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mg and Fishing , By C. J. DAUM Two weeks from Saturday is the big day—April 12. Many of us have been champing at the bit waiting for our calendar ta roll around to another trout season. It has been a bit easier to bear this year because of the late snows. They have lulled many of us into thinking that Winter was still here. Actually it was, in spite of the calendar. It will come with a rush now, boys, unless we are much mis- taken. A few days of sunshine or a good rain and the remainder of the snow will go very rapidly. •This worries the boys that are concerned about the condition of our streams for opening day. This too could be less serious than it looks as several weeks of normal weather could very easily have everything back to quite a normal, for early Spring, flow. Our stocking in spite of the weather is going on apace. We re- ceived 1500 native brookies running up to 11 and 12 inches in our up- county streams last Tuesday. Everyone was pleased with the size and condition of these fish. The next stocking is scheduled for Sunday, March 30. According to the latest reports we will receive at least 6,000 browns for north county waters at that time. We understand they are due to arrive at the Katonah park- ing lot between 9 and 10 A.M. that morning. Turn out, boys, and give your committee and the conservation men a hand in spreading these fish out properly. It's almost im- jpossible with a handful of men and you will be able to see just where they are put. In the event of a weather change for additional information call your hard-working chairman of the fish committee of the Sportsmen's Club of Northern Westchester, namely, Brad Odell, Katonah. We know he will appreciate your in- terest and your help. While we are talking about stock- ing fish it may interest many of you that these early stockings are just a beginning of what this area will receive through the season. "The Conservation Department is now planning season long stock- ing; that is, at intervals through- out the season in order to main- tain a good supply of fish at all times. Some real progress at last for our heavily fished areas. If the snow disappears before the week end we have a very strong feeling that perch will start taking hold about that time. This activity is overdue but stay with it, boys. They're in there we all know. After last week's comment about the chucks being out we'll keep quiet this week until we actually see the snow gone and the green grass growing. Here again, boys, it will happen with a rush this year when it finally comes. 28th County Cage Tourney Ends Season Adult basketball players crowd- ed schoolboy performers out of the County Center spotlight last week with the 28th renewal of the Westchester County Recrea- tion Commission's annual post- season cage carnival at the spa- cious White Plains arena on March 22. The show continues un- til April 2 and its windup brings the 1957-58 cage season to a close in Westchester. Mount Kisco won't be repre- sented in the big Recreation Commission event and the up- county area as a whole will have but a few quints battling for county championships. Schoolboy cagers played quite a bit of good basketball before their post-season tournaments end- ed. Local teams fared poorly in the annual PHSAA Section One event. John Jay High, a 10-game winner in regularly scheduled competition, lost its initial start in Class C. tourney play to Bronx- ville 52-45 despite Bob Duffy's fine 25 point spread. Ardsley High, defending "C" titlist, re- tained the championship by beat- ing Tuckahoe 63-49 on the County Center boards. Towering Ken Mc- Comb (6-5) scored 27 points for the winners who also claimed the Western Westchester scholastic — league crown by winning nine of 10 games. Jays Beat Champs Twice John Jay failed to get beyond its first tournament outing but Coach Bob Boissey's hoopers had the satisfaction of having beaten the "C" champs twice during the season. Duffy hit for 18 points on Jan. 28 as Jays trimmed ards- ley 46-38 at Cross River; the J. J. star did even better on Feb. 4 when he ran up 32 points, While pacing a 63-47 romp at Ardsley. About three weeks later Duffy hit for 42—his' high for the season- while Jays were beating his for-' mer alma mater, St. Mary's 62- 53! Horance Greeley High, a six- game winner during the season, also dropped out of the picutre after one start in the Class B. division. •' Bi^t <•* it took Harrison r "B" -title winners, t to oust Coach Carl Hall's Quakers.. Harrison, runnersup to cb-fftJists Rjte ; and Rye Neck in the SWJAC, went orf to win the , Cass,' sectional crown by shading Lakeland, Welst- put runnersup. 49-32. Pine Plains'/.outscoredj Pawling 58-32 for the "D" title-arid "White Plains.; ..-became "O p e n" Class winner with a 62-58 win over Rye; FJQ&Y0EF POSTPONED,. A Mount Kisco Senior Basket- ball League playoff game schedul- ed for last Thursday night; at Fox Lane High has to be postponed until this evening as a result of a heavy snow-storm that disrupted transportation on March 20. • Recreation Director Cliff Balcom reports .'that coleading Dons and VUlagq^Video will collide at 7 p.m. today'in-the ''snowed-out" 'contest. FISH STOCKING of Beaver Dam Brook Sunday under the auspices of the Sportsmen's Club of Northern Westchester, recruit- ed these two busy workers, Tonv Casalan at left and Michael Col- lier, center, members of Lincoln Hall 4-H Club. The boys helped in placing 350 trout in the stream, working under the dir- ection of Game Warden Ed Kur- ka. Atotal of 1500 trout were dis- tributed between Beaver Dam, Mianus, Trinity Pass and Hunter Dam d u r i n g the afternoon's work—Photo by D. B, Kirchhoff LL Champs To Win Awards Tonight By TODD CASO Awards will be presented at the Basketball Dinner tonight (Thurs- day) at 7:30 in the Robert E. Bell cafeteria to the victors of the three Little League matches. Finals for all three Little Leagues took place last Saturday morning with Wash ington beating Southern California, Michigan winning over Minnesota and Harvard downing Dartmouth. In the opening game, it was the Red of Washington against the Yellow of Southern California, made up of 6th graders. Washing- ton took an early lead, and led, 12-6, at halftime. In the second half, Southern California began to catch up, but Washington still led, 14 - 10, at th c third quarter, Southern California started to go in the last quarter, and outscored Washington, 9-6, but by that time the Red had built up a strong enough lead to just win out 20-19. Wheeler led Washington with 8 points, and David Roach was not far behind with 6. Only two men scored for Southern Califor nia, Mulhare with 10 and Billy Moss with 9 points. The next game was the best played of the three. Arch-rivals Michigan and Minnesota met for the championship of the 7th Grade League. Minnesota led most of the way until the last quarter. The score was 25-19, in favor of .Min- nesota, thanks mostly to Nelson Jantzen, when Ed Orser and Bren- nan got hot and dropped in 14 points between them, as well as controlling the boards, which won it for Michigan, 37-30. Orser got 12 points for the day and looked Gaels, Fans Given Award For Conduct Coach Charles Cundari's St. Mary's H. S. quint only lasted long enough in the new Iona Col- lege invitational schoolboy basket- ball tournament to take a first round 91-54 thrashing from All-Hal- lows High, a CHSAA powerhouse but Gaels and their fans behaved well enough to win a trophy. A 10-man all-tournament com- mittee chose Gales as recipient of a "Spirit Trophy" similar to the good sportsmanship award Gaels have - won on several oc- casions in the Putnam-Westches- ter schojastic circuit. The Iona trophy was presented to St. Mary's because, in the judgement of the committee, Gaels deomonstrated the best sportsmanship and their fans gave them the best support. MALLOY WINS TOURNEY The Iona tournament was won by Archbishop Molloy High's great team after it defeated Manhattan Prep 54-48; the win was Molloy's 29th of the season and its 33rd successive kayo in two seasons of play. All Hallows placed third by trimming Power Memorial 60-59 in a consolation game prior to the title event. Molloy and All Hallows each placed two players on an all-tournament team cho- sen at the close of the tourney. New York School for Deaf was claimant to two post-season titles; the deafmen dethroned Children's Village 40-32 to win a County Recreation Commission sponsored tournament for institutional school teams and also won the Class B. title in the annual Private-Paro- chial School A. A.' tourney. Hack- ley School of Tarrytown won the "A" title by outscoring N. Y. Mil- itary Academy 67-61. Corsis Score X-Roads Upset Corsi Construction popped out of last place "to upset top-graded Jerrys 3-1 in a Cross Roads wom- en's league tenpin match last week but even in defeat the pac- ers had enough points to, b l a s t four teajns, their conquerors in- cluded, Jrom the title.«hase. Out of. contention too are Stoll Furni- ture, despite their 3-1 win' over Potters, Halstead-uinn, a 3-1. los- er to County Seat, and Potters. Marineliis-hit week's best series, 1736 to get a 2-2 draw with Pines Bridge and move a point closer to the top. Furniture Exchange, a four point victor oyer Cross Roads had high,'game, 610. Nikki Baigas rolled high indidivi- ual game, 197, nudging past Jo Urso by seven pins; she earned high-series, 511, with 151, 170, 190- good. Brennan got 8 in the big last quarter, and Kent DeFelice helped out with 11 points. Minne- sota's Nelson Jantzen and Tim Lynch both showed up very well Lynch proved to be a good ball handler and playmaker. Jantzen wound up with 15 points, which is generally considered as an off-day for Nels, who has rack ed up a point per game average that is pushing 20. His high game this year was 30 points, and he looks like a fine future prospect Harvard and Dartmouth hook- ed up in the Ivy League final. A fine Vredenburgh-Lambert duel was expected, but today Lambert ran off with all the glory. Dart- mouth started out well, but quick- ly ran into Lambert and his shoot- ing eye. After the first quarter, Darmouth fell behind for good. Vredenburgh and Ed Risley shot a lot. but only managed to score 15 points between them, which lost it for the Green, 30-20. Vreden- burgh came up with 11 points for a good effort, but not half that of Lambert, who clicked for 20 points. SIDELINES: Michigan and Min- esota played a good, fast game for 7th graders... Harvard came up for their game... Top scorers for the year were Nelson Jantzen, who outscored everybody in all three leagues, and the Ivy League's Jim Lambert, Hal Ofstie and Don Vre- denburgh. , Annual NWIL Field, Track Meet June 2 Northern Westchester Inter- scholastic League will hold its sec- ond annual field and track meet on June 2 and Yorktown has ten- tatively been set as the locale. The league inaugurated field and track competition last Spring and Horace Greeley High accum- ulated 51 5-14 points to win with more than 15 points to spare over Briarcliff; Yorktown was t h i r d , followed by Fox Lane, John Jay and Somers. Lakeland High, newest addition to Northern Westchester Inter- scholastic League, won't be book- ed for the June 2 meet. Lake- land's NWIL affiliation commenc- es with the opening of the 1958-59 basketball season since the league's other sports schedules had been drawn prior to Lake- land's decision to transfer from Putnam - Westchester League to NWIL. Elsewhere throughout the Coun- ty plans are being made for other field and track events, some of which will attract athletes from schools in this vicinity. - From May 3, when the 20th Sec- tion-1 relays are held at' Pelham's Parkway Field, through June 7, date of the State intersectional championships at West Point, a total of 16 events are calendared. These are either open events or contests limited to certain leagues or classes. In a giant windup, the cream of the county crop will likely vie in the second Eastern, States championships at Randall's Island June 14. Inaugurated last year, the event met with outstand- ing success but only one of West- chester's public school kingpins competed because of a conflict with the State Intersectionals. The CHSAA relay carnival, in which only Stepinac of the West- chester schools will be involved, raises the lid on the new season at Randall's Island on.,April 12. The fourth Queens-Iona Relays will open the door to other schools on April 18-19, also at Downing Sta- dium, as a prelude to the 64th, Perm Relays. Halsteads Hit Reason High, Boost Lead Four teams hurled shutout vic- tories on March 17 in Cross Road^s Five Man Bowling League com- petition and,' Halstead-Quinn got one- of them to boost their lead frdm one point to four. The pacesetters hit 1025 in the last game to set a season high as they trounced Briccettis by 266 pins. The series added 23 pins to a record set last October 7 by Adams Motors. Fifth' place Katonah Barbers shutout Kensico Tube with the help of week's best series, '2748; they led off with 890, dropped to 879 and then picked up 100 pins for a 979 finish that buried the losers under 381 pins. - v Adams Motors and Westchester Auto Body, third and fourth res- pectively, also won shutouts, Adams using a 162 pin win over Megnas to draw nearer the run- nerup slot. Auto Body got their sweep from Gorhams. Rttnnerup Camillis lost 3-1 to Amuso Construction, and yielded ground both to the top placers and third ranking Adams Motors. John Haran of Halstead-Quinn rol- led individual highs of 255 and yy8, missing season high game by 13 pins and season high series by 18. He preceded the big game with 200 and 213; there were other standout scores too. Bill Canero of Katonah Barbers had 202, 211 and 224 for 637 and trailing him by three pins was Henry Widmann who fashioned 205. 182 and 247 into 634 for Amusos; Joe Pasquale contributed 604 to' the Halstead- Quinn tally with 172, 216, 226. Mario Genoyesi went into his 18th consecutive week as high average man. He currently boasts a 186 mark. Bill Canero Pin Shy of 2d Perfect Game Twenty one year old Bill Canero, the first and only tenpinner to bowl a perfect 300-game on Mount Kisco's Cross Roads Recreation alleys, almost repeated that feat I A 1 while bowling in an open match /\l*PniTP»tf *T Friday night there. The North 1 ^ i i J - 1> Street, Katonah, resident, who fashioned a 300 spectacular on Dec. 2, 1955, put together 11 con- secutive strikes and had' a nine pin hit on his 12th shot to miss the alley record by one pin. Canero's best and second best scores came in non-league com- petition but he hasn't confined his best bowling to open matches; on Nov. 1, 1956, for example, he gained the distinction of being the first' kegler to bowl a 700 series on the Cross Roads drives. - He wrapped up an all-time high in Bedford Hills men's league com- bat with a 755 series on games of 255, 257 and 243. Canero says he hopes to com- pete in the national bowling tour- nament at Schenectady this Spring. He has already bowled in the "Mets" arid may wind up among the money winners. Marions Seize Katonah Lead The Katonah Women's Bowling League's weekly three-match card produced three shutouts on March 19 and two of them resulted in a change of leadership in that six- team race. Marion Shoppe catapulted out of third place to the top of the stand- ings by sweeping four poirtts from Potters while Phelps Pharmacy skidded from first to third as the result of a four point loss to fourth ranking 19th Hole; the deposed leaders found themselves two and a half point off the pace and a point out of the runnerup niche Madcaps retained after they hand- ed Ahrens a 4-0 trimming to com- plete the string of gooseegg de- cisions. Ann Kozma had weekly high game .for the second time in a row with a 198 effort that missed the season record by a dozen pins. Mabel Stokes of next-to-last place Potters, got credit for the week's best series when she wrapped games of 168, 173 and 154 into a neat 495 bundle. HUDSON RACE RENEWED NEW YORK—The grueling 130- mile Albany-to-New York Hudson River Outboard Marathon will re- turn to the boating scene June 1st after an absence of six years, it has been announced by Sidney Panzer, chairman of the Hudson River Marathon Committee. EARNS HOCKEY LETTER John Turner Curtiss, 59, son 6f Mr. and Mrs. W. Marshall Cur- tiss of Dodge Farm, Chappaqua, was awarded his Williston Acad- emy letter earned as a member of the varsity hockey team, at the winter sports banquet, March 18. Coach Carpenter made the presen-j tation. To Address Garden Club James Fanning, a landscape architect who moved his home and office to New Canaan, Conn., in 1948, will be guest speaker when the Basket Town Garden Club of Pound Ridge holds its next meet- ing on Thursday, April 3, at Con- ant Hall. Dessert and coffee will be served at 12:30 p.m. Mr. Fanning has served two terms as president of the Men's Garden Club of Fairfield County. He has worked on residential and industrial projects w\th several architects of the modern school. Last Fall he went to the Carib- bean area to landscape some of the intercontinental hotels recently built there. At present, Mr. Fanning is serv- ing as landscape architect to the marine Historical Association at Mystic, Conn., and is in charge of the Joint Garden- Clubs Project for the Reconstruction of Robert Smith Park in Stamford, Conn. Mr, Fanning d e s i g n e d the "Five- Year", "Easy Upkeep" and "Out- door Living" plans which appeared in popular gardening magazines. New Leader In Industrial Cas Motors scored a 65 pin 3-1 victory over Kisco Beverages on March 18 in a Cross Roads League tenpin match that saw the winners and losers switch their first and second place positions in the stand- ings. Cas went from a second place tie to the top of the list with a half-point to spare while,Beverages tumbled into the runnerup niche only a half point from third rank ing Rockhiil Farm. They pro- gressed one position by blanking Whalens 4-0 and dropping that quint from a second place tie to fourth place. Ninth place Superior Electric also won via the shutout route, hitting Kopper Kettle with a four point loss. The electricians shortcircuited their foes with the help of 953 and 2714 weekly high scores; the series was only nine points short of a season mark set two weeks earlier by Cas Motors. Larry Staiger missed an indi- vidual season high by 10 pins when he hit 256 as Kensico Tube Two lost-3-1 to J&M Auto, Body. The other individual weekly high was also wasted when Bill Chiacchia of Kisco Beverages rolled 176, 247 and 193 for 616 while they were losing. Jay Swindell of Superior Electric was hot on Chiacchia's heels with 608; he connnected for 210, 213, 185. ERWIN K. HASSELTINE Ed. Hasseltine Given Award Two former upcounty high school coaches, Erwin K. "Ed" Hasseltine of Katonah, now John Jay H. S. principal, and Mike 1 Com- cowich of Yorktown were among 27 lifetime members of the West- chester Board of Approved J5as- ketball Officials who were honored by 'the association at its annual post season dinner on March 18 at Port Chester. The area officials were present- ed with Suitable inscribed statu- ettes as were other lifetime mem- bers of the association. Bill Bow- ers, long prominent in NWIL sports as Briarcliff H. S. coach, was among those honored for the 20 or more years they served as officials at athletic contest through- out the County. Nat Volpe of Yonkers, athletic director at Stepinac High, official- ly took over as association presi- dent, succeeding Gig 1 Nicol of North Tarrytown. Other officers in- stalled were Joe O'Lear of Yon- kers as vice president; Tony Sa- bella of Pleasantville and 'Bob Sampson of Mamaroneck, mem- bers of the examining committee; Fred Brooks of Croton, treasurer; and Charles Pease, White Plains secretary. North Werfqhesier Times, m % o , - N < Y.,. Marchj27, 195$; ; ;. 17 New Castle Tribune, Chappaqua,. N. Y.*, Mar,eh 27, 1958i Of Realignment Committee's Long Range Aims Bared Glenn Loucks of White Plains, chairman of the Sectional Com- mittee on realignment, today list- ed the basic considerations that both guided ^and motivated the recommended plan of realignment approved by Westchester's Chief School Officers Thursday. The following is the statement issued by Chairman Loucks: "The New York State Public High School AA realignment com- mittee was charged with the re- sponsibility of recommending a realignment of the public high schools in Section One for com- petition in basketball on the basis of the following four main con- siderations: "1. To equalize as far as pos- sible the powers of opponents in the various competitive groups or leagues. "2. To align teams with close geographical proximity wherever possible and to**minimize travel distances. "3. To make it possible .for schools to have enough flexibility of scheduling so that all tradition- al rivalries, even though some Schools have outgrown each other, could be maintained and continued at the option of both schools. "4. To maintain the status quo of existing leagues so long as they are desirable and effective. Classic Gets 3d 247 Score Andy Cappello bowled 247 in an Andy's Classic match Friday night to claim a slice of that league's season high game already shared by Andy Buono and George Gan* sen. Buono recorded 247 on Oct. 11 to add four pins to the old record; on Jan. 18, Gansen equalled the season high and that pair shared it until Cappello came up with his equalizer as second place Bouton's Garage was beating pacemaking Marty Motors 3-1 and cutting their lead from 12 points to 10. George Treistman and "Shadow' D'Angelo duelled for weekly high match score and Treistman won by" a pin with 628 while? LaitelSSid wSs defeating "B. & B. Tires 3-1. Treist- man teed off with 197 -and im- proved as the match progressed adding a 214 middle heat and cas- ing out with 217. D'Angelo got 627 on games of 210, 206 and 211 as Cross Roads won three points from Pest Control. The winners hit week Iy team highs of 802 and 2243. Elks 1-A climbed to a third place tie with Cross Roads after hurling the week's only shutout, a 169 breeze 1 against Kelly Construction "It .is intended that this realign- ment be re-examined after three years for possible adjustments. "It is believed that the recom- mended alignment meets the above mentioned objectives far better than the existing arrange- ments w.ith all their inequities with greater benefits for far more boys. "It is anticipated that the leagues as a group would form the WIAA or Westchester Interschol- astic Athletic Association of Sec- tion One of the N. Y, State Public High Schools' Athletic' Association. "The WIAA would have its own overall council with proper repre- senation from ea'ch group or league. .The leagues in turn, where possible, would doubtlessly retain their names, excepting the exist- ing WIAA, and they would have their own officers and basic homo- genious organizations. "The suggested plan, while cer- tainly not perfect, besides meet- ing the four basic considerations of the committee, which were the guideposts, would provide certain additional advantages. Namely: "1. Give all teams an opportun •>:o:«:.:.»>M.:.:.:.M.>r.v;v;*X4K- GLENN LOUCKS ity to compete on an equitable basis. "2. Economize time and expense and the efforts of athletic direc- tors and coaches in the scheduling of contests. "3. Help maintain the excellent officiating through the coordinated effort and the encouragement on the part of the league council to motivate qualified young men to become officials and to have a clearing house for the establish- ment of better relations between approved officials' boards and the high school athletic departments and teams. "4. Make for better understand- ing and communication's between all participating teams within the Section competing within the framework of the WIAA. "It was apparent to the Com- mittee at the outset that the need for this assignment was concen- trated in Westchester and Putnam Counties. The Northern extremity of the Section seemed to be better aligned. '.'On behalf of the realignment committee, it is hoped that future generations of schoolboy athletes within the confines of our organi- zation may reap the benefits of this year-long study." Chairman Loucks' committee included Superintendents Philip Langworthy of Hastings and Mat- thew Gaffney of the Tarrytowns; Principals Edward Sinnott of Tuckahoe, Merritt L i n d s e y of Lakeland, Ben Ingram of Wap- pinger Falls and P. Hamilton Whipple of Pelham, and athletic directors Les Beck of Yonkers^ Jack Jarvis of Eastchester, Petj Kuracheck of Pleasantville an* Martin Todd of Katonah. Freds Hurl Shutout Win Fred's Body Shop upped their lead to nine games in the Katonah men's tenpin circuit last week with an assist from fourth place Ka- tonah Barbers. The league leaders took a three game sweep from Dolicker's Ga rage after a tight 10 pin finish Barbers trimmed second place Kelly Construction in another shut- out and before the night was over three other teams had swept the board; Niles & Rhoads strengthen ed their grip on third place by shutting out tail-end Phelps Phar- macy 3-0, Bedford Road Garage spilled Coronet Homes by the same score and Clark Associates were awarded three games when Gum boldts failed to put a team on the alleys for their scheduled match. In matches that did materialize, H, H. Park Inc. turned back Young & Halstead 2-1 as the losers averted a shutout by a four pin win at the start and W. A. King Inc. use 564 and 1534 weekly highs to shade 19th Hole by a one game margin. COACH OF THE YEAR Jim McDermott, peppery, athlet- ic director and hoop mentor at Iona CoHege of New Rochelle, has been selected as "coach' of the year" among the Catholic colleges in the hietropoitan area.. , BUY 'EM ALL A suggestion that Westchester County buy up all or most the county clubs in the county' has been made by Ralph .T.Walker of C h a p p a q u a , internationally known' architect. -. - _ TRACK MEET SITE : Peekskills' Depew Park has been selected again for the State' Sec- tion 1 Class C track' arid field championships. .'May 26 is the date. It will-be the sixteenth' annual Classic-competition.- ' REALIGNMENT ENROLLMENT- GROUP 1 A .B. DAVIS. LINCOLN NEW ROCHELLE ROOSEVELf SAUNDERS TRADEL WHITE PLAINS YONKERS GROUP 2 EDISON TECH MAMARONECK OSSINING 1958 703. .275. .988. .507. .539. 915. 55b. 1963 .750 350 J100 .650 .700 -940 -400 PEEKSKlLl PORT CHESTER. SCARSDALE_^_ SLEEPY HOLLOW. GROUP 3 EASTCHESTER— HARRISON HASTINGS PELHAM _285. .456. .338 _246. .436. .450. .285. .300 J50 .400 .400 .725 .625 .400 PLEASANTVILLE. RYE GROUP 4 BRONXVILLE —- COMMERCE EDGEMONT GORTON .171. .238. .178. .280. .313. 207. J32. .206. J02. .243. .1.16- .102. RYE NECK TUCKAHOE : GROUP 5 ALEXANDER HAMILTON-62. ARDSLEY 102. CROTON-HARMON 135. DOBBS FERRY ^-125. HENDRICK HUDSON 131. IRVINGTON , 153. GROUP 6 1 .360 .360 .200 .303 ;313 .300 .135 .210 .150 .275 .150 .110 J25 PRIARCLIFF- FOX LANE - HORACE GREELEY. JOHN JAY ' -CApTAIN : EI^(C5T'"pd\:Ander-" son' of MouhtKisco, 'center, dis- cusses., his duties-with two other s fcaptains at Trinity, .CoUege.cAnd- ersori was chosen by his team- ; »a'tesi\to head me ; -varsity' ^bas- ketball ,squad next ^season. Edi • .son-of Mr, and, Mrs% WillisJp. Anderson/'has Received varsity,, Spahn letters, and - the last two years.--; At:left is swimming team cap-' tain. Petor Oriderdonk and at right is swash leader Robert; "LAKELAND- - v ^YORKTOWN.. GROUP 7 BREWSTER. CARMEI HALDANE - . - s M4HOPAC- ,PUf?'DYS—.: .SOM£HS._ _153_ -192. _206_ -116. -139- _123_ -1,06- _103_ . 58- _98_ _32_ ^74- -171 J80 J75 .160 .120 J53 -295 .280 .235 .300' .250 J 50 .225 . 65 175 .80 .13& AW^ARD-vTOi 'WATCHDOG' v ^OTW|0i38ELLE v.. .Godfrey ^ . Sctmidti^ attorney, .teacher.,'and iecmr'erV-.rec^ived\ in'-absehtia the [fourth annual-Americanism'Award '•PdsP.S^'Aitoencan Legion, .on SaturjJay.vHis" sort' Peter accepted the; J awai^J;fprVhimv Schfaidt"V re- cently was" appointed one of t%ee "watchdogs", who •• will overSee, Jimmy Hoffa's:supervision,of- the? teamsters. iritematipriaT uniQn. SUMMER COURSES j, MAMARONECK — Suitiltfer ses- |,sions in five' subjects will, be of- fered' in the Mamarorieck>. school system >for_/ : students- wishing to talce. accelerated - wprkr'T Subjects will-be .'intermediate algebra; tfrig£,-. orionietry,. dearthscience'/ : typing and - ; driver ,veducation.:'./O t hfe r. courses -will be;addedias students- express enough'interest;'jhus far,. 219 have registered. ^ K> tS- is
Transcript
Page 1: LL Champs To Win Awards Tonight - …nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn92061718/1958-03-27/ed-1/seq-17.pdf · fine 25 point spread. Ardsley ... nia, Mulhare with 10 and Billy Moss

mg and

Fishing , By C. J . DAUM

Two weeks from Saturday is the big day—April 12.

Many of us have been champing at the bit waiting for our calendar t a roll around to another trout season.

It has been a bit easier to bear this year because of the late snows. They have lulled many of us into thinking that Winter was still here. Actually it was, in spite of the calendar.

It will come with a rush now, boys, unless we are much mis­taken.

A few days of sunshine or a good rain and the remainder of the snow will go very rapidly. •This worries the boys that are

concerned about the condition of our streams for opening day. This too could be less serious than it looks as several weeks of normal weather could very easily have everything back to quite a normal, for early Spring, flow.

Our stocking in spite of the weather is going on apace. We re­ceived 1500 native brookies running up to 11 and 12 inches in our up-county streams last Tuesday. Everyone was pleased with the size and condition of these fish. The next stocking is scheduled for Sunday, March 30.

According to the latest reports we will receive at least 6,000 browns for north county waters at that time. We understand they are due to arrive at the Katonah park­ing lot between 9 and 10 A.M. that morning.

Turn out, boys, and give your committee and the conservation men a hand in spreading these fish out properly. It's almost im-jpossible with a handful of men and you will be able to see just where they are put.

In the event of a weather change for additional information call your hard-working chairman of the fish committee of the Sportsmen's Club of Northern Westchester, namely, Brad Odell, Katonah. We know he will appreciate your in­terest and your help.

While we are talking about stock­ing fish it may interest many of you that these early stockings are just a beginning of what this area will receive through the season.

"The Conservation Department is now planning season long stock­ing; that is, at intervals through­out the season in order to main­tain a good supply of fish at all times.

Some real progress at last for our heavily fished areas.

If the snow disappears before the week end we have a very strong feeling that perch will start taking hold about that time. This activity is overdue but stay with it, boys. They're in there we all know.

After last week's comment about the chucks being out we'll keep quiet this week until we actually see the snow gone and the green grass growing. Here again, boys, it will happen with a rush this year when it finally comes.

28th County Cage Tourney Ends Season

Adult basketball players crowd­ed schoolboy performers out of the County Center spotlight last week with the 28th renewal of the Westchester County Recrea­tion Commission's annual post­season cage carnival at the spa­cious White Plains arena on March 22. The show continues un­til April 2 and its windup brings the 1957-58 cage season to a close in Westchester.

Mount Kisco won't be repre­sented in the big Recreation Commission event and the up-county area as a whole will have but a few quints battling for county championships.

Schoolboy cagers played quite a bit of good basketball before their post-season tournaments end­ed. Local teams fared poorly in the annual PHSAA Section One event. John Jay High, a 10-game winner in regularly scheduled competition, lost its initial start in Class C. tourney play to Bronx-ville 52-45 despite Bob Duffy's fine 25 point spread. Ardsley High, defending "C" titlist, re­tained the championship by beat­ing Tuckahoe 63-49 on the County Center boards. Towering Ken Mc-Comb (6-5) scored 27 points for the winners who also claimed the Western Westchester scholastic — league crown by winning nine of 10 games. Jays Beat Champs Twice

John Jay failed to get beyond its first tournament outing but Coach Bob Boissey's hoopers had the satisfaction of having beaten the "C" champs twice during the season. Duffy hit for 18 points on Jan. 28 as Jays trimmed ards­ley 46-38 at Cross River; the J. J. star did even better on Feb. 4 when he ran up 32 points, While pacing a 63-47 romp at Ardsley. About three weeks later Duffy hit for 42—his' high for the season-while Jays were beating his for-' mer alma mater, St. Mary's 62-53!

Horance Greeley High, a six-game winner during the season, also dropped out of the picutre after one start in the Class B. division. •' Bi^t <•* it took Harrison r

" B " -title winners, tto oust Coach Carl Hall's Quakers.. Harrison, runnersup to cb-fftJists Rjte ; and Rye Neck in the SWJAC, went orf to win the , Cass,' sectional crown by shading Lakeland, Welst-put runnersup. 49-32.

Pine Plains'/.outscoredj Pawling 58-32 for the "D" title-arid "White Plains.; ..-became "O p e n" Class winner with a 62-58 win over Rye;

FJQ&Y0EF POSTPONED,. A Mount Kisco Senior Basket­

ball League playoff game schedul­ed for last Thursday night; at Fox Lane High has to be postponed until this evening as a result of a heavy snow-storm that disrupted transportation on March 20. •

Recreation Director Cliff Balcom reports . ' that coleading Dons and VUlagq^Video will collide at 7 p.m. today'in-the ''snowed-out" 'contest.

FISH STOCKING of Beaver Dam Brook Sunday under the auspices of the Sportsmen's Club of Northern Westchester, recruit­ed these two busy workers, Tonv Casalan at left and Michael Col­

lier, center, members of Lincoln Hall 4-H Club. The boys helped in placing 350 trout in the stream, working under the dir­ection of Game Warden Ed Kur-

ka. Atotal of 1500 trout were dis­tributed between Beaver Dam, Mianus, Trinity Pass and Hunter Dam d u r i n g the afternoon's work—Photo by D. B, Kirchhoff

LL Champs To Win Awards Tonight By TODD CASO

Awards will be presented at the Basketball Dinner tonight (Thurs­day) at 7:30 in the Robert E. Bell cafeteria to the victors of the three Little League matches. Finals for all three Little Leagues took place last Saturday morning with Wash ington beating Southern California, Michigan winning over Minnesota and Harvard downing Dartmouth.

In the opening game, it was the Red of Washington against the Yellow of Southern California, made up of 6th graders. Washing­ton took an early lead, and led, 12-6, at halftime. In the second half, Southern California began to catch up, but Washington still led, 14 - 10, at th c third quarter, Southern California started to go in the last quarter, and outscored Washington, 9-6, but by that time the Red had built up a strong enough lead to just win out 20-19. Wheeler led Washington with 8 points, and David Roach was not far behind with 6. Only two men scored for Southern Califor nia, Mulhare with 10 and Billy Moss with 9 points.

The next game was the best played of the three. Arch-rivals Michigan and Minnesota met for the championship of the 7th Grade League. Minnesota led most of the way until the last quarter. The score was 25-19, in favor of .Min­nesota, thanks mostly to Nelson Jantzen, when Ed Orser and Bren-nan got hot and dropped in 14 points between them, as well as controlling the boards, which won it for Michigan, 37-30. Orser got 12 points for the day and looked

Gaels, Fans Given Award For Conduct

Coach Charles Cundari's St. Mary's H. S. quint only lasted long enough in the new Iona Col­lege invitational schoolboy basket­ball tournament to take a first round 91-54 thrashing from All-Hal­lows High, a CHSAA powerhouse but Gaels and their fans behaved well enough to win a trophy.

A 10-man all-tournament com­mittee chose Gales as recipient of a "Spirit Trophy" similar to the good sportsmanship award Gaels have - won on several oc­casions in the Putnam-Westches­ter schojastic circuit.

The Iona trophy was presented to St. Mary's because, in the judgement of the committee, Gaels deomonstrated the best sportsmanship and their fans gave them the best support. MALLOY WINS TOURNEY

The Iona tournament was won by Archbishop Molloy High's great team after it defeated Manhattan Prep 54-48; the win was Molloy's 29th of the season and its 33rd successive kayo in two seasons of play.

All Hallows placed third by trimming Power Memorial 60-59 in a consolation game prior to the title event. Molloy and All Hallows each placed two players on an all-tournament team cho­sen at the close of the tourney.

New York School for Deaf was claimant to two post-season titles; the deafmen dethroned Children's Village 40-32 to win a County Recreation Commission sponsored tournament for institutional school teams and also won the Class B. title in the annual Private-Paro­chial School A. A.' tourney. Hack-ley School of Tarrytown won the "A" title by outscoring N. Y. Mil­itary Academy 67-61.

Corsis Score X-Roads Upset

Corsi Construction popped out of las t place "to upset top-graded Jerrys 3-1 in a Cross Roads wom­en's • league tenpin match last week but even in defeat the pac­ers had enough points to, b l a s t four teajns, their conquerors in­cluded, Jrom the title.«hase. Out of. contention too are Stoll Furni­ture, despite their 3-1 win' over Potters, Halstead-uinn, a 3-1. los­er to County Seat, and Potters.

Marineliis-hit week's best series, 1736 to get a 2-2 draw with Pines Bridge and move a point closer to the top. Furniture Exchange, a four point victor oyer Cross Roads had high,'game, 610.

Nikki Baigas rolled high indidivi-ual game, 197, nudging past Jo Urso by seven pins; she earned high-series, 511, with 151, 170, 190-

good. Brennan got 8 in the big last quarter, and Kent DeFelice helped out with 11 points. Minne­sota's Nelson Jantzen and Tim Lynch both showed up very well Lynch proved to be a good ball handler and playmaker.

Jantzen wound up with 15 points, which is generally considered as an off-day for Nels, who has rack ed up a point per game average that is pushing 20. His high game this year was 30 points, and he looks like a fine future prospect

Harvard and Dartmouth hook­ed up in the Ivy League final. A fine Vredenburgh-Lambert duel was expected, but today Lambert ran off with all the glory. Dart­mouth started out well, but quick­ly ran into Lambert and his shoot­ing eye. After the first quarter, Darmouth fell behind for good. Vredenburgh and Ed Risley shot a lot. but only managed to score 15 points between them, which lost it for the Green, 30-20. Vreden­burgh came up with 11 points for a good effort, but not half that of Lambert, who clicked for 20 points.

SIDELINES: Michigan and Min-esota played a good, fast game for 7th graders . . . Harvard came up for their g a m e . . . Top scorers for the year were Nelson Jantzen, who outscored everybody in all three leagues, and the Ivy League's Jim Lambert, Hal Ofstie and Don Vre­denburgh. ,

Annual NWIL Field, Track Meet June 2

Northern Westchester Inter-scholastic League will hold its sec­ond annual field and track meet on June 2 and Yorktown has ten­tatively been set as the locale.

The league inaugurated field and track competition last Spring and Horace Greeley High accum­ulated 51 5-14 points to win with more than 15 points to spare over Briarcliff; Yorktown was t h i r d , followed by Fox Lane, John Jay and Somers.

Lakeland High, newest addition to Northern Westchester Inter-scholastic League, won't be book­ed for the June 2 meet. Lake­land's NWIL affiliation commenc­es with the opening of the 1958-59 basketball s e a s o n since the league's other sports schedules had been drawn prior to Lake­land's decision to transfer from Putnam - Westchester League to NWIL.

Elsewhere throughout the Coun­ty plans are being made for other field and track events, some of which will attract athletes from schools in this vicinity. -

From May 3, when the 20th Sec-tion-1 relays are held at' Pelham's Parkway Field, through June 7, date of the State intersectional championships at West Point, a total of 16 events are calendared. These are either open events or contests limited to certain leagues or classes.

In a giant windup, the cream of the county crop will likely vie in the second Eastern, States championships at Randall's Island June 14. Inaugurated last year, the event met with outstand­ing success but only one of West­chester's public school kingpins competed because of a conflict with the State Intersectionals.

The CHSAA relay carnival, in which only Stepinac of the West­chester schools will be involved, raises the lid on the new season at Randall's Island on.,April 12. The fourth Queens-Iona Relays will open the door to other schools on April 18-19, also at Downing Sta­dium, as a prelude to the 64th, Perm Relays.

Halsteads Hit Reason High, Boost Lead

Four teams hurled shutout vic­tories on March 17 in Cross Road^s Five Man Bowling League com­petition and,' Halstead-Quinn got one- of them to boost their lead frdm one point to four.

The pacesetters hit 1025 in the last game to set a season high as they trounced Briccettis by 266 pins. The series added 23 pins to a record set last October 7 by

Adams Motors. Fifth' place Katonah Barbers

shutout Kensico Tube with the help of week's best series, '2748; they led off with 890, dropped to 879 and then picked up 100 pins for a 979 finish that buried the losers under 381 pins. - v

Adams Motors and Westchester Auto Body, third and fourth res­pectively, also won s h u t o u t s , Adams using a 162 pin win over Megnas to draw nearer the run-nerup slot. Auto Body got their sweep from Gorhams.

Rttnnerup Camillis lost 3-1 to Amuso Construction, and yielded ground both to the top placers and third ranking Adams Motors. John Haran of Halstead-Quinn rol­

led individual highs of 255 and yy8, missing season high game by 13 pins and season high series by 18. He preceded the big game with 200 and 213; there were other standout scores too. Bill Canero of Katonah Barbers had 202, 211 and 224 for 637 and trailing him by three pins was Henry Widmann who fashioned 205. 182 and 247 into 634 for Amusos; Joe Pasquale contributed 604 to' the Halstead-Quinn tally with 172, 216, 226.

Mario Genoyesi went into his 18th consecutive week as high average man. He currently boasts a 186 mark.

Bill Canero Pin Shy of 2d Perfect Game

Twenty one year old Bill Canero, the first and only tenpinner to bowl a perfect 300-game on Mount Kisco's Cross Roads Recreation alleys, almost repeated that feat I A 1 • while bowling in an open match / \ l*PniTP»tf*T Friday night there. The North 1 ^ i i J - 1> Street, Katonah, resident, who fashioned a 300 spectacular on Dec. 2, 1955, put together 11 con­secutive strikes and had' a nine pin hit on his 12th shot to miss the alley record by one pin.

Canero's best and second best scores came in non-league com­petition but he hasn't confined his best bowling to open matches; on Nov. 1, 1956, for example, he gained the distinction of being the first' kegler to bowl a 700 series on the Cross Roads drives. - He wrapped up an all-time high in Bedford Hills men's league com­bat with a 755 series on games of 255, 257 and 243.

Canero says he hopes to com­pete in the national bowling tour­nament at Schenectady this Spring. He has already bowled in the "Mets" arid may wind up among the money winners.

Marions Seize Katonah Lead

The Katonah Women's Bowling League's weekly three-match card produced three shutouts on March 19 and two of them resulted in a change of leadership in that six-team race.

Marion Shoppe catapulted out of third place to the top of the stand­ings by sweeping four poirtts from Potters while Phelps Pharmacy skidded from first to third as the result of a four point loss to fourth ranking 19th Hole; the deposed leaders found themselves two and a half point off the pace and a point out of the runnerup niche Madcaps retained after they hand­ed Ahrens a 4-0 trimming to com­plete the string of gooseegg de­cisions.

Ann Kozma had weekly high game .for the second time in a row with a 198 effort that missed the season record by a dozen pins. Mabel Stokes of next-to-last place Potters, got credit for the week's best series when she wrapped games of 168, 173 and 154 into a neat 495 bundle.

HUDSON RACE RENEWED NEW YORK—The grueling 130-

mile Albany-to-New York Hudson River Outboard Marathon will re­turn to the boating scene June 1st after an absence of six years, it has been announced by Sidney Panzer, chairman of the Hudson River Marathon Committee.

EARNS HOCKEY LETTER John Turner Curtiss, 59, son 6f

Mr. and Mrs. W. Marshall Cur­tiss of Dodge Farm, Chappaqua, was awarded his Williston Acad­emy letter earned as a member of the varsity hockey team, at the winter sports banquet, March 18. Coach Carpenter made the presen-j tation.

To Address Garden Club

J a m e s Fanning, a landscape architect who moved his home and office to New Canaan, Conn., in 1948, will be guest speaker when the Basket Town Garden Club of Pound Ridge holds its next meet­ing on Thursday, April 3, at Con-ant Hall. Dessert and coffee will be served at 12:30 p.m.

Mr. Fanning has served two terms as president of the Men's Garden Club of Fairfield County. He has worked on residential and industrial projects w\th several architects of the modern school. Last Fall he went to the Carib­bean area to landscape some of the intercontinental hotels recently built there.

At present, Mr. Fanning is serv­ing as landscape architect to the marine Historical Association at Mystic, Conn., and is in charge of the Joint Garden- Clubs Project for the Reconstruction of Robert Smith Park in Stamford, Conn. Mr, Fanning d e s i g n e d the "Five-Year", "Easy Upkeep" and "Out­door Living" plans which appeared in popular gardening magazines.

New Leader In Industrial

Cas Motors scored a 65 pin 3-1 victory over Kisco Beverages on March 18 in a Cross Roads League tenpin match that saw the winners and losers switch their first and second place positions in the stand­ings.

Cas went from a second place tie to the top of the list with a half-point to spare while,Beverages tumbled into the runnerup niche only a half point from third rank ing Rockhiil Farm. They pro­gressed one position by blanking Whalens 4-0 and dropping that quint from a second place tie to fourth place. Ninth place Superior Electric also won via the shutout route, hitting Kopper Kettle with a four point loss. The electricians shortcircuited their foes with the help of 953 and 2714 weekly high scores; the series was only nine points short of a season mark set two weeks earlier by Cas Motors.

Larry Staiger missed an indi­vidual season high by 10 pins when he hit 256 as Kensico Tube Two lost-3-1 to J&M Auto, Body. The other individual weekly high was also wasted when Bill Chiacchia of Kisco Beverages rolled 176, 247 and 193 for 616 while they were losing. Jay Swindell of Superior Electric was hot on Chiacchia's heels with 608; he connnected for 210, 213, 185.

ERWIN K. HASSELTINE

Ed. Hasseltine Given Award

Two f o r m e r upcounty high school coaches, Erwin K. "Ed" Hasseltine of Katonah, now John Jay H. S. principal, and Mike1 Com-cowich of Yorktown were among 27 lifetime members of the West­chester Board of Approved J5as-ketball Officials who were honored by 'the association at its annual post season dinner on March 18 at Port Chester.

The area officials were present­ed with Suitable inscribed statu­ettes as were other lifetime mem­bers of the association. Bill Bow­ers, long prominent in NWIL sports as Briarcliff H. S. coach, was among those honored for the 20 or more years they served as officials at athletic contest through­out the County.

Nat Volpe of Yonkers, athletic director at Stepinac High, official­ly took over as association presi­dent, succeeding Gig1 Nicol of North Tarrytown. Other officers in­stalled were Joe O'Lear of Yon­kers as vice president; Tony Sa-bella of Pleasantville and 'Bob Sampson of Mamaroneck, mem­bers of the examining committee; Fred Brooks of Croton, treasurer; and Charles Pease, White Plains secretary.

North Werfqhesier Times, m % o , - N < Y.,. Marchj27, 195$;;;. 17 New Castle Tribune, Chappaqua,. N. Y.*, Mar,eh 27, 1958i

Of Realignment Committee's Long Range Aims Bared

Glenn Loucks of White Plains, chairman of the Sectional Com­mittee on realignment, today list­ed the basic considerations that both guided ^and motivated the recommended plan of realignment approved by Westchester's Chief School Officers Thursday.

The following is the statement issued by Chairman Loucks:

"The New York State Public High School AA realignment com­mittee was charged with the re­sponsibility of recommending a realignment of the public high schools in Section One for com­petition in basketball on the basis of the following four main con­siderations:

" 1 . To equalize as far as pos­sible the powers of opponents in the various competitive groups or leagues.

"2. To align teams with close geographical proximity wherever possible and to**minimize travel distances.

"3. To make it possible .for schools to have enough flexibility of scheduling so that all tradition­al rivalries, even though some Schools have outgrown each other, could be maintained and continued at the option of both schools.

"4. To maintain the status quo of existing leagues so long as they are desirable and effective.

Classic Gets 3d 247 Score

Andy Cappello bowled 247 in an Andy's Classic match Friday night to claim a slice of that league's season high game already shared by Andy Buono and George Gan* sen.

Buono recorded 247 on Oct. 11 to add four pins to the old record; on Jan. 18, Gansen equalled the season high and that pair shared it until Cappello came up with his equalizer as second place Bouton's Garage was beating pacemaking Marty Motors 3-1 and cutting their lead from 12 points to 10.

George Treistman and "Shadow' D'Angelo duelled for weekly high match score and Treistman won by" a pin with 628 while? LaitelSSid wSs defeating "B. & B. Tires 3-1. Treist­man teed off with 197 -and im­proved as the match progressed adding a 214 middle heat and cas­ing out with 217. D'Angelo got 627 on games of 210, 206 and 211 as Cross Roads won three points from Pest Control. The winners hit week Iy team highs of 802 and 2243.

Elks 1-A climbed to a third place tie with Cross Roads after hurling the week's only shutout, a 169 breeze1 against Kelly Construction

"It .is intended that this realign­ment be re-examined after three years for possible adjustments.

"It is believed that the recom­mended alignment meets the above mentioned objectives far better than the existing arrange­ments w.ith all their inequities with greater benefits for far more boys.

"It is anticipated that the leagues as a group would form the WIAA or Westchester Interschol-astic Athletic Association of Sec­tion One of the N. Y, State Public High Schools' Athletic' Association. "The WIAA would have its own overall council with proper repre-senation from • ea'ch group or league. .The leagues in turn, where possible, would doubtlessly retain their names, excepting the exist­ing WIAA, and they would have their own officers and basic homo-genious organizations.

"The suggested plan, while cer­tainly not perfect, besides meet­ing the four basic considerations of the committee, which were the guideposts, would provide certain additional advantages. Namely:

" 1 . Give all teams an opportun

•>:o:«:.:.»>M.:.:.:.M.>r.v;v;*X4K-

GLENN LOUCKS

ity to compete on an equitable basis.

"2. Economize time and expense and the efforts of athletic direc­tors and coaches in the scheduling of contests.

"3. Help maintain the excellent officiating through the coordinated effort and the encouragement on the part of the league council to motivate qualified young men to become officials and to have a clearing house for the establish­ment of better relations between approved officials' boards and the high school athletic departments and teams.

"4. Make for better understand­ing and communication's between all participating teams within the Section competing within t h e framework of the WIAA.

"It was apparent to the Com­mittee at the outset that the need for this assignment was concen­trated in Westchester and Putnam Counties. The Northern extremity of the Section seemed to be better aligned.

'.'On behalf of the realignment committee, it is hoped that future generations of schoolboy athletes within the confines of our organi­zation may reap the benefits of this year-long study."

Chairman Loucks' committee included Superintendents Philip Langworthy of Hastings and Mat­thew Gaffney of the Tarrytowns; Principals Edward Sinnott of Tuckahoe, Merritt L i n d s e y of Lakeland, Ben Ingram of Wap-pinger Falls and P. Hamilton Whipple of Pelham, and athletic directors Les Beck of Yonkers^ Jack Jarvis of Eastchester, Petj Kuracheck of Pleasantville an* Martin Todd of Katonah.

Freds Hurl Shutout Win

Fred's Body Shop upped their lead to nine games in the Katonah men's tenpin circuit last week with an assist from fourth place Ka­tonah Barbers.

The league leaders took a three game sweep from Dolicker's Ga rage after a tight 10 pin finish Barbers trimmed second place Kelly Construction in another shut­out and before the night was over three other teams had swept the board; Niles & Rhoads strengthen ed their grip on third place by shutting out tail-end Phelps Phar­macy 3-0, Bedford Road Garage spilled Coronet Homes by the same score and Clark Associates were awarded three games when Gum boldts failed to put a team on the alleys for their scheduled match.

In matches that did materialize, H, H. Park Inc. turned back Young & Halstead 2-1 as the l o s e r s averted a shutout by a four pin win at the start and W. A. King Inc. use 564 and 1534 weekly highs to shade 19th Hole by a one game margin.

COACH OF THE YEAR Jim McDermott, peppery, athlet­

ic director and hoop mentor at Iona CoHege of New Rochelle, has been selected as "coach' of the year" among the Catholic colleges in the hietropoitan area.. ,

BUY 'EM ALL A suggestion that Westchester

County buy up all or most the county clubs in the county' has been made by Ralph .T.Walker of C h a p p a q u a , internationally known' architect. -. - _

TRACK MEET SITE : Peekskills' Depew Park has been

selected again for the State' Sec­tion 1 Class C track' arid field championships. .'May 26 is the date. It will-be the sixteenth' annual Classic-competition.- '

R E A L I G N M E N T

ENROLLMENT-

GROUP 1 A .B. DAVIS. LINCOLN — NEW ROCHELLE ROOSEVELf SAUNDERS TRADEL WHITE PLAINS YONKERS

GROUP 2 EDISON TECH MAMARONECK OSSINING

1958

703. .275. .988. .507. .539. 915. 55b.

1963

.750 350

J100 .650 .700 -940 -400

PEEKSKlLl PORT CHESTER. SCARSDALE_^_ SLEEPY HOLLOW.

GROUP 3 EASTCHESTER— HARRISON HASTINGS PELHAM

_285. .456. .338 _246. .436. .450. .285.

.300 J 5 0 .400 .400 .725 .625 .400

• PLEASANTVILLE. RYE

GROUP 4 BRONXVILLE — -COMMERCE EDGEMONT GORTON

.171.

.238.

.178.

.280.

.313. 207.

J 3 2 . .206. J 0 2 . .243. .1.16-.102.

RYE NECK TUCKAHOE :

GROUP 5 ALEXANDER HAMILTON-62.

• ARDSLEY 102. CROTON-HARMON 135. DOBBS FERRY ^-125. HENDRICK HUDSON 131. IRVINGTON , 153.

GROUP 6 1

.360

.360

.200

.303 ;313 .300

.135

.210

.150

.275

.150

.110

J25

PRIARCLIFF-FOX LANE -HORACE GREELEY.

JOHN JAY

' -CApTAIN:EI^(C5T'"pd\:Ander-" son' of MouhtKisco, 'center, dis­cusses., his duties-with two other s

fcaptains at Trinity, .CoUege.cAnd-ersori was chosen by his team-

; »a'tesi\to head me ;-varsity' ^bas­ketball ,squad next ^season. Edi •

.son-of Mr, and, Mrs% WillisJp. Anderson/'has Received varsity,, Spahn

letters, and - the last two years.--; At:left is swimming team cap-' tain. Petor Oriderdonk and at right is swash leader Robert;

"LAKELAND-- v ^YORKTOWN..

GROUP 7 BREWSTER. CARMEI HALDANE -

. - s M4HOPAC-,PUf?'DYS—.: . S O M £ H S . _

_153_ - 1 9 2 . _206_ - 1 1 6 . -139 -_123_

-1,06-_103_ . 5 8 -_ 9 8 _ _ 3 2 _ ^ 7 4 -

-171 J 8 0 J 7 5 .160 .120

J 5 3 -295 .280 .235 .300' .250

J 50 .225 . 65 175

. 8 0

.13&

AW^ARD-vTOi 'WATCHDOG' v ^OTW|0i38ELLE v.. .Godfrey ^ . Sctmidti^ • attorney, .teacher.,'and iecmr'erV-.rec ived\ in'-absehtia the [fourth annual-Americanism'Award

'•PdsP.S^'Aitoencan Legion, .on SaturjJay.vHis" sort' Peter accepted the;Jawai^J;fprVhimv Schfaidt"V re­cently was" appointed one of t%ee "watchdogs", who •• will overSee, Jimmy Hoffa's:supervision,of- the?

teamsters. iritematipriaT uniQn.

SUMMER COURSES j , MAMARONECK — Suitiltfer ses-

|,sions in five' subjects will, be of­fered' in the Mamarorieck>. school system >for_/:students- wishing to talce. • accelerated - wprkr'T Subjects will-be .'intermediate algebra; tfrig£,-. orionietry,. dearthscience'/ : typing and -; driver ,veducation.:'./O t hfe r. courses -will be;addedias students-express enough'interest;'jhus far,. 219 have registered. ^ K>

tS- is

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