THURSDAY. APRIL! 12. 196^ Trout Pishirig Good In County Streams JOE GRATA * Male, female, beginner, amateur, and professional When five o’clock Saturday njoming draws near, anglers of alii sorts will be flodringto wards local streams, and creeks to mark the.olficial beginning of another trout fishing season. . Many students will probably rise well before daybreak to give then: gear a last minute inspection before heading for “the old fishing hole” The sport is as old as man himself, and student enthusiasts who stiijP practice, the ancient cult should find' fishing in Centre County among the best in Penn sylvania. ! “All county ' streams will be well-stocked by opening day," : said .Howard Fox, superintendent of hatcheries fot the Pennsylvania ;State Fish Commission.. THE SPECIES found in this area include the brook, brown, and rainbow trout The minimum length is six inches, with the crpel limit not to : exceed eight of -the combined species each day. . j One of the most popular ofi nearby, fishing spots is “Fisher-! man’s Paradise,” located on Spring Creek about six miles north of State .College on the road '■ to Bellefonte. East year, the take-! i -home limit was one trout per person, “but from rising costs in having to restock the stream so often,” as. it was put by Fox, “we’ve had to regulate the pro gram.** He means that the Fish Com-! mission has inaugurated a “Fish for Fun" program, by which no] fish will allowed to be tahen from Fisherman’s Paradise. Fox pointed out that no bait casting or spinning! reels are to be used in this section of Spring Creek, only fly rods whose [flies fill proper requirements in'regard to hook size. He added that fishing is free, except that persons over sixteen are required to have a license. , "It’s - sq easy to catch trout here,”, Fox i said, “that even be ginning girls have no difficulties." FOX ALSO NOTED that the Lemont area of Spring Creek lies about two miles outside of State College on the road to Bellefonte. Economics Major vwith Fine Arts Styling This one goes to the head of the class— with the lowest Wagon price in the U. S., the highest honors lor top gas mileage, and the longest of high resale value among aB compacts. That’s the Rambler American Deluxe . 2-Door Wagon for you. And when you consider its dean. Crisp styfing that lives so smartly with the years (wa don'tmake drastic changes merely for the sake of change), you! really have a good and handy thing going Jor you. Try it on all counts— , Rambler dealer’s. “ - . ; i ' I -iBL Anierfcaa Motore; Means More for Americans “Pollution is hurting the fish below here” he said, “but the |Stream has exceptionally, good fishing ,in the upper parts near Leraont. For the eager student fisherman, it’s within Twalkipg distance of campus.” District Fish Warden Paul Anto losky of Bellefonte .outlined all the trout fishing streams of the Centre County area in a recent report. He also advised, “you’ll find that fish are resting behind large [rocks and logs but will venture [into faster water when feeding time comes. Logs, under-cut banks, and large overhanging rocks will provide cover for fish ■ Good cover and an ample food ‘supply indicate the best places to 'spend your time fishing.^ ■ BALD EAGLE CEEEE—rated imoei btrt in country for Urge. trophy eixed trout . . . enaily nrruiMc entire lra«th ifrom Rt. 220 . . - one of terse etremms in eren. I SPRING CREEK-clone to State Col lie . . . Leraont Mellon within welkin* —Sugar Ray nouncement Tuesday that Robin : By DENNIS KHKHT Robinson just missed getting to get hard wortt before' another world title £i § ht 85 * June dash in Lotvdon Some present for his soonle 42nd l “” IS W ihi“lS;U* ,& b ‘(KS birthday, his adviser disclosed! haw to, (he «- invaded the area last week. (yesterday. [tie all right,” said Gninfocd. • The Lion coaches have been? Instead the farmer nreitma.-ei.rM(That’* w hv I was in Boston for holding light workouts on-BeaverL-j Pmder-Downes fight. This Field since the opening of the! wi J h a^at*" 11 ** real b * *-™don spnng term and expected to start ™ f^ a d2 way Ra T has » name SSL'S*** SS2d^“^AeiaS>sto ! LSdfe: m s? 1 *. „_ „ wee*, rain on Saturday rained m j un)f i Robinson, who will be 42 on P* ai }f ~l or tnals if the cocky Cockney had re-i 3y 3 according to the record ev‘en tsf 1 but^most his of the middl >»«ady has had 22 title but most , JKS|ppi2?\ weight crown against Paul Pen-! fl ( !h t?''?,«h r ce dm S ions~wcner : 1 «* d , der last Saturday instead of <*>. middleweight (15) and mm' i in « * DO™ and Robinson' 1 *!* 1 heavyweight (1). The mag- ; P Afore : f J would have fought for the title, nuicent boxer-puncher was on the More rain and ______ verge of talcing the light heavy iMondays cold HR'Wti GEORGE GAINFORD. Robin-weight crown from Joey M-vx- I weather and high ' son's adviser, and.'Sam Burns, im in 1953 when he roMon-' i ir [winds ruined an- «■»*%ff Downes* manager, confirmed the 103-degrcc heat and couldn" (other workout. "■Hp* ; matchmaker Mickey Duff’s an- come out for the 11th round However, coach f t ‘ Chick Werner' was intent on V seeing some re sults and timed Sieve Moorhead his four top distance men Gene Norman, Mike Miller, Howie Daar dorff and Steve Moorhead in the four-mile relay. . The weather also played havoc [with the conditions of the track.: Constant freezing and thawing temperatures have kept it soft and. the runner’s spikes have dug it up. 1 Navy, State’s first opponent,' prepared for the Lions with a . triangular meet Win at Quantico, last -Saturday. The Middies took the first three places ini ; the shot put to roll up 70% points : against the Quantico Marines’ S 5: 1 and Morgan State’s 49%. { Sophomore Doug Tozour, who : won the discus and hammer! i throws, was the only double win-j 1 ner for Navy. The Marines had, , two double winners, former! ! Prihcetoi) star Dick Edmunds in 1 the 220 and 440, and Gary Weis-j inger. former Duke ace, in the mile and two mile runs. - A QUESTION TO 1962 ENGINEERING t SCIENCE QIAOUATESt while If your answer is yea you didn’t talk with GE when we j were on campus), this message is ad dressed to you. ; At The Knolls' Atomic Ifower Laboratory,, select opportunities are - now open to hard-Mtting engineering and .science graduates who Jean qualify for one of the following work-study regimes: * I i KAPt-RPI PROGRAM Openings for engineering; and physics graduates.' A 2>4 to 3- j work-study Master's degree Program conducted in conjunction with [Rensselaer Polytechnic jlnsti tuteJ Offers Master’s degree in fieid of choice'—minor in Nuclear Engineering. ( V. S.iCitizenship Required receive is a |IVHKCI~«IrI (ran Bill McHUIIIH /BILL\ or Around lhe |ggt tf/nllT >3O East CoMaot Av*w»« 1 IiUHA 3m* Catbg* NiM^vania Djo you wank to your continuing to Selection of canAidatet\it note in progress. 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