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Show SVTDAT, AP71IL T, Sunday Hsrold 4 'Guis Gutovski IW UtM County. UMt In Gymnastics " i . Ramsey Takes 2nd '"-"''- : V- " ' Vx ( at the end of the prelim inrry By PHIL &HURTLEFF with a total of competition -TUCSON, Aril. (Special) of 188.75 University point. Dennis Ramsey became the Iowa showed surprising team gymnast for rst depth and was second in the BYU as he catxured a second with 186.4. Fri- preliminaries place tie on the Favored champion defending day night with Michigan State's Southern Illinoig trailed at third Nation, annual in the Thor Dave with 185.05. Temple University si Collegiate Athletic Associa- was fourth with 177.5. tion championships. WAC team champion New smoothly Ramsey performed under the pressure of some of Mexico missed fourth place to e compe- qualify for final night's compethe toughest tition in the NCAA meet in the tition by a close .45 of point. Lobos finished fifth with past seven years to receive J.55 The 177.05. a score. WAC gymnasts The second Cougar nof eiui, Austin Thatcher, had a small fared well In the touch Olvmoic- to year competition and placed at hop on his vault and had in settle for a tie for 20th with least one man in the top Southern California's every event, except the horiwinner Makoto Sakomoto and zontal bar. Mike Jacki of Iowa State. Pat Arnold of host team AriAll three received 8.7 scores. zona brought the Wildcats their This is the first time this sea- first national individual son Thatcher received below title as he outclassed a 1.0 score. other ring performers with a title went to 9.55 routine. The Teammate Bob Sakomoto. Shirk was third on USCs diminutive rings with The 1 standout was not really 9.35. pushed for first, as he defended Arizona State's Richard his title on parallel bars and tied for sixth place on Franando Valley's edged San floor exercise and Stormy Eat y defending titlist Richard Grigs-b- on of New Mexico, the WAC for first on the high bars. floor exercise champ, tied for He totaled 110.45 points in ninth place. compe the twc-dEaton also was seventh on tition. Another Japanese gymnast, the trampoline with an 8.95 from the University of Washing score, while other WAC repre on trampoline, Jim ton, Yoshi Hayasaki, wag sec sentatives wnn a Royce of New Mexico and Nick ond in the total of 108.65 and MSU'l Thor Spann of ASU, finished way down the list with identical 8.2 was third with 107.85. Utah's Mike Kimball, WAC scores. finished Arizona's Jeff Bennon, tied champion, for a for the bestever aeventh, eighth place on long horse WAO gymnast. The previous with a 9.15, beating the Lobo best was a 10th place by BYU's WAC champ Rich r'iConnell, Nlfhoks in 1966. who was 10th with 9.1. The University of California On parallel bar Impson of art Berkeley led the team race ASU finished in a tie for ninth place with New Mexico's John Charzuk and Colorado State's Dei Strange. Each had 8.9 aver- SPORTS FANS! v - . For BYU side-hor- - - ' - . VV" tf'l "4'-.V- ' "C i - .... . , Opens New Series " ' v-'v-- : v ., . u- f - - - ! in (Ed. Note: This is the first a series f articles dealing wiu national sports figures he had promising careers cut snort for one reason or another.) 7 By TOMMY THOMAS Bob NEW YOK" (NEA) Gutowski never was the sort cf a guy to burst suddenly onto the sports scene, thougn it may have eppeared that way. A he slim, jandy-haire- d gained a reputation for being unassuming, quietly ambitious and fearless. "Guts" Gutowski, they called him. As a high school pole vaulter in San Diego, he nsver qualified for a state meet. Hs enrolled at Occidental College in Los Angeles on a basketball scholarship, never indicating future nuccess as a track star, ne managed to clear 13 feet as a freshman and made it to - r, se V i . side-hors- generally is a THE UTAH COUNTY PROS bead the Central Chapter of the Professional Golf Association this year. Billy Korns, pro at the Riverside Country Club, tetter, is the President of the Utah branch of the PGA. Phil Cannon, left, is the vice presl- - learning to keep his tegs skyward a fraotion of a second Gutowlonger at the push-off- , ski finally cleared 15 feet. As a senior, he sailed to breaking Cornelius Warmer-dam- 's world record. He did an encore by smashing his own mark in the NCAA championships that year, soaring to 15-Pro-Aat (Site Sept. (Utah A decade has now passed open) at Riverside C.C. since Bob Gutowski claimed at Hidden Pro-Pr- o at Oakridge that world record before being Oct. 7 Jr. "A" -C- killed in an automobile accident at Wasatch C.C. (Class "A" year later. And names like entral Chapter only). ennel and Hansen and Sea gren have replaced his in the record books as new heights UPGA Sets Tourney Slate 5-- Lake C.C. (Players permit 4 July 29 Central Chap- to be announced). card holders Pro-AAug. 12 ter only). Valley C.C. Pro-APro-Aat Bonne July 22 Aug. 19 State Park. ville. The Central Chapter of th Professional Rocky Mountain Golf Association has announced its schedule of tournaments for the coming golf season. The highlight of the year will be the Utah Famlee Open at the Riverside Country Club in Provo set for September 4, 5, 6. and 7. President of the Central Chapter (Utah) of the PGA Is Riberside pro Billy Korns. vice president ts Timpanogos pro Dave Crowton, and secretary is Alpine Country Club pro Phil Cannon. The schedule of tournaments is a$ follows: Pro-Aat Forest May 6 Dale. Pro-Aat Timp- May 24 anogos. ay d urk Pro-Pre- m s. m - 9. m - m are conquered. Dr. B. H. Culiev. Dean of Men at Occidental and one of Gutowskl's closest friends, re calls that Bob wa$ becoming an man in track and had the potential for the "In a dual meet with UCLA " he remembers, "Be) vaulted 15 feet, broad jumped over 23 feet and beat Rafer Johnson in the dash. He told me he had decided to pursue the decathlon for the 1960! Olympics. "In the 1956 trials. Bob fin ished fourth and didn't qualify for the U.S. team. But Jim Graham sustained an injury and gave up his spot on the team to Bob. Occidental students then raised enough money for uranam to go to m 100-ya- rd m June 3 Pro-A- at Treasure m Mountain. Corletti Wins BET YOU l KNOW m Jfvf y : . 24-2- DIDN'T .4 Pro-Pr- o at Alpine June 10 C.C. (Players permit 4 card holders Central Chapter only). Pro-Aat Brig- June 17 GOTEBORG, Sweden (UP- D- ham City. 5 P.G.A. QualiEduardo Corletti of Italy rallied1 June in the final rounds Friday night fying at Alpine C.C. Pro-Jr- . at Wasatch July 1 to score an unpopular State Park. decision over New York s Bob at Meadow-brooJuly 8 Pro-Ahea Stalling In a ' vyweight bout at Froelundaborg v Pro-A15 Salt at July Hall. k. - by ED GIVAN I Harold Richardson of New Union and Confederate losses York, 157, earned a decision over Sweden's Bo at the Battle of Gettysburg totaled approximately 51,000 Hoegberg, 159, in a I middleweight preliminary. lives. Did you know that only om man in history has I awards won the three top in baseball Most Valuable Player, Bookie o! the Year and the Cy Young Bert Can Pitcher Award . you name the only man who's won all three of these honors? . . . Answer ... 1956. b'l not ftn tWof a rtck! big Imim wM an run racord, but Rudy ham York hold audi a diitiiKtimi. Yrk't caokia ...In I 1937, I . LlA t nw nu i m yarr tha month af Awgurt . . . Na arhar maler Uogu playar b- for ar atnta hat vr hit that many (n ana month. I I Yastrzem-sk- l, ho won the Most Valuable Player Award in the American League last season for his clutch hitting and fine play in the outfield, originally was not an outfielder at all . . . Carl was an infielder when he started out in the minor 'eagues, playing second base and shortstop . . . Another fact that some fans don't know about Carl Is that he went to Notre Dame the school that has produced so many football stars and now has a famous baseball alumni in w Shrewd? DSafe? DRatriotic? Exclusive? ' " You're right if you checked all four boxes. when held Freedom Shares are a shrewd investment because they pay 4.74 redeemable and to maturity. They mature in just arc years, after one year. There is no safer investment because Freedom Shares are backed by The United States of America. four-and-a-ha- lf Not everyone Can buy new Freedom Shares. You have to belong to the or Payroll Savings Plan. Freedom Shares are a bonus opportunity for these regular Bond buyers. Exclusive? Absolutely. Bond-a-Mont- its ranks. Motorcycle Event Is Set At Widowmaker Hill showing Ford's new Motorcycle races are attracting big crowds at Widowmaker Hill just east of the Utah State Prison at the Point of the Mountain. Races are scheduled again this Sunday for tha second straight week. .Last week Kent Kizerian of Provo won uie 650 Open Class with a spectacular climb up tne steep incline. Bill Olson, another Provo cyclist, finished in third place in the Class B with a 650 BSA. The races today are sched uled at 1 p.m. Weber Nine Wins Game 6-- 1 - BOISE (UPI) Pitcher Mike Bevill led Weber State to a 1 win over Northwest Nazarene Friday in the opening game of the Boise College Baseball Gas sic. Bevill gave up only three hits and one unearned run. Clair Wadman, Larry Cole, Roger Reid and Ray Melbos were top scorers for the Weber Wildcats. Weber goes against two opponents today, meeting the e of the University of of Idaho game at noon and the victor in the Gonzaga-IdahState match at 3 p.m. Exhibition Game 6-- NEW YORK v Idaho-Colleg- Conference. SaTS 'a.v WF V W U It".1 M 'V Y with I Provo Flying Service Utah's Finest Aviation Center 373-150- V ftftrtnmt l US. Savings Bonds, Copyright 1968 1 . VA New Freedom Shares and FUI of H.P. Fully Staff ( it fntmAti a a aMi r Ail VS. SntnuuKt aV 9 Mtno m ttopmtitm witk tin Trmuarf Dtpmrtmnt and tin AdurKttt. CowuiL A A FAA FLIGHT 4-- 150 14 8 New Aircraft Rental Air Taxi and Air Charter Air Ambulance Helicopter Service niii GIVAN FORD Home of the Most Affordable Fordsl (UPI)-Nati- onal Basketball Association player representatives Friday agreed unanimously to play an exhibition all star game in New York's Singer Bowl Aug. 15 as a tribute to the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Larry Fleisher, an attorney for the league who made the announcement, said the game will be a - benefit for the Southern Christian Leadership h Model C. y ! M 1 Bob Gutowski 'Torches' were lit eluded," says Culley, "and the stadium was dark as Bob got ready for his attempt at He was the last contestant to jump and he couldn't even see the crossbar from the end of the runway. So nearly all of the 47,000 fans, some of them lining the runway, made torches out of their programs. The whole stadium lit up and Bob cleared the bar, equaling the Oiympic record." It was generally assumed that Gutowski would become the first man to vault 16 feet. "There was no question that he would eventually break that mark," says Culley. "As for 17 feet or higher, I don't know. Some of the glass fiber pole manufacturers tried to get him to use thtm but he always went back to the me!al pole. Unless he could have got used to the new pole, he probably wouldn't have broken 17 feet." Perhaps not. But he would have given it a good try. Hall Finishes Fourth in Nation - NEW YORK (UPI) Ken Hall of Westminster College ended the basketball season with the fourth highest scoring average in the nation, NCAA statistics showed Friday. Hall scored 300 field goals and 182 free throws for 7S2 a S2.6 points . in 24 games for fourth place. average Hall, a transfer from New York Community College e year, is Westminster's scoring leader. Mike Davis of Virginia Union was the nation's top scorer with Gutowski won a silver medal. finishing second to Don Bragg. Perhaps Gutowski's most memorable triumph came in a summer meet at Bucharest. Romania "The pole vault, as usual, was the last event to be con- - a 36.3 average. last Legal Notice NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING - expiring is A. H. Ellett. COUNTY COMMISSIONERS r One (I) ON AN ORDINANCE VACATand one (1) ING CERTAIN commissioner. PROPOSED four-yeMARK F. BOYACK STREET BE TWEEN Utah County Clerk COLUMBIA LANE AND CARTERVILLE ROAD Published in The Sunday Herald IN PRCVO CITY, UTAH. April 7, 1968. Notice is hereby given that NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS the Board of Commissioners of Office of the City Recorder Provo City, Utah, will conduct Provo City, Utah a public hearing in the City Sealed proposals will be reCommission Room in the City ceived at this office until 10:00 Office Building in Provo, Utah, a.m. 1968, at 10:00 o'clock a.m. on Wed. for Thursday, April 11, the construction of a sewer nesday, April 10, 1968, at which line oh 200 West from approxitime all parties in interest and mately 2800 North, North to the citizens will be given an op Gam Baum Fruit Processing portunity to be heard either Plant. Work must be completed for or against the adoption of by July 1, 1968. an ordinance vacating and setThe approximate quantities ting aside a certain proposed ara: street between Co- Excavation 7,500 and Backfill lumbia Lane and Carterville cubic yards Road in Provo City, Utah. Lay 4,500 lin. feet of 18" con BY AND FOR THE BOARD crete rubber gasket sewer line OF COMMISSIONERS FOR Lay 2,500 lin. feet of 12" con PROVO CITY ON this 13th crete rubber gasket sewer line DAY 07 MARCH, 1968. Install 9 concrete manholes R. GLENN OLSEN 5' diameter City Recorder Install 5 concrete manholes Published in The Sunday Her-ai- d 4' diameter March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 100 tons bedding gravel 1968 1 crossing under railroad; pipe is in for highway crossing NOTICE The City will purchase the I herer,y announce that the pipe and manhole materials, following offices are those for Specifications and forms of which candidates are to be nom contract and bonds, together inated in Utah County at the with the plans, mny be obtainPrimary Election to be held on ed at the Office of the City Tuesday, the 10th day of Sep Engineer. A deposit of 15.00 tember,- 1968: is required. CONGRESSIONAL Each bidder must submit with 1. United States Senator his bid a certified check, draft, 2. One Congressman in each or bid bond to and made paycongressional district. able to Provo City In the amount STATE EXECUTIVE of the bid. of five per cent 1. Governor Bids will be opened in urn 2. Secretary of State City Commission Chambers at 3. Attorney General 10:00 a.m. en Thursday, April 4. State Auditor 11, 1968. 5. State Treasurer The right is reserved to re6. All District Attorneys ject any or all bids and to STATE LEGISLATURE waive defects. 1. Every member of the Utah By order of the Board of House of Representatives of Provo Cty, Commissioners 2. State Senator, District 17 Utah. STATE JUDICIARY R. GLENN OLSEN 1. One (1) Justice of the Utah City Recorder Supreme Court. The Incum- Published in The Sunday Herbent justice whose term is ald April 7, 1868 two-yea- And, as you help yourself by buying Freedom Shares, you're also helping your country. Sign up for Freedom. Get all the facts rom the payroll people where you work or any officer where you bank. Givan Ford ts now ' ar mm m Did you know that base- ball star Carl er hetiond investment Shares? He is Don Newcombe was voted Rookie cf the Year in 1949; Most Valuable Player in 1956 and he got the Cy Young Award in BILL OLSON, of Provo, is shown getting tossed from a bucking motorcycle on Widow-makHill last Sunday in exciting motorcycle climbing events at Widowmaker Hill near Point of the Mountain. The event is set again today. I I & L sophomore. BJt in his junior year, after dent of the group and the pro at the Alpine Country Club. Dave Crowton, right, is secretary of the group and is the pre at the Timpanogos Golf Course. gym-iw.s- i 1. M u 1 j f1 Full-ti- APPROVED SCHOOL 10 AlrciVl Equippd Tralmn Imtruttort CompUtt Oreund Schaol iKomlnlny Authority RIGHT-OF-WA- right-of-wa- y ' - (5) |