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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 52

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Louisville, Kentucky
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52
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in Till; COl RNAL TIM U)U II, KV SUNDAY JAM AKV 21. 1071 The Excitement of Circling Ducks But some hunts prove frustrating at daybreak By JOE TOM ERWIN, mirier Journal Times Special Writer MURRAY, Ky. We had just pulled a boat and trailer by hand up a Mississippi River bank that was too slick for a truck to negotiate. We stood there exhausted and out of breath, fingers and toes numb with cold. Someone said, "Thank God, we don't have to go duck hunting anymore this year." Dr.

Ronnie Babb, Bill Wells and I had been on the river, near Hickman, since daybreak this last day of the duck season and were leaving at 11 a.m. with a grand total of one duck for our efforts. To be at the river set up and ready to hunt by daybreak had meant crawling out of bed in Murray at 3:30, a 4 o'clock breakfast, a 70-mile drive, a three-mile boat ride in the dark and 45 minutes of cold work putting out decoys and constructing a blind. As we approached the sandbar and flooded willows where we planned to to the water. I declared a split shot, claiming I had so encircled her with shot she was afraid to fly.

We had one small flight of mallards work our decoys after this but we couldn't get them low enough for a shot. We started to quit and go home three times during the morning but each time we'd leave the blind we'd see ducks and decide to try a bit longer. Each time I'm a party to a duck hunt such as this one, I wonder why anyone would put up with such discomfort and frustration, much less call it recreation. But then I remember the excitement of ducks circling and chuckling overhead before putting in to decoys and I know why. I spent last Saturday morning quail hunting with Kenny and Larry Green of Hazel, but our luck was similar to that of my last duck hunt.

We found four coveys but the first flushed ahead of the dogs, the second was in such heavy cover we couldn't shoot, and the third, although pointed by our dogs, flushed before we could get in range. Everything seemed perfect on the fourth covey. Our dogs trailed them across a patch of woods before pointing in a clump of honeysuckle. I stepped into the middle of the covey before the birds flushed. They fluttered up and flew straight away directly toward a house across the road.

Kenny finally knocked a bird down as it was going out of range. Larry and I never shot. John Lyons of TVA's Land-Between-the-Lakes staff reports that reservations are still available for the "Eagles Revisited" weekend at Kentucky Dam Village State Park on Feb. 12-14. Among the weekend activities will be guided field trips to LBL to observe eagles.

Lyons says several bald eagles have been spotted recently along embay-ments of Kentucky and Barkley lakes. Sugar, Duncan and Pisgah bays are favorite eagle areas on Kentucky Lake. Fulton, Mammoth Furnace and Crooked Creek bays are the best spots on Barkley. Both bald and golden eagles have been observed this winter at Energy and Hematite lakes. PETER VAN LINGEN of Glasgow has been ranked No.

1 in Kentucky for 1970. He's also on the No. 1 rated men's doubles team. Tennis rankings for 1970 Baseball fete nears Nice guy Sparky proves Leo wrong started the outboard and went out to pick it up but before we got to it, it righted itself and dived. We chased it a good 15 minutes before it got into the flooded willows where we couldn't follow.

Split shot: she was afraid to fly! After completing our blind, we sat for nearly an hour without sight of a duck. Finally, a flight came over high. While Ron was trying to get the flight's attention, two black ducks came from now-where and' were cupping to alight before we noticed them. Ron ducked into the blind, but his movement startled them. Nevertheless, a black susie made a short circle and was back low over the decoys.

1 emptied my shotgun without knocking a feather, after which Ron dropped her AUGHT Associated Press Sailing MIKE DICKSON, 11, Louisville, displays an 81-inch sailfish caught recently off Key West. He lives at 2602 Saddle Court. Spo rts in brief By RON COONS Courier-Journal Times Staff Writer Leo Durocher once remarked, "Nice guys finish last." The veteran manager made that statement over 20 years ago, and for a time it was accepted as valid. But this so-called maxim has been contradicted on at least two noteworthy occasions. For instance, Durocher himself fin-" ished last with the Chicago Cubs in 1966 and nobody, to best knowledge, has ever accused Durocher of being a nice guy.

Some say he has mellowed, but no one has gone so far as to say he's a nice guy. Never! On the other hand, nice guys sometimes DO win pennants. Only last season, for example, Sparky Anderson took Cincinnati to the National SPARKY ANDERSON Here Thursday night with Rose, Gullett League championship in his first year as a big league manager. The previous four seasons he had won pennants at Rock Hill, S.C.; St. Petersburg, Modesto, and Asheville, N.C.

When he was named to succeed the popular Dave Bristol at the Cincinnati helm, the reaction was "Sparky who?" But in 1971, he'll be going for his sixth flag in a row. Anderson, whose premature grayness makes him look 50 instead of his 37 years, is a real down-to-earth fellow. His honesty is frightening. So is his modesty. He was quoted last year as saying, "Every man on my staff is capable of managing this club.

I don't mind saying that my coaches make a lot of decisions for me. I like to think of myself as just another coach." Sparky, who played only one season in the majors with Philadelphia in 1959 he hit .218 in 152 games has the ability to communicate with his players. The Reds showed remarkable togetherness in 1970. And Sparky's role in developing young players, such as Don Gullett, Milt Wilcox, Wayne Simpson, Bernie Carbo, Dave Conception and Hal McRae, is Fans here will get a chance to meet Sparky Thursday night when the Louisville Colonels salute the Reds at their an make our set, dozens of ducks rose off the water. This caused Ron, who had been agonizing over whether to hunt the river or the flooded fields along Mayfield Creek, to predict a good hunt.

We had just finished putting out our decoys and were getting ready to start on our blind when a pair of greater scaup came in low over the decoys. When Ron called them they took a short circle and cupped to alight despite our being in full view. A duck is hit, but I had hurriedly loaded a shotgun and handed it to Ron. He hit one of the ducks hard but it flew a few hundred yards up river before it fell to the water and began to float down stream on its side. We nual baseball dinner in the Brown Hotel's Crystal Ballroom.

The affair starts at 7 o'clock. Coming along with Anderson from Cincinnati will be Pete Rose; Gullett the 20-year-old Kentuckian who amazed everyone with his fast ball as a rookie last summer; Lee May; Jim Mc-Glothlin; Carbo; Jim Stewart; broadcasters Al Michaels and Joe Nuxhall; possibly coach Ted Kluszewski and front-office people Bob Howsam, Sheldon Bender and Paulie Campbell. Darrell Johnson, the new manager of the Colonels, will be on hand. The master of ceremonies will be Gordy Coleman, former first baseman of the Reds who now heads the club's speakers' bureau. 1 Anderson will have plenty to talk about.

For instance: Did the Reds lose the 1971 NL pennant at the Franklin County High School Gym in Frankfort? That's where 'star center fielder Bobby Tolan tore an Achilles tendon while playing on the Reds' basketball team. He's expected to be out of action until June, and there's no guarantee he'll play then. So will Anderson move Rose from right to center, Carbo from left to right and give McRae the left field job? Or will he simply put Ty Cline or Angel Bravo in center? Or move first baseman May to the outfield, shift Tony Perez from third to first and put McRae at third? Does he anticipate making a deal for an outfielder? Colonels cut Lock, Hartenstein He'll undoubtedly talk about the World Series, especially the controversial play.at the plate in the first game in which umpire Ken Burkhart blocked Carbo and Baltimore catcher Ellie Hendricks. And what about the medical reports on Simpson, a rookie who was well on his way to the Cy Young Award before incurring arm trouble after winning 14 games in half of a season? McGlothlin and 20-game winner Jim Merritt, too, were hampered by injuries in the Series. Can they bounce back in '71? And are there any more Gullets, Carbos and Simpsons among the' Reds rookies Kurt Bevacqua, Pat Osburn, Ross Grjmsley, Bill Ferguson, Frank Duffy and Dan Godby--coming up? The Colonels yesterday announced that veteran outfielder Don Lock and pitcher Chuck Hartenstein have been given their unconditional releases and that outfielder Fred Wolcott, on loan to Toledo last summer, has been sold to the Mud Hens.

16 K-K2. Pretty, but to no avail. Before playing, study the diagram and see if you can find it. PIRC DEFENSE if if mm, wM. ml mi ft WM if HAIi 9 ppt v-MM ft ftftftWMI IP Kentucky rankings (Players from Louisville unless denoted otherwise) Men's sinSles 1.

Peter Van Lingen, Glasgow; 2. Rod McNerney; 3. Tommy Wade, Lexinaton, and Bill Evans; 5. Gay Messlck, Glasgow; 6. Charlie Kane; 7.

Lin Alexander; 8. Bobby Nolan. (Insufficient data-Jackie Cooper, Tim Cooper, John McGill, Mickey Schad.) Men's doubles 1. Van Lingen-Messick; 2. R.

Mc-Nerney-Kane; 3. English-B. Evans; 4. Mike McNer-ney-Alexander; 5. English-Elam Huddleston.

Junior veterans singles 1. B. Evans; 1. Dick Swi- gart; 3. Livingston Taylor, Lawrenceburg; 4.

Ron Eads. Junior veterans doubles 1. B. Evans-Bob Bortner; 2. Taylor-John King, Lexington.

Senior singles 1. Swigart; 2. Fred Friedmann; 3. Bob Russell; 4. Dave Oevol.

Senior doubles 1. Allen Schmilt-Wilson Evans, Berea; 2. Leo Schuhmann-Devol. 55 1 over singles-1. Schmitt; 2.

W. Evans. Women's singles-1. Pam Hart, Lexington; 2. Teri Tafel; 3.

Gaylee Gillim; 4. Alyce Boone, Lexington. Women's doubles 1. Tafel-Gillim; 2. Hart-Boone.

Boys 18 singles 1. J. T. Sims; 2. Jamie Howell; 3.

Ernie Plock; 4. Hunt Helm; 5. Mark Lucas, Georgetown; 6. Tom Jones, Lexington; 7. Mike Kane; 8.

Lindsey Logan, Shelbyville; 9. Gary Willis; 10. Kent Schickli. (Insufficient data Dwight Mitchell, Ted Roberts, Ross Bowling.) Boys 18 Howell-Kane; 2. E.

Plock-Chet Algood, Henderson; 3. E. Plock-Lucas. Boys 16 singles-1. Sims; 2.

Gary Plock; 3. Tom Tafel; 4. Kevin Walsh; 5. Bobby Massie, Lexington; 5. Ike Lawrence, Lexington; 7.

Brian BecVar; 8. Craig Hume; 9. John Gittleman; 10. Bill Ruch (insufficient data Boys 16 doubles 1, G. Plock-Walsh; 2.

Massie-Jeff Reed, Lexington; 3. Sims-Walsh. Boys 14 singles 1. Dan Lucas, Georgetown; 2. Scott Eads; 3.

Mark Wise, Georgetown; 4. Hilary Boone, Lexington; 5. Mike Bryant; 6. Paul Warner; 7. Billy Goldberg; 8.

Greg Klump; 9. Bill Plock. Boys 14 doubles 1. Boone-Lucas; 2. Eads-Bryant; 3.

B. Plock-Wise; 4. Goldberg-Warner. Boys 12 singles-1. Mark Buechler; 2.

Jim King, Lexington; 3. Paul Lang; 4. Whitney Bradley, Lexington; 5. Eddie Proffitt, Lexington; 6. Greg Adams, Richmond; 7.

Alex Boone, Lexington; 8. Danny Gunth-er. (Insufficient data-Mel Purcell, Murray.) Boys 12 doubles I. Buechler-Lang; 2. King-Bradley; 3.

King-Sieve Hillenmeyer, Lexington; 4. Adams-Gunther. Boys 10 singles I. A. Boone; 2.

John Wafson, Richmond. Girls 18 singles 1. Rita Metzroth; 2 Linda Burton, Ashland; 3. Jane Wheeler, Lexington; 4. Barbara Watson, Lexington; 5.

Mary Pat Wheeler, Lexington; t. Lois Holmes, Glasgow. (Insufficient data Ellen McGuire.) Girls 18 doubles-1. J. Wheeler-M.

P. Wheeler; 2. Watson-Jill Robertson; 3. Sally Noyes-Holly Rentz, both of Lexington. Girls 16 singles 1.

Terl Tafel; 2. Gaylee Gillim; i 3. Colleen Jones; 4. R. Metrnth: 5 ficmv Mainnou.

6. Becky Bryant; 7. Lizzie Boone, Lexington; 8. A. Boone, Lexington.

Girls 16 doubles-1. Tafel-Gillim; 2. A. Boone-L. Boone; 3.

Susan Gustafson-Bryant; 4. Kay Thompson-Rentz; 5. Karen Buttorff-Diane DeMoss. Girls 14 singles-1. Lissy Howell; 2.

Bernita Watson, Richmond; 3. Betty Jones; 4. Holly Gillim; 5. Katie St. Charles, Frankfort; 6.

Janls Mucci, Frankfort; 7. Penny Craig; 8. Patty Walsh. Girls 14 doubles 1. Watson-St.

Charles; 2. H. Gilllm-Howell; 3. Watson-Jones; 4. Mucci-Jones.

Girls 12 singles-1. Teri Wheeler, Lexington; 2. Susan Nolan; 3. Laurie Montgomery; 4. Jennifer Guv.

Girls 12 doubles-1. Nolan-Montgomery; 2. Beverly Ramser-Amy Daughterly; 3. Nancy Devol-Marianne Leveronne; 4. Carol Walson, Richmond-Missy Brown.

Girls 10 singles 1. Bamser; 2. Daugherty; 3. Brown. Falls Cities rankings Men's singles 1.

Rod McNerney; 2. Bill Evans; 3. Lin Alexander; 4. Charlie Kane; 5. Bobby Nolan.

Insufficient data Jackie Cooper, Tim Cooper, Mickey Schad.) Men's doubles 1. McNerney-Kane; 2. Sam English-Evans; 3. English-Elam Huddleston; 4. Nolan-Alexander; 5.

Bill Reed-Bart Walts; 6. Gene Schagene-Tildon McMasters. (Insufficient data Schad-J. T. Sims.) Junior veterans singles 1 Dick Swigart; 2.

McMasters. Junior veterans doubles 1. English-Huddleston; 2. Don Eads-Dave Steere; 3. (tie) Bill Peterson-Leo Schuhmann and McMaslers-Schagene.

Senior singles 1. Swigart; 2. Fred Friedmann; 3. Bnn Moore; 4. Randy VanDenover, Jeffersonville.

Women's singles 1. Teri Tafel; 2. Gaylee Gillim; 3. Dolores McGill. (Insufficient data Ellen McGuire.) Mixed doubles 1.

Tim Cooper-Tafel; 2. Schad-Esther Barker; 3. John McGill-D. McGill. Fattier son doubles 1.

George and Lin Alexander; 2. Randy and Tom VanDenover, Jeffersonville; 3. (tie) Don and Scott Eads, and Gene and Gary Plock. Boys 18 singles 1. J.

T. Sims; 2. Jamie Howell; 3. G. Plock; 4.

Mike Kane; 5. Ernie Plock; 6. T. VanDenover; 7. Kent Schickli; 8.

Don Paper. Boys 18 doubles 1. Kane-Howell; 2. Sims-Walsh; 3. Howell-Tafel; 4.

John Gittleman-Bill Ruch. Boys 16 singles 1. Kevin Walsh; 2. G. Plock; 3, T.

VanDenover; 4. Gittleman; 5. Brian BecVar. (Insufficient dala Sims.) Boys 14 singles 1. Scott Eads; 2.

Paul Warner; 3. Mike Bryant; 4. Bill Plock; 5. Billy Goldberg. Boys 14 doubles 1.

Eads-Bryant; 2. B. Plock-Gold-berg. Boys 12 singles 1. Mark Buechler; 2.

Paul Lang; 3. Danny Gunther; 4. Scott Beard; 5. Scott Koch. Girls 18 Jeanne McClure, New Albany; 2.

Janet Oehler; 3. Rita Metzroth; 4. Peggy Hilbert. (Insufficient data Ellen McGuire.) Girls 18 Teri Tafel-Gaylee Gillim; 2. Colleen Jones-Cissy Maloney; 3.

Susan Gustalson-Becky Bryant. Girls 16 singles 1. Tafel; 2. Gillim; 3 Jones; 4. Maloney; 5.

Bryant. (Insufficient data Metzroth.) Girls 14 singles 1. Betsy Jones; 2. Lissy Howell; 3. Holly Gillim; 4.

Weezi Brown; 5. Patty Walsh; 6. Penny Craig. (Insufficient data Bentley Cox.) Girls 14 doubles 1. Susan Nolan-Laurie Montgomery; 2.

Ann Steinbock-Brown; 3. Howell-H. Gillim; 4. Molly McCarthy-Walsh. Girls 12 singles 1.

Nolan; 2. Jennifer Guy; 3. Montgomery; 4. Beverly Ramser. (NOTE; No rankings in 10-and-under singles, 16-and-under doubles, 12-and-under doubles.) Hostilities' spark Pro Bowl; Saints trade Kilmer to Skins Solunar tables The schedule of solunar periods, as printed below, has been taken from Mrs.

Richard Alden Knight's Solunar Tables. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during these times, if you wish to find the best sport that each day has to offer. Use Eastern Standard Time A.M. P.M. Date Day Minor Maior Minor Maior 24n'Sunday 2:10 2:40 9:25 25 Monday ....3:05 :50 3:40 26 Tuesday ...4:00 10:50 4:35 11:15 27 Wednesday 5:00 11:50 5:30 28 Thursday 6:00 12:15 6:30 12:45 29 Friday 7:00 1:15 7:30 1:40 30 Saturday 7:55 2:15 8:25 2:35 31 Sunday ..8:50 3:05 9:15 3:30 while Miss Casals defeated Francoise Durr 3-6, 6-3, 6-3.

The Milwaukee Brewers named Frank Lane director of player operations and Bob Quinn director of minor league operations for their American League baseball franchise. Ellie Daniel of the United States set an Australian record of 2:24.8 when she won the 200-meter butterfly at the New South Wales swimming championships in Sydney, Australia. Gadabout 'Flying fisherman' lo appear al Sport, Boat, Vacation show Gadabout Gaddis, television's "flying fisherman," will headline William H. King's 14th annual Sport, Boat and Vaca- tion Show Feb. 6-14 at the Fairgrounds.

Gaddis will answer questions about fishing as part of a show which also will feature several stage acts, a petting zoo. a log rolling expert and a trout-stocked fishing pond. The show will also feature a preview of 1971 sport, boat and vacation equip- ment and provide information on vaca- tion areas. fridays pro basketball at Seattle 03-Haywood 30, winfieid wiik- cTemenssmith'Tnel0, Meschery Koiis Cincinnati (n'u-van Arsdaie 39, Robinson 25, H' VanLier U' Green a Lacey Cincinnati royals is 4i 3i 34 i-ni Seattle supersonics 38 38 22 a i-m Xhoewx' Arsdale 23, Hawkins 21, Haskins ie, Green 15, snas 10, wetzei 10, counts 1, si. Greer 30.

Clark 20, Howell 14, Washington 13, Jackson 5. Craw- lord 2, Foster 2, Awtrey 0. PHILADELPHIA 7ERS 23 3 4 34 26-117 PHOENIX SUNS 25 24 35 32114 Attendance 8,059. AT LOS ANGELES (1301 West 28. Hairston 27, Erickson 22, Goodrich 17, Chamberlain 12, Roberson 10, Wetzel 8, Carter 2, McMillian 2, Riley 2.

SAN FRANCISCO (110) Thurmond 20, Mullins 17, Lucas 16, Williams 13, Ellis 10, Lee 10, Fontaine 7, Jones 6, Portmann 4, Turner 4, Osden 3. SAN FRANCISCO WARRIORS 24 35 23 28-110 LOS ANGELES LAKERS 2 7 3 8 31 34-130 Attendance 15,766. PAM HART Lexington star rated No. 1 LIVE BAIT Medium Minnows 55c doz. Night Crawlers 3 doi.

1.25 Phillipson and Shakespeare Rod Blanks Velcheck Worm Proof Tackle Boxes touisve's only full service tackle shop FENTRESS TACKLE SHOP 31 19 So. 4th 366-3927 Opposite Church Downs Open Every Night 'til 9 except Sun. Big Mother. 1971 Shipment Just Arrived Good Selection All Colors TAFjEJL MOTORS 839 E. BROADWAY AT CAMPBELL 584-4305 Metropolitan LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY PROUDLY ANHOUHCES THE APPOINTHINT OF lv7il Tf SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE The king's men Fischer finishes first In interzonal at alma Associated Press The hostility veiled but strong remains between players of the old American and National football leagues.

It may surface one way or another in the Pro Bowl game today in Los Angeles. No one on either side cares to pop off publicly. That would be inviting trou ble. But old scores may be settled and new ones born as the National League season finally chugs to a stop. Sixty thousana oi more fans are ex- pected for the, kickoff at 4 p.m.

EST. CBS (Channel 11 in Louisville) will tele- vise the game with Southern California blacked but. Cleveland, Baltimore and Pittsburgh are now under the American Conference tent and such players as Mike Curtis, Bubba Smith and Jerry Logan of the Colts will be playing against their old rivals. The New Orleans Saints traded quar terback Billy Kilmer to the Washington Redskins for two undisclosed draft picks and linebacker Tom Rousscl. Bob Cousy and bob Pettit, two of pro basketball's all-time greats, and the late Abe Saperstein, founder of the Harlem Globetrotters, were elected to the Na- tional Basketball Hall of Fame in Spring- field, Mass.

Saperstein, who died in 1966, was voted into the shrine as a contributor to the game. At Detroit, Arthur Ashe broke Ken Rosewall's serve six times in a 6-2, 6-2, 0-6, 6-4 victory. Ashe earned the right to jump back into the winner's bracket in the $210,000 Tennis Cham- pions Classic tournament. Ashe will meet the winner of a match between Rod Laver and Tom Okker in Madison Square Green Jan. 28.

Top-seeded BiHie Jean King and sec- ond-seeded Rosemary Casals advanced to today singles final in the Brook Club tennis tournament at Milwaukee. Mrs King beat Ann Haydon Jones 7-5, 6-3 Friday's Big Ten box At Chicago IOWA (69) Brown 23, Grabinskl 14, Lusk 12, Williams 8, Hazley 7, Kunnert 3, Rowat J. CINCINNATI (73)-Dickey 28, Johnson 14, Hess 9, Jurcisin 8, Wenderfer 8, Schmeider 4, Snow 2. Halttime Iowa 41-35. Attendance 7,755.

By MERRILL DOWDEN Courier-Journal Chess Writer My good friend and newspaper colleague, Bob Barnard, suggests that it's high time the King's Men had something to say about the most recent achievements of the incredible Bobby Fischer. The point is well taken, because Fischer is the brightest star to rise on the American chess horizon since the golden era of Paul Morphy, more than a century ago. Fischer captured first place in the recent interzonal tournament at Palma, Majorca, winning the 24-man round-robin knockout by the considerable margin of 3 12 points. His final score was 18 ML, and this included 15 wins over the world's greatest players. In the course of the tournament, the American grandmaster from Los Angeles exploded the myth of Soviet invincibility, scoring 3 12 points out of a possible 4 against the best the Russians could muster against him.

He defeated the Czechoslo-vakian players, 2-0, and East Germany, 1-0. Despite this astounding show of strength, Fischer oddly could do no better than split the point against the three Palma participants who finished at the bottom Naranja of the Philippines, Jimenez of Cuba, and Uituman of Mongolia. A number of pre-tournament favorites failed to qualify for the coming elimination matches for the world title challenge. Among them was the noted Yugoslavian grandmaster, Svetozar Gligoric. Fischer was bad news, as usual, for just about everybody he met during the Tournament of Peace, held last year at Rovinj and Zagreb, Yugoslavia.

In today's game, Fischer, White, forces M. Udovic to resign in 31 moves. The latter, however, came up with a very pretty move after Fischer's Metropolitan Life Fischer Udovic Fischer Udovi 1 P-K4 P-KN3 17 N-K3 QR-Q1 2 P-Q4 B-N2 18 R-KN1 K-Rl 3 N-QB3 P-Q3 19 PxB PxP 4 P-B4 N-QB3 20 Q-N3 Q-B3 5 B-K3 N-B3 21 QxBch QxQ 6 P-KR3 0-0 22 RxQ KxR 7 P-KN4(a) P-K4 23 N-N4 R-B5 8 QPxP PxP 24 K-K3 QR-KB1 9 P-B5 PxP 25 B-K2 P-KR4 10 NPxP N-Q5 26 NxP R-R5 11 N-B3 P-B4 27 R-Nlch K-R2 12 B-KN5I Q-N3 28 R-KR1 R5-B5 13 BxN QxB 29 N-Q3 R5-B2 14 N-Q5 NxNch 30 NxP R-B1 15 QxN Q-RJch 31 NxKP Resigns 16 K-K2 B-K3(b) Mr. Moody anticipates serving and working with you in the following arooi: BUSINESS INSURANCE: Solo Proprietorship, Partnonhip, Corporation, Key-man, Keogh, Group Health-Life and Hospitalization, and Retirement flam. TRANSMISSION SPECIALS All Transmissions Fully Rebuilt and Guaranteed 1958-61 Ford Chevrolets Ml 950 1962-64 Fords Chevrolets.

$1 3950 1961-64 Pontiacs Olds, Buicks 5950 1 965-67 Pontiac, Olds, Buicks 1 7950 BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE-BANKARD-SHOPPERS NATIONWIDE AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS 106 E. Broadway 587-0133 1 PERSONAL INSURANCE: Life, Estate Planning, Annuities, Disability Income, and Hospitalization. For detailed information concerning the above, call or wme Darby City District office, 3901 Oixio Highway, Louisville, Kentucky, 40216 Phone 302-448-5955 or 426-3985. (a) This move is not recommended, unless made by an attacking genuius such as Fischer. (b) If 17 PxB, then PxP, with advantage to Black.

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