Madrid-Morristown Winners in Valley League Playoffs

OCr^iNSBURG JOURNAL
iVlONDAY, MARCH Z, 1942
PAGE SIX
Madrid-Morristown Winners in Valley League Playoffs
New York—Note on t h e permanency of athletic f a m e : When t h e
A.A.U. moguls gathered yesterday to award t h e Sullivan trqphy, President
Larry DI Benedetto made the opening speech Iahding Leslie MacMitchell
. . . . T h e next speaker told about "Leslie MacMullin," whose Scotch!
"blood" kept him from wasting seconds, and t h e third congratulated "Mrs.
Mitchell" on having such an outstanding and s t a l w a r t son
Maybe
it's j u s t as well t h a t Cornelius W a r m e r d a m didn't g e t t h e trophy
When J o e Louis t a k e s on Abe Simon he may have to go through his first
fight without his trainer, old J a c k B l a c k b u r n e / w h o is taking t r e a t m e n t s
for sciatica a t Hot Springs, Ark. Jack wasn't able to do more than give
advice and moral support in t h e Buddy Baer scrap while Manny Seamon
did t h e real work in Joe's corner.
v
FOUL PLAT
.
Since n o one on his club pulled
this one. Nick E t t e n of t h e Phils
feels safe in reporting w h a t h e
t h i n k s w a s last s e a s o n ' s
prize
boner or b e s t hitting—he doesn t
ichow which. M a x West of t h e
B r a v e s h a d just grounded out and
a d v a n c e d a r u n n e r to tbid base.
T h e first b a s e m a n t h r e w t h e ball
h o m e a n d t h e catcher let it get
a w a y just far enough so t h a t t h e
r u n n e r m a d e a b r e a k . West, h e a d
in°- for t h e bench, absently p i c k e d
•up t h e ball a n d tossed i t to t h e
^
Bowling Schedule
•4>
Monday, 7 p . m .
Pepsi-Cola Vs State Restaurant.
Battle Ship-Shape
Championship
Will Be Played
Here Wednesday
BIG LEAGUE TRAINING CAMP
In t h e opening g a m e Madrid; who
Vine's vs Middlemiss
Men's
Shop.
Central N . Y. P o w e r v s Bourdon
Insurance."
Monday, 9 p . m .
Crescents v s Elks.
Ogd. T r u s t Co. vs Rosebud M e a t
Products.
catcher, who made a putout. While Al's M e n ' s Shop vs M a d d e n Blue
everybody, including Casey Sten- Coal.
gel, still was speechless, Paul
W a n e r administered a perfect r e - Tuesday, 7 p . m .
Hotel McConville v s Shade Rollb u k e b y fouling: one off so t h e ball
By Austin Bealmear
.
caughter M a x on t h e h a c k of t h e er.
New York — (AP) — Baseball's
Hall
Coal
Corp.
v
s
G
e
n
e
r
a
l
E
l
e
c
neck.
«
grapefruit season—the period of
tric.
dress r e h e a r s a l t h a t gets t h e playImmigration
vs
State
Hospital.
TODAY'S GUEST STAB
ers in shape, t h e m a n a g e r s in p r i n t
C a r t e r (Scoop) L a t i m e r , Green- Tuesday, 9 p . m . Ladies League
ville (S. C.) N e w s :
"Cornelius
M c C a d a m Cheese v s E .
D . and t h e fans in a dither—is h e r e
W a r m e r d a m , who vaulted 15 feet Briggs.
again, b u t this one previews a
t 1-4 inches, ought to m a k e a gooa
T h e Griddle v s Surprise Store.
major
league campaign designed
executive. He'U know how to throw
Loblaw Groceteria v s Hector's.
to boost both morale and finances
his legs up and acrpss a desk.
Wednesday, 1 p . m .
of a nation a t war.
B u r n s ' Bottling Works v s Shade
SERVICE D E P T .
But even t h e w a r h a s failed to
Lieut. N o r m a n F e r t i g , t h e old Roller.
s p a r e club' owners t h e h e a d a c h e s
Michigan Stater who coaches a t
H u t t ' s Grill v s Algonquin No. 1.
F o r t Monmouth, N . J., is expectCentral N . Y . P o w . v s F r a n c o - caused by t h e perennial s t r i k e r s
—known to t h e t r a d e a s holdouts.
ing so m u c h good football m a t e - A m e r i c a n .
r i a l n e x t fall t h a t Us h a s sched- Wednesday, 9 p . m .
In t h a t department, from
the
uled g a m e s against Villanova,
Bonville Beauty Shop vs Ogd. standpoint of money involved, t h e
Scranton and R u g e r s . — J a c k Mc- J o u r n a l Ladies.
world champion N e w - York YanDonald, San F r a n c i s c o Call-BulO'Connor Cigar Co. v s C-Way
kees againi t o p both leagues. W i t h
letin columnist who w a s r a d i o m a n
aboard the t r a n s p o r t Mount Ver- Lunch.
six regulars still unwilling to acSunshine
Store
v
s
Waddington.
non when it w a s torpedoed during
cept t h e club's t e r m s , t h e Yankee
the last war, has rejoined the Thursday, 7 p . m .
workouts
a t St. P e t e r s b u r g , Fla.,
Ogd. Journal vs Rotary.
• N a v y a s a chief p e t t y officer . . . .
h a v e Tesembled a school for rookDetroit is lining up a basketball , J o n e s Mcintosh, v s Kiwanis.
ies t h e past week.
doubleheader for t h e A r m y
and
G a m a c h e Liquor Store v s M c Joe DiMaggio, m o s t
valuable
N a v y R e c r e a t i o n league
benefit C a d a m Cheese. (
player in t h e American League
Mar 11 wiwth Port Custer and Thursday, 9 p . m .
season, wants ?40,000 to play
Great Lakes scheduled to play one Algonquin No. 2 vs Sperling's. last
centerfieldl this year and is quietgame
H a n k G r e e n b e r g hopes
J. P. Sharp Co. vs Advance ly waiting, out P r e s i d e n t E d Barto line u p a b a l l t e a m a t M a c Dill
row. Other Yanks whose signatures
field which will b e good enough to News.
a r e needed are Pitcher Red Ruffgive m a j o r league clubs a tussle.
Morristown v s . Cresoent Hotel. ing, Catcher Bill Dickey, OutfieldF r i d a y , 6:45 p . m . Ladies League
SYancis B . B u r n s v s S t a t e Hos- er Charley Keller and Infielders
SPOBTPOURRI
J o e Gordon and Red Rolfe.
T h e r e w a s considerable m i l i t a r y pital.
Nathan Frank's vs Newell Mfg. T h e Detroit Tigers, launching an
a t m o s p h e r e a t S a t u r d a y ' s A.A-U.
economy campaign, still h a v e n ' t
t r a c k champiemships with
T o m Co.
convinced n i n e squad m e m b e r s t h e
Woolworth's
Caxey . representing C a m p Ettfigures mentioned i n their 1942
w a r d s , M a s s . , Koy Cochrane t h e
contracts a r e adequate. T h e group
G r e a t L a k e s N a v a l Training Staincludes P i t c h e r s P a u l Trout, Buck
tion a n d Allan Tolmich arriving
Newsom, L u t h e r Thomas and J o h n
from C a m p D i s too late for t h e
Gorsica, Catcher Bill
Sullivan,
hurdles trials
a n d it looks a s
F i r s t Baseman. R u d y York and Outthough Al Blozis m i g h t do a l l
fielders R i p Radcliff, Barney Mcr i g h t a s a long-range c a n n o n . . . .
Cosky and Dick Wakefield. on h i s a r r i v a l in t h e
Giants
T h e Brooklyn Dodgers
have
c a m p , Rookie Connie R y a n called
Clinton, N. Y.—(AP) — Forrest rounded up everybody except Whiteveryone "Mister" until Mel Ott EvashevsTd, 1938-1940 blocking low Wyatt, who pitched t h e m to
took h i m aside for s o m e fatherly b a c k for Michigan's All-America 22 victories l a s t year.
Wyatt
advice i
p a t r i o t i s m n o t e s : J o e Tommy H a r m o n , will become Uni- worked for $11,500 in 1941 a n d
Gould w a s seen on J a c o b s B e a c h versity of P i t t s b u r g h
backfiield w a n t s $201,000 this year, threatent h e other d a y a t t h e u n e a r t h l y hour coach this m o n t h after a success- ing to pitch h a y on his farm if
of nine a.m. and explained h e w a s ful season a t Hamilton College's he doesn't; get it.
escorting a couple of his fighters head football mentor.
P r e s i d e n t L a r r y MacPhail, who
to t h e N a v y r e c r u i t i n g
station
Evashevski, whose
record in- knows ?20,000 isn't hay, t h r e a t e n s
. . . . a n d Dewey F r a g e t t a is m a i l - cluded five victories, one defeat t o let W h i t do his pitching on t h e
ing out p o s t e r s u r g i n g all fighters and one tie, leaves t h e reins to farm.
a n d p r o m o t e r s to h u y
defense dean of students Campbell DickA similar attitude h a s
been
bonds.
$
son, former Chicago end and for t a k e n by Connie Mack of t h e Phila ' t i m e a s s i s t a n t grid coach a t adelphia Athletics in t h e case of
CONFESSION
F i r s t Baseman Dick Siebert, w h o
Bill M c C a r t e r , D a r t m o u g h ath- Princeton and Michigan.
Mox A. Weber, long Hamilton's was offered a contract and told to
letic director, a d m i t s h e doesn't
s h a r e t h e college's g e n e r a l enthu- backfield coach and 1941 line in- "take i t or leave it." Up to now,
s i a s m for winter s p o r t s . . . .
I structor, will b e field coach u n d e r Dick h a s left it, as h a s Outfielder
Bob Johnson, whose salary w a s
h a v e a 100 foot d r i v e w a y to k e e p Dickson.
„ shoveled out," he explains.
Evashevski, w h o resigned Sat- chopped $.5,000 from a reported
urday, joins the P i t t staff of Head ?17,500 in 1941.
Pitchersl Dutch Leonard
and
Coach Charles Bowser Mar. 15.
Steve. Sunflra and Outfielder Bruce
Campbell haven't come to t e r m s
with t h e Washington Senators, although Leonard's case is t h e only
;
one causing Clark Griffith m u c h
concern.
Everybody on t h e P i t t s b u r g h Pir a t e roster is h a p p y except OutAlbany, N . Y.— CAP)—The Mt.
fielder
Vince DiMaggio and P i t c h e r
Van
Hoevenberg
bobsled
run
stands deserted—for the year and
Poughkeepsie, N. Y. — (AP)—• Bob Klinger. T h e St. Louis Cardi' possibly t h e w a r ' s duration—but Poughkeepsie bowlers lead four nals have a n unsigned trio in P r a n k
Crespi, Eddie L a k e and Woody
its t r i c k y course a c c e n t s even i n classes, yielding t h e . honors
to
disuse the pluck and persistence Binghamton in t h r e e after t h e first English, all infielders.
T h e Boston R e d Sox, pleasantly
of a S a r a n a c L a k e pilot who w o n of seven weekends of t h e 11th anevery m a j o r four-man r a c e this nual N e w York State Women's surprised b y Ted Williams' draft
reclassification to 3-A, still need to
season.
Bowling t o u r n a m e n t .
sign J i m m y Foxx.
Saturday, J i m Bickford's twoAnn H a p p e l and Gladys Sullivan,
Shortstop Bill Judges is t h e N e w
m a n sled w e n t off t h e r u n n e a r both of Poughkeepsie, hold the
L a k e Placid, t h w a r t i n g h i s hid for laurels in Class A and B singles, York Giants' only holdout, among
t h e regulars and if h e h e a r s of
•the " m o u n t a i n " two-man c h a m p ionships t a k e n b y Curtis Stevens, respectively, with three-game totals t h e way Dick B a t t e l l is' performing
at Miami he may bob up with a
L a k e Placid, in t h e senior division, of 564 and 544.
Marie Randolph a n d Lila Harned, loaded fountain pen.
and
Charlie
Keough,
Saranac
Jeff H e a t h i a s n ' t
signed
his
Binghamton, top Class A doubles
L a k e , in t h e junior.
Bickford a n d h i s b r a k e m a n , Wil- with a combined total of 1060, while Cleveland contract but the Indians
l i a m D'Amico, e m e r g e d unscathed,, Bertha Heidel arid Isabella Schoon r a r e happy over Boy W e a t h e r l y ' s
early signing.
however,
and,
yesterday
big maker, Poughkeepsie; posted 997 to
T h e Chicago W h i t e Sox, St.
•Jim's four-man c r e w r o a r e d down lead Class B . Louis Browns, Cincinnati Reds,
the m i l e Jn a four-heat t i m e of
Binghamton's Amoco team ex- Chicago Cubs, Boston Braves, and
1:29.05 to c a p t u r e t h e
Lowell cels its Class A competitors with
T h o m a s t r o p h y . His speed w a s 2458, and Agra Ansco, also of Philadelphia Phils have n o holdout
to speak of, although-Billy
more than two seconds faster than Binghamton * dominates Class B troubles
Myers of t h e Cubs is t h r e a t e n i n g
that of second-place J o e Meconi,
Lake Placid, a n d well a h e a d of t e a m s with 2299. Poughkeepsie's t o quit baseball and E r n i e LomKnapps rule t h e booster class with b a r d ! is balking a t catching for
his five other competitors.
t h e Braves for half t h e salary h e
T h a t event closed t h e bobrun, 1992.
earned with t h e R e d s .
and, a s t a t e conservation departrhent s p o k e s m a n said funds for n e n t possession.<S"
-$
At Glenwowod, Jack Holzer, Bufits m a i n t e n a n c e m a y b e eliminat
ed from t h e s t a t e ' s w a r t i m e budg- f a io, a n d M a x Koehler of Alle
_A.t a s
— ^ n n .r.ce.o-n+.nT
T^he*
oslide
li/Io g
n-n-ni*
O +t a
n+
"D«-*lr>eTri+OTClt.a+l»
ir
<^any S
t eo P
a r k ' sa Ixxxocj.oi,aii,c
n t e r s t a t e KSki
eec
h e ssntac
a s aa non-essential.
non-iesasejuwa/i- Txiie
gany
£3Lo,t,&
x-ajLji.
»in B
y T h e Associated P r e s s
was built- m 1931 for t h e 1932 Olym- c l u b took t h e Downhill a n d Cross- SATTJBDAY
Country Titles c a p t u r e d "last y e a r
pics. .
At H a v a n a : / B r o o k l y n (N)
6,
y P
aul M
a s s e y of
a t NorthMeanwhile,
.ftleanwmie,
att
JWU-LULL.' Creek,
^icca, b
>uy
jra-ux
j.v±a,aacy
vx. "the
i a c -Cleveland,
U I C Y W O U U J New York (N) 3.
Del.,- entered a second successive O., Ski Club in t h e y e a r l y N i a g a r a SUNDAY
JOE DIMAGGI0
ASKS $40,000
FROM YANKEES
EVASHEVSK1
WILL COACH
PITTS BACKS
RUJT
AT LAKE PLACID P0UGHKEEPSIE
CLOSED FOR YEAR WOMEN LEAD
BOWLING MEET
claim on the C. R. Barton trophy
Holy N a m e five of this city was
eliminated from the St. Lawrence
a t George Hall gym Wednesday
night to d e t e r m i n e t h e
league
championship. Heuvelton and Waddington will m e e t in t h e preliminary.
Totals
Heuvelton
Roch, rf
Hazelton, If
P a r k , IfMix, c
Fishbeck,
rg .
Crayford, lg
,
FG
_o
„..o
i
FP
0
County AATT playoffs in a h a r d
fought game a t Canton Saturday
night when they dropped a close
decision t o Norwood in a second
overtime period.
TP
0
" H a v e a nice winter, Curtis?"
7
1
15
FG FP TP
2
1
5o
TRAINING CAMP BRIEFS
:
$>
5 By T h e Associated P x e s s
0
M i a m i , Fla.—Manager Mel Ott
0 of t h e N e w York Giants w a s look2 ing for the answer t o t h e baseball
riddle t h a t p e r m i t t e d his club* to
12
Totals .
score in the first inning of e a c h of
Score a t half-time: S-7, Heuvel- the two weekend g a m e s w i t h t h e
ton.
i
Brooklyn Dodgers- but k e p t t h e
Official: J e n k i n s .
Madrid
FG F P T P b a t s silenced the r e m a i n d e r of t h e
w a y although Sunday's 3 to 2
Harder, rf
.',
o
g a m e went 12 innings. A hitting
Cooper, rf
o
drill w a s scheduled for t o d a y .
Sargent, If
o
Finnegan, c
. 2
Havana—Two crowds of approxLay,
Bushaw,
r g lg.
.^„....„ 34
imately 5,000 ' e a c h
saw
the
Mcintosh, lg
,.„„
0
Brooklyn Dodgers, Cuba's favorites, defeat t h e N e w York Giants
Total
—9
5
23 twice during t h e weekend.
Waddington
FG FP T P
Manager
Leo Durocher
was
5
Sweet, rf ....
3 pleased with the hurling efforts of
Hanson, If ..
2
4 his rookies a n d t h e five - inning,
Henry, c
0 one-hit stint of big Hugh Casey.
0
Carr, r g
McDowell, r g
0
0
St. P e t e r s b u r g , Fla.—Although
Oshier, lg
,.„...!
2 J o e Dimaggio's cabin is only 14
miles from t h e p a r k w h e r e the N e w
Totals
14 York Yankees a r e t r a i n i n g , " the
NEW FACES
COMPETE FOR
NCAA TITLE
By Harold Claassen
New York—(AP) — One year's
t i m e can work almost as big
transformation i n a group of eight
basketball t e a m s as one hour in a
beauty shop can do for an average
chorine. .
Competing in t h e playoffs which
will g e t underway Tuesday night
a t t h e Canton Grammar School g y m
will be Potsdam, Bombay, Gouverneur and Norwood.
Saturday night's game was one
of t h e closest fought contests ever
played on t h e Canton court. At t h e
end of t h e r e g u l a r playing period
the score w a s knotted a t 27-27. At
Of t h e eight top flight quintets
who competed for t h e n a t i o n a l collegiate basketball title a year ago,
n o t one h a s a clear out r e t u r n
ticket for t h e
1942
jamboree. Holy Name
Three—Dartihmouth, Arkansas and Delaney, g
Creighton—continue In t h e running, Denneny, g _
however.
Richards, c—
If t h e practices of t h e p a s t two
LaMacchia, f .
years a r e followed, Illinois of t h e
Diamggio,
the
A m e r i c a n Rocky Mountain's big seven a r e as>
l e a g u e ' s m o s t v a l u a b l e p l a y e r last sured of b e r t h s .
season, officially becomes a holdIllinois, winner of i t s first uno u t today when t h e outfielders a n d
disputed title since 1915, and Keninfielders are expected to report. tucky would go to t h e eastern
PARISHVILLE
AND NORFOLK
IN TITLE GO
playoffs in New Orleans on Mar.
Pasadena, Calif.—leo Wells, kid 20 and 21. Colodado would be at
shortstop from St. P a u l , is only
a few m i l e s a w a y from t h e Cicago
White Sox training c a m p b u t h e
h a s n ' t shown u p for drills because
h e ' s keeping on with his j p b in an
airplane factory. He is expected
Potsdam—Norfolk and Farish- Thursday,
however, when t h e m a i n
ville will play in the Mountain Val- Sox contingent is d u e .
ley league championship in Clarkson g y m Saturday, a s a result of
M i a m i Beach, Fla.—If a t all posthe semi-final? played t h e r e Satur- sible, t h e P h i l s a r e going to be
day evening. Alumni g y m
w a s speedy running to first base this
j a m m e d to 'the doors for t h e play- year. Manager Hans Lobert conoffs and four vociferous b a n d s centrated on running exercises, in
added to t h e general excitement. t h e first workout of t h e season
The fight between t h e old rivals, y e s t e r d a y a n d indicated h e would
Parishville and Colton for a 21-18 m a k e t h a t a p a r t of each d a y ' s
decision w a s t h e highlight of the routine.
evening and w a s anybody's g a m e
Anaheim, Calif.—Buss
Christoall the way. B a r r i g a r tied the tally
for Parishville with a 1-18 t o . go pher, rookie pitcher drafted by
from
and a field goal b y Monica and a t h e ' Philadelphia Athletics
foul by E a s t m a n contributed to t h e Newark, m a d e a n impressive big
m a r g i n of victory. Sullivan, Col- league ' debut y e s t e r d a y b y holdton, w a s high s c o r e r with 12 ing Seattle' hitless in s, three-innpoints. Permer and Crowley split ing turn on the mound. I n addition , he banged out a single a n d
for Parishville with 6 each.
•Norfolk, league l e a d e r s all the a triple.
season romped a w a y with Lisbon
36 to 8, Goodnough contributing 8
and R i c h a r d s , Dishaw a n d B r i g g s
6 apiece. Saturday evening, too,
Lisbon a n d Colton will b e seen in a
consultation g a m e a s a n opener for
the m a i n eVent. On the p r o g r a m
too, is the annual series of l e a g u e
a w a r d s , outstanding player, alls t a r t e a m , a n d others.
I r o n Mountain, Mich. — (AP)—
Gathered for w h a t probably w a s
T0GLEAGAIN •
TOPS SKnERS;
SETS RECORDS
CAGE PLAYOFFS
AT CANTON ON
TUESDAY NIGHT
the last major ski. meet of the war,
an all-star field of t h e nation's
top r i d e r s s h a t t e r e d every m e n ' s
jumping mark in the United States
r e c o r d book y e s t e r d a y off t h e icy
chute of towering P i n e Mountain.
The mass assault on records was
Canton—The St. Lawrence County AATJ basketball league playoffs will b e h e l d a t t h e Grammar
School gym in Canton Tuesday
evening.
T h e four teams in the semi-finals
a r e Norwood, which defeated t h e
Holy K a m a t e a m of Ogdensburg
31 to 29 in- a special game to decide fourth place a t t h e Grammar
School Saturday night, Bombay,
Potsdam and Gouverneur.
T h e t e a m s will draw for oppon
ents t h e night of the game. T h e
winners
will
meet
for
the
championship Mar. 10 a t the Gramm a r School.
T h e P o t s d a m Utilities
finished
t h e season in first place and a r e
favorites t o win the championship.
Gouverneur, which h a s won t h e
championship for the' past
few
y e a r s , will again send a
strong
team out on t h e floor. T h e Bom>
Frontier Ski Council Championship
bay and Norwood quintets a r e t h e
At
H
a
v
a
n
a
:
Brooklyn
(N)
3;
N
e
w
Tourney. Masse^y retained t h e Sladark horses of t h e league, a n d . m a y
York
(N)
2
(12
innings).
lom Crown and the t e a m s u p r e m At Anaheim,. Calif.: Philadel- blast their w a y thi-ough t h e chamacy trophy Went to Buffalo's Roald phia
pionship.
(A) 17. Seattle ( P C D 3L
Amundsen Club^
, •
»- '
led by Torger Tokle, t h e flying
Norwegian c a r p e n t e r from Brooklyn, N. Y., Who soared off P i n e
Mountain's l a r g e s t artificial ski
slide in t h e world for a n e w Class
A record—289 feet—one foot better
than the previous record he established last year at Snoqualmie ski
bowl n e a r Seattle.
I n spite of perfect skiing weather, Tokle found the slide w a s not
so constructed a s to be safe for-a
300 foot leap—one of h i s cherished
ambitions. He set his new record
using one cracked ski. His equipm e n t w a s d a m a g e d -on his first
leap of 281 feet and h e w a s unable
to replace it i m m e d i a t e l y .
A crowd of 20,000- s a w Tokle,
former national ski champion a n d
r a t e d by experts a s the' country's
most powerful j u m p e r , also win
honors a s t h e m o s t graceful rider.
T h e other t h r e e r e c o r d s w e r e
established on j u m p s of 261 feet
in Class C, 258 feet to Class B
and 238 feet in the senior division.
Alf E n g e n , of Sun Valley, I d a h o ,
who held t h e P i n e Mountain rriark
of 267 feet, finished fourth in yeSt e r d a v ' s Class A. comnetition.
K a n s a s City t h e same nights i n
t h e w e s t e r n doings.
W i n n e r s of t h e two gatherings
t h e n collide a t K a n s a s City on Mar.
28, to determine a successor to Wisconsin as t h e NCAA king,
Illinois clinched its big t e n crown
with a 63 to 49 t r i u m p h o v e r Northwestern before 18,931 spectators in
Chicago S a t u r d a y night. T h e Illinia r e a t Iowa, tied for second V i t h
Indiana, tonight. T h e loop wars
end Saturday night.
K e n t u c k won its r i g h t for consideration b y annexing t h e southeast conference tournament title a t
Lexington, Ky., Saturday
night
with a 36 to 34 triumph over Alabama. T h e latter club h a d eliminated Tennessee, leader during
the* season, in a semi-final game,
21-18.
A similar
tourney
involving
southern conference teams s t a r t s
Thursday a t Releigh, N. C. Duke,
last year's-champion, Seorge Washington, W a k e Forest, N o r t h Caralina State, South Carolina, William and Mary, North Carolina a n d
Washington and Lee will compete.
N o r t h Carolina represented t h e
huge Dixieland a r e a a year ago.
Colorado, only major five to whip
all i t s collegiate rivals during t h e
season, replaces Wyoming as t h e
Rocky Mountain ' s t a n d a r d b e a r e r
after copping its third big seven
flag in a four-year span.
Dartmouth's t a s k of regaining its
1941 honors, both as t h e eastern
intercollegiate champion and t h a t
area's NCAA five, looms
easier
after t h e Indians' 68 to 53 verdict
E . Wiber of OFA announced. * l t
morning. T h e pairings w e r e .mad*
a t a m e e t i n g of league officials
Saturday.
The
Ogdensburg - Gouyerneur
g a m e will be played
Saturday
night at Franklin Academy gym
in Malohe while t h e Massena-Norwood s a m e will be p l a y e d u t '
George Hall g y m in this city F r i d a y night.
Ogdensburg Free A c a d e m y jayVees will m e e t Tupper L a k e jayv e e s in t h e p r e l i m i n a r y to t h e
OFA-Norwood g a m e while Canton
and S a r a n a c L a k e j a y v e e s
will
m e e t in t h e p r e l i m i n a r y to
the
Massena-Norwood g a m e .
Both
preliminary games
at
George Hall g y m a n d F r a n k l i n
Academy g y m will s t a r t a t 7.:30
p . m . with t h e m a i n . v a r s i t y contests following immediately.
F i n a l L e a g u e Standing
*
W. L. P e t .
Massena
3$
1 .935
Norwood
„
„ i o 4 .714
Ogdensburg .....'._.„.„„
9 5 .643
Gouverneur ..„
„
„ 8 6 .571
P ao rt sa dn aa m
.500
S
c - L a.._k e ......,,
„.. 67 87 .423
:
Malone
Canton
T u p p e r Lake
<S>-
;
4 10 .285
4 10 .ZB5
2 12- 144
HOCKEY RESULTS — « >
B y T h e Associated - JPress
SUNDAY
NATIONAL L E A G U E
Montreal 1, Brooklyn- 1 (overthe end of a five minute overtime t i m e tie).
Boston 3,. Detroit 3 (overtime
period t h e score w a s again tied tie).
.
29-29 after Delaney of Ogdensburg Toronto 4, Chicago 3.
and Narrow of Norwood had each New York 8, J e r s e y Skeeters
scored a basket. In t h e final over- 2 (exhibition).
AMERICAN L E A G U E
t i m e w i t h seconds to play, L a P l a n t N e w H a v e n 6, Hershey 1.
with h i s back to t h e b a s k e t tossed Washington 5, Providence 2.
one over his h e a d and through t h e P i t t s b u r g h 4, Buffalo 2 .
Indianapolis 7, Philadelphia 3.
hoop to win t h e game.
SATURDAY
Box score:
NATIONAL L E A G U E
Norwood
FG FP T P Toronto 8, Chicago 2.
0
0
0 Montreal 8, Brooklyn S.
Castle, f _.
,
3
2
Muller, 1 ..
AMERICAN L E A G U E
1
1
3 H e r s h e y 5, New H a v e n 5. .
Gibson, f...
Narrow, c
5
0
10
Cleveland 2, Providence 0,
2Iagrabelny, g
0 0
0 Buffalo 5, Springfield 1.
Laundahl, g
, „...!
0
2 Pittsburgh 7, Philadelphia 1.
Queior, g
1
0
2 f BASKETBALL RESULTS^?
LaPlant, g
2
2
' 6 <&
: :: •
—
*
Score at half-time: 16-8, Madrid, slugging outfielder hasn't ap- big ten, Kentucky of the southeast Meehau, f
Officials: Jenkins-Joyce.
peared at any of the workouts.
conference and Colorado of the Parrand, f
EXHMTION BASEBALL
b y winning t h e a n n u a l 3,300-foofc
dpwnhill Gore Mountain Ski M e e t '
from 12 r i v a l s . Victory n e x t y e a r
-would give t h e Norwegian p e r m a -
HOLY NAME
ELIMINATED
FROM PLAYOFF
Madrid and Morristown will meet
Box s c o r e s :
Morristown
Cree, rf . .
Harvey, rf
Dunn, If
„..
Woodcock, c «...
Bordine, r g ....
White, r g
__.
Brown, lg
In League Playoffs
Ogdensburg F r e e A c a d e m y will
m e e t D e a n High School of Gouverneur and Massgna R e d R a i d e r s
will class with Norwood
High
School in t h e N o r t h e r n New York
Scholastic League playoffs
this
coming weekend, Principal R a l p h
Madrid a n d . Morristqwn
H i g h finished t h e regular scheduled seaSchool basketball t e a m s , victors in son without a defeat, eliminated
the playoffs here Saturday night a h a r d fought contest. The* winwill m e e t a t George Hall gym h e r e n e r s displayed fine t e a m work with
Wednesday n i g h t to determine t h e t h e scoring h o n o r s divided by Finchampionship of t h e St. L a w r e n c e negan, Lay and Bushaw. Sweet led
t h e losers w i t h five points.
Valley League. A
T h e . second g a m e w a s
more
Nearly 31,500 fans from Madrid,
Morristown
Morristown, "Heuvelton, Wadding- evenly fought , w i t h
ton and other nearby communities edging out Heuveltoh 15-12. Brown
packed t h e spacious Hall gym to tallied seven points for t h e upnear
capacity
Saturday
night. river congregation while Roch and
School bands from t h e four com- P a r k s each scored five points for
petiting schools were on hand and the losers.
played school songs and aided in
As a result of l a s t night's games,
the cheering.
Blue Devils Will
13
5
31 B y The Associated P r e s s
EAST
10 Navy 48, Temple 40.
N a v y P l e b e s 73, Western M a i n l a n d T*6sh 26.
A r m y 38, P i t t s b u r g h 28.
I t h a c a 46/ M o r a v i a n 41.
P e n n State 43, New York V 35.
FG FP TP
......4
2
,..„ 1
1
12
LARRY-TECH
CAGERS MEET
TUESDAY EVE
29
Gettysbury 40, TJrsinus 38,
Yale 51', Columbia 42.
Carnegie Tech 44, Thiel 22.
Indiana, P a . , T e a c h e r s 44, Clarion T e a c h e r s 29.
H o b a r t 36, Buffalo TT. 33.
Bhode .Island State 68, Providence College 54.
- '
Muhlenberg 44, Albright 39. -
Washington 44, Virginia Military
I n s t -32;
«•
Brown 52, R u t g e r s 47.
TJ of Rochester 37, Hamilton 28.
Trinity 45, Wesieyan ,43.
Canton—Tlie St. L a w r e n c e Uni- M a s s ' State 64, Worcester Tech
versity basketball cagers will m e e t 55.
Colby 58, Bowdoin 41.
t h e Clarksoh Tech five a t B r e w e r
Field House in- Canton Tuesday Lehigh.41, Lafayette 35.
night in w h a t promises to be one California ' P a Teachers 45, Shipof t h e b e s t tilts of t h e c u r r e n t pensburg 43.
Mansfield Teachers 53, Rochescage season.
ter. N Y Mechanics 42.
•The Burlrman coached five won F a i r m o n t W Va T c h r s 63, Aldert h e first game between t h e two son Broaddus 46.
traditional north country rivals in Loyola (Baltimore) 50, Washa 49 to 48 thriller a t P o t s d a m ington College 43.
earlier in t h e season. T h e T e c h e r s Syracuse' 48, Colgate 31.
will be anxious to atone for this A m h e r s t 39, Williams 35.
defeaiWestminster 79, Bethany 47.
Coach Hodge of t h e Green and Washington
& Jefferson Frosh
56,
West-Virginia Frosh- 42.
Gold will pin m u c h of his hopes
Lock
Haven
P
a
58, Columbus tr.
for victory on J a c k Phillips, six
foot three center^ and t h e Finne- 52.
gan twins, who h a v e proven .time . Dickinson 80, t l e l e w a r e 49.
Brooklyn.Poly 49, Arnold 44.
and a g a i n t h a t t h e y a r e dangerous
from any s p o t on t h e floor. H e also Rider College 58, O m a h a 43.
v
i
s
Elkins 53.
is expecting m u c h from Johnny
West Virginia Wesieyan 79, DaSmith,
former
Potsdam
High
G e n e v a 58, Youngstpwn 47.
athlete.
«
Coach B u r k m a n will no doubt . St. Vincent 48, Juiliata 34.'
s t a r t Gordon Christie, Woodcliffe, D a r t m o u t h 68, Cornell-53.
N. J., and John Varsoke, Amster- Alfred 57, Hartwick 34.
dam, a t t h e forwards; K e n t Faulk- Connecticut 58,. Northeastern 29.
ner, Upper Montclair, N. X, a t t h e M a n h a t t a n 63, Brooklyn 54,
pivot post;
and ' Bill
Bartlett, • Buffalo State T c h r s 77, Geneseo
Rutherford,
N. J., and ' Warner- N o r m a l 33.
Wagner .49, Susquehanna 43.
Wicke, Amsterdam, a t the guard
Morris H a r v e y 47, Salem 49.
berths. I t will be t h e final game of MIDWEST
t h e season for both schools.
Iowa 42, P u r d u e 36.
Toledo 65, Ohio 39.
Michigan 49, Chicago 36.
over Cornell, erstwhile companion
Michigan S t a t e 46, Notre Dam&
indoor
of t h e Hanover t e a m on t h e top New York-^-(AP)—Four
world t r a c k m a r k s were e s t a b - 4s:
rung.
Indiana 54, Minnesota 45.
lished S a t u r d a y night in t h e NaBoth conferences, t h e Big Six and t i o n a l AAtT championships but Gil , Illinois 63, Northwestern 49. t h e Missouri Valley, in the plains Dodds, & shy N e h r a s k a n ndw
N e b r a s k a 41,' Missouri 40.
west of the Mississipi River have studying in Boston to be a minisMarquette 42, Detroit 38.
P i t t s b u r g , Kas., T c h r s 48, P o r t
two teams each in the throne room. ter, drew the most applause^
Hay's -42:. '
Creighton, who represented t h e Twenty - three-year-old
Dodds,
Creighton 54,, Tulsa 23.
two leagues l a s t season,
s h a r e s m a k i n g his first b o a r d a p p e a r a n c e
De P a d 50, B r a d l e y 37.
t h e Missouri Valley title with t h e a s a irdler after frightening G r e g
Oklahoma Aggies and K a n s a s and Rice in »a- t r i o of tw.o-mile r a c e s , SOUTH
Rice 61, T e x a s 41.
.'
Oklahoma a r e in a virtual Big Six ended Leslie MacMitcheli's string
Methodist
tie.
of triumphs with a 4:08.7 effort. ' 38.Baylor , 48, Southern
In t h e n o r t h e r n half
of t h e MacMitchell
yesterday
told
Kentucky 36, A l a b a m a 34.
Pacific Coast Loop, Oregon State guests a t a luncheon, where h e w a s
H a m p d e n - Sydney 49, William
h a s replaced Washington S t a t e as presented t h e J a m e s E'. Sullivan and M a r y ' 4 7 . , .
the champion and Stanford has re- m e m o r i a l trophy a s the 'outstandDavidson 37, Norfolk N a v a l Stn
peated in t h e Southern Division. ing athlete of 1941, t h a t h e thought .35. •
T h e two metet i n a t h r e e game ser- Dodds " w a s running too fast and'
N. C. State 64, South Carolina
I w a s going f a s t enough to w i n . "
54.
ies starting Mar. 13 for t h e allThis
week
MacMitchell
will
A r k a n s a s 63, T e x a s Christian
loop title t h a t .went to Washington
compete in t h e IC-4A m e e t a t t h e 37.
State l a s t season.
Garden to which 34 eastern col- F A R W E S F
T h e Middle Atlantic area, which leges a r e sending ttieir best.
sent Pittsburgh to t h e w a r s a year
The world m a r k s established a t ' Colorado 5, B r i g h a m Ybung 35.
D e n v e r "'38, Colorado State 30- ;
ago and h a s a major college in the AAtT m e e t were R i c e ' s 13:45.7
virtually every city, is t h e biggest in the three mile run; Al Blozis'
Washington 75, Washington State
mystery, with t h e New York in- 57 foot 3'4 inch toss in the shot 51.
vitational tourney favored by most put; Seton H a l l ' s ^39.8 i n t h e twoMontana State 46, Montana 42vt e a m s . Both P e n n State and W e s t m i l e relay, a n d J o h n B o r i c a n ' s
Oregon State.53, I d a h o 30:
2:24.3 in the 1,000 m e t e r r u n .
Virginia have good records.IT. of Cal 51, U. of Cal a t L , A.
43.
Stanford 47, IT. of Southern Cal
43.
NEBRASKAN DREW