MONTREAL (CP) -- Mont- real Canadiens and Chicago Black Hawks continue to battle for top spot in the National Hockey League with the Mont- real Canadiens holding 80 points to Chicago's 79. The Canadiens, bidding for their eighth championship in 10 years, have six games left while the Hawks, who have never won the Stanley Cup, have five. With two weeks remaining, Boston Bruins could decide the ehampionship. The Bruins, who have a chance of vacating the cellar position they have occu- pied for the last five seasons, face the Hawks three times and the Canadiens twice. Chicago. also meets Detroit Red Wings at Detroit and the Canadiens at Montreal. Four of the Hawks five games are on the road. Montreal also has two games with Toronto Maple Leafs and one with New York Rangers. Toronto holds third place with 71 points, three jaore than the fourth-place Red Wings. The VANCOUVER (CP) -- Chuck} Hay of Scotland, an easy-going! veteran of two previous tourna-| ments, opened the international curling championships Monday Scots Upset Champions, Easy Win For Canadians last rock with a one-point lead and the house empty. Hay did not throw last rock. The American rink curls out of Fargo, N.D., although Dr. with an 8-7 upset of the United) Zbacnik, Roberts, 23, Michael| States champiun, Dr. Joe Zbac-|Q'Leary, 23, and Gerald Tout- TIM McCARVER,; St. Louis Cardinals catcher, is aided by Pittsburgh Pirates Jim Maloney Signs; Yankee Veteran Hot By HAL BOCK Associated Press Sports Writer It was the first day of spring) so Jim Maloney ended the win-| ter of his discontent and Whitey Ford, Bill Monbouquette and) Dean Chance served notice it could be a long, hot summer for American League hitters. 1 Baseball 'Linescores By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS nik. Dr. Zbacnik had predicted his! American rink would breeze| through the four-day competi-| tion undefeated. Hay, 35, a grey- ing Perth farmer, lived up t9) advance billing as the man to} watch--he is the only skip in the| tournament with previous inter- national experience. | Victory left Scotland tied for! first place with Norway and) Canada, the other first-round) winners. Ron Northcott of Cal-| gary crushed Lars Dracke of Stockholm, Sweden, 16-4 and} Nels Weidemann of Trondheim won 12-8 over France's first en-! try in the tournament, Jean Sul- pice of Megeve. Switzerland's Kundert rink of to| Rigi - Kaitbad drew the first- jround bye. In today's second round, Swe- den (0-1) meets Norway (1-0), | Switzerland (0-0) meets Scot- land (1-0) and the U.S. (0-1) trainer Danny Wehlan after being hit by Nelson Briles' wild pitch. St. Louis won the game 6-3 in St. Peters- | burg, Florida, Maloney had been holding out)been saying $40,000, flew at Fresno, Calif., over contract|Fresno Monday and emerged terms while Cincinnati Reds/with Maloney's signature on a trained in Tampa, Fla. He ar-| $46,000 pact. gued his 20-9 record and two no-| Meanwhile, Ford, Monbou- hitters last season were worth) quette and Chance were pitch- goes against France (0-1); -- ing. The rinks wil) continue the Cincinnati's assistant general' Jord, 37, of New York Yank- round robin through seven manager, Phil Seghi, who had ees, worked six innings and al-\roynds Tuesday and Wednes- | lowed just two hits as New York day, The top four rinks enter a |blanked Los Angeles Dodgers! pjayoff Thursday after all four- 3-0. somes have played each other Monbouquette, traded to De-| once. | troit Tigers after eight seasons At Orlando, Fla. with Basten Red ie. worked HAY THE FAVORITE ant, 33, all live in Moorhead, Minn. CANADA WINS EASILY Northcott's Canadian champi-| ons simply overpowered Lars Dracke's Swedish four, rated the best of the continental Euro- pean entries. The Canadians scored on nine of the 12 ends and included threes on the fifth, seventh and ninth ends. Northcott, 30, George Fink,| 26, Bernie Sparkes, 25, and Fred) Storey, 34, hope to revenge a} loss by Canada in the 1965 tour- nament. Bud Somerville of Superior, Wis., ended a streak of six straight championships by Ca-}| nadian rinks when he won the tournament last year. Weidemann gave Norway its victory by scoring two in the| eighth and three in the ninth to} extend a 6-5 advantage to 11-5.) Weidemann's rink includes his cousin, lead Johan Lefstad, 17, the youngest curler in the tour-} nament. | RESULTS | VANCOUVER (CP) -- First-| round results of the interna- tional curling championships} here Monday night: | Lowly Bruins Could Decide Race For NHL Championship Leafs have two games in hand over Detroit. The remaining two games be- tween the teams could be the deciding iacior ia seétiliag third place. SURE OF TITLE Bobby Hull of Chicago Is al- most sure of winning the indi- vidual scoring championship, Hull has 93 points, including a record 53 goals, and a 19-point lead over team-mate Stan Mi- kita, whose 74 points include a league-leading 47 assists. Hull has five games remain- ing to pick up four points to break the record of most points in a season, set in 1958-59 by _-- Moore, former Montreal star. Three players are tied for third place in the scoring with 71 points each. They are Bobby Rousseau and Jean Beliveau of Montreal and Detroit's Gordie Howe, The Vezina Trophy race among netminders has devel- oped into a two-team affair be- tween Montreal and Chicago. Montreal's Lorne Worsley and Charlie Hodge have 160 goals against while the Chicago com- bination of Glenn Hall and rookie Dave Dryden has 169. | Roger Crozier of Detroit con- hs a Mu |tinues to lead in shutouts with aor ce seven. Reg Fleming of New York took over as penalty leader after he was assessed 22 min- Douglas Awaiting Moment Of Truth MONTREAL (CP) Kent Douglas, Toronto Maple Leafs' defenceman, will know by Thursday whether he will re- |ceive additional punishment on| Simmons, NY top of automatic fines for his part in a Saturday night fracas at Maple Leaf Gardens. Clarence Campbell, National Hockey League president, said Monday he has not received the officials' reports of a fight be- tween Douglas and Chicago Black Hawk winger Doug Mohns. The Toronto defence- man pushed linesman John d'Amico and then tossed a punch at the official. Douglas received a minor utes last week, giving him 150 minutes for the season. The Rangers Jead team totals with 834 minutes. The leaders: GA Pts. PiM 53:40 93 66 27 47.74 = 54 28 43 71. 18 28 43 71 = «(77 Beliveau, Mtl 26 45 71 44 Uliman, Det 29 40 69 33 Delvecchio, Det 29 37 66 4 Nevin, NY 32 60 Richard, Mtl 37 Mahovlich, Tor 23 Pulford, Tor Esposito, Chi Marshall, NY Oliver, Bos Bucyk, Bos |Ratelle, N | Keon, Tor | Provost, Mtl | Hay, Chi Smith, Det | Maki, Chi Record of goalkeepers: G GA SO Avge 46 «(105 24 1 Totals 64 Chi 60 Dryden, Chi 10 Chicago totals 65 Bower, Tor 29 |Sawchuk, Tor 24 |Gamble, Tor 8 |G, Smith, Tor 3 |A. Smith, Tor 2 | Toronto totals | Crozier, Det | Bassen, et Gardner, Det | Detroit totals |Giacomin, NY | Maniago, NY Hull, Chi Mikita, Chi Rousseau, Mtl Howe, Det | Worsley, Mtl 61 9 1 5 35 23 il 65 35 29 7 166 13 1 183 127 76 37 242 121 99 34 Se&essusaeaessesse | NY totals Parent, Bos | Johnston, Bos | Cheevers, Bos Ring, Bos Boston totals dk edt alk el dl ool salt db ook vod gal ol dhol sk sol ok | SoOKHHNMSNSONISSHASOSFe HN ROM OD ow ce Mom DA mS OO 8 8 1 4 64 259 «2 4.05 Empty - net goals against: Worsley 3, Bower 1, Sawchuk 1, Crozier 2, Bassen 1, Giacomin 2, Johnston 1. Note: Games column shows number of games in which goal- keeper appeared, not complete THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, March 22, 1966 7 LONDON (CP)--The' Profes- sional Golfers. Association of Great Britain and municipal of- ficials from St. Andrews gave a welcome Monday to plans by the. Alean gro for a rich tion beginning next year at the Old Course of St. Andrews. Tom Jones, chairman of the PGA here, told a press confer- ence that the event marks a "new era in championship com- petitions in this country." Two tournaments will be will be for 50. British pros and five other invited competitors. The premiere event, to be the Year championship, will match 12 North American and ; five British pros. Top prize will The "North American golfers 9|Must qualify in four 1967 tour- naments: The Colonial National 'at Fort Worth, Tex., the West- ern Open at Chicago, the Cleve- land Open and the Philadelphia Golf Classic. British golfers also known as the Alcan Golfer of|' British PGA Welcomes _ Rich Double. Tournament 0 in_negotia of companies! his golf competi-| th played at the same time. One| repo. Duncan Carlyle Campbell Montreal, an Alcan vi \- dent, said the company had de- cided to sponsor a tournament because of the wide-spread in- terest in golf. Hebert Tops qualify in four tournaments in Britain. Monday's Games At Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Kansas City 010 000 000-- 1 92)seven shutout innings as the Ti- Minnesota = 202 002 31x--10 12 0| gers rocked Baltimore Orioles Los oe oh 000-- 0 a; Krausse, Segui (6), Allen (6),|7-0. New York 001 001 O1x-- 3 71) Grzenda (8) and Bryan; Roland,|,".. ey Aes a Singer, Willhite (5), Miller (8)| Morris (3), Glo (8). Fosnow| HURLS THREE-HITTER and Roseboro, Torborg (5);|(7), Crider (9) and Battey, W--|, Chance, hoping to bounce Ford, Ramos (7) Womock (9)! Joland. L--Krausse. HR: Minn) back after a 15-10 record last Norway 020 121 023 001--12 France 103 000 100 210-- 8 |penalty, a major, a misconduct and a game misconduct as the Leafs downed the Hawks 4-2. He |picked up an automatic $25 fine 'for the misconduct and was as- |sessed $50 automatically for the games played. Goal average is based on number of minutes played. Penalties in minutes by clubs: Boston 710, Chicago 719, Detroit 730, Toronto 749, Montreal 817, Hay was clearly the favorite with the crowd of 3,246 in-his game against Dr. Zbacnik, who surprised staid Vancouver curl- ers with his predictions of vic- tory. 111 023 303 101--16 000 200 010 010-- 4 Canada Sweden HELPS GAME Lord Alexander of Tunis, post-war Canadian Governor- General, a director of Alcan and a self-styled "old retired soldier who has never had a handicap below 14," thought the event -- be a "terrific boost" to golf. Hillis Pickens of Montreal, one of the prime movers behind the scheme, has been involved Nicklaus Seeking Full Membership COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)--The Golfers Association gave its ap- proval Monday to Jack Nick- lJaus' application for full mem- bership in the _ Professional Golfers Association. Nicklaus, last year's leading Southern Ohio Professional! 9 Money List PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP)~ Lionel Hebert's $21,000 first- prize money in the Citrus Open shot him to the top this week in official Professional Golf As- sociation winnings for the year. Hebert has $27,647 in official winnings and nothing events not sponsored by PGA. He took the top spot from Phil Rodgers, who picked up $1,583 in the Citrus Open. That gave Rodgers $23,960 in official earnings, good for sec- ond place. His unofficial earn- hg for the year stand at $28,- In third place is Arnold Palmer, with $18,834 in official earnings and an unofficial take of $37,114. Gay Brewer is fourth with $18,177 and $21,113. eg money winner on the PGA tour, still must win approval of the national] PGA's application board. He will appear before that board next Monday at West Palm Beach, Fla. | Nicklaus flew here Sunday from Orlando, Fla., to appear before his regional PGA board. He asked the board to accept his 24-tournament schedule of 1965 as a full year of competi- tion. He failed to meet the 25- tournament minimum require- ment for apprentice PGA mem- bers because one tournament Hay, John Bryden, 38, Allan Scotland 10 032 002 00x-- 8} game penalty. New York 834. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS he entered was cancelled. aniioeeiiiaiea and Gibbs, Fernandez (7). w8 ilive | Season, hurled three-hit ball for|Glen, 32, and David Howie, 38, United States 061 100 210 11x-- 7 Ford. L'-- Singer. HR: NY-- | six innings in California Angels'!ali Scottish farmers who eurl| Clinton. |1-0 victory over Cleveland Indi-| oyt of Perth, oroke open a tight| duel in the fifth and sixth ends Twins! by scoring five to go ahead 6-2, STANDINGS VANCOUVER (CP) -- Stand- ings after the first round of the international curling champion- ships: At Long Beach, Cal. s. At Miami, Fla. San Fran. -- 0013000 010-- 2 90 Elsewhere, Minnesota Detroit 301 000 102-- 7120 Chicago N 000040 00x-- 4 92 ripped Kansas City Athletics) Dr. Zbacnik, 28, who includes Baltimore 000 900 000-0 50 Estelle, Perry (6) and Hiatt;|10-1, Chicago White Sox!road work and isometic exer- Monbouquette, Pena (8) and/Elisworth, Abernathy () and! whacked Boston 10-4, St. Louis|cises in his rink's training pro- Freehan; Bunker, Bertaina (7)| Hundley. W -- Ellsworthi L--| Cardinals downed Pittsburgh Pi-| gram, cut the edge to 8-7 after and Carreon. W--Monbouquette.! Estelle. HRs: Chi--Browne. SF|Tates 6 - 3, Cincinnati shaded/11 ends, after switching from L--Bunker. --Fuentes, Houston Astros 5-4, Chicago|the knockout game to the draw. | Cubs defeated San Francisco| Bruce Roberts, who throws ; Giants 4-2 and New York Mets last rock for Dr. peagee failed beat Atlanta Braves 7-2. to put either of his rocks into 000 008 000-0: 2 1| Ford allowed the only Dodg-|an empty house in the 12th and 000 010 00x-- 1 41) 4, hits--singles by Lou John-|final end. It left Hay holding | Bell, Kelley (7) and Azcue;|son in the second and Jeff Tor- es sae Chance, Gatewood (7) R. Egan|borg in the fifth. The veteran} Packs BE Te toes eke| SKINNY, Young Student a core, Fi Is Heroine Of Poland : At West Palm Beach, Fla. | Dooley Womack worked the last ---- 4 bd ide bbe New York N 230 100 001--.7 72) three innings and Lou Clinton Nuxhall, Tsitouris (6), Baid-| Atlanta 110 000 000-- 2 75) homered for the Yankees. schun (9) and Edwards; Fisher, Nischwitz (6) and Can- Monbouquette, 10-18 with the NEW YORK (AP)--Tall and; When the Olympics come up Coombs, Lee (4), Zachary (5),\nizzaro; Johnson, Olivo (3), Le-| ed Sox last year, combined kinny with a gaunt face and alin Mexico City in 1968, this long- Owens (8) and Bateman, Heath| master (5) and Hancock Clark| With Orlando Pena to blank the! : ohae Irena Kriszenstein is| stemmed Polish girl 'with three (6); W--Nuxhall. L--Coombs.! (7). W--Fisher L--Johnson. HR: dea while Detroit pounded Poland's national heroine. : more years of maturity, may HR: Hou--Bateman. Atl--Mathews, Wally Bunker and Frank Ber- The 20-year-old sprinter, a capture four gold medals. University of Warsaw student,' 'This would put her on a ped- will be the featured personality/ esta] with the late Babe Didrik- when the Polish men's and)con Zaharias, sensation. of the | taina for 12 hits. Shortstop Dick McAuliffe led the attack with a triple, double and two singles STRUCK OUT FIVE women's track teams meet the| 1932 Games in Los Angeles, and out five and| United States' best at Berkeley.) Holland's Fanny Blankers Koen, in his six-inning!.Calif., July 16-17. winner of four gold medals at |stint against the Indians. The! On successive evenings in|tondon in 1948. Chance struck (9) and Romano, Josephson (9);| Duffalo, Neville (6) Gillingan| walked ee (1) and C.) Angels scored the game's only, Warsaw last August, she ran|-- Sanchez; I--'run in the fifth inning when|away from two of America's| Wilson, Rohr (8) and Nixon. W (8). Henderson (9) and Coker; Jackie Warner doubled and| Olympic champions -- Wyomia| --Howard. L -- Wilson. HRs: Leal, F. Sanchez " came around on an infield out) Tyus in the 100 metres and) Chi -- Josephson. Bos -- Nixon,|Sanchez. W--F. Conigliaro. Henderson. and a wild pitch. Edith McGuire in the 200 me-) LONDON (AP) The Twins, who succumbed to} tres. She also spearheaded vic-\Old Country Dodger speed in the World Ser-| tory in the relay and won the Monday. ies last year, took on a go-go| women's broad jump. ENGLISH LEAGUE look of their own by swiping Thirty thousand Poles stood in Division I five bases, four in one inning,| their seats to cheer her. Leicester 1 Chelsea 1 Irv Ungerman Counters s Threat To Stop Fight in their lopsided victory over) When she walks on Warsaw Division IT the Athletics. Tony Oliva kept) streets, traffic stops. Small chil- Mansfield Town 0 Shrewsbury 3 TORONTO (CP)--Irving Ung Next Ungerman managed to| Minnesota's power structure in- dren «rush up to touch: her rman, @ newcomer to boxing/get a clause in the original|tact with a two-run homer, one|Many clamor for her auto. A Division IV who manages George Chuvalo, Clay-Terrell contract, matching) of 12 Twin hits graph: ; Newport 1 Crewe Alex 0 Monday night cleared up a situ-|Chuvalo against the winner.| John Romano, Tomthie Agee! Last year Irena tied the world| Port Vale 0 Hartlepools 0 ation that was threatening to|Then, when Terrell refused to| and Lee Elia smacked three) women's record for the 100 me-|50uthport 1 Chesterfield 0 stop the controversial match come to terms for his title fight hits apiece leadirig 'a 16-hit Chi-| tres in 11.1 seconds and bettered| Stockport 1 Bradford C 1 -- Cassius Clay next Tues-'with Clay, Chuvalo's manager)cago attack to beat Boston,| the 200-metre mark with 22.7.| SCOTTISH LEAGUE y was waiting in the wings with} » Conig : |She starred in the relay. She) Division I The threat came from Chris his fighter, et are an beat Britain's Olympic cham-|Dundee U 1 Rangers 0 Dundee, who said in Miami he' And now Ungerman has sur: Alex Johnson drove in two Pion and world record-holder,|Partick 2 Celtic 2 os aga aa peer eae 'o rounded his Canadian heavy-| runs with a petite a single! Mary Rand, in the broad jump.'Dumfermline 2 Aberdeen 3 psn di = 2 an - agen {wrote champion with some of|and Nelson Briles pitched five) ous contract for a Chuvalo-Levi| the pixing Weed. thew "thee innings of one-hit ball as St. Scotland Canada Norway U.S. Sweden France xSwitzerland x--Bye At St. Petersburg, Fla. Pittsburgh 000001 020-- 3 63 Z St. Louis 010 100 40x-- 6 12 0| Cleveland Gelnar, Walker (4), Knoch| California (7) and Gonder, Price (6); Briles, Simmons (6) and Mc- Carver, W--Briles. L--Gelnar.| HR: St.L--Johnson. At Palm Springs, Cal. L 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 At Winter Haven Fla. Mexico Ci Chicare A At Mexico City 100 300 312--10 1632 ../ ; Boston 000 301 000-- 4 51 Cinci. (N) 000 000 001 00-- 1 72 Lamabe, Howard (5). Bolo Mex. City 000 000 001 01~ 2100 --Results of soccer matches Forte match tonight. The contract had been signed before Chuvalo agreed to re- place World Boxing Association champion Ernie Terrell against Clay. dini) Brown, a former aide, joined the Chuvalo camp Monday and wil! work with the Canadian until fight night. Former champion Joe Louis Clay Louis ended a three-game losing streak by whipping Pittsburgh. Jack Baldschun pitched out of |a bases-loaded, none-out jam in the ninth, saving Cincinnati's victory over Houston, John "It left. us unable to fill the Joined the Chuvalo supporting|Bateman homered for the As- commitment against' Forte in|cast last week along with Izzy| Miami tonight," Toronto businessman, said. "Dundee wanted to make sure the matter wold be.cleared up, s0 we agreed to compensate} them financially. A sum of! money will be posted with law- yers today. If George wins they'll get more than he loses."" Ungerman's action was just another in a long list he has taken to match Chuvalo against! Clay, generally recognized as/ world heavyweight champion. He trjed to get a match for against Clay by match- Toronto boxer against r champion Floyd Patter- son and Terrell. Chuvalo lost both on decisions. if in Terrell's corner last Novem- ber when the WBA champ dis- posed of Chuvalo. Whitey Bimstein of New York, a veteran cut man, will also be in Chuvalo's corner when he goes against Clay. Meanwhile, a partial list of outlets in 22 United States cities| televising the fight was released in New York Monday night by Main Bout Inc., the group handl- ing the closed-circuit telecast. Mike Malitz, executive vice- president of Main Bout. said the TV sites have a potential seat- Ing capacity of 125,000. An an- nouncement on, Canadian out- lets will be made later, Ungerman, a Kline of Chicago, who worked} COAST PAST BRAVES | The Mets, who usually give in the first two innings on four Braves' errors and coasted past Atlanta. Tom Cheney, who holds the} record for most major league strikeouts in a game is trying to make a comeback. Cheney struck out 21 batters in a 16-inning game against Bal- timore Orioles in 1962. It turned out to be his one claim to fame | before he tore the muscles in his forearm in 1964 and was forced to place himself an: the |voluntary retired list Now, after a 1'4-year layoff: jhe is trying for a comeback with Washington Senators, | runs away'on errors, scored five} FABULOUS EUROPEAN TOURS =. 014 including special Economy Excursion air fare from Mont- real effective April 1, subject to government approval. _ Here's the biggest bargain ever offered in European tours. See the places you've always dreamed of. You've never guessed how inexpensive a European tour can be. BOAC's "European Vacations '66" offers you tours taking in the whole of Europe, including the Middle East and Iron Curtain countries. Get details today. Fill in the coupon now and send for our free 72-page full color guide or see your Travel Agent. To BOAC, P.O, Box 426, Station B, Montreal 2, Quebec. Please send me z free 72-page book, 'European Vacations '66"', telling' me how I can have a tour of Europe from as little as $314. NAME: ADDRESS: CITY: eocninetanesetantinjesinanpseonnnns EAD NB sssccinasts PIR OVEN CB isc > BOAC BRITISH OVERSEAS. AIRWAYS CORPORATION WITH AIR CANADA 3 See 8 8 ee oe ee ae a good taste du MAURIER, the cigarette of du MAURIER KING Light up a du MAURIER and enjoy something special: the full, rich flavour of select Virginia tobaccos, aged for mildness. du MAURIER also has the exclusive Millecel Super Filter, the most effective filter yet developed. du MAURIER, the cigarette of good taste, in the distinctive red and silver package ee today's finest smoking pleasure, Beh» Symbol of Quality. _