ON i oe Se we "Cee ee 16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, June 14, 1962 HEADS UP FOOTBALL! Edvaldo (Vava) Neto of Bra- zil, hits the ball with his aead to score against Chile in yestérday's world champion- ship semi-final soccer match at Santiago, Chile. Opponents are Chpe's Manuel Rodriguez (left) and Raul Sanchez, sec- ond - from - right. Brazil's Amarildo is. at the ' right. Vava penetrated the Chilean goal at 78 minutes of the contest. The Brazilian centre- | | forward scored twice in the second half as Brazil won 4-2. Brazil will now meet Czecho- slovakia in the final match, on Sunday, in Santiago. Q WIREPHOTO 'SPORTS MENU Ccechs Sunda By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' RANDALL-ROY METALS League are being victimized b to Oshawa last night for their scheduled tilt of the Beaches Major Fastball y the weatherman, They came with Oshawa Tony's, only to be 'rained out" for the second time, To make matters worse, the same two Monday night at Kew Gardens out by Mr. J. Pluvius. Not on of going "'stale" due to lack clubs were to have played on and that one was also washed ly is the R-R squad in danger of activity, but they are also faced with two extra trips to Oshawa. Meanwhile, local soft- ball fans can take in another doubleheader tonight at Alex- andra Park and be almost certain to see top notch entertain- ment. Tuesday night's twin-bill produced two sparkling games, yet the attendance was not up to scratch. Tonight it's Hef- fering's and MacLean's in the opener, a battle of the "oilers'"' that should be a dandy. In the on Cobourg "'Brokers" and thi pitching battle between Rolli Tony's Ronnie Taylor, nightcap, Tony's Vendors take § one is apt to prove a stern e Campbell of Cobourg and PUBLIC SCHOOL youngsters are busy these days training for their big track-and-field meet, their own "Olympic Games" do, which is scheduled for Alexandra Park next Wednesday afternoon. The various schools athletic meets, to declare the have held their own individual ir representatives for the big intra-city meet. The public is invited to Alexandra Park next Wednesday afternoon and we can advise -- they should be on hand, especially all the parents as well as sports-minded citizens, They'll have over 1,500: youngsters competing in 34 track (races) events and 14 field events, jumps, ball-throws, etc, It's a gala sports event and with each school having a lusty cheering section on hand, high, there's more enthusiasm than in most sports spectacle country. The boys and girls g school colors and flags waving and actual color to this event presented anywhere in the ive their all, in true sporting competition, for the honor of their school and the sheer thrill of competing. Tom Cotie and his staff of about 40 efficient workers, run the whole program off in about four hours -- itself a feat of organization -- but to properly appreciate the mammoth scale of this operation, you need to be on hand to see it. There's no charge either -- so if you are free next Wednesday afternoon, we recommend that you take in the annual "Oshawa Public School Games" at Alexandra Park It's something you'll thoroughly enjoy. STILL ON track-and-field, the Ostiawa Shamrock Athletic Club. opens its annual night, when the E. F. Farrow get under way and on Thursda weekly competitions next Tuesday Trophy (for the sprints) will y evening, the distance events, with the Legion Trophy as top prize, will be started, They run in two sections, three weeks in each section, with points deciding the trophy winners. Oshawa Shamrock AC is cele- brating its 25th season this yea August 11, is to be held, featur r and an anniversary meet, on ing 14 events of track-and-field competition. The annual Oshawa and District championships will be held on Sept, 22, Club president Ben Fallman, the one man: who has kept track-and-field activity alive in Oshawa (outside of secondary school competition) for all of those 25 years, is looking for help from former Shamrock AC members and any and all of the forme wore the green-and-white, are their assistance. OHA Meeting London, June 17 WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- On- tario Hockey Association presi- ient Lioyd Pollock says a meet- ng of all clubs interested in senior hockey next season will ve held in London June 17. Some Senior OHA clubs, not- tly Windsor Bulldogs and Yhatham Maroons, have ex- yressed a desire to return to he system of paying salarie 0 players, Pollock said W. \esday, Other clubs who played o the senior circuit last sea- on want to remain on the share- he-wealth system. Pollock said the outcome of he Eastern Professiona! ague's annual meeting in Ot- awa Saturday will have a bear- 1g on the Senior OHA's even- ial status, The Eastern Pro »op is rumored to be in danger r runners and jumpers who urged to phone Ben and offer Beasley Honored At Annual Dinner TORONTO (CP)--Bill Beas- ley of Toronto Wednesday night was honored as owner of Can- ada's horse of the year, Hidden Treasure. It was his; second such award in five years. tat | din |Ra } ner, sponsored by the Daly cing Form. bred by E. P. Taylor. He bred Derby winner Dark Star from |his own mare, Ratine. The horse of the year fo 1961 won 20 races, including 1 Stakes, in 42 starts. Hidden dian breds with earnings more than $156,000. of f folding. If the league does ollapse, many players would] 6 a to return to amateur! anks., End And Fullback! BUFFALO (AP) -- Buffalo ils of the American Football sague have signed fullback! illie Jones of Purdue and Bill anis, an end from Eastern! ichigan.. : First Blind Woman --| Enters Ont. Match| GUELPH (CP) -- Jane Cam-| Buffalo Signs Two | .ou of Dunnville, Qnt., will] be the first woman to compete ¢ in the Ontario: cham | blind golfers when she tees off here Sunday with 10 men. Mrs. Camelford before she lost her years ago. 7} |sixth in eight decisions. Brazil Meets Y In World Title SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)--D fending champion Brazil an Czechoslovakia will meet Sun- day for the World Cup soccer championship. Brazil reached the finals by beating Chile 4-2 while Czecho-| slovakia defeated Yugoslavia | 13-1 Wednesday. Chile and Yu- goslavia will play Saturday to} decide the third- and fourth-| | place finishers. Brazil may be without services of its star player, right winger Garrincha who scored two goals Wednesday before be-; ing sent off the field in the last} }10 minutes by Peruvian referee Maximo Yamasaki. The Inter-| national Federation of Football| Associations wss expected to| rule today or Friday on Gar- | rincha's case. Both semi-finals were rough, with Yamasaki sending Chile's, centre forward Honorio Landa out of the game two minutes) before ejecting Garrincha, The! teams finished with 10 men| each. During the Czech - Yugoslav ;match, Swiss referee Dienst had| |to call together the captains of! |each club, He warned them that |somebody would go off if there was any more rough play. TALLIES TWICE Vava, Brazil's centre forward, got two goals. Scoring for Chile | were inside right Toro and} |Lionel Sanchez who tallied on a penalty kick. Inside left Koraba gave the ;Czechs a 1-0 lead in the 48th minute but Yugoslavia tied it on centre forward Jerkovic's| | goal in the 70th minute. Inside} right Scherer then broke the game open by scoring twice for Czechoslovakia within four min- utes -- in the 80th and 83rd min-} utes. A Brazilian team without Gar- rincha could run into trouble against the Czechs, Already the defending champions are with- out inside forward star Pele! who was injured in an early }sroup match against Czechoslo- | Vakia. If Garrincha is disqualified, the Czechs could become the first Communist team to win the Jules Rimet trophy -- the symbol of world soccer suprem- acy. ie. the; Baitiiilias 'Belts Homers In Chiefs Win By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS John Glenn, pretty much a bust as a hitter when pla for the Atlanta Crackers, looks like a second Roger Maris in a Syracuse uniform. The outfielder, traded May 25 |to Syracuse by Atlanta for first |baseman Fred Hopke, got his fifth and sixth homers for the|Cincinnati Beasley was guest of honor|Chiefs and drove in three runs| Milwaukee the annual horse-of-the-year|Wednesday night as Syracuse|Houston 'Y | Philadelphia e 0 game. | Chicago Beasley won the honor in 1956 | While with Atlanta Glenn hit! New York S| with Canadian Champ, a horse °Mly two homers. The Columbus at Buffalo twi-| Los Angeles 010010000- 2 71 defeated Atlanta 4-1 in the onl International League Hidden Treasure by Kentucky |ight doubleheader and single|/ Milwaukee games between Richmond - at | Toronto and Rochester at Jack-|R . sonville were postponed because | cher (9) and Crandall. HRs: LA --Koufax (1); Mil -- McMillan run (6), Treasure also became the lead. |0Mer in the fourth after man-|San Fran. ing money winner among Cana- #8°° Frank Verdi had singled | Cincinnati of rain. Glenn clouted a two and got his second round Crackers, came up with the Crackers' lone run which came in the fourth on Beauchamp's double and Morgan's single. The use starter Ray. Apple in the ourth but were held to four hits (8) |the remainder of the way by/Elst ;Southpaw. Carl Mathias for his| Tappe, Played golf |fourth victory as against seven! Virdon = slate three {losses she will be coached!charged w 'by her husband® Pe sige t Leroy Gregory was the defeat, his Twins Pursue Top, By JIM HACKLEMAN 'doubles by Lennie Green and Defeat Angels 4-2 Ken Retzer and Jock Hicks "ee * " SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY SOFTBALL "Major League" Doublehejer: Rangers The first round of the Carling Challenge Trophy was played fit Sg a - thes So me, SO OY Le OG Advance, Ousting Kickers this Friday evening at 8.00 p.m. stadium. Rich Rollins in the first in- ning. He finally was lifted for a pinch-hitter in the seventh and Minnesota proceeded to cash in against Duren. FINALLY YIELDS HOMER Assoclated Press Sports Writer Bob Allison is the latest hero in the rotating cast of stars for Minnesota's surprising Twins, who again find themselves bar- ely out of the American League lead they've been pursuing since the firing started in April. Heffering's Imperials vs Mac- Lean's Esso, at 6.45 p.m. and Cobourg Brokers vs Tony's Ven- dors, at 8.15 p.m., both games homered, and Cleveland errors gave Washington two unearned runs, Pedro Ramos lost the first in the last night, and in a real close|last a Ran Insmen Civic Stadium gers edged Kickers This was a hard game for |. Winner of the Labatt Award night was Gerry Kea, centre-half of Rangers. | In the second game of the Reserve League this season, The hard-throwing reliever is- sued a walk to Rollins leading game and Dave Stenhouse was the loser in the second, Schwall showed the form that made him a 15-game winner at Alexandra Park. Inter-County League: Fo- ley's Plumbing vs Fernhill Gen- Kickers to lose as they hadjItalia defeated Rangers 61. In the edge on chances, at least|their first game, Italia edged two shots rebounding from the| Whitby Bathurst 1-0. The next cross-bar and it took a fluke|reserve game is scheduled for Allison clipped Los Angeles reliever Ryne Duren for a two- run homer with two out in the eighth inning Wednesday night, and AL rookie of the year last season, handcuffing the Orioles in the wind and drizzle at Bos- off the eighth, then struck out Harmon Killebrew and Don Mnicher before Allison rapped osha Aces, at Alexandra Park, west diamond; Police Assoc. vs Ukrainian Aces, at Bathe Park; oal to beat them. However} angers had the more aggres-| sive play and it was a result next Wednesday, with Rangers + jg Whitby Bathurst at the Twins to a come-|the first homer Duren has ton's Fenway Park. The Red)both games at 6.45 p.m. of this that gave them the | friend." | pink convertible was Bridget | Whitaker, 33, of Hollywood. | bleeding profusely from a cut | dress iChicago (Ellsworth 4-8). powerin from-behind 4-2 decision over the Angels, The victory hoisted Minnesota back into second place only 10 percentage points behind New York Yankees, whose home game against De- troit Tigers was rained out. Mean while, Cleveland 'In- dians slipped to third--but still only a half game off the pace-- in a doubleheader split with Washington Senators. The In- dians won the second game 4-1 after dropping the opener 4-2. Kansas City Athletics, knocked over Chicago White Sox 4-3 and win over Baltimore Orioles. Dean Chance, fined Dodgers Nip Braves; | Giants Bow To Reds By JIM BECKER If Milwaukee's Warren Spahn has been able to bank a few of| The third-place Pittsburgh Pi-!'men on third and one out. The Braves|rates feasted on Chicago Cubs|win made him 9-2. the surplus runs the have given him over the years, he would be winning 2 few }more ball games this season. Spahn has 315 victories to his credit and at 41 he shows few signs of basebal! senility. But Wednesday night he dropped his fifth one-run decision of the year as the Braves bowed to Los Angeles Dodgers 21, leav- him with a 6-7 won-lost mark for the season. The win opened a two-game National League lead for the Dodgers over San Francisco yiants, who could do almost nothing with Bob Purkey of Cin- cinnati Reds. He beat them 5-0 on three hits and became the ing yielded in 23 appearances this year. Allison also delivered an insurance run in the ninth on sacrifice and a hit batsman, fly to shallow right, but threw out Green at second as- Ver- salles scored. Minnesota reliever Ray Moore was the winner with three shutout innings. Duren was charged with the loss. | Dick Donovan ran his record |\to 92 with a_ six-hitter for Don Schwall's two-hit pitching|Cleveland in the second game|Dick Howser stole his second lat Washington, backed by John along|Romano's three-run homer injon Jose Tartabull's second run- with fellow Angel pitcher Bo/the fourth inning. The Senators) producing single of the night.) \Belinsky after an early-morn-|won their fifth in a row in the) Tartabull Sto ling peccadillo, started as ad-|opener as Claude Osteen and) took third on an infield out and) 'vertised against the Twins and|Steve Hamilton collaborated to) socred the clincher on Manny! 'did well after being tagged forihold the Indians to four hits,|Jimenez' single. first major league pitcher to q Associated Press Staff Writer) reach the 11-victory mark in the!He gave up only three hits, and|---- |process. 64 for their fifth straight vic- tory and St. Louis Cardinals romped over Philadelphia Phil- lies 6-1 for their ninth in the last 10. The New York Mets-- j Houston Colts game was rained out. Sandy Koufax, who was still buying kiddie-price tickets when Spahn began winning the Dodgers with his first ma- jor league home run in the fifth. A solo clout, it provided the deciding run. Roy McMil- lan hit a homer in the sixth for the Braves' only marker. The fireballing Los Angeles BELINSKY IN TROUBLE WITH WOMEN BEVERLY HILLS, (AP) -- Bo Belinsky, Los An- geles Angels' nightclubbing pitcher, left a bon voyage party for singer Eddie Fisher at 4:45 a.m. and 15 minutes later a woman companion ac- cused him of beating her. The Los Angeles headlined the story: | "Belinsky denies one-hit- | ter." | Belinsky, 25-year-old south- | paw whiz, started off the sea- son with six victories includ- ing a no-hitter and a two- hitter. He soon became a favorite Hollywood celebrity. He's been batted out every start since. RELATE DETAILS Beverly Hills police gave this account of the incident: "Gloria Eves, 33, of Holly- wood, a restaurant cashier, ran to police car early Wed- nesday screaming: "He's beating me up. He's | also beating up my _ girl | Times | in | Officer B. E. Gruenzel said he found Belinsky in the front seat of a car with another Angels pitcher, Dean Chance. Also in Belinsky's expensive Police said Miss Eves was over her left eye and her Calif. | | erent, AND TEAM took five stitches to close the wound at an emergency hos- pital. Belinsky denied hitting the |'woman and later told a re- | porter "'it's all a blown-up | publicity stunt," | GIVES HIS VIEW He told officers he or- dered the woman out of the | car when she became bellig- suggesting that she take a cab. He said he then pulled Miss Eves from the hit some object. : Miss Whitaker told police: | "The whole affair was an ac- cident." Belinsky was called on the carpet for 45 minutes by An- gels general manager Fred Haney before he dressed for Wednesday night's game. About 10 days ago, manager Bill Rigney gave his pitcher stern lecture about extra-cur- ricular activities. Last Friday night Bo showed up at a Hollywood birthday party with singer Connie Stevens. He left at 7 a.m. Sunday night, after being knocked out of the box that afternoon, he escorted singer Kay Stevens to a night club. That party broke up at 5 a.m. Rigney announced he im- posed substantial fines on Be- linsky and Chance but de- was bloodstained. !t clined to give the amounts. an unusual force out, following a double by Zoilo Versalles, a Leon Wagner dropped Allison's Sox right-hander, winning for only the second time in nine decisions this year, gave up a two-out double to Jackie Brandt in the fourth and a single to Whitey Herzog with two away in the seventh. Boston collected six of its eight hits and all four of its runs against Chuck Es- deciding goal. | The first period ended in a scoreless dead-lock, after some fast end-to-end plays, with both! sides missing their chances. As| the game progressed the im-! portance of getting the first goal made the game wide-open, 'so that both defences had a Southern Ontario County Lea- gue -- Mount Zion vs Brooklin at Brooklin, 8.15 p.m. UAW League -- Body Shop vs Kent's Western Tire, at Alex- andra Park, west diamond, 1.30 p.m. BASEBALL | " Hae Rough Riders Talking Trade in the| majors, won his own game for avenging a double defeat Tues-| defeated 4-1 last night in Agin- letfhander struck out six, a low} car and her eye apparently | trada, now 3-8, The Athletics toppled the | White Sox for the sixth straight itime with a two-run rally in the lseventh highlighted by classy | base running and clutch hitting. | After banging into a force play, Lakeshore Intermediate Lea- gue -- Orono vs Oshawa, at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Sta- dium, 7.15 p.m. Oshawa Legion Minor Assoc.-- (Bantam League) -- Jury and Lovell 'vs Oshawa Dairy, at Eastview Park and Victor's Sports. vs Whitby, at Whitby; both games at 6.30 p.m. (Midget League) -- Whitby vs Ajax, at Ajx ande Beaton's Dairy vs UAW, at Alexandra) Park; both games at 6.30 p.m. Leaside Junior League -- Osh- awa Canadian Tire Legion Talbot Park, 7.30 p.m. FRIDAY base of the game and rode in then stole second,| "NCCER Semi -Final who had a bye round, next Wednesday evening. |The next game of the series sees |heavy share of work. Early in the second half, a they had into the the one goal to eliminate but Rangers will move into the against Ukrainia, in the first Hungaria meet Polonia, National League Ttalia-| Virtus vs Oshawa Hungaria, at} Toronto Stanley Park, 8.00 p.m.! | Oshawa and District Assoc.-- }(ist Round Semi-Final Chal- lenge Cup) -- at Kinsmen Civic 'total for him, and walked two.|Memorial Stadium, 8.00 p.. | oo twice worked out of jams with 'Agincourt Jr. Girls Score Win Oshawa Seugog Cleaners were Spahn struck out seven, walked only one and three of the seven hits he allowed were} jbunts. | Purkey threw a no-hitter at} the normally potent Giants un- til Felipe Alou doubled with two out in the seventh, and! gave only two more hits the! rest of the way. The Reds,| jday night, got two runs in the|court, in their East Toronto fourth and added one in the|Ladies' Junior Softball League fifth and two in the sixth, in-| schedule tilt. |cluding a solo homer by Cole-/ p. Jarvis, pitching for the| man, jhome club, gave the Oshawa RETIRES SIDE girls only four hits. In the sec- Reliever Elroy Face, who has|0"4 baie Pappragon oR ner gy iworked in four of the five|®% vd slider ser an a straight Pirate wins, came on|4nced on errors to score what LEAFS BIG 'M' TIES THE BOW' TORONTO (CP)--The date, time and place of Frank Ma- hovlich's wedding were closely guarded, but it didn't take school 'children in the neighborhood long to find out. When the Toronto Maple Leafs hockey forward and his bride, Marie Devaney, left Holy Rosary Church Wednes- day, a nearby school had just released its pupils for lunch. Several dozen boys invaded the wedding party ranks, seeking autographs. Two po- lice constables kept the gath- ering crowd off the church steps, orator, headed for their car they were quickly surrounded. Among the 120 guests at the wedding were Frank's team- mates George Armstrong, Tim Horton, Dick Duff, Carl Brewer, Bob _ Nevin, Baun and Billy Harris. to retire the last four Cubs and|¢ventually provd to a a stood ~* but when Mahovlich | and his bride, an interior dec- | Bob | To Other Clubs OTTAWA (CP) General hasty clearance by Kickers re-|manger George Terlep of Ot- bounded from Ritchie of Ran- tawa Rough Riders is talking gers into the corner of the net 'race for the only goal of the game. Football League clubs. From then on it was a hard- fought battle, right down to the final whistle, both sides putting everything | fray, and was enough Kickers from the series. with several Canadian Terlep says he hopes to re- port something definite 'within a few days" but refused to say }what clubs he is dickering with '© name any players in- volved. vur policy is not to men- tion any names until and if a deal is made," he said Tuesday. The Riders also announced the signing of two new U.S. players and three team yeter- ans. The newcomers are halfback Raymond Sine of Central Michi- gan University who played with Sarnia Golden Bears last sea- son, and defensive end Lex |Byrd who played his college |football at Drake University. Returning for another season are iinemen Ron Koes, Tom jJones and Moe Racine. | Carr Of Ireland Wins Third Round HOYLAKE, England (CP) -- Joe Carr of Ireland, the strong- est favorite to win the British amateur golf championship for jthe fourth time in 10 years, to- jday faced B. G. H. Chapman, an English player in the fourth jround of the tournament. Carr, 40, won his third-round jmatch 2 and 1. against Bruce Critchley, 19, of England before jabout 4,000 fans who followed |him around the 6,932 - yard course Wednesday. | Robert Sweeny plays another 36 holes today in his bid for a comeback. Sweeny, 50, of Palm Beach, Fla., won this tourna- Iment 25 years ago. | save the win for Alvin McBean|~/¢aners' only run. |(6-3). A three-run blast by Bill) Agincourt got one in the sec-) \Virdon broke a 2-2 deadlock injond inning also, when S. Hardy| the sixth, and tagged Cal)was safe on an error, Yeaman Koonce (4-2) with the loss. Chi-/Singled and an interference play cago's Bill Williams, who|followed, plus a choice play, to boosted his batting average to|let Hardy score. |.345 with three hits, homered in| In the fourth inning, Yeaman, ithe sixth. |Foster and Millson all singled The Cardinals concluded a}in succession and thanks to an 9-1 home stand, as Bob Gibson/infield out, a couple of stolen! struck out 12 Phillies and ran|bases and one wild pitch, all his record to 8-4. It was a Car-|three crossed the plate, to give eer strikeout high for Gibson|the home club their winning who allowed nine hits, all sin-| margin. les. Partie TE othe Cardinals routed Dennis) SCUGOG CLEANERS: Ger-| Bennett (2-2) in a three-run|mond, 1b; March, rf; Boddy, fifth. ss; Schultz, p; Lyons, If; Vail- ais ----|lancourt, cf; Crossman, c; Par- jadise, 2b; Parker, 3b; Wilson, |rf in 6th; Pelow, ef in 1st; Lu- |cas, 2b in 8th. Axeman Take AGINCOURT: Badgley, 2b; Connaught Cup, ser. 3, ssams sx 8 At Woodbine |If; Millson, 3b; Burroughs, c; D. Jarvis, p; Seng, 2b in 7th; Schilling, c in 4th. TORONTO (CP) -- Axeman -- found an opening along the in-| ner rails and defeated Hidden} Treasure by slightly more than} a length in the 28th running of the $11,875 Connaught Cup Han- dicap at Woodbine. Champagne Velvet, a stable- mate of Hidden Treasure fin-| ished third, about three lengths} behind the winner. Despite the defeat in Wednes- day's Connaught Cup, Hidden Treasure was later honored at a Horse of the Year banquet. The five-year-old horse, owned by W. R. Beasley of Toronto, was voted Canada's outstanding thoroughbred in 1961. Young Canuck Takes Crack AtUS.Open | OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) -- A handsome young Canadian who got his start in golf through | Dow Finsterwald will take his| first crack at the U.S. National Open this week while on fur- lough from the U.S. Army. Adrien Bigras, a 24-year-old private first class at Ft, Lewis, BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS Wash., concedes he's "'a bit ner- jvous, but I think I can do all right--L_ hope." | National League | Pet. 688 656 576 569 8 561 84 467 14 424 16% 407 17% .328 221% .291 23% National League L ay} 44 20 42 22 34 25 33 25 32 25 28 32 25 34 24 35 20 41 16 39 Los Angeles feet San Francisco Pittsburgh St. Louis 2 7% | 000 001 000- 1 20 Koufax (9-2) and N. Sherry, oseboro (3); Spahn (6-7) Fis- 000 000 000- 0 30 dwards. HR: 00 000 010- 1 91 001 130 10x- 6 91) Bennett (2-2) Green (5) 000 111 010- 4 81) McBean (6- on (8) Cardwell (9) (3); Chi--Williams (12) Probable Pitchers Today Pittsburgh (Friend 6-7) at|( Chicago Baltimore Washington Minnesota Los Angeles 020000 000- 2102 000 212 00x - 5 91|Battey; Chance, Duren (2-6) (8) Sanford (5-5) Lemay (6) Bolin|Spring (9) and Rodgers. HR: tripper of the night in the sixth.|(8) and Bailey; Purkey (ii-i)|Minn--Allison (5). Meantime, Hopke, who has beeniand E travelling a fast pace with the|man (10). two | Phila. Singles but neither figured in'St. Louis Cin--Cole-| Cleveland Washington Osteen (3-5) Hamilton (8) and Retzer. HRs: Wash--Retzer (5) Jim Owens (7) and Dalrymple; Gib-|Hicks (3). Jor'son (8-4) and Oliver. s Pittsburgh Crackers chased Syra- Chicago \Cleveland 100 013 001 - 6 143|Washington 3) Olivo (8) Face|Stenhouse (4-2) Hannan (8) and and Burgess; Koonce (4-2)|/Schmidt. HR: Cle -- Romano|Toronto at Atlanta (N) and/(11). Barragan (8). HR: Pgh-| Baltimore Boston ying} By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Los Angeles (Williams 6-2) at Milwaukee (Shaw 7-2). | San Francisco (Pierce 8-1) at) Cincinnati (Jay 8-6) Night. New York (Craig 3-8) Houston (Golden 3-4) Night. (Only games scheduled). American League W L Pct.. GBL| 32 22 .593 35 25 583 -- | 32 23 582 4 | 31 25 .554 2 28 27 509 414 29 31 483 6 | 28 31 .475 614 | 27 33 450. 8 24 32 429 9 20 37 .351 13% 100 000 021- 4100 at) New York Minnesota Cleveland Los Angeles Detroit Kansas City Boston Kralick, Moore (4-1) (7) and 000 002 000- 2 43 010 O01 1Ix- 4 51 Ramos (3-3) and Romano; 000 301 000- 4 71 010 000 000- 1 61) Donovan (8-2) and Romano;| 00 000 000- 0 20) O11 110 00x- 4.81) Estrada (3-8) Hoeft (5) Stock| 8) and Landrith; Schwall (2-7)|* and Tillman. | +Lollar; Rakow (5-7) Jones (8 | Syracuse | Syracuse |Buffalo at Jacksonville (N) The Montreal native's main 100 - $0 Chicago a rere worry is fearsome Oakmont Kansas City 100 100 20x- 4 $1)" v Buzhardt (6-6) Fisher (7) and|Country Club, where the 62nd U.S. championship begins 'Thursday, and his bank ac- |count, | and Azcue. Probable Pitchers Today é Baltimore (Barber 4-4) ai; "You know, it cost me $140 Boston (Monbouquette 4-6). just to get here," he said, "You Minnesota (Katt 5-4) at Los|can't do much of that on a Angeles (Belinsky 6-2), PFC's pay." Cleveland (Latman 3-4) at Bigras led the Seattle sec- -- (Burnside 4 ~- 5)/tional qualifiers for the . Na- ight. |tional Open last week with a 36- Chicago (Horlen 5 - 3) at Kan-/hole total of 140, culminating a sas City (Wyatt 4-4) Night. ;career that started with a break (Only games scheduled) he received while caddying for International League |Finsterwald in the 1957 Cana- phe J GBL/ dian Open. 9 . -- | "Dow learned that I was in-| a zs on fi |terested in golf and brought me | 7 PH "491 at to his club at Tequesta, Fia., as " 7 "471 12%4 an assistant, Adrien said Tues- i rel 113 1544 day, "I spent a year there and a $s on 1644 then _two years with Shelley ae Mayfield at Meadow Brook on 21 34..382 17% |Long Island before I was 000 201 001- 4 83 drafted. As soon as I get out, Atlanta 000 100 000- 1 60) pm going to go. back to golf Apple, Mathias (4) and Dot-|fyii time. I've served 17 months, terer; Gregory, Duliba (8) and/have seven months to go. I'd Saul, ~~ ol Hove to be a regular tournament james Today Columbus at Rochester (N) player." Richmond at Syracuse (N) Jacksonville Buffalo Toronto Atlanta Rochester Columbus Richmond | LITTLER PLANS ENTRY | MONTREAL (CP) The Royal Canadian Golf Associa- tion said Wednesday night that Denver 4-0 Louisville 3-3 Gene Littler, who starts de-| Omaha 12 Oklahoma City 6 fence of his U.S. 'open golf} Ind'polis 3 Dallas-Fort Worth 2: championship at Pittsburgh to- Senior Inter-County day, figures on playing in the American Association BLACK'S Feature for FATHER'S DAY | IS SUNDAY) (TH % BOWSPRITE Hawaiian Length This is one of the smart new swim fashions from Jantzen for '62. 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