Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Aug 1962, p. 20

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veer ee eee ao. 4 " 20 THE OSHAWA TIMES, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1962 ee ee ee yn SIDELINE TO FOOTBALL "Willie Fleming, rated as the ost outstanding and popular Ifback with British Colum- ia Lions, is perhaps the spest-dressed player with the 4 Si hishe hired By JI MPEACOCK "VANCOUVER (CP) -- Willie Bleming slipped his slim-line under the button-down collar Pi: short-sleeved white shirt. ""He then pulled on a black- -white checked sports jacket eyed the crisp creasein his k, cuffless trousers. "Thus attired, he was ready the photographer who'd geome to his Granville Street n's clothing shop to record @emething of Willie's other bu- Fines. Willie Fleming, of course, is t and foremost a football yer; the most outstanding ifback British Columbia Li- have displayed in their stern Football Conference Westory and voted for three con- @cutive seasons as the most lar player among BC. s. So far this season, he's given\dles the buying and some of ry indication that he'll be|the selling, but has to employ Est as outstanding on the field|staff to help out, especially in if not more so--than in his|football .season. viousthree years with Lions ice coming here from the Uni- ¥Prsity of Iowa. «His sensational explosive run- dla Western Conference team. Fleming's eye for clothes is understandable -- he's part owner of a men's shop in downtown Vancouver. Here the 23-year-old University of LIONS' GRID STAR Willie Fleming Is B.C. 'Beau Brummel ning is the Lions' most potent ticket-selling advertisement. Off the fieid, the 23-year-old Will of the Wisp is his ownbest advertisement, a likely candi- date as one of the best-dressed individuals on the Lion roster. His taste runs to casual wear jand this might prove a handi- leap in sartorial competition of international society. But among {the sports fraternity, he's eon- sidered a well - dressed young man. "In a way," Fleming said, "T've been a bug on clothes as long as I can remember. I've always spent a lot on clothes, so when I got the chance: I went into the business." The business is called the Lions Den, a men's wear shop in which Fleming is in partner- ship with long-time Vancouver clothier, Frank Richards Fleming runs the shop, han- The customers include many of his Lion teammates--"I buy all my clothes through his ivruwuvewurve re 4 Iowa graduate, poses with slim tie and checkered sports jacket on a stairway in his shop, the Lion's Den. (CP not) "but he doesn't try to push us into buying at his store." They also include football fans. "They come in and talk foot» ball a lot," Fleming said, 'but they also buy clothes." Claridge said Willie's personal taste in clothing is fairly con- servative. "He.dresses in good Iv, League fashion," Claridge said. "He's always well dressed, but not gaudy." Fleming, more comfortable without the tie, is more in clined to disctiss foniball than his clothing interests He's under contract for two years to Lions, has taken out the necessary papers to qualify for Canadian citizenship in three years' time if he chooses to do so and has settled down full- time in Vancouver where he and his wife are apartment dwellers. "I'm hoping for a real good year," he suid of his football career, "I had a bad one last year (he was selected to the WFC all-star 'eam) and I'm hoping I can have abetter one shop," says end Pat Claridge, this year," Dodgers Toughest In Their Own Ball Yard - - By MIKE RATHET - lated Press Sports Writer 0 grapes grow in O'Malley's ey. But it's providing os Bisse Dodgers with the ingre- mts for a champagne party. [Born Chavez Ravine, rechris- ed O'Malley's Valley and gow dubbed Dodger Sta- , the place the Dodgers ll home has turned into their in weapon in the three-team Wattle for the National League's he ribbon. e Dodgers? continued their a winning habit in their ww ball park Tuesday night, ng back the third-place innati Reds 81 in the mer of a key three-game Fics with the defending cham: ns for their 18th Victory in E last 20 home games. ome runs by Tommy Davis Duke Snider, blended with) 46,536. es, boosted the Dodgers over the Reds to 514 games maintained their 2!4-game over runner-up San Fran- ares te pitching of Johnny e Giants, who have failed win in five games at Los les, kept pace at home by ing Juan Marichal's six-hit and home runs by ie Mays and Harvey Kuenn ay 43 triumph over Milwau- SPLIT ewhere, Pittsburgh edged go Cubs 7-6 on Bill Mazer *s eighth inning nomer, |Houston defeated St. Louis 4-2; land New York and Philadelphia| split. The Mets won 2-0 behind Al Jackson's three-hitter before the Phillies took the nightcap 0-1 on Dennis Bennett's six-hit pitching. | The Reds got to Podres (11-10), who won his fifth con-| secutive game at Dodger Sta- dium, for their run in the second ifffing on singles by Vada Pinson, Leo Cardenas and Gordy Coleman. In the bottom half, the Dodgers moved ahead to stay on run-producing singles by Podres and Maury Wills off Reds' starter Bob Purkey (20-5). The homers by Davis and Snider in the third and fourth, fespectively, made it 41 and the Dodgers were on theif way to victory No. 43 in 61 games at home, before a crowd of {SAVED BY MAYS | Mays' 39th homer and Kuéenn's two-run shot off Braves' starter] Bob Shaw gave Marichal (17-9), a 3-0 lead and he held it with one-hit hurling for six innings. | Del Crandall's three-run homer) in the seventh brought about a deadlock the Giants quickly broke in their half against Carl! Willey (1-5) on a-walk ty "huck Hiller, a single by Orlando Cepéda and Felipe Alou's grounder. Mays then saved it! in the eighth when he thrust his glove above the centre field fence to haul in Eddie Mathews bid for a two-run homer. | MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 'National League AB R H Pct. gon, Cin 498 114 170 .341 Davis, LA 532 94 81 .340 Aafon, Mil 497 109 167 .336 jal, St. L 331 48 110 .332 Ss 506 88 163 322 Robinson, 114. batted in--T. Davis, 126. tsT, Davis, 181. bles--Robinson, 44. plesW. Davis, Los An- s and Virdon, Pittsburgh, e runs--Mays, San Fran- 39. bases--Wills, Los An- - co American League AB RH Pet. 475 70 161 .339 495 94 155 .313 484 74.151 312 }Jimenez, KC 440 44 136 .309 |Rollins, Min 532 82 163 .306 gaat: Los Angeles, Runs batted in--Siebern, 101. sgilltsRichardson, New York, Doubles--Robinsori, 37. | oa Kansas City, | |Runnels, Bos |Siebern, KC Robinson, Chi | Home runs -- Cash, Detroit) and Killebrew, Minnesota, 34. | Stolen bases--Aparico, Chi-/ eago and Wood, Detroit, 24. Pitching -- Stigman, Minne- sota, 9-3, .750, Strikeouts -- Pgcual, Minte- sota, 156. Trailing 6-1, the Pirates came back to tie the score on Roberto Clemente's two-run third inning triple, Bill Virdon's homer in the fifth and Smoky Burgess' second sacrifice fly in the seventh Mazeroski then clinched it with a shot off the left field scoreboard clock, tag- ging Cub reliever Don Elston (4-8) with the loss and giving Diomedes Olivo (5-1) the vie tory. WIN THIRD STRAIGHT Bob Bruce (8-8) and reliever Don McMahon, who retired all 11 men he faced, combined for a five-hit pitching job that pulled the Colts to their third Straight victory. Carl Warwick got Houston rolling against Cardinal starter Ernie Broglic (10-7) with a leadoff -homer before the Colts put it stit of reach in the fifth on a two-run double by Roman Mejias and 'lwith a certain refreshing can- ewwVewye yyy ve Re ie NOT WORRYING TYPE By MARVEN MOSS MONTREAL (CP) -- For a football rookie in something of a hot spot, Sandy Stephens talks dor. You wouldn't call him brash. But chat with him for five minutes and it's obvious that if anyone is going to sell Sandy Stephens short it won't be Sandy. His comments are pointed and frank and he's quick to pooh- pooh any notion that his pass- ing arm is not up to standard for a big league quarterback. "T've always known I could ge and so did my coaches," e says quickly. "It might be that I don't throw too often. But that's be- cause the teams I've played with have been primarily rush- Montreal's Sandy Stephens Has Plenty Of Confidence FRANE TALK Sipping a soft drink after a 2%-hour team practice, Steph- ens spoke without restraint about his Canadian pro debut, when he led Montreal Alouettes to a 28-15 win over the Argo- nauts in Toronto. Did jhe feel he had made any mistakes? "No, not that I know of," he said quietly. Was he nervous at any time? Again a quick '"'no." Then a pause and the qualifi- cation: *"Actually I looked at the opener the same way that I did the pre-season games and any 'eve vese ee 8 TS * i_~vw*ea Cea + Fe ¢ to find the team leader he;dication and a unique improvi- wanted, came by then and said|sation on training. ' jubilantly: Pathe -- big. Bey main "He? i real fine job Street was clogg bundle- 'aan doing a real fine J sg oe. yer Mg Ps skip down the sidewa lor Perry had good reason to bel ioous trying to avoid touching pleased. The win Aug, 10 was! anyone, his first over the Argos since, "I wanted to practice making he took over in Montreal three| myself elusive to tacklers," he seasons ago, an . exasperating) said. stretch that covered eight Mont-| A well-muscled 224 pounds, real-Toronto games. |Sandy is a hard and surpris- The Als bagged Stephens from|ingly swift runner. His forte is Minnesota Gophers with a/the option play, where he swings three - year contract package around the end on a oll-out, that is understood to call for|threatening either to pass, some $20,000 a season plus a\churn out yardage himself or bonus. jlateral to a halfback. | With Minnesota, Stephens led NOVEL TRAINING |the Gophers to a 21-3 win over other football game I play in. Every one is a big one. But I have no nerve trouble." Coach Perry Moss of the Alou-) -|the other way around, is pretty ing teams with the pass only tojettes, who processed 13 quarter- supplement the ground attack." backs last year in a fruitless bid! Sandy is a native of the Penn-|UCLA in last year's Rose Bowl sylvania coal-mining commu-|game and made the All-America nity of Uniontown--his father is team of The Associated Press. an undertaker there--and as a| He is married and the father youngster he set his sights on alof a four-month-old boy, San- football career with feverish de-|ford, Jr, Ill. Jim Bronstad Has SPORTS IN BRIEF Suns As Problem THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | with ninth inning assistance The reason pitcher Jim Bron-'from Ted Abernathy when the, stad's record is 7-11, instead of| Virginians had two base runners and one out, got credit for his 18th victory. John Powers hammered home three runs and Bob Veale got the victory, with relief help from Bob Priddy, as the Jets evened the series with the Crackers at a game apiece. The Jets, with a 73-66 season mark have a shade over Atlanta, with 74.67, although both are .525 and 13%. back. Rochester erupted for five runs in the seventh inning to erase a 4-2 Buffalo lead. There were two out and a man on first when the roof fell in on Max Surkont, who had relieved starter Joel Gibson in the sixth. A walk, and then four straight) hits did the damage. Frank Herreya hit his 29th homer, tops in the league, for Buffalo. Toronto overcame a 4-2 Syra- cuse lead in the ninth inning, as three straight hits off starter Carl Mathias loaded the bases/ with nobody out and brought in ay simple, Jacksonville. The league-leading Suns have beaten Bronstad, who labors for Richmond Virginians, four times this season by one run. They did it again , Tuesday night, 1-0, although Bronstad gave up only four hits while his mates collected nine. In other International League action, Columbus Jets moved into fourth place by a percent- age of a percentage point over the Atlanta Crackers, in their head-on battle for the last play- off spot, by beating the Crack- ers 6-2. Rochester whipped Buffalo 7-5, and Toronto Maple Leafs took Syracuse Chiefs 5-4. The only Jacksonville run off Bronstad came in the seventh when Buddy Barker doubled, went to third on an infield out and scored on Dan Morejon's sacrifice fly, Joe Schaffernoth, BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS Today's Probable Pitchers Cincinnati (Jay 20-10) at Los Angeles (Drysdale 22-7) (N) Milwaukee (Hendley 9-10) at) San Francisco (O'Dell 15-11) New York (Hook 8-14) at| Philadelphia (McLish 8-4) (N) By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League WL Pct. GBL 5 586 561 3% 560 3% 515 9% .504 11 5 500 114% 474 15 466 16 New York Los Angeles Minnesota Chicago Detroit Baltimore Cleveland Boston Kansas City 451 18 Washington 383 27 Results Tuesda Cleveland 1 New ork 2 (Called in fifth inning, rain; second game ppd, rain) Detroit at Boston ppd, rain Baltimore 0 Washington 4 Minnesota 2 Chicago 0 burgh (Friend 14-12) (N) Houston (Farrell 8-17) at St. Louis (Gibson 15-8) (N) International League 86 52 .623 78 60 .565 8 75 64 .450 11% 74 67 .525 138% 73 66 .525 134 67 71 .486 19 Richmond 55 87 .387 33 Syracuse 49 90 .353 3744 Jacksonville Toronto Rochester Atlanta Columbus Buffalo Chicago (Koonce 9-7) at Pitts-| WOULD ADMIT REDS centre with Toronto Maple MONTREAL (CP) -- Howard) Leafs, as coach of Rochester Radford, honorary secretary of/Americans of the American the Canadian Olympic Associa-| Hockey League was announced tion, said Tuesday East Ger-)Tuesday night. Migay, 33, who mans would 'be allowed entry|also played with Rochester, a into Canada if the Winter Olym-|Toronto farm club, succeeds pies are held in this country in} Johnny Crawford, He will join 1968. | Leafs' training camp at Peter- Mr. Radford told a press con-|borough when it opens Sept. 7. ference he had been assured by| the department of external af- CUT FROM STEELERS fairs that contestants from East) PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Tom Germany would be '"'ailo to/Tracy, a starting halfback for come to Canada and pz ate| Pittsburgh Steelers the last four in the 1968 Winter O} ies|years, was out Tuesday as the should Canada be granted the| National Football League club games," igot down to the 43-player limit. |Tracy, formerly with Ottawa roienTo om : BI Ht Riders, injured his leg p CP) -- Appoint-|Monday nigh ibi ment of Rudy Migay, a former|game. o_o ere Dwight Siebler. Dennis Menke! WINS GOLF TITLE popped out, but Steve Demeter, OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)-- walked to force in a run. Pinch- Doug Sanders nipped Johnny hitter Neil Chrisley grounded to, Pott by two strokes Sunday to Fred Hopke at first, and win the $35,000 Oklahoma City Hopke's throw achieved the!Open golf tournament as third forceout at second, but Frank/round leader Don Massengale Obregon's return throw 'win apiece. Third and deciding a i ee ee a eB A Bi i ed Whitby Lads Even Series OLD COUNTRY SOCCER Whitby Pee Wees defeated Oshawa People's Clothing 9-2 Monday night at Alexandra Park, to even up their Oshawa Legion Minor Assoc, Pee Wee League playoff series at one game will be played in Whitby, on Wednesday, Sept. 5. With Preston in top pitching form, People's were held under stern control in this game. Christenson got a walk in the third inning, stole second, ad- vanced on an infield out and stole home. People's other run came in the fourth frame when Warner singled with one out, stole second and scored on a single by DeHart. Preston had eight strikeouts and allowed only two hits, but walked four and hit one batter. Christenson started' for Peo- ple's, was relieved in the d LONDON (Reuters)--Results of Tuesday night's old country ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Burnley 2 Bolton 1 Ipswich 5 Blackpool 2 Notts F 2 Blackburn 0 Division 11 Charlton 2 Dunderland 2 Preston 0 Plymouth 0 Rotherham 2 Leeds 1 Scunthorpe 3 Chelsea @ Division TI Barnsley 2 Brighton 0 Bristol 1-Colchester 3 Coventry 2 Swindon 0 Northampton 2 Bristol @ Watford 4 Notts 0 Division IV Doncaster 0 Chesterfield @ ees | 1 Tranmere 6 tish eague Division 11 Stenhousemuir 1 Dumbarton @ when Whitby bombarded him, came back to the mound in the third frame and had to be re- lieved again in the 7th. The second stanza was the big one for the Whitby boys. They HIGH AND LOW The highest and lowest points in the 48 mainland states of the U.S.--Mount Whitney and Death Valley, Cal--are only 85 miles part. bunched seven hits, along mole a two walks, a hit batter, a couple of errors and quite a few stolen bases, to pile up eight runs. | They got their only other tally; in the sixth, when Reeson walk- ed, stole two bases and scored) on a single by Oben. WHITBY ---Cawker, ss;' Maher, 2b; Norwood, 3b; Har-; tis, 1b; Reeson, ¢c; Staples, If; Keenan, cf; Preston, p; Scar- rehetti, rf; Oben, If in 4th. PEOPLE'S CLOTHING -- Mc-! Guire, 3b; Reed, rf; Prest, ss/ and p in 7th; Warner, 2b; Tay-| lor, 1b and p; DeHart, cf; Alex-/ ander, c; Judge, If; Leffing, p| and 1b; Christenson, p and ss. ! | SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, relioble Ges Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 Horse Show Midway President, i DR. D. C, CHRISTIE wild and two runs scored. the stretch, was and Gay Brewer Jr., folded in| PORT PERRY FAIR | LABOUR DAY - B Softball SEPT. 3, 1962 Livestock Ladies' Work Secretary, F. LAMB Cosc2 OTe ts, ee a Ts = --, 2 oS DOMINION ROYAL a. cu? Sie _-, a ee ; Ses 32 +s e = So: Ses cS 2: oS MASTERS Los Angeles 5 Kansas City 10 Today's Probable Pitchers American League Cleveland (Latman 5-11) at New York (Coates 6-6) Detroit (Foytack 9-5) at Bos- ton (Schwall 6-14) Baltimore (Estrada 6-13) at Washington, (Daniels 5-13) (N) Minnesota (Pascual 15-8) at Chicago Buzhardt 7-10) (N) Results Tuesday Toronto 5 Syracuse 4 Buffalo § Rochester 7 Columbus 6 Atlanta 2 Richmond 0 Jacksonville 1 Games Wednesday Toronto at Syracuse (N) Buffalo at Rochester (N) Columbus at Atlanta (N) Richmond at Jacksonville (N) Los Angeles (Belinsky 8-7) at Kansas City (Pena 2-1) (N) National League WL Pet. 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