pee ee HE SCORES! Los Angeles' Dodgers won the first game of their doubleheader in New York on Sunday, 5-2, over N.Y. Mets. Above right- fielder Ron Fairley slides safely over home plate, scor- FEA ca oi i a a, ing from second on a two- bagger by catcher John Roseboro, in the fourth in- ning, at Shea Stadium, for one of the Dodgers' runs. Chris Cannizzaro, Mets* catcher, is about to glove aartd Pn aa a aa penn, -- "en ot Oe FS FE ee SP Fee Fre Move By AAU, Feud Continues CHICAGO (AP) -- The Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Asso- ciation planned Sunday to counter a hard blow to its Olympic organization prestige The setback came Saturday las the United States Olympic committee, in special session, approved a measure increasing the power of the Amateur Ath- letic Union in Olympic «ports. -The AAU and NCAA have been feuding five years over sanctioning of U.S. and ama- teur competitions, but the USOC's overwhelming, vote to give majority membership on various Olympic sports com- mittees to groups holding inter- national recognition stoked a fresh controversy. The action left' the NCAA and its family group .-- high schools, junior colleges and coaches associations -- with a minimum of influence in the) Olympic movement. Immediately following the USOC's 1,339 to 585 vote which gave the AAU control of major. games committees, an NCAA- backed caucus met to decide a course of rebuttal, The group of collegiate, high school and junior college king- pins decided to appoint a "'se- lect committee of nationally prominent educational leaders to make a major issue of Sat- urday's USOC action." For 35 years, following a pro- test walkout by the NCAA prior to the 1928 Olympics in Amster- dam; the collegiate forces were accorded equal representation the ball, but too late to catch the runner. In foreground is Wes Parker, Dodgers' first baseman, guiding Fairly "home", jtees | Now, collegiate representa-| tion will be in a minority, up to the discretion of the USOC's board of directors. --AP Wirephoto NCAA Counters! with AAU on gamés commit- jtion. a en ae ee aed cee ad teed Ce ie aa es Te ed ae ' THE OSHAWA TIMES, i a oa Monday, June 14, 1965 J. home the winner with a triple in the ninth. That left Chicago only half a game behind the league-leading Minnesota Twins while the Yan- kees languished in sev- enth place, In other games, Detroit Ti- gers edged Minnesota 5-4, New By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bill Skowron is still attending to a bit of unfinished business. Shortly after the Moose helped New York Yankees win the 1962 pennant, they decided the big first baseman was sur- plus to their requirements and dealt him eff to Los Angeles Dodgers. York blanked Los Angeles An- One mediocre season later,|gels 3-0, Baltimore Orioles Skowron was back in the Amer-|nipped Boston Red Sox 1-0 and ican League, first with _the/Kansas City Athletics defeated lowly Washington Senators,|Cleveland Indians 8-4 before then. with Chicago where - he/losing 5-2. contributed a number of clutchigrio_EsS EDGE SOX hits to a drive that left the! caturday Baltimore edged White Sox just one game out Ofiposton 5-4, Washin gton first place. ' trimmed Chicago 7-1, Detroit _This year, at 34, he's out t0/defeated Minnesota 8-5, Kansas finish the job. '-_ \City downed Cleveland 7-0 and Leading the White Sox in'Los Angeles overwhelmed New runs batted in with 30 and in/York 13-3, : home runs with seven,\.the) Skowron's game-winning tri- Moose did practically all the Of-\ple off Pete Richert Sunday fol- fensive damage Sunday in a 2-Nlowed Floyd Robinson's leadoff victory over Washington. He!double. The* first baseman's tied the score with a home run|home run offset Don Lock's sec- in the seventh inning and drovejond-inning homer and ended Washington Edges Up; Skowron Has Big Bat Richert's string of 19 scoreless innings. - Hank Aguirre posted his sev- enth victory against two de- feats and singled across the éventual decidirig. run in the seventh. Bob Allison's two-run homer in the Minnesota eighth made it. close. Pedro Ramos rescued Whitey Ford in the ninth inning and saved the Yankees' victory. Ford, now 6-6, permitted only one Angel as far as second jbase. The Yankees scored all jof their runs in the fourth in- ining, two on a_ bases-loaded single by Hector Lopez. | John Orsino brought home| Brooks Robinson with a sacri-. fice fly in the fifth for Balti-| more's only run. Milt Pappas) picked up his fir tstriumph in} nearly a month. } The Athletics won the opener with five runs in the seventh inning, three on Ken Harrel- son's homer and two on short- jstop Dick Howser's error. | LEAFS END. SLUMP Bork Hurls One-Hitter To Lead Columbus Jets By THE CANADIAN PRESS Three Bisons pitchers held Columbus southpaw Frank|the Crackers to just seven hits Bork stole the spotlight as the|in their two games as Buffalo worm turned in weekend Inter-|snapped Atlanta's eight - game national League baseball ac-|winning streak. Be The Leafs used a_ three-run Bork faced a minimum 21/fifth to win the second game batters in pitching a one-hitter| after the Suns won the opener to give the Jets a seven-inning)/on homers by Coco Laboy, Ted 3-0 victory in the nightcap Sun-|Savage and George Kernek. day after Rochester Red Wings! * took the opener 5-2. On Saturday, Atlanta turned Sport Executives | | Are Given Honors ST. CATHARINES (CP)--Six) prominent sports executives! were honored at the Niagara) |District Old Time Sportsmens | | Association's eighth annual re- union Saturday. | Receiivng plaques were Jim Farrell of Fort Erie, Ont., Dr.! Arthur Wilson of Thorold, Ont.,} jand Harvey Dudley, William} Mable, Wild McAvoy and Ed) Sheehan, all of St. Catharines. Presentations were made by |Chicago 'Black Hawk defence- {man Elmer Vasko, representing |present-day athletes. 'SEE YOUR GENERAL TIRE SPECIALIST NOW FOR THE BIGGEST SAFE-DRIVING BARGAIN IN TOWN! j | back Toronto 6-4, Rochester de-| More than 25 former Nia- | Otherwise it was a weekend) Pea | A feated Toledo 7-2, Jacksonville| gara-area athletes from Ontario) N) U arathon jof vengeance. Toledo Mud|qqyneq Buffalo 5-2 and Colum- and United States centres at-| L.A. Stretches Lead, FOR 30 DAYS Via Three From Mets By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer Gene Mauch, the explosive manager of Philadelphia Phil- lies' doesn't throw spare ribs any more. Now he conducts lec- ture sessions at 9:30 in the morning. The subject of Mauch's diser- tation Sunday was the lacka- daisical play of outfielder Tony Gonzalez. N And the result of Mauch's dis- ciplinary action was a homer, double and single by Gonzalez that carried the Phillies to a 5-0 victory over Houston Astros for their fifth straight triumph, termed the outfielder's less. than his capabilities." "He was right," admitted best." ; He did it right away, leading off the first with a homer, tack- ling on the other two hits and raising his average to .298 while providing the only support Chris Short needed in subduing the Astros on five hits. Los Angeles Dodgers, mean- while, stretched their National League lead to 34 games over Milwaukee, defeating New York Mets 5-2 and 4-3 while the lifting them to the .500 level for the first time in almost a month. | Mauch, who has been known to throw spare ribs around the clubhouse when he's fuming, long while the Braves split, beating St. Louis Cardinals 4-2 before. getting wal- loped 12-2 in a wild, rhubarb- punctuated game. failure| Philadelphia "to execute four plays much}5-4, San Francisco turned back} Gonzalez. "'It was my fault. I}defeated St. Louis 4-1. just. go out now and do my) downed Houston} |Pittsburgh 4-0, Chicago edged] Cincinnati 3-2. and Milwaukee} The Dodgers put Sunday's opener out of reach with a four- run fourth-inning uprising keyed by Willie Davis' two-run single. In the nigthcap, the Dodgers overcame a 3-2 deficit in the ninth on a' game-winning double by Wally Moon that sent the Mets 'to their 1th straight de- feat. Milwaukee snapped a 2-2 tie in the opener on Gene Oliver's two-run single in the eighth in- ning while Wade Blasingame completed a four-hitter against the Cardinals, The Braves not only lost the Inightcap but manager Bobby Elsewhere, Chicago Cubs|Bragan and their starting bat- has kept his temper all season|rapped Cincinnati 9-7 before the/tery--pitcher Hank Fisher and Phillies have/Reds took the nightcap 7-0 and) catcher Gene Oliver--in a series languished in the second divi-|Pittsburgh Pirates edged San| of ejections during the fourth in- sion, But Mauch and Gonzalez had their chat Sunday for what the Philadelphia manager Francisco Giants 2-1; In Saturday games, Los An- New York. 5-0, geles, tripped NEW YORK MET FOLLOWERS FINALLY GET SERIOUS? By HAL BOCK NEW YORK (AP) -- Are New York Met fans losing their sense of humor? For four years the Mets have stumbled through the National League, lovably los- ing their way into the hearts of fans everywhere. Never did the faithful suggest that their ' heroes' hard: times were the product of anything except good old fashioned ineptitude. But a strange thing hap- pened Sunday, There were 57,175 fans squeezed into Shea Stadium and midway through New York's 10th straight loss --this one to Los Angeles Dodgers 4-3--they turned on plate umpire Chris Pelekou- das. What set the fans off was Pelekoudas' cali on a close play on Johnny Lewis at home plate which ended the sixth inning. Lewis, pinch hitting Danny Napoleon, had been purposely walked with Ron Swoboda on third and New York leading 2-1, The Dodgers had won the first game 5-2. for When Billy Cowan dropped a hit off Willie Davis' glove in centre field, Swoboda scored easily and Lewis came racing around third, heading for home. Dodger catcher John Roseboro grabbed the relay and planted the tag on the sliding Lewis. When Pele- koudas called him out, Lewis and the rest of the Mets rushed the umpire, In. the argument following | jning as the Cardinals pushed Across seven unearned runs. Rookie catcher Chris Krug and Ron Santo each hammered three-run homers while Billy Williams connected for a solo job fin the Cubs' first-game vic- tory. The Reds came back to take the nightcap as Frank. Robinson drove in three runs' with a dou- ble and single in support of Joey Jay's five-hit pitching. Vern Law pitched a_three- hitter for the Pirates: winning his fifth straight, and, scored the winning run on Bifl Virdon's seventh-inning triple. [APPOINTMENT | the call, Met coach Don Heff- | ner was thrown out of the game. The fans began chanting "kill the umpire" after the call, Waving handkerchiefs and tossing debris on the field. Finally Pelekoudas walked into the Mets' dugout to con fer with manager Casey Sten- gel. The fans' booing all but drowned out the public-ad- dress announcement that the game would be forfeited un- less they stopped throwing de- bris on the field Needless. to say-~after the fans calmed down, the Mets went on to lose in their ac- customed fashion, Snell Wants To Regain Mile Record VANCOUVER (CP) -- Peter Snell said Sunday he has one object -- to get back. his world} mile record before his world tour ends in August. The famed New Zealand run- ner arrived here for his -first whack at his objective at an invitational track meet - here Tuesday. Snell's pending world record of 3:54.1 was lowered last week by Michel Jazy of France in a time of 3:53.6. "T want to get the record back," Snell said in an inter- view. "This will be my main goal for the rest of. the. tour." GIVES TWO REASONS He gave two reasons why he expects the mile Tuesday 'will be a fast one. One is that Jim Grelle of Los Angeles will be running and Grelle has been needling him. The other "is that Cary Weisiger of North Caro-| During Tour lina will force the field into a fast pace. _ "The confirmation of Grelle in the race puts a different slant on the whole race. He has made a lot of remarks about being out for my scalp since I beat him in Los Angeles 10 jcovering the 26-mile, 385-yard| Jacksonvi |Hens, losers of nine of their last bus nipped Syracuse 4-2. tended. 11, swept-a pair from Syracuse To Canada Runner (Geiss "ang 2 the hast. z {place Buffalo Bisons, losers of HOLYOKE, Mass. (CP-AP)--\19 in a row to Atlanta, dumped Canadian runner Ron Walling-jthe league - leading Crackers ford, of Hamilton, won the U.S.|42 and 3-0. | Amateur Athletic Union's mar-| Toronto Maple Leafs snapped 4 "1 la nine-game losing streak with athon championship Sunday,|, 5-3 nightcap. victory. over Ne Suns after losing course in two hours, 22 minutes|the opener 4-2. | and 29 .seconds. | Andy Etchebarren's single in Wallingford, a physical edu. (the ie utr the only hit . cation instructor at McMaster iHeher. gf ei or was parang: Sagar xalley promptly erased in a double of Groton, Conn., to win over play. a field of 69 starters. Kelley,;RELIEFERS WIN finished in 2:25.31. | Two left-handed relief pitch- Wallingford was the, top Ca-frledo.. Lou "yicaey phe bee nadian in this year's Boston/opener and Jack Curtis the sec- marathon, finishing 11th, 'ond game on a three-hitter. One of Canada's 3 Great Whiskies PROUDLY CAN EXPORTED TO ADIAN WHISKY MORE THAN NTRI New Blue Sunoco can eliminate these 5 common carburetor problems In your car RON SILVER Frank Wonneeott, Used Car Man- ager of the Cliff Mills Motors, is pleased to announce the appoint- ment of Ron Silver to their Used Cor Sales Stoff. Mr. Silver has had several yeors experience in the automobile sales field and looks forward to serving you at Mills. 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