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Show Tiger Tracksters Win Over Spanish Fork by Kent Ward Tiger cinder men sprinted past Spanish Fork High last week to maintain the lead in the Region 5 track and field race. Orem racked up exactly twice as many points as the Spanish Fork Dons with 86-43 victory. This afternoon the Tigers are scheduled for action in ar dual meet with Carbon High School in. Price. On Saturday Orem will compete with other Utah County schools in the Fiayson Invitation track meet. . Most of the school in the valley val-ley will travel to Payson for , a full day of activities. Results: Orem 86 Spanish Fork 43 Hign Huroues - uooae Hooley (O), Zoll (O). Time 17.6. . 100 - Whitaker (O), Barnes (SF), Jex (O). Time 10.4. Mile - Conover (O), Walker Walk-er (SF), Ellison and Douglas (SF) tied for third. Time 5:16.5. 440 - Jacobsen (SF), Pusey (O), Becker (O). Time 54.7. Low Hurdles - Goode (O), Hooley (O), Evans (SF). Time 23.4. 220 - Whitaker (O), Barnes r 0CCDCCU iti.i nhii f I J II & $ " 1 1 fc Outside White gal. $1.98-up Interior Latex . . . gal. $2.79 -fr Redwood Oil Stain gal. $1 .69 -jV Painters' Plastic . . reg. 69c fr Drop Cloth 9'xl2'....28c m mm mm mmb mmm mmm mm mmm mmm 'il0 Bob's Army 418 North lli, I FISHY STORY II your present bouse is just a little Shrimp and you are tired of living like Sardines. Here's a Whale ol a buy. 1208 sq. ft. of lovely living area, bulit-in oven and range, 3 bedrooms, 1V4 baths, part basement with family room area, fireplace up and down, carport, large landscaped land-scaped lot. All this for $12,500. Terms can be arranged. TIGHTWADS SPECIAL ' $7,950 will buy one of the cleanest 2 bedroom homes in Provo. Carpeted living room, separate utility room, nice shady yard, designed to give years of enjoyment and contentment for only $500 down and approximately approximate-ly $65.00 per month on Low FJIA. loan. DONT BE A RENT SLAVE Invest your money in a home of your own, such as this spotlessly clean 3 bedroom shake with garage and fenced yard. Close to shopping area and Elementary School. Buy a home, build an equity, pay less than rent. $9,500 on F.HA. loan. Approximately $550 down. JOHNSON REAL ESTATE INSURANCE LOANS 143 So. State, Orem - Ph. AC 5-2900 (SF, Jex (O). Time 23.0. 880 - Olsen (SF), Shephard (0), Smith (O). Time 2:13.5 Mile Relay - Evans, Riggs, Olsen, Jacobsen (SF) Time 3:52.4 880 Relay - Hooley, Whitaker, Whit-aker, Clark, Jeffs (O) Time 1:40.7. Medley Relay - Shelton, Day, Money, Walker (SF) Time 4:14.8. Field Events: High Jump - Hamlin (O), Vest and Nelson (SF) tied for second. Height 5' 7" Pole Vault - Ward (O), L. Davis (SF), J. Davis (SF). Height 10 6" Shot - D. Bailey (O), M. Bailey (0), Money (SF). 43' 8". Discuss - D. Bailey (O), M. Bailey (O), Lunceford (O). 112' 6". Broad Jump - Barnes (SF), Hardy (O), Swenson (SF). 20' 10 one-half inches. Javelin - Hardy (0), Jeffs (O), Johnson (O), 132' 3". VnilR UflMP WITH rwwi ...... DOT GARDENING? Dandilion Rake . . $1.98 Garden Rake . . . $1.78 Long Handle Shovel $1.99 Post Hole Digger $3.99 Straw Hats .... 69c up Western Straw Hats $1.98 up Baseball Time! Fielders' Mits $3.95 up Ball Caps .... 98c up Tennis Ball 3 in can 1.39 & Navy Store State, Orem 7&r TIGER POINT-GETTERS Kent Ward, left, and Robert Pusey, are a pair of sure point-getters for the Orem High School Tigers trackmen. Kent rises with the pole vault, and Bob races the quarter-mile. The Lamb's By Nina L. Jones My hands have been itch ing for the feel of the old fish ing rod and the twitch of the line as some foolish trout nips at a flashing lure. The pike run started the itch and It hasn't helped any, either, to drive up around Deer Creek and see the ice disappear while the fishermen increase. Seeing a young boy carrying a string of trout he'd caught west of the bridge near Charleston, just stimulated my fishing appetite. I have listened eagerly to the stories that are circulating about the success or failures of fishing on the dam and it has naturally natural-ly led into other tales of hook ing the wiley trout. My de sire for the fishing pond has betan increased mightily by these luring tales. Now the logical cure-all is to go fishing. There are, how ever, a few complications caused by the necessity of conforming con-forming to the duties of em ployment, wife and mother. Another little item is the sad fact that I do not have a '64 nn A get more OIK mi. t'AMCWCAK DAIRY Ml k NT'" k nf- v vuur j wmm js .; Centra Utah's Largest Most Modern Original Trophy Ream Offers the Latest Styles on the 1964 LINE of TROPHIES For Any Sport or Event Pins the Most Modern Engraving Facilities for Faster Service Mullctfs Jewelry & Trophios 184 West Center, Provo 873-5270 ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENT -- adults all theatres $15 ACADEMY SSSa Open Daily 1 pjn. ACADEMY AWARD WINNER -HELD OVER!! BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTION BEST SCREEN PLAY BEST MUSIC SCORE CO-HIT at GENEVA Bob Mitchum -Elsa Martinelli In "RAMPAGE" Acadeffly Award Cartoon "The Critic'' wA I) Tale . . . license, and I hope I don't have to wait until Mothers Day to get one. More women become involved in-volved in the intricacies of fishing each year. They find it is fun, relaxing, quite challenging chal-lenging and a sport the whole family can enjoy. Now the men of the family might not appreciate this at first but after af-ter a while they don't seem to mind it at all. When I started fishing my instructions from Spouse Jones were," If you're going to fish you have to bait your own hook and clean your own fish.' This sounded like good advice ad-vice until I tried baiting my first hook. Since that first squeamish lesson it has been brought to my attention that if you use any one of the hundreds of different lures, it is no trouble at all. A woman wo-man doesn't mind snapping a lure on the end of her line. They aren't slimey, do not' wriggle, crawl or struggle in any way. Now when it comes to cleaning clean-ing a fish, that too can be done nnnp fcrjths weekend 1 X;SdCIATION OF UTAH GENEVA S23S Open 6:45 Show at 7:30 "TOM JONE Orem - Geneva Times - tSpcrts Seeing With Dean - The Far-West Regional of the NCAA basketball tournament tourna-ment will return to Provo and Brigham Young University at the end of the 1964-65 season, read ths press release out of the NCAA offices. There's far more behind this move than meets the eya at first glance. For one thing, it's not a matter of being fortunate fortun-ate enough to get the Region-als Region-als played at your school. Because Be-cause of the problems involved involv-ed in staging such a tournament, tourna-ment, the housing of teams and fans, etc., it's a problem of convincing the school involved involv-ed that they ought to have them for the forthcoming year. Some schools have actively sought the big basketball tournaments, but many others shy away from them as if they were poison. Since the rule was passed that such tournaments be held on campus floors only, the NCAA has been in a dither to find places where an adequate adequ-ate tournament can be staged. Places like Los Angeles' Arena the San Francisco Cow Pa-lace, Kansas City's Municipal Aud itorium, Louisville's Freedom Hall or New York's Madison Square Garden no longer are acceptable for Regional tournaments. tour-naments. However, a loophole was left, big enough that the national finals can be held in a civic or public auditorium off campus. For this reason, there are only two or three acceptable places in the West where the NCAA Far West Regionals caa be held. Corvallis, Oregon's Gill Coliseum on the Oregon State campus, BYU's Field-house Field-house in Provo, possibly Washington University's Ed-mundson Ed-mundson Pavilion. None of the California schools have big enough campus cam-pus facilities to stage the tournament. tour-nament. New Mexico's Johnson John-son Gymnasium is really not big enough at 8,000 capacity. Wyoming has an adequate fieldhouse, but the housing facilities for teams and fans just aren't adequate. Just where else do you go? Last year, Slats Gill thought It would be a good thing to return the meet to Corvallis since his Oregon State team would probably be a prime contender and having the meet on your floor certainly doesn t hurt However, in a switch ot fate, his team lost out in the play-offs, and didn't even play in the Regionals. You may be sure Stan Watts at BYU has looked at his simpley and does not need to be a gorpy mess. 11 your nus-band nus-band is sincere about helping you learn how to fish he'll also teach you the proper way to clca'.i one. If you really object to clean ing fish then try fishing for fun which is a barbless way of catching fish, gently unhooking un-hooking them and returning them to the water for the next person. We were introaucea 10 nsn-tng nsn-tng for fun a few years ago at Yellowstone. After the first meal of trout our appetites had been satisfied as far as fish were concerned, but we still liked to try our skill. So we tried the barbless hooks and kept only the fish we wanted to show off and the ones that would have died had they been returned to the stream. This might have been the answer for those people who try to hide them or throw them away when they have filled their limits but not their desire to fish. Talking about fishing really makes the desire grow strong especially when Jay Sargent just tells me that they picked up three and five pounders at Mlnersville over the weekend. PIONEER Drive-In 374-0521 Open 7:00 Show at 7:30 PIONEER CO-HIT - IN COLOR James Stewart - Sandra Dee in "TAKE HER, SHE'S MINE" Thursday, April 23, 1964 chances in the next WAC race and considers them pretty good and consequently he has high hopes of having his own team in the Far West Region-als Region-als on their home floor. He thought this could happen two or three years ago, too when the Cougars agreed to host the meet. But look at what you have to give up in order to hold such a meet. The Utah High School tournaments are usually usu-ally held in the BYU field-house field-house at about the same time that the regionals are scheduled. schedul-ed. If there are conflicting dates, the University of Utah will get first grabs at the tournaments, and the advantage advan-tage of recruiting where our home state boys are concern ed. Don't think this doesn't enter the minds of the BYU officials. Then, too, what if the tour-ments tour-ments do conflict and the fans are split up between the college col-lege and the high school tournaments? tour-naments? There really aren't enough to go all the way around so everybody can make money in our sparsely settled region. This is the big reason for still allowing the finals to be played in major civic or public pub-lic auditoriums. You've got to make enough money to support sup-port your program, and you've got to have enough housing to go around for a coaches convention, con-vention, basketball w riters convention, and all the fans that want to follow their team to the national championship. It's a fascinating and sometimes some-times harrowing way of life. Tiiger Pitchers Lead 14-5 Romp Against Payson Gary Herbert, Robert Bingham, Bing-ham, and Ron Hawkins took their obligations at the plate as serious business Tuesday when they led the Tiger nine in a hitting carnival against the Payson Lions in Payson. Orem romped Payson 14-5 after seven innings of action. Manny Martinez threw from the mound for the first five innings to Ted Story and Ron Hawkins behind the plate. Jeff Fenton finished up the last two innings for the Tigers with an impressive job including in-cluding five strike outs. Orem and Provo will pick up their gloves Friday for the second cat-dog fight of the season. In am earlier game, Provo defeated the Tigers. Continuing in its winning ways, the Orem tennis team outclassed Payson 5-0 on the Lion courts. l Singles - Randy Thur-good Thur-good (O)) def. Lynn Warr (P) 6-4, 5-7, 6-1. No. 2 Singles - Ken Evans (O) def. Layne Elmer (P) 6-1, 6-1. No. 3 Singles - Tom Band- ley (O) def. Micheal Harris (P) 6-0, 6-2. No. 1 Doubles - Dan Sabln and Gerald Clayburn (O) def. Bob Butler and Gary Searles (P) 6-0, 6-1. No. 2 Doubles - Frank Lar-sen Lar-sen and Greg Packard (O) def. Ricky Herbert and Lee Muniz ( P) 6-0, 6-0. Hear The World Famous. . . U. S. w Tigers Prfco For Y Invitational, Meet Provo Today The' Orem netters look forward for-ward to a weekend of tennis. This afternoon they will match up with the Provo Bulldogs, and on Friday they will participate par-ticipate in the BYU Invitational Invitation-al net tests. Last week the Tigers swept all matches for a clean 5-0 victory over Spanish Fork. STARTS Rock Hudson 'Paula Prentiss PLUS DRAMATIC Co-HIT lives his most electrifying role as Ira Hayes... of Iwo I UINTA 1 Runs April 23rd thru 27th Feature Weekdays: "MAN'S FAVORITE SPORT" - 6 and 10 p.m. 'OUTSIDER', at 8:05 pjm. Sat.' and Sun.' "Man's Favorite Sport" at 2-6-10 p. m. "OUTSIDER" at 4:05 and 8:05 p.m. ADULTS $1.00 CHILDREN 35c Now Playing FUN AND FANTASY n si Plus Disney Feature Disneyland Open 1 :00 p. m. Saturday Shows Continuous Kids 35c NAVY XT n i (7 (I 'ft I ) ;.;.;:,..4;;.;ly..' X Brigham Young University Stadium Fund Benefit BYU Fieldhouse May9, 1964 -- 2 p. m. and 8:15 p. m. Get Your Tickets At Orem Drug 800 So. State summary-no. summary-no. 1 Singles - Randy Thur- good, O, def., R. Davis, Sp. F 6-3, 6-0. No. '2 Singles - Gerald Day, O, def. Steven Cloward, Sp. F., 6-0, 6-2. ; No. 3 Singles - Ken Evans, O., def. George Fillmore, Sp. F., 6-3, 6-2. No. 1 Doubles - Don Sabip and Gerald Clayburn, O, def.. David Sheen ana Mm mei-sen, mei-sen, Sp. F., 6-3, 3-6, 6-3. No. 2 Doubles - Frank Lar-sen Lar-sen and Packard, O., def. Reed Nelsen and Gary Jestln, Sp. F. 6-2, 6-0. TODAY hero Jimal Show at 7:00 and 9:15 SONGS AND SORCERY -, I Tn I f - - inn iitt 4 - " v , k ' -i VJ 'i f-?WAITDISNEI felons TECHNICOLOR After Dark BAND ft 0 a J.- 2- , '.HrtMiwaw' |