FLAGS FLY HIGH AT ROME'S OLYMPIC GAMES SITE | The flags of the various com- peting nations fly from tall GOLF PLAY Canad | masts, lining the main approach | Games, some six miles outside of Rome. The circular building, in far baci ground, is Palazzo a Takes Lead to the site of the 1960 Olympic For Americas Cup OTTAWA (CP) The United States defence of the Americas Cup flagged Thursday, allowing Canada to slip into a slim half way lead in the international golf and matches. The U.S. team, to take the trophy time since it was ward in 1952, saw its fortunes dip with disorganization in the initial round of sixsomes when the Americans won only one match out of three each wiih Mexico and Canada. For Canada's young amateurs all six of them playing well, meant the opportunity to pile up a 4% point lead on five wins and : tie--a margin that was cut to a half-point 'ater in the day when the Americans recuperated in the singles. U.S. CHAMP HOT Sparked by the hot eight-under par 65 of Jack Nicklaus, U.S heavily favored for the fifth brought for amateur champion, the Ud S. team Ottawa Bill Shea Is | Confident Of | Expansion | NEW YORK (AP)--Bill Shea, founder of the Continental League, sald today he was con fident baseball's major leagues would vote for expansion in accordance with the committee's resolution despite the reported objection of co-owner Dan Top- ping of the New York Yankees. "I have read that Topping will] insist on the American League moving into Los Angeles hefore| he will agree to any move that would have the way for New York's return to the National," said Webb. "Such a statement from Top- ping doesn't seem logical in view] of Del Webb's having gone on rec- ord as favoring a second major league team in New York with no strings attached. of them from the tied one. only t| lost winds up late today. Canada 9 picked up three point tory ties are BURNS UP COURSE course in his singles matches went on to capture eight singles ch against Canadian amateur titlisl victories, three ties and only one loss that, to Canada's Gary(Johnny Johnston of Vaucouvei Cowan who edged Charlie Coe 4/and Hector Alvarez, Mexican ju- 3 nior champ. postings gave| He defeated the U.S. 10%, !four under par at 69--3 and 2, and trounced Alvarez 6 and 5 Cowan, 21-year-old Torontonian ) low amateur in this r's Canadian ope n, won both les shes after shoot- fling a two-under-par 35 on the out- going nine, His match ended on the green with victories of 4 and 3 | over Coe and 6 and 5 over Rafael | Quiroz of Mexico. Teamed with 19-year-old Phil Brownlee of Toronto, Cowan while Mexico helped earn two 'of Canada's s. Each vie-/morning-round sixsome victories, while pw orrih Dr. Frank (Bud) Taylor |and collegiate titlist John Konsek 2 and 1, and trouncing the Mexi- Nicklaus burned up the par 73| can pair of Tomas Lehmann and Hunt and Gi If Club 'Roberto Halper m 7 and 6 The day's final Canada 11 points, Mexico 5% points Most of the American progress in the singles was at the e: the Canad ames. Canada six U.S. won Mes The Mex one victory, seven The international managed "tied four and competition In singles, the U.S. outpointed 2 10 9%, is worth a full point, rated at a half. ROY CAMPANELLA SEEKS SEPARATION FROM WIFE Johnston--himself | a NEW YORK (AP) Campaneila, the paralyzed for- mer Brooklyn Dodger baseball | star, said Thursday his 13-year- | old marriage has broken up. "This is the worst hurt of all," he said The 'hurts' other were an automobile accident that ended | his playing career in January, 1958, and trouble his stepson, David, 17, had with police last February. Campanella ¢aid at his Long Island home thal he had begun a suit for legal separation and that papels in the been served on his wife, Ruth, last Tuesday. He accused his wife of com- | home late "on many oc- asions."' Campanella ing said the mar- case had | | He also has two daughters by | Roy | riage had been on the rocks | for over a year "People would come into my liquor store (in Harlem) and tell me things about her," he | said. "It was embarrassing." | His wife called the suit "ri- diculous." "I think he's getting some faulty advice from somewhere, maybe from idle gossipers," she said. Besides David, who was | placed on probation for break- ing into a store, the couple have three children, Roy, 12; Tony, 10, and Princess, 7 { Campanella said he would | ask for custody of the children. | a previous marriage. The former catcher has be- come a sportscaster and tele- vision personality since his ac- cident | Aa n | Delle Sport, where the, Jhdoot | competitions will be hel (AP Wirephoto) -- | [PENNANT WINNERS Brantford Red Sox Get Their 2st 1-C Victory By THE CANADIAN PRESS The Red Sox, held to five hits The Brantford Red Sox gof{by Roy McKay, went ahead 2-1 their 21st win of the seasc: |'n the sixth inning on a triple by Thursday night and with it the|Jimmy Wilkes and a wild pitch. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, August 12, 1960 {1 NEW YORK (AP)--Can hyp-| receiving hypnotic suggestion that nosis help an athlete tap that he would star. extra ounce of something to win| But the AMA Journal, in an editorial, recalls that in 1950 the Hypnosis Dangerous And Not Much Help coulda's by itself cure the golfer's ice. Given hypnotic suggestion, athe { |ener-Waterloo Dutchmen 8-4. 4 | Diamonds in the two-way race {for the sixth and last playoff % |again Wednesday in London to championship of the Inter-County Baseball Association senior ser 1es. At Kitchener, Hamilton Cardi- |nals staged a five-run rally in the leighth inning to defeat Kitch- | The loss prevented the Dutchies {from picking up any ground or spot. | Kitchener now must beat Lon- don here Saturday night and get a playoff position. | THREE HITTER At St, Thomas, righthander {John Poholsky posted his 10th] victory with a three-hitter when| the Listowel Legionnaires blanked the St. Thomas Elgins 5-0. The win for the Sox was their |21st against 11 losses. 1 player-manager, sixth after catcher Earl Crawley dropped a third-strike pop-up be- THREE-RUN TRIPLE Hamilton's five-run rally came with only three hits of losing pitcher Gerry Denomme. Two were bunt singles but the third was a bases - loaded double hy Fred Thompson that produced three runs. Winning pitcher Richard Jack scattered 12 K-W hits and left 11 runners stranded. He fanned five and walked four. Thompson, Jim Wilson and Nilo Giavedoni each collected two of Hamilton's seven hits. Pacing the Dutchmen was first baseman Ar- lie Parker with four hits, and three RBIs, Listowel's Thomas, who has ost only one game this season, struck out 10 batters. Johnny Ambrose, St. Thomas singled in the | Al Wade held London to six hits hind the plate. and the only run he allowed was| Al Dorans, St. Thomas pitcher, Harry Fisher's homer. Manager | allowed six hits, struck out three {George Brantford, letes might push themselves be. an Olympic gold medal? ! 4 yond their physical limits and Or help a golfer cure his slice? then St. Louis Browns, in sev- Just possibly sometimes, but only in limited ways, and' such experiments could be highly dan- gerous for athletes unless carried out by well-trained physicians or psychiatrists, medical experts on hypnosis warn. "There have been reports of seemingly improved athletic per- formance, but frequently the man's prformance is no better, or sometimes it is worse," says Dr, Harold Rosen, Baltimore psy- chiatrist and chairman of the| American Medical Association's committee on hypnosis. enth place, hired a "psychologist hypnotist" to eliminate self- doubts of the losing players. The team still finished seventh. Hypnosis cannot give a man skills he doesn't have, or make him stronger. Dr. Rosen says. While, in stage acts, a hypno- tized man may lift seemingly great weights, this is something he could do just as well: without hypnosis if he wanted to, or had to. A frail woman can lift an suffer serious harm, aggravate hidden physical -defects, or dis- regard their own safety, the state. ment adds. It urges careful medical safe. guards and supervision of any experiments on effects of hypno- sig' on physical performance. It frowns on hypnotizing athe letes just to help them win as unsportsmanlike to doping a horse. -- comparable astonishing weight if it is hurting her children. Hypnosis might help some play- PICKING PIKE ers relax, and so perhaps per. form better by relieving nervous. ness, Dr. Rosen remarks. But it HIS FISH-DISH PARIS (CP) Twelve year-old Ken Beechey of this Brantford district community seemed to have his pick of the pike during his Bruce Peninsula holiday last week. He landed a 38-inch, 17- pound pike, the biggest caught in the area in three years, and within 90 min. CAN'T ADD TO SKILLS Last winter a basketball player loutdid himself in a game after MANY NEW FACES Saskatchewan Riders Carrugh homered for|and walked two. He has a 1-3 Irecord for the season. TED WILLIAMS HINTS HE Canada Cagers HAS NO FUTURE TARGETS 'Open Tourney | For Olympics BOLOGNA, Ii: (CP) -- Can |ada will be battling Belgium | |Germany and Thailand to try to| {win a berth in the Olympic| haskieball tournament unde or the) draw of a pre-Olympic elimina-| tion tournament completed Thursday The draw put the seeking the remaining in the 16-team' Olympic competi tion in different brackets, with the w and one hers to get (Play starts tod Eleven teams, favored United Stat inio the i their records in internat tonal compelition. Elmer Riply, Canadian tear {iopes JE the Olympics, Aug. 25 ( 18s teams five berths second-place fin- coveted spots. including the| coach of the| aid he has high is team into 5 0 peni ng at Rome He said that hic team was the| strongest ever sent by Canada to the Olympics. Nationalist China's {team agreed, under protest, to compete as Taiwan in the pre- Olympic tournament, | An official lever, that the designation was to |apply only to the preliminary| {tournament and said the Chinese] {would continue to oppose efforts {to be called Taiwan in the Olym- | pie 'Games. Dodgers And Redlegs Get 'Early Warning CINCINNATI (AP) -- National {League chief Warren' Giles |warned the Cincinnati and Los Angeles team anagers Thurs- day against any kind of beanball | a warfare. He said their pitchers must be "doubly careful about their so-called tight pitches. n The warning came in a letter| {delivered to Welt Alston of Los {Angeles and Fred Hutchinson of Cincinnati before their teams opened a six-game series Thurs-| |day night. Giles did not mention fit, | | | | but | wavered from | made after basketball | emphasized, how-| CLEVELAND (AP)°'-- Ted Williams has won his race with age to claim a baseball honus --home runs No. 512 and 513 for third place in the major league rankings. Just a few days away from his 42nd birthday, the Boston Red Sox slugger passed the | late Mel Oit's 511 total Wed- nesday night with a two-homer salute to an almost incredible story of stamina and condition- ing. Are bhasehall's keenest eyes now focused on runnerup Jimmy Foxx's 534 in the home- | run derby? Williams says no. He has not | hig statement, | hitting his 500th here earlier this season, that 1950 marks the end of his play- | ing days. | Ted cannot get the 22 homers needed to tie Foxx by the end of the current campaign. He has indicated to intimate | friends he goes through agony | to get in shape and stay there. | Two services hitches plus in- juries have prevented Williams from having & chance at the lifetime mark of 714 homers | hung up a Babe Ruth. No one is more aware of the fact than Williams who--because of his | oft-interrupted career -- never set a home-run goal for him- | self beyond the 500th. Tying Oit Tucsday night and passing him Wednesday night | are considered by Ted to be | bonuses in the Williams book | of milestones which also in- clude his 1,800th RBI and 2,600th. hit this season. It a tired Willlams-- comp ing of a return of the neck pains which dogged him ! last season and this spring-- | who said before Wednesday night's game "I better hurry up and get the 512th before I col- lapse." As the Sox beat Cleveland | 6-1 Wednesday night, Williams | hammered No. 512 with the | bases empty in the fifth inning | off loser Barry Latman. He tagged Johnny Klippstein for another in the ninth with a mate aboard. CALGARY (CP) relative," drawled coach Otis "1t'y allCanadians Calgary Coach Keeping Quiet Art Scullion, Brown and Dale Parsons. Doug | » M Be Su rise Team utes landed four other pike ay averaging 10 pounds. | REGINA (CP)--The word is| Smith could make local grid out around the Western Inter- enthusiasts forget about favorite {provinc 'ial Football Union to keep Bobby Marlow, retired through |a wary eye on Saskatchewan injuries. Roughriders. A six-foot, 200-pounder, Smith! Long accustomed to being ban-|is a vicious blocker, an explosive | lished in the pre-season polls to runner and a tiger on defence | [the role of also-rans, the Riders|at corner linebacker, Ptacek can! apparently have been relegated run as a halfback as well as call| once again to the same category.!signals and Burrell is expected] But they could be spoilers and to be a top interior linebacker. | even surprise their first time out| Other new imports are Purdue --at home Friday night against halfback Leonard Wilson; end cal gary Stampeders. |Jack Gotta from Calgary and | Ken Carpenter, up from the fullback Clair Branch, on the {playing ranks to take over head Texas team in the Cotton Bowl {coaching duties, has team morale last year. Good holdover imports {high. are fullback Ferdy Burket, quar-| terback Don Allard, halfbacks| (NEW PLAYERS TOO {Jack Hill and Bobby Renn, centrt The Riders also will have the neji Habig, ends Vernon Vaughan | {newest look in the circuit. and tackles Al Benecick and Bob) Heading new recruits are |Golie, UCLA fullback Ray Smith, quar-| The best-looking contingent ofl |terback Bob Ptacek (pronounced |new homebrews in years ncludes| tag-chuck) and guard-linebacker naifhacks Bob Miller and Don| Bill Burrell, the all - American {Beattie from London Lords, of | |from Dlinois, [the Ontarie Rugby Football Olympic Torch = Will Be Lit 'By Sun's Rays | OLYMPIA, Greece (AP) | Greek officials converged on this ancient Olympic site Wednesday to prepare for the historic cere- mony of kindling the torch which will inaugurate the 17th Olympics fin Rome Aug. 25. | The torch will be lit by the rays {of the sun Friday morning. It will [be carried to Rome in relays by | Del-Hi Spaulding TV. Towers or Aniennas ® INSTALLED MOVED ® REPAIRED SERVICE TO ALL SETS LEN & LOU's T.V. RA 8.5804 --- RA 5.7844 {been a freak one. | { Douglas. "It's no good you im-| proving 20 pre cent if the rest of| the teams improve 40 per cent." With this philosophy the reso- lute Virginian refused to offer what, if any, hopes he had about his Stampeders' 1960 chances in the Western Interprovincial Foot- ball Union, The big problem |ing well. so far has grpoNG REGULARS Twenty players suffered burns, some serious, from a marking material on the Mewata Stadium turf July 20 in an exhibition tilt ainst Edmonton Eskimos. "The club was without 10 first- stringers when it tangled a week {later in Toronto against the Ar- |gonauts. The Calgary line crumbled before a 51-30 Argo onslaught. HIGHEST HOPE { Quarterback Joe Kapp, who {proved himself last year as a ers, strong regulars Bill been joined by promising rookie, Janes, acquired last week from {the B.C. Lions. There are few new faces in| an Bottoms, Clare Exelby, 'all are back at Kenna and Ernie Warlick have! the camp's most who will carry the torch into the Willie Barber|Olympic Stadium Aug. 25 and of Florida A and M, and Jerry|plant it on its concrete pedestal [the backfield. Proved regulars veteran Earl Lunsford will be His problems on the line were nearly 2,000 runners. The bless- disappearing with the return tong of Zeus will be invoked in an- action of tackles Chuck Quilter, cian ritual as the flame is kin- George Hansen Don Luzzi and] Opie Bandy, all burned in the ex-| hibition game. Veteran Canadian|Saturday after being carried Ron Allbright at guard was work- along the gulf of Corinth by run- The torch will arrive in Athens ners. In the Greek capital's J pie stadium, it will be handed over to Italian Olympic And at end, perhaps the hap- officials. Then it will be shipped plest key spot for the Stamped- Mec-|by further relays of runners. to Syracuse and taken to Rome In Rome, the big question is high above the imposing arena | built by the late dictator Benito Mussolini, Normally, a famous runner of | the past gets the honor, but Ital- Gene Filipski and Harvey Wylie| ian Olympic officials are not let- halfback, and| ting out any trade secrets. "There will be no announce- said a NSAFE TIRES running from the fullback slot for ment before the day," {his third year with Calgary. spokesman. It only take) a minute to' check your tires for bald- "Webb (Yankee co-owner along with Topping) was co-chairman [the letter apparently resulted| Passing artist, has developed this | from recent frictions between the |Y®4T and remains the club's high- OUSTS MRS. LYLE est hope. of the expansion meeting in Chi- cago last week and he was wholeheartedly in favor of the| recommendation to expand the| majors by bringing in four Con-| tinental League teams either in| 1961 or 1962, with the other four around 1965. No mention = made of I of Los Angeles then." "Bibis' Retains Judy Darling Semi-Finalist SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP) -- | quarter-final play. Miss Harvey | Blonde Judy Darling of Hudson|coasted to a 6 and 5 victory over Six-Metre Title | of Heights, Que., Scarborough, Ont., and Gail Harvey Roma Neundorf of Toronto. {teams, the latest one two weeks | | 28 in Los Angeles. Dodger pitcher Don Drysdale, & his first pitch to slugger Vada | Pinson July 27, hit the outfielder | lon the head. Pinson was knocked | down and dazed but continued to | play. | Eddie Rrcaro Rides Only One Winner FORT ERIE (CP) opposed! Today's other semi-final pitted Eddy Arcaro atiracted es reco! TORONTO (CP)--The Toronio| each other today in a match that Mrs. Frank Stranahan of Toledo, week-day crowd of 10,128 to Te id yacht Bibis captured the North W sailing for the | American six meire championship Thursday gecond year in a row The Royal Canadian Club craft finished third in Thurs- day's race under skipper Jim Crang. However, the finish gave Yacht! junior champion, i! leave an finalist in the Canadian women's open golf championship. Miss Darling, forme was become the first former champion event, while Miss to win Harvey, Canadian Mrs, aiming to open crown in 1936, daughter of a tional golf to defeat the 42 - 17-/ close champion, on the 16th hole 5, Goulet of Regina. | 'Miss Darling, A. B. Darling, won the shot sensa- Mrs. Lyle, yéar - old Canadian women's her 39% points in the three-race vear-old three-time winner 'of the She won on the 16th by sinking junior crown, had her sights on a 12-foot putt for a par four. series, Second-place finisher was another RCYC yacht Buzzy III! which gathered 36% points under) skipper Reg Dixon, Fred Obershiemer's town, N.Y., yacht finished third with 33 points in| the 14-boat field. | Jerry Cassel's Stork, Roches. ert Lyle of Montreal 3 and 2 in'the ninth. ter, N.Y., and Skip Doyle's Fun, | Youngstown, tied for fourth spot with 30 points each. Bibis won the first race and was second in the second race] over the 18-mile course here, Ottawa Petitions For Junday Sport OTTAWA (CP)--Another 1,000] names have been added to a petition in support of Sunday | sport in the Canadian capital. The Sunday Sport Committee | collected the names at Wednes- day night's exhibition football game between the Ottawa Rough iders and the Edmonotn Eski-| mos. The committee says the peti-| tion now contains 7,000 names. | 4bout 12,500 names, 10 per cent. of the city electorate, are re- quired to put the question of Sunday sport before voters mext December's eivic election, | the first open championship win by a junior, Little Sister| Country Club Saturday. Mrs. Lyle and Miss Darling were deadlocked after nine holes. | | stroke lead but Mrs. Lyle evened Miss Darling took a big step the match with a par three on Thursday by defeating Mrs. Rob- the eighth and a birdie four on than that TOCTEST FOOD FOR DOPE IN OLYMPIC MARATHON ROME (AP)--Special checks will be made on the food par- cels of marathon runners and long-distance walkers to make sure no pep pills. or dope have been included with the food, Italian medical authorities said Wednesday: Dr. Ferruceciu Antonelli, member of the Italian Federa- tion on Sport and Medicine, said the Italian Amateur Fed- eration would make the check | before the athletes started out on their long grinds through the Roman countryside. "That is being done at the request of the International Federation," Antonelli said. at| "The food will be checked and then put into a plastic bag. The bag will be specially sealed once the food has been | checked." The marathon runners travel 26 miles, 385 yards through villages and fields outside Rome. The walkers are called on to travel 12 miles, 752 yards and 31 miles, 120 yards. They are the athletes most | likely to suffer from the Italian heat and from fatigue. Reports circulating in Rome that other athletes--swimmers and track' men among them-- would be subjected to doping tests were described as "'ridic- ulous" by Dr. Guido Iannac- cone, secretary of the medical committee for the Olympics. unpr ecedented Ohio, against dark-horse Joanne Fort Erie Jockey Club Thursday, bit the best he could do was a] whose mother, first and a second in four races. | He was making his first start at the Fort Erie track rode out on ee AC and Winesteo, came in second with Roundency and fi- nally scored on his last mount, foste Roman. Noble Roman paid $3.10, $2.80 and $2.30. Top price of the day was pai return $47 for $2. The crowd was 3,000 larger| of the corresponding {day in 1959. Three-Horse Spill | At 01d Woodbine | TORONTO (CP)--A three-horse| spill jammed up the race track | at Old Woodbine Park Thursday| Inight causing a stewards' dec sion that put the winning horse in the third race back to fifth. Winning pacer was King Flyer, owned by R. W. Leatherdale of Windsor and driven by Jiggs Me- {Fadden, but after consultation| {the three stewards decided the| | four- -year-old gelding was instru. | {mental in causing the spill. | In setting King Flyer back tol fifth, the judges made a winner| {of the second horse to finish, {Jonny Johnston C., owned by |Lorne Johnston of Dresden and| driven by Ross Johnston. | Third horse, Estell Chips, owned by Gordon Pullman of [Seaforth and driven by Bill Har- |vey, became second. > g | quitting the National Basketball A aid | The 36-hole final will be played Judy had birdies on the second by Chop O'Lark in the sixth when| "arriors reputed to make him Youngs-| at the nearby Riverside Golf and and third holes to grab a two- he caught a tiring Roundency tol hy sports {the NBA was mine alone. How- {117 Hambletonian trotting derby Douglas 1s proud of one ial tion of strength in his 1960 lineup: | Early this week he had more| Canadians--20 -- and fewer im-| ports--17--in camp than ever be- re. He could afford last week, for | instance, to dismiss on waivers {import centres Kurt Burris and | Chuck Zickefoose in favor of Wilt The Stilt " Draws Sports' Highest Salary PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Wilt (The Stilt) Chamberlain, bowing to what he described as the wishes of his fans and his race, changed his mind Tuesday about Enjoy BIGFOUR FOOTBALL There" 's no B Hore Hamiing game to watch and enjoy than ho by the Big Four, b and fall, football as ssociation and signed a three- year contract with Philadelphia |the highest - salaried athlete in Eddie Gottlieb, owner of the| | Warriors, said he enticed Cham-| berlain from his last March re- tirement with a contract, includ- ing fringe benefits, that "we feel makes him the highest: paid ath- |lete in sports today." Chamberlain, 7 - foot - 1 Negro who reportedly earned In excess f $60,000 from the Warriors last | year, said Tuesday: "My original decision to quilt ever, after discussing the mat- ter with leaders of my race, friends and my family, I realized | that it was a bigger decision than imine alone. " REMEMBER WHEN . . ? By THE CANADIAN PRESS The Canadian-owned filly Hell- copter became the first foreign- owned horse to capture the $117,- for three-year-olds at Goshen, N.Y., seven years ago today.| Helicopter, owned by brothers| J. E. and C., E. Armstrong of| Brantford, Ont., was driven by 29-year-old Harry Harvey, yous est driver to win the race. the 0 safe...be ness, uneven tread wear, cuts or bruises. Any of these signs means your tiresare unsafe! Go to your Dominion Royal Tire Dealernow. Buy RoyalSafety 8'sfor greater safety and performance... 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