Campbell Too Busy To Consider Retiring | re. "I've no thought of retiring ," says the man who has and principal r of the National lockey League for the last 20 years. At the start of the 1967-68 season the NHL will expand Sy et Spang ae lu spring up in San Francisco-Oak- Louis, Pittsbu: Puiladelphia and Minneapo . : a ely are television con- ee to negotiaie ang inere new working agreement et ie bate force Faith the Ca- nadian Amateur Hockey League. Retirement? He hasn't the time. At.61, and after 20 years of red the collective destiny of the Montreal Canadiens, Boston Bruins, Toronto Maple Leafs, Detroit Red Wings, New York Rangers and Chi- cago Black Hawks, he still has much to do. 10 - PIN ACTION Lions Roar And Hawks Fly, Classic Loop's Co - Leaders Walt Scott's Lions climbed into a first-place tie with the| Hawks in the Classic League bbs Jewell's Union Reps conewes to om vil bint Die. Room ters to camp 4- Rolf Rocker' when they blanked the Eagles} \hich 3 to 0 while the 'birds' were the Mustangs 2 to 1. tet kept close with aj Spooner 3-1 win over the Jets as Ron Nelson caught fire, while the thers 'scored their first ints of the season with an impressive 3-0 victory over the Tigers, despite a fine 596 series by the pongale' a Prank et. sr teaatk So Sobli wT oot on" . Jim Leaman 584, Lou John Waildinsperger 566 and Standings: Hawks 8, s 8, Hornets £ -- 4, rn % panthers 3, Eagles THURSDAY mie MEN'S. produced some fine scores this week, with Doug Vann's 617 triple oenivn followed by Lawrence who tossed a fine 609. Doug Gibbs with @ 589, Arno Knop 574, Ken Fisher 576, Bob Gardien 570, Don Fra' 565, Bob Courtney 555, Fred Snow 548, Tom Krawchuk 543, John Mason 537, Russ Y 536, 531 and Joe Thiemann Grinti and oi be tag A "with 40. wins lead with ms y# point shutouts featured, with rinti bg tl Aldsworth's over Les Eveniss, ing Mackies, and Wil- Pag ese L in the oieaes, ideal cay - as asi et iom illes, and Ontario victimized Clints, all by 3 to 1 an @.M. LaAeun Pg Ae § Flint- ~-- eine won meted = Sree me 05's, ee 530, . closely | 10, In| S16, ite $39, 532, Tom Krawchuk 527, 526, Bob Richardson 9 er ie M1, Jake Wind 521 and Arno Knop Medace uh Mea lg Boe yh Grill 4 House of and neck er the wn aor pe In ne, Cadillacs and Police "A's" who scored blankings last week received the same medicine this week. The Police B's rec- orded seven points, as a result all but Late Starters and City of Oshawa lads have pS gd to their credit. Best scores on the night had rad g Prakken tops with a 585, Glen Copp 57 Chartie Le aight de Gi Turner is, Doug Keeler 552, Tom rion 519, MeLachian 519 and E. Buechler 514. BASTWAY MIXED agers Stand- i@\ ings: Potlucks 11, Speedy ffler Kings North Oshawa Golf 10, teeny 13's 10, e Taypee: Saree SV, Art's Hairstyling 5, Team No, 7, 4, The Accents 0 and Team No. 16, Bob Fogal| 0. George Reid finally came into his own with @ 612 triple on games of 232 and 224. 's| Top gir! on the night was Joan Ross with lowed by Carole Collls 495, Mavis Taylor 491, Ade Floody 490, irene Frobel 467, Josie Gyurka 461, Jean Lawrence 451, Elieen Worsley 458, Nadine Solo- tarow 44, Marthe Stauffer 449, Doris Vann hod Amy Walker 447 and Joyce Wagar Nosine s Solotarow had the high single for the -- 180. On R with 563 f good scores were by Ted coins 'sm on Vann 562 (201), Alex Ross 555 (235), Bob Worsley 537 (201), Dawa Gil 533, George Taylor wrence S29, Cole 527, wins,' Ki Neal 'end Bil Buchowski One of the trickiest prob- ms facing the league presi- ont is television re on a re gaa scale in United ta season, the National Broadcasting Corporation tel- evised part of the Stanley Cup & semi-iinai and finai series in color. This year, the league had hoped to have 10 or 12 late-season games, plus some playoff games, accorded sim- ilar treatment, NBC said no, TRY OTHER NETWORKS "They had the first right of refusal and decided not to go for it," he says. The NHL recently signed a three-year, $3,600,000 deal with CBS, however. Clarence Campbell has been "in the process of conducting negotiations" about something almost from the time he was born on July 9, 1905, in Flem- ing, Sask. The family moved to Ed- monton while Campbell was a youngster. He attended the University of Alberta from 1922 to 1926, when he went to Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, He was 19 when he organ- ized the Edmonton District Hockey Association. Today, as a $25,000-to-$30,; 000-a-year executive, he is en- shrined in the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder of the game. To the office of league pres- ident, Campbell brought the mind of a scholar, the cour- age of a soldier and the elo- quence of a successful lawyer who was once a prosecutor of Nazi war criminals. With precise utterances de- livered in clipped speech he brought order out of the bed- lam league owners' meetings, re- ducing the wrangling and up- roar to the quiet efficiency of a bankers' board meeting. BUILT PENSION FUND A few days after he took of- fice. in 1946, Campbell said hockey should be considered a career to which any Cana- dian parent should be able to conscientiously direct a son tude for the game. To this end, he developed the NHL players' pension fund into the richest in sport. As with the fund, expansion of hockey generally, and the NHL in particular, is another personal goal. Television, he feels, could help here. "Excitement generated by the actual viewing will be- Keeling Surprises Bombers With Pass From Own One; WINNIPEG (CP)--Bud Grant thought Winnipeg Blue Bomb- ers had things all wrapped up with his club ahead 9-6 and Cal- gary Stampeders backed up their own one - yard line with 26 minutes remaining in a West- ern Football Conference game Tuesday night. But Jerry Keeling back-ped- alled into the Calgary end zone and threw into the waiting arms of Terry Evanshen at the Cal- gary 40 and Evanshen scamp- ered 70 yards for a touchdown as the Stampeders moved on to a 16-9 victory before 15,107 fans. "Tt was a fine pass," Grant said of the throw that boosted Calgary into the midst of the race for the WFC's last playoff tojon the ground and 58 passing fence for 19 first downs. Per- kins rushed 12 times for 85 yards and grabbed two passes for 22. Rosen got 12 yards and Dave Raimey 84 on the ground and 18 passing. Ploen, Thornton and Raimey threw 24 times, completed 11 for 128 yards and had two inter- cepted. Keeling and Peter Liske threw 22 times, completed 11 for 264 yards and also had two intercepted, Liske 'switched from defence, where he inter- cepted twice, when Keeling was shaken up in the final minutes. BASEBALL spot with nine points. Winnipeg has 10, second - place Edmon-| ton Eskimos 11. It was good enough to equal a Canadian Football League rec- ord for the longest completed) pass. The same distance was) covered previously by Sam Etcheverry and Hal Patterson of Montreal Alouettes and Win- nipeg's Kenny Ploen and Ken! Grant also paid tribute to! Keeling's accuracy in the sec- ond quarter on a deep pass to Howard Starks for a 5i-yard touchdown that wiped out a 3-0) _-- lead. rry Robinson did the rest' of ibe epoetad for the supposedly | crippled Stampeders, who have| come up with three wins and al draw in their last five games.) He booted a 42-yard field goal and a convert. PLOEN HURT Directing a Winnipeg second-| quarter march that eventually' produced a 95-yard touchdown, Ploen was rammed by the knee of Calgary's Wayne Harris and suffered what appears to be a hip bruise. But its proxim-| ity to the kidney forced his withdrawal from action as a! precaution against more serious injury. Dick Thornton stepped in, threw a 32-yard swing pass to Marty Rosen and seven plays later handed to Art Perkins for four - yard touchdown dive over tackle. Norm Winton kicked a 32-yard field goal in the first quarter. Evanshen, the Eastern Con-| ference's best rookie last sea- son with Montreal, was the game's offensive standout. Besides scoring his sixth touchdown -- Calgary has only produced 10 this Evan- shen pulled in five passes for 174 yards. Starks caught four for 66 yards of the 312-yard Calgary offence good for 11 first downs. Perkins, Rosen and Dave Rai- mey put out strong efforts for Winnipeg, but it wasn't enough to stave off the team's fourth} loss in five games. Bombers had a 330-yard of- LEADERS THE CANADIAN PRESS National. League AB RH Pet. 512 82 176 .344 651 119 215 .330 Carty, Atl 511 72 168 .329 Rose, Cin 634 96 203 .320 aap Pgh 619 102 197°.318 Atlante, .110- Pc Atlanta, 116. s batted in--Aaron, 125; Clemente, 116. | By | | Alou, Pgh Alou, Atl mms Alou, Atlanta, 215; come contagious and stimu- late editorial comment. We hace « vartain amount of | egotism and we think the tre- iemnivus tapveur~, dium entirely suited. "tor the game, will serve to build up attend at the g Expansion of the big league through the U.S. will have an- other benefit, providing "a great stimulus for playing the game." "Thousands of American boys will become interested and when they find out that salaries, pensions and other benefits match other sports, they'll start making their own | comparisons. "Our history has indicated that practically all U.S, hockey players come from Wisconsin, northern Michigan or places having similar cli- matic conditions to Canada. This interest dropped off when hockey bowed out in these dis- tricts. Now, with expansion, the interest will be revived." INTEREST SPREADS Campbell looks forward to the time when hockey will be- come a truly international sport, where now it is limited | somewhat by climate. "Interest is spreading in | Mexico and Europe--with the exception of France and Great Britain--ig. moving up."' To those who believe recent Japanese participation in the game is an innovation, Camp- bell points to the 1935 tour of | of Hits -- Alou, | Rose, 203. Doubles -- Callison, Philadel-} phia, 38; Rose, 36. Triples--McCarver, St. Louis, | three tied with 10. Home runs--Aaron, 43; Allen, Philadelphia, 40. Stolen bases -- Brock, St. | Louis, 72; Jackson, Houston, 46. | Pitching -- Regan, Los An- geles, 14-1, .933; Marichal, San! Francisco, 24-6, .800. Strikeouts--Koufax, Los An- geles, 294; Bunning, Philadel- phia, 244. | American League AB RH Pet. F.Robinson, Bal 567 120 179 .316 Oliva, Min 600 97 183 .305 Powell, Bal 483 77 139 .288 Kaline, Det. 466 82 134 .288 Killebrew, Min 553 84 157 .284 Runs--F. Robinson, 119; Foy, Boston, 99. Runs batted in--F. 120; Powell, 107. Hits--Oliva, 183; F. Robinson, | 79. 13; | Robinson, Doubles -- Yasirzemski, Bos- jton, 39; B, Robinson, Baltimore, 35. | Triples -- Knoop, California, | Campaneris, Kansas City, 10. Japan by the Beavers North Battleford, Sask. Wherever the game may move, however, Campbell cannot see the Montreal head- | quarters of the NHL moving-- at least not in the near future. "I'can't conceive the move- ment of league headquarters | to New York," he says. "Traditionally hockey . will always be identified with Can- ada and it would be difficult | | to change our headquarters | without bringing forth a high degree of resentment among Canadians. "We've been here for 50 Canada has been most hos- pitable to the NHL. It would ation of authorities." OSHAWA TIMES PICTURE RE-PRINTS Available At Home runs--F. Robinson, 49; | Killebrew, Minnesota, 37. | Stelen bases -- Buford, Chi-| cago, 51; Campaneris, 49. Pitching -- McNally, Balti-| more, 13-5, .722; Boswell, Min- nesota, 12-5, .706. Strikeouts -- McDowell, Cleveland, 216; Kaat, Minne-| sota, 199. NU-WAY PHOTO SERVICE 251 King St. E., Oshewe 8 x 10 -- 1.50 each 5x 7 -- 1.25 each 20% Discount on Orders of 3 or More Pictures that once marked the | who shows exceptional apti- | NOT RETIRING -- Na- tional Hockey League pres- ident Clarence Campbell has no plans for retirement, although he has held the position for the last 20 Dodgers Pad Lead; Blank Cardinals and Boston Red Sox ended their season by nipping Chicago White Sox 2-1 after losing 1-0. Kansas City Athletics at Balti- more Orioles and New York Yankees at Washington Sena- tors lost to the rain. Don Drysdale was the Dodg- ers' latest hero as he shut out St. Louis on four hits for his fourth straight victory and 13th against 16 defeats. Ron Fairly gave him the only run he needed with a second-in- ning homer, but the Dodgers added one in the sixth on a| double by Jim Lefebvre and) Lou Johnson's single. MAYS HAS BIG NIGHT Willie Mays drove in four) runs with his 36th homer and a single, keeping the Giants mathematically alive. They're in third place, four games out. Mays' slugging offset Hank Aaron's 43rd homer, a three run blow in the fourth inning. | George Brunet stymied De- | troit on four hits while Jim Fre- gosi hit a two-run homer and Jose Cardenal a_ three - run homer for California. Minnesota moved to within one - half game of the second- place Tigers behind Jim Perry's years, He's too busy plan- ning for the league when it expands to 12 teams in 1967-68, --CP Photo By MURRAY CHASS Associated Press Sports Writer "Well, we're a half game bet- ter than we were yesterday," manager Walter Alston said Tuesday night after a 2-0 vic- tory over St. Louis Cardinals in- creased the Los Angeles Dodg- ers' National League lead to three games with five to go. The Dodgers' win reduced their magic number to three, meaning any combination of Los Angeles victories and Pitts- burgh Pirate losses totalling three would give the Dodgers the pennant. The second - place Pirates, who were rained out Tuesday night, play Philadelphia Phil- lies twice tonight, and the Dodg- ers play the Cardinals once. When the possibility of the jpennant race ending tonight was suggested to Alston, he said: "Tt hope you're right, but that's asking for a whole lot in one day." CAUTION HIS STYLE Alston's style may be loaded with caution, but it's followed him through five pennants in his 12 years with the Dodgers. This would be his sixth in 13 seasons and would mark the|three - hit pitching. Harmon fivet tima eines 1957-58 that al Killebrew hit his 37th homer for National League team has won| the Twins whlie Zou Versace, | drove in two runs with a double. | Ken Berry singled home Tom-! San Francisco| mie Agee with the only run of| | the game for Chicago's open-) ing-game victory over Boston. But the Red Sox, who ended their season unusually early, | | came back in the second contest | as Tony Conigliaro tripled home fornia Angels stopped Detroit}/one run and scored the other Tigers, 6-2, Minnesota Twins|when Don Buford fumbled downed Cleveland Indians 5-1|George Scott's grounder, BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League WL Pet. 592 573 .567 541 525 503 481 436 WY CuMoeLur In the only other National| League game, Giants defeated Atlanta Braves 6-3. Rain also washed out Hous- ton Astros at Cincinnati Reds and Chicago Cubs at New York) Mets. In the American League, Cali- Thursday's Games Houston at Cincinnati (N) Los Angeles at St. Louis (N) (Only games scheduled) American League WL Pet. 615 551 548 516 500 494 452 447 444 436 GBL 3 4 8 10% 14 17% 2414 28% 35 93 90 89 85 83 79 74 68 | Las Angeles | Pittsburgh San Wrancisco Philadelphia Atlanta |St. Louis | Cincinnati | Houston New York 64 410 Chicago 58 369 Tuesday's Results Washington |Chicago at New York, ppd. | Boston | Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, ppd.|New York |San Francisco 6 Atlanta 3 x-Clinched pennant | Houston at Cincinnati, ppd. |Los Angeles 2 St. Louis 0 Tuesday's Results Prohable. Pitchers 'Teday Minnesota 5 Cleveland 1 San Francisco (Perry 20-8) at] Boston 0-2 Chicago 1-1 Atlanta (Cloninger 14-10 or|New York at Washington, ppd.| |Schwall 11-10) (N) Kansas City at Baltimore, ppd. | Los Angeles (Sutton 12-11) at} probable Pitchers Today | |St, Louis (L. Jaster 10-5) (N)| Detroit (Podres 4-4) at Cali- Pittsburgh (Veale 15-12 and/fornia (M. Lopez 7-14) (N) iLaw 12-8) at Philadelphia | Cleveland (Tiant 11-10) (Jackson 15-14 and Bunning 19-| minnesota (Kaat 25-11) 12) (TN) New York (Bahnsen 1-1 and) Houston (Giusti 14-13 and) Downing 9-11) at Washington) | Cuellar 11-10) at Cincinnati (El-| (Richert 14-14 and Ortega 12- 12)| |lis 12-18 and Nuxhall 6-7 or Ma-|° Kansas City (Odom 5-5 andj loney 15-8) (TN) |Krausse 14- 9) at Baltimore) Chicago (Ellsworth 7-21 and| (Palmer 15-9 and McNally 13-5)) jNye 0-1) at New York (Ribant! (N) GBL} xBaltimore 96 Detroit Minnesota Chicago Cleveland California Kansas City 10 10%] 154%) 18 | 19 | 2514 | 26% | 27 28 at tees of England, blamed by jsome drivers for causing mse eat Lnsave ti in oturdau! SSeS pee dian Grand Prix at Mosport race track, denies he was at fault. tees' Lolo T70 spun as the field was heading into the first cor- ner. Soon after the five cars had heen sidelined. some of the other drivers accused Surtees of causing the pileup. into the corner too fast and lost control of his car, Others said he had bumped several cars go- ine un the pit straightaway. Surtees Denies Guilt For Mosport Accident TORONTO (CP) --John Sur-| "A lot of people are talking who should be keeping said Surtees. "If some of these drivers saw. a8 much as they claim to have seen, then there must have been an awful lot of gawking around instead of con- centrating' on their driving." BLAMES A BUMP , Surtees, who almost lost his life in a practice crash here a vear ago. said he was bumped from behind and along the side of the car Saturday. "I was hit. The other car made first contact behind the rear wheel on the right, then isheered up the side of the car and into the front wheel. That a five- 'a dana. The crash occurred after Sur- Some drivers said he went SILVIKRIN Shampoo Keeps working between shampoos... is Now in a new foil pack! 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