y. g^aaaas »-.«••*•- carme| hands crusaders texas winds up ... 21/cortland ny...crusaders...

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. y. g^aaaas »-.«••*•- Carme | Hands Crusaders Down The Sports Alley first b $ s 43 . 41 fe IW JVs Down Auburn Juniors With ROL RANDALL Basketball tomorrow rugnr — Binghamton Central at Homer Central, STAC games, JVs at 6:30 and varsities at 8:15. John Moulton was the lone 600 bowler in league play here over the weekend by chalking up a 603 series at the Bowling Center on games of 248, 153 and 202. Steve Watrous had to settle for 596. Marg Weismore led the ladies with her 547 set at Cort-Lanes on games of 158, 210 and 179, while Anita Van Gorder had 537 on 160, 166 and 211; Joann Renz 520 on 133, 207 and 180; Sylvia Coville 516 at the Recreation Alleys on 159, 178 and 179, and Doris Sherman 505 on 163, 163 and 179. Charles Mullen picked up the 4- 7-9-10 split, Jim Parker the 6-7, Pete Van Gorder the 4-10, Glen Bush the 3-7-10, Diane Davenport the 3-7-10, Bob Hutt the 3-7-10, Hubert Merchant the 2-7-10. and B. Grinnell the 2-7-10. In junior bowling at the Recreation, Kathy Partigianoni led the bantam girls with 225 and 125 for 35C, while Rick Par- tigianoni had 206 for the bantam boys. Greg Partigianoni 169 and Dave Barbato 154. Ten more leagues have filed their January 1st individual bowling averages with yours truly for possible use in the up- coming men's city tournament, bringing to 25 the total number on hand so far. We still need more than 50 more. The latest to file include the Knights & Ladies, Seven Valley, Guys & Dolls, Saturday Recreation Mixed, Cincy Mr. & Mrs. Cincy Goose & Gander, Marathon Ball & Chain, Dryden Merchants, Skyline and Bowling Center loops. Bogard's defeated Timnion's by a score of 74-42 in the finals of the Junior High Division of the holiday 3 man basketball championships held last week at the YMCA. Bogard's dominated the game from the start and had no trouble in holding Timmon's at bay throughout the contest. Scott Bogard had 38 points Ted Walsh 26, and Vince Partriarco 10 for Bogard's. Dave Gulini led Timmon's with 17, while Steve Timmons had 16, and Mark Stupke 9. In quarter-final games Bogard's defeated Berarm's 53- 32, and Flatt's beat Harmon's 51- 34, while Timmon's had a bye. In the semi-finals Timmon's defeated Flatt's 62-44, while Bogard's had a bye, thus setting up the final game. Dave Gulini led the Junior High scorers with 60 points in the tourney for a 20 point average. Phoenix Suns* fans were ec- static. There was Dick Van Ar- sdale, leading the fast break, feeding, sometimes driving, and always playing that tough defense that has earmarked his all-court hustle since the 26-year- old star came into the NBA in the fall of 1965. Van Arsdale on this occasion had 19 points, but more im- portantly, he played a big role in Phoenix's 127-116 victory over the Boston Celtics. This was no or- dinary victory for Van Arsdale and tbe^ther Suns. It was their first triumph ever over Boston, the defending NBA world champions, and a nationwide television audience was looking on this Christmas Day at the proceedings. "He is a fierce competitor," noted Suns' General Manager Jerry Colangelo (new coach) of Van' Arsdale. "He exerts leadership through performance rather than conversation. Van gives you 100 per cent game after game," he's the best driver in the league, and has done an amazing job of developing an outside shot at this stage of his career." The outside shot Colangelo refers to. coupled with Van's aggressive down-the-iane drives, make him one of the league's better scorers. It also makes the Suns' front office look like a group of geniuses for switching Van from forward to guard at the start of this season. It was a move borne by necessity. The Suns had acquired 6-S forward Connie Hawkins after THUBS., Jan. 22-*:3t P. BALTIMORE BULLETS iMtm BtvWon flritmM M.| DETROIT PISTOSS with S.TT.'a DIT» Bits THUBS- Feb. l§-8:3u P. M. PHILADELPHIA 76m DETROIT PISTONS $5 — $4 — $3 — $2 tt* SPORTS PROMOTIONS WAR MEMORIAL n v. ixm picking up muscular Paul Si] (in a trade with Atlanta/last May), plus Jerry Chambers in a swap with Philadelphia last winter. Chambers, however, was not released from military service until last summer. So, «ith Hawkins, Silas and Chambers, plus the tandem pivot of Jim Fox (one of the league's most accurate shots and a for- midable rebounder) plus No. 1 draft pick Neal Walk, Phoenix could better make use of the 6-5 Van Arsdale at guard alongside Gail Goodrich. In the backcourt, Van's height could be used to advantage, and his aggressiveness and quickness — plus his dedication to victory — made the maneuver a natural. Now, midway in this first season, the move seems like the smartest thing the Suns did since picking Van off the New York unprotected list when the ex- pansion club was stocked in May of 1968. Dick had come out of University of Indiana highly- touted with his identical twin brother Tom. Dick won first team Big 10 honors and was named first team Academic All- America. He made the New York Knicks at forward on his hustle and superb defense. Brother Tom, now with Cincinnati, exudes a similar determination and has become a fine NBA player. TownersBeat Onondaga Five For Two In Row The boys from McGfaw sparked the Cortland Towners to their third win of the season against four losses Sunday af- ternoon at McEvoy gym, an 84-80 verdict over CNY Semi-pro League leading Onondaga Central. Cortland, which has won two straight, is scheduled in Seneca Fails next Sunday night. Jack Pease along with Terry and Jim Macomber, the trio which has formed the nucleus of a few McGraw Central champion teams, led a late thrid quarter drive that drew the locals even at 61-61. Two Terry Macomber free throws put Cortland ahead to stay midway through the final period. Macomber had seven points in the fourth quarter. Big Carl Colgan, playing in his third game with the Towners — all wins, spearheaded the victory with 26 points in addition to lending a rebounding hand to Bill Williams. Chuck Klempka, on leave from college, saw his first action. Klempka ,was a link on last season's club'. Williams added 12 points, Terry Macomber 11 and Dave Jones 10 including two important baskets in the fourth canto. Bill Smith had 20 for OC, Andy Dobreski 14, Ron Cox and Joe Costeilo 12 each. The score: Corfland—84 B. F. T. Wiiliams 5 2-4-12 Klempka 2 0-0,4 Pease 2 0-0 4 Jones 5 0-0 10 T. Macomber 4 3-3 11 Fougnier 0 0-0 0 Colgan 10 6-7 26 Sosinsky 0 0-0 0 Dexter" 2 3-3 7 Tillets 0 0-0 0 J. Macomber 14-5 6 31 18-22 84 Onondaga C'tral-80 B. F. T. Costeilo 5 2-3 12 Sceck 2 0-14 Dobreski 6 24 14 Hunt 3 2-3 3 Allen 4 2-3 10 Cox . 6 0-1 12 Smith 10 0-0 20 36 8-15 80 Score by Periods: Cortland 21 15 25 23 --84 Onondaga C'tral. 17 25 19 19 —80 Fouls Called: On Cort-12, On O. C.-18. 700 Write In For Tickets At Buffalo BUFFALO. N.Y. CAP) - Buf- falo's new National Hockey League team has owners, a temporary office in a downtown building, and a list of about 700 people who say they want sea- son tickets. The owners say they can do nothing with the list because the team lacks players, a place to play, a coach and a general manager. The team also doesn't- have a name. "We are listing them accord- ing to when they were re- ceived," Robert O. Swados, at- torney for the owners said Satur- day of the ticket requests. The team says it has done no advertising, but the applica- tions have come throughout western New York and areas of neighboring Canada. By Jere Dexter Tit for tat. Slugging it out in the con- cluding game of the season's two game series, Mt. Carmel of Auburn held off St. Mary's High here Saturday night to tag the Crusaders with their first loss, 43- 41, squaring the score for an earlier loss in Auburn. The non-league drop lowered St. Mary's to 5-1 overall as it looks forward to a return to IAC action Friday night at Western Division tri-leading Newfield. ~"*Mt. Carmel is 7-1, finally solving the local parishioners who had handed the Auburn five six straight beatings. St. Mary's managed some satisfaction when the JVs stopped its visiting counterpart, 56-47, for the losers' first loss in 32 games over three seasons. A second half surge made the difference after Carmel jumped to a 23-20 halftime lead. Sarto Schickel hit 16 of his 18 points in the last two periods to lead the comeback for the 5-1 Saint scrubs. Tom Mack scored 15 and Chris Clark 10 points in the victory. Schickel was tall off the boards. The Crusaders nearly used the last half upstaging in the varsity fray. Bringing the "Deke" McEvoy gym SRO crowd to its collective feet, Pat Young stoked St. Mary's from a loitering 19-12 trail at half to an even third quarter which ended 26-26. But the homers looked in dire straits on the lean side of a 43-38 count when Carmel's Dave Bishop converted his only two points of the night at the foul line with a minute left. Denver Rockets Wallop Dallas By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Denver Rockets are a last place team but they're not play- ing like one. The Rockets pounded Dallas 122-85 Sunday night for their seventh straight victory in the American Basketball Associa- tion and their ninth in 11 games under their new coach, Joe Bel- .mont. The victory, sparked by "Larry Jones' 28 points and Spencer Haywood's 25, matched the Rockets' longest winning streak ever and their 37-point winning margin was the largest ever amassed by a Rocket team. Because of their miserable \ start this season, the Rockets \are still in. last place in the' estern Division. But the way they're playing it looks like theirsiays in the cellar are num- bered. They're only one game out of fourth place in the tight five-team division. In other games Sunday, Indi- ana beat Carolina 121-113 and Miami whipped the New York Nets 124-104. In the National Basketball As- sociation, Philadelphia beat Boston 130-120: Cincinnati edged Baltimore 129-128, Atlanta nipped Milwaukee 126-125, Los Angeles pounded Phoenix 120- 112, San Diego whipped Chicago 140-121 and Detroit defeated Seattle 116-110. In Saturday ABA games, Ken- tucky best New Orleans 119-107, Dallas edged Los Angeles 139- 137"= Carolina defeated New York 100-91, and Miami turned back Pittsburgh 114-111. Denver surged to a 25-14 lead over Dallas in the first quarter and was never headed. But the Rockets provided some excite- ment in the final five minutes by pumping in five three-point goals, three of them by Jeff Congdon. The loss dropped Dallas into a tie for second in the Western Di- vision with Washington, five games back to New Orleans. Indiana increased their lead in the Eastern Division to six games over idle Kentucky by beating Carolina. The Packers led throughout and held a 23- point margin in the final quar- ter. The littlest local kept it alive. Spare Don Kopp, a 5-7 flit, drove the lane and banked home a 7-footer-^and drew a foul. Making the 3-pointer, the score was Final. But St. Mary's regained possession with 5 seconds left after a Carmel 50- tick freeze. Pat Finney, competent grid aerialist, unloaded a fullcourt pass that Jim Gaston swatted to Young whose last ditch off- balance tie-try flicked off the left side of the rim at the buzzer. The first half didn't hint at the final two quarter play. The Crusaders, failing to get inside Carmel's layback man-to-man defense, shot only four baskets by half, three by Finney. Auburn had seven in 30 shots. The Saints took 23 attempts. The final shooting totals showed St.. Mary's 15x50 and Carmel 17x56. Part of the cool caging was attributed to well geared defenses which seldom gave shooting room without company around the ball. The ball handling both ways was sure. The Crusaders finished with 10 tur- novers. Carmel's defense might have been the key. St. Mary's had worked long and tedious at press breaking, ex- pecting a copy of the Auburn defense that bothered the locals in the first meeting. It never appeared until Carmel protected its winning margin in the closing seconds. "I hope we got it out of our system," a dissatisfied Dick Shay said of his club's game. Auburn captain Bob Balash, who played a fine floor game while the lone visitor in double figures with 18 points — three clutch buckets in - the final quarter, opened the scoring from the foul line. Finney's 22-foot straightaway hoop moved the Saints on top and Dick O'Shea's foul toss gave them their biggest edge, a 3-1 briefer. Young's basket with 5% minutes left in the quarter was the last local lead of the half at 5- 4. Carmel, outboafding the Crusaders, led 11-7 at the junction and widened the gap in the second period. The Crusaders ran six straight points after halftime. Young getting a rebounder, a corner make and a freebie before O'Shea made a foul to come within 19-18. Balash, who shot 7x21 all told, and Tom Larkin swapped twos with a Finney angler at the key giving St. Mary's a 22-21 lead. Young, who made three hoops in a 6x11 local third quarter shootout, made it 26-all on a wild fall-away banker as the period closed. A Gaston foul throw after 43-seconds of the last quarter put the Saints ahead a final time at 27-26. The visitors gained a four point edge midway through the fourth quarter, with first Balash and then Dave Kuncio finding the hole. Kuncio, a backliner, sank his only six points in the flurry. Five Finney points and four by Young kept the spread within eyeshot. St. Mary's —41 B. F. T. Young 4 4-5 12 Schickel * 0 0-0 0 Larkin 2 0-14 Harrington 0 0-0 0 O'Shea 0 2-2 2 Lowie 0 0-0 0 Finney 6 2-5 14 Gaston 2 1-3 5 Kopp 1 2-3 4 Mt. Carmel —43 D. Balash Clifford Ewald Nardello Bishop DiAngelo B.°Balash Kuncio Catalfano 15 B. 2 1 3 1 0 0 7 3 0 11-19 41 F. T. 1-1 5 1-1 3 1-2 7 0-0 2 2-3 2 0-0 0 4-5 18 0-1 6 0-0 0 17 9-13 43 St. Mary's 7 5 14 15 —41 Mt. Carmel 11 8 7 17 —43 Fouls Called: On St. Mary's — 9, on Mt. Carmel — 14. CRUSADERS — Dick O'Shea (50) of St. Mary's High shoots over Mt. CarmeFs Tom Nardello in the last half of Saturday night's 43-41 loss at McEvoy gym. The loss was the Crusaders first after five wins. Carmel has lost just once, an earlier verdict to St. Mary's in Auburn. The Saints play again Friday at Newfield. (Steve Flatt Photo) Dragons Lose To Post And Wagner Teams Cortland College's varsity cagers lost both of their weekend games on Long Island, as C.W. Post beat the Red Dragons, 80-73, and Wagner took an overtime 103- 94 verdict Saturday night. The Dragons now stand at 4-3 and their next game is not scheduled until Jan. 28 when they invade Ithaca College. This week hill students return to classes following the year-end holiday break and next week exams are in order on the campus, followed by the semester break. In Saturday night's game against Wagner, Coach AL Stockholm's dribblers trailed-S^ 48 at half time and then/fied the play, 86-86, at the end of regulation time. In the extra period of play, Wagner outscored the Dragons, 17-8, to take the nine-point decision. Top Scorers for Wagner in- cluded 6-4 Gene Guerriero who shot in 31 points, 6-2 Ray Hodge who had 23,5-10 Bill Seaman 19, 6- 3 Frank Bayersdorfer 16, and 6-4 Tracy Windrum 12. ^ Mike Eidel led the Dragons with 28 markers, while Earl Rogers found the range for 17, Brian Drohan 15, John Pessala 13, Bob Antin 12 and Fred Bruntrager six. The hillmen made 38 field goals in 75 tries for a little better than 50 percent. They did better at the free throw line where they caged 18 of 21 with Rogers going 5-5, Antin 4-4, Eidel 4-5 and Pessala 3-4. Rogers chipped in with nine rebounds, Pessala eight and Dan Riggins six. Hockey Tournament Shifted To Sweden GENEVA,'Switzerland (AP) —The World Ice Hockey Cham- pionships scheduled forMarch in Canada will not be held there. The Canadian Amateur Ice Hockey Federation canceled the championship Sunday after the European hockey federations retused to play against a Cana- dian team containing profes- sional players. KEROSENE 17.9c S Big "D" Station South Corttand Trojans Host Rangy Central Tuesday Night The tall and short of it tangle Tuesday night in Homer where Bill Lindberg's scrappers meet unbeaten Binghamton Central in 6:30 and 8:15 JV and varsity games. It will be the Trojans' first time out against the bigger Western Division schools of the STAC. Homer, which lost to (2-2 Susquehanna Valley) its last time out, has taken one of five games against fellow conference Easterners. The Trojans beat 3-2 Maine- Endwell and has lost to Owego, Susquehanna Valley, Seton Catholic and Chenango Valley. -^The CV five leads the Eastern Division in which Homer is located. The Trojans' tallest* are 6-1 Greg Greene, a leading Homer scorer, 6-2 Bob Rabeler, and 6-1 Dan Dafoe. Central will provide plenty of forecourt steam led with slender 6-7 Dave Tita, one of the con- ference's hottest performers scoring and rebounding-wise. The Bingos, who stand 5-0 overall and 4-0 with Ithaca in the loop, also boast 6-4 and 6-3 cage students. Lindberg hopes his quick back- court can offset Central's timber. Duff Ripley and Dan Weddle are two Trojan swifties. They'll be joined by forwards Pat Riley and Dafoe, and pivot Greene. Dafoe has been a strong boarder thus far. Stew Barber Retires BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Of- fensive tackle Stew Barber of the Buffalo Bills, a member of five Ail-American Football League teams, has retired. Barber, 30, announced his re- tirement Saturday, nine years to the day after he joined the Bills as a rookie. "It is now time for me to de- vote my full attention to private business," the former Penn State star said. He works for a rendering firm during the off- I season. A back injury forced Barber to break a string of 125 conse- cutive games by missing the last game of the" 1969 season. He is a native of Bradford, Pa., and lives in nearby Alden. Texas Winds Up No. 1 May find Repeating Tough By JACK KEEVER AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) - Texas^ wishbone will be broken in half next year. The loss of quarterback James Street, the fourth down magi- cian, and halfback Ted Koy, a top pro prospect, will^make it especially tough for Royal's Longhorns to repeat as the na- tional champions of college foot- ball. "You are always hopeful of a repeat," said Royal, "but the odds are so heavily against that kind of thing. It's a frustrating feeling when you know it's only one way to go. I don't want to sound like a defeatist, but you've got to be a realist." Royal, coach at Texas since 1957, directed the school's first national champion in 1963 and missed out the next year when the Longhorns gambled on a two-point conversion and lost to Arkansas, 14-13, for Texas' only defeat. This season Royal gambled— not once, not twice but three times—in the final do-or-die games against Arkansas and Notre Dame and it paid off each time, giving the Longhorns the national title. The Associated Press' final poll of sportswriters and sports- casters, after the Jan. 1 bowl games, made Texas the No. 1 team in the nation with 37 first place votes and a total of 910 points. Penn State was No. 2 with seven first place votes and 822 points. Two voters split their top choice between Texas and Penn State, and two others selected Ohio State, No. 1 all year until upset by Michigan in its final game. Southern Cal finished third; Ohio State was fourth; Notre Dame climbed from ninth to fifth after losing to Texas, 21- 17, in the final 68 seconds in the Cotton Bowl; Missouri remained sixth despite its 10-3 loss to Penn State in the Orange Bowl; Arkansas fell from third to sev-' enth after Mississippi whipped the Razorbacks 27-22 in the Su- gar Bowl, Mississippi leaped from 13th to eighth; Michigan dropped from seventh to ninth after losing to Southern Cal 10-3 in the Rose Bowl; and Louisi- ana State, which did not play in a bowl, was shifted from eighth to No. 10. The second 10, in order, were Nebraska, Houston, UCLA, Flor- ida, Tennessee, Colorado, West Virginia, Purdue, Stanford and Auburn. Texas' backfield of Street, Koy,- Steve Worster and Jim Bertelsen—operating out of Tex- as' two-year-old wishbone-T of- fense—was considered the fin- est in the Southwest Confer- ence's 75-year history, ripping off 2,242 yards in 10 games out of a team total of 3,630 yards rushing, an SWC record. There are those who believe that Texas would have been No. 1 last season too, if Street had started instead of Bill Bradley, a marvelous athlete who is now a punter-defensive back for the Philadelphia Eagles but was miscast as a quarterback in the intricate wishbone-T. The Long- horns tied Houston and lost to Texas Tech, and then Royal re- placed Bradley with Street, and the peppery 175-pounder direct- ed Texas to 20 straight victor- ies. Koy called„Street a "mini- psychologist," a quarterback who talks as good a game in the huddle as he plays. His replacement will be either Eddie Phillips, who averaged 6.4 yards a carry running this season as Street's understudy but seemed to lack his nimble footwork, or freshman Gary Keithley, a 6-2 strongman who can zing a football but also lacks Street's agility. Texas will lose its 252-pound All-America tackle Bob McKay; linebacker Glen Halsell, who also made at least one All- America team; and the Camp- bell twins, Mike and Tom, who alwa>> served to be in the right pia.-,-£ on defense at the right time. Safety Freddie Steinmark's career was ended when cancer forced the amputation of one leg at the hip. Fabius Hands Cincy Initial Defeat, 5 8 5 6 "Clouting Western Division teams before the holidays, the IAC Easterns met their own kind Saturday night for the first time and showed their strength. Fabius Central stamped the first loss on Cincinnatus' Lions, 58-56, on the Falcon floor. Cincy is 4-1 in the loop, 5-1 overall. Larry Carr's Onondaga County crew rose to 3-2 in* its maiden conference season. Both have outsiders tomorrow, Cincy at South Otselic and Fabius hosting Tully. The Lions, who also fell in the JV contest, 46-41, never gained total control although a fourth rter binge nearly pulled it out rite four starters oenched by fouls. "Reserves did a real fine job," Cincy's Tom Rausa said. Sub Terry Jolliff's fling from the key-top erased a nine point deficit after three quarters and evened the score at 56 with 21- seconds left to play. Each five took a shot in the clock rundown. Fabius' Steve Latocha latched onto a missed Lion fielder, fed Pete Doran at midcourt and Doran went in for the winning chippie as the gun sounded. "We seemed to suffer a letdown when their big guys fouled out," Carr commented of Jim Button and Hank Diaz exit in the last quarter. Button, who made nine of his 19 points in the fourth frame, was disqualified midway into the finale. Doug Miller left first with six- minutes to play followed by Button, Mike Preston and Diaz in that order. Fabius lost but one player via fouls in a fine effort sparked by Larry Millar, whose 19 points matched his opposite center, Button. Miller, tall Latocha and Tom Strodel split Falcon rebounding chores. The three Fabius insiders drew Rausa's applause for tight defensive work as well. He labeled Fabius' guard as "tougher than Tioga." "Their defense was par- ticularly good in the first half. We couldn't get the ball inside, " Rausa said. Cincy trailed at the first quarter, 12-9, but narrowed the margin to 24-22 by half. The Falcons hiked the lead after the recess by successfully solving a Cincy press which had shaken past foes. "We were getting 3-on-ls and 2-on-ls in our forecourt," said Carr. The Lions abandoned the press about four- minutes later. Fabius held a 40-31 lead-into the fourth quarter. Turnovers plagued the Lions throughout. "They hurt," the Cincy mentor recalled. "A couple of 3-second violations and at least 10 offensive fouls were up- setting." Cincinnatus shot better than 40 percent from the field with Diaz and John Malmquist supporting Button's team leading total. All five Lion starters hit the boards trying to counter the Falcon frontcourt. Fabius bit 36 percent from the field — "Our next to lowest average of the season," Carr said. Cincy and Fabius are home for leaguers after tomorrow's out- side tilts. The Lions host Lansing on Friday while Fabius is home to Spencer-VanEtten on Satur- day. A return to Western Division opposition will probably be received with open arms by both Easterns. i The box: Cincinnatus —56 B. F. T. Miller Diaz Malmquist Preston Simpson Beckwith Button Jolliff Jordan ,,> Fabius —58 Latocha Miller Doran Hizkey Strodel Virgil Livingston 2 4 8 4 3 11 5 0 10 1 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 1 19 2 0 4 0 0 0 23.10'56 B. F . T. 4 2 10 6 7 19 3 1 7 2 0 4 2 5 9 1 2 4 2 1 5 20 18 58 Cincinnatus 9 13 9 25 —56 Fabius 12 12 16 18 -58 RENEW ACQUAINTANCES — St. Marys High's Pat Fiimey and Mt. Carmel of Auburn's Bob Balash (15) have bees butting beads often during scholastic cage careers. Finney tries advancing on the Carmel star Saturday nsghi at McEvoy gym where the visitors took home a 43-41 win. Balash, a junior, sparked Carmel with 18 points. Ffcmey tallied 14 for the Saints along with 12 rebounds and five assists. (Steve FJatt Photo) TRANSPORTATION SUPERVISOR EXAMINATION FEBRUARY 7, 1970 SALARY: $9500.00 At Present, one vacancy exists in the City of Cortland En- larged School District LAST FILING DATE: January 7, 1970 HOW TO APPLY: Applications and qualifications are available ' at the Civil Service Office, Court House, Cortland, New York. CORTLAND COUNTY CIVH. SERVICE COMMISSION Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Page 1: y. g^aaaas »-.«••*•- Carme| Hands Crusaders Texas Winds Up ... 21/Cortland NY...Crusaders with their first loss, 43-41, squaring the score for an earlier loss in Auburn. The

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y . g ^ a a a a s »-.«••*•- Carme| Hands Crusaders Down The Sports Alley first b$s 43.41 fe

I W JVs Down Auburn Juniors With

ROL RANDALL

Basketball tomorrow rugnr — Binghamton Central at Homer Central, STAC games, JVs at 6:30 and varsities at 8:15.

John Moulton was the lone 600 bowler in league play here over the weekend by chalking up a 603 series at the Bowling Center on games of 248, 153 and 202. Steve Watrous had to settle for 596.

Marg Weismore led the ladies with her 547 set at Cort-Lanes on games of 158, 210 and 179, while Anita Van Gorder had 537 on 160, 166 and 211; Joann Renz 520 on 133, 207 and 180; Sylvia Coville 516 at the Recreation Alleys on 159, 178 and 179, and Doris Sherman 505 on 163, 163 and 179.

Charles Mullen picked up the 4-7-9-10 split, Jim Parker the 6-7, Pete Van Gorder the 4-10, Glen Bush the 3-7-10, Diane Davenport the 3-7-10, Bob Hutt the 3-7-10, Hubert Merchant the 2-7-10. and B. Grinnell the 2-7-10.

In junior bowling at the Recreation, Kathy Partigianoni led the bantam girls with 225 and 125 for 35C, while Rick Par­tigianoni had 206 for the bantam boys. Greg Partigianoni 169 and Dave Barbato 154.

Ten more leagues have filed their January 1st individual bowling averages with yours truly for possible use in the up­coming men's city tournament, bringing to 25 the total number on hand so far. We still need more than 50 more.

The latest to file include the Knights & Ladies, Seven Valley, Guys & Dolls, Saturday Recreation Mixed, Cincy Mr. & Mrs. Cincy Goose & Gander, Marathon Ball & Chain, Dryden Merchants, Skyline and Bowling Center loops.

Bogard's defeated Timnion's by a score of 74-42 in the finals of the Junior High Division of the holiday 3 man basketball championships held last week at the YMCA.

Bogard's dominated the game from the start and had no trouble in holding Timmon's at bay throughout the contest. Scott Bogard had 38 points Ted Walsh 26, and Vince Partriarco 10 for Bogard's. Dave Gulini led Timmon's with 17, while Steve Timmons had 16, and Mark Stupke 9.

In quarter-final games Bogard's defeated Berarm's 53-32, and Flatt 's beat Harmon's 51-34, while Timmon's had a bye. In the semi-finals Timmon's defeated F la t t ' s 62-44, while Bogard's had a bye, thus setting up the final game. Dave Gulini led the Junior High scorers with 60 points in the tourney for a 20 point average.

Phoenix Suns* fans were ec­static. There was Dick Van Ar-sdale, leading the fast break, feeding, sometimes driving, and always playing that tough defense that has earmarked his all-court hustle since the 26-year-old star came into the NBA in the fall of 1965.

Van Arsdale on this occasion had 19 points, but more im­portantly, he played a big role in Phoenix's 127-116 victory over the Boston Celtics. This was no or­dinary victory for Van Arsdale and tbe^ther Suns. It was their first triumph ever over Boston, the defending NBA world champions, and a nationwide television audience was looking on this Christmas Day at the proceedings.

"He is a fierce competitor," noted Suns' General Manager Jerry Colangelo (new coach) of Van' Arsdale. "He exerts leadership through performance rather than conversation. Van gives you 100 per cent game after game," he's the best driver in the league, and has done an amazing job of developing an outside shot at this stage of his career."

The outside shot Colangelo refers to. coupled with Van's aggressive down-the-iane drives, make him one of the league's better scorers. It also makes the Suns' front office look like a group of geniuses for switching Van from forward to guard at the start of this season.

It was a move borne by necessity. The Suns had acquired 6-S forward Connie Hawkins after

THUBS., Jan. 22-*:3t P . BALTIMORE BULLETS

iMtm BtvWon flritmM

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DETROIT PISTOSS with S.TT.'a D I T » B i t s

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PHILADELPHIA 7 6 m

DETROIT PISTONS

$5 — $4 — $3 — $2 tt*

SPORTS PROMOTIONS WAR MEMORIAL

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picking up muscular Paul Si] (in a trade with Atlanta/last May), plus Jerry Chambers in a swap with Philadelphia last winter. Chambers, however, was not released from military service until last summer.

So, «ith Hawkins, Silas and Chambers, plus the tandem pivot of Jim Fox (one of the league's most accurate shots and a for­midable rebounder) plus No. 1 draft pick Neal Walk, Phoenix could better make use of the 6-5 Van Arsdale at guard alongside Gail Goodrich. In the backcourt, Van's height could be used to advantage, and his aggressiveness and quickness — plus his dedication to victory — made the maneuver a natural.

Now, midway in this first season, the move seems like the smartest thing the Suns did since picking Van off the New York unprotected list when the ex­pansion club was stocked in May of 1968. Dick had come out of University of Indiana highly-touted with his identical twin brother Tom. Dick won first team Big 10 honors and was named first team Academic All-America. He made the New York Knicks at forward on his hustle and superb defense. Brother Tom, now with Cincinnati, exudes a similar determination and has become a fine NBA player.

TownersBeat Onondaga Five For Two In Row

The boys from McGfaw sparked the Cortland Towners to their third win of the season against four losses Sunday af­ternoon at McEvoy gym, an 84-80 verdict over CNY Semi-pro League leading Onondaga Central.

Cortland, which has won two straight, is scheduled in Seneca Fails next Sunday night.

Jack Pease along with Terry and Jim Macomber, the trio which has formed the nucleus of a few McGraw Central champion teams, led a late thrid quarter drive that drew the locals even at 61-61.

Two Terry Macomber free throws put Cortland ahead to stay midway through the final period. Macomber had seven points in the fourth quarter.

Big Carl Colgan, playing in his third game with the Towners — all wins, spearheaded the victory with 26 points in addition to lending a rebounding hand to Bill Williams. Chuck Klempka, on leave from college, saw his first action. Klempka ,was a link on last season's club'.

Williams added 12 points, Terry Macomber 11 and Dave Jones 10 including two important baskets in the fourth canto. Bill Smith had 20 for OC, Andy Dobreski 14, Ron Cox and Joe Costeilo 12 each.

The score: Corfland—84 B . F. T. Wiiliams 5 2-4-12 Klempka 2 0 - 0 , 4 Pease 2 0-0 4 Jones 5 0-0 10 T. Macomber 4 3-3 11 Fougnier 0 0-0 0 Colgan 10 6-7 26 Sosinsky 0 0-0 0 Dexter" 2 3-3 7 Tillets 0 0-0 0 J. Macomber 1 4 - 5 6

31 18-22 84 Onondaga C'tral-80 B. F. T. Costeilo 5 2-3 12 Sceck 2 0 - 1 4 Dobreski 6 24 14 Hunt 3 2-3 3 Allen 4 2-3 10 Cox . 6 0-1 12 Smith 10 0-0 20

36 8-15 80 Score by Periods:

Cortland 21 15 25 23 --84 Onondaga C'tral. 17 25 19 19 —80

Fouls Called: On Cort-12, On O. C.-18.

700 Write In For Tickets At Buffalo

BUFFALO. N.Y. CAP) - Buf­falo's new National Hockey League team has owners, a temporary office in a downtown building, and a list of about 700 people who say they want sea­son tickets.

The owners say they can do nothing with the list because the team lacks players, a place to play, a coach and a general manager. The team also doesn't-have a name.

"We are listing them accord­ing to when they were re­ceived," Robert O. Swados, at­torney for the owners said Satur­day of the ticket requests.

The team says it has done no advertising, but the applica­tions have come throughout western New York and areas of neighboring Canada.

By Jere Dexter

Tit for tat. Slugging it out in the con­

cluding game of the season's two game series, Mt. Carmel of Auburn held off St. Mary's High here Saturday night to tag the Crusaders with their first loss, 43-41, squaring the score for an earlier loss in Auburn.

The non-league drop lowered St. Mary's to 5-1 overall as it looks forward to a return to IAC action Friday night at Western Division tri-leading Newfield. ~"*Mt. Carmel is 7-1, finally solving the local parishioners who had handed the Auburn five six straight beatings.

St. Mary's managed some satisfaction when the JVs stopped its visiting counterpart, 56-47, for the losers' first loss in 32 games over three seasons. A second half surge made the difference after Carmel jumped to a 23-20 halftime lead.

Sarto Schickel hit 16 of his 18 points in the last two periods to lead the comeback for the 5-1 Saint scrubs. Tom Mack scored 15 and Chris Clark 10 points in the victory. Schickel was tall off the boards.

The Crusaders nearly used the last half upstaging in the varsity fray.

Bringing the "Deke" McEvoy gym SRO crowd to its collective feet, Pat Young stoked St. Mary's from a loitering 19-12 trail at half to an even third quarter which ended 26-26.

But the homers looked in dire straits on the lean side of a 43-38 count when Carmel 's Dave Bishop converted his only two points of the night at the foul line with a minute left.

Denver Rockets Wallop Dallas By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Denver Rockets are a last place team but they're not play­ing like one.

The Rockets pounded Dallas 122-85 Sunday night for their seventh straight victory in the American Basketball Associa­tion and their ninth in 11 games under their new coach, Joe Bel-

.mont. The victory, sparked by "Larry

Jones' 28 points and Spencer Haywood's 25, matched the Rockets' longest winning streak ever and their 37-point winning margin was the largest ever amassed by a Rocket team.

Because of their miserable \ start this season, the Rockets

\are still in. last place in the' estern Division. But the way

they're playing it looks like theirsiays in the cellar are num­bered. They're only one game out of fourth place in the tight five-team division.

In other games Sunday, Indi­ana beat Carolina 121-113 and Miami whipped the New York Nets 124-104.

In the National Basketball As­sociation, Philadelphia beat Boston 130-120: Cincinnati edged Baltimore 129-128, Atlanta nipped Milwaukee 126-125, Los Angeles pounded Phoenix 120-112, San Diego whipped Chicago 140-121 and Detroit defeated Seattle 116-110.

In Saturday ABA games, Ken­tucky best New Orleans 119-107, Dallas edged Los Angeles 139-137"= Carolina defeated New York 100-91, and Miami turned back Pittsburgh 114-111.

Denver surged to a 25-14 lead over Dallas in the first quarter and was never headed. But the Rockets provided some excite­ment in the final five minutes by pumping in five three-point goals, three of them by Jeff Congdon.

The loss dropped Dallas into a tie for second in the Western Di­vision with Washington, five games back to New Orleans.

Indiana increased their lead in the Eastern Division to six games over idle Kentucky by beating Carolina. The Packers led throughout and held a 23-point margin in the final quar­ter.

The littlest local kept it alive. Spare Don Kopp, a 5-7 flit,

drove the lane and banked home a 7-footer-^and drew a foul. Making the 3-pointer, the score was Final. But St. Mary 's regained possession with 5 seconds left after a Carmel 50-tick freeze.

Pat Finney, competent grid aerialist, unloaded a fullcourt pass that Jim Gaston swatted to Young whose last ditch off-balance tie-try flicked off the left side of the rim at the buzzer.

• • • The first half didn't hint at the

final two quarter play. T h e Crusaders, failing to get inside Carmel's layback man-to-man defense, shot only four baskets by half, three by Finney. Auburn had seven in 30 shots. The Saints took 23 attempts.

The final shooting totals showed St.. Mary's 15x50 and Carmel 17x56.

Part of the cool caging was attributed to well geared defenses which seldom gave shooting room without company around the ball. The ball handling both ways was sure . The Crusaders finished with 10 tur­novers.

Carmel's defense might have been the key.

St. Mary's had worked long and tedious at press breaking, ex­pecting a copy of the Auburn defense that bothered the locals in the first meeting. It never appeared until Carmel protected its winning margin in the closing seconds.

• • • "I hope we got it out of our

system," a dissatisfied Dick Shay said of his club's game.

Auburn captain Bob Balash, who played a fine floor game while the lone visitor in double figures with 18 points — three clutch buckets in - the final quarter, opened the scoring from the foul line.

Finney's 22-foot straightaway hoop moved the Saints on top and Dick O'Shea's foul toss gave them their biggest edge, a 3-1 briefer. Young's basket with 5% minutes left in the quarter was the last local lead of the half at 5-4.

Carmel, outboafding the Crusaders, led 11-7 at the junction and widened the gap in the second period.

The Crusaders ran six straight points after halftime. Young getting a rebounder, a corner make and a freebie before O'Shea made a foul to come within 19-18. Balash, who shot 7x21 all told, and Tom Larkin swapped twos with a Finney angler at the key giving St. Mary's a 22-21 lead.

Young, who made three hoops in a 6x11 local third quarter shootout, made it 26-all on a wild fall-away banker as the period closed. A Gaston foul throw after 43-seconds of the last quarter put the Saints ahead a final time at 27-26.

The visitors gained a four point edge midway through the fourth quarter, with first Balash and then Dave Kuncio finding the hole. Kuncio, a backliner, sank his only six points in the flurry. Five Finney points and four by Young kept the spread within eyeshot. St. Mary's —41 B. F . T. Young 4 4-5 12 Schickel * 0 0-0 0 Larkin 2 0 - 1 4 Harrington 0 0-0 0 O'Shea 0 2-2 2 Lowie 0 0-0 0 Finney 6 2-5 14 Gaston 2 1-3 5 Kopp 1 2-3 4

Mt. Carmel —43 D. Balash Clifford Ewald Nardello Bishop DiAngelo B.°Balash Kuncio Catalfano

15 B. 2 1 3 1 0 0 7 3 0

11-19 41 F . T. 1-1 5 1-1 3 1-2 7 0-0 2 2-3 2 0-0 0 4-5 18 0-1 6 0-0 0

17 9-13 43 St. Mary's 7 5 14 15 —41 Mt. Carmel 11 8 7 17 —43

Fouls Called: On St. Mary's — 9, on Mt. Carmel — 14.

CRUSADERS — Dick O'Shea (50) of St. Mary's High shoots over Mt. CarmeFs Tom Nardello in the last half of Saturday night's 43-41 loss at McEvoy gym. The loss was the Crusaders first after five wins. Carmel has lost just once, an earlier verdict to St. Mary's in Auburn. The Saints play again Friday at Newfield. (Steve Flatt Photo)

Dragons Lose To Post And Wagner Teams

Cortland College's varsity cagers lost both of their weekend games on Long Island, as C.W. Post beat the Red Dragons, 80-73, and Wagner took an overtime 103-94 verdict Saturday night. The Dragons now stand at 4-3 and their next game is not scheduled until Jan. 28 when they invade Ithaca College.

This week hill students return to classes following the year-end holiday break and next week exams are in order on the campus, followed by the semester break.

In Saturday night's game against Wagner, Coach AL Stockholm's dribblers trailed-S^ 48 at half time and then/fied the play, 86-86, at the end of regulation time. In the extra period of play, Wagner outscored the Dragons, 17-8, to take the nine-point decision.

Top Scorers for Wagner in­cluded 6-4 Gene Guerriero who shot in 31 points, 6-2 Ray Hodge who had 23,5-10 Bill Seaman 19, 6-3 Frank Bayersdorfer 16, and 6-4 Tracy Windrum 12. ^

Mike Eidel led the Dragons with 28 markers, while Earl Rogers found the range for 17, Brian Drohan 15, John Pessala 13, Bob Antin 12 and Fred Bruntrager six. The hillmen made 38 field goals in 75 tries for a little better than 50 percent. They did better at the free throw line where they caged 18 of 21 with Rogers going 5-5, Antin 4-4, Eidel 4-5 and Pessala 3-4. Rogers chipped in with nine rebounds, Pessala eight and Dan Riggins six.

Hockey Tournament Shifted To Sweden

GENEVA,'Switzerland (AP) —The World Ice Hockey Cham­pionships scheduled forMarch in Canada will not be held there.

The Canadian Amateur Ice Hockey Federation canceled the championship Sunday after the European hockey federations retused to play against a Cana­dian team containing profes­sional players.

KEROSENE

17.9c S Big "D" Station

South Corttand

Trojans Host Rangy Central Tuesday Night

The tall and short of it tangle Tuesday night in Homer where Bill Lindberg's scrappers meet unbeaten Binghamton Central in 6:30 and 8:15 JV and varsity games. It will be the Trojans' first time out against the bigger Western Division schools of the STAC.

Homer, which lost to (2-2 Susquehanna Valley) its last time out, has taken one of five games against fellow conference Easterners.

The Trojans beat 3-2 Maine-Endwell and has lost to Owego, Susquehanna Valley, Seton Catholic and Chenango Valley.

-̂ The CV five leads the Eastern Division in which Homer is located.

The Trojans' tallest* are 6-1 Greg Greene, a leading Homer scorer, 6-2 Bob Rabeler, and 6-1 Dan Dafoe.

Central will provide plenty of forecourt steam led with slender 6-7 Dave Tita, one of the con­ference's hottest performers scoring and rebounding-wise. The Bingos, who stand 5-0 overall and 4-0 with Ithaca in the loop, also boast 6-4 and 6-3 cage students.

Lindberg hopes his quick back-court can offset Central's timber. Duff Ripley and Dan Weddle are two Trojan swifties. They'll be joined by forwards Pat Riley and Dafoe, and pivot Greene. Dafoe has been a strong boarder thus far.

Stew Barber Retires BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - Of­

fensive tackle Stew Barber of the Buffalo Bills, a member of five Ail-American Football League teams, has retired.

Barber, 30, announced his re­tirement Saturday, nine years to the day after he joined the Bills as a rookie.

"It is now time for me to de­vote my full attention to private business," the former Penn State star said. He works for a rendering firm during the off-

I season. A back injury forced Barber

to break a string of 125 conse­cutive games by missing the last game of the" 1969 season.

He is a native of Bradford, Pa., and lives in nearby Alden.

Texas Winds Up No. 1 May find Repeating Tough

By JACK KEEVER

AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) - Texas^ wishbone will be broken in half next year.

The loss of quarterback James Street, the fourth down magi­cian, and halfback Ted Koy, a top pro prospect, will^make it especially tough for Royal's Longhorns to repeat as the na­tional champions of college foot­ball.

"You are always hopeful of a repeat," said Royal, "but the odds are so heavily against that kind of thing. It's a frustrating feeling when you know it's only one way to go. I don't want to sound like a defeatist, but you've got to be a realist."

Royal, coach at Texas since 1957, directed the school's first national champion in 1963 and missed out the next year when the Longhorns gambled on a two-point conversion and lost to Arkansas, 14-13, for Texas' only defeat.

This season Royal gambled— not once, not twice but three times—in the final do-or-die games against Arkansas and Notre Dame and it paid off each time, giving the Longhorns the national title.

The Associated Press ' final poll of sportswriters and sports-casters, after the Jan. 1 bowl games, made Texas the No. 1 team in the nation with 37 first place votes and a total of 910 points.

Penn State was No. 2 with seven first place votes and 822 points. Two voters split their top choice between Texas and Penn State, and two others selected Ohio State, No. 1 all year until upset by Michigan in its final game.

Southern Cal finished third; Ohio State was fourth; Notre Dame climbed from ninth to fifth after losing to Texas, 21-17, in the final 68 seconds in the Cotton Bowl; Missouri remained sixth despite its 10-3 loss to Penn State in the Orange Bowl; Arkansas fell from third to sev-' enth after Mississippi whipped the Razorbacks 27-22 in the Su­gar Bowl, Mississippi leaped from 13th to eighth; Michigan dropped from seventh to ninth after losing to Southern Cal 10-3 in the Rose Bowl; and Louisi­ana State, which did not play in a bowl, was shifted from eighth to No. 10.

The second 10, in order, were Nebraska, Houston, UCLA, Flor­ida, Tennessee, Colorado, West Virginia, Purdue, Stanford and Auburn.

Texas' backfield of Street, Koy,- Steve Worster and J im Bertelsen—operating out of Tex­as ' two-year-old wishbone-T of­fense—was considered the fin­est in the Southwest Confer­ence's 75-year history, ripping off 2,242 yards in 10 games out of a team total of 3,630 yards rushing, an SWC record.

There are those who believe that Texas would have been No. 1 last season too, if Street had started instead of Bill Bradley, a marvelous athlete who is now a punter-defensive back for the Philadelphia Eagles but was miscast as a quarterback in the intricate wishbone-T. The Long­horns tied Houston and lost to Texas Tech, and then Royal re­placed Bradley with Street, and the peppery 175-pounder direct­ed Texas to 20 straight victor­ies.

Koy called„Street a "mini-psychologist," a quarterback who talks as good a game in the huddle as he plays.

His replacement will be either Eddie Phillips, who averaged 6.4 yards a carry running this season as Street's understudy but seemed to lack his nimble footwork, or freshman Gary Keithley, a 6-2 strongman who can zing a football but also lacks Street's agility.

Texas will lose its 252-pound All-America tackle Bob McKay; linebacker Glen Halsell, who also made at least one All-America team; and the Camp­bell twins, Mike and Tom, who alwa>> served to be in the right pia.-,-£ on defense at the right time.

Safety Freddie Steinmark's career was ended when cancer forced the amputation of one leg at the hip.

Fabius Hands Cincy Initial Defeat, 5 8 5 6 "Clouting Western Division

teams before the holidays, the IAC Easterns met their own kind Saturday night for the first time and showed their strength. Fabius Central stamped the first loss on Cincinnatus' Lions, 58-56, on the Falcon floor.

Cincy is 4-1 in the loop, 5-1 overall. Larry Carr's Onondaga County crew rose to 3-2 in* its maiden conference season. Both have outsiders tomorrow, Cincy at South Otselic and Fabius hosting Tully.

The Lions, who also fell in the JV contest, 46-41, never gained total control although a fourth

rter binge nearly pulled it out rite four starters oenched by

fouls. "Reserves did a real fine job,"

Cincy's Tom Rausa said. Sub Terry Jolliff's fling from

the key-top erased a nine point deficit after three quarters and evened the score at 56 with 21-seconds left to play. Each five took a shot in the clock rundown.

Fabius' Steve Latocha latched onto a missed Lion fielder, fed Pete Doran at midcourt and Doran went in for the winning chippie as the gun sounded.

"We seemed to suffer a letdown when their big guys fouled out," Carr commented of Jim Button and Hank Diaz exit in the last quarter. Button, who made nine of his 19 points in the fourth frame, was disqualified midway into the finale.

Doug Miller left first with six-minutes to play followed by Button, Mike Preston and Diaz in that order.

Fabius lost but one player via fouls in a fine effort sparked by Larry Millar, whose 19 points matched his opposite center, Button. Miller, tall Latocha and Tom Strodel split Falcon rebounding chores.

The three Fabius insiders drew Rausa's applause for tight defensive work as well. He labeled Fabius ' guard as "tougher than Tioga."

"Their defense was par­ticularly good in the first half. We couldn't get the ball inside, " Rausa said. Cincy trailed at the first quarter, 12-9, but narrowed the margin to 24-22 by half.

The Falcons hiked the lead after the recess by successfully solving a Cincy press which had shaken past foes. "We were getting 3-on-ls and 2-on-ls in our forecourt," said Carr. The Lions abandoned the press about four-minutes later.

Fabius held a 40-31 lead-into the fourth quarter.

Turnovers plagued the Lions throughout. "They hurt," the Cincy mentor recalled. "A couple of 3-second violations and at least 10 offensive fouls were up­setting."

Cincinnatus shot better than 40 percent from the field with Diaz and John Malmquist supporting Button's team leading total. All five Lion starters hit the boards trying to counter the Falcon frontcourt. Fabius bit 36 percent from the field — "Our next to lowest average of the season," Carr said.

Cincy and Fabius are home for leaguers after tomorrow's out­side tilts. The Lions host Lansing on Friday while Fabius is home to Spencer-VanEtten on Satur­day. A return to Western Division opposition will probably be received with open arms by both Easterns. i

The box: Cincinnatus —56 B. F. T.

Miller Diaz Malmquist Preston Simpson Beckwith Button Jolliff Jordan

• ,,>

Fabius —58

Latocha Miller Doran Hizkey Strodel Virgil Livingston

2 4 8 4 3 11 5 0 10 1 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 0

9 1 19 2 0 4 0 0 0

23.10'56 B. F . T.

4 2 10 6 7 19 3 1 7 2 0 4 2 5 9 1 2 4 2 1 5

20 18 58

Cincinnatus 9 13 9 25 —56 Fabius 12 12 16 18 - 5 8

RENEW ACQUAINTANCES — St. Marys High's Pat Fiimey and Mt. Carmel of Auburn's Bob Balash (15) have bees butting beads often during scholastic cage careers. Finney tries advancing on the Carmel star Saturday nsghi

at McEvoy gym where the visitors took home a 43-41 win. Balash, a junior, sparked Carmel with 18 points. Ffcmey tallied 14 for the Saints along with 12 rebounds and five assists.

(Steve FJatt Photo)

TRANSPORTATION SUPERVISOR EXAMINATION

FEBRUARY 7, 1970 SALARY: $9500.00

At Present, one vacancy exists in the City of Cortland En­larged School District

LAST FILING DATE: January 7, 1970 HOW TO APPLY: Applications and

qualifications are available ' at the Civil Service Office, Court House, Cortland, New York.

CORTLAND COUNTY CIVH. SERVICE COMMISSION Untitled Document

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