Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 21 Jun 1960, p. 11

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Brantford Swimmer One Of Canada's Best BRANTFORD, Ont. (CP)--At 19, Sara Barber has already smooth-stroked her way through almost every Canadian women's swimming record to become one oi Canada's brightest hopes for the Rome Olympics. ' Sara's powerful backstroke has churned up and down pools throughout Canada and the United States and in Australia, England, Wales, France and Ger- many At the Olympic Games in Aus- tralia four years ago she placed seventh and eighth. The bright- = eved athlete hopes to be at her pea¥-thi for her d try She will take along a whole cheering section on her trip to Italy. With her will be her trainer-coach father, Dr. Stuart Barber, a Brantford surgeon; her mother; sister Candy, 12, and brother Graeme, 16. W| But he's almost as vegetarian Rose used to make a millet loaf SWIM STAR Husky Aussie Athlete Is Really a Vegetarian By HAROLD TILLEY States scientists, he says, be- Canadian Press lieve it will not be long before SYDNEY, Australia (CP) -- Allarge numbers of people are quick assessment of the 190- eating food made from deep-sea pound, six-foot plus frame of/plant life. Australian swimming star Mur-| vegetables, raw and cooked, ray Rose, now training for the| nuts, eggs and cheese are Rome Olympics, would be thatlitems in varied menus prepared be is the product of hefty, juicy by the Roses and there's a spe- {steaks as demanded by sturdy|cisl millet bread available at | masculine appetites. only one Sydney store. Mrs. ay/a millet-seed-eating canary. and when Murray visited Cali- {In fact, millet seed plays an im-|fornia he gave the recipe to a | portant role in a diet which in- neaith-food store which soon had |cludes also seaweed and ground|s "Murray Rose" loaf for those |sunflower and sesame seeds. | who wanted something special in Now 21, Murray has never had | this line. {a meal from the flesh of bird or| THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, June 21, 1960 13. Canadian Press Staff Writer Over - entfusiastic track and field experts for years have drawn polite snjckers with wild predictions of Olympic gold- medal possibilities for Canadian| athletes. The doubters have yawned at such- sayings, and with justification. Percy Williams was the last Canadian track gold medallist in the Games--in 1928 at Amster- dam when the fresh-faced 20- year-old from Vancouver romped off with the 100- and 200-metre sprints, Canada came close in tl 1930s with such stars as Alex beast and, on the theory that BREAD BY AIR you never miss what you've never had, he guesses he can go) on not missing meat to eat. The Roses, including Murray, The Sydney loaf is like the Californian loaf so it will be {flown regularly to Murray's| training camp in Townsville, Wilson and Phil Edwards, but | since then the runners have been {left behind by the rest of the orld. Any day now, someone is bound COULD WIN 100 He is 19-year-old Harry Jer- ome, a gling six-foot Negro who has capabilities of going all the way in the 100 at the Aug. 25-Sept. 11 Rome Games. ¥ he doesn't pop up with the gold medal, he could win the second-| place silver or third - place bronze. A year ago such talk would have sounded ridiculous. He was stepped into the staring blocks that if he was serious about run- ning he should go to the United To get anywhere, a runner just has to have a coach who can to train." His chances at Rome? "Well," said Williams, "Olympic tests are never predictable, particu- larly in the sprints, A lot can happen right at the starting line, an awkward runner and ap- although not as much as it used peared to be suffering from an ' inferiority complex whenever Relt® Tve got a spade thal woul explain this--it's the one I used in Amsierdam to d'~ starting States, where the coaching was. | "Usually, by the time the Canada's Harry Jerome Carries Olympic Hopes rolled around, track teach him how fo run, and how|all that with name sprinters from the United States. holes. This was evident at the Pan-| American Games in Chicago where he was an also-ran in the | sprints, won by Ray Norton, a TAG Sara bas devoted her life to be- coming a top athlete. She lifts weights, tosses a medicine ball, pulls pulleys and does pushups. in her spare time she plays basketball, volleyball the piano. She rises daily at 6:30 am. has breakfast and drives to the Brantford Y pool for a full hour's training with Graeme, a swim- mer on his own, pacing her Then she spends a "nerfnal day" at her Grade 13 studies at Brantford Collegiate. After school three days a week she exercises until suppertime. The two other weekdays she swims from 7 to 8 p.m. Her training schedyle curtails extra - curricular activities but, says Sara, "it's worth it." She hasn't decided yet between nursing and social work as her and career but one thing is certain--| "I'm going to either the Univer- sity of Toronto or the University of British Columbia because they have the best pools." [THF Rules Near CAHA -- Juckes MELVILLE, Sask, (CP)--Gor- don Juckes of Melville, Sask., Canadian Amateur Hockey Asso-|pendable ciation secretary-manager, said| in an interview Monday that] three rules changes proposed for are English-born and his par- Queensland. Seaweed, sunflower f ents were using "natural" meat-|and sesame seed will also be # husband noticed her | Seaweed OLYMPIC HOPE -- Swimmer Sara Barber, 19, of Brantford, | Ont., will represent Canada at the summer Olympic games in Rome this year. Sara, shown with her trophies, has captured almost every Canadian swim- Eddie Black's Defeat Tony's Eddie Black's "king-sized" and eight in the Olympics at Melbourne, Australia, four yrs. ago. Her father, Dr. Stuart Bar- ber, a Brantford surgeon who acts as her coach, will accom- pany the swimmer to Rome. --(CP Photo) took another let big "Red head" sco.. Tony's ball League standings last night, frame, with lead-off man Jimmy at Kew Gardens, in Toronto,|Loreno working a walk and scor- whipping Oshawa Tony's 4-2. {ing on Jim Cruickshank"s run- The vielory hvke a Y0-Way | batted-indouile, ite for second place for Black's ' i 1 i with Latimer Brokers and placed ne son g cut Ie pein bol 1 themselves to within one-halfl waters cashed in back-to-back game behind the pace-setting De-| doubles, for one run to move Caterer team. LOSS|them within striking range. They sunk Tony's deeper in the base moved out in front for the first ment, 1% games behind third) time in the Tony's disastrous 5th place Latimers. |inning. After two were retired, the International Ice Hockey Fed- eration annual meeting at Timini, Ttaly, next month will bring the| ITHF rules closer to those of the CAHA. Juckes was referring to two rules proposed by the Swiss Ice Hockey Federation and a third by the Swedish Ice Hockey Fed- eration. Bob Lebel of Chambly, CAHA past president, who is ex- pected to become the first inter- national fed er ation president since W, G. Hardy of Edmonton held the post from 1948 to 1951. The rules changes proposed will be to make minor penalties "served" when the team with the manpower advantage scores a goal; to bring an icing call only when teams are at full strength and to follow the line of the CAHA in respect to ice markings, making them the same through- out the world. Lebel, who has the support of| both the CAHA and the US. Amateur Hockey Association in his bid for president, will also seek to get teams competing in world tournaments bigger cuts of three walks over the nine-inning| 's stay route. Walvre go i we fvav's onthe a hits including a r WO 2 Canada will be represented by|gers, while Diamond also blasted Que.,| out two doubles in his four trips Elacies Jed ge nifty shit Sullivan yielded a double to ne NolgTal of ger Diamond and another two-bagger ere als be or by Waters scoring the tying tally. Phil Waters and | an mo Devereaux delivered the tie to turn tie triumpl Be i breaking hit with a single scoring eaux, one iree capable pi Waters, and moved all the way ers on Black's roster, to third base on the play to the three plate on Waters. This ended Sul, mound Bagnell took over. "Red" Wilson was safe on an infield error, scoring Devereaux, with the in- surance run and Gordie Barker struckout to end the inning and the threat. From then on, Bag- tributed three to the plate. Devereaux aided his own cause, checking in with two place in the Beaches Major Fast-|/to the scoresheet in the second 78, safeties. Al Sullivan and Norm Bagnell divided Tony's pitching with "Sully" the starter taking the loss. Sullivan gave up four runs in four and two-thirds innings he worked, while Bagnell looked im-| pressive in his relief chore allow-| ing no runs. His performance will probably earn him the starting role against Latimers here at Alexandra Park, when Tony's do the hosting in the next Beaches contest. Tony's broke in front in the first inning after two were out, when Jack "Red" MacDermaid lifted a long smash into the wrong field and the outfield gates earned and of radio-tele-|-- \Vancouver Men Cannon Free To File For New vision revenue. Join Houston Court Rules LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A court has ruled that All-America halfback Billy Cannon is free to|American Football League. play for Houston Oilers of the| American Football League. | Federal Judge William J. Lind- berg took the action Monday in| deciding not to issue an injunc-| tion sought by Los Angeles Rams| of the National Football League| to prevent Cannon from playing| with the Oilers. The court criticized NFL com-| missioner Pete Rozelle for con- ducting Cannon contract negotia-| tions in a "shroud of secrecy" | when Rozelle was the Rams' gen-| eral manager last November. The judge said the 1961 - 62 agreements were not signed by| then acting commissioner Austin] Gunsel as required in the NFL constitution. Daniel F. Reeves, Rams presi/, dent, indicated the Rams may appeal the decision. The judge described the 22-| year-old backfielder as unusually | naive for a college senior and|died in 1714, was the son of Sir anything but astute in business dealings. bobbled the fall long enough to| AFL Franchise VANCOUVER (CP) -- A Van- couver group announced Monday they have filed an application for a franchise with the new Peter W. M. Graham, 35-year- old president of Family Finance Corporation and Vancouver Vending Services Limited, said the group filed application with Lamar Hunt of Dallas, Tex, AFL president, together with a $125,000 good-performance round. | The proposed team would join| the AFL at the start of the 1961) season, using the 30,000 seat Em-| pire Stadium as home park. The application of° a Toronto group already has been ac- cepted by the AFL expansion committee and is up for league ratification next month. A Mont- real group also has filed an ap- plication. Graham said he has not talked with the Toronto or Montreal groups. Charles Davenant, English writer on political economy who William Davenant, the poet. EHL Approves ~ Franchise Shift NEW YORK (AP)--The East-| ern Hockey League has approved | Del-Hi Spaulding the transfer of the Washington | franchise to Haddonfield, N.J.,| and decided not to act on plac- | ing a team in Jacksonville, Fla., for another year. League president Tom Lock- hart said Haddonfield has a 5 000-seat arena. "Right now," Lockhart ob- | served, "there Is a possibility | Towers or nell blanked Black's. MacDermaid and Nick Mro- czeck sparked Tony's batsmen with collecting two hits. TONY'S TALES: Catcher Bob- by Booth missed last night's ac- tion because of work but will re- turn to action tomorrow night at Alexandra Park against Latim- ers. The team would like to re- port that the stands which were removed from the ball diamond for last Wednesday's games be- cause of the annual Public School Track and Field meet, will be returned so the fans will be able to have the seating capacity again, RHE Black's 001 030 00x--4 9 2 Tony's 110 000 000--2 6 2 . Devereaux (WP) and Barker; Sullivan (LP), Bagnell (5th) and Cruickshank. less meals before Murray came flown up so that Murray can along. Mrs. Rose had adopted it continue to eat the food that for health reasons and when her seems to have helped him win improve- Olympic medals. 'ment he, too, adopted it. Since he has returned from " u-iversity studies, Murray has IRISH Spar), Mo family Put on weight but he's confident diet is one of a number of va-|* shedding it quickly. rieties collected and marketed| He says he has not concen- for their jellying end health-giv-|iraled on an approved (raining alities. They are prepared Schedule since the Olympic juices and figure in) Games in Melbourne in 1956 but the early morning meal with now he's getting right exercise isiiced pineapple and goat's milk|and food for the strenuous prep- junket. | aration ahead. Murray's seaweed reputedly] Murray's eating habits have comes from Ireland and is/been a matter of interest in {known as Irish moss. He says training circles for some years it is like others in the many but camp colleagues seem to al- {types of seaweed harvested off'lov their interest to remain at {the Californian coast. United/the discussion stage. SPORTS IN BRIEF WINS 600-MILE RACE | the QRFU. Junior League are to CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)--Joe|play exhibition games with the Lee Johnson, 29, a Chattanooga, | Ottawa and Hull teams. Tenn., mechanic, won the in-| augural world 600-mile stock car| QUITS BASEBALL HAMILTON (CP) -- Murray race Sunday before a crowd| step towards first initial tally, They added another|.qii ated 'hy track officials at|Oliver, 20 - goal scorer with De- Y |troit Red Wings in the National Johnson was about five laps Hockey League last season, has ahead of mer - up t Mi given up baseball with Hamilton Beauchamp of Cedar Bluffs, Cardinals of the Senior Inter- Iowa, in winning top money of county League. The Wings who $25,650 in the $107,775 race. John.|suggested an injury received son drove a 1960 Chevrolet.|playing baseball could end his Bobby Johns of Miami, Fla. hockey career, Shortstop Oliver finished third. {led Hamilton batters with an un- Twenty - five of the starting official 484 average in five field of 60 finished the race. games. SOCCER MATCH TIED SIGN TWO IMPORTS CASABLANCA (AP)--Santos of MONTREAL (CP) -- Montreal Brazil and Barcelona tied 2-2 in| Aj uettes announced Monday the a soccer game before a crowd of . 15,000 Sunday. signing of two new imports. The two are tackle John Outland, a QRFU ADITS MEMBERS |,00 _|280-pounder who stands six feet, MONTREAL (CP) -- The Que tour inches, and halfback bec Rugby Football Union has Georges Felts, a 215 - pounder. accepted ons for mem- bership from the Quebec City The Als announced also the sign- Football League in Ottawa and|ing of Ray Siminski, an end with the club last season. Hull, Que. Montreal teams from |to spring up with a forecast that |this is the year for that long- |sought first place. Stifle that |yawn, because there's another | Vancouver youngster with a | splendid chance. barrel-chested American who shares the 100-yard world rec- ord of 9.3 seconds with three others, Last month the young Cana- dian, a freshman at the Univer- sity of Oregon, flashed into world prominence when he beat Norton vith a time of 9.4 seconds. It was| no fluke | | 'Canada Cup Golf Action REPEAT PERFORMANCE He won his heat in 9.4 and du- plicated the performance in the) final. Two days later he again| was clocked in 9.4. | What did Williams think about | On Thursday]; PORTMARNOCK, Ireland (AP)| "Obviouly," the one - time| | _Stan Leonard and Al Balding 8reat told Eric (Vancouver Prov-| |head the Canadian challenge|ince) Whitehead, "the boy has a {against teams from 29 other|great future. countries in the eighth inter-| "About a year ago he asked national golf championship and|me what I thought he should do Canada Cup matches opening|about his future, I just told him BOBO BRAZIL Tuesday, June 21 TEAM BOUT 3:45 P.M. KINSMEN STADIUM" In event of rain, Oshawa A ANGELO POFFO -"§. and his menoger we BRONKO LUBICH § BOBO BRAZIL and FRENCHY VIGNAL IVAN KALMIKOFF GEORGE DRAKE " BOB LEI PLER JOHN PYE Tickets for these 75¢ ot Casino' Restoul Pat 3 fine exhibitions rant: $1.25, $1.00, - aide over the Portmarnock links Thursday. The tournament lasts four days with 18 holes played daily. It de- cides the world team and individ- ual championships after 72 holes. The Irish say it's the biggest] sports jamboree they've ever| been called on to organize, ! A total crowd of about 60,000 is expected over the four days. Organizers have laid a mile of new road from the main high- way to the links, hired every large tent in Ireland and bought 10 miles of rope to control the crowds. Australia's two - man team of me Peter Thomson and Kel Nagle € are defending the team cham- \ B pionship. They're after their third \\ title, \ Leonard won his second world > individual title last year in a sudden-death playoff after tying with Thomson. The United States, South Africa and Australia are regarded as| favorites. Arnold Palmer, the| United States' Masters champion! and leading money winner on the American circuit, will start al betting favorite for the individ- ual title, Sam Snead is his part-| ner in the team championship. OFFICIAL FIGHT FILMS... LITT Si How to the most get for your money! STARTS THURSDAY! 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