Michael Vels Chief Financial Officer 416 9262048

The Company had sales of $5.2 billion in 2007.SOURCEMaple Leaf Foods Inc.Michael Vels, Chief Financial Officer, (416) 926-2048. Domres as a JetSince we're waiting on two-deeps from both Fordham and Columbia for this weekend's Liberty Bowl game, I'm going to hold off on a complete game preview, with matchups, etc. until I have a little more information.That said, remember that the two-deeps are not set in stone. Not that anyone is deliberately misleading the fans, it's just that there are a lot of moving parts involved.Day 3: Marty Domres '69I've written a lot about the great Marty Domres in the past. 1965 -1968: Columbia University varsity quarterback, set fifteen college records; one Ivy League, three Eastern and, one National passing record. Columbia was ranked 3rd in nation in offense with 2,404 yards and 4th in nation with passes at 2,206 yards.

Finished his college career with 4495 passing yards, third all time in the Ivy League 1969 -1971: San Diego Chargers. 1972-1975: Baltimore Colts, Moreover, the man who replaced John Unitas as quarterback of the Colts – 586 attempts, 293 completions, 3,471 yards and 21 touchdowns. 1976: Played for the San Francisco 49ers 1977: Played for the New York Jets 1978: Retired from football playing in 90 NFL games throwing 27 touchdowns. 2004: The All American Football Foundation Presidents Award 2004: Inducted into the C.B.A LaSallian Athletic Hall of Fame. Domres, who played for the Colts from 1972 to 1975, is now managing director at Deutsche Banc Alex Brown, an investment company downtown Baltimore.

Below are some of the highlights of his overall career and some of his best games: I can't imagine it was a lot of fun to be on campus in the fall of 1968, just months after the infamous campus riots almost shut the school down forever. In a 34-25 win over Cornell, Domres shattered several Columbia passing records and his numbers then stood for 14 years. He followed that up two weeks later with a 46-20 thrashing of Brown after convincing first-year head coach Frank Navarro to just abandon the running game early in the first quarter.Domres became a respected QB in the NFL, at one point replacing Johnny Unitas in Baltimore and later taking over from Joe Namath with the Jets. He never quite emerged as a starter, but he made a great impression on the fans and his fellow players alike. Baltimore took such a shine to him that he settled there permanently after his playing days were over Domres works in the brokerage field there. Rutgers' slow climb to upper echelon football made most of the last games against Columbia one-sided affairs, (the last meeting was in 1978 at Giants Stadium where the Lions fell by a 69-0 score, convincing then-Head Coach Bill Campbell to quit coaching, though he did spend one more year at the helm in Morningside Heights) But most of the games in the 1960's were pretty exciting. One of Columbia's best wins came in 1967, with junior QB sensation Marty Domres leading the way at Baker Field.In what was to be legendary Coach Buff Donelli's last season, the Lions opened 1967 with an encouraging 17-14 win over Colgate.