16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdoy, August 30, 1961 HERMAN WILLEMSE, 27- i year-old swimming star from 'The Netherlands, waves jubi- ,lantly after winning the 15- ! mile marathon swim in Lake , Ontario, in front of Canadian * National Exhibition Park, To- | ronto, yesterday. Willemse, a school teacher, covered the distance in six hours, 54 min- utes and one second, six min- ute and 36 seconds faster than the record set in 1933. Toronto Controller William Allen (left) is with Willemse. --(CP Wirephoto) Herman Willemse 'Wins CNE Swim, Fiancee Is 7th ! TORONTO (CP) -- A Dutch schoolteacher and his fi- ancee swam away half the in the Ca- money Jaden ational Exhibition's S50 marathon swim Tues- y. | i Herman Willemse, 27, earned $6,000 when he covered the 15 mile Lake Ontario course in a record time of six hours, 54 minutes and one second, leaving his nearest competitor behind by three-quarters of a mile. + Mary Kok, Willemse"s 20-year- old fiancee, finished seventh, winning $1,000. ¢ Willemse, of Utrecht, and Miss Kok, of Hilversum, The Nether- ds, will use the money to complete a house in Utrecht, where they will live after they pre married. . Willemse, who makes about $1,000 a year teaching in Hol and, said he has earned about ,000 from swimming in the fast four weeks--excluding his $6,000 CNE prize. WINS SEVERAL . . He won the recent Atlantic City swim, the Lake St. John, RQue., swim and the Trois-Rivi- eres, Que., swim--*"'a short one, 'only 10 miles" + The event here was the first professional marathon swim since 1954. The previous best time set by Marvin Nelson in 1933 had six minutes and 33 sec- onds shaved off it Tuesday by Willemse. : Tom Park, 37-year-old former Maccabiah Games Open In Tel Aviv ' AVIV, Israel (AP)--The «sixth Maccabiah Games were 'declared open Tuesday by Pres- Jddent Izhak Ben Zvi of Israel +n a moving ceremony that tbrought tears to many eyes among the estimated 30,000 'spectators in Ramat Gan Sta- dium ! It was an Olympic-type spec- Aacle with bands, choirs, flags wand thousands of athletes from '26 countries. But there were a resident of Hamilton earned $2,- 500 for his second-place finish, almost{36 minutes and 39 seconds be- hind Willemse. Park now lives in Lakewood, Calif. During the first nine miles of the race Willemse and Park staged a shoulder-to - shoulder battle. A crowd of 7,000 watched the finish. Greta Anderson of Los Ala- mitos, Calif., was third and Eddie Black's Top Tony's In CNE Go tional Exhibition Softball Tourn-{Tony's batsmen to solve the ament, defeating Tony's 2-0, last|slants of the big Toronto right. / night at the CNE Park in To- Des shutout, hurling a fine three-hit- ter over the seven-inning route. Meulemeester was tabbed with the loss, after hurling Tony's into the quarter-finals with a 4-2 win over Toronto Tri-Bel AC last week. "Meuly" scattered five hits, fanned six and issued one base-on-balls. Stan Diamond, lead-off batter for Eddie Black's, slapped out a disputed hit down the left-field line. Plate umpire Bill Barey ruled that the left hand swing of Diamond's blow fell on the foul ball chalk line and Diamond went into second base with a stand-up double. Jake McLean, Eddie Black's rookie shortstop. connected with another solid drive off Meulemeester, a single into right field plating Diamond. Tony's escaped with only one run scored as Meulemeester got the next three batters in order. Black's hit the score sheet again in the 5th, with the insur- ance tally as Tony's handed the ueen City boys a "gift run". Normie Beaumont singled to rights Johnny Mitchell pushed him along to second on a sac-|By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS rifice bunt. On the plate at first| Pitching -- Camilo Pascual, Jimmie Loreno, covering the bag, fell on the low throw by Joe Piontek, and Beaumont hustled on his way to third. Loreno re- covered and. fired to Piontek wildly, trying to nip the runner and Beaumount crossed the plate easily to make it 2-0. Devereaux had the game in complete command, allowing no .{mond, Des Devereaux and Noe more than one hit per inning. Joe Piontek, Freddie Etcher and Danny Price were the only hander. Jake McLean led the winners at the plate with a pair of hits including a double. Stan Dia- mie Beaumount claimed others. TONY'S TALES: Tony's are now idle till the Beaches Major Fastball play-offs, The Caterers boys expect to open the best-of- three semi-final round against either Eddie Black's or Randall- Roy Metals, here in Oshawa next Wednesday, Sept. 6 ... Tony's meet Hamilton in OASA Senior "A" play-off competition on Saturday, Sept. 9 ... Bev Smith, now holidaying in Mon- treal, is expected back for the play-offs. OSHAWA TONY'S -- Loreno 2b, Piontek 3h, Etcher 1b, Mro- czeck If, Booth ¢, Meulemeester, EDDIE BLACK'S -- Diamond rf» McLean ss, Wilson cf, Dev- ereaux p, Waters 1b, Hill 2b, Beaumount If, Mitchell ¢, Craw- ford 3b. RHE Tony's 000 000 0--0 3 1 Black's 100 010 X--2 5 2 Umpires: Bill Barey (plate), and Lou Visconti (bases). YESTERDAY'S STARS Twins, blanked Yankees on four singles and struck out nine, three times fanning Mickey Mantle, for 3-0 victory. Hitting--Steven Bilko, Angels, belted three - run homer in opener and won second game with solo home run in 1ith in- ning for pair of 6-5 decisions in twi-night sweep over Orioles. SEATTLE Wash. (AP)-- Satchel Paige, baseball's an- swer to boxing's ancient Ar- chie Moore, launched his ump- teenth comeback' in profes- sional baseball Sunday. In- stead of coming, he went. It wasn't entirely the fault of old Sach that his new af- filiate, Portland Beavers of the Pacific Coast League, dropped a 3-2 decision to Se- attle. Satch pitched only four inn- ings and was lifted in the fifth for a pinch - hitter, He had given up only three hits and was trailing 2-1, chiefly due to the carelessness of a sec- ond baseman who failed to grab a soft grounder. Paige, whose age falls somewhere between 50 and 60, says he has 'played more baseball than any man alive." He often claims -- without contradiction -- That he in- SATCHEL PAIGE MAKES ANOTHER PRO COMEBACK troduced baseball /to Latin America. Detractors have said Columbus was there and threw out the first ball. Whatever his age, Satch carries just 191 pounds on his lean, six - foot - three frame and looks like 'a baseball player when he puts on his new Portland uniform. If his face has wrinkles, so does the pitch he dishes up. "I've slowed down a little," he admits. "I get tired a lit cher. for St. Louis Browns and in 1948 helped Cleveland Indians win an American League pen- nant. He turned to pitching in exhibition games several years ago. Toronto's Cliff Lumsden, a for- mer winner, was fourth. Greta, 31, said she had high hopes for second place until she strayed 150 yards off course. She won $3,000--half for being third and half for being the first woman to finish. Lumsden got $1,000. Fifth place went to John La- Coursiere of Montreal, who won $800, and sixth to Helge Jensen of Toronto $700. Miss Kok got $500 for seventh place and $500 for being the sec- ond woman. TELL HIM "Ben (Ben Gazel, his trainer) told me I must go faster. I was doing about 68 (strokes a min- ute) all the way although I usu- ally do 72." Swimming conditions were ideal, with a hot sun and unusu- ally calm lake with 66-degree water. Thirty-nine swimmers started. All completed two laps, 36 three laps, 33 four laps, 27 five laps and 25 six laps. After that many gave up because they were too far out of contention. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Seattle, Wash--Harold John- son, 173, Philadelphia, defeated Eddie Cotton, 170, Seattle, 15. (Johnson retained his world light-heavyweight title). Halifax--Burke Emery, 166%, Sherbrooke, Que., knocked out Blair Richardson, 163, South Bar, N.S, 9. San Jose, Calif.--Wayne Me- thea, 212, New York, defeated Willie Richard son, 186, San Jose, Calif., 10. Sacramento, Calif. -- Jesus (Jesse) Pimental, 118%, Sacra- mento, stopped Joey Castellano, 119, San Jose, Calif., 5. {couple of notable differences. ! One was the precision march- Jng of 180 tanned military men 'and women of the six services, ,all carrying uzzis--the light sub- manufactured in 'machine guns 'Israel. The other was the mem- orial prayer for the Maccabi or- ganizations wiped out in 14 coun- { Ben Zvi called for fair play and wished the athletes success. +All the delegations, from the 'one-man Katanga team, tennis «player Isy Bor, to the large 'American and Israeli 'and Canada's 36 athletes, re- ceived ovations from the spec- 'tators ou a sunny, breezy after- . BOOM. | * HM . London Will Have New Curling Rink LONDON Ont. (CP) -- Plans for a $500,000 curling rink in south London were announced Tuesday by a group of London and St. Thomas businessmen known as Brookside Invest- ments. Tenders will be called for construction of eight ice sheets and a two - tier lounge, said Brookside President Freeman J. Talbot. Next year a second PWSU JUNIOR Comets Rally In th, Edge Oshawa Metcalis Toronto Comets staged a four- run rally in the last of the 9th inning, last night at Coxwell Sta- dium, to defeat Oshawa Metcalf Realtors 11-10 in the first game of their PWSU Junior playoff round. This game proved a series of big scoring rallies. Oshawa girls got four runs in the fourth in- ning on Joan Clark's triple, walks to Lynda Boddy and Con- nie Crossman and three-straight single blows by Gayle Sceror, Carol Germond and June Sud- dard. They didn't score again until the 8th when Crossman, Scero and Germond all hit safely, followed by an infield out and then singles by Emily Mitchell and Joan Clark, after two out. This meant three more runs and the Oshawa girls added three more in the 9th on Boddy"s single, a walk to Crossman, an infield error, Germond's sacri- fice fly and then a timely hit by Mitchell, after there were two out. Meanwhile, Boddy gave up two runs in the third on a single by Diane Rorke and a homer by Ginny Moskalyk. In the sixth in- ning, the Comets got untracked and clicked for five runs on two walks, three errors and three singles, by Moskalyk, Sharon Carney and Helen Tucker. Trailing 10-7 going into the final inning, the Comets sudden- ly got to Boddy"s pitching and on the game with a four-run lly. Moskalyk singled to start them off and Sandy Campbell walked, then Carney hit a homer to tie the game. Helen Tucker was safe on an infield error and advanced on Arlene Whelan's singled. Jean Medland was walked to fill the bases and Tucker scampered home with the winning run, to lend the game, when Lynda Oben hit a sacrifice fly to centre field. Emily Mitchell, with four singles, was Oshawa's top batter with Germond, Clark, Boddy and Scero each having a pair of safeties. Ginny Moskalyk, with a homer and two singles, paced the Comets. Carney, Tucker each had a couple of hits. OSHAWA METCALFS -- Ger- mond, 1b; Suddard, 2b; Camer- on, c¢; Mitchell, 3b; Clark, rf; Jarvis, If; Boddy, p; Crossman, cf; Scero, ss; Thompson, batted in 8th; Paradise, batted in 9th; Lucks, If in 8th. TORONTO COMETS -- Mos- kalyk, If; Campbell, ¢; Carney, cf; Tucker, 3b; Whelan, p; Med- land, ss; Oben, 3b; Cowley, 1b; Rorke, rf. MONTREAL (CP) -- Nel- son Yarbrough, the bespec- tacled quarterback who was going to make Montreal Alou- ettes fans forget Sam Etche- . verry, was placed on waivers Tuesday. The 25 - year - old Univer- sity of Virginia import, who won the starting post and words of high praise from coach and general manager Perry Moss, has led the club to just one tie in four league games. The Alouettes still have five of the 13 quarterbacks they've tried this season in camp. But all of them are either unknown in Canadian football or rejects from other clubs. Expected unit of eight sheets will be 'added. to start against ALOUETTES GIVE UP ON QUARTERBACK YARBROUGH the Rougn Riders in Ottawa Saturday is Don Allard, a Boston College graduate who came to Montreal through Ot- tawa, Saskatchewan Rough- riders and Toronto Argonauts in that order. The others in the back. ground are Joe Francis, a discard from Green Bay Packers of the National League; Gerry Thompkins, cut by Ottawa; veteran Ca- nadian Gerry Doucette, who has played 'in Toronto and Calgary; and Jack Moynihan, picked up from the NFL New York Giants. Yarbrough was the club's leading scorer with two touch- downs but the Als managed only 32 points and 378 yards p, Oldfield ss, Hill cf, Price rf.} tle sooner. But I'm sure I | could still help some major | league team as a relief pit- Paige was in his 40s and a | living legend when he finally | made the majors. He threw } passing during the four games. FASHION NEWS FROM THE FASHION CENTRES OF THE WORLD . . . 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