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The Daily Item du lieu suivant : Sunbury, Pennsylvania • 14

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The Daily Itemi
Lieu:
Sunbury, Pennsylvania
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14
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14" THE DAILY- ITEM Sunbury, Oct. 20, 1975 Mustangs outs core Eagles Wolverines win big Bahr helps Lions with more than foot were outstanding for the Eagles. The losers totaled five first downs and couldn't sustain a drive after their first-haif TD. The Eagles stopped Mustangs' Chales i 1 1 a halfback, who gained Big 33 nomination the previous weekend. Line Mountain will face Hali-' fax on the Line Mountain field in Mandata Saturday night, Oct.

25. Summaries: Dave Weaver picked" up a Line Mountain fumble on the West Perry 40 and slithered his wayTon.the muddy field for 60 yards and the tying TD. The Mustangs turned two fourth period fumble recoveries into the deciding TD's. Dan Rothermel, West Perry halfback, concluded 40 and 65-yard drives after the fumbles with eight and 11-yard runs for TD's. Overall, Rothermel gained 101 yards for the winners.

Eric MoMillen nad Jeff Hammons covered the Eagles fumbles to get the West Perry team its starts for the fourth period tallies. Clint Geist, with a total offense of 95 yards, and linemen Steve Geist and Rod Campbell By Herschel Nissenson AP sports writer Since baseball games are stil with us, you might be interested to know that football games, too, are never over until the last well, until the last down-and-out. For example: Colorado, No. 12 in The Associated Press ratings, erupted for four touchdowns in a 14-minute span of the second half to erase a 17-3 deficit and defeat lOth-ranked Missouri 31-20. -Arizona, the No.

13 team, trailed Texas Tech 21-6 at half-time but finally overtook the Red Raiders 32-28 thanks to Lee Pistor's 41-yard field goal with six seconds left and a safety on the ensuing kkkoff Notre Dame, No. 15, needed 21 points in the final period for, the second week in a row; this time coming from 20 points down to shade the Air Force 31- run to hold off winless Oregon 17-3. In the Southwest Conference, fifth-ranked and No. 8 Texas are tied for the lead, one-half game ahead of unranked Rice. The Aggies scored twice in the first half on short runs by Bubba Bean and held on to beat winless Texas Christian 144.

Meanwhile, Texas used the defensive" heroics of. tackle Brad and touchdown runs by Marty Akins, Earl Campbell and Gralyn Wyatt to outlast No. 20 Arkansas 24-18. Alabama, ranked No. 6, dow-ed 16 Tennessee 30-7, and Dave Stutts caught two second-half touchdown passes, including a 30-yard toss from Dick Barvinchak off a fake fie' 1 goal, as ninth-ranked Penn State beat Syracuse 19-7 in a battle between Eastern independents.

30 when freshman Jerome Heavens scored from the one with 3:23 remaining. Missouri was the only one of the Top Ten teams to lose, while some of the conference races began to take on. old familiar looks. The Big Ten chase, as usual, finds Ohio State and Michigan tied for the lead after No. 1-ranked Ohio State mauled Wisconsin 56-0 while seventh-ranked Michigan clobbered Northwestern 69-0.

The Big Eight has a two-way tie between second-ranked Oklahoma, which downed Kansas State 25-3, fourth-rankecT Nebraska, which outlasted Oklahoma State 28-20 as Vince, Ferragamo came off the bench, passed for two touchdowns and ran for two more. 'USC used Doug Hogan's 61-' yard interception return and Ricky Bell's three-yard scoring SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -Chris Bahr, Penn State's superb place kicker, is a threat even when he doesn't kick. Syracuse Coach Frank Malo-ney will vouch for that. "Bahr was the real difference in the game," Maloney said after Syracuse lost 19-7 Saturday to the Nittany Lions.

The little kicker put six points on the board in the first quarter with 55 and 37, yard field goals. Then he helped with a charade that broke the game open. Penn State led by those two field goals in the third period with 9:03 left. The Lions' offense had been successfully stopped by the' 17-point under-' dog Syracuse team. State Coach Joe Paterno a aid.

he was thinking that his team needed something to give it a lift, a change of game play. So, with a fourth down, Bahr trotted out, ostensibly to try a 47-yard field goal. Only he didn't kick, The Syracuse defense charged 10 men in an effort to block the expected field goal effort. The ball ''was snapped. Dick Barvinchak, the holder, leaped to his feet and rolled right.

According to both Barvinchak and Paterno, the play was a run all the way. But Barvinchak stopped and threw a 30-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dave Stutts standing in the end zone all alone. "When he threw the ball 1 al-most threw up," Paterno said later. "Wasn't it an option play?" someone asked. Paterno almost choked on the answer.

"Well, thank God he con pleted the pass," Paterno finally replied. The implication was that Barvinchak might have had to hitch-lrke back to State College if he had missed. ELUOTTSOTRG Turnovers in general, and fumbles in particuiar killed Line Mountain's chances for an upset victory over unbeaten, once-tied West Perry (6-0-1) here Saturday afternoon. West Perry recovered three Line Mountain bobbles and turned all three breaks in to touchdowns, winning the Twin Valley Conference tilt, 18-6. Line Mountain drove 4 0 yards to its TO in the second period, with fullback Dave Galinskie running the last 11 yards for the score.

Scott Lenker's try for the extra point from placement failed and the Eagles at halftone, 6-0. Then Lady Luck turned her back on the Eagles (3-4). Dragons LEWISBURG LeWisburg High's Green Dragons will take a 4-3 overall record into their traditional game vs. powerful Bald Eagle-Nittany (6fl-l) in Mill Hall Saturday afternoon. After spotting Montgomery (1-6) a 7-0 first period lead, the Green Dragons exploded for six TDs and walloped the Red Raiders, 38-7, in an inter-divisional West Branch Conference game on a muddy Memorial Stadium field here Saturday night.

Six different plays, including Brad Richardson, a two-TD scorer, did the point-makinj for the Union Countians. i hardson, hard-running fullback, scored on runs of roll over Raiders Boston College blanks Iron men streak past Central Columbia Tigers rip winless Rams, 22-6 SUNBURY The streaking Danville High Ironmen (4-3) remain in the thick of the battle for division Susquehanna Valley League and southern division, Eastern Conference honors today. The Ironmen, with halfback Jay Rothermel scoring two TDs and gaining nearly 100 yards from scrimmage, whipped Central Columbia's Blue Jays (5-2), 25-0, in the Shikellamy High Stadium here Saturday night. The game was originally scheduled Friday night, on the Southern Columbia High School field. Several thousand fans watched the inter-county lilt, transferred to the Shikellamy field after Friday's heavy rainstorm prompted a postponement.

Rothermel, whose brilliant play has spearheaded the current four-game Danville winning skein, tallied the game's first two touchdowns. The speedy senior scampered 27 yards for the first quarter tally, then bolted six yards to minutes of the third quarter. Most of the damage was done by a senior halfback who never played high school football and a defensive corner back who doubles as a place kicker. The. corner back-kicker, Bruce Rich, started things when he intercepted a poorly thrown sideline pass by Kerry Snow with less than two minutes remaining in the second quarter and returned it 28 yards to the Bucknell 22.

From threre, quarterback Greg Geiger threw 13 yards to tight end Jim Sturgis; Roger Strandberg, a Pennsylvania product from Levittown, ran for six; and after being stopped on his first attempt, Tom Floyd, the walk-on halfback, scored from three yards out. After taking the second half kickoff, Geiger handed off three times to Floyd for 28 yards and three times to Strandberg for 14 and passed eight yards to Floyd to set. up Very Important Protection CATAWISSA Doug Richie's two TDs and a 372-yard total offense powered Southern Columbia (2-5) to a 22-6 Homecoming victory over winless Columbia-Montour Vo-Tech (0-6) here Saturday night. Southern will face High in a 'division, Susquehanna Valley League game here Friday night. After a frustrating first half, which saw the Tigers do everything but put points on the board, the home club went ahead midway through the By Jeff Ranck LEWISBURG Two weeks ago a national magazine 'eported that Boston University was one of several schools whose varsity football program a in danger of being eliminated.

Don't believe a word of it. The first disavowal came last week in a letter to the magazine from BU's director of athletics. The second came Saturday afternoon in Bucknell Memorial Stadium when the Terriers completely shut down Bucknell's offense and broke through a tough defense often enough' to post a 16-0 victory over the touchdown-starved Bisons. When it was learned that the visitors' 48-man traveling squad included 11 freshmen and 18 sophomores, Bucknell partisans quickly turned to the listing of future schedules in the Bison media guide and were relieved to learn that the New Englanders don't make another appearance until 1978. Defense was definitely the name of the game and both teams can hold their heads high in this department.

Receivers, and runners were unquestionably hampered by a slippery field, but the fact that both teams gained 'a total of only 304 probably speaks most eloquently for the defense. Bucknell Coach Bob Curtis said that the Terriers were definitely the "toughest team, physically, that we have seen this year. They massacred our offensive line." Boston University did all Its scoring and accounted for more than half of its total offense in a 10-jninute span covering the waning moments of the first half and the first eight Boros invited SOUTHERN PINES, N.C. tAP) Two time U.S. Open champion Julius Boros today received a special invitation to take part in the eighth-annual 72-hole Izod International Golf Championship at the Mid Pines course Oct.

28-30. The field of 50 pros, incuding 38 sectional champions, Include 1975 Canadian PGA winner Bill Tape, defending champion Jimmy Wright of New York, and pro Dick Crawford of Little Rock, 195940 U.S. Amateur winner. BU, Billfoyn harriers triumph conclude a sustained drive midway through the second quarter. Just before the half ended, quarterback Steve Cole passed to variety back Dave Roth for 26 yards and another Danville touchdown.

Walt Peters kicked the PAT following the winners' first TD. Peters ran 32 yards on a draw play for the final Danville touchdown in the fourth period. The Danville defense stopped the Blue Jays' top rusher, Mike Merucci, cold. The losers finished with minus seven yards rushing. Rich Drzewiecki completed nine of 25 passes for 100 yards and Central managed to penetrate the Danville 25-yard line just once.

Summaries: Score by periods: Centrol Columbia 0 0 0 0 0 Donville -7 12 0 625 Statistics DHS 13 136 62 4-11 4 5 40 CCHS 7 7 100 -25 2 35 First downs Rushing yardoge Passing yardooe Posses Passes intercepted by Fumbles lott Yords penalized and Jim McKeown added a second-half goal for Rider. George Collins scored a second-half goal for the Bisons, with Scott Strasburg getting an assist on the play. The BU goalie, Paul Sin-nenberg, had nine saves and his Rider counterpart, Larry Powall, had 11 clears. Bucknell had 23 shots on goal to 20 for Rider. The Bisons will face Lafayette College in another ECC game in Lewisburg Saturday.

Walters elected AM AN Iowa (AP) Bill Walters of Burlington was reelected- president-treasurer of the Class A Midwest Baseball League for 1976 at the group's annual fall meeting ended here Sunday. Walters will direct the league's operations for the third straight year since succeeding Jim Doster, Decatur. in 1973. Rider defeats Bucknell Score by periods: Line Mountain 0 6 0 West Perry 0 0 6 Itotlitici LMHS First downs (v 5 Rushing yardoge 98 Passing yardage 43 Passes 4-17 Passes intercepted by 2 fumbles lost 3 Yards penalized 45 0 6 1218 WPHS 17 146 105 1 40 Ron Gessner added six-pointers as the game progressed. Bingaman scored on a two-yard run after a sustained drive.

Cortez thefted a Montgomery pass and ran 24 yards for a score and Gessner tallied on a 13-yard run. Richardson picked up two points for the winners on a run after a second period TD. Summaries: Score by periods: Montgomery 7 Lewisburg 0 Itotistlct First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes intercepted by Fumbles lost Yard penalized 14 6 0 7 1838 LHS 11 210 86 3-8 4. 2 165 MHS 6 19 76 7-29 1 45 The Rams broke into the scoring column with four minutes left in the game. Culminating a sustained drive, Rich Cherwinskl, the quarterback, passed to George Stradnick for seven yards and the tally.

Summaries: Score by periods: Columbia-Montour Vo-Tech 0 0 0 66 Southern Columbia 0 0 16 6 22 Statistic V-T SC First downs 16 20 Rushing yordage 61 240 Passing yordage 29 132 Posses 5-13 10-14 Fumbles lost Posses intercepted by 1 0 Yords penalized 25 203 mate Bob Braile placed second in 25:24, and the Bisons' Lou Calvano and Dan Davis were fourth and fifth in times of 25:34 and 25:44, respectively. Pete Heesen of East Stroudsburg State College placed third in 2 5:27. Bucknell's George Buckheit finished seventh in 25:55. Millersville State College, East Stroudsburg State College and Bloomsburg State College placed 2-3-4 In the event. Steve Eachus of BSC placed sixth in 25:53.

In the schoolboy event, WUIiamsport's Chris Shafer, a senior, finished the three-mile course first in 15:30." His team totaled 36 points to win the title. Metuchen, N.J., Shikellamy and Selinsgrove High grads finished 2-3-4, respectively. Metuchen had 46, Shikellamy 85 and Selinsgrove 125. Shikellamy's Mark Albright finished eighth in 16:39. A Berwick at Selinsgrove meet will headline today's Susquehanna Valley Cross Country League menu.

Millersville crushes BSC MILLERSVILLE The Millersville State College Marauders steamrollered their way to a 55-0 Pennsylvania Slate Football Conference triumph over visiting Bloomsburg State College (1-4) here Saturday afternoon. Millersville capitalized five BSC turnovers and a blocked punt to open a 35-0 halftime lead. The winners rolled up 23 first downs to eight for Bloomsburg. Total offense showed Millersville (4-2) with 475 yards to 111 for Bloomsburg. The latter team will play Cheyney State College In Bloomsburg Saturday afternoon.

LEWISBURG Bucknell's-Bisons and the Williamsport Millionaires were the winners in Bucknell's intercollegiate and schoolboy invitational cross country meets here Saturday. Coach Art Gulden's Bisons, a 42-yard field by Rich. On the next series, Bucknell lost seven yards in three plays and Rich returned a punt 38 yards to the Bison 42. From there it took only five plays, the big one a 22-yard sprint by Strandberg, before Floyd burst in from the six. Rich added the extra point.

Summaries: Score by periods: Boston Univ. 0 6 10 0-16 Bucknell 0 0 0 00 Statistics Boston Bucknell First downs 11 7 Rushing yds.) 36-108 35-61 Passing yards 98 37 Passes comp.) 13-8 20-7 Passes had inter 1 2 Punting 7-26-7 Return yards 61 5 Fumbles lost 2-0 1-0 Penalties yds. 2-25 8-95 at Very Inexpensive Prices! dllMllrli LIFETIME EACH Installed I a FOR 13, 7.00-13,8. 85-14 Black will. 29 231 I la taH.

I it It All price plus 37C to 62C pel tua Fed. tax expsnte end 2 recappible tires. -it ert iuiAt College Football Scores three and 14 yards as the Dragons built a 20-7 lead after three periods. The home club tallied three TDs in the late quarter to turn the game into a rout. Coach Ray Pottios' unit finished with a 210-yard rushing total.

Montgomery quarterback Art Bennett connected with Cliff Strayer on a 34-yard pass-run TD strike in the first period and Don Bennett kicked the PAT. Then the Dragons took over and it was all downhill for the visitors. Scott Roadarmel ran three yards for a Lewisburg TD and teammates Tim Bingaman, Mike Cortez and third period. Richie scored on a short plunge, concluding a drive. Jim Kessler passed to Randy Johnson for the bonus points.

The Tigers' second TD came on the end of a 90-yard march. Randy Johnson scored on a four-yard run and Jim Kessler tossed to brother Dan to make it 16-0. The brothers collaborated in a 20-yard pass play which kept the 90-yard advance going. Richie tallied the winners' final TD on a five-yard pass play Irora Kessler. getting better with each meet, totaled only 19 points while outclassing a six-team field over the 5-mile course.

Larry Hager took first place for the Bisons, covering the distance in 25:18.2, the fastest time in course history. Team- Kentucky St 21, Virginia St 15 LSU 17, Kentucky 14 Maryland 27, Wake Forest 0 Memphis St 41, Louisville 7 Miami, Fla 24, Houston 20 Mississippi St 15, No Texas St 12 No Carolina, St 21, No Carolina 20 Richmond 24, VMI 19 So Carolina 35, Mississippi 29 So Carolina 35, Mississippi 29 Southern 21, Jackson St 20 Tennessee St 14, Virginia Union 7 Virginia Tech 24, Virginia 17 Kentucky 20, Tennessee Tec 7 Midwest Arkansas St 14, Cincinnati 9 Ball St 16, Cent Michigan 13 Bowling Green 35, Kent St 9 Dakota St 19, So Dakota Tech 14 Indiana St 56, Dayton 14 Iowa 20, Indiana 10 Kansas 21, Iowa St 10 Miami, Ohio 17, Ohio 9 Michigan 69, Northwestern 0 Michigan St 38, Minnesota IS Nebraska 28, Oklahoma St 20 No Dakota 34, No Dakota St 17 No Illinois 52, So Illinois 12 No Michigan 20, Michigan 7 Ohio St 56, Wisconsin 0 Oklahoma 25, Kansas St 3 Purdue 26, Illinois 24 So Dakota St 24, So Dakota 22 Toledo 25, Michigan 7 Tulsa 41, Wichita St 10 Wittenberg 24, Denison 0 South Texas St 20, Abilene 18 Rice 28, SMU 17 So Mississippi 34, Tex-Arlington Texas 24, Arkansas 18 Texas AIM 14, TCU 6 Texas St 24, Drake Far Wttt Arizona 32. Texas Tech 28 Arizona St 33, Colorado St 3 California 51, Oregon St 24 Colorado 31, Missouri 20 Hawaii 24, Portland 7 Long Beach St 47, Fresno St 17 Montana 14, Idaho 3 Montana St 19, Idaho St 7 New Mexico 27, Utah 23 Notre Dame 31, Air Force 30 San Diego St 48, New Mexico St 3 Southern Cal 17, Oregon 3 Stanford 24, Washington 21 UCLA 37, Washington St 23 TRENTON, N.J. Rider's Broncs proved to be the better "mudders" here Saturday and posted a 3-1 East Coast Conference soccer victory over visiting Bucknell (6-2). The playing field resembled a mud-hole rather than a soccer field and made It difficult for the players to keep their footing.

Tom Wiebreck and Paul Larson tallied first half goals Coach of Year KANSAS CITY (AP) -Coach Terry Hanson of Benedictine College at Atchison, has been named soccer coach of the year by the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics Soccer Coaches Association. The Ravens have 50 23-4 record under Hanson and finished third in last year's NA1A national tournament. The award will be presented to Hanson Nov. 25 at the NAIA soccer banquet at Raleigh, N.C. SHOCK ABSORBERS No matter if you own a compact or a luxury car.

youU appreciate the benefits of Firestone's V.I.P. Car Service. Well install the famous Monro-Matic shock absorber for a smooth ride and long wear you'll never have to pay for shocks on that ear again. Co) 11 UMITEO ORIGINAL PURCHASER WARRANTY II Monro Monro malic ahocl anaorbar I told by Fireitnne ilort or dealer lor your ce'l become uniervtcaaafe during normal un on mat nr. lor at long Aft you own the car.

Fn-eaione win lurnuh new shock etuorber ol tlx tame type and aire, free ol chargt Simply rtlurn lh deltclivt thodk with Biool ol purchatt lo am Fuailooa alora or participating dealer Firailon win nllaa lh rwwahocli tor an inttallalinn charga THIS WARRANTY DOtS NOT APPtY TO COMMERCIAL RACING OR OFF THF ROAD USE By Tbt Associated Prtsi Akron 24, Temple 23 Albright 42, Susquehanna 20 Bethany (W.Va.) 9, Carnegie-Mellon 7 Boston U. 16, Bucknell 0 Cheyney 23, Kutztown 8 East Stroudsburg 39, Mansfield 8 Edinboro 52, Lock Haven 0 Franklin Marshal 35, Dick-bison 10 Gettysburg 21, Western Maryland 0 Grove City 34, Geneva 0 Hiram 14, Thiel 13 Indiana (Pa.) 16, Clarion 16 Ithaca 3, Wilkes 0 Lebanon Valley 55, Swarth-more 12 Lehigh 35, Delaware 23 Lycoming 16, Juniata 12 Millersville 55, Bloomsburg 0 Penn State 17, Syracuse 9 Pennsylvania 13, Lafayette 0 (Friday night) Pitt 52, Army 20 Shtppwisburg 21, California (Pa.) 14 Ursinus 14. Muhlenberg 14 ViUanova 21, Marshall 14 -r Washington tV Jefferson 21, Allegheny 16 Wayiresburg 29, Slippery Rock 7 7, Ohio Northern 7 Widener 21, Moravian 13 Upsala 7, Delaware Valley 6 East Boston Col 17, Navy 3 Brown 10, Dartmouth 10 Colgate 22, Princeton 21 Connecticut 4, Maine 0 Fordo am 10, Hofstra 7 Harvard 34, Cornell 1J Howard 35, Virginia St 12 Massachustts 23, Rhode Island 7 New Hampshire 28, Central Conn I Rutgers 24, William Mary 0 Tulane 16, Virginia 14 1 Yale 34, Columbia 7 South Alabama 30, Tennessee 7 Auburn 31, Georgia Tech 27 Citadel 44, Davidson 0 Duke 25, Clemson 21 Carolina 42, Carolina 14 Florida 34, Florida St 8 Florida AiM 52, Morris Brown Furman 21, Holy Cross 14 Georgia 47, Vanderbilt I Grambllnf 38, Mississippi Val WINTER IIETREADS 6 50 2 I PRIME RIB IS BACK FRIDAY AND SATUR0AY 5 to 10 P.M. Dine Dance Enjoy Complete Prime Rib Dinner NOW ENTERTAINING GEMINI A Super Group fjmitj.n-Mn ifcekwal pi Ml OFT! I V9' FIRFSTOMf 1 mow ii'iir Whitfjwalls add tl.SO per tira. nnrmi at urennn i ACCOUNT We also honor BankAmaricard Master Charae Diners Club American Express ifirre Hlanrn REMEMBER Monday Night GALS' NITE Tmt Brain, pXait Ene" A Radial Tar Headquarters NEW STORE HOURS: A.M.

taj PRI. A.M. 1.04 SAT. 1:00 A.M. to 12:30 P.M.

Scholastic Scores (Feeetxl) Selinsarov 42, Hoomaburg 20 Lewisburo 31 Montgomery 7 West Pery II Lme Mounrom Shomokm 26 Our Lody of Lourdee Northwest 28, Milton Domnlie 25, Central Columbia Tn-Volley 3. Millersburg Wyoming Volley West 43, Hozleten 23 Morion Catholic 28, We Hozleton 16 Schuvik'M Haven 7, Notiyitv Shenandooh Volley Blue Mountain (tw) North Schuylkill 31, txetef 0 Upper Douphin 22, West York 0 M)lhnbul 31, Worrior Run II Montoursville 70, Hughesville 14 laid iogie-Mittony 34, Uyakwck Two. 7 Entertainment Nightly Monday thru Saturday 9:00 to A.M. PHONE 743-1111 Rts. 11 IS, Shamokln Dam Sunbury-Silinsgrovt Highway FIRESTONE STORES 2K-7U1 Sunagry 909 HortJi its SL ptxx uttn st so, weber St 7.

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