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Show Sunday, November 28, 1378. THE HERALD, Provo, 9 ge Utah-Pa- Aiimn uowns is W i M ,f f&J f I jvr i W fttea Semifinal n .,.,u r.r''"'1--- '.j i.ry-- r r il. W -- -- . v T i t ; - , . If T - W - aV--i ' . r v 1 7 I n 4 i,f jr t ;, Michigan-Delawar- - - - . ' ' . ;www " " -- - HUNTERS bagged sour Canadian geese, two swans and four ducks in big day south of Utah County. From left standing, Gary Ferre, Thayne Ferre and Charles Ferre all of Orem, and Danny Stevenson of erio Cops 2i s - Allan ATHENS, GA. (UPI) Leavitt kicked a field goal with only five seconds remaining Saturday to give heavily-favoreGeorgia a hard-earne- over fourth-ranke- d victory 13-1- 0 d Georgia Tech in dense arch-riv- fog and steady rain. Jackets, trailing 10--0 after three periods, had scored 10 points in the final quarter on a The Yellow field goal by Danny Smith and a run by Eddie Lee Ivery to tie the scrre. But Georgia, the Southeastern Conference champion, moved down the field in the waning minutes of play and field Leavitt booted the e situation at goal, on a the Tech 16. The Bulldogs will carry a 10 1 record into their Sugar Bowl match with Pittsburgh in New Orleans on New Year's Day. Tech finished its season at Tech bottled up the Georgia running attack in the first quarter and rnidwav game-winnin- fourth-and-thre- Driessen Signs ruu CINCINNATI (UPI- )- Dan Driessen. who has the distinction of being the National League's first and, so far, only designated hitter, has signed a r contract for the 1977 season with the Cincinnati Reds. Designated hitters, used in the American League but not in the National, were permitted in the recent World Series for the first time ever, and Driesson served as Cincy's DII in all four games against the New York Yankees, slugging two doubles and a home run and hitting ,357. In the regular season. Driessen had 219 hitting .247 with 44 RBI. He at times, but mainly outfield the played substituted at first base for Tony one-yea- Perez, H FH ru M (UPI) -Senior tailback Glen Capriola thundered 179 yards and Smith tossed two swing Cross, The a series that began years ago. Jackets pounded out 80 yards. Dave Sims .ran 17 and 28 yards for the key plays before Ivery took a pitchout and dashed 26 yards for the touchdown. Smith's extra point tied the game. An exchange of fumbles helped keep Georgia's drive for the winning field goal alive. The Bulldogs took the ball at the 33 and rolled to teen's 2! where Goff fumbled with Tech's Don Bessil-lierecovering. But on the next play Tech fullback Adrian Rucker fumbled and Georgia defensive back BUI Kru recovered at the 34. The Bulldogs, moving against the clock, carried the ball to the 16 before Leavitt s game winning kick. Georgia's Al Pollard ran 24 times for 112 yards and Kevin McLee carried 30 105 yards. McLee finished with 1,058 rushing for the season to become the The . passes were 15 yards to Dennis Ouellette and 16 yards to Lee Pope. Kostrba led all rushers with 115 yards on 14 carries. Bill Burniiam, the nation's fourth leading rusher, was effectively shut down by the Bobcat 17-- defense, which limited him to 6G yards on 17 carries. The win, MSU's 10th of the year against one loss, put the Bobcats into the Division II semifinals against North Dakota State at Fargo next Saturday. Earlier this season MSU defeated North Dakota State 34 7 in Bowman. The playoff loss left the Wildcats, who won the one-yar- Yankee Conference championship this First Pros season, With a final mark CINCINNATI (UPI) The Cincinnati Tieds, win of 83. --ner or ineir secor.a str.ncnt Wor d series m 1976. tteie the first professional baseball team In 1869, the i'tyXii-iiiiS- i - .J 7 i't r,n, j j.. .1 l . , i .... ;v -- 1 1 I : k'Ft thc could find and began paying them A humiliating i defeat two years earlier by a barnstorming amateur team from Washington, DC, prompted the decision to pay players. - :- fr- - ia . - k:r- - y-&AtM I ys&A&J ! (- - l' ' buto .d Tim Moorman added a field goal. Dennis Buchanan added a scoring run and Dan Conway raced 27 yards to finish the Eagle's s r i n,ra. no need to ...'.-'.'- yj' f 1 yi . t for n ? iISni "" 14 l4 li t o t4 M p V"" A Vv ' y p H K 41 1 1 I Mi tlClftl!Pa 0 w ' i Good November 29 to December 4, 1976 While Stock lasts! W ;n V L 1 took when yoo itfei fi There WVWi d A chooS. from y:y sill for a touchdown. 1,000-yar- 8 j m m t )m YMW flanker Paul McCarty and 10 yards to tight end Don Petersen McCarty also caught a scoring pass from backup quarterback Joe O'Brien, who later ran one yard runner since Frank Sinkwich back in 1941 to top the mark. Despite the dismal weather, a sellout crowd of more than 60,000 attended the game. if " 80 8-- Georgia v x TTTC-- rf T Boston College, which finished the season at also got scores on Smith's passes of 49 yards to u fl Pi. n 0! 59-- Capriola, who finished the season with 1,003 yards rushing, was voted the O'Melia Trophy as the game's top player. His touchdown runs from one snd two yM? rmt won among the Berwyn, Pa., back's 23 carries. r-- Paul Dennehy mi t ? -- 3 Boston College past traditional rival Holy the ft plunge early in (he fourth period. It was then that. Allen brought New Hampshire to hie. His two scoring one-yar- 18 passes Saturday to boost Lucius Sanford F1 d board first on a sneak by quarterback two kick. On P II w Sr touchdowns while Ken win was Boston College's 10th straight over Holy Cross and gave the Eagles edge in first s S for recovered a fumble for Georgia Tech at the Georgia 19 late in the third quarter. Tech moved it to the one where, facing a fourth down situation, coach Pepper Rodgers decided to go for a field goal. Smith put the Yellow Jackets on the board with a Tech's next possession, st is JwS? !i3 v.Alm H BOSTON d Linebacker played The second half was a punting contest with winds gusting up to 35 miles per hour keeping most kicks short and the ball in the middle of the field. M ?VA. S Big Win through the second until Bulldogs quarterback Ray Gotf began to throw. He connected on his first three passes for 10, 12 and seven yards in an march for the game's first touchdown. Goff scored it on a three yard keeper. Georgia drove 68 yards at the start, of the third quarter and Leavitt kicked a field when the drive bogged down at the five. m rl Eagles If S Mont. iafis touchdown was set up by defeat New Hampshire a pass from DenSaturday in a nehy to Len Kelly snd a 28 Division II yard run by Kelly. football playoff. Moments later the BobA missed extra point cats cashed in on a fumble recovery when Tom following the final Wildcat touchdown was the Kostrba dashed 40 yards to set up a field deciding margin. The Bobcats, with a goal by Jeff Muri. lead seemingly safe The Wildcats got on the early in the fourth board shortly before the quarter, saw quarter- half on an 18 yard field back Jeff Alien of the Sam Checovich Wildcats fill the air with goal by after Allen had passed footballs in the final 12 the Wildcats down the minutes. Allen guided his field with short passes. team to two touchdowns The two clubs battled within five minutes and through a scoreless third kept the New Hampshire team in contention until quarter before Belmar the final 30 seconds. Jones, the Bobcats' fullback, dashd 58 yards to MSU, after a scoreless d first quarter, got on the set up Kostrba's Akron then moved 74 yards in seven plays, all on the ground, to again take the lead. The touchdown came when sophomore quarterback Marty ran an option play 43 yards. Deniss Stroud then intercepted a pass by Rebel quarterback Glenn Carano and returned it 21 yards to the Las Vegas 49. Akron scored 11 plays later with jiinior fullback Mark Hovanec scoring his first TD ever. Pleasant Grove. Front, Steven Elder, Orem. Charles and Thayne Ferre had swan permits and each bagged a bird weighing about 20 pounds each. Geese weighed around 10 pounds. a rally to last-quart- . !lti.UiliyW'''iW''.----r- ihc-S- m - Akron scored first as they took the opening kickoff and marched down to the Las Vegas 24 where Jim Embick kicked the first of his two field goals. On the next kickoff, the Rebels' Henry Vereen caught the ball in the end zone, ran it out to the nine, and then lateraled to freshman Ken Bowles who dashed the remaining 91 yards for the d score. Bowles got credit for a return. tJ ' gams e Vfc' sUPD The Montana Siate Bobcats withstood a Saturday. ; " pt; - - . ! f v . .","'Trr""""""" l .' -"- , itv i ::i T " I f "."t" -- ' w BOZEMAN. AKRON. Ohio (UP!) Akron g UniverUniversity held sity of Nevada Las Vegas to just 2!5 total yards and smashed the Rebels, 27-Saturday Li a semifinal game for the NCAA Division II national championship. on the The win puts Akron, now year, into the Knute Rockr.e Bowl next Saturday in Akron's Rubber Bowl against the winner of the Western high-scorin- It 4 m- -r Is that Christmas gift list getting longer as I the days get BASE BOARD SJJ 2rtQWatt 5 220 j VOLT I 15n Ft 1250 W;tt;. 3 Ft 250 Watt 11" 6Ftl503Iait 17 4 ft 1000 Watt 1311 21 17 Ft 2500 10 o Ft 2000 wait 25" Watt Wa!I Tbrrmndti ? t 1 DRESS UP B W H r 7 4T ra F08TH5 HOLIDAYS W : .,,................ 7 V' 4. f if . M M Hcot Cable Abo Avotioble i FEFF ( GIFT L " 185 MS Pik M j to ii " I M J Baseboard Thermasf at Double Pole Itsls ThcrRisstsi Ssnis Po.3 I shorter? A' 6T y R I i ou won't find a better, friendlier plat far your hofidoy ihof.pirg thoti (Kit tommunity. Our merthonti end thnir tmpioytt urt your ft iends pftl r..kH'.'t who know you und c&n beW you wifh nil yur hu'idxy neJ- ! - 0 m$ V m SOUTH ST All - w OliM, WWW UTAH IliWeslGitier, -- sees r.e Quafify Sforl wif.S family Fik mSONAUUDtmtCilNOOWMQVMnOVQ At fHONt 225-445- 9 t 1 PrftV9,Uh;h , t. i |