IE LAI EATS 81 RIA BCAA LSS «il 10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mendey, February 14, 1966 International Championship BANFF, Alte. ¢CP)--Nancy Greene of Rossland, B.C., gave Canada virtually its only suc- & cess of the weekend during the § first half of the Canadian inter- national ski championship--first held in Canada under sanction pf the International Ski Feder- ation. (FIS) Miss Greene captured the women's slalom Saturday by more than three seconds over Heidi Zimmerman of Austria. Two Austrians captured other con. petitions. Christ! Haas, 1964: Olympic downhill champ, won the women's giant slalom and Gerhard Nenning earned the men's slalom title. Nenning fin- ished second to Kurt Huggler of Switzerland in the men's giant slalom. The international competition --to conclude next weekend with an identical schedule at Mont Ste.-Ann, near Quebec City-- had near - perfect conditions. More than 4,000 fans, largest crowd in the history of this Rocky Mountain resort for an alpine event, watched the final § day of competition. ONLY SEVEN FINISH Miss Greene, 23-year-old sten- ographer, was one of only seven to finish two rugged runs Satur- day on the 1,000-foot Mount Nor- quay slalom course. Third be- hind Miss Zimmerman jas Miss x | Norquay ae mme on Mt. Banff. ture the women's slalom event and a gold medal Sat- urday at an international ski NANCY.-GREENE_ of Rossland, B.C. flashes under After the end of competition) next week, trophies will be} awarded to winners in men's| and women's slalom and giant} islalom competitions. Haas, followed by Karen Dokka| the finish banner to cap- 7 ie egy Spb ~leabege| only 17-100 of a second for thei erson of Banff a surprising fifth. of Italy, Stephenie Townsend of| iaced: Canada' Banff and Heather Quipp of Ot-|™en's giant slalom title. Duncan, considered Canada's tawa. |Bruggman of ee or fn none male -- poms Hag sage Miss Greene almost scored a} |ished gm i s ott pie' pari Roca scerseicakdcuen ews 0 second victory in the women's|"ance fourth and Se Lae Sunday. When she} | Sar det fat se haltway| NHL BIG SEVEN If Hull scores six goals in thejdien, picked up one goal to down the course, she was nearly] jn games remaining, he will set)move into a seventh-place tie a second ahead of Miss Haas') Norm Uliman of Detroit |? ening ag Lapras se in -- heap nae Jean Beliveau, time at the same position. She/ picked up three points during | Season. sey hy cat sarin 0 has 47 points finished fifth, less than two sec-|two weekend games to take over jent record of 5 : goals be WO! The leaders: ee eae [second place in the | National Fre and Bernie Geoffrion. | G A Pts. | The women's giant slalom} Hockey League individual scor-| Hull, Chicago 45 29 produced the tightest race of|ing race. | Ousted from second place by Utihah: Betrelt 26 33. 59 the two days. Miss Haas nipped) He got one goal and assisted| Ullman was Stan Mikita of Chi- ores : | Miss Zimmerman by 1-100 of alon two others to raise his total|\cago who picked up only one|Mikita, Chicago 24 34 58 second and Madeleine Bochatay|to 59 points. Chicago's Bobby| jassist during the weekend, up-|Howe, Detroit 23 35 58 of France was 6-100 of a second|Hull, who picked fip a goal, re-|ping his total to 58. Delvecchio, Detroit 23 30 53 further back. Burgl Faerbinger|mained the undisputed leader} Montreal's Bobby Rousseau|poiccoay Montreal 19 31 59 of Germany edged Miss Greene! with 45 goals in as many games|remained with a points total of § OS papas it for fourth place. and 29 assists for a total of 74{50. Beliveau, Montreal 17 30 47 Huggler defeated Nenning byjpoints. Henri Richard, another Cana-'Richard, Montreal 18 29 47 WATERLOO (CP)---"If you squop my wink, it'll be a diffi- cult squidge to score a plop." Sound strange? It's not a bit strange to a group of students at the Uni- versity of Waterloo who have formed = tiddly-wink club and Claim the Canadian cham- pionship for the game. Why the Canadian cham- pionship? "You see, there was no other club to challenge us," says Colin McLeod, organizer of the club which boasts more than 80 players. "Some came to laugh, but stayed to play." After a shaky start because the student's federation was a little skeptical about spon- soring the club, the organiza- 3 _|'TIDDLE TITLE NEARING Greene Wins Ladies' Slalom. ror STUDENT SQUOPPERS _ tion settled down to some hard "tiddiying."" The plan is to challenge Harvard University next nionth for the North American "wink title' and then chal- lenge Oxford University for the world title. Eight members whe really know their tiddlies (or winks) will be chosen to play the matches, but McLeod, a grad- 'uate student from the Univer- sity of Aberdeen, says mem- bers are having trouble with their "squops." "To squop," he explains, "'is to cover your opponent's wink (colored button) with your wink and prevent him from plopping or snapping it into a cup. "Then of course, you must squidge your own wink and land it in the cup." € Oshawa Driver 2nd 'In Winter Car Rally -- of mathematics at the Univer-|in the first 60 miles out of Tor- sity of Waterloo, started out|/onto when more than half the 86th in the field, two hours andjentry lost points in axle-deep 52 minutes after the first car.j|mud at a highway construction The first ,leg of the rally|site. started 7 p. in. Friday from Tor-|. Farther north spring - like onto's east end and ran over|weather and a weekend freeze muddy back roads to North|took its toil as springs sagged, Bay. The ears then doubled|shock absorbers collapsed and back to Toronto. cars bottomed and snagged on The drivers ran into difficulty! the rough roads. Dave McGillivray Wins Junior Skating Crown PETERBOROUGH (CP) Spectators at the finals of the Canadian figure-skating champ- ionships saw David McGillivray TORONTO (CP)--Paul Mac- Lennan of Toronto and John Wilson of Waterloo, Sunday won their second consecutive Cana- dian winter car rally. MacLennan and Wilson, driv- ing a Ford Anglia, completed the 1,322-mile course between Toronto and North Bay with only one penalty point in two days of driving. Only 40 of 112 the Hat cars entered f course. The winners ruined their chances for a perfect run when they lost a point after passing 48 of the 53 check points, They won the 1965 rally in a Ford Cortina. Second place went to Bill Sil- vera of Toronto and driver Mar- tin Chenhall of Oshawa in a Corvair. They had seven pen- alty points. never by one competitor in a single competition. SKATES FLOWLESSLY OLD COUNTRY SOCCER LONDON (Reuters) FA CUP Fourth Round | Beatord 0 Everton 3 |Birmingham 1 Leicester 2 1 Preston 1 Chelsea 1 Leeds 0 iCrewe Alex 1 Coventry 1 Hull City 2 Notts F 0 Man City 2 Grimsby 0 |Newcastle 1 Sheffield W 2 Norwich 3 Walsall 2 {Plymouth 0 Huddersfield 2 |Shrewsbury 0 Carlisle 0 Southport 2 Cardiff-0 Tottenham 4 Burnley $ West Ham 3 Blackburn 3 | Wolverhampton 3 Sheffield U 0 Man United 0 Rotherham 0 ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Liverpool 4 Sunderland 6 Stoke 6 Northampton 2 Division IH Brighton 0 Scunthorpe 1 Reading 1 Millwall 1 Southend 2 Bristol R 0 Swindon 2 Brentford 1 York City 0 Bournemouth 2 74 |Mansfield vs. Old Athietic,|B Peterborough vs. Exeter /Queens PR vs. Watford, ppd. Division IV Aldershot 3 Port Vale 0 Barnsley 1 Notts C 1 Bradford 6 Newport 1 Chester 4 Bradford 0 Halifax 4 Chesterfield 1 Old, Lincoln © Colchester 2 ountny soccer results Satur-}Luton 2 Hartlepools 1 Rochdale 0 Doncaster 1 Torquay 3 Wrexham 1 |Darlington vs. Tranmere, ppd. Exhibition Southampton 1 Arsenal 3 SCOTTISH LEAGUE | Division I Celtic 6 Falkirk 0 Dundee 0 Kilmarnock 2 Hamilton 0 Dundee U 4 |Hearts 3 Partick 1 Morton 2 Stirling 1 Rangers 2 Hibernian 0 St. Johnstone 3 Motherwell 3 |St. Mirren 2 Clyde -t Dunfermline vs. Aberdeen, ppd.}| Division IT | Airdrieonians 2 Montrose 0 | Arbroath 3 Queen of S 3 Ayr U 2 Queens Pk 0 |E. Stirling 3 Dumbarton 1 | Stenhousemuir 1 Raith 1 |Stranraer 5 Forfar 0 |Thd Lanark 1 Cowdenbeath 6 |Brechin vs. |Fife vs. Alloa, ppd. ENDS STREAK |Hockey League, |Cleveland Barons. |Edmonton for his father's fu-| 'neral. Albion and - East} CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) --) illy Dea of Buffalo Bisons, who| and/had played in a record 548 con-| | secutive games in the American | ended his) streak Saturday night when he) missed the game here against) He was in| In the junior women's event, Cathy Lee Irwin, 13, of Toronto combined a winning per- formance in compulsory figures with an almost-flawless free- skating exhibition for the win. The one bright spot for the West was the performance of Vancouver skaters Joni Gra- ham and Don Phillips, who won the dance finals with their free- i: dance performance. : They had won the compulsory a dance and edged Janet Cowling if and Thomas Falls, both of Tor- : onto. In third place were Mau- reen Peever and Bruce Lennie, both of Newmarket. - The novice women's title went to Mary Lynne Petrie of Ot- tawa, who upset early leaders when she jumped from third to first place. Cy Wylde of Newmarket, Ont., and John Clark of Tor- onto, driving a Mustang, also had seven penalty points but were placed third by rally offi- of Toronto get the jump on his opponents Saturday to win the junior men's title. McGillivray won with an ex- hibition that seemed more = Sue \suited to a gymnasium than a ilvera an enhall were|rink, | pera ol pd et ata But it was this performance Fourth pnd went to John D,|°7 Skates that pulled him from Sinith af Ttingston und naviea.|# possible third-place finish to \see Daves Piapoen of Collies a title. He came out on the ice Bay. Oat, in: i Cortina. 'They and dazzled fans with a pair of lhad eight 'penalty points, triple rotation jumps--a toe loop | Maurice Carter of Hamilton od pion cd eR ge the jand Don Hambly of Sudbury. na- ke 5 risa f TF seni ater |vigated their Chevy Ii to fifth) sani ides mm iucisnge lace with 18 penalty points. \P P ? |place behind Douglas Leigh of |COMBINE TALENTS iNorth Bay. MacLennan, 30, a suburban) McGillivray's coach, Sheldon |North York fireman, and Wil-}Galbraith, said-the two jumps son, 31, an assistant professor'had been performed before, but _ Summerfield ended in third i saphena | | There's | more to a M ybe you re perfectly happy with the ale you're drinking now. Maybe not. But you'll never Str ate be sure until you try the raight | ale. CaN AR Mea IN Carling Red Cap Ale The CARLING BREWERIES Limited | Niagara loan than money IMMEDIATE SERVICE In some cases, Niagara cash can be in your hands in 20 minutes... in almost every loan, less than 24 hours. | UNDERSTANDING ATTITUDE Money for vacations, new clothing, redeco- rating is as important at Niagara as money for overdue bills, emergency repairs, or un- expected expenses. CO-OPERATION Your meeting at Niagara is in private, where you van readily discuss the cost of loans, re- payment schedules, and available life-insur- ance protection. 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