The Guardian, Charlottetown. Mon. Nov. 28. 1964. 9 By DON ANGUS HALIFAX (CP)—St. Msry', University Huskiel overcame nine penalties and a scrappy McMaster University defence to pull out a 15-1 victory in the Atlantic Bowl game here Satur- day over the Marauders from Hamilton. Ont. The Huskies captured the Stanfield first-place tie with St. Francis Xavier University in the Atlan- tic Football Conference, opened up a 9-1 lead early in the fail classic McMaster. undefeated Ontario intercollegiate Football Confer- ’ this season. Mary‘s charging backs on . eral occasions and countering with an unexpected combina- tion of off-tackle rushes and [mirth-quarter passes. Mary‘s triumph was the fifth victory by an FAC team against invited representatives of the OIFC and the senior In- scored wins in four of the last five post-season Bowl games. TED PURNELL ADS Huskies‘ rookie Ted Purnell ran back McMaster's wetting kick yard march that culminated in a field goal and an early 3-0 cad. .lohn Schneider's boot fro the McMaster 30-yard line later proved to be all that St. Mary’s neede to keep the Atlantic Bowl from the Marauders for the second time in four years McMaster. d e fe ate d by toe X-men of St. Francis Xavier in off 15 yards to begin a 60- 56 Si.-Mary's Win Bowl Game On Rain Drenched Field A slippery turf. soaked by rain Friday. slowed the offence of both teams. McMaster failed to get out of their own zone in the second quarter and when St. Mary's rushing backs did man- age to find a foothold and 1161 through the Marauders' line. penalties and a key interception hurt them. One burst. highlighted by Pu- ma' 38 - ard sprint off left tackle. went by the boards when George Adams intercepted a pass by Murphy on the McMas- ter nine-yard line. The Huskies later attempted two field goals. buth Schneider was short on t . The third quarter was marked by the rushing of McMaster fullbacks Steve Ostapchuk and Ted‘Favot In a drive from the Marauders' 40-yard line to St. Mary's 29. Osatpchuk carried four times and Fay twice. The fullbacks ate up 133 yards rushing between them in the N m e. McMaster missed a field goal attempt in the final quarter and quarterback a r k Timpany went to the air six times in the last seven minu-tes to try to even the score. But Paul Puma. Daryl Burgess and Ted Purneli launched the Huskies on a 70- 0 yard march to paydirt in nine plays to salt away the victory. uma. who rushed for yards in 19 carries, went oval for St. Mary', on a two-yard plunge to round out the 15-1 ore Marauders' quarterback Marl Timpany completed three out of 14 passes for a loss of 15 yards. while Dave by of St. Mary‘s had four completions in TORONTO 1 CHICAGO 0 SUMMARY 1961. answered with a rouge on Volker Leyernapl's third - clown punt in the first quarter. but it was the visitors’ last threat. margin to eight points before the quarter ended. Moving from their own 25 after McMaster’s single. the Huskies picked up five yards on quarterback Dave around right end by fullback Paul Puma swept St. Mary's to the Marauders 41-yard line. . 31-yard pass-and-run pay from Murphy to Al Keith put Halifax University on the 10 and after a holding penalty nullified an eight - rphy Iobbed a 12-yard pass into the end zone that Keith pulled in for six points The Marauders could not or- ganize an offensive surge in the second quarter. but their lighter line and pass defence thwarted St. Mary‘s ground and serial attacks. Minor League Is Underway The Charlottetown Forum was a bee hive of activity on Satur- day. when hundreds of young- sters particl in t e open- ing day of play in the Charlotte- town Minor Hockey League pro- gram for 1964-65. With 38 teams competing in paperweight. pee wee and Bantam divisions. in host of referees. coaches other officials were busily en- gaged in k e program rollitng for a highly auspicious s or . I 5 SI- Registration of players was also continued throughout various divisions. I ' I present rosters of extsting teams or will be fonm- ulated mto new teams. The combined midget and ju~ enile divisions will commence V ,- Veek. The 1 two a or so Will be exhibition contests in all is sr league to! ' at! letting underway early in ecem - t Dtlon of the paperweight div)- llion which were not records ‘ se of the heavy. initial sch- edule in that division— ' . PBS WEB bby . .Bieons 3 - Gordie Beck (3). 1' MecRaae: Elks 3 Alan - l 9 Dam in Dob (4). Al Ross. olves 2 -— Jim- ANTAM . Him Jackson. Har- ll.‘ Robert Stewart (I): e Huskies increased their‘ First period—1. Toronto. Pul- lford 6 rBaunl 18:08. Penalties— lBrewer 4:57, 15:58. ‘ Second period—No scoring. Penalties — MacNeil 2:38; 144 . I 10 pass attempts for 70 yards. Puma tossed three passes. none of them complete. - UPS quarterbacks. Longstaff. Randie; Leyerzapf, Murakami. Lawrie, Emslie, Adams. Thom- son. Locke. Igggett. Favot, (1s- ta-pchukz. centres: Valentenuzzi. Angi; guards: ‘ ster Jones. Reid: Currie. Libis. Haughton, Stetic, Jobc; ends: Howard. Camble, Hudnll. a St. M ry’s — quarterbacks: Armitage, Dave Murphy. alves: Penner. White. ur- gess. Colle. Keith. Lyons. Pur- nell, rner. Puma. Ruotoio. Baldwin; centres: Matheson, W. O'Brien; guards: Don Murphy. Haney. Redmond, Skating; tac- kles: Brian Mu-rphy. Grant. Ar- chambault; MacDonald; ends: S. O'Brien. John Murphy. Ven- ning. Schneider. Johnston Referee: Bob Gr Perth. Ont.; umpires: Franklin. Ottawa. Ch-uck Rai- ner, Toronto; linesman: Ray Beliiveau. Weymou . N.S.; field judge: Bob Reardon. Hali- ax. SUMMARY . . . ,. av WW First Q . St. Mary's, (Schneider) . McMaster. fie 1 d goat single zaph) . . St. Mary‘s. touchdown (Keith) Second Quarter No scoring. Mr No scoring. Fourth Quarter |4p St. Mary's. touchdown (Puma) l a NH‘L SATURDAY lBrewer. 5:25. 8:32. Brenneman 9:34. Ravlich. 13:32. Third period — No scoring. Penalties—Horton 2:19. Espo- sito 6:28. Horton 8:57. Curling Draw ; Saves: [Hall 8 12 9——29 ‘Sawchuk l2 8 7——27 ‘ DETROIT 3 BOSTON 1 SUMMARY » First period—l. Detroit, Smith The followms is the curllns 4 Ullmanl 4:05. Penalties— draw for Monday night at the .Kennedy 5:42. Boivin 5:43. Lind- Charlottetown Club. (Spares :say 13.12. Langtots major) “ ‘15:09. Oliver and Crozier Vlhrl G Storey 1“ Gilles 16:” ” 5‘ ' “ . ' Second period -- No scorin'z. p‘e' D' Humhmson' 6‘ Broom“ .jPenalties -— Balfour 3:51. P. vs. R Ewing. B. Ball. L. Leger. F. MacLean. Ice 2 — F. MacMillan. W. Farrell. W. Carr. H. Shams vs. P. 'Rourke. Dr. Jelks. .18. Taylor. Albert MacNeill. Ice . Tanton, A. Garrett. L. Bagnall. T. Burke vs. D. George. G. Anderson. J _ Ledger- wood. R. Merr'man. Ice 4 —— 1". Curtis. S. Benton. Jim Wilson. K. Doucette vs. '. Asprey. A.E. Piercey. B. Parke. Geo. Schleyer. Ice 5 — A. Leaman, L Blak- eney. C. wne. . Coffin vs Dr. Giddlngs. A. Bagnall. 11 Edwards. H. MacLauchlen. 8.30 p.m. Ice 1 — D. Rogers. H. Rector. H MacDougalI. L. Burke vs. I". Burke. P. Perry. E. Jay. F. nil- Ion. Ice 2 — J. Squarebriggs. 1!. bell. Dr . R 1c — G. Dillon. B Dillon vs. ll Bell. N. MacNeill. MacDonald 7:08. Langlois 15:11 ‘Smith 17:15. ‘ Third period—2. Boston. Pren- itice 6 (Kurtenbach) 3:09: 3. De- troit. Smith 5 10:13: 4. Detroit. iUllman ti (Smithl 16:42. Pen- :alty—Fleming 12:58. . yes: lCrozier I ll Ill 6—32 with iJohnston IVarsify Team 7 Downs Royals Taking a 3-1 lead in the first period. St. Dunstan's University Saints went on to sweep a two game exhibition series Saturday w.th a Sandy's Royals. Last year's M.I.1-I.L. scoring champion and most val- uehle player. Billy MacMillan. was the only SDU player to gar her more than one goal. her SDU scorers were Mike Kelly. for hockey scheduled for the Charlottetown Forum. will get underway at 7.30 p.m. and not 8.30 pm. as previously mentioned in this paper. Coaches and executive mem- bers of the respective teams in the loop are urged to this meeting an administration plans for the coming season are expected to be finalized. tonight k e O'Rourke. J- fel. Rex MacCarville and Mau Squarebriggs. I. Machinnon. (6. rice 0y, Miller - 137- 348090113“: Royals goals were scored by Am: J WIN”- 5- Hm” Apps Arsenault with two and I“ 5 — E- MEW- L- C P: Stan Penrdon. St. Dunstan's led bell- K- Canlwell- W- Douslu s.) after the first’. added three V'- 11- M'thum- 5“ Kelly: 3' lunaswered goals in the second. MacLennan. H. Douglas. .m.] ended 7.3. ‘ Referee Brian lewlittil called as 0 total of twenty pens es. eg t I to SDU and twelve to the Royals. including two match penalties to ' Dick Carrol and Dave Lawlor. rrel Pollock was not in the lineup for lthe :aints:MCoacol} h Jack Kane ost t e se ces mflfmfigfl fietm'm'g George MacMillan late in the first period when he twisted his nee. The next game at the SDU k will be Friday night when the Saints host Acadia Axemen to open their Maritime Inter- collegiate Hockey League Sche- e. attend dul - First Period: Royals: A. Arsen- Curling Draw At Belvedere The following is the curling draw for Monday. Nov, 23 at the Belveders Golf and Winter Club. 7 .m. . I,“ l — Norman Nicholson. Ralph Manning. Howard Doug- las vs. Wes y. 1|- n John Smith. Ice 2 — Jack Cooke. Fran! Maclnnis. Dr. Irwin. Bill Ross vs. Doug Saunders. Bill Roger- son. Ivo . Ted . Ice 3 — Dr. WHO. Bull! Sim . Perc Simmonds. Dr Us aw vs. Dr. Cox. Cecil Dow- ling. Barry Simmonds. Merlin ac on 0. Ice 4 -— Dave Walker. 3111 Boyles, Dr R). John Mac- Kianon vs: Cyri Flinn. DV MacDonald. Reg. Medusa. Dan NeCormeek. O . . l - hank Acorn. Wells 0030‘. Mb “We “"138”. o- m.l'umi t. T3 1 —- Bill “Neill Gordon Wanner. Ivan igne- rm no“... its...“ use fast 4 sun In practice M an Penalties: Kennedy. 2:10: SDU: Hughes, 2:10: SDU: (Lever 1. I : Andre Gelinas. Dennis DeCaru-~ ,. n...:.. The Toronto Maple Leafs had a fence across their net Saturday night called Terry Sawchuck. The masked goal- ie stopped 27 shots by Chicago llrish Top Ohio For Nin’rh Win By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Top-ranked Notre Dame con- tinned unbeaten in United States college football Saturday. while Michigan led a parade of teams into post - season bowl games by blanking Ohio State and grabbing the Big Ten title. Notrc Dame rolled over lowa 28-0 for its ninth victory. leav- ing only Southern California in the way of its first undefeated. untied season since 1949. The Irish. however. apparently will .nol play in a bowl game since the major pairings have been just about completed. Sixth-ranked Michigan moved into the Rose Bowl. defeating n: it I STONEVIIALL ICais TUrn Mental Lapses * llnio Two Key Touchdowns Second Quarter IVAN ‘39- a d field veal attempt b 1 By JACK SULL y r . 3. Hamilton. single Sutherinl if Canadian Press Sports Editor Moe Racine with the 30-mile-an- HAMILTON (CPI — Hamil- hour wind at his back wentwide ton Tiger-Cats Saturday shook for a single. Racine had kicked 4. off an early case of jittens to two field goals from the 16- and 8 Hamilton. sinzlo zligcr) and demolish Ottawa Rough 17-yard lines in the opening 3- HEMlllml. lnurhrlnu'n ‘Co- Riders 26-8 and move into the quarter and Ulmer added a sin- heel 4:20 ‘ Grey Cup final by an almost- gle early in the fourth. 8. Hamilton. convert ‘Snthe- unbelievable 39-38 margin in the Ulmer was the unfortunate two - game total - point Eastern victim of Hamilton's third-quar-i, 7 Football Conference final. They for touchdowns by mmyi I - t . ' _ turned Rider mental lapses into Grant and quarterback Bernie 8- Hamilton. Slnzle slitherin) key touchdowns to do it. Faloney. Earlier in the second -I The Ticats will meet British (193?!" D0“ Sutherln “Paw Columbia Ltions. Western Con- his attempted punt deep In 0t- 9- ference champions. in the Grey lawa lel‘l'llm'y Ind 1)le COMO; Cup game at Toronto next Sa-i- followed the dribbling ball into‘ rm “day- The LION [sombesd (315“; the Rider end zone where he.” Ham ff’hli‘iihidii’oinlim""coil home- on n for 4 {Hence final] two games to om. :first touchdown. 2 Hamilton. convert Suthe- No one. except possibly coach It was a nightmarish few seed "‘ Ralph Sazio and his players. ends for Ottawa's defensive half. figured Ticats could overcome and punter in the third. Ottawa's 17-point bulge manu- First. he allowed Grant to get lectured on a 30-13 first-game behind him in the Ottawa end;15 : 1 V . I \ victory at Week earlier. But. zone to pick off a 20-yard pass i212;'8“3‘ 5 l “ Ell“ ‘Ral‘mt’ ‘ then. this is old stuff to Tiger- from Faloney. Ulmer ap ared ' Cats w- 0 now have made it to to be in position to knock it ‘— the Canadian classic seven do“ even intercept the. .n‘ . times in the last eight years. deep in Argos To Win rin) . Hamilton. single ‘Slllhf‘l'lnl Third Quarter Hamilton. t on c h d 0 on :52 10. Hamilton. convert Suthe- Ilton. touchdown lFaIn- :49 Fourth Quarter 13. Ottawa. single ’Ulmer' I) :31 14. Hamilton. single ’Sutherinl or high. floating pass. Toronto Argonauts are pain- Then. with Riders -;- {ally In)?” 0:8 lhlsi llnd1963- their own end of the field and WINNlliEGlf'CPI-v A dazzling 6! 00 an -pom ea in o . . . . individua e Oi'l h: halfback Hamilton for the showdown con-"n a m‘rd'down. punt “maulm'. Gerry Burrows, bat-kid by a .13. test by virtue of a first—same “‘9 5“? “’35 W'de- mm"! W‘mitence that crushed all second- 25-7 victory. Tiger-Cats caught a horde of Ticats booming in onhalf bids, 16d Toronto East them to tie the round 27-27 after him picked up the ball at the York Argonauts to a 41-25 win 60 minutes and then plastered one and tried to advance_ He. over the defending champion Argos With 8 2841mm over'llme was splattered right there and Sl- James Rams l" 8 Canadian half to win the series 55-27. on the next play Faloney‘. segior football finial hSaturday h u hdown: urrows score 1 rec tour - HISTORY REPEATED. miffkefi ogiegrfgaéhearflg 38,361downs, caught four passes for So history repeated itself at P g 155 - l .. . . . . , yards. rushed 10 times .0. the bitterly—cold cim Stadium .on the round- .34 yards and picked u nine of before a small chilled crowd of‘ ‘ p KICKED 3 CONVERTS . ‘Argos‘ 25 first downs, He was 2mm “‘0 W’bably “mm the" Sutherin kicked all three con-l selected most valuable player ln _ verts and added four singles on the game. watched in 15-da- tha.” Whe" Tm“ 5°01“? 1" wide placement attempts. His aree temperatures uhat kept the (CP Wirephotm {Sgt-0‘1?”chgzgrthzglvflneg fina| point. the one that proved crowd to about 1.000. - i - T e Toronto defence. wobbly tor the Cotton Bowl but in dif- 3 36'“ Smell deficit into a 33- ffelilf..}v‘§3§:gef“§§e “Quiet! in the first half as Rams look {Hem wa 5 Arkansas Shut c“W36 lead, They gleefully accepted. . . . . .‘ 26' a 24.20 lead, closed 311 gap in - Y- ithem particularly two gm out With injuries smce Sept. . th 1 “to , t . h 1d. sSt Texas Tech 17-0 while Nebraskalmuch'downS ho a second-quarter single. J9 as 91mm“ es. 0 'lng. - fell to Oklahoma. 17-4. The loss; ‘ The final statistics gave Ham- ages to "_ yall'dsi ruthlnfi 4“? stopped the Cornhuskers wm-‘ ll anyone llgd lgtbe‘fille goal. ilto a big edge. They gained a. 2m 1::55Ar‘g%mgc?éfl‘erznalw in: mm: streak at 15. . e horns "11-!" It. 43-year-old total of 289 yards—229 of them; 9 - ‘ . ~ .~ Tulsa put itself in line for a“ Ulmerv 3“ "mm" “0m 0"” along the ground—on 15 first tempted three amals m the . State University. But then, Ot- d ' 216; th R hi sewn“ ha" bid to the Bluebonnet Bowl by‘ v ff - d id 1 owns again“ M e 0“: l Halfbacks Pete Warren and routing Toledo 39-16 solo-daylfiiwfefiofifiiifi 5:10:83 031.13.?“ Ride“ .Wh" "We "‘9 SIM“. Ian Monteith and fullback Ray ‘ ‘Seven “mes: Riders 35m?“ 150; Williams scored the other Tor- night. Tulsa quarterback Jerry'in their woeful final 30 minutes - . Rhome completed 21 of 35 tossedwhen they managed only three yards msmng and 66 passmg' Ionto touchdowns. {runs of an for 305 yards. to set NCAA rec-hm downs. so yards rushing SUMMARY “140 “"9"” “‘3' We“ "1’ 509 ords for the most rushing andjnnd lost one of two fumbles. First Quarter paSSing plays in a career—971.1 Even at that. the Riders had 1. Ottawa. field goal (Racinel' He broke the record of 935 set.a chance in the final three min- ' by George Mira of Miami fromlutes to go ahead 40-39 and pos-, Black Hawks to record his first slmtout for Leafs and a record 97 in regular - season National Hockey League play Here he blocks a shot by Black Hawks Bobby Hull (9) Other Leaf player is B 0 b b y .chiiblains in the weird secon Baun. ‘ ' by second - ranked Alabama after the Crimson Tide's‘ Thanksgiving Day game with “a ’7 C V > w Auburn. Texas was idle Satur- DENSE AREAS—w— arts of China's Yangtze Val- Third - ranked Arkansas and 2:07 1 P 2. Ottawa. field goal (Racine) ‘ley support 3.500 persons to the ' 9 sq uare mile. Nebraska. No. 4. warmed up 1.061 to 1963. sihly salvage this series. But a seventh-ranked Ohio State. 10-0 the II 1010—31 fumble, help of a Buckeye c Wolverines did not know Th limmediateiy who their Pacific Athletic Conference opponent would be since Southern Califor- nia and Oregon State finished in a tie for the title. USC crushed UCLA 34-1 Oregon State ‘nipped 10th-ranked Oregon 7-8 .on Booker Washington's one- lyard smash and Steve Clark‘s lextra point with 54 seconds I left. Y The Sugar Bowl was filled as eighth-ranked Louisiana State and ninth-ranked Syracuse ac- cepted invitations. LSU d feated Tulane 13-3. but West Virginia edged Syracuse 28-27. giving the Orange their third loss in 10 games. LSU is 7-1-1. Florida State earned a Gator Bowl berth by knocking off Florida 16-7 behind three field by Les . a other spot remained to be filled. Texas. No. 5. already is in the l. ange Bowl and will be joined I O n «T SPECIAL INVITATION R. T. Holman Lid. and RCA Victor Co. Ltd. invites the people of Prince Edward Island to a grand showing and demonstration of new RCA Sterophonic in- DeCarufel (Misconduct) 8:43; Royals: MacLeod. 18:33; Royals: Dick Carrol (minor. match pen- alw). served by Calille. i7234 Second Period: Saints: R. Mac- Carville (Kelly) 8:38 Saints: B. MacMillan (DeCarufel. Gelinas) ‘0 Saints: . DeCarufl ( MacMillan. Gelinas) 12:33 Penalties: Royals: MaeKinnon 3:41; Josey. 02w; Lawlor. minor. imlsconduct. game misconduct) served by Calille. 14:57; SDU Gelinas. 6:23; minor. major) SDlU DeCarufel. 17:06; IeClair. 17:08; Josey: 17:08: G 11 l i a (minor. major) 17: Third Period Royals: S. (Mac- Klnnon) 9:57 Saints: M. by (LeClairl 15:40 Royals: A. Arsenault (Cami): 5:59 Penalties: SDU: B. Mac- Millen 5:40: Royals: MacLood. 3:57 SDU:R. MacCarville. 14:41 l IMMIA "HANG! I40 Banshee from Coast to Gee-t ": ms o... 89.. em' 894-582 mm Always there with ready cash . . . For car Repnlrs or mgood reason .5029. to $50009." COMPANY UMI‘I’ID struments for 1964. This Showing will consist of over $10000 worth of Sterec instruments priced from $99.95 to $1,500.00. and includes portables, inexpensive consoles and the completely new “Personally Planned Stereo" which lets you choose from seven cabinet stylings, six record changers and five ampli- fier systems all completely interchangeable. Also demon- strated will be the new "solid state" stereo models. the top of the RCA Victor Line. This is selection of Stereo Prince Edward Island. with no obligation and no admittance charge. An RCA Victor representative will be present to discuas your particular stereo requiements. your opportunity to hear and admire the finest instruments ever demonstrated on LOWER FOYER OF THE CONFEDERATION CENTER (Queen St. Bitrance), 2 DAYS ONLY Tuesday. Nov. 24—3 p.m. to 10 poo.~ Wednesday. Nov. 25—3 pm.“ 10 p.m. 4 ass-sits I