The Oshawa Times, 13 Jul 1960, p. 16

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16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, July 13, 1960 GINA PURCHASES OLYMPIC HORSE The horse looks happy at having beautiful Gina Lollo- brigida for part-owner. The Italian actress, who now makes her home in Toronto, bought the horse in partnership with | Harry Addison at the Olympic equestrian trials over the week- end, His name was Taboo but | Gina renamed him Roma and he'll go to Rome in September to represent Canada--and Gina in the Olympics. --CP Wirephoto SPORT FROM BRITAIN Britain's Mary Bignal Seeks Olympic Medal LONDON (CP)--Mary Bignal's bright blue eyes are set on two! r a world record in the pe nfathlon and a gold medal in the Olympics at Rome this sum- mer. 'If she succeeds in' the latter| she would be the first British woman to win an Olympic track and field title. She was awarded a special prize by a board of Soviet track| and field experts last September | for her performances in a meet-| ing between British and Soviet| athletes at the Lenin Stadium in Moscow. To Britain it was one of those moments of glory that seldom come to a team that opposes the 2 formidable Soviet athletes. To Mary, it crowned a season that saw her become the greatest all- round woman athlete Britain| prove in the throwing events. However, last August she be- came the first British woman to exceed 4,000 points for this event | when she set Empire and British| records with 4,679 points at Wolv- {erhampton. The world record,! St. Thomas Will Enter Junior ORFU ST. THOMAS (CP) -- The St.| Thomas Football Club plans to enter a team this season in the Junior Ontario Rugby Football {Union provided Hamilton Tiger- | SOCCER TOURNEY By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special to The Oshawa Times LONDON -- The stage is now set for another international soc- cer competition, embracing four teams each from England and Scotland and eight from France. The teams have been chosen and the first round draw made. From Scotland, the four teams will be Motherwell, Clyde, Dundee and Celtic. The English teams are Newcastle United, Bolton Wan- derers, Liverpool and Middles- borough. It is noted here that non of the top-flight British teams are Release Draw For International Play for Britain's amateurs to play Brazil at Leghorn on August 26, Italy in Rome on August 29 and Formosa at Grosseto on Septem- ber 1. The 19 players who will be taken to Italy are: Goalkeepers -- M. J. Pinner (Queen's Park Rangers) and J. B. Wakefield (Corinthian Ca- suals). Backs: T. W. Thomson (Stock- ton), D. D. Holt (Queen's Park), w. Neil, (Airdrieonians). Half-Backs: M. M. Greenwood (Bishop Auckland), L Brown (Bishop Auckland), 'R. W. Slean, ter City. Plenderleith, 22, has al- ready had a good share of in- A ternational honors, but he asked for a transfer when he yas dropped from the hibs first eleven near the end of last season. Another close season bomb- shell is the decision of Blackburn Rovers to sack their manager, Wally Duncan. Duncan was in| charge of the team which went | into the cup final last "fay, but lost to Wolves at Wembley. The| team, however, just escaped rele-| gation to the second division. | Duncan is being made the goat| for this, and he is being sacked Board Recommends Offer Acceptance HAMILTON (CP)--The board of directors of United Fuel In- vestments Limited here Tuesday recommended that an offer from Union Gas Company of Can be accepted by holders of Class A and Class B preference shares enabling the board to wind up the {company's affairs, Union Gas owns all but 93 of the 90,000 outstanding common shares of United Fuel Invest- ments, RE FD J OH ANNE KASIF "Pan NONLEVY Starts TOMORROW Les GORCE Huntz HALL iN fort "0 BRAVO" plus "DEEP ADVENTURE" THEATRE GUIDE {Brock (Whitby) -- "It Started With A Kiss" 7.00, 9.00. p.m. Last complete show at 9.00 p.m. plas -- "The Apartment" 1.00, 3.10, 5.20, 7.30, 9.45 p.m. Last complete show at 9.35 p.m, (Barnet), R. McKinven (St. Johnston), W. Forde Glen- avon). Forwards: included in the list, The draw for the first round of the com- petition is: Toulouse vs Motherwell, Lens vs Clyde, Valenci®ines vs Dun- dee, Sedan vs Celtic, Racing Club of Paris Newcastle, Le-|(Barnet), L. G. Brown (Dulwich Havre vs Bolton, Nantes vs Liv-| Hamlet), J. H. Devine (Queen's erpool, Lille vs Middlesborough.|Park), T. Howard (Hendon), {P. J. Hasty (Totting and Kit- OLYMPIC TEAM {cham), J, L. Lewis, (Waltham. The amateur team for the|ctow Avenue) and H. H. Barr Olympic Games is almost an| (Ballymena United). all-British selection. The side | chosen consists of 19 players, 12| CLOSE SEASON CHANGES English, four Scots and three] One of the biggest captures of Irishmen. Only Wales has been | the close season to date is the left out of the squad which wiil|iransfer of Jackie Plenderleith, go to Rome. The schedule calls! centre half of Hibs, to Manches- FOUR PROVED ENOUGH Four St. Kitts Youths Create Rowing History Only bowman Frank Zielski, 19,| February an athletic coach in|Clay Brown, 19, Bob Adams, 17,| this Jiagara Peninsula city of{and Chris Leach, 18, answered | sport' sought volunteers for a| Wilson' Ss February call for candi- four- man rowing team, Only four| dates for a rowing foursome. All| teen-agers volunteered. |had competed under him last] Today these three high school Year, when he coached a St. students and a machinist appren- | Catharines pollegiste hea yy tice are Canada's representatives | He18ht eg w Hen won the in the four-oared rowing competi- anadian junior eights a tion at the 1960 Olympic Games. | championships. The young squad won a trip to After ice cleared in April, the Rome Saturday, by finishing al|four began twice-daily practices. one-mile 550-yard Olympic trials | For the two weeks immediately course two lengths ahead of a|preceding Saturday's trials, they favored University of British Co.|moved into Wilson's three-bed- lumbia . crew. UBC, defending | room bungalow, living with their Olympic champions in the four-|coach, his wife and two children. | oar class, won the other spots on| They led from the start and Canada's 15-mar rowing team. |won on a rough course in seven The St. Catharines crew was minutes, 44 seconds though on organized and coached by Alex|c calmer practice waters they have Wilson, 29, a St. Catharines po- covered the distance in 6:42. A. Coates, (Even- wood Town), H. M. Lindsay (Kingstonians), R. H. Brown ST. CATHARINES (CP)--Last St. Catharines supporters, who | United States intermediate eights | broken twice within a week by Cats and Montreal Alouettes of {liceman who has rowed eight at 4,959 po Mary's career began in 1957 when she won the All - England schools broad jump champion- ship. With the title went a schol- arship at Millfield, an expensive school in Somerset that special- izes in sport. Two months later she won her first international against the Soviet Union. Early last year, she met Thiti Burakamkovit, the son of a wealthy Thailand government of-| Sesal The rules of the school for: ever produced bid boy friends and rather than| {not see Thiti she quit the school | OLYMPIC HOPES in a blaze of newspaper publi- The nearest mark to Mary's|city. reach is probably a world record] She moved to London to share in the broad jump. Last May she|a room with: Canadian sprinter heat her own British record with|Eleanor Haslam of Saskatoon a leap of 20 feet, 7 inches, three/and came under the wing of inches short of the world mark|John Le Masurier, one of Brit- held by Poland's Elizabeth Krze-|ain's top high jump coaches. She sinka. | has since cleared 5 feet, 6 inches, | Russia's Irina Press, now stands|the Big Four Football Union reach an agreement on territor- ial rights. Hamilton is reported to have informed the club it will assist it financially, provided territorial {rights can be straightened with Alouettes. Alouettes, who took over this district from the Ti- Cats as their protective territory, refused assistance to the eclub| {last week. J. I. Albrecht, Alouette"s per- sonnel director, told the club Montreal did not have sufficient funds to help St. Thomas and money could be used to develop Canadian talent in the Montreal area. Ron Davies, St. Thomas seere- tary, said the Ti-Cats are "will ing to help us' provided "this territorial mess can be straight- ened out." "We have until this coming In the pentathlon her chances| would be better if she could im-| only two inches off Thelma Hop- kins' national record. SPORTS IN BRIEF $100,000 OFFER LONDON (AP) -- Boxing pro-| moter Harry Levene has offered Paul Pender £30,000 plus ex- penses to defend his limited ver- sion of the world middleweight title in London. His opponent would be either British champion Terry Downes or Phil Edwards, who fights Downes for the British title here tonight DELICATE SURGERY PHILADELPHIA (AP)--Jack Meyer, Philadelphia Phillies pitcher, underwent what was de- scribed as "dehcate sisal sur- gery" F disc. M burgh last May 28, and spent sev- eral days in the hospital after re- turning here. He has been on the disabled list since JOCKEY SUES JOCKEY FREEHOLD, NJ. (AP)-- Sammy Boulmetis has been sued for $300,000 by another jockey, | George Gross of West Grove, Pa., accuses Boulmetis of reck-| less riding in the fifth race at Monmouth Park July 11, Gross contends he suffered injur- ies which prevent him from con-| tinuing his riding career. ? DECATHLON RECORD EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -- Rafer Johnson smashed the world de- cathlon record Saturday with a sensational series of -perfor- mances that brought him the United States amateur athletic title and a place on the US.| Olympic team. In his first return to competi tion since he was injured in an automobile accident last year, the 24-year-old Johnson ran up 8,683 points in the two-day meet, eclipsing mark of 8,357 set by Russia's Vasily Kuznetsov last year STULAC WINS TORONTO 1958. | | (CP)--George Stu- SPRINT RECORD CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. (AP) --A world record in the 200- metre run highlighted the women's division of the U.S. Amateur - Athletic Union track and field meet Saturday night. Wilma Rudolph of Tennessee State University sped the dis- tance around two curves in 22.9 seconds to shatter mark of 23.2 seconds held by Betty Cuthbert of Australia. CATCHER FINED PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Bob Oldis, Pittsburgh Pirates catcher, ha- been fined #100 and sus- "ipended for two days for a rhu- | barb with an umpire. Three other Pirates -- shortstop Dick Groat, pitcher Fred Green and third baseman Don Hoak -- have been fined $50 for general misconduct. Thr argument occurred night after the umpire "'ueben Amaro Sale in a close | play at the plat OFFER TO KWONG EDMONTON (CP)---Edmonton Eskimos of the WIFU have of- | fered * fullback Normie Kwong | [two bonuses to induce him to |play. They offered Kwong, who announced his retirement earlier| in the week, a $500 bonus should Eskimos make the playoffs and another $500 if they reached the Grey Cup. Kwong turned down the offer BREAKS LEG REGINA (CP)--Saskatchewan Roughriders of the WIFU have lost the services of fullback Doug | MacKnezie who broke his left leg {during weekend practise. Mac- Kenzie his second year with Riders, broke his leg during the first full- | scale scrimmage of the season. HUGE DOUBLE a former University of| the recognized world Western Ontario star going into 6, Saturday to make the final ar- rangements whether we will field| a team or not," Davies said. MUTUELS CLERK "STUCK" $522 STAUNTON, Del. (AP)-- Mrs. Eunice Connor, a mu- tuels clerk at Delaware Park race course, thought she was stuck Monday with 'a $10 ticket on Little Huskie to win the second race. She thought the customer who purchased the ticket had said '$10 on Little Huskie to win." So 'that's the way she punched the ticket. The customer, however, had bet Little Huskie to place and show, and he wouldn't accept the win ticket. Mrs. Connor had to buy if with her own money since it was al- ready punched. Little Huskie won the sec- ond race and paid her $522. years, and coached for four. COACH WON'T GO Wilson will not go to Rome. UBC's Frank Read will coach all Canadian oarsmen in Olympics] competition. have never before had a team in Olympics competition, have started a fund to finance the crew in Italy, Zielski, only member not in high school, is a machinist ap- | prentice. ; PETERBOROUGH (CP)--Sue Hilton of London Hunt pulled a major upset in the opening round of the Ontario ladies' amateur open golf tournament Tuesday when she defeated defending champion Gail Harvey of Scar-| borough 2 and 1. The 16 - year-old Miss Hilton, | eliminated last year in the quar-| Gail Harvey Upset In Opening Round awa 3 and 2 in a second-flight | match. Mrs. D. Mitchell of Port | Hope scored a 2 and 1 win over |Mrs. A. Phillips of the Ladies |Golf Club; Mrs, B. N. Holt of St. Catharines defeated Mrs. A. | McCormack of Chedoke on the 18th. Ottawa Will Host from his post, although his five-| year contract still has three Regent, Sar oe 9 i Be 05, 6.25, 9. .m., yolis by "us. | "The Naked Jungle" 1.30, 4.45, BITS AND PIECES -- Terrk| gos pm, Last complete show Medwin, Tottenham's Welsh in-| at 8.05 p.m ternational right winger, hnas| . -- asked for a transfer. Medwin, | who has 26 caps, cost the Spurs £18,000 when he was bought| Go from Swansea four years ago. He | #%=== lost his place in the Spurs team = when John White, Scottish inter- |: national, joined the club last win-| ter and took over the wing posi-| tion . Arsenal have joined Chelsea in trying to secure the services of George Thomson, left back of Edinburgh Hearts, and, Everton may also get into the bidding. It will take a £25,000 transfer fee to secure this tish international . . . Nott ham Forest are in robe of their stars, Iley, Burkitt, Wil- son, Whitefo ot, McKinlay and Gray have refused to sign for the coming season, because they are not satisfied with the teams of- fered . Bolton's England full back, Tommy Banks, is being |" chased by Birmingham City, who| are ready to pay £12,000 for him. Six | Shores MOTEL | | DIRECTLY ON "WORLD FAMOUS" DAYTONA BEACH Largest & Finest -- ® Heated Pool ® Color TV Lounge ® Restaurant ® Cocktail Lounge © Planned Entertainment ® Deluxe Rooms & Efficiency Suites SPECTRESONICS! The livin Crawls Sound That, round You! See Your Travel Agent or write DANCE Paul F. Gocke, M to the CLYDE DON| TRIO GENEVA PARK Sat., July 16 anid 2, [REIN (WA N] {Tel 3 DAYTONA BEACH, riorioa XX XX XXX kk TONIGH BOX. OFFICE OPEN 8:00 SHOW STARTS AT DUSK ALL COLOR SHOW ON YOU'LL NEVER FORGET YOUR x FIRST "PINCH"! __OSHAWA'S LARGEST a REN | STARTS TODAY X | our CHARLES BICKFORD KATHRYN GRANT for toa) round NS iy Golden B all Event nine. The 17th hole proved the de-| OTTAWA (CP) -- Ottawa will fending champion's downfall as) play host to the 1961 Ontario high she three-putted and took a seven) school golden ball basketball to the London, Ont., girl's six. |tournament. In other championship flight | Norman D. Fenn, chairman of matches, Roma Neundorf of Tor-|the committee handling arrange- onto, defeated Jean Castle of|ments said Monday the event will Peterborough 2 up. Katherine|be played March 17 and 18 at Cartwright of Cataraqui scored a|local gymnasiums. 4 and 3 win over Joan Donaldson| It will be the first time the of Thornhill. | tournament has been played in the capital. In first- pm, Rates, Meo 2 Six top teams from across On- Creed of Oakdale defea TS-tario will battle for the equiva- John Murphy of Couchiching, 4| lent to the provincial champion- and 3; and Mrs. Grace Hough of ship, won by Toronto's Runny- Barrie defeated Mrs. J. M. Car- mede High School for the last ruthers of Lambton, 2 and 1. two years. Mrs. R. F. Cooper of Summit] The event was played defeated Doreen Dobb f Osh- Guelph last year, CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 6. Perform D tra» 7, Pierce in 29. Erorum Friday | called | QUITS ARGOS AURORA (CP) -- Bill Bucek, halfback import from Rice Insti- tute in Houston, Tex., quit the | Toronto Argonauts when the Big | Four team moved here for a two- week thaining session, "He is the first one I'm sorry to see leave | the team," said coach Lou Agase Monday. "He might have helped us." Bucek, six feet, one inch and 195 pounds, was a defensive { halfback. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By "HE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York--Benny (Kid) Paret, 152°", Cuba, knocked out Garnet (Sugar) Hart, 153%, Philadelphia (non-title) Fort Erie--Joey Giambra, 157, Buffalo, N.Y., knocked out Bobby Hughes, 157, Erie, Pa. 2. McKeesport, Pa.--Johnny Mor- ris, Pittsburgh, (sym.) 32, Subtle varia. tion 35. Radio selece tors 36. Sound, asa goose 37. Poker stake 38, Celestial by 8.0wn 9, Level 10. Repose 6.0f Scandis navians 9. Seasoned 20. Japanese sash 21, River barrie: 22. Viper 24. Thus 25. Wood sor rel (8. A) 26, Girl's nick- name 27. Cunning tive pro- noun 6. Santa's reindeer 11, Verdi's princess 12, Eight 13. Spill over 14. Cudgels 15. Salt marsh 17. Flexed 18. Bassets 20. Harem room 23. Causes 28. Established 80. Not widee spread 81, To stamp 83. Not one 34, Twisted 36. Book cl 40. Foon? (Fr.) 44. Detain, asa ship 46, Affin. 47, Quiesce 48. Girl's name 7 Vesterday's Answer 42, Belgian Congo rive: 43, Bone picture 6. Japanese 41, Wicked measure Sidney JAMES « Eric WR Kenneth CONNOR « Charles HAWTREY Kenneth WILLIAMS = Leslie PHILLIPS Joan SINS = Hattie JACOUES and Shirley EATON XX XX XXX kK MARI "ALDON JOIN OUR BUMPER oLUB AND SAVE ! Membership admits Cor and Driver free every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday (with the of holidays). A $40.00 value for only $1.00. CHILDREN under 12 FREE! ALWAYS A (OLOR CARTOON u Here it was the Hunnicutts ...last of their kind! Starring Co-Starring EVERY TOWN HAS ITS "FIRST" FAMILY METRO-GOLDWYN- MAYER presents A SOL C. SIEGEL PRODUCTION ADULT ENTERTAINMENT Not since "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" has the motion picture camera rattled a family skeleton more loudly than in "Home From the Hill." Relentlessly, it unfolds. the story of Wade Hunnicutt, a stranger to the wife he married; of his two sons, only one of whom bore his name, and of a girl who needed love and wasn't too proud to ask for it, pe CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR ROBERT MITCHUM-ELEANOR PARKER From lac, 25, of Toronto Saturday won| STANTON, Del. (AP) A 160, outpointed the Canadian decathlon cham-| | whopping $2,666 - for - $2 daily pionship and Olympic trials, reg- | double was posted Monday at istering a total of 6,178 points in| Delaware Park when Bona Quest WILLIAM HUMPHREY'S § rich and earthy Ses. GEORGE PEPPARD GEORG HAMALTON - EVERETT SLOANE - LUANA PATEN Screen Play by Tony Dupas, 153, New Orleans, 10. Miami Beach, Fla.--Chico Ve- the 10-event championship. WASTED TRIP HENLEY, England (Reuters)-- Four Britons studying at the University of British Columbia failed to qualify Monday in the British Olympic Games sculling trials. The four engineering stu- dents paid their way to Britain from Vancouver. The defeat elim inated the group. 1 won the first race and paid $40.20, and Little Huskie scored in the second for a $104.40 payoff. 2,500th WINNER OCEANPORT, N.J. (AP) Jockey Bill Hartack rode 2,500th winner of his career day at Monmouth Park. Hs 28, now ranks eighth in the all- time jockey . standings. He rode his first winner. Oct." 14, 1952. the Mon | Dwyer, jar, 161, Stamford, Conn., and Frankie Belmas, 154, Los An- geles draw, 10. New Bedford, Mass. -- Mickey 156, Boston, stopped Greene, 160, Providence | Willie RI, 9 | Los Angeles -- Hank Aceves, 127%, Los Angeles, knocked out | Ramon Sarmiento, 123, Mexicali, | Mex., 4 DOWN 1. Soviet news agency 2. Nuclei of starch grain San Goss! 8. Heathen image 4.Palatable B. Amount of &edicing FEATURE AT: 1:00 - 3:35 - 6:45 - 9:00 HARRIET FRANK, J and IRVING RAVETCH - **=*; VINCENTE MINNELLI - "> EDMUND GRAINGER novel}

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