big-game hunting season in state comes to endfultonhistory.com/newspapers 23/rome ny daily... ·...

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PAGE TWENTY-EIGHT DAILY SENTINEL, ROME, N. Y., THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 12, 1963 WRUN AM—1150 WRUN FM—104.3 Fewer Deer and Bear Bagged Big-Game Hunting Season In State Comes to End ALBANY, NY. (AP) - The big-game hunting season in New \'ork State is over, and statistics indicate that fewer deer, hear and hunters were killed during this year's season than in 1982. An Associated Press tally showed that nine hunters lost their lives while after big or small game Two others died of heart attacks. Last year's toll »a' 15 and 4," The big game season ended Wednesday. A spokesman for the State Desperation Pass Gives Brown Prize NEW YORK (AP)-The wind flushed Ed Brown's face as he stood on his own goal line in punt formation. "We had to pass. There was no way we could punt. We had to get out of that hole." said Pittsburgh Coach Buddv Parker. "Everyone knew what they were going to do. They had to run .or .throw." said .Dallas Coach Tom Landry. Brown took the snap from cen- ter He didn't punt. He passed. Red Mack latched onto the pass for a 42-yard gain, and the Steelers kept rolling until Ther- on Sapp bolted 24 »ards for the touchdown that gave" Pittsburgh a 24-19 victory and moved them into this Sunday's winner-take- all battle with the Giants for the Eastern Conference title. For Brown's ability to suc- cessfully complete the gamble the first time he had attempted to pass from punt formation this season, the 10-year-veteran was named today National Football league Player of the Week by The Associated Press. The Steelers' final drive was an amazing sequence, thrusting Brown. Mack and Sapp into the spotlight. Trailing 19-17, the Steelers started from the 20. but on fourth down the ball was four yards closer to the Pittsburgh goal, with about 3Vi minutes re- maining. Brown's call was a pass to Mack. Other standout performances were turned in by Baltimore quarterback Johnny Unitas, St. Louis signal-caller Charlie John- son. Willie Galimore of the Chi- cago Bears, Detroit quarterback Earl Morrall and New York de- fensive back Dick Lynch. Conservation Department said season—Nov. 18-Dec. 3—was un-' final figures en deer and bear affected by the temporary clos-j taken were not yet available He ing last October. The southern I said, however, that the total /one includes the Catskills and probably would be below previ- the central and western coun- ous years. ties. The big-game season in the Sample Figures northern zone which includes A sampling of figures the Adirondacks Originally gathered from the Conservation was scheduled to end Dee. 3, Department's big-game check-in but the season was extended to stations showed: make up for eight days lost —The Lake George station in when the woods were closed be- Warren County had 351 deer and cause of forest fire hazards. 13 bear checked in during four I The southern zone big-game weekends of operation this sea- son compared with 325 deer and 1 3 Ranking Hoop Teams Outclassed 16 bear recorded on three week ends during the 1962 season. The Northville station in Fulton County had 240 deer and; 13 bear checked in during four; weekends of operation this sea-1 son compared with 257 deer and! 15 bear recorded in three week-! T , „, . ... , , , ends last season. It was a Black Wednesday for ; _ Thc C( , n)ra , Rrid s(ation < the Duke Blue Devils, the An- in Schoharie C ountv had 205 zona State Sun Dev.ls and the d e e r ( . hockpd in dunn , he Oh.o State Buckeyes, three of, T day ;in(] twf) w | ekend * of| the top-ranked teams in college oporatinn in 19 r )3 compared with basketball. They tumbled ini de- dp( , r rm)rdod during the feat before the vanderbilt Com-' • - - modores, the Bradley Braves and the Davidson Wildcats. same period last season. The Conservation Department Undergoes Surgery CALDWELL, Idaho (AP) - American League home run king Harmon Killebrew of the Minnesota Twins is scheduled for surgery today aimed at cor- recting a knee ailment that slowed him up during the first month of the 1963 season. « u.c uavwwn wnucais. [spokesman attributed the ap- Only the victory of the Michi-; parcnt drop i n l h e number of gan Wolverines over Butler pre-kjg game taken to a disruption vented a complete rout of theLf hunters' plans by the closing top-ranked clubs scheduled to o f t h e f orcs t s , a sharp decrease play on a busy midweek nation-| m the number of hunters in the al program. The seventh-ranked l woods ,he weekend of President Wolverines upped their record Kennedy's assassination and un- to 4-0 with a 80-70 victory. I usually "warm fall weather that Vandy similarly made its rec-1 tended to slow hunters down, ord 4-0 with a 97-92 triumph i Bow and arrow hunters in the over third-ranked Duke. So did northern zone had their special. Bradley by whipping the fourth-;two-week archery season inter- ranked Sun Devils 92-85. David- Irupfed after only three days son also kept its slate clean at afield when the forests were 4-0 with a whopping 95-73 tri- closed due to the fire hazard, umph that shattered a 50-game By order of the Conservation home court streak for eighth- Department, those hunters were ranked Ohio State. |given a post - season hunting Blow 16-Point Lead | period from Dec. 12 to Dec. 22. Vanderbilt, rated a title threat in the Southeastern Con- ference, blew a 16-point lead at Nashville when Duke rallied to tie the regulation game at R5-S5 on Jeff Mullins' jump shot with four seconds left. But John Ed Miller broke loose for 10 points, 1V 111C JUIUor m gn ocnooi won ( in the overtime to sew it up for all eight events as it downed the Commodores after the score Herkimer 62 to 6 in a swimming |was knotted at 89-89. (meet there yesterday. Arizona State also lost on the Rome also won all second road at Peoria, blowing a 44-35 place competition. Jhalftime lead as Bradley got; The team is coached by Paul hot in the second half. Gigliotti, who also handles the It remained for Davidson, i Rome jayvees swimmers, heralded as the Southern Con- "" ferenee champions to be, to pro- vide the night's biggest surprise with its one-sided triumph over Ohio State. The Wildcats hit a sizzling 59 per cent of their shots and when their star, fi- foot-9 Fred Hetzel went out on fouls with only 16 points, Dick |(ru , Snyder and Terry Holland took 120.88 up the slack. Snyder finished 25 points and Holland 22 to offset the 26 tallied by Gary Bradds for the Buckeyes. It was the first setback at St. John Arena in Columbus for Ohio State since Purdue won on March 7, 1959. MAN OF THE YEAR IN SPORTS — Dr. Kiyo Tashiro, still playing football at the ape of 47, has been selected by The Sentinel sports de- partment as Rome's Man of the Year in Sports for 1963. Junior High Sweeps Meet Rome Junior High School won The summary: u^Ui^ttfi^^^^^^iS GUARANTEED For m long as you own your car. If aver a replacement is needed, yen pay only a service charge! 304 N. James St. Arnett Sidelined For Game Sunday LOS ANGELES (AP)-Injured, Time tWiI halfback Jon Arnett probably JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL 200 yard medley relay, won by Rome (Dave Thomas, Bob Nuccio, Dave Wyher, Gary Sauer). 50 yard freestyle, won by Tim Taylor (R); Second Dennis Siddall (R); Third Marosak (H). Time 0:28.4. Fancy diving, won by Georoe Frost (R); Second Dan Morgan (R): Third Marosak (H). Points 25 yard buterfly, won by Eric Skalwold (R); Second Jon Getbe- head (R); Third Nusbaum (H). Time 0:16.8. 100 yard freestyle, won by Dick Feeney (R); Second Gary Jones (R): Third Oldfield (H). Time 1:06,1. 50 yard backstroke, won by Dan Furia (R); Second Hank Adolfl (R); Third Venera (H). Time 0:40.0. 50 yard breaststroke, won by Arthur Westcott R); Second Tim Dunn (R): Third Shaffer (H). Time 0:35,7. 200 yard freestyle relay, won by Rome (Brad Birnie. Dan Throop, Steve Grtbehead, John Oliveros. •lui.uQMi uiiu mucti jjiuuauiyi won't play for the Los Angeles Hat Trick Rams Sunday when they wind up their season at Baltimore. MADISON, Wis. (AP) The Arnett suffered a pulled ham- U.S. Olympic hockey team, led string muscle last Saturday by the three-goal hat trick of against Green Bay, He had Dan Dilworth, continued its been disabled earlier in the sea-ituneup campaign by whipping son by knee injuries. (the Madison All - Stars 9-2 $ 1957Z5 5 YEAR 50,000 MILE WARRANTY Mtfluftcturtr't Suu*tt*d RtUil Pnc* I V 1 I lela W l ^ i l V I V r ^ l ^ I •''' D100 Utiline Pickup. Optional equipment, State and local taxes, if any, extra. •THE DEPENOABLES' 5 YEAR, 50.000 MILE WARRANTY - Chrysler Corporation warrants, for 5 ftsrs or 50,000 milts, wtiichever comes first, against dtfocts In materiel! and work- manship and will replace or rtpair at • Chrysler Motors Corporation Authoriiad Dealar't p!»e« of business, th« enfine Mot*, head and internal parts, intake manifold, water pump, transmission case end internal perts (excluding manual clutch), torque conver- tor, driirt shaft, universal |oints. rear aile snd differential,-and rear wheel bearings of its 1964 automobiles, provided the owner has the engine oil changed every 3 montha or 4 000 miles, whichever comes first, the oil filter replaced every second oil change and the carburetor air filter cleaned every 6 months and replaced every 2 years,* and every 6 months furnishes to such dealer evidence of performance of the required service, and requests dealer to certify (1) receipt ef such evidence and (2) cars then current mileage. A. J. RYAN MOTORS, INC. 601 W. Dominick St., Rome A. F. Hyan and Sons A. F. Ryan Motors, Inc. 12? Cede* St. ONEIDA, NEW YORK 102-104 E. Senexa St. MANLIUS, NEW YORK B O Y S SELL TOUGH TRUCKS 3>JiarL dfajyatL HlS FATHER. AN INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN scientist who died last June at.the age of 81. played handball daily tilt he was in his 60s, so it is small wonder that at 47, Dr. Kiyo Tashiro has no intention of abandoning the stren- eous life that to him means, despite his age, active participa- tion as a competitor in football, basketball, Softball and swimming. The Rome physician-surgeon, who this year has been ac- corded a six-page picture layout in Sports Illustrated and who completely fooled Tom Poston, Barry Nelson, Kitty Carlisle and Peggy Cass when he appeared recently on the television show "To Tell the Truth", wins designation here as Rome's Man of the Year in Sports for 1963. Born in Chicago on Nov. 8, 1916 of Japanese ancestry, Dr. Tashiro came to Rome in I960 where he became a playing coach for the San Carlo softball team of the Central New York League and where he also played in the City Senior Basketball League at the YMCA. He is probably best known here sportswise, as a football player with the Mohawk Valley Falcons of the Atlantic Coast League. While he was practicing medicine in Dolgeville be- fore coming to Rome, Dr. Tashiro organized the Dolgevil'e Ramblers, a forerunner to the Frankfort Falcons, now the Mohawk Valley Falcons. I HE DOCTOR HAS BEEN ACTIVE IN FOOTBALL since his school days in Cincinnati, where his father Shiro Tashiro was a professor of bio-chemistry. Earlier the senior Tashiro had been an instructor in physio chemistry at the University of Chicago. He had come from his native Japan, where he was a black belt champion at judo, at the age of 17 and was a graduate of the University of Chicago where he was the Big 10 Conference flyweight wrestling champion at 112 pounds. Kiyo played football and baseball, was on the swimming team and ran on the track team at Hughes School in Cin- cinnati where he was a member of the graduating class of 1934. At Harvard, where he took his pre-med, Tashiro played three years of varsity football and a season of freshman foot- ball. One of his freshman teammates was the late president's older brother, Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., who was killed in World War n. Tashiro remembers his classmate as a splendid end around 5*11 and 185 pounds "and a completely nice fellow." l j PORTS ILLUSTRATED ERRED WHEN IT REPORTED Dr. Tashiro did not play football at Harvard. He didn't wrestle in college because he was teaching judo at the time but he had two years of varsity football under Coach Eddie Casey in 1935 and 1936 and played a full 60 minutes as a single wing back when Dick Harlow took charge of the Crimson in Tashiro's senior year. Dr. Tashiro obtained his medical degree from the Univer- sity of Cincinnati Medical School in 1942 and interned at Jew- sh Hospital there. From 1943 through 1945 he served in the Army at Hawaii and still is in the active reserve as a major and chief of surgical service for the 816 Station Hospital, formerly Rhoades Hospital in Utica, Tt was while in service thaf he was drafted by the National Football League Boston Redskins, later the Washington Redskins, owned by George Preston Marshall. Separated from the service Dr. Tashiro took up resident training in St. Thomas Hospital at Akron, Ohio and played football with the Akron Bears of the-then minor American Football League. Akron was a farm team for the, Chicago Bears. Coming east to Brooklyn for more advanced surgical training at Kings County Hospital in 1947, he played semi-pro football with the Brooklyn Bushwicks. The doctor took a hiatus from football while training in chest surgery at Biggs Hospital in Ithaca but managed to keep up his sports activity by playing softball. Tn 1953 he was back in the grid sport at Ironwood, Mich., where he had set up a clinic and where he helned coach the hieh school team while playing semi-pro ball with the Duluth Eskimos. It was here in 1954 and 1955 that he also managed the Norrie Amateur Softball Cub which won the North Ameri- can championship. At I/ickporf in 1956 he played football with the Buffalo Bills, then a semi-pro club and softball with the Lockport Essos, He is married to the former Karin Menge of Dolgeville and lives at .106 N. Madison St. He has four children, an 18- year-old son. Joseph, who attends Columbia: 17-year-old Cathy. 12-year-old Stephanie and 10-year-old Charles, a'l in Dolgeville. A HUSKY ISO-POUNDER STANDING 5*10, *«* ""^HIRO weighs the same as he did in college 30 years agi,. As a keen student of all sports, he has a word of caution for operators of small fry sports teams. "Don't let it get out of pattern by putting loo much pres- sure on it," he advises. For himself and his unusual sports career, he says he's not trying to prove a thing. He simply enjoys playing sports and he gets fun out of them. A philosophy that is a distinguishing mark of Rome's 1963 man of the year in sports. Grid Pros Bid for Roger Navy Ace Receives Queries NEW YORK (AP)-Now hear this from Navy's Roger Stau- bach: "I have a lot to learn about passing. I figure I'll learn a lot more about football in the next year and a half. I'm going to work hard next season. I hope we can improve on this sea- son's record." That comforting news .for Navy's opponents came from the All-America quarterback [Wednesday night when he ac- cepted the Heisman Trophy award as the top.football player in the country. Staubach led Navy to a 9-1 record, a No. 2 national rank- ing and a spot in the Cotton Bowl against top-ranked Texas. Jolly Roger was asked how he figures he has "a lot to learn about passing." "Lots of times I wait for my receiver to get in the open be- fore I throw," he said. "That's wrong. The pros throw to where the receiver is supposed to be." Did that mean Staubach was interested in a pro career? "I have received question- aires from professional football teams but I haven't talked to anyone because I still have a year and a half at the academy and then four years of service." Among the other things, Stau- bach discussed was the best team he played against this season, and the support he re- ceived from the entire Navy team. Lauds Lynch •> "I can't say enough about the support they gave me. Tom Lynch would do anything for me on the field or off and I feel the same way about him. If I hadn't been getting that second block I'd be scrambled eggs." Lynch, the Navy captain, and Coach Wayne Hardin accom- panied Staubach to the Heis- man awards dinner. They let Staubach monopolize the talk- ing but Hardin had this to say: "I think we,have the finest four backfield men ever put to- gether although I'll admit I nev- er saw the Four Horsemen in action. Staubach is a stick of dynamite. Johnny Sai runs the 100 in 9.7 and can break up any game. Pat Donnelly is the finest fullback the Navy ever had. Skip Orr is our leading pass re- ceiver. "But," he -emphasized, "I can't _say _too much about Roger." Neither could his father, Rob- ert Staubach. "We only had one child," he said, "but the good Lord gave us a good one." Hits on 66 Per Cent of Shots Cornell Basketball Team Sets Scoring Record With 97 Points By The Associated Press Cornell hit an amazing 66 per- cent from the floor Wednesday 'night and established a school j scoring record in its 97-83 bas- ketball victory over Canisius. Elsewhere on the Upstate col- lege basketball scene, St. Bona- venture buried Steubenville (Ohio), 113-86; Union tripped Hamilton, 75-60; Oneonta State defeated Kings, 73-64; Rochester trounced Clarkson, 86-52; Col- gate edged St. Lawrence, 90-82; Hartford topped Siena, 51-36; and LeMoyne beat Hobart, 75- 57. Cornell's previous high score in a basketball game was 93, recorded against Syracuse last year. Wednesday night the Big Red hit on 36 of 55 field-goal at- tempts. Frank Swiatek of Canisius led College Basketball ot By The Associated Press EAST Louisville 70, LaSalle 60 Princeton 69, Lafayette 64—2 Pennsylvania 94, Swarthmorc 45 Fordham 69, Yale 64 Cornell 97, Canisius 83 Harvard 64, Northeastern 61 Holy Cross 91, St. Anselm's 75 St. Bonaventure 113, Steuben- ville 86 Seton Hall 98, Baltimore Loyo- la 81 Temple 66, Lehigh 38 Navy 73, Gettysburg 52 Army 70, Albright 44 Colgate 90, St. Lawrence 82 RPI Beats Yale Sextet NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)- Undefeated Rensselaer Poly- technic racked up its third vic- tory of the young hockey season Wednesday night, nipping Yale in the third period, 2-1. Both RPI tallies came in the final period. The Bulldogs now have one victory and three de- feats. Center Bob Brinkworth scored RPI's first goal and assisted on the winning §cojre, shoved in by Al Jones. Kent Nelson scored an unas- sisted goal for Yale in the first period. Goalie Mike Hanson made 44 saves for the Bulldogs. Bill Sack blocked 30 shots for the winning Engineers. Punt Leader From SMU Got 44 Yards NEW YORK (AP) — It's get- ting to be a habit at Southern Methodist and Arkansas coming up with the national punting and punt-return champions. Final season statistics by the NCAA .Service -Bureau today showed that Danny Thomas of SMU won the major college punting championship with an average of 44 yards for 48 kicks. He is the third SMU player to win the kicking title. Ken Hatfield of Arkansas, a junior like Thomas, took the punt-return title with 350 yards for an average of 16.7 on 21 re- turns. He is the third Razorback to lead the nation in this cate- gory in the last four years. Gary Wood of Cornell led in kickoff returns with average of 32.5 on 19 returns. Dick Kern of William.and Mary took the pass interception crown with eight grabs. SMU led in team punting with a 41.4 average, Army in team punt returns with 18.1 and Mem- phis State in team kickoff re- turns with 27.7. Packers Get Bowman MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Uni- versity of Wisconsin co-captain and center Ken Bowman said he had signed a contract Wednes- day with the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League Boston U. 86, Amer. Int. 61 Delaware 74, Franklin & Marshall 67 Maine 88, Bates 76 Union 75, Hamilton 60 Oneonta State 73, Kings 64 Rochester 86, Clarkson 52 Hartford 51, Siena 36 LeMoyne 75, Hobart 57 SOUTH Vanderbilt 97, Duke 92—ot Florida 108, Tampa 75 Tennessee 55, Sewanee 31 MIDWEST Davidson 95, Ohio State 73 Bradley 92, Arizona State 85 Michigan 80, Butler 70 Tulsa 127, Christian Bros. 81 SOUTHWEST Rice 102, Florida State 81 FAR WEST Utah 98, Texas A&M 71 Air Force 85, South Dakota 53 all scorers with 28 points. Ray Ratkowski paced Cornell's well- spread scoring with 17 tallies. The game was played at Ith- aca. St. Bonaventure parleyed a deadly fast - break and Fred Crawford's 33 points into a de- cisive victory over visiting Steubenville. The win was the third without a defeat for the Bonnies. Crawford scored 23 of his points in the second half. At Hamilton, Union expanded a 31-28 halftime lead and evened its season's record at two wins and two losses. The game was the first of the season for Ham- ilton. Don Sweeney of Hamilton led ali scorers with 25 points. Toby Lustig threw in 24 for the win- ners. Ron Brown paced Rochester to its second victory of the sea- son without a loss, scoring 24 points against visiting Clarkson. The loss was Clarkson's first in four outings. At Canton, Bob TeCarr poured in 22 points to lead the Red Raiders of Colgate over St. Lawrence. Al Jonsen of the Larries paced all scorers with 27 points. The game evened the records of both teams at two victories and two defeats. CONVERTABLE TOP BACK W I N D O W S * ^ All Packed In a Box For Under the Christmas Tree INSTALLED AFTER CHRISTMAS MANUFACTURERS OF AUTO SEAT COVERS ROME AUTO SEAT COVERS 716 Erie Blvd. W. Dial FF 7-5750 Phils Best At Fielding CINCINNATI (AP)-The Phil- adelphia Phillies, with outfield- er Don Demeter tying a ma- jor league record, captured in- dividual fielding honors in the National League last season, the final averages revealed today. Demeter handled 172 outfield chances perfectly in 119 games. Second baseman Tony Taylor and pitcher Chris Short of Phil- adelphia also led at their re- spective positions. Taylor fin- ished with a .986 mark while Short accepted 61 chances, the most among the 37 pitchers who fielded 1.000. Milwaukee led the league in club fielding for the first straight time. The Braves field- ed a collective .980 in 1963. Ski Conditions ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)-Skiing conditions in New York State as [reported Wednesday to the State Commerce Department: Central Region- Good: Song Mountain (Tullv) Fair to good: Greek Peak (Cortland) Northern Region- Fair to good: Snow Ridge ; (Turin) Southern Region- Good to excellent: Grossinger Western Region- Good: Holiday Valley (Elli- IcottvUle) Stretch out and relax when you budget your Fuel Chief payments with our easy plan. It lets you stretch your payments over the year, No big fuel bill in cold weather. No interest or carrying charges. Give us a call, won't you? We are always at your service. ADOLFI'S OIL CO 326 Henry St. Phone FF 6-7070 FUEL CHIEF HEATING OIL Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Page 1: Big-Game Hunting Season In State Comes to Endfultonhistory.com/Newspapers 23/Rome NY Daily... · and the Davidson Wildcats. same period last season. The Conservation Department Undergoes

PAGE TWENTY-EIGHT DAILY SENTINEL, ROME, N. Y., THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 12, 1963 WRUN AM—1150 • WRUN FM—104.3

Fewer Deer and Bear Bagged

Big-Game Hunting Season In State Comes to End ALBANY, NY. (AP) - The

big-game hunting season in New \'ork State is over, and statistics indicate that fewer deer, hear and hunters were killed during this year's season than in 1982.

An Associated Press tally showed that nine hunters lost their lives while after big or small game Two others died of heart attacks. Last year's toll »a' 15 and 4,"

The big game season ended Wednesday.

A spokesman for the State

Desperation Pass Gives Brown Prize

NEW YORK (AP)-The wind flushed Ed Brown's face as he stood on his own goal line in punt formation.

"We had to pass. There was no way we could punt. We had to get out of that hole." said Pittsburgh Coach Buddv Parker.

"Everyone knew what they were going to do. They had to run .or .throw." said .Dallas Coach Tom Landry.

Brown took the snap from cen­ter He didn't punt. He passed.

Red Mack latched onto the pass for a 42-yard gain, and the Steelers kept rolling until Ther-on Sapp bolted 24 »ards for the touchdown that gave" Pittsburgh a 24-19 victory and moved them into this Sunday's winner-take-all battle with the Giants for the Eastern Conference title.

For Brown's ability to suc­cessfully complete the gamble the first time he had attempted to pass from punt formation this season, the 10-year-veteran was named today National Football league Player of the Week by The Associated Press.

The Steelers' final drive was an amazing sequence, thrusting Brown. Mack and Sapp into the spotlight. Trailing 19-17, the Steelers started from the 20. but on fourth down the ball was four yards closer to the Pittsburgh goal, with about 3Vi minutes re­maining.

Brown's call was a pass to Mack.

Other standout performances were turned in by Baltimore quarterback Johnny Unitas, St. Louis signal-caller Charlie John­son. Willie Galimore of the Chi­cago Bears, Detroit quarterback Earl Morrall and New York de­fensive back Dick Lynch.

Conservation Department said season—Nov. 18-Dec. 3—was un-' final figures en deer and bear affected by the temporary clos-j taken were not yet available He ing last October. The southern I said, however, that the total /one includes the Catskills and probably would be below previ- the central and western coun-ous years. ties.

The big-game season in the Sample Figures northern zone — which includes A sampling of figures the Adirondacks — Originally gathered from the Conservation was scheduled to end Dee. 3, Department's big-game check-in but the season was extended to stations showed: make up for eight days lost —The Lake George station in when the woods were closed be- Warren County had 351 deer and cause of forest fire hazards. 13 bear checked in during four I

The southern zone big-game weekends of operation this sea­son compared with 325 deer and1

3 Ranking Hoop Teams Outclassed

16 bear recorded on three week ends during the 1962 season.

— The Northville station in Fulton County had 240 deer and; 13 bear checked in during four; weekends of operation this sea-1 son compared with 257 deer and! 15 bear recorded in three week-!

T, „ , . ... , , , ends last season. It was a Black Wednesday for; _ T h c C ( , n ) r a , R r i d s ( a t i o n<

the Duke Blue Devils, the An- in S c h o h a r i e Countv had 205 zona State Sun Dev.ls and the d e e r ( . h o c k p d i n d u n n , h e Oh.o State Buckeyes, three of, T d a y ; in( ] twf ) w | e k e n d * o f | the top-ranked teams in college o p o r a t i n n i n 19r)3 compared with basketball. They tumbled ini de- L £ d p ( , r r m ) r d o d d u r i n g t h e feat before the vanderbilt Com-' • - -modores, the Bradley Braves and the Davidson Wildcats.

same period last season. The Conservation Department

Undergoes Surgery CALDWELL, Idaho (AP) -

American League home run king Harmon Killebrew of the Minnesota Twins is scheduled for surgery today aimed at cor­recting a knee ailment that slowed him up during the first month of the 1963 season.

« u.c uavwwn wnucais. [spokesman attributed the ap-Only the victory of the Michi- ;p a r c n t d r o p i n l h e number of

gan Wolverines over Butler pre-kjg game taken to a disruption vented a complete rout of theLf hunters' plans by the closing top-ranked clubs scheduled to of t h e forcsts, a sharp decrease play on a busy midweek nation-|m the number of hunters in the al program. The seventh-ranked l

w o o d s ,he weekend of President Wolverines upped their record Kennedy's assassination and un­to 4-0 with a 80-70 victory. I usually "warm fall weather that

Vandy similarly made its rec-1 tended to slow hunters down, ord 4-0 with a 97-92 triumph i Bow and arrow hunters in the over third-ranked Duke. So did northern zone had their special. Bradley by whipping the fourth-;two-week archery season inter-ranked Sun Devils 92-85. David- Irupfed after only three days son also kept its slate clean at afield when the forests were 4-0 with a whopping 95-73 tri- closed due to the fire hazard, umph that shattered a 50-game By order of the Conservation home court streak for eighth- Department, those hunters were ranked Ohio State. |given a post - season hunting

Blow 16-Point Lead | period from Dec. 12 to Dec. 22. Vanderbilt, rated a title

threat in the Southeastern Con­ference, blew a 16-point lead at Nashville when Duke rallied to tie the regulation game at R5-S5 on Jeff Mullins' jump shot with four seconds left. But John Ed Miller broke loose for 10 points, 1V„111C J U I U o r m g n ocnooi won

(in the overtime to sew it up for all eight events as it downed the Commodores after the score Herkimer 62 to 6 in a swimming

|was knotted at 89-89. (meet there yesterday. Arizona State also lost on the Rome also won all second

road at Peoria, blowing a 44-35 place competition. Jhalftime lead as Bradley got; The team is coached by Paul hot in the second half. Gigliotti, who also handles the

It remained for Davidson, i Rome jayvees swimmers, heralded as the Southern Con- "" ferenee champions to be, to pro­vide the night's biggest surprise with its one-sided triumph over Ohio State. The Wildcats hit a sizzling 59 per cent of their shots and when their star, fi-foot-9 Fred Hetzel went out on fouls with only 16 points, D ick | ( r u , Snyder and Terry Holland took 120.88 up the slack. Snyder finished 25 points and Holland 22 to offset the 26 tallied by Gary Bradds for the Buckeyes. It was the first setback at St. John Arena in Columbus for Ohio State since Purdue won on March 7, 1959.

MAN OF THE YEAR IN SPORTS — Dr. Kiyo Tashiro, still playing football at the ape of 47, has been selected by The Sentinel sports de­partment as Rome's Man of the Year in Sports for 1963.

Junior High Sweeps Meet

Rome Junior High School won

The summary:

u^Ui^ttfi^^^^^^iS

GUARANTEED For m long as you own your car. If aver a replacement is needed, yen pay only a service charge!

304 N. James St.

Arnett Sidelined For Game Sunday

LOS ANGELES (AP)-Injured, Time tWiI halfback Jon Arnett probably

JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL 200 yard medley relay, won by

Rome (Dave Thomas, Bob Nuccio, Dave Wyher, Gary Sauer).

50 yard freestyle, won by Tim Taylor (R); Second Dennis Siddall (R); Third Marosak (H). Time 0:28.4.

Fancy diving, won by Georoe Frost (R); Second Dan Morgan (R): Third Marosak (H). Points

25 yard buterfly, won by Eric Skalwold (R); Second Jon Getbe-head (R); Third Nusbaum (H). Time 0:16.8.

100 yard freestyle, won by Dick Feeney (R); Second Gary Jones (R): Third Oldfield (H). Time 1:06,1.

50 yard backstroke, won by Dan Furia (R); Second Hank Adolfl (R); Third Venera (H). Time 0:40.0.

50 yard breaststroke, won by Arthur Westcott R); Second Tim Dunn (R): Third Shaffer (H). Time 0:35,7.

200 yard freestyle relay, won by Rome (Brad Birnie. Dan Throop, Steve Grtbehead, John Oliveros.

•lui.uQMi uiiu m u c t i j j i u u a u i y i won't play for the Los Angeles H a t T r i c k Rams Sunday when they wind up their season at Baltimore. MADISON, Wis. (AP) — The

Arnett suffered a pulled ham- U.S. Olympic hockey team, led string muscle last Saturday by the three-goal hat trick of against Green Bay, He had Dan Dilworth, continued its been disabled earlier in the sea-ituneup campaign by whipping son by knee injuries. (the Madison All - Stars 9-2

$ 1957Z5 5 YEAR 50,000 MILE WARRANTY Mtfluftcturtr't Suu*tt*d RtUil Pnc* I V 1 I lela W l ^ i l V I V r ^ l ^ I • ' ' '

D100 Utiline Pickup. Optional equipment, State and local taxes, if any, extra.

•THE DEPENOABLES' 5 YEAR, 50.000 MILE WARRANTY - Chrysler Corporation warrants, for 5 ftsrs or 50,000 milts, wtiichever comes first, against dtfocts In materiel! and work­manship and will replace or rtpair at • Chrysler Motors Corporation Authoriiad Dealar't p!»e« of business, th« enfine Mot*, head and internal parts, intake manifold, water pump, transmission case end internal perts (excluding manual clutch), torque conver-tor, driirt shaft, universal |oints. rear aile snd differential,-and rear wheel bearings of its 1964 automobiles, provided the owner has the engine oil changed every 3 montha or 4 000 miles, whichever comes first, the oil filter replaced every second oil change and the carburetor air filter cleaned every 6 months and replaced every 2 years,* and every 6 months furnishes to such dealer evidence of performance of the required service, and requests dealer to certify (1) receipt ef such evidence and (2) cars then current mileage.

A. J. RYAN MOTORS, INC. 601 W. Dominick St., Rome

A. F. Hyan and Sons A. F. Ryan Motors, Inc. 12? Cede* St.

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H l S FATHER. AN INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN scientist who died last June at.the age of 81. played handball daily tilt he was in his 60s, so it is small wonder that at 47, Dr. Kiyo Tashiro has no intention of abandoning the stren-eous life that to him means, despite his age, active participa­tion as a competitor in football, basketball, Softball and swimming.

The Rome physician-surgeon, who this year has been ac­corded a six-page picture layout in Sports Illustrated and who completely fooled Tom Poston, Barry Nelson, Kitty Carlisle and Peggy Cass when he appeared recently on the television show "To Tell the Truth", wins designation here as Rome's Man of the Year in Sports for 1963.

Born in Chicago on Nov. 8, 1916 of Japanese ancestry, Dr. Tashiro came to Rome in I960 where he became a playing coach for the San Carlo softball team of the Central New York League and where he also played in the City Senior Basketball League at the YMCA.

He is probably best known here sportswise, as a football player with the Mohawk Valley Falcons of the Atlantic Coast League. While he was practicing medicine in Dolgeville be­fore coming to Rome, Dr. Tashiro organized the Dolgevil'e Ramblers, a forerunner to the Frankfort Falcons, now the Mohawk Valley Falcons.

I HE DOCTOR HAS BEEN ACTIVE IN FOOTBALL since his school days in Cincinnati, where his father Shiro Tashiro was a professor of bio-chemistry. Earlier the senior Tashiro had been an instructor in physio chemistry at the University of Chicago. He had come from his native Japan, where he was a black belt champion at judo, at the age of 17 and was a graduate of the University of Chicago where he was the Big 10 Conference flyweight wrestling champion at 112 pounds.

Kiyo played football and baseball, was on the swimming team and ran on the track team at Hughes School in Cin­cinnati where he was a member of the graduating class of 1934.

At Harvard, where he took his pre-med, Tashiro played three years of varsity football and a season of freshman foot­ball. One of his freshman teammates was the late president's older brother, Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., who was killed in World War n . Tashiro remembers his classmate as a splendid end around 5*11 and 185 pounds "and a completely nice fellow."

l j PORTS ILLUSTRATED ERRED WHEN IT REPORTED Dr. Tashiro did not play football at Harvard. He didn't wrestle in college because he was teaching judo at the time but he had two years of varsity football under Coach Eddie Casey in 1935 and 1936 and played a full 60 minutes as a single wing back when Dick Harlow took charge of the Crimson in Tashiro's senior year.

Dr. Tashiro obtained his medical degree from the Univer­sity of Cincinnati Medical School in 1942 and interned at Jew-sh Hospital there.

From 1943 through 1945 he served in the Army at Hawaii and still is in the active reserve as a major and chief of surgical service for the 816 Station Hospital, formerly Rhoades Hospital in Utica, Tt was while in service thaf he was drafted by the National Football League Boston Redskins, later the Washington Redskins, owned by George Preston Marshall.

Separated from the service Dr. Tashiro took up resident training in St. Thomas Hospital at Akron, Ohio and played football with the Akron Bears of the-then minor American Football League. Akron was a farm team for the, Chicago Bears.

Coming east to Brooklyn for more advanced surgical training at Kings County Hospital in 1947, he played semi-pro football with the Brooklyn Bushwicks.

The doctor took a hiatus from football while training in chest surgery at Biggs Hospital in Ithaca but managed to keep up his sports activity by playing softball.

Tn 1953 he was back in the grid sport at Ironwood, Mich., where he had set up a clinic and where he helned coach the hieh school team while playing semi-pro ball with the Duluth Eskimos. It was here in 1954 and 1955 that he also managed the Norrie Amateur Softball Cub which won the North Ameri­can championship.

At I/ickporf in 1956 he played football with the Buffalo Bills, then a semi-pro club and softball with the Lockport Essos,

He is married to the former Karin Menge of Dolgeville and lives at .106 N. Madison St. He has four children, an 18-year-old son. Joseph, who attends Columbia: 17-year-old Cathy. 12-year-old Stephanie and 10-year-old Charles, a'l in Dolgeville.

A HUSKY ISO-POUNDER STANDING 5*10, *«* ""^HIRO weighs the same as he did in college 30 years agi,.

As a keen student of all sports, he has a word of caution for operators of small fry sports teams.

"Don't let it get out of pattern by putting loo much pres­sure on it," he advises.

For himself and his unusual sports career, he says he's not trying to prove a thing. He simply enjoys playing sports and he gets fun out of them.

A philosophy that is a distinguishing mark of Rome's 1963 man of the year in sports.

Grid Pros Bid for Roger Navy Ace Receives Queries

NEW YORK (AP)-Now hear this from Navy's Roger Stau-bach:

"I have a lot to learn about passing. I figure I'll learn a lot more about football in the next year and a half. I'm going to work hard next season. I hope we can improve on this sea­son's record."

That comforting news .for Navy's opponents came from the All-America quarterback

[Wednesday night when he ac­cepted the Heisman Trophy award as the top.football player in the country.

Staubach led Navy to a 9-1 record, a No. 2 national rank­ing and a spot in the Cotton Bowl against top-ranked Texas.

Jolly Roger was asked how he figures he has "a lot to learn about passing."

"Lots of times I wait for my receiver to get in the open be­fore I throw," he said. "That's wrong. The pros throw to where the receiver is supposed to be."

Did that mean Staubach was interested in a pro career?

"I have received question-aires from professional football teams but I haven't talked to anyone because I still have a year and a half at the academy and then four years of service."

Among the other things, Stau­bach discussed was the best team he played against this season, and the support he re­ceived from the entire Navy team.

Lauds Lynch •> "I can't say enough about the

support they gave me. Tom Lynch would do anything for me on the field or off and I feel the same way about him. If I hadn't been getting that second block I'd be scrambled eggs."

Lynch, the Navy captain, and Coach Wayne Hardin accom­panied Staubach to the Heis­man awards dinner. They let Staubach monopolize the talk­ing but Hardin had this to say:

"I think we,have the finest four backfield men ever put to­gether although I'll admit I nev­er saw the Four Horsemen in action. Staubach is a stick of dynamite. Johnny Sai runs the 100 in 9.7 and can break up any game. Pat Donnelly is the finest fullback the Navy ever had. Skip Orr is our leading pass re­ceiver.

"But," he -emphasized, "I can't _say _too much a b o u t Roger."

Neither could his father, Rob­ert Staubach.

"We only had one child," he said, "but the good Lord gave us a good one."

Hits on 66 Per Cent of Shots

Cornell Basketball Team Sets Scoring Record With 97 Points

By The Associated Press Cornell hit an amazing 66 per­

cent from the floor Wednesday 'night and established a school j scoring record in its 97-83 bas­ketball victory over Canisius.

Elsewhere on the Upstate col­lege basketball scene, St. Bona-venture buried Steubenville (Ohio), 113-86; Union tripped Hamilton, 75-60; Oneonta State defeated Kings, 73-64; Rochester

trounced Clarkson, 86-52; Col­gate edged St. Lawrence, 90-82; Hartford topped Siena, 51-36; and LeMoyne beat Hobart, 75-57.

Cornell's previous high score in a basketball game was 93, recorded against Syracuse last year. Wednesday night the Big Red hit on 36 of 55 field-goal at­tempts.

Frank Swiatek of Canisius led

College Basketball

ot

By The Associated Press EAST

Louisville 70, LaSalle 60 Princeton 69, Lafayette 64—2

Pennsylvania 94, Swarthmorc 45

Fordham 69, Yale 64 Cornell 97, Canisius 83 Harvard 64, Northeastern 61 Holy Cross 91, St. Anselm's 75 St. Bonaventure 113, Steuben­

ville 86 Seton Hall 98, Baltimore Loyo­

la 81 Temple 66, Lehigh 38 Navy 73, Gettysburg 52 Army 70, Albright 44 Colgate 90, St. Lawrence 82

RPI Beats Yale Sextet

NEW HAVEN, Conn. ( A P ) -Undefeated Rensselaer Poly­technic racked up its third vic­tory of the young hockey season Wednesday night, nipping Yale in the third period, 2-1.

Both RPI tallies came in the final period. The Bulldogs now have one victory and three de­feats.

Center Bob Brinkworth scored RPI's first goal and assisted on the winning §cojre, shoved in by Al Jones.

Kent Nelson scored an unas­sisted goal for Yale in the first period.

Goalie Mike Hanson made 44 saves for the Bulldogs. Bill Sack blocked 30 shots for the winning Engineers.

Punt Leader From SMU Got 44 Yards

NEW YORK (AP) — It's get­ting to be a habit at Southern Methodist and Arkansas coming up with the national punting and punt-return champions.

Final season statistics by the NCAA .Service -Bureau today showed that Danny Thomas of SMU won the major college punting championship with an average of 44 yards for 48 kicks. He is the third SMU player to win the kicking title.

Ken Hatfield of Arkansas, a junior like Thomas, took the punt-return title with 350 yards for an average of 16.7 on 21 re­turns. He is the third Razorback to lead the nation in this cate­gory in the last four years.

Gary Wood of Cornell led in kickoff returns with average of 32.5 on 19 returns. Dick Kern of William.and Mary took the pass interception crown with eight grabs.

SMU led in team punting with a 41.4 average, Army in team punt returns with 18.1 and Mem­phis State in team kickoff re­turns with 27.7.

Packers Get Bowman MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Uni­

versity of Wisconsin co-captain and center Ken Bowman said he had signed a contract Wednes­day with the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League

Boston U. 86, Amer. Int. 61 Delaware 74, Franklin &

Marshall 67 Maine 88, Bates 76 Union 75, Hamilton 60 Oneonta State 73, Kings 64 Rochester 86, Clarkson 52 Hartford 51, Siena 36 LeMoyne 75, Hobart 57

SOUTH Vanderbilt 97, Duke 92—ot Florida 108, Tampa 75 Tennessee 55, Sewanee 31

MIDWEST Davidson 95, Ohio State 73 Bradley 92, Arizona State 85 Michigan 80, Butler 70 Tulsa 127, Christian Bros. 81

SOUTHWEST Rice 102, Florida State 81

FAR WEST Utah 98, Texas A&M 71 Air Force 85, South Dakota 53

all scorers with 28 points. Ray Ratkowski paced Cornell's well-spread scoring with 17 tallies.

The game was played at Ith­aca.

St. Bonaventure parleyed a deadly fast - break and Fred Crawford's 33 points into a de­cisive victory over visiting Steubenville.

The win was the third without a defeat for the Bonnies.

Crawford scored 23 of his points in the second half.

At Hamilton, Union expanded a 31-28 halftime lead and evened its season's record at two wins and two losses. The game was the first of the season for Ham­ilton.

Don Sweeney of Hamilton led ali scorers with 25 points. Toby Lustig threw in 24 for the win­ners.

Ron Brown paced Rochester to its second victory of the sea­son without a loss, scoring 24 points against visiting Clarkson. The loss was Clarkson's first in four outings.

At Canton, Bob TeCarr poured in 22 points to lead the Red Raiders of Colgate over St. Lawrence.

Al Jonsen of the Larries paced all scorers with 27 points.

The game evened the records of both teams at two victories and two defeats.

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Phils Best At Fielding

CINCINNATI (AP)-The Phil­adelphia Phillies, with outfield­er Don Demeter tying a ma­jor league record, captured in­dividual fielding honors in the National League last season, the final averages revealed today.

Demeter handled 172 outfield chances perfectly in 119 games.

Second baseman Tony Taylor and pitcher Chris Short of Phil­adelphia also led at their re­spective positions. Taylor fin­ished with a .986 mark while Short accepted 61 chances, the most among the 37 pitchers who fielded 1.000.

Milwaukee led the league in club fielding for the first straight time. The Braves field­ed a collective .980 in 1963.

Ski Conditions ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)-Skiing

conditions in New York State as [reported Wednesday to the State Commerce Department:

Central Region-Good: Song Mountain (Tullv) Fair to good: Greek Peak

(Cortland) Northern Region-Fair to good: Snow Ridge

; (Turin) Southern Region-Good to excellent: Grossinger Western Region-Good: Holiday Valley (Elli-

IcottvUle)

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