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Show Men Tournament Vl Score of Players erald Jmirndl -- Are Outstanding During Annual Division Meet Presents Three Teams For Following Saturday Finale In al raid-journ- 1943 Wellsville Gym M MEN TEAMS LOR CACHE DIVISION IN 1913 Position Second Team first Team nflULD-JArRNA- L F. Clinton Nelson, Smitlif. 4th F Louis Livingston, Logan 9th !an Rich, Smithfield 4th .C .. John Sorensen, Logan 1st G Durrell Hughes, Mention Ixgan 9th Hayes, t Gt,ael Yinn, Sniithf. 3rd .G Kenny Maughan, Wells. 1st , Third Team Harold Gutke, Smithfield Fourth, anti Clark forwards 'ennan, Trenton. David Egbert. Logan Ninth. Center Dean Ellis, Smithfield Fourth, and ('less Olney, Guards .ithfield Third. Twitchell, Igan 1st A. Andrew, Trenton Honorable Mention Paul Sharp, - hrwsnl- Wellsville .(y Xtrrs First; Richard Bateman, Lojjan First; Gordon Maughan, Fourth; Clyde Campbell, Wells-- , Provi-rfC- e Xlst Mn in the Tourney Richard Bateman of Logan Fust. star Paul Sharp of Logan First. JM Colorful Harold Butch Gutke of Smithfield Fourth. John Sorensen of Logan First. Mt n Setup with Highest Scorer Lathael Winn, Smithfield Third center, ray nelson jche division M Men oftictrs who watched two observers , more rounds of the annual mi tournament, and who re contacted as to their choices team, were n dif-tuaimous that it was most to select five members for but if ten dress team, K mid be chosen well, then the be easier. nk would these men opened up with a iat of nine, or 10 or 12 men who think have been outstanding meet. Every man y die as a star has ttj characterized kiketball all-st- Jt So four-da- ko just that Equal Calibre five from job of naming ul first dozen is hard; never in The years have there been so nay fine M Men players of equal Lbre. With this explanation the Ktnt UTAH. MONDAY. MARCH No or Guadalcanal Was Smithfield 4th M Men Win Division Crown 1943. S, Like This! New York U Wins IC4A Track Contest Indoor Campaign To Conclude Next Saturday Logan First, Trenton Are Other Final Winners MEN DIVISION MEET How The Finished CHAMPION Srailbfield Fourth SECOND Logan Ninth THIRD Logan First FOl'RTH (Consolation) Trenton FIFTH Wellsville First SIXTH Smithfield Third M th O Results of Final Round Smithfield Fourth 29, 'Logan Nin- 19 Logan First 38, Wellsville First 37 Trenton 33, Smithfield Third 31 (Three extra periods) O Smtihfield Fourth Ward M Men found their pot of gold at tie end of the trail after three or four long and lighting Satjeais of .searching urday night as they decisively do 9 fealed Logan Ninth in the championship game of the Cache 29-1- 59 , by LOGAN. - Logan First; Webb Maughan anil Archie Zeno Anderson, Mention; Farrell Pickett, pirst; Boyd Hulse, Trenton. flundti PlAn Hillyard, Smithfield First; Doug Shelton, Mendon. Selected All-Sta- rs place and one from sixth plaee. On the second lineup are one each from first and second plaee, one from third, one from fifth and one from a team which dropped from the meet on the third round. Clint Nelson is moved to forward from Smithfield Fourth; lus storing and floor work have been excellent. Louis Livingston of Logan Ninth is the other fine forward. Hughes of Mendon is always an outstanding man, and was for three consecutive years several years ago. He can hold his own with any guard, and the only thing that kept him from first-teaconsideration is the fact that Mendon couldn't stick until the final night. With Hughes is Kenny Maughan, one of the best players Wellsville had to offer in the meet. dnisnni tournament Opening the tourney in round Wednesday M Men will find North Hollywood facing Rupert Second; Bennion vs. Ogden Fourth; Sandy hirst vs. runner-up- ; Provo Sugar City vs. Bonneville; Springs ille First xs. Twenty seventh; Smithfield Fourth vs. Ogden Fourteenth; Edge-hi- ll vs. Santa Clara, and Aurora vs. Ta)lorsille. r?: Li "We've been working for this for Now we got it!" impetuous Buteh Gutke as the game ended. By virtue ot their triumph, Smithfield Fourth squads-me- n - with their coaches Leigh Bair and Jack Allsop will represent the a long time. Barney Boss, Marine hero of On ulali mini, enjoys earned fun in Hollywood night cluh, whue his bride. Mrs. Ca Ross, at right, beside the former tluee-waring champion, dancer prior to his letmn. Corp. Aggie Players Win Third In Intramountain AAU district t ithough Utah Valley Stcelers of Ptovo a Brigham Young uni-- j versity hoop five wearing different suits won the ln'ermountam 1rwt AAU Saturday, championship K F the Weber Dormitory Ag0 0 night, 0 gie playeis - took thud place by running up the biggest score of the meet against Gemniell club 75 to 39. Ariel Maughan hit his stiule In the Salt Lake City games, and scored 21 points against Gemmell. Ralph made 19 and Keith Trane I -- M I 1 'ill Men Scores I irt I Utah-southe- HiiAtp r i Twin hHl t man.c Uat 2R04 3 o 1 . 3 ft AV Maiiicim 4 .1 T 4 - 4 O .1 1 4 U 42-3- fill 4 13-1- C 1 1 4 1 R 1 I 1 1 17-1- ! 80-4- 38-3- hat 24-1- 30-2- - - BY OSCAR IRYLEY lilted Press Stalf Correspondent NEW YORK, Mareh 8 d !t After sitting on the sidelines H week while the eollegtnns romped through their pnees in the IC4A games, track's glamor boys take over again Saturday as the 24th annual K. of C. meet winds up the indoor campaign. The Greg Riees, the Barney Ewell and the Gilbert Dodds were outside looking in Saturday night as New Y'ork university won the IC4.A title with 48 points -greatest total amassed in the 22 year history of the spiked-sho- e carnival. This .shuttered Penn's 1131 lecord of 38 points. Major I pset In the major lipset of the meet, Dartmouth' Don Burnham Frank Dixon of NYU ui the stretch to capture the eollcge mile. Dixon, winner of the Hunter mile at Boston and the national AAU mile, was a favorite but he erred in pace Judgement and left Burnham with too much reserve. Dartmouth Don caught him at the tape to win in a slow 4.16.2. Only two of the collegians were successful in title defenses Tom Todd, the husky Virginian, swept over the high hurdles In 7 4 seconds while A. Richmond n Morcom, New Hampshire's track team, kept pole vault honors with a leap. NYU coppd only three titles, freshman Ed Oonwell thundering home in the dash in 6.3; Barney Mayer tailing the shot with a 52 feet, 3 e inch toss, and the violet relay team sprinting home ahead of the best from 31 other colleges. But the boys from University Heights counted heavily In the places to roll up their ord f, 3 1(1 I i U 3 is w R . I 33-3- . 7 . ? . 9-- 9-- .122 La-Pra- 4 I - 7 I 4 W i 4 28-2- 9 4 K 1 fills On II K t 8- -- record-breakin- BY ROKKUT MELLACK NEA Staff 'nrresH.mlent NEW YORK, March are no provisions in record books of athletic achievement for the element of luck, no compensation for the boy who doesn't have it. Fortune was a little Ht the National AAU Track and Field Championships in Madison Square Garden. Cornelius Warmerdam is the only man who has 15 feet. The Flying Dutchman has accomplished the amazing feat 29 times, not counting jumps made in tireless practice. When they put the bar up to 15 feet, 8 inches in the Garden, a height never attained, Warmerdam was confident he could make it and better his world record of Twice he went up, and 15, twice he came down with the bar. Record Appeared Certain Warmerdam took a short rest. Then, at the peak of his vault, with the pole released, you could not have promoted a bet with the Piedmont anyone, including Calif., school teacher, that a new record was being made. But Warmerdam exhaled just In time to scrape the bar with his stomach, and that on his down ward flight. Had every motion been in line, explained the pertotal. sonable young man of Fresno, a Fordham finished second, far new record would have been esback with 20's points. Cornell tablished, and they were in line scored 13, New Hampshire, 12, until luck entered the picture. Army, 11, and Columbia and Penn Warmerdam says he can make State's defening champions each 15-nine. High Jumper Big Bill Vessie, the Columbia blond who hasn't been defeated in the high jump this winter, created the other meet mark with a leap of 6 feet, 7' inches. Art Bynes of Manhattan held the previous record, a 6 feet 6'j inch jump in 1939. Bulky Bill Fisher of Harvard gave the Crimson its first IC4A title in seven years by winning the weight throw with a heave of 50 feet, 8' Inches. Army gained its lone win when Cadet Howard Yielding took the NEW YORK, March 8. ir.I'i broad jump with a mark of 22 feet, 11. inches. Fordham men The St. Louis Cardinals, champions snapped the tape in two middle of the national league, will open the distance events. Rangy Joe campaign at Cincinnati d scored easily in the run in 2:4.7 as Bob Stuart April 21, according to the 1913 schedule announced today. took the run in 1:14.6. e Other opening games have New Fordham also won the relay, but no clocking was avail- York at Brooklyn, Philadelphia at able as the second men ran a Boston and Pittsburgh at Chicago. e The schedule reduces lap short due to an official's y error. NYU's team travel for each club by an estimated 4.000 miles, cutting transportation sprinted home in 3:24. by 1,000,000 passe n ge r miles. It two-face- d pole-vault- 7. one-ma- ot one-mil- lop-sid- He has been up there and over only to have hi. diaphragm crus him. As for fabulous 16 lect, well anything after 15-- 9 will be luck, purely, he opines. of Jersey Herbert Thompson City has dashed 60 yards In seconds to share the world record with Big Ben Johnson, Barney Ewell and Perrin Walker. This winter, however, he had not been able to catch Champion Ewell. He won his heat in 6.3 while Barney was taking his in 6.4. Ed Conweil, New York university freshman, also posted 6.3. Starter Had Trouble Five minutes later Conweil. with 6-- 1 Eulace Peacock and Homer GillLs, was disqualified for two false starts by Nate Carmell, a starter who earned a reputation as a trigger man with an itchy finger that night. In the final, Carmell was still having trouble with his blunderbuss, couldn't restrain Thampson, who got away with a yard lead on defender Ewell and Harold Saickel of Pittsburgh. Thompson beat Ewell and Stickel by that yard, and the timer announced that he had tied the world mark The record books will never say that Starter Carmell was having a bad night and that Cornelius Warmerdam's respiratory system was zigging when it should have 6-- been sagging. clovRabbit's feet and four-leers are standard equipment for the track and field athlete. af well-turne- d Armstrong Tackles Fierce Tippy Larkin This Evening CARDINALS TO OPEN CAMPAIGN APRIL 21 No-wic- ki 154-ga- 1,000-yar- 600-ya- rd two-mil- war-tim- mile-rela- Southern Cal Meets nt 4) g Cornelius Warmerdam appears to be over for world 15 feet, 8 Inches at Madison Square Garden, but bar came with him. top-hea- northern Idaho f meet which 0 2 23 172 at the in Salt Lake City Wednesday. 0 6 JoItfA opens names its annual In bowing to their rivals Satur- o 0 I0 0 Ttirnpr ube division all-- t ournament 0 0 0 right day, Logan Ninth fought hard but that the club imps, recognizing climb and couldn't far a last UPotent Tot Third U just String rinded as second team may be Score hv quarter: David Egbert, who the No slouches are members of the enough. I? 12. Firxt nil strong as the first. lwun string Harold Gutke of round previous against Wellsville W ell an III First Fvwards on the star five are third Ready for competition in the could make 10 mhde and points, Smithfield only Clark Fourth U Twitchell of Logan First the AAU basketball tournaNational was HiHlttifiehl Dean he Fourth so bottled three up by of Trenton, forwards; 4 which nosed out Wellsville , T F l ment at Denver were the from center Smith opening Rich, 3 of 2 David Ninth, !.i in&ston f Logan 3 KIliR.f Egbert 0 '.it for third spot and Dean senior interUtah Steelers, Valley was f 0 Ninth guard, SkiGmoic Hayes, field, 1 4 Ellis Smithfield of Dean Ray Uutkc.f idrew of Trenton. The latter center; t AAU champions. mountain 2 Kulwtt.c as Smith-fiel- d as brilliant llirh.t ever, making of Cless Fourth and just Olney ird won the consolation 2 8a champ-cihi- p K The Steelers, formerly members nine points, but Louis Livingston 2.12 0 All. n 0 0 0 M Hl Fourth, guards. rd in the most bitter battle i'l of the Brigham Young university Smithfield and was held conby III guards, 0 There are many who will the year it went three extra western division champion team, can lick the meanwhile, Glen Hillyard carried jo 0 6 OF HUUAI'I nods, and ironically enough, the tend this third team won their right to compete In the the fight for the champs in the first second. And or the 0 14 7 19 first 3 re 24 perhaps Total 10 which won for Trenton pints national tourney by virtue of a with Gutke and Clint Nelson It Score ! quarters: half, can! id been they made earlier in the 7 13 23 29 win over Ecker, defending keeping the ball rolling in the last SmMlifiHti Fourth .34 use by a Smithfield Third ward Scoring leaders during the tour- canto. 19 10 17 Lognn Ninth champions. nament were Twitchell of Logan u. Relying on their height and abilSmithfield Third for the forwards, Winn of Hillyard made five points in the TtriilwI Twitchell, a superb athlete, is a First 4j T JT P ity to score with close-shots, the T F Rich six. One othand initial for and half, Third Smithfield centers, wd ball J Steelers turned back Eckcr in a n T.iolxon 9 Rllermnn.f 1 handler, a clever man Ellis Smithfield Dean er 0 0 0 put of f goal by 0 Ninth, Johnson. t the floor, 0 0 guards. 0 Logan Spar kmun.f nigged with pretty Hayes 4 2 thrilling contest to clinch the title, hV. inn.c 7 2 4 Hul.o Four guards bunched closely ahead ') at the intermission. The ed height He doesn't tire easily, and the opportunity to vie with G Philllpw.g 0 2 0 l.aFrav.ff 7 was In the uncertain. outcome then Sorenwere John 41, with ed Hayes the ability of his recognizes 0 nincv.g 4 1 InNne.gr the country's top teams for recsen of Logan First with 40, second half, Ellis scored another 4 0111 K Hurren 0 3 A mire w 0 a mates. In meet. scoring he led all in 2 ognition in the national Nelson tossed Gutke three. Saxton 0 3 and 38 110 Allred Mendon with goul, Hughes of wt forwards with 34 an even first half, which After 0 2 points. to more one Rich liT and 37. three outstrip Smithfield Nelson of Fourth, Key Man For Trenton ened the Steelers went on 12 14 7 31 There was a great drop from their opposition by a long way. 11 23 011 Total Andrew, former star athlete at in the final minlead to clinch a the in last a of banket iwnrl SinhhfioUl fact, Matter quarter. of fcrth (Hurren Cache high, has been a Winn's S9 points to his nearest utes of outstand.ng play. while two Among made Smith-fielbut Ninth d lienum.) points frScore quarters: fit player in division M Mea rival at center. Rich of were Budy Walker and Smithfield made six. Coach of Trrnton 27 and Gordon 5 10 23 29 31 33 players Fourth got urecys for the past three years. 31 31 Bob Orr. 9 29 14 Niiuli is Ben Slack, former star at Smilhfhia Third .7 consistent .clever, and tire-- st Maughan of Wellsville 23. In Saturdays finals, Mint Cafe Dixie high. were the forwards Four among Although short, be is fast defeated Salt Lake City air base, paced by John SorFirst, interLogan is it however brackets, high kijh that he holds his own as Fred Sheffield and ensen and Bill Twitchell, barely r'A any opponent, and often esting to note the forwards of Gregory piled up 42 ponds were not scoring gained third spot in the tourney by tournament the re his between them to lead the Mint five guards out of position. on out a 7 victory over last edging Twitchell the with "4 h guards. to victory and consolation honors. running mate, Clark had par Ellerman of Trenton 29, year's division champs, Wellsville 34, nnan, led Trenton's fight cost the govAmong the outstanding teams As the half ended,, it looked it First. does Andrew Mendon and of Anderson hast Smithfield Third the final which will compete at Denver the for win soldier? an a like Logan; easy to ernment ration 27. each of Trenton, W in beautiful fashion. eastern division But Webb, Gordon Also, A The cost vanes according to were Wyoming, A lot of credit is due division score was has the knack of of mess. The champions who have 23 victones keeping officers who were conscientious in and Clark Maughan staged a whirlsize and locality squad together. which closed the government spends approximately and one defeat to show for a seafor the success of the wind 7comeback ' 0 of third quar- 42 cents a day for the ration of a son's play, Phillips Oilers from finish utstanding centers come working the at gap Smithfield and one from meet, and the umpires who did a Bartlesville, Okla., and Denver, ter, and Logan had to hustle in ord- soldier in the wcontinental U. S. W- Dean Rich job. good marof Smithfield er to come with a single-poidefending champions. Wyoming leaders: are Jrth was scoring Following handed the first-teaseason has twice degin. game already this Q What Is the one-da- y post on the basis of Back Come Oilers and is refeated Fist Phillips Forward record? observers contact- Had Wellsville piayed the entire hunting garded as one of the favorites to bagged Walsingham three are wonderful take the title; tournament in the same manner it 1070 grouse at Yorkshire, EngWers, but Dean the The box scores: went through that second-hal13 probably de Ellerman, Trenton 1888. 6, land, Sept. Mint Caf Air ltae I? ,th initial spot. But move Anderson, Mendor championship story may have been i ; T K P tiTK P Winn of Smithfield Third different. ff most nf 2 42 2 U 0 4 Hnrrl f to 2 be Sin the said is Andrew, Trenton What Q tournaof the ahn bittle k. r vi. Most 2 9 Ilftl.I.Rid 12 battje bombed spot on earth? Gutke, Smithf. 4tl drf' was Srenun, Logan's 'I u k.r f 2 2 2 2 0 2 ment one with a touch of irony, a outstanding in two Sharp, Logan 1st A Malta, the British island 8 9 1 Huhlmi.i.r 9 I 119 klllK.F basketball and first of lot good fight 6 t I ythehe made 22night against Toolson, Smithf. i 3 2 2 ti Mediterranean. an in r Du, the, possession between finale consolation 8 the was 0 9 9 9 Smkieth K Kmc lit u 1 a .jn ,of The evening.points and Ellis, Smithf. 4th f it ' o Third. 9 2 18 Smithfield f omuful and Trenton bombSaturday Pickett, Prov. 1st British was the o 0 I i. 0 0 2 9 9 Sihii f QWhy 1 for TrenThe score ended ,"elLsv,11e First he tanked anWeilsville of tn mts' iitnn u 1119 31a " hen the chips were Darley, ton but only after three extra per- ing interruption so Goermgs 2 lUuikln g 19 W. Maughan, Weil funny? spfeech 9 0 9 9 f gamst Smithfield iods hod been played, only after niversary Fourth Center A Because Goering once boast- 9 0 9 9 Makiti f of Smithfield Third Hurren evenm8' John could get Keith 3ri t or assured the German people Winn, Smithf. had tossed a beautiful goal thru fully 6 M only five counters, and 27 22 9 3 47 Total deRich, Smithf. 4th ousted Those two points that he had perfected such a AD Hhm basket. Trenton's early in the fourth G. Well no hostile air- 17.fckoi at half: Mint Oif 27. fdree that fense Maughan, meant the ball game. femnuls, Proof of his Hiihner, Mendon Ilmiwtnn. would ever reach Berlin. Official: OirwaM el s value was shown, Led by Lathael Winn, the Smith-fiel- d plane 9th ,v Logan 5 Egbert, in the ahead W elier IirmitrN club the forged in fact when f.' that Bateman, Logan il T F at first quarter, and lagged First lost the ball Hulse, a 3 21 4 A M i i.iilian f Trenton .. the third period, Winn In halftime. 9 ti f mu Guard laid down a basket 3 0 9 Cless Bost Guard fJuilfmh end Olney N Stc Matitfhun 92 II' lnn is high scorer of Hayes, Logan barrage for Smithfield which apa 1 t,.n- - k 8 0 9 2 Sorensen, Logan peared certain of victory, but Clark I). W,Tament' he It., given a Hughes, Mendon y 3 Ellerman. Dean Andrew,, Jay Roard post with Ray ll. iri. k 2 2 aitt , Nelson, Smithf. 4 Itoflmali (19 0 2 and Boy Hulse were just as n 3 I?" Ninth- who ckedl Smithf. determined. been the outstand- - Olney, 73 31 9 ,tU , Smithfield took the ball out of j 0f tbe tournament, K. Maughan, We We C. Maughan, (i i l.eker and Trenton's Sleeker basket, under CWl1 bounds and effective, a Atkins .Prov. 1st P T ; T F P ''ion or Hurren received the pass, dashed 7 2 f 4 2 strength f , defensively Campbell, Prov. 19 and shot basket his 2 1.1 for 5..- .i (I f opponent's scorer13 4 2 h Kvx f 3 score lodri oor man - Winn, too, is Shelton, Mendon with the 2 14 it through. Later, 119 PMrn,c Abliilt, but his work 8 3 .11. vs .tlkti.tf i,r , be Smith 8111! for Trenton, Hurren had two 2 0 0 bankbards and his Clii.N 8 4 6 hi ir one to tanked he and free shots are his 9 o 9 ft f Inter RESULTS Pi.idb.y assets. HOCKEY greatest l. bascount His 0 0 1,11 2 9 l. deadlock the 19 Second team are Clint 4o 9 2 Ity t'nited Pres 1..- ti mm tied the score. Trenton for ket one added Red mi,hfield The Detroit Wings Fourth and a I each extra first period, the I"- 10 7 ttr leaIn I 12 IS 14 national of hockey "VJrd'1oKSton Dan Ninth, point to their for 11 tt f iiih nre: M4i4i 17. K ktr 17. - r7; herensen of First, cen-- d gue lead Sunday night as they came team made a basket Olney Andrew for Trenton. and Smithfield to in last the period Hughes of Mendon from behind y. FAY OKED the finale, Boyd Hulse sank two UURhan of Wellsville earn a 3 to 8 deadlock with the In sards throws under the greatest presPHILADELPHIA, March - ir.n fiee New The Chicago Black Hawks. 1 renton the consolation Johnny Hutchinson, Philadelphia were sta- sure to Ihp first 1 th". quintet of all- - York Rangers meanwhilein the final crown. give lightweight, will be an 8 to 5 favorls a man from the rally four goul a ging " ite tonight when he gets his second Officials for the evening were orbamPinnship sqund, one session to earn at 5 to 5 tie with the Wotta ya mean, I win first crack at New York's Maxte Shapiro onsolatinn winner; one Toronto M irle Leafs before a crowd 7 hatcher Handley, Harlan Simmons bout at the arena. in a prize? I work here! onc rom second j of 1 3,4b 1 at Madison square garden. and Elmo Keller, wrJ-plaee- LUCK PLAYS PART IN TRACK, TOO; WARMERDAM EXHALES TOO SOON, AND IT COSTS HIM WORLD RECORD Washington For Title By DAN MrCUIRE United Press Staff Correspondent SAN FRANCISCO, March 8. E Hammering Henry Armstrong, beaten in his last start, attempts to climb further lip the Steen comeback trail tonight when he battles crafty Tippy Larkin of Garfield, N. J., at Civic auditorium. Armstrong, despite indications that he has lost the windmill power wbichmarried him to three world titles, ruled a 10 to 7 favorite. Promoter Benny Ford expected a $20,- 000 house to witness the bout. For both men it will be a critical Hurricane Henry's" comefight. back struck a sang last week when he dropped a decision to Willie lists three intersections! trips in- Joyce, in Los Angeles. The little stead of the previous four. negro is slated to head east soon for Arc light contests are banned In a March 22 battle with A1 Tribuanl New York because of dimout regu- at Philadelphia and an April 22 lations but St. Louis, Philadelphia match with Beau Jack at New and Pittsburgh each list 14 night York. Larkin has been going strong games. The Red will play seven. For the first time, intersectional since losing the lightweight title. games will be played on holidays. New York version, to the battling Eastern teams invade the west on Beau at New York last December. Decoration day with the western Prior to that he had won 20 in a teams in the east on Independence row and he came west with only one thought ln mind, to regain his day. Eastern clubs are allowed two lost prestige by beating Armstrong days to travel west and vice versa. so he can demand a rematch with e Atlanta shoeshine boy. the d batLarkin,' a rangy, Notre Dame And tler, was expected to have a two pound pull in the weights. Armstrong will enter the ring weighing 138. Drop Ti about Angelo Pucci. Larkin's manager, claimed that the Jersey boy weak- SAN FRANCISCO, March A TRi University of Southern California basketball team, champion of the Pacific coast conference southern division, leaves for Seattle Thursday to play the University of Washington for the conference title. Although USC had clinched the title in the southern division before splitting a weekend series with University of California at Los Angeles, the Trojans won their final game of the regular season Saturday night. 53to 46, from their crors-tow- n rivals, UCLA. On Friday night, the Bruins did what no other UCLA team had done PALO ALTO. Calif., March 8. in 10 years. They beat the Trojans n'.Pi The Stanford - Notre Dame over and stopped USC victories' football game, slated to be played UCLA at 43. here next Sept. 25. had been cancelled by mutual agreement" today LEADS GOLFERS tc avoid transportation difficulties. SAN FRANCISCO. March 8 (I'.n Alfred R. Masters, Stanford gradDefending champion Jim Mollina-r- i. uate manager, announced the canSan Francisco policeman, was cellation last night. The schools r out of the running today in the San signed a contract two Francisco amateur golf tournament, years ago and Notre Dame Won and sailor Lou Jennings of Portlast fall's tilt at South Bend, 27-land, took his place as favorite. I talked with Coach Frank Leahy of Notre Dame on the phone toTO GO AHEAD day and we agreed that it would SAN FRANCISCO. March -d r. not he conducive to the war effort of Bay Meadows to take up train space by bringing' Continuance racetracks spring meeting was as- the Notre Dame team out here, sured today with settlement of a Masters said. labor conroversy which had threatIt was the first such move toened to shut down the track. ward cancellation of intersect innal games on the Pacific roast. CHUTISTS ACTIY'E Most sthools hope, however, 'o 8 if LONDON, March continue intercollegiate football deradio France, broadcasting from spite army refusal to permit resei-- . Algiers, said today that Ued para- vis's to oompctc. They intend to fill chutists had destroyed objectives their squads with freshmen and railroad in special naval students who are not the Gafsa-Sf.ibanned from competing. (entral Tunisia. one-tim- long-arme- Stanford two-yea- 8- x ened himself too much by going in against Beau Jack a 134. .Witt the added weight, he said he is confident Larkin will again derail the Armstrong express. Popular here because of triumphs over Fritzio Zivic, Juan Zurita and Rodolfo Ramirez, Armstrong was a 1 to 1 favorite until Larkin demonstrated his hard punching style in gymnasium werkduts. The Jerseyite's seven year record of only five losses in 107 fights was a major factor in scaling down the odds. George Mooro. Armstrong's manager. declared that Henry deserved no less than a draw against Joyce, a Gary, Ind., negro. "Joyce couldn't hurt Henry, he asserted. If anything Joyce. came out of it in worse shape. He got a broken jaw and a closed eye. Larkin revealed that was shooting for a quick knockout and said he hc!ieved he could tie up Armstrongs whirlwind attai k. Armstrong has to crack up some time and I'm sure he Will under Tippy's attack", Pucci said. 0 ..0 |