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Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Jun 1967, p. 6

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6 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, June 17, 1967 By OSHAWA GREEN Gaels find themselves in the strange position of second place as they head for Huntsville to- night and a battle with the Hawks, third place club in the Ontario Lacrosse Associa- tion junior "A" series. of course, Gaels have three games in hand on the first place _ Toronto Township squad, but they have to win them. Hawks are usually tough on their home floor, and they can be expected to give Gaels some spirited op- position tonight. MONDAY NIGHT, at Civic Auditorium, Hastings Legion- naires will provide the oppo- sition for Jim Bishop's Gaels. Legionnaires have lost high- scoring Jim Paterson from last year's squad but Jim Grady is a dangerous shooter for the easterners. Gaets hope to have Don Stinson back in the lineup if not tonight, then in time for Monday's clash here, which gets under way at 8:30 p.m. SHOULD BE an interesting game at Brooklin tonight, with the Peterborough Don Byes in against Fred Whal- ley's Redmen. Redmen, short players for the past week, hope to be near full strength tonight as. they battle for the league lead. Brampton stun- ned Morley Kells' Toronto Maple Leafs in Brampton Fri- day night, which just proves that this is the best balanced senior league in years. OSHAWA LEGIONNAIRES juniors came up with an easy triumph Friday night in East- SPORTS BEAT Eric Wesslby Times Sports Editor ern Ontario Baseball Associa- tion play. They were slated to play Little Britain in a 7:30 game, but at 7:35, only five Little Britain players were on hand. Rain delayed the sched- uled start, but when it stop- ped raining, the umpires call- ed the teams to the diamond, and forfeited the game to Le- gionnaires, When the umpires called play ball, three of the Little Britain players had al- ready left the park, heading for home. IT'S DIFFICULT to under- stand how a team with a ros- ter of at least 15 players can muster only five for a night game. The five who showed up said four more were ex- pected, but they never turned up. If they were going to show, they should have been at the park well before 7:15, in order to start at 7:30. I be- lieve the EOBA constitution calls for a severe fine for this sort of thing. Umpires have to be paid and costs taken care of by the home team, THE HOCKEY season is still quite a ways off, but it's still a prime subject among sport fans. California Seals bounced Rudy Pilous as gen- eral manager Friday, a move that was hinted at during the Stanley Cup playoffs. Color- ful Rudy will come up laugh- ing, however. He won't be out of a job for long . .. Mont- real Canadiens have signed Peterborough Petes' Gary Monahan to a_ professional contract. Rumor has Mickey Redmond also signing for pro, although he's eligible for jun- ior competition next season. The front end of Mario Andretti's car comes apart after the Indianapolis ace hit oil on one of the final turns of the circuit at Mos- port Friday during trials for ANDRETTI'S BAD LUCK CONTINUES today's Indianapolis 200 races. Although Andretti and crew were able to repair part of the damage, hasty correspondence was _ di- rected to somewhere in the United States for quickly needed parts. Andretti failed to qualify during regular trials but had the good for- tune of being one of five names drawn from: a hat to fill the 22-car field for to- day's event. Andretti cracked up his car during the running of the 24-hour Le Mans Grand Prix last weekend. __ (Oshawa Times Photo) | By BOB GREEN SPRINGFIELD, N.J. (AP)-- Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Billy Casper. Like cream, the three super- stars of the game moved to the top in the most prestigious of all the world's golf tourna- ments, the United States Open chan-pionship, and are poised for the final two climatic rounds today and Sunday. Palmer, his jaw jutting in de- termination and his game in harness, looked like the charger of old when he swept over the steaming Baltusrol Golf Club course in a two-under- par 68 Friday for 137 and a one- stroke lead over Nicklaus. Big Jack, sweat streaming from his face, pounded out a 67 on the 7,015-yard layout for 138. He was one stroke up on Casper. HAS STEADY ROUND Casper, who beat Palmer in a playoff for the title last year after Arnie's now-famous col- lapse, took a careful, par 70 for 139. had a solid 68; rookie pro Deane Beman, who had a 71, and Marty Fleckman, the 23- year-old amateur from Port Ar- thur, Tex., who led the first round with 67. Don January was alone at 141. Today's pairings have Nick- laus and Palmer as the last two-some away. Casper plays against Devlin and Beman against Flecknan. Toronto's Al Balding shot a two-over par 72 for a 147 total to survive the cutoff. In all, 66 of the original field of 150 survived the cut to the low 60 and ties. It took a 148 to make it. Among the major casualties are former Open champions Gene Littler, 151, Tommy Bolt, 149, and Jack Fleck, 149. : Palmer, the golfing million- aire from Latrobe,' Pa., was again the charger, challenging the course, gambling, putting body English on every shot and jerking cheers and groans from his vast army. PLAYS BY THE BOOK d him, at 140 came By DICK COUCH Associated Press Sports Writer Woodie Held, dealt from Bal- timore Orioles to California An- gels Thursday, smacked a game-winning home run in the) in the second Friday night, . TODAY SOFTBALL "Lakeshore Minor League -- Port Perry vs Oshawa Qual- {iy Fuels; at Alexandra Park, 8:00 p.m. SOCCER "Darlington Senior League-- Zion at Maple Grove; Cour- at Salem and Solina at mpton; all games at 7:15 .m. be Oshawa and District Assoc. #Azzuri vs Ukraina; at Kins- iien Civic Memorial Stadium, 7:00 p.m. LAWN BOWLING Mixed Doubles Tournament -- 'at Cannington Lawn Bowl- ing Club, 1:30 p.m. BASEBALL Eastern Ontario Midget SPORTSCOPE SOCCER Oshawa and District Assoc.: Ontario Cup Elimination Play- offs; two games, 7:00 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.; at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium. BASEBALL Leaside Junior League: Oshawa Legionnaires vs High Park; at Talbot Park, 2:00 Eastern Ontario Bantam League: Cobourg vs Oshawa; at Kinsmen Stadium, 2:00 p.m. Eastern Ontario Pee Wee League: Whitby at Peter- borough, 3:00 p.m. League: Oshawa at Whitby, 2:00 p.m. LACROSSE OLA Senior 'B' League: Sarnia Beavers vs Oshawa League -- Oshawa 'A' Majors |Lasco rs; at Civic u at Frankford, 3:00 p.m. toriuiu, 2:00 p.m. » Eastern Ontario Bantam gue -- Oshawa at Peter- MONDAY rough, 6:30 p.m.; Ajax at {LACROSSE Frankford, 2:00 p.m. and OLA Junior 'A' League: Bowmanville at Belleville, | Hastings Legionnaires vs Osh- 3:00 p.m. awa Green Gaels; at Civic » Eastern Ontario PeeWee Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. Teague -- Belleville vs Osh- OLA Junior 'B' League: wa; at Kinsmen Stadium, |Brooklin Lasco Steelers at 700. p.m. and Whitby at Kitchener, 8:30 p.m. Ajax, 2:00 p.m. BASEBALL LACROSSE Leaside Junior League: " OLA Genior 'A' League -- | Richardson's Sports vs Osh- "Peterborough Don Bye jawa Legionnaires; at Kins- "'Petes" vs Brooklin Redmen; at Brooklin Arena, 8:30 p.m. * OLA Junior 'A' League -- Oshawa Green Gaels vs Huntsville Hawks; at Hunts- ville Arena, 8:30 p.m. . SUNDAY 'LAWN BOWLING Mixed Trebles Tournament: 'Annual William Ward Trophy Event; at Oshawa Lawn Bowl- ing Club; 1:30 p.m. TENNIS Toronto 'C' League: Lea- side vs Oshawa; at Oshawa Tennis Club, 10:00 a.m. SOFTBALL Lakeshore Minor League: 'Picton vs Oshawa Quality Fuels | ,at Alexandra Park, 2:00 p.m. | Fi Service League: oubleheader at Alex Park, 6:30 p.m. _-- * Votes taser rede men Civic Memorial 'Stadium, 7:30 p.m. Oshawa Legion Tyke Sched- ule: Tigers vs Legionnaires; Cardinals vs Athletics and Indians vs Orioles; all games at K of C Field, at 6:15 p.m. Oshawa Legion Bantam League: Jury and Lovell vs UAW, 6:15 p.m. at Eastview Park and Oshawa Dairy vs Sklar Furniture, 6:15 p.m. at |Alexandra Park (west dia- ;mond). SOFTBALL Kiwanis Bantam League: Clean-Up of rained out games. | Oshawa City and District Assoc.: Mr. TV Towers vs Georgian Motel, at North Osh- awa, 8:00 p.m.; Pam Elec- tronics at Ajax, 8:00 p.m. SOCCER Exhibition Game: Bowman- ville at Salem, 7:15 p.m. Eastern Ontario Tyke the Orioles. pitcher Marcelino Lopez before Friday morning's trading dead- line. "But I should get to play more with California. "You get old sitting on the bench. In fact, I'm old al- ready." The sweep extended the An- gels' winning streak to five games and gave them 10 vic- tories. in their last 11. The double setback stretched Balti- more's losing string to five and dropped the defending Ameri- can League champions into a tie for sixth place. RED SOX LOSE TWICE Indi land |hit a two-run homer as the "I didn't want to leave the| gels moved ahead 5-0, but guys in Baltimore--they're ajtwo-run Baltimore burst in the|man George Scott's throw to great bunch," said the 35-year-|fifth chased McGlothlin. | old Held, sent to the Angels for} Rookie Ken Turner theMNipinch hitter Paul Casanova. Former Mate Murder For Baltimore Pitchers ;plate, Held led off the ninth | Baldwin replaced Priddy in the with a shot into the left field eighth and completed the shut- bleachers off left-hander Pete} out. Richert, snapping a 1-1 dead-| lock. of | In. the second game, Held's|closed the gap on run-scoring first game and a two-run homer|second homer of the night--| singles by Frank Howard and and third of the year--staked|Key McMullen. powering the Angels to a 2-1, | right-hander Jim McGlothlin to | tieq 5-3 doubleheader sweep overja 2-0 lead. Jose Cardenal alsO/joaded throwing error by third AN-|base-man Joe Foy, then won it 4) when McMullen beat first base- blanked the Orioles until the ninth, when Frank Robinson) |the Trailing 3-0 in the ninth inning Washington the nightcap, plate on a The Indians broke a 1-1 tie i The Senators the score on a_ bases- grounder by, unloaded his 19th homer. the 10th when Larry Brown sin- gled, took second on Max Al- jvis' infield hit and scored on LOSES JOB California Seals of the Na- tional Hockey League an- nounced Friday that the club had released Rudy Pilous (above)\ as general n Last - place Washington Sen-| ators edged Boston, Red S0X/ Chicago twice, 1-0, and 4-3, while Cleve-| notroit COMBINE FOR SHUTOUT | The Senators started sweep over Boston behind right- jhander Bob Priddy, | blanked linnings in his first |and squeeze their|Chuck Hinton's single. hander Luis Tiant who|went all the way for the In- the Red Sox for seven|dians, scattering eight hits--in- AL start|cluding a sixth-inning homer by - bunted a runjrookie Rod Carew, who 'has hit jacross in the third inning. Dave'safely in 15 straight games. Right - managér, The c vill pay | Pilous off for the remaining three years of his four-year contract. Seals' coach Bert Olmstead will assume the general manager's duties. BASEBALL SCOREBOARD | By THE CANADIAN PRESS /Kansas City at Detroit | American League w Twins 2-1 in 10 innings in the/ poston only other AL games played. A scheduled doubleheader be- tween Kansas City and Detroit and a single game between New York Yankees and Chicago White Sox were rained out. Held, a utility infielder-out- fielder who had gone hitless in opener as a second - inning re- muscle spasms in his back. After striking out and sing- ling in his first two trips to the| nipped Mi a his last 22 at-bats for the Ori-| New York at Chicago, ppd, rain oles, got into Friday night's|Kansas City at Detroit 2, ppd) chicago 4 New York 3 % Pittsburgh 3 Philadelphia 5 placement for shortstop Jim|Minnesota 1 Cleveland 2 St. Laue 6 Sek Francisan § Fregosi, who complained of|Boston 0-3 Washington 1-4 \California 2-5 Baltimore 1-3 | | 33 23 589 -- National League | 32 25 .561 | cas a 4 Pet. GBL held Belleville i 30 508 4%) incinna peowew 30 4 500 £4 Ist, Louis 35 21 .625 Cleveland 29 30 .492 5%4/San Francisco 32 27 .542 6 Kansas City 29 31 .483 6 |Chicago 30 26 .536 Baltimore 28 30 .483 6 | Pittsburgh 30 27 526 7 New York 28 30 .483 jAtlanta -- 30 28 517 7%\and California. 30.33 476 61%|Philadelphia 28 30 .483 | Washington "41.35 435 9 Prego : _ = 15 5 40s Angeles 23 36 3 15 Friday's Results Feet York 10 38-345 17 rain Sunday's Games New York at Chicago 2 By HAL BOCK Associated Press Sports Writer Chico Ruiz beat out an infield single for Cincinnati's first hit and sparked the Reds to a 3-2 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers Friday night. In other National League action, Chicago Cubs shaded New York Mets 4-3 in 10 in- nings, Atlanta Braves nippéd Houston Astros 9-8 in 10 in- nings, Philadelphia Phillies dropped Pittsburgh Pirates 5-3 Colborne School Runners Win Cross-Country Races WHITBY (Staff) -- Students from Colborne Street 'Public School won first and second Place in each of the four cross fountry races held Thursday night. Debbie Dilling of Colborne 'Street won the one-mile run for Birls in 9 minutes and 36 sec- 'onds. She was followed by Cathy McGrath of Colborne and Deidre Newman of St. John's Separate School. Jessie Connor of Colborne finished the two- mile event in 17 minutes and 27 temage Joan Dunbar of Col- rne was second with Debbie Age of Colborne third, In the two-mile run for boys Terry Halton of Colborne won in 14 minutes and 59 seconds. Ron Kennedy of Colborne was sec- ond and Don Robertson of St. John's third. In the four-mile event George Yates of Col- borne won in 32 minutes and 30 Seconds. Graham Sangwin of Colborne was second and Steve Stoneman of Colborne third. Colborne Street School won the shield at the Field Day of Champions, Wednesday at the Henry Street High School field 224.1 per cent. Dundas Street School was second with Rowe was third with 110.1 per cent; R. A. Hutchison fourth with 81 per cent and St. John's School fifth with 71.7 per cent. _The excellence of the compe- titions was evidenced by the fact that 13 records were broken. They were: Senior Boys: 440 yd. Run -- 59.8 sec., J. McGrath (Col- borne) and Shot Put -- 36' 8%", K. Ibbitson (Colborne). Intermediate Boys: Triple Jump -- 35' 14%", Steve Thomp- son (Colborne) and 440 yd, Run -- 65.1, Tom Letham (Colborne) Junior Boys: 100 yd. Sprint -- 13.1 -- Harold Moore (Dundas) and 440 yrd. Run -- 68.8, Harold Moore (Dundas) Senior Girls: 220 yrd. Sprint-- 28.5 sec. Laurie English (Col- borne) and Softball Throw -- 142' 8", Laurie English (Col- borne) Intermediate Girls: 220 yrd. Sprint -- 30.4, Lisa Karssing (Colborne) and Softball Throw-- 155' 5", Pam Detlor (K. Rowe) Junior Girls: 75 yd. Sprint -- 10.0 sec., Debbie Lomax (K. Rowe); Running Broad Jump -- 12' 11%", Debbie Lomax (K. Rowe) and Softball Throw -- 129' 814", Kathy Hood (Col- 160.7 per cent; while Kathleen \ borne), and St. Louis Cardinals took San Francisco Giants 5-3. } With two Reds out in the sixth inning, Leo Cardenas was hit by a pitched ball and Dodger pitcher Bill Singer balked him to second, Then Ruiz tapped a ball to third and beat it out for a single. He promptly stole second and then rode home with Cardenas on Vada Pinson's single. The Dodgers tied it in the bottom of the sixth, but Lee May's seventh-inning homer put the Reds on top to stay. HURLS 4-HITTER Mel Queen hurled a four-hit- ter for his eighth victory in nine decisions. May's homer was his fourth. Adolpho Phillips, who hit four home runs against the Mets in a doubleheader Sunday, was Chicago's hero again. This time he cracked a three- Ruiz Sparks Cincinnati In Victory Over Dodgers keyed a four-run Cardinal first) inning against the Giants, who dropped their third straight. St. | International League | Ww | Rochester 34 17 .668 Toronto 26 21 .553 _ |Richmond 26 27 .491 and then ignited the Cubs' win-| Buffalo 22 24 478 914! ning rally in the 10th when he) Jacksonville 24 27 .471 walked, stole second and went! Toledo 22 26 to third on a bad throw. He! columbus 21 27 scored on John Boccabella's| Syracuse 21 27 sacrifice fly. out an early 8-3 Brave lead! homer. LEADS IN RBI | Minnesota at Cleveland L Pet. GBL California at Baltimore | Friday's Results Cincinnati 3 Los Angeles 2 a double, Atlanta 9 Houston 8 White. | Sunday's Games Oshawa |Chicago at New York 2 B'ville ~~ | Pittsburgh at Philadelphia | Atlanta at Houston Cincinnati at Los Angeles ;St. Louis at San Francisco eo. LOCAL 222 Friday's Results Sonny Jackson's. two-base er-| Jacksonville 3-4 Toronto 1-7 ror on Hank Aaron's leadoff) Richmond 8-8 Buffalo 3-1 sec- grounder in the 10th led to) ong game 8 innings rain Atlanta's winning run against) Toledo 6 Rochester 8 Houston. The Astros had wiped| Columbus 4-3 Syracuse 2-4 Today's Games mostly on the hitting of Jim) Jacksonville at Toronto Wynn, who drove in three runs) Richmond at Buffalo with a single and his 15th) Toledo at Rochester Columbus at. Syracuse The homer was Wynn's fourth | FIGHTS LAST NIGHT in two nights and seventh in the ted-in lead with 46. Clete Boyer, Mack Braves. ' Rich Allen, with 13 hits in his last 27 swings, led the Phillies past the Pirates. He smashed a triple and a home run, driving in two runs and scoring twice. | Larry Jackson went the dis- tance, allowing eight hits for his fourth victory. , Two - run singles by Mike Shannon and Julian Javier| Louis has won three in a row) run homer in the fifth inning and eight of the last nine. WRESTLIN TUES., JUNE 20 -- 8:30 P.M. OSHAWA CIVIC AUDITORIU BROWER an VS ey VALENTINE SCHMIDT vs. BROWER TAG TEAM EXHIBITION ATKINS & SINGH PARENTE & FLANAGAN Tickets sides $1.50 -- Generals Ringsides Only At The Casino Restourent 723-9721 -- Pat Milosh Promoter ROBERTSON 1.25 -- Children 75¢ VALENTINE last eight games. He took over|By the National League runs-bat-/ Baton Rouge, La. -- Joe|scored twice for Italia, with 139%, New Orleans,| other goals going to John Puc- Jones,|La., stopped Portfiro Zamora,|uc, Adrianno Didanelli and Al Tito Francona and Denis Menke|Corpus Christi, Tex., 8. had three hits apiece for the) -- |Brown, THE ASSOCIATED PRES White Spins 'No-Hitter BELLEVILLE (Staff)--Brian |White of Oshawa Quality Fuels| Richard Ellis 635 -- hitless here Friday in posting 1%/an 8-0 Lakeshore Minor Soft- ball League victory. {against White, three on walks three hit batsmen. He 914| struck out 14 batters. | John Nestic clouted a pair of| Fireflys, bases empty home runs while|/Tern and one Bluejay raced. Ron Parfitt and Bill Melnychuk|The Committee boat had one also homered. Tom Eldridgejof the largest crews of recent had a pair of doubles and Bill|years consisting of 13 members Prentice a double and: single.|made up of the judges and Other hits went to Gerry Welsh,|families of some of the sailors. Dennis Ashton and) after the race was complet- Cronkright. : Now Second 10) Local 222 has taken over sec- 458 10%!ond place in the Oshawa and +438 11% | District -438 114! points behind leading Italia, and Soccer Leagve, four two ahead of Ukraina, Azzurri, Ukraina and Polonia. John Lopes is the league's jtop scorer, with eight goals, | jgoing into tonight's game be- {tween Ukraina and Azzurri at Kinsmen Memorial Stadium. In games Thursday, Local 222 blanked Napoli 6-0 and Italia trounced Polonia 7-0. Ken Cowie and Janiri Salva- -|tores each scored twice for | Local 222, with single goals go- | ing to Winifred Kasprzyck and | Matt Dockerty. ' Costa. | Lopes and Frank Meens each| 64} Only six batters reached base|jay is a class that cannot be \ed uu O11 103--8 12 0 everyone gathered in the Club- vil 00 = gee 9 2!house for a social hour. It is e and Nestic; Goyer and! pjanned to have a much great- ~|next Wednesday night and that 'lor more boats entered. We also fi / |Bruce Devlin of Australia, who Nicklaus plodded over the course, looking neither left nor Peter, Dick McLaughlin Team Up For OYC Win Skip Peter McLaughlin and Crew Dick McLaughlin, in their Albacore, proved they could sail and win in light or strong breezes by winning a drifting sailboat race on the Oshawa \lakefront on Wednesday night. | The occasion was the third lrace of the Yacht Club spon- sored "Early Bird" series. This was the second consecutive race this crew has won and proves that a good boat and an able crew are hard to beat. The next two places were taken by Firefly sailors, Wally Dilling and Doug McNaughton, who were sailing single hand- ed and who finished only two minutes behind the leaders. These two sailors had a luffing contest on the homeward course or they may have been even closer than they were. Fourth place was won by |Skip Chuck Dewhirst and Crew |Bill "No E" Lock in their | Leader, Fred Henry with Crew Bill Leggatt sailed their first race ever and turned in a commen- dable performance considering ithe fact that it is very difficult jfor a novicé to sail in such light weather. Skip Harvey Kirby and Crew Pete Siblock also earned hon- jorable mention as their Blue- [expected to be competitive with the other boats. in this race. | In all four Albacores, three one Leader, one and the boats put away, er number of boats in the race separate starts will be given to all classes which have three |hope to see more of the sail- lors' wives in attendance to watch this race. The order of finish of the race is as follows:- 1. Skip Pet- er McLaughlin and crew Dick Taylor and Ray Petre (0) 6-4, | 7-5, 8-6; Harry Collingwood and William Elmsley (P) outlasted Bryce Brown and John Kleon had to be finished under lights. ed); 4. Skip Chuck Dewhirst and crew Bill 'No E" Lock; 5. Skip Tom Reed. and crew Ted Reed; 6. Skip Harold Arm- strong (single handed); 7. Skip Al. Banfield crew Norm Ridg- ely; 8. Skip Brian Wilson (sing- le handed); 9. Skip Harvey and crew Pete Siblock; 10: Skip} Fred Henry and crew Bill Leg- gatt. Peterborough Tops Oshawa Netters The Oshawa Tennis Club lost} out 4-1 to Peterborough, in the opening matches of the Kawar- tha Tennis League, which got Super Stars Lead United States Open right, except to note distances in his little black book, the book that goes with the swing that makes him perhaps the most feared golfer in the world today. Casper was bland as ever, and as colorless as the oat- meal he can't eat. "I liked my round," Palmer 'said, "I hit every green but one and I missed few fairways. I had several chances for birdies that failed to fall. But, in all, I liked it." Asked if he was thinking of going for Ben "Hogan's Open scoring record of 276, Arnie grinned broadly and replied: "Not yet. I just want to win this tournament." Nicklaus said the 96 degree heat didn't bother him, and preferred to talk instead about a new, white-painted, middle- shafted puttér he was using for the first time. "Why do you like it?" he was asked, "Easy," said Big Jack. "It knocks the ball in the hole." He had birdie putts of 7, 12, 18, 25 and 30 feet. Gary Player, one of seven tied at 69 going into the second round, went to 73 for 142. Art Wall had the same. Chi Chi Rodriguez went to 75 after go- ing two over par on the first hole, and Don January strug- gled to a 72. Ben Hogan took his second straight 72, Whitby Honors OMHA Champs WHITBY (Staff) Whitby Gold Seals, Ontario Juvenile 'A' Minor hockey champions, were feted at a civic banquet last night. In recognition of their provin- cial championship honors, the boys each received a handsome jacket, from Dunlop Canada Limited with the Town of Whit- by's official presentation was a set of cuff links for each player, carrying the Centennial emblem, underway in Oshawa on Wed-| nesday night. | The visitors took the mixed| doubles and two of the three! men's doubles matches, | Jeanette Kilgour and Carole| Dodsworth saved the locals from a whitewashing by down-} ing Cathy Toole and Jean Ark-| sey 6-4, 6-3. | After a hard first set, Ralph Harlowe and Marg Grey lost| out 7-5; 6-3, in the mixed doub-| les go. Results of the men's duublea| remained in doubt for some! time as two marathon match-| es featured the play. All were eventually won by Peter- borough. Don Mac Kay and Don Little (P) defeated Jack| 6-4; Hugh Dibben and Bob| Clarke (P) defeated Brian Bar-| ker and Jim: Sutherland (0) 2-6, (0) 4-6, 7-5, 6-3. This match Following play the efficient social committee served refresh- ments to the participants. plus a Centennial tie-tack. The Whitby Minor Hockey Association gave each boy a group photograph of the team, in color. Scarboro Girls Edge Oshawa Oshawa Junior Girls bowed to Scarborough Village 12-11 in their softball game at North Oshawa Park on Thursday eve- ning. The winners staged a six-run rally in the third inning and this proved the big blow, along with singletons in the first, sixth and seventh frames, plus three runs in the fifth. Oshawa scored two runs in the first and three in the fifth and four in the sixth, plus singleton tallies in the second and seventh frames, to make if real close. Nancy Desjardin, Janie All* son, Barb Bachelor and Bet Myles were best at the plate fot the winners with Gail Lucas, Judy Esposito, Linday Kawecki, Dianne Watt and Anita Roter the best for Oshawa. McLaughlin; 2. Skip Wally Dil- ling (single handed); 3. Skip Doug McNaughton (single hand- KAMPING UNLIMITED Townline Road North (1 Mile North of King St. £.) PH. 728-9942 Check the Camping Column in the Classified Section for our ad. Canada's Most Outstanding Lacrosse Goalie. Bus Service 7:30-8:00-8:30 Return downtown after game, With The Gaels In Their Climb To Their 5th Minto Cup MONDAY, JUNE 19th 8:30 P.M. HASTING Legionnaires OSHAWA Green Gaels [ese | x \ty/ G ke : td er: ee A LM GERMANY'S NU soccer spectacular EINTRACHT Braunschweig MBER ONE TEAM us L.K.S. of Lodz POLISH CHAMPIONSHIP CONTENDERS VARSITY STADIUM Wednesday Night June 28, 8:30 .n. Reserved tickets: south end ($3.00 students under 16 ($ Cast side ($4.00); west side ($5.00); 0); Dox seats ($6.50) Varsity Stadium, Gate 3, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily Tickets Available In Oshawa at: JIM BISHOP SPORTING GOODS 151 King St. East, Oshawa Hart House Toronto 5, Ont A WORLD CLASS PRESENTATION OF THE TORONTO CITY SOCCER CLUB THE TIME to s ing about impro' wing shooting is no the week or so be ing day next F shooters have poor ing the hunting s vow that next year different. But durin ing days no one terms of ducks and and the next thing opening day is her if your shooting wé but good last year cast your eye at t skeet shooting as better shooting for son, and there is time than now. THIS UNIQUE shooting was star' in Andover, Mass., of. upland game sh wanted to improve shooting. Not onl; prove to be the ans ter gunning, but th caught the fancy o! old, male and fem: a degree that it is petitive sport of it portent. SKEET SHOOT at all difficult, pr start about it the so for the benefit o may be thinking | their score in hur basic factors are skeet field layout a high and low hot tion which places in the air in a lo arc over the field eight stations on with seven of the! circle from hous Station 8 is in th the field, betwee and low house. skeet consists of singles from eac tions and doubles one and two, six If you get 24 bre bird is optional. 1 the flight of the t that from a pract view you will be birds just about 1 might get them in hunting. There is tion from this in ing but the differ ly negligible. SHOOTING SKI of five persons with each person shots at each stat is mounted to t and when the'sho he calls for the b results the bird broken about th the field because you get the best the gun. The ave birds for the be; first round of s which should. enc anyone when you Alouet B.C. Li MONTREAL | Faloney, probat paid quarterbac' football, was tri Columbia Lions | real Alouettes {1 Mike Webster, 8 nadian lineman. Faloney, in th a three-year co Als at an annua to he $37,500, ca after performing Tiger-Cats for e He was voted able player in th ball Conference ster, a native 0 six foot four 8 pounds. After earning at Gladstone | Vancouver, he Dame Universit; Ind. In 1962, he wz the top two fre and from there regular job wil Notre Dame v2 the Lions last | formed as a fi sive lineman. Alouettes' he Dalton, said h can start for h offence or defe: GAVE CONSE! "Bernie has § to a trade," sai Dalton said | with Faloney b Bernie only in one more seas lessened his ¢ ing it with us vastly superio quarterbacks." Dalton had ir be tough for Fa had previously Bork as his sta ing .season. Be THUND GOLF Golf lessons | CPGA Professic terson, John Burrows. Club repaired carts for rent . ASH 655. one

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