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The Salt Lake Tribune from Salt Lake City, Utah • 16

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Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

rp ue'w1T vry rnry Dick ntury of Aiiileiic Service A member of 1916 Utah U. basketball team that won National AAU title, Fame aa football coach and a basketball player. Served as chairman of NCAA-TV committee In 1955. Was instrumental in bringing Skyline football first nationally-televised game (Utah-BYU) that brought conference $125,476.27 for single game. COACHED in first nationally-broadcast basketball game, against Kansas in 1936.

Took first mountain team into Madison Square Garden. Took Aggies to first NCAA basketball playoff, during 1938 Worlds Fair. lost 91 and tied 16 and won conference championships in 1921 and 1936 and tied for title in 1935 and 1946. Finished in second place five times. In baseball, won conference championships in 1926-30-35-36, and teams won 225 and lost 159.

Won conference championships in track and in 1924-25-26-27. Won baseball championship in 1920 and tied for championship in 1919 and 1921. He was named to Hall of By John Mooney Tribune Sports Editor The man who first brought Utah, basketball to rational prominence stepped out as Skyline commissioner Monday. FOB DICK ROMNEY, the i turning over the reins to Paul Brechler brought to an end some 50 consecutive years of active athletic participation. As a four-sport athlete at Salt Lake High School and the University of Utah, as a win-, mng coach in football, basketball and track at Utah State Agricultural College and as Dick Romney As Skylines first commissioner.

Played on Camp Lewis football team that played In Rose Bowl in 1918. HEAD FOOTBALL coach and athletic director at Utah State Agricultural College from 1919 through 1948. Head basketball coach from 1920-1941 inclusive; head track coach from 1919 through 1941 and baseball coach from 1919-1921. His football team won 132, Page 16 Salt Lafte Jiminez Pitches Bees to; 6-3 Win Over Sactos Mitchell-Steals the first commissioner of the Mountain States Athletic Conference, Romney left many milestones in sports. In brief, here are some of the highlights of Commissioner Romneys career.

Won varsity letters in football, basketball, and baseball and track at Salt Lake High School. Won 12 letters in four major sports at University of Utah, was all-conference in football and basketball and captained baseball team in 1916 and basketball team in 1917. Brooks day season was a four and the daily hag limit would possession limit eight would have been favored by the residential private dubs. the minority compared to the pieces out to a public marsh. Outdoors by August 23, 1960 Don It came as- no surprise to your Dead Fish Editor that Utahs Fish and Game Commission selected the five-bag, five possession duek option for Beehive State hunters In 1960.

you analyze the four choices handed down by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Spiv no you arrive at the conclusion that the five and five deal was thp only logical selection the eommission had if it wanted to be as fair as possible the greatest number of hunters. The other choice for a 90 eight setup. In other words, have been four birds and the That option, no doubt, those gunners who hunt on But such hunters are far in gents who take their fowling in 4th baseman Jim Baumer, who hobbled the ball and was charged with an error. That set the stage for pinch hitter Jack Littrell to deliver three-run homer and rob Jiminez of his shutout.

SALT, LAKE jumped on starter Bud Watkins for two runs on three hits In the first inning and chased Watkins with a three run uprising in the fourth. Left fielder Hank Mitchell steal of home featured this frame. Mitchell -hit a triple, and than made a clean steal of home on a 2-0 pitch. Reliefer Carl Greene gave up the final Solon run in the fifth inning when center fielder Chuck Harmon touched him for a home run over the scoreboard in left center. SALT LAKE CITY 1 SACRAMENTO ab rbF ab rb! Tthmn 3b 5 12 1 Petersn ss 4 0 10 Miley rf 5 13 0 Bedell cf 5 0 0 0 Bright ss 5 0 2 2 Shields If 3 0 0 0 Stevens lb 5 1 1 0 Porter lb 4 0 0 0 Harmon cf 5 1 2 HBolgerrf 3 0 0 0 Baumr 2b 4 0 2 1 Smith 3b 4 0 0 0 Mitchell If 4 1 2 0 Bai ragan 3 1 0 Hail 4 1 1 0 Jacobs 2b 2 10 0 Jiminez 4 0 10 Watkins 10 10 'Greene 0 0 0 0 i a Krsntch 10 0 0 I Bowman 0 0 0 (b Roselli 10 0 0 Goi in 0 0 0 I Littrell 113 3 Totals 41616 Totals 3J 3 3 a Forced runner for Greene Jn 5th; forced runner for Bowman in 7thi c-hit home run for Gorin 9th.

Salt Lake City 310 0004 Sacramento 000 000 003 Bolger, Smith, Stevens. Baumer DP Peterson to Porter LOB Salt Lake City 11, Sacramento 8 2B Bright 2, Stevens. 3B Mitchell. HR Harmon, Littrell. SB Mitchell.

fBiek Romney conference half As All-In 1916. Lake Zoning Due for 1st Hearing By Don Brooks Tribune Outdoors Editor CODY, WYO. The first In a series of three hearings on a National Parks Service proposal to close the southern arms of Yellowstone, Lake to power boats is due to hit the boards here Tuesday at 10 a m. The hearings will be conducted by the 'Department of Interior and the bossman of the departments National Parks Service, Conrad L. Wjrth, of Washington, is slated to conduct them.

Following Tuesday's clambake, the troops are scheduled to deploy to Yellowstone Park for a Wednesday session at Lake Hotel. Thursday will ho a day of rest and fiom all indications it piobably will be needed. Then Fiiday the final hearing takes the stage at Idaho Falls. The talk around this Wyoming oil andxanch center Monday afternoon was mostly to the effect that its a lead-pipe cinch that Yellowstone Lake will be zoned, but were going down with colors flying. THE MAJORITY of people here in Cody do not want the lake zoned.

Typical comment came from Chet Castle, a veteran Cody angler and boating-enthusiast; They keep wanting more people in the park but they keep crowding them in smaller areas. All of the people fish on the northern end of the lake and it is the southern end that has all the fish. Bob McManus, prominent Cody oilman and member of the Wyoming Fish and Game Commission, said, Weve had some difficulty finding out exactly what is going to happen at these hearings. I thought everything had been pretty well said at the previous hearings last February. The hearing he referred to also was hekl here at Cody.

It was conducted by Sen. Gale McGee member of the Senate Committee on Appropriations. THE COMMISSION, we understand, gave no consideration at all to the two bptions offered on 75 day seasons. One of those choices offered a bag limit of five birds and a possession limit of 10. The other offeicd a daily limit of six and a possession limit of six.

Again, the commissions action makes sense. For years, the game department has strived toward obtaining a longer season. And one of the bitter controversies of past years has centered around the argument of southern Utah wildfowlers that theyget no shooting at ail during a shoit season. Must Give Deep South a Break They have claimed, and rightly so. that the birds do not migrate out of the big northern marshes until late in the season when cold weather sets In.

Thus, to give the southerners and equal break, the 90-day season was a must. It also was no surprise that the federal boys damped stricter regulations on the taking of waterfowl. Back in June at the convention of the Western Association of State Fish and Game Commissioners, officials of the Fish and Wildlife I Service painted a gloomy picture of conditions on the Pacific Flyway. Virtually all duck species were down, they said, and the redheads and canvasback were on the brink of extinction. Pick Romney A grid coach of Aggies In 1940s.

ffibtm City, Utah Tuesday Morning games scheduled at George Q. Morris Park but tournament play is expected to get under way Tuesday at 10 a.m. Crews worked over night on the park and hopes Here high that the meet would start as scheduled. A crowd in excess of 900 attended Monday nights banquet. Speakers included Marvin Ashton of the General Superintendency YMMIA, sponsors of the junior tournament; Joseph Fielding Smith, president of the Council of Twelve Apostles, and S.

Dilworth Young, member of First Coun-cil of Seventy. Marion D. Hanks of the First Council of Seventy was master of ceremonies. Eight teams will share opening game honors Tues UHMl ftt 1U day with four games ached- a-m. The big tournament 32 teams are entered in both the senior and junior tournaments will end Saturday night with the crownifig of the 1960 champions.

Tuesdays schedule: SENIORS Upper Bracket 10 a m. -Pocatello 24th vs. Canogi Park. 4 30 m. Plain City Second.

4 30 pm Taylorsville Jerome Second 10 a m. Syracuse Second vt, Mesa Sixth. 7 ra. Lethbridge Third vt. Riverside.

8 30 pm Pro 13th vs Fulton. 2 pm San Bernardino First vt. Pontiac, Mich 8 30 m. Spokane Third vs. Monument Park West Fifth Lewer Bracket 8 45 m.

Sutherland vs Bennion 11 15 am Perry vs Mesa Eighth 12 45 pm Ogden 45th vs. Provo Sixth 12 45 pm. Logan Eighth va. Lawndale. n'-is pm Bi.ndinc v.

Ceniin.ia. right, look over Softball banquet. Marion D. Hanks, master of ceremonies, S. Dilworth Young, guest speaker, and Malcolm LcSueuer, tournament chairman, left to pairings for annual LDS All-Church Tournament during pretourney Tourney starts Tuesday.

Banquet Moves Indoors LDS Softball Tourney Starts Today MANY OF THE western game leaders who heard those 1 gloomy reports were not in complete agreement, hut they became-resigned to the fact that restrictions would come, And come they did! For Instance, this season the taking of canvasbacks and redheads is prohibited under federal law. That restriction is going to pose nne whale of a prob-Jlem for federal and state enforcement officers in Utah, Re-tcent surveys have revealed that there is better than a fair population of redheads on Great Salt Lake marshes. I Well! Can You Identify Them? And this writer will bet his last box ofEoose loads that out of 10 hunters who will be on Farmington Bay Jon the opener wont be able to tell a redhead, from any other duck that comes zooming in at 60 miles per! Home By Associated Press SACRAMENTO, Aug. 22 Salt Lake Citys Dave Jiminez came close to a one-hit shutout here Monday night but had to settle for a 6-3 win over the Sacramento Salons in the opener of their four game Pacific Coast League series. Jiminez had a one-hitter going into the ninth and retired the first two Solons.

Catcher Cuno Barragan drew a walk and second base-man Bobby Jacobs bounced a grounder to Salt Lake second Spokes Beat Mounts 1 6 Boost Lead By Associated Pres SPOKANE, WASH Aug. 22 The Spokane Indians stretched their Pacific Coast League lead to seven games over the idle Tacoma Giants here Monday night with a 9-4 win over the Vancouver Moun-ties. A righthander Elmer Singleton landed his 11th win of the season in going the distance for the Indians. He was helped by Earl Robinsons 11th home run of the year, the blow that put the Indians out in front to stay. VANCOUVER SPOKANE ab rbll rbl Causey ss 5 0 2 0 Davi ef 5 111 Fnigan 3b 3 1 1 0 Roberts 2b 5 0 0 0 Bond If 3 1 1 1 Smith 5 2 3 1 Barker lb 3 0 0 ItRoif lb 5 2 2 0 tthitec 4 0 0 0 Fairly If 12 10 Durhm rf 4 1 2 0 Robinsn 2 1 1 2 Alomr 2b 4 0 0 0 Conde 3b 4 0 3 4 Goss cf 4 112 Saduskj 3 1 1 0 Moeller 2 0 10 Smglton 3 0 0 0 a Oertel 1 0 1 01 Vinyard 0 0 0 ol Bczwskt 0 0 0 01 1 Jolly OO'OO1 Dyck 1 0 0 0 Totals T3 917 8 Singled for Moeller in 7th.

Ran for Oertel in 7th; c-flied out for Baczewski In 9th. Totals 34 4 9 41 Vsncoaver'" 000 oo 4 Spokane 000 103 32x 9 None. DP Roberts, Smith, Roig; LOB Vancouver 6, Spokane 7, 2B Conde. Davis. 3B Smith, Bond HR Goss, Robinson, SB Smith, Singleton, SF Barker.

Ip er bb so Moeller (L, 7-7) 6 6 4 4 4 3 Jolly 4 4 4 2 Baczewski 2 1 1 0 Sngletn (W, 11-5) 9 9 4 4 1 WP Singleton. PB White. 2 21. A 3 667. Errors Hurt Ports As Suds Win, 9-1 SEATTLE, Aug.

22 () Errors proved costly to the Portland Beavers as they bowed to the Seattle Rainiers, 9-1, In the opening game of their Pacific Coast League baseball series here Monday night POBTLANB I SEATTLE abrhrbt sbrbrbi Graff 2b 4 1 1 OIMartyn rf 5132 Brdwsr ss 4 0 2 0 Mlmbrg 2b 4 1 0 0 Mason rf 3 0 1 0Bevan lb 6 111 Wilson If 4 0 1 1 1 Taylor cf 4 1111 Taussig cf 4 0 0 0 O'Brien 3b 3 1 1 0 Jones lb 4 0 10 Pettit lb 1 0 1 0 1 Baxes 3b 4 0 0 0 Regalado If 4 1 2 2 Gopgola 2 0 0 0 Hain ss 4 110 Egan 0 0 0 OlZimrmn 4 10 0 Gnffinp 3 0 1 Oi Rudolph 44 2 3 a-Valnxnti 10 0 0 Clift 0 0 0 0 b-Westrfld 10 0 0 Tetals SS 1 7 1 -Lined out for Griffin In 7th; grounded out for Clift In 9th. Portland 104 000 00-1 SestUe 709 911 OOx 9 Graff, Brideweser Malmberg, Ham, Zimmerman. DP 'Rudolph to MaJmberg to Bevan; Hain to Malmberg LOB Portland 8, Seattle 11. 2B Bevan. Regalado, Rudolph Jones.

HR Taylor. Ip er bb so Egan (L 1-4) 44 5 7 2 1 2 Griffin 5 5 2 2 4 3 Clift 2 3 0 0 1 3 Rudolph (W. 11-7) 9 7 1 0 2 4 3 31. A 3.7R8. Go INVINCIIU DELUXE i I a Positive Identification of the redhead, particularly the female, even stumps the experts at times! In stressing the decline of cans and redheads the federal boys were at variance with recent reports Issued by Ducks Unlimited.

On Aug. 10, Ducks Unlimited stated: Reports from the field all stress the fine year which is icing experienced by redheads and canvasbacks. Production his year will certainly help offset the decline suffered by those two species in 1959." Have Papers to Prove Girls Arc Girls VERY INTERESTING! Could it be that someone strayed nfo the official loco weed patch? The brightest spot in the I960 regulations Is the fact hat the feds" decided to give back the half hour before sunrise starting time to John Q. Public. That decision, no doubt, stemmed in part from the unanimous stand taken by the western fish and game leaders at their June meeting in Salt Lake City.

They wanted no more of that official sunrise opening, they told the boys from the banks of the Potomac, and they meanrtt' 6 45 pm Rosecrejt Second vs Os good 7 15 Pleasant Green vs 34 ells-ville First 2 pm Richfield Second vs. South nth. JUNIORS Upper Bracket 5 45 pm Hill Springs. Canada Colonial Hills. 10 am Provo Second vs Reseda 10 a m.

Delta Second vs. Mesa Sixth. 5 45 pm Jacksonville. MiUcreek Fifth. 11 15 a Williamson.

Alhambra. 11 15 sm Pocatello First vs ton. 4 30 pm Santa Clara vs. American Fork Fifth. 7 15 pm Afton, Wyo.

vs Bonneville. Lower Bracket 4 30 pm Menan vs Centmille. 12 45 pm San Diego Sixth vs Centerfield 7 15 pm Perry vs. Valley View Fifth 12 43 pm Rupert First vs. Queen Creek.

8 30 p.m. Clinton vs. Riverside 28 th. 8 30 pm Albuquerque Third vs. Colonial Hills Second.

2 pm West Arcadia vs. Lewiston Second 2 pm Arcade vs Eugene, Ore. 7 15 pm. Afton Wyo. vs, Bonneville.

Speed Runs Hit Delay SpecUl to Th. Tribun BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS Wind and rain brought a temporary halt to record runs In the annual Bonneville National speed runs here Monday. THE QUALIFYING runs were delayed by wind Sunday and Mondays stormy weather forced a second delay on drivers bidding for new records here. A few qualifying runs were held, but records can be established only In final runs and drivers were hoping to get In some final runs Wednesday. cur: fK All In all, the I960 regulations are not good, but thoy could have been worse, A lot of talk has buzzed around the past few months hat a "four-four" limtr would he proclaimed.

Some even 2 31 A 3 256 TIDE SALE! PRICES SLASHED PER TIRE nini 1ST FtiCt NEW CAR TAKE-OFFS exchanged for Kelly Celebrity Nylon Extrail DRIVIN ONIV A TEW MILES FKOM psy? A 0 7-SO-U 1 nos TAX AND RETEEADAIlI TIKE iiniir DpfmqLsdUi jriRnk fin, LOOK FOR THIS SIGN OF QUALITY ST COVEY Gas and Tira Center 1200 BECK ST, (N. 2nd Weil) Ph. EM 3-2711 Ops Saturday Until I m. fur Yeur wunvsiusiKS By AMocl.ted Pre- ROME, Aug. 22 All the girls on the United States Olympic team are girls and theyve got papers to jSrove it.

We've had some border line cases in the past, said T.r mitt ovAniiVin. man Bingham, executive director of the U.S. Olympic committee, "but weve got none this time." He took a filled in from his desk. form This tells the story, he adds. It's a ST-8 form, signed American League predicted a cut to three birds.

Well, we got five and five and -that's Tint-'too 1)Ji As Harold Crane, Utah fish and game director put it: 'It was just about all we could expect, Salt Lake Citys first real rainstorm of the season Monday moved the annual pretournament banquet indoors but failed to dampen, hopes that this ears LDS All-Church Softball Tournament starting Tuesday will be one df the best In history. Monday's rain also wiped out the two slow ball exhibition by a doctor. One has been turned in for all of the 18 girls on our track and field team." He said every female on the American team had been close- hnucstionciL hvm Thn rlrvotnp tm-nAt 1 r-i ttvA The doctor turned in the papers when he was satisfied all the girls were just that. THE QUESTION of whether a girl athlete may not. in fact, be a girl arose when officials of two unnamed European countries were reported to have questioned the sex of a British Olympic girl athlete.

Brundage Captures Fight for Post ROME, Aug. 22 (UPI) White haired, pink cheeked Avery Brundage apparently won his back-room battle for another term as president of the International Olympic Committee Monday when Chancellor Otto Mayer announced that the Chicago millionaire would be re-elected Tuesday. Mr. Brundage will be elected Tuesday," said Mayer after a session at which a previous ruling was confirmed that Nationalist China should continue to be known as Taiwan" during the course of the games. -K0WE RENTS-, COMPRESSORS JACK HAMMERS Sal, Laic.

,375 5. Scat 17 Watt). IM. NUA4561 (X 4-9414 C10SED timnAYt Baseball Scoreboard Tribune Pacific Coast League National Leaguo Mender's RetuUa Chicago 6, Cincinnati 3 Los Angeles 8. San Francisco 6 (Only games acheduled) Taeaday'a Probable Pitchers Pittsburgh at Chicago Law (18-8) vs.

Ellsworth (6-9). Philadelphia at St Louts (night) Conlgy (7-10) va. Sadeeki (6-7). Milwaukee at Los Angeles (night) Burdette (14 7) Williams (12-6). Cincinnati at Ran Francisco (JjiKhtH-Puikey (13 Sanford Pioneer League poksns 3tt Lak Seattle Bacramento Ban Diego Vancouver Portland Monday's Rstalts Balt Lake 6, Sacramento 2.

fc Spokane 9. Vancouver 4. Seattle 9, Portland 1 (Only fames scheduled.) Tsesdmy's Probable Pitcher Salt Lake City (Gross 4-5) at Sacra-jnento (Hickman 8-6 Portland (unannounced) at Seattle JWieand 9-4). Vancouver Bamberfer 119) 12-7). i (Only fames scheduled pokane (Nelson 12-7) International League Montreal 7.

Richmond 8 Toronto 6. Buffalo 6 (Only fames acheduled) Southern Association Shreveport 4. Birminfham 8 JeshvilJe 6. Chattanooga 4 Little Rock at Mobile, grounds ppr Memphis at Atlanta, ppd. rain vet Texas League Amarillo Rio Grand Valley 1 San Antonio 6.

Victoria tulaa Austin 1 iijOSBii ay in Monday's Results (No fames scheduled) Taeaday'a Probable Pitchers Chicago at New York (night) Pierce (12-7) vs. Grba (3-1). Detroit at Baltimore (night) Fischer (5-6) vs. Pappas (11-6). Cleveland at Boston (night) Rtigman i Ml) or Locks (1-3) vs.

Muffett (4-2). Kansas City at Washington (night) Dgley U3 U) x. KraUck (4 3). American Association Louisville 4. Indianapolis 0 Houston 6, Denver 7 Charleston 8.

Dallas Fort Worth 0 St. Paul 6, Minneapolis 2 Runs Batted In American earns Sknwron Yanks, 84. Werti, Red Sox, 63; Minoso, Whits' Sox. 82. Ntlen Leaf Bank.

Cubs. 98, Aaron. Brae. 91. Mathews Braves.

82. Maya, Giants, 61. -V- Zm itriiTif fn ltl ifil jn iiirti Monday's Results Billings at postponed, grounds Pocatello at Idaho Falls postponed wet grounds Missoula at Idaho Falls postponed ram wet O' 4" ed. iima. Is 4.

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About The Salt Lake Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,964,073
Years Available:
1871-2004