YW" OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, June 10, 1967 ~ EVERY YEAR, more and tore of our populace is tak- "fng to the waterways for out- door recreation. Boating, like any other form of sport, can be a lot of fun and will pro- vide many hours of exhil- 'arating enjoyment. But like toring, hunting and_fish- x. the use of a boat re- quires some common sense practices on the part of the user. One has but to travel a few miles, along the Trent em, to see bad boating habits and quite often from those who fly flags to show that they have taken boating courses. TO GET THE BEST enjoy- ment out of your craft, the first thing to do is learn all about it. Every boat has its limitations and learning what ou can expect from it, should be the first rule of fun in a boat. You cannot expect to fide out as heavy a sea in a twelve-foot aluminum cartop model, as you would in a twenty - foot inboard. The smaller and narrower the boat, the more precaution you should take in a heavy swell. BALANCING the load in the boat should be the next con- sideration. Weight, _ whether cargo or passengers, should be distributed evenly, from side-to-side, as well as from bow - to - stern. Disregarding rhis rule is inviting trouble. This is doubly important in a canoe. THE WISE MARINER in- forms himself about weather signs. Fishermen are espe- cially prone to disregard an approaching storm, particu- larly if the fish are biting. Y6u cannot expect to feel se- cure on the water during a severe thunderstorm, so head for shore at the first sign of bad weather. If you do get caught, seat your passengers on the floor and head in. Keeping low in the boat or canoe, when moving about, is another good precaution. Step in the centre of the craft if you must move about or when stepping into it from dock or shore. SOME YOUNGSTERS think it is smart to open the throttle wide and dash over the water, in high waves. The banging and slapping seems to create a sense of bravado within them, as they roar from one end of the lake to the other. This is a dangerous practice and should not be tolerated by the parents: Not only is it foolhardy, but it tan also do severe damage to the equipment. If waves are high, head your boat at an angle to the waves and. take them at slow 8 OUTDOORS By Bill Owens Times Outdoor Writer EVERYWHERE TODAY, the accent is on speed and the boat is no exception, Some characters will put a 50 horsepower motor on a boat that should carry only half that much. Too much power can damage the boat and may even swamp it. Look for the OBC recommended horsepower plate, that all good. quality built boats carry. Seats and seat-space do not indicate the boat's capacity for passengers. Two or three adults may be a full load for some boats while four or five will be safe for others. Literature, supplied with the boat, will give prop- er passenger loads, Do not go beyond these recommend- ations. FAST, SHARP TURNS are very hard on the boat and motor and are harder on pas- sengers. Youngsters may lose their balance on sharp turns and may injure themselves or fall overboard. Do not be a contributing cause to this form of casualty. Slow turns are safe and a lot more fun. The last safety precaution is to provide good life jackets, for EVERY PERSON on board. This is a law require- ment: and one that is often disregarded. There are many good jackets on the market but you should buy only those that are approved by the De- partment of Transport. Remember -- only you can prevent a boating accident! HERE AND THERE: Ed. Kroll, Fred Dykstra, Alex Gagne and Dragon Mirkovic took 19 pickerel during a late afternoon and evening fish- ing last Saturday at Balsam Lake. A whopper, weighing 7% pounds, was taken by Mr. Mirkovic. The balance of the catch was made up of fish from five to two pounds. A red and white jig and Ra- palla were "the killers" ... Ontario Department of Lands and Forests reports the greatest forest fire toll in his- tory. Over 80 per cent of for- est fires are caused by human carelessness. Don't you start a forest fire! .. . There were 47,899 pickerel, 3,280 small- mouth bass, 947 largemouth bass and 533 muskies taken out of Sturgeon Lake in 1965. E * DOWN AGAIN -- for the second time. Jerry Quarry stands over fallen former world's heavyweight cham- pion Floyd Patterson, after LOS ANGELES (AP)--Floyd Patterson got off the floor twice in the second round and went on to fight a bloody 10- round draw with young heavy- weight Jerry Quarry Friday night. The decision drew boos from an estimated 20,000 fans, a highly partisan Quarry turnout, sending him to the canvas for the second time, in the second round of their 10- round battle last night in Los Angeles. Patterson ral- but it was a busy slugging match for most of the distance. Patterson, 194, the former two - time world champion from New York, thus kept alive his comeback while Quarry, 193, from nearby Belleflower, ap- parently preserved his No. 10 rating among lied-to floor Quarry in the seventh round and the fight wound up as a draw. --AP Wirephoto Patterson Gets Off Floor For Bloody 10-Round Draw After a slow first round, the inseee hitting Quarry opened up jin the second. His powerful left |hook caught Patterson's chin and the ex-champ hit the deck. Floyd was up quickly but took the mandatory eight count. | Moments later, Quarry the world's/floored Patterson for another heavyweights. |mandatory eight with a right- Scugog Cleaners, of the Osh- Assoc. 'A' League, were outhit With more and more fisher- men, this figure will be high- er now ... The neck of a bird has greater freedom of motion than that of a snake, In the tiny neck of a spar- row, there are 14 vertebrae; in the swan's 23; but the neck of a giraffe has only 7 . .. The sloth eats so slowly, that before he has finished one meal, it is time for the next. SPORT : TODAY OLA Senior 'A' League -- Brampton Excelsiors vs Brooklin Redmen; at Brook- lin Community Arena, 8.30 p.m. OLA Junior 'A' League -- Oshawa Green Gaels at Brampton, 8.30 p.m. LAWN BOWLING Wm. Ward Trophy--Annual mixed trebles tournament; at Oshawa Lawn Bowling Club, 1.30 p.m. SOFTBALL Lakeshore Minor League-- Picton vs Oshawa Midgets; at Alexandra Park, 8.00 p.m. BASEBALL Eastern Ontario Bantam League -- Whitby at Belle- ville, 3.00 p.m. an _ Peter- borough vs Oshawa; at Kins- mien Stadium, 2.00 p.m. Eastern Ontario Pee Wee League -- Ajax vs Osh- awa; at Alexandra Park, 2.00 p.m. and Belleville at Whitby, 2.00 p.m. Eastern Ontario Tyke League -- Whitby at Belle- ville, 1.00 p.m. and Oshawa at Peterborough, 1.00 p.m. SOCCER Oshawa and District Assoc. -- Polonia vs Napoli; at Kins- men Civic Memorial Stadium, at..7.00 p.m. Darlington Senior Leagues Zion at Salem and Courtice at Maple Grove;) both games ate7.15 p.m. SUNDAY SOFTBALL 'Lakeshore Minor League -- Oshawa Quality Fuels at Pic- ton, 8:30 p.m. and Port Perry at Trenton, 8:30 p.m. SOCCER Oshawa and District Assoc. --Ukraina vs Local 222, at 7:00 p.m. and Italia vs Azzurri at 8:30 p.m.; both games at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Sta- lum. BASEBALL Eastern Ontario Midget League -- Oshawa 'A' Majors vs Oshawa 'A'; at Kinsmen Civic Stadium, 2:00 p.m. Eastern Ontario Pee Wee League -- Oshawa at Peter- borough, 1:00 p.m. and Ajax at Belleville, 1:30 p.m. Eastern Ontario Tyke League -- Cobourg vs Osh- awa; at Alexandra Park, 2:00 p.m. and Belleville at Whitby, 2:00 p.m, SCOPE MONDAY LACROSSE OLA Junior 'A' League -- Toronto Township PCO's vs Oshawa Green Gaels; at Civic Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. BASEBALL Leaside Junior League -- East York Kinsmen vs Osh- awa Legionnaires; at Kins- men Civic Memorial Sta- dium, 7:30 p.m. Oshawa Legion Tyke League -- Athletics vs Le- gionnaires; Indians vs Tigers and Orioles vs Cardinals; all games at K of C Field, 6:15 p.m. Oshawa Legion Bantam League -- Sklar Furniture vs Jury and Lovell; at Alex- andra Park (west diamond) at 6:15 p.m. and UAW vs Oshawa Dairy; at Eastview Park, 6:15 p.m. Easterr Ontario Bantam League -- Port Hope at Bow- manville, 6:30 p.m. SOFTBALL York Central Juvenile Ladies League -- OsKawa Woodview Park at ew- market, at 8:00 p.m. Kiwanis Bantam Lea) Southmead at Kingside; Storie Park at Fernhill Park and Lake Vista at Woodview Park; all games at 6:15 p.m. Civil Service League Woods Transport vs Rundles; at Radio Park, 7:00 p.m.; Town and Country vs Rexco; at Alexandra Park, 7:00 p.m. and Cadillac Billiards vs Foley's Plumbing; at Alex- andra Park, 8:30 p.m. City and District Assoc.-- Brooklin Concretes at Ajax, 8:00 p.m. and Port Perry vs Georgian Motel; at North Oshawa Park, 8:00 p.m. SOCCER Darlington Senior League-- Bowmanville at Courtice; Ex- hibition Game, at 7:15 p.m. 2-0 win over Brooklin Concretes, last night at Brooklin. Scugogs scored a run in the first inning and their other one in the seventh, while fending off threats in the first, fourth and seventh innings. Bill Taylor, who went into the game in the fifth inning for Terry McQuaide at second base led the Cleaners with two sing- les while other hits were hit by Ron Siblock, Wayne Chees- man and "Boo" Burke, for a total of five. Elmo Gibson and Bill Corn- ish each hit a pair of singles to spark Brooklin at the plate while other safeties were hit by Vern Ferguson, Don Fergus- on and Grills, giving Brooklin seven, all told. Brooklin loaded the bases in Scugog Cleaners Outhit But Claim 2-0 Shutout awa City and District Softball|guson but Gibson and Cornish but not out - scored, in their|before the first baseman got Gibson, Cornish and Vern Fer- were retired on the base paths the third out, unassisted. Brooklin threatened again in the fourth and seventh innings with men on second and third on both occasions but they too failed to reach home plate when they were stranded, as Gibson became the third out on a third- to - first play in the seventh. Scugogs. scored their run in the first inning on singles by Siblock and Cheesman, plus an error hy the catcher. The sec- ond run came in the seventh inning on two more errors, a walk and a single by McQuaide. Dave Leaming struck out 10 batters on his way to victory and walked only three men. Two pitchers used by Brook- lin, Doug Scott and Grills, com- bined to strike out nine bat- ters while walking only one man. Starting pitcher Scott was the first inning on singles by charged with the loss. Athletic highlight of the school year for more than 8,000 Oshawa public school students is the annual school games. The event this year will be held Wednesday, at Alexandra Park, commencing at 1 p.m. Styled after the Olympic Games, which are held every four years, the one-day event opens with a torch bearer light- participating athletes repeating the School Olympic Games Oath. Wayne Newman of Ridgeway Senior Public School will be the Olympic Torch runner this year and the Olympic Oath will be administered by L. Haisell of Queen Elizabeth Public School. Schools are divided into five groups of comparable stature, and major prizes are the Rose Bowl Awards, presented an- nually to the top school in each division. Annual Meet Highlights Public School Program "Rose Bowls'? are provided by the Lions, Kiwanis, Rotary, Kinsmen and Westmount Ki- wanis Clubs of Oshawa for an- nual competition. : The school games had their start in 1929 but were discon- tinued in 1932. Resumed again in 1949, they have been a fix- ture ever since. The first "Rose Bowl" was ing the official torch, and the| awarded in 1950 by the Oshawa Kiwanis Club for the school amassing the highest aggregate points. during the games. The Kinsmen and Lions Clubs pre- sented Rose Bowl Awards in 1953, and the others have been added in the intervening years. Forty-four track and field events are scheduled for the afternoon, with the stress on track, in which there are 30 classes. First five in each class will receive a ribbon. Agincourt Ladies handed chop to the jaw. As the crowd roared for a knockout, the 22 - year - old Quarry unleashed an attack with both hands and from all 'angles, but Patterson managed to escape further damage. Patterson, 32; shook off his sluggishness in the third round and was credited with a knock- down in the seventh. A combination caught Quarry slightly off balance. His ankle twisted and he went down. - The count reached only two when he was up, but the, refe- ree called it a knockdownpand the bell quickly ended the round. Brampton Seniors Score First Win BRAMPTON, Ont. (CP) -- Brampton Excelsiors registered their first win of the season Fri- day in the Ontario Lacrosse As- sociation Senior A series by up- setting Peterborough 11-5. Wayne Thompson collected three goals for Brampton. Don Arthurs, Brian Ahearne and Bruce Wandless added two each, Bob Haw and John Ford scored the other goals. Bill Armour tallied twice for Peterborough. Jim Paterson, Jerry Byrne and Tim O'Grady scored single goals. REMEMBER WHEN... By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bill Crothers, the track- star pharmacist from Mark- ham, Ont., beat Peter Snell in the half-mile event of the O'Keefe international track ' meet at Toronto's Varsity Stadium two years ago--in - 1965. Although his time of 1 minute 46.8 seconds was well over the New Zealan- der's world record, Croth- ers' strategy won the day, - and his sprint overtook Snell 40 yards from the tape. Bantams Win Four Points Oshawa Legionnaires handed Frankford Braves a 6-2 setback at Kinsmen Memorial Stadium Friday night in an Eastern On- tario Baseball Association Ban- tam' League four-point game. Jeff Stapleton, with relief help from Bryan Rose through the last two innings, held Frankford to four hits, in pick- ing up the victory. Rose re- tired the side in order in both innings he pitched, striking out five batters in succession. Stapleton fanned eight and walked only one batter. Big blow of the game was a bases-loaded triple, by Oshawa catcher Joe Reid, in the fifth inning, off losing pitcher Bruce McAuley. Earlier in the inning, Larry Dart also tripled and scored on a sacrifice fly. Legionnaires struck for two runs in the first inning, Dave Ross singling to centre with the bases loaded. Frankford scored once in the second inning on a pair of out- field errors and a single. The visitors notched their second run in the seventh on a passed ball, a two-base error ana single. Wayne Tutin had two of Osh- awa's six hits, with Ross, Dart, Reid and Stapleton each claim- ing one. Stan Dafoe had two hits for Frankford, McAuley and Perry Williamson one each. Frankford 010 000 100--2 4 3 Oshawa 200 040 00x--6 6 4 McAuley, Cook (5) and Hoyle; Stapleton, Rose (8) an Paterson, Reid (5). : Fernhill Tops Bantam Game Fernhill Park bantams follow- ed a 13 - strikeout and one home - run effort, by Gord Bryan, to defeat Woodview Park boys 13-3 in Kiwanis Softball League play Friday night. Lake Vista also came up with a win, beating Southmead 6-1 at Lake Vista Park. Fernhill's big inning was the fourth, when they picked up eight runs. Other Fernhill runs came in the first with two runs, second for three, and one in each the fifth and sixth in- nings. Woodview's effort was confin- ed solely to the seventh inning when they scored all of their runs. To that point Fernhill's Bryan allowed only one man on base; a walk in the first inning, to Tomlinson. Woodview's three runs came on the strength of five hits while Fernhill collected a total of 17 hits. Losing pitcher for Woodview was Randy Orr. D. Whitmee and Buchanan led the Lake Vista attack with two hits each while single hits came from J. Thornton, Hud- gin, R. Whitmee, and Curtin. T. Thompson and F. Allison each hit a triple to account for the Southmead hits. Aside from the fourth inning, when. Southmead scored both their runs, the losers had a man in scoring position only once, but he "died" on third, in the fifth inning. BASEBALL STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Batting -- Carl Yastrzemski, Red Sox, hammered his 13th and 14th home runs of the. sea- son, pacing Boston to a come- from - behind 8-7 victory over Washington. Additional Sport Found On Page 15 - By MIKE RECHT Associated Press Sports Writer Pittsburgh Pirates are closed mouthed about their closed door meeting Wednesday, but since then they have been making plenth of noises at bat and on the mound. It rose to a crescendo Friday night when the revived Pirates exploded for 23 hits as they fr ers-only meeting. They had lost five of seven games, stood only three games over .500 and had fallen to fourth place after be- ing picked by many to win the pennant. With manager Harry Walker and the coaching staff omit- ted, the Pirates, who held a similar caucus two years ago and a few more last 'season, p Phillies 16-1 for their second straight victory since the locker room get-together. They were not the only ones with plenty to say at bat Fri- day night. The National League- leading Cincinnati Reds, a noisy bunch all season, hammered Houston Astros 10-7 with six runs in the seventh inning. In other games, St. Louis Cardinals edged Los Angeles Dodgers 3-2, Atlanta Braves beat San Francisco Giants 5-3 and Chicago Cubs slipped by New York Mets 6-5. WERE MEEK HITTERS The Pirates, the best-hitting team in the league in 1966, were a meek bunch until their play- pr bly met to talk over their problems and bring their gripes into the open. Friday night, every starter except pitcher Billy O'Dell, who scattered eight hits for his fifth victory in seven decisions, had at least two hits. Manny Mota and. Gene Alley each had four. Bill Mazeroski drove in four runs with two singles and a sac- rifice fly ahd Willie Stargell, Alley and Jerry May aecounted for three each as the Pirates slugged 20 singles, one double and two triples. GOT 14 HITS The Reds did not get as many hits--only 14--but three of them were homers by Pete Rose, Deron Johnson. and Don Pav- Pirates Pep Talk Producing Power letich for six runs in the seventh inning that overcame a 7-4 defi- cit. Pitcher Dick Hughes hushed Los Angeles with a run-scoring single in the seventh inning that broke a 2-2 deadlock. The lanky Tight - hander also scattered seven hits before leaving in the ninth. Orlando Cepeda had an inside - the - park. homer for one Cardinal run. - SNAPS TIE Joe Torre snapped a 1-1 tie with a run-scoring single that put Atlanta ahead in the sixth inning and Dennis Menke fol- lowed with a clinching homer off Joser Mike McCormick. Ken Johnson yielded only solo hom- ers by Ollie Brown, Jack Hiatt and Jim Hart in 8 2-3 innings. Ernie Banks did most of the talking for the Cubs. He opened the eighth inning with a double that led to two. unearned runs and a 5-5 tie and then he sin- gled home the winning run on a 3-2 count with the bases leaded and one out in the ninth. The Mets had walked Lee Thomas to get to Banks the final time. By HAL BOCK Associated Press Sports Writer Baltimore Orioles wasted no time teaching Cal Ermer the acts of American League life. Ermer, new manager of Min- nesota Twins, climbed into a uniform only 20 minutes before the game time Friday night and then watched the Twins absorb an 11-2 loss at the hands of the Orioles. Frank Robinson slammed a three-run homer, his With pt the year, and Boog Powell/had a three - run shot as Baltimore jolted four Minnesota pitchers for 14 hits. In other American League action, Kansas City Athletics shut out Cleveland Indians twice, 2-0 and 6-0; Boston Red Sox nipped Washington Sena- tors 8-7, New York Yankees pushed a run across in the 10th inning to edge Chicago White Sox 2-1 and California Angels blanked Detroit Tigers 4-0. Ermer was named manager of the floundering Twins Friday afternoon after president Cal Griffith dismissed Sam Mele. He flew in from Denver, where he had managed the Twins' Pacific Coast League team for the last 2% years, and made it in time for Friday night's game. He had hardly found a spot for himself in the Minnesota dugout before the Orioles hopped. on Dean Chance for three unearned runs in the first inning. Robinson doubled home a run in the fifth and then put the game out of reach with his three - run homer in the sixth. fish) Hunter hung the double shutout on the Indians for Kan- sas City. Dobson outduelled- Steve Har- gan, who allowed only two hits, in the opener, Hargan had pitched six hitless innings be- fore Ramon Webster's leadoff triple broke the spell in the seventh. Two outs later, Jim Gosger homered, accounting for both Kansas City runs. - The Athletics routed Sam Mc- Dowell with a six-run first in- ning in the nightcap and Hunter breezed with a six-hitter. The big' blow for Kansas City was rookie Dave Duncan's three-run homer in his first major league at bat this season. Carl Yastrzemski and Joe Foy tagged two homers apiece for the Red Sox, who overcame an early 6-2 Washington lead. John Wyatt relieved winner Jose Santiago with the tying run at third and none out in the ninth and pitched out of the jam, preserving the _ victory. Reggie Smith also homered for Boston and Frank Howard con- nected for the Senators. Horace Clarke singled Steve Whitaker across with the Yan- kees' winning run in the 10th inning against Chicago. Whit- aker had singled and moved to second when pinch hitter Dick Howser was hit by a pitch. George Brunet ended a nine- game personal losing streak that had stretched since open- ing day with his three-hitter against the Tigers. Don Mincher walloped a two- run homer, accounting for half of the Angels' runs as Califor- nia won its third straight and evacuated the American League Chuck Dobson and Jim (Cat- celler. Orioles Make It Very Rough, Twins New Manager Debut CALVIN ERMER Calvin Griffith, owner of the Minnesota Twins, yes- terday fired Sam Mele and named Calvin Ermer as the new manager. Ermer, 42, takes over the Twins after two-and-a-half seasons as manager at Denver, in the Pacific Coast League and a total of 15 years as a minor League thanager. Ermer's new start was an 11-2 loss at the hands of the Balti- more Orioles. Opening Dance Oshawa Tennis Club Corner Hilleroft & Ritson Road Scturday, June 10th 9:00 P.M. Dodsworth Orchestra BAR FACILITIES Members $2.00/Couple Non-Members $3.00/Couple building savings made satisfaction. MIDGET TUES., JUNE 13 -- 8:30 CIVIC AUDITORIUM MIDGET TAG TEAM EXHIBITION FUZZY CUPID is : and LITTLE BRUTUS ve. IRISH JACKIE Win Doubles Play WHITBY (Staff) Rain, which arrived with only a few ends remaining to be played, caused cancellation of the | third games, in the annual ladies' doubles tournament at 'Stampeders Sign Arkansas Blocker CALGARY (CP) -- Calgary Stampeders of the Western Football Conference today an- nounced the signing of import fullback Eddie Woodlee, 23, and Canadian Don Green, 24. Woodlee, 5, 11", 198 pounds, |has been starting fullback at University of Arkansas for two years. The club said he was primarily used as a blocker, Whitby Lawn Bowling Club and prize-winners were decided on | the results of the first two) games. | Mrs. E. Frewin and partner, from Agincourt, captured top| honors with a score of 35-plus-l | points. Mrs. V. Erskine, of Co- | with a point-total of 30-plus-6, Third prizes went to Mrs.| Cora Wright of Cannington. She | and her partner had 29 points} and fourth prizes were won by the Whitby host club entry of} Flo Lott and Marion Hutchins, with 26 points. BATTLE FOR FIRST PLACE Individual championships will BULLDOG I WHKQAMAICA KIO be awarded to the boy or girl BROWER _ : Promoted B LORENZO PARENTE vs, DUKE NOBLE ag Pepe fae cay cit PAT MILOS! Tickets ~~ At Geseine Rest, 1:50 = 1:28 75 DON'T FORGET JUNIOR LACROSSE ACTION at the CIVIC AUDITORIUM MONDAY, JUNE 12, 8:30 p.m. TORONTO TOWNSHIP P.C.O. 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