Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Mar 1966, p. 12

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

3 12, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Merch 23, 1966 At left is Montreal's Carol Vadnais and at right Osh- awa's Danny Sandford --Oshawa Times Photo ley (3) are too late to keep the puck from going over prone goaltender Ian Young. first of two goals against Oshawa defencemen Barry Wilkins (6) and Nick Bever- JACQUES LEMAIRE sec- ond from right) of Montreal Junior Canadiens scores his Canada Just Breezin Along Junior Habs Shade Generals: emi-Final Series Tied 1-1 Lemaire Scores Twice Then Defence Tightens SUMMARY CANADIENS 2 -- GENERALS 1 GENERALS -- Goal: Young; Defence: Orr, Beverley, Roberts, Cadieux £in: Fx + Little, Babcock, Whi Dussiaume, Sandford. CANADIENS -- Goal: Quimet; fence: Savard, Descoteaux, Bannatyne, Vadnais, Pate; Forwards: Pleau, Gagnon, Bordeleav, Pumple, LaPaime, Liesemer, Cote, Ferguson, Stewart, Gre- nier, Burns, Lemaire. FIRST PERIOD 1, Canadiens: Lemaire {Liesemer, Vadnais) 17:47 Penalties -- White (crose-checking) :25, Vadnais (interference) 3:28, Vadnais (in- ie Fear lack, Cashman, De- Wil. ferference) 6:14, Roberts (high sticking), | Burns (high sticking) 13:01, White (high sticking) 15:09, Roberts (boarding) 16:00, O'Shea (cross checking) 18:10, SECOND PERIOD 2. Generals: White (Dussiaume) 3. Canadiens: Lemaire (Bordeleau, Vadnais) 19:32 Penalties -- Pleay (hooking) 2:04, Orr {hooking) 6:04, Savard (elbowing) 9:38, Roberts (holding) 12:27, O'Shea (face-off interference) 16:57. THIRD PERIOD No Scoring No. Penalties SHOTS 4:37 Canadiens Generals Tony's Nearing Hockey Crown | One win is all that separates | |Tony's Refreshments from the| [UAW Hockey League cham-| pionship. Tony's skated to an easy 6-2 weekend victory over Versa-} |food, to take a 2-1 lead in the} \best-of-five series. It was the! second straight defeat suffered! by Versafood after they won the opener. 7 $-% 8 5 S--18 TED OUIMET Allows One Goal DANNY O'SHEA Rest General Hawks Carry Hefty Lead Into Second Semi Game 99. 22 Oshawa Hawks carry a point lead into the second game of their. Ontario Intermediate 'A' basketball semi-final against St.) aj Fleming's 20-point effort --| Thomas Broncos |16 in the first half -- led the} The second half of the two-|winners. Tom Olinyk scored 12) with a comfortable 78-56 victory at Donevan Collegiate Saturday night, The best defence in the OHA Junior 'A' Hockey League settled a score with the circuit's most prolific offence Tuesday night at Civie Auditorium. Montreal Junior . Canadiens all but handcuffed Oshawa Gen- erals -- who scored a league high of 217 goals during the regular schedule -- to return home with a 2-1 victory to their credit. Each club now has one win in the best-of-seven semi- final series, Generals having skated to a 5-3 victory in Sun- day's.opener in Montreal. Third game fs at Montreal Forum tonight. Led by all-star Serge Savard, Canadiens demonstrated the de- fensive skill that allowed the opposition just 147 goals during} the season. Trailing 2-1 after 40 minutes, Generals controlled the play for most of the third period. Play was almost exclusively in the Montreal zone for the last five minutes. Oshawa managed only five shots. on goal during the period, however, most of their drives being kicked out of dan-| ger by defencemen. Generals' best opportunity in game total-point playoff will be! points, all in the first ithe third period came at the Chris Roberts was in the pen- alty box Jate in the first period when Canadiens went ahead 1-0. Bill White had just return- ed to the ice. With White and Roberts both. off for over a min- ute, the Oshawa penalty-killing held Canadiens to a single shot on net, Once again Wayne Cashman and Danny O'Shea were the big men on the penalty - killing team. With the sides at full strength, Oshawa's entire de- fensive unit performed credit- ably, Oddly enough, one of Osh- awa's finest scoring opportun- ities came without a shot being fired. Midway through the first period, Billy Heindl sent Bobby Orr in alone on a_ two-on-one break, but the play was whistled' dead on a dubious off- side call, The only regular for either side to miss the game was Brian Morenz. Morenz, who suffered a fractured skull in a game Saturday, is still in To- ronto General Hospital. Brian's condition is considerably im- proved, but reports are that he may be hospitalized up to six weeks. In International Competition By DOUG MARTIN | VANCOUVER (CP) -- Northcott of Calgary rode a combination of slow ice and ajWin over Lars Dracke of Sw hot hand into first place in the|den in the first round. round-robin portion of the inter-| The wins left Canada in first national curling championships|place with a 3-0 record. here Tuesday. Dr. Joe Zhacnik of the de- Northcott, 30, o ver p owered|fending champion United States Chuck Hay of Scotland in a 16-8/and Paul Kundert of Switzer- fourth-round contest. |land grabbed a share of second HOCKEY SCORES By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Southern N.B. Intermediate American League jLancaster 4 Fredericton 3 Springfield 4 Baltimore 2 (Fredericton leads best-of-five Eastern League | semi-final 2-1) Greensboro 4 Charlotte 0 | (Best-of-five Southern Divis-j ion semi-final tied 2-2) Western International Spokane 1 Kimberley 2 (Kimberley .leads best - of- seven final 3-9) Central Senior Collingwood 2.Midland 1 (Collingwood leads best - of- seven final 3-1) Manitoba Senior Maritime Junior Fredericton 2 Halifax 8 (Halifax leads best - of - five final 1-0) Ontario Junior Montreal 2 Oshawa 1 (Best-of-seven semi-final ser- jes tied 1-1) Toronto 3 Kitchener 4 (Best-of-seven semi-final ser- Warroad 4 Winnipeg 6 | jes tied 1-1) (Winnipeg wins best-of-seven) semi-final 4-3) | NOHA Junior Alberta: Senior North Bay 5 Sudbury 4 Edmonton 2 Drumheller 4 | (North Bay wins best-of-seven (Best-of-seven final tied 3-3) ° semi-final 4-2) Government May Settle Harness Racing Dispute (CP). -- Harness ;the Ontario Racing Commission they | will attempt to clear up the is- jsue The horsemen ended a two- day strike Saturday when they reached agreement with man- agement at Greenwood Race TORONTO. horsemen said Tuesday believe the provincial govern- ment will take action within a few days to settle their purse dispute with The Jockey Club Ltd. The win followed a 23-1 romp|place with fourth-round wins to, Ron| against Jean Sulpice of France|bring their records to 2-1. lin the third round and a 16-4 e- Elmer Tran was top scorer jfor the winners, with one goal jin each period. Singles came} ng nee. en po er club may have some variant period goals from Ron Myles holding on to the margin in St} and Wayne Redshavw. , Thomas, He pointed out, in St. Thomas Saturday. Despite the 22-point cushion,| "With the ice heavy and slow \the way it is, you can't try the TIED FOR FOURTH fine shots like drawing to the) Tony's held period Scotland and Sweden are tied four-foot. It bothered us too, but/1-@ and 3-0. hance' to the hal |for fourth place with 2-2 rec-\we were able to adjust easier cine' go et a ce O Meanwhile 'ho ords, while Norway follows at)hecause we use heavier weights|84™me 0° «cS st Ma indie cacash REO AR sacks 1-2, France is winless in four) in our chad, Soca of an de- uled for 11.00 'sunday morning os glty Soe Ie aie | starts. livery and because most of us 2+ Civic Auditorium. Ne Anhads? ark Bik g Brana cd Zbacnik, a Moorhead, Minn.,|have curled on natural ice at Tondon for ii provincial title. Bap pad who curls out of Fargo,}some time during our lives Hawks moved into the lead |N.D., slammed Sweden 13-6.) Most of the crowd of 3,438 ig Kundert won 15-7 over France.|nored the Canadian game to Norway drew a fourth-round spend the fourth round cheering bye on the people's choice, jaunty The fifth round today pairs! Jean Sulpice, the expressive Switzerland and the U.S., Swe-| French veteran den and France, Canada and) Sylpice has refused to become Norway. Scotland (2-2) has aldiscouraged despite losses of | bye. 12-8 to Norway, 17-9 to the U.S., | Northcott said he was sur-| 93-1 to Canada and 15-7 to Switz- prised by the ease in which he,!erland. George Fink, 26, Bernie! He drew the biggest ovation |Sparkes, 25, and Fred Storey, |of the night when he scored a |21, defeated the Scottish veteran|single point on the seventh end |Hay, the only skip with previ-|to cut a Swiss lead to 12-2. | ous tournament experience. Kundert became the first] "I know on keen ice Chuck |Swiss skip to win as many as| |Hay would have been a lotitwo games when he defeated| |tougher,"" Northcott said, |France, entered in the tourna-| |ment for the first time. STANDINGS | Kundert also upset Scotland |10-8 in @ second-round contest. VANCOUVER (CP) -- Stand-| ings after the fourth: round of| the international curling .cham-| |plonship Tuesday night: | P to play badly if Broncos are to} TONY'S 6 VERSA 2 FIRST . Tony's: (Delves, Tran MacDonald) SECOND Tran (MacDonald) ... Sutton (Ford, Dowe) . THIRD MacDonald (Weidmark) R. Myles (Redshaw) Tony's: Tran (unassisted) Tony's: Dowe (Delves) Versa: Redshaw (Armstrong 9.11 °» Last-Minute Goal sa Beat Marlboros 4 goal by rookie Walter Tkaczuk with 25 seconds left in the third period gave Kitchener Remember When... . ? Rangers a 4-3 win over Toronto By THE CANADIAN PRESS |Marlboros in Kitchener Tuesday} Henry Carr of the United /night. | States set world track rec- The win left the best-of-seven ords for 200 metres and 220 yards on a turning course three years ago today--in 1963--at Tempe, Ariz., fin- ishing in 20.3 seconds. Carr took 0.1 seconds off his own time a year later on the same track for the current records. 2. Tony's: 3, Tony's 4, Tony's 5, Versa 6 7. 8 series is in Toronto tonight. Gord Kannagiesser, Don Luce and Jim Krulicki. got the other |Kitchener goals, while Mike Corrigan, Terry Caffery and |Gerry Meehan scored for Tor- tonto. Canada Switzerland United States Scotland Sweden Norway France Poile Seeking | \Junior 'A' Club TORONTO (CP) Norman |Hawks led 41-33 at the break. {O'Shea went in alone only to Hawk coach Jim Brady feels hisjeach added turned games. Ehlert did an amazing|nearly 4,000 saw - Canadiens' how-jjob of 'checking Broncos' | leads of /cver, that Oshawa would have/scoring star Bob Mires. losers, however, with 15 points,\c@ch of the first two periods. St. Thomas man-|followed by Verne Siena ack Bill White scored for Generals| Alaska, has the smallest state Bob Melville with eight apiece.,|°8tly Ehlert, (9), B. Olinyk (12), B. Jepma (5), J. Rowden (8); B. Booth (6), T. Dejong (4), M. Boivin, G. Gunn, F, Reilly (9), D. Calder. Snowsell (8), B. Mires (18), Ta Fazakus (7), B. Gibson (7), B. Miller (7), D. Swift, R. Trow- hite (2), P, Hepburn, W. Pad- din (2), OHA Junior 'A' semi-final series|!aya _ tied a 1-1. Third game of the Paid in soda pop. half./13-minute mark, when Danny Generals boarded a train |shortly after the game en route jto Montreal for the Wednesday encounter. The fourth game is at Civic Auditorium Saturday 6'8"'| captain and top Montreal scorer) * |Jacques Lemaire score both Mires was top man for the | 8oals for the winners, one in Fred Reilly and Bob Ehlert|be stopped by goaltender Ted nine points, and|Ouimet. in brilliant defensive) A standing-room crowd of PEOPLE SPREAD THIN The largest state of the U.S in the second seventh of the playoffs. his capital, Juneau, with a popula- HAWKS: A Fleming (20), R. 'tion of 7,200, Jenkins (5), T. For The Lergest Selection Of TROPHIES For All Sporting Events and Gifts In Eastern Ontorio The G. B, Company 356 Dean Ave, Open Thurs. Evenings by Appointment 723-3961 BRONCOS: B. Melville (8), V. WORK FOR MAN Monkeys are employed in Ma-| to pick coconuts, being} Sar... V8-powered four-sleeper is a Chris-Craft, Leslie Ehriick, chairman of the horseman's purse commit- tee, said that' "'because racing is a franchise kiven by the peo- plé of Ontario" the horsemen) way for an $11,000 daily purse schedule for the remainder of the meeting that started Feb. 26 Monday (Bud) Poile, manager of Cali- fornia Seals, the San Francisco entry in the expanded National Hockey League, said Tuesday the night he will apply to the On-| agreement was WHEN A MAN PUTS HIS MONEY ON THE BARRELHEAD are certain the: government and Noble Victory Now Valued At Cool Million PHILADELPHIA (AP)--Har- ness racing has its first million- dollar horse Kenneth D. Owen, Houston, Tex., oilman, sold three-fourths of Noble Victory to a 16-man syndicate Tuesday for $750,000. He retained a $250,000 interest in the four-year-old trotter. The syndicate plans to race Noble Victory for two more years before retiring him to stud. Heading the syndicate is Alan J. Leavitt, 29-year-old Hanover, Pa., harness horse breeder Leavitt made the announcement of the purchase at Liberty Beli Park where Noble Victory is ex- pected' to make his first start under the new management May 20. Owens purchased the horse in 1963 for $33,000. Since then, No- ble Victory, trained and driven by Stanley Dancer, has earned $311,695 with 28 wins, 4 seconds and 2 thirds, It was the highest price ever paid for a harness racer. The previous record was $600,000 paid for pacer Adios Butler five years ago. Owen last year paid $450,000 for Overtrick, another pacer. "SOCCER SCORES LONDON (Reuters) Tues directors. A club statement said management representatives, in a day, exceeded the authority given them The board authorized payment which April 16 Ehrlick said horsemen meet Thursday. Entries already been filed for Thursday and Friday is scheduled will Saturday. Ehrlick,. president of the On tario Harness Horsemen's Asso- ciation, said in a statement Tuesday that the horsemen's committee is still shocked by the attitude of the Jockey Club board revoked by the club's board of agreeing to any average purse distribution for the balance of the season in excess of $10,000 of the $11,000 daily only for the balance of the present meeting, through have cards and entries are expected to be placed for fario Hockey Association for a Junior A franchise in Guelph. Poile, a former NHI. player, has been in Ontario this week | investigating possibilities of ac- quiring a Junior A club and has obtained an option to -play in the Guelph Arena. "We are anxious to. start building our player system im- mediately," he said. The Seals will move up from the Western League when the expanded major league starts operations in the 1967-68 season. Guelph had a Junior A team until three years ago when New York Rangers, holders of the franchise, transferred their team to Kitchener. The OHA Junior Council an- nounced several weeks ago that it would be interested in ex- panding its A group in line with} NHL expansion. All nine teams} in the OHA Junior A series are affiliated with NHL clubs. HE OUGHT TO GET THE BEST RUM FOR IT Captain Morgan Black Label. The rum that's aged in oak-- for smoothness you'll want to go with. Therum that's finely blended from the world's largest Fertilizers .... Peat Moss .... Evergreens ... Shade Trees .. Flower Shrubs Hedges ...... stocks of fine rums-- for flavour you'll want to stay with. J CAPTAIN MORGAN RUM Good rum to begin day night's soccer results: English League Division It LANDSCAPING DISTILLERS LIMITED with... A SPECIALTY Watford 0 Brighton 1 Division IV Lincoln 4 Barnsley 1 Scottish League Division I Allea 1 E Stirling 9 Irish League Cliftonville 0 Distillery 3 Van Belle 5 MINUTES EAST On Highway No. 2 "DROP IN OR CALL" Gorden Centre" OF OSHAWA Waterloo, Ontario Suppliers to the Royal Canadian Navy Good rum to stay Gardens with. 623-5757 quality built in Canada. Now designed and butt in Canada Natural-wood finish d color- v te che sting degen shes and color blended olstery materials give the eabin a look of warmth and luxury. Nylon carpeting and full headlining are standard equipment. Available with a 210-horsepower Chris- Craft V8 engine, this model will deliver speeds up to 33 mph. Price is only . $8990.00* FOB Stratford, Ontario. See your Chris-Craft dealer soon. For litera- ture, write Chris-Craft of Canada, ited, Stratford, Ontario, Canada. CAsdan Craft "FOB prices and specifications subject to change without notice, NOW ON DISPLAY AT The OSHAWA MARINE §=yYACHTHAVEN SUPPLIES EQUIPMENT Oshawa's Only Marina Open 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Daily New Number 723-8186 Canadian Tivers, this is as as lacrosse. Fishing, water-skiing, family fun, eom- fortable accommodations, and Chris-Craft quality are all offered in this handsome 27' Express Cruiser. There are v forward, and the wide dinette amidships -- into a At double pegs e galley is equipped for prepar- ing meals, with a sink and fresh water system, stove (which may be covered for more counterspace when not in use), ice je = key for ---- and utensils. nd there's a lavatory with sink, vanity, and linen storage locker. Harbour Rd. Off Simcoe St. S.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy