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The Morning Call from Allentown, Pennsylvania • 12

Publication:
The Morning Calli
Location:
Allentown, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

28 THE MORNING CALL, Allentown, Wednesday, Jan. 11, 1967 THIRD Dieruff Raps Hazleton By JOHN KUNDA Morning Call Sports Editor Dieruff's hungry basketball team made it look easy again last night. The Huskies, fighting to successfully defend their East Penn League championship, battered Hazleton with surprising ease, 96-56, in the East Side Gym. It was a victory much like the one Dieruff scored over Liberty last Friday. The Huskies got an early jump and turned the contest into a rout even long before the first half ended.

The win, Dieruff's fifth in six league starts, gives the Huskies sole possession of second place behind Pottsville, the team which handed them their only league setback. Coach Dick Schmidt learned one thing from last night's runaway. His Huskies can handle a man-to-man defense much the same way they pounded the Liberty zone defense the other night. Hazleton played the first quarter in a zone, but when Mounts switched to man-to-man in the second quarter, the kies adjusted amazingly well. So well, Dieruff, a team which thrives on running, outscored Hazleton, 19-2, at the start of the quarter and before the half ended, the Huskies had a 28-point advantage.

Picking out an individual standout for the Huskies is a near impossibility the Huskies' "Iron Five" emphasizes teamwork. Jan Kapcala, however, has to be singled out for his superb effort last night. The 6-3 junior, the only Dier- uff boy over six feet, turned in an all-state performance against a normally tough Hazleton frontcourt. Kapcala scored 27 points, hauled down 14 rebounds and was the key man high post in Dieruff's give-and-go attack that produced countless easy layups. Kapcala worked beautifully with his outside tandem Jack Conrad, the floor leader, and Danny O'Donnell, a swift, goodshooting senior.

Both boys joined Kapcala in the high-scoring department. O'Donnell collected 19 and Conrad had 16. NBA's West Stars Coast Behind 'Super Soph' Barry Warrior Ace Nets 38 Points SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Rick Barrys scored 38 points which some great rebound. ing by his San Francisco Warrior teammate Nate Thurmond brought the West a 135-120 victory over the East Tuesday night in the 17th annuat National Basketball Association All-Star Game. It broke a four East domination.

The West a led from the first quarter on. Thurmond and Barry combined for 23 points in the openmentum. Detroit's DeBusstanza which provided. moschere became the gunner in the second period as the winners took a 77-67 lead before 13,972 partisan fans in the Cow Palace. Red Auerbach, the Boston Celtics' general manager returning to coaching for a single night, was thumbed out of the game on his second technical foul in the third period and Bill Russell had to take over the coaching reins.

The banning of Auerbach was the first time in All-Star history that a coach had been ejected. Barry, the second-year star from Miami, proved why he leads the NBA scoring. At one point in the final period. he dropped nine points while nobody else scored. Newsmen covering the game voted him the outstanding performer.

Oscar Robertson pactd the East with 26 points while Wilt Chamberlain, playing despite an injured Achilles tendon, was held to 14, seven in the opening quarter. The East's other big man, Russell, had only one field goal. Defensively, Thurmond was forced to cope with the East's top rebounders when Auerbach sent Russell and Jerry Lucas to team with Chamberlain midway in the opening stanza. Robertson's field goals and single free throw kept the East in contention in that quarter. DeBusschere provided the big surprise.

A year ago in the AllStar Game when the East won 137-94, the coach of the Detroit Pistons shot from the field 14 times and hit just once. Redeeming himself this time, he dropped in his first six attempts, missed a 20-footer and then zeroed in another pair, the last from 30 feet out. He finished with 22 points, second high for the winners while Elgin Baylor of Los Angeles was third at 20. Chamberlain led the rebounders with 22 while Thurmond grabbed 18. The West shot 50 per cent from the floor to 45.8 for the losers.

EAST Reed 2-0-0-4, Howell 1-2-2-4, Chamberlain 6-2-5-14, Robertson 9-8-10-26, Greer 5-7-8-17, Lucas 3-1-1-7, Walker 6-3-4-15, Russell 1-0-0-2, Havlicek 7-0-0-14, Ohi 5-7- 7-17. Totals: 45-30-37-120. WEST Barry 16-6-8-38, Baylor 8-4-4-20, Thurmond 7-2-4-16, West 6-4-4-16, Rodgers 0-1-1-1, DeBusschere 11-0-0-22, Bridges 4-0-2-8, Imhoff 0-0-0-0, Wilkens 2-2-3-6, Sloan 4-0-0-8. Totals: 58-19-26-135. East 33 34 28 25-120 West 39 38 27 31-135 City Loop Schedule CLASS A LEAGUE Tonight's Games Sweeney Stalsitz vs.

Trenge's at Raub (7:20) Boulevard Inn vS. Wedgewood A.C. at Raub (8:30) Winter's Cafe vs. Union A.C. at Central (8 o'clock) INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE Tonight's Games General Electric Bonney Forge at Harrison-Morton (7:20) Allentown Police Dairy at Harrison-Morton (8:30) L.V.

Finance vS. Mack Local 677 at Jefferson (7:20) Air Products VS. Electronics Training School at Jefferson (8:30) Willard Battery vs. Call-Chronicle at S. Mountain (7:20) GAC VS.

Post Office at S. Mountain (8:30) 24 54 32 COME ON DOWN Catasauqua's Watching are Mike Herman (24) and Tom DeLong waits for a re- Gerry Steiner (32) of Catasauqua and bound 1 as Stroudsburg's Paul Shaffer Hal Watson of Stroudsburg, Catasau(45) tries to reach back for the ball. qua gained control easily. Catasauqua's LVL Streak Halted at 16 by Poconos By PAUL REINHARD Stroudsburg refused to Catasauqua's hustling, hawking tactics get the best of it last right, and that's what the game is all about. Mountaineers, harassed for nearly three quarters by the smaller, but more aggressive, Rough Riders, finally caught fire at the end of the third period and defeated Catasauqua, 74-55, to end the Rough Riders', Lehigh Valley League win streak at 16 games.

Coach Tony Romano's club, which went into the LVL campaign as the team to beat the basis of its strong exhibition record, didn't look like a championship club as it won its second league game in three starts and eighth over-all as compared to three losses. Catasauqua outhustled the Mounts on the floor and off the Sports Results BASKETBALL Scholastic Dieruff 96, Hazleton 56 Pottsville 87, Central Catholic 53 85, Allen 76 Liberty 86, Phillipsburg 44 Bethlehem Catholic 61, Easton 55 Palmerton 71, Northampton 52 Stroudsburg 74, Catasauqua 55 Emmaus 64, Slatington 60 Whitehall 59, Lehighton 58 81, Wilson 56 Nazareth 51, East Stroudsburg 50 Bangor 79, Pen Argyl 64. Southern Lehigh 76, Pleasant Valley 42 Salisbury 95, Mountain Palisades 72, 67 Northwestern 51 Wissahickon 47, Upper Perkiomen 29 Pennridge 69, Quakertown 40 Daniel Boone 54, Brandywine 43 Kutztown 57, Mount Penn 40 Weatherly 62, Marian Catholic 60 Jim Thorpe 88, Freeland 62 Pius 58, Notre Dame 50 Phillipsburg Catholic 69, High Bridge 71, Mifflinburg 57 Mechanicsburg Harris 55, 90, Milton Lebanon Hershey 65 48 Hazleton St. Gabriel's 96, West Hazleton Downingtown 61, Pottsgrove 56 Pottstown 93, Owen J. Roberts 56 Exeter 58, Twin Valley 50 Oley 51, Fleetwood 49 Harrisburg Penn 52, Reading 49 Conrad Weiser 68, Gov.

Mifflin 46 Muhlenberg Township 61, Wilson (West Lawn) 52 Hamburg 79, Wyomissing 39 Schuylkill Valley 72, Tulpehocken 37 Danville 60, Bloomsburg 52 Shikellamy 90, Selinsgrove 60 Lancaster 64, Central Dauphin East 63 Hempfield 68, Elizabethtown 56 Conestoga Valley 89, Manheim Central Lampeter-Strasburg 64, Donegal 57 Pittston 84, West Scranton 64 Dunmore 78, Old Forge 52 Elk Lake 87, Falls-Overfield 46 Mountainview 90, Susquehanna 52 Montrose 92, Abington Heights 32 Nanticoke 76, Wilkes-Barre Meyers 47 Forty Fort 55, Plains 39 Newport 76, Hanover 53 Wilkes-Barre Coughlin 54, Wilkes-Barre GAR 49 Kingston 77, Plymouth 72 Crestwood 92, garnotch 72 Wyoming 91, Dallas 62 Athens 65, Sullivan County 43 Shippensburg 38, Camp Hill 35 Altoona 60, Chambersburg 55 Cedar Cliff 64, York 63 Middletown 74, leona 41 Central Dauphin 57, 49 Carlisle 64, Hanover 51 Delone Catholic 82, Bishop McDevitt 77 Shamokin Lourdes 69, York Catholic 42 Aliquippa 69, Farrell 60 Midland 61, Rochester 52 Richland 87, Central Cambria 50 Somerset 61, Windber 54 Bradford 58, Kane 28 Punxsutawney 52, DuBois 51 Pittsburgh Schenley 121, Pittsburg South 64 Pittsburgh Fifth Avenue 76, Pittsburgh Westinghouse 57 South Hills 91, Pittsburgh Langley 38 Bellefonte 79, Bald Eagle Area 55 Ephrata 94, Garden Spot 75 Collegiate Cincinnati 62, Dayton 49 Texas 82, SMU 73 Akron 96, Oberlin 73 58 Duke 85, Clemson 61 Miami (Fla) Ill, Okahoma a City 109 Wisconsin 98, Michigan 90 72 Holy Cross 74. Rhode Island 66 Bowling Green 76, Kent State 68 Gettysburg 91, 72 Alfred 62, Rochester 58 Kansas State 75, Missouri 65 Davidson 76, The Citadel 72 Furman 69, Georgia Tech 68 (overtime) TCU 67, Texas 64 Northwestern 104, Illinois 96 St. Louis 84, Creighton 79 Fairfield 65, Massachusetts 60 Boston College 54, Northeastern 47 Baylor 65, Arkansas 53 Yale 59, Columbia 47 Trinity (Conn) 84, Wesleyan 83 46 Texas Tech 91, Rice 69 Texas Western 85, West Texas State Lock Haven 65, Juniata 64 Wagner 91, Upsala 70 Syracuse 66, Cornell 65 American 94, LaSalle 90 (overtime) Washington College 79, Dickinson 78 Professional NBA All-Star Game West 135, East 120 A HOCKEY American League Baltimore 6, Providence 1 Eastern League Charlotte 4, Knoxville 2 Becahi's Late Surge Upsets Easton; Coyle, Chassar Pace 61-55 Victory Bethlehem Catholic turned in its best performance of the season to upset visiting Easton, 61- 55, last night in an East Penn League contest. Tom Coyle and Jim Chassar paced a fourth-period comeback as the Hawks overcame an 11- point deficit to gain their third victory in six league games. Coyle scored 18 points, 10 in the final period.

Chassar collected 19 tallies, seven in the last quarter, and grabbed 10 rebounds. The Hawks had few turnovers and hauled down 43 rebounds in extending their season record to 5-4. With Sophomore Ross Moore also scored in double figures 14 points as the Huskies' 96 point total matched the school set earlier this season against Tamaqua. Kapcala was strong in the kies big move. He second quarter, when the Hushad 12, all from the inside, as Dieruff outscored Hazleton, 27- 12, in the quarter.

At the half, Kapcala had 16 points and Dieruff had a 25-point lead, 45-20. Coach Fran Libonati might have been disgusted with his Mountaineers when Dier uff Hurricane Ends Skid With Romp Officials- Boylan and Grossman. SEMI NEW LOWER PRICES NUNN BUSH COMMANDER CUSTOM ROBLEE E.T. WRIGHT UP-TOWN CENTRAL STORE MEN'S SHOES COMMANDER CUSTOM FLORSHEIM HUSH PUPPIES WALL-STREETER SAHARA BOOT HUSH PUPPIES BILT RITE $10.95 TO REG. $34.95 $790 TO $2290 CENTRAL STORE 719 Hamilton St.

Wetherhold UP- STORE 953 Hamilton St. and HOURS: Wed. 10 A.M. 5:25 P.M.; Thurs. Noon 8:55 P.M.

PARKING Fri. Sat. 10 A.M. 5:25 P.M. Liberty snapped its two-game East Penn League losing streak in grand fashion last night, blasting host Phillipsburg, 86-44.

John Lehman, the Hurricane's strong 6-5 senior center, and Mike Rosko, a 6-2 junior who didn't get into the game until the second period, combined for 46 points as Coach John Howard's club handed the Stateliners their sixth straight league loss while boosting their own mark to 4-2. Lehman, scoring at will from underneath the basket, finished the game with 26 points on 13 field goals, while Rosko, who came into the game after sitting out the first period, had 20. Bill Wescoe, another reserve, was in double figures with 10. It was simply a case of too much height. Lehman scored 10 of his 15, points in the first quarter as Liberty took a 15-9 lead, and four of the field goals came cn tapins.

Rosko got nine in the second quarter as the Hurricane built up a 36-25 halftime lead. But it was at the start of the third period that Liberty really put it out of reach. The Hurricane reeled off eight straight field goals before Phillipsburg got a point and outscored the Stateliners, 29-11, in the eightminute stretch. Rosko had nine and Lehman eight in the quarter. Wescoe then scored eight of his total in the fourth period as the Hurricane put the finishing touches on the runaway by outscoring P- 21-8.

Steve Samson was the top scorer for Coach Al Senavitis's club, which was held to one shot all night by Lehman, who controlled both boards. Samson had 14. Dave Leone chipped in with 11. Liberty also won the jayvee game, 59-48. LIBERTY Schreiber 2-2-2-6, Albino 2-1-1-5, Lehman 13-0-0-26, Lukevics 4-1-2-9, Biggs 2-0-0-4, Kauffman 1-0-0-2, Inman 0-0-0-0, Peto 1-0-0-2, Rosko 8-4-5-20, Wescoe 5-0-0-10, Behr 0-0-0-0, Partridge 1-0-4-2.

Totals: 39-8-14-86. PHILLIPSBURG Jean 1-0-1-2, Stamets 1-3-3-5, Pianelli 4-0-0-8, S. Samson 7-0-0-14, Leone 3-5-8- 11, Touchton 0-0-0-0, Russo 0-0-1-0, D. Samson 0-0-0-0, Long 0-0-0-0, Rodenbough 0-0-0-0, Utley 1-0-0-2, Farmer 1-0-0-2. Totals: 18-8-13-44.

Liberty 15 21 29 21-86 Phillipsburg 9 16 11 8-44 Officials- Boylan and Grossman. Ease, pulled away to a 30-11 lead with still 4:21 left in the half. He yanked his starters and put in an entire new unit. Joe Marnell and Joe Moran, Hazleton's top scorers, didn't have much of a chance against the aggressive Huskies. Marnell managed but eight points, while Moran had 11.

Reserve Bob O'Donnell also had 11 to share for scoring The Huskies, honorsin need an assist from somebody in the league to knock off Pottsville, went over the 50 per cent mark from the floor. They made 39 96-56 field goals on 73 shots for 53 per cent. Hazleton weak 28 per cent from the floor. Terry German's Dieruff Jayvees continued unbeaten, defeatthe Hazleton Jayvees, 63-52. HAZLETON Marnell 3-2-3-8, O'Donnell 5-1-2-11, nell 3-4-4-10, Lucadamo 0-2-3-2, Babon 0- 0-0-0, Kinney 1-0-0-2, Perry 0-3-4-3, Moran 5-1-2-11, Farkus 2-0-1-4, Fuddy 2-1-2-5, Andras 0-0-0-0.

Totals: 21-14-21-56. DIERUFF Conrad 6-4-5-16, Waelchli 3-2-2-8, O'Donnell 7-5-7-19, Nyemscek 2-0-0-4, Houser Isaacson 3-0-0-6, Knerr 0-0-0-0, Witkowski 1-0-0-2, Moore 5-4-4-14, Kapcala 12-3-7-27, Trinkle 0-0-0-0. Totals: 39-18-25- 96. Hazleton 8 12 14 22-56 Dieruff 18 27 21 30-96 Officials: John Spirk and Curt Steigerwalt. Vikes Belted By I Pottsville le Special to The Morning Call POTTSVILLE Norm Waters and Bill Devlin turned in outstanding, foul second perform.

quarter Tuesday night as Pottsville spurted away and routed Central Catholic, 87-53, for its sixth straight East Penn League victory. The pair hit on 14 of 15 free STANDINGS W. L. Pct. Dieruff Pottsville 0 1.000 .667 Liberty .667 Bethlehem Catholic .500 Hazleton .500 Tamaqua .500 Allen .167 Central Catholic .167 Phillipsburg 0 .000 throws during the eight-minute stretch in which the Crimson outscored CCHS, 24-14, to move away from a 16-16 first period tie and hand the Vikings their fifth straight league loss since an opening-night win.

Clay Draft Appeal Rejected FRANKFORT, Ky. (P) Heavyweight champion Cassius Clay lost his bid Tuesday to be classified as a conscientious objector. The appeal was turned down by the State Board of Appeals. The State Selective Service director, Col. Everett Stephenson, said the decision by the five-man board was unanimous.

If one member of the board had voted to grant the exemption, then the case would have gone to the Federal Appeals Board in Washington. The board left Clay 1-A, and the case is now up to his Louisville draft board. Clay also has been trying to get a deferment as a minister. He is a Black Muslim. Stephenson said Clay has been notified of the board's decision.

Canaries Defeated By Tams It was an over-aggressive defense which got the Vikings in After staying with Pottsville through the first period, they pushed Waters and Devlin to the hilt in the second. Waters made good on eight of nine tries, and Devlin converted six straight. Waters, a talented senior who is playing his third season as a starter for Coach Ken Kline, led the scoring with 24 points, and 14 of them, came from the foul line attempts. Devlin, who finished the night with 17 points, hit 11-for-13 from the charity line. Dan Guers and Bob Wilson also finished in double figures for the Crimson with 13 and 11, respectively.

Jim Booros, a 5-10 sophomore starter for Coach Mike Koury's Vikings, was the only visitor in double figures. He finished the night with 22 points, and 16 of them came in the first half. Lou Seier was next best with seven, while captain Ray Bazylak, the team's best scorer, didn't get a point. Pottsville, which is now 10-0 over-all for the season, jumped off to an 11-4 the first period before Booros rallied the Vikings. Central Catholic scored straight points, and Booros had six of them, to take a 14-11 lead with a minute left in the period.

Pottsville completed a sweep by winning the jayvee game, 74-55. CENTRAL CATHOLIC Bazylak 0-0-0-0, Caggiano 0-0-0-0, Payonk 2-2-2-6, Seier 1-5-9-7, Cech 2-2-5-6, Neft 0-1-1-1, Booros 8-6-6-22, Pfahler 1-3-3-5, Thomas 0-0-0-0, Williams 1-0-1-2, Bushner 2-0-0-4, Weider 0-0-0-0. Totals: 17-19-27-53. POTTSVILLE Waters 5-14-17-24, Guers 6-1-3-13, Wilson 5-1-2-11, Bechtel 1-0-4-2, Devlin 3-11-13-17, Spector 2-0-0-4, Lombel 2-0-0-4, Seiberling 1-2-2-4, Mills 0-2-2-2, C. Baskerville 2-0-0-4, Evans 0-0-0-0, Glenn 1-0-0-2.

Totals: 28-31- 43-87. Central Catholic 16 12 15 10-53 Pottsville 16 24 26 21-87 Officials: Barletta and Garramone. Nobody considered Tamaqua a contender in the East Penn League, but rejuvenated Tams are making like one with each game. The Blue Raiders yielded the lead but once last night in downing visiting Allen, 85-76, for their third straight triumph after seven successive losses. Except for a brief spell in the closing moments of the half, the Tams used an effective man-to-man defense and a sharp shooting inside game to stay ahead and maintain Coach Pinky Purnell's mastery over the Canaries.

Allen grabbed a 29-27 edge with 3:11 left in the half as Glenn Angelino hooked one in from the side. Kevin Young immediately countered for the Tams to even the count, and 55 seconds later John Forys scored on a stab from the top of the key to send Tamaqua ahead for keeps. The Tams roared in front at the game's start behind Rich Krepak. The three-year vet sizzled for 10 roints on perfectly executed drives that sent Tamaqua to the top, 20-13. Allen fought back in the second period as Tom Kerstetter, who had scored four points in the first period, found some room left corner for four field goals.

led with a pair of fouls, he finished the quarter with 10 points and nearly sprung the Canaries loose. But, Jim Knoblauch came on to rescue the Tams on timely one-handers from the 25-fcot mark. The 5-7 backcourt man tallied seven points all of which preserved the Ta Tamaqua edge. The Tams led 42-36 at the half. The defensive strategy deployed by the Blue and White worked even more effectively in the third quarter as the Canaries were forced into throwing errors.

They managed but five field goals and two fouls in the period while Knoblauch continued to direct the Tamaqua attack. He scored 10. points. using Krepak inside for tapins, but the diminutive set shooter rarely missed and Tamaqua carted a comfortable, 67-48, command into the final period. Tamaqua jayvees set the tempo with an 83-78 win in the first game.

ALLEN Bierman 0-3-4-3, Berliant 4-4-6-12, Helman 1-0-0-2, Miller 0-0-1-0, Peters 1-0-0-2. Zelickson 0-0-1-0, Wehr 2-0-0-4, Angelino 9-5-5-23, Kerstetter 11-3-5-25, Ulanter 2-1- 1-5. Totals 30-16-23-76. TAMAQUA Woodring 1-2-3-4, Young 4-0-0-8, Knoblaugh 8-6-9-22, Ruggeri 1-0-0-2, Wenzel 0-0-1-0, Krepak 7-9-10-23, Mateyak 3-4-7- 10, Forys 5-4-6-14, Henne 1-0-1-2. Totals 30-25-37-85.

Allen 13 23 3. 12 28-76 Tamaqua 20 22 25 18-85 Officials: Lorah and Martinec. 45 Easton was led by Joe Braido and Tom Fisher who collected 20 and 18 tallies, respectively. Fisher got all of the Rovers' final period points. Red Rovers held a 49-42 lead entering the fourth quarter but saw quickly dwindle.

Chassar's three point play and a turnaround jump shot and Len Eddinger's jumper tied the game, 49-all, with seven minutes remaining. Fisher got Easton back into the lead but Coyle's long onehanded jump shot knotted the score, 53-all, with 3:45 left to play. Chassar's layup followed by boards and had little trouble getting the ball a inside the bigger team's zone defense. Stroudsburg did only one thing better than the Rough Ridersit got the ball in the basket more often. But that was enough to produce its first win in more than seven years over Catasauqua.

The wild contest, in which both teams made their share of mistakes, saw the lead change hands 13 times and the score tied five times before Stroudsburg broke away in the last minutes of the third quarter and the first minute of the fourth. Holding a slim 47-44 lead, Stroudsburg reeled off 10 straight points in that stretch to break it open and then kept pulling away as the Rough Riders struggled when things fell apart. Hal Watson, the Mounts' 6-3 senior center who came into the game with a big reputation, was the player who finally made the difference. Held in check by Mike Herman, Catasauqua's high scoring senior, for the first minutes, Watson made three straight short field goals at the end of the third And once he got going, the rest of the Stroudsburg team. Watson, who had a 31-point per game average before last night, finished the night with 24 points, but he made just seven field goals on 22 shots.

He hit 10 of 13 free throws. It was at the foul line where Stroudsburg came away with the upper hand. The Mounts outshot Catasauqua by only one field goal, 26-25, but they converted 22 of 33 free throws as 73 compared to Catasauqua's 5- for-18 showing. Bob Warner, a husky 6-3 forward, and Paul Romano, a slender 6-2 guard, also finished in double figures for Stroudsburg. Warner got 16 points, including a 6-for-10 night from the foul line, while Romano had 15, nine in the second half.

Herman was the lone Rough Rider in double figures. He scored 24 points on 11 goals and two free throws. and i it was his 13-point performance in the second period which enabled Catasauqua to hold a 30- 29 lead at the half. He fouled out with 4:26 left in the fourth period and his team trailing, 64-50, with him went the bulk of the Catasauqua offense. Freshman Walt Winch scored 38 points in the junior varsi.y game as Coach Ray Laubach's Catasauqua club walloped Stroudsburg, 80-49.

STROUDSBURG Watson 7-10-13-24, Romano 7-1-2-15, Warner 5-6-10-16, Baustein 4-0-2-8, Shaffer 1-4-4-6, Williams 2-1-2-5, Gorse 0-0-0-0, Lambert 0-0-0-0, Everitt 0-0-0-0, Weber 0- 0-0-0. Totals: 26-22-33-74. CATASAUQUA DeLong 3-3-6-9, Dewar 4-0-2-8, Herman 11-2-6-24, Grout 0-0-1-0, Hoffman 2-0 0-4, Moll 0-0-0-0, Steiner 4-0-3-8, Geiger 1-9-0-2, Leggett (-0-0-0, Wotring 0-0-0-0, Hassle: 0- 0-0-0 Bennett 0-0-0-0. Totals: 25-5-8-55. Stroudsburg 13 16 24 21-74 Calasauqua 12 18 14 11-55 Freed and Ondrovic.

PRO BASKETBALL JETS vS. WILMINGTON SATURDAY, JANUARY 14 8:30 P.M. ROCKNE HALL ADVANCE TICKETS WALLY'S NEWS, 12 S. 6th St. YOCCO'S, 625 Liberty St.

four free throws by Coyle gave the Hawks a 59-53 margin with 1:08 on the scoreboard to clinch the battle. Late in the first half, Easton held its biggest lead, 30 19. The Hawks finally caught up at 38-all at the 4:18 mark of the third period. The Rovers went back into the lead, 48-40. before Becahi started its comeback.

EASTON Huffstutler 3-0-1-6, Jefferson 1-0-1-2, Keiber 3-1-2-7, Braido 8-4-5-20, Fisher 6- 6-9-18, Pearson 0-2-2-2, Miller 0-0-0-0. Totals: 21-13-20-55. BECAHI Coyle 6-6-6-18, Chassar 7-5-7-19, Falkenbach 2-2-5-6, Eddinger 4-2-2-10, Kardos 3-0-1-6, Metzger 1-0-2-2, Meder 0-0-1-0. Totals: 23-15-24-61. Easton 17 17 15 6-55 Becahi 12 19-61.

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