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The Times from Shreveport, Louisiana • Page 24

Publication:
The Timesi
Location:
Shreveport, Louisiana
Issue Date:
Page:
24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

0 i 8-B Wednesday, Oct. IV. Ivob Ihe SHKtVEPORT ll.MKS vA rm SPOR fef vtMde BY JACK FISER EX-SHREVEPORT SKIPPER Salty arker Take Over lo Eagles 1-' K' IsaaKsx'f-: I fr VJ 5' i Hear Jack Fiser's "World of Sports" at 5:35 p.m. and "Sports Final" at 10:15 p.m. Daily, Monday Through Friday, on KWKH A Lesson in Double Talk There may be escape routes from the Texas League's upcoming racial quandary, but it can be safely said that the directors did not discover any at their Monday meeting in Dallas.

All that yak-yak about an eye for an eye and a player for, a player may have saved a little face around the circuit, but as a practicable solution to the problem, it's pure funnybook. Houston, Austin and Dallas, you know, declared their intention of using Negro players in 1957, but also said that they have no intention of defying Louisiana law when they're here in Shreveport. They propose that for every Negro player denied the right to play, a Shreveport regular at a corresponding position be benched. And they intend to ask President Dick Butler to throw the weight of his office behind that "solution" if the Shreveport club won't do it voluntarily. Needless to say, Shreveport Mill not.

Bonneau Peters' attitude is that the Sports are in no way responsible for the law, and that they should not be penalized for anything resulting therefrom. The whole idea is patently impossible first because nobody- in baseball has the authority to enforce it, and secondly, because it is unenforceable whatever the authority behind it. While doing his level best to consider all sides of the argument, Butler frankly doubts that he, or anyone else in baseball, has the right to dictate to a club whom it shall play and whom it shall bench. Even if he had, Dick flinches at the headaches involved in carrying through. "It looks to me," he says wryly, "as if I'd have to move mv office to Shreveport and let the rest of the league shift for itself." Just for fun let's look at some cases that might have Dallas 4' DRY PRONG'S 213-POUND "DOC" BANKSTOX BASTROP'S 225-POUND CHARLIE JOHNSON Dynamic Demon Tackles; One in Limited Capacity, The Other All the Way Teeli on ne, ense reasieg NSC Staff's Collect 1VC J3FOW Francis J.

(Salty) Parker, former manager of the Shreveport Sports, was named manager of the Texas League Dallas Eagles yesterday as part of a three-way shift of managerial personnel within the New York Giants' farm system. Parker, who has lived in Shreveport since 1947, did not know of his appointment until late yesterday afternoon when a Times reporter contacted him. "Great! Great!" the excited baseball veteran said. "I didn't know about the appointment, but I guess that's because they didn't know how to contact me at work. The main thing, though, is that it's official." Later, Parker said Eagles General Manager Warner Lewis had reached him by telephone confirming the move.

Parker left for Dallas by automobile last night for Dallas, where he will confer with club officials today. He succeeds John (Red) Davis, who is moving up to Minneapolis of the American Assn. Davis had been given his release so he might accept the Minneapolis managership offered him by Carl Hubbell, director of the Giants' farm system. Dallas has a working agreement with the Giants. Davis replaces Eddy Stanky as head of the Millers.

Stanky, onetime member of the Boston Braves, Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Giants and pilot of the St. Louis Cardinals, was told he won't have a spot waiting for him within the Giant organization. Stanky, in his Fairhope, home said, "This comes as a complete shock to me. I was led to believe that at the end of the season, I was to become a coach of the Giants." The Associated Press had quoted Giant President Horace Stoneham as saying "there is nothing to such talk." Parker managed the Sports for eight years and was with Dallas briefly as a player in 1939. He made his managerial debut here in 1941 as a 27-year-old, and the club landed third.

In 1942, the second-place Sports won the playoffs under Parker's guidance. After a hitch in the service and a managerial stint at St. Paul, Parker returned here in 1946 through 1951. His clubs finished seventh, fifth, fourth, fourth, seventh and eighth, in that order. Since then he has managed at NATCHITOCHES, Oct.

16 (Special) Two questions are uppermost in the minds of Northwestern State College football coaches and players as the demons undergo extensive drills on the field and the film room this week. How to penetrate the huge Louisiana Tech line and how to stop those fast-moving Tech passers and runners from scoring this Saturday night in Shreveport are those questions. Kickoff time for the annual gridiron classic has been set lor 8 p.m. marking the first time the game has been played at night since the long series began. GSC SCRAMBLE With this important Gulf States Conference game on tap Demon coaches are keeping their two squads, the "Purple" and the "White," hustling on pass defense, tackling and blocking assignments and running plays from offense.

"Our ball club has shown steady improvement since the first game we played and the experience which comes from five hard contests has done lots to develop our freshman players" Head Football Coach Harry (Rags) Turpin said here this week. Northwestern coaches pointed out that "only five" players are in- "SALTY" PARKER Neio Dallas Skipper Arnie Atkins Ticketed for Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 16 Indianapolis of the American Assn. today announced the purchase of righthanded pitcher Arnie Atkins from San Diego of the Pacific Coast League. The 30-year-old hurler had a 13-6 record this year with Seattle and San Diego and a 22-8 record last year with Shreveport of the Texas League.

The Indians also bought Bob Hall from San Diego. He is another righthander who has been with the Boston Braves and Pittsburgh Pirates. MUNGER TO GO PITTSBURGH, Oct. 16 UP) The Pittsburgh Pirates today asked waivers on George (Red Munger, 38-year-old righthand pitcher who won three and lost four with the Pirates this year. v.

RODESSA'S JOEL THOMAS SHREVEPORT'S CHARLEY GLOVER Louisiana Tech's Top Two Centers of Controversy Temple, Tyler, El jured and will miss the Tech game come up if the proposed solution had been attempted during tne season just past. As all good Texas League fans know, two of the outstanding Negro players of 1956 were shortstops nare Koagers of Dallas and Ruben Amaro of Houston. Suppose the Sports had been told to bench their regular snortfielder whenever those clubs came to town? Would that have evened things up? With all due credit to the lads who patroled the shortfield for Shreveport, wouldn't those mutual benchings have hurt Dallas or Houston much worse than they would have hurt Shreveport? And what about Tulsa's Negro utility man, Marv Williams? Who's to say exactly what his "regular" position was, or which Shreveport player would have had to be benched to compensate for his loss? Wouldn't it have been possible for Manager Al Widmar to say, "Williams would have been my right fielder tonight, so you'll have to bench Ken Guettler?" Nobody could prove him wrong, because Williams played five different positions during the campaign. And what about pitchers? Who could say for sure which one was supposed to work for the Sports on a given night? Couldn't Mel McGaha have benched one of his less effective chuckers to indemnify the opposition for the loss of a regular Negro starter? Seems to us that the circuit would have to hire a full-time arbitrator to cull out the rosters at each game and say who was eligible and who wasn't. Any baseball man worth his salt knows that no such artificial gimmick could possibly succeed.

Ignoring all other considerations, the fans would not buy any such watered-down version of Texas League baseball, and they would be perfectly justified in. staying away. It's our opinion that the gentlemen who sprung the gimmick knew it would not work, and that it would never be attempted. They were merely trying to put it. on the record that they had not given up without a fight that they had done everything humanly possible to perpteuate the use of Negro players in our league.

Having made their point, they are now likely to submit to the will of the majority. It was noticeable that Fort Worth and Oklahoma City stated their intention of playing the game by Louisiana ground rules, while Tulsa and San Antonio played it cagy ready to swing either way. Those four clubs and Shreveport could represent the balance of power. At any rate, we left the meeting with the same feeling we had on entering it that Shreveport will remain in the Texas League if it chooses to do so, and on its own terms. Dorado, and last year he was team has had three mutual opponents, Louisiana College (which tied Tech 0-0, and Tost to NSC, 1 18-7), Stephen F.

Austin (which de-, feated Northwestern, 14-12, and seen, but he should give the De-I mons badly needed reserve strength i at tackle this Saturday. Enthusiasm for the football ex-i travaganza, which will be preceded on baturaay mgnt. iney include starters Phil Collins, fullback, and Jim Bruning, end, with a broken foot and leg injury respectively, and halfback Petie Moore, whose outstanding performance in the La- at Danville, Va. He said yesterday that the Eagles had contacted him about 10 days ago and he had been in touch with them since then. mar Tech game moved him into a starting position against McNeese, along with quarterback Billy Wayne Johnson who wound up the 1955 season as an important understudy to Red McNew, and Kemp Flash) Gordon, a dependable performer on the "white" unit who has a dislocated wrist.

All except Bruning are out for the season. Although injuries have hampered the NSC eleven all. season, the team has managed to stay "in the ball game," compiling a season's record thus far of 2-2-1, an identical one to the Tech Bulldogs. Each lost to Tech, 37-14) and McNeese State (which defeated NSC, 20-13, and lost to Tech, 6-0). Good news coming from the Demons' camp today was the announcement that all-GSC tackle Charles Johnson will return to the lineup in a "limited capacity," after suffering a broken bone" in his hand about three weeks ago.

Whether the layoff from game time has hurt Johnson remains to be I by several activities in Shreveport (a parade at 10 a.m., alumni coffees at 2 p.m., and pre-game ceremonies at 7:30 p.m.) is high in the Natchitoches and Huston areas this week besides beir.g "way up" in the Shreveport area. College and State Fair officials expect an attendance of seme 20,000 persons at the ball game, since it is being played at. night. COLLEGE FOOTBALL POWER INDEX mm. Tht Power de ratings art past performance averages.

Ex EXPLANATION ample: a 50.0 team has been 10 scaring points stronger, per game, than a 40.0 team, against equally re red opposition. niitim 'iiwiti mm mniw iiiii i ink nin GAMES OF WEEK ENDING OCT. 21, 1956 Connolly Net Clinic Here Today OTHER EASTERN FRIDAY, 0CT03ER 19 St. Vincent 38.0 5) W'aynesburg 33.3 Otterbein 37.1 13 Hiram 24 Rose Polv 17.5 (161 111. Coll 10 St.Ben'dict 49.4 (191 stern.K 30.8 Ft.

Joseph 69.5 tlOi Butler 59.2 S. I'linois 56.5 61 E. Michigan 50.1 SW.Okla. 58 7 61 N.E.Okla. 53.1 Sterling 2C.1 Ei Ottawa 18.4 71 Navy Pier 1 1 .2 Higher Rating Lower Rater Diff.

Rater AMONG TOP 150 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19 Chat'nooga 72.0 1 4 Abil Chris'n 57 Denver (341 Colo.Coll Z2.9 G. Wash'ton "75 6 I 51 V.M.I. 70 8 Miami.Fia. 99.1 (Hi Georgia 84.6 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20 2.6 30.9 "1.4 20.4 37.0 42 2 3-8 31.4 Valparaiso 41.1 i DPatiw Warrensburg 45.8 (15 NE. Mo.

St. Washburn 47.2 6i Wavne 36.7 16 1 Case V. Illinois 45.7 Pi N. Illinois W.Michirran 60.0 (181 Wash'nMo, W. Reserve 61.0 (241 Slip.Rock Wheaton 47.5 (17i Ill.Wesl'n SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20 Alfred 14:11 Itheca Allegheny 30.4 i23 Grove City Amherst 53.5 il9t Coast G'd E'oomsburg 47.6 81 Ship'nsb'g Buffalo 53.1 (231 St.Lawrence Cortland 43.3 (111 Brockport Delaware St.

46.6 (301 Lincoln.Pa. Drexel 2 P.M.C. EStroudsbg 47.2 i21l Mansfield FiM 49.4 41 Albright Gettysburg 'STO (111 Muhlenberg Indiana.Pa. 34.1 61 Clarion St. J.

Carroll 38.6 8 EdinborcSt J. Hopkins 41.7 21 Haverford Juniata 54 8 (.321 Dickinson i8" I i Air Force "71.2 (411 Colo. Mines Arkansas S2 4 3 Texas Boston Coll 76.0 27 1 Rutgers Bowlg Gr'n 78 5 24i Toledo California 96.9 II U.C.L.A. Col. Pacific 82.1 i25i Marquette Colorado 87.4 12 1 State Connecticut 75.1 01 Maine Dayton 75.4 Pi N.C.

State Deiawrre 71.4 (141 N.H'phire St. 85.5 .11 WakeForest 12.6 7.4 34.7 27.8 34.4 16 9 43.7 26.6 45.0 47.7 28.4 30.4 40.0 22.7 11.0 17 3 8 9 34 8 47.4 35.7 27 9 46.9 Wm. Jewell 43.7 5i Col Emporia Witter berg 54.0 (101 Mt. Union 43.7 OTHER SOUTHERN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19 Lock Haven 39 8 i2SI Cheyr.eySt. BIG BULLDOG LINE 56.7 1391 Wilkes Citadel 65.4 Wofford Fairmont 37.0 8i Salem SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23 Ark.

ASM 35.1 71 Ouachita Ark. Tech 47 4 91 NW.Okla. world. In 1931 she became the youngest player ever to compete on the Wightman Cup team and she was top ranked in the USLTA women's division after capturing both the national junior and women's singles championships. Her women's win at Forest Hills helped her to be voted the Woman Athlete of the Year by the Associated Press.

Eventually she received the nod as the woman Athlete of Year for three straight years and in 1953 she became the first woman ever to hold the Big Four singles titles at one time National, Wimbledon, French and Australian. During this same period she was also named the world's top female player in 1952, '53 and '54 a completely prodigious feat for. a teenager, whose career was ended before she turned 20-! Since her accident, she. has been employed as a writer for newspapers and magazines covering the last Wimbledon tournament for a West Coast newspaper. With Wilson Sporting Goods, she has par 18 8 HOI Nat.

Aggies 42.7 81 Leb. Valley 57.5 4 1 Hofstra 43.0 7 1 Upsaia 38.1 (10( King's 50.8 41 CarnogieT Lycoming Millersville MoraTian N'eastern Norwich Scranton Temple Union Vermont Three of the most prominent figures in the world of tennis, led by a woman who as a teenager was the world's greatest women's singles player, will perform here in a clinic at 4 p.m. today. Maureen Connolly Brinker, former Wimbledon and National champion, will lead the admission-free production on the Princess Park tennis courts. Joining her will be a familiar face to local net fans Bernard (Tut Bartzen, former National Clay Courts champion and the former British great, Mary Hardwick Hare.

The event will feature discussion and demonstration of proper tennis strokes and strategy followed by competition which will include a one-set battle between Bartzen, the slender San Angelo, southpaw, and C. Franklin McCarter, Princess Park tennis pro, and former Texas and Texas University net squad member. SERIOUS LEG INJURY Connolly; who ranked with the greatest women tennis players of all time, turned pro and joined the Atistin lem 61 8 29.1 28 2 23.7 42.8 54.4 12.3 41.5 8 1 31. 6 46.6 46 0 51.9 17.0 3 2 (111 R.P I 23 0 Sees Troubles NSC Offensive 58.2 (221 Rochester 3 0 21.4 (141 Kings Ft. 7 8 36.2 6i Thiel 29.9 '44 8 21 E.TexasSt.

2i Jac'is'ville (351 DavElkirs 50.2 4i Elon 41.0 (33 Geo'town (22i Stetson "9 51 Florence "51.8 3i Appalach'n 55.9 4i Newberry 20.8 41 W.V. Wel'n 38.6 (151 W.Maryl'd 30.7 89.3 19.3 54 4 95.5 57.6 75.4 74 7 75.0 80. 3 'PS. 4 6.1.(1 84.3 55.1 4V9 68.8 51.7 83 '88 8 85.2 92.0 f4.fi 71.fi 82 67.3 68 8 93 83.5 79 8 61.9 94.0 8T.R 38 8 9fi 9 88. ft 49 4 89.S Will WJ V.ChesterSt 52.6 "201 Calif St.

32.8 60.9 (241 Geneva 36.8 West'mster A.ust.Peay Bethany Catawba Centre Davidson Em'yHenry E.Tenn. St. Furman GlenviHe HamSvdney Kc w.Payne Len. Rhyne La. College La.

Tech McNeee St. Maryville Ga.Tech 107.0 12 1 Auburn Harvard 74 2 1211 Columbia Houston V. 93.0 81 Okla AiM Holy Cross 74.6 71 Dartmouth Iidana 7K.9 8i Iowa U2 3 (341 Hawaii Kentucky 9n.2 fii L.S.U. Lafayette 7S.4 (23i Eucknell Louisvi'le fifi.4 (2H Morehead Marshall B7.4 It Kent State Maryland 91.0 (201 N.Carolina Minroi. O.

SO. 2 1 29 Ohio Michigan 111.5 28 No'wetern Mich. State 115.2 1311 Not. Dame Minnesota 97.2 12 1 Tlinois rsis'iopi 112 3 i20l Tulane State R7.2 (181 Memphis St. MifsSo'th'n r2.9 (11 Ark.

State Missouri 84.4 1221 Kansas St. Navy 85.3 13 Cincinnati N. Mexico 9 0) Arizona OfvoState in4.2 (lit Penn State Oklahoma 118.1 (35 1 Kansas Oregon St. 97.3 (18i Wah. State Penn 3.8 21 Brown Pittsburgh 94.4 Duke Princeton S8 2 71 Colgate C.

FRANKLIN MeCARTER 56.8 (10i X.Mexico 69 6 (241 T. Carolina 51 8 (18i Tex.Luth'n 64.4 7 1 NWLouis'na 41.4 45.8 34.1 56.9 56.7 Wilson Sporting she suffered a in a horse back 1954. 64.3 8i NE Louis'na advisory staff of Goods Co. after serious leg injury riding accident in Included in her 35.9 (121 TennWesl'n 23.6 Miss. Coll 76.9 31 Millsaps spectacular rec- ord which began as a 12-year-old 23.7 49 4 26.8 28.

1 'OR 26.9 ticipated in that company's clinic Mor 55 3 6) F. Carolina Ozarks 29.2 2i Henderson RandMacon 31.7 4i Guilford S.Houston 66.8 till I amar T. SW.La.Inst. 50.2 3t St. S'westn.

T. 7) Wash. Lee OTHER MIDWESTERN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19 G.Adolphus 53.5 6i St. Thomas 47.6 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20 Anderson '30 0 61 IndCentral 2 0 Augsburg 41 (171 Duluth 4 Aueustana 22 8 (191 Flmhurst 3 8 Baker 21.9 (191 Bethany 2 9 Ball State 41.4 8i Indiana St. Bethel 20.9 8i Friends 12.7 P.eloit 40.8 It Albion 39.8 Blufftm 31.3 9 Wilmngton 22.7 Bradley 56.7 6t Omaha 51.0 Capitai 47.9 (13) Akron 34.9 Carleton 49.2 (171 Grinnell 32.6 Cent.Okia.

50.4 (261 E.C.Okla. 24.6 Cerut. Mich (271 111. Normal 8.S Coe 39.2 1 1 Cornell la. 38.3 Defiance 4.6 5i O.

Northern 1.0 F.Illinois 35.4 II Evansville S4.2 EmporiaSt. 28.7 01 Ft. Hays St. 28.5 Findlav 52 6 (251 Ashland Franklin (10) Manchester 17.0 in 194C, were victories every program on the. school and college major tournament throughout the level throughout the country.

Pan Joe St. 71.0 (321 S.Dgo St. Po. Calif. '117 8 '111 Washington S.M.V.

S3.1 51 Rice SDringfld 72.8 (23t Brandeis Stanford 90.9 It Oregon Svracuse (12t Armv i 90.9 "3 Tempe St. 88.5 (111 HardnSim's 77.4 Tennessee 105.0 (23 Alabama 82.5 T.CU. 110.0 1141 Texas AIM 95.8 Tex. West 83.0 24t N.TexasSt. 83.7 SWTexasSt 57.7 (101 S.

F. Arvstin 47.2 Tampa 51.7 (19i Prcsbvt'n 42.4 Tenn. Tech 63.3 31 Murray Texas All 58.9 (231 SuI Ross 35.9 Wabash 58.7 (40t Sewanee WKv. State 59.0 51 H. Ky.

State 53 6 W. Liberty 46.1 (351 Concord MLS W.V.Tech 36.7 1261 Newnt.News OTHER FAR WESTERN SATURDAY. OCTOBER 20 Calif. Poly (221 Long Beach 39.9 Colo. State 48.4 (13 Panhandle 35.3 ColoWest'n 44.5 (171 Adams St.

27.1 Fresno St. 63.6 (29t p. F. State 37.8 Humboldt 33.1 (181 W.Wa-hton 20.5 L.A.State 32.8 2i Nevada 30.8" L4C 53 4 (281 Chico Pt. 24.9 Pugrt Sd (lOrCent.

Wash Sta! Barbara 55 9 9i Cal. Aggies V5.4 Wliittier 40 6i Occidental 3 Whitworth 35 9 291 BrColumbia '6 5 Hanover 33.7 (3-' Earlham Heidelberg 67.9 '241 Denison Hillsdale 63.1 (281 Hope Hobart 48.9 (301 Kenyon cent) with only four interceptions. The Northwesterners have averaged 41 yards per tilt by passes. Behind the stalwart play ot such fellows as tackles Pat and Tommy Hinton, guards Bobby Stone and Buddy Juneau, center Charles Glover, and ends Billy White and Neal Thompson, the Techmen have thrown up a stout defensive game all season. The tough forward wall of the Canines has allowed but two touchdowns all season on the ground.

Tech has allowed 103 yards per bout in rushing while NSC has given up an average of 129 per contest on the ground. On the other hand, the Demon pass defense has been more effective. Coach Harry Turpin's NSC team has permitted the opposition 63 yards a game through the airlanes while Tech has yielded 87 yards per battle in the air. Tech kickers have averaged 36 yards per bout on 19 attempts. Northwestern, in the same number of attempts, has sent the ball 32.5 yards per kick.

The Techmen have been bothered by fumbles all season. In the five games the Canines have fumbled 21 times and have lost the pigskin on 11 occasions. NSC has had 15 miscues and has given up the ball only four times. RUSTON, Oct. 16 (Special) De- fensive-minded Louisiana Tech today took a look at the offensive record stacked up this season by the Demons of Northwestern State and the Bulldogs realized a tough job faces them Saturday night at the State Fair S.adium in Shreveport.

Featuring a fleet of fast backs, the Demon team has gone for many more yards in rushing this fall than have the Bulldogs. The speed of such scatbacks as quarterback 'James (Red) McNew, fullback Charles Tolar, halfback Charles Hennigan and others has stacked up a total net gain rushing of 1,131 yards, an average of 226 per game. Tech's Bulldogs have managed only 858 yards cn the ground (an average of 171 per game) in the same number of contests this fall. The Tech passing attack has been a bit more successful this season. Bulldog quarterbacks James Mc-Cabe, Billy Bond, Clyde Thompson and Pobby Anderson have connect- ed on 36 out of 63 aerials attempted for a very good 53 per cent.

Bulldog tosses have picked up 102 yards per game but six have been intercepted. DEMON COMPLETIONS Through the air NSC has completed out of 39 tosses (43 per Kalamazoo 30.8 71 Adrian Tulsa 81.2 U0t Detroit Utah 88 3 (101 Vvomine Utah State 69.6 6 Colo.AltM Vanderbilt HOt Florida Vi'lanova 83 4 (131 Boston IT Virginia 77.1 31 Lehigh Va. Tech Richmond W.Teras N.Mer.Ai-M W. Virginia 95.7 (321 Wm.l-Mary Wichita 71.7 (231 Drake Williams 75.5 I49t Bowdom Wriscensin It Purdue 71.5 78.fi 63.3 92.8 70.fi 73 9 67.5 "8, 48.7 26.1 96.9 2.3 44.3 35.5 18.7 23.4 78.8 27.6 29.7 32.7 "1.0 49 5 46.1 25.8 Kan. Wesl'n 43.1 (191 McPherson Knox 45.8 (181 St.

Olef Macalester (221 Hamline MankatoSt 2.0 9i Bemidji St. Millik'n 35.0 4( LekeForest' Mom'rside 54 1 51 Iowa Trs Mvsking'm 49.2 3t Wooster O.Weslev'n 36.1 (101 Oberlin 4 Sit- Xavier, O. 77.S 1 Ouantico Yale (201 Cornell 55.7 4' A. -St 1 THIS WEEK'S LEADERS NATIONAL I EAST Oklahoma 111.1 Syracuse SOUTHWEST FAR WEST T.CU. 110.0 So.

Cali. 107.8 Ravlor 100.6 i Oregon t. 97.3 102.4 MM Pittsburgh 94.4 Texas AftM 95.8 Washington 96.9 90 9 Army 96.7 California SOUTH Mississippi 112.3 Ga. Tech 107.0 Tennessee 105.0 Vanderbilt 103.1 Miami. Fla.

99.1 W. Virginia 95.7 Auburn 95.5 Va. Tech 95.2 Duke 94.0 Florida 92.8 Princeton Navy Villanova MIDWEST Oklahoma 118.1 Mich. State 116.2 Michigan 111.5 Ohio State 104.2 Iowa 102.3 Wisconsin 97.8 Minnesota 97.2 Purdue 96.9 Notre Dame 88 8 Colorado 87.4 Mich. State 116.2 Mississippi 112.3 Michigan 111 5 T.CU.

110.0 So. Calif. 107.8 Ga. Tech 107.0 Tennessee 105.0 Ohio State 104.2 Vanderbilt 103.1 Houston U. 93.0 S.M.U.

93.1 -Arkansas 92.4 Texas 89.3 Rice 8.6 Tempe State 88.5 Tex. Western 83.0 Colgate 83.2 85.3 83.4 80.8 78.4 76.0 76.0 95.5 90.9 89.5 88.3 82.1 79.8 U.C.L.A. Stanford Oregon Utah Coll. Pacific Wash. Stae Lafayette Boston Coll Yale s- Service Dunkel Sports Research MAUREEN BRINKER Home Teem Copvrioht 1956 bv Rotiaa, Unavailable TUT" BARTZEN MARY HARDWICK.

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