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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 56

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
56
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

14 THE COURIER-JOURNAL TIMES, SUNDAY, JUNE 25, 1972 Ruby's report V'; Dogs news Jo Jo latest in line 1 Love's pet pro ect to push wildlife care with farmers By EARL RUBY, Courier-Journal Times Outdoors Editor of famed chows I bred by Mrs. Scotf fx tf the July meeting of the board of directors of the foundation. Honorary members The Kentucky Wildlife Federation Foundation announced that these men have agreed, to serve as honorary members of the foundation and to assist in naming the scholarship recipients: Gresham Houghland, Paducah; Gov. Wendell Ford; L. Allan Caperton, Prospect; Dr.

Tim Lee Carter, members of Congress; Dr. Frank Steely, Covington; Dr. Robert Martin, Richmond; Jerry Howell, Jackson; Joseph Leary, Frankfort. Harry Towles The Fifth District Federation brought to the convention a plaque for Harry Towles, recently retired public relations man for the Department of Fish and Wildlife. Harry was away fishing, unfortunately, and missed hearing many nice things said about him and his years of service to the sportsmen.

Bringing in the netv REID LOVE (left) accepts congratulations from Edgar Paul at the League of Kentucky Sportsmen convention last week. Love of Vanceburg is the new president, succeeding Paul of Louisville. BILLY WALKER of Brooks, caught this 8 12 -pound largemouth bass at Nolin Reservoir. The 12-year-old fisherman pitched a rapala-type lure along a rocky bank in fairly shallow water. Spassky is cool and relaxed on eve of world title match By SUSAN JEFFRIES Courier-Jourrnl A Times Correspondent Four shows and four group firsts.

That's the latest accomplishment of Champion Lakeview's Jo Jo, a Chow Chow bred, owned and handled by Naomi Scott. The Chow's latest victory was at the Michiana Kennel Club show, South Bend, Ind where he claimed his fourth consecutive Non-sporting group win. The other three were at Woodstock and Joliet, 111., and Kokomo, Ind. Each win has put him in contention for best in show where only the top six dogs, representing the Sporting, Hound, Terrier, Working, Toy, and Non-sporting groups, may compete. Although the least number of breeds compete in the Non-sporting group, it offers some formidable opposition.

Among the rivals are the stylish Poodles (Standard and Miniature), such charmers as the Lhasa Apso and old favorites like Boston Terrier and Dalmatian. Three-year old Jo Jo, who now has a total of seven group wins, is the latest in the long line of champion Chows, dating back to 1939, bred by Mrs. Scott. Her best known is probably Mamie and Joe Gregory's Ch. Lakeview's Han-Sum, one of the top four dogs in the country for six years.

OTHER WINS Ch. Holly Hill Genie Ace of Spades, an Afghan Hound, was best of breed with a Hound group second at the Columbiana County Kennel Club show at Salem, Ohio, and the next day went on to top the Hound group at the Rubber City show, Randolph, Ohio. Ace is owned by Tom and Nancy Fisher. Edith Goldstein's Whippet, Ch Coronation Champagne Flight, was best of breed at shows held in Springfield, Blooming-ton, and Peoria, 111. The Whippet was handled by Bob Hutton.

A Miniature Schnauzer, Fancy's Dandy Andy, owned by Mrs. H. L. Dobbs, won three championship points, went on to best of breed, and claimed a Terrier group placement at Fort Wayne, Ind. Ruth Wurmser's Miniature Poodle, Terudon's Golden Angel, won three points each at Cincinnati and Waukegan, 111.

Her seven-year old Toy Poodle, Ch. Terudon's Rough and Ready, was best of variety at the Waukegan show. Both dogs were handled by Jackie Butts: Strohl's Independent Jason, a Dober-man Pinscher owned by Barbara Stroh-beck and Jack Strutt, won three points at the Cincinnati Kennel Club show. He was shown by Paul Schmitt. Mrs.

Edw. L. Hohmann's Pomeranian, Ch. Lewis' Toma Jhon, shown by Richard Jackel, was best of breed at Paducah. Tom and Terry Flener's German Shepherd, Crestgate's Ode v.

Quiet Valley, was best puppy at the recent Kentuckiana Shepherd Club match. NEW CHAMPIONS Ch. Favo's Yankee Kentucky Rebel, a Bullmastiff owned by Mike Riley of Elizabethtown and Harry Kennady, Jeffersontown, finished championship requirements at Lima, Ohio. Handled by Kennady, Rebel was 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 Malor JUNE 25 Sunday 3:20 10:00 4:05 10:25 2AMonday 4:10 10:50 4:40 11:15 27 Tuesday 5:00 11:45 5:30 28 Wednesday 5:55 12:10 6:25 12:40 29 Thursday 6:55 1:05 7:15 1:30 30 Friday 2:00 8:10 2:25 JULY 1 Saturday :40 2:50 :00 3:15 2 Sunday .9:30 3:40 9:50 4:05 DOWNTOWN 584-4211 524 W. MARKET OPEN DAIIT TO 5:30 MON.

aFII.OTOf SOUTH IND 361-2313 4700 S. 3RD OPEN DAILY TO SATURDAY 9 TO 6 Wt HONOH MASTEH CHAR.GI QUANTITY EIGHTS RESERVED I PFLUEGER- SUPREME "5 10" ANTI IViRSI FEATHER TOUCH CONTROL SAVI 10.00 PUSH BUTTON FOR FREC SPOOL CASTS, STAR DR AO CONTROL NO. 510 RUBBER BOATS 2 MAN 4 MAN 6 man INFLATABLE NO. 1303 NO. 3304 NO.

SJ4 SPORTY AK 7 FT. POLTITHIlINf WIIOHT- II. LOAD IR. o.t 30 INFLATABLE VINYL BOATS I MAN 1 MAN SAVE 1 OP SAVE 3.00 aaWRKRlataVWVI I II- II ErJ 'SET MOTOR BATTERY Onjl towurai 2-SPEEO IMP LIFE Too JACKET KM i SAVE 00. tPg ril.

I fry, WVvtmTsr IP NO. Jo'SiCJ HO. AKl NO. JOO I InFTfiW Reid Love of Vanceburg, who became president of the League of Kentucky Sportsmen last week, is an avid angler nd hunter but lays no claim to excellence at either, it. "The biggest fish I've ever caught was i.

a 3 12-pound largemouth bass," he said, "and my hunting is confined almost "wholly to grouse, and you know nobody ever bags many of them." u. Reid, who is 48, has been an outdoors-man most of his life. He bagged his big liass just recently at Mitchell Lake in his county of Lewis, not more than 10 jriiles from his hardware store. i He prefers grouse hunting over other ggame because it affords him long hikes the woods and a minimum of shooting. I t'l like to hunt, but I'm not hung up Jh killing," he said.

"Last year my total Jcill was zero. I took Edgar Paul of Louisville on a hunt last year. We jumped five grouse, but we didn't ruffle a feather." Love says he hopes to make at least ihree trips across the state this year to juish the league's pet projects. Probably Jhe No. 1 project for this year will be promotion of a fish and wildlife manage-jnent project through the Future Farmers group.

-Payne re-elected are offering awards for conservation projects, hoping to help the young 7armers realize that it is to their best interest to encourage wildlife on their Jcres," he said. will stand to benefit, he said, rom increased interest among farmers in" better game management practices. "People don't seem to realize," he said, ('that most members of our league are conservationists first and hunters and fishermen second. If there is no effort to preserve game and fish we soon would hot have anything to hunt or catch." i Reid also strongly endorses the Fish Wildlife department's game management land acquisition program, which lie believes is the hunter's only hope for the future of their sport. He believes the league is on solid ground at Frankfort.

"We had long sessions with both candidates for governor ihis past fall," he said. "The men were interested in our problems and seemed glad that we had good answers to all of their questions. This advance work paid tff at the last session of legislature. We got everything we needed and asked for." Redmond Payne League directors reelected Redmond Payne of Franklin secretary-treasurer and John E. Murphy ot Covington league editor.

New directors serving for the first time were Fred Nunn of Edmonton and Roy Haddix of Lexington. Love's vacated seat as director from the eighth district will be filled an election on July 9. Catch of the week I Big Bass William H. (Billy) Walker of Brooks, is only 12 years old, but he made the catch of the week. Fishing at Nolin Reservoir with his dad, Sherman, and two friends, Bill and Jimmy Owen, he boated an 8 12-pound largemouth bass.

The boys started fishing at dawn and Billy made his catch about 9 o'clock when he pitched a rapala-type lure along a rocky bank in fairly shallow water. to say the prize is being mounted. Cat fight When you go camping in Kentucky, be prepared for surprises, warns Fred Pennington, a Perry County sportsman. Camping at Buckhorn Lake State Park with his family last week, he heard an odd noise under his camper. He thought it might be a dog.

In an attempt to scare it off, he stomped on the floor. The noise continued. He went outside to see what it; was. Fred was attacked by a bobcat. Having no weapon, Fred could only grab trie cat by the throat and try to choke it into submission.

Fortunately Fred's grip was strong enough to choke the cat to death before the cat could claw him too seriously. Scholarship rules Elinor Clark Fund Rules by which money from the Minor Clark Scholarship Fund will be distributed were approved annual league meeting. The recipient must be a high school graduate with at least a average, be at least 17 years old, pass the entrance exams and enroll in a college or university in Kentucky, pursue a course of, studies that will lead to a degree as game biologist, wildlife management, fisheries biologist, or fisheries management, or courses equivalent to these. Applications for the scholarship should be', made through Joseph Coomes, 1621 Booth Owensboro, 42301, before Bass-ful Associated Press SPRING CITY, Tenn. Roland Martin won the Tennessee National Bass Fishing Tournament at Watts Bar Lake yesterday with a total catch of 37! pounds, six ounces in three days of competition.

"This is the toughest tournament lake I have ever fished," said Martin, who collected $3,000 in prize money. "Today I wouldl have taken any bass that had eyes and fins." Berea, Wiertville make a perfect basketball match By MIKE SULLIVAN Courier-Journal A Times Staff Writer Sometimes a man seeks out a job and sometimes a job seeks out a man. Both things have happened to Roland Wierwille of Lexington er, Berea, Ky. Wierwille, for seven years an assistant basketball coach at Transylvania College in Lexington, recently accepted the head coaching position at Berea College. Ask this personable Madeira, Ohio, native and former Eastern Kentucky athlete why he made this move and you'll understand quickly: He likes the territory.

"I've always said that I never want to leave Kentucky. My wife loves it and we hope we never have to leave," Wierwille declared, quickly warming to his subject. "And) I don't believe I've ever seen a Berea College basketball team that didn't hustle. That's just the kind of kids you get over there and I hope to keep that tradition going." For the fun of it Realistically speaking, Berea is a notch or two below the polished basketball program that head coach Lee Rose has been building, brick by brick, at Transylvania with Wierwille's help. But the little school in the Eastern Kentucky mountains has risen up to challenge for supremacy in the Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference under W.

C. Sergeant, who stepped down this spring to enter private business. "Berea has the philosophy I've been working with for years you might call it basketball for the fun of it," Wierwille said. "It's a high-quality, all-around program with good academics. There are no scholarships.

Every student is in a work-study program and has to work a certain number of hours each week, and basketball practice doesn't count. So you get the type of kid who knows he has to work in all phases, and when you win it's a little more fun." Berea had a veritable barrel of fun one night last season, in fact, when it upset Transylvania. "Oh, how I suffered," Wierwille recalled. "They really earned it. And that game sure made us play harder the rest of the year." Wierwille, who is married to the former Cecilia Craft of Cumberland, has three girls Gretchen, 9 Deborah, 6, and Courtney, 3.

Since accepting the Berea offer, with Rose's blessing of course, he has been "calling some coaches I know, trying to do some late recruiting, and waiting by the phone a lot." This concern was revealed when a reporter asked him, "Well, coach, is there anything else?" "Yes, one more thing. Send me a couple of 6-foot-8 Louisville kids." Highway 363-5 1 86 PREMIUM 95 Lifetime Guarantee For as leng as your awn the cor INSTALLED FREE ea. COMPLETE DISC BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL ALIGNMENT BY FACTORY TRAINED SPECIALISTS Assures easier steering, greater safety and tire savings. Open Monday Till 9:00 Closed Saturdays fl MONARCH CH TIRES uter Twin I te Price I LANCED FREE. Jj 78 5rie 4 Ply Poly at Comoefitiv MOUNTED AND BALA DM Stiff Photo by James N.

Keen Easy, easy PUTTING the bite on "Harry Kennady, this champion Biill-mastiff named Rebel is just a big, powerful playfellow. undefeated in the classes, and posted 12 best of breed wins in 14 shows. Jack and Louise Strutt's Doberman Pinscher, Lujac's Stinger, won a four-point major at the Miami Vajley Dobe specialty to complete her championship at 12 months of age. Stinger was handled by Charles A. Cooper.

Lysbeth Hughes' Rhodesian Ridgeback, KaKara Dee of Reldnahc, won three points at the Chicago International show to finish her championship. NEW ITEMS NOW AVAILABLE RATTLERS FOR PLASTIC WORMS COLEMAN FUEL 99c gal. GREEN WORMS 30 for 65c PLENTY OF FREE PARKING FENTRESS TACKLE SHOP 3119 So. 4th 366-3927 FISHING STUFF $40 Garcia Lifetime Pack Rod, with Aluminum Case. Spinning Fly.

Rod Combination. Now $14.95. $55 Norsemen Spincast Set $4.98. $35 Shakespeare Purist Casting Rod, Now iru-lemper fly Rods or Spin Rods. Ndw $6.66.

120 Garcia ABU Spin Cast Reels, Now $8.88. Reg. $41 Cardinal Spin Reel 4 by A.B.O.: Reel Co. Specially Priced $17.95. 8-ft.

Catfish' Rod with Carboloy Tip, $12.88. Pflueger Reels reduced 50. South Bend Jigging Poles with Line, J7.95. Cordell Spiders.99c. SURPLUS BAIT BARN 1730 W.

Market 3924 Shelbyville Rd. DIXK HWY. 35-5121 DIXIE MANOR OPEN DAILY TO 9 SAT. 9 TO A SHELIYVIUf RD. (97-3251 SHELBYVILLE PLAZA OPIN DAILY OiSO TO JO SAT.

TO OiSO ANKAMERICAD SHOPPCHS CHAGt i I PRICES GOOD THROUGH NEXT WEDNESDAY 1 TRAILBLAZEFt. DINING CANOPT 12X12 SAVE 5. 00 AND HAM SPALDING TOP FLITE PRO GOLF BALLS 3 FOR MOST POPULAR PRO IALL OF ALL MANTLE tr'-arj LANTERN Mjmiw4 KL kSMA.O mJTat jMt RACKET fLlTiYiy 70 main Jr IJ STRINGS Mmf I sii cost JLJ lif" ill iZJK'. mm wzA mm. -tOm.

mm is a a a a WA fk Mm -ft mmwrwm mm mm. mm. (White) now ends the carnage with one devastating stroke. What is it? CARO-KANN DEFENSE Horowitz Gudju U.S. Rumania 1 P-K4 P-QB3 2 P-Q4 P-Q4 3 N-QB3 PxP 4 NxP B-B4 5 N-N3 B-N3 6 P-KR4 P-KR3 Horowitz Gudju U.S.

Rumania 7 N-B3 P-K3 8 N-K5 B-R2 9 B-QB4 N-Q2 10 Q-K2 KN-B3 11 NxKBPI 12 B-N5ch 12 P-B3 Resigns Black has no defense if 12 KxN. 4 1 06 Preston mil raniTT ifDTl LOUISVILLE "imi iiii By MERRILL DOWDEN Courier-Journal Chess Writer What is the mood of world chess champion Boris Spassky on the eve of his title match with his American challenger Bobby Fischer? If one may believe the press dispatches from Moscow, home of the champion, Spassky is completely relaxed, and as cool as the proverbial cucumber. "I am in a very good mood," he was quoted at one of his rare press conferences. "I generally look on this match as a big holiday because it is quite a rare event. Objectively, Fischer is the strongest rival.

I don't know the outcome of the match. Maybe he will win, maybe he will lose, but in any event it seems to me the match between us will be very interesting in terms of chess art." If Spassky is quietly confident, it is not without reason. Five times he has given battle to Fischer across the board, and he has yet to taste defeat. The most Fischer could salvage from these five confrontations was two draws. In spite of his unimpressive showing against the Soviet grandmaster, Fischer is favored to give to this country its first official world chess championship.

This apparent contradiction is explained by the fact that in the last year and a half, Fischer has been all but unbeatable. He won 20 successive games against the world's leading players in his march toward the title match. Spassky has declined to reveal how he has trained for the most-talked-about match in the history of the game. "So far this remains a secret," he said at the press interview. "After the match with Fischer, I think I'll be able to tell you more details on how I prepared." Spassky left for Iceland, site of the 24-game match, last Wednesday.

He was accompanied by his trainer, Yefim P. Gel-ler, and two friends. He holds a degree in journalism from Leningrad University, and enjoys reading and sports, especially tennis. However, he describes himself as a "professional chess player, and like Fischer, he holds no other job. The historic match begins next Sunday.

Here's a mini-game in which Al Horowitz scored a point for the home team during the Fourth Olympiad at Prague. Before playing, study the diagram. Black has just moved 10 KN-B3. Horowitz Martin catches 37 pounds for bass tourney crown He settled for a catch of four largemouth bass that weighed four pounds, eight ounces. But the 32-year-old electronics engineer had built up enough of a lead the day before to keep first place when the final creels were weighed.

Don Sprinkle of Virginia Beach, made a run at the title but fell short with a total of 33 pounds. First round leader Bobby Murrah of Hot Springs, was two ounces behind Sprinkle and settled for third place. SHOCK ABSORBERS if IGLOO PCI CDDITV COOLER 4AVI4.0O 8QTVMK I2 9 JTVIV 1 fa no TTtTV WO- T0--O II 'AMI NO QtOT "celebrity 1 2'X9' MVI30.00 BIO NTtOM alrf WINDOWS I 1 I VIw'aV I '-sr- A I ins ioi upftt Lr NT ON FLOOI aW WW A ALUMINUM nWr FR AMI NOOIM 'ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT Installed Free BRAKE SERVICE BY FACTORY TRAINED SPECIALISTS A Whsslc Relined Compact can, fordt and 51 T'5 Chevrolet! thru '5. Front I 9 MUFFLERS Ceor Lifetime $695 up VJ Economy Guarantee up INSTALLtD WEE 4106 Preston Hwy. at X-Way 363-5186 9 ITI1NGS STIUN9.

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