{ | =Genosha Juniors "Upset Port Perry «+ « tional League's top position. * Shitter in 1929, © 1Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, June 17, 1963 EFTEETT TET £2 JUAN, HAPPY FELLA! --San Francisco's Juan Mari- chal made a symbolic ges- EXCITED IN 9TH Juan Marichal Credits Control For No-Hitter SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--/got a feeling I just can't de- scribe." "God gave me what I wanted this afternoon." | Dominican Republic speaking| quietly after hurling a no-hit,| no-run baseball game Saturday) to beat Houston Colts 1-0 and! put San Francisco into the Na-| great ball games for us, but that jhas to be his greatest. Quite a pitched game, wasn't it?" "You know pitchers think all the time about the best in base- ball and this was my day," said the stocky pitcher. "I've had better stuff in a lot of games but my control was good." He said he fooled the final Houston batter, Brock Davis, wtih a fast ball inside on a 2. and-2 pitch after throwing him outside all day. Marichal said he depended largely on his fast ball but mixed in a few curves and screwballs -- the pitch that brought fame to Carl Hubbell \I é weighs 185 pounds, said his fast It was Juan Marichal, .25-| pall was only medium-swift, but year-old righthander from the/added: "I like to throw break- ing pitches in this park. The winds help them." explained his pitching and ad- mitted: CO Ths beginning of the game. I knew games, but I guess this was just "|my day." faced only 29 batters, walking only two but not allowing a Colt past first base. He struck out five. 1 tory for Marichal as a. Giant, who pitched the last Giants no-|He joined the club in mid-sea- j | son 1960 and in his first outing} "I didn't get excited until that|twirled a one - hitter against "last inning," he said. "Then Ij Philadelphia. ture in Giants dressing room Giants since 1929. Sunday after pitching his first no-hitter and first for the He beat Houston Colts, 1-0. --(AP Wireploto) The six - foot hurler, who} Manager Alvin Dark | 'Marichal has pitched a lot ofl With a wide grin, Marichal "T didn't feel, what do you|® sharp... at the had better stuff in other He used only 89 pitches and record started 13 games, pitched 84 1-3 innings and has an earned-run) average of 3.64, and reserve |Kostro to Los Angeles Angels in a trade for George Thomas, a 25-year-old utility man, and a minor-league player to be desig- nated later. ; Lew Burdette Goes To Cards NEW YORK (CP)--Only four teams completed player trans-| Washington ctions in the final hours before} the Saturday midnight major-| washin league baseball trading dead-| notroit 2 New York 9 line. Two veteran pitchers Of| Kansas City 4 Chicago 3 jnote, Lew Burdette and Paul|/rog Angeles 9 Minnesota 6 Foytack, moved to new teams.|Baltimore at Boston ppd, rain Milwaukee Braves traded League pitcher, nd batter, has a 6-5 won-lost this season, He _ has Oliver, 28, has been catching bout one-third of the games for the Cards this season. Sadowski, 25, was on the Cards' roster in spring training. Detroit Tigers sent Foytack infielder Frank The no-hitter was the 47th vic- Oshawa Genosha Aces Jun-| lors scored a surprise victory in Oshawa City and District "Northern Division" competi- tion, on Saturday night right in| fly and an infield sacrifice sco Port Perry, when they won ajed Mason with the tying run, Prior to that, in the 5th, Shody thrilling 12-inning decision over! Port Perry Merchants, 2-1. Bob Mason, on the mound for the Aces, gave up only two hits -- none in the first eight in- nings. Two successive errors, on in the outfield and the next in the inner circle, gave the! homesters their line run in the third inning. Don Mitchell sin- gled in the 9th, with two out, for Port Perry's first run and he opened the 12th with their only other hit. Mason struck out 14 batters over. the distance. Neil Bramley, pitching for Port Perry, was almost as stin- gy with what he gave up. Gas- kell singled in the first inning and two infield errors loaded) the bases but Genoshas could-| n't score. runner nipped at the plate. In the 12th, Tilk doubled with one out and then with two out, Za- rowny smacked a line-drive dou- ble, proved the winning run. c; Gaskell, lb; Boivin, ss; Ma- son, a Warringer, Mitchell, If; Mitchell, c; Venning, lb; Han- son, 3b; Bramley, p; jbatted in 12th. In the 6th, Mason himself got : l In the 11th Genoshas had a I ( to score Tilk with what GENOSHA ACES -- Zarowny Rowden, 3b; Szysz P; PORT PERRY -- Edgar, ss; cf; Petch, rf; Cornish, 2b; B. Harper, Arn Palmer Cops. Thunderbird On Ist Playoff Hole HARRISON, N.Y, (AP)--Ar-| nold Palmer turns his attention|ished in the mcney. Al Balding of Toronto earned, ----~-- to the United States Open today, | e jto second on an outfield bobble, which ended Sunday, with two |Of his long fly. Then a sacrifice Italians breaking the record for r-| distance travelled. was 2,781.6 miles, se with a Ferrari drive by Phil fill of the United States and when his | skidded on an oil patch into two overturned cars ahead of him,| Phone Rds Ka,/His car burst into flames and| half game separating first-place zy 2b; Seneco, cf; Tilk, If; Shody, he rf, Ferraris Dominate Le Mans LE MANS, France (AP)-- Ferraris captured the first six places in an amazing windup of| he Le Mans 24-hour speed and ndurance automobile race Ludovico Scarfiotti and Lonzo |Bondini of Italy covered 2,834.1) |miles at an average speed of 3-Way Race had opened with a triple but! 118.1 miles an hour in the gruel- Bramley left him stranded. ing race which began Saturday marred by one fatal crash. The previous record distance in 1961 Jlivier Gendebien of Belgium. Bino Heins, 28, of Brazil died French-built Alpine died en route to hospital, Only 13 of the original 49 cars which roared away Saturday at'. i a '(4 p.m. local time (11 a.m. EDT), Virtual deadlock with Syracuse finished the race in which the| Sunday by sweeping Chiefs 5-1 accent this year was placed on| and 8-2 while sizzling Rochester endurance, The race was a Ferrari festi- val all the way. During the last | two flashed by in a phalanx, rolling) kansas Travelers got a_ split almost together. laps, the six Ferraris But the biggest cheer came for the first jet-powered auto/after Virginians grabbed éver to appear in a race. It was| opener 5-4 n 11 innings. Atlanta a BRM chassis powered by a|Crackers padded its southern|There are se British Rover turbine which had/ division lead to eight games by|9US golfers, gruff golfers and been especially invited but|sweeping Jacksonville Suns 5-3/g00d-natured golfers. could not officially compete. It was driven by Ritchie Gin 'Graham Hill and bettered ex- All four Canadian entries fin- our, By MURRAY ROSE Associated Press Sports Writer American League President Joe Cronin was as happy today as a cat who fell on a plate of sardines. The league pennant race has become as hot as mid-summer's day at the equator. A year ago Cronin was gleeful over a "shoehorn" battle. Today you'd have to use a crowbar to pry the jamming teams apart. New York's league - leading Yankees took two from Detroit Tigers Sunday for their first twin conquest of the year and discovered Chicago White Sox were still in a virtual tie with them, only a hot breath away. Boston Red Sox, Cleveland In- dians and Los Angeles Angels also swept doubleheaders, re- sulting in a complete shuffle of the next four places. Red Sox are third, 24 games back of Yanks and White Sox, with streaking: Cleveland and slumping Baltimore each 3% games back and Minnesota four games behind. GET LARGEST CROWD Yanks bumped off Tigers 4-0 and 6-3 before 44,357, largest crowd of the season at Yankee | Stadium. Red Sox copped their} | sixth in a row with 8-1 and 12-5 blitzes of Orioles before 29,258 --biggest Boston turnout of the year. White Sox edged Kansas City As 2-1 and 3-2 before 28,- 909 in Chicago. Indians bumped off Washington Senators 4-2 and 6-4 for their third and fourth successive victories before a disappointing 15,347 attendance at Cleveland, and Los Angeles Angels dismayed 36,160 Minne- apolis-St. Paul customers by) topping Twins 5-3 and 5-4. | New York got fine pitching from Ralph Terry and Bill Staf- ford and extra-base power from the hitters in skinning the tooth- less Tigers. Terry hurled a three-hitter in the shutout opener, Tom Tresh's two-run double in the first in- ning and Tony Kubek's two-run homer in the third made work easy for Terry. Stafford re. quired help from Hal Reniff in the ninth but he had it made before then on two runs in the second and four in the fourth off Hank Aguirre. Detroit's Al Kaline, the league's leading batter, ran his Doubleheader Sweeps Keep American Loop Wide-Open Scramble Johnny Buzhardt (8-2) pitched an opening game four-hitter, marred only by Norm Siebern's homer with two out in the ninth, and Juan Pizarro and Jim Brosnan combined their pitch. ing talents in the second game for an eight-hitter for White Sox. Roman Mejias walloped three home runs--equalling his séa- son's total--in the happy Red Sox' double rout of Orioles, who lost their 15th of their. last 18 decisions. Mejias hit two hom. ers in the first game in backing Bil Monboquette's (9-4) eight. hitter and the third in the free- hitting closer. Dick Stuart cracked his 15h homer--and his fifth in as many games--in the opener for Red Sox. Flamethrower Dick Radatz was reached for two runs in the nightcap's seventh inning, snap. ping his scoreless inning streak at 33. Angels put on a couple of late uprisings, scoring three runs in the ninth inning of the opener and two in the 11th, inning of the closer to cut up Twins hitting streak to 14 games with) singles, twice. Felix Torres got key hits 'in both games. BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League WL Pct. GBL 34 23 596 -- 37 26 587 -- 31 25 554 2% 31 27 534 3 532 525 4 402 6 32 24 485 6% 24 36 .400 11% 21 45 .318 17% Results Saturday gton 0 Cleveland 4 New York Chicago Boston Cleveland Baltimore Minnesota Kansas City Los Angeles Detroit 3% 1% | Milwaukee | National League W L. Pct. GBL 38 27 585 -- 37 27 578 36 27 .571 33 29 .532 34 31 .523 30 32 .484 6% 29 33 .468 7% 29 34.460 8 Houston 27 38 .415 11 New York 25 40 .397 13 Results Saturday Chicago 1 Los Angeles 4 New York 4 Cincinnati 1 Philadelphia 3 Milwaukee 5 Houston 0 San Francisco 1 San Francisco St. Louis Los Angeles 1 Cincinnati 3% Chicago 4 Pittsburgh Philadelphia Results Sunday |Burdette to St. Louis Cardinals) paitimore 1-5 Boston 8-12 |for catcher Gene Oliver and am washington 2-4 Cleveland 4-6 | International added: | Bob Sadowski -of Atlanta. Bur- |Los Angeles 5-5 Minnesota 3-4 | Detroit 0-3 New York 4-6 dette, 36, a righthanded pitcher| Kansas City 1-2 Chicago 2-3 Probable Pitchers Today Baltimore, McCormick (1-3). .at Boston, Wood (0-1) Washington, Bronstad (1-2) or Duckworth (2-4) at Cleveland, Dralick (6-5) N. (Only games scheduled) | Pittsburgh at St. Louis ppd, rain | Results Sunday |New York 5-3 Cincinnati 11-10 | Philadelphia 3-7 Milwaukee 5-4 Pittsburgh 4-7 St. Louis 3-11 | Houston 3-3 San Francisco 0-4 Chicago 8-0 Los Angeles 3-2 | Probable Pitchers Today | Philadelphia, Duren (1 - 1) at Cincinnati, Tsitouris (2-1), N. Pittsburgh, Cardwell (2-8) Milwaukee, Piche (0-1), N. New York, Hook (3-6) at St. Louis, Broglio (7-2), N. Los Angeles, Koufax (9-3) st San Francisco, O'Dell (9-2), N. (Only games scheduled) at International League Northern Division W iL Pet. ea Syracuse 35 26 574 -- = t S ems Ce eee ee oe asta st iets die She MOE NORMAN NEW ONTARIO OPEN CHAMP Moe Norman (léft) of Toron- onto poses with last year's Ontario Open golf champion Nick Weslock after Norman blasted his way to the title Saturday at Pine Valley golf and country club at Wood- bridge, Ont. He had a 54-hole 211 total. Weslock shot a one- over-par 214 to share third place with young Copetown professional Ron Capra. 37 28 .569 -- 36 28 563 4 Richmond 28 28 .500 4% Toronto 28 34 .452 7% Southern Division Atlanta 40 25 615 -- Indianapolis 33 34 .493 8 Little Rock 28 34 .452 10% Jacksonville 26 39.400 14 | Columbus 24 39 .381 15 Results Saturday Little Rock 6 Richmond 3 Rochester 2 Indianapolis 1 Toronto 4 Columbus 1 Syracuse 3 Buffalo 4 Atlanta at Jacksonville ppd, wet grounds Results Sunday Toronto 2 Columbus 7 | Little Rock 4-3 Richmond 5-2 | Syracuse 1-2 Buffalo 5-8 Rochester 5 Indianapolis 4 Atlanta 5-4 Jacksonville 3-2 Games Today |Columbus at Atlanta Indianapolis at Little Rock Richmond at Syracuse (Only games scheduled) Buffalo Rochester NICK WILLHITE By JIM BECKER ond game of a doubleheader. He} Dodgers New Lefty Brilliant In Debut nings. The six-foot two-inch 190. Associated Press Sports Writer, gave up only five hits, struck}pound native of Tulsa, Okla., "T found my curve in Hono- lulu," Those are. not the opening | words to a new hula tune to be \¢rooned to the strum of some ukulele, {out six and walked just one. His victory gave Dodgers a split, as Cubs won the opener | 8-3. The National League-lead- ing San Francisco Giants also split, losing to Houston Colts also pitched complete games | his last three starts. Willhite's victory kept Dodg- ers a game back of Giants and a half game behind Cards, after Bob Buhl beat them han- It's the secret of the success 3-0 and winning 4-3, and St.|dily in the opener for his sixth |geles Dodgers, 22-year-old left- 'hander Nick Willhite. Willhite made his majof 14-3 in 12 innings and winning 11-7. Philadelphia Phillies and Mil- of the newest flame throwing| Louis Cardinals divided a pair) victory. pitcher imported by Los An-|with Pittsburgh Pirates, losing, Giants, pitched into first place |Saturday by Marichal's no-hit- ter, held on when Billy Pierce and Jim Duffalo combined to league debut Sunday and shut-|waukee Braves split, Phils tak-|stop a Houston ninth inning out Chicago Cubs 2-0 in the sec- ' Northern Div. | International The northern division of the International League had the look of a traffic jam in a tele- booth today with only one Syracuse Chiefs and the third- place Rochester Red. Wings. Buffalo Bisons climbed into a was winning its eighth straight, 5-4 from Indanapolis Indians. Columbus Jets whpped Tor- onto Maple Leafs 7-2, and Ar- with Richmond Virginians by |winning the second game 3-2 the and 4-2. ther of the U.S. and Britain's) THROWS THREE-HITTER Craig Anderson hurled a for Buffalo in the opener | against Syracuse Sunday, and }ing the second game 7-4 in 11 | innings and Braves the opener Cincinnati Reds scored the | only sweep on the full 10-game | slate, trouncing New York Mets | 11-5 and 10-3. | FINDS CURVE Dodgers' young Willhite sud- denly found his curve and his winning ways while working for Spokane in the Pacific Coast League, Strictly a fast ball pitcher before, he said he un- covered the curve in a game in Hawaii. 'With the new weapon he won his last six games at Spokane, striking out 38 in his last 31 in- rally in the second game. Don |Nottebart, who suffered a | sprained right foot in the fifth }inning, and Jim Umbricht com- |bined to shut Giants out in the | opener. Catcher Jim Campbell's | two-run double was the big blow for Colts. |WINS OWN GAME Al McBean pitched six score-| | less innings of relief for Pirates }and woh his own game in the /12th with a homer to run his /record to 7-1, Cards bounced back with seven extra-base hits to take the second game, de- spite three-run homers by both Jim Pagliaroni and Ted Savage 'for Pirates. N o-Time-Out Moe' New Open Champ WOODBRIDGE, Ont. (CP)-- rious golfers, merv- And there is Moe Norman. Unpredictable Moe -- racing around the Pine Valley course with his usual abandon--fired a pectations by averaging about) three-hitter for his fifth victory|fjnal-round 69 Saturday to win 108 miles an h his second Ontario Open title with a two-under-par total of 211 Jateur champ, was one stroke |better than defending champion Nick Weslock of Toronto and professional Ron Capra of Ham- ilton who were tied in third place with 214s. Norman, the color guy of Ca- nadian golf who recently de- clared himself world driving champion after a marathon driving exhibition, won with a flourish. | weekend, '" | Peter Berge, Doug Kerr and Jr. Legionnaires Blank Lauries; Oshawa Canadian Tire Le- gionnaires blanked Doug Laurie's Sports 4-0, here at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Sta- dium on Saturday afternoon, in a Leaside Junior Baseball Lea- gue schedule fixture, to increase their margin as league-leaders in the Leaside circuit. Then on Sunday afternoon, jhere at Alexandra Park, they whipped Burlington Fuller Brush Juiors, in an exhibition game, 7-1, to complete a happy Gary Newitt started on the mound for Oshawa. He gave up a single to Al White and a walk to Bob McClelland to open the first inning, then fanned the next two batters and got Bill Leonard to ground out, to the box, Eric Leasman doubled in the second inning. In the third, White again opened with a single but was forced by Mc- Clelland and the latter was trap- ped in a run-down when Fallis was safe on an error, after two out, Newitt pitched the first five | frames, fanned seven batters and gave up four hits, Roger Reeson took over in the sixth and he gave up one hit, to Bill Lennard in the 8th, |and struck out seven batters, in} the last four innings. Brampton And Brooklin Win By Same Scorés By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario lacrosse senior action Saturday saw Brampton Seal- tests and the Brooklin Hillcrests defeat their opponents by iden. tical scores. Bob Haw led Brampton with three goals in a 9-4 win over St. Catharines Athletics. Gary Burrows also scored three for Brooklin to help defeat Port Credit Sailors 9-4. | were John McCauley and} Wayne Thompson with two} | each, and Gord Thompson and) /Ken Richardson. Wally Thorne, | Gary Hind scored for St. Cath- arines, Rock Bradley scored two goals for Brooklin. Cy Coombs, | .9, Glen Lotton, Larry Ferguson and Don Barrie were the other marksmen. Paul Henderson and Dave Hall scored twice each for Port Credit. which will be held this year at Kingston Cataraqui on July 17.! Toronto's Ray Phelps goes into the final 18 holes at King- ston only one stroke behind Ptashnik and Kitchener's Mike Whitney and Toronto's Brian Wilcox are two strokes off the pace. The team will represent On- Win Ex. Tilt Too Dave Stickwey was on the mound for Laurie's. Oshawa Legionnaires got a run in the first inning when Al Etchells singled, was forced by Roger Reeson and then the latter stole and scored, with two out, on a single by Ron Bell. Back-to-back singles by Dave Couch and Bob. Marshall, to open the 2nd inning, plus Ne- witt's grounder, another by Ted Lutton then Aetchells' single, made it 3-0. Oshawa's final run came in the fourth when Bob Marshall opened with a single and Gary Newitt tripled. He was later thrown out, trying to score after Etchells had flied out to left field. Al Etchells, with three hits, Ron Bell and Bob Marshall, with two apiece were the big hitters for Legionnaires, in this one, LAURIE'S SPORTS -- White, 2b; McClelland, c; Etsel, 1b; Fallis, lf; B. Lennard, rf; Hons- berger, ss; Leasman, cf; Aus- tin, 2b; Stilkwey, p. CANADIAN TIRE -- Luitton, 2b; Etchells, ss; Reeson, 1b and p; Domm, c; Bell, If; Ferries, ef; Couch, rf; Marshall, 3b; Newitt, p and 1b; Mitchell, rf. WIN EXHIBITION GAME On Sunday afternoon at Alex- andra Park, Oshawa Legion- naires whipped Burlington Ful- ler Brush 7-1, | Rick Johnston pitched this win, in masterful style. He gave} up only four hits over the dis-| tance, struck out a total of 13 batters and the only run_ the visitors collected came in the 4th inning, when O'Brien singled with one out, stole 2nd base and scored with two out, when Whal- ley was safe on an error at first base. The Oshawa boys scored in each of the first three innings, against Moore, for a 4-0 lead and then added one in the fifth and two in the 7th to complete their total. Etchells had two hits and Ron) gles to be the big hitter. Roger} |Roger Reeson had a pair of| Safeties also. BURLINGTON -- Moore, and 1b; O'Brien, 1b and 2b; Plasky, cf; Whalley, 3b; Callon, ss and p; Killingbeck, c; How- rath, If; Pitt, 2b and ss; Wat- n, rf. OSHAWA: Lutton, 2b; Etch- ells, ss; Newitt, 1b; Domm, c; Bell, If; Reeson, cf; Mitchell, rf; Marshall, 3b; Johnson, p; Upsets Loom In Shamrock Club's Trophy Events The Shamrock Athletic Club's annual trophy competitions, for the E. T, Farrow Trophy (sprints) and Canadian Legion Trophy (distance races) have attracted the largest number of entries in years and the most interest, in this 1963 season. Track stars from McLaughlin Collegiate, have so far domina- ated the events and at least; in the first half of the season's annual compeition, appear to be |ready to establish themselves as new trophy winners, In the 100-yards Senior race, Larry Plancke, of MCVI fifiish- ed first with a fine time of 10.5 seconds, He was followed to the tape by R. Werry, MCVI; T. Dittmar, MCVI; B. Grierson, O'Neill CVI; C. Williams, Sham- rock A.C. and J. Dearborn, MCVI, In the Junior division, J. Lawrence of MCVI was first, at 11.2 secs. followed by R, Taylor and J. Pearce, both of Mc- Laughlin Collegiate. In the 800-yards Senior run, C, Reid, of O'Neill. CVI. was first in 1.57:2 seconds. He was followed by J. Dearborn, MCVI; G. Banks, O'Neill, CW4; C, Wil- liams, Shamrock A.C.; H, Gough, MCVI; L. Lnacke, MCVI and D. Davies, MCVI. The Junior 88-yards race saw W. Marchant, of R. Me- Ewan P.S., in first place with a time of 2.05:5, He was follow- ed by J. Lawrence, MCVI; J. Pierce, MCVI; D. Linklater, King street P.S.; A. Roxbor- ough MCVI and C, Stone, MCVI, Tomorrow (Tuesday) night, the 220-yard sprints will be held and on Thursday, the gruelling -- event will hold the spot- ight, WINS SHOT PUTT ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (CP- AP)--A mighty final . effort heave of 62 feet, five inches won the shot put event for big Gary Gubner of New York University Saturday night at the National Collegiate Athletic Association track and field championships. Gubner's heave, on his seventh and final try, defeated Cana- Other. scorers for Brampton! pit iad 's triple and two sin-|dian-born Dave Steen of the University of Oregon by less than six inches, Steen, of Bur- naby, B.C., was the preliminary leader but couldn't improve on his 61 feet, 11% inches on any of his final three tries. A. E. Johnson 0.D. OPTOMETRIST 723-2721 14% KING L Cough, cf in 8th; Plews, rf in 7th. ATHLETIC S'PORT SHORTS begaid eon $1,750 despite slumping to a fi-| Ajthough he shot a two-over.|Babe Birrer posted his fourth|, i ' J -over- Awe ds 'or the 54-hole event. --_ oy once again able to gio ge sage ype of 69, par 72 the last round and| Victory with a six-hitter in the) In his usual manner, Moe dis- ug and quip: : g . His total was\iet Harney catch him when he|Nightcap. Two homers by Ray|regarded practice swings and . "After all these years, I've gs ive strokes off the pace. hit a too-streng approach and|Oyler and one by Bill RomanjKept his opponents off balance. found my choking price. It's "3 A the list with 69-|4 too-weak chip on the 17th and| accounted for all of Syracuse's|The colorful pro from Toronto|birdie three. $25,000. tess: d of Wan. veteran Stan! missed a three-foot putt on the runs, Oyler hit one in each|has his own way of playing--he| In fifth place was Barrie's The 33-year-old Latrobe, Pa., aa $595 Se acre tec wholigth, Palmer dominated. the|game. Joe Hicks homered for|steps up to a ball, whacks it|young Bob Panasiuk, who strong boy--refreshed and re- ot Tor ; Ruane ne Thunderbird from the start to| Buffalo in the nightcap with the|and romps down the fairway tolplayed tour golf this winter, laxed after a month's layoff--|%o9. 4 stroait ae finish, bases loaded, |his next shot. |with °71-71-73--215, Capra, 72-70- shoved himself back on the|* 7470 7373 mt ' ohn-)| He was never out of the lead. Columbus rapped four consec-| He was the only golfer in a|\72--214, picked up $400 for the ¢ throne of golf Sunday by win- $970. TOtTE--ON, LOOK AWAY) atter firing a first-round 67 on utive hits with two out in the/field of 51 professionals and 38\second best score among profes- ning the $100,000 Thunderbird , the 6,550-yard, par-70 Westcheg-| fifth to beat Toronto. Jim Mc-|amateurs to break par over the|sionals and Panasiuk, third classic in a sudden-death play-|\TO HELP IN OPEN ter Country Club course.6 Knight, who joined Toronto over|54 holes and it was worth $750 in}jamong the pros, earned $300. off with Paul Harney. "My whole idea here was to, With the $25,000 first prize, the weekend, drove in both runs!winnings to him. The four leading amateurs-- Palmer put away his challen-|hit good golf shots, the kind that|which led to Palmer's "chok-|for Leafs. Norman edged runner - up|Cowan, Weslock, Bell and Bob ger by a stroke with a parjwould help me in the Open,"|ing" quip after his missed| Atlanta scored five runs in the|Gary Cowan, Kitchener's out-/Ptashnik of Toronto (218)-- three on the first extra hole|said Palmer. "Oh, I was trying|three-footer forced the playoff,| seventh for a comeback victory|standing amateur, by two|made bids for places on Onta- after they had tied over the reg-|to win, certainly, but mainly I/the king became the first golfer|over Jacksonville in the first|strokes. Norman was 70-72-69--|rio's Willingden Cup team. The ulation 72 with 277 totals, and|wanted this to help me getlin official Professional Golfers) game, Crackers broke a three|211 and Cowan even par at 69-/members are picked after 72 picked the winner's check|ready. I've got to feel good/Association records to earn|game_ victory drought in the|73-71--213 on the par-71 course.|holes of play, 54 in the open for $25,000. about my game again." more than $400,000 in a career. sweep. Cowan, former Canadian Am-'and 18 in the Ontario Amateur ) FOR MEN AND BOYS All active men reall appreciate WATSON": athletic pouch and three-way abdominal support. Elastic waist unequalled masculine comfort, S richer, wiser, out of a rgd tario Aug. 12-13 at Riverside He dropped a nifty wedge shot Golf Club, Saint John, N.B. four feet from the 18th pin and calmly dropped the putt for a © Air Conditioners ° Refrigerators WAYNE APPLIANCES 78 SIMCOE NORTH Quality Products -- Low Prices Accent On Value 411 Long-wearing, expertly tailored, launders easily --no ironing. Jerseys to match.