The Oshawa Times, 23 Jun 1961, p. 12

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PHP PR Ri TA TT 12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, June 23, 1961 SPORT OUTDOORS -- By Jack Sords SWORDFISH, C.GLASSELL soucToNTEr CAUGHT HIS BROAD. | BOA Eirini. Will Now Pound A Typewriter NEW YORK (CP) -- Archie |Moore, hitherto better known {for his fast rights than for his [talent on a typewriter, plans to jab his way into the literary world as publisher of a new monthly magazine, Jazz Day. The ancient light-heavyweight boxing champ announced his new venture at a night club press conference while a jazz group blew in the background. Archie, whose age ranges from 44 to 47 depending on what record book you're read- ing, habitually jumps rope or jabs punching bags with jazz in the background. "Music to train by," he calls it. "This is a tired old man marching to war and he needs something to revive him," says Moore. "Jazz keeps me happy and alert. It soothes the savage heart and arouses it, too." Archie, who seems slightly an- {noyed that few persons are |aware of his literary talent, NTO 2 INCH SOLID WOOD! |says he plans to write a A RAR Fh O {monthly article for the new jazz publication. THEY ARE KNOWN TO HAVE DRIVEN THEIR BEAK: AT PLA! "To be truthful," he says, "I Maxwell School Field Day Handsome trophies, donated by the Home and School Asso- ciation, were presented to the winners by Mrs. Percy Hayes at the third annual Field Day of Maxwell Heights School. Winners were: Midget girls -- Donna Campbell; midget boys-- Alan Bathe. Junior girls -- Karen Kolynko; junior boys -- Douglas Wood- cock. Intermediate girls -- Janice Hill; intermediate boys -- Har- vey Ward. Senior girls -- Joan Hill and Bonnie Dale tied; senior boys--| Charles Gooding. Winners in the individual events were as follows: MIDGET GIRLS High jump -- Donna Camp- bell, Cindy-lee Parfitt and Diane Brooks. Running broad jump--Donna Campbell, Kathy Thomas and Jayne Patte. Wheelbarrow race -- Jayne Patte and Chris Skuce; Kathy Thomas and Diane Brooks; Diane Barnett and Cindy-lee Parfitt. Ball throw -- Lynda Geisber- ger, Diane Brooks and Jayne can't talk one-third as good as I can write. I've written some : weird stories and the lyrics for eights oom | "My writings are .timeless. {Like evergreens, you just brush them off and they keep go- ing." | And so does Archie. SWITCH CATCHERS PHILADELPHIA (AP)--Phil- adelphia Phillies sent catcher Ca! Neeman to their Interna- sey. tional League farm affiliate at SENIOR GIRLS Buffalo Thursday night and re- High jump -- Bonnie Dale, called catcher Jim Coker from Linda Hopkins and Carol Wales. that club. Carl Lindsey and Peter Atkin- son. 50 yd. dash ~~ Harvey Ward, Peter Atkinson and Carl Lind- Archie Moore [SPORT SNAPSHOTS By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer It isn't often that success comes to a man at 80. At that age, they're content to sit at home and tell their great-grand- children about the good old days. But not Col. K. R. Marshall. He's at home at the racetrack and June 17, 1961, will be 2 day he'll always remember That, in his own words, was "the happiest day of my life." Here is a man who owned his first thoroughbred as a school- |boy in 1895. He rode it in a race lat the Canadian National Ex- {hibition in Toronto--and lost [Since then, his cerise and | white silks have become known {to thousands | Although he walks with a |cane, he could have tossed it {away last Saturday when he | made the short walk to the win- {ner's enclosure at the New Woodbine track in suburban Toronto. A crowd of more than [28,000 stood up in tribute to him as he accepted the $5,000 Gold Cup as winning owner of | la Queen's Plate horse. | He had been dreaming of tak- {ing that walk for nearly 50 |years. He had saddled a dozen {or so Plate starters but none had finished in the money until Blue Light, an 18-to-1 shot, made it in probably the closest | Plate finish of all time. |GREATEST THRILL | He has had plenty of thrills laround the tracks in his 60-0dd years of owning and riding 'thoroughbreds. But they were | | Running broad jump -- Bon-|-- nie Dale, Joan Hill and Susan Patte | Standing broad jump -- Bon- {nie Dale, Carol Wales and Joan | Hill. | Catch and throw --- Carol |Wales and Nicole van Veld- {hoven; Jean and Dorothy Hos- | kin; Joan Hill and Bonnie Dale. 100 yd. dash Joan Hill, Sharon Yourth and Carol Wales | 75 yd. dash Joan Hill, {Sharon Yourth, and Carol Wales. |SENIOR BOYS i | High jump -- Charles Good- ing, Earl Churchill and Bob Gray. Running broad jump--Charles Gooding, George Kolynko and Earl Churchill. Standing broad jump--Charles Gooding, Bob Gray and Harry Shephard. Ball throw -- Charles Good- ing, Harry Shephard and Bob Gray. { 100 yd. dash -- Charles Good- ing, Harry Shephard and George Kolynko. Patte. 50 yd. dash -- Donna Camp- bell, Diane Brooks and Laurie Marshall. 25 yd. dash -- Donna Camp- bell, Laurie Marshall and Diane Brooks. 75 yd. dash -- Charles Good- MIDGET BOYS ing, Harry Shephard and George High jump --- Alan Bathe, Kolynko. I Bluse Annand and Charles dsey. PARIS TUNNEL Running broad jump -- Alan r ; | Bathe, Frank Bathe and Bruce PARIS (AP) -- Work starts| Annand. in July on a tunnel under the Wheelbarrow race -- Frank Seine to be part of a new 10-| Bathe and Bruce Annand; {mile subway system for express | Blaine Hayes and Wesley Glas-|trains. The $50,000,000 project is pell; Terry Souch and Diane erected to be completed in| Brooks. 1961. GRADUATION SPECIAL! COME SEE! -- COME SAVE! Canadian Made BICYCLES LOOK AT THESE PRICES! FOR BOYS OR GIRLS (Men and Women too) DOMINION TIRE STORES 36.99 Terms: 5.00 DOWN 2.00 WEEKLY 48 BOND WEST (Corner of Church) RA 5-6511 nothing compared with his plate victory. "You get few opportunities to bring a horse along who is cap- able of going into the Plate," he said a few moments after the race. Blue Light's win- gave Col. Marshall $46,475, the Queen's 50 guineas (about $170) and a couple thousand more. He had a $50 bet on the three - year - old which paid $39.50. "I guess I made enough for a good dinner," he chuckled. Little is known about this man who has done a great deal for racing--and for the Queen's Plate. For the first 84 years, the Plate was confined to horses that were Ontario-foaled and owned by British subjects resi- dent in Ontario. The conditions of the race must have been a constant source of irritation to horsemen from other parts of Canada, particularly the late Commander J. K. L. Ross who campaigned a stable which Half-Century Wait And Then The Plate dominated all North American racing for two years, but couldn't start a horse in the Plate because he was a resident {of Quebec. Ontario Jockey Club directors refused to change the conditions until 1943 when Col. Marshall SPORTS IN BRIEF SHOCKED BY SITE PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- The National Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People said Tuesday it was "deeply shocked to learn" that the 1962 Professional Golfers Association tourney would be held at Phil- adelphia's Aronomink Golf Club. The PGA championship for next year originally was scheduled for Los Angeles. It was with- drawn when California's attor- ney general asked that a Negro pro, Charles Sifford, be per- mitted to play, The NAACP said, "we are extremely un- happy that Aronimink has de- cided to make itself a party to the continuing un - American practices of the Professional Golfers Association." WIDOW SUES As KANSAS CITY (AP)--Kansas City Athletics were sued Tues- day for $43,750 alleged to have been due Parke Carroll, the As former general manager, who died Feb. 4. His widow, Mrs. Clover Carroll, filed the suit. Her attorney said the sum was due under a two-year contract Carroll had as executive vice- president and general The suit charged Carrols serv- ices were terminated Jan. 1 in violation of the contract. EE HORSES HURT TORONTO (CP) -- Three horses were injured in last Sa. turday's running of the Queen's Plate. Conn Smythe's Jammed Lucky, who finished eighth after being tabbed as one of the fav- orites, suffered a broken bone in the left foot which will pre- vent the horse from racing until at least late fall. Bill Beasley's Ramblin Wreck, who finished, is also out for a few months. He injured a front leg leaving the starting gate. Fifth - place Gramp's Pride has been side- lined with bucked shins. was elected to the pr y of the OJC. At a special meeting of directors in Toronto on Sept. 29, 1943, the board approved his suggestion that the Plate should be open to any Canadian-foaled three-year-old owned by any Canadian. The next year, Cum Laude, bred in British Columbia and owned by Dr. L.H. Appleby of Vancouver, finished fifth in the 85th running of the Plate. Since then, many out-of-On- tario horses have been entered but none has won. EARLY START About half of all the girls in East Pakistan are married be- fore they reach age 15. CJ summer DISCOUNT FARES save you money | EG foge CN SUMMER TRAIN FARES in Canada are the lowest in years. You get a big, friendly discount for the second adult in your party . .. and the third ... and the fourth...and soon...when travelling beyond a basic minimum. On rail coach, the discount for those * travelling with you is a big 40%. GENEROUS REDUCTIONS also apply on tourist and first class when two or more adults travel together. ASK ABOUT other discounts on CN's all-inclusive travel to Western Canada and the Maritimes. GO CN...together.,.and save. CALL RA 3-4122 and find out the big discount that applies on your summer trip. 76-61 New Symbol of Seagram Quality Beforeintroducing Seagram's 5 Star, Seagram tested® this great new brand of rye whisky from coast to coast against the three leading brands in its price class...and in test after test Canadians liked the taste of Seagram's 6 Star best. Next time try Seagram's great new brand with the Five Stars on the bottle. *Tested under the official supervision of a leading Research Organization, JOSEPH £,SEAGRAM & SONS TMITID WATERLOO ONTARIO CANADA Ball throw --- Alan Bathe, ~-- Bruce Annand and Frank Bathe. | 50 yd. dash--Alan Bathe, Frank Bathe and Bruce Annand. 25 yd. dash -- Frank Bathe, Bruce Annand and Alan Bathe. JUNIOR GIRLS High jump -- Karen Kolynko, Wendy Yourth and Elizabeth Greer. Running broad jump -- Karen Kolynko, Susan Annand and Trudy Hart. Standing broad jump -- Nancy Stiles, Elizabeth Greer and Ruth Hoskin. Catch and throw - Karen Kolynko and Trudy Hart; Ruth Hoskin and Patti Hart; Ruth Bishop and Pamela Dowling. 50 vA dash N ITUUy nar anu naoonda wais- glas. 25 yd. dash -- Wendy Yourth, Nancy Stiles and Trudy Hart. JUNIOR BOYS High jump -- Doug. Wood- cock, Pat Woodcock and John Wales. Running broad jump -- Doug. Woodcock, Pat Woodcock and] Paul Walker. | Standing broad jump -- Doug. | Woodcock, Pat Woodcock and Ralph Barnett. Ball throw -- Doug. Wood- cock, Norman Hoskin and Pat Woodcock. 50 yd. dash -- Doug. Wood- cock, Pat Woodcock and Robert ey. 25 yd. dash -- Doug. Wood- cock, Pat Woodcock and Robert Lindsey. INTERMEDIATE GIRLS High jump -- Harriet Kolynko, Anne Bishop and Janet Wad- dington. Running broad jump -- Har- riet Kolynko, Janice Hill and Anne Bishop. Standing broad jump--Janice Hill, Anne Bishop and Rosemary Greer. Catch and throw -- Janice Hill and Brenda Hopkins; Rose- mary Greer and Anne Bishop; Harriet Kolynko and Joan Ogle. 75 yd. dash -- Janice Hill, Anne Bishop and Harriet Kolynko. 50 yd. dash -- Janice Hill, Harriet Kolynko and Rosemary Greer. INTERMEDIATE BOYS High jump -- Harvey Ward, Paul Patte and Doug. Wilbur Running broad jump -- Har- vey Ward, Carl Lindsey and Paul Patte. Standing broad jump -- Har- vey Ward, Doug. Wilbur and Carl Lindsey. Ball throw -- Carl Lindsey, Paul Patte and Harvey Ward. 75 yd. dash -- Harvey Ward, p nn 88 I a 3 Refreshing O'Keefe Ale finda friande Filia) Ba everywhere O'Keefe Ale owes its good taste to natural brewing. It's mellowed to maturity--a quality that mustcome slowly and naturally. Next time you order ale, do as O'Keefe fans everywhere do, say OK and get the natural flavour of pure ale. (ATR 4 photograph taken in Hong Kong

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