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The Record du lieu suivant : Hackensack, New Jersey • 16

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The Recordi
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Hackensack, New Jersey
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VAGS SIXTEEN THK BERGEN EVENING RECORD, WEDNESDAY. TFfF.MRFR 1 FIVE BERGEN HIGH SCHOOL TEAMS WIN STATE GRID CROWNS Rutherford mTFV BfrX Alt CA CTEDM in ax ''ZJlS i At Random In Sportdom J-ft I Draws Fire I By AL DEL GRECO Jimmy Mahon Sinltn But licit He (Sett Half A Pie FromMahon THE New Jersey Interscholastic Athletic Association met at thfl PalnhAUT Dftflm nf Vi A IJf 1 TTIIlAnhrAhf In TpAnlnn mm il II r. vr r- tw FOLUBtR'i Am, II II COULTER Army II BTArV VlL Tf I NEMETZ Army DICKcRbON Penn. 1 uu -'yKJs yh 'i 1 i East Kuthcrford Coach Maintains His Team Played The Toughies LEONIA "(JETS A TIE Hasbrouck Heights And Garfield Champions In Croups 1 And 1 Two Bergen County high school football teams won championships outright and three others shared crowns, the Executive Committee of the New Jersey State Inter-scholastic Athletic Association announced last night after a meeting at the Hotel Hild-enbrecht in Trenton. THE CHAMPS Art Argauer's Garfield High School Boilermakers are North I Jersey, Section 1, Group 4 chain- last night.

The Job before the group was to pick the football champions of the year 1945. Outside the room. In the paced 20 football coaches and five writers. For the most part, the coaches were gentlemen who had a premonition that the roof was going to fall In on them. They were not, as subsequent events JJ proved, disappointed.

James Mahon and Lou Flttlpaldl, coach and assistant coach of East Rutherford High School, headed the Bergen County delegation. And what I mean to say they headed it, there's no argument about It because the only other Ber- genltes present were O. F. Thompson of Hackensack High and Father Timothy Moore, sitting in the N. J.

S. I. A. A. conference and helping to pick the winners.

It was exactly 7 P. M. when the N. J. S.

I. A. filing out like a Jury, decided to put on the feedbag. It filed down- stairs, only Gus Falzcr, field secretary, remaining behind to Z. give the writers the tentative selections.

The big news as far as North Jersey was concerned was that East Rutherford and Rutherford were tied for the Group 3, Section 1 championship! v- Mr. Mahon's attitude was that this was robbery. Fittl--- paldl called it murder. The facts of the matter are that Rutherford swept clean In eight games while the East Ruth-. erford record was only besmirched by a tie with Clifton.

Rutherford played Lyndhurst (20-0), Cliffside (18-0), Hack--ensack (26-7), Tenafly (24-0), Teaneck (33-7), Rldgefield (20-6), Leonia (21-14), and Passaic (7-6) while the E. opposed Passaic (26-14), Paterson Central (27-6), But-2'ler (43-2), Garfield (13-6), Lyndhurst (21-0), Clifton (6-6), 7.. Paterson Eastside (36-0) and Lodl (38-0). Mahon's plea for the whole pie Instead of half was simple: "Look," he said, "at the teams we each played." Z', Let us return to the N. J.

S. I. A. A. The condemned ate Ilia hearty rneal, returned to the Rainbow Room, a dark, dis-y: trial place that looked like a funeral parlor, and faced the assembled coaches and writers.

"Rutherford," said Mahon, "simply doesn't figure to have 570 points to our 565. Why that team wouldn't dare step on a field and play us." The conversation came fast from then on: Secretary Walter Ezekial Short of the N. J. S. I.

A. "Let. us put aside the human element and consider the rf mathematical formula. If I lived in Newark and examined the record, they would both be equal. If I lived in Ruther- ford, I would consider Rutherford the better team but if I lived in East Rutherford, East Rutherford would be the bet-r ter team." Three writers.

Bob Dougherty of Newark, Bob Whiting pions. Eddy Tryon's Rutherford team and Jimmy Mahon's East Rutherford team are tied for the North Jersey, Section 1, Group 3 title. Dave Jones' Leonia High Lions and Pompton Lakes tied for the North Jersey, Section 1, Group 2 crown. And Andy Kmetz's Hasbrouck Heights Aviators, are North Jersey, Section 1, Group 1 champs. The East Rutherford-Rutherford tie was bitterly disputed by Jim.

Army WZS. 5 I AlW Jh ifrL A my Mahon, East Rutherford coach. CHAMPS Four Fair Lawn High Boys NORTH JERSEY, SECTION Group 4 Garfield. Group 3 Rutherford, East Ruth. erford.

(Tie). Group 2 Leonia. Bovnton Lakp Prospects Not Very Bright For Hackensack Court Squad PARK RIDGE HAS TWO VETS BACK On Bergen-Passaic Eleven; I iTil w-, Group 1 Hasbrouck Heights. Weil, Krauss, Hague And roster Are selected for; north jersey, section 2 Group 4 Bloomfield, Newark First Team Honors, 3 Lyndhurst Hoys Named Eastside. Group 3 Westfield.

Group 2 Roselle Park. By GERRY DE LA REE Fair Lawn High School, which captured the 1945 Bergen-1 Group 1 Washington. Defending Group 3 State Champs Have Lost Entire First Team; Rebuilds With Underclassmen Howie Bollerman, coach of the Hackensack High School basketball squad, isn't looking forward to the coming season with a great deal of optimism. Last year, the Comets copped the N. N.

J. I. L. title and went on to take the New Jersey State Group 3 crown by winning in the finals at the Elizabeth Armory last March. Passaic Interscholastic League football championship, places central jersey four boys on the second annual I.

L. team picked Group 4 New Brunswick, through a consensus taken among the League coaches, 3 foutn. iver cials and sports writers. Group 2 Highland Park. The sad part of the whole affair Lyndhurst High was awarded three slots on the first Group 1 Point Pleasant, team, while Bogota.

Ramsey, Hawthorne, and Bergenfield south jersey is that the entire team that marched each placed one on the club, Oroup 4 Collingswood, Camden. The coaches of the I. L.J 'ne. which Is the youngest of Bergen's1 A II 7 Group 3 Woodbury, three major circuits, just couldn't l.llmJj,"JLm 1, Li Group 2 Merchantville: seem to agree on who should hold Group 1 Ocean City. down what posts.

'i (CATHOLIC) NORTH JERSEY BACKFIELD IS STRONG FIRST TEAM St. Peters High School, Jersey City. Only a few boys seemed to standi He and Flttlpaldl. assistant Ingenito Has Turnout Of Thirty Boys Park Ridge High, which was unable to win a single B. C.

S. L. game last season, will be out to break that streak this year. Coach Lou Ingenito was greeted by a turnout of 30 boys at the opening practice last week, among them two regulars from the 1944-45 team. Ingenito has already cut the squad down to 25 and will have another cut before the season opens on December 14 at Spring Valley; N.

Y. The two veterans back are Frank Berneberg and Joe Bergholtz, who covered the forward slots on last season's team. Bergholtz is expected to switch to guard this winter, while Berneberg may cover the center post. The team is not a tall one, with Berneberg being about the biggest boy on the first string. Harold Bell, Frank Streich, and Rich Arrigot will probably round out the starting five, although Ingenito is still undecided.

Forbes Walker, Hamilton Wright, Bob Arents, and Ed Beuerlcin are also varsity possibilities. Beuerlein is the younger brother of Charlie Beuerlein, who played guard for the Owls last year. Ingenito will use a fast break this year. While the Owls aren't hoping for too much, they will be building for next year as most of the boys are underclassmen. Park Ridge will have a practice scrimmage with Suffern this week.

of Paterson, and Joe Lovas of Passaic spoke up and said 1 they were neutrals and considered East Rutherford's record superior to Rutherford's. "Isn't it silly," said Mahon, "to give us a tie for Group 3 when we beat Garfield, the Group 4 champion, and tied Cllf- ton, the Group 4 runner-up?" Professor Colllton, the mathematics teacher from Tren-- ton who engineered the system which guides the State Com-w mittee, spoke up and gave off with a little bit of Gert Stein. The gist was that a game was a game and a game and that despite the fact that East Rutherford beat better clubs than Rutherford, the teams were all Judged on a point system for the season. Short added that the system was 93.7 per cent perfect. This led Newark's Mr.

Dougherty to ask the committee to unbend enough to use 7 per cent common sense. "Six point three," murmured the Professor reprovingly. The N. J. S.

I. A- A. wouldn't budge. It works by a mathe-matical formula, they abide by it. Comparative scores don't mean a thing, no poll would be taken of the opinions of the writers.

"How about polling your committee here," said Mahon. "Let me se If they all have the same mind on this subject." "Certainly not," said Short. "That kind of stuff doesn't go here." That ended l'affaire East Rutherford versus the N. J. S.

I. A. A. Mahon had a few words to say to the writers after the Bob Marinellli. Ramsey 'TS 'iHi Doii arguing heatedly against the "un- FIGHTS 4) Lest Night iBy Associated Press! Boston Ray Robinson.

148'j, New York, outpointed Vic Delltcurti. lao. New York i loi J. C. Fllppen, 183.

New York, and Indian Oomez. 183 Miami, drew -Si. Eliiabeth, N. J. Lee Oma.

196. Detroit. T. K. O'd Jimmy Saunders.

187. Philadelphia iS: Bozo Constantino. M7. New York. T.

K. O'd Tony Ryles. 150. Paterson. N.

J. (3l. Buffalo Phil Muscato. 183. Buffalo T.

K. O'd Irish Mickey Hayes. Milwaukee (4i; Bobby Collins. lS8'i. Buffalo.

T. K. O'd Alex Doyle. 147'i. Oar-field.

N. J. (2i. Jersey City Lou Anaelo. 15634.

Bayonne, N. T. 'd Harry Oary. 163i4. New York (Ti Artie Towne.

149'i. New York, outpointed Artie Haddad. 147. Paterson. N.

J. i8i. White Plains. N. Y.

Eddie Murphy. 138. New York, outpointed Juan Carrero. 135. Puerto Rico.

6: Joe Luscignan. 149. Jersey City. T. Miguel Arroyo.

I513. Mexico City 2I. New York Maxle Beruer. 152. New York, knocked out Georae (Redi Doty.

133'a. Hartlord. Conn. (7i: Art. Tatta.

159. New Haven. outpointed Jimmy Davis. 158' a. Brooklyn id.

Brooklyn Jimmy MeDaniels. 150. Los Angeles, outpointed Johnny Ryan. 153. Detrltt flOi: Monty Klein.

New York, knocked out Patsy Zoccano. 143. of these lads were George Miller of Hawthorne and Edwin "Butch'1 Krauss of Fair Lawn, who both won backfield positions. Another popular choice was Bill Walsh, Bo R.G Roger Hague, Fair Lawn of Colllton System, R.T Harold Foster. Fair Lawn nlcn ls a u'de PickinB the R.E Ernie Mingst.

Bergenfield pl.ns' butlttnelr arguments Q.B Edwin Krauss. Fair Lawn fa f3 t0JW the executive com- L.H.B.. Cardillo, Lyndhurst some of the were moved to Drotest in Mahon's through all competition, has been graduated. Those boys were Marvin Gelber, Gerry Breen, Jim Franklyn Sens, and Sid Hasler. BEAT BERGEN COLLEGE Rebuilding a completely new court quintet is going to be a far from easy task.

But Coach Bollerman is beginning to build from the ground up, having a squad well packed with sophomores and Juniors. To date, the Comets have held practice games with Bergen College and Holy Trinity High School of Hackensack. Bergen College was an easy victim of the schoolboys, who in turn went down to defeat at the hands of Coach Ted Mitchell's Trinity outfit. Today, Hackensack will hold a practice scrimmage with Fort Lee High, which is being coached by Bill Mansfield, former Ridgefield Park High School star. The starting lineup used by Hackensack so far has shown Bill Gorman at center, Larry Ramer and Paul Lacey at the forward posts, gota's ponderous tackle The I.

L. backfield isun quite strong. Miller, hard-hitting 6 Charles Benson of Pompton Lakes Hawthorne fullback who was re- HONORABLE MENTION 'wanted to know how Leonia was leased from the Navy shortly before! Linemen: Weigle. Bergenfield; considered for a crown when it lost the season started, is the only hold-jrjupre, Bogota, Moore, Haw-three games but "unusual circum-over from last year's All-Loop team, thorne; Fiorenza, Fair Lawn; stances" settled the decision here, Miller was runner-up for the League cerone, Lyndhurst: Bachman, Leonia having a great margin in scoring title this season with fivc.Dupre, Bogota; Moore, Haw-Points, due, undoubtedly, to the fact touchdowns and five extra points jpair Lawn. that it played a tougher schedule, for a total of 35 tallies.

Backs: Valentino, Lyndhurst; Coach Benson didn't press the point. Benny Weil, who took the scoring Villarosa. Ramsey: H. Zeiss. Fair BLOOMFIELD IS TOPS honors with 36 points, is placed in Lawn; Giordano, Bogota; Dean, Bloomfield, Newark East Side, the right halfback slot.

Weil was Hawthorne. Garfield, New Brunswick, Ceilings- a steady ball player all season and: and Camden won 1945 Group was instrumental in the great sue-scoring. Cardillo racked up 19 Four football honors. Brooklyn (2i. Salem.

Mass. Benny Singleton. The Owls have a 17-game schedule, meeting. He said: "I'll never be caught in this kind of swindle again. I should have stayed home instead of wasting a nieht in Trenton.

But I thought the boys deserved the Waterbury. T. K. Wlllard 153. 161: Jim Pettie.

150. unburn. outpointed Joe GilUs, 143 Springfield. Mass. (6i.

Bill Van Zandt and Bill Mastrolla at guards. Mastrolia is a transfer from Passaic High School where he played on the, basketball squad. cess experienced by Frank Bennetts points for the season. J. Whitney Colllton awarded Hartford, Conn.

Dennis "Pat Brady. 130. New York, knocked out Allie Minutoli. 12. New York Hi: Joe Keyes.

145. Los Angeles, outpointed Nunzlo Ferraro. 142. Milwaukee (8i. Tampa.

Fla. Tommy Gomez. 187. Tampa. Other candidates and the sche Fair Lawn ciuo.

RffWtoH first-toom mric Bloomfield 670 points, hiehest in l.J i 1 1, 1 dule: n.mu is Luuyicu 111 uic r.arun cntoln nf the1 ocale- ln nls statistical tames. John Nochu. Chuck Menke. Mike D'Ar- knocked out Irish Johnny Denson. 197.

Indianapolis. 7i. field with his teammate. vnHhf which the N. J.

S. I. A. A. use as a minio.

Jim Onorato Dick Oigon. Fred Van Weterlna. Ed Rausenserjer. jonn Butch" was the Cutters' field gen- Mlngst rangey bergenfield boy. US ftk- East Side, which this and turned in tied with Droblnski.

Joe Vasile. Jack Minnella. Car Los Anreles Nick Moran. l.iH'a. Jalisco.

Mexico, outpointed Bobby Yaeger. 139, Los Angeles. (10). which opens against Spring Valley a week from Friday. The schedule: DECEMBER 14- Prk Ridge at Spring Valley 'N Y.I 18 Pearl River N.

at Park Ridge JANUARY 4 Park Ridge ai Fort Lee 8 Dumont at Park Ridge 11 Westwood at Park Ridge 15 Hasbrouck Heights at Park Ridge 18 Wood-Ridce at Park Ridge Spring Valley at Park 25 Ridge at Closter 29 Tort Lee at Pf Rldee 30 Park Ridge al Pearl River FEBRUARY 1 Park Ridge at Dumont 5 Park Rldae at Westwood 8 Park Ridge Hasbrouck Heights Park Ridge at Wood-Ridee 14 Berefnfield at Park Ridge 19 Closter at Park Ridge eral season a Bloomfield for the North Caruccl played good ball and won Flint. Jonn McKnstie. tan rinice. Myron Henriee Bnllistierre. Herb Leverett.

Jersey, Section Two, title, was sec fine performance In the scoringjthe yot of several ue coacn line he accounted for seven conver- Mief roH (V, Herb Plump. Jimmr Kay. Jim Nystrom. warren Brosa. Joe Licureno.

r'rea uon- PANZER COURT TEAM WINS East Orange, Dec. 5 UP) The Kleton. Andy Devlne. Walt Klnzley, Bob "championship and felt it my duty to come down here and "'see that they got it. To me, they're the champions.

And I dare say that every North Jersey fan who knows the type of "ball we play in the Passaic Valley Conference as compared to the Northern New Jersey League, will agree with me 100 ZL per cent." Odd isn't the word for it. If East Rutherford was in Group 4, it probably would have been the champion of that division. So the best It gets in Group 3 is a tie. And if any East Rutherford group is sucker enough to ask Mr. Short or Prof.

Colllton for an explanation, the worst thing that can happen to you is to get It. ST 100 points, 80 points, 60 points, 40 points, 20 points, whereas, but, if, unusual circumstances, common foe hypothetical case in question. Take it away, Bub. sions, which was tops ln the circuit. The fourth back chosen ls Fred popular lad on the Bergenfield ond with 640.

Garfield took the North Jersey, Section One, championship with 600 points, while New Brunswick won team, and as a result was the lone Mauthe Calvin Weber. Masis parsetnian. Walt Dalbey. Joe Franck. Dick Sherer.

Dave Kllnte. Joe Medaska. Don Bell. Richard Lubln. John Thornton.

Dick Plump, and Walt Whltms. Panzer College basketball team opened its season here last night by beating Yeshiva College of New- Cardillo of Lyndhurst The Lynd-imember of dub 0 make AJ1 hurst backs were rated quite even Lea I in Central Jersey with 573 and Col- this fall, with each sharing in the; lingswood tied Camden for the York, 01 to 42. ine lacKies cnoscn were waisn ,01 Jersey crown even though Bogota and Harold Foster of Fairthev trailed in points, 434 to 510. Lawn. Both boys are capable line-: Here's how the top teams rated men.

Walsh proved to be the most on a point basis: highly-regarded tackle in the cir-j NORTH JERSEY. SECTION 1 Possibility Chicago Bears May Be Pawns In Pro Grid War; Luckman Will Not Shift cuu, mainiy Decause 01 nis size. groip 4 Bob Marinclli of Ramsev and sod' w. THE SCHEDULE DECEMBER 11 Ramsey at. Hackensack 14 Hackensack a Lodi JANUART 5 at Enlewood Hackensack at Rldcefield Park 13 Hackensack at Teaneck 18 Hackensack at Tenafly 19 Hackensack at Leonia 23 Hackensack at Cliffside Park 26 Rutherford at Hackensack 30 Hackensack at Ridnewood EEBRI'ARV 3 -Paterson Eastside at Hackensack ft Enalewood at Hackensack 9 Rldiefleld Park at Hackensack 13 Tenafly at Hackensack 18 Teaneck at Htockensack 20 Leonia at Hackensack 23 Cliffside Park at Hackensack 27 Hackensack at Rutherford I Roger Hague of Fair Lawn hold 575 groi 3 Halas SavS Nothing Tsjdown ttw guard posts on the team.

'J Rutherford' lldlilS CdJS 1S iMrinolli i. tho nl p.m.. w.5 Rulherford 33 Race Tracks On Hand, Stopping His Players uiuj uu.ritn:. r.nKIPWOOO to be honored this year. Hague is '144 Rosewood GIt rated as an outstanding 452 Leonia from Bolting Club i Moguls Will'Clean House'.

r-'jmpron LaKes Faluzzi, center on the Lvndhurst 249 Dumont narriyon (team, was selected to fill in the nnrp 1 players would not be mailed until "some time after the champion 371 Hasbrouck Heights 8 1 same post on the All-League BERGENFIELD TOPS ship nlavoff. probably before Jan-! Sid Says Hell End His Professional Career With Chicago Club Chicago. Dec. 5 (JP) Any plans the All-America football conference may have of raiding the National Football League in general and the Chicago Bears in particular of player talent are causing owner-president-coach George Halas of the Bears no sleep- Paluzzi was picked by half the loop -An RnS, 5 i' mentors Mountain Lakes 1 7 NORTH JERSEY. SECTION muuiiK uie ooys nsiea unaerj groip 1 honorable mention were several who i SIS 1 14" tast bide.

Newark just missed making the first mo Jefferson. Elisabeth Ben Valentine of Lyndhurst, andiSJJ uary 1." ANTICIPATES NO TROUBLE "I don't anticipate any difficulty getting them signed; they all seemed ready to come back when I last talked to them after Sunday's New York, Dec. 5 (P) A drive to "clean up" racing was Under way today as the Thoroughbred Racing Association began the organization of a bureau of investigation which will operate on a national basis. Concerned over the bad notices the sport has been re-' ceiving lately, officials representing 33 of the nation's race tracks met here yesterday and gave the association the au- thority to "set up machinery to get at the bottom of any ef-. forts that may be made to prejudice the name of racing," ac-' cording to Alex Robb, executive secretary of the T.

R. A. "Wht. the action amounts to." 0RADELL 59 TO 37 The Bergenfield Badgers handed the Oradell Rangers a stunning 59-37 setback in a game played recently at the Oradell Junior High court. Moore of the winners chalked up Helmuth Zeiss of Fair Lawn, and'jSJ Phllllnfibury Paul Villarosa al! gained votes in 555 Bf-iieviue GROUP game with the Chicago backfield.

On the line. Bill SM he said Koop of Bogota came Close to Piainfield fiin linden 360 Mornstown less nights. snaring an end post. iTomorrow: All-B. teams 1.

S. L. Luckman, leading the league in passing and apparently in line for his first championship in that de-rjartment in seven vpars nf nlnv n-irh GROl-P 1 S90 Ronelle Park Crnnford 478 Srotr Ea5t Oranse 450 Verona 430 Summit 22 points, while Bob Horton topped the Oradell team with 16. Lindsay of the losers had 10. while Donaldson of Bergenfield had 16.

Tomorrow night the Rangers will play the Union City Missionary Boys in one game, while the Oradell Vets will tackle the Union City Stry player LAPLANDERS DRUB GROIP 1 39 Washington 353 Scotrb P'-it. "I started with the Bears, and I RAIDERS BY 30-10 Robb said, "is that racing people; to follow the recommendation of are taking cognizance of the fact the directors. that we might be suffering ourj The association members elected own crime wave, just as the rest directors: Henry H. Parr, Pim-" the country is. Racing is going to lico- Carlton F.

Burke. Santa Anita: clean up. i James E. Dooley.Narragansett: John WILL PROTECT Pl'BLIC lc. Clark.

Hialeah; Matt J. Winn. "No matter who is responsible for Churchill Downs: Benjamin F. Lind-infractions of the rules, he is goinglhe.mer Arlington and Washington CENTRAL HALAS I'NWORRIED "I'm not at all disturbed about it," he replied when told of reports a number of his players, including such stars as Sid Luckman, George McAfee and Clyde (Bulldog) Turner had been offered lucrative contracts by members of the newly formed pro circuit which plans to begin operations in 1946 "I don't know where the reports, started, but I'm not worrying about i them. I haven't heard anything from want to finish my professional ca mi r.

iv i reer with the Bears." Luckman said. Led by Jim Ippolito. the Enelc-Un Ne- Men's team. Bfrafndflll l.Vll 'Yes. the new league has approached wood Laplanders defeated the En- Asb'uly Aparky O'Nfll 4 (i a 1 GROl South River Lon? Branch Bavu.

I 0 Murphv 2 Stanbark. 1 Orsdrll itft Horton, 8 0 Id Bnnfffcer. 2 0 4 Lind.Mrom 2 fi 4 LtnrHf.y, fl 10 Driaroi 0 0 Campbell, (1 ft 0 113 MS 488 Louie A Beard, Keeneland nit, miu yiuuauiy some ox me rest Kicwoon ttaiaers. su-iu. in a DasKet-of the team.

Perhaps I could get 'ball game played Monday night at more money from them. But I Cleveland School. Englewood. couldn't play for anybody else. I'm The outcome was never in doubt.

Moore, 1 1 DUl.ci K1- a 2 a (i :2 i 2 0 (1 2 is 5 preset he good name of racingiEugene Mori Garden State (S. nnhiir" iGeorge D. Widener, Belmont; Alfred i Mc.nuiifn. and P1.1 the Public. I rhm Mar- Donaldson, AJ.

VttliaeiUlH, rillUllU. JHLa mat any of our players to support reports they may jump to the All- BHn VDB staying with the Bears as long as. with the Laplanders taking a com-Halas will have me." imanding lead in the first period. n.i. rf rw.

h. rnlt of the recent alleged To.ai.i 21 sn Luckman. who was en route to lppolito tossed in 8 baskets for 16 1 Diuiald P. Ross. Delaware Park.

scorn-: bt rrRions his Brooklyn, N. home todav. points to capture hieh scorina ing Cases jaiunilB au Pprenltfld Banafrs IS 14 12 foplins of the track moeuls1 The directors re-elected ParriOiadrii Rni.cr in 9 i .17 America conference next fall." ls5i); He said, however, that without a ib 37 'working agreement with the new i league, such as that between the i American and National baseball GKUI 342 Highland Park 271 Mnnasnunn 228 Leonardo GROI I 377 Point Pleasant 2P9 Toms Piver SOl'TH JERSEY iROl M0 Camden 434 GROI 3 178 Woodbury 420 taddon Heights 4M Paulsboro GROI 3K0 Merchan'ville 34S Moorestown said he hadn't discussed a 194fi honors that "we need to clean out cer-(president. Burke, vice-president, and! a.i. htva rnmo inrn'riamprl Hnnlpv aprrplarv nnrl trpfts- contract with Halas vet.

but didn't "PVrvrt onv trriithla oKnnt leagues, there was nothing to pre- JLvV I Cjs- 7skSf, 1 iI. 11 II II OLUIILO Orailfll i Brirkmnn. 2 1 5 Enms. I S'ork. I 111 IMUl Mit rtcing" He declined to elaborate urer.

Robb was re-elected executive on the latter point. secretary. iMafSol.r.i'f i I UD to now, Robb said, the Individ-1 1 r. 1 iv, wnTTl iv ITU Il inmt "00 vent a player from leavinx the rvT SILVERMAN SCORES KAYO OVER EAGLES 35-17 Hartford. Dec.

5 iP, Al Silver- Bears, or am ouht nuu 142. New York. -CI li. man- BP tOl'K. Wulf! ual'traCKI Hc oeen icsuiisiuic Jarkohsnn a 2 (I r.

uif uairi ii-u KnOClCed Ollt The St. Nick's Boys' Club opened Chicago. Dec. 5 iPi-Eddie Botten.l,S' ue lliuic uimdSruus. iiisj6.45i'jiiii wjnii.

n.i. jersey uity. in trie its season recently with a IR to 17 War'rnb rg 1 00 only for their own territory. The new bureau will not have the authority to punish but only to recommend action on their findings to the in East Orange, N. was in eighth place as the fifth annual All-star bowling tournament closed its pte- Toia)s 8 4 is 3 276 Mount Holly 264 Pleasan'villf 2 GROI Salem "5:: Ocean City i 247 Pitman 1 213 riot- Msv CATHOLIC HIGH GROIP NORTH JERSEY 424 Si.

Marys Rutherford ..6 3 sroRt by rmiuni IV 4 II 11 hi nr-txuis iimi Mil pm.x-is a.s Ll'CKMAN UIln roiina 01 a scneauicd six here win over the Eagles A McAfee, Turner, Ken last night. Dave Allen. 131. New Mike Pollotta was high man in Kavanaugh. Lee Artoe among the ent war" first were published in York, kayord Johnny Rone.

128. the scorinc column with 16 points. Bears might be used as "pawns" the Chicago Daily News yesterday. Jersey City, in the first frame of Bob Brant of the losers was i in a threatened inter-league "tal-J Halas-said 1946 contracts for hisjother scheduled six. in line with eight.

dividual track nd racing commis-iliminary phase yesterday, with Ion. The latter will be honor bound score of 4.724 for 24 games. a 5.2 1 ReTeree Sa'rser, I'mpire- Mock..

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