3.....- KENNEDY SCORES Canadiens Defeat Bruins i To Retain Second Place BOSTON (GP) - Montreal urdayh night. The Canadiens ee continued its mastery over the last-place Boston Bru - day night with a 3-1 National Hockey League victory. but lost mo of its three goal-geiters in process. rookie Johnny Fer- gall triggered a brawl midway up-ough the frame. Most of gm Players from both tennis ined in, _and Fer- guson came out of it with a cut tendon on his left thumb. ice with a blackened right eye and a five-stitch cut between the eyes. Montreal's other scorer was Dave Balon, who deflected rookie defenceman Jacques La- perriere's fliot from the point at 1:54 of the third period. SHUTOUT FOILED at Boston Gardens. The two teams had battled to a scoreless tie in Montreal Sat- FOOTBALL RESULTS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Yale Z) Harvard 0 Holy Cross 9 Boston College 0 Dartmouth 22 Prtilnceton 21 Auburn 10 Alabama 0 I-‘lorida’7 Florida State 0 Tennessee 14 Vanderbilt Midwest Indiana 15 Purdue 21 Missouri 9 Kansas 7 Ohio State 14 Michigan 10 Oklahoma 34 Okla. State 10 Wichita 26 Tulsa 16 Southwest Baylor 21 Rice 12 ‘ TCU 22 SMU 15 Texas W 13 W Texas State 0 Far West Arizona S 35 Arizona 0 New Mex B Brigham Young 0 Stanford 28 California 117 Oregon 31 Oregon S 14 Southern Cal 26 UCLA 0 Washington 16 Wash. State 0 San Jose S 32 Pacific U 20 TAKE A now Suntimes e game before 13.613 ‘ ave beaten Boston thr and tied twice in five games this season. Referee Art Skov w-histled four major penalties for the second-period fighting. Fergu- son had Westfall pinned to the ice when Jean Beliveau and Bob Mccord went at it with Boston goalie Eddie Johnston came out of his cage to join the altercation and drew an au- tomatic $50 fine. ’ Hodge. who had only 18 stops in the game, made a fine stop on Tommy W-ltliams seconds before Backstrom stole th 3 or S Johnston to the left and put the puck in the right side. Johnston wound up with 28 saves, making 15 in the middle r1 . First period -— 1. Montreal, Backstrom 2, 0:45 Penalties- Larose. Boivin 4:02. Gendron 6:55. Harper 9:12. Second perlod—2. Montreal, Ferguson 11 (Geoffrion. Har- per) 2:12. Penalties—I-‘erguson major, Beliveau major. Westfali major. Mccord major 10:41, Boivin 14:15. period - 3. Montreal, 11 (Laperriere, J. Classic Has Tremblay) 1:54 4. Boston, Ken- ned 3 (Mohns, I-lebentom 15:33. Penalties—Mohns, majol. Backstrom, major 0:11, Lapel’- riere 7:21. Saves Hodge o 1 5 0—l8 Johnston 4515 7.23 Armstrong Helps Leafs To 4-l Win DETROIT (CP) Armstrong. getting Career 8081. helped Toronto Maple Leafs lo a 4-1 victory Sunday ‘night over Detroit Red Wings in a National Hockey League contest here before 12.- 471 ans. The Red Wings were playing with their fourth goalie in three games. Hank Bassen was sum- moned from Pittsburgh when it was learned that rookie Roger Crozier had suffered a cheek- ‘bone fracture in Saturday's 1-1 tie at Toronto. Crozier had been playing in place of regular goalie Terry Sawchuk, who wrenched his back in a game - George his 0 last Thursday. A M ing a first-period goal by Dave Keon and one by Tim Horton early in the second. Horton also Cruel Lapse By TERRY ROBERTS ANCOUVER (CP)—Sporadlc violence, occasional gaiety and long intervals of deep calm marked downtown Vancouver Saturday night as citizens, ex- hausted by long hours of Grey Cup revelry. reconciled them- selves to. _the harsh fact that their British Columbia Lions hadn‘t won the football game. In a cruel pse from an apparently ready-made script. Hamilton Tiger-Cats thumped the Lions 21-10, thwarting their (first bid for the cup in 10 year of professional footbatl and d’ appointing a capacity crowd of 36,465 fans at Empire Stadium. The day had begun festively with a massive parade of 117 units and 5,000 participants. replete with colorful floats and marching bands, through the heart of the city. CRUSH LIONS But the Tlcats. skillfully di- rected by veteran quarterback Bernie Faloney and brutally Baker crashing through for a third score. The Lions. sorely crippled by second - quarter injury to Willie Fleming, their chief offensive threat. got their on uchdown in the dying minutes on a pass by quarter- back Joe Kapp to Mack Burto . Peter Kempf contributed a fietd goal. As Grey Cup night went on, the only life down wn was provided by happy Eastern sup- -porters and elements whose interest in football appeared to be confined to an excuse for boisierousness. assisted on two other goals. Detrl ‘s MacGregor ed the score briefly when he did finnrdimt SECOND SECTION SPORT ECHOES y Norman Macdonald Sunmierside Bureau of The Guardian COACH Ralph Sazlo and .quarterback Bernie Faloney of ti beat Toronto goalie Johnnie Bower in the first minuia of the second period. First period 1. Toronto, Keon 7 (Armstrong) 12:30 alties—M. Pronovost 5:18, Donald and Mahovlich 11: Second period — 2. Detroit, MacGregor 3 (Martin, Jeffrey: :31 3. Toronto, Horton 6 (Kelly) 3:55: 4. Toronto, Armstrong 8 (Keon) 9:12. Penalties—Brewer 10:31, 13:33, Barkley 13:33. "U o 5' Mac- 37. N.Y.-, Chicago Play 3-All Tie CH.’-ICAGO Rangers goalie Jacques Plante made 40 saves . fought the league-leading Chl- “'3 33 tic cago Black Hawks to a in a National Hockey League -game here Simd-ay night The tie broke seven-game-.w-inning str and all 1'1-flame home-ice victory string. Giicago had beat Ne York four times in a row Sunday's game. Chicago now is 10 points ahead of second-place Montreal Canadiens, and New York is tied for fourth with Detroit Red Wings. Goalkeeper Jacques Plante was the Rangers’ outstanding opei-former, although Camille He scored two goals. The former Ca 11 adien netminder (made20ofhis40stopsinth‘o first period, when the Hawks W 1'0 THIS WEEK AT THE FORUM MONDAY TIP FROM 2,000,000 CANADIAN MEN . . . Give Him PHILISHAVE (21 one. comfort- able shaves for a labor Mart every morning. From ‘I935 7:30-8:30 a.m.—Qucen Charlotte 12:45-1:45 p.m.—P. W. C. 4:00-5:30 p.m.-Ska ng, Children kept the puck in New York ice for almost the entire no minutes. Bathga . ette 9:40 2. Chicago, Hull 15 (Maki) 17: e llson 10:25, 23. P nalties-—Ne 11:00-12:00 a.rn.—Sprlng P a 1-1:] am S Balfour and Nellson 12:46, How- ell 14:38. Second period—3. New York, Bathgate 8 (Hadilield) 3:31. Pen- es—1-Ienry 4:14, Pilate 5:30. Young 11:38, Cahan 12:40, Pl- lote 13:34, Hadfield (double minor) and Nesterenko (double (or)—New York °° ‘H-k' theuiiwsp By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press 8 Editor VANCOUVER (CP)—Two old Hamilton cuties conducted a course in football tactics Satur- perlod—-5. Toronto, Pu.» day as the Tiger-Cats broke out a lling-on infraction ford 3 (Horton) 4:49. Penalties-of a four-same Grey Cup slump asainst'1‘icats. —Shack 1:27, Jeffrey 6:30, Mac. with a cosy 21-10 victory over “Zuger tackled him," Mosca Gregor 19:38. British Columbia Llons. They reporters later. “Fleming Saves - made it look simple and ruth- was still running. That was why Bower 8 5 10-23 less. I came in. I think my head hit Bassen 101010.39 The textbook precision ‘of 31- his" year - old quarterback Bernie Faloney and the pass-catching heroics of Hal Patterson, one 6' =1‘. ens e punch. And they were capably backed up by a brawny l-lection of roughouse bruis- ers in Ticat black and gold who lines play. should have called 1 yard 1)- year his junior, contributed the Pres 1-Ialton Tigercats hold aloft the Grey Cup, moments printable remarks by specta-, tors who figured that head‘ linesman Tom Cheney of Cal- gary, who was dose to the side- Sydney Halter of Winnipeg, missioner. told The Canadian “Unfortunately, I can't say just exactly what l1appened._ "I'd have to look at the films first. It appeared to me that it Charlottetown, Mon. Dec. 2, 1963. after the Ticats engineered a 21-10 victory over British Co- was not a deliberate case of piling on such as one sees when a man is down and an comes in and lands on him.” LIONS ATTACK HURT atever it was, the injury. her - tacklers, including th Western Conference season. At rue time the Tiger-Cats,‘ who had taken beatings from Winnipeg Blue Bombers in 1958. 1 gave the Lions a physical beat- The western champions weren’t exactly healthy when they trotted on to the Empire Stadium field, to an ovation ’ a doctor in the medical inspec- HOCKEY "RACT ICE e cut from his average of been won 9.7 yards a carny during thelsafely locked up lumphin 36 East-West meetings since the championship became a natirgiiaf affairdlnh1921. And it revers a tren t at has seen 1959, 1961 and 1962, were ahead {seven We stern champions on 3 touchdown by wime icrowned in the last nine years. 3 ( l s in Vancouver. (CP Wirephoto) lumbia Lion Olcl Hamilton ‘Cuties’ Leacl‘“‘” Tiger-Cats To Cup Victory They completed their scorlngf 5 on a third-quarter 70-yard pass-; ( and-run touchdown play from ; lFaloney to Patterson. Don Suth- l gerin kicked the convert. , The Lions. with quarter Joe} seriously crippled L1ous_' ground; Kapp going into the shotgun gm-.; attack although Fleming had mation — something similar to‘ ‘hank heaven for that small been well looked after by Ticat the short punt—finally clicked M0568. fo‘on an end zone pass to Mack: at point. He netted only 14 Burton at 13:42 of the final Yards in five Plays. 8 c0nS1der- quarter. The game had already Canadian Football League co_m- 8 ast had tri- and the E its 25th 7-0 Bethea. The Lions continued on- the move after Fleming‘: in- y to score a 29-yard field goal by rookie Peter Kempf. ii“ §Ame-ricans their explosive breakway run- ner who has en up many games in his five years with the club, left the field in a daze five minutes before halftime r a tackle by Hamilton‘: Joe Zuger with crunching help fro Angelo (Big Angie) E3. Mosca. The first quick diagnosis in- dicated a possibly serious head and neck injury. Ftemmg him- self doesn’t remember a_ thing between the time he carried the ball and when he stared up at tion room at the stadium. ‘RETURNS HOME _ X-rays Saturday night con- firmed a slight concussion. The 183-pound half was not in P8111 after the game and returned to his Vancouver home after hos- pital exsmlnation. _ Fans in the immediate vicin- ity of the play—on the Hamil- ton 54-yard line — screamed abuse at the 258-pound Mosca. “Big Dirty" was one of tho 8:30-10:30 p.m. — Adult 50c WEDNESDAY 0:M-10:00 a.m.—Pa1-kdale 1:3)-3:00 p.m.—Pre-School Skat- 8 3:30-5:30 p.m.—Flgure Skating u 7:00 p.m.—School lce Sports THURSDAY 7:30-8:30 a.m.—-Queen Charlotte 11:00-18:00 a.m. — Sherwood Elem. 12:45-1:45 p.m.—P. W. C- 4:00-5:00 p.m.—P. S. S. 5:15-6:15 p.m.—Bli-chwood School 0:15-7:15 p.m. 7: 8:40-9:45 p.m.—Glnsgow Road 10:00-11:00 p.m.—Ravens FRIDAY g;oo.1o:00 a.vn.-Parkdale and 811 out 11:00-12:00 a.m.—Park_dale Elem. 12:45-1:45 p.m.--P. 11. 15c: Adults 25c 7:00-0:00 p.m.—7 Mile Road 35¢: Adults 50 SATURDAY ngooqgoo p.m.—Mlnor Hockey 18¢; Adults 5:U-0:00 p.m.—Mlnor Hockey —Store a . 30-8:30 p.m.--North River Jrs. C. 4:00-5:00 p.m.-«Skating. Children 3:09-1:00 p.m.-—m{~. 5. r. w. C. 8:50-10:00 p.m.—S|iatlng. Teens 7;g).10:30 s.m.—-Minor Hockey mo-4:00 p.m.—sndns. Children 1:00-9:00 p.m.-Skating. Teen! 15c. A c - . 6:00-7:00 p.m.—Juniors V _ 4_ Chicago’ 7:00-8:00 p.m.-—Mt. Albion Legion Kay 10 (Hun, Pilate) 0:13 3. 3=30-“=39 Pm - C°mm°'°l=' Goyette) 0:58: 6. Chicago, Hay I-E38119 Hay 10 (Hull. Pilote) 0:13 3. New York. Henry 8 (N TUESDAY Goyette) 0:58; 6. Chicago, Hay 11:00-12:00 mm-—Snrins Park 11 (Balfour) 5:57. Penalties—- School None. 12:45-1:45 p.m.—P. W. C. Saves: 3:45-5:45 p.m.—Mlnor Hockey Plante 20 911-40 6:00-7:00 p.m.—-P. W. C. . G. Hall 412 7-23 Dltfllllls Hockey Scores Nova Scotla Senior New Glasgow 7 Monctm 0 (overtime) STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS F Pcistrano Is Winner Reutem-AP JOHANNESBURG - World light-heavyweight boxing cham- pion ie astrano defeated‘ sou African hamplon Mike; Holt on points in a 10-round] match here Saturday nl8l'|t- Pastrano at 178 pounds owed little th class of a sh world champion against olt. who wei 175. Thou!“ P States, did not land is damaging ‘om blow. Pastrano was cautioned six times for holding. butting. pul- ling and keeping his head low. W L T A 1 Chicago 15 .2 5 81 4535 ontreal 10 8 5 06' 5825 Toronto 10 7 4 50 5524 Detroit 611 3 41 5913 New York 613 3 58 6915 Boston 412 4 39 5312 Adella ’s O Sophisticated Mlllinery for a dis- cerning clientele Accessories to match 0 Gift Certificates Adella ’s Millinery 177 Grfltol Strut Charlottetown ale: Adults 50c Poor Ice Proiesied TORONTO (OP) - Poor ice conditions at f trait ed Win brought an official protest from Red Wing coach Sid Abel. teams were jeered by the 14,017! fans as the players s In 3 surface, pock- remains of earth the Canadian: leaguc does not officially recognise protests any kind. Abel said he wanted. to on‘ record to prevent o over ice marked by the and dirt from co. 3 I0 repeats ’s ‘ condl- . dons. ' noon in Chatham SDU Lose Pair In MIHL FREDERICTON (CP) —— St. Dunstan‘s University of Char- lotietown opened their 1963-64 Maritime Intercollegiate Hockey League season with a pair of ed games in New Brunswick over the weekend, losing both. They dropped a 5-3 decision to University of New Brimswlck Red Devils here Saturday night in overtime and were slugged 9-2 by a tired-up St. Thomas University squad Sunday after- Danryl LeB1anc;s goal at 19:23 of the third period was the key‘-being struck on the head with a -marker for the Red their 5-3 triumph. St. Dunstan’s and -had two assists. Other St. '1 Devils lni ed 3-2 at the time and LeBlanc's marker forced the game into, overtime. LeBlanc and Dave Peterson scored two goals apiece for the -Mvillan collected the two St. Devils and Bob Naylor added a 2 Records Set In NFL Games NEW YORK lAP)—Y. A. Tit- -remained in a tie for the East- ern Conference lead but were -unable to pull away from the threatening Pittsburgh Steelers. Tittle passed for two touch- downs for a career total of ii?! —one more than Boby Layne who wound up his football ca- reer in 1960 with Pittsburgh- hl lasted Dallas Cow-boys 34-27. Brown scored two touchdowns and gained 179 yards for a sea- son total of 1.677 yards—-he set the old record of 1,527 in 1950- as the Browns defeated St. Louis Cardinals 24-10. The victories left the Giants in and Browns tied for first place. each with nine wins and three losses, while the title-hopeful Cardinals dropped off the pace with an ll-4 mark. Plttsbilrgh remained in contention with its third lie of the season for a 0-3-3 record. Lou Michaels‘ 24-yard field goal with 40 seconds remaining brought the Steelers a 17-17 tle Stan‘ fifth. A former Ontario Hockeylnea and Le“ ““ Association junior. Bill MacMil- Ian, counted two for St. Dun- Ed Hospodar, who’s expected to shoulder much of the load if the Tc‘-mmies are to go any- where this year, lirig-gered three goals in a row in the final period Sunday to cap St. Thomas‘ 92 win. He added a pair of assists. Doody McCarthy, who was forced to leave the game mid- w in the third period after stick. banged home two goals Thomas marksmen were Paul Ouellette. Greg Moms. Eddie Lester and Joe Breen. Dick Tingley and Billy Mac- Dunstan's goals. for their fifth win in six games. Moncton. for th Boyer. Gerry vath and lather Amerk tallies. - For the B‘ ions tied Springfield Indians -14- stan‘s Denis Ducarufel trlgger- in ovemme and B-alumme Ch?‘ ' . rpers the l'h“'d' nets $2 in overtime. RALLIES wlch rallied his team from a 4-1 deficit with a goal and Gary Bergman, and Bill Sweeney were th marksmen. ' ll 1, G (ii I In the Baltimore asse oreIEag Al Langlois and Dick Gamble, a native of N.B., scored two goals e winners as did Wally] Ehman. Bronco 1-for-; Darryl Sly scored the- lSOl'lS it was Billy L de. In other action Cleveland Bar-, Pittsburgh Hor- - TEAM At Cleveland, Ray Kinase-| Ellett scored the For the Tribe, Mike Labadie.3 Miller, ; «=2 ( Labossiere’s goal at 4:30 of th overtime session gave the Clip , pers the win. i Other Baitimore scorers were. Curling draw for Belvedere. 7 PM Frank Acorn,’ Dr. A. Mac-l E‘ iP1'°g1' States college football battles ‘OI’ Pittsburgh. -1 Saturday. some of which were! postponed from Nov. 23 because ling P3551118 8-1111 Of quartenback of the assassination of President lD0n Trull to a ' [pounded 9 Big lrese into a New Years date with 111- inois. putting Orange Bowl against Nebraska- and setting up a Mississippi- Alabama Sugar Bowl match of- unhappy powers. Ole Miss had: to hat 1 down, ' A ping band of hockeyists. Aldo Guidolin., feated the_ RCAF Eagles at For the losers the goals came] Station l‘lIll( yesterday after-; from Pit Martin and Floyd [ noon by the score of 9-3. Smith. i CURLIN-G DRAW FOR BELVEDERE ‘ j the play . .3 which ended 4-0. ;did better in the other two A Going Concern Looks as if the Prince County their regular goalie was in- League is a going concern. In three games the cash cus tomers have averaged about jured early in that battle. One circumstance of the O'- 450 per game. and this figure Leary I-eEl°n3l1'¢ 831119 W35 must compare favorably with unique, at least as far as our the average in ISHL games at memory for hockey line-ups this time last year. The balance down through the years is con- among the teams has been ade- Two games. in- quate so far. corned. 0‘Leary had in its line- up two boys with exactly the volving Junior Legionaires with same name —- Ron MacArthur. Borden and O’Leary, have been If any of you reminiscence ex- close and exciting with the Jun- iors coming from behind each game to take the verdict. and this is always a puIse-quicken- mg experience. The Combines heat Borden 11-5 and seemed to have more than just an edge over the South Shore boys. but it must be remembered that Borden has some aces in the hole which they haven't played yet, and also Edwin Johnston, perls can come up with another such duplication, please let's hear about it. some years ago a young Summerside hockey team had Garth and Garland Harris. and their names had to be written in full in scoring summaries. Another example was Grant and Gord Grady. But a team having two players of the same name? 1 We'll be waiting to hear about t. Our Favorites Win Far too often athletic teams we favor do not emerge victor- ious, but in the last two years our Grey Cup favorites have given us reason to celebrate We rooted for Winnipeg over Hamilton, and Hamilton over B.C. Lions. Why the switch? Well, this is how we feel. Ham- ilton with Trimbla — non. Ham- ilton with Sazio — oui. That should answer your questions and also show how hard we're working at this bi-lingual bus- We. read "Portrait of a Hero" a recent issue of a Canadian periodical and frankly we were a bit disappointed. We suppose it's foolish to expect too much of our her- oes. but it does cause a bit of a jar when your realize that they too have feet of clay. Seems Gordie Howe (our he- ro of all hockey heroes) tried to_dodge a traffic ticket by re- minding the cop who gave it to him that he coached the kids of policemen, and he even threatened to quit the ob — but was only bluffing. mercy. The author says fur- ther: “On the ice Howe can be as cruel and vicious as Huskies, NEW YORK 4 AP )—Demoied fullback Junior Coffey t -meat,’ after ,, scorelemf 0 Washington Huskies right into‘- “'°“‘ ”“° 35- “'3 W1” °°“' A practice has been called at -hafidl-hitting first quarter, had ‘Are vlcfcrs the R099 BOWL Aubum passed buted a cup record 534 .- the Fm-um {mm 5 to 7 o'clock gradumy taken command of its way to_ the Orange Bowl. Un- 576.50 at the gate and an over- “might M jmim. hockey play. the wntest and scored another 3 THE CANADIAN PRESS ibeaten Mississippi is New Or- a“ “up ’°°°’d re.V°““F of 3b°“£ ars wishiirvg for a tryout for the touchdown to make it 14-3 on a -y . 9193115‘ bmmd 3391‘ “'i11fli118 3 , oes were soon Chmoewnwn team omcws onewmd plunge by Art Baker, Rochester Americans. the .hot- (field goal gamble and the °°mfi’1‘:““deg]' is ) F1 in announced last night’. (before half-time. ,',‘I°ff:kP51“Il"ea me Amenclfn 50119193539?” C°"f9T9flC¢’- 5119- W e ( W P em 8' falo Bisons 7-2’ Saturday night These results highlighted 5' am of traditional United ennedy. ; Shortly a f t e 1- Washington 1 Washington State 16-O.l Six conference faculty rep- I ntatives voted the Huskies] Auburn upset Alabama 10-8. the Plainsmen tie from behind to tie Mis-‘ two slssippi State 10-10 on Billy Carl‘ assists. Ron Attwell, Ray Bru- Irwin's fourth-quarter, fourth-: mel and Ray other Barons markers. 1 I 20-yard field goal. ll of which makes the major: Royals Beat i l l Sandy's Royals. a hard-thuén-l e. the‘ The Royals had command of. in the first period; The Eagles‘ frames. The Royals scored one unanswered goal in the middle’ ses ‘ S1011. and outscored the home forces 4-3 in the last period. An-', gie Carroll scored iv('o- for the winners while Gnrd Lovelace second of the season with ...e. Eachern. Harry Simmonds, Iv-E fired a brace for the Eag1eS~ i Eagles. ' One other tie turned up on the six-game program. That in- volved the Western division leading Chicago Bears, who came ' tie, against Minnesota Vikings. - The ties Ie the Bears and; Green Bay Packers, who tied. 13-13 with Detroit last Thurs- day where they were before the week's action began. Chicago leads with a 9-1-2 record to 9-2-1 for defending league champion Green Bay. In other games, Johnny Uni-: tas passed for three touchdowns - in Baltimore Colts‘ 35-20 wal- loping of Washington Redskins, and Los Angeles Rams downed San Francisco '49ers 21- . San Diego's chargers, leaders‘ the American Football Lea-gue’s Western division. ew the Eastern race into a scramble by whipping Houston, Oilers 27-0. That dropped the; Oilers into a tie for the top spot with Boston Patroiis. 17-7 vic- tors over Buffalo Bills. Houston‘ is 6-5-0 to Boston‘: 6-5-1. , In the only other game. New: Yonk Jets blanked Kansas City- W league champion Chiefs 1 with Philadelphia Eagles, their secod tie in a row a their their first shutout in 54 games. an Berrigan, vs. Frank Hansen ‘ Dr. K. lrwin. Earl Baker, Ivo mint)? Cudmore. 0“ Doug Saunders. Dr. W. More-l side. Cec. Dowling. Jlggs Mac-l Donald, vs. Doug Hill, Norman: Butch Magee. George Nicholson, Bill ‘ Vic Williams. Joe Mollo vs, Myron Bell, Errol Nicholson. Hugh Simpson, Toby MacMil- lan Bcer.l Y. 1 Edgar Taylor, Dr. 1.. Cox, D.‘ V. MacDonald. Ed Hodgson vs. (Mel Jenkins, Frank Maclnnisfi l‘_°”~ -1- “3°L“°d' , ' ties —- Mclntyre. Reeves. lxane. E. Buchanan, Al. Gaudet. , 8.30 .m. ‘- Reg. Jenkins. P.M. Simonds‘ Reg. Newsom. Reg. Mahar vs.‘ Ivan Horne. Mack Kennedy‘. Reg. MacLean, Bob Dowling. ( 15 A. Likely, Tom Rogers, Rog- er Perry. Ivan Hughes. vs Dave Walker. A.B. Lepage. Dave Boswell. John MacKinnon. Cyril Flynn, Stan Bryenton. Frank Trainor, A. McCurdy vs. Harry Bartlett. Ted Miller, D. T. Laidlaw. Art. Clark. Fred Cannon. Dr. Drysdale, Ted Brooks. Dr. L. Killorn vs. Geo. Vessey. Dan Mccormack. Chiefs 17-0, handing the defend- Bill Jardine. Hoag Carmlchael.(12. E All players not listed will bel requircd for spares. \ The game was rugged and 14- penalties were handed l by Referees Bob Rcardon‘ and Bob Black. the Royals zei- img the Lion's share —- r-l(=\-en. Buffet and Davis were each gi- - ven majors for fighting. Summary: First Period: -— 1 Royals Lawlor IWh1llnrk) 419, 2 Roy- als —- G. Kane (.\l. .\lacl\'mnnn) 12.06; '1 Royals »-- -'1. Carroll (A. Andrews. 4. Royals —— Andrews (A. Car- 15.06: Penal- ran_ -‘nent to be nam , ance in the 5 14-3 strengthened its ‘ Dufour ") he is personable and gener- ous off it." And he is accused of "deliberately raising the puck at other people's heads".. Author Gzowski goes on to say: "Violence and intimidation are a facet of hockey" and if. this is so. why argue against boxing and not put hockey in al- most the same category. Anoth- er quote which some fans might take exception to: "listening to a hockey player talk without swear words wo d like watching him play without I stick." We've heard this said of mu]; skinner: but never of hockey players before. Not exactly a good example for our minor. hockey players and their coach- es who are trying to instill sport- manship and a cw other virtue! in their young charges. LAST WEEK'S BOUQUET Working together like an oiled machin 8. Their skating smooth and their stick-handling keen. To honor them wo write this limerick, For each of them have scored a "high hat trick". Their names - Ulric G and Gregory Deighan. Illinois yPlay Bowl Game -.C011€ge bowl picture look like I this: Rose—Il1lnois. 7-1-1, n Wgdy ington, 6-4. 0range—-Nebraska, 0-1, Auburn, 9-1. _ Sugar—Mississippl. 7-0-2, vs .Alabama. 7-2. Coi:fon—Texas, 10-0, vs oppo- ed Dec. 7. al- most certain to be Navy. 8-1, 7 . Baylor rode the record-break- _ 21-12 triumph over Rice and a Bluebonnet Bowl invitation to oppose Louis- iana Statc. 7-3. Dec. 21. Baylor officials are expected ap- prove the post-season appear- MAY MAKE GATOR BOWL In addition. Georgia Tec conquest of Georgia position as a possible rival for North Caro- iina in the Gator Bowl at Jack- s sonville, Fla.. Dec. M15 is- sippi State also is a candidate. Pittsburgh. once- beaten but uninvited, mov ind the artful direction of Fred Maz- urek and got a touchdown and a field goal from Rick Leeson in the final quarter to offset the aerial bombardment of George Mira and whip Miami 31-M in a night game. NHL SATURDAY CHICAGO 3 NEW YORK 3 SUMMARY First period: 1. New York 1 (Henry, McKenney:‘ 4:29: .. Yo Gilbert 5 (Fonleyne. lngariield) 13:53; 3. Chicago. Hay 9 (Pilate. Hull) 1a:49. 4. Chicago, Murphy 4 (Maki) 17:06. Pe ties-—Mac- Neil 4:50; Goyette 15:13. Secon period: 5. Chicago, Balfour 1 (Wharram, Mikita) 6.06. Penaltles—Pilote 0:22: Balfour 3'50; Murphy 5:02: Nielsnn 18:58; Maki 18:58 h. T 11- period: No scoring. Penalties — Nesterenko 5:33: Ncilsnn 10:54. Saves Dcnlnrdy Plants 11 DETROIT 1 TORONTO 1 SUMMARY First period: No scoring. Pell- K allies—A Pronovost 13:32. Baun :17-2n. Seronrl period: 1 Detroit. -T. .\'IaFL€0d' 14-39 MacDonald 5 (Delvecchio) 1:29. Penalty—l-lenderson 4:15. - Third period: 2. Toronto, Pul- l ford T (Horton) 15:30. Penalties M Hlll(‘ll(!S0ll. Wliillock. I.awlnr.‘ -_1n;;1~;m1 :;52_ Pronovost Mackinnnn 7 ‘J0. Cuslienan 16:33. cond Period: — 5 Royals gm-05; — Wlnilock ILa\\lor Reeves‘ (‘rozior 1412 9-33 58 Penalties -— .\'l(-lnlvre 30“-or ‘,Wond, Built-It -major» Da > (major) Rt-eves. Hutclieson. ‘Ln\'ela(.:e (1.. Boone. Relton. i tyre) 5.22: 8 Royals .\lacl\'1n- non (Rr‘r*\’05- ll.-332 9 R0.\’-"ll-5-: Penalties - Kurlcnbach 2:47. Jim .\'la(-Lend ([)avis. A. Carroll) 'p31bm 15;49, 113.24; 10. Royals ~- D. Carroll Tm.-d period: No scoring. lwhitlovk. Lawlor) 15.15: ll. P¢nal1ieg._Connel]y 8:45, L|- ‘ Eagles. Lovelace (Rcltcn) 17.59: [059 13-30 agles —— B. Sleigh -Relton) saves-, 18.45. Penalties; Davies. D. Car- Johnston 6 10 11-21.‘ in,” (Hodge 10 O F-34 _ Third Period: — 6. Eagles - '2.28: 7. Royals. \. (‘arroll -.\lcln- . 1412 9-35 "l*‘-‘ ‘.\(I0.\’TRI-_JAL 0 BOSTON 0 SUNLVIA ‘ alties—Provost 12:28. Kurten- 1256. Oliver 19 06 \ First period: No scoring. Pen- ‘ Second period: No ‘scoring. ~ -‘ *2 v 77$ .,Q_‘§iHI_uu3nn 3 1 1 1 l ;l l 1 2 ( a 1 i -* w.--- '2 rs‘; §.~aa=szajr_-s-.-Ins -.1:-mi, 1 r