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Show o THE IIERALD-J- PAGE FOUR UIINAL, LOGAN, UTAH, O LOGAN STAKE M MEN Schedule Wednesdays Game at Logan: Sixth vs. Eleventh, 7 p.m. First vs. Providence Logan Second, 8 p.m. Second vs. College, 9 p.m. Game at Providence: First, Seventh vs. Providence 8 p.m. . Nears End Regular play in Logan stake will end February 14, while Cache stake will go to February 28. It is expected that a meeting of Logan stake teams will be called m in the near future to decide on activities after the regular ached uled play. This week, there are three high-- and important interesting ly games on deck. In the first one at Logan, Sixth ward will attempt to keep in second place by down- Eleventh. That will be a " ing Herculean feat, for although the Eleventh bogged for awhile, last week they came back strong to ' First by 10 whip Providence points. Logan First, after a weeks layout, engages Providence Second at 8 o'clock in another thriller, while at 9 o'clock Second plays College. At Providence gymnasium. Seventh ward will attempt to stop Providence First. . . Landis Jibed In Feature Skit NEW YORK. Feb. 5 l.i: Baseball Commissioner Kenesaw M. Landis, his secretary, Leslie O'Connor, and William Terry, manager of the New York Giants, were main targets of the feature Bkit at the 17th annual dinner staged by the New York baseball writers last night Highlighting the program was a newsreel depicting speeches by public figures such as President Roosevelt. King George of England, Adolph Hitler and Haile Selassie pleading fervently to "stop the Yankees." A jackass made tho final plea, S8.ying, Confucius say: 'stop the Yankees. There were songs titled "The Great Big Man Who Wasn't There" and "Right Down the Alley and Over the Fence" referring respectively to Ernie Lombardi of the Cincinnati Reds and Luke Hamlin, Brooklyn Dodger Pitcher, who had a penchant for pitching home run balls last season. One sketch, with a baseball writer wearing Terry's uniform I never with No. 30. parodied: knew trouble till I lost Carl Hub-bel- l. There was an entire skit devoted to Landis and his secretary called "The Great Liberator" or A Quiet Day With Landis." Ed Barrow, president of the New York Yankees, and Bucky Walters, Reds pitcher, were presented with plaques. Barrow received his for distinguished service to baseball and Walters, for being the pLyer of the year. NEW CHAM HON RENO. Nev Feb. 5 T.1' The University of California replaced the University of Nevada as champion of the Intercollegiate ski tournament today after the Wolves had won the first three years. Stanford university was third, but other places had not been determined. Twelve western colleges competed. BASEBALL MEETING POCATELLO, Ida., Feb. 5 President J. P. Halliwell of the Pioneer Baseball League said today the 1940 schedules and other business would be discussed at a meeting of league directors he has called for Feb. 16 at Salt Lake aty. INTO AVDDLEWEtSHl steps PICTURE BY GETTING OFF FLOOR To BEAT AL HOSTAK, ' NS. AIN - COMMERCIAL LEAGUE E Climax of the Cache stake M Men TALE HARDENED UP for Ring in gary, ind. STEEL MILLS... yfeniZ Zale Gets Off Deck to Hammer Hostak finished when A1 Hostak, NBA middle Tony Zale appeared weight champion, dropped him with a left hook to the jaw in e the first round of fight in Chicago, but the Gary, Ind., boy got up to win decisively in 10 non-titl- Nobody Zale Is Suddenly Somebody a f, VV. f. CU g CA Doll, f, CU Blake, C, CA Toburen, c DU F. Morris f UA Fullmer, f .BY Gowdy, f Wyt Sheffield, f, U. Gardner f BYU .. G games: 8 30 78 9.7 7 30 70 10. 7 30 68 9.7 7 30 68 9.7 7 24 68 9.7 7 25 63 9. 5 24 62 12.4 26 61 10.1 23 61 7.6 14 58 9.6 b 20 56 9.3 Fg goals; Tp total points: Average per game. field Avg. 5 Wyoming vs. Colorado at Boulder. Brigham Young vs. Utah at Salt Lake City. Denver vs. Colorado Sate at Fort Collins. Team 20-1- 9, Standings Lost Pet. Won W. L. Pet. PF PA 6 1 .857 347 246 4 1 .800 189 171 4 2 .666 262 241 2 .666 298 278 2 5 .288 298 366 2 6 .250 272 314 . 1 8 .142 289 333 Team Team Colorado Utah State Utah BYU Denver Wyoming Colorado State SALT LAKE CITY, Feb 501.19 The Buffaloes of Colorado university today were riding high above the other six members of the Big Seven oasketball conference and seem headed for their second consecutive championship. Aggies Second In percentage standings, the PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE Buffs are nearly 200 points ahead of five of the teams. The sixth, Northern Division Utah State, is only 57 points behind and is apparently the only squad in the circuit that has much of a chance of ever catching the d Coloradoans. galloping, This Weeks Games The games Saturday served to shove Utah out of second place Washington vs. Idaho at Seattle, into third, trading places with the Friday and Saturday. Utah Aggies and knock Wyoming Washington State vs. Oregon from fifth to six place. Idle Den- State at Corvallis, Friday and ver rose a notch by this last shift. mid-da- title-boun- BASKETBALL SCORES ternity. when the points won in had been swimming added up. Sigma Phi Epsilon had taken over the reins in the fraternity league and ousted the former Phi Kappa Iota crew who have been dominating competition at Utah State during four long years. Leads By Margin The new leaders amassed enough points in the swimming meet to pass their rivals and now lead them by 17 points in the intramural race. The swimming meet was won by Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity who garnered 105 points. Sigma Phi Epsilon took second; Sigma Chi. third. Beta Kappa, fourth; and Sigma Alpha Epsilon, fifth. In the department league the Foresters and Ag. club tied for first place with 7 points each, no other department team scoring points. A shutout was tallied to the credit of the Smelter club in the club league as the winners scored 17 points. The Smelter bu.nch was the only team in the club league to garner points. Today intramural Druxman Is one promoter whom Jacobs doesn't twirl around his finger. When Zale finished mopping up on Hostak, Druxman announced he had the former Chicago amateur champion tied up. Zale is 26. He started boxing at Gary high school in 1929. He comes from a fighting family . . . four brothers having competed in professional and amateur ranks before him. Zale first attracted some local attention when he copped the Cary sectional amateur crown in 1934. He was a small and Melio Bettlna middleweight who has won and lost the was a full- leadership, d rs 10. Larsen Ed Oliver Gets Smith Totals FIRST Purse PHOENIX, Ariz., Feb. 5 0.719 Ed Oliver of Homell, N. Y., the winner's share $700 from the Phoenix open golf tournament tucked in his wallet, was ranked among the countrys hot golfers today as the golfing brigade headed for Texas $5,000 open at San Antonio, Feb. Oliver, a virtual unknown until he won the Bing Crosby tournament at Del Mar, Cal., last week end, set a new competitive course record of 64 yesterday as he won the $3,000 Phoenix open with a score of 205 for 54 holes. Close on Oliver's heels was Ben Hogan who carded 206. John Geert-seSalt Lake City, had 224. n, Robello To Pilot y when they met grown as simon-pure- s at Madison Square 'Garden. After flooring the southpaw in round one. Zale dropped a three-roundecision in a photo finish. After prevailing in six straight starts in 1938, Zale signed a contract with Sam Pian and Art Winch, who handled Earl Mastro, the bantam, Barney Ross and others. light-heav- f Freston f H. Christensen f Anderson c P. Wyberg g R. Wyberg g Brierly Craw Osguthorp Totals 10 SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 5 (UP) Tom ''Tony" Robello, the PiO' neer League's home run king in 1939, today was selected of the Salt Lake Bees for the 1940 season. Eddie Mulligan, club president and last year's playing manager, said Robello was named from a group of several players we had SURVIVES THE TEST under consideration. Mulligan deDEMANDED BY VETS Pian and Winch did not appear clined to comment on Robello's salto realize what they had until re- ary. What position Robello will play cently, although uflder their di- was undecided. said we rectorship Zale has bagged 11 of will have Ra.y Mulligan back on first 14 battles, seven by knockouts and obtained a draw. In all, he has and we'll decide later where Tony had 48 professional matches and will play. Alves, first baseman for the Bees has come down in front 37 times had been rumored as . . . via the kayo route on 19 oc- last season, going to stick this year with the casions. Francisco San Seals, parent club enIn his ' the Bees. gagement with Hostak. the NBA of Robello managed the Pocatello the ruler, Zale sailed through test demanded by He Cards last season and played first base. He is a former member of the got off the deck . . . survived a Cincinnati Reds of the National terrific bombardment in the first League, where he played second two spasms. Zale really can smack the other base. bloke with his right hand. He can take it until the gentile bovines wend their way homeward. He fights along .he lines of Solly Krieger and a noticeable weakness is lifting his elbow before delivering a punrh .. . tipping his mitt. NEW YORK. Feb, 5 tr.Ri The But a warrior with his New York Rangers and Boston and will succeed Bruins, top teams in the National capabilities urge despite a multiple of faults. Hockey League, moved further Hostak two fingers of away from the rest : f the circuit his left hand. victories over today after Brittle hands may be the bar- tho Montreal Canadiens New rier between the Puget Sound York Americans last night.and puncher and the peak. The Rangers walloped the Canadiens, 9 0, while the Bruins trimBetween 8 p. m. and midnight med the Americans, are the best hours for natural The Chicago Black Hawks held sleep, according to a British the Detroit Red Wings to & tie. player-manag- es above-the-we.g- Rangers And Bruins Get Victories lop-sid- 1-- 1 er 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 3 3 10 0 0 0 ? Large Participation assisted in the capacity of student intramural swimming manager. Officials included: J. K. Vander-hofcoach, varsity swimming referee; Elvin Wayment, starter; Conrad Bertin, announcer; Lee Car-Io- n and Bill Whitesides, scorers; Everett Thorpe and Riley Bingham, timers; Car' Mcllride and Frank f, 2 0 1 1 0 3 23 f. p 3 0 1 0 35 F.P. 4 1 8 0 8 0 2 0 16 0 6 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 40 3 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 20 D. 1 G F. 0 2 0 Results: Sixty yard back troke: SPE; Thorrell, Foresters; 1 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 4 11 2 1 1 4 0 0 0 11 2 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 4 16 G. T. F. P. 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 2 James g James g 3 1 6 F.LLSVILLE 1ST L Maughan f D. Maughan f c Hall g Larsen g A. Archibald Perkins Baxter 100 60 4 13 7 I 13 G. T. 3 2 0 1 4 2 4 2 1 1 2 0 1 F.P. 0 6 14 1ST Skidmore c P. Murray g E. Reynolds g R. Baily c F. Cooper g Totals II Y RUM 1ST M. Jorgenson f J. Peterson f C. Maughan c F. Petersen g B. Petersen g O. Unsworth g F. Nielsen g Totals G. T. F. 3 7 6 0 2 4 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 F.P. 0 10 0 0 0 10 111 102 1 4 0 ...2 12 LEAVENWORTH. Wash., Feb. 5 A new American ski distance jumping record went up for recognition today. Alf Engen of the Sun Valley. Idaho, ski club soared off the Leavenworth lump in perfect form before 3,000 persons yesterday to establish a new distance record at 252 feet. Engen exceeded his mark of 251 feet set last year at Big Pines, Cal., and bested 56 of the leading American and Canadian jumpers. 0 il'.K) 0 1 4 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 2 6 113 VALLEY LEAGUE Tonight's Schedule Smithfield at Hyrum. Clarkston at Utah Oil. Cliff's at Mendon Eagles. After playing on even terms for the first three quarters, the Mendon Eagles staged a strong rally in the closing minutes of the game to down Garland at Mendon Saturday night. This marked tho 25th win for 29 In the Eagles this season games they have played. The largest crowd of the season is expected to crowd the Mendon gym tonight to see the Eagles and Cliff's battle for the Valley league lead. New Jump Record P. W'ELLSVILLE 2ND. G. T. F. P. B. Hall f 2 0 0 4 W. Leatham f 4 0 0 8 S. Poppleton c 7 1 0 14 1 P. Murray g 0 0 2 1 E. Reynolds g 0 0 2 R. Baily f ..0 3 0 0 R. Maughan f 0 0 0 0 F. Cooper g 0 0 0ft Totals 15 4 0 30 HYRUM 2ND G. T. .F.P. D. Clawson f 1 B. McBride f 2 0 0 4 and Calder, Ag. club. Time: 1:20.7. Medley relay, 180 jard; SPE; PKA; SAE; and Sigma Chi. Free style relay, 160 yards: lKA; Smelter, and Sigma Chi. Alf Engen Sets 0 7 14 11 25 G. T. F.P. 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fancy diving: Goodrich. Sigmu Combs, Smelter; Petit, PKA: and Pitcher, SPE. One hundred yard backstroke: Fernelius, SPE; Call, Sigma Chi: Thomas, Ag. club; Parks, PKA: Chi; 57-4- 1111 10 1:23.5. 11 G. T. 5 5 0 1 5 0 G. T. F.P. 0 0 0 0 WEI.LSMU.E 2ND One-hundr- Garland Quintet Dunn f 4 2 2 10 Simmons f 2 0 0 4 Haws c 0 1 0 0 Glockmore g 0 2 0 0 Stuart g Totals 6 5 2 14 Sixth won by forfeit. B. Halt f W. Leatham f S. Poppleton c Thomas, Ag. club; Call, Sigma Chi; and Crockett, SAE. Time :44.8. Forty yard free style: Bingham. PKA; Nord, PKA; Miller, SPE; and Anderson, SPE. Time :20.9. Sixty yard breast stroke: Thompson, BK; Miller. SPE; Stockdale. Smelter; West, PKA; and Brown. PKA. Time :45. free style: , yard Bingham, PKA; Nord. PKA; Thor-tl- l, Foresters; Tucker, BK; and Anderson, SAE. Time 1.02.3. One hundred yard breast stroke: Thompson, BK; Stockdale, Smelter; Brown, PKA; Wetzler, SAE. Time: Mendon Whips 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 V. Archibald Smith Totals IKOMDKNCE Crabtree f Loonhardt f 111 0 0 W Theurer 2 10 10 . Obrav g Totals ' 13 0 4 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I. 1 .0 V. 6 6 0 20 0 2 3 Totals 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 1 PARADISE Oldham f Bankhead f Puree c Bishop g 2 0 Lynn Nielson g D. Nielson g G. Gibbs g D. Peterson g W. Leatham f B. Hall c P. Murray g C. Reynolds g F. Cooper g W. Lloyd g 0 4 0 10 0 4 2 0 Basketball Results score: Half 18, Wyoming Utah Slate 11. Free throws missed Utah State 6, Wyoming 8. and Officials Gidden Bres-naha- , J DeLaney, judges of fancy diving. W'ELLSVILLE 2ND G. T. F. P. 1 2 R. Baily f 0 0 8 0 0 L. Nielson c Totals 4 G. 1 ELEVENTH 2 F. P. 0 0 17 -- 0 1 10 4 0 0 0 SIXTH Gibbons f Smith f Bonnell c Timms g Seeholzer g Boyle Lundahl R. Gibbons Totals 2 100 C. r. YOUNG WARD R. Olsen f C. Campbell f A. Campbell c M. Speth g B. Campbell T. Speth W. Olsen Totals RIVER HEIGHTS F. Young f R Blauer f K. Long c N. Schenk g E. Olsen g W. Leichty O. Leichty ' Totals d F. P. 100 Nielson C. Olson D. Forsberg G. Olson Salt Lake Bees five-ye- G. T. 1 3 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 4 8 G. T. 2 3 5 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 1 Over 200 Aggie intramural athletes participated representing 24 teams. Of the 200 original entrants 54 swimmers qualified for the final events. The meet is sponsored by the intramural department each year and is under the direction of Professor H. B. Hunsakcr. Sid Glock-ne- r Far-neliu- s, SEVENTH Schvaneveldt McBride f Dunn c Sears g Nelson g All Commercial league games are played in the Logan Junior high school gymnasium. Golf non-titl- Rothman, Hdricks Bergman, 3 4 5 3 2 2 Friday .855 .555 .555 .445 .285 .285 mercial basketball league, became undisputed champions of the first teams Logan half, while two Teachers and Evans Coal and Ice tied for second place. Last year, the Teachers went through the entire season in top form, winning most games with ease. Then in the round robin at the end of the regular schedule, which was to determine the champion, the defending champs, Evans and Ice, tripped up the Coal Teachers, thus again laying claim to the trophy. The Construction gang, is capbunting, won turing the first-hasix of their seven games, showing strength in every round so far as offensive and defensive work is concerned. Even then, all six teams are evenly matched. Witness to that statement is the defeat Rechow-Mortotied for last, handed Teachers Thursday night. Without that beating, the Pedagogues would have been in possession of second place undisputed. Tonights games, which launch the second half, place Evans at at Cache Knit, Rechow-Morto- n Tates, and Olof Nelson at Teachers. Although the Coal and Ice quint is given slight edge over the Knitters, two or three ace scoring men make Cache Knit a troublesome five at all times. The clash between Rechow-Morto- n and Tates g will be a affair, with the victory capable of falling to either team. Highlight of tne evening is the Olof scrap at When Ed Oliver came up to the eighteen green needing a four for a 29 for the last nine holes. Gene Buck, president of Aacap and the man who discovered such theatrical stars as W. C. Fields, Eddie Cantor. Will Rogers, Helen CHICAGO. Feb. 5 Tony Zale Ben Miller, Marilyn Morgan, Williams and Ed Wynn, suggested vl is a pugilistic nobody until he Oliver be handed over to a taxi- got off the floor to decisively dermist, stuffed and sent off to whip A1 Hostak here the other night. the museum of natural history. a Now the product of the Gary, mills is one of the prinAny man who can shoot Ind., steel that sort of a score should be cipals in the promotional war bepreserved for posterity," Buck tween Michael Straus Jacobs, In said. At this point Mr. Buck this corner, and Nathan Druxman In that. went into a graphic description Mike Jacobs and Nale Druxman of the 156 strokes he had needed for the same nine holes the turned in an even better fight day before. It was at this point than Zale and Hostak. The old Broadway ticket scalper that I took my ear from the ground and got up. Having lost lost two nights of sleep trying to into a two dollar bet to Mr. Buck talk Druxman permitting e ou the round he was describHostak to appear in a ing, I didn't want to listen to engagement in New York prelimhis open, shameless bragging. inary to tackling Ceferino Garcia Sammy Byrd, who quit base- for a clear claim to the middleball to become a golf professional, weight championship. was being questioned by a reportBut Druxman insisted on Jacobs er when I walked by on the way agreeing to evenly divide Hostak-Bfll- y to the clubhouse. "Why did you Conn and Hoeitak-iGarcfmatches between Manhattan and give up baseball for this game? the golf writer wanted to know. Seattle, where he holds forth. "Because I started hitting .250 Unele Mike would not consent in the majors, Babe Ruths to that, so there wa3 no dice, former understudy answered. "I and they left declaring each other figured I could get around a golf to be just plain nuts. course in less than that, DRUXMAN NOW HAS TWO GOOD MIDDLEWEIGHT SCORERS GFgTp Avg. Brawner. f, DU 7 36 97 13.85 Watts, f, Utah 6 31 83 13 .83 3 Nelson-Teache- tournament LEADING 4 4 For the first time in the past four years, intramural sports at the Utah State Agricultural college are being led by a team other than the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fra- ding-don- Ellsworth Vines was the next man to put my ear in jeopardy. He passed so close I overheard him answering a friend's question as to why he abandoned tennis for golf. He gave boredom as the reason. There is little or no variety in tennis. Vines said. Golf, Vines went on to say, is just the opposite. You can play the same course every day for a year and never have identical shots to make. the little old lady was guilty of understatement. Teachers Evans Tates Cache Knit Pet. n, football player in the country last year was Tom Harmon of Michigan, but he wasn't a great deal better than Southern Amby Schindler of The critic who exCalifornia. pressed this opinion was Bob Zuppke. poet, painter, monolo-gis- t, dialectician, psychoanalyst, and coach of the University of Tom and Amby, Illinois. I a friend, beard Zuppke tell were the only two players he saw last year who filled me with awe. this 1 lf best A little old lady who all but pierced nty ear with a shooting stick emphatically slated Jimmy Thompson was the longest hitter 1 have golf has ever known, watched Mr. Thompson play many times and he always hits the ball 410 yards, she said. "Putts too?" Someone asked, "Yes, putts, too," From the way Jimmy putted in 6 Saturday Brigham Young vs. Utah State at Logan. Results Last Week Denver 56, Utah State 46. Wyoming 53, Colorado State 40. Colorado 45, Utah 38. After their defeat Friday night Utah State 30, Wyoming 27. of Cache Knit in a postponed game, Young 62, Colorado Brigham Olof Nelson Construction company, newest entry in the Logan Com- State 42. Sports Parade Turn To Swim Events Top Game Top game of the night and the one that most Big Seven fans believe settled the title for 1940 was played at Salt Lake City between the Buffs and the Utah Indians. It affair illuswas a Colorado trated by the leading, halftime score that was decided by the sparkling play of the Colorado reserves. Colorado, led by reserve Guard McCleod, started the second period with a scoring spurt that brought 19 points while Utah was tallying but five. From then on out the jittery Utah quintet was unable to close the gap. Colorado stalled successfully for the last two minutes. Behind At Half The Utah Aggies rose their notch by overcoming a 16 to 11 half time deficit at Laramie to go on to win by three points. The lead changed hands several times but with only a few minutes to go, Cal Agricola, Utan State's stellar guard, sank two free throws for the win. At Provo, it was BYU all the way over Colorado State after y in the first half, when the Cougarst had rung in It points in a row while the visiting Aggies went scorless. The halftime count favored BYU 30 to 23. BIG SEVEN CONFERENCE Games This Week Tonight's Schedule Beginning of Second Half Evans at Cache Knit, 8 p. m. Rechow-Morto- n at Tates, 9 Olof Nelson at Teachers, 10. BY HENRY McLEMOKE PHOENIX Ariz., Feb. 5 IC.19 It isnt every reporter who will literally put his ear to the ground to gather information for his readers. But I did yesterday afternoon at the Phoenix country club. For two hours I kept my ear tucked in a divot hole back of the 18th green and these are some of the things I heard as the big gallery followed the players In the open tournament. Won Lost Olof Nelson Rechow-Morto- n tough encounter. . Logan Fifth has been picked all season as the team to beat, and a The possible district champion. lineup includes a brilliant array of haven't athletes, and as yet, they tasted defeat. Fourth ward, on the other hand, Is unbeaten in league play, and is showing increasing power and finesse the form which carried them to the church tournament during the past two years. In other Wednesday night games, Ninth engages Tenth and Hyde Park plays North Logan. The First Half Standings MATCH... race comes this week when two unbeaten teams Fourth and Fifth tangle in wht promises to be a Today Intramurals Commercials Colorado And Utah State Launch Continue To Lead Second Half Big Seven Hoop Scramble CHAMPION, NOM-TTL- Fourth. i 0. Jotttriiil STAKE Logan stake M Men team in the A league go into their next to last round Wednesday evening at the Logan high gymnasium with Logan First leading the scramble, followed by Sixth, and Eighth as second and third, respectively. Round Robin After the regular schedule has been played, the four top teams will enter a round robin tourney to decide which quints represent Logan stake in the district tournament It has been suggested that two teams will represent the stake in the district meet, since there are but 11 teams in the district, and plans are being made for a affair. Ernest Olson of of Oxford, Idaho, supervisor of the district, was in Logan yesterday, and although definite plans for the district tournament have not been drawn, he declared that indications pointed to a event, with larger stakes having an opportunity of sending two teams in. In that event. Logan stake would be represented by the two quints which had the best record in the round-robiInto that round robin will go the four teams having the best percentages for regular scheduled At present, Logan First play. hasnt suffered a single defeat. Sixth is second with four and two; Eighth is third with four and three while Providence First and Eleventh are tied for fourth with three and three. 4 -- CACHE B LEAGUE Thursdays Schedule Benson vs. North Logan vs. 19 THE NAME SHOULD BE GALE CACHE STAKE M MEN Wednesday's Schedule Fourth vs. Fifth Ninth vs. Tenth Hyde Park vs. North Logan Third, bye. Fifth B LEAGUE Thursdays Schedule Games at Logan: Sixth vs. Seventh. Twelfth vs. River Heights. Game at College ward: Logan First vs. Young Game at Providence: Eleventh vs. Providence First LOGAN 5, Race Readies Climax Mem Hoop Cache And Logan Stake Teams Poise For Crucial Tilts This Week MONDAY, FEBRUARY Utah university 38, Colorado university 45. Utah State 30, Wyoming 27. Brigham Young 62, Colorado State 42. Oregon State 28, Oregon 27. 37. Washington State 45, Idaho U.C.L.A. 34, California 32. Idaho Southern 44, Boise J. C. 28. Montana 61, Montana State St. Mary's S3, Stanford 30. 41. i I |