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Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Mar 1966, p. 7

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FIRST WIN FOR P.E.1.-- Art Burke's Charlottetown rink eked out an 8-7 win over Newfoundland, to score their first win of the 1966 Canadian Men's Curling Championships, in the open- ing round of the annual ONTARIO HAS ONE - AND - ONE 'Brier'? -- which started yesterday in Halifax. Skip Burke (right) and Arnold Llewellyn, vice - skip and Temple Hooper, the lead, are shown "pouring on the broom", in a late end of the game, Youthful Calgary Rink Wins Twice, First Day By DON ANGUS HALIFAX (CP)--Ron North- cott's youthful Calgary four- George MacCharles of St thern Ontario The Islanders outlasted New-|and 10th and came up with al John's, and Bill Grozelle's Nor-|foundland 8-7 in the first round|decisive three in the 11th when representatives | and MacCharles lost again, 7-4,;Mason's last-rock some had first place all to it-|from Haileybury were winless in|to New Brunswick in the sec-|tempt rubbed off the Manitoba self going into the second day of the Canadian curling champ- jonships but the Albertans were given a workout by their hosts before they reached the top. Vie Snarr's Halifax rink, bid- itwo starts. .. | MEET QUEBEC NEXT The Albertans faced Quebec jin the third round, starting at 9 a.m. ond. shot stone and slid harmlessly! Nova Scotia opened with a 7-6\through the house. Tracy jolted the favored Sas- victory over Northern Ontario before running into Alberta. katchewan entry by counting Snarr drew first blood against|four in the second end and both ding for Nova Scotia's first|Other matches pitted Saskatche-| Albertans intentionally blanked championship since Don Oyler|wan against Northern Ontario,|the second end before counting) game, in which neither skip! (8 a.m. EST) today.|Northcott, counting one, and the/sides piled up multiple counts | throughout the free - scoring Dick Gamble's 'Linemates His Closest Rivals ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -- Jim Pappin and Mike Walton of Rochester Americans are threatening to join linemate Dick Gamble in a sweep of American Hockey League. scor- ing honors. - Gamble, on temporary duty with Toronto Maple Leafs of the Bek a cazvuc last weekend leads AHL scorers with 81 points, latest league figures re- veal. Pappin is second with 75 points in only 48 games and Walton, a rookie, is fifth with 69. Walton is three points short of third place, which is shared by Wayne Hicks of Quebec Aces and Bob Courcy of Cleveland Barons. Al Caron of Buffalo Bisons fired his 38th goal to tie Gam- ble for the goal-scoring lead. Caron has 10 game-winning tal- lies, three short of the league re- cord set by Dunc Fisher of Hershey 12 years ago. Gerry Melnyk of the Bisons, 10th on the point list, tops the league in assists with 53. Jacques Caron of Springfield Indians paces the goalies with a 2.59 per-game goal average in 31 games. Pittsburgh Hornets' George Gardner is the shutout leader By CARL MOLLINS LIURBLIANA. Yugoslavia (CP)--A pair of classy centres, Fran Huck of Regina and Marsh Johnston of Brich Hilis, Sask., have given Canada's national team a strong look in the world hockey tournament and the statistics show why. Both their lines rank high in the over - all scoring, having produced 16 of the 22 goals Can- ada scored in three winning per- formances. It's a toss-up right now which is the most produtcive. Each has scored eight goals. How- ever, the Huck trio has a slight edge in total points with 12 to the Johnston combination's 11. Huck himself is one of the two highest scoring centres in the tournament with four goals and three assists. The other is Alexander Alme-) tov, who with wingers Veniamin Alexandrov, the scoring leader so far, and Konstantin Loktey make up the No. 1 Russian line. They lead the tournament with nais of Riviere Qui Barre, Alta., says "should be scoring more," has five goals and five assists to its credit. Bourbon- nais has a goal and four as- sists and his wingers Paul Con- lin of Kitchener, Ont., and Ray Cadieux of Ste. Adele, Que., two goals apiece. Cadieux also has an assist. The three lines scored all but one of the goals in the convinc- ing victories over the United States 7-2, Poland 6-0 and Fin- land 9-1, Veteran defenceman Lorne Davis of Regina got the other goal. The Canadians believe they won their first three. starts mainly because they. scored early enough to put the pres- sure on the other side, and they hope to do the same thing again tonight against East Ger- many. The Canadians aren't taking the Germans lightly, especially after East Germany's 4-1 upset win over Sweden. "We must get the jump on RUSSIA LINE TOP SCORERS "Fe ----__ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, March 8, 1966 7 them," Bourbonnais said after a workout Monday. "'If they score first. they could be hard to stop." The Germans have been es- pecially tough in the frst pe- riod. It took the Czechs almost 19 minutes to score against them before winning 6-0. The Germans switched goalies after the Swedish game and held the vaunted Russians to one first- period goal before they olc- lapsed completely and took a 10-0 trouncing. East Germany's kitty-bar-the- door hokey with the occasional flashing sortie down the ice -- give the Canadians trou- e. Monday, the team held a spe- cial workout that lasted 75 min- utes with particular concentra- tion on forechecking and posi- tional defence before scrimmag- ing. Canada, Russia and Czecho- slovakia are in a three-way tie for first place with three vic- tories and six points apiece. Classy Play-Making Centres Give 'Canucks Strong Look __ f ing tie games, the threes way deadlock should be broken Thursday when the top teams begin laying each other. The six games that will de- ide ine ciampion and ine sec ond-place silver and third-place bronze medallists are (times EST): i Thursday--Canada vs. Czech oslovakia, 7:30 a.m.; Russia vs. Sweden, 11 a.m. Friday -- Czechoslovakia vs. Sweden, 11 a.m.; Canada vs, Russia, 2:30 p.m. . Sunday--Canada vs. Sweden, 5 a.m.; Russia vs. Czechoslo- vakia, 10 a.m. All eight countries in the round-robin championship pool see action today, with the Can- ada-East Germany game the last of the day's play. The Shedule (times EST) Sweden vs. Poland, 4 a.m. Rusia vs. Finland, 7:30 a.m. Czehcoslovakia vs. United States, 11 a.m. Canada vs. East Germany, 2:30 p.m. 10 goals and 11 assists for 21 with seven. Aldo Guidolin, Providence | Reds' defenceman, was hit with} three minor penalties last week, | boosting his league-leading pen-! alty total to 139 minutes. HOCKEY SCORES By THE CANADIAN PRESS Western. Senior Yorkton 1 Saskatoon 9 (First game of best - of - seven final) Ottawa-St. Lawrence takeout at-|Ottawa Carleton 3 Perth-Smiths | Falls 5 |ate of the University of Denver FA. Cup Draw, points. ALEXANDROV LEADS | Almetov has three goals and four assists and is tied for the second spot with Huck in the individual scoring. Alexandrov is the leader with four goals and four assists. Huck, 20-year-old son of a brewery 'worker, has Morris Mott of Creelman, Sask., and playing-coach Jackie McLeod of Winnipeg as his wingers. Johnston, 24-year-old gradu- where he was 'one of the school's hockey stars, is the pivot for George Faulkner of Harbour Grace, Nfid., and Billy MacMillan of Charlottetown. Johnston's scoring perform-) ance isn't anywhere near that| of Huck's. Nevertheless his all-| SHE FINISHED FOURTH One Legged Swimmer Disqualified For It By CAROL KENNEDY LONDON (CP)--A one-legged schoolgirl who finished fourth in a county championship swim- ming event--only to be dis- qualified because of her handi- cap--will see her case consid- ered by a higher authority, it has been learned. The outcome of- next Mon- | . | Quarter-Finals | around performance has drawn|day's meeting of the Southern LONDON (Reuters) ---Draw | repeated praise from both Mc-| Counties Amateur Swimming Association here could affect pionships. After the race the judges, Mrs. Mary Howe and Capt. Frederick Dows, disqual- ified her. The reason? The rules of butterfly in the swimming as- sociation handbook state: 'All movements of the legs and feet shall be executed in a simul- taneous manner." John Moorey, president of the Hampshire Amateur Swimming Association, said he was to the rule there is no doubt about it. *T've looked up 'simultaneous' in the Oxford dictionary and it means two things together. A one-legged girl can't do that." Asked why Monica was not earlier told of the ruling, Mrs. Howe said the judges' jurisdice tion did not begin before the race started. v | Leod and team adviser Rev. Da- | vid Bauer. other handicapped swimmers by The big man on Johnston's}amending a rule whose strict] eral experts before the race had | line, of course, has been Faulk-}interpretation in the case of|said Monica was eligible. Blackb |ner, 81-year-old former defence-| Portsmouth schoolgirl Monica,' "If the girl has just one leg or _piackDUrn| man who is the top goal-getter/aughan, 13, led to protests. land it moves up and down she Rovers vs. Sheffield Wednesday | in the tournament with Russia's) Monica, whose left leg was not or Leicester of Kentville won it here 15 years|Manitoba against P.E.1., aie to pull ahead, : A 1 , held Northcott on even/Scotia against Newfoundlan s rock. Pickering pulled ahead to}. ;_,; = 7 al he six ends in the second|and Ontario against New Brans-|SNARR DREW EVEN stay with a four in the seventh | Sauer Pad quarter - finals . pound of the 11 - team round-|wick with British Columbia} The Nova Scotians came back/end that made it 12-8. | Shelves "s, Hull City robin competition Monday night,/drawing the bye. |with two in the fourth but fell) Reotimoar tnd ole Aty and stayed in the game until the} Apart from a comfortable/behind again as Northcott's | STANDINGS iz M Calgary skip counted two in the|11-6 victory by: Northcott 'over|front end built up a three-count} iaranohectas City |managed to score against. last} r for the English Football Asso- "aghast and distressed." Sev- PLAY GOLF "" KING WEST GOLF CLUB is breaking the rule," lith end to win 11-9. New Brunswick in the first|in the fifth. Two smooth draw| The only other unbeaten rinks| round, none of the three favored|shots by Snarr evened it at 5-5 after the first day were Mani-|Prairie rinks found easy pick-jat the halfway mark. toba, skipped by Hersh Lerner lings on the first day. A missed takeout by Snarr By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian curling champion- | ship standing after two | rounds: |City vs. Everton | Preston North End vs. Manches- | jter United Fifth-Round replay March 9: | Vyacheslav Starshinov and Va-| amputated above the knee when vakia. Each has five goals. |clav Nedomansky of Czechoslo-|she was four after a road ac- \cident, learned to swim three Johnston has two goals and); years ago and became Ports- MacMillan one goal| mouth butterfly champion in her Moorey said. "I think the hu- mane and moral view should have prevailed over everything else. The girl should not be sub- jected to indignity." 100 Thornton Rd. N., Oshawe 9 Holes Excellent Greens -- Well Trapped Membership Available of Winnipeg, and Bob Picker-| Tracy dropped a seesaw 14-12/cost him three in the seventh} a ing's quartet from Avonlea,|decision to Saskatchewan in the/end and the home rink never} gig one assist, ENGLISH FA CUP | an assist. McLeod has| age-group in 1965. She finished fourth Alberta Mrs. Howe, a swimming judge|-0% Reduction if paid Mer. |15. Organizations, Office Groups, in the Sask., each drew the byes in the! first round, following with anjcaught up, despite outscoring} Manitoba first two rounds, picking up one|impressive 16-7 triumph over!Alberta 4-3 the rest of the way. victory apiece against Alberta's two. j Northern Ontario. Manitoba had) to come from behind to pull out) Lerner, trying to live down a 3-7 record when he last repre- Next in line, with 1-1 records,|a 9-7 second-round victory over|sented Manitoba in the tourna- were Lynn Mason of Burnaby,| B.C.; Snarr's Saint Joli, N.B.; | Joe Gurowka of Dixie, Ont., and) , the Prince Edward Island entry/ led by Charlie Burke of Char- lottetown. B.C. Ontario, touted as a possible dark horse, took a disastrous 14-6 lacing from Mason, but came back to score two in the final end for an 8-6 victory over) Prince Edward Island. ment three years ago, trailed B.C. 5-2 after six ends but closed the gap with a two in the seventh. Lacking last blank eighth end, the Winnipeg skip stole singles in the ninth ' Newfoundland, skipped by! Art Stratton 'Has Big Lead By THE CANADIAN PRESS Art Stratton, veteran left jwinger of St. Louis Braves, has @ 13-point bulge over his near- est rival in the Central Profes- sional Hockey League scoring race pith 16 games remaining in the regular schedule. Stratton, winner of the Amer- ican Hockey League « scoring crown last season, has netted 24 goals and assisted on 58 others for 82 points. Paul An- drea, a right winger with Min- nesota Rangers, holds second place with 69 points while Bill Inglis and Andre Boudrias, both with Houston Apollos, are tied for third with 62 points The Braves' Oscar Gaudet of St. Joseph, N.B., is the league's top goal-getter with 33 goals Bruce.Gamhle who left Tulsa Oilers to fill in with Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League, leads the goal- tenders with a 2.87 goals-against average, 4 'Boom Boom' Sorry Scored 50 Goals? QUEBEC (CP)--Bernic Geoffrion, former right - wing star with Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League, says he's sorry scored 50 goals in one NHL season. Geoffrion, now coach of Quebec Aces in the American Hockey League, told a social club Monday night: "I should he MONTREAL (CP) -- Three| players shared honors statistic- ally in the National Hockey) League last week. The highlight was Bobby Hull's 50th goal of the season, scored against Detroit Red Wings Wednesday. The same night, Jean Beli- veau of Montreal Canadiens took over sole possession of third place on the NHL's all- time goal-scoring list with his 380th regular season goal, against the Maple Leafs in Tor- onto. Then there was Bruce Gamble a substitute netminder, who reg- istered two consecutive shut- outs--blanking Montreal Cana- diens 4-0 Thursday and Chicago Biatk tiawks-5t-Saturdey: The big question is whether Hull will become the first player to score more than 50 goals in a season. Hull has 11 games remaining to score his record - breaking 5lst goal. He is the only player to reach the 50 - goal plateau twice in a career and he shares the record of 59 goals in a sea- son with Maurice Richard and Bernie Geoffrion, two former Mo@real stars. REPLACES VETERANS Gamble was called up from Tulsa of the Central Profes- sional Hockey League to fill in for injured veterans Johnny Bower and Terry Sawchuk. He had previously played for Bos-! and 1961-62 and (Hull, Beliveau, Gamble Sharing NHL Spotlight One point behind Mikita, scor- ing champion the last two years, is Norm Ullman of Detroit Red Wings. Gordie Howe of Detroit is in fourth place with 65 points, followed by Bobby Rousseau of Montreal with 64. Beliveau is sixth in the scoring with 62 points, Lorne (Gump) Charlie Hodge of Montreal lead the goaltenders with a combined 148 goals against. John Ferguson, Montreal left winger, leads in penalty minutes with 133 while the Rangers lead the team penalties with 759 min- utes. | The leaders: A Pts. Pen. 37 87 64 42-67 38 66 38 65 41 64 38 62 Hull Chi Mikita, "Citi |Ullman, Det |Howe, Det Rousseau, Mtl Beliveau, Mtl 31 69 18 rock after aj} Worsley andj pra 38°N. Ontario Saskatchewan | British Columbia New Brunswick Nova Scotia Ontario Prince Edward Island Quebec Newfoundland Northern Ontario SCOPE HEN eS VKH MME HOOOM 2 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 \MONDAY'S SCORES: cuez, 151, Miami, knocked out HALIFAX (CP)--Results in the Canadian curling champion- |ships Monday: | First Round |N.B. Alberta B.C. Ont. Sask. Quebec 040 202 010 201--1 Nfld. P.E.L. 000 101 010 202-- N.S N. 120 010 010 011-- Ont. Second Round 100 000 020 301-- 010 001 101 000-- N.B Nfld Manitoba B.C, 001 010 201 130-- 210 101 000 002 P.E.I. Ontario 000 011 110 202-- Aiverta N.S. Quebec 010 100 102 010-- 6| weights. George Foster Cincin- 003 031 020 101--11) nati, knocked out Maurice Tra- 201 121 122 020--14) 010 000 000 203-- 6] ny 203 030 401 010-14 a Pee we te Jimmy Fields, | 2 7 021 010 101 020-- g| Knocked out 7 900 101 102 100-- 6) 6 7 4 9 7 000 300 002 001-- 6 8 000 304 400 320--16) 010 010 021 002-- 7! |Leicester City vs. Manchester | ca City Blackburn Rovers vs. City SCOTTISH FA CUP {Celtic vs. Hearts | sido sxupcadrt tag ae mae Norwich LAST NIGHT'S FIGHTS Philadelphia -- Luis Rodri- :George Benton, 157, Philadel- 'phia, 9. | PARIS -- Yoland Leveque, | France, out-pointed Art Hernan- dez, Omaha, Neb., 10, middle- vant, France, 6, lightweights. Wellington, New Zealand -- anuel Santos, 134144, New Zea- 12. Angeles, Sassari, Sardinia Winstone, 124%, Andrea , 123%, Italy, 15. DEALING YOUR CAR ? The man to see is MITCH KOWAL it ONTARIO. MOTOR SALES LTD. Oshawe -- 725-6501 Howard Britain, Silanos, The Whole Thing ? Hey, Joe! Feel Sick About _. NONEED TO WHEN YOU CONSULT HOLLAND LUMBER BUILDING EXPERTS scored a goal in each game and} for 15 years, said: Mott has a goal and an assist.) Hampshire Amateur Swimming) "'I"ve no doubt I was right.\¢te-, osk about Group Membership The third Canadian | line,| Association's elimination race|I know I've been accused of|Plan. |which centre Roger Bourbon-! Feb. 26 for the national cham-!lack of humanity but according' Information -- 723-6101 never have scored 50 goals in '0 in 1960-61 the same season because the next year I' scored only 23 goals and everyone said I was finished."' His 50 goals in the 1960-61 season tied him with former Montreal star Rocket Rich- ard. Bobby Hull of Chicago Black Hawks equalled the mark in 1961-62 and again this season with New York Rangers in 1958- 59. He registered his first NHL shutout in his second year with the Bruins Statistics released by NHL headquarters today show that) besides his 50th goal, Hull also picked up two assists last week | to boost his league - leading points total to 87, 20 more than) teammate Stan Mikita who) leads the league in assists with 42 RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH 5.00 PER DAY Aas chs MILEAGE CHARGE 725-6553 RUTHERFORD"S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS 725-6553 14 ALBERT ST, Oshawa FINISH YOUR BASEMENT ADD A RECREATION ROOM There's still Time to Custom Finish a lovely Family Ree, Room before Summer weather gets you out-of-doors . . . improve your home . . . and added family living enjoyment. For Modern plains, ideas, and quality materials be sure te see RAY HOLLAND. He'll give all the heip possible, and recommend a reputable builder, if desired. @ FREE DELIVERY SERVICE ® HOLLAND LUMBER CO. R. R. 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