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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
urac- 8 structor Bows In .. More than 300 women took ad- to w of the instruction given ; . Floretta D. unfuicheun, pion. of her sex. wor gave practical lenfi the members of the classes at Hempstead Recreation alleys. than half of those who at- were beginners. Aflrmhdlizhwlnle-mph: is __ enough players for about 20 teams. .. ~According to Eddie . Heineman, manager of the Hempstead Recre- akion, teams will be sel with eare, allowing beginners and ex- perienced players to play with the same team. This system is expected to take gare: of the possibility. of a team *omposed of experienced bowlers being matched against a team composed solely of novice bowl- ers. Surpassed All Expectations Surpassing all ex tions, the #ithusiasm shown by the Nassau Women for the classes is proof that the new league will be one of the + active winter sport's series. ith the exception of .a girls' hone league that has been ing for two seasons, small groups of women who bow! infre- , 'quently are the only bowling units At present. Climazing her Hempstead visit, Mrs. McCutcheon bowled a five exhibition match with Mr. eman, Nassau's leading bowler, Although dropping four out of the five games, Mrs. McCutcheon did not allow her opponent a large margin, keeping the score 1053-920. Holding a slight advantage. by virtue of familiarity with the , Heineman topped the four games after Mrs. McCutcheon bad rolled 221 to win the first. Mrs. McCutcheon Heineman The scores: ‘ 221 189 w 187 235 a 166 192 189 236 187 201 'Total 920 Total 1053 OCEANSIDE WINS OVER ALUMNI '5\ Jack Guibert Sinks Baskets 'In Final Minute To Give Varsity 29-28 Win Thanks to some timely and ac- urate shooting by Jack Guibert, Nhe Oceanside high school vanity mm is today boasting a three ame winning streak-and. more Miportant, a, triumph over the Alumni combination. Guibert proved quite a hero flux-day night against the grads, Mterally snatching the game from the fre with the last second baskets that gave the varsity a 29-28 victory in a hard fought éver time contest. Trailing by one point, Guibert g the score for the varsity in fourth session with a long shot the center of the court with one second of play remain- In the overtime period after grads had taken a one point on a foul shot by Lindberg, bert duplicated his feat with fifteen seconds of play re- ing-this time swishing: the with a one-handed shot from “Matthecountowinth: thoulh Guibert is credited winning the' ga the vet- Tammy Ramsden also play- t part in the tri- and paced the varsity with taking the indi- \honors of the clash. with - six - tailies, \R my PB - “mum mmmnmvnhmmsmmmm—mvml Mrs. McCutcheon Instructs - More Than 300 Enthusiasts * Popular Response Answers Pin School; In- - Notices for the organization meeting of a women's bowl- Ing league will go into the mails today, as a result of the two- day. Review-Star free bowling school. ACTION EXPECTED IN GAGE PLAYOFF Mineola, Western Champs, To Meet West- bury March 12 Loop The coming clash between Westbury and Mineola, for the championship of the North Shore scholastic league gives early promise of being one of the most action-crammed thrillers the cur- rent court season has produced. The County Seaters turned back Glen Cove on Friday night to cap- ture the western division title while Westbury cashed in on an early season lead to take the crown in the eastern loop the pre- ceding week with a victory over Hicksville, The two teams meet for the league title in a playoff on March 12. Comparatively the teams are rated on an even standard, Min- eola is unbeaten in league play, although a series of early season defeats at the hands of Sewanhaka and Long Beach mar the record of the Hafnermen. Westbury, play- ing one of the hardest schedules of any team in the county was upset by Oyster Bay for its only league defeat while Freeport and St. Francis college freshmen boast victories over the Green and Gold. Against Baldwin, however, the charges of Tom Fitzgerald man- aged to break even in a two-game Cegit | Nassau Women Laud Review-Star Bowling School; To Organize Local While three Interested members of The Nassau Daily Review- Star Free Bowling school, look on, Mrs. McCutcheon, world's champion woman bowler, and instructor, at the school, gives a ll Mrs. McCutcheon Gives Demonstration of Form demonstration of perfect form as the ball leaves the bowler's hand. More than 300 women crowded the Hempstead Recreation alleys to attend the two-day session. HOFSTRA TOPPED BY LAWYERS 81-27 series, taking the first game by a marrow margin while losing out in the return match. Both Fives Have Easy Time In divisional competition, the Westbury cagers and Mineola had things all their own way, as the weak calibre of other competing teams in the respective loops en- abled both fives to annex their titles with very little difficulty. In the eastern circuit, Farming- dale, Hicksville and Sea Cliff all threatened the champions' lead for a brief period, but in the final showdown, Westbury had little trouble defeating each in turn to establish itself early in the season as the outstanding contender for the division title. Likewise in the western division the Maroon clearly established its superiority to the other contestants at an early date and stayed well out in front of the pack through- out the season, winning all games by a wide margin without undue effort. Port Washington, the only threat to the County Seaters' title bid, was eliminated at the start of the season by a 40-28 defeat and in the return game, the North Shore quintet went down inglor- fously a second time to wind up the season in second place. The strong zone defense of the Hafnermen received a stiff test against an invading Ossining con- tingent and came through with flying colors on successive occa- sions and Westbury, with a smooth passing combination and a speedy offense must crumble the power- ful guard of the wectern cham- plons to win, While playoff arrangements have not yet been completed, the Great Neck court or Oyster fiayl spacious gym is the probable scene of the clash. ARAGAING DEFEATED BY WILLISTON, 32-30 Jamaica Club Bows Before Legionaires In Fast Close Cage Tilt Barely nosing out the visitors the Williston Legion five defeated the Jamaica Aragains 32-30 at the Park avenue school Saturday night. After leading 17-8 at the end of the first half, the Legion team slumped allowing the Jamaica team to score through the defense. Individual scoring honors went to Ford of Jamaica who totaled 13 points. Carbone and Odeski ran a close first and second for Williston with a total of 21. wun Nassau Coliegians Beaten By N. Y. U. Law School In Close Clash The New York university law school cagers record boasts an ad- ditional notch today following a successful Nassau invasion against Hofstra's Flying Dutchmen. The charges of Jack McDonald came through with a strong rally in the last half after getting off to a poor start, but their late: drive failed to overcome the lengthy ad- vantage. of the visitors who stayed out in front all the way to win 31-27, Saturday night at the Hempstead high gym. With Don Lay back in the line- up, the Nassau Collegians made a fight of the issue late in the game, but the law students managed to stave off the bid of the home team to win comfortably on the margin of their early lead. In the opening stanza, the Met- ropolitan aggregation struck its stride at the very start of the game and rolled up a lengthy lead to be out in front 21-12 as the first half came to an end. While the McDonald men managed to eke out a few additional markers before the end of the game, they were thoroughly held in check until just before the final whistle. The end of the game cut short their belated rally, however, while the visitors were still far out in front. Kreuger tallied 11 points to lead the losers while Smith of the vis- itors annexed high scorimg honors with 6 baskets and two fouls for 14 points. The lineup: «U, Law (B1) NASSAU county * | AMATEUR LEAGUE #--_-___._\_4 SOUTHERN DIVISION A17 BH 100 LONG BEACH HALTS LYNBROOK TEAM, 4-1 Women in Sports By ALICE KARR As was inevitable, Hollywood finally re-discovered Sonja Henie and transformed her from an Olympic champion into a star of a different sort. The transformation, however was painless, both to the blonde Scandinavian and her public. Whether her recent movie was the cause or the effect, figure skating has enjoyed one of its most suc- cessful seasons in this country. In [her recent exhibition in Madison Square Garden, where she gave a solo performance, Miss Henie skated before a capacity crowd. Before her New York ap- pearance, and since that time she has been packing arenas in her tour of the country. Word comes from Kansas City, however, that Sonja took a tum- ble. Far and above any other woman figure skater, the fall can- not be said to be the fault of Miss Henie. Rather, bad ice was given as the reason for the inglorious completion of a difficult turn. Congratulations are in order for Miss Mirabel Y. Vinson who was unanimously acclaimed North American figure skating champion at Boston Saturday. Miss Vinson, who for nine years has held the American title, is one of the few champions that can stay at the top without losing any of their grace, skill or popularity. Performing in her home city, she was closely trailed for second and third honors by two Canadian girls, but perfection in the diffi- cult school figures gave her the triumph. This department got a glimpse of what figure skaters must en- dure when last fall Miss Vinson STORE CLOTHES -| HOUSTON, Tex.-P-H. H. (Herb) Hoover, headline writer on the Houston Post, is a vet- eran hunter. Recently he shoul- dered his gun and went out in pursuit of deer. A bush moved. Hoover took aim. But a man walked out, Explained Hoover: \In those store clothes he looked exactly like a big buck.\ 5 COURT OFFICIALS SCHEDULE EXAM): L. 1. District Board To Test New Members Tonight At Freeport spoke of a long train ride she had 'made to perform in some other city. The place was Adelphi college on the day the South African hockey team played the Long Isl- and squad. Cold, damp winds were blowing across the open fields and the press table had no protection. Although no less hardy than the others, Miss Vinson was wary lest the wind and damp effect her legs. A stiff knee, merely an in- convenience to be endured for a few days to the average person, can assume the proportions of a major tragedy for the skater, Hours of practice are necessary to retain and further improve upon the skating form. The traditional school figures must be supple- mented with individual routines of rare skill before they reach the top. Calisthenics and strict weight control are of secondary import- ance only to the hours spent on the ice. Ruth Hill, member of the West Hempstead Hill team, scored six of the ten points for the Savage college team over the Harrison- burg, Va., college team in the re- cent game. A last year student at Savage, Ruth played forward po- sition in the annual game with the southern school. It was the frst time the Savage squad had ever defeated the rivals. YANKEES OPPOSE SPARTAN CAGE RS East Rockaway '5' Hopeful Of Halting Loop-Leaders In Clash Tonight The Inwood Spartans will be resented with a fine chance of Virtually clinching the champion- ship in the Red division of the Long Island Amateur league when they meet the Long Island Yankees of Rockaway at the Old Law» rence high court tonight. .. ELEN COVE SEAS SCORE 41-32 WIN Victors Romp Over Oyster Bay Cagers To Triumph In League Game The Glen Cove Sebas are back among the winners today, after taking the measure of Oyster Bay in a northern division Nassau amateur league contest. The victors overwhelmed the Baymen during the third and fourth periods, and had little trouble ringing up a 41-32 win over the red and blue north shore quintet which failed to impress and never so much as threatened the winners lengthy lead during the second half. During the initial stanza, the home team managed to trail the victors closely and were behind by only two points as the game went into the second quarter. Spurting a bit before the inter- mission the losers closed the gap and had knotted the count at 17 all at the half. The Sebas opened up strongly in the third quarter however, and recaptured the lead which they never relinquished for the re- mainder of the contest. With the score 26-23 going into the fourth quarter, the Glen Cove contin- gent cut loose with a barrage of shots and ran away with the game in the final period. A weak Oyster Bay rally fell far short of matching the victors' strong spurt and as the end of the game ap- proached the home team fell farther and farther behind. Capobianco led the winners' of- fense with six field goals for 12 points to place first in the scoring column while Joe Minnicozzi led the losers and wan the Glen Cove forward a close second with 11 points. t...0 OVaimar, ff a| three with the assistance of Ray The lineup: H gflgnmd it .. \5 Nolen's 252 and Shadow D'Ange- ner R - R © lo's 256, The Brunswick Red Gien Cove (41 1 AlMeKeever, cf ....208 t g-pmum\?f‘ 3 UVC} a butane, . _._ _ } ] Crowns continued their winning Pamigletti, If 3 A Mas le 0 - - a welser Clark, /c 1 8C ¥annoui. if | 28 s 10|Oieon lo 9) stre ”and tooklthe Bud t,’ Anthancio, te .4 10 Wanear 1 . o/ ff ¢ ¢) gregation pen orthwo m; fa! Woodten, ig ....2 43am Minnicorsi.c 2 4| Cheslack h erner stacking the map lor \ ie .. loo ..... (ok 4 td 4) 109 $ 00 a 207 count in the second game, Totals ...... 1 a ag O'Brien g a‘ Ace Sperando advanced his av- Score by perioass \\*\ \ iate C0 d erage to 211.27 to continue lead- gmter Bat more w - -| ing the high average men. Felix Glen Cove # 17 26 41] Totals ... ...16 24 Totale 19 Retorse-Farreli ' T'Roolyn Gains In Loop Rm 1937. OJ! Caseys Ring Up 26-17 VietcryOverSlhhTo Climb Within 4 Game Of Lead The Roslyn Caseys are ahalf game behind the loop leading Hu- ola A. A. today in the race for the northern division crown fl the REDEEMER TEAM \\The stong Reniants of HALTS AEFEREES Som of veien Bay and scored ai Freeport Parochials Rout Officials By 55-22 almost exact duplication of @ In Court Clash vious victory over the St. inics Alumni last night Parish court. The Caseys a 27-19 win earlier in the and last night topped the by a 26-17 score. Is With only one setback their record, the Roslyti stand firmly entrenched im * place in the division with 14 C. toric, while the county sert tet, clinging stubbornly to its row lead, stands with 12 View. and one defeat. The Saints, who upset the um The Nassau county Amateur league referees will think twice before they abandon their neutral role a second time. Today the of- ficials walk with their heads held low in shame as a result of an overwhelming 55-22 defeat en- tered into the record books against them. The officials invaded Freeport yesterday to clash with the strong Holy Redeemer quintet at the parish school court and after four periods of fast and furious play, emerged on the short end of a 55-22 score. With Jimmy Murphy setting the pace, the Catholic cagers literally ran away with the ball game, sink- ing shots from every angle almost at will while the officials, with little practice previous to the clash, rapidly disintegrated as the scoreboard began to assume alarming proportions. Held to a foul shot and a single field goal in the first quarter, the invaders trailed 13-3 at the end of the period. At the opening of the second stanza, the losers staged a brief rally and scored 8 points before the half, but Holy Redeemer | did not remain idle either and con-! tinued to dominate the scoring eola quintet recently and smashed their undefeated record, found the strong Hilltopper aggregation a bit too strong and trailed from the opening whistle on. The visitors jumped out in front by an 8-4 margin at the end of the initial stanza and had suc- ceeded in holding their lead at the half by a five-point margin. With the count set at 11-6 as play was resumed in the third m after the intermission, the ts spurted and doubled the only to have the visitors mac-u their speedy pace to hold the lead and jump the count up to 19=12. Cracking down defensively: in the fourth quarter, the visitors held the Saints to five points, add- ing seven points to their lead at the same time for a clean- cut decisive victory. The losers dropped out of a tie with Westbury for third place as a result of the setback and now stand alone in fourth place with five setbacks in 13 starts. Mike Monilaws snared the scor- ing crown, looping the hoop with four baskets and a foul for points while Heffner tallied markers for the home team' place second in the scoring edl= umn. column with an additional 19| The lineup: | points to lead 31-11 at the inter- KennyIn; m (20) at. D—hlu an | mission. Despite the efforts of Joe Car- bone and Jimmy Pasquarelli of the Tally-Ho club of Westbury during the third period, the Holy Redeemer quintet continued to have things all its own way. The victors slackened their speedy pace slightly during the second half, but at the close of the con- test were still in possession of a lengthy lead. Murphy scored 19 points to cap- ture high scoring honors while Jerry Couniban ran his teammate a close second for high honors with 18 points. Hesse paced the losers with 8 points. The lineup: Moly Redsemer (55) Murphy, rt DiMartino, if Coleman, c [AlaTm‘n - ealy, Comthan, ig \. Totals ... fibres-0mm). HOFSTRA CO-EDS FACE N. Y, U, GIRLS TONIGHT Hempstead Collegians Seek Third Straight; Defeat Northport Sextette By 22-10 Score In the winning column with two straight victories in the past week, Hofstra college girls' team will try for its third tonight when it meets the New York university sextette on the Hempstead high school court. Traveling to Northport yester- day the co-eds scored a 33-19 de- feat over the Suffolk team, the second this season. Adelphi col- lege felt the weight of the Hemp- stead offensive Wednesday with the game. ending in a 22-10 deci- sion. The game tonight is the first time the Hempstead college has met the sister university. Only one game is scheduled between is this season, cn Northport (19) Bladykas, e . Mamire rt 4[Birminghem a Petvela, lg 4{Robetts, obolmhlu. ll 0lHtPner '. RECREATION HIPS CAPITOL PINMEN Officials (2%) «..o rf . Hempstead Bowlers Win Close Match In Nat'l, Loop Clash HELLLL B | The S. R. O. sign was out early when Capitolians locked horns with Eddie Heineman's Hemp- stead Recreation bowling stars. It was a thrilling match just as crowd anticipated and the Bowling quintet drew first bl when they tallied an even 1000 Im: the first game to the Long Island- er's 967. The tables were tured in the second brut, the Hemp- steaders piling up 1021 of the ma- ' ple sticks while theCapitolians scored but 982. The final round was decidedly close and when the dust of the battle cleared. Hemp- stead Recreation finished three pins to the good, 1046 to Capitol Bowling's 1043. Frank Seaton's 258 in this final game would have changed the story had it notbeen for Nick Zazzali's split in the tenth frame. Ace Sperando topped the individual scores with 267 in the first game of the match. Pabst Blue Ribbons trimmed the White Elephant quintet two out of Rothe\ 1; Northport Ts Gelhausen's 208.56 is second in Nation's New No. 1 Shuffler Beats Elders At Own Game line: William Hansly's 20817 third and Alec Murzinaki's 202.85 fourth with Jack Wilday's 202.20, fifth That 788 high series of Ray len's has not been nor hak. the high score of Felix 'Gelhatis= en's 300 been matched. LINCOLN A. C. CAGERE TOP BROOKSIDE 49-86 Rockville Centre Quintet Gap in Battle for Long Jz» land Amateur Loop' Crewf#i The Lincoln Athletic club quin- ORLANDO, Fla.--Shuffle- board, the \sport for oldsters,\ has a younuur as its champion. Wayn Miller, _ 14 - year- old Berwy'n. IIL, lad, recently cap- tured the national title by defeat- ing Charles E. Edwards, almost four times his age. In most sections of the country the shuffleboard title is looked up- on as an empty honor, But not in Florida, California, Mia and New coast states. sort cities in thece states hav- from ten to 100 boards. @, The recent national m ship at Orlando drew more than 100 contestants and a gullery of e than 500 witnessed young let's title match. The um- requires skill rather than exertions of “rty und for this reason appeals to sons. Ouly a few of those who watched Kl‘fl‘u win mama were than years m veteran whom he defeated coathed young Miller,} tet of Rockville Centre ”at“, wit hthe league leading Afinlctlr‘club of Hempstead de- feating the Brookside e club of Hempstead, 40-36, at the Hempstead gym. was the 13th tn 13