The Highacres collegian. (Hazleton, PA) 1956-????, January 18, 1971, Image 8

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    HIGHACRES COLLEGIAN, JAN, 18, 1970--PAGE EIGHT
Hazleton clobbers
The Hazleton campus
intercollegiate basketball team
mauled the host Schuylkill
team Saturday night at the
Blue Mountain High School
gymnasium, 90-76.
Hazleton placed six men in
double figures. Bill Schaller led
the Hazleton barrage with 29
points, Joe Zoeller had 17,
Steve Barrett and Greg Knouse
tied with 12 each, and Jim
Barrett and Larry Kovatch also
matched scoring abilities with
10 apiece.
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Jan. 16
Jan. 20.
Jan. 23
Jan. 27
Feb. 2 .
Feb 3 .
Feb. 5 .
Feb. 8 .
Feb. 10
Feb. 13
Feb. 17
Feb. 20
Feb. 25
Home games are played at the Jewish Community Center
(JCC). Gametime is 7:30 p.m.
Emergency stations
If a snow emergency occurs, listen to any of the following radio
stations for information about classes
WHLM
WARM
WILK.
WYNS
WBRX
WLSH
WAZL,
WMBT,
Need a 2a.m.
book break?
No matter how late you're up we're up later! 2 am.,
4 a.m., anytime you need a break from boning up . . . or
want to cut out from calculus ... swing by Dunkin' Donuts.
We're close to campus. Open 24 hours a day, 7 days a
week. We pledge to make our donuts fresh every 4 hours.
(52 varieties from plain to fancy filled.) And we brew our
coffee fresh every 18 minutes.
Kelly was high man for
Schuylkill with 29, tying
Schaller for game honors.
Kramer and Sakowski were the
only other members of the
Schuylkill team to hit the
doubles column with 19 and
10 respectively.
Hazleton, missing the
services of last year's leading
scorer, Dave Pikna (sidelined
with a broken finger), struggled
to a 41-41 halftime score with
the Schuylkill five. But the
Hazleton contingent put it all
•
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Schuy kill A
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Allentown H
Mont Alto H
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Schuykill H
Wilkes-Barre A
Wilkes-Barre H
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St. Pius H
550 kc Bloomsburg
590 kc Scranton
980 kc Wilkes-Barre
1150 Lehighton
.... 1280 kc Berwick
...1410kc Lansford
...1490kc Hazleton
..1510 Shenancoah
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Schuylkill, so• 16
together in the second half and
went on to win with all reserve
players getting a chance to
play.
Head coach George Bobby
proclaimed that the game was
won on the basis of "great
team effort."
This week's schedule pits
Hazleton against Scranton on
Wednesday at Scranton and
brings Allentown to Hazleton
on Saturday.
Lack height advantage
by Tom Caccese, Sports Editor
The Hazleton campus
intercollegiate season got
underway on Saturday night at
the Blue Mountain gymnasium,
home of the Schuylkill team.
Head coach George
Bobby, assistant professor of
health and physical education,
predicts a good year for his
'hoopsters.' Speed will be a
great aid to the team since they
lack the height advantage that
most teams in the league will
have.
The team will sport good
ball handlers in Jim Barrett,
Dave Pikna, and Bill Schaller.
Steve Barrett, Joe Zoeller and
Larry Kovatch will pull down
their share of rebounds but not
without a struggle. Barrett is a
proven (caper but Zoeller and
Kovatch will have to prove
themselves.
The team is maturing with
every practice session and by
Feb. 15 they will know
whether they have it or not. Of
course, one never knows what
may happen in college
basketball, as exemplified by
last year's team which mauled
their first four opponents like
Sherman destroyed Georgia in
his march to the sea.
Then the roof fell in and
the team struggled through the
PREGNANT?
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Route 93
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The box scores
HAZLETON
J. Barrett 4 24 10, S. Barrett 5
2-4 12, Schaller 12 5-8 29,
Zoeller 8 1-2 17, Knouse 6 0-0
12, Kovatch 5 0-0 10,
Dougherty 0 0-3 0. TOTALS
40 10-21 90.
SCHUYLKILL
Drahuschack 4 1-1 9, Fink 2
2-2 6, Kelly 11 7-12 29,
Kramer 8 3-8 19, Honich 0 1-2
1, Sakowski 4 2-3 10, Mulloch
1 0-0 2. TOTALS 30 16-28 76.
rest of its schedule and finished
with an 8-5 record. What
happened? How can you beat a
team by 20 points at their
court and then lose by 20
points a few weeks later to that
same team on your home
court?
It is hope that this year's
team will put it all together
and give 100% for forty
minutes. If they don't, it could
be just another mediocre
season.
Behrend defending champion
Penn State's
Commonwealth Campus
basketball league opened its
season last week with a
ten-game schedule.
The league alignment
shows two conferences, each
with two divisions. Teams will
play a ten-game schedule.
The Western Conference
includes Beaver, Behrend,
Dußois and Shenango Valley in
Division I. Division II teams are
Altoona, Fayette, McKeesport
and New Kensington.
Division I teams in the
Eastern Conference are
Allentown, Hazleton,
Schuylkill, Scranton and
Wilkes-Barre. Berks, Delaware,
Mont Alto, Ogontz and York
comprise Division 11.
The 18-member league will
conclude its season Feb. 26-27
at the New Kensington campus
with the four division winners
hying for the league
championship. Behrend is the
defending champion.
Hundreds of cranes, egrets and herons
flock each year to a 380-acre lagooning
system at Humble Oil & Refining Co.'s
refinery at Baytown, Tex. The lagoons
were built several years ago as the final
stage of an extensive water treatment
system designed to remove impurities
from the refinery's waste water. The re
finery lagoons and surrounding vegeta-
The World Of The Beaver
A beaver scurries across the land, collecting food and materials
for his home, then heads for his pond and disappears beneath
the surface. For the second time in wildlife history, man will
have an opportunity to dive in with the mysterious beaver and
share the beauty of his surroundings and marvel at his tech
nical skills.
Beaver Biography
This beaver biography illus
trates the way of all beavers—
playing, working, finding a
mate and starting a family. It
shows the relationship these
furry animals have with the
other wildlife, and also the
dangers they have to face—
from ferocious bears to man
made traps. And there are
humorous scenes too, such as
the "pool party" where
skunks, raccoons, badgers,
porcupines and muskrats are
photographed from below as
they demonstrate their various
swimming styles.
Beavers are known as work
ers, and this film gives a
beaver's-eye view of them bus.
fly going about their tasks.
They select a site on the edge
of a stream, surrounded by
aspen trees, their favorite
food. Then they collect stones
and twigs to dam the stream,
and with mud and sticks, they
build their lodges. The only
entrances are underwater, and
the structure is as intricate as
a bird's nest.
The beavers' ability as con
Bowling tournament planned
The Hazleton campus Pocono region at University
bowling team will be in Park in a tournament to be
tournament competition for held spring term.
the first time this year on Feb.
12-13 at Allentown. The team Tryouts will be held in the
will compete against coming weeks. Interested
Schu y l k ill, Scr an t on, students should contact Tom
Wilkes-Barre, and the host Caccese.
team, Allentown. Trophies won by previous
The winner of the two-day bowling teams are on display in
event will then represent the the SUB lounge.
Birds Flock To Oil Refinery
struction and drainage en
gineers is illustrated by the ex
tensive watercanal systems
they build under their lodges.
During the winter they store
branches and bark in their
larders, and even when there's
snow and ice above, they can
swim through their canals to
get food.
Beauty of Jackson Hole
"The World of the Beaver,"
set primarily in the beautiful
Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Rocky
Mountains, took 18 months to
film over a three-year period.
The underwater scenes were
shot during all four seasons—
the freezing winter as well as
the hot summer. The photog
rapher traveled alongside these
fascinating creatures, filming
what the beavers themselves
were seeing—wild flowers com
ing into bloom, the rare red
wing blackbird in search of
insect food, a new mother
sandpiper protecting her eggs,
an enemy bear trying to break
into the lodge.
Through this unusual adven
ture film, man is able to share
the secret underwater world
of the beaver.
tion have become an unofficial bird
sanctuary for many types of birds, in
cluding numerous roseate spoonbills, a
pink-feathered bird now considered an
endangered species by the American
Audubon Society. Many birds spend
nine to ten months at the refinery, mi
grating farther south only during the
severe winter months.
•
C TIRE
p
C n SERVICE
Tire Specialists
for 36 years
Outdoors...with Braskie
. .... ..
With the holiday season at
its official end, sportsmen are
digging out their warmest
winter clothing and a set of
strange-looking fishing gear.
__ •
Their wives and children
gaze in wonder as, for the first
time in a year, the tip,ups, ice
augers, and fishing shanties
come out of summer storage.
Although many fishermen
like to sit home during the
colder months, just as many
more aren't able to resist that
"inner" drive that sends them
to the frozen lakes to try and
catch the big ones.
The method of
transportation of the ice
fisherman varies with the
individual. Some prefer to use
their "walkin' shoes" and drag
a small sled full of gear behind
them. Others use a snowmobile
accompanied by a tow-sled in
which the gear is transported.
Still another method, although
not as practical as the
forementioned, is used by a
small minority group. These
adventurous souls don ice
skates and skate to their
favorite spot.
There is a little "trick"
that many ice fisherman
CHURA'S
ESSO SERVICE
CENTER
Complete
Auto Service
NORTH BROAD ST.
PHONE 454-7229
22nd &N. CHURCH STS. 455-3281
HAZLETON
recommend for insured
chances of success. Instead of
just baiting a hook and
forgetting about it until a fish
strikes, it is recommended that
the bait on each hook be
"freshened" at random
intervals.
The method of ice fishing
is simple. It consists of merely
choosing a promising location,
drilling a hole in the ice with
an auger, baiting a tip-up, and
trying to stay warm till the fish
bite.
For those of you that do
not know what a tip-up is, here
is a simplified explanation. A
tip-up is a device where a
fishing line is suspended from a
framelike structure with a
spring-loaded signaling device
in the form of a flag or the like
on top. When the fish bites and
tugs on the line, it activates the
loaded spring which, in turn,
lets the fisherman know that a
fish is on.
So all you young
adventurous souls get out in
that cold winter air and try this
very productive method of
fishing. But don't get
frustrated if your first efforts
are denied, success comes with
experience.
BOWL
ARENA
Your
Friend
Neighbor