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Show j. - rowo Wasps Whip1 Ice Cold Vikings HOW THEY FINISHED 1 ' 2. 3. 4. ' 5. 6 TitoK Pleasant Grove American Fork Judge Memorial Parowan PROVO. UTAH! COUNTY, UTAH ' ' Lehi ! Buckeye To Win IICAA Castiba Champ ionship 7. Wasatch 8. North Sevier , . , Saturday's Results Lehi 52, Wasatch 42. v American Fork 73, Parowan Judge Memorial 52, North vier 40. , Juab 50, Pleasant Grove 34. 57. Se- . house. The Grovers famed for their dead-eye- d shooting, just never had a chance Saturday night as the wonderTully-coaiche- d Wasps kept the pressure on them all the way. So tough was the Wasp, defense that the Vikings went almost the.; entire first quarter without scor. ing a field goal. Finally Connects ' Keith Allred finally made one of his famous flying jump shots with one minute and 23 seconds to play in the period And it was another six or seven minutes before Coach Don Crump's charges got their r second field goal. i Paul Miller got that .second field goal with 3:18 to play in the second . quarter j Altogether, the Vikings only picked up two other field goals in. the first half which ended with Juab, the champions of Region Nine, out in front 1. The most amazing thing about the first half, and in fact the first three quarters of the game, was that Pleasant Grove was able to remain in .the ball game. Finals Aussie Trackman Gains Berth On career Olympic Squad Gary Jorgason, Fay's Murray1, Mike Garrett, John ll Maughan, Karl Madsen, Robert Royce, Larry head, Richard Park, Bruce Wilson, Jim Christiansen. Marcus B. Garrett is the head coach. Gary LaComb is the assistant coach. ijir . , , I. . : '. ; Wasatch 1 .. i j two-inc- ot j 6-- . 110-3- 4 . n i 14-- f pin-poi- 16-tea- m ni i i Wil-eoe- j k j - 40-2- ot , 66-4- Marine Ball Club Edges Exhibition Tilt . '57-7- 3 i f i . j 11-- . i .. 4 j 9-- j. i . 2-- 2 . i . -- j 1 3-- 2 . ''.! - , . . 4-- le 9-- 4-- 0-- 2-- u' 1-- 1-- 0-- 2-- 17-1- go 9, v . . Yer-kovic- h, j i " r Jay pamble, of' Judge,' paced with 16 counters, the trailed j by teammates Lennie Johnson with 12, and Jim 11. Kirtley Tviadsen Shot best; for the Wolves with 10 points to his credit. JUDGE (52) G F P 0 6 Eagan. f ........... .3 ,0-- 0 j ... 2 4 Vogrenic f point-make- rs Yerico-Vichjwi'- i Johrisoii,' ,f. 0-- ...... ,....;...6l, Babcock, f. 6 Gamble, g Wy ant, g. ........ j ... 0 Yerkovich, g. . . . . j . . .2 Lucero, g.- ........i...O 8-- 7 12 2 16 0 11 2-- 1 1 0-3-- 0 0 U-- 4 . 1-- 0 - . 20 Tojals . SEVIER (40) G Madsen; f ...3 0' f DeLang, f.i Burr, ...3 F 9-- 4 ............ .!.... Torgerspn, c Mickleson, 2-- 0 .0 0 3 1-- 0 1 & 4-- 3 0-- S Nielsen,' g, 2 18-1- 1-- 1 , " 4-- 2 10-- 0 Freeman, g. 52 P 10 3 6 6 9 '4 2 Totals! ..15 '21-1- 0 Scored by quarters: 40 BYU Tom Skinny NYU's jumping-jac- k immediately after and the crowd rose to its feet again to applaud him. :. Sanders scored 27 points with 11 field goals and five free .' throws. Cincinnati, awav to a fakt. start led 5 at the halftime knd the violets; never got any closer for me resit ot tne game. 79-5- 2 Defeats New Mexico In Dual Trackmeet - ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. (UPI ) Defending Skyline champion Brigham Young parlayed team 2 depth to defeat New Mexico in a conference dual track meet " here Saturday. UNM took eight compared with seven first places for the Cougars, but BYU racked up a comforatble margin on second and third place Andy! f ". points. anwon Nielson Marcus Cougar other round in a personal duel with pole vaulter Monte Doyel of B4LTLMORE (UPI) Safety- UNM, winning by a foot in seal man Andy Nelson, one of the he- - ing 14 feet, The result put Nielson roes in! Baltimore's National Foot ahead of Doyel 32 in showdowns ball League championship victory between them. over the New York Giants last UNM coach Hugh Hackett, howDecember, returned his signed ever, had a pleasant surprise 1930 contract to the Colts Satur- - when freshman Jim Dupree apd J- .i :.-'day..'i I Adolph Plummer emerged as the ine native of Ath only winners, Dupree ens, Ala., was the Colts1' 11th breaking two school records i Ldraft choice in 1957. A Tiforma-tio- n athe process. He ran the mile in 4:21.1 and quarterback at Memphis Nelson State,; immediately!, made the' 830 in 1:53.9, shattering the tfie grade in the pro circuit as a old mark of Ron Pies last year by a full 4.2 seconds. Plummer took safetyman.' d dash. the century and ' Another Lobo Freshman R. P. .... Waters, heaved the shot 50' 4" in his first collegiate showing; Doyel came back in the broad jump, edging BYU's Glade Nixon with a leap of 22' W. Nixon previously had jumped 24'. NEW YORK (UPD The New' BYU had 11 second and third York Titans of. the American Footshowings out of the 15 sepball League announced Saturday place arate events. the signing of Floyd. Sloan, an of; Scoring Summary: fensive end. from Missouri, and Mile run: Jim Dupree, f UNM; Michael Simmons, a defensive Griff eth, BYU; Peel, UNM. end from Auiburn. v T 4:21. (New UNM record The1 Sloan was a Harrison 1S55, 4:21.2, three-lette- r man at Missouri. ;He Smith). played in the Jan. 1 Orange Bowl Dash: Long, BYU; game and later in the Hula Bowl BYU: Stewart, UNM. T ' w at Honolulu. .J :49.1. 3 and 215 pounds, Simmons, Dash: piummer, UNM; was a 'member cf Auburn teams Thygerson, BYU; McDonald, BYU. which1 won 28 games, lost! three T 9.8. and tied one in three seasons." High Hurdles: Pinkson, BYU; Johnson, BYU; Ramsey, I Nelson Signs Football Contract J ...I. b-- l, . - , 180-pou- UNM;" Walton, BYU; Johnson BYU. T 25.5. ' Two-MilRun: Griffeth, BYU; BYU; Jeffers, Greenhalgh, BYU. e 79-5- 39-2- T Relay: Brigham Young (Long, DeHart! Heywood and Day), T 3:19.6. "' ;. Shot Put: Waters, UNM; Quinn, BYU; George BYU. 50 ft. 4 in. e Javelin : Deveraux BYU ; Kele-he- r, UNM; Bell, BYU. 201 ft. 2 in. High Jump: Costa, BYU; Quin-ett- e and Brinkman ( tie ) , BYU. 6 ft. 6 in. Broad Jump: Doyel, UNM; Nixon, BYU; Brinkman, BYU. 22 ft -- 7 in? . Pole Vault: .Nielsen, BYU; Doyel, UNM; Potter, BYU. 14 ft., Discus: Waters, UNM; Michaels, BYU; George, BYU. 154 ft. 10 in. i i Hypnotized Man Bowls 166th Straight Game 220-yar- I 'l i .! Titan Grid Team Signs 2 Players i !' for-med- ly $-- 4, 9:44.9. One-Mil- two-eve- nt nd 195-pou- nd De-Ha- rt, 440-Ya- rd I 6-- NO. Kelly th Robertson.; center,!; left , ;, j Sanders, ,' r to j 100-Ya- rd . 120-Ya- rd NAMED ASSISTANT COACH Dal.DALLAS, Tex. (UPD-T- he las Rangers of the National Football League have named Brad Ecklutncli as assistant! coach.1 Eck-lan- d was an all-prcenter with the Baltimore Colts and was line coach for the past two seasons at Oregon,: his alma mater. o; - i UNM. T :14.9. Run: Dupree, UNM; Trapani, UNM; Eburne, BYU. T 1:53.9. '..(UNM record, old 1:58.1, 1959 Ron Pies.) Dash: Plummer, UNM; DeHart, BYU; Thygerson, BYU, T 21.9. rd Low Hurdles: Ramsey, 880-Ya- rd 220-Ya- rd 220-Ya- RENO (UPD The only image in the mind of a hypnotized Reno garage employe for' more than three days has been the head pin' on an alley at Reno Bowl. j The novice bowler, Dale Ander-- " breezed son, 27, through his 165th continuous game in 81 hours this morning and is heading for 20 hours.. "The only thing he is conscious7 of is tne center pin,"- said hypnotist Baron Von Brenner. '.who is directing ,hi. protege td prove his t i - theory that athletic performances can be improved under hypnotic i, ." influence, .Anderson had bowled only twice before he began his hypnotic stunt shortly after midnight Tuesday. He has a Ill-poiaverage, bowling mostly with his left hand. He will change back to his right hand today. Anderson will respond only to Von Brenner or the doctor or nurse ; in ' attendance. Each nour Von Brenner puts him in a, deep, three-minutrance to restore The doctor' said Ander-- . energy. ' son's condition is good. nt - . te 0 0-- r ; 52-4- ; 3-- the 14,500 fans. However; all the honors didn't i ,j . s Judge Memorial of Salt Lake City, gained some "consolation" f brj, their first round loss to Juab Wasps as they finished up the Class B Tournament in . fifth 0 a with over win North place Sevier; in a consolation final --- j matchj, After their first round loss the Bulldogs defeated Delta and Uintah to, work ' their way into the last day games. They lost only the one game in tournament ;; play. The jWolves, presenting a sharp passing and consistently shooting ball club, matched the ' Salt Lakers basket for basket 'in the first quai-ter- , and were in the Van 10-at the intermission;, but Judge rallied in the second period to stage a shooting splurge built around Jay Gamble, Jim; Yprkovich and Lennie Johnson,! land they never trailed m , , again. The Wolves apparently used up their steam, as the Bulldogs steadily moved ahead with Gamble and Johnson providing the punch. The Wolves were limited to three buckets in the thfrd period by the! steady defensive play of Judge. Coach Dent Sorensen gave all his jsquad a chance to play in the final minntps jinHftViAv hnH little chance against the pepped up Bujldogs who ran out : the game with an easy 12 point mar-gif- t. 1-- . : Ju dge Memorial Wins Class B Consolation Sharp Lehi Team Downs er ed i j Cavemen Whip Pa rowan, Finish 3rd In B Tourney Pendygraft Sets New Score Mark in JUCO Tourney : Broad-basketba- 50-3- six-fo- . , - WIN SECOND STRAIGHT STATE CHAMPIONSHIP Juab High's Wasps of Nephi won the state Class B championship Saturday night by defeating Pleasant Grove 4 in the BYU Fieldhouse. Members of the Juab team include Phil Sperry, Robert Wetherell, ; ; : - 32-po- int - ; an In 73-5- - of Darral Imhoff champions. well-balanc- ed American Fork Cavemen swept third place in the C ass B tourna- 7 to an easy Proves Salvation victory over, a ment standings. . l Free throws proved to be Pleas- tired and travel weary team of The Rams jumped into the lead Lehi Pioneers showed some of ant Grove's salvation in the first Parowan Rams Saturday to win in' the early stages of the ganis the best basketball of the .year half as ,13 of their 21 points in- the on a pair of foul shots by Dsan Saturday in downing Wasatch 52- first two periods came via the foul Brown, but Sterling Harris re 42 to take fourth place in the 19S0 - "r ;.. line. .j taliated quickly for the Forkeiis dribble derby. with a pair' of fiel; ers and "the But it: wasn't enough to keep the It was strir.tly team' play as the Cavemen to from dunfront. down in' Vikings going Pioneers, Who have been guilty of movedjout of geon Dennis Lowder hit for the Rams seme individual play at times, despair as Juab completein ly ran away from the Vikings Brown struck from the side, showed that they wanted the game and the fourth quarter. Juab ' led, and a; foul fehot by Lowder, fol and they went out' to prove it. with little over two minutes to Time and again a Lehi player lowed by a tipin, shot Parowan l play in the game and the Grovers into the lead. Kenyan Clark's passed off to a teammate who went Kan. (UPD HUTCHINSON, were dead. drive in from the" keyhole'' gavje in for an 'easy layup." This kind of h Doug Pendygraft, Juab had three big scorers Fri- forward from Columbia, Ky., set the Rams two more points and play could not be stopped and on the short end of day night, with Dick Park, a a new single-gam- e record theiF. final lead in the ball game. Wasatch was scoring ' youngster with all the moves, and Mike Bromley changed the lead the score from the beginning of the Saturday as he ' tallied 63 points ' the 8 Bruce Wilson, leading the to. lead Lindsay Wilson College to quickly for the Forkers. with a second period. The score! was tied several times way with 16 each. Mike Garrett, a victory over Grandview pair of hook shots ; Burdell Smith the state's leading scorer in regu- College of Des Moines, la., in the drove in fori one bucket and took during that close and hard-- f ought lar season olay, had 15. National Junior College Basketball a pass for: another and the Cavei-me- first quarter start, but early in the second canto the Pioneers movwere out in front to stay. . Nabs Scoring Title Tournament. out in front to stay. Brent PetThe old record of 53 points was The Forkers kept the scon ed The 16 points Wilson picked up erson madel it 9 for the Region Saturday night gave him the tour-- i set in 1953 by Denver Bracken of mounting in the second period as Seven third place winners with a nament scoring championship with East Central Junior College De Mike McCormick, Ray Hackford layup, and Doug Hadfield, a total of 78 points for the four catur, Miss. Sterling Harris and Smith began driving, one of the tournament's top1 playThe win gave Lindsay Wilson to find the range. Most of their days of firing. ers, added two more onia pair of field. points came following Not only did the . quick, mobile fourth place in the foul tosses, Pendygraft, the tournament's passes that put the ball ih the Garretti score 15" points, but he Ben Wools ey Peterson and deplayed, a great floor game and set leading scorer with 154 points in hands of a Caveman! toshooter 'struck from the field and the goal, up many of Juab's scoring plays four games, y outdueled Grand-view- 's finitely on his way Wells itallied twice from the Kent Marvin Torrence for scor- Score at the halfway mark was with his crisp, accurate passes to foul line asi ,Wasatch was able to 6 for American Fork. 6 inch . teammates, especially ' to Wilson ing honors, as the six points on fielders Torrence was only four points shy The Rams began to show the pick up only under the basket. by George Pitts and Neil Thacker. But it was Juab's defense that of the old record with 49 points. strain in the third period and the) and1, a pair of foul tosses by Pitts. movedi won. the' game for them. Coach Torreoce finished with 148 points Region Seven runneris-ui- p Lehi increased its lead in the v steadily ahead with Jim Ohadwick. second half with some of their finMarcus Garrett did a magnificent in four games. The 110 points scored by Lind- Dennis Morelli, Burdell Smith, est job coaching Saturday night and play. Hadfield passed off to his (xmfident cagers played the say Wilson fell four points short Mike, McOormick all finding the Marvin Wikcck for an easy layup, - u of the single game scoring mark range with increasing consistency.; script Jo the letter. Peterson! had split and Brent after Coach Don Mcintosh called off the They kept Pleasant Grove shoved by a team. strings with a jumper, Wilcock out far beyond the free throw his regulars after three minutes in struck again for seven consecutive the final period, with the Cavemen circle just like American Fork did points. in the second half Friday night leading 3 and a fulj team of Looking like a team that could when the Cavemen almost caught reserves finished the contest have "well been in the finals, the the Vikings with a ?reat rally, Coaeh Johnnie Wood rested most; "Pioneers moved aain in; the final of his tired starters and it hecamai Harass Grovers period. Much of the time was spent In BYU a battle of reserves. j The Ramsi in a control game but Wells went They harrassed Pleasant Grove' as thes in for a nice shot, Hadfield scored uipped the count to .. great gang of shooters all night , game ended. once and Wells twice from the ood long, selicm giving them shots arid hurrying them to death The American Fork scoring was; charity line and Hadfield hit the SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPD The on what few they did take. Aa a pretty well divided with Mike Me- - final points. for the winners from Marines San Diego were Saturday the off Wasatch result, Vikings way Cormick and Sterling Harris shar- - underneath the hoop. 'the beam most of the time. standi Young edged Brigham University in this made a desperate 9 in an exhibition baseball ing the lead with 12 points apiece; final period but the Juab! certainly made life misermargin; was Ohadwick Burdell Smith and Jim game. too Hal and Smith's great tipin able for Keith Allred, the Grovers Brigham Young, boosted by tallied 11 points each for runner-u- p served merely to cut the spread big bombardier, as they constantly Pete Marks' homer in the second honors. Dennis Lowder with 13, to an even 10 points. r with two kept h;m, with two men aboard, led inning scorled the Pitts George Wasp guards. most of the way, holding a 5 and Kenneth Bettridge with 11, led ing with 12 points While three However, Pleasant Grove wasn't edge going into the fifth, the Rams Pioneers hit in double figures with , without its heroes. Lee Sch?on-- i Victor Girodengo cracked one AM. FORK "(73) G F P; Marvin Wilcork hitting 16, and over played a tremendous ?ame on out of the when the Marines Harris ' 5 12! Kent-- Wells and . Doug Hadfield park the baseboards while Larry Harris' came to bat in the bottom half Chadwick! 5 l 11 tieing with 10 points each. great free throwing ketpt the Grov- of the fifth to even things up. The Zunieh '2-.1 " The' Box: 1 0 v j.... ers- iijrthe baH gpme in (he first host nine went on to 12 WASATCH (42) score two McCormic-- ......... 5 G F P half. more runs in the same inning Bromley 1 9 Trimble ... 4 . . 2 5 ;1-- 1 Harris' eight free- throws gave and another pair in the eighth. 1 4 6 . 3 . 0 Carlson ; 6 Wagstaff him the j scoring honors for the , Both clubs committed two: er- Smith ..i 3 11 Davis 4 1 ..... 3 ' 1 1 Vikings .for the night. That gives rors each.' 3 Pinter Morelli 0W 0 . pne, idea of just how effective the Line score: 6 8 4 Hackford 2 0 Smith ..4 Juab defense was. It wasn't only a BYU .... 331 020 000 9 12 2 2 5 1? Pitts ...... ' matter of Pleasant Grove not hit- Marines" ... . 013 230 02x 11 14 2 5 73 .Taylor .... 29 Totals 1 ; 4 ting. The Vikings just never got -0 Thornton, Russon (4), Raymond parowan : ; G. F P Chris ten sen 4 2 very many good chances and once (6, and Pierson. Barrington, Louder 6 o 13 Thacker . . 4 2 the wasps edged out in. front they Hottel (2) and Lister." 1 .11 Bettridge ..J 5,;. played it calm and ' cool all the 3 2 7 Mortensen . . i . . . 18 6 42 Totals ' . . JUAB (50) way. G 1 7 LEHI (52). F 3 P Clark . G P F 6 Garrett 3 15 Burt 2 10-- 0 4 . Wells 10 ... 2 PL. GROVE (34) G F 6 P Park .." 5 16 Smith .' 0 0 ;. 4 0 Hadfield ... 10 3 : Allred 3 . 6 Wilson. ....... 4 16 Lamoreaux 2 1 5 Wilcock "... 16 ... ,8 Schoonover 3 1 7 Sperry 1 Brown , 0 2 ,4-2 6 Woolsey 8 3 Harris 1 0 T 8 Witherall tM 2 Robinson 2 10-- 0 4 Peterson 3 8 44-3- 4, (UPI)The ' battle " f bottled out the defending NCAA up Ohio State Buckeyes . defeated of California, the underdog Big Lucas stuck so close , to Imthe California Eears at their own Ten champions rolled to a 37-1-9 hoff that the towering Bear got lbasketballby halftime lead and then played a only three field goals for the 5 a score Saturday night to slow-dow- n game to ; win going whole evening. '! .' win thie NCAA Championship. away. the meantime, the big and . In was oy 'California juea supposed to relaxed Ohio sophomore got Jerry seven have the peerless defense in this field and a pair of free throws goals but it for 16 championship points But Lucas wasn't wouldn't work against, the hot-sho-ts the only good shooter on the from the Midwest during Buckeye squad. Five the first half. During that time, in double figures. scored the. Buckeyes hit1 on 16 of J their Buckeyes The game actually was settled in first 17 shots to take the starch the first half when California could do no right, Ohio State no wrong. During the first 10 minutes, it didn't make any difference who was doing the shooting for the because just, about Buckeyes, SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) one swished through the every Oscar Robertson closed nmt. his . hoop. collegiate basketball ; In the first half, Lucas, got five Saturday night with a: effort while leading Cincinnati ;to Cield goals, Mel Noweii four, Larry a 95-7- 1 victory over . New York : SYDNEY, Australia (UPI) Siegfroed three and John Haviicek University to gain third place Alan Lawrence, who has run! two and Joe Roberts two each. After in the NCAA basketball cham- and three mile, races faster in- the first 10 minutes of play, each doors than! any-on-e 'j pionship.; else, gained a man on the starting Ohio State California met Ohio State for berth .on the Australian Olympic team had two field goals. the NCAA title in the second track team Saturday by winning California never was in the game game at the jam-packrace. Cow the 10,000-metafter the first few minutes. Robi. Palacej , j on leave from the erts and Nowell each sank layups Lawrence, Robej-tsonfaking, passing and of Ho u s t o n, was to get the Buckeyes off to a 0 dribbling through a bewildered University NYU team, collected "12 field clocked in 29 minutes, 55.4 sec- lead. California got a score on' Bill McClintock's field goal, but goals and picked: up eight free onds in beating Dave Stephens, the margin continued to widen throws j as the Bearcats scored the former world six-mirecord e an easy victory. i. holder in the final of the Olympic after that. When the talented senior, the trials. Stephen It was then 3 then 18-- 8 after was timed in irir scorer greatest major! college 30:22.8. .minutes. history left the floor, lie was given a standing ovation from Aii-Amenc- - . completely AU-Americ- an 75-5- it 24-2- who Lucas, igame-j-defensite- 50-3- ed 1 United Press International Herald Sports Editor Pleasant Grove's galloping ners were suffocated by an airtight Juab zone defense as the .poised and cagey Wasps swept to a 4 victory over the Vikings Saturday night and their second straight Class B basketball championship before 8,500 fans in the BYU Field- - well-cover- J SAN!' FRANCISCO By RAY SCHWARTZ ; SUNDAY, . MARCH 20, I960 2-- 2 Boyer, Hebert, In Tie For St. Petersburg Golf Tourney Lead : 1- -1 i 5-- ! ; o-- , .1-- 8-- 2-- i . 5-- ; ' 6-- - 1-- 17 1-- 8-- 2-- 4-- 2-- 1- -1 0-- 0 2-- 2 8-- 8 Lott ., Buekner Millar; Totals if n 0 0 . 3 9 1-- .6--5 0-- O 19-1- .2-- 2; 11 6 5 6 34 Totals ..V. .,13 Score by quarters: 7 Pleasant, Grove Juab 10 Totals ..' 50 20-4-4 . 21 24 Score by quarters: 28. 31 American Pork 24 33 -- 50 16-- 9 Parowan .. . : , 20 .15 40 -- . 60 57, , 73 Totals ..... Score by quarters: Wasatch- 26. 37; 57, Lehi ... - . ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPI) York, who finished earlier,; was slamming, out in second ; place with 67. Ted Kroll, Sarasota, .Fla., came giant; tee shots, and Lionel a in Hebert, playing third with a 68. Tied at 69 precision iron game, :both fired 66 Saturday ' to were Paul ; Harney, Worcester, tie the first round lead in the Mass.; Jack- Ellis, Stillwater, St. Petersburg Open Okla.; .Tony Longo, Clark SumGolf Tournament. mit, Pa., ' and Jack Fleck, Los ' in the Angeles. Bayer and Hebert played The course still was" soggy in same threesome and finished late the morning but was drying out when the course had more time well by noon. The tournament to dry' from, the recent . rain- had been - scheduled to start storms.; Joe - Campbell - of New Thursdayrthen ; Friday . but was George j Bayer, j . , 4 . ' . oft-delay- ed " J . 52 14-1- 4. - i, , 7 29 42 24 6 . 45 52 15 -- j i j - ; both days on account of torrential rains. The Jield will " play 36 holes Monday to comtournaplete the $15,000, postponed 72-ho- le ment. i" Bayer, of Glen Eagle, 111., had fvie birdies1 on the front nine and two on the back. His only bogey came on the. 17th hole when he hit a sand trap to the left of the green. He dropped birdie putts of 25, 20 and 15 feet. ' His drives ' were - tremendous. On 13, . a hole, h hit , . 431-ya- rd his tee shot out of bounds but still got a par five on the hole. Hebert and Kroll, He out-dro- ve the third player In their' group consistently.' " Hebert was a study in consistency. He had three birdies on the front 'nine, three on the Back, and not a., single bogey..". ' His putting was good throughout; Although drives Bayer's were longer, Hebert usually wound up closer to the hoij on th iron shoti. .il-j A: r |