inh Yesterday's Play TORONTO (CP)--Linescores pt the Tournament of Cham- pions Bonspiel Friday: Semi-Final et 110 041 020 10x--10 Cameron _ 000 200 101 01x-- 5 Braunstein 010.020 101 100-- 6 Richardson 100 302 010 011-- 9 Gervais inal Richar®on 201.002 302 02x--12 "Gervais 010 020 030 20x--- 8 (Fourth end blanked) Consolation Braunstein 112 020 020 004--12 Cameron 000 202 200 210-- 9 (ninth end blanked) TORONTO (CP) -- After two years in eclipse, Ernie Richard- 'son's Regina foursome has re- established its claim to curling supremacy. ' The four-time Canadian and world champions, who haven't won a national title since 1963, knocked off a long-time neme- sis Friday night by defeating Hec Gervais of Edmonton 12-8 to win the 1966 Tournament of Champions. It was the Richardsons' first * victory in three tries for the first prize of $5,000 in household appliances and the first time they have beaten Gervais in 12 meetings. It 'was something less than a Young Players Are One-Two In Tournament SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)-- The youth movement was in full swing today in the $40,000 San Diego Open golf tourna- ment as a pair of 26,000-year American professionals; - Paul Bondeson and Chris Blocker, ran 1-2 into the third round. Bondeson led the field with a 86-hole score of 132 after rounds of 67-65. Blocker was a stroke back with 65-68--133. Neither has ever won an im- portant tournament. They are roomates this week at the tour- nament headquarters, the Star- dust Country Club. The tournament - wise Don January was at 134. And the 136 bracket -- o a= ag = champions! reats as Casper Jr., Mason Rudolph, Mike Souchak and Tommy Ar- ron. ' The only Canadian left was Jerry Magee of Toronto, who just made it at 143. Canadian casualties were" Al Balding ef Toronto and Stan Leonard of Vancouver at 145, George Knudson of Toronto at 148 and Al Johnson of Montreal, Ready To Fight, But Who For? VANCOUVER (CP)--A_ chal- lenge event between British Co- lumbia and Ontario at an in- door track meet is more than a month away but the swinging has started already. Officials both east and west @re involved in a tug-of-war over shot - putter Dave Steen and sprinter Irene Piotrowski. Both B.C. and Ontario have claimed the pair for the two- province showdown Feb. 18. Steen and -Miss Piotrowski are former residents of Vancouver now living in Toronto. Fred Foot, thé Toronte coach who will head the 23-member Ontario team, insists Miss Pio- trowski and Steen line up with the eastern squad. The two track stars are re- garded as almost automatic winners in the Centennial Chal- lenge. Miss Piotrowski is the Canadian women's record holder fo the 100-yard dash with a time of 10.6 seconds and Steen is the only Canadian who ean consistently put the shot more than 60 feet, Home Is Where The Victories Are By THE CANADIAN PRESS The home teams were ready for the visitors Friday night in Ontario Hockey Association Se- nior A action as the first- and the last-place teams won their games. League - leading Guelph Re- gals overcame a 3-1 third pe- riod deficit to edge Oakville Oaks 43 and extend. their hold on first place by six points. Galt Hornets scored three times in about three minutes in the third period for a 6-4 wir over second - place Woodstock Athletics. . Terty Oliver led the Guelph attack with two goals and Ray Ross and Walt Bradley com- pleted the scoring. Jack Price scored twice for the Oaks, with Don Currie add- ing one, The Gait win ended a three- game losing streak. Earl Bal- four and Bert Brown led the scoring with two goals each. Bob Hall and John Rendall got the others. Dino Leggio scored twice for loodstock. Bob Robinson and : McGregor added one each. \ classic victoty. Both skips had trouble reading the ice and a» of the mark, "Hec and I were the lame ducks tonight," was. Richard- son's post-mortem. "We missed the most shots." HEAVY AT TIMES Gervais, whose rink took the $2,700 second prize, agreed. "I was a little heavy at times and when I quitied down my weight the stones went the other way," he said. Earlier in the day, in semi-fi- nals involving the-top four rinks in an eight-entry round-robin that began Tuesday, Richardson downed Terry Braunstein of Winnipeg 12-9 and Gervais dis- posed of Doug Cameron of Char- lottetown 10-5. Braunstein cap- tured third place by defeating Cameron 12-9 in another eve- ning match. Richardson, his brother. Gar- net, his cousin Arnold and Mel Perry wrapped up the final when Gervais missed with his last rock to give them three and an 8-3 lead in the seventh end. The Albertans got the three back in the eighth, but both tinks capitalized on their last- rock advantage the rest of the way and Gervais was unable to catch up before he ran out of rocks in the final end. The consolation final between Braunstein and Cameron pro- vided a bigger thrill for the crowd of 3,521, who brought the total attendance to approxi- mately 10,000 for the: nine draws. TAKEOUT WAS PERFECT Braunstein, who won six of his seven matches to lead in the round-robin tournament, came home trailing 9-8 after blowing a 6-2 lead at the end of the fifth end, But the Winnipeg skip de- livered a perfect takeout with his final rock to count four. Gervais, the defending cham- pion, reached the final when the Prince Edward Islanders missed their last three rocks in the fifth end to give him a 6-2 lead. He stole another point in the sixth and Cameron never recov- ered; Richardson needed a last-rock miss by the opposing skip to win his semi-final match as Braunstein was a shade off with an attempt at a double take-out that would have tied the match. Doug Maxwell, the tourna- ment director, said the tourna- ment lost money at the gate but that television subsidies would look after the deficit. / Eliminated in the preliminary round were world champion Bud Somerville of Superior, Wis.; Chuck Hay of Perth, Scotland; Jack Polyblank of Kirkland Lake, Ont., and Jim Sharples of Toronto. 'HAPPY' CHANDLER VIIGHUICL YUILS Football Post NEW YORK (AP) -- Happy Chandler considers himself big league all the way. So the Con- tinental Football League is looking for a new commissioner today. Chandler; the controversial Kentuckian who once was base- ball commissioner, resigned the job Friday after CFL brass | voted to look into the possibility of latching on to players op- tioned out by the National and American Football Leagues. The former United States senator and Kentucky governor | contends this setup would make the CFL '"'minor league." He was given a five-year con- tract as commissioner when the CFL was formed a year ago, calling for an average of $40,000 annually, but waived any further compensation. ALL LOST MONEY None of the league clubs made money last season aiid one, Rhode Island Indians, went broke and dropped out, leaving only nine teams. Sol. Rosen, former general manager of the league's New- ark entry, was named by the trustees interim commissioner, pending a league meeting in New York Feb, 12-13, : Club executives who favor uing optioned players feel it not only would give the. league bigger names, but also would help financially since at least part. of the player's salary would be paid by his NFL or AFL team. Under such a set-up, players who don't make an NFL or AFL roster but still are under con- tract to a team in one of those leagues might be optione@ to the CFL, number of key snois were wide | THE VICTOR and the van- quished stand side by side at the 1966 Tournament of Champions bonspiel in Tor- onto. Garnett Richardson (left) was a member of tichardson Rink Victorious In Championship Tournament brother Ernie's victorious Regina rink, Edmonton skip Hec Gervais, defending champion, looks on deject- edly as his rink bows to the Richardsons 12-8 in the final round Friday night. LOS ANGELES (AP)--Quar- terback Frank Ryan of Cleve- land Browns doesn't have a solution for the problem, but he's still hopeful that the Na- tional Football League's East- ern Conference can end the season in a winning way against the Western Conference Sunday. The U.S. pro season finally comes to a finish that day with the NFL's pro bowl, featuring all-star teams from the two divisions. In 16 previous battles between representatives of the East and the West this season, the® outcome has been one- Cleveland's Frank Ryan Is After Weekend Win Snow To Ski? {1 Who Needs It? WOODBRIDGE, Ont. (CP)-- Two skiers in this comntunity 10 miles north of Toronto don't care if it snows or not. . Mr, David Storey, 37, and Clarke Wallace, 30, have been skiing without enow thie winter, far they have stood up sup- "The smoother the surface-- grass or frozen ground -- this winter in the Toronto area, behead og spoil' have iad ample 0 to try out the tank4ike skis. Dr. Storey has raced through], grass up'to six inches high and has reached speeds of 30 miles an hour on the skis. "That's fast enough," he said. "The rolling action of the tread will easily handle the ruts but won't make the deep cuts. All rocks have to be cleared from the run." CROTHERS SHOWS HIS HEELS Distance runner Bill Cro- Foe athe' te pac cag thers of Markham, Ontario, y night, Hunning sec- hits the wire to win the hag a tag: og hong 1,000-yard run event in the unattached - Ca le, Il- Motor City International In- _linois. --CP Wirephoto "THE OSHAWA TIMMS, Seturdey, Jenvery 15, 1966 J "By JOHN BEST MOSCOW newspapers rooke Beavers, who took a 15-4 drub- bing from the Soviet wey Playing ability, "But they displayed some- thing else. Every time action became heavy, all six Cana- oo started fighting with their "We heard a lot about the character of Canadian hockey 'but for the first time we met this at home." HAD 'SERIOUS TALK' The-report-of the game from the newspaper's Kalinin cor- respondent notes that after the Remember When... ? By THE CANADIAN PRESS The governors of the Na- tional Hockey League de- cided 25 years ago today-- in 1941--to fine players $25 automatically for joining in fights they did not originate. The rule was intended to The device requires form similar to that used in skiing through deep power snow when the skier assumes almost a sit- ting position. Wallace feels that the snow- less skis can be used to get into shape before there is enough snow for conventional skiing. And he says it takes little time Rams New Coach SOCCER SCORES discourage free-for-alls such as had broken out on New York, Chicago and Montreal second {SP} -- Moscow;minute and 38 seconds ¢ Sherb beca' erees hai both coaches, Canadians Take Beating -- |But Go Down Sivingitg period -- called off 4 use of roughness--the d "a serious talk" with The third period, in which cham-|both teams scored twice, was cleanly played. ; Komsomolskaya Pravda, or of the Young Co ague, says that in order te keep warm in the ze: weather, dently decided to fight instead by the Beavers in thejof eg ob te 2 > hie sports struggle." The paper mits the Canadians terful fighters, the Canadians evi- were mas- The Soviet Army team holds first place in the Russian hockey first division and forms the nucleus of -Russia's world- champion national team. How. ever only a few of the national players performed against the Beavers, The Beavers the oe tional team here protein rae SALES & ® SERVICE VOLKSWAGEN WERNER'S SERVICE CENTRE MANCHESTER end Highwey Ne. 12 985-7162 Gets Early Starts CHICAGO (AP)--George Al- len, professed new head coach of Los Angeles Rams of the LONDON (Reuters)--Results rinks during the 1940-41 sea- son. @| ae enensinnsncnt of fhe two soccer matches played Friday night in the United Kingdom: English League There Are Specie! Benefits Fer All BUSINESS EXECUTIVES sided. The West has won 15 times, the East only once--when Dal- las Cowboys defeated San Fran- cisco 49ers in a regular season game. Western teams won i3 other regular season contests while Green Bay Packers and Baltimore Colts, bojh from the West, won the championship and runner-up games. "I really can't explain it," Ryan said. "It can't be that West personnel is that much better because basically we're all equal, Every team is capa- ble of beating any other. I hope pre can prove it Sunday." Ryan will be the East's quar- terback while his opponent will be San Francisco's John Brodie. By THE CANADIAN PRESS University of Toronto Blues bombarded goalie Norm Doug- las with 72 shots Friday night as they swamped Queen's Uni- versity Golden Gaels 10-3, The win left the Blues in a three-way tie at the top of the Ontario - Quebec Athletic Asso- ciation Hockey standings with University of Waterloo and Uni- versity of Western Ontario Mustangs. Waterloo downed Laval Uni- versity Rouge et Or 4-2 in Que- bec and Western defeated Mc- Gill Redmen 6-4. In Toronto, Varsity took a 3-0 lead in the first period then scored five goals in five min- utes in the second. Ward Passi led the Blues with four goals, and Gord Cun- ningham added two. Doug St. John, Brian Jones, Bob Awrey and 'Steve Monteith scored one each. Bob Pond, Dave Loch and Richard Bonn seored for Queen's. Waterloo scorers were Art |Bacon, Ron Smith, Marc Ruest land George Belajac. Reynard University Of Toronto Bombards Golden Gaels | Dave Leeson scored three for the Mustangs, with Dave Hos- podar, Jerry Knightley and Larry .Babcock getting the oth- ers. John Tibbets scored three for McGill and Skip Kernef the other, The three top teams have five wins each, but Waterloo has played one game less and is undefeated. Track Records 'Now Official _ LONDON (AP) --The amaz- ing performances last year of Randy Matson of 'the United States. and Michel Jazy of France were among a raft o track and field records ac- cepted as official world stan- dards by the International Amateur Athletic Federation Friday. Matson, a Texas strongboy, was credited with the first' 70- foot shotput ever--a heave of 70 feet, 74 inches at College Station. Tex., last. May. Dufour and Gaston Vandal scored for Laval. Phillies' Pitcher Mr. Money Bags PHILADELPHIA (AP)--Jim Bunning now is the highest paid baseball player in the his- tory of Philadelphia Phillies. The 34-year-old pitcher natur- ally is happy about his finan- cial status, but he's still a little shaken over how it came about. Bunning is known as a tough salary negotiator. He comes well armed with figures on his previous year's performance to wear down resistance of his general manager. | This year he didn't have to| argue a whit. Bunning won't say how much he will be paid under the con- tract, but rumor has it in the upper 60 thousands, which far exceeds the $50,000 bracket en- joyed by Robin Roberts when he was putting six straight 20- victory seasons together for the Phillies in the 1950s, and the Same area in which first base- man Dick Stuart is reported to have been remunerated last season, Jazy ran the fastest mile ever with a 3:53.6 at Rennes last June, The French runner also was credited with the two- mile record of 8:22.6. Australia's Ron Clarke was credited with three..marks. Among them were a 13:00.4 for three miles; 47:12.8 for 10 miles and 13:25.8 for 5,000 metres. Clarke has a 12:52.4 three- mile set last July and a 27:39.4 10,000 metres set the same month pending. CAR THIEVES THRIVE A record number of cars' 48,- 114 in all, were stolen in New York City in November, 1965. DEALING YOUR CAR? The man to see is MITCH KOWAL LTD. RENT-A-CAR DAY --WEEK-- MONTH. *5.00 PER DAY -- wittrcr crarce 725-6553 RUTHERFORD'S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS 725-6553 14 ALBERT ST, Sstiawe | Division IV Stockport County 2 Wrexham 4 Tranmere Rovers 6 Southport 2 The Second Division match between Cardiff City and Bol- ton Wanderers was postponed because of a frozen field. National Football League, said Friday he is attempting to round up a Ram staff although he is still held in a legal head- lock by cago Bears. Allen, defensive coach and personnel director for the Bears, is theoretical Ram boss, pending resumption Tuesday of a circuit court hearing "on a Bears injunction to prevent him from taking his new job. Bears owner - coach George to learn to use them. SURTEES OUT LONDON (Reuters) -- John Surtees, former world cham- pion racing driver who was in- jured in a 100 m.p.h. crash while practising for the Cana- dian Grand Prix last Septem- ber, left hospital here Friday. He will convalesce abroad and return here in March for an ex- amination. He hopes to an- tract suit against Allen, 43, who agreed to become the $40,000-a- year Ram pilot with two years left on his $19,000 annual Bears For personel fer Hatem lor willy Bag @ ACADIAN definite edventeges when you leese « new... 6 Ne Insurance costs , . . Ne 'MILLS AUTO LEASE PHONE 723-4634 @ PONTIAC oie © BUICK -- Reon can ax' Gve your tose hems a's Poowe or tome trp. 266 KING ST. WT nounce his racing plans then.'Hallas filed a breach of con-!contract. X 2 escape to Calypso Country cle | enjoy AIR CANADA's best-ever jet services there...and new, fun-filled Club Calypso flights! BAHAMAS Daly. non-stop jets to Nassau leave Toronto International. Airport at 9.30 a.m. You're there in just 2 hrs, 50 mins. Also non-stop service every Monday to Freeport from Toronto. $149 return. "JAMAICA Daily non-stop Jet service except Wed- nesdays! Leave Toronto at 10.40 a.m. $199 return. ANTIGUA Up to 5 Jet flights a week and 4 of them are non-stop from Toronto, 219 return. BARBADOS Up to 6 Jets 2 week (one Is non- stop) from Toronto, : return, This winter, every Air Canada flight to the Islands Is delightfully different. We call this difference "Club Calypso". That's the name we've given the strictly-for-fun feeling you experience as soon as you step aboard your Air Canada jet, For instance, you'll sense the atmosphere of the South In the colourful decor, the catchy Calypso music. Later, you'll taste real, down-in-the-South-style food and refreshments. It's the perfect start to a perfect holiday! ig TRINIDAD & TOBAGO Up to 3 Jets a week from Toronto. $278 return. FLORIDA Alr Canada is your only non-stop ser- _ vice from Toronto--twice dally--plus a dally Van- guard, (2 Vanguards on Saturdays!), To Tampa/St. Petersburg. $134 return. All fares shown (except Tarnpa/St. Petersburg) ere 21-Day Economy Excursion Return trom T and are efectve Dec, 16, 1966--- Aor 14, 1866. Talk to your Travel nt & an all-Inclus' Package Vacation In the' Sun and for details of our, Fly Now -- Pay Later Plan. Or write AIR CANADA In Toronto et AIR CANADA (&) DONALD TRAVEL SERVICE OSHAWA -- WHITBY -- BROOKLIN 104 BROCK ST. $. WHITBY 'PHONE 668-8867 For Travel Information Call or See > _ FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL 57 KING ST. E. 728-6201 Call Now For Complete Travel Arrangements MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE | 25 KING ST. E. OSHAWA PHONE 723-7001 te A meth: Mile lin nite