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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 21

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

POM Boston Evening Globe Monday, February 2, 1970 21 RAY FITZGERALD NEXT: A Bill for a Fenway Fact: This Time Friday's Right The score at the end of two mixups is Tom Moon 1, Bill Friday 1. Moon is a goal judge at Bruins games. Friday is a referee of somewhat controversial mien. Pres. Pusey on Friday, that Harvard cannot be faulted for this situation.

"But this probably means that the Patriots will have to leave Boston. "The primary fault, as I said, lies with the administration of the city of Boston and Gov. Sargent's corporation was not a special one. Pres. Pusey, treasurer George Bennett and the five fellows of the corporation meet every second Monday.

Sen. Donahue said, "I regret that Harvard has made this I would have to reiterate what I said in my letter to called a meeting today-seemed to indicate they were going to reconsider," Cawley said. "They obviously didn't consider the people of GreaterBoston. "Economically, the Patriots generate up to $10 million in the area. Harvard ignored this fact." Today's meeting of the STADIUM Continued from Page 1 Sen.

Robert L. Cawley (D-West Roxbury), co-sponsor of the bill to seize the stadium and lease it to the Patriots, said he found the Harvard decision "hard to believe." "The mere fact that they The two got their signals "If the mayor and the governor had really pushed and if they were really in favor of a stadium, this situation would not have resulted. "Harvard certainly hasn't contributed to the situation." House Speaker David N. Bartley has predicted that the eminent domain bill would be killed. Gov.

Sargent opposed the proposal to condemn the premises. Bartley also said the taking of Harvard property is unjustifiable. "Harvard should not be made the scapegoat here," he said. Several billd offering various stadium plans are pending in the Legislature. One, to take Fenway Park and remodel it into a II llllllll IIW llir-iPl IIIIHIIII "') iT'H 1 crossed yesterday at the Garden for the second time in a couple of weeks.

This time Moon was wrong, and admits it. The goal judge flashed a red light early in the first period yesterday on a Johnny Bucyk shot. Friday immediately shook his head and put his palms down to signify no goal. The fans, who will never award the good guy trophy to Friday, were irate, not to mention out of their skulls in anger. SPEAKER BARTLEY stadium suitable for both baseball and football will be heard Wednesday by the legislative Committee on State Administration.

The statement by the Harvard Corporation follows: STADIUM, Page 24 thrJ-y! Tom Moon ki mi I I III h9l i i 4 ft ii iii '--mm Pavelich and Neil Armstrong step between Bob Pulford and Don Awrey. (Danny Goshtigian photo) IT WAS THAT KIND OF DAY This is on fight the officials managed to break up before it flared. Linesmen Matt One middle-aged man, no doubt gentle as a lamb around the house, beat on the glass as though Friday had just gunned down a squadron of little kids. "Friday was right," said Moon. "It was no goal.

I'm human, I make mistakes. On that one I was just trigger happy. The puck hit the post and came out." A couple of weeks ago something just the opposite happened. Jerry Pinder of the Black Hawks fired at the Bruins goal and Ed Johnston appeared to have kicked the puck away. Moon didn't budge a thumb but Friday signaled a goal.

It turned out to be the only one of the game. In that instance, Moon frantically waved to Friday to come on over and talk, but the referee would have none of it. Yesterday, however, Friday skated behind the Bruins net and plainly said something to Moon. The goal judge doesn't know yet what it was. 'That slot in the glass isn't very big," Moon said.

"With all the yelling I have no idea what was said to me." Friday, contacted last night, was about as talkative as Harpo Marx. He picked up the phone in his hotel room and said "no comment" instead of "hello." The CIA couldn't have pried a secret from him. "If you asked me if the sun" was going to come up tomorrow," he said, "I'd still say no comment." "Is the sun coming up tomorrow?" "No comment." Friday did reveal the startling fact that he was catching a plane home to Hamilton. Ontario, where people presumably don't treat him as if he were Genghis Khan. Moon is still convinced the Black Hawks' goal a couple of weeks ago never went in.

He also says it's a dead issue, and that he'll never speak to Friday about it. "I dont go anywhere near the referee, before or after the game," he said. "It's better that way." You're probably right, Tom. Even if you worked at it, he'd never tell you whether the sun was coming up to- morrow. Observation car: Art Dulong didn't sleep much Saturday night after his electrifying win in the Hunter Mile he says he never gets much rest after a night meet and the victory just made the adrenalin flow a little more Dulong says he runs about 40 miles per week, in no set pattern and does a lot of speed work at a quarter mile.

The Randolph rabbit feels he's better at longer distances than the mile because his speed is limited but his stamina isn't "You can build stamina almost to infinity," he said, "but you either have speed or you don't and I've about reached my peak there he wants to make the Olympics in cither the 5000 or 10.000 meter run "a 4 01.1 mile doesn't qualify me for the Olympics," he added Auerbach Sees Red, Fines 10 of 12 Celtics It's Beanpot Time: Beware of Upsets Bruins' Curse: Slioddv Defense By John Ahern, Globe Staff The place looked like a disaster area with everybody standing around and asking things like: "What happened?" Late Sunday after the Bruins had overcome their latest bout with blind staggers and had beaten Toronto, 7 to 6, there was one acceptable explanation: Both the Bruins and Maple Leafs had played Saturday night (the Bruins tied Montreal, 3-3, and the Leafs beat Minnesota, 4-2) and after long flights through the night both were on Garden ice to play their second games within 15 hours. This came about because of television's Game of the Week that was being whistled out of here, and if television is going to rule as it does, the product is going to be pretty well watered down. Sunday it was even worse than that with brawls, over-officiating, pretty poor hockey and Bobby Orr. After it was over and it seemed endless Harry Sinden stood in his office, a little too stunned to sit down, and he tried to go beyond the first answers. It had to be bad because we no sooner finished one game than we're asked to start another," he said.

"In a contact sport like football they play every seventh day. We have as much contact," he stressed. "And we come right back." There's more to Sinden's problems than lack of rest between games and those matters are eased only somewhat by the fact his team took three of a four possible points from Eastern division opponents over the weekend. What is haunting him still is the big lead, the big collapse, something to which he has become accustomed, but never can accept. "You were ahead, 4 to 1," Dan Kelly, the television man stated.

"What else is new?" Sinden asked. "Has it happened before?" Kelly wanted to know. "In just about every game," Sinden answered. He tried to laugh. That's so he won't cry.

"Saturday night we played a good tight game. I thought we had started to come along, get together. But there's no reason," Sinden said, "even with little rest that N.H.L, teams should play such a loose game as that." It comes back to the basic problem the Bruins are not playing defensive hockey and have not played that type game for most of this season. BRUINS, Page 22 "I have more than cautioned myself against this happening. We beat them, 7 to 1, earlier in the year and sometimes your kids get engulfed in something like that.

This is their season. This is their big game." Harvard coach Ralph (Cooney) Weiland was still trying to regroup his thoughts Sunday night after he sent his team through a practice session at Watson Rink. Losing to Penn was something that couldn't happen, but did. "We didn't have enough ice time," said Weiland. "It showed.

It was our lack of games. (Harvard hadn't played in three weeks.) They were a driving, hustling team. We made too many fundamental errors to win it." The Penn goalie, sophomore John Marks, made 51 saves. Harvard twice led by two goals, 2 to 0 and 4 to 2, but Penn caught the Crimson and won it in overtime when Harvard had a man sitting in the penalty box. "It was a screen shot, from the blue line," said Weiland "right after a face-off.

Still, if it wasn't for him (Marks), we would have won. We had enough chances to score. But, we weren't skating. We were standing around." Will Harvard rebound? "I think we can," Weiland said. "But we're going to have to hustle.

This B.U. team has been skating and is picking up confidence. It should be quite a tournament. The clubs are evenly matched." By Joe Concannon, Globe Staff The Beanpot Hockey Tournament, something that grew out of a meagre beginning, opens for its 18th run this evening at the Boston Garden and, picking a favorite is an assignment that nobody wants to take cn. Why? Well, the reason is obvious.

College hockey is an unpredictable sport and, if any further evidence is needed, just consider what happened to Harvard Saturday night in Philadelphia. It was Penn 5, Harvard 4. "I'm too stunned to say anything about it," said Boston University coach Jack Kelley when he heard the score Sunday. "It has to be one of the biggest upsets in a long time. It will only serve to fire them up for us." B.U., a team that has been getting better each week, meets Harvard this evening in the second game (9:00) on the Beanpot card.

Boston College and Northeastern open the program at 6:45. The winners meet the following Monday. A week ago, B.C. probably 'deserved the favorite's role. That was before B.C.

met B.U., last Tuesday at the Arena, and lost, 8 to 3. B.C., with 10 wins in 12 Eastern games, does deserve the edge this evening, though. but you can't take anything for granted in the Beanpot," interjects B.C. coach John (Snooks) Kelley. "Everybody rises to the occasion in this one.

Northeastern has been known to pull some big upsets in this one. BEANPOT, Page 23 70-Mile Week Gives Scott Boost oromdl with it hand and the little hand backwards, two full years. "For two years," he said, "I didn't do anything. Not a thing. I took a few courses and that was it I just rif7 mlkerV 4t WALKERS first trial balloon sent aloft a month ago at the Knights of Columbus meet at the Garden.

The event was the 1000-meters run. The results were not good. "I finished fourth," Scott said. "My time was 2:11. It was disappointing." Scott went back to work, running at both Boston College and Harvard.

He ran again Saturday night The result was in his hands, a clock radio presented for winning his race. "It would be nice if you could turn the clock back two years in all respects any time you wanted," someone said. "Yes it would," Scott said, nodding "This is one of the most gratifying moments of my "life." Who knows? Maybe he can do it Peter Scott obviously is a guy who does not know how to grow old gracefully. Maybe he'll never learn. PETER SCOn "We still have games left to play," pointed out Heinsohn "and while we're in a tough position as far as making a playoff position this year, we still expect them to give out If they don't, they may find themselves off this team another year." A friend remarked to Bryant who didn't get into the game until the fourth quarter with the Celtics down 99-85, that it was one night he wouldn't complain about not playing.

The veteran guard chuckled, "I guess you're right. I was lucky in a way." Rookie Steve Kuberski who occupies the next "locker" to Bryant, shook his head: "It was my luck to play a lot tonight I haven't been playing this much in any game." It was even costlier for Don Nelson. Beside the fine levied by Auerbach, the veteran blond cornerman got tossed out of the game in the fourth period on two technical fouls by referee Jack Madden. That cost him an additional $50. Besides losing the game and money, the Celtics lost the services of Sanders probably for the rest of the season.

Satch suffered strained ligaments inside his left knee in a third period jam and was sent to-University Hospital for the night CELTICS, Page 23 By Herb Ralby Globe Staff For the first time in the 19 years Red Auerbach has been associated with them, first as coach and now as general manager, it appears the Celtics will miss the N.B.A. playoffs. And for the first time, Auerbach in that period, has fined his players for an unsatisfactory effort. That was last night after they had been drubbed 123-105 by the San Francisco Warriors at the Garden. He fined all but two players a sizable amount and warned that if they didn't start thinking basketball to the exclusion of other interests, it would be double the next time.

The only two players to escape Auerbach's wrath after the game were Tom "Satch" Sanders, who was injured in the third period and had to be helped to the dressing room, and Em-mette Bryant because he didn't playuntil after the damage had been done. It was the second time in a week that Auerbach and Coach Tom Heinsohn have closed the dressing room door after a defeat and "read off the players. The previous time was in New York last Tuesday night after the Knieks had bombed them there. "Evidently they didn't get the message the first time," said an irritated Auerbach. CANADIAN Invite this Canadian home and By Leigh Montville Globe Staff Peter Scott thought his track career was over two years ago.

He put his trophies in the basement his sweatsuit into storage. He picked up the evening paper and a copy of TV Guide and he was ready to live like the rest of middle America. No more 70 miles of roadwork per week. No more angry dogs and giggling passersby. Not on your life.

"It has been nice," Peter Scott 24-year-old Canton gym teacher said, "but Peter Scott, the runner, is now Peter Scott, the sitter." He took a few graduate courses and watched May-berry RFD and for two years, he was like everyone else. He sat and ate, sat and ate and after a while hated himself for it Only Peter Scott did something about things so much so. that Saturday night, at 26-yearsold, he was back in the track wars at Boston Garden and yes, he was a winner. He won the special 830 yard run, at the 81st annual Indoor Games of the BAA. defeating favored Jamaican Olympian Byron Dyee and moving the big TV S3 2fc mm, it'll do you proud.

For its impressive Hiram Walker name is linked to a great tradition cf Canadian whisky-making that goes back well over a century. That proud name says, "here's something exceptional." And your taste proves it. Try Hiram Walkers felt my life wasn't complete." So, one sunny day in July, Scott a Scituate kid who had been NCAA 880 champion while attending Nebraska became unretired. He started training. "I decided I wanted just one more indoor season," he said.

"That's alL Six or seven good races." Scott kissed his wife on the forehead, told her what he was doing and was off CANADIAN THE NOTEBOOK Art DuLong, the outstanding performer with Walker's Special Canadian. The proud one! Best balanced Canadian on ice. his 4:01 1 mile victory, is for his good old 70 miles roadwork each week. of understood, smiling She still undecided about his mile future He has only one mile race scheduled in two weeks in Louisville and said he defi-nately prefers longer races B.A.A., Page 24 and asking at what impossible hour he'd be home for dinner. The comeback had its Imported fcy nJ te U.S.

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