Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Jan 1966, p. 8

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

@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday. January iv; i786 Czech Goalie Foils TORONTO (CP) -- Vladimirjbest part of the show for 8,041|was veteran Vladimir Nadrchal Dzurilla, the Czech goaltenderjdisenchanted fans who watched|who bore the brunt of the Ca- whom Toronto Maple Leafs have|the Czech national team defea{|nadians' sharpshooting in one of on their negotiation list, won't}Canada 5-1 Sunday. It was altheir finest performances in be playing in the National decisive reversal of the meeting] years. But the Czechs were full Hockey League until at least/between the same two clubs in|value for their victory Sunday, 1968. But he'll take fond mem-|Kitchener, Saturday night, \their first in four meetings with ories of Maple Leafs Gardens|which the Canadians won 7-3. |Canada on their current North back to Czechoslovakia. The Czechs gave Dzurilla the| American tour. Cuurilla's acrobatics were the|night off in' Kitchener and it) Dzurilla, who won't be avail- lable for any professional offers until after the 1968 Winter Olym- |pics, was beaten only once, 'Canu To Avenge Saturday Defeat Matte Named Top Player As Colts Thump Dallas MIAMI, Fila. AP() -- Tom Matte, who almost quarter- backed Baltimore Colts into the National Football Leaguee championship game, led them to a 35-3 victory over Dallas Sunday in the consolation tilt. The performances pose for coach Don Shula the problems of what to do with Matte next season. "J don't know," said Shula. "I guess I'll have to keep the Matte offence in our play book, though." Matte, in only his third pro- fessional game as quarterback, was voted the outstanding player in the playoff game be- fore 65,569 in the Orange Bowl He earned the award on his passing. When he was first rushed into the quarterback breach _ be- cause of injuries to John Unitas and Gary Cuozzo Matte had a slim repertoire of plays mostly running. Still the Colts defeated Los Angeles Rams 20-17 and in a playoff for the Western Con- ference title lost 13-10 in over- time to Green Bay Packers. Matte passed 17 times against the Cowboys complet- ing seven. Two of them went 15 and 20 yards to Jimmy Orr for touchdowns. Two more of 37 and 52 yards set up second- period touchdowns which gave Baltimore a 14-3 half-time edge.| jond - quarter touchdown after wee coc on tied for|C@tching a 52-yard rocket from second place in the Eastern| Matte. Conference by winning five of| End. John Mackey's catch of their last seven games ran into|@ 37-yard pass from Matte set| a fierce Colt defence. up Baltimore's first touchdown) Dallas put together only one|/--® six-yard run by Lenny} wistained drive on the passing) Moore--after a scoreless first | ef Don Meredith in the second| Period. quarter. The Cowboys reached) The six-foot 205,-pound Matte the Colt four with a first down|had been a substitute halfback TOM MATTE | f)who is on New York Rangers' | sociation |when George Faulkner finished off a first-period power play to give the Canadians a temporary 1-1 tie. HE'S FLAWLESS His performance the rest of the way was flawless. He was particularly adept making stick- Saves that played the puck safely out of reach of the Ca- nadian attackers. | Dzurilla had plenty of help from his team - mates. The |Czechs outskated and out- \checked their opponents and jtheir defencemen blocked. as | many shots as the goaltender. By contrast, Canada's defen- jsives lapses were responsible for all five Czech goals. Three came on breakaways, two of them while the visitors were shorthanded. Jaroslav Holik, Josef Cvach, Vaclav Nedomansky, Stanislav Pryl and Jiri Holik were the Czech marksmen. Nedomansky, a big centre Petes Tie Habs To Grab First | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Peterborough Petes moved into sole possession of first place in the Ontario Hockey As- Junior A_ standings | Sunday night by battling Mon- |treal Junior Canadiens to a 1-1 ucks negotiation list, scored one of) the most spectacular goals. . of Jaroslav Holik off for interfer- ence, he stole the puck on a} faceoff in his own end and| cruised in unmolested to beat) Canadian goalie Ken Broderick! at close range. CANADIANS BOOED The crowd booed the Cana-! dians, who appeared disorgan-| ized most of the way and missed a number of scoring opportun- ities through poor shooting or} inability to get their shots away. The Czechs took eight of the laway in the third, game's 11 penalties but killed most of them without difficulty. Before 33 J in Aitchener dat ry pow. a urday; play was a 'more potent-weapon, | accounting. tor. three "of = goals. Faulkner scared twice and the other tallies came from Paul Conlin, Gary Dineen, Rick Mc- Cann, Terry O'Malley and play- ing-coach Jackie Macleod. Josef \Golonka, Jan Klapac and Jiri Holik replied for the Czechs. Canada jumped into a 3-0 lead before Golonta put Czechoslo- vakia on the score sheet on a first-period power play. Each |team scored once in the second! 'period before Canada pulled) There were 16 penalties, split jevenly between the two teams. SEA STILL UNKNOWN Only about five per cent of) the .sea's bed has been accur- | ately charted. Sh 7 ie erhrooke Tons Cezchs For Their Second Win PRAGUE (CP - Reuters) -- The touring Sherbrooke Beay- ers hockey team defeated the Czecholovak national ju- nior team 7-3 Sunday night for NHL LEADERS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Standings: Chicago, won 21, jlost 10, tied three, points 45, Points: Hull, Chicago, 55. Goals: Hull, 32. Assists: Rousseau, Montreal, 6. Shutouts: Crozier, Detroit, 5. Penalties: Green, Boston, 97 minutes. 7 <y WEEKEND STARS Rv TSE CANADIAN PRESS | Chariie Hodge, wno gained his} jist Suit amie Season as jMontreal Ce: oped! Montreal ped Boston Brats 4-9" Sa Norm Ullman, who scored a its second win in three g in Czechoslovakia. The Beavers 1965 Allan Cup winners got two goals in each of the first and second periods and three in the final period while holding the Czechoslovak team to one score in each period. Scoring for the Beavers who won the Ahearne Cup in Stock- holm before starting a tour of Czechoslovakia were left- winger Larry Drouin with two playing - coach Georges. Roy }} goal and isted on another as Detroit Red Wings downed Tor- T0 DEFEND TITLE SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Wiseh Kiorde of the Philippines has signed to defend his junior" lightweight boxing title in San Francisco. against Mexico's Ricardo Moreno on Feb. 21, matchmaker Don Chargin an- nounced Friday. onto Maple Leafs 3-1 Saturday. Vie Hadfield, who scored two goals and assisted on another as New York Rangeers over- whelmed Chicago Black Hawks 64 Saturday. Roger Crozier, who kicked out 40 shots, 17 of them in the final period, and Detroit defeated Montreal 4-2 Sunday. Bernie Parent, who stopped 24 shots, including several from point-blank range, as Boston beat New York 3-1 Sunday. right - winger Maurice Hurtu-| Bill Hay, who scored a goal bise left-winger Rejean Richer|and assisted on two others to captain Rene Pepin and centre/lead Chicago to a 5-3 victory Gilles Cartier. over Toronto Sunday. EARN UR TO $100 A WEEK OR MORE _ BIG PAY JOBS WAITING for MARVEL GRADUATES, Marvel Hairdressing Schools in principle cities offer ex- clusive "MARVEL TOUCH" training. Cornplete course DAY or EVENINGS. For free brochure, write or visit MARVEL BEAUTY SCHOOLS Established over 40 years. Dept. OT, 219 Bloor St. W. Toronto See those giant wide doors? Handi-Van is easy to load and unload. Two curbside doors may be specified, and then there are a number of extra window combinations available. -- tie in a game that erupted into a third-period brawl. The tie pushed the Petes a} |point ahead of Oshawa Gener- als, who lost 5-4 Saturday waht, to Hamilton Red Wings. In another Sunday contest, St.| |Catharines Black Hawks teed joff against the seventh-place Kitchener Rangers 11-1 and moved out of last place. The brawl in Montreal broke out at 6:9 of the third period when Danny Grant of the Petes checked Montreal defenceman but were stopped in their tracks and Danny Villanueva kicked a 12-yard field goal. Jerry Logan recovered a fumble on the Dallas 25 in the third quarter and fullback Jerry Hill plunged for a touch- down five plays later. Hill also boomed three yards for a sec- NHL BIG SEVEN By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bobby Hull scored one goal and picked up three assists in two weekend National Hockey League games to boost his in- dividual scoring lead to 55 points. Hull, Chicago Black Hawks' left winger, has a league-lead- ing 32 goals and 23 assists, giv- ing him a 13-point lead over runners-up Norm Ullman of De- troit Red Wings and Bobby Rousseau of Montreal Canaai- ens, who are tied for second place. play maker with % ne. Stan Mikita of Chicago slipped to fourth place in the scoring with 40 points, two more than Gordie Howe of Detroit | Alex Delvecchio of Detroit is} in sixth place with 35 points and Jean Beliveau of Montreal rounds out the big seven with 34 points. with the Colts for five seasons|Carol Vadnais into the boards. until the quarterback crisis de-|Sticks and gloves were tossed veloped. |to the ice as two Peterborough He was @ quarterback at/players and three from Mon- Ohio State, but since then had/treal left their benches to join thrown only a couple on the|the free-for-all. halfback option play. START AGAIN But Matte's ic s y ti be vote daly a gpd Officials stopped the brawl! but! land (Joe) Matte, a native of 2% Teferee Dennis McMannus . |was figuring out the penalties, Bourget, Ont., had a lengthy | Vadnais and Grant started -- professional hockey career that} ling all over again. included a stint with Chicago} i A total of 60 minutes in pen-| on pene ee Nee alties was handed out for the| Hockey League. --. --" four 10-minute | WOMAN GLIDER | yet yon for the Petes in| |the first period and Larry Pleau IS QUITE A GUY replied for Montreal in the sec- ond, JOHANNES BURG (Reut- | St. Catharines movéd a point ers -- Yvonne Leeman 34- |ahead of London Nationals as year-old South African flyer | Ken Laidlaw led the Hawk scor- who broke the women's world|ing parade with three goals. gliding speed record last enn Latinovich and Doug Shel- week disciosed Sunday sie ;** ed two each while Jean| was a "man" until a sex- |Paul LeBlanc, Willie 'Paral change operation four years | Kerry Bond and Richie Bayes ago. jadded one apiece. Jim Krulicki! Miss Leeman told the Jo- |Scored for Kitchener. hannesburg Sunday Times | Hamilton moved into fourth | she underwent an extensive |Place, a point ahead of Mon- iseries of operations in 1961|'Teal, with its Saturday upset. after years of 'fighting a hopeless battle against my what's feminity."' j "All my friends and just | The leaders: ful about my change" she | ; G A Pus.| MXit | in the Hull, Chicago 32 23 55 Miss Leeman, who broke | Ullman, Detroit 17 25 42 | the record at the South Afri- Rousseau, Montreal 16 26 42 | C4" gliding championships at Mikita, Chicago 18 22 49 | Kimberley, was known be- Howe, Detroit 16 22 38 - the operation as Edwin d Delvecchio, Detroit 12 23 35 | '#eman. ; Beliveau, Montreal 2 22 3 7 s eae Home need fixing up? DO IT NOW with HFC cash! Materials are in stock... service is prompt... and low, off-season prices mean real savings. Remodel, re- decorate, or refurnish your home. Then, repay HFC in convenient monthly amounts. Don't wait for spring, do it now--with a ee s loan from i sang oan. napa MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS oF | a@| w | | | months | months | months months moaths months $...0.) 9... | $6.12) $9.46 18.35 | 28.37 « | 23.73 | 32.86 | $1.24 Lincs mn Sarg are. Also, 41.45 | 58.11 | 91.56 i it our léwer rates | 1600 aie zs 4 . i 2500 3 } on loans over $1500. 3008 38.02 108.22 4000 | 101.01 | 117,37 | 144.30) . $000 | 126.26 | 146.71 | 180.37 Ask about credit life Insurance at low group rates Ask about our evening hours 2 OSHAWA OFFICES | Suite 208, Oshawa Shopping Ctr.--Ph. 725-1138 (northwest corner, over Fairweather's) 64 King Street East--Telephone 725-6526 osha Motel) ++ Telephone 942-6320 Above payments Include principal and interest and are based on prompt repayment, but de not include the cost of life insurance. eal ie AJAX: 66 Harwood Avenve South. (over The Abeta LC apaee ai Spat everybody has been wonder- | grade with the R.C.M.P. Why not life like TOUGH? YES, FOR ANYBODY? NO. GOOD PAY? YES, ORDINARY JOB? NO. FINE CAREER? YES, A career in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is no picnic, Neither is it grim, You like it--or you don't. There's no in-between. The force selects young mien who measure up to its standards--and offers these men a life that's rewarding and satisfying, a career they're proud to pursue. If you like the out of the ordinary, if you have a basic respect for law and order, if you like people, if you like working with other men as a team, if you are self-reliant, if you like learning new things, if you love Canada and all our country stands for--you may make ithe find out? Ask at your nearest R.C.M,P. office or write to: The Commissioner i) Royal Canadian "5 Mounted Police | Ottawa 7, Ontario » | Handi-Van can turnina35.5 foot circle. Lets you scoot out of packed traffic and de- liver your goods where and when you promised. Look at all the space. H-ndi- Van measures 211 cu. inside. That will hold up to a ton of payload. Loadspace length from engine housing back is over 92 inches. : it. * The engine is a 120-hp en- gineering gem. And if you want more muscle, you can specify a 140-hp workhorse. Powerglide is available too. The metai fioor is built to shrug off abuse from 'most any kind of load. In fact, it's a heavy duty floor at no extra cost. Handi-Van's body and frame are unitized. And the heavys_ gauge steel has extra resist- ance to corrosion, giving you longer service. You can see how great Handi-Van is from the back. But the most important thing is on the front. it's that GMC nameplate that makes the differ- ence. Not the plate itself of course, but what it represents. GMC has a reputation for Engineer- ing Leadership. For instance: realizing most Handi-Vans would be city-operated and subject to road moisture and salt, GMC engineers start- ed at the bottom. Sheet metal in exposed areas is first galvanized, then covered with aluminum paint, phosphated...then, after all that, under- coated! No wonder Handi-Van stands up so well under the worst a Canadian winter has to offer. And no wonder GMC has earned that reputation for leadership. When you're thinking vans-- think Handi-Van, by GMC. TRUCKS ENGINEERING LEADERSHIP J A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE " dm See your local GMC Truck deal THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LIMITED H. DICK PONTIAC- BUICK LIMITED 266 KING ST. W., PHONE 723-4364 Se Sure to see "The Fugitive' OSHAWA, ONT. Mondays ot 8:00 P.M, -- * The Red Skeiton tour kuesaeys et o.00 7 103 DUNDAS 'ST. EAST, WHITBY, ONT. PHONE 668-5846 one "Totoscope!! Theridevs, o# 9:20 PLM, on Channel 6

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy