Page 6, The Herald, Thursday, June 26,- 1980 Ne _ Copperside Store . PROPANE - GROCERIES - LAUMBROMAT | Cataiing to comp and lnstitation orders OPEN 16-10 7 days a week Phone 635-4660 Compara eur prices to your favourite store! AX dank RETTHE : Tye mh ' e Shad ot vy te Trevor Kennerd got as much of a kick out of his first start Wednesday night in Toronto with Winnipeg Blue _Hombers as did coach Ray Jauch. It was the first chance Jauch had to. assess the former University of Alberta kicker under game con- ditions, and the unheralded rookie didn’t do his pro career any harm, Kennerd, 24, kicked 14 points, including four field goals, to lead Winnipeg past Toronto Argonauts 20-16 in Canadian Football League exhibition play. ‘ In the only other pre- season matchup, Montreal Alouettes didn't look ‘to be hurt by the ‘retirement’’ of. Billy Jean’ LONDON (AP) — Billie Jean King showed ‘her fighting . spirit today, defeating Anne Smith -of Dallas 6-3, 7-6.to reach the third round of the Wim- bledon pionships. King,. 36, six. times Wim- bledon singles champion and winner of a record 20 titles over-ali here, had a first round bye. In her first match, the No. 5.seed saved two set points as Smith, 21. next week, hit fine shots and battled to the tiebreaker. | Fourth day competition was to start two hours early because of the backlog caused by rain, which returned briefly today, tennis ‘cham- Palmer By The Canadian Press Jim Palmer scored a pair of victories Wednesday night. . First the 34-year-old Balti- more right-hander scattered eight hits as the Orioles beat Toronto Blue Jays 6-3 for Palmer’s 232nd career triumph. Then, after the game, it was announced that: he had agreed to a two-year contract extension with the club. Contract ‘terms were not disclosed, but Palmer previously had rejected a three-year extension valued at about $1.9 million. He has complained that his $260,000 salary was no longer com- mensurate with what was being paid other. pitchers of his stature. Ken Singleton continuted his hot hitting against the Blue Jays. He had two hits and drovein two runs, giving him 23 hits in 46 times at bat over the last 13 games. Singleton singled in the first inning and came around to score on a walk to Eddie Murray and a single by Terry Crowley. He later drove In his runs with a fifth inning single. The triumph was the eighth for the Orioles in their Jast 10 games and their 12th in a row over Toronto since July, 1978. Red Sox 4 Yankees 3 Rookie second baseman Dave Stapleton hit a two-out double in the 10th inning to drive in Gary Allenson with million-dollar running back Dave Green after breaking a ‘ 24-24 tle with 10 fourth- quarter points and taking a 34-24 win over Eastern Con- ference rivals, Ottawa Rough Riders. The Als are 34 in pre- season play while Ottawa fell to 0-3, Kennerd, at 5-foot-6 and 190. pounds, booted ‘a 57- arder on the final play of ihe first half that moved Winnipeg into a 13-9 lead. His evening's total included a 48- yard single and a convert of the lone Winnipeg touch- down, a 52-yard pass .play from ‘quarterback Dieter Brock. to running back Robert Woods. — delaying play for 40 minutes on thé centre court, longer elsewhere. No, 11 Greer Stevens of South Africa comfortably defeated Paula Smith of the United States 6-1, 6-4 in the first round. The, pair had waited in the locker room most of Wednesday but never got on court. King hada lot of lapses, in- ‘cluding seven double faulls. ‘Smith hit some beautiful winners, particularly ori her forehand. Ff ; Shlomo Glickstein, who just over a year ago, was a sergeant in the Israeli army, was to face No. 1 star Bjorn Borg. . . “It's. a great opportunity wins the game and money the West. Steve Garvey also the winning run for Boston. Allenson had reached second when his one-out grounder went through the legs of third baseman Graig Nettles and then was bobbled - by left fielder Dennis Werth. Allenson advanced to third _on Rick Burieson’s grounder and scored when Stapleton pulled Tommy John’s first pitch into the left field cor- ner, . Brewers 5 A’s 2 Ninth-inning home runs by Sixto Lezcano, Mark ‘Brovhard arid Buck Mar- tinez, plus a, runscoring single by Cecil Cooper, gave _ Milwaukee a sweep of the three-game series and dealt the A’s their 11th loss in the last 13 games. “ Tigers 13 Indians 3 — . .Cleveland’s pitchers gave up 14 walks, five of them with the bases loaded, to ~ make Detroit’s seventh straight victory an easy one. The Tigers got three runs in the first inning on a single by Steve Kemp and five con- secutive walks by Cleveland starter Dan Spiliner and the Indians never caught up. Rangers 6 Mariners t Ferguson Jenkins -scat- tered nine hits, struck out two and walked one asTexas beat Seattle. : Richie Zisk drove in three runs with a pair of singles to lead the Rangers’ attack. Royals 4 Twins 1 Paul Splittorff shut out Minnesota until Jose Morales’ double with two out SKB wins away George Kuish threw a four-hit shutout in Kitimat Wednesday night to lead SKB Salvage toa 4-0 win over Kitimat Buildall. Bob Couture and Bob Findlay shared the loss for Buildall in the only Pacific Northwest Fastball League game played. SKB got eight hits off the two Kitimat pitchers while their defence played well to keep the. home-town offence contained. Next action in men’s fastball is tonight, when Houlden’s Logging plays Williams Moving and Storage at 7:30 p.m. at Riverside Park in Terrace. Pony Ball In the first game of fhe Terrace Minor Basebail Pony league playoffs held Wednesday Knights of Columbus beat Kinsmen 15-5. The second game of the series goes tonight at 6:30 p.m. at Rotary Park in Terrace, night, . The ease with which Woods circumvented the Toronto pass ‘defences illustrated the prablem Argos rookie head coach Willie Wood faces over. the next few months if he hopes to pacify the Toronto, faith- ful. They've been waiting for. _a championship since 1952. Only an errant throw by Brock nullified another Winnipeg TD when Woods got 20 yards clear in the Toronto end zone. But his. team-mate threw to the nearest Argo — defensive back Dave Newman. ’stan- ding on the goalline. — - Zenon Andrusyshyn ac- counted for all the .Argos’ first-half points with field goals of 45, 12 and 32 yards, for me,’’: said Glickstein after his first-round upset of Raul Ramirez of Mexico. “I - am sure I will learn a lot from the match and gain a lot of experience, and I hope to'do my best.” ‘ But asked about. his chances of . winning, Glickstein rhapsodized about . Borg, who is bidding to win Wimbledon for the, fifth - straight year. “Borg is just a. great player,” said the virtually uiknown Israeli, one of the -few men from his country who have’ played at Wim- bledon. ‘He's out there on. the court to win. “His concentration is unbelievable. in the ninth, when Dan Quisenberry came on to get the last out, The two com- bined for a six-hitter. White Sox.5 Angels 2 Chet Lemon hit a two-run homer, Wayne Nordhagen belted a solo shot andJim Morrison doubled home two more runs for the White Sox, ‘Cardinals 4 Pirates t Keith Hernandez’s tie: breaking single in the fifth inning helped St. Louis chalk upits fourth straight victory. | Phillles 2 Expos 1 Bake McBride helped give Montreal its run in the fourth inning, committing a two- base error, then got the run _ His rival for the kicking chores, Ian Sunter, con- verted the only Toronto TD, quarterback Mark Jackson's 30-yard pass play to Terry Greer, | | ; , _ The loss before a crowd of 24,101 -didn‘€ “We did not have a good. game,” Wood understated. “But. we-have some fine players. ... “I said. we'd be en- tertaining, and I'm con- vinced we will be because we have the players here to be entertaining” = Winnipeg had the edge in the game, rushing for. 139 yards to 107 for Toronto and. passing for another 247° to ALWIMBLEDON = s still winning. Psychologically, none of the top players can beat him," _ Glickstein was the star of ‘the third day's” play, ' defeating Ramirez 4-6, 6-2, 3- 6, 7-5, 8-6. He saved. two, match points at'&3-in the fourth set. : He has spent barely a year on the tennis circuit after serving three years in the Israeli army. Grass courts are as familiar to him as a sandy desert would be to an’ Eskimo. : “Let me see,” Glickstein said, counting up om his fingers. “I have played on ras six times befare in my life. “Twice I played in the Wimbledon junior tour- back in the sixth when he hit ° his fifth homer of the season. And in the eighth, McBride nailed Montreal's Rodney Scott at the plate to keep the game tied. - Mike Schmidt untied it in the loth with a bases-loaded, no-out single, pulling the Phils within 14% games of the . first-place Expos in the East. ‘Dodgers 9 Astros 2 Steve Yeager hit a three- run homer off Ken Forsch — the same man who gave up his last homer back on Sept. 28 — to break a seventh- inning, tie and- move the Dodgers within two games of the front-running Astros in AT THE —. Terrace Arena ’ Saturday, June 28 4:00pm-12midnight © sit well with . : _. ultimatum on a multi-year > HEIDELBERG GARDEN ~ - In Montreal, the Als looked set to. repeat as Eastern. . Conference champs with. newcomer Alvin - Walker replacing, Green as - Mon- treal’s money carrier,Green retired . when . Montreal refused to accept: his contract... ; Walker, acquired five days ago from Saskatchewan Roughriders, carried 13 times for 81 yards and scored the go-ahead touchdown that brake a 24-24 deadlock in the fourth: quarter... . Don Sweet later added his second field: goal’ of the | game. Earlier, Montreal quarterback Joe Barnes . scored on a oneyard run; Charles Burgess ran nine for nament, and lost in the first round each time. And I once entered the Wimbledon qualifying competition, but I was beaten in the first round in that, too." . = . Rain on the first two days ° has left. the tournament seriously: behind schedule, The committee made a rare decision and ordered play:to begin at noon ‘today and Friday in an effort to catch up on the backlog: ‘Play has traditionally started at 2 .m. ever since the Wim- ledon event was launched in . 1877. . 2 oe The committee hoped. to get through the entire second round of the men’s singles. had three RBI for Los An- geles. . Padres 7 Giants 3 Dave. Winfield drove: in five San Diego runs, three - with a first-inning homer. - Dave Cash had an RBI double iri the fourrun first inning. against the Giants’ Allen Ripley. . . “Mets 0-1.Cubs 1-4 _ *“Weneeded a strong game . from him justas much as the’ vietory," Chicago’ manager Preston Gomez said after Lynn McGlothén pitched 71-3 innings of four-hit ball to give the Cubs their twinbill - split, - soa ‘ Refreshments & hot food served to you by the local Kinsmen & Kinettes. good food, good music, good times a ADMISSION - $3.00 per person No admittance to persons under 19 years old - from. at 36. | - | ae Hank Pfister, ia /6-foot-4” ’ Amaya, the Kennerd’s kicks hurt the Argos - another: Montreal: TD. and. Ron Calcagni,* substituting ' for Barnes;hit tight end Nick . Arakgi for a 60-yard scoring - Play: oe gee. “Sweet converted all ‘four’ scores to go with his’ field goals. hn Ottawa’ quarterback Con-. dredge Holloway and wide | receiver -Martin. Cox. com- bined for an 11-yard scoring play, Steve Coury ran a punt back 65 yards for -another score, and: Richard’ Crump took a four-yard scoring pass: , Fookie:. .Charlie Weatherbie for the Rough Riders’ TDs. =: Ottawa kicker Gerry Organ .added the, converts and kicked a field goal. The first seed fell Wed- nesday. * powery‘player, edged Vic ; No.t4 seed, 3-6, - 6-4, 6-0, 3-4, 6-3, oe ~ Winning seeds were No.15 _ Stan; Smith, who downed - Rhodesian-born Andrew | ‘Pattison 5-7, 6-3, 6-3, G4 ina § had.,-been . match that | dragging ‘on between rain ‘showers since Monday; Joseluis Clerc of Argentina, -who-beat Vijay Amritraj of - “India 1-6,3-6, 7-5, 7-5, 64, and Pat DuPre, ranked ninth and a semifinalist last year, who served and volleyed his ea arvetinae’ Holipupen Pee ae ne ee ee one 7 ‘actor. Vince Van: Patten 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 64 in an all-U.S. duel. : . ’* Jater;, struggl e] “gays it's. ile to “sit-in: the.. SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) “ _ Ten years ago he was . *"* baseball’s No. 1 draft choice, -. ‘akid catcher said to have the - with. Don Schaffer J potential to ‘be’ a. Johnny Bench! ° : oN > But 10: turbulent years: ing’ Mike Ivie stands, erack some peanuts, have a. bees and-holler.”’:- ° " aren't ‘gil they. are cracked : up-to” be,\." Ivie,. 27, who played. first” base:-recently, * Wednesday: night....0. + Ivie, who‘recently. came { the 15-day’ disabled list for. what the club ‘called ‘mental exhaustion, Itiformed manager Dave Bristol of his decision prior-to Wednesday ‘night's ‘San -Francisco-San to Atlanta. 0420 -.“It'sa super big decision,” he said, ‘I'm going toleave a lot of money. = * ; “Tm. ready to: something else. ‘I've been. thinking the last few years of retiring.. Nobody's going to talk me out of this year.” -Dlego' game and flew home- ~." The announcement caught.’ the Giants by. surprise,” although Bristol said he _ “had an inkling’ this might ~ “happe ao Last. Sunday, 22-year ' veteran ‘Willie McCovey, nw. n. we also a first baseman, said he .. Saying -‘the big leagues: announced ““his:. retirement > look ‘for ~ Ivie's. loss leaves rookie ‘starter Rich Murray as the Giants. only full-time first | baseman, although third baseman Darrell Evans has _also played first'in the past. ” Currently. batting .231 with ‘.six runs batted in. and two home runs, Ivie was ham- pered bya grip problem. after slicing his little finger in an off-season accident .with a hunting knife. A year ago, he led the - Giants in home runs. with 27 antd runs batted in with 89, while batting .286..°./ °° Drafted in 1970 by the %- ‘Padres, he was the No. 1 choice in the U.S. and started - -his first major. league game . asa: 19-year-old catcher. | ~ However, club..officiats | said. he developed .a mental block over throwing'the ball back to the mound and eventually asked to be moved to a different posl- tion. He was traded ‘to San ’ Francisco in February, 1978, and hit 308 and drove in 55 runs a3 4 part-time. starter. “Tf I had it to do over, I ‘would, have gone to college and found out what it is about,” Ivie snid. He sald he may go to work for a trucking firm or a rail- road firm or possibly coach in college. ; . Sg a an ae J Ss or arcs se aC eee he Te 4 noe MM ead ” BOARDING < | ACCOMMODATION | 4}, SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 88 (TERRACE) “ invites” offers df _COMMODATION for students from Kit-. ‘| -sault, Alice Srm, who. will be. attending _ Grade 1) or 12 in Térrace for the 1980-81 School Year, commencing 1 September. If you are willing to accept one or more’ of these young people into your home, please | contact Mrs. Quantz at ‘the School Board Office, P.O. Box 159, Terrace or phane 635- BOARDING AC- ll li UEUR 4 UNION MADE ARLING Dien: | OS O'KEEFE BREWERIES MALT LIQUOR OR DE MAirT