RUSSIAN STAR, Tomas Le- fus wears a big grin as he slams back a "return" to end his iuatch in the opening American Allan Fox in straight sets, 6-3, 6-2 and 6-2. --(AP Wirepress) round of the men's singles tournament of the All-England Lawn Tennis championships, at Wimbledon. Lejus defeated Three Keen Games In UAW Circut Three keenly-contested games were played in the UAW Soft- ball League schedule last night. DIXIE-PLAZA WINS Dixie-Plaza Restaurant defeat- ed Dover's Men's Wear 7-4, in their game at Alexandra Park, with Komylo earning the win on a neat four-hitter, during which he struck out 10 bat- ters. Three-straight errors gave Dover's two of their runs in the fifth inning, Leveck doubl- ed and scored on Smith's sacri- fice in the sixth and Trinkwon singled in the 7th and scored on Harman's double, for their final run. ' Smith, pitching for Dover's, ran inte trouble early when Buzming was safe on an error and followed doubles by Arn- old and Korezynski meant two runs. Arnold homered in the third, to make it 3-0. In the sixth, Malloy walked and then Top Pair Wins Wimbledon Play WIMBLEDON, England (CP) Australia's Roy Emerson: and Chuck McKinley of the United States, the two. top favorites, Bellanger got on via a single, to open the third inning and advanced on an error and {scored when Weeks doubled. In |the fourth, Korbak singled to open and he got his team's other run on Jackson's single, plus a double-play being made after Murray had walked. Mavericks had one _ good chance, when they loaded the bases in the fourth inning, but they did all of this after there were already two out and the ing round of the men's single championships at Monday. don champion, took only 58 minutes to down South African Terry Ryan -6-2, 6-2, 6-3, in the opening match of the tourna- ment. & \outstanding (Opening Rounds: Wimbledon! tober 13-27. McKinley, 23-year-old Wimble-|miles ev ALEX OAKLEY op. By GERRY SUTTON One of the most unpublicized world-class athletes in North America today is marathon walker Alex Oakley of Oshawa. The 36-year-old Oakley, a resident of this city for the last 10 years and a native of St. John's, Newfoundland, has won numerous races and broken lseveral records since he began been second-place as far as track and field fans are con- cerned. The 160-pounder started his walking career with the Torofi- to Gladstone Athlete Club in 54 and since then has never looked back. } He competed in the Olympic Games at Melbourne, Australia, in 1956, but was unplaced, In 1960, he earned, the only point by a Canadian athlete in track and field events at the Olympics in Rome. That year, the heel-and-toe artist finished sixth in the 50 kilometre event (31 miles and 440 yards). He also placed ninth in the 20 kilo |walk (12% miles). His performances in the Rome games earned him Canada's amateur athlete award by the AAU of Canada. But since 1960, Oakley has been winning races throughout North America with regularity. WINS GOLD MEDAL He won a gold medal in the Pan American Games in Sao Paulo, Brazil, in May 1963, in ithe 20 kilo event. He set a re- cord for the 20 kilo walk at the Varsity Stadium in No- vember, 1962, with a time of ione hour, 34 minutes and 10 sec- londs, which still stands. : | Oakey, who is registered with |the Amateur Athletic 'Union of |Canada as a member of the |Oshawa Track Club (Bran ch 43, Royal Canadian Legion) now swept to victories in the open-/pas his sights on the Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo, Oc- Alex walks approximately 75 ery week at Alexandra 'Park and in Toronto. In the |winter months, he used to walk about 100 miles a week, but | shortens his distance prior to a big race, to improve his. style} walking in 1954, but has always Fe. | Marathon Walker Headed For Olympics =: cial e the U.S., France and Canada.| - ALEX OAKLEY enter at the summer games. Oshawa's Junior Chamber of Commerce has guaranteed ex- penses for Mahon. Another man who is helping Oakley through his training pro- gram is George Easton, a great sports enthusiast and well- known masseur. The Olympic Committee pays all of Oakley's transportation to Tokyo and accommodation in Tokyo plus $2.00 per day ex- penses, But Alex will receive no remuneration for loss of work from the committee during final preparations and actual partici- pation, which starts beginning of September until end of Oc- tober, x -- a period of two months, Oakley, who is one of the most. dedicated sports athletes around, works at.General Mo- tors during the day and trains in his leisure hours, a In the next month, he will ; the 20 mile walking champion-) wij] be a gruelling pace from THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, June 23, 1964 1 it all depends in the 20 kilo. RECOVERY LIKELY If it's a cool day, I will pos-/ CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- A sibly get a medal or finish in| medical report Monday said car the first six, then go all out for| driver Glenn ( 11) Roberts from 4 the big one." property, wire J ~ Whatever he does, Oshawa|Severe burns suffe' fans can be sure that the hard- World 600 May 23. The 39: ; old Daytona Beach, Fia., dri working athlete gave his best) was critically burned in a three- at all times. car smash-up during the race, 7 pic trials and the Canadian Championship Walk, Alex qualified for the 50 kilo jovent._ in Tokyo, when he won --Trialy at Camry , June 6, in a time of four hours, 44 minutes and 27 seconds, more than 10 minutes ahead of his néarest competitor. Oakley says, "It's going to A week later, Alex will be in}be very tough over in Tokyo, It} compete in three events in an effort to meet top-flight compe- tition and improve his stamina, style and form. : fOn June 2t, he goes to Mont- real, Que., to compete in a spe- invitation 20 kilo walk, against the best walkers from ship here at Alexandra Park.|the beginning and the idea is to This event is in conjunction/oytsmart the other competitiors with the Oshawa Folk Festival.|py holding your energy until the H ; 9s ree | Top-flight walkers from Canada|yight time and then giving and the U.S, will be opposing|jt all you've got." | him. | "I feel I have a good chance He again travels to Montgpgaljin. my specialty (50 kilo) o° on July 11 for the 20 kilo Olym-!placing first," he added, "'but (KF \ | ON SAVINGS Interest from date of deposit THE CLiDDEm ComPANY APPLY IN MINUTES You decorate so well, so quickly with Glidden's Spred Satin, the quality paint that lasts, and lasts, Use. brush-or roller; no fumes or odors, clean up with water. " é Spred Satin; 2.95 .. 9.40 Spred Lustre «3.25 c..10.15. Alkyd Semi-Gloss Enamel, a long-weoring, washable enamel ' for woodwork, furniture, kitchen and bathroom walls. No primer needed, JAPALAC ENAMEL ¢;. 3.70 cu:12.15 The high quality enamel, so easy to work, so long-lasting, MILLWORK AND BUILDING 'SUPPLIES: LTD. 1279 SIMCOE NN. -- 728-6291 Open Daily 7 A.M, till 6.P.M. Fri. Till 9 P.M, Free Chequing Privileges Deposits by Mail postage paid envelopes provided free Hours--9 to 5 Fridays--9 to 9 Saturdays--9 to 1 GUARANTY TRUST CANADA'S LARGEST INDEPENDENT TRUST COMPANY 32 KING STREET EAST y 728-1653 one more hit needed didn't come. Stacey had two of his} team's 'five safeties. lHe is assisted locally by Bar- Ralston, his country's But fellow American Dennis} No. 2}° Jay Law, chairman of the OTC. His trainer, Joe Mahon, QC, a player, was victim of a stun- ning upset by Tony Pickard of | Britaiii. | | Pickard, 29, a former British) |Davis Cup player, won 3-6, 3-6, 16-4, 7-5, 9-7 after a battle which \lasted more than 21% hours. New Toront with two out, Michael was safe on an error and Prest homered for three runs. Kornylo walked in the 7th and scored on Arn- old's sacrifice fly. SCUGOG CLEANERS WIN Scugog Cleaners defeated Dyett's Sports 10-5 in their game at Alexandra Park and as it turned out, they need have played only the first in- ning as Cleaners scored five runs in their first time at the plate, after Dyett's had open- ed with a four-run rally. Three walks and three errors gave Dyett's their four runs as Howard started out wild and his infield support was just as weak. Dyett's got their other run in the third on back-to-back doubles by Weales and Law- son. Both Howard and his mates came up with much im- proved ball for the last six innings. . Whiteley was the starter for Dyett's and gave way to Beers when the first batter drew a walk. Three walks plus Kel- lar's single and two-baggers by Howard and Corbett gave Scu- gogs their big five-run rally They added one in the second, a pair in the fourth and their last two in the sixth. Howard had a homer to open the fourth and in the sixth, Westfall open-| ed with a single and Corbett) homered, for his third hit of} 6-3, 6-1, 6-0. It took him 69 New Toronto Owen Robert-| minutes. shaws got revenge on Oshawa| Jn other first-day matches |Tony's, in an Inter-City Beaches|Canadian Davis Cup player leo Tommie. ate a Beg Francois Godbout of Waterloo, tested tho ieee 184 ®/Que., defeated Wimbledon's \"wony'a had onl Squa' ai youngest competitor, Gerald [ning fk i AP sh oat Batiiiod, a Welsh schoolboy just : turned 17, by 6-3, 6-2, 8-6. Keith to starter Deverechuk for all/carpenter of Montreal downed their runs, on five hits, after itai | ' ' G é loading the bases in the second "righ ae eee stanza and failing to score. Old- St. Kitts Triumph field opened the third with a In OLA Sr. Action idouble. O'Connor doubled and }Armstong followed with a triple, |Booth did the same and Hill jsingled, to complete the big ST. CATHARINES (CP) -- St. Catharines defeated Brampton 12-8 in Ontario Lacrosse Assoct- ation senior A action Monday to splurge. Gary Nolan took over the move into a first-place tie with Brooklin Merchants. mound for New Toronto in the Ronnie Ray paced the St. fourth and Tony's failed to get a run off him, but managed three more hits, Tom O'Connor had two of these and Jack Armstong the other one. Sud- dard and Elliott each singled|Catharines team with five goals in _the second inning. Nolan/and one assist while Pete Birge claimed, nine strikeouts in the|Gary Moore and Ted Howe six innings he pitched. scored two each. Ron Taylor started for Tony's| added. one. ee and gave way in the third to} Gord Thompson and John Bev. Smith. George Teasdale|Spicer scored two each for homered in the first inning. In|/Brampton with Wayne Thomp- the second, K. Gordaneer|son, Mike Finnegan, Jim Mc- singled and scored on a double/Lure and Bob Mulvey adding by Edwards. In the third, Teas-|one each, dale and Klazer both drew walks, the former scoring on a|- single by Sobezyk, first batter to face Smith. CANOES CHANNEL DOVER England (CP)--Na- t Beats Tony S Official favorite Emerson beat) wILL GO WITH OAKLEY Donald Dell of Bethesda, Md.,| Mahon will accompany Oak- former Canadian Walking Cham- pion and international walking coach and judge, has lined up events for Alex at Internation- al Meets in various parts of the United States and Canada, ley to Tokyo and assist him in jhis preparation for the 50 and 20 kilo events, which Alex will oe , 4 PLAIN or FILTER TIP One 15 minute test drive in a Rambler (up the road) (and hack) will completely change your mind the game. j the: deriueteee val rating John Holliday, 29, has In the fifth, Best game of the night in the) . adeq three runs on Smith's own UAW action was at Lakeview Park where Kent's Western Tire defeateq the Chassis Plant Mavericks 2-0, in a real pitch- ing duel between Jackson for the winners and Denault f Mavericks. The margin in hitting was seven-to-five for the winners, which about tells the score. Cullen's Triumph Over Bosco Squad Tom Cullen's Esso won its second straight Juvenile-Jun- ior Lacrosse game of the season last night edging Joe Bosco's Real Estate 8-6 here at the Children's Arena. The victory moved Cullen's into a three-way tie for second- place with Bosco's and Beau- pre's Spurs. Brooklin leads the) league with six points. Don Dagacio and Ed Aru paced Cullen's attack with three goals each. Herb Gray and John Johnston added the others. For Bosco, Ron Sutton and Fred Greenwood had two goals apiece, while Dave Spencer and Doug Sutton fired singles. » BOSCO'S goal," Abbott; Spencer, D. Sutton, Lewis, Was- lyk, Wilson, Wood, Waters, Greenwood, Wright and R, Sut- ton. CULLEN'S -- goal,- Mitchell; eLakas, Bradley, Aru, House, Davis, Dagacio, Johnston, John- stone, Clark and Gray. 'of double scoring Doyley, who had jerror, a walk and homer by |K. Gordaneer. The winners CIGARETTES crossed the English channel] the hard way. He paddled his canoe added one in the sixth and another in the eighth, Goossen's singles to help in both of the last two. tallies. |. OSHAWA TONY'S Old- field, ss; O'Connor, 3b; Arm- |strong, 2b; Booth, c; Hill, ef; /Suddard, lf; Elliott, rf; Court- jney, 1b; Taylor, p; Smith, p in 3rd; Grier, batted in 9th | NEW TORONTO -- Doyley, \3b; Teasdale, 1b; Klager, c; Goossen, 2b; Sobczyk, *ss; |Gordaneer, cf; K. Gordaneer, Wh to Caldis in 74% hours. OF THE SEE THE ROUGHEST BOUT ",;" @ RETURN GRUDGE TAG TEAM BOUT @ Yukon Eric and llio DiPaolo Bulldog Brower The Beast ACC. BY HIS MANAGER J) Hans Schmidt vs Eric Froehlic Billy Red Lyons vs Mike Valentino : Tickets for these exhibitions at the | CASINO RESAURANT -- PAT MILOSH PROMOTER jf) Tie. June 23rd THE BEAST 8:45 P.M. \lf; Edwards, rf; Deverechuk,| p; Nolan, p in 4th. | OSHAWA ARENA sez Coaches: OSHAWA, Limited Openings Available Accommodation (supervised) for out of town students ot "ERINLI GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB"" (Rochester Americans) (Toronto Maple Leafs DICK GAMBLE 244 Glenwood Cresc., Phone 725-8028 DICK GAMBLE HOCKEY SCHOOL @ Bowmanville Memorial Arena @ JULY - AUGUST AGE 7-17 Classes Limited (30 Students) DICK GAMBLE and DON SIMMONS For information CONTACT Geo. W. Cawker, 7 St. George St. N., BOWMANVILLE, Ont. Phone 623-2004 Ontario ad iP aos WELLMAN MOTORS LIMITED 100 NONQUON ROAD NORTH--728-7351 about cars! + Rambler is unlike any car you've ever owned, any car te ve ever driven. A 15 minute test drive will prove it you. Rambler came out of nowhere to challenge the gi 4 e the giants. Now, after just a few record-breaking years, over 3,000,000 people in North America have switched to Rambler. Quite simply, all those satisfied owners found od to i ined -- car value beyond a doubt.. Rambler gave them muc for thei i f why tiny enlisted more for their money. That's A test drive made up their minds. A Rambler test drive will change your mind about cars, too. Right now is the best time to see your Rambler Dealer. He's holding his Summer Sales Spree. Take your choice of engine and model. You'll find the car to suit your needs, you'll get the deal to suit your budget. In his great Summer Sales Spree, your Rambler Dealer can offer you a trade-in allowance and a deal no one else can match, Take an eye-opening test drive and get an eye-opening deal--at your neighbourhood Rambler Dealer's today. Rambler A Product of American Motors (Canada) Limited Your Rambler Dealer's Summer Sales Spree can save you money! See Rambler's . wide new variety of models and 6 and V8 engine options--from 90 hp to 270 hp. ABNER'S ESSO SERVICE : 1003 BROCK STREET SOUTH, WHITBY--668-5391 PORT PERRY _ HARRY PEEL RAMBLER SALES & SERVICE