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Show v'- un f - 2D The Salt Lake Iribune, Sunday, November 14, tv i Pheasant Hunters Have Fair Success 1371 Tribune Outdoor Editor DAcnitA mtHHr fnarle nrirj wet fields, Utahs hunters had fair to good success Saturday as the pheasant season opened across the state. Spotty Hunt The hunt was spotty, with the best reports coming in from southwestern, northeastern and central Utah sectors. Poorer reports came out of northern Utah, where Friday nights storm struck the heav- :r;,b iest. ! C'.y'V- - !?. vv vV '!,'. A ,yx A 'C M X'V; o X: V. - . By Don Brooks P 'V it s v s & ' ?& JO Reports from southeastern Utah areas were generally poor. And the storm apparently kept a lot of scattergunner at home. Conservation officers in the Uintah Basin section said pressure was rnucn lighter than in previous years. It appeared for a time before dawn Saturday that the hunt was going to be wiped cut as ratns and hail belled northern Utah points. But the weather gods relented and by the time hunting started at 8 a.m. skies had cleared. By 10 a.m. in the Salt Lake Valley it wus an absolutely beautiful day. This w.iter toured hunting areas in both the north and south ends of the valley. Most hunters were contacted in the West Jordan area had some birds, although we failed to check any limits. In the northern part of the country we saw less hunters than in previous years, but many of them had their birds. . Milford Area Above-averag- hunting was e reported from the Milford sec- tor and officers in North Sanpete said success was above n Muddy fields proved on the of the hard to flush because damp fields. ice Gesture, Ray Around Springville, Maple-toarid Provo, fair hunting was reported throughout the day. Pressure was heavy and the birds were hard to find. Up north, hunters had about 30 percent success around Plain City and Ogden. Poor hunting was the rule in most of Box Elder County where muddy roads proved a big handicap. n W1S. BAY, UPI) Ray Nitschke, the veteran Green Bay middle linebacker who is being honored Dec. 12, has asked that all money collected for him be used to set up a nonsectarian organization to help underprivileged children in Wisconsin. tough scattergunners around Logan in Cache County. Dav is County had very heavy pressure with conservation officers reporting fair to good success. Reports from southeastern Utah were all the same. Poor hinting was reported from Only fair success was rethe from ported section, with heavy pressure. The birds were extremely spotty and Roads were bad but hunting GREEN Fields Soaked Fair Success area. IN The Corinr.e area was listed as fair hunting. Moderate sucwas cess reported from Point where Promontory fields were extremely wet. was good in the Lakeshoie-- , section ol Berijamin-PaysoUtah County. The harvest was duwn around Juab County spots, but the pressure was light because of extremely wet fields. average. Good hunting was reported around Gunnison and Centerfield. The Delta sector apparently was slow, with heavy pressure. Hunters had fair success around Duchesne and results were listed fair to good in the Gusher-LaPoisection. Few hunters and few birds was the story from the Roosevelt Huntington, Ferron, Wellington and the Green River dis tricts. for Pros pects Sunday's hunting were not too good late The National Weather Service expects storm front to move across most of the state, with snow expected in the mountains and rain in the valleys. Saturday. ' ' Portland Ice l Kent Peterson bagged this brace of t pheasants in West Jordan area with ..... -- Ponies Drop Parsons in Battle $8-2- help of his dog, Freckles. Section drew many hunters on opening day. Eagle Crew Special to The Tribune Don Brooks 1 Special to The Tribune SILVER CITY, N.M. -Western New Mexico University exploded for two fourth qijhrter touchdowns Saturday toJiose out the Westminster in a Rocky Parsons, Mountain Conference battle Fish and Game Developments I11 Intermouutain Area Just banging around these here hills: MONTANA The harvest of grizzly beas is of 1970. At least 15 grizzlies ahead running slightly have been taken this year compared to a total of 13 taken by hunters daring the entire 1970 season. her. &he loss dropped the Parses to a league record ajjd left them with a final nark for the season. This .s tl$. best record for the in five years. 4 4 A significant change in the 1972 NEVADA fishing regulations will be inclusion of the East Fork of the Owyhee River from Wildhorse Reservoir to the Duck Valley Indian Reservation as waters allowing five fish daily and in possession. Wilson Sink Reservoir and tributaries and Bull Run Reservoir also were added to waters. Most of Nevadas waters remain ''pen on a yearly basis. UTAH According to the Utah Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit at Utah State, the prairie dog occurs only in a limited area of south central Utah. Only three counties (Iron, Wayne and Garfield) have significant populations. A total population of 6,000 animals has been estimated for the entire state. WYOMING A' Wisconsin man recently had the dubious distinction of shelling out the largest fine ever assessed in Wyoming against a single hunter. He was fined S1.1S5 on five counts of overbag limit, five counts of improper license and five counts of illegal possession and transportation of game. He was nailed after killing two deer and five turkeys. Besides his own permits, he hid another persons deer license and four extra turkey permits. $ was first on Westminster the; board when Guy Brown blocked a Mustang field goal attempt, then ran 63 yards with the ball for a touchdown. Bob Wittwers kick was good a ijd Westminster led, jitter Wittwer attempted a d nl$ goal in the second missed, the Mustangs were held for four downs and file Parsons took the ball on llfeir own 44 and marched in Mustangs 28 from where CEuek Riley blasted over for sijlpoints. The PAT was good aa( the Parsons led, 14-Ijie Mustangs recovered a PJixson fumble on the Westminster 24 and scored five plajs later with Gary Robles bouncing over from the two. PAT was good and at the ii0f the score was 14-- for the Parsons. Westminster capitalized lor five-fis- h quar-teT-an- e 7 Continue License Quotas alcoie after a Parson punt nij a Mustang ball player and roiled to the Western N e w Mexico five. Two plays later, hit Jimmy Rsy Dickerson Philips for the score. The conversion was good to put ile 'Parsons on top by 14. Western New Mexico intercepted a Parson pass and a penalty on the play moved the 26. oalf to the Westminster Robles sprinted around end fejihe score and the kick was IDAHO Quotas on nonresident big game licenses will be conhunting licenses and 1972. Director Joe tinued through Greenley said the be will numbers for the 9,552 magic quota of nonresident big game licenses during the 1972 seasons and licenses. The licenses in 3,821 nonresident deer-onlquestion are the nonresident combination hunting and fishing licenses, needed for hunting elk and costwhich will be ing S135, and the nonresident $75 in 1972, an increase of $25. Wilson snipe are fair game for water-fow- l UTAH hunters on the marshes until the snipe season closes on Dec. 5. Daily bag limit is eight birds and Zjtuck Riley dosed out his possession limit is 16. fdur - year carer at Westmin-teIDAHO - - The general fishing season in Idaho with 132 yards in rushing in 1972 will open on May 27 and close Nov. 30. The injhis final game. statewide daily trout limit has been reduced from 15 to 10 fish. Other restrictions include season and daily bag limits on salmon and steelhead, limiting part of the Henrys Fork of Snake River to fly fishing, and allowing only catch and release fishing on the Middle Fork of the Salmon River. WYOMING Applications for the nonresident and fishing license ($125) must be in the hunting .SOUTH BEND, IND. (UPI) Fish and Game offices before the Nov. 15 Cheyenne ' Sophomore quarterback deadline. A drawing will be conducted Nov. 16. HoldClifford Brown scored two ers of the license are allowed to harvest one antlered touchdowns and passed for elk, one deer, a black bear, birds, plus fishing. another in a second-haldrive deer-onl- y y deer-onl- y f Second Half Slaves Irish f to bring Notre Saturday Dafne from behind to a triumph over underdog Tulane. The Irish victory, however, was unimpressive and proba-hfdidn't help the Notre Djime bowl prospects despite running their season record to right wins and only one loss. bowl four front Jkxmts the Sugar, Gator. games were on Liberty and Fiesta !iiid to watch die display. TJhey saw nothing to impress them until the second hJM as Tulane limited Notre Dajne to only 63 yards rushing and 74 passing in the (jpening 30 minutes. Mean-whpTulane controlled the bJH most of the time and lead when Rusty esrjied a Laehausse completed a lotihdown pass to Steve Bar-21-- 7-- 0 d 1 ioS. It took Brown he. third period almost to - PORTLAND The Salt Lake Golden Eagles, riding a winning streak, will into Portland Sunday night and attempt to do something they have never done beat the Buckaroos at home. two-gam- e roll Beat Jinx 28-2- Far-son- The Difference in Leasing: Greets half spark the Irish into a tie. and he ran over from one yard out him-se- l with 8:30 gone in the quarter to wind up a march in 11 plays. Report on Ruby Marshes NEVADA The Board of Fish and Game Commissioners and the U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife have gone on record dispelling rumors that the Ruby Marsh area is to be commercialized with addition of concession, marinas and other private development. The two agencies also have agreed that the Ruby Marshes will again be open to fishing on a year around basis except where posted. Now that ALL POINTS BULLETIN environmentalism is in, the world ecology is so popular that many people mistakenly assume they and use it incorrectly. know what it means Ecology is not interchangeable with ecosystem. Like all words ending in ology, ecology is a branch of science. Ecosystem refers to a comnurity of living organisms and their environments. Thus, pollution damages a river ecosystem, not the river ecology. Pollution cannot damage a branch of science. To put it another way, we study ecology and try to preserve the ecosystem. Sez the Sourdough Kid: I don't know about that ecology business, but some joker polluted my last batch of soda biscuits and if I catch him I'm going to ram the mess down his ecosystem. o In the Eagles two previous seasons they compiled a dismal record on Portland ice, but the Salt Lake club is hoping to beat that jinx Sunday. The two teams have met twice so far this season with the Eagles winning at Salt Lake and the Bucks winning at home. The game Sunday will have several interesting facets. It will mark the first heme game this year for rugged Buck Connie defenseman Madigan who sat out the first month of the season under suspension. Madigan was suspended for striking an official during the WHL playoffs last spring. Tied Record lied Guvle Fielder, who Gordie Howes point scoring record against Seattle Friday, will be out to break the that mark Bucks. Fielder had three assists against the Totems to put him at 1,809 points and tie him with the retired Howe. Fielder is playing on a line with newcomers Wilf Martin and Reg Fleming, and this veteran trio is expected to give the league's defensemen and goalies plenty of trouble before the season is out. suv . - ft' e against HAROLD H. BENNETT President RICHARD S. BENNETT ROBERT H. BIRD Executive Vice President Executive Vice President and General Manager Defense Down The Buckaroos, WHL champions last season, have not hit their stride yet, but they have not yet been beaten at home. The' Buck defense is down a bit with several stars missing from last years team, but the return of Michigan should Salt Lake has outshot the in the first Buckaroos, of the teams two meetings this year, and the Portland club will be out to stop the Eagle attack. Salt Lake will return home after Sundays game and will s Phoenix the meet in a Thursday clash at the Salt Palace. That gome will be the final home game for Salt Lake until Dec. 2. 83-6- Road-runner- Louisiana Stale Roars to 28-- 3 Triumph JACKSON. MISS. (UPI) -QLyons ran for two ouchdowr.s Saturday night to tie n school record and lead Louisiana State to a 28-- Southeastern Conferencec victory over Mississippi State. Lyons, a junior, raced 13 and" 15 yards for touchdowns as the potent LSU offense kept mainly on the ground lo subdue the stubborn Bulldogs. Bert Jones, Quarterback alternating with Lyons, scored run and on a Chris Dantin added the other touchdown on a three-yar- d dash. Jay Michaelson was successful on all four extra point attempts. The only scoring for Mississippi State came on a field goal in the first quarter by Glen Ellis. The rugged LSU defense managed to contain the Bulldogs new wishbone offense for the remainder of the night. The two touchdowns by 1946 Lyons tied a record set in by Y. A. Tittle for most touchdowns scored and responsible for in a single season. Lyons to six hoosted his record touchdowns running and nine passing. uarterback Paul 3 tail-buc- k two-var- d I V ' trwv. WILLIAM J. JOHN H. BENNETT HARVEY Vice President, Truck Renting and Leasing PETER A. M. VAN DERHEYDE Automobile Vice President, Manager, Automobile Leasing and Equipment Leasing Leasing is a relatively young business and still a mystery to some. But leasing has come of age. It is recognized and utilized as a valuable management practice to cut expenses and control capital 'outlay. The basic question today is not should lease?'', but. rather, "which leasing company has the experience, the expertise to design the lease tor my need? Equally important, which company has the stability and reputation to carry out its promises? Meters, Ford. Chrysler Corp., Arp.sricsn Motors and importers. We are not restricted to any one supplier or any one make. This provides a special advantage to Bennett Lease customers. If you know which make and model of car you want, Bennett's will arrange the best possible lease. bt pioneers There are always costly pitfalls in pioneering. Bennett Lease is long past the pioneering stage. Bennetts key people, with over 100 years total experience, are leaders in national leasing circles. They KNOW THE BUSINESS. Bennett Lease, as a result, has grown and expanded because it has offered good service, trustworthy counsel and kept its promises. any make or model Bennett Lease started years ago as part of Bennett Motor. But as the business grew. Bennett Lease became an INDEPENDENT company leasing vehicles supplied by General free advice If you want help in choosing the right make, model and accessories for your particular need and budget; Bennett Lease can give you straight answers. We are free to recommend the best without bias. Our comparative leasing rate chart on all brands of cars is helpful in making decisions. diversified Bennett Lease is the largest Lesser of vehicles in Utah a position reached after 20 years and many thousands of car and truck leases. 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