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Show 159 OT Sunday Herald 16 Handicap System, Rules Are Explained At UG A Meeting this season. The continuous putting rule will be enRay DuBois pa. UGA pres- forced. Unless an opponent asks me of the new his playing partner to mark his ident outlined on ball, a penalty of -- e in effect rules wiH be assessed the violator. this season. Utah's co, or croquet No penalty will be assessed The mallet-hea- d putter, will, of course, be out a golfer who strikes ar apponboard of directors for the conducted the mee uig. The Utah Golf Association held a meeting ai the Riverside Country Club last night to discuss the 1968 handicap system, rule changes, ?nd upcoming tournament in the Utah Valley area this year. Alan Bader, president of Hie ents ball on the geen on a shot from off the fairway. A maximum $100 in merchandise will be allowed among amateurs in any given tournament. The winner may accept in addition to the $100 merchandise award, a trophy, plaque. or similar award also. George Marks, chairman of the. handicap committee and course rating for the UGA an nounced that April 1 will in augurate the 1968 handicap system. The UGA will continue with toe same procedures as used in 1957. Ail golf courses have receiv ed handier cards for $ie com ing season and association members may pick them up at their local clubs. Cards are available for $3. New members may also obtain handicap cards through their local pro shops. The UGA also put out & book let which gives facts on the computerized handicap system now in use. It also gives a comtournament schedule. plete These booklets are available at the local pro shops. The Utah Golf Association tournament schedule for 1968 m the Utah County area is as fol UGA lawed t one-stro- r ' a! ;.$s; If 1 7 )v Sf.J ; ; . I J I I JV - I I lows: ! I " "II ' 4 . May Payson Pot of at Gladstan 11-1- Gold Tournamant Golf Course. " Provo Open and at Timpanogos Golf May Pro-A- m Course. June at June FORK HIGH SCHOOL has fve sted la a new piece of gym eqtripment which is eipecied to be a big asset to the physical education department. Steve Hailsey Ii shown working out en the gym with student teacher Lea Walker supervising activity. AMERICAN Art City Amateur at Hobble Creek Golf Course. June 24: 'Utah County Junior Touroameni at Gladstan Golf 22-2- American Fork High School Invests In Physical Education Apparatus AMERICAN FORK-Stud- cnts it American Fork Senior High School are currently enjoying a new $2,300 "Universal" gym ' in regular physical education classes. The gyiii was recently installed, on the balcony of the Alpine InvitaAlpine Country Club. tional Course. June PGA 24-2- 5: Sectional Qualifying Rounds at Alpine Country Club. July I: Utah Professional and Junior Tournament at Wasatch mit the following exercises: Mountain State Park. chest press, shoulder or ess. July 2940: Utah Junior Golf at Timpanogos leg press, pulley station, ab Tournament dominal board, thigh and knee Golf Course. Aug. 4: Spanish Fork macnine, chinning, dipping, curls, and stretching. All sta- Best Ball Tournament at Span tions asav bs used simultane ish Fork Golf Course. Riverside "Mul Aug. ously. Member-Gues- t Tourna Student body members ere ligan" ment at Riverside umnsry fund a in currently engaged raising project to raise one- - Club. Famlee Utah Sfcp. half the cost of the unit, with Pro-Aat Riverside and Open most of the physical education students pledging activity re Country CM), The Utah Golf Association is funds to the project. Other doalso sponsoring a round robin nations have also been received between golf teams tournament and will be welcomed. eight different The gym is similar to those representing clubs. Ths schedule of contests used in universities and larger for the team representing the schools, with the emphasis on Riverside Country Club is as physical fitness making the follows: unit especially welcome to May 7 Riverside at Salt Lake physical education instructors Country Qui). and students alike. at River May Constructed of heavy chrome, side. all seats, boards and upholstJune 11 Hiverside at Logan. ered components are covered June 25 Salt Lake Country with a striking red in keeping Club at Riverside. , with the school colon of red Riverside at Oakridge. at Riverside. and white. July boys' gym, where it is utilised by boys classes on Monday, and Wednesday and "Friday, on classes .Tuesday by girls and Thursday. ' The versatile equipment features 10 "stations" which per- - an . . m flij 1 If" j ' baJ f I 1 n J vLv' CMWTNWM y rJyGei2ml-J3t4-pl- TMoiiCoiiWliifaB 16-L- ogan Ml A i ' I i jwiMsipi'Sr I ii i mm 'VaxV' 1 k Vsnhml Sp!a! Sa4ei fHHwSett lof!rfl far ytur uf!de ''Reg. 100 iq. Ka tour Ml con! to protect wsinst blowouts. tousfi Dungtn rubber bead to roll in of up fH o ' " Farm t tfc 'Jsa GENERAL'S E PLAN and Ed Pinegar, a 1952 eached from 1935-4basketball and an outstanding player. Visiting with graduate them is Wendell Rigby, right, Herald sports writer, who was gathering inf ormation for a series of ai tides on BY High REMINISCING ABOUT OLD DAYS at BY High School are some of fiie standout athletes and coaches who helped build a colorful history in athletics at the school. Left to right are Dr. Robert Hales, a 1948 graduate of BY High; Jae Ballif, s 1949 graduate and outstanding football player particularly; Coach Buck Dixon, who coached from 1928-3Dave Crow- - ton, who 373-689- lose After olortu Sports History High 1 O I By WENDELL RIGBY (The first of s series) Brigham Young High School, ss an institution, will fade away into history at the close of this school year, but the memories of its achievements will always remain with the hundreds and thousands of people it has helped to attain success. Athletically there is little written record of the work, success and failures of. the individual or teams that have passed through its doors, and that rec ord is particularly scarce until school Year Books were retained beginning with the 1931. 35 year. It is known, however, that BY High grw cut of the LDS Church sponsored Academies, and the Wildcats are among the last of those 23 institutions to discontinue or move into the ranks of the state supported high schools. BY High did have a basket and ii was a good one. It toured Southern Utah with unusual success, meeting most of the strong teams in that area. It featured a number of players who achieved stardom in later col lege life such as Ike Young, Clarence Langford, Rip Jack son, Hindoo Partridge, Kim ball Mcintosh and others. Reference is also made in one of those 39 or more year books now on file in the High School Library, of a Y cage team that played in the Utah State High School Tourney in 1921, but was beaten out for championship honors by a team of Grizzlies from Logan. Bock Dixon As Coach In 1935, Buck Dixon, a Provo High and BYU star came to Provo from Weber. The team had a successful season, but lost the last three games to miss a tournament berth. It included Read Oldroyd, an All Division guard; Rill Pardoe and Malcolm Booth, possibly better known for weir tennis achieve ball team in 1020, ments, but still rating Divi- High. Basketball was still the d sion' honors; Eddie Jrnart, sport, hut baseball Ivan Iverson, Bud Eggertsen, and tennis teams were quite Vir Richins and Paxman Mar- successful. The basketball team tin. was called "the one point Six man football was intro- team" .because of the number duced at BY High in 1940 of games determined by that after the gridiron sport had margin. been abandoned in all Church Reed Stolworthy, Bob Malin Perry, Robert Schools following the death of a player in a game accident. Hales, Ross Vieweg and Karol Names such as Bruce Dabling, Bills were featured names, in Dick Johnson, Bob Clark ap- football te. 1946 and a one point victory peared on the roster along with Gene Marshall and Bob Carl- over Lincoln (Orem) was a feason. The Y defeated Alterra ture of the basketball season. 43-- 0 and 634); they split with Harold Christensen, Bob Kirk. and Uintah 13-Patrick, Lamar Rawlings reached ths headlines in tennis. Tied For Title Overtime Wins for the championThey tied BY High won back to back ship with Uintah and won in a playoff game at Springville. state basketball championships 1948 and again in 1949. Dave They played for the State in masterminded the Crowton a in championship Thanksgiv Wildcats to victory to 1948 in ing Day game in the Y Stadium and were tied 6 with Paro-wa- three consecutive overtime but had to concede the wins and a two point final night with a team including game when key players were margin Harold Christensen, Jae Ballif, " ' injured. The basketball team rated a Russ Fairbanks, Don Mcintosh, berth in the All State Tourna- Bob Hales, Bob Kirkpatnck, ment in 1941 with Dave Crow-to- n Bob Swensen, Norm Christian as coach. It was the first sen, Kent Broadhead and Erven Nelson. appearance in All State since With Rex Olsen at the helm 1921. Jim Oldroyd, Bud Har top-rate- , Kirk-patric- k, 34-1- 3. , 6-- n, n, mon, Glen Godfry, Lloyd John Lloynel Harding, Huish, Bob Clark were some of the players listed. Bob Booth, Bud Harmon, Doug Jenkins and Lee Knell won honors in tennis competition in BYU Invitational Meet and Alpine Division and Bob Marshall, Lloynal Harding won recognition in track. For two years in a row, 1941 and 1942, BY six men footballers took second place fe state playoffs. Basketball and baseball received considerable attention in the year book reports for 1944. Lee Knell won the state tennis championship and BY High seemed to be in the van so far n sports competition was concerned. It was in 1945 that 11 man football was introduced at BY tp SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -ESalt Lake City and Orem contenders were taken out of National Golden Gloves Tour nament action Friday night one by a technical knockout and the other by decision. oth PROVO - 55 referee stopped it after 1:55 with Porter hanging on the ropes. Earlier in quarterfinal action, Orem's , Jerry Green, a 112-lost a close deci pounder, sion to Dan vigil of Roswell, N.M. Green was aggressive but Vigil effectively countered his onslaught to win the Judge's Eaton Already CALL Names Starting Quarterback - a former quarterback at Mesa College in Grand Junction, Colo. 75 Eaton said Skip Jacobson would start at quarterback for the Cowboys in fee 1968 season. The Wyoming coach said his team's question marks in 1968 would be at the quarterback post, fee defensive ends and the defensive halfbacks. Mike LaHood, an offensive tackle, and Mike Dirks, a defensive tackle, both on the 1968 Cowboy Sugar Bowl team, also spoke at the meeting. LaHood is a second round draft choice of the Los Angeles Rams and Dirks is a fifth roup J of choice the Philadelphia 373-668- 2 5th SOUTH end 2nd WEST S73-2S- State Fallback. The basketball team of 1949 was quite consistently called one of the greatest if not the top aggregation to ever perform Tom Karrea for BY High from Canada, Harold Christensen, Kent Broadhead, Nona Christiansen, Jae Ballif and Don Mcintosh. Their only League loss was an overtime match with American Fork, a team they beat for the title in the State Tournament DENVER (UPI) University of Wyoming football coach Lloyd Eaton Friday told 122 alumni meeting in Denver he had "hopes for greatness" from lulldlngt. 373-442- - Owen Dixon As Coach Owen (Kokey) Dixon took over as head football coach and tiie Y achieved a high mark on the gridiron with wins over Spanish Fork, Americas Fork and Springville. The Wildcats lost to Lehi, Payson, Pleasant Grove and Lincoln, Reed Stolworthy rated AS Henry Porter gave a good account of himself in a bout against Houston Williams, nod. Charlotte, N.C. Porters right- left combinations staggered Williams in the first round, but fee game Williams came back to drop Porter in the second. The tW 6ol mm 333 WEST 1230 NORTH the Wildcats won the title the following year with Harold Christensen, who later became all Conference guard at BYU, rating All State recognition. In tennis Bob Kirkpatrick placed first in the BYU Invitational, won Region 3 honors for the third consecutive, year, and placed second in the Stat singles competition. Orem Boxer Loses Decision No 1 8; history. (Photo by Dean Ostlund, Herald photographer.) 4; Hi M. I B 1 WMHla.6Hv'Ml 24 HR. WRECKEI I SERVICE 0 NIGHT PHONE rr o- ft t St ' I ? I - 100 sq. ft. hih rileigia. And th only tnction.tioii dual cSeiign to it poet Hon; tread ttorai y ,f a $14.50 while k lotto fr fcuitt. -- K , 75'. Special 't f Eagles. Iran and Kenya Is waiting. So are Bolivia, Malaysia, 53 other countries. You'll get 12 weeks of Intensive draining here and an airplane ticket. For Information, write iThc Peace Corps, Washington, D.C. 20525. tffi. of Eaton said he would be one three coaches in the Game Ga., June Scientists grew ago, 100 at Atlanta, 28. tay to the ginkgo 200 million bet years |