14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, December 19, 1961 THIS TYPE OF 'PASS' IS NOT RECEIVED Marion Mark shows what can happen to a would-be "wolf" when he picqs on a woman who knows the ancient Oriental method of defense. Marion shows her knowledge of Karate on Benny Allen, as members of a Toronto Karate Studio give a demonstration. --(CP Wirephoto) Started Boom! MONTREAL (CP) -- le (Boom Boom) Geoffrion of Montreal Canadiens taken a big step towards snapping the season-long monopoly of team- mate Claude Provost and New York's Andy Bathgate at the top of sn Rag aig Hockey League sco! race. mpc wp fos a, te ion up four » of them goals, last week while Provost and Bathgate were each held to one, goal. Official statistics released to- day show the perform ance pulled Geoffrion into a tie for second place with Provost. Each has 33 points, five fewer than Bathgate, who has only been able to pick up seven points in the last 12 . player Only matched Geoffrion's four-point effort last week. He was rookie Cliff Pennington of Boston Bruins, who got two goals and two assists in four outings. Pen- nington occupies 16th spot in the scoring list. Gordie Howe of Detroit Red Wings and Frank Mahovlich of Toronto Maple Leafs each scored twice last week and are tied for fourth with 30 points each. MAKES FIRE RETURN Veteran Johnny Bower, back in the Toronto nets after sitting out five games with an ankle injury, gavé up only three goals in two weekend games and sol- idified his hold on the leader- Geoffrion Has 'To Go Boom! trophy is awarded to the goalie who plays the most games for the team that allows the fewest goals. Bower and his two substitutes --Don Simmons and Jerry Cheevers -- have given up 66 goals in 29 games for a team goals-against average of 2.27. Jacques Plante of the Cana- diens ranks second with a 2.47 average. Terry Sawchuk of Detroit leads in shutouts with four. Montreal continues as the most penalized club with 356 minutes. Defencmean Lou Fon- tinato of the Canadiens is the most pena'ized individual player with 81 minutes, two more than a week ago though he did not dress for any of Montreal's games last week because of an ankle injury. The two minutes --a minor penalty -- were as- sessed against Fontinato ear- lier in the season but unre- corded until this week. The scoring leaders:X G A Pts. Pen. Bathgate, NY 12 Provost, Mtl 18 Geoffrion, Mtl 13 Howe, Det 1 Mah'vlich, Tor 14 Ing'field, NY 13 McKenley, Bos 12 Kelly, Tor ll Richard, Mtl 10 Bucyk, Bos 7 Backst'm, Mtl 15 Mikita, Chi 8 Ullman, Det 11 Prentice, NY 10 ship for the Vezina Trophy. The Mohns, Bos 9 SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "Everything From Soup To Nuts' GLANCING BACK:- Sports fans, especially the gridiron variety, who have taken a much keener interest in U.S. pro-football goings-on this season, thanks to in- creased TV coverage, had quite an argument set up for themselves over the week-end. If you watched it, you'll have to admit, whether a Giant or Brown fan, that game in New York could have gone either way. Both teams had fumbles within a step of the goal-line. Giants won the title because a tie was good enough. But, for the benefit of those football fans who have been wondering about our Canadian rules -- how much do you think Cleveland Browns, their coach Brown or star Jimmie Brown, would have been willing to pay just to have that old-fashioned Canadian one-point kick rule in force, just for the day at least? The Eagles made a magnificent finish to win in Detroit but they still had to settle for second place. The next couple of weekends. will bring up some very interesting U.S. football games and of course the various "Bowl" games on the New Year's holiday weekend, will top off the geason in a grand climax. BITS OF SPORT:- Port Arthur Bearcats defeated a Czechoslovakia district team 6-0 Monday night in Prague but there's not enough shine to that win to off- set the tarnish they've been suffering lately. Hockey Tournament officials World have announced the draw and the Canadians will meet the Czechs on the final day ... TOM JOHNSON, of Montreal Canadiens, who suffered an eye injury in Toronto a few weeks back, is expected to resume workouts with the Habs today... DON SIMMONS, called up by Leafs when Johnny Bower was on the injured list, has revealed that he played the entire stint with a broken bone in his hand . . UXBRIDGE defeated Trenton Flyers 5-3 in over- time last night in Uxbridge, OHA Intermediate "A" League fixture . in their Lakeshore League N.Y. YANKEES are going to defy the Florida segregation laws--they're going to have three Negroes with them at their spring training camp at ' cause quite a stir! . oe Fort Lauderdale. It could "PING" BODIE, the baseball figure with color galore, who was once a roommate of Babe Ruth, died over the weekend. He supplied base- ball scribes with color galore, especially Ring Lardner's immortal classic series "You Know Me, Al" -- "put a 'little lemon in mine"! .. . OSHAWA Dr. John Brock 'and his rink suffered an 11-8 defeat at the hands of Don Can Luven's Unionville rink, in the Toronto and Dis- 'trict Major League curling play on Sunday. 'American League Football * OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- iCommissioner Joe Foss of the «American Football League has jrenewed his year-old challenge _ «to the rival National League for *a post season ganie between the Meague champions. * "We'll give them the longest wafternoon they ever had --. any *place and any time they want sto put a team on the field," *Foss said. * "7hey'll have a million ex- *cuses to avoid us. They act like [they don't want to admit the *AFL exists. But they've got tplenty of reason to know we're .here -- we're solid and we're * growing." H In New York, NFL commis- "sicher Pete Rozelle said: "The fanswer has not changed in the past 18 months. You don't con- , sider playing games with peo- Sple who are suing you for $10,- £ 000,000. i The AFL has filed an anti- *trust suit against the NFL ; which is scheduled to be heard in Baltimore in mid February. 'SET 10 RECORDS - . Meanwhile, it was announced' Boss 'Challenges NFL that 10 AFL records were set this season with Billy Cannon of -_ noted one--048 yards rush- ng f{ouston quarterback George Blanda won the passing title with 187 completions in 362 at- tempts for 3,340 yards. His yardage was a league record and he also set one for touch- down passes--36--during the 14- game season. Lionel Taylor of Denver was the pass - receiving champion wiih a record 100 catches. Char- ley Hennigan of Houston was sccond with 82 and set a rec- ord for yardage gained on them --1,/46 yards. Bil) Groman of Houston caught the most touchdown passes in the league's two-year history--17. Gino Cappelletti of Boston, who played a few years ago with Sarnia Golden Bears of the Senior Ontario Rugby Football Union, was the scoring cham- fion with a record 147 points, Lacky Christy of 'New York averaged 21.3 yards on punt returns to set another record. Bill Atkins was thejof Canadiens Are Still Winning In CYO League Black Hawks evened the score with Leafs on the season's play, as they downed them 2-0, in a C.Y.0 Atom game at the Child- ren's Arena. The win pulled the Hawks into a second place tie with the Leafs, who had beaten them handily in a contest earlier this season. AHan Taylor opened the scoring for the Hawks with a first period goal. The clinching goal came when Leaf goalie Walter Klaman raced Ray Keeler for a loose puck but fanned on his shot, allowing Keeley sore on an empty net. Joe Reid played a strong game in the nets for the Hawks as he chalked up his first shutout of the season. The luckless Bruins salvaged their first point of the season, as they held Red Wings to a 1-1 tie. Larry Flynn gave the Bruins a short-lived lead only to have Brian Delves of Wings tie it up just minutes later. The teams played scoreless hockey; for the remainder of the game. Canadiens continued on their winning ways as tliey registered their sixth win in a row, by beating Rangers 6-2. Lenny McAvoy sparked the Canadiens with a hat trick, with Wesley Lack hitting for two and Brian Smegai scoring one. A pair of Joes, McAllof and Corvana took care of the Ranger scoring. Bearcats Beat District Team PRAGUE (CP)--Port Arthur Bearcats defeated a_ district hockey team 6-0 Monday night in the north Bohemian town of Chomutov, the Czech news agency Ceteka reported. Some 11,500 fans watched the Czechs hold Port Arthur score- less until centre Pete Johnson tallied with six minutes left in the opening period. Three minutes later Rudy Mi- gay made it 2-0 for the Bear- cats, Port Arthur tallied three times in the second period to wrap up the game. Red Olson, who scored two goals in the game, slipped a shot past the Czech goalie after three min- utes of the period and Bud Whitney and Wally Maxwell scored within three minutes near the end of the period. Olsen tallied his second goal near the beginning of the third period. The shutout was goalie Bob Kilgour's first of the tour. Port Arthur now has won three and lost three, all against Czech op- position. Don Simmons Admits He Had Broken Hand TORONTO (CP)--Goalie Don |Simmons reluctantly admitted Monday that he had a broken bone in his left hand wher he played three National Hockey League games recently with Toronto Maple Leafs. Simmons said he suffered the injury during an American League game while: playing for Rochester Americans, a substi- tute for Johnny Bower, side- lined with an ankle injury until last weekend. Simmons said the injury was somewhat painful, though he didn't realize there was a bro- ken bone. punting leader- with a record average of 45 yards. Bily Mathis of New York, seccnd in rushing with 846 yards, set a record for number tunes carried--202. GORDIE HOWE MONTREAL (CP) -- Gor- die Howe, the colorful Detroit Red Wings right 'winger, has snapped another of retired Maurice (Rocket) Richard's National Hockey league rec- ords, The 33-year-old Detroit all- star's new mark, established Sunday against Montreal Ca- nadiens, is for most winning goals. Howe got his 84th game winner when the Wings beat the Canadiens 3-1 at Detroit. Richard had 83 when he re- tired after 18 seasons with BREAKS ANOTHER ROCKET RECORD Montreal before the 1959-60 season got under way. Howe's record - breaking goal was his 483rd in 16 sea- sons. That leaves him 61 be- hind the Rocket's record of 544 Howe also is the only player to have participated in more than 1,000 NHL games and has picked up more points than anybody else. He also has been selected the league's most valuable player a record five times and been named to the first or second all-star team in 12 different seasons» SPORTS CALENDAR _|leave Jan. 10 for Germany. TODAY'S GAMES HOCKEY Oshawa Minor Assoc.: (Exhi- bition Doubleheader) -- Tren- ton Midgets vs Oshawa Midget All-Stars, at 7.30 p.m. and Tren- ton Juveniles vs Oshawa Juve- nile Generals, at 9.00 p.m. Both games at Oshawa Children's Arena OHA Metro Junior "A" League -- Toronto Marboros| at Unionville, 8.30 p.m. OHA Little Big Five Junior "C" League -- Uxbridge at Stouffville, 8.30 p.m. OHA Intermediate "B" League -- Uxbridge at Port Perry, 8.30 p.m. BASKETBALL Oshawa and District Indus- trial League -- Student Engi- neers vs Oshawa Simcoe Hall, at Simcoe Hall, 9.00 p.m. GAMES FOR WEDNESDAY HOCKEY Oshawa Minor Assoc,: (Mid- get League) -- Canadian Legion vs. Local 222, at 6.30 p.m.; Firefighters vs Kiwanis, at 7.20 .m.; Kinsmen vs Navy Vets, at 8.10 p.m. and» Rotary vs Lions, at 9.00 p.m.; All games at Oshawa Children's Arena. ' OHA Lakeshore Intermediate League: -- Trenton at Port Hope, 8.30 p.m. and Bowman- ville at Belleville, 8.30 p.m. Canada Has 9-Man Team In Bobsl OTTAWA (CP)--A_nine-man team will represent Canada in the 1962 world bobsled cham- pionships at Garmisch-Parten- kircnen, Germany. The Canadian Amateur Bob- siccding and Tobogganing As- sociation said three team mem- bers already are in Europe prachsing and the rest will Tue members are Chris Ond- aatje, David Hobart, Purvis Mc- Dougall, Paul Levesque and Pe- ter Kirby, all of Montreal; La- mont Gordon, Harriston, Ont.; Jchn Emery, London, Ont.; and Goréon Currie, Toronto, Orval Tessier Canadian Tire and Local 1817; remained the Oshawa Minor' Hockey Association Bantam League leaders, Civitan kept their unbeaten streak alive, B'Nai B'Rith posted their first league victory and four shutouts were registered, in the six games played last night at the Children's Arena. LEADERS WIN Tiremen and Local 1817 con- Sy ag rh mpg: be atop the 'team ladder, claiming key wins. Canadian Tire bombed Local 2784 6-1 while Local 1817 kept pace with a brilliant 6-0 -- over Houdaille Indus- ries, Bev Smith's Civitan remained the loop's only unbeaten sextet blanking Police Association 5-0, Civitan have now won three and tied three. B'Nai B'Rith picked up their first win in six starts, shading Coca Cola 2-1 while in the other action Westmount Kiwan's knocked Scugog Cleaners off a share of first place with a 2-0 win and Local 205 took care of Duplate Limited 5-0. B'NAI B'RITH 2 -- "COKES" 1 Scoring two rapid fire goals in the opening period, B'Nai B'Rith nosed out Coca Cola 2-1. Johnny Scattergood and Pete Hollings- worth were the winners' marks- men. Scoring for the losing "pop" boys was Jimmie Clarke. B'NAI B'RITH -- goal, Buret; defence, Tole, Crumb; forwards, Davis, Forshie, Bryant; alter- nates, O'Brien, Ross, Scatter- good, Conway, Baluzek, Butt, Brabin, Goodchild, Hodgners, Hollingsworth and Robinson. COCA COLA -- goal, Brett; defence, Brezzent, Logan; for- wards, Peterson, Wallace, Cle- ments; alternates, Allant, Erwin, Clarke, Cockerton, Saw- yer, Hudgins, Collins, Forestall, Chapman and Johnston. CIVITAN 5 -- POLICE @ Al Trotter turned in a flawless effort as Civitan rolled over Police Association 5-0. Five separate players shared the winners' scoring including Larry McAvoy, Jimmy Preston, pany, Fithescell, Chris Weeks and Gerry Williams. Bob Dawson and Anlauf were standouts on the blueline. CIVITAN -- goal, Trotter; de- fence, Dawson, Anlauf; for- wards, Preston, Lloyd, Stewart; alternates, Krantz, Sutton, Me- Avoy, Fitzgerald, Williams, 'Tut- ton, Lloyd, and Weeks. POLICE ASSOC. -- goal, White; defence, Hewer, Scott; forwards, Bruno, 'McKenzie, Griffin; alternates, Howard, Welsh, Bligdon, Paradise, Whit- ting, Hercia, Zean, Norton and Dionne. TIREMEN BEAT 2784 Canadian Tire turned in a top team effort, to defeat Local 2784) McQuade 6-1, The loss for the local drop- ped them into the league base- ment. Jimmie Curry, Carl Mac- Rae, Mike Hewer, Ray Graham and Bruce MacKay shot the Tireman goals. For "2784", Billy Morrison noted their lone marker. CANADIAN TIRE -- goal, Pollard; defence, Graham, Bremner; forwards, 'Vice, Gra- ham, Hewer; alternates, Mac- Kay, Wald:s, Curry, MacRae, Popham, McConkey, Clarke and Phillips. LOCAL 2784 -- goal, Wilson; defence, Ruse, Boyle; forwards, Harrison, Moore, Morrison; al- ternates, Sutton, Dionne, Twaites, Parker, Potter and Peyton. W. KIWANIS 2 -- SCUGOG'S 0 Goaltenders Billy Wayling and Brad Wilson combined talents to whitewash Scugog Cleaners 2-0 as Westmount Kiwanis came up with a big win. Alex Talkachoff and Elliott Beharrell triggered the WH goals. WESTMOUNT KIWANIS -- goal, Wayling and Wilson; de- fence, Lakas, Thompson; for- wards, Bee, Talakachoff, Fry; alternates, Warren, Moore, Be- harrell, Walker, Cook, Pascoe, McKee, and Ranger. SCUGOG CLEANERS -- goal, Metcalfe; defence, Simon, Graper; forwards, Knight, Lupel, Miljour; alternates, Gar- rison, McCullough, Kurello, ten City League Bantams Continue Keen Race G: Sete Se Aoi BF rege Fv apne other was ed with Local' 1817 ray Blioden: Rey' Maris, Peo ray er, Ron Pere and J heart WS fo! Ryan lied the "1817" goals, \ af Danny Varcoe had his second "SEK unr -- goa, Yr defence, Fisher, 'Selleck ee wards, Elliott, Ryan, Stead; al- Martin "Holt Stewar a a Babcock, Kelly and Vann" HOUDAILLE INDUSTRIES -- goal, Nealt; . defence, Brown, ;, forwards, Waldens, Osborne, Juvenville; alternates, Rossnoski, Murray, Carey, Ostle, Weeks, Howard, Master- oe gia > "gg Glendin- ng, oona: urchb; Mans, Susttane py LOCAL 205, 5 -- DUPLATE 6 In the wrap up tilt Local 205 continued the shutout van ing Duplate 5-0, Louie Vaillan- court sparked the "205" snipers with a pair of markers. Singles went to Roger Waddell, Harry Morrison and Kevin by Ahad O'Neil picked up the shut- ut, DUPLATE -- goal, Wilson; defence, Konopalski, Smith; for- wards, Carroll, Greenwood, Watson; alternates, Wilson, An- dison, Bouckley, Bonnet! Locke, Knowlton, MacKay, Nichols and Lakas. O'Neil; LOCAL 205 -- go defence, Moak, Slack; forwards, Zufelt, Morrison, Salowski; al- ternates, Andrews, Burch, Me- Lean, Manchan, Mills, Muir, Rollo, Shouldra, Vaillancourt, Waddell, Wragg, and Zedic. Officials -- Paul. Kawzenyk, John Sadowski, Harvey Balsom, Mel Suddard and Stan Westfall. HINDERED BY RAIN MiLBOURNE (AP) -- Rain held up preparations of the It- alian and Australian Davis Cup tennis teams Monday for the challenge round starting here Dec 26. Continuous showers Clarke, Logeman, Hamilton, kept the players of the courts, Holds Lead In A.L. PITCHING EPHL Scoring OTTAWA (CP) -- Orval Tes- sier of Kingston F ron tenacs picked up one assist last week to maintain a seven-point lead over Ed Hoekstra of Kitchener. Waterloo Beavers in the East- ern Professional Hockey League ied Maki To FIGHTS LAST NIGHT Join Bearcats For Few Games GALT (CP) -- Ted Maki of Galt Terriers, 1960-61 Allan Cup champions and Canada's repre- sentatives in the world hockey, tournament at Colorado Springs, Colo., March 8-18, will leave for Europe Dec. 26 to help) Port Arthur Bearcats on their hockey tour. Maki will return Jan. 5 after bolstering the Bearcats defence during a series against top European clubs in Sweden. The Terriers also announced that netminder Jacques Mon- ette won't be with them for the world championships. The Terriers had been con- sidering Monette for the goal- tending chore on the basis of his performance with Amherst Ramblers, last season's Mar\- times Senior champs, but the situation changed when Mon- ette decided to play this By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York--Cecil Shorts, 148, Cleveland, outpointed Billy Collins, 14514, Detroit, 10. Providence, R.I. -- Paddy Reea, 130%, Providence, out- pointed Nat (Kid) Williams, 128, Philadelphia, 10. Coach Bud Poile Puts It Bluntly PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- Coach Bud Poile of the West- ern Hockey, League's Edmonton Flyers said Monday that play- ing on the West Coast is like playing against seven men. He is requesting a league di- rectors meeting to discuss of- ficiating. After a 2-1 loss to Portland, Poile said: "In Portland, Seat- tle and Spokane the referees don't run game. The crowds 0." scoring race. Tessier has 22 goals and 20 assists in 26 games, league sta- tistics issued today show. Hoek- stra has netted 14 markers and helped on 21 others, It was a low-scoring week, with 25 goals being scored in six games. In the only change in the top sccrers' list, Tom Mc- Carthy, Tessier's linemate, took over possession of third place with 34 points. Cesare Maniago of Hull-Ot- tawa Canadiens consolidated his hold on the lead among goal- keepers by allowing only four goals in three games. His aver- age is 2.55 goals per game, com- pared to 2.92 for Claude Dufour of North Bay. Bob Wilson of Sault Ste. Ma- rie took over the penalty lead with 98 minutes. Wilson and his team-mates have spent 464 min- utes in the cooler, tops in the league. in the U.S. Eastern Amateu League. , First, Monette found he likely wouldn't be able to secure the needed month's release from OLD COUNTRY SOCCER SCORES the Greensboro, N.C. Then he was suspended by the Mari- times Amateur Hockey Asso- ciation for playing in the U.S. without a release from the Ramblers. The Terriers haven't decided yet on a substitute. | LONDON '(Reuters)--Results of Monday night's old country soccer games: ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I West Ham 4 Wolverhampton 2 SCOTTISH LEAGUE CUP Rangers 3 Hearts 1 HOCKEY SCORES STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Exhibition BOSTON (AP)--Veteran Dick Donovan became the first Wash- ington pitcher in 33 years to win the American League earned - run title when he fin- ished with a 2.40 average in 61. Four days after the close of the campaign, Donovan moved to Cleveland in a five-player trade. Final pitching statistics re- leased today by the American League bureau show that the} 34-year-old right hander allowed! only 45 earned runs in 169 in- nings while compiling a 10-10 record, He is the first Senator to take the earned - runs - allowed crown since Garland Braxton in 1928. Bill Stafford of New York was the runner - up in the earned- run competition with a 2.68 av- erage. He was followed by Don Mossi, Detroit, 2.96, and Milt Pappas, Baltimore, 3.03, Although the Yankees' Whitey Ford finished 10th in earned runs with 3.21, the cagey south- paw who won the Cy Young award as the majors' outstand- ing pitcher had the most yic- tories, 25, and the highest win- ning percentage, .826. He also pitched the most innings, 283, started the most games, 39, and was second to strikeout leader Camilo Pascual of Min- lag with 209. Pascual fanned Pascual and Baltimore's Steve Barber shared the shut- out lead with eight. Dick Donovan Wins ERA Crown At 33 1057), again led 'in this Sad » & q J ment with 39. The Caben rlonty also yielded the most hits, 265, and runs, 134. Chuck Estrada of Baltimore -- the most bases on balls, 2. The Orioles had the best col- lective earned run ayerage, 3.22. Tigers pitchers had the most complete games, 62, while . Pedro Ramos of Minnesota, who holds the circuit's record Los Angeles moundsmen struck out the most batsmen, 973 110 KING ST. W. ne DRY HARDWOOD SLABS Excellent wood for fireplaces McLAUGHLIN COAL & SUPPLIES LTD. PHONE 723-3481 Port Arthur 6 Czechoslovakia 0 Nova Scotia Senior Windsor 9 New Glasgow § Moncton 9 Amherst 5 Saskatchewan Junior Moose Jaw 4 Saskatoon 1 Niagara Junior B Stamford 9 Fort Erie 2 OHA Intermediate A Ingersoll 7 Dundas 3 Port Hope 7 Napanee 12 Trenton 3 Uxbridge 5 College Exhibition U. of Toronto 3 U. of Minn. 4 MONTREAL (CP) -- McGill University is giving sport a sub- tle push. No official drive to flush out athletes has been proclaimed. But a program of a kind is nonetheless apparent. ' It's something of a shift in policy. For years, the univer- sity's traditions were largely academic. Alumni moaned. But the hockey and football teams were still the patsies of inter- collegiate play. The change takes form in the innovation of top-line coaching, a move to grab men with pro- fessional playing experience. Soft - spoken Bill Bewley, 30, a halfback with the Montreal Alouettes, is the latest recruit. He was appointed Dec. 6 to succeed another ex-Al, Bruce (Bones) Coulter, 34, as coach of the university's Redmen in the Senior Intercollegiate Foot- ball League. Coulter went to Bishop's Uni- versity of Lennoxville, Que., as athlétic director after four sea- sons steering the Redmen, one a title year and another a near- miss. NEW HOCKEY COACH Senior hockey has also under- gone & ; f shuffle in coaching per-|man McGill University Moves In On Sport sonnel. The new head 'man is slim Kelly Burnett, 35, a high- scoring centre from minor pro hockey. Harry Griffiths, the univer- sity's athletics director, and in- dustrial magnate Geoff Notman, chairman of the athletics board, are key figures behind the new look. Notman is a burly, rough- hewn man of 60 with a firm handshake, easy grin and boy- et for college foot- all. His business interests .cover the presidency of the aircraft- manufacturing firm of Canadair Limited and executive positions with a score of other big firms, But it's eyident when you talk to him that he feels he made perhaps just as big a mark as a member of the university's gridiron champions of 1919. "We used to draw crowds as high as 18,000 in those days," he said in an interview. "There is no reason in my mind why the college game can't come back. But it has to start with the undergraduates." NEED WINNER Thé answer is winning: foot- ball ahd both Griffiths and Not- started thirigs rolling--the Re4- men's big win in 1960 under him was the university's first title since 1938 -- and they look to Bewley to keep it moving. McGill, like other Canadian universities, provides no ath- letic scholarships. But it op- erates under an additional handicap. High school football is well below the standard of Ontario, thus making for a weaker potential in personnel. "We try to make up for it! now 'by selling the school as an institution to promising ath- letes," said Griffiths, "and it's worked out fine for everyone." Two big finds were quarter- back Tom Skypeck from Cor- nell University and tackle Tom Stefl from the University of Maryland, Skypeck, 23, a pass wizard, is a third-year dentistry stude.t who has another year of elig-' ibility. Stefl, 26, is among 15 men the club loses through graduation. But both have promoted the university among their football-|° playing friends in the United States. It's yielded a number of first-string performers for the team and more are ex- PRESTIGE Ribb: de luxe ass $1.50 Ib rtmer @ aware of it. Coulter pected next season. os AND n huchles enjoy...