Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Oct 1964, p. 11

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| | Gibson Survives As By JOE REICHLER ftaals if ry z rata . LOUIS (AP)--New York a fs ay Pag BE Cardinals, on the oth hand, hit two home runs--by 2H ; | Rival Sluggers Wage All-Out In 7th Game Dick Groat that filled the bases, in the second, A play Pepitone. The first baseman's throw to Linz forced Groat but the shortstop's relay sailed past Pepitone and Boyer scored on the error. Mike Shannon followed with a single and there were runners on fist and third with one out. Then came the play that proved to be the turning point of the game, With Maxvili at ,/bat, the Cards successfully pulled off a double steal, Mc-|series total to 31, another rec- Carver scoring. A pair of er-|ord, rant throws by catcher Elston) , |Howard and second baseman |;ees outhomered the Cardinals, Richardson made the daring/19 to five but also outerrored play work, It also put Shannon) in position to score the third) ib-|run on a single by Maxvill. p after Gib-|son. They failed to take advan-| The ame by dis-|tage of en error by shortstop Cards stretched their lead to 6-0 in the fifth. South Bill Crothers Wins Silver Medal When Snell Cops Crown By ED SIMON TOKYO (CP) -- New Zea- jand's Peter Snell turned back a valiant closing bid by Can- ada's Bill Crothers today to win a thrilling Olympic 800 - metre race. (Well back in the field of eight after the first of the two laps around the track, Crothers roared down the stretch to grab second place and was closing the gap on Snell at the finish. But Snell was running strongly and it was too big a gap for the Markham, Ont., pharmacist. No other runner threatened the New Zealander nadian in Olympic track and field since Johnny Loaring took second place in the 400-metre hurdles in Berlin in 1936. BEST OF CAREER Crothers' time was 1:45.6, best of his career. Wilson Ki- prugut of Kenya was third in 1:45.9, putting Commonwealth runners on all three steps of the podium for the medals cere- mony. | The United States continued to dominate track and field, day but this did not count in the finals, Defending - champion Elvira Ozolina of Russia, holder of the previous world record of 201 feet 44% inches and Olympic Breedlove Sets Record, Over 500 mph BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, Utah (AP) -- "I'm aii right, baby, what's the speed?" That's how Craig Breedlove greeted rescuers Thursday|' pL 3 i ain i paw Al Downing had two hits had increased his over- all total to 13, a series record, popped meekly to Maxvill, It was the second victory in three attempts for Gibson, who struck out nine to increase his 'ihittens with a .478 batting av- record of 183 feet eight inches, could do no better than 179 feet| 9% inches today and came| fifth. In the women's 100 metres Edith McGuire, the girl whom | the U.S, team had expected to d Miss Rudolph as Olym- however, and the R were having troubles. Rex Cawley took the 400-me- tre hurdles in 49.6 seconds, beat- in the last 200 metres. ling the rest of the field by at Snell won the gold medal in 1:45.1, improving upon his 1960 winning time of 1:46.3. He also holds the world record of 1:44.3. Crothers' silver. medal was the best performance by a Ca- Toronto Leafs Top Red Wings In First Game By THE CANADIAN PRESS The Red Wings can't get the better of the Maple Leafs, even with Ted Lindsay. Detroit and Toronto battled throughout last season for third place in the National Hockey least five metres, It was the fifth consecutive U.S. victory. in the event. Wyomia Tyus, picking up where Wilma Rudolph left off, was crowned the world's fast- est woman. The U.S. ace won the 100 metres in 11.4 seconds. Mihaela Penes of Romania beat the favored Russians in the women's: javelin, winning the gold medal with a heave of 198 feet 7% inches. Antal Rudas of Hungary was second with 101 feet two inches and Elena Gorchakova of Rus- sia third with inches. |SET RECORD Miss Gorchakova set a world record of 204 feet 814 inches in the qualifying round earlier to- 187 feet 214| pic champion, was a_ well- beaten second in 11.6 seconds. Poland's Ewa Kiobukowska was third, also in 11.6. Crothers' medal was the sec- ond for Canada in track and field at' the current . games, Harry Jerome of Vancouver having picked up the bronze in the 100 metres Thursday. Jerome moved smartly through the 200-metre prelimin- aries today, winning his heats in both the first and second rounds to qualify for the semi- finals Saturday. His times were} 2.9 and 21.2. A. E. JOHNSON 0.D. OPTOMETRIST 14V King St. East 723-2721 League and the Leafs came out) on top. Then they met in the Stanley Cup finals, but for the second year in a row Toronto beat them for the silverware. The teams faced each other Thursday night in Detroit and, despite a record opening crowd of 14,323 and the return of Lind- say after four years in retire- ment, the verdict was the same. The Leafs won 5-3. Hard - working centre Bob Pulford provided the ammuni- tion for the Leafs, setting up Ron Stewart for the winning goal in the second period and clinching the win in the third when he scored while killing a Toronto penalty. The teams battled to a 3-3 tie! period. | in the wide-open first Toronto held the upper hand In the seven games, the Yan-| them, nine to three. On the other hand, young McCarver performed faultiessty be- hind the plate and led all the erage on 11 hits, including a E game-winning home run, in 23 times at bat. Warren Spahn Not Ready To Retire MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Gen- eral manager John McHale an- nounced Thursday that Milwau-| kee Braves' great lefthander, | Warren Spahn, rejected three} non-playing jobs with the or- ganization next season, McHale quoted the 43-year-) old Spahn as saying he feels he can still win as a starting pit- cher in the major leagues and eventually could be a major league manager. McHale said Spahn was given} his choice of becoming com-| mentator on radio and televi- sion, pitching coach of the| Braves' minor league system or} manager of one of the Braves Triple A farm clubs. Spahn, who has had 13 20-/ game seasons, had a 6-13 rec-/ ord in 1964, LON DON PRESENTS A Flavoured Wine "SERVE COLD ON THE ROCKS OR WITH YOUR FAVOURITE MIX" termDlan loan -- | put less money into financing and more into Features: WINTER TI BRAND NEW f ri re stone 775/670-15 TRACTIONAIRES UNMATCHED FOR TRACTION IN THIS LOW PRICE RANGE @ Exclusive "Triple-Action" Traction tread to help you GO through ice, mud or snow. @ Built with four rugged plies of Safety- Fortified Nylon cord for your safety. @ Sup-R-Tuf rubber gives you thousands of extra traction miles. ) ie: RE SALE SIZE TYPE 775/670-15 Tube-Type Blackwall Tubeless Blackwall 775/670-15 Tube-Type Whitewall 815/710-15 Tubeless Blackwall 815/710-15 Tubeless Whitewall 775/750-14 Tubéless Blackwall 775/750-14 Tubeless Whitewall 825/800:14 Tubeless Blackwall 825/800-14 Tube-T: Whitewall 600/650-13 Tubeless Blackwall 600/650-13 Tubeless Whitewall with a 3-1 lead until the Wings} capitalized on a rash of penal-| ties for two power-play goals| within 68 seconds. EARNS 3 ASSISTS Andy Bathgate, Dave Keon and Red Kelly, just returned from a government assignment at the Tokyo Olympics, scored for Toronto in the first period 'the car 99 | earned three assists, two in the opening frame and one on Pul- . te pec | First -- before you shop around - arrange with Royal Bank to finance in advance for the Wings on & ck long with a low-cost termPlan loan. It puts buying"power, bargaining power in your pocket. dash. Floyd Smith narrowed the (With the dollars you save, get that optional equipment you wanted!) No extras. No Leafs' margin while Billy Har- hidden charges. Fast service, often within 24 hours. ris and Bathgate sat out penal- Borrow this businesslike way. 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