Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 May 1967, p. 8

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" THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdoy, Mey 23, 1967 'Tottenham Wins Cup In Subdued Fashion By CARL MOLLINS LONDON (CP)-- Spurs have the fame of their third English Football Assodfation Cup in seven years, but the feat has been greeted by a barely-stifled yawn. Spurs, or Tottenham Hotspur, ~ beat Chelsea 2-1 with little ap- parent effort and less excite- ment in Saturday's Cockney Cup Final--so called because it was the first professional soccer final between two London clubs. Most experts had said before- hand that the North London -erew was artful enough to beat proved the prediction's accu- felt cheated. teams--Chelsea blue, the Spurs in glettering white--lined up on Wembley's luxuriant turf. A cloudburst co- operatively moved off just be- Parnelli Jones Favored For Indianapolis Event By DALE BURGESS INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP)-- "There's no way,' said Dan Gurney, 'that we can keep Parnelli Jones and the turbine from winning the Memorial Day race if nothing breaks in his car." Mario Andretti said earlier that if the Pratt and Whitney turbine car holds together "the rest of us will be competing for second place." Andretti was fastest qualifier at a record 168.982 m.p.h. in a Brawner Hawk-Ford. Gurney, Santa Ana, Calif., was second fastest at 167.224 in one of his | reduce the amount of nitro| methane and other additives in| their qualifying fuel, in order to avoid burning the pistons. The turbine car uses JP1 fuel identical to that used by air- planes. The STP. division of Stude- baker, headed by Andy Grana- telli, spent three years building the noiseless "Turbocar." Granatelli contends the car may make the Grand Prix-type rear-engine cars obsolete, even disregarding the turbine power plant. The engine is installed beside the driver. aircraft - originated aluminum own American Eagle-Fords. Jones, the 1963 winner of the 500-mile race in a conventional backbone frame, an airfoil brak- the temperamental team from|fore the start and returned only arty Chelsea. When the result|briefly late in the game. Within 15 minutes, racy, the forecasters perversely | wingers Frank Saul and Jimmy a : Robertson had severely tested "A quiet, subdued final,"' con-|Chelsea goalkeeper Peter Bo- cluded The News of The World. |netti. "The game will not linger long| spectacular in the memory," said The Sun-|stretched in the Spurs goal dur- day Mirror. "Tedious," was the|ing the same period when Tony verdict of The Sunday Times. /Hateley The ingredients of excitement|/header over the defence and|! seemed to be there when the/Charlie Cooke hammered a low, in rich royal|hard shot minutes later. Thereafter, Tottenham's for- midable defenders stolidly de- clined to give Chelsea a fight- ing chance, despite the urgent efforts of Cooke and Hateley. At the same time, Spurs built up their offensive pressure in a workmanlike way, alternating) « A"? between sweeps down the side- lines by Robertson or Saul and thrusts through the centre by Jimmy Greaves or Alan Gil- zean. Robertson's goal in the last minute of the first half thus came as no surprise. He slam- med a rebound from the legs of hapless Chelsea captain Ron| Harris past the helpless, kneel- ing Bonetti. The other goals were almost afterthoughts, Saul beating Bo- netti with an acrobatic effort |°"°- midway through the second half and Bobby Tambling cashing in|Seconds and 440 yards in 44.8 on a rare mistake by Jennings|in the San Jose with less then five minutes re-|track and field meet and was maining in the game. it h The sellout crowd of 100,000/Adolph Plummer's 44.9 by only as aN paid £109,649 ($328,947) to see|one-tenth of a second. the game. Pat Jennings had his similarly talents looped a dangerous Hotspur SPARKS HAWKS Brian Thompson, with Oshawa Green Gaels last season, sparked Huntsville Hawks to a 20-15 victory over Long Branch Monarchs Saturday in an Ontario La- crosse Association junior game. Thompson scored five goals and Tim Kelly added four for Hawks. Tommie Smith SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- 'Damascus Makes Certain No Triple Crown Winner Stockton Wins Colonial Open FORT WORTH (CP) -- Dave Stockton of San _ Bernadino, ton on the 12th, but went one over on the 13th and finished with a 72, good for a third place tie with Ben Hogan at 281. George Knudson of Toronto wound up 46th at 295 with R. H. Sikes and Paul Bondeson, good BALTIMORE (CP) -- There will be no winner this year of North America's triple crown for thoroughbreds. Damascus made this certain Saturday by winning the $194,- 000 Preakness Stakes at Pim- lico. Under jockey Willie Shoe- maker, the three-year-old bay son of Sword Dancer, charged from ninth in a field of 10 to take a 1:55 1-5, three-fifths of a second slower for the 1 3-16 miles than the record set by Nashua in the 1955 Preakness. Second was In Reality while Kentucky Derby winner Proud Clarion finished four lengths back in third. The Derby, the Preakness and He raced 400 metres in 44.5|owners, and Belair Farms. Derby. back. 2Y%-length victory in maker recalled. when I called on him." The horse finished third in the Damascus earned $260,460. Tom Weiskopf, finished no|By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS away in the chase for the $23,000 length As Top Contender SANDWICH, England (AP)--| driving in one run and igniting a } ] Bill Campbell emerged from the|two-run insurance rally as New|ended 11th with 286 while Stock- U.S. Walker Cup victory with an) York trimmed Los Angeles Dod-|ton carried on to 278. unruffled glory that gave him|gers 5-2 the Belmont Stakes June 3,|the edge over every other con- constitute the three legs of the Triple Crown, last won 19 years ago by Citation. Reason to Hail was three- quarters of a Proud Clarion at the wire fol- lowed, in order, by Misty Cloud, Barbs Delight, Ask The Fare, Celtic Air, Favorable Turn and Cracks Marks: |c:%: 4". | BIG PURSE : ; ictory by Damascus re- Tommie Smith broke two world Abs "$141,300 es the biggest track records Saturday and then| preakness purse in history--to expressed disappointment with! yrs, William Woodward and her daughter Edith Bancroft, the|in the Walker Cup in 1951 he never has lost in the singles. Yankees 7-0 Batting--Ed Charles, Mets, slapped four straight singles, pass him. round of the final day. Pitching--Tom Phoebus, Ori-|first prize, was tied with Stock- oles, allowed just two singles as ton entering the final round. But Balti N he went one over on both the Campbell Emerges -- third and fourth holes and two over on the fifth to let Stockton Weiskopf slid to an 81 and George Archer caught Stock- : . 3 Calif. could manage only a two- managed to "Damascus was an entirely|worse than third in his career. |oyer-par 73 Sunday, but it was for $150. Knudson 8 different horse today from the|He has been to the post 10/go0d enough for first place in hold onto ninth place among one I rode in the Derby," Shoe-|times, and as a three year old|the $115,000 Colonial national|PGA money winners with an "He had it)has won four of six starts and|inyitation golf tournament. official $36,973 and an unofficial Playing in wind, cold and/$40,132. Damascus returned $5.60, $3.60) mud, Stockton beat off. Charles and $2.60; In Reality $4.60 and/Coody who finished second with|284, Proud Clarion also came from|§3.69 and Proud Clarion $3.80. 1 d Jack Nick- jet of the back to cue aS $ a two-under 69, the only sub-par| Brewer had 288 an j bby U: ri said: "1 dint plan tobe 30 f'| BASEBALL STARS |?! #380. Arnold Palmer finished with tournament favorite Gay Coody|laus ended with 285. For The Largest Selection of TROPHIES tender for the British Amateur Golf Championship next week. The British amateur begins May 29 at Formby near Liver- behind|pool in the north of England. The 10-man U,S. team battled seaside winds and rain Friday and Saturday to retain the trophy 13-7 with four matches halved. It was the 19th Ameri- can victory in 21 Walker Cup contests. The British have won once and tied once. | Campbell won all four of his matches. Since he began playing To Experienced Drivers To The Accident Prone An opportunity to help clear your record. To The Beginner-"A MUST" pass your tests with ease. invitational displeased that' the latter beat "It should have been faster," ing flap and four-wheel drive. Granatelli, himself a former s State College senior who now race car, qualified only sixth|race driver, has been busily tralg t ea holds or shares nine world fastest in the 10-mile trials the|knocking down rumors that the last two weekends, 166.075. But|Canadian-built turbine develops} he was practising almost that/1,000 horsepower. fast last week with a full load of fuel. Parnellj had faulty gear box in the trials but} Jones undoubtedly has much new gears have been installed.|to do with the Turbocar's suc- OPERATES ALL-OUT cess. He had to re-learn to The reason the top drivers|drive, except the steering. The fear Jones is that the turbine|engine produces its power at may be able to run all day at/practically all r.p.m.'s and he "Simply not true," he says. "It provides 550 h.p., compar- to pamper a_/able to that of our competition." NEW YORK (AP)-- Straight Deal broke away from three other horses in the stretch and scored by three-quarters of a length Saturday in the 28th run- ning of the $55,500 Top Flight close to qualifying speed. The|could destroy the tr piston engines will be running|and axles by hitting the throttle slower because they have to/too hard. Handi at Aq : Last year's top money - win- Eight Canadians Qualify For United States Open By THE CANADIAN PRESS Windsor, Ont., Ron Folk of At least eight Canadians qual-|Saskatoon, Bobby Cox Jr. of ified Sunday in preliminary|Vancouver and Bill Ezinicki, trials for the U.S. Open golf|formerly of Winnipeg but now Championship set for June 15-18|resident of Mashpee, Mass. at Springfield, N.J. The second round of the qual- But notable among those not|ifying tests is set for June 5 and qualifying were pr ionals|\6 at courses across the _-', arn a . Toronto and\U.S. Stan Leonard of Vancouver. LEAD FIELD Leonard tried at Seattle, but) Breen and Balding set the picked up after 27 holes because pace in the fields in which they his-score was s0 bad. He had @/advanced, Breen leading 22 pro- first-round 79. fessionals at Detroit with an Knudson, was required to qualify after| courses while Balding shot 73-69 jning mare, a daughter of Hail to R winning the Canada Cup indi- vidual honors and the. Greater New Orleans Open and because the U.S. Golf Association found a flaw in his original entry form, refuse to refile an entry and passed the Open. Joining Gary Cowan of Kit- chener, Ont., an automatic qual- ifier as reigning U.S. Amateur champion, are Al Balding, Bobby Breen and Frank Whib- --142 for a four-stroke lead at Buffalo. But the low Canadian was Folk, who blistered the par-72 Odessa, Texas, Country. Club course in 69-69--138 to become one of two entrants there to advance. Behind Breen at Detroit was Panasiuk with 75-73--148 while Whibley was 10 strokes behind Balding at 76-76--152 to be one ley of Toronto, Bob Panasiuk of/of nine successful entrants at the second to wind up with 70-77 Buffalo. Spahn's Bid p --147 as one of six to make the Cox lead the Seattle field after grade while Ezinicki was a Thrown Out comfortable four strokes in front of the last of nine qualifiers at was the outside horse in a four-across situation before pulling ahead to win go- ing away over Mac's Sparkler. Another four lengths back was Malboa. Straight Deal, a five-year-old bay ridden by Angel Cordero Jr., returned $6.80, $3.40 and $2.80 and rewarded Mrs. Ethel D. Jacobs with $36,075. Straight Deal covered the 1% miles in 1:49 3-6, one second off the record. She had been the second choice to Lady Diplomat, who finished last in the field of s Wins Feature |." 0%. gasped 22-year-old San Jose records from 200 metres to 440 yards and two relays. Told that he shattered the beamed and said: "I am very happy with that." | Otis Davis of the U.S. Olym-| pic team set the 400-metre mark | in the 1960 meet. | | Britain, Spain | Planning a Wedding OFrsse Going Formal ? Visit GLAZIER'S all formal ettire representing SYD SILVER Tuxedos, Tails, Weddii gowns, Bridesmaids' dresses, all formal clothing and accessories. Wedding Invitations, Reply Cards, Wedding Napkins and Matches, printed to order at low prices, GLAZIERS 478 Simcoe St, South Clothing for Men, Women and Children -- Use Your Credit OSHAWA consisting of Two -- 2 hour classes 7:30 P.M. -- COURT ROOM @ Tuesday, May 23rd @ Tuesday, May 30th It's a challenge to improve your driving ability. A course money can't buy which will help you TRAFFIC CLINIC OSHAWA POLICE STATION For all Sporting Events and Gifts in Eastern Ontario. THE G. B. Company Open a from 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. Open Thursday Evening By Appointment Only. 356 DEAN AVE. One Tire-ific Win Rounds By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Britain and Spain led Euro- pean challengers for the Davis WHERE THE BOYS ARE Cup with second-round victories in elimination competition Mon- day. Britain swept past Bulgaria, | winning five matches to move| into the third round of the Zone | A championships. | At Bucharest, Spain had to/| rally in the final two singles | matches to score a 3-2 decision seven after leading into stretch. Mac's Sparkler, the third choice, paid $3.40 and $2.80 and Malboa returned $3.40. At Inglewood, Calif., remark- able old Native Diver came upset because hejeyen par 71-72--143 over two|Pack to again bedevil the/victory by Alexander Metrevele | younger Horses, winning the $54,650 Los Angeles Handicap in a brilliant wire-to-wire perform- ance at Hollywood Park. Jockey Jerry Lambert rode the eight-year-old gelding to his 32nd stakes triumph and boosted the Diver's lifetime earnings to $890,750. Native Diver finished 1% lengths in front of a longshot, Shebason, with Chiclero, the second betting choice, third, 214 lengths back. The time for the seven-furlong feature was 1:21. Native Diver, owned by Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Shapiro of Los Angeles, returned $3.80, $3.60 and $2.80 as the odds-on favor- ite. Shebason returned $8.60 and $4.60 to place, and Chiclero the first round, but faltered in Boston with his 73-76--149. paid $3.00. the |Zone A com over surprising Romania in| tition. Britain m™ third-round match, whic aust be. completed by June 11. In another Zone A match at | Copenhagen, Russia beat Den-| mark 3-2 on a deciding singles ie over Torben Ulrich 6-3, 6-1, 6-1. | Greece was just one set away from moving into third-round competition against Russia when the match between Peri- cles Gavrilides and Patricio Ro- driguez of Chile was postponed Riding Horses @ Playing Hockey WITH" JIM PAPPIN ALL SUMMER ALL BOYS AGES 7 TO 16. 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Spahn, who now manages Tulsa of the Pacific Coast League after racking up 363 major league victories -- more| than any other southpaw in his-) tory--withheld comment on the | decision pending talks with his) attorney. The court's unsigned opinion | cited its ruling earlier this year FEATHER-LITE -- TOP-FLITE ETONIC. From ............ thy, SESS Pale tera nensar erie OPEN EVERY DAY LADIES' GOLF SHOES -- Sizes $12-9, Widths AA-C. LECKIE -- BREVITT -- ETONIC. LATEST STYLES & COLOURS With complete stock on hand "WE CAN FIT YOUR FOOT AND BUDGET «N ONE STOP!' . «+ PHONE 655-4952 LOCATED 214 Miles West of Myrtle Hwy. No. 12 THUNDERBIRD PRO SHOP WHERE THE GOLFER SHOPS ! MEN'S GOLF SHOES -- Size 7-12, Width B-E. --"16.25 ro 87.50 16.95 +o 39.95 in a case involving the play, The Desperate Hours. It ruled then that publications can' be pun- ished under New York State's privacy law only if there is proof of deliberate falseness or recklessness. 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