Re: Intermittent Spark
The black piece with the spark plug wires comming out of it under the blue looking multi coils is the distributor cap, the bunch of bluish coils in a circle is your stator(alternator). You should have a power pack(capacitance discharge type) a black box on the right of the motor towards the bottom left corner, this is what fires a coil(close to the power pack same side) which in turn sends juice to the distributor to distribute the spark.
There should be 3 wires comming out of the top of the power pack one should be 12 volts with key on one goes to your points and the other goes to the coil. The 12 volt wire depending on the pack if it is aftermarket or not, should go to the terminal strip mounted on the same side just up from the power pack and should have alot of wires going to it, take a test light if you have one or borrow one and turn your key on and check to see if the light lights up if not we have a power problem, but you said it was intermitent sort of all the sudden died so...
Take the black wire from the power pack and follow it to were it plugs into another leading to the top of the flywheel and unhook it and put a spark tester on the coil wire to the distributor cap inbetween closest to the coil side and touch the black wire to a good ground on the engine block and see if your spark tester lights up or jumps spark depending on the type of spark tester(if you do not have one get one they are cheap or borrow one).
Now if it lights EVERY TIME we can move ahead. If not you may have a faulty power pack(not cheap btw welcome to boating

).
Get your gap to .10 not anything less, this motor has dual points and if you can't get both to .10 then set the leading one a little bit bigger for example; if you get the one to .10 and the other one goes to .11 your fine leave it but do not set it lower then .10 other wise we have what is called pre-detonation and that is not your case but will effect it all the way across the board as far as it running.
Also if you have a deep cycle battery hooked up to that motor you can kill the power pack, the electrics of this motor are real picky. I had an old ciggy lighter on my boat that rusted over time shorted and killed my pack mid run in a tournement years ago. Your starter can also be pulling to much juice to get it going if you have a weak battery or have a cranky motor that take a sec to start can kill a weak battery well enough that it can kill a power pack, that pack is designed to have atleast 10.5 or so volts anything less and you can kiss it goodbye for the most part, some get lucky others do not.
I still run the same 1970 Evinrude 60hp today still runs like the day I bought it, although I do not run the power pack anymore

but that is another lesson..
You need a book badly and they are cheap and will explain more into detail as to what little I have explained here and I am tired so I will goto bed now, let us know how it goes and what you are getting or if your confused as to what I have said and I will explain it with more detail.
If I get time tomarrow I have some old pics of my motor and will explain more as to what I have said, easier to describe with pics, also look at the facts page they have here it's good..
CHECK ALL OF YOUR CONNECTIONS!!! Make sure your wires are in good shape otherwise your going to be chasing a ghost.
Good Luck and let me know what you find out.