Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Jul 1965, p. 6

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5 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 26, 1965 ae Britain's Linda Ludgrove is shown here, in the pool at London's Crystal Palace, right after she set a new world's record for women, in the 110-yard backstroke event, yesterday, with the time of 69.5 seconds. Her SETS NEW WORLD'S BACKSTROKE RECORD effort took place in a swim meet against Germany. --AP Wirephoto Brooklin Lacrossers Win Over Huntsville By CLIFF GORDON Brooklin regained at least a share of the top rung in the Ontario Sr..A Lacrosse Associa- tion standings on Saturday night, with a convincing 13-5 win over the Huntsville Hawks, at the Brooklin Arena. The win gives Brooklin a tie with the Brampton Excelsiors for the first place, with Peter- borough Speedy Erns just one point back in second place. Peterborough will be the visi- tors at the Brooklin Arena, on Wednesday night of this week and this is the game that will more than likely decide who gets the top rung in the league standings. CRAGGS LEADS WAY Don Craggs was once again the big sniper for Brooklin scoring three goals and hitting at least four goal posts and missing as many open corners, as the dead-game fellow had several other good _ scoring chances. Captain Glen Lotton and his brother Ken added a pair, as did Mike Gray, who saw a lot of floor time. Jim Hinkson, Elmer Tran, Dave O'Brien and Grant Heffernan each had singles. Johnny Roberts scored two in a losing cause with aces going to Robert Clarke, Dave Lough and Brian Warnock. Brooklin led 3-1 at the end of the first, 7-3, after two and then the third period they outscored the Hawks 6-2. The first period was a very quiet and slowly played affair with both teams apparently the worst for the hot day. The fans were constantly chanting at the players to speed it up. Brooklin managed to get a few good plays organized but were not running as they did in the final two periods, NAME NEW COACH Manager Bob Vesey has an- nounced that he has appointed Bud Christie of Oshawa to handle the coaching chores for the balance of the season. The reason being that he felt Craw- ford would be much more valuable to the Brooklin team as a player, without the adde worry of coaching. : His play in the last two games would indicate that man- ager Veseys' thinking is cor- rect. Also, the team spirit on} the squad appears better in the last: two games. Christie coach-| 'Pia Star' Wins Big One, With 'Kelso' NEW YORK (CP)--Pia Star, a speedster from start to finish, tossed a roadblock in Kelso's bid for a sixth straight U.S. Horse-of-the-Year title as he| Only Third | oiceate Oaks at elaware |Park and set a record for thé race by covering the 1% miles in 1:48 4-5. Next move set the}| over cordially in the $56,962.50)"9 won the $107,200 Brooklyn han-jold mark of 1:49 2-5 in 1950. dicap at Aqueduct Racetrack in| Juanita earned a purse of New York Saturday with a/$37,025 and paid $16.40, $4.40 clocking of 2:00 3-5 for the 1%|and $2.40. Cordially returned) miles. |$2.80 and $2.20, and Peak Pér- Kelso couldn't even salvage|formance $2.60. second place in his first major|-------- -- foment wih tna in te "ve: Bloggom Time' Wins Feature horse field as little Roman| Brother came up for second, two lengths back of Pia Star. It was another two lengths back to Kelso, with Quadrangle fourth and Repeating last. Pia Star earned $69,680 for Mrs. Ada L. Rice of Chicago TORONTO (CP) -- Blossom Time, owned by Adrien and Girard Miron of Montreal, won the featured Canadian Series ed the game in Brampton on Friday night. Christie is no stranger lacrosse fans in. this area, as he played and coached here be- fore. He was born in Mimico and played his Junior Lacrosse there. He came to Oshawa in 1947, to play with the Oshawa Sr. B team, where he played two years. He played inter- mediate in Brooklin from . 1949 to 1955. He brings with him considerable knowledge of the game and should be an added boost to the Brooklin team as they make their stretch drive for the title, with only four league games remaining. Jr. Hockey Star Dies In Crash CALGARY (CP)--Greg Tom- alty, 20, a high-scoring centre with Edmonton Oil Kings, was killed Friday night in a one-car accident 30 miles southeast of Calgary. Tomalty, who played two sea- sons with the Western Canadian junior hockey champions, was one of three men in the car. Police said Greg Pilling of Lethbridge, a former Oil Kings star, and Merv MacDonald of Calgary, were injured in the ac- cident. Both were in hospital. Police said the car in which the trio was riding apparently missed a curve and hit a guard- il. Tomalty, a native of Red Deer, joined Oil Kings two sea- sons ago and played in two Me- morial Cup finals. He was one of the club's top scorers and was noted for his ability to work the puck ou tof corners. b BACK HERE TONIGHT -. Hastings Jrs. Hold Green Gaels To Tie Oshawa Green Gaels will have their backs to the wall for the first time this season, to- ings, buoyed by a fine effort Saturday night, will be out to clinch third place with a win to} here, HOMESTERS LEAD EARLY Green Gaels' powerful _of- fence took a long time getting started Saturday night and it was almost too late! Hastings had a 6-1 lead, at the midway point in the game and _ the Gaels looked to be heading for their second defeat. They had hardly touched the ball in the first ten minutes of the game when the Legionnaires con- trolled most of the play. And then, they started to come back in the final period. Hastings led 4-1 after the first and 8-4 at the end of the second period and only some superla- tive work by Merv Marshall had kept the score down. Oshawa got rolling in the final- period and scores by Ken Thompson, Ross Jones, John Davis, and Gaylord Powless left night, when they entertain Hast- ings Legionnaires at the Civic Auditorium. So far this season the Gaels have never been out of first place, but after a terrific battle in Hastings on Saturday night, that ended in an 11-11 overtime tie, the Gaels must win to- night, to stay ahead of Mimico Mounties and may have to win again on Wednesday in the final game at Etobicoke to clinch their Ontario title. They lead the Mounties by a scant single point and Hast- Legionnaires -- Bow In Tourney To East York Oshawa Junior oe ts ropped a tough 3-2 decision to LO the East York Kinsmen, to suf- twee. pile oyhiry fer elimination in their first|) ota se he he tied it game of the annual Junior Base-|¥P aie sent the game into ball Tournament, held at Little! bi wie ce Britain, on Saturday. | sta , In other games, Little Britain) defeated Kendal 13-0 in morning round while Peterbor- ough ousted Courtice entry 7-1. Richardson's Sports of the Lea- side League, walloped Orillia Juniors 10-1. Fred Norman pitched the win! for East York Kinsmen over the| |Oshawa Legion team, allowing 'only four hits, with Brian Boyd getting two of these while John Fair and Jerry Nekkers each had one safety. | Legionnaires got their two! runs in the fifth inning when Fair opened with a single and advanced on Pat Watters' in- field grounder. Tim Donevan was safe on an infield error and then Jerry Nekkers followed with his solid single, which was then hobbled in the outfield, allowing both Fair and Donevan to score, | Jerry Nekkers gave up only extra the jadvantage over Wayne Platt, in the Hastings net. Gaylord Pow- less put Oshawa ahead after 50 lseconds but Grady again tied it jup and then Hastings' went ahead on Dan Hopcroft's goal at 3:14. Powless got the final goal at 4:15 and though Oshawa jearried play in the final five minutes, they just couldn't get janother one past Platt. | Oshawa Itali Oshawa Italia defeated King- ston by a score of 3 to 1, Satur- day night at the Kinsmen Me- jmorial Stadium, in the first jround of the Ontario Cup Soccer |Championship. By entering the second round, pene n the Oshawa team took a step John Lindfield was safe on Nek-|towards representing Ontario in kers' own error, Then Bobithe Eastern Canadian Cham- Levac hit a two-bagger,. Fred|nionships, to be held this year Norman sacrificed and with two|in Halifax, Nova Scotia. out, Kerry Meehan completed} However, the Oshawa team the three-run rally with his solid) will have to show improved single to left field. |form over that displayed Satur- Wees and Levac each had two|day night, for even though they of their team's half-dozen total|won by a comfortable margin, with Ian Braithwaite and Mee-|many of the players admitted han getting the others. ithat it was their worst display jot in Adaeon ant many nied St. Kitts' A's ° Top Peterboro | |six hits in losing the decision. |East York also got all their runs lin one inning, the fourth. Ken Wees opened with a single and the Kingston team would have jbeen defeated by most of the # Oshawa and district teams, The trend of the game was set in the early minutes, when Brooklin Merchants downed\a shot by Pedretti, at the four- Huntsville Hawks 13-5 Saturday|minute mark. The homesters that Bud Christie of Oshawa|mark, on further counters by has replaced playing-coach Ken|Bressan and Lopes. This, no ford will continue as a player.Italia reverting to a defensive The victory gave Brooklin 26\game in the second half, allow- points, the same as Brampton,|ing the Kingston team to attack and left the teams a point aheadiand they finally counted, on a of third-place Peterborough. penalty try by Houghton, who St. Catharines Athletics|played a good game at centre moved into the fourth and last|half playoff position by defeating) Maurice Laidlaw, Gustav Peterborough 12-4 Sunday night.|Seide and G. Cucinato all had There are 10 days left in the good games on the Italia defence schedule. but the forward line was dis- St. Catharines was each with three goals. Mike Da-|will have to improve, if they mico added two and Gary Carr,/hope to win the Ontario: Cup, Ted Howe, Brian Thomson and/ which Dave Landry one each. Larry; -- THOMPSON AND POWLESS Top shooters for Oshawa were Brian Thompson and Gay- lord Powless with each player picking up three goals, Singles went to Ross Jones, Jim Higgs, Dwight Davies, John Davis and Ken Thompson who also picked, up four assists; Ken Henderson, Jim Grady, Jim Patterson and Bill Armour all scored a pair for Hastings. Singles went to Don Scollard, Jim Gooley and Dan Horpcoft. GAELS' GAB -- Only Hast- ings have blemished the Gaels' undefeated mark this year, gaining a win and tie in their three 'meetings. Goaltending Saturday was sensational and fans at tonight's game will see the league's two best in Wayne Platt and the Gaels' Merv Marshall... . Oshawa finish at Etobicoke on Wednesday, while Mimico plays Long Branch tonight and _ entertain St. Catharines tomorrow at | Peter Snell Quits Track AUCKLAND (Reuters)--New Zealander Peter Snell, winner of three Olympic gold medals, today announced his retirement from running. Snell, 26, holder of the world half-mile and 800 metres rec- ords, and former holder of the world mile record, made the an- nouncement when he returned tonight after a seven-week tour of North America and Europe. Snell will become a director of a New Zealand sports foun- dation. His acceptance of the full-time position would jeop- ardize his amateur status even if he had wished to continue his track career. " Snell, who won the 800 me- tres gold medal in the Rome Olympics in 1960, reached the peak of his career in the Tokyo games last year when he scored impressive victories in both the 800 and 1,500 metres. He failed to hit top form on his tour this year. "This tour really brought home to me. the difficulty of maintaining world-class - form. I found a remarkably improved standard overseas. An athlete has to be at peak form to win home. . Bill Armour and the clubs tied. Dwight Davies|John Davis will continue their|not carry out a sufficient train- |scored at 18:06 to put Oshawalscoring race battle tonight with|ing program to reach my time butlonly a scant few points sepa-|peak. . . rating the two... Armour got| four Saturday . . . Davis two. | OSHAWA -- Goal, Marshall; Kiwior, Jones, Lloyd, Arm- Gaels completely dominated the|strong, Higgs, B. Thompson, |! feel the time t jattack but could not get the|Davies, Marlowe, Clayton, Pow-| ' jless, Sandford, Greenwood, Thompson, and Davis. | HASTINGS--Goal, Platt; Nor- |rad, O'Grady, McMahon, Grady, Henderson, Armour, Hopcroft, Laplante, Morris, 'Barrie, Self, Scollard, Gooley, land Patterson. Officials -- Boyd Baulkwill of Orillia and Brian Goldthorpe of |Toronto. a Advances Ontario Cup Soccer Play |teams in the -league's existence. The opponents for the Oshawa team in the next round, will be jannounced Jater in the week. | SOCCER COMMENTS: Walter Rohrer, the hard-working Presi- jdent of the- Oshawa Associatior and. his, treasurer, Bill Yasmi- nicki, were smiling yesterday with the .results of the picnic tournament, at Hampton which {was a. huge success. Oshawa Polonia turned out to be the eventual winners, defeating UAWA in the final 5-2, after eliminating Hungaria in the semi-final 2-1. UAWA had. de- feated Rangers in the other semi-final, 3-2, 12-year | Brampton Jrs 'Down Mohawks By THE CANADIAN PRESS [italia took a one-goal lead, on| By THE CANADIAN PREss /Bill Lovell and Art Weiss, all Oshawa Green Gaels, who are accustomed. to winning, were night and announced Sunday|were three up, at the half-way|held to an 11-11 overtime tie} Saturday night by Hastings. Le- gionnaires but still moved Crawford at the -helm. Craw-doubt, had much to do with|ahead of Mimico Mounties in| the battle for first place in the Ontario Lacrosse junior A series. It was the first tie game of the season for the Gaels, who have lost only once. Hastings was the team that handed Osh- awa its lone defeat. The tie left Oshawa with one point more in the standings than second-place Mimico. led by| appointing and it is in this de-| Brampton moved into a fifth-| Peter Berge and Gary Moore,|partment that the shawa team|place tie by downing Guelph Mo: | hawks 17-8 Saturday night. Brian Wilfong led Brampton has eluded Oshawa's'with four goals. Gord Keates and. Association and for various reasons I could i} "I would like to think that aftér a spell I could come back and be as good as ever. But jone has to stop sometime--and top is now," | | Ajax Bantams | Beat Oshawa Ajax Bantams defeated Osh- awa Legion Bantams 5-3, in their Eastern Ontario Baseball Assoc. Bantam League schedule \fixture, on Sunday. Roy Linkilde pitched the win |for Ajax, giving up eight hits }but receiving very good support |from his mates in the field while) |Cope, McCash and himself each! had two hits; his both doubles, | joff Wayne Blanchard, the losing| pitcher. Blanchard only gave up \these six hits, to the three Ajax clouters, but Oshawa's fielding was wobbly, four errors hurting their cause. Bernie McGuire, Jim Nesbitt) jand Ted McComb, who also) |Played well at first base, were| Oshawa's top hitters. | | In an Oshawa Bantam League jgame on Friday night, at Kins- reg Stadium, Mets tied Giants, 4-4, with Jim Yakemishyn and| thurlers. | Wilson was also his} Irwin Loft Has First Bird Home 'The fog and overcast skies of Saturday did not hinder the birds of the General Racing Pigeon Club, when they com- peted in their second: race of the 1965 Young Bird series. The race was from Brantford, Ontario and to the winner goes Gary Player Wins By One WASHINGTON (AP)--United States Open champion Gary Player, who said he just couldn't get going in the fi round, emerged as an 11-8) victor in the four-day National Challenge golf match, Player took the $20,000: first the club's 100-mile young bird challenge trophy, it being won for the second time by the loft prize as he rounded out a 72 hole total of 269 at nea ren Country Club Sun- ay. Going into the final round Player was leading U.S. Ama- teur champion Bill Campbell of Huntington, W. Va, by 16 strokes, He shot a two over pat 1299.40; A. Szazur, 1298.04; Kel-/73, his worst score of the four lar and Cooper, 1297.65; F. Stu-\rounds, but. still won running art, 1292.06; C. Bennett, 1282.56; jaway. S. Grant, 1280.80; J. Askew| eae 1278.85; F. Cowle, 1278.06; J, Strachan, 1276.86; L. Prescott, 1274.13; A. Szazur, 1273.26; E.) Jackson, 1266.15; C, Bennett,) 1264.36; J.' Strachan, 1259.86; L. Kinsman, 1249.54; §. Grant,| 1221.46; L. Kinsman, 1192.67; L./ Prescott, 1152.00 and §. Grant,| 1143.62. SEASON IS SHORT The port of Churchill, Man., is open for only 10 weeks a year ang exports more than 20,000,-) 000 bushels of wheat in that time. of J and R Irwin. The following is the result in yards per minute: J. and R. Irwin, 1307.26; J. and R. Irwin, 1305.65; D. Bej- kowsky, 1304.44; D. Bejkowsky, NOTICE! O'Malley's Snack Bar 922 Simcoe St. N, Js under new management and will be knewn os NORM'S Snack Bar We welcome oll our former eus- tomers and new ones, NORMAN O'MALLEY, Mgr; ---- BAD BOY perinitecy SELLS FOR LESS! FREEZERS - 21 CU. FT. 5 Year Guorantee made by Beatty. Free food plan, Free delivery, PRICED FROM R.C.A. VICTOR tes FM/AM Radio, 4 Speed Automatic 300 88 Changer, 23" TV all in one Walnut . 23" BIG SCREEN TV former. Up-front tuning, AGC circuit. Swin-out chassis, Convectaire Cooling, WE ARE OPEN EVERY NIGHT mavens "TIL 9:30 P.M. 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Winner of place was worth $21,440. jthe first heat' in the opening é race was Bella Flicka, owned WINS SCRAMBLE by the Cartier Stable of Mont- At Inglewood, Calif., Portjreal. The daily double returned Wine won the hectic scramble of!$21.60, the two-year-olds by a length in} The quinella was worth $16.40 the $156,500 Hollywood juvenile|when Kwik Kat won the sixt championship. jrace and Gentry Yates finished Ri Tux was second and Flame} Second. Tree third in the rush of 14 ------ youngsters to the finish line. FORT ERIE, Ont. (CP)--Hin- The time for the six furlongs|}emoa won the $12,000 Boniface was 1:10 1-5. Stakes at Fort Erie Race Track Port Wine was ridden by|Saturday, beating second-place jockey Bill Shoemaker. Ice Water by three-quarters of The victory was worth $111,-|a length as the -favored Prize 500 to Whitney's stable. Jive finished third. Port Wine, the second choice] The crowd of 13,311 made in Wagering, paid $7.20, $4.60/Prize Jive the 2-to-5 choice. and $3.80, Prize Jive, owned by Gary Gar- Ri Tux, ridden by Jerry Lam-jrett of Hornby, Ont., had won bert and owned by Las Vegasifive consecutive races. sportsman J. K. Houssels, paid). Hinemoa, ridden by Nick $19.20. and $9.40..Flame Tree,|Shuk, returnéd $25.40, $9.7. and with Bobby Ussery up, returned /$3.60 in winning the 5'4-furlong $5.20. race. Hinemoa, owned by Doug At Stanton, Del., Juanita;/Banks of Nashville, Ont.,. ran| romped home by four lengths|the distance in 1:06 2-5. | Firestone CLEANER/WAX/ POLISH for a durable finish. 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