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| } & - H 4. f [ A: §} newcomer to Philadelphia. Be- 1 fore he was traded to Toronto, THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1972 f; MEDINA JOURNAL-REGISTER Yank Enjoys [On British . _ _'* By JOE NAGLE J| + SANDWICH, England (UPI) i-Marty West of Washington, hays his first experience on a British golf links has left him with the feeling American $3 urses are insipid. 3 : Miami Loses Hockej ! PHILADELPHIA (UPI)-Phi- . jladelphia will get a franchise 'originally awarded to Miami by -the World Hockey Association (WHA) because Miami failed to post a $100,000 bond, the WHA announced Wednesday. __ One of the biggest plums in | 'the deal will be Goalie Bernice | Parent, who jumped to Miami | from the Toronto Maple Leafs | in the National Hockey League. He is reportedly committed to | a $750,000 contract over five years. will be Parent a not 'he played with the NHL | Philadelphia Flyers. TV Races ' NEW YORK (UPD-Hammess track (owners and horsemen ' told a state Harness Racing Commission hearing Wednesday that televised trotting from Roosevelt Raceway would re- duce revenues. But, a spokesman for the city Off- Track Betting Corp...said, \Television can be the salvation of a declining racing industry.\ i The commission was holding i the hearing on the request by ( i OTB and Roosevelt Raceway to ' allow telecasting over WOR-TV ' of races during the track's spring meet, currently in prog- j ress. The 23-year-old hoped to get a lot more experience on the 6,663-yard Royal St. George course today en route to Friday's quarter-finals in the British Amateur golf champion- ship. Also through to today's fourth round of play were Dick Siderowf of Westport, Conn., Kemp Richardson of Lacuna Nicaragua, <- Calif., and John Arnold Cameron of Dallas. Two tough 18-hole matches stood between West and his target today. A 2 and 1 win over Englishman David Hedges Wednesday clinched a fourth- round match against British Walker Cupper Rodney Foster, one of the eight seeded players. The fifth round also was scheduled for today with the winner of the West-Foster match drawn to meet either Siderowf or his conqueror in the afternoon. Siderowf, 34-year-old ex-Walk- am Amateur Turf: er Cup star and current Canadian Amateur champion, \got away with a bad round\ and beat Briton George Hyde 5 and 3 Wednesday. His fourth- round opponent today was Barry Drayson, a reinstated amateur who played as a professional for two years. \I went out on this course to practice only two hours after arriving,\ West said. ''What an experience. After playing those carefully manicured American courses all my life, it was fantastic to get on a real, natural links.\ West went on: \I must have shot one hundred, but it didn't matter. I mean, this is where golf began and this is how a golf course should be. Not flat like at home, but with all these sand dunes and - undulating fairways, everything so natural. It's just great.\ \'Mind you,\ West concluded, \I wouldn't like to play it every day.” j Balcerzak First In Pole Vault Jeff Balcerzak, who continues to keep the Mustang name fresh in the minds of scorekeepers,. pulled off another first yesterday as he reached the 12 foot mark in the pole vault competition at the BBB track and field sectionals at Hamburg High School. His victory was not the only one for the Mustangs, however, as Mike Holland tied the school record in the 180 low hurdles with a time of 21.1 to take first place while teammates Jim Champlin took second in the 100 yard dash in 10.5 and Dan Curtin took third in the 180 yard lew hurdles. The 880 yard relay team of Dan Curtin, Mike Holland, Mark and Jim Champlin took second place f\ AT LAST... [ rue rcamernooreo curormnet I| ura catchesL- impurities FILTER AID [ $5.29 (s-su4) #--- - RUA W”) Tests for chlorine and alkalinity. (75-6179) in the competition which saw Royalton-Hartland's Rams take the track and field cham- pionship. Roy-Hart came out of the meet with a total of 59 points, six more than second place Akron with 53. Falconer, Albion and Medina placed third, fourth and fifth respectively in the team showings. Ed Drisdon of Albion was outstanding in the shot put as he heaved for a meet record of 49-2 and then went on to capture the discus with a throw of 146-2, another meet mark. Medina will be going on to the inter-sectional - qualifiers Saturday at Kenmore East High, 5 ib. jug ' | $4591?!) |b.r drum I $1 89 Kemper Rbughing It Begins CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UPD-A touring golf pro will tell you that the only thing that really counts in a tournament is where he stands at the end of the final round. That's not exactly true in the $175,000 Kemper Open which began here today. ‘ The Kemper, marking a first for the PGA tour but in. what is expected more often in the future, will pay $1,500 in daily low-round money. Winning round money or the $35,000 first prize will be a chore here this week since just about all of the leading money winners of the past two years are on hand, including such big names as Lee Trevino, Gary Player and Arnold Palmer. Most notable absentee is this year's, and last year's, leading money winner Jack Nicklaus who is skipping the Kemper and next week's Philadelphia tour stop to get in some early practice for the U.S. Open. Tom - Weiskopf, who beat Trevino, Player and Dale Douglass in a playoff to win here last year, is back on hand as is Bob Lunn, who led the secnd and third rounds here last year and won last week's Atlanta Classic. The weatherman promised clearing skies and temperatures in the upper 805. _ The .7,278-yard Quail Hollow course here, highly regarded among the pros, sports 47 new trees and a relocated sand trap -plus a change of grass which has added some speed to the greens. ’ Lunn sounded confident when asked about the course. \I like it,\ he said \you always like to come back to a course you've played well.\ He admitted the momentum of last Sunday's win helps, but said at the same time he had to watch out for the others that finished near the top in the last tournament, because they may also still be going strong. 5 25 Ib. pail SENTRY does all you'd expect from a pool sanitizer as well - as something extra .. . . it doesn't burn! Unlike conventional _ chlorines, it will not flame up on contact with suntan lotion, alcohol, algaecide, or almost any other organic material. _- And nothing kills bacteria faster! High chlorine residual lets > you enjoy long-lasting bacteria control, too. That leaves you more fun and swim time! (75-6182-86) 8 Ibs. _ For sparkling clear water. Collects suspended foreign matter and settles on the - | bottom for easy removal. (75-6169) 10 Ibs. Restores overly alkaline wa- ter to a comfortable pH level. Prevents ugly white deposits from forming. (75-6135) Liquid Chlorine] Plus Deposit POOL $taqs° 5 Ibs. | Maintains proper pH level, while cutting the number of - - chlorine treatments. Makes - chlorine work quickly, . longer. (75-6166) > \ Prices good through this weekend only. ‘ Alhipn-Medina Rd., Rt, 31, Knowlesville STABILIZER ALGAECIDE 1 gal. Effectively kills algae and and fungi and minimizes re- growth. Non-irritating. (75-6100) - other microscopic plants - 9 lbs. - Raises low pH; reduces chlorine odor; minimizes eye irritation; increases life of pool, filter; pipes. (75-6105) - _L FARM & Home stort * Store Hours: Mon. thru Thurs. 8 to 5:30 - Todaqfi ort Parade e d Sp DES MOINES, Iowa (UPD- Adrian Garrett wanted to make sure he understood. \What do you mean by 'typical?\'\ he asked me. \I'm looking for the typical minor leaguer, if there is such a ballplayer,\ I said to him, as p both of us sat on some cast iron chairs outside the hotel where his team, the Iowa Oaks, were staying. \A ball player who has been around awhile. and typifies what the minors are all about.\ Adrian Garrett knew what I p meant now. \It would be hard to say I wasn't a typical minor lea- guer,'\' he conceded. \I've spent 11 years in the minors, practically my whole career. It doesn't feel good to say I'm a typical minor | leaguer. - It doesn't feel good to say it at all, but I suppose it is the tru \1 Garrett gazed out idly at the passing traffic on the street. \...I still keep hoping for a break that'll get me back up there,\ he said. \Something ... just something ...\ Born in Florida > Born in Brooksville, Fla., 29 years ago and now a Sarasota resident, Garrett, a left-handed hitting outfielder, is about as close to the typical minor league ballplayer as you're ever going to get. He's 6-3, 210 pounds and has some power. He also sounds like John Wayne when he talks. Originally, Garrett | was signed by Zack Taylor, the old St. Louis Browns' manager. Taylor signed him for the Atlanta Braves' organization the same way he signed his two younger brothers, Wayne, 24, now with the Mets, and Charlie, | 27, who got tired of minor league ball and quit. \I've thought of quitting a coupla times myself,\ says \Adrian; \but somehow when the ° spring rolls around I always keep coming back. My wife, Linda, gives me the inspiration. She wants me to stay at this because that's what I am, a ballplayer. She thinks I'm good enough to play in the big leagues.\ | _ Actually, Adrian Garrett had three cups of coffee in the big time. He got his first taste of major league life with the Braves in 1966-\I really loved it'\-but after a month, on a flight back from Los Angeles, Bobby Bragan, the manager, came down the aisle and told him he was too young to be a pinch hitter and the Braves wanted him to: go back to Richmond. So Adrian went. He got another brief shot with the Cubs two years ago, and after they traded him to Oakland last year, the A's brought him up near the end of the season, then sent him back down to the minors again. The greatest portion: of Garrett's career has been spent in such romantic places as Palatka, Fla., (\there was only a sink in my hotel room, no toilet, no shower\) Davenport, - Towa, . Cedar. Rapids, Towa, Boise, Idaho, Austin Tex., Richmond, - Va., Tacoma, Wash., and Des Moines and although he has efiijoyed some good years in these places, he isn't bitter about having spent so much time in the bushes. \I've had a lot of great experiences,\ he says, \and they've meant a great deal to me. I met my wife while playing in Austin and many other fine people in the minors. It's been a very enjoyable 11 years and if anyone were to ever ask me whether I'd do it, again, I'd say certainly.\ cor- § Chlorine in tablet form. Dis- solves uniformly for slow : chlorine release for contin- uous bacteria control. (75-6117-21) Friday --8 to 9 PM; Sat, -= 8 - 3 PM. _ t * Miata hattin tth fis 28 Sherm Lollar, the former big league catcher who manages Towa, has this to say ' about Adrian Garrett: A Bear-Down Player \On the field, he gives you everything he's got. He's a bear-down player, a threat every time up and will play when he's hurt. Off the field, he's personable, mixes well with the other guys and impresses me as being a very. high class person.\ One week ago, _ rett sat outside his hotel and i -- told me still hadn't given up | hope of getting back up to the: big leagues. ' Last Sunday, before a game [°° here with Wichita, Ray John- son, the\owner of the Iowa Oaks, called Garrett into his office and placed a call to Charlie Finley, the owner of the - Oakland A's with whom the: Oaks work. - ~ ‘ Finley, who had spoken to Johnson earlier, told Garrett | toll pour ' F4 so c e> > Adrian Gar- | National League East w. 29 24 20 18 16: 16 West w 26 24 23 1. pct. g.b. 11 .725 - 15 .615 4% 18 .526 8 22 .450 11 24 .400 13 25 .390 13%» New York Pittsburgh Chicago Montreal Philadelphia St. Louis . 1. pet. 16 .619 17 .585 18 .561 22 .450 26 .381 31 .326 g.b. 1% 2V/2 T 10 13 Los Angeles Houston Cincinnati Atlanta 18 San Diego 16 San Francisco 15 Wednesday's Results Phila at New York, ppd., rain Los Ang 5 San Fran 4, 10 inns St. Louis 1 Chicago 0 Cincinnati 12 Houston 4 Montreal 3 Pittsburgh 2 Atlanta 5 San Diego 4 Today's Probable Pitchers (All Times EDT) Philadelphia (Selma 1-5) at New York (McAndrew 3-1), 8 .m. St. Louis (Wise 4-4) - at Chicago (Pizarro 3-1), 2:30 p.m. Cincinnati (McGlothlin 2-4) at Houston (Reuss 3-3), 8:30 p.m. Los Angeles (Singer 3-4) at San Francisco (Stone 2-4), 11 .m. (Only games scheduled) American League East w. I. pct. 21 16 .568 20 16 .556 18 17° .514 17 20 .459 15 19 .441 12 22 .353 West w. 1. 25 12 23 12 22 16 18 23 g.b. ¥/2 2 4 4Vz 7¥e Detroit Baltimore Cleveland New York Boston Milwaukee pet. g.b. 676 .657 .579 . 439 Oakland Minnesota Chicago California Texas 17 M4 .415 Kansas City | 13 24 .351 Wednesday's Results New York 5 Milwaukee 4 Boston at Balt, ppd., rain - Detroit 5 Cleve 4, 10 inns Minnesota 3 Kan City 2 Oakland 5 Texas 1 California 4 Chicago 3 Today's Probable Pitchers (All Times EDT) Kansas City (Murphy 0-1) at Minnesota (Woodson 3-3), 2:15 1 3V¥a 9 10 12 p.m. New York (Hinton 1-0) at MflWaukee (Slaton 1-6), 2:30 p.m. Detroit (Lolich 8-3) at Cleve- land (Perry 8-3), 7:30 p.m. Boston - (Siebert 3-2) - at Baltimore (McNally 5-3), 7:30 p.m. (Only games scheduled) Moe Berg, Baseball Vet Dies NEW YORK - (UPI)-Moe Berg, a brilliant scholar at Princeton and the Columbia Law School and a veteran of 17 seasons in the major baseball leagues, will be buried in private ceremonies tomorrow. Berg died Monday at his home in Newark at the age of 70. - An outstanding student in his days at Princeton, Berg passed up a lucrative teaching position to try his hand at baseball. He broke into the majors with Brooklyn in 1923 and then joined the Chicago White Sox in 1926. He also played for Washington and the Boston Red Sox before retiring in 1939. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) -Car owner Dan Gurney Wednesday night filed an appeal of (the ruling by Indianapolis 500-mile race stew- ards which powered the finish of his driver, Jerry Grant, from second to 12th in last Satur- day's Speedway classic. Gurney said he was making the appeal to the United States Auto ° Club because .of the severity of the penalty imposed against Grant. The car builder from Santa Ana, Calif., said the penalty was \arbitrarily im- posed\ - by - race .. stewards Harlan Fengler, Don Cummins and Walt Myers. The penalty of - voiding Grant's second-place finish and dropping him- to 12th followed a Aaron Ties Mays Homers; ~ Nears Ruth: By VITO STELLINO | UPI Sports Writer Reaching the No. 2 plateau on the all-time home run list would be a milestone for any other player. - But for Hank Aaron it was just another pause on the way to his assault on baseball's most célebrated record-Babe Ruth's lifetime mark of 714 homers. | > Aaron hit the 648th homer of his career Wednesday night as Atlanta topped San Diego, 54, to tie Willie Mays for second place on the list. It was the ninth homer of the year' for Aaron compared to two for Mays. ~ - Aaron, admitting he's only been thinking about Ruth's mark for the last couple of years, said, \I figured it was just a question of time before I'd catch Willie.\ He added, \but as it gets closer to Ruth, the pressure will build.\ Aaron's homer came with two out in the third inning and started a two-run rally. San Diego starter Fred Norman was the victim of the blow. Reed Sacrifices ' Winning pitcher ron Reed hit a sacrifice fly in the eighth inning to give the Braves a 5-2 lead and that proved 5o be the difference after pinch-hitter Larry Stahl hit a two-run homer in the ninth. ~- .~. In the other games, Cincinna- ti routed Houston, 124, St. Louis nipped Chicago, 1-0, Los Angeles edged San Francisco,. 5-4, in 10 innings and Montreal beat Pittsburgh, 32. The 5:2 figfifiafigj GU [nay ~ Appe als In dy Penalty for Driver _ protest by Vel's Parnelli Jones team crew chief George Bignot- ti. - Bignotti - charged - that Grant's racer illegally was refueled from teammate Bobby Unser's pit tank. Gurney's appeal said \Jerry Grant...gained no 'advantage from extra fuel being added\ to the car's tanks. He said Grant had sufficient fuel in the car's tanks to finish the 13 remaining laps following his pit stop to change a damaged left front tire. Bignotti's protest asked for \automatic disqualification\ of Grant's car, but Gurney said the protest was erroneous .in this respect in that no penalty was spelled out in Speedway rules or bulletins prior to the running of the race. Gurney said a \penalty should be clearly defined\ in the event of future infractions of this sort. Although he did not specifi- cally , ask that Grant be reinstated into the second finishing position, Gurney said \Grant drove an. excellent race...and earned second place\ for his efforts in finishing on the same lap with winner Mark Donohue. Donohue took over the lead on Grant's unexpected fifth and ill-fated pit stop and led the final 13 laps of the race. Senior Baseball Sign-Up - A special \sign-up\ day will be held Saturday for all boys in the 13-15 age group who want to play baseball with the Senior Mini League during the summer. Chairman Edward Bresnich said today that these boys will be enrolled at a \sign-up\ station in front of Veterans Memorial Park Saturday from 1 to 2:30 p.m. The league -will be starting play immediatley after the July Fourth holiday at a location to be announced. Sponsors and uniforms are being provided. ''We have about 15 boys already signed up, but need over 40 more,\\ said Bresnick. \'We'll welcome any interested boy in the 13-15 age bracket. to enroll Saturday,\ he continued. Hawks Get Philadelphia at New York game : was rained out. - . In the American League, Minnesota beat Kansas City, 3- 2, New York topped Milwaukee, 5-4, Oakland stopped Texas, 5-1, Detroit edged Cleveland, 5-4, in 10 innings and California edged Chicago, 4-3. The Boston at Baltimore game was rained out. ' . Cincinnati exploded with a pair of six-run innings to beat Houston. The Reds got six in the third when the Astros intentionally walked Tony Perez to bring up George Foster, a 167 hitter. That - strategy backfired when Foster hit a grand slam homer. Johnny Bench, who is on a hot streak after a slow start, added three hits, including a three-run homer in the six-run eighth inning. Berg broke in as an infielder | but became a catcher in 1927 and it extended his career. He had a lifetime batting average of only .243 but was regarded - as an excellent defensive catcher. Berg spoke 10 languages and also served as an undercover agent during World War II. the A’sl were bringing him up as a left-handed pinch hitter and extra outfielder. \I wish you all the luck in the world,\ Finley said. \Thank you for the opportuni- ty,\ said Garrett. The big, 29-year-old outfielder then caught a plane for Dallas where the A's were staying for their series with the Texas Rangers. _- Dick Williams, the Oakland manager who knew - Garrett from back in the International League and, of course, having him briefly last year, saw him in. the hotel lobby. He stuck out his hand and said: \Welcome back!\ \Thank you,\ Adrian Garrett . grinned. back.\ \It's great to be Open Thursday Night till 9:00 10% off All Purchases - 5:30 to 9:00 Excluded | Wolk! Apparel.. afar - Alcort: Sunfish SPORT SAILBOAT Factory built Suns Coach. PHOENIX, Ariz. > (UBD- After two winning years in the National Basketball Association as coach of the Phoenix Suns, Cotton Fitzsimmons is moving to the Atlanta Hawks as coach. General manager Jerry Co- langelo, of the Suns said, in obvious disappointment, ''Cot- toon made it clear that he wanted out and that he felt opportunities would be greater in Atlanta, I was shocked by the immediacy of his requést and thus have had no time to consider a successor.\ Fitzsimmons came to the Suns) from Kansas State and still Eihad two years on his contract when he quit abruptly Wednesday. WORLD'S MOST POPULAR SAILBOAT! unsinkable fibreglass - - Bronze and aluminum fit- - tings. Dacron \Ratsey\ sails. 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