Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Honolulu Advertiser from Honolulu, Hawaii • 29

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
29
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A The Honolulu Advertiser FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1972 Trevino and Jacklin tied at Scotland 753 Sanders tied ivith blows lead on 18th. Nicklaus for third MUIRFIELD, Scotland (UPI) A triple bogey on the 18th hole yesterday cost Doug Sanders the halfway lead of the British Open Golf Championship, leaving Lee Trevino and Tony Jacklin tied for the top spot at 141. Trevino, the defending champion, bounced back after bogeying two of the first three holes to shoot a 36-3470 and claim his tie with Jacklin, a stroke ahead of Jack Nicklaus and five others. Then Sanders took over the lead by birdying No. 17.

A PAR ON the 18th would have left Sanders two strokes ahead of the field. But his tee shot went into a right-side trap; he blasted out into the rough; chipped beyond the green; chipped again into another trap; came out of it 10 feet past the pin; left his putt short, and eventually dropped the ball with a disgusted backhand slap for a seven. Sanders finished with an even-par 71 and a 142 total. He was one of seven players no Fischer for game 2 REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) Charging there was "a conspiracy against me," U.S. Grand Master Bobby Fischer locked himself in his hotel room yesterday and refused to come out for the second game of the $250,000 world championship chess match, forfeiting the game to Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union.

DESPITE LAST-MINUTE attempts by organizers to get him to the hall before the 6 p.m. deadline, Fischer refused to listen and took the receiver off his telephone. Aides said the unpredictable chess genius stayed in bed to protest the presence of close-circuit television cameras in the contest hall. He later allowed an old friend, Icelandic Grand Master Fridrik Olafsson, into his hotel suite. "TALK TO ME about just about everything but the match," Olafsson quoted Fischer as saying.

"I am not interested in it any more. In fact, I lost interest already six months ago." The American camp announced four hours after the game that Fischer was filing an official protest against the decision to give Spassky the second game. Fischer's spokesman said they would protest on the grounds the clock was started before the playing conditions were in proper order. They said Fischer felt the arbiter had violated the rules of the International Chess Federation (FIDE) and would ask the match committee to cancel the results of the game. Under the rules they have 12 hours to make a decision.

ICELANDIC CHESS sources quoted Fischer as saying he was not only protesting the cameras but also the fact that "there is a conspiracy against me here." The forfeiture put Fischer, 29, two games down in his attempt to wrest the championship from Spassky. See BOBBY on C-4. Col. 3 with that total, including tourney favorite Nicklaus, South African Gary Player and first-round leader Peter Tupling. Trevino opened bogie, birdie, bogie but settled down.

Birdies on the ninth and 12th pulled him even with Jacklin. The talkative Mexican said later: "I still can't fathom this course. It's tougher than people think, but I'm glad to still be in contention. "IF IT had blown a gale and rained I think there would have been a few low scores. We came prepared for gale and five inches of water and could not adjust to the heat." The defending champion took three to reach the first green; chipped in from 25 feet at the second, and saw his second shot find a trap at the third.

Nicklaus, the big man from Columbus, Ohio, who is bidding for his third straight major championship, suffered because of poor iron play while fash- Sports Editor ioning halves of 38-34 for 72. After his round Nicklaus, who already has the Masters and U.S. Open titles in his possession in his bid for the Grand Slam, said, "The course is just waiting to be beaten up. It's absolutely a piece of cake." JACKLIN, A 26-year-old Briton who won the title in 1969 and took the U.S. Open the following year, had halves of 35-37 over the course despite a triple bogey six at the 13th.

Johnny Miller, a 25-year-old from San Francisco, came home with a course record 66 on halves of 32-34. But an opening 76 also left him at 142. The highlight of his round was a double eagle at the 558-yard fifth. Nicklaus admitted over-confidence may have been his undoing. "Because of the good conditions I took it for granted I would shoot in the mid 60s.

Maybe I took too much for granted and the course was tougher than I thought," he said. Nicklaus had three bogies and three birdies in an up-and-down round. He missed from five feet at the sixth, three-putted the seventh, was short at the 10th and then failed to save his par when faced with a 10-foot putt on the 18th. He hit good 8-iron shots to line up four-footers at the 11th and 13th for birdies, and he exploded out of a trap to within seven feet at the 17th for his other birdie. Miller went out "to free-See BRITISH on C-5, Col.

1 flST hal wood UPI Photo "Grrrrrrrr," goes Lee Trevino after missing a putt in the British Open at Muirfield, Scotland. Trevino, the defending champion, shot a 70 yesterday for a share of the second-round lead. the Pants Place for rm tee I I ti I Pants 9.50 op 350 up hit 'M I MEN'S SHOP ALA MO ANA ON THE MALL I liV ill -ar mi in mm. IX DOWNTOWN FORT ST. MALL Patch-Pocket Fastback Flare Fashion flare with two front patch pockets, hip hugging contour body lines, -inch wide belt loops in sizes 28 to 38- help for the P.D.

tojiight The umpteenth annual combination Police All-Star Football Game and Dog Show gets under way at the Stadium ton'ight. And you have to admit that's a happy combination. No mention of pigs, you'll notice. If you don't like football players, there's still a chance that you'll love the dogs. And if you are an animal hater, the air 'is mighty fine at the Stadium these days.

Even the termites are enjoying it. This is the fund raising event of the year for our Police Department and if you'll turn out and donate your $1.50 for a general admission ticket, they'll be mighty pleased. "I think we net about $30,000 a year," says Wes Young of the department. "This is our only way to raise money for widows and orphans. The insurance premium for the department comes to $88,695.36.

The police officers pay the balance themselves." This Isn't exactly the Hula Bowl, but there are some pretty darned good football players who'll be out there tonight. The likes of Jim Kalili, Dana Mead," Glenn Hookano, Don Mahi, Larry Frank, Bill Kaai arid Howard Gay from University of Hawaii will be in there battling. There'll be players from Wyoming, Yale, Brig- ham Young, USC, Dartmouth and Montana, to mention a few major schools. Plus the usual number of ex-prep stars. And a few members of the Over The Hill Gang who'll faint if they have to run more than three yards.

been going a long time But it's for a fine cause and Honolulu's Finest appreciate the effort. "We have about 1300 officers, plus about 300 civilians in our department," says Capt. Peter De-Mello of the Task Force. "And as far as I can figure out this football game has been in action about 37 years maybe longer. "The first group insurance was started in 1932, so maybe it started around there.

So you can see it has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for our widows and orphans over the years." DeMello has seen the last 22 shows and he'll never forget one in particular. "I don't remember the year," he says, "but it was back in the 1950s. Little Eddie LeBaron and his University of Pacific football team came over here. "LeBaron, who later played a long time in the pro ranks, was a magician in ball-handling and he put on a terrific show. I think his team won by something like 75-0." Don't expect Howard Gay or the other quarterbacks to put on anything like that tonight.

There'll be a lot of passing, but there's no cinch that anything will hit the target. the dogs are in shape, at least The football players don't get a chance for too much practice before the game, but that can't be said of the dogs. There are 16 members in the HPD's Canine Corps and seven of these will put on a show to remember during a 15-minute half-time display. These mostly German shepherds, have been in training for years and the things they can do in the way of criminal apprehension, holding a suspect at bay, crawling clear across a field on their bellies and leaping at a command are amazing at least to an average football fan. If the football teams were that well trained, there wouldn't be any 300 -pound linemen, they could play the whole game without a time out.

And the score would be either 0-0 or 90-90. In any event, you'll get a lot of entertainment for your buck and a half at the Stadium tonight. And the P.D. thanks you. It.

down go Islanders 12-8 again, ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Mike McCormick's bid for a fourth straight victory ended early last night as the heavy-hitting Albuquerque Dukes pounded him and three successors for a freewheeling 12-8 victory over the Hawaii Islanders at the Albuquerque Sports Stadium. McCormick, now 8-6, was chased in the fourth inning with the Dukes building a 7-4 lead. They tallied another four runs off reliever Bob Chlupsa in the sixth and that sealed Hawaii's third straight loss. ALBUQUERQUE starter Geoff Zahn didn't have an easy time of it, either, in notching his fourth win against a single loss especially when Ivan Murrell stepped to the plate.

Murrell contributed five runs batted in to the Islander -cause, the first three coming on his seventh homer of the season in the fourth inning. He singled for another two runs offknuc-kleballing reliever Charlie Hough in the seventh. Tom Paciorek's two-run homer, his 21st of the year, was the key hit as the Dukes wrapped up the game with four tallies in the sixth. Ron Cey's 10th homer of the year tallied two runs in the fourth that chased McCormick to an early shower. THE MOST productive Duke batter of all was Paul Ray Powell, who drove in four runs with a sacrifice fly and two timely singles.

And Dave Lopes had a perfect 4-for-4 as leadoff, lacing out a pair of doubles, scoring four runs and batting in a fifth. The Islanders scored their first run of the night in the See DOWN on C-4, Col. 2 CORDUROY 9.00 100 Polyester 0 An Knit 1 o.OO INNSBRUCK FLARE Unique saddle bag pockets and side panels. low riaing. Most wanted LEEN KNITS The "comfort" jean in Lee Double knit Flared, dress-jean 1 5 00 BUSH PANTS Multi-pockets flapped front and back.

Tunnel belt loops in corduroy 2,00 COME ON DOWN TO THE RITZ PANTS YOU'LL LIKE IT! LEE LEEN FLARES I'm "the pants everybody knows" with Lee's 1 It greaisiyieanaiiL.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Honolulu Advertiser
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Honolulu Advertiser Archive

Pages Available:
2,262,631
Years Available:
1856-2010