‘PRORTS FRONT . | -PVI Pucksters i Disappointing: By CHRIS ANNETT BOE the many people whom attended the first game of ‘the semi-finals of the Charlottetown and. districk Junior "hockey league at the Charlottetown Forum Tuesday evening .- the result must have been a PM Pg yr east eg lige » least. PVI took it on the chin 13-3 and they looked to be a far different club than tied the Saints 88 a week ago. | PVI had done a tremendous rebuilding job since Christ- mas and the consensus of @pinion was that they were going to be a strong contendor in the playoffs. Many expected te see the Institute shade Saints last evening on the basis of their regaining Herb Steele and the fact that Wayne Mac;, along =, Ceci, MacDonald were sidelined by the » SRHS coaching sta 4 Tanner tic wea nak tie: Genie tae! Uae tenis Pbonberded. | Reid with shots. PVI did not appear to be &s « sharp as they have appeared in their last few outings but no doubt this illusion was brovzht about by the tenacious fore- * checking of SDHS forwards. Coach A. J. MacAdam, who took over the chores when * Bert Steele left the fold found a fine replacement for Cecil MacDonald as Dunsford contributed two goals in his outing. CONSIDER THIS... Every season interested . ey fans’ cluster around their - TV sets on Saturday and down to see the world’s best * hockey players beat their brains out for 60 minutes. CBC-TV televises a Montréal or Toronto oS on every other week- end and at least ten times a season avid Chicago fans get to see their darling Bobby Hull in action. Now comes the interesting point . HOW MANY TIMES IN THE. PAST FEW SEASONS HAVE FANS SEEN * BOBBY HULL PICKED AS ONE OF THE THREE STARS AFTER ONE OF THE GAMES. This is not the Detroit series of last season. I’ve seen Hull play a ¢ few this season and he has yet to come up with a big ef. a ; Ts . UNEXPECTED FACEOFF other players also became in- volved. At left are Leafs Ron | guson (22) of Montreal Caha- gue game in Toronto. The Ellis (8) and Canadiens Dick Bob Baun (21) of Toronto face-off during Wednesday Maple Leafs and» John Fer- night’s National Hockey Lea- and. ee Players came to blows 2 i i i g 5 : yet. . RAMBLINGS arity contest between the MONTREAL TORONTO LEAFS and to date the on The Rangers skating ability showed to better effect in the third as they won the game by outscoring the Legion 3-1 but it was some sloppy work by Sum- merside marksmen that even- tually meant the difference. Three times in the closing min- utes they missed golden , op-. portunities -f-r-om-close-.in— and that hurt a lot. ores stuffed... home a Kennedy and then Kennedy ie all the way = SUMMERSIDE—Rogers’ Ran- | Fe - MERSIDE had a: game taken away from VINCIAL LEGION. BONSPIEL by default was delayed. by bad weather . However the rules of the siders came back. Paul Hogan killing off a Charlottetown power jand advances against Frederic- ton Junior Red Wings in Mari- time Junior =. ht was the first series win - Rangers TODAY'S CURLING DRAWS 7 ned one his backhand shot. However a beautiful effort by_ C.Y. MacDonald and Les Barnes gave the Rangers their winning tally. MacDonald streak- ed through the Legionnaires, didn’t favour them. — play got a break, and Ellis fan- | 3 im |became the first player in Na- “Covers Prince Edward SECOND SECTION Charlottetow n, Thur., March 3, 1966. + he Guardian — Island Like The Dew” PAGE i Rang ers Wi CHICAGO ( ng Hull tional Hockey League history to | reach the 50-goal plateau twice when he, slammed a third-period | goal past Hank Bassen to lead Chicago Black Hawks to a 5-4 victory over Detroit Red Wings Wednesday night. The Golden Jet, who accom- plished the feat of 50 goals in the 1961-62. season to share the record with Maurice Richard and Bernie Geoffrion, former Montreal stars, needs one more goal in Chicago’s 13 remaining games to break the mark. Hull’s record-tying goal came at 5:15 of the third period and gave the Hawks a 4-2 lead, but the Chicagoans were forced to ! | Duff (CP Wirepheto) (8). BE Cop P.E.I. iota Crown D. Arsenault, 3:46; 2. Summer- side, Perry, (Smith; Foley): 10.28; 3. Summerside, K. Arsen- ault (Richard, Smith) 11:26; 4. Rangers, MacDonald ‘Brown, Kennedy) 16:35; 5. Rangers; Kennedy (MacDonald) 16:37; 6. Summerside, Perry (D. Arsen- ault) 19:55. Penalties: Smith, 0:54; —Irwin,-1:48;-MacDonald. Smith, 7:37, MacDonald, 11:54, K. Arsenault, Chandler 14:17 (minor, misconduct), K. battle back from a 4-4 tie to win it on Kenny Wharram’s goal with less than ‘six minutes to play. : TAKE FIRST SPOT The victory, . Chicago’s 10th BOBBY HULL Bithe fast. rough game watched Hull Leads Hawks To Win; in, Habs Tie pate Pacrns, ee Armstrong’s goal mid- | NHL's undefeated scrapper on ee through the final period | the ice, had to settle for a draw | gave Toronto Maple Leafs a 33 | with the rugged Baun. Neither tie. with Montreal eens | ot a Yood punch at the other, here Wednesday night in SUMMARY bruising National Hockey | First period — 1. Montreal, League game highlighted by a Backstrom’ 17 (Larose) 5: 13; 2. six-player, second-period brawl. | Toronto, Kelly 6 (Pulford, Shack Four powerplay. goals were | 14:39. Penalties—Montreal team scored, two by each team, in | penalty served by Cournoyer 1:55; Laperriere, Shack 11:00. by 14,996 fans. | Second period — 3. Montreal, .cntreal scorers were Ralph | Beliveau 22 (Cournoyer, Backstrom, Gilles . Tremblay, | Tremblay) 11:27; 4. Toronto, and Jean Beliveau. It was Beli- | Mahovlich 25 (Hillman, Ellis) veau's 22nd goal of the season 14:04. Penalties—Ferguson ma- and the 380th of his career, jor, misconduct, Harper’ major, /making him the third highest, Misconduct, Baun major, mis- all-time scorer jn’ NHL. history. conduct, He now has one more than Ted | misconduct 3:00, Shack 10:58, the retired ele 13:23, Stanley 14:25. Third period—5. Montreal, The goal, which gave Cana- | |"Tremblay 22 (Rousseau, Bell- diens a short-lived 2-1 lead in |Veau) 4:24; 6. Toronto, Arm- ‘the second period, bounced in strong 9 (Keon )11:10. Penalties |the net off Beliveau’s skate on|—Shack 4:17, Ferguson 6:07, ‘a powerplay. |Robarts 7:20, Worsley served by G. 6 Kurtenbach major, - a” against one loss and one tie with for the season, nine short of the Red Kelly and Frank Mahov- | ‘Jat 15:50 of the second period, ,|Hull and Bobby slammed the Detroit, gave the Hawks sole possession of the league lead, one point ahead of Montreal Ca- nadiens, who settled for a 3-3 tie against Toronto Maple Leafs Wednesday night. The Red Wings, playing one of their stronger games of the season against the Hawks, took the lead at 16:32 of the first pe- riod ona goal by Alex Delvec- lchio but-Chicago tied it with 11 second left in the. period on a goal by.Lou Angotti. Chicago took a 2-1 lead in the second period ‘on ‘a. goal by Phil Esposito, but Gordie Howe tied it at- 7:53 of the setond‘ ‘period: with his 26th goal of the season. The Hawks were shorthanded Moore in 1958-59. When Hull - scored his goal, | the crowd of more than 17,000 cluttered the ice with hats, bal- | loons and what-not as play was interrupted for more than five | minutes. x Earlier in the game, Hull re- mained on the ice for an unu- sual five minutes but to no avail. , . SUMMARY First period—i. Detroit, Del- vecchio 24 (Howe, Fonteyne) oe 2. Chicago, Angotti 4. | Second period — 3. Chicago, Esposito 23-(Maki,* Hul}).-5:29; 4. Detroit,” Howe . 26-:.(Delvec- chio) .7:58;. 5. Chicago, Hay 15 15:50, Penaltles—Gadsby 8:08, Vasko, 14:53. Third period—6. Chicago, Hull 50 (Mikita, Wharram) 5:15; 7. Detroit, Howe 27 (Delvecchio, Prentice) 7:29; 8. Detroit, Mac- Gregor 18 (Prentice, Bathgate) 10:55; 9. Chicago, Wharram 23 (Stapleton, Hulk) 14:02. Penal- ties — Mohns 6:02, MacGregor 8:12, Esposito 10:11, Howe 12:04. ‘Shots on goal by Detroit 11 12 18—36 but Red Hay managed to make it 32 on a breakaway. That’s how it stood in the third period when Hull made it 4-2 with his record-tying goal. The play was launched by Stan Mikita, who passed to Whar- ram, who in_turn flipped it to puck past Bassen for a 4-2 Chi- cago lead. | Goals. Mahovlich's, also on a| power play, came about three | minutes after Beliveau scored |T his |FEATURED HARD-ROCKS The brawl broke out at three’ minute mark of the second pe- iriod, percipitated by two hard- rocks, Bobby Baun of the Leafs and John Ferguson of the Ca- nadiens. Tray had been gunning for each other since the start of jlue Be 2 and when they finally jcame to “blows along the boards two other players from each team,- trying to’ intercede, -got up between Montreal’s Terry Har- per and Orland Kurtenbach of the Leafs. They came together. jtwice to slug it out despite ef- forts to restrain them. knocked Harper cold in a fight winger played for Boston, es- caped unscathed. Ferguson, recognized as the 60 08s here Monday, grabbed | -bullied—his- ee ee ee -Arsenault,—14:1/7,.Perry, 17:50, | HOWE-GETS—-SECOND-——-———| qn 8-19-9904 The following is th ting | Mérrow, FH. Doucet vs C. Mae-|20 early 30 lead and held a| Side and forced: Woodcock to| MacDonald (minor, game mis-|" Goals by Howe and Brute | ™cs*° ollowing {ts the curling , o ; b 3-4 edge after tw ind come out and cover the angle.| conduct), 19:18. 4 MacG both coming on| MONTREAL 3 TORONTO 3 draw for Thursday night at the|Donald, L.- Landry,” E. Mac- ge © periods. Le-| when he did, MacDonald slipped . acGregor, TORONTO (CP) — Captain Swain, M. Reid. |Slonaires pressed for the equali- Third period: 10. Rangers,/powerplay s, lifted the Red ap! Charlottetown Club: wi wer” .’ a pass across the goalmouth to t into a 44 tie mid-way in = p.m. 9—11 ieee Barne eee the oncoming Barnes who ginger- MacDonald (Kennedy) 1:11; 11, |Wings er ant Ice 1 — L. Campbell, B. Ro- | ICE 1—E. Doucet, 5. Chewar. See maar bee aon beat |ty slipped in the open corner. Rangers, Kennedy, 4:24; 12, |the final -peri on Whereas oa H.MacLaughlin, A.|C- Paters, R. Ching vs C. De-~ cae te an ..,| The. game was an extremely |Summerside, Hogan (Richard) |made it 54 as co 4 “We vs A.E. Piercey, Dr. Jelks, |!amey, C: MacDonald, J. Mac- MacDonald, J of, Cecil rugged one with a total of 30| 12:08; 13. Rangers, Burns (Mae- | with Hull and Pat Staple ey E. Tedford, J. Dennis. Donald, J. Young. t-< Jeera a ee and |infractions being called by the| Donald) 14:09. Penalties: Hog-| Hull’s goal and two ass Ice 2 — Dr. MacDonald vs D.|ICE_ 2-H. Larter, allant, the pace .with | refering team. an, 2:97, Arsenault, 7:21, Mut-|gave him a total of 87 points c M. Birt, W. Coffin vs R. Rowan, |a total of five goals and six SUMMARY tart, 7:42, Bernard, 11:44 . omeree. R. Solomon, B. Pierce, W. Ding: |assists. MacDonald had a hat- . ae dn aa lee 5 — D. Bell vs Dr. Gallant Wall: trickand two ‘assists, Kennedy «First period: J. Summerside, | lpr, 15:21, Taylor, 18:46. : ' io eee The following are the contests |two goals and theree assists and | i Powna ps ¢ p.m. in the first two draws -of the|Brown~picked up two assists. _ Ices 3 and 4,,(Legion Play- | patriot Bonspiel for ladies to| Barnes and John Irwin scor- = S L dad. offs), be played in Souris this weekend. |ed Charlottetown's other goals. | eries ea 8.30 a ' ten |9:00_A-M.—Montague vs Sum. Richard Perry scored twice «tustd Ice 1, 2 and 5 open for scratch |merside and Charlottetown vs) for with singles The Pownal Royals, detested games. : Souris. 1. Soing to Keir Arsenault, Don Nine Mile Creek’ AT SOURIS. “unten” ee fe North River Rink last fast net in Art Ballem of the Charltte i : an. game town Legion won his ame The following is the Curling cori teat “hirics ti Gee North heh Seba g Summerside opened the first Period just like a team that has its back to the wall (they did) and had ammassed three goals by. the midway point of the ses- sion. Donnie Arsenault started the assault at the 3.48 mark as _ ‘Draw at Souris today. 79 ICE J—B. Boertien, J. Macin- dosh, R. Lamby, H. Poole vs ®D. Marold, P. Gallant, D. Mac- ‘Leod, D. MacLaren. aCE 2—R. Coffin, H: Poole, D. Bill MacDonald : Paces Pee Wees The Charlottetown Racoons de- feated Morell 8 to 3 in. the first By DOUG MARTIN VANCOUVER (CP)—Alberta’s Hazel Jamison rink breezed to its sixth straight victory Wed- tiene Provincial Pee.|he tipped the puck inesday and put the pressure |Shirley Pilon of Bathurst ‘en- | 8% ag P. Smith C. Scott,| Curling, happily enjoying —un- Wee ite This —— a two-|Richard Parry pret onl on squarely..on the rest‘ of the field |gineered the 9-8 New Brunswick (Ne each. beaten records of 4-0 and 3-0 re- game total point, series. ald Smith under Ellis seven min. jit the Canadian women's curl-|upset of Marg Cooke of Vancou- “aturday ight — = spectively. Ballem managed to + OOD SERIIG Inthe first game at Morell,|ttes later and-then Keir Arsen- |#& championships. ver by stealing a page from the resume -their semi | steal one on the and two the Racoons downed their host|ault tipped in a blueline drive| Mrs. Jamison’s Edmonton/|B.C. book — 4 last-gasp rush final, which Hampshie leads in the third end of afternoon Ee Ssh d(8):42 DP 13-1. Gary Currie got two goals|off the stick of Smith. |rink. overpowered Kay Hoare of jafter blowing an early lead. games to one. match against Wes Storey but and John Dalziel scored ‘once| Charlottetown came back Summerside, P.E.I., 13-3 in a| Mrs. Jamison’s Edmonton from then.on the clubs curled Volkswagens | seroi's tow marke lage ne Boal a8 Machonald |*'Secfatchewan took over see-|tory over Nicole Jenelie, « ty | SOUFIS Bones ~ — « [pesutilly tne vaded a em a over . ” Tes' ie Si In the second - game, Char-|cock and then J; Ke ond place as Barbara MacNe- French girl, who at 22 is the coming on top 94. He locked cman sar geo | ae ae cated va ae ce ge iar ead ene ane = Te S| WIRY Susctcer. [Grail os ime ee we ian ea evening match bu a : Volkswagen parts. goals for the Racoons. Kelly and|However the Togticnagies “tant a_seventh-round clash | Barbara “MacNevia of Delisle | Souris Crossbones shaded the |jess trouble as he cracked the ae oa scoréd one each for| pressing and it paid off as Rich. |Atberta and Saskatchewan. put Saskatchéwan into a second-|Morell Meteors 5-4 in an Inter-| game wide open by scoring a fh _RUDISCH'S — | Morell ard Perry took a. breakaway|, Marg Cooke of Vancouver, |Place tie with B.C. by blitzing |mediate B playoff at Souris last |nig four in the fourth end and , | “The Racoons meet New’ Haven who. started the day tied for Kay Hoare of Summerside, evening and “kept” their “slim aling two and three in GARAGE in the next round. All pass from Don Arsenault and then stealing P Sosa asked to meet at the Forum (beat Ellis with a low shot intojfirst place with four straight |P-E1, 18-3. June Shaw of Ken- |hopes alive for a playoff berth |the ninth and’ tenth. [a on at five o'cinck thi evedae the left hand corner. _ |wins, also lost a@ fifth - round /°ra, Ont., staged a late come- oe grovinciel race. Hed they) Qsnourke, sporting a 1-0 re- ater *_| Charlottetown picked up one|match 9-8 to New Brunswick, back to win 10-6 over Joyce they would have been elim-| 4 entering the day won his In other sixth - round action, Nicole Janelle of Quebec won 8&7 over Vi Pike of Newfound- land, June Shaw of Ontario de- goal in the second as they out- scored Summerside 2-1. The Le- | gionnaires went ahead 5-2 before fans had settled back from the DANBURY Take Two Pastings lead June Coyle—went ahead 4-0 after three ends. They finished the job with back-to-back fours in the fifth and sixth ends. Beek of Dauphin, Man., and Vi|imated bit are now still alive al- Pike of Grand Falls, 9-8 to Rene Snow of Halifax in |Temaining games. other fifth round action. Nfld., lost ult. Danny O’Rourke had a battle on his hands to win his first 8-4. However both ‘are in the same spot today after ~the second round of the Legion Bonspiel be- ing held at the Charlottetown River Hockey League. Pownal | new leads the series 3-2. wGcdtind Ge the witsers. were J. MacPhail with four and D. Sheidow with a pair. For the losers: MacEachern first game by default and then subdued the Art Love quartet in one of the two games with a blank end. The other game fea- though they must win all their Carl Peters was the hero of the match as he O'Rourke, Ballum Are: Unbeaten In Legion Spiel turing a blank end was the con- test between Bob LeClair Bill Pud ; ir ca..2 up with a four ender in the eleventh, having given one | Boston up in the tenth to win the match 11-8 and eliminate Beer. 11 O’CLOCK DRAW Ballum (C) 112 101 010 101— 9 Storey (6) 000 010. 101 010— 4 Miles (C) 1M1 010 101 O01— 6 Prowse (B) i 040 102 010 110—10 . O’Rourke (C) won by See B. Beer (B) 010 019 010 1— 8 'B. LeClair (IC) 101 103 001 040—11 B. Stewart (C) B. Stewart (C) F. Miles (C) 200 000 110 xxx— 4 A. Robereson: (a) 023-214. 002. s2en—14 : A. Batlum (c) 010 401 123 o10—13 D. Saunders (B) Hast. season when the Leaf | oo" ii Courhoyer 9:57, Pulford, J. C. record -set by Montreal’s Dickie lich fired the other Toronto |Tremblay 19:55. Shots on goal by: Montreal 12 12 12—36 13 12 .13—38 Attendance—14,996. . |NEW YORK 5 BOSTON 3 NEW YORK (AP)—Third:pe- riod :goals by. Billy Hicke, Bob Nevin and Vic Hadfield gave New York Rangers a 53 vic- tory over Boston Bruins in a battle- between the National Hockey League’s last two clubs Wednesday night. Hicke, who had assisted on two second-period goals by Earl Ingarfield, tied the score for New York on a scramble in : win of Boston goalie. Ed° John- ston at 5:23 of the last period. Boston defenceman Gilles Ma- rotte was in the penalty box when Hicke hit. . Nevin broke the tie just | over two minutes later. when he swept the puck across the Bos- ton goal mouth and backhanded it past Johnston. Hadfield’s 13th * | goal of the season wrapped it up for New York. He took a cross- whipped the puck home. at. 11:14. AE Maw ~ First period— Boston, ant (ene) 6:08 eee Howell 9:08; Hillman 13 . ee See hone ie cyk 20 (Oliver, McKenzie) :20; New York, 16 (Hi- cke, Neilson) 8:37 4. New: York, ingarfield 17 (Hicke, Howell) 13:21. §.° Boston, Martin 17 (Doak) 17:42: Penalties —Mar- otte 4:38, Johnston 6:31; Mar- tin. double minor, Hadfield ma- |r, misconduct 1:3 ¢.° Third period — 6. New York, Hadfield 13 (Ratelle) 11:14. alties — Marotte 3:41, and | 13:19, Kennedy, 17:02, Neilson 17:23. ee New York Attendance—i0,222. Murrays Pot 9 As Albony Wins. 11 13 11-98 12 19 10-41 Hy be i : rE g E i fe it i Ae it B g i z 102 020 000 101— 6 A. Love (C) 010 000 010 920— 4 D. O'Rourke (C) * 100 202 001 301—10 pumped home three goals in the Bantams Host aceoff as Muttart broke in|feated Irene Snow of Nova Sco- - “FIFTH ROUND _ G. Stewart (C) alone on a two against one situa-|tia 11-6 and Joyce Beek of : Makar oat Sheet aria he 120 000 103 oo1— 8 New Haven tion and made a low ten footer. |Manitoba defeated Shirley Pil- |Nfld. 001 003 101 2— 8 |the otherg. fo Mere had’ NHL STANDINGS |W. stotey c) !John Irwin blasted a low. back-/|son of New Brunswick 11-8. N.S. 310 110 030 0— 9|Murphy and Ernie Crane had \ 001 241 010 130—13} The Bantam Hornets wilt . |@hand through a maze of players|TOOK EARLY LEAD two. each, | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | The following is today’s draw: *|meet the New Haven club this b to get the Rangers back within| In the Alberta-P.E.1. match, |Que. ‘ 000 111 2001 6| ‘The game was highlighted by National League _|2:00 P.M. Jjevening at the Charlottetown y two and then MacDonald blast-|the Edmonton women — skip /Alta. 612 000 0410—I4\4 brawl in the second period. WLT -F APt| Ballum vs. LeClaits..,..°-r-fForufit at 6.30 im the second ed a passout from Jamie Ken-|Gale Lee, third Mrs. Jamison, Majors to Craine, Affleck, Mac- | Chicago 32 18 7.210 152 71| O'Rourke vs. Larter. igame of their two game total TIP TOP nedy past Woodcock. ‘second Sharon. Harrington and |Man 120 030 100 1— 8 |Intyre and Cheverie were asses- | Montreal 31 16 8 186 142 70|' Dr. Prowse ~ 3inclatr. point affair for the right to re- om: 002 101 024 0-10 |sed for fighting and Bill Mac- | Detroit 26 22 9 186 159 61] Stewart vs. Love. : this county in provincial Laren got a misconduct. Loyola |T-rento 25 20 9 161 150 59/8:00 P.M. playdowns. The two clubs- bat., g y PLAY-OFF HOCKEY | Sask. 222 208 O11 x--13 |Grigtin and MiacAdam reffed the New York 15 33 9 168 218 39| Storey vs. Robertson. tled to a 33 draw in their first See our /P.E.L, * 000 020 100 x— 3 | came: 'Boston 15 35: 6 136 296 36|- Ballum vs. O'Rourke. encounter. » * * ew: ont ‘e. c. ‘ B.C, * 011 100 320 0— 8 ie a complete F O R U M NB. 200°012 001 3— 9 . THURSDAY, MARCH 3rd—8:30 P.M. = selection | SIXTH ROUND. t e } St. Dunstan's High School Lenisets nai tab wi priced from : Wi. Nova Scotia 300 101 100 0— 6 _ @ e 39:0 i 49° | Provincial Vocational Institute Kiefee 101 021 020 1 8 e (2nd game two-out-of-three series) Nfld. O18 ont ee Ort nts—35c \ Adults—60c B.C. 010 100 101 x— 4 Stude 5 I Sask. 101 043 040 x—13 ea | Alberta 121 044 001 x—13] § Perma Cr se ‘PEL. 000 100 110 x— 3 rou . T sers Manitoba 102 031 110 2—11 Awa. press i NB. 010 300 004 0— 8 || sory _|.._Canadian...women's curling 4% | championship standings Wed- | nesday after six rounds: | ’ PWL Alberta 6 6 0, KEEPS CANADA CLEAN Saskatchewan 6 5 tee NG | | British Colambta f 4-2 Bick, : AD bs : SEGUE ae ; Nova _ Scotia 6353 CANADA'S LARGEST MANUFACTURER OF Quebec 633 THEY ARE THE BEST INDUSTRIAL CLEANING SUPPLIES AND EQUIPMENT —Ontatio 6° 3.3 ; * x d + Newfoundland 6 24 These are the five players Press yesterday. It is the se- ier, a junior. FROM LEFT TO Cazzie Russell (Mivhigan) and | Manitoba 62 4 named-to the first team of the: cond time that-Cazzie Russell RIGHT are Louie’ Dampier Dave Scheldl ( 7 } P.E.LI-: 615 1966 college. basketball All-. has been named to the team. (Kentucky), Dave Bing (Gyra- e Perdue). \ New, Brunswiek 615 American by The Associated Al) are seniors except Damp- cuse), Clyde Lee (Vanderhilt), (AP Wirephote) , * ; > y ice pass from Jean Ratelle and - rod A f