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Tr* CtTTZEN-ADVERTISER. Auburn. N.Y. °o°o %o o California — No. 18 tOM MIS ono Moadoy. April I. Itot IS <&3° ,* Angeis Lack Power at Plate; Cool Temperatures, Rain Fail r . ... To Dampen Spirit of Anglers rou r nPosition s cMill rsUpen iE^jg^'&spj^ssxr*-™ »„ ji%t tmu/ u .1 . „ , ^ w . i w 11 J I! o u r- , -w rainy ride* tolled to deter thou- Tnere were predictions, how- 1 llmen u llmUe im t0 PAT vT^PP^MrJI^f , um * , * * i ^y challenged bv Bob Taylor Twn sands <* avtd anslen today as ever, that laat year's near-reo P£tM OK,.' 9allf, (AP) flve wins over the last tw0 sea' Egan and °™«nd° McFarlane. f^ trout-fishing season opened ord turnout lor opening dav. Hoosiers Top Swimmers - The California Angels, an sons. Newman was a mainstay nurelio Rodriguez, .308 at acrOM New y0rk State tor a six- *ftlch fell on a Saturday, would American League novelty when of the pitching staff In 1964-65, Seattle, could beat out .slick month stay not be matched today because they challenged for the pennant with 13-10 and 14-16 records. iieXting, P£ul Schaa,i at thJrd/ Fisherman were Dermitted to <* weekday job and echool only one year after being creat- The Angels are hoping that Chuck Hinton, obtained from ., ™,., , ,™ " obligations Goach Wants Entire Team to Try for Olympics ed by expansion, have settled one of them can join the start- Cleveland, was in the center- dlo their lines in at li:01 a.m. The state Conservation De- HANOVER. N II. (AP) — In• down to being Just, a good team ing rotation of George Brunet, field race with Jay Johnstone, « virtually all spots altJhoujm payment promised a good diana coach L>oc Counsilman trying to Improve. 11-19 last year. Ricky Clark. 12- 209. and Roger Reuoz, .250. rainbow streams in the Finger ^^^ to hook brook brown. knows his newly crowned NCAA The Angels, now eight years 11 and Jim McGlothlin, 12-8. Jimmie Hall, .249. may be LakM "g» ^JJ JftfiS rainbow and lake troug. splakswimmine g champlcns can't old. were fifth last year. 7'* Best of the young pitching platooned in right with Bubba spawning funs were on-llmlts and landlocked salmon, make the Olympics en masse, games back, and helped knock candidates are Ken Tatum, 12-6 Morton, .313 in 63 games last umu 3 *-m- however. but he wants tlu-m ail to try. Minnesota and Detroit out of the at San Jose, Calif., and Marty year. At Catherine Creek, a famed The prospect for large rain- "I'm nut wmnt.' to single out IT'S A CHARGE CARD! race. Pattin, 12-11 at Seattle. Veteran Woodie Held, also rainbow area near Montour bows in the Finger Lakes area Olympic pro.»pi cts," Counsil• The Angels are looking for Jack Hamilton. 2-0 for the having a fine spring, lends Falls in the southern Finger was enhanced because late man said aftpr his char^d-up regulars at four positions and New York Mets and 9-6 for the pinch -hi 11 i n g and infield Lakes, observers predicted fish- snowstorms and low water de- MfMisiors ended loni; years of had not hit a home run in 18 ex- Angels, and Minnie Rojas, 12-9, strength. ermen would line the banks at javed the upstream spawning frustration bv making a runa• sibitlon games. head the bullpen corps. - toe rate of 5.000 a mile. Many migration of the species in Sen- way of the 1968 NCAA meet. t MARINE In addition,, pitcher Sammy The Angels began the spring « . M of the anglers were from other eca and Canandaigua Lakes bv - T Etttsy obtained from Ctnctnnatlr with only four certain regulars- AllKlirn Ta>J!m -**atM, Jadudin*. aaaw Penn- three-weeks. "TTe wanT"everv bov fo~ tralrT MIDLAN KTBUM was unpredictable. —Don Mincher, .273 with 25 ho Occasional showers and tem-for the trials as Ion? as he has Ellis, a 22-game winner In men—Don. Mincheat firstr ; .27Bobb3 wity h Knoop25 ho,- MMWHIII I JGCIIII sylvaniaOther . favorite spots through- peratureOccasionas thal t ranged from the the slightest givost of a chance MtyUt* 1965, was hit hard as the exhibi- .245, at second; Jim Fregosi, out the state were expected to 40s in the western section to the —and we think everyone,on the ^_tion season progressed. , .290, -at ahort; and Rick Rei- Still in Lead draw large crowds, including low 60s in the Hudson Valley team has that." added the vet• 12 345678 While Ellis was having his chardt, .265 with 17 homers, in WATERTOWN, N.Y. (AP) Naples Creek, also In the Finger greeted the fishermen. eran mentor who coached'the troubles, the Angels were en- left New leaders have emereed in ^"esLakes, , Wiscowiscoy t^ree*Creek. in Westerwestern Witwiinh regionarcKivnali e»exceptionsc , the U.S: Olympic team to its smash• JACK CANTWELL New Yo M 1 SeaS n eXtend couraged by the" improvement Catchers Bob Rodgers, .219, the six Class A and B divisions * £?*„*« ™ fi t^V ^ ° "^ ing success in 1964. of Fred Newman, whose arm and Tom Satriano, .224, were 0f the month • old New York areas of Southeastern New to Sept. 30. One Hoosier ace whose \ „ >" -' * " ^ _ State Women's Bowling ChamJham-• chances seem more corporeal pionship Tournament. than spectral has to be Charlie Barbara Hoffman and Hickcox. the meet's individual Need tax-payment money? Peckham of Schenectady scoreoarodi Jaclclin First Englishman star with three record-breaking scored w victories. The 21-year-old junior BOWLING 107-point lead6 overethe°ir near- | O YY If! On I TO GOllCr lOUT from Phoenix, Ariz., lowered CHARGE CASH UP TO $500 est rivals in Class A doubles. American standards with a In Class A team competition, ~=~ - By F. T. MacFEELY — r 1:52.5 clocking in the 200-yard 0 Ta Buff al individual medley and a ;52.1 in -YHS° °* t °' PMted a JACKSONVILLE Fla. (AP) uary. Gardner Dickinson. Chi defending his 100-yard backst• 2,667 to wrest the lead from _ Not g^ce Ted Ray took the Chi Rodriguez and DeWitt Wea- Lindauer s, also of Buffalo,, Open in 1920 had an En«- -<r Jr. Each collecttd $6,520 roke crown, then erased hie own U-S> NCAA and meet marks with a Falcon 595- Fred Dziuba 571; Fred which had rolled a 2,557 . Ush'gofier won a major Ameri- Palmer was at 276 and Jack 1:54.6 effort to retain the 200- Juniors John Curtin. 46d; FeUav^565 Evejyn Crowley orScotia- took can tournament. Nicklaus, never a contender yard backstroke title. Dick Sierzenga, 434; Pete -,„ ^„ ^ , ^__ .,__, over first place in Class A sin- Then alone came Tony Jack- ^£5^!* ^ ^'^^ went' Climate Control — Bruce Mln- g\ ith a 604. The feats of Hickcox and his CyCctfocysez es W ~ - finished 23rd at 280. teammates dominated over-all SPRED ^alc^' - Fr^c Fro^. ^i^^^^ST^U IH^cS competition in the three-day ^638-257; Andy Ca*teri»3r^a«h ^ vetas-the Wnd that wins and meet at Dartmouth college, but Cisek, 609. Chayka, 575. Leaders In all four dlvislonT^1"8 "** becoines Kreat UCLA's Mike Burton turned in Moose Women - Fran Lans- Commercial - Jud Binrf»m. j£ §p suidav niJht- At *• *>*e of &> Jac"in * a the biggest single highligiht with SATIN bury. 566; Mary Kreydatus, 438; 571; Sonny Simmons. 546; Joe aa«A S ftmr'« Ruf. winnex with every promise of ^382 SmSfi. ~a~ historic smashing of the 16- minute barrier in the 1,650-yard Marge Langtry, 429 Damick, 532. falo 2667~DouWeS S?Jl Peck *>**** «» ranks of the great- By KEARNEY EGERTON aI wWc -freestyle. Moose Men- Sam Daratt, 587; Protestant - Jud Bln«ham, n °J ^"i Barbara Hoffman h he thinks of as Arnold PAINT SALE . JSteve Walowaky, 575; Mdtoe 568; Don Houghton. 558; Dick S£ne3adv ll9§a SinS EvS' Palmar, Jack Nicklaus. Gary The 5-foot-9 ' "Mtehty Mite" Lang, 548. Clapp, 540. hSrKS??' iottk fiSI '. Ev€ Player and Ben Hogan,-but with churned to a 15:59.4 clocking on Teenage - Mike Homyn. 562; Kings & Queens - Men: Erv ^S^R^OST' Fiiri-n*'. no idea of patterning himself Saturday's closing night. The David EJkovitch. 530; Pefer Pappert, 57?; Bill Shutter, 575; _2"f S99. "ni«wS & after any one of them. feat, comparable to the sub four Bcwnmersbaoh, M0; Dentoe Kac- Harold Evans, 561. Women: Car- Ki^'andMidge McDade^S He said he was nervous, But minute mile in track, erased has 00 hurak, 409; Nancy Fronczek. dyn Marinelld, 579 - 223; Oat Si i2»- StaSes SaemSrv h« *»ver showed it as he faced own record of 16:08 set a year OFF ^P, ... w^>,.«f m„ T»„r S11^"-. 511; Mary Wesokwaky, BSflZZZL sSSa 593 *»"« Palm€r in the final round ago. • , The big story of the meet^ 2 though, had-te-be^the victory of ier the long-thwarted Hoosiers. who "ss 8!^ &-. ^y^. irtbA'iif. §& J£ fc^ga a^g ;e^^^&•? saws had won just about every other THE TOOL. 584; B«nJe KwHec, 584; Pe»r wesolovralty. 418; Ctoudta Ba«h- «g. ^"Xn^js g ' ZTJandtte $20,000 tint mow. honor in Counsilman's 10 years WHILE COLORS *rft. StJffiSiS'.B: U' m: K**L<?'m°- m BS-0"83h2£. Benvenuto , It M. *•«««». eolier at the helm only to miss out on W9WDERS. THE. ^m^w we™11— StarJite Brothers Watertown 2136- Dou- from England had ever won on the top prize. For three years WISE MAM ASMS ~t*ST Betty Weak^Sie.