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Show PAGE 8 f ROVO. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH MONDAY. MARCH B, IMS Tourney Time Nears For Nation s Better Basketball Quintets By EABL LUNDQUIST NEW YORK, March 5, U.tt Tournament tipie drew near today to-day for the country's better basketball bas-ketball teams. That means a baffling baf-fling time for fans who try to figure out the annual whirligig of eliminations for three national championships beginning next Monday. Each of. the tournaments is run Independent of the others, each has a logical process of getting its entrants and each winner has a legitimate claim for national honors. hon-ors. The first to get underway will be the National Intercollegiate at Kansas City, Monday March 12. Normally it is a 32-team affair, but the field has been reduced to 16 teams because of travel dif ficulties this year and to date 10 teams from as many different states have been entered. Teams entered thus far in the intercollegiate are Central of Fayette, Fay-ette, Mo., unbeaten in 11 starts; Eastern Washington of Cheney, Wash., which has the nation's second highest scorer in Jack Utah, Sans Ferrin Starts Training Cam l fAt amn III A A resent the south. Brown or Y6Sl6iil RtAA RhodelslandStatemay represent New England with Connecticut a Undefeated champions of the gj? "J? big seven basketball conference.! nd,."t"bjIJ cndj-the cndj-the University of Utah Redskins da" tthe maidt;Aila,nntLc "' now have their sights on perfect-' ,Aftf.r th eastern and western ing an offense without Arnold f"!; neA w,mne me1 ir Ferrin. as the first step toward I e N .C A. A. title at the Garden defending their NCAA champion-iMan 2J. Injp The third tournament, the Na- Invited to the NCAA western tlonal Invitational, is a clubby se-playoff se-playoff at Kansas City March ! lective meet, which takes eight 23-24 the Utes clinched their! hand-picked quality teams for the right to go Saturday night when j eliminations which begin at the they staged a final minute rally Garden, March 17. and came from behind to defeat' Three teams, St. John's, the a steady-fighting Brigham Young defending champion, Muhlenberg Cougar quintet, 56 to 52 in the 'and Tennessee already have ac-Deseret ac-Deseret gym. cepted invitational- bids. The Saturday game was the final one for Arnold Ferrin, all- i American forward, who paced thej Utes to the national championship last year and sparked them to an unchallenged title this year in the Big Seven league. He will be inducted March 10. However, Coach Vadal Peterson said the squad has been working on an offensive-without-Ferrin, and has! hopes that the Redskins will; make a much better showing at Kansas City than Ute followers, foresee In Saturday's game. Ferrin i rated second insofar as Ute scor-' ing honors were concerned. How-1 ard Satterfield. smooth center.! accounted for 17 Redskin points,, with Ferrin sinking 16. The ; Bailey brothers Maynard and: 3. Z "'1 V-UUK"' which gave them a larl nf 39 to anH tirl im th ' - - v , as the Utes met their severest! S'lif but outs&nd T16 nortnern Prtn conditioning test of the season. Maynard col-; ffJji t?m at wne,arby lected 17 points and Bryce nr -JV 11 Par' MJd" "v Wednes-12 Wednes-12 n Proved his theory by smash- day, March 7, and on the follow- While the Utes and Couears mg Illinois. 43-37. Saturday night ing day the Chicago Cubs will were tangling in Salt Lake City.:0 accomplish what 44 previous pitch camp at French Lick, Ind. Utah Aggies squad lost a close Iowa teams had failed to do None of the other teams will game to the Wyoming Cowboys at Ti.1a,,1??per CCnt B,g Ten begin activities until the follow. Laramie, 42 .to 39. The Cowboys i ketba11 tit,e- in week, when all of them will held the edge most of the time, j PPS ?IIeTei "a d defensive be in training. team will win more games than Major league executives are CHEST COLD SORENESS STs. quickly soothed by Pcnetro uraBdnaa s old-time mutton auet kicm developed by modern science lntoacounter-irntant .vaporizing sJvetastbnngsQUJck.coinfort- lagrcuef. 2oc, double sisa 35c, PENETRO USE I1CM IX MUTTON latT Adv. I mmmmmr WILL Opem 4 9, rONIGHT P. (AND EVERY MONDAY NIGHT) STORE HOURS: MONDAYS: Noon to 8 p. m. Other Days 10 A. M. to .6 P. M. DAILY HERALD Perreault with 481 points in 29 games; Eastern Kentucky. WIch ita, Kan., university; Southern Illinois Normal of Carbondale; Catawba of Salisbury, N. C, George Fepperdine of Los Angeles; An-geles; West Texas State of Canyon; Can-yon; Phillips university of Enid, Okla.., and Loyola of New Or leans. The National Collegiate Ath letic associaton meet for which only member teams are eligible, comprises the major conferences and will have its western play offs at Kansas City beginning March 23 and its eastern at New York starting March 22. Teams which have qualified thus far for the western meet are Arkansas of the Southwest Okla noma A & M of the Missouri val ley and Utah's defending N. C A. A. champions from the Rocky mountains. The winner of a play off series between Washington State and Oregon beginning March 13 will be the Pacific coast representative. The eastern N. C. A. A. playoffs. play-offs. Depaul of Ohio State's all-civilian all-civilian team is expected to represent rep-resent the midwest since Iowa, Big Ten champion, has naval trainees, who can't leave the cam pus for the meet. Kentucky, win ner of the southeastern tourna ment or North Carolina, which !won the southern meet will reo Wilkinson Boys Pace Havkeyes to BigfdO Honors CHICAGO, March 5 (U.R) Iowa's record-smashing Hawk-eyes Hawk-eyes revived an almost discarded basketball theory to win their first undisputed championship In the history of the western con- the history of the western con ference. The Hawkeyes were sparked by the Wilkinson brothers from Utah, Herb and Clavton. Herb was picked on the Big Ten first team honor at the euard oost. Clayton placed on the second j ! ror nwa i nam uwrrnrp a good offensive team, for when the boys aren't hitting their shots'over the signing of player con- they still can win ball games withjtracts and their personal man - defensive play. And although ! defensive basketball has become, or professional athletes is clan- yet called. his Gulf port about-face, we'll almost an orphan to the light- fed in pending "work or else". National League ihave to wait for Sammy's reac- ning offense which dominates to- legislation at Washington. I St. Louis Cardinals: Top hit- jtions to pressure on the final hole day's play and coaching theories.! Because of the conditional go-jter Stan Musial inducted, catcher ,jn big tourneys later before be-Pops be-Pops stuck with his theory and ahead for baseball from Presi- Walker Cooper and pitcher Maxjjieving lnat the navy wroUght a made it pay. dent Roosevelt, the sympathetic! Lanier slated to go. Martin Mar-!mjracie in tne former bare-foot turn. BE Late M. High School Teams Prepare For State Tournament Utah's A high school basketball classic begins to shape up with six of the eight contestants already al-ready determined. - Provo, defending champions, and Box Elder, last year's runner-up, will both be back in the tournament. The others already in are Granite, East and Jordan from the Big Six and South Cache from - Region One. The third team from Region One' will probably be North Cache. Weber, the probable fourth place team will play Carbon at Price to determine de-termine the eighth place in the A tourney. Wasatch high of Heber, 1944 B champion, will be back to defend de-fend its laurels and American Fork is already in as the Alpine B champion. A third team to win a berth is Delta which won the right by winning from Cedar 30 to 25 Saturday at Fillmore. Cedar will play Richfield at Richfield, Friday for another chance at the tourney. Another B tourney entry will be decided at Payson when Juabi and Spanish Fork, play off the Nebo championship tie. Another likely B tourney entry is Moab from Region Five. Snead Wins Honors At Jacksonville JACKSONVILLE, Fla., March 5 (U.PJ New superlatives and the supply is getting low were in order again today for that slammin' smoothie of the fairways, fair-ways, golfer Sammy Snead. The Hot Springs, Va., veteran, apparently out to catch up on the prize money he missed while he was in the navy, pocketed $1,000 for his third straight tournament victory and left behind him one of the greatest competitive performances per-formances in golfing records. He won with strokes to spare in compiling a 22 under par total of 266 in the 72 holes of the $5,000 1 Jacksonville open, which ended yesterday. Bob Hamilton, the Professional Golfers' Association champion from Evansville, Ind., finished second with a total of 270. Snead's winnines boosted his j total profits for the winter swing to $13,510.66 and his record to six triumphs, putting him ahead of Byron Nelson of Toledo, O., the pace-maker until Sammy came around. Sammy Byrd of Detroit finished finish-ed in a third place tie with Bruce Coltart of Seaview, N.J, and Ky Laffoon of Chicago with 274 s. Baseball Faces Uncertain Outlook 7ith Small Nucleus for Training United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, March 5 (U.R) The major leagues, still facing a definitely uncertain manpower outlook, begin spring training n7"" "YL XVn nucleus of players in modern next week with the smallest limes. Every team in both leagues is operating on a day-to-day basis with top flight stars, who were 4-F's or deferred for dependency reasons last season, expected to f a ni H t-o ft pvamlnAtlnnt Ho. fore tne general opening on April lO. The Washington Senators get maintaining a discreet silence power problems until the status amiuae ui war rovDuoer aincsuon, Desi major league snonsiup Jr. Byrnes and the agreement for traveling conditions worked out j with Office of Defense Transportation Transport-ation Director J. Monroe Johnson, John-son, baseball leaders were hope- iful that there would be a special provision in the legislation for ! players. I Failing to get that, it was no ' secret that the majors would have extremely tough sledding to survive sur-vive their fourth wartime season. ! Numerous players, now in war jobs, have indicated that they will not be available unless the government ffives its bleninff to baseball. Moreover, as soon as the legislation is passed, the quota of athletes being drafted probably will be stepped up to new high proportions. A check of tentative major league rosters reveals that practically prac-tically all clubs have suffered i some manpower losses, with a I number of key players going or siaiea to go. ine picture orieiiy was as follows: American League St. Louis Browns: Less affected affect-ed than most. Will take field with ! virtually same starting lineup which won first American league pennant for Browns last season. Detroit Tigers: Loss of outfielder out-fielder Dick Wakefield, who sparked late season pennant bid, a staggering blow, but pitchers Dizzy Trout and Hal Newhouser i might lead club to pennant if they have another big year. Boston Red Sox: Catching staff completely depleted with all three 1944 regulars gone. Top stars of 1944 season, pitcher Cecil !(Tex) Hughson and infielder Bobby Doerr, drafted, before end of that campaign. Shortstop ' La-. WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER AT A Perils i . ........ 4 K i' YxCf H6f- 'Mm!P ij m tjBjsBBBsBjsjsBjHBBMHBHBHBVkt-'r siBsjBMBjBsWiMiiijMBBBMBBMBiMMMBsWsW lms'itSi-SdSi ' :. V- 1VV' . I 3Pvi l at2 eAsilt: Sports Figures Change Personalities; MacPhail Becomes Quiet, Refined NEW YORK, March 5 0J.R) Wunder Hagg being an entirely Nearlv every day we read in the newspapers about Important sports figures changing their personalities. per-sonalities. Explosive Larry Mac Phail has become quiet and refined. re-fined. Temperamental Sammy Snead has lost his tendency to blow up in the tight spots. Gun-der Gun-der Hagg has discarded the vinegar vine-gar puss for a sunny smile. Next week we may hear of similar changes in Pavot or Twilight Twi-light Tear reports that can be filed along with those of MacPhail, Mac-Phail, Snead and Hagg in a cabinet cab-inet marked "baloney." Give Larry MacPhail a couple more months as president of the Yankees. Give him time to get his feet on the ground. And you'll see some fireworks. He's a leopard that's too old to change his liver spots, if he has any. Those tales about Gunder-the- mar (Skteter) Newsome Inducted recently. New York Yankees: Banking strongly on pitcher Hank Borowy, who may stay in war Job unless draft legislation clarifies status. Otherwise few changes. Philadelphia Athletics: Depending De-pending for pitching strength on four men honorably discharged from service, may lose first base man Bill McGce, who has passed j physical but may not be in ducted until July. , Washington Senators: Still hoping to strike winning combination combin-ation with draft-exempt Cubans, 12 expected to report. Not likely to be contenders. Chicago White Sox: Induction : of star relief pitcher Gordon Maltzberger biggest loss. Have 39 players on roster inciumng two catchers and an infielder signed last week. Also lost 18-year-old rookie Gene Thomas. Cleveland Indians: B i g g e s blow would be loss of Manager Lou Boudreau who might stay on war plant job. Otherwise little affected with outfield Felix Mac- war plant job. Otherwise little affected with outfield Felix Mac- kiewicz passing physical but not! also may go Loss of all would put World Champion Cards in about same category as other good National league teams. Pittsburgh Pirates: Played best ball in major last six weeks of 1944. May be the team to dethrone de-throne Cards if they are dethroned de-throned since player losses have been Light. on'sVrngp'itSg slatTST i a i n i . si . Iron Man catcher Ray Mueller, who didn t miss a game last year, biggest blow. Outfielder Estel Crabtree retired but didn't play regularly. Chicago Cubs: Hopes largely depend on whether slugger Bill Nicholson is inducted. Loss of two regulars, pitcher Les Fleming Flem-ing and outfielder Dom Dalles- sandro, also vital. New York Giants: Have ac quired several young pitchers, but still weak on infield. No important im-portant player losses. Brooklyn Dodgers: Will be in bad shape if lose catcher Mickey Owen, an excellent handler of young pitchers. Have lost pitcher Rube Melton. Depending on numerous youngsters in key positions. posi-tions. ' Philadelphia Phillies: Lost their best player, Ron Northey, and indication of how serious player shortage is going to be, signed. 39-year-old catcher Gus Mancuso. Boston Braves': Need everything, every-thing, but haven't suffered important im-portant losses. JUY YOUR NEXT CAR FROM rJn 4m mmsmm of Yourfi i different fellow from the dour chap who visited these shores in 1943 are mere fairy stories. It is true that when the swift Swede first landed here on his previous trip he was irritable and hard ifi interview. That early attitude resulted re-sulted from the unfortunate combination com-bination of bad handling by Swedish-American friends, his inability in-ability to understand English, and his attempts to train in strange surroundings, after a long sea voyage, for what he then considered consid-ered the toughest race of his career ca-reer against little Greg Rice. After he beat Rice and left New York, he mellowed. He again became be-came the same pleasant Swede that friends in his homeland knew at the Gavle fire department. The case of Samuel Jackson Snead is mighty interesting because be-cause of the service angle. Sdme writers have credited the navy with making a changed man of the ex-hillbilly from Virginia. Slammin' Sam, the golfing man, was given a medical discharge from the navy last fall, after 26 months in service. Since his discharge, Snead has won five tournaments. Now he is 'trying for his sixth victory of the winter season in the $5,000 Jacksonville Jack-sonville (Fla.) open. Yesterday Snead equalled the new record for the Jacksonville course with a 65. This left Samuel, at the end of the second round, in a three-way tie for second place with Byron Nelson and Jug McSpaden. At 134, they were two strokes behind the leader,. Bob Hamilton of Evans- v ill e. Ind Sammy's triumphant return to this exacting game, after a long hitch in the navy, is noteworthy indeed. But what excited the golf experts even more than the number num-ber of his triumphs was the man ner in which he beat Nelson in the Gulfoort (Miss.) open on Feb 19. Snead, notorious for blowing up under last-hole pressure, beat Nelson on the 19th hole of a play off. This victory followed his near "blow" on the day before when he needed only a par four par xc toorn t)on the 18th to win the ey. but took a five and wound up in a tie with Lord Bvron. He had clicked off birdies on the 15th. 16th and 17th. Despite Snead's victories and caddy of Hot Springs. We are hard to convince because we happened hap-pened to witness his grand blowup blow-up in the 1939 open at the Philadelphia Phila-delphia country club, when he could have won with a five or tied with a six. Instead, the pressure got him, and he belted the ball all over the pasture like a raw duffer for an eight. This left Nelson, Craig Wood and Denny Shute to Which Nel"! r" J The great fire of London in 1666 destroyed 13,000 homes and 87 churches in four days. lis $20 to $300 II 1 to 12 Months at BARGAIN RATES Rand Clark Sparks Play Of Bluejackets (Special to the Provo Herald): GREAT LAKES, 111., March. 5 The Great Lakes Bluejackets, with 32 victories in 37 starts, have just clinched the service championship cham-pionship for the fourth straight year. And one of the young men lnstrumenuu; in piling up this terrific ter-rific record was Rand Clark, a 19-year-old Provo, Utah boy. Although he got a late start, Clark finished sixth in scoring with 183 points. The smallest player on the squad. Clark was nonetheless the best competitor. He was immediately dubbed "Sparky" for obvious reasons. Clark was the sixth "regular." When the team wasn't showing much life, in would go "Sparky" to get i t going. A good shot, Clark n u lied 8 several games out of the fire. A forward, he relieved either Paul Cloyd or Luke Majorki. He didnt start many g ames. His chief worth Clark and it was plenty. . . . was in sparking the club when it started to lag. "Sparky" had his most spectacular spec-tacular night in the Wisconsin game at Madison,- Wis. The Sailors Sail-ors were having tough sailing that night. They couldn't get started. With 10 minutes to play, the Bluejackets led by only a few points. Clark entered the game. He started hitting immediately with his left-handed shot In a shooting shoot-ing splurge that made the sports writers blink. 'Sparky" took nine shots from all over the floor and made seven of them. The game turned into a rout. Counting Count-ing a first-half goal, park altogether alto-gether made eight baskets to capture the game's scoring honor! hon-or! with 16 points. He took only 11 shots all night "One of the most terrific exhibitions ex-hibitions of shooting I've ever seen," said Chief Specialist Forrest For-rest Anderson, the Bluejacket coach. And as a former all-Pacific performer at Stanford and a competitor on two Great Lakes teams, the 25-year-old Anderson has seen many a star in action. Anderson heaped further praise on Clark. "He's one of the finest competitors I've ever see. He's always hustling. He's a fine boy." While playing on the Provo, Utah High School team, Clark was twice all-state. Two years ago he won high scoring honors hon-ors in the state with 320 points. Last year, as a V-12 trainee at Dubuque (la.) University, he led that school to the Iowa Conference Confer-ence title with 14 straight triumphs. tri-umphs. He was second high loop scorer with 182 markers. Clark, who has ambitions to become a 00801 some day, shortly short-ly will leave for PI (physical instruction) in-struction) school at Bainbridge (Md.) Naval Training Station. Before that however, he's going home to Provo to visit his folks. His dad, Herald R. Clark, is dean of the college of commerce- at Brigham Young university and acting president. Clark has two brothers Stephen and Homer who are both in the service attending at-tending medical school. An elephant's heart has a circumference cir-cumference of five feet, and may weigh over 60 pounds. Fans Acclaim Hagg NEW YORK, March 5 (U.R) Swdish distance runner Gunderj Hagg, who made few friends! when he was breaking records in' America in 1943, found a legion! of them today because of one of, the most dismal races he ever, ran. It was because the haggard-Hagg haggard-Hagg ran at all Saturday night; in the special intercollegiate 4-Al mile that they acclaimed him, certainly not because he finished a badly beaten fifth in a field of five. Never since he became a runner of world renown, had he! taken a more thorough licking. Jimmy Rafferty of New York! Athletic club, Forest Efaw of Bainbridge, Md., Naval, Don Bur-! man, - Navy Pre-medical student and Ruddy Simms of the New York Pioneer club, finished ahead of him. Rafferty won his sixth, straight race in 4:16.4 and Hagg'sj Just Arrived Men's Painter OVERALLS All Sizes Limited Quantity '4: I W J - M$n Overseas Want Baseball Continued Sports Voice Says By JACK CUDDY NEW YORK, March 5 (U.R) Three sports writers and Mel Allen were chatting at a table in Toots Shor's last night. They were talking baseball about the opening open-ing of spring training this week. Allen is the "sports voice" for thousands (perhaps millions) of service men overseas. He is an army technician, fourth class, who broadcasts to them daily by short wave. Before Pearl Harbor he was one of the nation's top sports-casters. sports-casters. During the conversation, one of the writers asked Allen: "Do you think the opening of training will mean anything to the boys at the front? Honestly now do you believe be-lieve that men overseas care whether baseball continues?" Melodious Mel tall, dark and handsome in his army uniform grinned and answered: "Certainly "Certain-ly the men overseas want baseball continued. They're interested in sports, right up into the front lines. And they're particularly interested in baseball. Even the Germans appreciate that fact." "The Germans" "Yes, the Germans," 'Allen continued. "I know of at least one occasion when the Germans took advantage of our fighting men's interest in baseball to try to spread their propaganda." Mel explained that the Germans Ger-mans picked up and recorded one of his short-waved summaries after a game in the last world series. They re-broadcast the summary, realizing that baseball talk on the air would quickly command a large listening audience audi-ence among Americans at the front.- And the Germans larded the record with plenty of their propaganda, in English. How do the boys at the front get their sportscasts? Allen explained that the armed forces radio service has studios in New York and In San Francisco. New York short-waves to the European areas, and San Francisco Fran-cisco to the Pacific areas. The service has 432 expeditionary stations sta-tions which can pick up and re lay programs to those unable to get them direct At the front most combat outfits have at least one good receiving set, with loud speaker, and usually some of the men have small, light sets around which their buddies can gather. Allen said, "The men at the front get big events broadcast direct di-rect from the scene of action--world series games, important football games, and the like. We merely eliminate the advertising announcements the commercial plugs. The sponsors co-operate with us in this, letting us know when the plugs are coming, so that we can tune them out meanwhile mean-while filling, in with something of our own fojthe boys. Later we broadcast summaries of the events for the boys who were unable to listen in while the games were in progress. "In addition, we have two 10-minute 10-minute sportscasts every day seven days a week. These are round-ups of latest sports news. We get our material from the army news service, which has the finest sources available. There's j so much sports interest overseas. that we're going to start a special; sports quiz show in a couple of! weeks. Foifr important sports In Losing Race lime was :ji, a marx irequeniiyi topped in high school competition. competi-tion. But the fans remembered that: he had been off the boat only 48 hours after a storm-tossed 23 day vnvaep from Fnpland and that he They figured it was a sporting gesture that he would agree to compete at all and they gave him an ovation that topped any he; received as a champion in 1943. : Hagg. had no excuses, and no I regrets. II This Special MirJEElAL-SUnFflCED boll noonrjG moans Moro Years of Service! Double protection! Colorful, fire-resistant mineral granules Wbedded in Pabco's own exclusive Floatine Asphalt to keep your roof from drying out and cracking! PABCO ilin-eral-Surfaced Roofing exceeds U. S. Gov't. specifications. TRI-STATE V LUMBERvCO. PHONE 2$ figures will participate in each show a different four for each program. These quiz programs will be recorded and sent overseas over-seas for re-broadcasting there." Allen, raised in Birmingham, Ala., and educated at the University Uni-versity of Alabama, broadcast three world series in peace time. Also five mid-summer all-star games. In addition he broadcast New York games of the Giants and Yankees. Mel says, "The litters and messages mes-sages we receive from men at the front prove beyond question that our fighting men want sports continued, particularly baseball. Even the Germans know this." Lehi Forfeits To BY High Play for the Region Three Class B basketball tournament to be played by the teams who failed to qualify for the state tournament tourna-ment will get under way tonight Lehi's forfeit to B Y high at Provo, eliminates that game tonight, to-night, but Pleasant Grove and Lincoln will meet as scheduled. The elimination games in the Nebo division will be played Wednesday, after tonight's game has eliminated one of the title contenders. The loser of the Juab-Spanish Juab-Spanish Fork game will go in as second place team against Spring-ville, Spring-ville, fifth-place team. Tintic and Payson, tied for third place, will meet in another contest HOLLYWOOD WINS SAN JOSE. Cal. Earl Escal-ante, Escal-ante, of the Hollywood club, led the Permanente Metals Corp. nine to a 17-7 practice game victory over the Portland Beaver rookies yesterday. Spencer Harris, veteran Portland Port-land outfielder, reporte'd here for spring training. 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