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Lebanon Daily News from Lebanon, Pennsylvania • Page 38

Location:
Lebanon, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
38
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Rangers To 4-3 Win Over Bruins UNlJEto PRESS INTERNATIONAL Phil Goyette of the New York Rangers didn't feel very- well Wednesday night, but it is the Boston Bruins who need' the today. Goyette, the slender center whom the Rangers acquired from Montreal in off-season trade, scored three goals and a fourth despite a very heavy cold as New York edged Boston, 4-3. Goyette's first goal midway through the second period tied the game at 1-1 and the former Canadian's third, goal, registered at 17:07 of the third stanza, appeared to be the winner. It gave the' Rangers a 3-2 lead, but 59 seconds 1 later de- fenseman Leo Boivin beat Jacques Plante for the equalizer. Then Hadfield tipped in Goyette's shot in the final minute to give the Rangers their fourth victory of the season three of them at the Bruins' expense.

Penalties and fights were the attraction at the Toronto-Montreal game. The Leafs came out ori top with a 6-3 victory to move into; second place, but had quite a battle on theii hands. A total of 20 minor pan allies wore meted out by busy officials in addition to 10- minute misconducts to Toronto's Bob Pulford and Montreal's Terry Harper, who continued their bad manners in the penalty box. NHL Standinn TFtiGFGA Chicago 6 1 1 32 18 Toronto 5 3 9 10 27 20 Montreal 3 3 2 8 27 26 'New York 4 4 0 8 12 23 Detroit 3 4 7 19 23 Boston 1 7 I 3 13 30 P.etulU Toronto 6. Montreal 3 New York 4, Boston 3 Only games scheduled Todaj'i Gams New York at Detroit No gAmes Friday To Blue Jays For Season ELIZABETHTOWN An in- iury suffered by Jeff Sensing, former Norlebco athlete, Tuesday in Elizabethtown's 3-1 soccer victory over Miilersville SC proved costly to the Blue Jays as the left halfback and co-cap tain suffered a broken ankle in the contest arid will be lost to the team for the remainder of the Sensing is a senior majoring in chemistry.

Fredericksburg athlete has been a mainstay of the Elizabethtown eleven since his freshman year and coach Owen L. Wright will be hard pressed to find a replacement for Bensing as the Blue Jays battle for the MAC title. Bensing has riot, missed an soccer game in i years and-was a 1 starter in his first from year in the first collegiate game of bal his Award To List Of Laurels freshman year. The injury was at first believed to be a severe sprain but X-rays disclosed the fracture. Bensing was hurt late the contest.

The loss of Bensing is especially crucial to the Blue Jays since they are currently in the thick of a race for the Middle Atlantic Conference championship. 'addition, Tony McGlaughlin, center forward, is stiH hobbling on a partially healed knee injury received earlier in the season. And John Suffel, the right fullback, is limping with a severe charley horse. Me- Glaughlih is a junior from McClure; Suffel, a junior from Millerstown. Tuesday's BOSTON (UPI) Koufax nit a $50,000 to "double" todpy a Cy Young award and a most, valuable player award in one season.

The 27-year old Los Angeles Dodger fireballer won the "seci ond half" of the double Wednesday when the Baseball Writers Association of America selected him as the National League's MVP. Earlier, he was named winner of the Cy Young award as the outstanding major league pitcher of 1963. The first man to win both awards since Don Newcombe of the Dodgers in 1956, Kou'fax' selection as MVP should lift: him into the $50,000 to salary class in 1864. Sandy may. have hinted at his salary intern lions when he called the MVP "the most important in baseball." Nearly Unanimous A 25-game winner with a 1,88 earned run average, 11 shutouts and 306 strikeouts, Koufax was named on 19 of the 20 ballots cast by veteran members of the BBWAA.

Fourteen of the writers made him their No', 1 selection, three chose him second and he got one third and one fifth for 237 of a possible 280 points. Shortstop Dick Groat of the SANDY KOUFAX NL's MVP St. Louis Cardinals was second 1 with 190 points, slugging outfielder Hank Aaron of the Milwaukee Braves was third with 135 and relief ace Ron Perra- noski of the Dodgers was fourth with 130. They were followed, in order from fifth through 10th, by outfielder Willie Mays of the San Francisco Giants, infielder Jim Gilliam of' the Dodgers, first- baseman Bill White of the'Car- dinals, outfielder Tommy Davis of the Dodgers, third baseman Ron Santo of the Chicago Cubs and outfielder Vada Pinson of the Cincinnati Reds. Very Surprised "I didn't think a pitcher would get it," said Koufax when BBWAA National Secretary Hy Hurwitz informed him of his tri "I felt Groat would be up there but I'm amazed Gilliam didn't finish higher than Jim never gets what he deserves.

He deserved to be The sophisticated, Brooklyn- born Koufax capped his brilli ant season by scoring two victories in the Dodgers' four- game World Series sweep of the New York Yankees. He set a series single game record of 15 strikeouts in a 5-2 opening-game win and beat the Yankees, 2-1 in the fourth game. Koufax's 11 shutouts were the most achieved by a left-handei in one season during the mod ern era and his 306 strikeouts arc a National League record. Walter Johnson, Rube Waddell and Bob Feller are the only other pitchers who have struck out 300 or more batters in one season. Dally News, Lebanon, Thursday, Oetelier 31, 1983 Page $9 3-1 win over Mil- Cold Weather BARGAINS Beit American-made guaranteed brands Reg.

12.00 warm btlow- itre lightweight deep gullied underwear Pants and Jackets Sets lersville had no bearing on the standings, but a 2-1 triumph over Drexel last Saturday kept them in the top spot in the Northern Division of the MAC. Now the Jays are digging in for Saturday's Dad's Day game with Moravian here and the regular season finale against Wilkes here in November. One other game on the regular season slate, East Stroudsburg away on November 6, figures to be a real battle accord ing to Coach L. Wright, but the teachers are not in the MAC. Leading the offense to date are Al Hershey, Paradise sen ior who plays left inside, and Hershey Seeks 4th Loop Win At Mechanicsburg Hershey School's Trojan football team will close Out their Capital Area Conference schedule Friday evening when they meet Mechanicsburg on the Wildcats' home field.

The Trojans, defending CAC hanipions, now sport a 3-3 eague record and hope to regis er their fourth loop win against tie winless Wildcats. The charges of Sterling Banta have their work cut out as the ViKcats are improving every veek. Last week they gave Mid lletown the biggest scare the Jlue Raiders have had all season in conference play. Mechanicsburg (0-7) will count leavily on one of the conference's best passers, Bob Holder baum, in their attempt to gel nto the win column for the firsi Tittle, Kemp Named Pro Players Of Week Men's and Boys' Sizes Only 4.88 complete set Rta. 7.91 lip off hood boys' and aim' warm deep quilted Siieii la U.

Jackets only 3.98 Reg. 1.91 warm hooded pull over tf full ilpptr i Grey, Navy, Red, McGiaughlin. Hershey has nine goals; McGlaughlin, eight. Jay Lehman, a Mt. Joy senior, has five goals.

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Air farce style bomber jackets, flight parkas, bar bell sets, sleeping bags, tents. Army bunk beds, Chicago rink shot, roller skates our eosy-loyaway-plan Wt fliv. PARKING TOKENS Remember for Real Honest Bargains MARTIN'S Store With More Values For AM Spen Every Erinrng Til 9 P.M. WeCaih Checks 20 South 8th St. Milton Hershey Frosh Defeat Palmyra, 12-0 Milton Hershey School's freshmen grid team blanked the Palmyra understudies by a 12-0 count on the home field on Wed nosciay afternoon.

Mike Wright hit paydirt from the 17-yard-line on a fullback swing left to score in the first quarter and John Duffy's 38 yard pass to end Ronald "Bee tie" Bailey added the insurance sis-pointer in the final period. Dave Harding, Bill Vcssa and Andy Parrish sparkled on de fense for the Young Spartans did Art Fegan for the alms. Milton Hershey showed 8-4 advantage in firs owns. our Hold Twin Double ickets For $7,234.60 PHILADELPHIA (UPI) our holders of the 2-3-24 twii ouble combination collecte 7,234.60 each Wednesday nigh Liberty Bell harness rac rack. Band S.

won the $3,200 feature rairmount Park pace in 2:04 lat and paid $5.40, $3, and $2.60 The daily double (1-2) paid 187. this year. They are 0-5 in competition. Hershey, hit heavily by injur les throughout the season, wil on Allen Shaver and Alex NEW YORK The Play-1 of the Week in the National Football League has to be just one Yelberton Abraham Tittle. His probing Cleveand's defenses with short passes and running plays and his arilliant automatics under i a pressure in a "must" game were outstanding.

'Y. A. called as good a game as I ever saw a quarterback call," said Allie Sherman, his coach on the New York Giants and a former quarterback himself. "When I speak of calling a good game I don't mean passing rn a first and 10 situation or not running on second and three. I mean taking a game plan, it and moving your stuff around.

To top it ofl he is a great All pro football fans must know by now that the Giants under Tittle, snapped Cleveland's six-game winning streak last Sunday 33-6. Tittle, who turned 37 on Oct. 24, ignored his favorite weapon, the long bal Trayer to move the ball while Craig Hetrick and Harry Susi or bomb. Instead he "chunked will share the signal calling job. The Trojans have suffered losses to key players but have up with sterling performances from young and inexperienced players in every game and it is this team effort that has icept the Hershey season from turning into a disaster.

Banta is counting on another strong effort by his squad to bring home a victory Friday night. The Trojans dropped a non- league contest to Central Dauphin East last weekend but Banta is looking for his club to rebound from that defeat. The Trojans need this game and their final game to finish at the .500 mark as they are now 3-5 on the season. He hopes that the chance of splitting even on the season will give his squad a bit of added incentive in tomorrow evening's encounter with the Wildcats. Bob Bailey Quits As Boss Of Phila.

Ramblers PHILADELPHIA (AP) Bob Bailey, coach of the Philadel phia Ramblers in the Eastern Hockey League, resigned Wednesday night in a policy difference with management. The club named Doug Adam, Ramblers coach from 1958 to 1961, to succeed Bailey. as Sherman called it, passing accurately when the occasion demanded and Alex Webster, Hugh McEIhen- Phil King and Joe Morrison along the ground. Tittle hit with eight straight passes in one streak, competed 14 of 20 in the first half and wound up the day with 21 of. 31 for 214 yards and touchdowns.

He was named Star of lie Week by the Associated Press. If there was a Lineman of the Week category in the pro ranks, it would have to be Henry Jordan of the Green Bay Packers. The big defensive tackle made three key plays in the last quarter that saved the day the Packers in a 34-20 victory over BUFFALO, N.Y. hemp's confidence may be the he's the Player of the rVeek in the American Football League. Like most of the 29,243 persons in the stands, Kemp figured he had blown the Buffalo Bills' chance to beat the Boston Patriots last Saturday night.

Hadn't the Patriots driven him from Boston's 11-yard line to the 40 with about two minutes left in the game? And didn 1 Mack Yoho miss a 47-yard field goal attempt that would have broken a 21-21 tie? But Kemp, chosen by The As sociated Press, recalled today that he had not given up hope. 'I thought we'd make it," he said. "We'd at least get close enough for' a field goal if not a touchdown." That view, he said, came when Buffalo regained the bail on its 28-yard line with 28 seconds to go. "We had set up the play on the sideline," Kemp said as he described how Charley Ferguson, a former Minnesota Viking, was instructed to sprint downfield and then cut to his left while Kemp made his throw. Ferguson, a 6-foot-5 end filling in for Bill Miller, reached out, gathered in the ball on the Boston 20 and raced across the goal line untouched for Buffalo's 28-21 victory.

Earlier, Kemp scored three touchdowns, each on one-yard line smashes. Pennsylvania nimrods have been promised that despite the current hunting ban, there will be plenty of hunting opportunity this year. H. L. Buchanan, president of the Pennsylvania Game Commission announced that he will contact the seven members of the commission just as soon as conditions warrant a review of the opening and closing dates of the various seasons.

"Although the ban against hunting must be continued until 'sufficient rainfall reduces the threat of fire in Pennsylvania's fields and forests, we will still follow the commission's long-standing policy of providing maximum hunting opportunity for Pennsylvania hunters," Buchanan said. "This means that just as soon as the ban is lifted, we will officially consider extending seasons which already have been'interrupt- ed. It also means that if the 1963 small game season is delayed, we will consider setting additional shooting days later to make up for the lost time." Buchanan pointed out that, from a game-management standpoint, hunting seasons can be held anytime after the breeding-and rearing season has produced annual surplus of game species. The basic objective regulating the harvest is to permit hunters to crop surplus without depleting the breeding stock for the following year. For this reason, hunting seasons can be held anytime between fall and spring.

At the same time, Game Commission spokesmen are predicting good to excellent hunting this year on most small game species regardless of when the season starts. They report that the current drought and forest-fire situation has not caused any widespread loss among wildlife populations. Warm weather actually slowed down the fall migration of waterfowl, giving Pennsylvania one of the highest concentrations of ducks and geese in years. Commission field officers also report above average fall populations of pheasants, wild turkeys, quail, deer and bear. Fall populations of squirrels, rabbits, grouse and snowshoe rabbits on a statewide basis are.

generally reported to be average or slightly below average. sportsmen's organizations throughout Pennsylvania are urging their members to vote for the Project 70 Amendment, which will be on the ballot in a statewide referendum at next Tuesday's general elec- MaHjoll, Tempiiir Nel Champions At Green Hills Club Eddie Mattioli, a former county champion, captured the third annual Green Hills Tennis Club singles championship by downing John Myers, 6-4, 7-5, in the final round. Stan Templjn and Mattioli teamed up to cop the doubles title at the Cleona courts with a 6-2, 6-4, triumph over the tandem of Claude Donmoyer and Harold Miller. Both the Donmoyer Miller team and Myers had won the respective titles during the first two years the tournament was in operation. Mattioli had gained the finals of the singles tourney by ing Lowell Kreider, while Myers polished off Tempiin in other semifinal test.

The Tempiin Mattioli victims in the semifinal round of the doubles joust were Henry Long and Myers, while Donmoyer and Miller reached the finals in that portion of the competition by eliminating Roger Knix- ley and Howard Moyer. tion. If approved, the seventy million dollars (that's how Project 70 got its name) in this fund will be allocated for the acquisition of lands by the Commonwealth's Game and Fish Commissions and. for the establishment of State parks in-various areas of Pennsylvania. Foremost in the minds of local anglers and out-; doorsmen is the proposed.

Swatara Park near Inwood. While approval of Project 70 will not guarantee the approval of Swatara Park, local sportsmen and other advocates of the park contend that Swatara site is the most logical one for such a park in this area. Moreover, they point out that Lebanon County and its environs have been consistently by-passed in the distribution of States parks. A glance map of Pennsylvania will show that a huge gap in the State park system exists in this region. That's why they hope that Project 70 will go a long way to alleviating this situation.

And that's why they urge all of you sportsmen to vote for the amendment. A'S CANCEL PACT Ore. A working agreement between the Kansas City Athletics of the American League and the Portland Beavers of the Pacific Coast Baseball League was canceled Wednesday. John Kobs retired as Michigan State baseball coach after the 1963 campaign. In his 39 years he had only four losing seasons.

-VOICE FROM THE BLEACHERS- Football Follies Decries Unequal Publicity; Fine Was Not Justified I EAR VOICE: Many people are wondering why just certain teams get all the credit in the Lebanon Midget Football League. Most people feel the boys on all teams play a good game and deserve equal credit. Cleona's team has a so-called Big TV man behind them, so they get all the publicity. Is this fair? One team got in the headlines and had to pay a fine imposed by men who think they are big. The father involved must feel very bad about this episode.

His action was understandable. Any normal father should be handled otherwise than by headlines and an article just to fill up the sports page. Many people work hard and give up valuable time to help these boys play football. On the other hand, many ot the bystanders just shoot off their mouths and say how things should be done. The boys and some parents respecf these workers and helpers.

If the boys get along together; why can't the big men who run the we say to (he and the coaches, don't let this gossip bother you unless you have a guilty conscience. WILLING HELPER. DEAR MRS; HELPER: It is our policy to' give all the teams their fair share of publicity. far as tho "episode" to which you referred goes, it is our contention that publicity It the best way to ttop this kind of interference. PRICES REDUCED On AH Sporting Goods "Red Head" "Saf-T-Bak" "10X" Hunting Clothing Lay-away your favorite gun now.

Parsons' buys, trades and sells used guns. GUNS REPAIRED SCOPES MOUNTED RIFLES SIGHTED IN Come in and look over our store full of guns, hunting clothes, boots, Tyrolean Leather Shoes, Wigwam Sport Socks and Hunting Equipment. Parsons is a store whert YOU not enty buy Best For less." They give service en anything they lell, Rods, Reels, Guns, PARSONS Lebanon's Finest Sport Store 28 S. 8th St. 20 Years in Business in Everything for Sportsman BRAND NEW FULL 4 PLY NYLON Super Traction Master SNOW TIRES NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED Type, Blk.

2 FOR 670x15 30.00 710x15 35.OO 760x15 39.00 Whiiewalls 1 AQ Only 1.89 I''. Tubeless, Blk. 2 FOR 27.00 700x13 29.00 31. OO 750x14, 670x15 35.OO 800x14 39.00 Tubeless, Blk, 2 FOR 710x15 39,00 850x14, 760x15 43.00 47.OO 47.00 Only BRAND NEW TRACTION MASTER Blk. 15-MOHTH GUARANTEE Tube Blk.

670x15 710x15 760x15 600x16 2 FOR 20.00 25.00 29.00 25.00 Tubeless Blk. 750x14 19.0O 25.00 We Buy and Sell PROOF SETS GOLD COINS Coin Supplies It Coins Open Evtningi Until Tunday A Friday Until Hunting Licenses SOLD HERE NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED TIRES MOUNTED FREE ALL TIRE PRICES PLUS FED. TAX 12-MONTH GUARANTEE NEW TREADS 2 C.OO 750x14 JL 800x14 150x14 FOR Tubelcss Blackwalls 2 FOR 17.00 2 FOR 19.0O Open Tues, Fri. 'Til 9 P.M. 622 CUMBERLAND STREET Week-end Discounts At Prices That Yon Can Hot Afford To Miss.

Hunting Clothing and Hunting Rubber Footwear Buy now and save lots of money largest selection in this vicinity. Thermo-Llned Hooded Sweat Shirts $2.98 Assorted Colors Army Style Tanker Jackets $3.98 Quilted Lined 2-Piece Rain Suits 3.9S With Hood Woolrich Clothing Many new styles to choose from. Safety Toe Work Shoes up Ladies' and Men's Bowling Shoes up Bowling Shirts made order. to Shop Here For Young Hen's Dress Clothes We carry such brand lines as Levis, Dickies, Fruit of Loom, Elbeco shirts; Foot King, Georgia, Wolverine, Herman shoes. Bulky Knit Sweaters assorted styles Values To $9.95 Little League Football Shoes, Helmets, Shoulder Pads, Pants, Shirts and Other Accessories at Savings up to Bowling Shoes $9 Qfi From up Brunswick Bowling Balls Measured To Fit You.

Hundreds and Hundreds Of Other Items Stop In and Look Around. Charlie Baer's Army 8c Navy Store 5-7 South Eighth Street FREE TOKENS GIVEN Open Evenings Until 9 pm Wt Civf Mirchanli Grein Stampi Your Pay Chtek Coihid.

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Pages Available:
391,576
Years Available:
1872-1977