Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 May 1963, p. 10

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can Games. She is shown here, crying on the shoulder of teammate Diane Gerace (left) in Sao Paulo, Brazil, yester- day, after her throw of 164 NANCY : » Ontario, is over- : come with emotion after win- 'ming her second gold medal 9 OORIO RS 16-05 ae te we 20 bs amen * feet, 744 inches, set a new Pan-Am games record in the discus event. --AP Wirephoto . for Canada, in the Pan-Ameri- SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' fgee eat 4 AD gu Oshawa Minor | Lacrossers To Register Mon. Oshawa Minor Lacrosse As- sociation will have its registra- tion night for all boys 16-year- LACROSSE returns to Oshawa this year and the news t arouse a wealth of pleasant memories and also nostalgic "anecdotes, in the minds of this city's veteran sports fans. For "this writer in particular, lacrosse has a special significance "because our first assignment as a very young and inexperienc- "ed sports writer, was to cover the first game of the 1929 "Levack Trophy playoffs. Down in the old Motor City Sta- dium, on a Saturday afternoon, almost 3,000 Oshawa fans 'turned out, both as spectators and as citizens paying tribute, "to the great Oshawa General Motors team, which on Sept. 4 had defeated the famous New Westminster Salmon Bellies "2-1 (a history-making score for field lacrosse) to win the Can- 'dian championship, The Mann Cup in two straight games. In "those days, the Intermediate Champions could challenge the "Senior champions, for a special trophy here in Ontario -- ~The Levack Trophy. Oshawa defeated famous Toronto Mait- "Jands 10-1 here that afternoon, Sept. 28 and won again in "Weston the following Saturday 6-3. As we recall it now -- "The Levack Trophy was never played for again. Many top "Intermediates graduated to a larger Senior OLA group the -following year and then in the early 30's came the ill-fated "experiment of professional lacrosse, as "Box" lacrosse was "developed -- in order to take the game indoors. It also meant ~only half as many players on a team, which was easier on "the budget. Many of Oshawa's great team of 1929 later play- ed professional box lacrosse, such as Bill Coulter, "Red" Spencer, Kelly DeGray, Chuck Barron, Chuck Davidson and "Toots" White. x x x x = OSHAWA'S Mann Cup champions, in addition to those "players named above, included 'Paddy" Shannon, Norv. Hub- "bell, the only "homebrew" at that time, Ernie Shepley, Albert =Smitty" Smithson, '"Doddy" Doddemeade, Cunny Golden, Big Bob Stevenson, Walker Wilson, "Smoky" Fox, and Mel Whyte. The latter, along with Coulter, Barron and DeGray ~made their homes in Oshawa. Oshawa's Mann Cup title came the year after they first entered Senior ranks and won the OLA title in their first season. In that year, '28, many of the Mann Cup team were already playing here, along with that great competitor "Ted" Reeve, of sports-writing fame, -Joe and Jack Walsh, and some others we can not recall at fithis time. They beat Brampton in the finals and in those ewdays such names as Bert Large, George Sproule, Zimmer- &man, Stu Beatty, Jerry Kendall, Burton, Burry, Gowdy and a Shost of others, were familiar stars of the field game. 'Out win New Westminster, where their fans were dumfounded in ©1929 -- they boasted such names as George Feeney, Johnny "Stoddart, "Red" Fraser, Jack Wood, the Patchell brothers, and the Gifford brothers, Stew and Bill. When the team came home, Oshawa turned out and put on the longest actual organ- ized parade ever held in the city, every sports team in the ..city participating. The railway folk also sent the club one of Sthe largest bills that was ever known too! Others connected ith that great club, and we'll not try to name them all, were =the late George Munroe, coach; Sammy Johnson, the skilfull Strainer; the late Fred Hobbs, Matt Leyden, H. W. Nicholl, =@C. E. McTavish, the late Harry Leckie. The congratulations "poured in by wire and mail from the Premiers, Members of = Parliament, one of whom was the late W. E. N. Sinclair and wof course Oshawa's Mayor, the late T. B. Mitchell and his council, put on a great civic welcome for the conquering » heroes. & x x x x : NOW that we've started we could go on for hours, even without any research work. .We could tell how, after pro |a- Ecrosse died, a group of 15 lacrosse enthusiasts borrowed per- = sonally from the bank and built their own lacrosse box in Motor City Stadium -- with lumber secured from the old Oshawa Curling Rink. Dozens of "great guys" helped out with the work and so did every single player. Yep -- that "was really "amateur sport" in those days! The teams later + played in Oshawa Arena and we still had a respectable senior "team here late in the 40's -- or was it 1950? After the Osh- Sawa Arena burned down, lacrosse dwindled away here, ex- cept for some minor activity that never seemed 2 Now we are to have lacrosse in Oshawa again an qe may win The Minto Cup (Junior award). Back in awa won a Dominion title. Fished in 1907 and so "Green Gaels" is a good choice ©1963 edition of Junior lacrosse. Now that we've got = we'll give this topic another go, later next week. But i e = meantime -- all of Oshawa's sports fans wish the new Oshawa {Junior Green Gaels Lacrosse Club -- the very best of luck! ~ | Argentina and-under, on Monday, May 6, at the Oshawa Childre's Arena at 7.00 p.m. Advance registra- Oshawas Oakley Wins Gold Medal SAO PAULO, Brazil (CP-AP) When Nancy McCredie was left off the Canadian team that went to the British Empire Games in Australia last year, she concealed her emotions, flexed her young muscles and tore into a stepped-up training program, Today the strapping 18-year- old Brampton, Ont., high school girl is enjoying the fruits of her labor, basking in the limelight as the only person with two gold medals in track and field at the fourth Pan-Amercan Games, Tears of happiness streamed down her cheeks Frday after she'd won the women's discus with a record-breaking throw to become the first Canadian ath- lete since 1928 to turn a double in track and field in major in- ternational games. Last Sunday the brawny youngster put the shot for a games record and a gold medal. Her discus victory followed by a few hours another Canadian gold - medal triumph, which boosted the Canadian team's to- tal here to 10 golds--the great- est showing ever by Canada in international games. EASY FOR OAKLEY Alex Oakley, St. John's, Nfid.- born heel-and-toe specialist who now lives in Oshawa, Ont., eas- ily out-distanced a field of six to win the initial games run- ning of the 20,000-metre walk. Nck Marrone of Montreal crossed the finish line second to give Canada the gold and silver medals in the event. Meanwhile, Diane Gerace, a 19-year-old stenographer from Trail, B.C., was adding to Can- ada's impressive medal list in track and field by finishing sec- ond to Eleanor Montgomery of the U.S. in the women's high jump. e shed tears of jay, too, when the medals were pre- sented. Sandra Marks, 19, and Mari- lyn-Malenfant, 14, both of Que- bec: City, picked up a bronze 4S medal Friday night by finishing third to two United States pairs in the synchronzed swimming duet competition. The day's results--in which the United States added four track and field golds, won the men's basketball crown and was forced to a playoff for the wom- en's basketball title -- boosted Canada's medal total to 61--10 golds, with five in track and field, 25 silvers, with four in track and field, and 26 bronze, with one in track and field. DIDN'T WIN BEFORE Canada won no gold medals in track and field in the first three Pan-American Games and won only two silvers and six bronzes in that area in Chicago in 1959 when the 175-member team--41 larger than the' team' here--got seven golds, 21 silvers) and 29 bronze. Canadians may add to their totals in today's windup to the games, which began April 20, with chances in the relays, the 1,500-metre run and the wom- en's 80-metre hurdles, where Jenny Wingerson of Toronto has qualified for the final. After Friday's competitions, the U.S. had piled up 95 gold medals, 52 silvers and 32 with Canada's totals second best fol- lowed by Brazil with nine golds, 14 silvers and 12 bronze. Brazil probably will pass Canada's gold medal figure today with eight men in the 10 boxing fi- nals. Miss McCredie, a five-foot, 94-inch 175-pounder who has been described as a girl who might be taken for a tall-girl fashion model, won her second gold medal with a discus toss of 164 feet, 74 inches, cracking by nearly three feet the previ- Ous games record of 161 feet, 94 inches set by Mrs. Earlene Brown of the U.S. in 1959. It was the best toss ever for the talented youngster, who has shown well in hurdles and jave- lin in addition to the discus and shot put and who also is a tal- ented singer and budding artist. The Belleville-born Miss Mc- Credie, who conditions herself with a combination of mental and physical exercises in which she gets a mental picture of ac- tual competition while lifting weights to increase her strength, had a previous best throw in discus of 151 feet, three inches--the Canadian rec- ord. She finished far ahead of sec- ond-place Ingebord Pfuller of Argentina, who tossed for 156 feet, 11 inches. Oakley, a lanky 133-pounder who at 34 is a veteran of two Olympics, won the walk--equiv- alent to about 124% miles--in one hour, 42 minutes, 42.2 seconds to finish half a mile ahead of Marrone, The Montrealer, a 38-year-old) native of Fossacesia, Italy, was timed in 1:46:34.0. Ronald L. Zinn of the U.S, was third. Miss Gerace, best athlete at the Canadian indoor track and field championships in 1962 and holder of the Canadian women's high jump record of five feet, six inches, cleared five feet, 4% inches Friday to place second to the U.S. winner who cleared Ss" , WINS HURDLES In other track events Friday, Blaine Lindgren of the U.S. won the men's 110-metre hurdles in 13.8 seconds, breaking the pre- vious games record of 14.0; Ralph Boston, the 1960 Olympic champion from the U.S., won the broad jump with a record leap of 26 feet, 74% inches, three inches better than the previous mark; and Al Hall of the U.S. took the hammer throw with a record 205 feet, 10 inches, 10 feet, one inch better than his own 1959 mark. The U.S. won its third succes- sive men's basketball crown by defeating Brazil. 78-66 before 30,000 screaming fans Friday night in the tournament's deci- sive game. Each had 5-0 rec- ords going into the final. tion may be made at the Simcoe Hall Boys' Club, the CRA or the Children's Arena. BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS ~ The first practices will be held at the Children's Arena on Thursday, May 9, starting at 6.00 o'clock. All boys under 16- years-of-age may register and play lacrosse. No boy will be dropped from a team or league for inexperience at the game. Competent coaching will, be available to all, led by' Don Craggs, former Brooklin senior star, who is the head coach for the Association. Games and practices will be held on Thursday evenings and in the mornings during the sum- mer holidays at the Children's Arena. The executive of the Association is also striving to obtain some outdoor facilities! for lacrosse in the city. Remember, all boys are wel- come and no one will be re-| fused who wishes to play, so) |come out and register on Mon- day night. Jr. Green Gaels Expect Homebrew Rearguard Dept. | WHITBY -- Oshawa Green| "Gaels" held a "stiff" workout| last night at the Whitby) Community Arena in prepara- tion for the 1963 Ontario Junior) Lacrosse Association season. Gaels open up the campaign Saturday, May 11th at "home", against the powerful Long) | | | HOMEBREW DEFENSE | With only seven days away for the season's opener, coach jJim Bishop had his | working hard. As it looks now,! |the defense looks _ strickly| |"homebrew", Big Frank Wilk.| inson a 6' 4" 225 pound Whitby} native has looked impressive and seems to have insured him. self a position on the club. He joins "Butch" Kadwell and Mike. Gray both Whitby boys jand Jimmie Hinkson, an Osh- | awa lad. Gaels will practice again to- day and Sunday at the Chil- dren's Arena at 12.00 noon. | Fans may watch them in action, at no admission charge. | Canada Claims 10 Gold Medals SAO PAULA, Brazil (CP)-AP) --Unofficial medal standings jafter Friday's competitions in the fourth Pan - American Games: Gold Silver Bronze 79 «62 = 82 10) 25 26 oh 2 6 10 17 United States Canada Brazil Roman Banquet Is O¢p COUNTRY £ Fort Erie Winner | SOCCER SCORES 3 7 3 3 3 Venezuela Cuba Uruguay Mexico Trinidad = FORT ERIE, Ont. (CP)--E, C. Pasquale's Roman Banguet) LONDON (Reuters) held off the determined /late/ sults of British soccer matche challenge of Hellenic Stable's|pjayed Friday night: 'All Canadian to win the fea-| ENGLISH LEAGUE tured Alps Gourmandes Purse| "Division II rat Fort Erie Friday before) 5.491 © 9 Wrexham 2 4,934. SCOTTISH LEAGUE -* *, ' | '7 JE e Ben Steen's Balinode finished Wiclsien Y |St. Mirren 2 Dundee 1 |The The winner was favored and retymed 4. - oe vit le Re-| Chile Lanagk 4 Dumfermline 0'Pery 8) British | Antilles | Puerto Rico Guatemala | Jamaica | Panama |Barbados Guiana eSeownneorrusa ay ~. = w co By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League W L Pct GBL 652 -- .632 609 542 .500 478 450 421 -381 318 15 8 7 14 9 13 11 11 11 11 12 9 11 811 St. Louis Pittsburgh San Francisco Milwaukee Chicago Los Angeles Philadelphia Cincinnati New York 8 13 Houston 715 Results Friday San Francisco 5 New York 3 Los Angeles 2 Pittsburgh 13 St. Louis 0 Cincinnati 6 Houston 3 Philadelphia 4 | Chicago 10 Milwaukee 7 | Probable Pitchers Today | San Francisco (Pierce 1-2 )at/Baltimore 8 Detroit 5 New York (Craig 2-2). | Los Angeles (Miller 2-1) at Pittsburgh (Schwall 1-0). St. Louis (Gibson 0-0) at Cin- cinnati (Malconey 2-1). | Houston (Johnson 1-3) at Phil- adelphia (Culp 2-1). Chicago (Hobbie 1-2) at Milwaukee (Shaw 0-1). American League WL Pct. GBL 14 8. 10. hs | ae Be 12 10 | 12.12°. i ee 7 ay on. 913. 813. Results Friday Cleveland 2 Los Angeles 1 Boston 1 Kansas City 3 New York 4 Minnesota 3 Washington 5 Chicago 2 |Kansas City Boston New York Baltimore Los Angeles Chicago Cleveland Minnesota Washington Detroit | Probable Pitchers Today | New York (Williams 1-1) at Minnesota (Kaat 1-2), |Washington (Stenhouse 1-1) at Indianapolis 11 Atlanta 6 Chicago (Fisher) Cleveland (Donovan. 1-2) at Los Angeles (McBride 2-2) N. Boston (Delock 1-1) at Kansas City (Thies 0-0) N. Baltimore (Barber 4-2) at De- troit (Bunning 1-2). Student Engineers First Champions In GM Basketball Loop -- The Student Engineers Club captured the first Motors Basketball League cham- pionship by defeating the Parts Department 43 to 29. The game, played at Mc- Laughlin Collegiate on Thurs- day night, was the third and deciding contest of the final series. Parts won the first game 35 to 31 and then the Students took the second game 34 to 26.- Parts had previously elim- inated Purchasing while the Stu- dent Engineers defeated Per- sonnel in the other semi-final series, Parts took an early lead but the Students rallied to end the first quarter ahead 11 to 9. In the second quarter, the Stu- dents, led by Paul Smith, com- pletely dominated play by scor- ing ten points, while holding Parts to two points. In the third quarter, teams scored ten points. Parts pulled within six points of the Students with only min- utes remaining but Big Dave Thompson threw three quick both General) 43 t baskets and the Students won 0 29. High scorer in the game was Gary Vaughan of Parts with 14 points. Dave Thompson and Paul Smith scored 13 and 12 points respectively for the Stu- dents. TROPHIES PRESENTED At the completion of the game, League Commissioner Ed Kolodzie announced the league's Most Valuable Player to be Gary Vaughan of Parts. A tro- phy, presented by Byron S. Ed- mondson, who represented the GM Recreation Council, was awarded to Vaughan. Don Lid- diard and Bob Winter, both pf Personnel, tied for second place in the balloting. The General Motors Recrea- tion Council Championship Tro- phy was presented by Mr. Ed- mondson to Maurice Lake, team representative and coach of the Student Engineers. Individual trophies, were also presented to Dave Thompson, Dave Lalonde, Jim Stevenson, Chuck Tuson, Paul Smith, Abb Gilbert, Maurice Lake, John Orr, Hate vey Hicks, Gary Lucas, Kom™ Smith, Jim Falloon and Tom Cormier, ' CHEQUE PRESENTED The proceeds from the Bene- fit Game, played on Thursday, April 25, between the GM League All-Stars and the Indus- trial League All-Stars, amounted to $53.75. A cheque for this amount, presented by Rick Sal- way, secretary-treasurer of the GM Basketball League, was re- ceived by Graham 'Tim' Nel- son, Assistant Director of the . Simcoe Hall Boys Club. All pro-_ ceeds will go to the Boys Club Building Fund for the new build- ing, now being erected at East- view Park. Parts -- Forbes 4, Fowler 4, Vaughan 14, Graham 3, Eagle- son 2, Salway 1, Matthews 2, Martin and Sandrelli. Students -- Thompson 13, La- Londe 2, Stevenson 4, Tuson Smith 12, Gilbert 2, Hartley and Lucas, Officials -- Tim Nelson and Paul Wright. 4 Former. Stars Fire-Crackers With Indians Old teammates should just fade away like Christy Mathew- son's curve ball, the Atlant Crackers agreed today. Lefty Taylor Phillips and slug- ger Jim Koranda appeared out of the past Friday night and combined their talents to help Indianapolis win ah 11-6 Interna- tional League baseball game. The victory enabled the Indians to move into a virtual tie with Atlanta for second place in the League's Southern Division. Arkansas followed the superb pitching of big John Boozer to a 2-1 11 inning victory over Buf- falo and padded its Southern Division lead to 1% games over Atlanta and Indianapolis. Co. lumbus shaded Jacksonville 6-5 with a ninth - inning uprising, Syracuse s}ug ged Richmond Virginians 13 - 1 and Toronto bounded into third place in the Northern Division by trouncing | Rochester Red Wings 8-4. | BLANKS CRACKERS Phillips, who hurled bril- liantly for Atlanta in the South- International League ern Association 10 years ago, Northern Division W L Pct. GBL 11 4 733 -- 8 9 471 4 Toronto 7 9 438 4% Rochester 6 9 400 5 Southern Division Arkansas 11 6 647 -- Atlanta 9 7 464 1% Indianapolis 10 8 556 1% Columbus 8 10 444 3% Jacksonville 7 11 .389 4% Friday's Results Arkansas 2 Buffalo 1 Columbus 6 Jacksonville 5 Syracuse 13 Richmond 1 blanked the Crackers in 6 1-3 innings of sharp relief. Husky |Koranda, a leading. slugger when the Crackers won their 17th Southern pennant three years ago, slapped a single that triggered a five-run Indianapo. lis blast in the first inning. Boozer blanked Buffalo for Buffalo Syracuse |run to Grimm Mason, the first Bison batter. Lefty Willie Smith restricted Richmond to seven hits for Syr- |acuse and rapped three of the Chiefs' 16 hits. Toronto pinned Rochester with its seventh loss in the past Toronto 8 Rochester 4 Ed Rakow's 4-Hitter | Puts A's Back On Top By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer In the topsy-turvy American League, it seems reasonable that one of the hottest pitchers] J 0X | * Branch Castrolites. Game time|is Ed Rakow, a cellophane cut-|into a second-place tie with)ington Senators beat Chicago is 8.20 p.m. with a special pre- ter who found the back door to| New York Yankees, who used| White Soc 5-2. game "'show" set for 8.15 p.m,|major league baseball in a wed.|Clete Boyer's 10th-inning home| ding chapel. Rakow, a 26-year-old right- hander put Kansas City 'Athlet- ics back into first-place by lim- "boys"| iting Boston Red Sox to four hits! Friday. Wayne Causey provided the key single that gave the Athletics a 3-1 victory over the Red Sox in their battle for top |spot in. the American League race, The triumph was Rakow's third against one defeat this season. Not bad for a guy who was told "forget it son, you can't throw hard enough' when he went for a major league try- YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Batting--Bob Bailey, Pirates, drove in five runs with two hom. ers and a single, and scored four runs in 13-2 walloping of Los Angeles Dodgers. Pitching--Joe Nuxhall, Reds, became first pither to go nine jinnings against National League | leading St. Louis, limiting Cards |to five hits in 6-0 victory, | | | ;out, then bumped into a scout} at a frend's wedding who got lhim a look-see in the big leagues. | The loss dropped the Red Sox| run for a 4-3 decision over Min-} |nesota Twins. | | | TIGERS ARE LAST | Baltimore Orioles got consec- utive ninth-inning homers from} FIGHTS LAST NIGHT | | eight games. The Maple Leafs massed eight of their 11 hits for eight runs in the first four inn- ings to present veteran right- hander Steve Ridzik with his third victory in four decisions. | Arkansas after yielding a home| NATIONAL LEAGUE By JIM BECKER Associated Press Sports Writer Joe Nuxhall broke into major league baseball so long ago that when Cincinnati Reds brought him back last year, some folks thought he was his son. Actually, it was a different Nuxhall. Gone was the wild lefty who pitched one inning for Reds in 1944 at the age of 15, the youngest player ever to ap- pear in the big time. Nuxhall came back as a control pitcher. He demonstrated that again SPORTS CALENDAR | TODAY TENNIS Oshawa Tennis Club's Official "Opening Day" for 1963 sum- mer season, at 2.00 p.m. SOCCER Oshawa and District Associa- tion Schedule Opener -- Kickers vs Ukrainia, at 7.00 p.m. and Hungaria vs Italia, at 8.30 p.m. Both games at. Oshawa Kins. |men Civic Memorial Stadium. MONDAY SOCCER Oshawa and District League -- Polonia vs Bathurst, at 8.00 p.m, SOFTBALL Civil Service League --Fire- fighters vs Foley's, at Baker's Park; Eaton's vs Post Office, 'Old' Joe Nuxhall Blanks Cardinals Friday night as he set down the high-flying St. Louis Cardinals 6-0 on five hits and didn't walk a man. Pittsburgh Pirates closed toe within a game of the Cards, as they bombed Los Angeles Dodg- ers 13-2. San Francisco Giants also moved to within a game of the leaders with a 5-3 decision over New York Mets. CUBS BEAT BRAVES ° ° Chicago Cubs topped Milwau- kee Braves 10-7 and Philadel- phia Phils downed Houston Colts 4-3. Nuxhall, who had a 5-0 record last season after the Reds res. cued him from San Diego, posted his first victory of the year. Leo Cardenas and rookie Pete Rose Lacked him with... homers. Bonus baby Bob Bailey . banged a pair of homers and drove in five runs as the Pirates . abused five Dodger pitchers. A crowd, of 49,431, largest in the majors this year and the: biggest the Mets have drawn for a single game, turned out for Mays night at the Polo Grounds. Willie, who tried hard to hit a homer for the fans ia the park where he burst to greatness with the old New Giants, had to settle for a run- scoring double in four trips to the plate. BROWN'S LUMBER & SUPPLIES LTD. | at Cowan's Park; Times vs Osh- awa Dairy, at Northway Park and Reynolds vs City Hall, at Thornton's Corners; All games at 6.45 p.m. Handy Joe Takes Mohawk Feature CAMPBELLVILE, Ont. Luis Aparicio and Joe Gaines and dropped Detroi tTigers into BASEBALL Leaside Junior League -- Osh-| awa Canadian Tire Legionnaires) vs Doug Laurie's Sports, at) Talbot Park, Leaside, 7.30 p.m.! "DO-IT-YOURSELF HEADQUARTERS" NEW HOMES & HOME IMPROVEMENTS FULL LINE OF BUILDING MATERIALS 725-4704 | 436 RITSON N. (Where Pavement Ends) } | (CP)--Handy Joe, a three-year- old colt which has to be led to the starting gate by a groom, paced to a popular victory in the featured mile seventh race at Mohawk raceway. With 18-year-old Rheo Filion last place with an 8-5 triumph Cleveland Indians edged Los Angeles Angels 2-1 and Wash- Causey, hitting at a .397 clip capped a three-run uprising in the seventh inning against Bill Monbouquette with a two-run single. Boyer's blow broke up a pitching duel between Minne sota starter and loser Dick Stigman and Jim Bouton, Yan kee reliever who hurled no-hit ball over the final four innings after taking over from Bill Staf ford. driving, Handy Joe reached the wire before second-place Mr. Key Witt and third - finisher Pierre Herbert in 2:07.2. Handy Joe returned $5.80, $4.60 and! 3.30. TO PEARNER In 1962 tourism was Britain's biggest earner of United States dollars. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|r Los Angeles -- Don Johnson, |1243%4, Los Angeles, outpointed Juan Ramirez, 126, Mexico, 10 | Memphis, Tenn.--Ernie Bur- ford, Memphis, stopped Bill Belchia, Toledo, Ohio, 10, Mid- dleweights. QUARTERBACK INJURED MENIO PARK, Calif. (AP)--) Quarterback John Brodie of San |Francisco '49ers suffered a) broken arm Friday when his car) swerved off a road and hit a) tree. X-rays showed the Na- tional Football League star's} right arm was broken above the wrist, but Coach Red Hickey said there was every reason to believe Brodie would be physi- cally ready for July's start of football drills. and SA For personal use or for Company use there are definite advantages when you lease a new . No insurance costs . . . No main for full details. PHONE 723-4634 There Are Special Benefits For All BUSINESS EXECUTIVES @ PONTIAC @ BUICK @ ACADIAN everything on one or two yeor lease terms... MILLS AU' LTD. LESMEN Other odels Request + +» One rate covers Phone or come in tenance costs < TO LEASE ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS holi. A £ OSHAWA Alcoholism is @ disease with no known cure. A group known as Al y To inform the general public to attend. maybe your own, 266 KING ST. WEST grown to a membership of over 250,000 in 84 countries, World Wide has made tremendous gains in helping the alcoholic lead a healthy normal life. public meetings will be held across Ontario, Sunday, May Sth. One such meeting will be held here in Oshawa. You, the citizens of Oshawa and District are cordially invited Alcoholism is no respector of race, creed, color, man or wo- man, knowing a little about AA might someday save a life, PLAN TO ATTEND KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 COLBORNE ST. W. Sunday, May 5th 2:30 P.M. This is a paid Public Service Announcement. ded 28 years and which has on how AA works, 40 open i Buses leave Oshawa Terminal at 12:00 Noon Saturdays GfEENWoOD "THOROUGHBRED OPENS MONDAY 2 P.M. ge (THE NEW NAME FOR OLD WOODBINE)

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