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Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Jul 1965, p. 9

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Eastern Games |Haller And Mays Homer |To Lead S.F. On Television, SPORT FOM BRITAIN Over Braves Rugged Northern Sport Rift Settled TORONTO (CP) ---Kastern Conference football games will be televised this season, it was announced Friday night after the two TV networks, CBC andj CTV, and John Labatt Ltd., agreed to terms. The brewery was reported to have paid $300,000 for half the broadcast rights -- including hts to the Grey Cup game tcheduled in Toronto this year and all Eastern Conference playoff games. A_ similar amount will be paid for the other half of the games by a second sponsor, possibly an oil company. Tom Kirkwood of Montreal, Labatt's vice-president, said after a meeting with H. G. Walker, general-manager of English - language broadcasts for the CBC, and Gordon Kee- ble, CTV vice-president, that he could not name the second spon- sor, but "it could be an oil com- By HAL BOCK Associated Press Sports Writer' Bobby Bragan won the battle but lost the war. The umpires didn't catch his Milwaukee Braves pitchers throwing spitballs Friday night but the way San Francisco Gi- ants were hitting them, the umps weren't getting too close a look. Bragan claimed he ordered his pitchers to use the illegal pitch "to prove the umpires won't stop anyone from throw- ing the spitter." After the Giants worked over five Milwaukee pitchers for a 13 hits and 9-2 victory, San Francisco manager Herman Ranks wasn't about to complain about whatever Bragan's staff was throwing. Tom Haller, batting .277 going into the game, drove in five runs with a homer, double and ground out for the Giants while Willie Mays, an 0-for-23 slump, hammered his first homer in three weeks. Willie McCovey pany." He said Bouchard, Cham- pagne and Pelletier Ltd., the Montreal advertising firm which had paid the Canadian Football League $475,000 for the rights to EFC broadcasts and $175,000 for Grey Cup rights was not represented at the meeting and had delegated its authority to Labatt's. Kirkwood had nothing to say about television of Western Con- ference games, for which the CBC now is negotiating. The advertising company had paid $260,000 for the western rights. WANTED GUARANTEE The company, CBC and CTV were unable earlier to come to an agreement when the TV net- works demanded that the agency guarantee the $1,500,000 cost of transmission of CFL games. There was no announcement following Friday night's meet-| ing, but earlier it was said that! Associated Press Sports Writer|ferring to Chance's ability to| Labatt's hoped to be ready to roll in time for the EFC opener Aug. 6 here between Ottawa Rough Riders and Toronto Ar- gonauts. Told of the arrangement, Jake Gaudaur of Hamilton, CFL television committee chair- man said: "That's great. We're not interested in who picks up the tab, but we're glad someone is going to." also homered and Jim Ray Hart had three hits. | The defeat was only Milwau- |kee's fourth setback in the last 17 games--all the losses com- jing against San Francisco. Elsewhere in the National \alene, Los Angeles Dodgers ibeat St. Louis Cardinals 4-2 to maintain their two-game lead over Cincinnati as' both teams won, the Reds batting Houston Astros 7-1. Philadelphia Phillies downed New York Mets 5-3 and Pittsburgh Pirates slipped by Chicago Cubs 3-1 in other games, Deron Johnson took over the major league lead in runs lbatted in, driving in three as the Reds battered the Astros. Tony Perez delivered a two-run pinch homer as 37-year-old. Joe Nuxhall celebrated his birthday with his eighth victory of the lyear. St. Louis' Curt Simmons had the Dodgers down 2-1 going into the eighth inning but Jeff Tor- borg's homer broke the ice and Los Angeles tied it on Jim Gil- liam's double and Lou John- son's single. Then the Dodgers pushed across two more runs in the ninth, the tie-breaker coming when Hal Woodeschick walked pinch hitter Don Lejohn with the bases loaded. Bobby Wine and Johnny Cal- lison tagged two-run homers as the Mets sent an_ electronic happy birthday wish to ailing manager Casey Stengel and Finds Favor By JIM CONWAY LONDON (CP) -- Orienteer- ing, a Scandinavian sport which combines athletic prowess with a good sense of direction, has found favor with British athletes and looks as if it is here to stay. This unusual sport has flour- ished in Sweden and Norway for several years because it is tailor-made for the rugged ter- rain of Scandinavia, which is similar to that of the more iso- lated parts of England and Scot- land. Competitors run over a rough cross-country course with only a map, compass and common sense to guide them. ideal conditions are wooded areas with just enough land- marks to aid the sharp-eyed, but dense enough to give the unwary a maximum chance to get lost. As many as half the then went on to lose to the Phil-| field can fail to finish in a tough lies. race, The Mets held up placards) Pinas on nig sia * aap ; ute intervals wit minutes al- pint ag gg pg Pig lowed beforehand to study the watching the game on televi-\Toute. Then they plunge into the sion in a New York hospital. fields and hedgerows for two or Stengel was 75 Friday. three hours, reading their maps, Don Cardwell scattered seven| compass Ren pyri and taking) hits and won his ninth game for} Many of the devotees of orien- teering are by no means top- the Pirates. \elass athletes. One recent event) PLAY TO TIE j|was won by a mother of nine-| TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto year-old twins because she read) Olympia and Toronto Hungaria| Blue Bombers L. A. Angels By MURRAY CHASS Dean Chance's record doesn't show it, but Boston Red Sox manager Billy Herman says he's the same old Chance. In fact, Herman said, the Los Angeles pitcher, who has displayed very little of the tal- ent that earned him the 1964 Cy Young Award, was in ex- ceptional form in the sixth inn- ing of Friday night's game won by the Angels 9-2. Harvey Shoo Takes Comm By JIM CRERAR : KITCHENER (CP) Gail Harvey, a 22-year-old brunette who plans a career teaching physical education, straightened out her putting and came up with a record 71 to take a com- manding lead in the Canadian women's close golf champion- ships Friday. Miss Harvey, the defending women's close champion needed only 27 putts in the sec- ond round of the 54-hole test and leads her nearest rival, May Gay of Kitchener by eight strokes. Miss Gay shot a 78 for a %-hole total of 157. The tournament winds up to- day but most observers were ready to: conceded the title to 'Miss Harvey. "I've got a good putting stroke this year," Miss Harvey explained after her round, which set a record for the diffi- Rochester Tops | ts Record 71, anding Lead cult par-75 Westmount Golf and Country Club course. Although competitive womens records have not been kept, Miss Gay had the best non-competitive round with a 74 last year. PRACTICE DID IT Miss Harvey said that she had been cutting the face of her putter diagonally across the ball before this year and often saw her putts spin off the rim of the hole, But diligent prac- tice enabled her to straighten out her putting swing and it paid off. She one-putted nine greens, her longest a 20- footer, and birdied six holes. She was one under par with 36 at the turn and had a torrid back nine with birdies on five of the last seven holes, Her only hole over par was the 12th, a par-three layout where she took a four by hit- 'Beanballs' Trigger Fight played to a 0-0 tie ina National Soccer League game here Fri-| Edge Eskimos In First Game day. Whip B ip Bosox, By BOB TRIMBEE EDMONTON (CP)--A fourth- |quarter touchdown by veteran Herman, however, wasn't re-jhalfback Leo Lewis, his second of the game, carried Winnipeg |put the ball over the plate but/Blue Bombers to a 21-14 victory} to what he called his ability to}over Edmonton Eskimos Friday put the ball near a. batter's'»icht before 16,123 fans at the) or gee -- vp ae ane . ~~ 1965 West- od, what triggered alern Footba Sonference sea- free-for all 24 innings later. son. Chance hit pitcher Dave| Lewis scored on a seven-yard Morehead in the seventh. More-jrun around left end with two head already had hit Jose Car-|minutes remaining to cap an nomad and he later hit Jim Fre-|n' the march, His mart early ' ; re-lin the openin uarter, came _ in the vag: - a aig a pte lianas to end an replacement, Arnold Earley,/86-yard drive. coos Rodgers minutes later,| "Rookie half Dave Raimey ma Rigel pl . "«<% |scored Bombers' third touch- moun and fuigied vith Far. _, . big ne ley. Players from both teams Se ee Dave Thiessen kicked two roe pp onto the field, and abdut coinverts and added a single alf a dozen separate fights when a 32-yard field goal at- erupted, ' When peace had beenre- tempt in the second quarter went wide. stored, Rodgers had an ejection Halfback slip, a discolored left eye and aj, a Sr and Soin Gad & sore right hand. Earley also Sige whe ai a the Un ng had an ejection notice while || eague scored touchdowns for Herman owned some cuts and Edmonton, both on pass plays. bruises. y ALSO SPORT INJURIES ADDS SINGLES Jim Thomas and \ciation has already held three In England her map correctly and the others didn't. 4 r} s s tt Queen's Winnings) aincs'to sii,066. and sent "ner into second place in the winning owners' standings. Stand At $113,000 The Queen's horse Apprentice won the Goodwood Cup day. It was the Queen's victory at Goodwood in two jdays and her 11th of the sea- | son, 3 Prime mover in popularizing! GOODWOOD, England (AP) boosted her season's win- Apprentice, ridden by Stan Clayton, won the 24%-mile race THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturdey, July 31, 1965 @ NEW YORK -- Quad.|last year, goes to stud with et ang 0 2, 1, wtores "in a8 rangle, one of the outstanding|starts and total earnings Thu rs- quarters of a length behind. by 2% lengths from Soderini, with Philemon another three- The victory was worth $8,943. three-year-olds of 1964 but a/$559. failure in four stakes races this year, suffered a leg injury in the recent Brooklyn Handicap at Aqueduct and will be retired this branch of athletics in Brit-| ain is John Disley steeplechase bronze medal winner at the Hel- sinki Olympic Games in 1952. He started the craze in England after a visit to Norway. Disley maintains that the best method is to run fast in the right direction, | "The racer. must be able to recognize with little more than a quick glance the likely phys- ical hazards to rapid travel,"' he) says. Olympic athletes such as Chris Brasher, Gordon Pirie, Bruce Roger Bannister--the first man to achieve the four-minute mile --are regular addicts. Brasher, 36, has given up full- time track racing in favor of writing and broadcasting. But he) has fallen for orienteering which he ecstatically calls "the best participation sport in the world." ee Disley's lead has prompted other groups of enthusiasts to form clubs around the country. The Scottish Orienteering Asso- Scottish championships and sev- eral other groups in the north and Midlands have raced to-| gether. | The Southern Navigators Club) formed a few months ago by| Disley and Brasher has held a number of meets in the Surrey) woods where British orienteer- ing first took root. They hope) to organize national champion-| ships with other groups, and per-| haps international matches to beat the Scandinavians at their own game. | | Lady Lawn Bowlers Hold Club Fun Day The members of the women's section of the Oshawa Lawn) Bowling Club held a successful! "Fun Day' Monday at the club. A game was played in the morning and another in the afternoon with lunch served at noon, | Rhea Mann, Peggy Phipps | and Evelyn Tunnicliffe had high) score for two wins and won the| cups and saucers donated by Mrs. C. Baxter. | In second place were Gladys} McCutcheon, Ethel Cay and) Dorothy Nicholson, Helen An-| derson and Ena Pearce, who) played. doubles, were third.| The prizes for one win went to Alice McDiarmid, Florence! Love, Jean Saywell, Emma Lovelock and Mabel Myers. Houdaille On Top | In Pee Wee Loop Tulloh, Martin Hyman 'and Q No other Boston players were) injured, but the Angels' Albie Pearson had a cut forehead and) Vie Power had a swollen right)' hand, | In more peaceful surround-| ings in the American League, Minnesota Twins edged Balti- more Orioles 3-2, Cleveland In- dians whipped New York Yan- kees 5 - 0, Detroit Tigers trimmed Chieago White Sox. 3-1) and Washington Senators beat Kansas City Athletics 3-1. Chance wasn't around when the fight erupted, but he still halted a- four - game losing)" f' t | C ting her tee shot over the green. | Miss Gay also putted well] and shot two birdies, was one over par on three holes and two} over par on one hole. streak with his seventh victory) against eight defeats. Carden-| al's two-run double in the sev-| enth inning snapped a 2-2 tie.) Earl Battey's squeeze bunt with the bases loaded brought Ciba Centre Jim Mitchell con- verted one and added a single n a 24-yard field goal attempt n the second quarter. Bombers led 13-6 after the irst quarter, 14-7 at half time nd each team scored once in he final 15 minutes, In moving Bombers down- field for the touchdown that gave Winnipeg its victory, Ploen ihit ends Norm Rauhaus on passes of 18 yards and 39 respectively. Farrell Funston and A 33-yard pass to flanker Bill Jooper was the key play in Win- ininee's second touchdown. Yardstick totals were fairly 'lose with each team getting 18 irst downs. Raimey, cut adrift by Cleve- and Browns of the National |League after suffering a shoul- der injury last season, gave Houdaille Industries doubled the score on Auto Workers 6-3 Thursday night, in the final] game of the Oshawa Legion) Minor Baseball Association's) 4 STARTS CIVIC HOLIDAY ALL LAUGH SHOW ! > THE ARMY CALLED THEM UP--BUT THE SERGEANT CALLED THEM . . . YOU KNOW! "CARRY ON SERGEANT" ----with-- SHIRLEY EATON WILLIAM HARTNELL YOU'LL BE SICK WITH LAUGHTER WHEN YOU SEE... "CARRY ON NURSE" '--with-- ALL THE CARRY-ON GANG! DOOR: OPEN 6:30 P.M BILTMORE PHONE 725-5833 SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1:30 P.M. to stud. Quadrangle, who cap- tured the Belmont, Wood Me- morial, Dwyer Handicap, Trav- DRIVE OUT ' TONIGHT ° ALWAYS BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 8:00 -- SHOW STARTS AT DUSK Gala Pre-Holiday Midnight Show SUNDAY 4 BIG FEATURES Including MIDNITE THRILL SHOW! FOR ONE ADMISSION PRICE! $1.25 COLOR ¢ FIRST RUN PROGRAM IN COLOR IT TAKES OFF WHERE THE OTHERS LEAVE OFF! "GIRLS ON THE BEACH" In COLOR with NOREEN CORCORAN MARTIN' WEST THE BEACH BOYS THE CRICKETS EVERY TIME HE COMES TO TOWN SOMEONE'S GONNA "BLACK SPURS" In COLOR with RORY CALHOUN LINDA DARNELL SCOTT BRADY TERRY MOORE BILTMORE 1° PHONE 725-5833 SAT. AND SUNDAY 1:30 P.M. @ REGULAR PROGRAM @ COME AS LATE AS 9:00 P.M. SEE THE REGULAR EVENING DOUBLE BILL PLUS THIS DOUBLE THRILL MIDNIGHT SHOW ALL STAR CAST IN "DATE BAIT" BORIS KARLOF Black Sabbath in PATHECOLOR TTT Pee Wee League. The win was the 14th straight for Houdaille| and sent them into the play-offs in top spot. | Vann was two-for-three at the| plate for the winners, with Jubb, Zerowny and Hobbs all collect-| ing a pair of hits in four trips. | French had two hits in three at- | bats for the losers and Smith tripled and doubled in ~ four) tries. | Nesbitt was the winning hurl-| er, giving up six hits and walk- ing only one. He fanned eight batters. Matthews gave up 11) hits, struck out eight and walk- ed three to take the loss. | ©1964 AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL PICTURES "Peter O'Toole is fascinating!" ~New York Herald Tribune (Tote MASON Jutdins Watthon Hawkins [ukis 1 soem pms 8, Baved onthe novel by JOSEPH CONRAD Tasikore = LAV 2. Musle by BROMISLAU KAPER Wetton forthe screen and Directed by RICHARD BROOKS A Columbia Petras Release Keap File Co-Production Flimed in SUPER PANAVISION 70° TEGHMRCOLOR® Hyzee\° BAYNE RECOMMENDED AS ADULT ENTERTAINMENT x LAST TIMES TONIGHT ALL STAR CAST ISLAND OF THE BLUE DOLPHINS ROCK HUDSO! SEND ME NO In Color IN FLOWERS r-wTrewrolwrmclClCCTrhOCUC TCO TCrOCCOC TCC OCW OH KING ST. W., OSHAWA GOLD RUSH LOUNGE and DINING LOUNGE | OSHAWA'S FINEST NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT Leading Jets lin Don Mincher with the eighth-| Another first - round con- 4 SHOWS DAILY ---- 1:40 -- 4:10 -- 6:40 -- 9:20 By THE CANADIAN PRESS Catcher Andy Etchebarren was almost all Rochester Red tender, Marlene Streit of Font- hill, had putting troubles and Wings needed to beat Columbus difficulty with her short iron game and came in with an 82 Jets Friday. : R fo 161, . Etchebarren, returning to the|onto. on pod tee eg Ma 2 nee wee aorta nd for second pace, ha : ity wiee'an 81 and 160. and threw out George Spriggs twice, while he was trying to TAKES JUNIOR LEAD steal, as the Wings dumped the) The defending Canadian jun- league-leaders 5-2. ior women's champion, Sandra} In other International Base- Post of Milton, Ont., took the| ball League action, Toronto junior lead with a 78 and a two-| Maple Leafs moved into second round total of 159. | place by beating Atlanta Crack-| That left her five strokes ers 5-0, Toledo Mud Hens de-|ahead of Helene Gagnon of Ar- feated Syracuse Chiefs 4-0 be-|Vida, Que. with whom she was fore losing 5-1, and Buffalo Bi-|tied after the first round. The sons and Jacksonville Suns split 54-hole junior tournament also |hit two-run homers and Chuck) Bombers the early edge they Inéeded with his touchdown run. Eskimos still appeared un- settled as Ploen guided Bomb- ers downfield for another touch- inning run that enabled the Twins to extend their league lead to five games. Jim Grant stopped Baltimore on five hits for his 12th triumph against! AVOID LINING UP ATTEND THE 6:40 SHOW IF POSSIBLE down 6% minutes later. SATURDAY NIGHT | DANCE OLD TIME and MODERN Dance to RUDY | three losses. Cleveland's Sonny Siebert and) Don McMahon combined for a} four-hitter against New York.| Joe Azcue and Fred Whitfield) Hinton conn bases empty. Detroit trimmed Chicago on| Jerry Lumpe's two-out, two-run} single in the ninth off ace re-| liever Eddie Fisher. | Frank Howard broke a 1-1 tie! for Washington with a home run over Kansas City's centre ected with the, | ™ hatlles Moon monsiers!. AGAINST He MeonMen COSMICOLOR + LUNARSCOPE ee rR Gola ADULT ENTERTAINMENT A RE, Earth's mightiest titan * Is this the way to' make a funny movie? VELTRI and his 1 NEW TORNADOS Toronto's Most Versatile Group RED BARN 7 a doubleheader, the Bisons win-|¢nds today. ning 8-0 and losing 3-2 in 13 Ontario captured the 36-hole!/500 feet in the air and a meas- innings. senior inter - provincial team/ured 516 feet over-all : Chuck EStrada_ scattered,championship with a | - eight hits to pick up the victory|player total of 638. Nobody was| for the Red Wings. Paul Blair in contention for the defending drove in the winning runs with|champion's crew, By THE ASSOCIATED. PRESS a fifth-inning double and ex-| British Columbia was a dis-| Batting -- Tom Haller, San tended his hitting streak to 13 tant second 40 strokes back 'at|Francisco, drove in five runs games. |678. On the Ontario team were|with a homer, a double and a! For the Jets, Spriggs, who Miss Harvey, Miss Post, Sue|grounder as. the Giants dumped! has stolen 57 bases this season, Hilton of London with an 80 and|Mileaukee Braves 9-2. drove in one run and got on 168 total, and Betty Stanhope| Pitching--Jim Grant, Minne- base twice but each time he|Cole of Toronto with a 79 and/sota gained his 12th victory was thrown out by Etchebar-|162 total. with a five-hitter in the Ameri- = she tried to add to his Piguet ~~ sed junior teamjcan League-leading Twins' 3-2 total. jtitle, with a 36-hole total of 332./triumph over i SHUT OUT CRACKERS 5 : enced Doug Gentry shut out Atlanta on five harmless singles as the} Leafs moved past the Crackers) in league standings. Joe Foy) led the Leafs with three. hits and two runs batted in. jfield wall that travelled about LOU | reer YESTERDAY'S STARS WANE FONDA-LEE MARVIN NAT KING COLE: STUBBY KAYE 'by WALTER NEWMAN and FRANK R PIERSON ~ Ranad save # roel by ROY CHMAELAR Screenplay dood by HAROLD HERAT Dit byELUCT SLVERSTEM FT COLUMBIA COLOR Also Fiction Thriller "FIRST MEN IN THE MOON" Color. LOUISE THOMSON FAMOUS PLAYERS THEATRES Oshawa's Swinging Sweetheart ... "DIRECT FROM THE ROYAL YORK AND THE CONSTELLATION" BELTS OUT THE BLUES with COOL JAZZ FOR YOUNG MODERNS @ LAST TIME TODAY ®@. NEXT WEEK - TRUMP DAVIDSON "Mr, Dixieland" and his C.B.C, All Stars Commencing MONDAY, AUGUST 2nd | PY O'KEEFE CENTRE 3 WEEKS AUG. 2--21 ~ ALFRED DRAKE KISMET CO-STARRING ANNE JEFFREYS LEE VENORA EVES. 8:30, MATS. WED. & SAT. 2 P.M. BOX OFFICE OPEN 11 A.M. -- 9 P.M, JOHN WAYNE KIRK DOUGLAS PATRICIA NEAL TOM TRYON PAULA PRENTISS BRANDON de WILDE JILL HAWORTH DANA ANDREWS & HENRY FONDA TODAY ! ADULT WAV , Pareles AN OTTO PREMINGER Fi STANLEY HOLLOWAY: BURGESS MEREDITH > FRANCHOT TONE - PATRICK O'NEAL CARROLL O'CONNOR SLIM PICKENS - JAMES MITCHUM- GEORGE KENNED BRUCE CABOT- BARBARA BOUCHET prorocrarnen mt PAMAVIGION® BY LOYAL GAIGGS. PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY OTTO PREMINGER REGENT : ( Block East of Liverpool Road Phone 668-2692 ..» Bach Evening & From Dusk (Approx. 9:20 P.M. Inc, Sundays) . SPECIAL LATE OWL SHOW--SUNDAY "SAIL A CROOKED SHIP" and "DON'T KNOCK THE TWIST" Come as late as 9:15 and see all 4 features! Vocalist | JERI JAE) JORDAN | | @ Entertainment Nighily at 9 P.M. @ ALLAN MacMILLAN -- Manager PPPDPPDPDPDPDPDDPDPDPDPDSD FEATURE DAILY * AT#2:1 5:15 + 8:20 Fl

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