i V V left. Sugar Ray Robinson. he connects with a right as KNOCKOUT BLO knocks out Maurice Rolbnet of Algeria at 1:55 of the third DECLARED PERFECTLY WELL Tlichardson Hospitalized Following Title Defence 1 By IAN DONALDSON HALIFAX (CP) — Canadian Middleweight champion Blair Richardson was admitted to hos- pital early Sunday a few hours after retaining his title by a un- animous (Li-round decision over rough Willie Gi‘eaves. The 22-year-old divinity stu- dent from Smith Bar. Cape Bre. 1 ion. was badly battered by Grea-l ves in the last stages of thel gruelling fight. ‘ Richardson was Victoria General Hospital for! checks. A hospital official said: Sunday night “Blair is perfectlyl well... he‘s getting masses of‘ BASEBALL SCORES Saturday NATIONAL LEAGUE San Fran 200 435 003—17 15 New York 000 400000—4 8 0 5 (3-0) Perry (7) and Craig (2.3) Rowe (5). Bearnarth (7) and Sherry. HRs; SF—F‘. Mon (4). Daven— port (1). Cepeda 2 (6) Bailey 2 (5); NY—Sherry (2). St. Louis 000000000—0 41: Cincinnati 00400011x— 6 90 Gibson (01), Bauta (7). Olive and Sawatski: Maloney (3i. and Edwards. HRs: Cin- Robinson (4). Coleman (3). Houston 000000000—0 3 Pi‘ila 000 302 20x—7 12 0 Johnson (14) Kcmmcrer (7). Cardinay (7). Zachary (8) and Batemaii: Ciilp (3-2) and Dal- rymplc. Los Angeles 000 000000—0 42 Pittsburgh 03000020x—5 70 Miller I2-Zi Perranoski (4). Roebuck (8) and Roseboro; Sciiwall 12-0) and Pagliaroni. Iicago 011 050 000—7 8 1 Milwaukee 010 101 200—5 10 1 I Hubble. Toth (ll‘ (4). Mc- Daniel (7) and Rancw; Shaw (0-2) Piche (5). Funk (6). Fis- cher (7), Lemaster (8). mond I9) and Crandall. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 010200000—3 80i Minnesota 000000002—2 40t \‘ii‘liams (3-1) Reniff (9) and|s Howard; Kaat (1-3) Moore (9) : NY—Howard 3) 000 120 50x4 ll 0 Sierhouse (1-2) Daniels (5). Dui'kworth (6). Bouldin (7) and Leooert; Fisher (1-4) and Mar : Chi—Nicholson 2 (5). 000 113 120—8 12 0 000 200 101—4 4 1 .Barber (5-2) and Orsino; Bun- ningil-3) Faul (7). Anderson (9) and Triandos. HRs: Bel- Powell (5). Brandt (4); Det— Wood (2). Kaline 2 (4). Boston 21000—3 51 Kansas City 60513—14 211 Delock (1-2) Lamabe (l). Nichols (1). Kolstad (2) and Tillman: Thies. Fischer (641) (4) and Bryan. Cleveland 002010120—8 9 0 Los Angeles 00000000041 80 Grant (2-2) and Edwards; McBride (23) Nelson (6). Moei' ier lb) and E. Sadowski. HR: Clo—Francona (3). "SAFETY 99" CAR TIRES nr s_n for you admitted tot V rm apt; A . So Nearly Indestructible It’s replaced FREE if It blows out. Ask Canadian Tire about "SIM! !will mean a GOOD DEAL a... CANADIAN TIRE Stewart 8: Mullet Ltd- ASSOCIATE STORE “ M. s" Dial I {3‘ ;.f.' navng BLAIR RICHARDSON visitors. He recovered c ... X-rays showed no head injur- ies. the spokeSman said. Rich- ardson was to be, kept in hospi- tal a further day for rest. Richardson. bleeding a n d very .a E hleary-eyed. was pounded by the cit-champion in the 12th. round as Greaves attempted to' score a knockout. Richardson was tangled in the ropes at thcl end and Greaves' handlers got[ him back in the ring just aftert the hell sounded. He appeared; dazed for several minutes. I Richardson weighed 160.; Greaves 130‘s. ’ it was the third meeting be—l tween the two men 0 com- pleteiy opposite boxing styles and the first to go the limit. Greaves. an Edmonon native who revels in the in-fighting and. never stops swinging. won the! first at Glace Bay. N.S.. lasti July with a lOth-round technical i knockout to hold on to his title.t 1n the second at Glace Bay last September. Richardson—a standup fighter who likes to throw punches and seems rel- atively ineffective in close—balm tered Greaves viciously and t" ca The 4.242 fans contributed a gross gate of 514.478. 3 record for a Halifax fight promotion but about $2.000 short of the At- lantic provinces record gate es- tablished last July in G‘ace Bay for the first Richardson-Greaves fight. Advance sales of reserve seats gave rise to pre-fighl. predic- tions of a crowd of 8.000 an a gate close to 320.000. but pro- moters said rush seats sa'es were “well down. The most serious trouble for either fighter Saturday night came in the 12th round when Greaves. behind on points. at- tempted to knock out the cham- pion—and came within seconds of succeeding. I Greaves caught the South Bar. N.S.. fighter with a series of punishing lefts and rights. fin- ally driving Richardson through the ropes for a seven~count. Richardson. bleeding from a by; . 450. t lchallenger. wobbly and glassy- SAO PAULO. Brazil (CP-AP" —The fourth Pan - American Gum-es came to a close Sunday with Canada winning a total oft 63 medals in nine sports for its? best showing ever in the quad-I iinnlal sports festival. 1 round Saturday in Sherbrooke. Que. Fciirview Aces Capture Honors g SUMMERSIDE — The Fair- vlew Aces of Halifax won th e gold Senior “A” open competition and the YMCA Cup at Civic Au- ditorium in Summerside Satur- day night. defeating the Charlot- tetown Micmacs in three games In the semi-finals, and taking the YMCA Triangles of Summer- side two straight in the finals. The scores in the finals were 158. 15-6. The Summerside High School team won the Senior “3" com- petition. winning the finals from the Checkmate: 14-16, 15-0, 15-7 Personnel of winners and run- ners-up: Fairview Aces—Al Roy. Glen Locke. Jack Jones. Dr. Dave Fraser. John Fraser. Bill Dick- ie. YMCA Triangles~Colin Camp- bell. Keith Lapp. Charles Bal- lem. Gerry Hopkirk. John Poir- ier. Charles Linkletter. Shewchuk. Ron Duggan. Summerside High Ranahan. Barry Ch Ralph Crossman. Joey Gallant. Carman Colwlll. Harold Mitton. Barry Lidstone. Checkmates— Paul MacWil- llams. Ronnie Ramsay. Chuck Silliphant. Bob Hickey. Kelly. Barrie MacGregor. i ' had cut near the left eye and obviously dazed. struggled backi to the ring and brought the‘ crowd to its feet with a punish- ' combination to Grcaves'. d. . But Greaves. 27-year-old vet-I eran of more than 60 fights. weathered it and unleashed a final attack that sent Richard-i son through the ropes again. SAVED BY BELL Richardson stumbled. then gott to his feet. his chin propped on the upper strand of rope. Hel was w o b b l in g there with. Grcaves poised a nciitrall corner and smeared with blood from Richardson's cut an a nosebleed of his own. when the: bell ended it. > Judge Don Kerr gave it to; Richardson 7-4-1. Alex Nickcr-l son had it 5-4-3 and Harold .lOIln-i so . . After the announcement. Rich- ardsnn ' the ring and was silent. Greaves m u m b l e (:1: “One I five other Maritime teams in the t fourth annual inter-club bowling N.S. Bowlers Corp Tourney For Blind MONCTON (CP) — A five - man tea representing th e MacLeod Club of the blind. New Glasgow. N.S.. Saturday won the Fraser trophy here by defeating tournament for blind bowlers. The Glasgow squad of Robert Howard. H. Brodeaux. Harold White. Carl Rodgers and Ian McDonald bowled 3.197 in eight strings of candlepins to take the Maritime championship from the Fundy Club of Saint John. N.B.. by 47 points. f The Fundy Club had won the three previous meets. High individual average for a totally blind bowler went to Har- old White of the MacLeod club. handsome and then some] He posted an 81.3 for the day. White also took top honors in his class for singles with a 99. 'iow, low priced 'Canuck Athletes Register Best Performance Ever The last medals were won by‘ (all Jennifer Wingerson of Tor- onto. who missed 5 gold by inches in taking a second-place silver in the women's (lo-metre hurdles. and Don Bertoia of Rossland. BC. the Slit-metre champion who was the third- place bronze medallist in the metric mile. With the dousing of the sym- bolic torch that ended the 21'country Western Hemisphere ccmpetition. Canada counted to medals. silver and 27 bronze. Only the United States did better with its huge team 400 although Brazil won more gold medals than Canada. A bad break cost Canada anothe- bronze in the women's 400-metre relay race Saturday when the week—long track and field competition was com- pleted. The four-girl Canadian . (the Americans had become I('- 'The Guardian, Charlottetown. Mon. May 6, 1963. 11 customed to. This time. Canada and Latin America made definite inroads fit the premier part igames once virtually a private 1 1.1.5. preserve. 'TRACK TRIUMPHS Until the fourth Ramf's. Can- . a hadn't won a gold medal in track and field. This time. the 1.. secretary almost caught the Indianapolis. in a tight (lo-metn,‘ gold medallist. Jo Ann Terry of hurdle race. A, DELUXE MODEL COMPLETE LESS FOUNDATION AND TRADES r team was disqualified for pas- fi ' .' .inrgdiul of its lane after placing “mplmber {Jack [and mm tetam a . . Y “on 5. me als— ive go . lve 18:1];0‘331f3d flitgglsll‘ignugi silver and two bronze—for [the and field and Maxims Fidel finest track and field perform Negrcie captured the gruelling .ance by Lemma": .m peg—war marathon, finishing far ahead intern;tioual competition. 0f 3 pa“. “r “norm.” in WO‘ The US. competed in all 21 “gum 27 minutca 55,6 seconds. sports at the 16-day games Us captured the big while Canada took part in 16. race of the track meet, the 1.500 The Americans “'(‘m‘d “9 the metre; or meme mile, when its big \\ inner with a total of 108 two btst milers. Jim Grelle and g0“ medals- 55 511"" and 37 Jim Beatly. finished one-two. It bronze. Brazil won 14 gold. 20 V_ ‘ r 7 also won the women’s hurdles. Em" and 13 bronzfi- till" the J: M7 "' metre 1 .3 'K , ost country's over-a ta y was re a) men“ 400 11 niedats shy of Canada's Local Agent bag. 30 Gerald Street 5- Delivered anywhere In P.E.l. . tax included. $4,795.00 ‘ As little as $240.00 down and monthly payments of $68.30. ' Many options available. Writ. or phone your agent today. scorr BROS. " * Charlottetown mPIre relays, javelin and hop, Phone 894-9358 . .. step and Jump. Canadians competed only in Saturday. Miss Wingerson the hurdles, metric mile and showed that with growing expe- . women's re ay. riencr- she will be a hiirdler to " ’ . . won 22 of the 33 be reckoned with in future HEAD OFFICE‘MARITIME MANUFACTURED HOMES "' I track and field championships international meets. - P.O. BOX 77, KINGSTON. NS. ‘ but was not the kind of showing year-old English-born private Here's a car that’s clean-cut, The complete family fits comfortably into its roomy interior. more round 4. . . e more round." He indicated he felt. an- other round would have given him the fight. Richardson was in command through much of the early fight- ing and in the eighth ha Greaves in difficulty. But the eyed. moVed into a clinch. 1n the ninth and 10th Greavcs‘ punches still seemed powerful while Richardson's lacked their ear- lier steam. Willie Williams of New Water- ford. N.S.. and Boston handed Les Sprague. Canadian junior I , welterweight champion. a heat- ing in the six-round semi-final. a non title affair. Williams. lightning fast but a light puncher. won a unanimous de- cision. Sprague was hurting Wil- liams in the last round. City Bowlers Finish; Second CAMP GAGETOWN. N. 3. (CP) — Halifax- Dartmouth In- dependents gained victories in the final two rounds of play Sun- day to win the third annual Maritime ladies tri- service five- pin bowling tournament by one point over runner-up Charlotte- town. the 1961 winner. Defending champs Shearwat- I champs were five points off the pace. Betty Hodgin led the N ova Scotian capital entry with the tournament high average of 234. Ann Poterl had the high single of 380 and M. Henderson came up with the event‘s best three of 6. Charlottetown whipped Shear- water 4-0 Saturday and took the measure of the Independents 3-1. 2 However. the Island entry drew . its two byes on Sunday and was forced to watch idly as H-D '- came from way behind to take the title. it was the first five-pin tour- ‘ nament ever held in the prov- ince. STANDINGS Halifax-Dartmouth so Charlottetown 29 Shearwater . 25 Camp Gagetown Moverettes 23 Camp Gagetown Alponc Shannon Park Camp Gagetown Schooner 5'53 Shelboume to Nashwaaksis Gems s Nashwaaksts Jays 3 CABINET CONFEBS prime minister In the absence of tester Pearson in London. presided at a cabinet session Thursday. Mr. Charter said the in would ha studying the legislative program for the session of Parliament w opens May 16. m? 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