Page B
THE CHINA MAIL FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1960.
COUNTY CRICKET
Imperial Cricket Conference opens Oakman, Suttle
Laws tightened on time-wasters and intimidators
London, July 14.
The question of throwing, discussed by the Imperial Cricket Conference here today for an hour and a half, was not resolved and discussion of it will be resumed tomorrow.
·
Points which were settled during today's five and a half hours meeting were time- After wasting, intimidation and drag. these matters had been disposed of, the last hour and a half was devoted to the discussion of throwing.
out in Champion
Colony Ladies' Singles Bowls
Mr S. C. Griffith, Assistant Secretary of the MCC said to- night that the Conference had accepted the MCC's experimental low on time-wasting, with amendment.
one
Wording changed
The present wording says that in the event of a bowler taking an unnecessarily long time to bowl an over, the umpire at the bowler's end shall caution the The first upset in this year's bowler and inform the captain Colony Ladies' Open of the fielding side that he has Singles lawn bowls cham-done so.
If this proves ineffective, he
pionship was registered should request the captain of the yesterday at the Police Belding side to take the bowler Recreation Club when Mrs off at the end of the over, P. Cosgrove of Kowling Bowling Green Club
eliminate the current champion Mrs Irene Souza of Craigengower by 21-13 after 19 heads in a first round match.
By the amendment, the word 'direct' is to be substi- tuted for *request' thus lightening up the law. The wording of the law
от
1971-
short-pitched bowling was also similarly tightened. An pire; if necessary, shall direct a captain to take a bawler off, in- stead of requesting him to do so.
On drag
Mrs Scuza made am impres- sive start by scoring a two and a three to lead 5-0 after the first two heads to lead 5-0.
On drag, a resolution was Mrs Cosgrove, however, rea- liated with a single, two threes passed recommending the mem-
ber countries
to
TWO BRITISH OLYMPIC HÖPES
Italy take 2-0
Davis Cup lead over Britain
Italy
London, July 14. took a confident sten Davis towards reaching the Cup European Zone final for the fifth time in six years when they gained a 2-0 lead over Britain here today,
On the well-wom turt of Wimbledon's No. 1 court, chunky Nicola Fietrangeli gave Italy great start to the semi-final en- counter by beating Bobby Wil- son 6-4, 6-3, 4-6, 7-5,
Massive Orlando Sirola pross- considered home the advantage with a 9-7, 7-5, 1-6, 2-6, 6-4 win over Mike Davies,
and another s'gle on the next four heads to ead 8-5. Play-adopting the front foot principle ing consistenly for the rest of as an experiment to start not the match, she maintained her before September 1982. lead up to the end.
After the first two heads, Mrs Souza's game fell to pieces when she repeatedly twisted her deliveries, especially on the backhand.
Following are the results of other matches played yester- day.
*
re-
The MCC proposed, and the Conference accepted, draft of the rules dealing with the appointment of Test um- pires.
The major differences are that the captain and manager of a touring team shall receive the
Both countries are relying on a two-man tean for the three. day the, the winners of which will meet the victors of the Sweden-France match, begins tomorrow in Banslad.- Reuter.
which
urs of the umpires appointed Win for Spanish
to the Test panel by the home authorities as soon as they arrive in the country, and that they shall also be given longer notice than at present of the umpires to stand in each parti-
Ladies' Open Singles Mrs M. M. Rozarto lost to Mrs I. Silva 15-21; Mra E. Scatt beat Mrs M. Poynton 21-3. Mrs M. Hetherington cular Test.
soccer XI
S
Santiago, July 14. The Spanish national soccer team beat Chilean Selection The subject of neutral um-4-0 in a match played here to- Mrs Ppires was not discussed today, day to help earthquake victims. Cosgrove 18-21; Mrs J. Liddell-China Mail Special.
lost to Mrs E. Clayton. 6-22, Souza lost to Mrs J.
beat Mrs M. Ma 18-15.
Men's Open Pairs
E.
C.
W. Chambers and A. Elliott (KDC) beat A. Camp- bell and A. Banks (KDC) 31-10, G. Jeffries and V. C. Bond (KBGC) lost to J. Tang and J. S. Landolt (KCC) 12-28. A. D. Duffy and W. Williamson (KBGC) lost to T. V. Reynolds, and P. B. Gardiner (HKFC) 17-23; W. M. David- son and R. S. Gourlay (KDC) lost to S. Y. Doe and W. Hong W. Sling (KCC) 18-21; P. Colier and F. Planck (HKFC) beat McCaffrey arid C. McLennan (71) 19-18;. B.
beat C. Mcintosh and M. S. McKay (KDC) 31-17.
-Reuter..
Spain's Manzaneque
wins Tour De
France 18th stage
BRITAIN OUT OF TEAM EVENT
Thonon Les Bains, July 14.-
Douglass and N. Fraser (TC) Spain's Fernando Manzaneque won the 18th stage of the Tour De France cycling race between Aix Les Bains and Thonon Les Bains today. Manzaneque covered the 215 now left with two kilometres in 6 hours 28 minutes been eliminated from the team
(including 10. seconda
one event-AFP.
Jean
$250,000 still
U.S.
needed by U.S. Olympic team
team to
minute winning bonus).
Second was Fratice's
Graczyk in 6 hours 41 minutes
men, has
37 seconds (including 30 seconde Neale Fraser in
bonus for second place).
the semi-finals
F
London, July 14. Now Zealand's John Mac Donald beat France's Herve Clement, 6-4, 7-5 in the quarter-
Busy making notes at the Renfrew Airport weather station, Glazgow, in the left photo here is meteorologist Crawford Fairbrother, 23. In five weeks' time, Crawford will have other preoccupations trying to beat the rest of the world's stars at the Olympic Games high jump contest in Rome,
Crawford, who set the British national record of 6 ti 83î ins for the high jump last October in Rome, is 6 ft 2 iny tall, and the only Briton so far to reach the Olympia quali- fying standard in the event.
Man at work in the right picture (treating a rating injured at the Royal Tournament) La Surgeon-Lichtenant John Derek Wrighton, better known as the man who won the Euro- pean 400 metres title for Britain two years ago in Stockholm, and is now Britain's best hope
for the event in Home.
Wrighton, 27 (best time 46.3 seconds) is. now doing National Service and intends to reifre from athletics after Rome, win or loss.--London Express Photo.
Moore will be
defending title against "Two-in-One' challenger on Aug. 8-
Toronto, July 14,
knock up 181 for Sussex
London, July 14.
Alan Oakman and Ken Suttle, the Sussex second-wicket pair kit up 181 in just under 180 minutes against Kent at Hastings today to maintain the run of high-scoring partnerships in this week's English County Cricket Championship matches. Oakman lost fellow-opener Les Lenham without a run on the board, but he and Suttle laid a very solid foundation to the Sussex innings, which went a long way to giving them bonus points and a first innings lead of three for the loss of only two wickets by the close.
Suttle was undefeated with 224 to lead by 26 on first in- 112-including 13 fours-at the pinga and Ken Higgs, with five close having reached his century for 48, helped hustle Derbyshire out for 134 in their second in 210 minutes.
Innings
Oakman reached 50 out of 91 | in 95 minutes and fooiced set for his first century of the season when he was caught at 97, after 180 minutes batting during which he hit 13 fours.
York's bad day
Yorkshire, last year's cham- plans and current leaders of
Disastrous start
Lanosabire, olasing 108 for
a win, began their second Innings disastrously, losing Jack Dyson before a run WAS sooked, and were thres for one at the close.
England and Gloucestershire
the Championship Table, had offspinner David Allen took four bad day at Colchester for 29 for the Players against where Esex medium-pace the Gentlemen at Lord's and, bowler Boy Ralph (four for with England fast bowlers Brian Statham (Lancashire) and Alan 26) and Ken Preston (four Moss (Middlesex), and Derby- for 38) shot them out for 185. shire's Les Jackson, grabbing Essex had made 29 for one in two wickets aplece, the Gentle their second innings by the close men were all out for 108. The to lead by 135.
Players passed this total for the loss of one wicket to be 125 for one at the close.
Nottinghamshireé opener Geof Millman hit a fine 105, made in 290 minutes and including 15 fours and one five, against Warwickshire at Coventry 10- day. He also figured in a second wicket partnership of 125 with Maurice Hill, who scored 65.
Dennis Springall hit an un- beaten 52 to enable Notting- hamshire skipper Reg Simpson to declare at 291 for sk,
Warwickshire lost one wicket in scoring 17 by the close. They were three runs behind with nine wickets left..
Ken Lancashire's
Grieves turned his overnight 53 into 102 before departing in the match
at
When Archie Moore enters the Varsity Stadium ring here on August 8 he
will be defending his world's light heavyweight championship: title against Derbyshire against two German fighters.
Archie will see just one and doesn't expect the lay off contender
chopper for two years light
28-year-old Erich to make him any less ready.
Second disappointment is this heavyweight champion of training camp site. The comp Europe. The second boxer will Is set on the paved parking lot be there only in influence-Max of a Toronto shopping plaza. Schmeling, las, German to Hold "A crens," Irwin" calls 14 a major world boxing crown.
"for publicity."
Predicts.
Schmeling was heavyweight champion and one of the few men to defeat Joe Louis.
This new German contend- er, ranked second among the world's light heavies, studied Schmeling's career and dreams of repeating it. Schoupper predicts he will knock out Moore in the
Erich would prefer his camp to be in the country, amid hills and forests and good air." --AP
HENRY COOPER
TO FIGHT
seventh round and win the title JOE ERSKINE
Moore has held since 1952.
Schoeppner has been boxing 13 years, starting while still a high school student in Germany. He fought 279 amateur bouts throughout Europe, and Jost only 15.
Since turning professional in early 1956, Schoeppner has been undefeated. He won 12 by decision, 16 by knockout, with three draws.
London, July 14.
Henry Cooper must defend his British heavyweight boxing title against former champion, Joe Erskine (Wales) by Decem- ber 31, the British Boxing Board of Control announced today.
If Cooper is still Empire cham-
pion by that date, the second
014
Trafford, Lancashire reached
Colin Wesley stops
South Africans'
batting
collapse
Leicester, July 14.
Colin Wesley, the diminutive left-hander from
Scores
Close of play socires in today's cricket matches were:
At the Oral; Surrey versus Combined Services. No play today.
At Southampton: Hampshire versus Warvestershire. No play today.
At Hastings: Kent 294. Sussex 252 for two (A. Oakman 97, K. Suttle, 112 not out).
At Lord's Gentlemen 108. Players 125 for one (J. Edrich 45 not out, W. Russell 40 not out).
Al Lelgester: Leicestershire 287 for three declared and two for no wicket. South Africans
235 (C, Wesley 90).
At Colchester: Essex 242 for nine declared (D. Insolė 69, M. Beat 57 not out, R. Illingworth five for 77) and 28 for one. Yorkshire 195 (R. Elingworth 40):
Af Coventry: Warwickshire 271-kid. 17 för offe. Nottingham. shire 291 Lex dealed (G Millman 105, J: Springall 52 Tact but
At Gloucester, Northampton- shire 213 and 181 for two (B. Reynolds 53, P. Arnold 61 not out). Gloucestershire 141.
At Bath Somervet 401 for
three declared. Glamorgan 247 (W. G. Davies 64), and 13 for
one,
Durban, stopped the South African cricketers' first innings collapse here today against Leices
At Old Trafford; Derbyshire tershire. Last out after coming in eighth, he 198 and 134 (G. Dawkes 47). helped take the score to within. 52 of the Lancashire 22 (K. Grieves 102, R. Colly 40, T. Eyre four for county's overnight declaration at 287 for three. 140, and three for one,Reu-
He
was pulling heartily wickets with poor strokes, and when caught by Harold Bird Peter Carlstein's dismissal' at 22 off John Savage. His innings was a saccial blow after he had had lasted two hours ten altacked the bowling brightly. - minutes, with ten fours.
In their second innings Leice- Earlier, Leicestershire's bow-stershire scored two runs with- lers had followed up their out loss before the close.
title will also be at stake. The batsmen's triumph on the first Willi Schoeppner lost his Board added that the date of the day by causing havoc on a rain- German light heavyweight title contest may be extended at affected pitch. their discretion. to the young Schoeppner in February, 1851, and the Euro-
CrOwnL penin
the following
December.
First away fight
Schepper's first
professional fight outside Germany.
The two have met twice be-
fore for the British title. Erskine won on points in September, 1957, but Cooper won last year, the referee stopping the fight in
the 12th round-Reuter.
"
Fighting in forden land Draw for unnerves neither Schoephner nor his manager, Walter Irwin
But two things about the! Canadian bout disappointed the German challenger.
First was the three-week post-
Incident
Scoreboard
FIRST INNINGS Leicestershire: 287 for three declared.
esope after tea, eight wickets Before Wesley engineered the
South African went. The last involved Geoff D. J. McGlew b Broughton $5 Griffin in an incident where Robin Gandner, after malding
T. L. Goddard e Broughton
b Van Geloven
good catch just inside the AJ. Pithey e Van Gelovan boundary, thought he bad stepped over the line. It was R. A. McLean & Boughton
8
Pratt
17
3
Canada-U.Snly after Gardner hext spoiden b Fratt
Davis Cup match
Gastone. Nencini kept the yellow jersey of overall leader- ship. He was still in the lead New York, July 14.
with a 4 mintric
3 seconds The United States Olympic | advantage over his countryman
Committee needs another Graziano Battisüri, $250,000 to send a complete Britain's Brian Robinson with finals of the Essex Tennis ponement of the title fight re
Quebec, July 14.. the Rome Olymple a total of 99 hours 45 minutes Championships at Frinton toquested by Moore, who felt the opening singles matches of the Today's draw for Friday's two Games, Mr Art Lentz, publi- 47 seconds was 26 hours, 53 day.
couldn't leave his San Diego elty director of the committee minutes and 23 seconds behind
home where Mrs Moore is Davis Cup He between
ex adiallied today.
Nencini. Tom Simpson Was Australia's Naute Fraser pecting their third child..
Canada and the United States Lentz wald that this situation 29th, eight minutes and 40 Wimbledon champion, qualined Schoeppner says he was ready pitted Canada's Bob Bedard was mainly due to the fact that seconds behind Robinson. for the semi-finals when he for the fight when his boat against Bernard Bertzen, and numerous private people and Following today's retirement defeated New Zorland's Roy docked in June. But he stays Don Fontana against Barry societies who financed the Pan- of Vic Sutton the British team, Clarice 6-3, 7-5,—AFP,
In condition all the year round, | Mackay --AP.
American Games in Chicago
1last year and the Winter
Olymple Games at the beginning TAE GAMBOLS
of this year were under the
false impression that their funds would be used by the Rome Olympics. -
Our aim," Mr Lantz said, was to gather some $1,500,000 to cover the expenses involved in
the Pan-American,
Olymplo. and ↑ Rome Games by the
athletes,"
Winder
Olympic
American
fr Lentz added that the Pan- American Games.and the Winter Olympics cost the commutes "Bome: $1,000,000
"In any case" he said, "the committee expects to collect the necessary funds and, no. Ameri- can athlete will have to-te- nounce the trip to Rome because of lack of radiBY MATP.
I CAN'T THINK WHAT,
WAS-I HAD TO TELL YOU
SHOULD MAKE A NOTE
Barre
AND THEN YOU CAN
READ IT. COME HO
THATS AN
to his captain, Willie Watson, J. P. Fellows-Smith c sub that umpire T. W. Spencer rubed Griffin 'out,
Y.
b Savage F. R. Carlstein b Kirby
Earlier, Springbok captain C. A. Duckworth e Pratt b Jackle McGlew resisted for 150 Savage minutes in making 35, but had C. Wesley Bird b Savage when he was finally bowled by already been given a "life" Griffin c Gardner b
Kirby Peter Broughto
The South Africans toiled to 190 in just over, three hojtes on z pitch whose variable pace confused them.
Some batsmen lost their
that you spekt
J. Fothecary o Cromack A. H. McKinnon not out
Extrak
Total
"
ter.
Benefit match for Brian Statham
Manchester, July 14, Subject to the approval, of, the Australian Board of Central, Langshire will allocate and of their two'matches 'with the Australian cricket tourists next summer, as a benefit for Brian Statham, the England fast bowler.
Mr Geofrey Howard, the Lan-
21 cashire Secretary, said that the
22 match would be played on July
2
3 and 4 at Old Trafford A
Statham made, his debut for Lancashire in 1850 and in 10
90 years has won all the honours
the game has to
6
offer
He has toured every cricketing
16 country in the world and at the
moment needs three more wie- 7. kéta to join the Hiust-lous band Ps of Lancashire Bowlers who have 285 taken 1,000 or more wicketam
China Mall Special
Wicketfails: 1-15, 2-45, 3–58; 4-76, 6-93, 0-109, 7-115, 8-125, 0-203; 10-234.
Bowllor Analyıda
Broughton
Prait
Ván Geloven
Savage
Kirby
Cromack
12 2 417
178 26
318243 25-
31.2 1870
281183:
SECOND INNINGS
M. R. Hallam not out M-D Bird not cont
Extras
World record
Faid that
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