the Bone e ruling “TORONTO: (OP) a Commissloner. fake Gaudaur of: the Canadian fear Lea oa said studying. Me ruling . hat Hamilton Tiger-Cats: dincelminated against Canadian quarterback the Ontario Human Commission, ordered the club to pay the 2hyear-old Patveraity Western. On- te Hoi" , aive eek wriveday 6 ; future and rite him i) team to carry a qua as an extra import in excess of ite quota of: 24 and -in- . farchange him with: the marter. if the. payers at: tected: are not quarterbacks, the man who. is: replaced cannot return to the gam Gaudaur noted that Ainile McCamus upheld Bone's complaint against the Tiger. rapport ‘hls alegadon that legation that the designated import rwe was’ diseriminatory, However, the chairman ordered the club to explain to Rights its coaches that the rule should not result in a preference for nonCanadian quarterbacks, © The CFL “cétimisloner sald the decision requires further. study. ““There must be a concern as to what effect this ent vil have in terms of negatin - motivationa, tre taubigas ‘b employ @ pot-inip e a oot cane date,” be “Ot greater concern {n whether there is anything in the language of the decision poate that would pre lude, the. league in futire from protecting the nativeborn or trained player as it now mby Limiting the Humber of imports.” acitdaur said the Pla nticipating posible charges of discrimination on grounds of nationality, changed its rules in {86, making the place of trainin M4 rather then é place of bir or cliizenship the basis of differentiating between imports and nen- importa, Meanwhile Bone's counsel, John Sopinka, said the TigerCata must comp! with the commission's order to grant Bone an-early five-day trial, regardless of any further legal action planned | by the team or by the CFL. “There are no provisions in the uatute to. slay at a Homan: Rights er, whether it ls a appealed or not," Sopinica: na Course praised ‘BRANTFORD, Ont. (CP) «= The course, not the man ie Caan the victory of amatans, golf 70 : ar veteran ‘Nick. " tHie-fleld are Gary Cowan of. yin. Kitchener, Ont.,...(1961); preparation | for today's . "Ia the last a¢7yeara T'va ed peau u wood et test of g this course for the national. championship," aald , Wealock. : "And" remember Jen Played in over 90 of Wenlock, of Puriington, Ont., wor for the first dime in 1967 and came back to win in 1963, 1964 and 1064. Weslock' is one of ilve former champions in the fled of 168 that will tee up today at the lush Brantford an onuxtt yy 4H aparsaseen Another gold for Peter]. | LEEDS, England (Reuter) — David Shemiit of Toronto won his second gold medal in the Brith are: group swimming mplonships Tuesday night and Peter Ward of Toronto added another win ,te jput.. the, Canadian total at five vic- tories in the first two days of baer 15, ata rie age group record in winning the 14-15 year-old boys 200 meires, freestyle in two rilmites 0.1% seconds. Hi firat win was in the 400 metres on Monday. Word also set a meet record of 4:04.29 in winning the i¢-17 agoclass 200 metres bu Andre Theoret ol Polnte cikire Que, w seventh in the race in 4: 123. ig Thurs 9 ay, the field will be cut to the low 70 and ties for the final.34 holes. of .play on the 6,636- yard, par-72course, ==, Other former winners in - Doug Roxburgh of Van- couver (1072 and 1974); Wayne McDonald of ie Ruta tiebelalbd Edmonton (1960), Naturally encugh Wealock gives himself a ahot at winning for a fifth time, “However my success will depend on how I stand up te the nature of the course. I could tire here," Weslock belleves that the wtimate winner must be « golter who can handle all the iricst of all the winner must keep the ball in the | Bale CUE at, pee fa, fhe, aoe? thasnb [soa ad. Earlier Tuesday, Jane Kerr of Toronto and Richard ' Morris of Pointe Claire wou gold mexieis, ‘Kerr, Canada's best all- Group this year, set m Brig ear, set a fenahip Reeet AW. U minutes 19.51 seconds as won the 10-11 year-old 200- metre freestyle by a wide in and 'ooked set for a handful more medals before: the week is cut. =" Morris took the 14-16 years, is 200-metre backstroke in Oster: 2:17.01 with metrer of Hamilton third in 2:16.64. Shemilt, the. Toronto Granite Club all-star, set an excellent competition record of 4:10.98 when he.won the #0o-metre freestyia in the ort because of the heavy he sald, “Secondly, rue 0 the small greens, he mia be an accurate {ron touch due to the 8 freense and finally he must: a sensational trap player, . This course has a a type sand where the ball gets buried," Pisin 2 Cup interprovinclal rh matches, which-will be held concurrently mee the amateur. : The Willingdon com- petition ig an aggregate event that takes in the scores of the players from the 10 provinces the first two days of the amateur. Each team has four players, with the tow three rounds counted in vince's score. alas myire Bot yy 4 We pr1098 ow Mews vial same 14-16 group. Michelle McPherson of To rénte tock second place in the 12-19 year-old 200 metres individual medley in 2:29.52. with oon mate Sodbury Carn, ‘pf 8u bury Taare in 2 Martin Tamme of Ponte Claire had to be satisfied with his silver in the: day's closest finish as four under- 41 boys finished almost in a Ina with the 100 metres breaststroke, His dme of 1:26.64 was only .02 behind the winner. Notalle Deschamps of Toronto missed a bronze medal in the girls 14-15 year- ‘old 300 metres individual medley by a touch in 2:27.74 In another tight finish. ow for a, | no erect ia) The Herald, Wednesday, Avguat 22, 197%, Page ? ware ee - dailyherald Ladies find it hard to even find their. balls 0 ST. JOHN'S, Nid: (CP) — Women golfers from across Canada, bundled up In sweaters and colorful raln parkas, eed off Tussda eae and watched their balls pear into the thick, soupy ig that anuck in off the Atlantic Ocean and reduced visibility at the Bally Maly Golf Clu! to about 75 yards. “We'll need radar to find those balls," sald one golfer as she waited impatiently at the firat tee. The. praciice session that preceded today's opening found of the é6th national amateur and provinclal championships already had been delayed for three hours when the fog slowly lifted, ‘only to be followed by heavy Although Lynn Cooke of cade an B.C., shot an eagle on the fog-shrouded second hole, organizers were scratching thelr heads and wondering whether they would shake the inclement weather (hat has dogged thelr trail for two weeks, This week's ovent ls a 72- hole championship in which the Inclal ttle will be det after the second round, Esch province has a four- member ‘aquad aad the best three scores each day. will make tip tw final’ tte And ‘Marlene ‘Stewart Streit of Fonthill, Ont, is expected to be in the thick of things going into Saturday’ r final round. Streit, a household namie in women golf for 30 years, has won the tlile 11 times since 1951. Her last win was in Charlottetown in 1973 and the 4i-year-old mother of two was runner-up last year to Cathy Sherk, also of Fonthill, who turned pro this year. The fairly short $,690-yard, ar-72 course ia usually Putteted b strong winds and Its undulating falrwaye vide @ vatlety of lies. A 4 lle and atance is the exception and control is ea- sential at all times because golfers are faced with several holes where the green ie hidden after two strokes. Several golfers chose Streit as the favorite because she plays at Lookout Point Golf Club, which closely reaembles this one, Michale Guilbault of Dorion, Que., set a course record last year on her way “fo the junior simaleyr title in Fredericton. ‘The. ‘long-ball ther, ar sak already” qualified for next* month's - United States: Open. Stacey West of Thornhill, Ont., is another golfer wha bears watching. West, who won three junior titles before graduating to the senior ranks in 1977, is long hitter who may do well ona course with. few “trees or difficult bunkers. ( Others include Karen Mandinger of Thornhill, and velerans Betty Cole of Ed- monton, Cathy McMillan of Ponoka, Alta., Gail Moore of Coquitlam, B.C., and team- mate Holly Warne of Rich- mond, The battle for the provincial title could be a wide-open aftair, It has traditionally been dominated by Britlah Columbia, which haa won lx times in the last 1 years, and Ontario, with four wins. But lately, teanis from Nova Scotia, Manitoba and Prince Edward Island have finlahed second and with weather conditions expected to be wel and cold, anything may happen. News of your community...your country...domestic ~ and foreign affairs. Everybody, from the housewife _ to the tycoon has found the, pages'of their newspaper affecting thelr daily lives. Repartg on shifts and trends in the business and financial world. 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