iX * Smart Eight Dash Card Tonight arue ty Eas f ; i i! ag Eas iu i ‘ | BGS | fit rf if i ff & Re i A aE ee] i a 1 h F fe ef iil i q it nif fbi = re : E ‘ { Tada Tj li Fa i é Z ft f fy a ; § | iil if Sasazeseasé i it i iT i f {p Ay i| tr Eg i iii rey] fia Lt taal gui i their arrival in the area the kill could have easily been number- be- in for 142 games. Yet Soe i" \ wretleg : ae . a 4 ¥ YON \ iN UA pi SNS . PX. SOFTBA Ph Bruce Levett!, Canadian Press sports editor, is on a tour of National ‘Hockey League’ training camps. To- day he talks with master psychologist Punch Imlach ef Toronte Maple Leafs. By BRUCE.LEVETT ° ‘, Canadian Press Sports Editor t | \ Coach George (Punch) Im- lach looked down the’ training table at his battered charges and ‘said “they weren't in shape \when they came to camp and they’re’ not in shape now;’’ Toronto Maple Leafs were facing National. Hockey League opening’. night with a the team on ‘the injured last, year’s players hampered by injuries—Eddie Shack, Bob Pulford, Brit Selby, Kent injuries ranged from pulled muscles to skate cuts to a broken nose. He named Orland Kurten- bach and Wally\ Boyer, picked “up “by —rivals “inthe mn currently- fighting Imlach -ticked offs seven- of . Douglas, ‘Alan Stanley, Johnny‘ Bower and\Bobby Baun. The . draft, as regulars. wouldn't ‘be for reinstatement as an ama- | to St. Louis\jast May 8 for pitcher Ray Sadecki. 5 In Rag peee ut a RESERE TE Li Ht iit FF fi i Ey if 8 E a 7h Z 7 3. B. 2 3 i [ # 3 | E s “4 a a y H 3 Es fife i é de 5 Eg EeRg Hi REagE ‘i iu nis Zz | | i 3 A ti i Bg ni : = 5 BIE i ni Fd ag trail "i | | : i ai by fl a¥ Hi Kl i i a ~ ~ 4 < g gr 2 [ | ef TPE itt sa i i the way out of the cellar for the first time in quite a while. Last year, Acadia, with a large crop of rookies and*a new coach, proved the surprise of the vear. They began that with a. convincing 27-6 vic- gag 4 ge F E 2 5 club stretcher orientated and then went on to a third place finish behind Saint Mary’s eal reeeee atte RISE G if : : F z Fé AF over 100 yards by & ‘3 i if SDU Meets 3 JOHN DRISCOLL jes from that game, notably full- back John Driscoll, are back in ‘| the active: lists. Les Affleck; who has deen out for two games, 1s stil a doubtful starter, however. Game time at the Varsity Field is 1.30 this afernoon. ets Acadia Cr ucial Game =e offence capable of moving the ball against any line in the lea- gue - The Saints are almost -as healthy: going into this one as they were entering the Halifax game. Al their last-half injur-- MEXICO CITY (AP)—So ‘you puff when you walk up two flights of steps and start gasp- ing for breath after running more than 200 yards. It’s not so much the lack of oxygen in the lungs or muscles begging for more fuel — it’s largely all in the head, a leading. Mexican doctor and. Olympic official said Friday. . “T think we have conquered the notion that athletes cannot adjust to our mile and a half altitude,” said Dr. Eduardo Hay. ‘‘Now our job is to cure their minds. . “All this talk of altitude is creating a fear hypnosis. Per- formances—if we do not erase the idea —. will suffer not for physical but for mental. rea- sons.”” from his medical profession to serve as press officer and mem- ber of the Olympic Organizing Committee, has been research- ing the altitude problem since | Mexico City, 7347 feet above sea e level was awarded the .1968 Olympics. Sme alarmists threw up their Dr. Hay, who takés* time out: | Mexican Doctor Positive Altitudes Are Harmless hands and said athletes would fall dead on Mexican tracks. Others predicted sieges of nose- bleeds, upset stomachs, ilines- ses and inferior performances. ISN’T IMPRESSED . “Ridiculous, absolutely ridicu- lous,’ Dr. Hay said. ‘“‘This mat- ter has been studied by the best medical minds of the world. They have decided that with proper preparations athletes can adjust to this altitude without noticeable effect. i “As for danger to the health of any competitor, there is none. Any man or woman physically fit cannot be harmed by exer- tion under these conditions.” Dr. Hay. said he and his me- dical contemporaries consider the problem of physical effort at this altitude a closed book. “We have shown ‘conclusively that athletes can ‘perform and achieve at this altitude without significant effect,” he said. ‘‘It is just a question of how best to acclimatize in order to have the athletes at their peak at the right time.’ .° , The mental problem is some- thing else, he added. * SK fad Yeoonrs ment Friday.as the horror.of a sandstorm turned into.a pleas- ant, ‘sunny day~on the desert and scoring returned to normal. per, U.S. Open champion and winner of ‘this event lest vear, Masters king Jack Nicklaus and Bob McCalister. Three shots off the pace were Arnold. Palmer and George Archer. began Friday, but nothine to hour storm Thursday. Casper, whose victory was a ‘wire-to-wire affair last year, moved into contention with a 65. Nicklaus had a 68 and McCal- lister, the second-round leader, a 71. : Palmer shot 67 and Archer 70. IMPROVES 15 STROKES Barber’s.64 was 15 strokes un- der his previous round and was change. Palmer was asked if the 13 Strokes he shaved from Thurs- playing itions. more like it; : “Tf-T- cut that» -many--strokes a shape to win.”’ Dual Favorite In Last Stake Race NEWMARKET, England (AP) The bookies have made Amberi- cos and Tarqogan joint 10-to-1 favorites for the Cambridge- shire stakes, the last - horse race of the year carrying the Irish sweepstakes. . At the final call-over at Lon- don’s Victoria Club, Fortezza, the former favorite, and Lang- ley Park were bracketed next at odds of 11 to. 1. Thirty-five horses are listed forthe race which has~ been run regularly since 1839. This is how the horses rated at the call-over: ie Ambericos, Targogan 10 to 15; Fortezza, Langley Park 11 to 1; Italiano 12 to 1; Le Cor- donnier 14 to 1; Le Garcon; Morris Dancer 16 to 1; Ki- benka 25 to 1; Birdbrook, By Rights, Commander in Chief, Vital Issue 33 to 1; Barwin, Di- tes, Isis, Welsh Dee 40 to 1. The rest of the field carried odds of 50 to 1 and upwards. ° “Other horses in the field are Princelone, Chestergate, Excel, Silent Spring, Great Uncle Fred, Off the Hook, Shady. Knight, Crepalia, Campaign, Ward Drill, Danella, High Table, Mountain Moss, Swift Harmony, Three Dons, Polar Boy, Traffic Leader and Wroth Silver. a. gaps, by forming \\ ines: SOX RAS . naie Stes S hara ‘f \ golf Stourna- } "The 35-year-old Barber, a 205- ‘ There was a wind when play | compare with the 50-mile-an indicative of the weather oy tidak 39 ohiole might be: off tomorrow I’H be in a hell of | ~ “CHAMPION UNDER GUARD SS... ovtners are taking\\no Me Gee 8 eres hour guard over We a . Nore here. Racetrack. police ped "~~ Soe oN = pacer. be! \trai are‘keeping\a 24 event. \, \Wirephoto) 5 : \ NE ON ; NN oS A landed-gentry"\. a a these “sporting. syn \of_rumting a: horse or even<a : e SX Ny . preventing ~gate-money taken. : ~ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15 8:00P.M. “ DASHES 1-3 1—HANDSOME LADY 2—RUDY FRISCO 3—CLOVER KING 4—HURRICANE JENNIE S—FRANKIE’S CHIEF 6—JOHNNY THUNDER 7—LAMBS NAVY 8—DRILLIO HAL SHADYDALE | TONETTE DASHES 2-6 os 1—FREE CHANCE 2—ASKET 3—ADAMS TOM J 4—SARAH’S JET 5—BROWN BUDLONG 6—TRIFLITE 7—WINDY JUNE + 8—JOLLY POLLY DASHES 3-7 1—CYCLONE KELLY 2—~EVELYN’S ARDENT 3—STARRY NIGHT 4—HELENS DREAM S—LUCKY LARK : 6—SHELBY KNIGHT ~ 7—KENNA K.. " DASHES 4-8 1—BOLD. DEBBY 2—IRENE MIR 3—BELLS LAST 4—WILLARDS CHOICE 5—JOLLY DICK — - nid. the self. hi | if f ing with anything up.to.100 share)" holdérs could. share. the costs\_}\ teur—-but then, nobody around Maple Leaf Gardens mentions Brewer in Imlach’s presence. Most of the injuries he listed were minor, but they were the type of injuries that . shouldn’t happen.to players in ame physical and mental ‘ , “In the old days, players would take tough off-season jobs to stay in shape for hockey,” Imlach said. “‘Now all they want to do is sit home andyread the stock tables.” How ‘much of his bitterness was genuine and how much was the patented Imlach psy- chology / won't be apparent until the season gets “under way. be FINISHED THIRD Last season this psychology turned Shack from the point of minor-league oblivion into a 26-goal scorer and Fast Eddie is. still feeling the Im. lach needle. When the 1965-66 National Hockey League season ended, Leafs were in third place, 11 points behind the champion Inter-Collegiate Football ST. DUNSTAN'S _ ~ Leafs Face New Season With Long Injury List — Montreal Camadiens who knocked them off swiftly in the Stanley Cup semi-finals. Imlach knows he needs added scoring punch to - im- prove on this performance—or even to match it in the im- proving league. . To'that end, eafs are counting on Jim Pappin, Mike Walton,- Brian Conacher and / Wayne Carleton. Other than that, the team appears to be set with such stars as Frank Mahovlich, Dave Keon, Baun, Shack and Pulford returning, along with defencemen Douglas, Stanley, Tim Horton, Larry Hillman and Marcel Pronovost. _ Down the centre, _ Imlach “has Keon, Pulford, Red Kelly, Walton and Peter Stemkow- ski. Right wing. is a toss-up among Ron E!lis, Shack, George Armstrong, Pappin ' and Conacher. On the left are. Mahovlich, Selby, Larry Jeffrey and Don Blackburn, although Carleton ‘or Conacher could go here - also. — i versus _ ACADIAS Game time Saturday 1:30 Parking off Belvedere Ave. oa , ion: Adults 1.00—Students 50c , Sf & ® é ‘ Sugar wins hands down ... in cakes, puddings, everything. Nothing else —_ quite takes the place of natural, oN wholesome sugar. Nothing else | SS brings out the full, true flavour of oe a foods, Sugar prevents weeping in custards; lumping in puddings, sauces and pie : fillings, shtinkage in meringues. (Even juicy steaks perk up when i sugar is sprinkled over them. Try it and see.) : So keep on adding the goodness of sugar to all your meals. Then sit back and watch your family’s eyes light up. ie You're right to like sugar. You need it, THE CANADIAN SUGAR INSTITUTE ‘* P.O. Box 1684, Station “B”, Montreal, P.Q, ~\ Paes it ~ OSS ANE oS ew?