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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 32
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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 32

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Tampa Bay Timesi
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St. Petersburg, Florida
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32
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SPORTS 2-C St. Petersburg Times, Wednesday, Feb. 14, 1968 SPORTS IN BRIEF pptfrflburtj amirs Devils Help Warhawks Win Title Chisox Deal Hansen In 6-Player Swap 'Dodgers Not Contender' Wednesday, February 14, 1968 U.S. Starlets Tumble SECTION U.S. Hopes Fall With Judy From Of Ski World CLASSIFIED KON HANSEN bound for Senators.

Two By Young Cap Northeast Rally 67-66 Chris Young's two free throws with one second left last night climaxed a Northeast High comeback and lifted the Vikings ft'; Judv Naeel takes lead in first run (left) of slalom, falls (below) out of contention in second. AP Wirepholos CHICAGO 1 The Chicago White Sox' brisk rebuilding for 1968 continued yesterday in a six-player deal with the Washington Senators which shipped veteran shortstop Ron Hansen to the Senators. Hansen, 29, about to be sup-planted by Ex-Baltimore Oriole Luis Aparicio, and pitchers Dennis Higgins and Steve Jones went to Washington for infielder Tim Cullen and pitchers Bob Priddy and Buster Narum of Clearwater. Cullen, 25, Santa Clara I ni-versity product who batted .236 for the Senators last season, is tabbed for second base to form a new Sox keystone combination with Aparicio. In the process of earlier acquiring such prime newcomers as outfielders Tommy Davis from the New York Meta and Russ Snyder from the Baltimore Oriole, the White Sox traded off two second basemen, Don Buford and Al Weis.

In Hansen, the Senators get a veteran shortstop of six seasons with Baltimore and the White Sox. Hansen led the to a 67-66 Pinellas Conference basketball victory over Dixie ROSEBORO GOGOLAK LA Trades Hunt, Oliver For Haller LOS ANGELES (iP) The Los 1 1 Mm Hollins. It was a near-repeat of North east's 65-62 triumph over Hol lins earlier this season. American League in assists and double plays last season and batted 233, three points lower than Cullen. Right-hander Higgins, 28, benched most of last season by a detached retina in his left eye, now is reported to be mended.

He had a 1-2 record, but was regarded as a strong bullpen performer. Jones, 26, a lefty, pitched a 9-3 record for Indianapolis and 2-2 for the White Sox last season. Priddy, 28, and Narum, 27, both right-handers, appear to be insurance additions to the Sox mound staff, considered the league's strongest. Priddy had a 3-7 record and 3.U ERA for the Senators in 1967. Narum was 9-8 with Hawaii and J-0 with Washington.

inn, KHiiS nan Dunt up a 35-27 lead in the first 16 minutes 8 Times Wire Services You can tell by the pessimism, baseball is upon us. The Braves' chances of breaking out of the second division in the National League don't look too good, center-fielder Felipe Alou says. And the Dodgers, says former Los Angeles catcher John Rosebo-ro, now a Minnesota Twin, won't win a penannt for the next few years. "The Braves picked up a good shortstop in Sonny Jackson," Alou says, "but they let go one of our best pitchers in Denny Lemaster. I know that my arm is in top shape and I know I will have a good season.

But the Braves won't finish in the first division with the defense and the pitchers they have." Roseboro issued his opinions on the Dodgers while heading for spring training with Minnesota. "I don't think they expect to finish one, two, three for several years," the veteran receiver said. i The New York Mets have all but two of their 42-man roster signed to contracts. Yesterday second baseman Ken Boswell and pitcher Dick Selma came to terms, leaving only pitchers Al Jackson and Jerry Koosman unsigned. Asa Small 26, a left-handed pitcher for the Columbus Jets of the International League, and his 25-year-old wife perished in a fire at Phillips, Me.

only to hit a cold shooting spell Angeles Dodgers traded second baseman Ron Hunt and utility Staff Photo by Bob Hannah in the third quarter. Northeast chipped away at the advantage infielder Nate Oliver to the San Francisco Giants yesterday for with a 23-point last quarter. catcher Tom Haller and a Two free throws bv Jerrv Ogle Snatches Rebound From Clearwater's Meyer (Left Bodden Devils Help Warhawks Win minor league player to ban- nounced. Boggs with nine seconds left gave Hollins its final lead of the night, 66-65. Eight seconds later Young was fouled while at It was the first major deal be ROM 1-C) mm tempting a 30-foot shot and won GRENOBLE, France UP) For one fleeting moment yesterday, a youthful band of American girls stood on top of the ski world.

But disaster again overtook them and dealt the United States another heart-breaking blow in the Winter Olympics. The U.S. girls Judy Nagel, 16; Wendy Allen, 23; Rosie Fortna, 21, and Kiki Cutter, 18 stunned onlookers by grabbing four of the top six places in the first run of the slalom as they tried to soften the misfortune that has struck American skiers since the Games began. But France's Marielle Goitschel came along and snatched the gold medal as the Americans were shut out when three of them were disqualified for missing gates on the first run and Miss Nagel fell on the second. Miss Goitschel, giving France its third Alpine victory in the Games, had a combined time of 85.86 seconds, .19 ahead of runnerup Nancy Greene of Canada.

Another French girl, Annie Famose, got the bronze in 87.19. Americans also got off to a poor start in the men's figure skating as expected winner Emmerich Danzer of Austria took a narrow lead over countryman Wolfgang Schwarz after two of the five compulsory figures. Tim Wood of Bloom field Hills, was fourth, Gary Visconti of Detroit sixth and John Petkevich of Great Falls, 13th. Toni Gustafsson of Sweden captured her second gold medal, winning the women's five kilometer cross-country ski race ahead of two Russians. No Americans were entered.

The two East German leaders in the women's luge competition were disqualified for illegally heating their sled runners after the final fourth heat was post it from the foul line. tween the Giants and Dodgers since 1956 when they traded Jackie Robinson from Brooklyn to New York for Dick Little-field. Robinson retired, however, and the deal was called off. Ron Haskell had 22 points, brother Mike had 17 and Young added 13 for Northeast, now 6-9 EARLY FINISHER "Golfing Cager' Stuns Dunedin in the PCC and 10-13 for the season. Bill Lindsey scored 20 points and Boggs 18 for Dixie Hollins, now 8-8 in the league tie for Clearwater's high.

Parker only had 10 points, but he scored all seven of his team's fourth quarter points and was the factor that kept them in the ball game. Milton May was high for St. Petersburg with 21, followed by Ogle with 11 and Jones with 10. At Tarpon Springs, Neil Shoaf was second to Van Ness for Seminole with 15 points and Jim Gonnering had nine. Mike Kmet and Dan Smith, usual double-figure scorers By DAN RUTLEDGE Of The Timen Staff It will be a surprise if Seminole Coach Don Rut lodge doesn't send St.

Petersburg mentor John Schoen a valentine today or at least a thank-you note. Because Valentine's Day is the day to acknowledge that you are fond of someone. After last night, Rutledge must be very fond of Schoen. Schoen's Green Devils upset Clearwater 58-57 in an overtime thriller at the Devil's Den. The St.

Petersburg victory, copuled with the Warhawks' 65-40 battering of lastr place Tarp Springs at the Sponger's gym, clinched the title for Seminole, making the Warhawks the first Class A team to win the Pinellas County Conference championship in the six-year history of the PCC. Before the games last night, Clearwater, and Seminole were heading for a showdown finale Friday at the Warhawks' gym. But the game, billed as the "PCC game of the year," is now meaningless. Seminole is 14-1 in conference play and Clearwater is 12-3. Seminole had little trouble winning what proved to be the clincher.

Ken Van Ness, the Warhawks' 6-6 junior center who is leading the county in scoring with 1 24-point average, scored nearly half his team's points (32) and dominated the boards. At St. Petersburg, junior guard Reggie Jones climaxed 38 minutes of basketball with a 35-foot jump shot. Jones let the ball fly with one second remaining in a second overtime period, and it dropped through the net at the buzzer. A technical foul played an Important part in Clearwater's last defeat a 66-63 thriller to Gibbs two weeks ago at Bayfront Center.

The story was almost the same this time. With one minute remaining-in the game and Clearwater leading 52-51, Tornado forward Jim Leach attempted a shot from the side. It was blocked by the Devils' Wayne Ogle. Clearwater Coach Jim Karr thought a foul was committed and violently protested to referee Russ Henegar. Hen-egar then called a technical on Karr.

Team captain Milton May sank the penalty throw tying the game 52-all. The Devils took the ball out of bounds and stalled for the last shot. Forward James Williams took it with two seconds left, but it was off the front of the rim. Clearwater got the tope to start the first overtime period, but Devil guard Bob Pa-rham almost immediately stole the ball. St.

Petersburg froze the ball for 2:45, but lost it without taking a shot with five seconds left when Williams stepped out of bounds with the ball. Clearwater's Jeff Jopf got off a despiration shot at the buzzer the only one taken in the three-minute period but it was way off the mark. onds. Then with 0:05 showing on the clock, little (5-7) Jeff Hopf went to the foul line for the Tornadoes, shooting one-and-one. He hit the first, but missed the second and Par-ham rebounded for St.

Petersburg. He passed to Jones, and it was all over. Before the game began Schoen said, "I'm more worried about Parker than (Gene) Bodden." His fears were well grounded. Ogle and Williams combined to hold Bodden to only 11 points well under his average of 19.3. Senior Scott i 1 matched Bodden's 11 points to if' od, but Devil guard Bob Pa-rham almost immediately stole the ball.

St. Petersburg froze the ball for 2:45, but lost it without taking a shot with five seconds left when Williams stepped out of bounds with the ball. Clearwater's Jeff Hope got off a despiration shot at the buzzer the only one taken in the three-minute period but it was way off the mark. In the second overtime both teams swapped baskets for two minutes and 55 sec and 12-12 overall. Shawn Stegg's 16 points helped Dixie Hollins take the jurior varsity contest 57-48.

NORTHEAST DIXIE HOLLINS He hit six points in a big first Red Jacket Time Leader quarter that saw Lakewood Nick Johnson made a choice Monday, and by Tuesday evening he and Spartan Coach Bill Bates were sure it was the correct one. Nick is a senior at Lakewood jump off to a 20-14 lead it was never to lose. Johnson ended the WALT ALSTON, Dodger manager, said Los Angeles, by acquiring Haller, "filled a void of which we were worried. We also have added some sock," Alston said. HUNT, 27, acquired by the Dodgers last winter from the New York Mets for Tommy Davis, hit .264 for Los Angeles in 110 games.

Oliver, also 27, hit .237. Oliver is a former Gibbs High School star who makes his home in St. Petersburg. The 30-year-old Haller hit .251 for the Giants including 14 homes runs. 6 5-9 17 Mead 9 4-42 2 L'say 0- 0 2-3 1- 1 24 1-3 0-0 game with 16 points, hitting six of eight from the floor and he Football for the Warhawks, were limited to four and three points, respectively.

M.Haskell R.Haskell Per'ciolo Dunphy Cor'son Feaster Young Totals 1 Brown 8 Jones 3 M'Coy 3 Boggs 13 McGee Staff Photo by Ricardo Ferro played less than three quarters fouling out in the third period It's Fair Weather For Sprint Cars 23 21-36 67 Totals 27 12-16 66 Northeast Dixie Hollins 23-67 19-66 Ron Fluker and John Stewart continued their point rampage they began last week against Total Fouls: Northeast 12, Dixie Hoi lins 20. Fouled Out: Northeast (Dunphy), High School and was a member of both the golf and basketball teams. But Monday afternoon the golf team had a match with Clearwater at the same time the basketball team was practicing. Nick decided to drop golf temporarily and practice basketball. Yesterday afternoon the 6-3 forward made his first start U.S.

Gals Tumble From Top Of World Seminole. Fluker, now the No. li scorer the county with a 16.5 average, hit for 23 points NBA ROUNDUP Sprint cars also will lie in action on the Pinellas County side of Tampa Bay tonight, with some 35 cars competing at Sunshine Speedway. Two of the Sunshine drivers and one owner yesterday were fined $100 each and suspended a year by the IMCA for competing in non-sanctioned races during the Winter Nationals. The drivers are Dick Gaines of Mitchell, and Rick Fcrkel of Findlay, Ohio, and the owner is William Corbin of Findlay, Ohio.

Bill Roynon (white shirt) and mechanic fuel up Roynon's sprint car "Karen Faye" in preparation for the fourth series of International Motor Contest Association Winter National Sprint Races today at the Florida State Fair in Tampa. Roynon, a Tampan, won a consolation heat Sunday as Bob Adam-son ended the two-feature winning streak of Jerry Richert. Note the larger tire on the right side of car to compensate for the lack of banked curves at the Fairgrounds' dirt track. (from i-c) Nate Crawford and Chuck Benjamin scored 10 apiece to pace Tarpon Springs. Both victors were double winners for the night as Seminole won its junior varsity game 55-54 and the baby Green Devils downed the Tornado jayvees 55-46.

Barons Trip Largo 62-50 Bishop Barry's pressing de Pete Gogolak, the New York Giants' field goal kicker, has been transferrred from Virginia to Germany by the U.S. Army. Pvt. Gogolak's chronic back condition does not permit him to handle rigorous military duties so he is in charge of an officer's club in Germany. Retired coach Clark Shaughnessy has been elected to the National Football Hall of Fame along with former backs Claude "Buddy" Young, Bobby Layne, Claude "Monk" Simmons, Johnny Pingel and the late Eddie Casey and former lineman Adam Walsh, Albert Wistert and Henry and Stewart had 18.

DUNEDIN'S 6-4 senior center, Steve Black, was the game's high scorer with 27 points, most coming after rebounds on the offensive board. and helped the Spartans upset Pistons Drop 4th Straight Miami Next For No. 1 Houston LAKEWOOD DETROIT UP) The Boston gates it looked like an incredible day for the U.S. Alpine team, seeking its first medal after a series of injuries and waxing mistakes. Miss Allen of San Pedro, 0 Young Celtics outscored the Detroit Pinellas County's 18-game winner, Dunedin, 77-69.

It was Lakewood 's first, Varsity basketball victory over Dunedin. "NICK PLAYED a great game they all did, but him especially," said a happy Bates afterward. "I decided to start him for the extra height. It Pistons 35-24 in the final period DUNEDIN Crv'ling Black Langley Hair Boans Wilson Brown Br'shr. Hadley 0 0-0 12 3-6 7 3-8 2 0-0 9 3-4 0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0-0 last night to grab a 127-115 Na 27 Murrell 17 Shaw 4 Th'ntn 21 Newman 0 Fluker 0 Johnson 0 Stewart 0 Lewis each other all the way.

The early postings in Class A had Rage at the top, Bolero and Bay Bea second and third, followed by Contigo, Robin, Inferno, Flame, Bona-venture II and Good News. There might be later changes in the bottom half of Class but the view from the top belongs to Homer Denius, owner of Rage, which was launched only a few weeks ago. Bolero was over first in 72 hours, 45 minutes and 2 seconds. It was the slowest elapsed time ever for a race that has been internationally notorious for rough weather going. This time the wind was light most of the way, not exactly suited to Bolero, but the 73-foot veteran yawl did a standout job in topping the likes of Bay Bea and Inferno.

Bolero went around the halfway point at Rebecca Shoal at 4 a.m. Monday. Rage was around in good shape in relation to the boat she had to (Please See RED, Page 3-C) tional Basketball Association 5-9 23 4-6 16 2- 2 18 3- 4 3 Gibson Scores Salary Coup ST. LOUIS IT) Bob Gibson said he wanted to be paid as much as any of the top players in baseball and the St. Louis Cardinals say he is, now that he's signed his 1968 contract.

Stan i a ex-general manager of the Cardinals, said yesterday, "He's probably one of the highest paid pitchers in baseball in the National League." But Is lie making the $100,000 he reportedly wanted? Apparently not. Estimates of his new contract range between $80,000 and $85,000. Gibson had strenuously denied he was asking fense and fast break helped the Totals 30 9-18 69 Totals 30 17-29 77 Barons to a 62-50 Pinellas Coun By RED MARSTON Times Outdoors Writer FORT LAUDERDALE -The Canadian swifty, Red Jacket, was on the scoreboard last night as the early leader on corrected time in the slowest race in the eight years of the St. Petersburg to Fort Lauderdale 403-mile ocean sailboat race. There was a procession of boats to the finish line after dark, but Red Jacket loomed as the boat to beat unless Alerion, a hot Class boat could come up fast enough to stage an upset.

As time wore on, however, her chances definitely diminshed. Harry Connollay's Red Jacket, winner of two of the first three races in the Southern Ocean Racing Conference (SORC) last year and second place finisher in the Lauderdale classic, got her earliest, toughest competition from the great St. Petersburg sloop Stampede, co-owned by George Dewart and Roland Becker. Stampede was 12th to finish, seemed to have gained the inside track on second place in Class and at 9:30 p.m. was standing second in fleet be gave us four men over six feet in there." ty Conference basketball victory Dunedin 14 21 15 19 69 Lakewoodo 20 16 18 22 77 Potluck over Largo iast night at tne poned in the men's and women's singles.

Again no American girls were entered. Russia's undefeated defending champions took over undisputed possession of first place in the hockey tournament by defeating Sweden in a battle of unbeatens 3-2 as Canada edge previously unbeaten Czechoslovakia 3-2. The Soviets have a 5-0 record while Canada, Czechoslovakia and Sweden are tied for second with 4-1 records. The United States, 1-4, was idle. When the times went up for the first run, through the 56 (Please See U.S.

GALS, 2-C) Johnson helped rebounding but his shooting helped more. bilt and Duke. The Top Ten, with first-place votes In parentheses, season records through games of Feb. 10 and total points on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis: 1. Houston 28 21-0 351 2.

UCLA 8 la-1 332 3. North Carolina 17-1 281 4. St. Bonaventure 17-0 22 5. New Mexico 1M 201 6.

Columbia 15-3 IQ8 7. Tennessee 15-3 104 8. Kentucky 15-4 87 9. Vanderbilf 16-4 75 10. Duke 14-3 57 Others receiving alphabetically: Army, Baylor, Chicago Loyola, Davidson, Drake, Kansas, LaSalle, Louisville, Marquette, Nebraska, New Mexico State, Ohio State, Princeton, South Carolina, Utah, Washington State, Wyoming.

Team Fouls: Dunedin 15, Lakewood 15. Fouled Out: Boans (Dunedin), Johnson (Lakewood). Barons' gym. clash between these two high-powered teams in the NCAA championships. Lanier is a husky, 19-year-old, 6-foot-ll sophomore who wears size 22 shoes and scores in bigger numbers.

Through the most recent NCAA statistics, Lanier was eighth in scoring with 27.9, third in field goal percentage with .632 and tied for 16th in rebounding, with 15.5. Behind the top two oame North Carolina, St. Bonaventure, New Mexico, Columbia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Vender- Beaten by Largo in the teams' Florida Thursday and the Air Force on Saturday, lioth at home, and then winds up its regular season schedule against U. of Texas-Arlington, Valparaiso, Hardin-Simmons, Virginia Tech and West Texas State. St.

Bonaventure, with the lesser-known but able Bob Lanier as its star, travels to Seton Hall today for its only game of the week and then finishes with Creighton, Niagara, Canisius, and Fairfield. After that, it's the tournaments for both and possibly a By The Associated Press It's 21 down and seven to go for Houston and 17 down and five to go for St. Bonaventure, the only two all-conquering powers in the Associated Press' Top Ten rankings of major college basketball teams. Houston, led by the famed Big Elvin Hayes, maintained its grip on first place in the weekly poll with a 21-0 record while St. Bonaventure held onto fourth place with its 17-0 record.

Hayes' team plays Miami of victory. Sam Jones combined with Bill Russell, Larry Siegfried and Bailey Howell to pace the final period surge by the Celtics, who held only a one-point lead at the three-quarter mark. IT WAS the fourth straight defeat for the sagging Pistons, who lost the services of newly acquired forward Happy Hair-ston midway in the third period when he was ejected by referee Norm Drucker after throwing a ball at Drucker's partner Ed last meeting, Barry applied the pressure from the start this Gladiators Press time and never trailed after the early minutes. Ray Hervey scored 18 points and Russ Hen Out Pirate Wrin kle derson lb as tne Barons won Edward N. Cole, who became president of General Motors Corp.

last fall, has reaffirmed the company's policy against auto racing. He told a news conference GM would not be reversing its long-standing policy "under the circumstances." The Phoenix Open Golf Tournament has something this year it never had before, a $100,000 purse, and may their 10th game against 12 loss es overall. Largo has a 9-13 rec Rush. averaging 25 or more points in 10 of 12 games nunmed in 26 ord. GOLF GREEN FEES LARGO BARRY Sam Jones wound up with 31 Boston points Eddie Miles had 29 last night and had 11 rebounds.

THE VICTORY, coupled with defeats suffered by Dunedin and for Detroit. US Skiers Pile Into Drift Of Troubles Wells Nelson Roberts Hamrick Ander'n Ohr vHelinger SLaRo'co 5Lyons 15H'derson 11 Hervey 2lrvln 1-2 13 3-4 J-J 3 1- 3 0- 2 6-6 2- 4 2-3 1- 2 $400 Clearwater, enabled the Gladia was third with 342.2 followed by Wood, the U.S. champion, with 334.5. Visconti had 324.7 and Petkevich, one of the better free skaters who is weak on compulsory figures, 300.4 Three more compulsory figures follow today, completing this portion which accounts for 60 per cent of the score. The free skating Friday will count the other 40 per cent.

Miss Gustafsson, a 29-year-old gymnastics teacher, won the 10-kilometer cross country last Friday and gave Sweden its second gold medal yesterday. Her time for the five kilometers was 16 minutes, 45.2 seconds as she started last in the field of 34 and paced herself on her competitor's times. Galina Koulakova was second in 16:48.4 and Alevtina Koltchina third in 16:51.6. Erica Lechner of Italy was the new leader in the revised women's luge competition on completion of three of the four runs after Ortrun Enderlein and Anna Maria Mueller were disqualified after finishing 1-2. Miss Lechner's combined time was 2:28.66.

Officials said an unidentified judge and three witnesses reported seeing the East German girls, along with teammate Angela Knoesel who held fourth place, warming their sled runners at the starting ramp for the third run. This is illegal. Manfred Schmid of Austria led the men's luge singles after three heats with Kim Lay ton of Tahoe City, six seconds behind in 26th place with a combined time of 2:58.64. Jim Murray of Avon, was 28th, Mike Hessel of Eugene, 30th, and Robin Partch of St. Cloud, 46th, among the 47 racers.

Winter Games Medal Standings GRENOBLE, France (API Medal standings by nations through yesterday's events in th. 10th Winter Olympic Lakers Beat Bullets BALTIMORE Jerry 00 $5 Totals 20 10-15 50 Totals 25 12-20 62 WEEK DAYS WEEK ENDS ELEC. CARTS tors to pull into a tie for second place in the conference with Clearwater. Gibbs now owns a West scored 47 points, five in 12 1050 TARPON SPRINGS SEMINOLE Largo Barry 17-62 6 6 overtime, and led the Los An $500 12-3 PCC mark and stands 19-4 5 0-2 10 Largo 17, Barry li. Fouled Total fouls: out: Irvin.

geles Lakers to a 119-116 Nation 0-0 4 Gonnering 3 3-4 9 Crawf'd Kmet 2 0-2 4 Hutch's Van Ness 11 10-17 32 Benl'n overall. The Pirates in one of al Basketball Association victo 0-2 10 5-6 9 3-3 3 Scar'h 0 Look into a Volkswagen at O'BRIEN MOTORS VOLKSWAGEN 4650 34th ST. NO. Dial 527-5811 Open Till 9 P.M. Smith the worst seasons in the history 1 ry over the Baltimore Bullets 1-1 15 Clark of the school have a 3-12 loon 1 0-1 have something it very seldom gets rain.

Despite intermittent showers the Valley of the Sun has been declared in excellent condition for today's pro-am prelude to the 72-hole tourney. Golden Knights Plan Jumping Exhibition ZEPHYRHILLS The crack U.S. Parachute Team, the Golden Knights, will present high altitude training jumps at 2:30 0-1 0- 3 1- 2 0-0 last night. Shoaf Rogers Groves Schrad'r Ruhlman Herbein mark and an all-game record of threw Kidd and Barrows flew off the first free jump some 30 feet in the air and landed in a bundle, breaking his hip. Saturday Karen Budge, Jackson Hole, practicing 90 minutes before the women's downhill, skied into a spectator crossing the course and dislocated her shoulder.

Heuga, Squaw Valley, finished eighth as Jean-Claude Killy collected his first of two gold medals. The American hospital run continued from Chamrousse as Jere Elliott, and Jim Barrows, both of Steamboat Springs, journeyed downhill and into the wounded ward. Elliott sprained both ankles on the same turn that 2 Rue 0 Cole 0 Jen's 0 0 Grenoble, but Allen continued workouts. Lady Luck turned her back next on the American men's team as Bill Kidd, Stowe, tumbled at the first treacherous trevasse of the downhill and sprained his ankle. Bad weather postponed the downhill final until Friday, but Kidd could do no better than seventh, and Jimmy For the second time this season Boca Ciega High School's Pirates tried the semi-stall on Gibbs and saw it backfire as they ran head-on into a devastating full court press by the Gladiators that downed the Pirates 85-58 in a Pinellas County Conference basketball clash last night.

Again it was big Norman Stevenson's shooting and rebounding that helped the Gladiators to their 10th victory in a row. The 6-2 junior guard, who has been Berkeley Prep Halts Farragut TAMPA Big Vance Wilson, hustling 6-3 center, scorched the nets for 33 points to spark Berkeley Prep to a 63-44 trouncing of winless Admiral Farragut in a non-conference high school basketball contest here last night ADMIRAL BERKELEY champion Marielle Goitschel of France. Robin Morning, Santa Monica, started it all off when she broke her right leg in two places a week ago practicing for the women's downhill. Wendy Allen, San Pedro, slammed into a slalom pole and slashed her forehead. Morning went the military hospital hospital near Elgin Baylor, who scored 32 Times Wire Services CHAMROUSSE, France -America's skiing hopes started going downhill even before that glamour event of the winter Olympic Games was staged last Friday.

And yesterday those hopes fell to a tearful low as the U.S. Women's Alpine team missed gates and stumbled in the slalom won by defending hind Red Jacket. The St. Petersburg-built Rage swept Class A in convincing fashion and figured to do well in the final fleet rundown. The Charley Morgan-designed 54-foot sloop beat first-to-finish Bolero and came out tops in her boat-for-boat duel with Pat Haggerty's brand new Bay Bea.

The two boats were within sight of 8-14. points and took over third place SPECIAL 10 Ploys $QC00 Weekdays OJ TARPON SPRINGS GOLF CLUB, INC. Alt. 19 South Tarpon Springs, Florida Phone 937-490 GIBBS BOCA CIEGA in the all-time NBA scoring, Totals 24 17-30 45 Totals 17 -15 40 sent the game into the five- 14 21 21 -45 6 16 6 12-40 Seminole Tarpon Springs had a spectacular 39.25, followed by Miss Na-gel's 40.19. Miss Goitschel was third at 40.27, Miss Fortna of Warren, next at 41.31, then Miss Greene at 41.45 and Miss Cutter of Bend, at 41.46.

Despite the disqualifications, hopes were high as Miss Nagel took the top spot. A school girl added to the team with Miss Cutter shortly before the Games, she caught the imagination of the crowd as she was pitted against veterans Goitschel and Greene, two of the world's best. Marielle, behind by .08 of a second, started sixth and sped through the 57-gate, 425-meter second run in 45.59, and 5-foot-4, 123-pound Judy followed. She flashed through the first few gates and then went down, once, then twice, and finished in 59.77, eliminating her. Miss Greene then tried and turned in the fastest time of the run, 44.70, but she had too much to make up.

Despite her victory in the giant slalom in 1964, Miss Goitschel was getting the reputation of not being quite good enough in the slalom after finishing second in that race to her sister, Christine, in the 1964 Olympics and runnerup in the 1962 and 1964 world championships. "At last I'm a bride, not a bridesmaid," she smiled. "This is the title I wanted to win most in the world. I was getting tired of finishing second." She still has the giant slalom to come on Friday. Olga Pall of Austria won the downhill earlier, but finished ninth in th slalom.

Danzer and Schwarz, who have finished 1-2 in every world and European figure skating championship since 1966, appeared on their way to duplicating that finish in these Olympics as they are expected to do Schwarz held a slight lead after the first figure a "back-outside three-change three," but Danzer moved ahead on minute extra period with a pair of free throws with 22 seconds Team Fouls: Seminole 16, Tarpon Springs 20. Fouled Out: Crawford, Beniamln (Tarpon Springs) remaining. Haskins Leads Bulls and 4:30 p.m. today, and the Coar 3 8 Hawk 7 0-0 14 Stevenson 10 6-8 26 Harling 0 0-2 0 Frazier 5 1-1 11 Day 0-0 0 Williams 3 0-2 6 Navarro 6 2-3 14 Hilliard 0 1-2 1 Schippers 0 0-0 0 Vaughn 5 3-3 13 Unruh 0 7-8 7 E. Wil'ms 1 1-2 3 Todsen 2 0-0 4 Randolph 5 1-2 11 Stahl 0 3-5 3 Newton 2 2-2 6 Porter 5 4-5 14 Ellsworth 1 0-0 2 Hunsinger 0 0-0 0 Totals 34 17-26 85 Totals 21 16-23 58 Gibbs 18 17 21 K-85 Boca Ciega 10 18 15 1558 CHICAGO IJPI The Chicago Bulls, led by reserve Clem HIGH SCHOOL PINELLAS COUNTY CONFERENCE Seminole 65, Tarpon Springs 40 St.

Petersburg Senior 58, Clearwater 57 (2 overtimes) Gibbs 85, Boca Ciega 58 Northeast, 67, Dixie Hollins 66 Lakewood 77, Dunedin 69 Bishop Barry 62, Largo 50 OTHER GAMES Tampa Berkeley Prep 63, Admiral Farragut 44 Fedar Key 59, Chiefland 53 North Marion 63, DunneMon 56 Fort Myers Cypress Lake 56, Venice 52 Punta Gorda Charlotte 72, North Fort Myers 55 Arcadia DeSota 73, Bradenton Southeast 67 Key West 64, Miami Mays 46 Fort Lauderdale Aquinas 82, Pinecrest 72 Florida Air 77, St. Patricks 41 Hialeah 72, Miami Coral Park 50 Miami Killian 57, Miami Southwest 47 Coral Gables 64, South Dade 37 Martin County 52, Jupiter 36 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Temple 73, Navy 63 Army 86, Colgate 52 Louisville 81, North Texas 72 Washington ft Lee 81, Lynchburg 50 Maine 97, New Hampshire 90 You're treated like a king at Colonial Dodge! public is invited to the airport area to watch. This will be a farewell jump and in the nature of a "thank you" to citizens of Zephyrhills for the warm welcome extended the members of the team. Soviet jumpers held 62 day and 30 night records while the Haskins' 28 points, defeated the San Diego Rockets 114-102 last night to solidify their hold on fourth place in the National Team Fouls Gibbs 19, Boca Ciega 17 Fouled out Vaughn, Gibbs, FARRAGUT PREP Basketball Association's West OF 5-6 Super Sprints Ready For Sunshine Dash 11 Flu'ty 1 2-2 ern Division. Knights held one day and 33 Dudley Ahearn Michell Bryan McC'ghy Gilbert 2-4 04) 3-5 0-0 o-o Amateur Gal Golfers 18 Lind'n 0 2-3 0 Simmons 0 1-3 13 Wilson 15 3-7 2 Salhman 0-0 0 Price 5 2-4 Gotpsch 4 1-3 YOU MAY NOT RULE A MONACO BUT YOU CAN DRIVE ONE OR buper bpnnts will race again tonight over Sunshine night records.

The Knights have cut Soviet records to 40 dav and Shoot For Tournament FACT-O-BAKE PAINTS CARS CORRECTLY IH RACING Hj NIGHTLY Speedway's quarter-mile as one night record while capturing Totals 17 1 0-15 44 Totals 26 11-22 63 Li day and ii night records. 1 Admiral Farragut Berkeley Prep 1863 phalt oval in a program that ends with a 30-lap feature for the unlimited class Indianapolis- Games: 138 PJL Admiral Farragut 11 Team Fouls Berkeley Prep 10. Gold Silver Bronie type racers. Ten amateur berths are at stake as 28 of the area's outstanding women golfers tee off at Sunset Golf course today. Each area club was invited to have two representatives compete in the qualifying for the Orange Blossom Open scheduled at Sunset March 14-17.

All Carrier Buyers are Shoppers. Smart Shoppers! Put a Charger in your Three heat races, a trophy Kiniski Whips Scarpa In Armory Wrestling dash and a consolation semi feature are also scheduled. The TAMPA Gene Kiniski, Vermont 99, Norwich 91 Bentley 79, Hawthorne 66 Oakland 62, Spring Arbor 60 Eastern Michigan 89, Cleveland Stat 71 Florida Southern 86, Rollins 77 OLYMPIC HOCKEY Group A Russia 3, Sweden 2 Canada 3, Czechoslovakia i Group Yugoslavia 10, France 1 PRO BASKETBALL National League Boston 127, Detroit 115 Los Angeles 119, Baltimor 116 (ovar-NMtl Chicago 114, San Diego 102 St. Louis 123, Cincinnati 111 Memphis State 67, Miami 44 Manchester 107, Franklin 103 Franc. Norway Holland Sweden Italy Russia United Stain Finland Austria West G.rmany Czechoslovakia Switzerland East Germany Canada Rumania main event will be limited to claimant to the world heavy Priced from the fastest 16 cars.

OO $2897 WHEELBASES on the sprints Derby Lane Perfeeta Pays Off $2,494 Derby Lane's perfeeta soared w. EXCEPT SUNDAY MATINEES WEDNESDAY SAT'lRDAY, 1:30 P.M. OUINIELA, PERFECTA, BIG SETTING DINE AT DERBY CLUB ST. PETERSBURG GANDT BLVD. No Minors delivered in St.

Pete (Ask Your Neighbor!) weight wrestling title, defeated Joe Scarpa in the main event of last night's Gasparilla Spectacular wrestling show at Fort Homer Hesterly Armory. In other bouts Johnny Valen running tonight have been cut from 96 inches to 86 inches and The roadsters have been lowered to a season high last night when one ticketholder collected Kids Stop Kubs to within two inches of the as- Custom Htg. Air Inc. the entire net pool, on tine beat Wahoo McDaniel; The in the sev- Infernos defeated Paul 10 accommoaaie ine snorM the 4-2 combination The Kids defeated the Kubsj 30-13 yesterday in a Three-; Quarter Century softball game, held at North Shore Park. Jimi Marco and Lorenzo Parente; quner-mue iracK.

enth race Missouri Mauler battled Jose Todd GlDson of K'chwood, Monthly Payment as low as $75.00 dflUmtal iniig? "TJie Largest Dodge Dealer" 2301 34th STREET NORTH PHONE 862-5105 Tor a count down to enjoyment Irdiana Tech 106, Huntington 77 Indiana Central 78, Anderson 70 Minnesota (5, Northwestern 80 Oklahoma 63, Southwestern Louisiana 62 South Carotin 72, Ertkin. 67 Michigan 67, Illinois 65 American League Indiana 120, Oakland 109 Pittsburgh 118, Ntw Jersey 114 PRO HOCKEY Eastern League Florida 1, Nashville New Jtriey Johnstown 1 Seattl. WL, 3, Quebec 1 Ohio, and Tom York of Misha- Sales Service 3090 47th Avenue North 527-5774 The season's previous high was $1,598.40 and the track record payoff was $3,954, paid to Bill Tidd, a Tampa winter visitor from Yorkshire, N.Y., last Lothario to a draw while the team of Aldo Bogni and Bronko Lubich got a no contest decision the more difficult "forward outside rocker" for a two-tenths of a point edge on his countryman. Danzer had 352.5 points and Schwarz 352.3. Patricia Pera of France 525-2195 4875 34th ST.

NO. waka, Ir.il.. will be the drivers to watch. Gibson took Friday's I Waldie, Bill McCray, Jack Wernz, and George Thornton smacked home runs for the Kids. Each team is 15-15 on the year.

GO KiTG EDWARD Ltrgtst Stlling Cigtr feature run and York finished against Eddie Graham and his partner Les Welch. I first Saturday night season..

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