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The Oshawa Times, 7 May 1960, p. 14

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14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, May 7, 1960 WILL COACH OSHAWA 'IMPS' | lreversal of form by each team.|for the first time in the series line, carried it around defence- Junior Conference. Shown a- bove are contrasting pictures of Bill in his street clothes and football uniform. Bill ZoZck, former Toronto Argonaut football great, will be the head coach of the Osh- ewa Imps in the Big Four Bill Zock Is Junior Coach Bill Zock, one of the greatest awa football fans are in for some lively action. They say that Zock had only one real ohjective in any game in which he played -- opponents and | A Associ He played most of his football) Union Junior|at the inside position and his fine foothall career included being a linemen to ever wear the famous double-blue colors of Toronto Ar- gos, has been named the 1060 pamely how many head coach, of the Oshawa could he bow! over . . . "Imps" Junior Football Club, he did that, quite successfully this city's entry in the Big Four Junior Football Conference. The news that the Oshawa member of seven Grey "Imps" will be headed by a Big/teams -- a record that is nol Four and Grey Cup star of Bill|surpassed by any player in Can- Zock's stature, should add tre-|ada. mendous interest to Junior foot-| A native of Toronto, he ball in this eity. It has already been announced, following a| leaglle meeting last week, that|of 1042-43-44, he was with Balmy this year's league will be com-/Beach and he rejoined Scullers P-| Tro prised of the same cubs as last for three years -- and they won tured some of his old success relief for the Athletics. namely Oshawa "Imps", (the Grey Cup in each of those|Friday night, Year, Stifboro, Toronto North York, three seasons. Bill sat out the|liever G . Balmy|1950 season to become a free hit shutout as.Ch Beach, plus a new entry, Bur-lagent and joined the Edmonton Scat Washington 3-0. Toronto Lakeshores, t/long road back from the injury| joined | careers three years ago today. Argos in 1937 and played with| them in '38, During the war years Wl lington Braves. A six-team group until 1954, Eskies won the Grey will make for added interest and|Cup in 1951 and '54. considering the good showing| Bill was back with for big improvements this year. w, Ag pesition 'tackle' now) them Osh-lada, is concerned. add SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts BILL ZOCK, one of Canada's all-time greats in the rugged and popular game of football, will be the new head coach of the Oshawa "Imps" Junior football team, in the 1980 Big Four Football Union's Junior Confer- ence, a six-team group this year which will include a new entry, Burlington Braves, along with last year's five teams, Scarboro, Balmy Beach, North York, Lake- shores and Oshawa "Imps", The "Imps" will be called in for a get-together meeting within the next couple of weeks. In the meantime, the news that the great Argo star is to coach here is being greeted with tremendous enthusiasm by: local young football enthusiasts. A full account of Zock's career appears above this column We didn't see it, but St. Catherines Teepees de- feated Edmonton Oil Kings last night 9-6 to take a three-to-two lead in the current Memorial Cup final series. Now the series moves into the 6th game, to be played Sunday afternoon, and while we doubt if they'll draw 10,000 cash patrons again, it certainly should be a crowd big enough to add considerably to the total attendance for the series. If Oil Kings come back again to tie up the round, then the walls will bulge on Mon- day night, but sticking with what we looked at last Sunday afternoon, we have to predict that there'll not be a seventh game. WEEK-END CHIPS: -- Men's Major 5-pin league holds their closing banquet next Saturday night . . . NEIGHBOURHOOD ASSOC. Dart League also wind up their season, a week from tonight, with a presentation banquet at the Woodview Club house . . MONTREAL ALOUETTES, moving in under general manager Perry Moss guidance, will organize a "Touch- down Club" this season, and already they have about 400 applicants , . . DOUG HARGREAVES, former gard and linebacker for Queen's University, has signed with Alouettes and they expect him to "stick"... PERRY MOSS proved one thing to the Montreal football fafis. He did more than merely "squawk" about the as Cowboys and N.Y. Giants playing an exhibition game in Montreal in August. He whelled up enough publicity "artillery" and anti-aircraft battery strength #0 cause the exhibition game to be called off . . . OLD 'WOODBINE opens its 101st consecutive season in "Pbgonto on Monday with a new million-dollar club- HOfise awaiting the racing fans, for their comfort, etc. +... WE AREN'T GOING but we have an invitation to attend the second annual St. Moritz Press Cup golf tournament, exclusively for members of the press, to be held at the Engadine Golf Club, St. Moritz, Switzer- land, on August 5-8. Newspapermen from all over the world have been invited . . . GORDIE HOWE'S record for winning the Hart Trophy for the fifth time, comes as no great surprise, Checking cold facts, it becomes obvious that without Gordie, the Red Wings would be lucky to be in the NHL, let alone earn a playoff berth. Balmy|row since last July 3. In 51 1-3 run double, his second two-base made by the new Oshawa clubiBeach in '56 and '57, the latter|innings since then he had given hit of the inning. Skinny Brown (0-1' (4) last season, high .hopes are held|year as their head coach. Teddy up 50 bases on balls. But he|(2.0) won his second complete Coates, Maas Morris, well-known Argo player walked just two and fanned fourigame in a row, If Bill Zock coaches the Osh-land now a club executive, refers hefore being lifted Friday night|Tribe until Woodie Held hit a awa Juniors along the lines into Bill ZoZck as one of the great for a pinch-hitter in a three-run two.run homer in the ninth. he himself starred at "in-|footballers of all-time, as far as seventh that kept the Sox in a for Argos (they call that|the history of the sport in Can. virtual tie for the American Teepees Take Lead Memorial Cup Set TORONTO (CP)--In this base-roamed almost untouched inside Delenceings Pat Stapleton and Have, Hall Brenneman, Burns, {the opposition blue line. centre Ray Cullen 'eepees Ives, Predovitch, ball Season: 3 ay J pestivent was practically the same/with two goals each. Others went| Referee: Joe Vinett, Winnipeg; to as 0's on Hirst™" In W€ 0 at the other end of the ice to. centre and captain Chico|inesmen: Bill Smith and Joey current Edmonton-St. Catharines|pyt "Edmonton forwards, possibly Maki, who also had four assists, (Friday, both Hamilton. Memorial Cup final for the Ca- bothered by the sticky ice sur- Doug Robinson, Carl Longarini, SUMMARY nadian junior hockey champion-|face, couldn't control the puck to/Murray Hall and Bill Ives. | Pirgt period: 1, Edmonton, ship, They are playing it as if mount an sath ol. godlkeuper pd oton Siipess were SLY MacGregor /Passutto) 2:11; 2. la 'eepees pepper 0 *| Pennington w 0 8 on gt, ( is, [there were plenty of tomorrows. oc "ein Flt 56 shots against| Chiz, Bob Goebel, Bobby Cox and|g. Sotbasines, Robiueon {Matis The Eastern Canada cham-ionly 21 handled by Roger Crozier Bruce MacGregor. ~ |stapleton (C. Maki, Cullen) 9:30: pions blasted the Oil Kings 9-6/for St. Catharines. Teepees out-| Pennington scored the game's|q, Edmonton, Goebel (Penning- |Friday night to take a 3-2 lead in|gpot Oil Kings 23-9 in the third|only picture goal in the third pe-|ton Muloin) 16:21, the best-of-seven set. But evenperiog, [riod with Teepees ahead 8-4. He|pagsutto 8:07, Braithwaite 8:50, the coaches are mystified at the," Edmonton opened the scoringitook a pass at the St. Kitts blue|MeGuire 15:08; EL i : : 1 Second period: 5. St. Cathar- The Oil Kings opened the series but lost the lead in the first 10 man Bill Speer and blazed an {with a 5-3 victory, lost 6-2 and minutes when Teepees countered angled shot into the corner after|3.o7; 6, St. Catharines, Longarini |9-1, hustled back for a 9-3 win with two power-play goals. The faking a drive that pulled Cro-|({all) 6:24; 7. St. Catharines, | Tuesday and then fell apart in the Oil Kings squared it 2-2 in the zier out of position. Cullen (Hadfield) 7:35; 8. Edmon- fifth game, period's final minutes, Referee Joe Vinet of Winnipegiion Pennington (E hr e n verth) Friday night's crowd of 4,014 The small crowd had hardly called 10 penalties--six to Fd- 15.13: 9. Edmonton, Chiz (Pas- |wasn't impressed by the 15-goal|settled down for the middle ses- monton--and most were for hold- gtt0) 14:25: 10, St. Catharines, deluge. Edmonton defencemen,|sion when Teepees rammed ining and interference, Tuesday, 22|Cyllen (Hadfield, C. Maki) 16:25: who had smacked every Teepee|three goals to take a 5-3 lead.|penalties were handed out 11, St, Catharines, C. Maki (Had- within range in Tuesday's rough- Edmonton replied with two of| The sixth game's here Sunday ficld, McGuire) 19:58. Penalties: house game, didn't get in a solid|their own but St. Kitts added an- afternoon and the seventh, if nec- Muloin 6:17. Cox, Hall 17:08, Cul- check all night as the easterners'other pair to sew it up. essary, here Monday night. len 17:48. i = LINEUPS Third period: 12, St. Catharines, | Edmonton--Goal: Gillow; de- Hall (Harris, Stapleton) 2:12; 13. ] lerb Score Back Passutto, Muloin; forwards: Chiz,{lum) 7:55; 14. Edmesdon, Cox | MacGregor, Joyal, Pennington, 15:07; 15. St. Catharines, Staple- J | Goebel, Lund, Marik, Ehrenverth, ton (Harris, Hall) 14:01, Penal- To Former Prime | Burgess, Cox. ties: Hadfield :18, Passutto 16:29, | St. Catharines--Goal: Crozier; Muloin innings with * a hitless, Guire, Stapleton; forwards: Cul-|Gillow len, Hadfield, C. Maki, Robinson, Crozier BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS SF-Me- fence; McCallum, Braithwaite,|Edmonton, Pennington (McCal- 19:30. defence: Longarini, Speer, Mc-| Stops: Mays 1412 21-47 By ED WILKS 116 2-3 6 8 7-21 ated Press Staff Writer |three-inning mopup. They've been few and far be-| win yn HARD WAY tween, but southpaw Herb Score The Yankees won their third in has taken another step on the, . ou o1 Gil McDougald's eighth.| that almost ended one of major (IE Save sus bows 8 0d |league baseball's most promising| wi) two runs in the seventh] |Ryne Duren (10) was the win-| Nagged by arm trouble and ner, pitching the eighth and the New York Idness since recovering from|pinth for a string of nine hitless| Chicago the line drive that endangered his|relief innings in five games, Bob Baltimore sight May 7, 1957, Score recap-| Trowbridge (0-1) was the loser in Boston Cleveland Baltimore cut loose for seven Washingion runs in the fourth inning against Lanans 1ty pike rookie Dick Stigman (1-1) and| Detroit : id [reliever Jim Perry. Brooks Ro- American League rod Score, one-time fast -balling|binson, who drove in four runs,|Kansas City 010 303 000-- 7 9 1jnati (Nuxhall 0-1) strikeout ace, had lost seven in a capped the rally with a three-| New York 311 000 21x-- 8 12 0 Daley, Johnson (3), Trowbridge ago (Drott 0-3) Kiely (8) and Chiti;| Philadelphia (4), Shantz Duren, (1.0) and Ho-|liams 0-0) (N) KC-Siebern (5) Chicago 000 000 300-- 3 5 1 Francisco (McCormick 3-0) Washingtin 000 000 000-- 0 3 0 Sunday's Games * Score (1-1), Staley (7) and|St. Louis at Cincinnati Brown, Lollar (7); Ramos (0-3),| Milwaukee at Chicago Clevenger (9) and Battey. Philadelphia at Los Angeles Cleveland 000 000 002-- 2 8 o Pittsburgh at San Francisco Baltimore 000 701 10x-- 9 11 Monday's Games Stigman (1-1), Perry (4), Pittsburgh at Los Angeles (N) Thomas (5), Lee (7) and Nixon;| (Only game scheduled) Brown (2-0), and Ginsberg. HR: International League Cle-Held (6 WwW L Detroit 1 Boston 000 000 003-- 3 11 1 Toronto 10 Bunning (0-2) and Wilson; F. Montreal 3 Sullivan, Brewer (1-2) (8) and H./ Havana 8 {Sullivan, Gile (8) (Rochester 7 Today's Games Richmond 7 (And probable pitchers) Columbus 6 400 Chicago (Donovan 0-0) at Wash- Miami 4 267 ington (Kaat 1.0 International League Cleveland (Bell 000 000 000-- 0 - 4 more (Estrada 2-0) 000 002 00x-- 2 2 Kansas City (Brunet Hoeft, Kay (8) and Green New York (Terry 0-0) Ridzik and Jones Detroit (Foytack 1:1) at ters (2). ton (Monbouqueite 2-2) Buffalo Sunday's Games Richmond Kansas City at Washington Hacker, Phillips (3), Erickso Detroit at Baltimore (2) (), Smith (8), Surkont (8) and Chicago at New York Davis; Freeman, Flowers Cleveland at Boston Monday's Games Kansas City at Washington (N) Cleveland at Boston (Only games scheduled) National League w By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League WL Pel 9 .643 10 .625 10 556 7 500 500 438 375 HRs: Covey (8), GBL| (2). | Phila L.A. 001 000 000 0-- 1 Cardwell, Farrell (2-0) (7) and Coker; Koufax (0-2) Labine (10) and Roseboro. HRs: Pha - Del Greco (4), Dark (1). Today's Game s | (And probable pitchers) St. (6), 4), Pit-Clemente Kirkland pairing with ~re- erry Staley for a three- icago White Sox ©Soxadawm 1 2 2 3 4 4 (Roberts Gabler (6) ward. HR blanking the .688 667 529 .500 500 .438 100 010 000-- 2 6 1 Buffalo 3 3 4 4% 6% COI MH; 2-1) Balti- Miami Toronto at 0-1) at Bos 103 000 04x Havana Montreal Pena, (6), Nunn Azcue; Pct. GBL ter (7), 684 HRs 632 3), Lennon 3 Rochester 000 000 000-- 0 00 Columbus 010 000 01x-- 2 4 1 .450 R. Ricketts, Stone (7) and Ma- .450 teosky, D. Ricketts (8); Veale 400 and Hall. HR: Col-Browne (2). 333 Today's Games Miami at Montreal St. Louis 000.000 000-- 0 4 0 Buffalo at Columbus (N) 022 012 020-- 9 14 Carrillo (3), (7), Arroyo (8) 4 Kunkel (7) and 6 13 y 12 1 2 (3), Altobelli (5) at, 31 a 4% 5% 62 sco 12 9 9 9 9 7 % 9 11 11 8 12 6 12 National League | | | Penalties: | § ines, Ives (Brenneman, C. Maki)| 000 001 000 5-- 6 9 o cer Friday. He had been in hos-| 2 4/pital since Feb. 26. | Louis (Kline 1-0) at Cincin- Milwaukee (Spahn 1.0) at Chic- 1-2 or prief co (8), Conley 0-0) at Los Angeles (Wil- Pittsburgh (Haddix 1-1) at San Pct, GBL - 2% HR: Tor-Wa- Dick (7) Acker (9) and Shantz, 120 000 430--10 14 5 first 2 Morehead circuit, to be known as the Con: | and |"! " : Birrer, Valdes (7), Hun. DiPeg, St, Paul, Minneapolis, Mil- Teed. Hav-Torres (4); Mtl-Risley| 2 o¢l!five years, but with talk of ex- Arroyo Saves Sugar Kings By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Royals had the bases full when Luis Arroyo, the little Puerto Angel Scull lofted a fly back of Rican: lefthander with the effec- . cond base. Havana second base tive 'pitching slants, has restored man Octavio Rojas dropped the the look of respectability to- the|bal, but umpire Augie Guglielmo ¢ [Havana Sugar Kings. iruled Scull out, calling it an in- The Cubans, winner of the field fly. ' : Little World Series in the 1959 hw | a, campaign, finally reached the|BISONS' FOURTH LOSS | : 500 mark in the Internationa! ""° Virsinians handed the League Friday by edging Mont Bisons their fourth loss in five real 10-9 in a game replete with wes by cramming six hits into five homers, seven errors, one a four-run eighth inning uprising. protest and two innings of fine|A Wild pitch, an error a double, relief work by Arroyo. {four flngles and Jim Pisoni's The five-foot-eight inch south.|triple did the job. paw came on in the eighth to pro-| Steve Ridzik shut out the Mar- tect a one-run lead after the(lins on four hits and centre Kings had pulled ahead on a two. fielder Jackel Waters' two-run run triple by Leo Cardenas and homer accounted for the Maple Felix Torres' sacrifice fly. Leafs' runs, Billy Weft. who The 33-year-old Arroyo struck|Pitched two-hit ball for Miami, out the side in the eighth. Hel|lost it when Waters connected in walked the leadoff man in the the sixth after a walk to Allen |ninth, but ended it by getting the Jones. Toronto's ailing Larry {next two batters on a doubleplay| P0bY, Who had been expected to | day i ion 1 { ally releas e [PROZEST FILED the save for |. Rookie lefthander Bob Veale, in winner Howie Nunn, has ap-| 0 his second year. or:pro- ball, {peared in eight of Havana's 16 banked. the Red Wings ap two VERN BICKFORD, 39, for. |Games, has a 32 record and a hits and struck out 10 as he icked up his first triumph for mer Milwaukee Braves pitcher, [Standout 2.25 earned run average. DiC ets. "pidge Browne drove in died of cancer yesterday in | In other games, Richmond de-|} oi, Columbus runs with a second | Richmond, Va. He pitched a |feated league-leading Buffalo 8-6, inning homer and a run-producing no-hit game for the old Bos- second place Toronto moved | gin ole in the eighth. ton Braves against Brooklyn on within a half-game of first-place|_ =" capaeere-- Aug. 11, 1950. with a 2-0 triumph over Miami Vem Bickford |and Columbus blanked Rochester Sad Sam Jones Back In Stride Dies Ot Cancer |with Torres getting their lone By ED WILKS RICHMOND, Va. (AP)--Vern round tripper. Bob Lennon, Joe Associated Press Staff Writer Bickford, 39, who pitched a no-|Altobelli and George Risley con-| Sad Sam Jones is back in hit National League game for the nected for the Royals. stride, the Willies are at it again old Boston Braves against Brook-| Montreal Manager Clay Bryant and the San Francisco Giants are lyn on Aug, 11, 1950, died of can-|filed the protest in the fifth. The within one game of the National |League lead. | It was as simple as that for the |Giants Friday night as they whipped Pittsburgh's Hout-place | Pirates 5-1 in the opener of a 410-Gauge Crown {three-game series at Candlestick MONTREAL (CP) {Park. They scored al their runs Francis of suburban wesnontollon homers by Willie McCovey, A bone spur pinched the nerve| Friday won the men's .410-gauge| Willie Kirkland and Willie Mays in his right elbow and ended his/erown in the Canadian and pro. While Jones spun a three-hitter. major league career in 1954.|vincial skeetshooting champion.| Jones, a 21-game winner in the After an operation he tried a|ships. Giant's' near-miss of last season, back with Richmond of| Francis broke all but two of{"0W has a pair of three-hitters [the International League in 1955100 clay targets to edge J. B.|and a one-hitter for a 3.2 record, but it was unsuccessful [Dinning of Ruxton, Md. who This one handed the Pirates' Since leaving pro ball, he had|scored 97. Sadn. Ldr. Barney|Vern Law his first defeat in five been =n automobile dealer, a|Hartman, the RCAF sharpshooter, decisions. . travelling salesman and a car-|from Ottawa who was the meet's Third - place Milwaukee, 2% |r er, He is survived by his big winner last year, was third | games behind, was rained out at |wife, three sons and his mother, | With 95. : |Chicago, but the Cincinnati Reds Dinning's wife Kathleen won|won their fifth in a row, beating . he umeys Hoe scoring 89. fourth-place St, Lous 29 Hh (Mrs. T. Fitch of New Britain, four-hitter by Jim "Toole, wi ays Officials Talk New West Hockey League |Conn., had 86. also drove in the rum. WINNIPEG (CP) Sports writer Dallis Beck of The Trib- une says Jack Perrin, general manager of Winnipeg Warriors of | the Western League, will meet| with hockey officials in St. Paul| this weekend to discuss possibil-| | | 2-0. | The Sugar Kings, only three |games out of first with a sweep of the three-game series against | Montreal, were outhomered 4-1 . In 1950, Bickford, a righthander| F TANCIS Captures pitched 312 innings for the Braves and won 19 games. Six times |the end of the season he tried for| |the charmed 20th victory but failed each time. | CAR LEASING Have You Ever Considered the Advantages of Leasing Your Automobiles ? OUR COMPLETE VEHICLE eo ego | LEASE PLAN INCLUDES : Beck says in a sporls-page | .|ity of formirg a new minor pro-| 201 030 000-- 6 13 1/Story that most of the delegates] 815 0 to the meeting will be represent n/alives of the Amateur Interna-| y tional League, which flourished (5),/in northern and midwest United ® COMPLETE MAINTENANCE ® CAR OF YOUR CHOICE ® COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE ® BUDGET CONTROL ® MINIMUM ACCOUNTING ® RELEASE OF CAPITAL ities last winter in its son of operation. involved in the proposed States Citi inental League, would be Win- |waukee, Omaha and St. Louis, "Winnipeg has operated as a member of the WHL for the last(|l These are just a few of the many advantages en- joyed by our clients. FOR FULL INFORMATION CALL US TODAY ATlantic 4-5141 or BAldwin 5-1111 GLOBE AUTO LEASE LIMITED 209 Morrish Road Highland Creek Ontario Affiliated with Hillcrest Auto Lease Limited pangion eastward of Portland, Los Angeles and San Francisco, | Perrin's franchise has been left in the unstable position of being 'frozen out' by far-west factions {because of Winnipeg's geographi- cal location," Beck says. In St. Paul, Perrin called the story "pure speculation." He said another meeting is plan: ' next week to discuss the matter. Per- sons associated with Minneapolis land St. Paul hockey clubs de- clined comment, | | Boston capped its, ninth-inning 'ead rally with two unearned runs League lead. after a two-out error by short- stop Chico Fernandez. Frank New York Yankees, .018 per-,. > (12) |centage points ahead of the Sox, Brewer 12. Jim |defeated Kansas City 8-7. Balti-| i a more grabbed third place back . i: dians 9-2. And Boston scored Trade Rip Repulski three in the ninth for a 3-2 de » cision over Detroit, the Tigers'| For Nelson Chittum | [ninth straight defeat. a sophomore in 1956, had only an|8eles Dodgers' outfielder Rip Re- 11-14 record with Cleveland after pulski is being traded to Boston his injury and the Indians traded Red Sox for pitcher Nelson Chit- him to the Sox three weeks ago.|tum and an undisclosed amount in his third start for the White| F Tiday night. cus) Sox, who were shut out on one] The first report of the trade hit for six innings before handing came earlier on Dodgers ol Pete Ramos this third loss of the fielder Duke Snider's local. radio it with two out in the seventh, Bavasi later confirmed the deal. when pinch-hitters Ted Kluszew-| He said Chittum would be as |ski and Earl Torgeson, batting|signed to Dodgers' Montreal farm [for Score, lined singles after Al|club. ley who hasn't been charged with a run this season, then ex- SPORTS tended his shutout streak to} =. Ducks Unlimited TODAY'S GAMES San Franci Spend $550,000 SOCCER Milwaukee is Ye . Osh. and Dist. Assoc. -- Hol- St. Louis DETROIT (CP)--Ducks Unlim- landia vs Polonia at 5.00 p.m.; Cincinnati Serv ation projects across the Ca- games at Kinsmen Civic Memor- | Philadelphia nadian Prairie, H. B. Rucker of|ja! Stadium. UEW vs Thistle at/Chicago San Francisco, said Friday. 6.00 p.m. in Peterborough Mr. Rucker, chairman of the Th 7 SUNDAY'S GAMES Cincinnati 000 001 00x-- 1 8 0 Rochester at Richmond (N) same amount as spent last year, Miller, Bridges (2-1) (5) and Havana at Toronto (N) will be used to construct, main- tain and operate breeding ground MONDAY'S GAMES | Pittsburgh 000 000 100-- 1 3 '1 Miami at Montreal (2) for all kinds of waterfowl. Osh. and Dist. Assoc. -- Strila'San Fran 200 201 00x-- 5 6 1 Havana at Toronto (2) About 100 officials of Ducks Un- ve Hungaria at 6.45 p.m. at Kins-| Law (4-1), Gross (8) and Bur-|Rochester at Richmond (2) |limited, including regional repre- men Civic Memorial Stadium. |Canada and every state of the | United States, are attending the |organization's annual meeting here. The three-day session ends NINTH DETROIT LOSS : " Malzone's single won it for re- from Cleveland, rapping the In- Score, 26, a 20-game winner as| LOS ANGELES (AP)-Los An- Score squared his record at 1-1 of cash, the Dodgers announced |year and fifth in a row. They did Show. General manager Buzzie 1's diuble and a walk, Sta- limited | CALENDAR | Pittsburgh ited will spend $550,000 on con- italia vs United at 6.45 p.m. Both Los Angeles board, said the money, about the No games scheduled. | i |Smith; O'Toole (2-2) and Bailey. Sunday's Games | sentatives from every province of |today. | Facts, Figures 'Today's Derby LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)--Facts |and figures on today's running of |the 86th Kentucky Derby: Place--Churchill Downs. Post Time--5:30 p.m. Starters--14 three year-olds entered; 12 expected to start. Purse--$125,000 added to nomi- {nating and starting fees making |gross of $160,100 on basis 14 | starters, $157,600 if only 12 start. Purse distribution--Net to win- ner $116,100 of 14 go, $113,600 if 12; second $25,000; third, $12,500; | fourth $5,000. | Favorite--Tompion, 7 to 5. | Last Year's Winner--Tomy Lee 2:02 1-5. Distance--1% miles. Record--2:01 2-5 by Whirlaway in 1941. new $1,200,000 CLUBHOUSE OLD WOODBINE NOW HAS MORE FIRST-CLASS SEATING ACCOMMODATION THAN ANY RACE TRACK IN CANADA. SPECIAL BUS SERVICE Leaving Oshawa Terminal at 12:00 noon returing after last race. Fare, including admission to track 2.45. 'Prince Aly Khan Loses Stud Farm |property. {ger. The prince breeds | according to his resident mana- pure- | blood race horses on part of the Crowd--100,000 expected. Television and radio--5:15-5:45 p.m Weather -- Partly cloudy and cool forecast. GENERAL ADMISSION $1.00 (incle. tax) CLUBHOUSE $2.50 (incl. tax) FREE PARKING . 1 ° INFORMATION: OX 8-313 POST CARACAS, Vi (Reut-| ers)--A 1,000-acre stud farm be-| longing to Prince Aly Khan will be expropriated at the end of this month by the National Agrarian Institute, an institute lawyer said Friday. The Farmers' Federation, an independent farmers' union, also has requested expropriation of 7,500 acres belonging to Nelson Rockefeller, millionaire governor of New York State, An dbsentee-ownership clause of new agrarian reform law could be applied in both cases. | Prince Aly Khan's investment | represents more then $4,000,000, | OPENING GOLF DRIVING RANGE 868 KING STREET, WEST Eost of Mount Lawn Cemetery Open Daily At 12 Noon Commencing Today TIME MONDAY

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