Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Jun 1964, p. 11

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oe ---- arlene pil! ROSES! Rodger Ward (right) who twice before won The Indianapolis 500, finished sec- ond in Saturday's tragedy- packed event. He is shown here with a wistful expression, Pp see ee with a garland of roses around his neck, during the Speedway ceremonies. The winner, A. J. Foyt (left) did the honors, doffing his award for the posed picture and NE a ES! Seger PE ee eS ' Double Fatality Mars Indianapolis Classic INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Two outstanding drivers died Satur-' day in a flaming pileup that marred the 48th Indianapolis 500. The first closed-circuit tele- cast of the event showed vet- eran Eddie Sachs plowing into . the side of rookie Dave Mac- Donald's car, causing an ex- plosion that killed them both. A, J. Foyt Jr., driving a.con- ventional, front - engine Offen- hauser, won $153,650 of the total prize money of $506,625, richest in the history of the race, top- ping last year's total by $12,959. The crowd, probably a record last Saturday but not disclosed, was estimated from 260,000 up to an unlikely 350,000. A large proportion of it saw the great ball of fire that erupted on the second lap»near the upper end of the main straightaway. Many felt the heat and inhaled the smoke as) five other cars piled into the in- ferno and were blasted from the race. It was remarkable that the five other drivers were not se- ¢ riously hurt. It was almost in- credible that the bulk of the field, well around the track in pursuit of Scott Jimmy Clark, | | was able to get stopped. Sachs, 37, who had promised to retire if he won the race, was burned to death before he could be. extricated from his car. MacDonald, 26, an: expert sports-car racer, died in hospital a short time later. The most serious casualty among the other drivers in- volved was Ronnie Duman, 32, with second and third-degree burns. The luckiest was Bobby Unser, 30, who drove straight through the fire without hitting anything and escaped with mi- nor burns, His brother, Jerry, was killed on the Speedway in a practice run in 1959. The hard-driving Foyt, three times national champion and the 1961 Memorial Day winner, gunned his supposedly obsoles- cent Sheraton-Thompson special into first place on the 55th lap, after the more glamorous new equipment had washed out, Roger Ward, twice winner of the event, made the best show- ing with one of the new rear-en- gine Fords, taking the $56,925 second money. He was bitterly disappointed, feeling he would have won if he hadn't had to make five pits stops three more than he planned and three more than Foyt needed. TIRES SHRED CHUNKS Clark and teammate Dan Gur- ney, in the new Lotus-Fords, sweetening Ward's second- place finish with this friendly gesture. The scene took place in a garage, when Ward went there to extend his congratu- lations to Foyt. --(AP Wirephoto) Upsets Occur In U.S. Stakes Races NEW YORK (AP) -- Roman Brother and Olden Times scored upset victories in Saturday's top United States horse races. Roman Brother won by three lengths over the favored Mr. Brick in the $125,300 Jersey Derby at Garden State Park. Olden Times took the $115,400 In picking up the 'purse of $75,010 to run his career bank roll to $487,075, Olden Times paid $21.40, $9.80 and $4.90. Quadrangle returned $6.30 and $3.80 by finishing a head in Blind Navigators In 30-Car Rally TORONTO (CP) -- A total of 30 cars, each with a blind navi- gator, took part in a special 50- mile sports car rally here Sun- day, All completed the course. Tied for first place in the rally were driver John Medwell and navigator Joe Bow and driver Glen Davis and naviga- front of fast-closing Saidam, the favorite. Saidam returned $2.90 to show. Metropolitan Handicap at Aqu- educt by two lengths over Quad- rangle. In winning the feature at Cherry Hill, N.J., Roman Brother paid $8.60, $3.40 and $2.60. Mr. Brick, who survived a claim of foul, returned $2.60) and $2.20 and third - place Na-) tional paid $4.60 to show. Trainer Burley Parke decided only last week to enter Roman Brother after The Scoundrel was injured. and_ withdrawn. OLA Reinstates Lakeshore Jrs., Suspends Coach TORONTO (CP) -- Lakeshore Castrols have been reinstated in the Ontario Lacrosse Associa- tion Junior Series as the result With Chilean jockey Fernando Alvarez in the saddle, Roman) Brother made his big move as the field of eight rounded the far turn, flew past Bob Ussery aboard Mr. Brick and widened his margin in the stretch. The winner's time was 1:49 3-5. NO BELMONT DECISION There was no immediate an- nouncement from Parke as to} whether he would enter Roman Brother in the Belmont Stakes at Aqueduct next Saturday, in of a deciion reached at an ex- ecutive meeting in Long Branch Sunday. Lakeshore was suspended for an indefinite period last week for playing Brian Warnock, a resident of the Bramalea sub- division, and, as a result, eli- gible to play only for Bramp- ton. Warnock has been declared \the property of Brampton. The Lakeshore club was fined $100 for playing Warnock de- spite league warnings and has which Canadian-bred Northern Dancer will seek to complete a Sweep of racing's Triple Crown for three-year-olds. Olden Times, six - year - old son of Relic, won the Metropol- itan with jockey Hank Moreno clinging to a slipping saddle. He stepped the mile in 1:34 2-5 un- der 119 pounds to beat Paul Mel- Jon's Quadrangle, only three- year-old in the' field. tered a one-year suspension to been ordered to post, a $200 good |behavior bond. Lakeshore coach Morley Kells and manager Archie Hamilton were each given three - game suspensions for their part in the jincident and Lakeshore's 6-5 win lat Hastings last week was can- \celled and awarded to the Hat- lings club. The executive also adminis- tor Peter Wade, all from Tor- onto. The rally started from Cana- dian National Institute for the Blind headquarters here and ended at nearby Pickering. TO MINT COINS The Bank of Norway has de- cided to mint 800,000 silver coins to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Norwegian constitution. Alderwood netminder Curly Sin- clair for attacking a referee during a Friday night fracas at INSTAL Concrete Embossed Operating Patio Ponels Protection 95 ATHOL ST. EAST Brampton. A "BAHAMAS ROOM" LATION by Nash Aluminum -- Oshawa Aluminum Vertical Well of Aluminum Glass Panels Gloss Aluminum Horizontal Mullions With Screen Panels Door Mullions =Aluminum For more details come in or phone ond our representative will call on you, ALUMINUM OSHAWA FREE PARKING PHONE 728-1633 ig Two things you ought It snuggles down behin real punch -- 9/4 hp. ) 1B} Eorl SMALL WONDER But don't let its bantam size fool you, It packs a it looks. Come in. See it, hear it, and heft it now. HANNAN MARINE SALES 20 RAY ST. THE ORIENT 20 days only $388.95 plus air fare ee ii Cacific TRAINS/ TRUCKS / SHIPS /PLANES /HOTELS / TELECOMMUNICATIONS / WORLD'S MOST COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM Tokyo, Hong service from Asia. Explore fabled cities of the Far East ~ and every bit as exciting as they sound. Fly there on.a Super DC-8 Jet - the fastest, most direct way to Tokyo, and then on to Hong Kong, both connecting points to all of Southeast cost Orient Tour - there's one to suit your time and tastes. Example: 20 days only $388.05 plus air fare. Call your Travel Agent or Canadian Pacific, ' i q | | Kong, Bangkok, Singapore - Toronto, It's daylight all the its jewelled splendor on a low were the victims of imported tires that began shredding chunks of rubber, The left rear wheel suspension collapsed on Clark's car as a result of the ure vibration, sending him into the infield grass, and Gurney was called in by Lotus builder Colin Chapman of London. Bobby Marshman, driving a ycct-old Lotus with a new Ford engine, set a one-lap record of 156.646--faster than Foyt's quali- fying speed of 154.672 with the track all to himself. Then Marshman sheared off an oil tank plug and had to retire after 35 laps. Panelli and Johns and Foyt duelled for a while in similar Indy roadsters but the fuel tank of Jones' Agajanian-bowes spe- cial blew up in a pit stop and he was lucky to excape with minor burns. After that it was all Foyt for the last 146 laps. Only 12 cars were running at the end. Ward had the only Ford-pow- ered car that finished among seven starters. Factors other than engine trouble eliminated five of them and veteran Eddie Johns was stranded by a faulty oil pump. The first four finishers ex- ceeded Jones' year-old record average of 143.137 m.p.h., aver- age of 143.137 m.p.h., topped by Fort's 147,350. Tragedy Doesn't Stop Soccer Team LIMA, Peru (Reuters) -- The Peruvian Soccer Federation has agreed that Peru, scene of the stampede tragedy, should go ahead with its pre - Olympic game against Brazil in Rio de Janeiro next Sunday. The game will decide which South American team should accompany Argentina to the Tokyo Olympics. The federation made the deci- sion Saturday despite a national sports committee recommenda- tion that Peru withdraw in view of last Sunday's stadium trag- edy here in which some 300 persons died. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, June 1, 1964 9]. SPORTS BRIEFS CAMPBELL HITS 389 LAKE EYRE (Reuters)-- British driver Donald i in his racer Bluebird clocked) 389 miles an hour over the measured kilometre at this Aus- tralian centre today. Campbell sought to break the world land speed record of 304.196 miles an hour set by Britain's John Cobb in 1947. The time was the high- est speed which Campbell had achieved in Bluebird, GONZALEZ TRIUMPHS WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)-- Pancho Gonzalez outfought.Ken Rosewall of Australia in a three-}. hour, 12-minute marathon ten- nis match Sunday and won the $3,000 first prize in the U.S. pro- fessional indoor tennis cham- pionships. Gonzalez, making a comeback at 36, rallied 5-7, 3-6, mi 10-8, 11-9 Rosewall. PATTERSON DETERMINED NEW YORK (AP) -- Floyd Patterson, former world heavy- 8-6: over top-seeded Dutch Swimmer Tops Canadian's World Record BLACKPOOL, England (A Ada Kok, a smiling 18-year-ol daughter of an Amsterdam milk- man, Saturday took part in set- ting' two world swimming rec- *one of them previously held by a Canadian. She set a mark of one mi ute 5.1 seconds for the 110-ya butterfly--a time that stands also as a record for the 100 metres. Nie Then she helped the Dutch girls' team set a world record of 4:41.4 for the 440-yard med- ley relay. Britain defeated The Nether- lands, 127-118, in a two - day eet, Miss Kok's. 110-yard butterfly time knocked 2.2 seconds off the previous record, set by Mary Stewart of Vancouver two years ago. weight boxing champion, said Tuesday he will retire from the ring if he is badly beaten by Eddie Machen in their fight in Stockholm, Sweden, on July 5, The fighter made the announce- ment at Kennedy International Airport before boarding a plane) for Stockholm. | 66 YEARS CITY DIRECTORY Publishers since 1898. VERNON DIRECTORIES Limited. Member As- sociation of North Americen Direc- tory Publishers. 29 Rebecca Street, Hamilton, Ont. GUARANTEE GUARANTEED against defects 'workmanship UNDER THIS GUARANTEE any NATION-WIDE "NO LIMIT" Wo limit on months. Be limit on mites. No limit as te roads. Ne fimit.es to speed. Fer the entire life ef the tread. 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