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Show A Polio Benefit . . . . Businessmen Take ToMardwoodsYonight Tonight's the night in Roosevelt Roose-velt It's the night when history his-tory will be made and many apparently ap-parently healthy businessmen will actually and most certainly find out just how old they actually act-ually are. . . It's the night of the big "Polio Benefit" basketball basket-ball game between businessmen from Roosevelt and men in the same category from Vernal. Of course the above described mix-up is the big item on the agenda for those who have the courage to see their butcher, and baker and haberdasher get their muscles bruised and their shins skinned, but there will be some of the finer arts of the game of basketball displayed by a couple of seasoned and well trained M Men teams from Uintah Uin-tah and Roosevelt stakes. The whole thing at Union High tonight gets underway at 7:30, with the highlight at 8:30. However, there is another activity acti-vity that should draw a large crowd of people and that's the piano concert to be presented present-ed by Paul Banham, of Kansas City, who will be at the Roosevelt Roose-velt stake chapel at 7:00 p.m. According to those in charge of the polio campaign, those who have purchased tickets to the basketball games, but who would like to hear the piano artist, can do both. The concert has been moved abead to 7 p.m. and tickets to' it will be hon ored at the 8:30 fiasco at Union High. Participants in the businessmen's business-men's basketball game will be decked out in full dress, so says Mrs. Elmer Eldredge and Mrs. Clem Labrum, who are in charge of costuming. Mayor Paul Murphy and Dwain Buchanan Bu-chanan are coach and manager of the local team. Receipts from the ball game will be split between Duchesne and Uintah counties. |