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York Daily Record from York, Pennsylvania • Page 1

Publication:
York Daily Recordi
Location:
York, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Mangual hit wins Game 4 for A's, 3-2 dominated series in the fifth inning and Anderson wanted Borbon to be careful with the A's catcher. When Borbon fell behind 2-1 on the batter, Anderson went to the mound again and this time he brought Borbon back to the dugout with him. Relief ace Clay Carroll came out Continued on Page 51 See A's man Mike Hegan to open the A's ninth. Oakland's pitch-hitting specialist, Gonzalo Marquez, batted for George Hendrick and singled up the middle. Allan Lewis ran for Marquez and, with Tenace coming to bat, Reds Manager Sparky Anderson went to the mound.

Tenance had already socked his third home run of this pitcher- Mangual, batting for winning pitcher Rollie Fingers, drilled his hit through the drawnin Reds infield and was mobbed by his happy teammates, who empited onto the field as Gene Tenance crossed the plate with the winning run. The Reds had rallied for a 2-1 lead on Bobby Tolan's two-out, two-run double in the eighth inning. Reliever Pedro Borbon got leadoff OAKLAND (AP) Pinch-hitter Angel Mangual, who played for the York Pirates in the Eastern League during the 1969 season, drilled a first -pitch single in the bottom of the ninth inning Thursday night, climaxing an Oakland comeback that carried the A's to a 3-2 victory over Cincinnati in game No. 4 of baseball's World Series. Mangual was a key member of the York team which won the Eastern League pennant in 1969.

He led the league that year in total bases with 271, hit 26 home runs and batted .320. The dramatic rally gave Oakland a 3-1 edge in the best-ofseven series and put the A's in position to clinch their first world championship since 1930, when the team played in Philadelphia. Friday, October 20, SALT 2 slated 1972 Presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler announced the date for starting SALT 2 in a brief statement simultaneously released in Moscow. It said: "Pursuant to the agreement reached during the summit 7 Vol.

170 No. 28072 I lllli Thieu talk wmmmamm wmmMwmmmm WASHINGTON (AP) The White House Thursday announced that Round 2 of the U.S.-Soviet strategic weapons curb negotiations will start in Geneva Nov. 21 with the aim of "reaching a more comprehensive agreement on offensive arms." Round 1 of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT), which began in November 1969, climaxed at the Moscow summit last May with accord on an antiballistic missile (ABM) treaty and on a five-year ceiling on numbers of offensive missiles. Round 2 in the historic negotiations to restrain the superpower nuclear race promises to be as long and difficult, administration officials said. But they voiced general optimism about prospects for a broader, permanent pact to limit offensive weapons.

Defensive-missile limits are fixed under the permanent treaty at two ABM sites each for the Soviet Union and the United States. The next round will focus on potential new curbs on long-range nuclear strike weapons. These include bombers, not covered by the current agreement, and land and submarine missiles. Administration officials said U.S. goals include restraints both on improvements in weapons and on numbers.

The Weather, Sunny. High in 40s. Details on page 4. (Thursday night) because of the expected freezing temperatures." A spokesman for York Telephone and Telegraph Co. said the storm caused "only slightly more than the normal amount of trouble reports." He said the service losses Price 10c 50c Week meeting in Moscow last May to continue active negotiations for limitations of strategic offensive arms, the governments of the United States and USSR will resume the talks on this subject on Nov.

21, 1972, in Geneva. Switzerland." information spokesman, said he was handed the communique at midmorning and told to read it at the daily afternoon briefing for newsmen. It said: "Political observers in Saigon remarked that at the arrival of the American delegation in Saigpn President Nguyen Van Thieu continues to meet with representatives of the Senate and the Lower House, the Supreme Court and various political parties and reasserted our firm position never to accept a tripartite proposal or any other political solution which has not been agreed upon by the people of South Viet, nam through democratic means' In response to a question, Khanh denied that the communique was intended as a rebuff to the U.S administration because of speculation that the mission of Kissinger, President Nixon's security adviser, was to persuade Thieu to accept some kind of a dual government. "When Kissinger came here' there were many public opinipns much speculation," Khanh said "We must stop false speculation. service until they get home from work tonight (Thursday night) so we can't count everything as back to nermal yet." Sunny weather with high tern peratures in the 40's is forecast for today.

city. Because E. Princess Street, not E. Market Street, would carry eastbound traffic through the city Keller said E. Princess Street would be resigned as traffic Route 462 the designation planned as a replacement for old Route 30 with the completion of the Route 30 bypass.

Philadelphia Street, which is Route 30 west through York, would also be resigned Route 462, he added. The cost of resigning would be paid by the state York, 4 "A I mmmmm. Cooperative, repair crews had restored power to all customers in' York County by early evening Thursday, after interruptions had affected customers in most sections of western York County and in the Red Lion area. In most areas of western York County, the power went off about 9:30 a.m., a spokesman said. A spokesman at the co-op office in Gettysburg said 21 repairmen were working in York County Thursday.

The spokesman also said a major cause of the service interruption was the "burn out" of a three-phase line in the Brodbeck area. The snowfall did not bring out any highway crews from the PennDOT headquarters on old Susquehanna Trail. County maintenance superintendent John Raborn was in Harrisburg and could not be reached for comment, although a secretary said crews were not called out. Raborn's assistant, Harlen E. Bollinger, said an "alert" had been posted so "we can get crews working if we need them tonight I .4, av 1 1 11 1 A Two feet of snoiv Not quite, though the first snow of the season amounted to an inch and a half of wet while Thursday morning, only the second time in 57 years that a measurable amount fell in October.

All told, with an additional .62 inch of rain and melted snow, Oct. 19 proved a cold and miserable harbinger of what's to come. (Photo by Eduoard Grenier) SAIGON (AP) Henry A. Kissinger and President Nguyen Van Thieu apparently intensified a search for a settlement to the Indochina war Thursday, meeting twice for a total of five hours and leaving open the possibility of a third meeting Friday. Thieu's information ministry issued an unusual communique quoting "political observers" as saying the South Vietnamese president has reasserted Saigon's opposition to a coalition government as proposed by the Viet Cong.

This caused some on the political scene to speculate that the focus of the secret talks may have shifted for the moment from Thieu's future to the possibility of an Indochina cease-fire. There was no explanation why the government chose to quote political observers as expressing Thieu's viewpoint. It could only be speculation that this was one way of making a point without having to accept official responsibility'. Thieu is pledged not to discuss the secret negotiations Vu Khanh, the government's attributable to the storm were coming from a number of points in the county, with no particular area having a concentration of customers without service. He said "we won't know about some of the customers without To reduce vehicular traffic at Continental Square, the plan would allow only two lanes of through traffic on Market and George Streets, and shuttle traffic around the square by making Princess Street one way east and Beaver Street one way south.

Princess Street would be one way only from Richland Avenue to Harrison Street. The cost of resignalization, which would be needed, and other street changes necessary to implement the plan would be borne by the city, Keller said. PennDOT would require assurance that the needed money was budgeted by the First October snow since 1925 cuts power Plaza plan eyed favorably The earliest fall snowstorm on record in York County Thursday caused service interruptions for telephone and electric customers in York and Adams Counties when snow-laden tree limbs snapped utility lines in many locations. According to weather records at the York Water Co. Brilhart pumping station, the only other October snowfall of measurable depth occurred on Oct.

30, 1925, when two inches were measured. Thursday's snowfall was 1.5 inches William Scharadin, operating superintendent for Metropolitan Edison said the storm interrupted service to as many as 6,000 customers in York County. About 100 repairmen were working on the line troubles during most of the day. Scharadin said the first crews were called to duty about 7:30 a.m. By late afternoon, Scharadin said, fewer than 15 customers were still without power.

According to a spokesman for Adams Rural Electric By CHI CK MUR Mayor Eichelberger's plan for a downtown plaza at Continental Square has received a passing grade from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT). Following a review of the plan Thursday by officials of Penn-dot's District 8 and central offices, Robert Keller, District 8 engineer, said, "We looked very favorably upon it." The city must now show, Keller said, how the plan will be implemented, what improvements will be made at intersections, and how much it will cost.

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Pages Available:
1,098,175
Years Available:
1918-2021