BD AZ Vor. III—No. 3 G Ut ae “le (NO)ND “le MON! a Jr Nin GLUS a > 1S CLUE Marcu, 1937 TRACK, FIELD MEN WIN FIRST TWO MEETS BUT RECORDS ARE MEDIOCRE @ Cold weather in January and slushy practice fields in February, together with in- eligibilities in March kept Coach Dink Tem- pleton’s track and field team more or less behind the eight ball, yet they were able to win their first two meets by YA topheavy scores. : They had started off their season on March 13 with an intersquad meet in which not a single record matched performances in like events over at Berke- ley where University of California men on the same day were working out. A week later on a heavy track the Indians defeated Flint Hanner’s Fresno State squad 98 to 33, allowing the visitors but two first places—the high jump and the pole vault. Beat Uclans On the following week the Indians trav- eled to Los Angeles where they defeated U.C.L.A. 88 to 43, yielding four first places to their hosts—the 440, the 2-mile, the jave- lin and the relay. Outstanding Stanford performances in the latter meet included Mahurin’s victory in the 880 in 1:57.4; Morrison’s 6 feet 3%4 inches leap in the high jump and Pete Za- gar’s discus toss of 149 feet 714 inches. Absent on a debating trip was Student Body President and national champion shot- putter Jim Reynolds and temporarily ineli- gible were Jim Kneubuhl and John Hewitt, the latter two TBMC lads. Also on the TBMC lists are Jack Weiershauser, Vic Boore, Stan Heiserman, Tom Montgomery and Clayton Burrows. Detailed results of the track meets follow: Fresno State Meet HIGH HURDLES—-Won by Hawkins (S); Gubser (F); third, Bale (S). Time, 0:15.6. POLE VAULT—Won by Warmerdam (F), 13 feet, 6 inches; Gill (S), 12 feet, 6 inches; Boore (S), 12 feet. MILE RUN—Won by Alexander (S); Mercer (F), second; Stevenson (F), third. Time, 4:33.3. 100-YARD DASH—Won by Heiserman (8S); Worrill (F), second; Weiershauser (S), third. Time, 0:10.2. SHOT PUT—Won by Montgomery (S), 48 feet, 3 in- ches; Lippman (S), 46 feet, 634 inches, second; Holbrook (F), 45 feet, 6 inches, third. 440-YARD DASH—Won by McCurdy (S); Malott (S), second; Hyde (S), third. Time, 0:49.2. (Continued on Page 4) second, BUCKKLUB PAID $2,705 TO KEEP BALL ROLLING DURING LAST QUARTER It was no picnic for the Selection | Committee to determine for the Winter Quarter who was going to get tuition awards and who was not, with the result that the list couldn't be published in the last bulletin. But here she be and the total is 23 full awards and 4 partial awards. The sum involved is $2,705 and even at that price the field couldn't be covered. More than a dozen boys were left waiting at the post. Four included in the Buckklub list had only about I! per cent of their tuition paid. The personnel is much the same as it was in the Fall Quarter, but for the sake of convenience and of the record, here they are over again by sports they represent: BASEBALL Leo Heagerty, George E. Farrell, Leonard Linde and Vernon Johnson. BASKETBALL fen. TRACK Victor Boore, Stanley Hiserman, James Kneubuhl, Thomas Montgom- ery, Jack Weiershauser, Clayton E. Burrows and John W. Hewitt. FOOTBALL Jack E. Clark, Robert E. Dakin, Leo Ferko, William Luckett, Richard Sutton, Robert Mangan, James Cof- fis, Jay Holdridge, Robert Matthews, William Paulman, Joe Vigna, Glenn Hamilton, Carl Schott and Grant Stone. Of the above, Mangan, Johnson, Schott and Stone had only $15 each paid on their $115 tuition. It should also be added that Mat- thews, Hamilton and Coffis are base- ballers as well as gridmen. Harold Robertson and Arthur Stoe- BUNN BOYS WIN SECOND SUCCESSIVE CONFERENCE HOOP TITLE IN PLAYOFF @ It was long drawn out and it was nip and tuck at the finish, but Coach John Bunn’s 1936 championship basketball squad drove through a terrific campaign to succeed themselves on the Coast conference B~ throne by winning two straight fu from Washington State at Pullman March 26 and 27. Just a month earlier the Cards had assured themselves of the Southern Division title by overcoming the Trojans at Palo Alto 39 to 34 and 47 to 38. A week later, already champions, they let down sufficiently to permit California to win from them 44 to 31. They had previ- ously taken three straight from California, three out of four from U.S.C. and four straight from U.C.L.A. In all the long campaign they dropped only two games, this including their barn- storming tour of the East coast and Mid- west. Hank Is High The whirlwind campaign of Hank Lui- setti toward a new national scoring record was severely checked in the final games with the Trojans and California, as well as in the playoff with Washington State, but “his count nonetheless rolled on to 410 of which 208 were scored in southern division conference play. His total conference score was 226, a mark never before approached. Meanwhile, the Stanford freshmen had finished their greatest season in a decade, winning their final game from California to take both the series and the unofficial fresh- man title. The score was 49 to 37 with Tom Seibert scoring 17 points for the Indians. Boys Come Through To return to the Varsity’s playoff with Washington State, many observers in the Bay region had expected the Indians to fold up before the rapidly improving Cougar attack. The Stanford season had been un- usually long and the layoff between the final southern division game and the title