om | resatenapewrrrs deere re bt ee eh ee alist This unusual camera shot shows the infield lakes and shrubbery in the background | at Fort Erie race track, with | 'Country Guy', owned by Con- ny Smythe of Toronto and rid- | den by Wayne Krohn, winning | the sixth race, yesterday's feature race at Fort Erie, on the turf. Gay Lothario was sec- ond and Marcus Antonius was third. The winner's time was ~ UNUSUAL CAMERA SHOT SHOWS BEAUTY OF FORT ERIE TRACK 1.45:1. This pieture was taken from the roof of the grand- y stand and shows the scenic beauty of the infield area. --(CP Wirephoto) '(12-14). The pesky Athletics) By JIM BECKER Associated Press Sports Writer Joy was unrestrained in Balti- more when the Orioles swept five straight American League games from the mighty New York Yankees last weekend. "If we played like that all the time, we'd win the pennant," said general manager Lee Mac- Phail. The Orioles don't play like that all the time and they are sixth. The lowly Washington Sena- tors clipped the Orioles 3-2 Thursday night for the third time in. four games since the Yankee sweep, . In the only other league game, Chicago White Sox _ widened their fourth-place lead to two games. over Detroit Tigers by beating the Tigers 5-4. The Yankees, whose charices of, blowing the pennant are really taken seriously only by the second place Minnesota Twins and third-spot Los An- geles Angels, open the final month's drive in the league race by entertaining Kansas City Athletics tonight. The Yankees, says New York manager Ralph Houk, are putting pressure on. the contend- ers in their own fashion. "The closer they get to us, the tougher it gest on them." Yankee ace Whitey Ford | (18-7) will go against Ed Rakow Syh5 tig dddedeeseeetesvebssewrds By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' BET REAEARSR ™ the three top softball teams of ~= liant wins in last night's action. ™ sational 2-1 victory over the Hamilton Fotheringhams, last | * night at the CNE, to win the annual Bulova Watch tourna- | "champions and they also knocke «Senior "A"' playoffs. -& venge with.a great team effort a == Anderson, Brent Oldfield, 'Red' ~ ment, Last 'year, Fotheringhams were the Ex. tournament | OSHAWA TEAMS had a "really, really good night" with the city all chalking up bril- Oshawa Tony's won a sen- | | d off Oshawa Tony's in OASA | Last night, the Tony's got sweet re- nd some star roles by "Andy" ' McDermaid and Bob Booth. *-For their triumph, the Tony's team will each sport a hand- | eaome gold wristwatch, a sui table souvenir to remember By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer Author-pitcher Jim Brosnan has just about finished his re- search for another literary effort. An appropriate title might be "Whew!" Brosnan got a first-hand look Thursday night when he trudged out of the bullpen in the ninth inning and preserved a 5-4 win for Cincinnati Reds over the league-leading Los Angeles Dodgers. The triumph kept the Reds within range of the Dodg- ers in the National League race. The third-place Reds led 5-0 "their fine play in this year's CNE softball classic. behind Jim O'Toole's five-hitter HERE AT HOME, Oshawa McLean's Esso evened up when the Dodgers rallied in the ninth, Three runs were in, one their series with Peterborough "Georgies" but had to stage a story-book finish to do it. Gary Copeland hit a homer early in the game and at one stage, behind Meulemeester's fine hurling, McLeans were out in front 4-0. But the Liftlock City ~ boys battled back to knot the count as they finally solved Mel's left-handed slants. Then with it all tied up, in the bottom of the 9th, Gary. Copeland smashed another homer for a two-run margin. A long outfield fly ball for a sacrifice = would have been good enough, as it happened, since Bob Keenan had just previously smacked a triple--with only one McLean's also won the toss for the third and deciding out. game, which will be played here in Oshawa, this Saturday night, and should prove the sports attraction of the week-end. HEFFERING'S Imperials also tied up their series last night with a clean-cut 4-0 victory over Belleville Joyce Realty, at the Belleville Fair Grounds. Right from the opening pitch, © Heffering's were "out to win" and came up with a solid, all- round performance. Reg. Hickey's fine three-hit pitching was the big factor and he pe to be just that good, too, because veteran Pat Maracle, in a little distress with an aching tooth, still only gave the Oshawa boys four hits--Larry Batherson * having two of these. In. this ga » of their chances with some a RBI blows. Belleville's biggest was on hand and there was a sees either. A repeat performance third game and' the boys figure verte me Heffering's made the most lert base-running and timely softball crowd of the season good number of Oshawa fans in the stand, too. Belleville won the toss and the third and deciding game will be played there on Tuesday night. It will be just as tough, but Hefefring's played errorless ball in the field last night and didn't make any mistakes anywhere else will be necessary to win the they can turn the trick. BRIGHT BITS:--Oshawa Sunnyside Park Pee-Wees open eeeee *% ball... SUNNYSIDE will play La day evening, same time, 5.45 0' lighaighs Juvenile "A" champions, here 7 kefield back at home, on Tues- clock. . . . OSHAWA Genosha Aces open their Ontario quarter-finals against the Toronto at Alexandra Park tomorrow » afternoon at four o'clock. : . . TONIGHT, at 5.45 o'clock, down © in Cobourg, Oshawa Connaught Park takes on Peterborough *" Bantams, in the third game of = tied and Connaught has to win "alive". heir series. The first one was = - . ~ * a > Suns Still S hine Best On The Road = By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Atlanta Crackers were fight- = the longest odds in the In- = . serene Maren : «It's tough playing the league- S Weading Jacksonville Suns under any conditions, But when you "Mave to play them when the «» Suns are on the road, it's really ed. <The Crackers made a fight of - pushing the game to 11 in- Pa Thursday night, but the ~ were too Ione. The Suns ~E 3-2 on a disputed triple ' pushed their won-lost road record to 49-17 for the season. "The loss eliminated the Crack- ers from the pennant race but didn't disturb their one-game lead over Columbus Jets in the struggle for fourth place, the last playoff spot. Columbus lost $5 to Richmond Virginians. "Toronto Maple Leafs outlasted Syracuse Chiefs 5-4 in 10 innings 'and Rochester Red 'Wings edged Buffalo Bisons 9-8. WIN IN 11TH Jacksonville won in the 11th frame on Vic Davalillo's triple Tony Martinez' sacrifice fiy. jammed in seven runs in the seventh inning in handing Buffalo its fourth straight loss. Five walks, a hit batter, an error, Pete Ward's two-run homer and a two-run jdouble by Ossie Virgil were the Contributing factors:in the big inning. ' _ Ted Kazanski's double drove in Fred Green for Toronto's winning run in the 10th inning against Syracuse. The Leafs forced it into overtime on Len Gabrielsen's two-run homer in the ninth. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lima, Peru -- Mauro Mina, 173%, Peru, knocked out Nor- mal Letcher, 171%, Santa Ana Calif. 2. - Miami, Fla, -- Willie James. 150, Greenyille, Ga., outpointed | Andy Mayfield, 158, Miami, 8. ' tonight, in order to pa, |man was out and the bases | were loaded when Brosnan, who jhas written stories entitled The |Long Season and The Pennant |Race, got the call. | Duke Snider. was the first jbatter against the 33-year-old |reliet specialist. He was called jout on strikes. Maury Wills then |beat out a hit, making it 54 jand leaving the bases loaded. i Gilliam stepped up, worked the count to 3-2, then lifted a soft fly to centre field. "Whew!" |WINS 13 STRAIGHT | The vicotry left the Reds 54% |games behind the Dodgers, who are 2% in front of the second- place San Francisco Giants: The Giants closed ground as Jack Sanford posted his 13th | straight victory with a 3-2 deci- \sion over Milwaukee Braves on ; homers by Willie Mays, Orlando |Cepeda and Jim Davenport. | While the pennant race was grabbing the spotlight, some other noteworthy achievements were recorded: Mays' homer was No. 40 of the season, marking the fourth time in his career that he has reached the 40-mark and start- ing veteran hurler Warren Spahn down to his first August defeat in three years. Pittsburgh Pirates clipped Chicago Cubs 5-3 and again had to call on relief ace Elroy Face. He responded with his 21st save of the year. Chicago second baseman Ken Hubbs~ played errorless ball for the 72nd game --one game short of . Bobby Doerr's record. Philadelphia Phillies used Don Demeter's grand - slam h omer and a rum-scoring single by Roy Sievers for five runs in the eighth inning to beat New York Mets 8-7. The Mets used five pitchers in the inning and tied a major league record. The Reds pounced on Dodger starter Stan Williams (12-9) for four runs in the first inning on run-producing singles by Frank Robinson and Gordy Coleman, an error on Coleman's hii by Willie Davis that enabled Robin- son to score and a wild pitch. DRIVES IN WINNER Jerry Lynch's double drove in the run. that proved to be decisive in the fifth.. When O'Toole (14-13) faltered, Bill Henry came on and then Bros- Student Coaches Ready To Preach' GUELPH (CP) -- A host of athletic missionaries leave here Saturday to spread the gospel their Eastern Ontario zone finals, in Lakefield, on Saturday jof track and field and physical at 5.45 p.m. Word is out that the Lakefield team is one of their best in recent years, where they have excellent in minor soft- fitness to every section of Can- ada. They are 173 student-coaches jfrom St. John's, Nfld., to Na- naimo, B.C, and almost every |point in . between. "They have |been attending the Royal Cana- jdian Legion's one-week national |coaches clinic, Any doubts that they might jnow leave with bursting zeal jhave been dispelled in the final sessions of the clinic. Attend- jance, instead of waning under jthe demands of a 12-hour work- ling day, has steadily increased. Says Geoffrey Dyson, urbane and' articulate British athletics jcoach who has directed the cli- jnic: 'Enthusiasm is the essen- tial ingredient and I've been most impressed with the atti- tude of the students here." The program has been a combination of lecture - room theory and on-the-track train- ing. MUSCLES ACHE Students who arrived without heeding a warning to 'get in shape" soon found their muscles aching from practical demon-- strations of the javelin, ham- mer- throw, hurdles, springs, pole vault, discus, middle-dis- |tance running, broad jump and | shot put. All have required ac- tual participation by the stu- dents. Their average working . day began with an 8:45 a.m. Jecture |and ended with another talk at |7:15 p.m. Most of the hours be- jtween were spent on the field. | Asked in an interview about |the quality of Canadian track and field, Dyson said he has YOUNGER NATION From 1940 to 1960, the num- f y |_ Hiroshima, Japan -- Piero)ber of people under 20 years of 'Gown the first-ase line and!Rollo, 122%, Italy, outpointed|age in 'the United States grew aes Sakamoto, 122%, Japan, 10. mabout one-third to about fro \40 per cetit of the population. been here too short a time to venture a full opinion. "Tt can be improved here, just as it can anywhere, by in- terest and enthusiasm first of all. Then there must be sound physical fitness, Athletes, to succeed, have to be tough and hard. "They must then have good coaches with a sound knowledge of physical fitness and the lat- est techniques. This, of course, is what We are endeavoring to help here at the clinic." . Dyson reiterated his belief in the need for winter training fa- cilities. They are "absoluteiy es- sental," he said. Ukrainians Hold First Golf Event | The Oshawa and District Ukrainian Professional and | Business Men's Association held jits first annual golf tournament | on. Wednesday, at the Bowman- ville Southview Club. A total of 32 golfers competed and a banquet was held in the evening at the Genosha Hotel, follows: Ist, Flight: 1st. Low Gross -- Annual Trophy --Joe Ristich; 2nd. Low Gross -- Al. Weather- head and Low Net -- Father J. C. Pereyma. 2nd. Flight: 1st. Low Gross. -- John Chasczewski;- 2nd. Low Gross -- Alex Smykaluk and Low Net -- Alex Kuch. 3rd. Flight: 1st. Low Gross -- John Muzik; 2nd. Low Gross -- Dr. Peter Zakarow and Low Net -- Joe Dzugan. Prizes were also awarded to Jake Maiachowski, Zen Wareny- cia, John Healey, Sherry Shelen- koff, Steve Melch, George Boy- chyn, Zen Salmers, George Semenuik, George Zakarow, Don Sadoway and Harry Pele- shok. where prizes were awarded as|2 SPORTS MENU Brosnan Saves Game As Reds Nip Angels : nan, who, has not allowed ani earned run in his last 10 appear- ances. Mays and Cepeda hammered consecutive homers in the first inning. Davenport connected in the sixth for the eventual game- winner over Spahn (14-12), who had won six battles in a row. Sanford (194) had a_ one- hitter until the seventh frame, }when Frank Bolling and Spahn hit back-to-back homers. Before the game was over the Giants had used five relievers -- Bob Bolin, Billy O'Dell, Stu Miller, Mike McCormick and Don Larsen. Donn Clendenon paced the Pirates with a homer and two doubles, driving in four runs |and providing Al McBean (14-8) with a big lead. McBean had allowed only two singles uniil the eighth inning, when the Cubs struck for two runs, bring- ing on Diomedes Olivo and then Face, Don Cardwell (6-14) took the loss. The Phillies' uprising tagged Robert G. Miller. (2-2) with the defeat while giving the triumph to Jack Baldschun (8-4). Sievers also homered for the Phils, as did Clay Dalrymple and John Callison. Jim Hickman con- nected for the Mets. 'Flash Song' Has A Winning Tune TORONTO (CP) -- Old Wood- |bine has been a happy hunting ground for the five - year-old gelded trotter, Flash Song, not one of the big horses around the track but a star in its own class. The son of Henry Song-Charity Hanover, owned by Viola and Alan Walker of Owen Sound, and driven by Alan, raced its seventh straight in-the-money heat before 5,646 Thursday night winning the featured sixth race, a B-trot. Since arriving at Old Wood- bine in mid-July Flash Song has shown a record of three thirds in addition to the four wins in its seven starts. Thursday night he withstood the flaming finish of Canadian intrusion, owned by K .E. Mackinnon, also of Owen Sound with Bill Wellwood driving. {- On Senators Clip Oriole Wings beat the Yanks in three of five games -back of New York, go against the Red Sox at Boston, with Dick Stigman (9-3) facing Bill Monbouquette (11-12). TRAIL BY THREE Los Angeles Angels, only three games back of the Yan- kees, meet Washington in a doubleheader, with Ted Bows- field (8-7) of Penticton, B.C., and Don Lee (11-9) opposing Clauce Osteen (7-10) and Steve Hamilton (3-5). The Angels invade Yankee Stadium for a four-gam* set beginning with a doubleheader Monday. : ot Robin Roberts, with the second-best earned run average in the league and a 9-6 retord, goes for Baltimore against Dick Donovan (17-7) and Cleveland Indians tonight and John Buz- hardt. (7-10) is scheduled to work for the White Sox against Jim -Bunning (14-8) of Detroit. -Dave Stenhouse threw a nine- hitter for the Senators Thursday night. Three straight hits with two men out accounted for two Washington runs in the first inning and Don Lock added the eventual winner: with a home run in the second. Russ Snyder \tripled home both Baltimore runs ik the third frame. Al Smith hammered a two- recent games. The Twins, two| ~ CRASH !--And 'Bang' Too! jrun homer in the eighth inning |for the White Sox, who added Winnipeg Blue Bomber Roger Hagberg runs head-long™into John Childress (71) and Lov- jan unearned run in the ninth lon pitcher Terry Fox's error, jfor the winning margin. j A Detroit rally fell one run] Short in the ninth. Turk Lown,!| who pitched to only two batters| in relief, got the victory. Brampton Will Meet Brooklin In OLA Final | PORT CREDIT, Ont. (CP)-- Brampton Ramblers Thursday night won their best-of-seven semi-final series against Port Credit Sailors, downing the Sail- ors 6-5 in Ontario Lacrosse As- sociation Senior action and tak- ing the series 4-2 in games. Brampton will open a best- of seven Eastern, Canada final against Brooklin Hillcrests here Saturday' night. Bert Naylor fired a shot in the final two minutes of the game that netminder Dave Rus- sell managed to stop but the ball trickled through his legs to produce the winning goal. Naylor scored three goals and Gord Thompson scored two for Ramblers. Port Credit scorers were George Kapasky, Florrie Tom- chisen, Ken Crawford, Brian Ahearn and Dave Hall. ell Coleman (22) of Calgary Stampeders, in last "iight's game in Winnipeg, where Blue Bombers whipped the Stamps 26-1 in their Western Football Conference game. Hagberg's | power was typical of the Blue Bomber offense, which ran up 166 ground yards in the game, as compared with 70 for Cal- gary. --(CP Wirephoto) Winnipeg Bombers Blast Stampeders WINNIPEG (CP)--Unable to get untracked in any depart- ment, Calgary Stampeders dropped a 26-1 Western Football Conference game to league- leading Winnipeg Blue Bombers Thursday night and remained deep in the conference cellar. The win was Bombers third in their first four games and leaves them a single: point in front of Saskatchewan Rough- riders in the standings with six points. Tied a point behind Saskatch- ewan with two wins each are British Columbia Lions and Edmonton Eskimos. Stam- peders have managed only one win and a tie in six games. Winnipeg held a 1-0 lead after the first quarter, then lea in front 22-0 at the half. After three quarters they led 23-1, Calgary getting its lone point on a- single by defensive half and punter Walt Weaver when Bombers' Jack Delveaux con- ceded a punt into the end zone. Delveaux scored two points, inglés in each the first and LONDON HAS DIRTY WATER LONDON, Ont. (CP)-- About 60 motor boats | from Ontario and the United States have accepted the Thames Boat Club's invitation to its annual regatta Monday and the hosts are fretting. The River Thames, winding through this city, has blos- somed with detergent scum and algae for the occasion. Islands of muck, fungus and dead fish have clogged the re- gatta course and the boat club's bay. Kenneth Wilkes, the club's fleet captain has put his men on the alert tonight, with bolts of cheese cloth in hand, the Thames Boat Club is going scum fishing. Men stationed on shore and others in a boat will skim the river with a cheesecloth net. Said Wilkes, wearily: "We expect to haul tons of it away." BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | American League | WL Pct. GBL 78 51 .578 | 76 59 .563 2 74 59 556 3 69 65 515 8% 67 67 .500 10% 66 66 .500 10% 65 70 .481 13 62 71 .466 15 Kansas City 61 73 .455 1614 Washington 52 83 .455 26 ~ Thursday's Results Washington 3 Baltimore 2 Chicago 5 Detroit 4 : Probable Pitchers Today Los Angeles Bowsfield 8-7 and Lee 11-9) at Washington (Osteen 7-10 and Hamiltop 3-5) N 4 New York | Minnesota Los Angeles | Chicago Baltimore Detroit Cleveland Boston Baltimore (Roberts 9-6) at Cleveland (Donovan 17-7) N. Minnesota (Stigman 9-3) at Boston (Monbouquette 11-12) N. Kansas City. (Rakow 12-14) at New York (Ford 13-7) N. Chicago (Buzhardt 7-10). at Detroit (Bunning 14-8) N. National League W iL Pet. GBL 87. 47 .649 84 49 632 21% 55 590 8 62 .534 154% 533 15% A71 24 .368 37% |Los Angeles San Francisco | Pittsburgh St. "Louis | Milwaukee Philadelphia Houston Chicago 466 38 New York 34101 .252 53% Thursday's Results | Milwaukee 2 San Francisco 3 'New York 7 Philadelphia 8 71 72 65 Chicago 3 Pittsburgh 5 Cincinnati 5 Los Angeles 4 Probable Pitchers Today Pittsburgh (Francis 6-7) at | Philadelphia (Green 6-6) N. New York (Anderson 3-14) at St. Louis (Jackson 11-10) N. Milwaukee (Cloninger 5-3) at Los Angeles (Rickert 3-3) N. | Cincinnati (Maloney 8-5) at |San Francisco (Perce 12-4) N. | International League WL Pet. GBL 88 52 .629 80 60 571 8 | 77 64 546 11% 75 68 .524 14% 73 68 .518 15443 67 73 .38934 | Richmond , 56 88 .389 34 | Syracuse 49 92 .348 3914 Thursday's Results Toronto 5 Syracuse 4 Buffalo 8 Rochester 9 Columbus 5 Richmond 8 | Jacksonville 3 Atlanta 2 | Games Today ' Toronto at Buffalo N Rochester at Syracuse N | Columbus at Richmond N Jacksonville at Atlanta N | American Association | Louisville 5 Oklahoma City 4 Indianapolis' at Denver, ppd, rain. Dallas-Forth Worth at Omaha ppd, rain. | Pacifie Coast League |Seattle 9-5 Hawaii 4-6 Tacoma 16 Portland 4 San Diego 3-6 Vancouver 2-3 Jacksonville | Toronto | Rochester | Atlanta Columbus: Buffalo Salt Lake City 10 Spokane 5 third quarters, while halfback Leo Lewis scored his second and third touchdowns of the season and end Ernie Pitts his third, To frost the cake, fullback Gerry James booted converts for all three touchdowns and added a fourth-quarter field goal. CHECK LUNSFORD One of the highlights of the game was tlie ability of the Winnipeg defence to hold Cal- gary's crashing fullback Earl Lainsford in check and to break up Stampeder pass plays. Lunsford, who had averaged 116 yards a game in his first five was held to just 53 while KCalgary's quarterbacks Gerry Keeling and Jim Walden were ped|only able to complete eight of 25 pass wgaens ona nc yards. Winnipeg quarterbacks com- pleted 14 of 24 passes tried for 232 yards. Winnipeg also came up with a couple of surprises in replace- ments for fullback - punter Charlie Shepard. Delveaux, who replaced him as punter booted 11 times for a 48-yard avefage after having SPORTS CALENDAR Russian Pucksters Will Play At MLG TORONTO (CP)--A Russian all-star hockey team will play TODAY SOFTBALL i Oshawa Minor Assoc. -- (Ki-' wanis Bantam League Playoffs) --Fernhill Park vs Storie Park, at Storie Park, 6.15 p.m. sharp, 2nd game of 2-out-of-3. serie OASA Bantam Playoffs |-- Peterborough and Oshawa Con- naught Park, at Cobourg, 5.45 p.m.; 3rd and deciding game of Eastern Ontario zone finals. SOCCER Toronto National League -- Toronto Olympia vs Oshawa Italia, at Kinsmen Civic Memor- at Maple Leaf Gardens Nov. 23, it was announced Thursday, but the Opposition for the cvouring Russians has not been decided. A suggestion that the Rus- sians play Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League is reported to have had a cool reception with coach Punch Im- ach since it will come within 24 hours of a regular NHL Sat- urday night game. Another suggestion is that the Russians play an all-star team from the Ontario Hockey Asso- ciation Metro Junior A League. in » daa average in the first alf. Taking Shepard's place in the backfield was towering Joe Williams, playing his first game after being flunked out of the University of Iowa. Williams was the second long est runner for Bombers, picking up 50 yards in seven carries while Lewis went for 56 in nine, LEAD ON GROUND In other statistics, Winnipeg went for 19 first downs com- pared with eight for Calgary and ran for 166 yards compared with Calgary's 70, Of the two fumbles in the game, each team recovered one while Winnipeg picked off two Calgary passes. Winnipeg was penalized twice for a total of 25 yards and Stampeders three times for 15 yards, The longest scoring play of the game was a 43-yard pass and run from Pioen to Lewis for the second touchdown after Lewis had scored on an easy 10-yard reverse six minutes earlier. Ploen was shaken up on the final play of the third quarter and Canadian quarterback Hal Ledyard went the rest of the way. After the game Bomber coach Bud Grant said there was nothing wrong with Ploen ex- cept having the wind knocked 'out of him: and possibly some bruised ribs. ; Al Ackland Sues Bombers On Grid Rule WINNIPEG (CP)--The legal- ity of the Canadian Football League's intermediate pro- tected list was challenged in a ial Stadium, 8.00 p.m, SATURDAY SOFTBALL OASA Intermediate "A": Peterborough "Georgies" vs YESTERDAY'S STARS statement of claim filed in _|Court of Queen's Bench against 'the Winnipeg football club. Al Ackland, 22, of Winnipeg, claims the Blue Bomber club Oshawa McLean's Esso, at Alexandra Park, 8.00 p.m.; .3rd and deciding game of series. OASA Intermediate "AA" Playoffs; -- Oshawa Pic-O-Mats and Belleville Trudeau Motors, $rd and deciding game of East- ern Ontario zone finajs, at Co- bourg, 5.30 p.m. OASA Juvenile "A'"' Playoffs: --Toronto Juveniles vs Oshawa Genosha Aces, at Alexandra Park, 4.00 p.m.; Ist game of 2- out-of-3 series. OASA Pee Wee Oshawa Sunnyside Park vs Lakefield at' Lakefield, 5.45) p.m., Ist game of 2-out-of-3 Eastern Ontario zone finals. SOCCER : Oshawa and District League: ~--Hungaria vs Rangers, at 7.00 .m, and Ukrainia vs Kickers, t 8.30 p.m.; both games at insmen Civic Memorial Stad- ium. Playoffs:-- 'British TV Fans To See Title Bout LONDON (AP) -- The world heavyweight title fight in Chi- cago between Floyd Patterson and Sonny Liston Sept. 25 may be brought live to British tele- vision screens--via Telstar link. A spokesman for the British Broadcasting Corporation said Thursday 'here is interest in the project, "provided the Tel- star position is right and we are given pérmission to use it." The BBC will in any 'case have cameras 'at. ringside and a telerecording willbe shown in Britain the following night. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Batting--Donn Clendenon, P.- rates, hit homer and two doubles, driving in four runs in 5-3 victory over Chicago Cubs. Pitching--Jim Brosnan, Reds, reliever came on in the ninth inning with bases loaded, get- ting the final two outs and pro- tecting a 5-4 victory over Na- tional League leading Los An- geles. has unlawfully restrained him from attempting to play profes- sional football elsewhere . in Canada by placing him on the list. In' the claim filed Thursday, lawyer Philip G. Nutter main- tains, that the football club should be required to pay dam- ages for salary loss. caused when it cut Ackland from its active playing roster earlier this manth. Ottawa Players Get Settlement Ou Of Court OTTAW A(CP)--Two Ottawa Rough Rider players who were injured and placed on waivers before the season began have reached a financial settlement with the football club, it was learned 'Thursday. Dick Desmarais and Bob Beattie turned the matter over to their lawyer after the club offered them 10 per cent of their full salary. There was no official mention of the amount of settlement, but The Journal lsays. Desmarais will be paid $7,000 on an $8,500 contract and Beattie will receive $4,000 on a $7,000 contract. The club's lawyer, Sam Ber- ger, said Thursday he will ask Canadian Football Commmis- sioner Syd Halter to recom- men& a standard contract clause 40 cover players who are injured before the season be- gins. ¢ The protected list enables each CFL club to protest a lim- ited mumber of players on af- filiated inte nmediate rosters, for up to two years. Ackland_first signed-a--try-out contract with the Bombers in 1961 and was cut from their ac- tive roster after. two league games. : He returned to intermediate football and signed another try- out contract with the Bombers this year. He was cut before the team's first league game. The claim contends that the Bombers placed Ackland on the protected list "without the knowledge or the consent of the plaintiff." FOOTBALL SCORES By THE CANADIAN PRESS Western Conference PWLT F APt. Winnipeg 43 1 012 & 6 Sask... _..5,2.2.1.55.77. Edmonton 42207 Calgary 61 1 8 -Thursday's Result Winnipeg 26 Calgary 1 2 2 4 R "et ib AAT Na,