November 29, 1984 The Netted Gem — page 9 «— Ten from UPEI, includin By Ross Hartinger University of Prince Edward Island Panthers’ Coach Vince Mulligan will have nine of his players in the line-up at the Third Annual Atlantic Universities Athletic Association All-Star hockey game to be held at the Charlottetown Forum, Sunday December 2, 1984.. Mulligan will also be the coach of the team, which will have members of the New Brunswick/P.E.l. universities playing against the top players from the Nova Scotia universities. Fulton, Steve Darwin McCutcheon and Rob Moffat are the defensemen from the Panthers who will be playing in the contest, while forwards Greg Gravel, Randy Muttart, Gordie Roche, Albert Roche and Ron Carragher will be the Panther forwards in the All-star showcase. ‘ Tony Haloduck, who has the best goals against average among goaltenders in the AUAA with a 2.66'rating, will be playing goal along with St. Thomas goaltender Terry Wickham, who sports a 4.92 AVG. Mulligan says that his team is the best on paper but says anything can happen when 42 of the best players in the Atlantic University loop com- bine for one game. Acadia University has placed six players on the East All-Star team, to be called the Schooners (by the sponsors Labatts/Oland’s). As well, , St. F.X. has five of their players in the line-up in- cluding Dave Purcell who is in third place in the scoring race behind league leading Greg Gravel and second place Randy Muttart of UPEI. The N.B./P.E.I. team will be called the Exports and is certainly the favorite. Don Coach Vince Mulligan chosen to coach NB-PEI Team in AUAA contest. (Photo: Hartinger) Women’s basketball grab two By Ross Hartinger The University of Prince Edward Island Lady Panthers defeated Memorial Univer- sity of Newfoundland twice .last weekend, upping their regular season record to 370, sin: Atlantic ‘: Universities: Athletic Association basket- ball at Alumni gymnasium. Friday night the Lady Panthers coasted to 78-30 victory of MUN behind its fast break and superb de- fense along with the 22 points bucketed by UPEI’s Sherry- dawn Jones. Colleen Rossiter score 11 points and rookie standout Paula Edwards netted 9 points for UPEI. MUN center Karen Cotter who hails from Saint John, New Brunswick was high scorer with 8 points. Saturday, Memorial jumped out to an early 14-2 lead in the first half which sur- prised ‘UPEI who had to 1 make. some quick defensive changes to reverse the deficit to a 37-23 halftime lead. Memorial came out strong again in the second half and kept the score to within ten points for a good chunk of the game, but MUN got into foul trouble and two players fouled out of the game. UPEI pressured some more defensively and UPEI’s fast break, headed by Libby, Baldwin who scored 15 points, broke MUN’s back. Paula Edwards scored 15 points Saturday and Sherry- dawn Jones added 12 points. Memorial has not won _a game this year and is 0-4. The team is led mainly by Lorraine Hickey, who scored .14 . points Saturday. .in the MUN cause, and Karen Cotter and Dianne Cashin, who blocked eight shots on the weekend. ' UPEI plays two games on the road this weekend in Nova Scotia; against Saint Mary’s University of Halifax, Friday night at 8:00 p.m., and in Antigonish, Saturday afternoon at 1:00 against Saint Franci Xavier. Athletes of the Week U.P.E;I.’s female athlete of the week is Sherrydawn Jones, center for the UPEI 'M .. -' " n; . .25 ‘» Bit: Athlete of the, Weekkfiert h I) . (1983 E’hnlorflhwquiepeku n’alwlyyys... By Tony Sauer women’s Panther basketball team. Sherrydawn played two 't-iwlv. HW- . new...“ —w.. .- Wit i' hockey Panthers to 9-2 and 'vZ-rfi' whisover St. Thomas and a ' Twenty-one points gives Ron , k -.. Race“ .‘ ile is from Emyraie. il,.F;l._- and is It; his third yea; as ; to twenty-one for the season. strong offensive games last week end to lead the Panthers to two wins over Memorial University 78-30 and 68-47. She scored twenty-two points on Saturday and thirty—four on the weekend and also had twelve rebounds. Sherrydawn is from Toronto, and is a Arts stu- dent, in her first fuli year with the Panthers. U.P.E.l.‘s male athlete is Ron Carragher. . Ron had a hattrick on Saturday against U.N.B. and was six points for the week- end to push his point total upi .Ron'spert’ormance led the T(List/tit, giving them an Jl-O-O record this season. ‘i‘ourth'l’place in the scoring ,Wells of Acadia, Coach of the Schooners, says the game . will have the best players in the AUAA and should be a very good contest. He didn’t say who the winner would be. The game is an AUAA event; that means students at UPEI will have to pay $2.00 admission at the door. Sweaters and socks will be supplied by the sponsors, as well as, the three stars-of—the- game aWards. Members of the P.E.l. 9 Vince, in All-Star game High School All—Star team will be the special guests of the AUAA at the game be— cause this year there won‘t be a game among the top high school players in P.E.l. The )rganizers felt this would be a good way to honor them. Hockey Panthers do it again By Ross Hartinger The University of Prince Edward Island Hockey Panthers continued their domination in Atlantic Uni- versities Athletic Association last weekend, winning two games in Fredericton, New Brunswick and extending their regular season unbeaten streak to eleven games. Friday night the Panthers defeated the St. Thomas Tommies 9-2, the third time the Panthers have beat the Tommies this year. Greg Gravel, who leads all scorers in the AUAA with 20 goals this season, scored three goals for UPEI. St. Thomas played one of their best games of the season and were leading the game after the first period 2-1. Saturday afternoon, Ron Carragher scored three goals and one assist to pace UPEI to a hard-fought 8-5 victory over defending AUAA champs, University of New Brunswick Red Raiders. Randy Muttart, Greg Gravel, Darwin Mchtcheon, Gordie Roche and Todd Sutcliffe each scored one goal . for UPEI, which led 3-2 after the first period and 6—4 after the second period. McCutcheon, Gordie and Albert Roche, Muttart, Ronnie Carragher, and Jeff Steffen are all in the top ten of scoring. UPEI has outscored the opposition 96-30 and it ap- pears they are heading for a conference title. UPEl are highly offensive as the number of goals scored indicate, and have a powerful defensive squad which in- cludes goal tenders Dave Reid and Tony Haliduck (who have been alternating games since the start of the season). The Panthers play this weekend against St. F.X., Friday night at 7:00 and Saturday at 7:00 p.m. at the Forum against the Saint Mary’s Huskies. Volleyball by Tony Sauer The U.P.E.l. lady volley- ball Panthers lost their third and fourth matches of the season last weekend against Mt. A. Even though the scores were 3'] and 3-0, coach Donna Sears thinks they still should have won both matches. “We had some commanding leads, but we lack the concentration and experience to finish «off the matches,” said Sears. “We have to overcome our inexperience. UPEI has not traditionally done well in volleyball and we are suf- fering from a carry-over alli- tudc. “Seven of the twelve members are rookies and coach Sears thinks that inex- perience in the mental aspect of the game might be hurting them. Yet rookie Anita Lagundziga had an K out- standing weekend in her first real start with the team. This probably indicates that the team has potential but needs only time to work out its inexperience troubles. The Panthers play their next two games at home against Acadia, eight o’clock on Saturdan and one o’clock on Sunday. SEX IS BEAUTIFUL. BUT IT SHUUIDN’T INCLUDE UNPIEASANI' SURI n iiulifaiir’aii student 71;; t,‘ 4 .i‘ >3,» q 3 ,I‘. 'o:'.-: i t . t * '33 lathe ‘ surest ‘ " " way in the world as ' g‘a heads