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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 4

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The Miami Newsi
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Miami, Florida
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Navy Cornell 38 19 Alabama 10 0 Iowa 13 Ohio State 13 19 0 Pennsylvania 34 Columbia 14 Army 40 Harvard 7 Holy Cross 0 Yale 0 Pe 0 TOPICS OF THE TROPICS MIAMI DAILY NEWS Section Classified Wisconsin 9 PHONE 3-1 191 PHONE 3-1 191 MIAMI 30. SUNDAY, OCT. 19. 1947 Sports Editor 7 Coliseum Reopening Boon To Miami Sports GEORGIA TECH YIELDS TO AUBURN BUT WINS One of the most fortunate things that's happened to Greater Miami sportsdom in years is the conversion of the Coral uabies Coliseum into an all-sports arena. Major Hor ace eeples is the man behind the move.

Tomorrow men i the Gables city commission meets to ratify the zoning board recommendation that the transaction be approved 0i ur" ana ratiiy it almost certainly will. i I Not only will Miami and environs benefit but the Gables itself will come into its own as an athletic center. The Coliseum is on Douglas 37,000 See Yellow Jackets Keep Record Free Of Defeat By WIIXIAM TUCKER 1 1 nlte4 rM prt Mrti) ATLANTA, Oct. 18. (UP) Georgia Tech struck from far out to defeat Auburn, 27 to 7, today before 37.000 fans, but between touchdowns the Engineers had their hands full with an ancient foe inspired by game-legged Road, on the rim of the Gables.

It is therefore, close enough to Miami, (which is just across, the street) and within the Gables, so it may be said to be quite convenient to both cities. But convenience isn't the only point. The important idea is that the Coliseum is a big, roomy place seating 10,000 or it will when the but game-hearted Travis Tidwell. ,000 bleacher seats are put in place. It can accommodate every known indoor sport and some of those generally played outdoors.

Basketball, boxing, wrestling, tennis, roller skating and Ice shows, perhaps even ice hockey, are sports for which Peoples is angling and which he un As in every game this season doubtedly will get. I'lus occasional dances and conventions, too. Especially is this return to the sports scene the Coliseum was the aite of boxing, wrestling, ice hockey and roller skating on occasions TOM McWILLIAMS Miss. State Star Tech got away to a fast start and was never worried In ringing up its fourth straight victory without a defeat. The engineers real position among the nation's pigskin powers is yet to be determined, because they haven't been duly tested.

some years ago a boon to University of Miami athletic program. Solves U-M Basketball, Boxing Problems SMU SCORES UPSET OVER RICE, 14 TO 0 DALLAS, Oct 18. South First, it solves their home basketball problem, enabling them to piay ine Diggcst teams in the country and give them good guarantees. It also affords them an incentive for their colleeiate boxinsr clans. U-M has its own tennis stadium but whenever the weather or some AUBURN'S LONG down-trodden Plainsmen, however, made a real game of it after Tech got two, quick touchdowns.

But the Engineers' great superiority in manpower enabled them to roll up an im ether cause forces it indoors the Coliseum can be used, if available. Gilmer Passes Tide To Victory Over Vols, 1 0-0 BIRMINGHAM, Oct. 18. Perhaps also during football when Coach Harding finds the weather or we rooting too bad outside Major Peeples will allow him to drill his ern Methodist remained among the charges indoors. pressive score at the finish.

Fullback Frank Ziegler started Tech off with a 68-yard touchdown run which sprung him com It is an ideal spot for major pro boxing shows a little under Orange Bowl size. Fights were held there in the old days and did Tight well. Now, with the Southwest and the Gables having grown considerably in the last eight or 10 years, there is ample population in the immediate vicinity to form a nucleus of a crowd for boxing, wrestling I 4 I 1 cA Alabama's Crimson Tide took full pletely in the clear he waltzed the last 20 yards. or any ouier presentation. Zeigler and Red Patton, Tech's advantage of Harry Gilmer's second half passes today to count a touchdown and a field goal in a 10-0 victory over the Tennessee "It used to be," Raid Peeples, "that the Coliseum was 'too far prize freshman, collaborated in But it isnf anymore.

Why, with all those empty lots filled up today. 58-yard drive to the second score igu iu tun 11. Vols before 32,000 fans. Gilmer set up both scores with his throwing. JOHNNY KAUCH Star Passer at Georgia but a four-yard pass from Jim Still to George Brodnax was needed to crack the Auburn defense for the FIRST PERIOD) After feeling each other out nuuilv In Another thing: fans will have a vastly larger, cleaner and better place to witness their sports events than Biscayne arena or Civic Center, neither of them adequate or suitable for a high-class boxing nations undefeated, untied teams today with a well-earned 14-0 decision over Rice in a Southwest Conference football game.

The! passing and running of Doak Walker and Gilbert Johnson, proved too much for the favored Owls. fFTRST PERIOO Southern Method nt too tne kfekeff p4 paraded f.q yards to a touchdown wlk the way. Hia 2S-rd rus crT.d into territory from the Ow. 37 the Method ljt mia line bucks and short passe to the one-vard -n down Walker laciteVt fott of a touchdown but Rice was offside w'er went around nht end for the score. Waiker ktekoff from IXti? 2y Pe failed ard rH 1 Tb' wi-j and Hctvissaek sparkicc tre di-ve Sw5pt midfid as the period ended.

Score: Southern sietnodist 7. Kace a. SECOXD PERIOD In an exchance of punts SJftT rt tm on ts 47. and ValheJ ripped down to the Rice 37 but a rr toPP he sure and dreea kicked outside on the Rice 13. Walrasy made 1 at right end but on tha neat try fumbled and Roberts recovered for SMtJ on tha Rica 38.

Johnson passed to B.aa. ly for Bn then to Reinkinit for a touca down. Walker kicked the point Rice took th. irkifr actual tally. Tech seemed to grow complacent midfield, Alabama clicked off two first downs, bmut the drive bogged on the Tennessee 47.

Harry Gilmer kicked out on the 15-yard stripe. Rowan pulled Tennessee out of a deep hole with a 62-yard punt as the Quarter ended scorelss. with a 13-point lead and the spot Dixie again is providing the football world with a host of outstanding players, many of whom will rate serious consideration when the time comes to pick the Ail-American team. Shown here are some of the leading stars in the Southeastern Conference. now.

Galento Coming To Town Nov. 4 was made to order for TidwelL who broke nis leg in a summer (SECOND PERIOD) Tennessee decisively omnia veil tha tm baseball game and still runs with Y. A. TITTLE LSU Ace Back during the second quarter, driving four times within the Alabama 30 before losing a pronounced limp. Tony Galento, the Beer Barrel from Orange, N.

is coming back to town. The last time Pat Malone had him booked here, the September hurricane scared him away. But he's trying it again Nov. 4 in Civic Center. And during December at the Coliseum Pat hopes to present me imu on aowns.

uecner pass to Kher- The crunky spot passer took ror for 16 yards and another to Bergmeier over at the start of the second iwr Brvrn aiciea one arive to tne I ifle nine, but Littleford was unable to click on four passes. Another Vol threat was rirno uarnpra. period and tossed Auburn to naiteo on tne Tide 14 Just before the scoreless half ended. touchdown in 64-yard drive. The biggest yardage was made on a ran PERIOD r.llmer Ditched the Tide to a touchdown Tidwell pass to his end, big Bill ley as he spark drove to "the 8M.V 1J Where SMU took nv.r nn nwn.

within six minutes of the third quarter. He completed five in a row to Cadenhead and Cain to put the ball on the Tnnessee 11. KENTUCKY TAKES LEAD OVER VAN DY NASHVILLE, Oct. 18. (INS) Kentucky's Wildcats grabbed a 14 to 0 halftime lead over Vanderbilt today before an overflow crowd estimated at 22,000.

The Blue Grass eleven tallied a touchdown in each of the first couldn't sain and Green kicked over tr Gilmer got three at euard and Cadenhari piowea 10 a nrst down on Lh Jkce 34 as the half ended. Score; Southern Methodist 14. Rica O. carried over on the next plav. Morros converted.

Tennessee haltd another drive spearheaded by Gilmr's passes on the Tennessee one a tew sconds before the quarter ended uaddail, who shook off cue tacklers and bulled his way to the Tech 13 for an overall gain of 32 yards. THAT WAS all for Auburn although the plainsmen's line outfought the Tech forewall through the third quarter. But a pass de THIR PERIOD) SMU recovered a Rice fumhl wun Aiaoama leading v-u. fFOVRTII PERIOD) An Alabama drive bossed down on the most set up another touchdown late ia the third period. But on the Owl fnur.

Plt fumbled and althoum c.thrtdae remv.rMt suit Tennessee six and Morrow came in to kik a field goal from the 17-yard stripe. Two odiats couldn't puncture the Rir i'r. two quarters. i fense lapse that enabled Rabbit and Walker missed field soai front piays aiier me roiiowing kickoii Keeker passed to Bergmeier. who broke into the clear for a 3-yard cain.

Cadenhead George Blanche scored the ini ma ia. Remember Jackie Cranford, the Washington, D. heavyweight who gave Red Cameron a going-over in the stadium last winter? Well, Cranford is crashing Madison Square Garden. Sol Strauss, the Twentieth Century Sporting club fill-in for Mike Jacftbs, has signed Cranford with Olle Tandberg, the Big Swede, there Jan. 2.

Chris Dundee, the affable Baltimore fight manager, has Cranford and sees him as the possible if not probable successor to Joe Louis as m-orld champion. Graziano May Have To Fight Outside U. S. It begins to appear more and more each day that if Rocky Graziano Is to defend hi middleweight championship it will have to he on foreign shores Cuba, Mexico or even Europe. Against Tony Zale or Marcel Cerdan.

If it's in North America probably Zale will be the opponent; if in Europe probably Cerdan, the Frenchman who has built ut quite a reputation over there. The" Answer Maybe -To Hurricane Problem "What's the mater with the Hurricane's?" is still the No. 1 sporting question hereabouts. Even Jack Harding is casting about for the answer. Nor do the athletes themselves know.

So, certainly the "exprets" don't. Jordan to catch a 21-yard toss rOl RTH PERIOD PMTT mat riA.n ia h. t.M barely caught him on the Alabama seven. Tennessee drove up to the Tide one but lost it on downs. Another Tennessee tial six-point tally midway of the first period from the one stripe.

A seven-yard pass, Blanche to Sen- from Still, a ball that was deflected by an Auburn halfback, put Tech ahead three touchdowns drive was halted on the Alabama 29 a few plays before tha game ended. Alabama Unt with second strtnsera. sparked hr Prank Payne and Bill iloxley. dome thw work. The Owls held PMU four tiaa Inside the elaht-yard stripe and took over.

Passes to Stnckhrlde and iu, Tennessee u. to one. i- -y I'nr -v gel, gave Kentucky its second score late in the second chukker. The Engineers scored the clinch er after a pass was ruled complete Tar Heels Win On Indian Miscue Kentucky clearly dominated the ecause of interference on the Au- hitrn fnnr fdtK.ii'. fl.nriA) to the Rice 48 and Waimslev made enra but Green Intercepted Ei ken here's pass aa the PsfU 35 to end the threat.

Or kicked to the Rice 27 and Rote pasl Windell Williams for 4 yards but fVU braced and took over on Its 32 M.ix-.tr fumbled and Taylor recovered but rr Intercepted a pass behind his icoai bss as the same ended. Final score: Southcrs lexas Rambles To 21-6 Victory MEMPHIS. Oct. 18. vP Power-laden Texas kept its record clean and its national championship hopes alive today smashing surprisingly stubborn Arkansas, a Southwest conference fot, on rain-soaked Crump Field, 21 to 6.

MKST After two punt exchanges. Arkansas took the hall on Texas" 47. On the firt play. ArkansHS' Clvde Scott broke over left Kuard. cut back neatlv and raced 4T yards to a touchdown with the iwriod first-half play," piling up nine first downs to Vandy's three and gain i a pass to Patton for the touch WILLIAMSBURG, Oct.

18. down. Bob isorth kicked three extra points for Tech. Methodist 14. Rica 0.

(.3) North Carolina's Tar-Heels ing, 125 net yards rushing to Van-derbilt's eleven. (KIRST PERIOD) FIRST PERIOD) CIIARLKY CONERLY Ole Miss Passer took advantage of a fourth quar Kentucky drew first blood within seven Auburn was stopped at the Georei Tech 31 and on first down Frank Ziegler. Jacket soph fullback, broke over center minutes of play. George Blanda's pass to teuton ornKei was ruiea complete on van-derbilt's 13-vard line due to interference and ran to vards to score. Another Tech drive went 59 Tarda to a touchdown wit LOYAL LEGION RACE VICTOR Joe Brown passing the last four yards ter fumble to pave the way for a touchdown that gave them a 13-7 victory over William and Mary's Indians in a Southern conference gridiron battle before a capacity Farris picked up nine and Mosley made it first down on the one.

Blanda carried It over, then kicked the point. The period to oeorge Brodnax. Bobbv North kicked But I have a sneaking suspicion the answer is there and it isn't condition or bad wind. They, of course, might be contributing factors. However, Im offering the thought that some of the Hurricane key men are anything but kids, anything but flaming youths of 18 to 20 years old who love nothing better than to wham into a line with all their might, grab a football and run over the opposing tacklers.

Whitey Campbell, who enjoys a hot battle, who is a terror on the basketball courts, showed Friday night that a devil-may-care he first point but missed tha second and miitiiiCT miu. irnny Holland missed enaea wun Kentucky 7 to 0. SECOND PERIOD trv for noint from nt. Texas lecn led as tn period ended. 1-i-O.

SKCOND PERIOD Army Wallops VPI, 40 To 0 took the ensuing kickoff and. a ided by aide Vanderbilt continued Its drive at the start of the second ouater. hut the ipning penalty and a 20-yard run bv With Travis Tidwell throwlnr bullet crowd of more than 18,000 in Cary Kentucky line rose to stop the thrat five like passes to Ray Williams and Bill Wad dall. Auburn drove 80 yards to a touch' yaras snort or pay dirt. Kentucky got stadium today.

down. Tidwell lunged over from the two- yard line and Bull coenran converted dsperate drive under wav midwav in the period. After an exchange of punts had Riven the Wildcats the ball on their imuae is veryuseiui on tne gridiron, both offensively and de fensively. Neither team threatened in tha remainin It was William and Mary's first loss of the season and was the five minutes and Georgia Teen led at tne own At. jjick Martin.

Dopev Fhlns and nanoacK Jim tanady. moved rio yards to Arkansas' l.v But the Razorbacks held and the period ended with Arkansas leading. 6 to 0 SECOND PERIOD) Texas' Byron iiilory returned an Arkansas punt yards to the Kazorbacks' and In two minutes Texas was over with the ivini; touchdown. Knndall Clay went across from the one after runs of X. 14 and 2 yards Frank fines p'ace-kirked the point.

Texas took the ball on Its own 44 midway of lite ieriod and rolled 5A vards tn Another Jack Farris led an advance to the Vandy naix. ij-i. THIRD PF.RIOD While the ages are not listed in any of the U-M data, a check reveals that a dozen or more of Coach Harding's hopefuls are 24 Tar Heels' initial conference vie tofy. LAUREL Md Oct 18. Walter M.

Jeffords' Loyal Legion ran back to his winning effort last week in the Maryland Handicap to capture the 34th running of the $25,000 added Washington Handicap this afternoon. The three-year- six. inere a clipping penalty against the 'Cats halted them. A fw minutes later the Oenreia Tech missed a chance when Bobby pavia blocked Bobby Weaver' punt WEST POINT, N. Oct 18.

P) Army defeated Virginia Tech, 40 to 0, today, marking the 32nd consecutive game without defeat rvenlucKv men talllde their second touch at the Auburn three but lb Tigers Held down, with a 50-yard drive. Taking over jears oia or over ana some or them are key performers, i. and to wit: Harry Ghaul, Al Adler, Hal Shuler, Hal oJhnston, Al Kasulin, i me miniieia stripe, tne Wildcats traveled -ta distance in five plavs. Phelps and Purdue Romps On fourth down Norths attempted field goal was wide. Later an Auburn fumble gave Tech the ball on the Tiger 17 and tfojr xvenuiiv-A, cui rrawz, George uarneo, uui Dixon, Tony Yovicsin by Raymond Jones and Bubba Shand's for the Cadets tarns reeled off two 'Cat runs which carried to the Vandy seven, where Blanda Jim Still passed 14 yards to Bob Jorda BOSTON, Oct.

18 (.) Scorine for a score North's kick made it 20-7 lossea an aenai to seneel for tne marker. old galloped home an easy eight in every period, the rugged Boiler- for Teen as the period ended. tFOlRTH PFRIOm After a seesaw punting duel. Georri Diancne again Place-kicked the extra point Kentucky 14. Vanderbilt 0.

(THIRD PERIOD makers from Purdue, displaying lengths winner over Mrs. E. H. Augustus' Blue Yonder. King Rip Rowan.

Win field Scott and Amos Gillette were Army's sparkplugs, and the big Cadet line held Tech to three first downs. There may be others. Youngsters Really Show The Old Fire 4 ii. i an aounaance of power, routed an ana a lz-yaro pa-s from Bobhv Lavne to Max Bumj--ardner put the ball on Arkansas' one and Jones plunged over on fourth down. Ouess again kicked the pout.

Texas was threatening again when the half ended with the I onchorns lead-THIRD PERIOD Arkansas halted a Texns drive on its own 29 and the Razorhacks' Howard Hughes boomed a kick .4 vard to Texas' 28. But with Gillorv and Clay nickinc un Kentucky marched from Its own Tech started at Its own 43 and drove to tbe Auburn one-foot line but kwt the yard line to Vanderbilt's seven, only to Ranch's Bridal Flower, lone mem outclassed Boston university football team, 62-7 before a dismayed ball wnen Still rumbled. After a pasa interception at tbe Auburn 20. Tech got ber of the female sex 1 nthe event. lose ine dhji on a Boiler fumble recovered bv Jib Baughn.

The Commodores then gained two first downs but were forced to kick. The quarter ended with Ken- up krt-n, me icveiana oaseoauer ana former Hurricane end, was saying after the Rollins game, "it takes those 18 and 19-year-old kids to really go to town on a football field. They have the 11,446 crowd today at Fenway bark to tne Tiger lour ana scored on a pass. Mathews to Red Patton. on tha last was third three-quarters of a rarK.

iuckv in possession of the ball on Van play of the game. North's kick made ground yardage in short hunks, the Long-horns moved across field to Arkansas' 29 where th period with Texas leading derbilt's 33-vard line and the score Km. Georgia Tech 27, Auburn 7. it length farther back. She beat iuckt 11.

vanderbilt Ohio State Rally Ties Iowa 13-13 11 io o. AaHara TODAY'S DIVOT Amanecer, a stablemate, by fire lengths. Waddalt Lanham Pltil, me KiuDiuon, i lie win 10 win. Well, some of Harding's better players are married, have children, regard football as just a means to an education. Some of them had rather not get hurt Football is a rough, a bruising game and you can't stand back and try to protect yourself.

If you do. you lose. Penn State Rolls. STATE COLLEGE. Oct.

18. Rebels Top Wave NEW ORLEANS. Oct. 18. (JP) COLUMBUS, Ohio, Oct 18.

Loyal Legion picked up $20,100 Cannon Herring Poucdstone A dock Ps LK LT LG RO RT RE l.H RH Georgia. Tech Grit fin Davis Healv Hook Pope Slaten Brrxinax Southard Mathews Petit (Z) Unbeaten Penn State, slow in for his winning effort to boost his Chunkin' Charlie Concrly threw By DAWSON NEWTON (Advertising Director. Rnnrlco Corn.) AS TOLD TO BILL, WALLACE A few days before the September getting under way, took advantaee Ohio State came from nowhere in the final period today to score two touchdowns and hold Iowa's fa- William Jenkins Tldwll Cochran of Syracuse mlsnucs to unlrash three touchdown passes and scored once himself on a line buck today as the University of Mississinni its tremendous power and sain a KB Zeicler Inn K-ored Hawkeyes to a 13-13 dead- lifetime earnings to $63,265. Tha gelded son of Halcyon and war grey had previously accounted fr the Maryland and Potomac handicaps and dead-heated Talon in the Srnr bv Mriodl hurricane. I was playing the 18th hole at the Miami Country club trounced i ulane football team, r.K it A 40 to 0 victory today before 20,000.

It was State's fourth triumph of Aithiira 7 ft to 14. before a homecrownine ilock before a Western conference Touchdowns: Zeicler. Brodnax. Tidwell. tne season.

with Ross Young, Walter Davis of Miami and Charles Ceyala of Rio crowd of 40,000. crowd of "2-99S. i Patton. Jordan. Points after toucodowo North 3.

Cochran. Merchants and Citizens handican. Today's victory insured the Phila de Janeiro. Everything went on this the final hole, and I was the delphia-owned colt a bid to the last to hit from the tee, much to Maryland Jockey Club's Punlico my disgust, and my opponent's de It's the gay, carefree, single adolescents that give the most thrill-lag exhibitions. And Miami doesn't have too many of those.

If they do, they are not rated as first-stringers. I believe that is the biggest and best answer yet to the problems Harding, Morris, Dunn, et.ai. Stars As Juniors, Flops As Seniors For example, this team has enjoyed a couple of fine years, in 1945 and 1946. Well, they are getting older, thy're satisfied, they lack ambition, aggressiveness, as Harding himself admits on the latter. This year they're not so hot.

I remember a Georgia Tech team years ago that as a chiefly junior eleven was terrific. Everybody said the following season they'd wipe everything off the map; it would be murder on the goal line. But the Techs, as seniors well-satisfied with "All-Americans all," didn't fare so well. They'd grown older, lost their lire and ambition, didn't wish to hustle. Something could have happened to University of Miami's team.

special to be run on Oct. 3L light. My drive headed for the The largest crowd of the fall Yale Bows, 9-0, Before Wisconsin "NEW HAVEN, Conn, Oct W- vw I Sf i -iff'' .42 roadway and out of bounds. But no, the miracle happened. My ball hit the side of a big truck and bounded back on the velvet fair season, estimated at 22.000.

was on hand. Tbe gathering included many New Yorkers who made the tri? by special train when racing was way at least 300 yards down the declared off at Jamaica today. JV Wisconsin, on Lisle Black i. middle. My second was short of Loyal Legion was a prohibitive bourn's 22-yard field goal and Jim the green and after chipping past 'Embach's touchdown, removed Yale favorite with the "chalk" pLayera.

He paid $3.00 straight. The track tne pm about 10 feet, I holed for from the undefeated ranks, 9 to 0, a birdie four and all the pesos. today in the Yale Bowl before was "good for the early races but had dried out for the feature. The .65.000 fans. one mile and one-quarter was run in 2:03 2-5.

The Badgers dominated the sectional played in base ball weather. It was the first time in 20 games Ring Board Here Bars Graziano Fight, Hands La ken Suspension that Yale had failed to score and was a shock to most of the crowd Duke Topples Maryland, 19-7 DURHAM. N. Oct. IS.

gathered to see the Bulldog van quish the Badger. By CARL DILLOX (Miami Dallv News Slsff Urii.Fi Duke's- Blue Devils knocked the Navy Scores Win After Many Losses ITHACA, N. Yn Oct. 18. (JP) Miami Boxing commission yesterday definitely and University of Maryland from the unbeaten ranks today with a 13-7 I 'v-v rs.

-eN- omciauy its ioot aown on tne proposed battle between middleweight champion Rocky Graziano and Tony Zale here next winter. In'official language, released by being AWOL while in the army football victory before 15,000 sbirt-sleeved fans in the top Southern conference football game of the glad to give Taylor a hearing at its next meeting Wednesday. As mentioned in the Miami Daily News Friday, the commission also furthered Regan's power by giving the director the right to suspend any licensee, pending a hearing before the entire board. with so much of their time taken up with the Graziano-Zale and Kakcn cases, the commission once again postponed action on- the reallocation of dates to the three! Navy won its first football game since opening day in 1946 by downing Cornell today, 38-19, in their first visit to Ithaca. The largest crowd in Cornell history, 33,787 paid, watched in the 82 degree Billy Regan, director of boxing.

ana naa a aisnonorable discharge, the commission said it "will not The commission, meeting in a sanction a Zale and Graziano fight lonS executive session, also meted day. Duke, also unbeaten but once tied, scored in every period except the third. out a six-month penalty to Jack within its jurisdictional limits un i temperature. Laken, veteran fight manager, for Harvard Bests H. C.

CAMBRIDGE. Oct 18. local promoters. However, they promised the issue would be defi nitely settled next Wednesday. Harvard's injury-riddled forces re-; I bounded from a 47-0 routing by 4 'Virginia to defeat much heavier West Virginia Cops NEW YORK, Oct.

18 (5) West Virginia' undefeated Mountaineers shut out an undermanned Near York university feotball team. 40-0. today to hang up their fourth triumph before en estimated 6.000 fans at Yankee stadium. Rex Lam. gardner scored twice for the Mountaineers, once on a 36-yard run and JOE FREEMANvand Sam Wein- conduct detrimental to boxing." However, the board decided to restrict this suspension to the city of Miami alone, refusing to ask the NBA to extend it over its entire territory.

Chuck Taylor, welterweight contender and Laken's outstanding protege, was suspended penting a hear before the commission for disregarding the instructions of an der any circumstances" and Regan refused to comment further on the resolution which was seconded and passed unanimously. The ban, not entirely unexpected, added another serious handicap to the plans of Harry Voiler of Miami Beach, who has the two boxers signed to box Feb. 12 in Miami. REG AX, HOWEVER, admitted th commission had no further Information on Graziano other than that he had served a prison term stein, who have been promoting every other week, have asked for more dates which would cut down JP Wlrephoto WISCONSIN FIELD GOAL ATTEMPT FAILS on Dave White's weekly Holy Cross. 7-0, before a shirt-sleeved 35,000 crowd today at the stadium.

A 14-yard touchdown aerial from Chip Cannon to Johnny Fiorentino in the third period settled this New England classic, during which Holy Cross failed to make a serious scoring gesture. 1 The new plan probably will call NEW HAVEN, Oct. 18. Lisle Blackbourne (26), Wisconsin back, sends the pigskin up into the air (arrow) but his field goal attempt from Yale's 16-yard line failed in the first quarter here today. Jack Wink (25), Badger back, holds for the ball that's no longer there.

once on a 32-yard pass from Tons Keane, while the other four touchdowns were divided amonr the for each promoter to stage two official of the commission. Regan said the commissioners would be, shows every three weeks. West Reserves..

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