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Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 13

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Hartford Couranti
Location:
Hartford, Connecticut
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13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 29, 1966- Giles Binds Braves To Atlanta Court Rule i i i i i I ized the Braves to move te Atlanta provided they fulfill their contract in Milwaukee ending in 1965 and provided they entered into a 25-year lease in Atlanta to be approved by the NEW YORK President! Warren Giles of the National! League said Friday the league: has authorized the Braves to fulfill their obligation to Atlan-; ta and disregard a Wisconsin i court order that instructed the Willi Malice Toward By BILL LEE Sports Editor Ok league. Braves to prepare to play in Milwaukee this season. Following a three-hour meeting of NL club owners. Giles sairl thp IpaeiiA intpnrie tn ram. "This they did.

The league likewise expects the Braves to comply with the Atlanta lease as ordered by the Georgia court. "The league is confident that it will prevail in its legal position that the members of the National League were legally entitled in the exercise of their experience judgment to authorize the transfer of the Braves to Atlanta Expansion not Feasible Giles disagreed with Judge Roller's expansion proposal and said: "Expansion in 1966 is not fea pOOTBALL pro style reared its ugly head in a baseball gathering this week at Cheshire. Two big stories broke and the football yarn, while it did not get equal attention, caused no little conversational buzz-buzz. This was the surprising word that Captain Otto Graham was going to yield his stripes and accept a job as head coach of the Washington Redskins. Everyone who has had anything to do with Otto Graham since he came to Coast Guard Academy seven years ago ply with the order of a Georgia court which said the Braves must fulfill their contract with the Atlanta Stadium Authority.

"The league expects the Braves to fulfill the 25-year lease in Atlanta," Giles said. Questions Court's Power The league, Giles said, believes the Milwaukee County court has no power to grant "the very extradordinary and unprecedented injunctions re "1 WARREN GILES day in Winnipeg, Canada. All of the race was in sub-zero temperatures and Friday's run was in 27 below zero weather. The race finish officially opened the St. Paul Winter Carnival (AP Wirephoto).

DEEP FREEZE WINNER: Herb Howe, Minneapolis, crosses the finish line to win the 468-mile marathon snowmobile race Friday in SL Paul, Minn. The last leg was 74-mile run from St. Cloud, Minn. The race, with 58 machines and drivers started Tues will wish him well. This big time college and all-pro quarter sible, and operation in 1966 or quested by the Wisconsin At- mui back fitted nicely into the small time Connecticut picture.

IT WONT BE LIKE ROLLING OFF A LOG Not everyone will expect Graham to make it back to the top in professional football at least not right away. He is an tt i ni gar(1 ordm of courts before. Hot Slwntinn (ynnnecticuttorney9eneralvhich turned LLUV kJllUUllliy UllUVlUV quire the Braves t0 remain in, for them an(J sometirnes would be a disaster for every- one. excellent coach but tne "aa uui uaui.y. ixia sk, -w-i rm Mllwaukee ana 10 De neia tnere HnmnQ Cnlnnio WlVlO Q7J7d hostage until the National Milwaukee and to be held there woods are full of good ones.

It takes horses to win in the pro what happens here." "dU UI L. morning meeting with Commis- vvy m. tsw j. League expands unde italic cave nu uiuiaiivm vi what Wisconsin's next move cn dictated by the court. ,50.6 percentage whereas Col-i 'The National nied reports that the league had Leaeue Live Sports (hi (he Air Baskitballi Princiton vs.

Pinnsjlvinii at Princeton 2:00 P.M. Ch. 8, 12. 22 UCenn vs. Univ.

of Virmont 7:30 P.M. WTIC 1080 Golf i Julius Boroi-Giorgo Bayer vs. Bobby Nichols-Ray Floyd 4:00 P.M. Ch. 3, 12 Bill Casper vs.

Doug Sanders 5:00 P.M. Ch. 10, 22. 30 By BILL NEWELL Courant Sports Writer league even more than in col lege football. The NFL woods are over run with prime horses, too, made overtures to representa- jgate cooled off after a torrid tends vigorously to resist the, said "If what I hear is true and STORRS Senior forward first half and wound up shoot- Wisconsin action and has com- they are defying an order of the ves of a Milwaukee group Ken Libertoff, who had scored mg 45.5 on 30 of 67.

The comioence mat it win: court, I assume an attempt will Most of the clubs are better equipped in this respect than if ultimately Prevail. madff in murt vprv snnn lo dui id points in seven previous bounding was almost two to one Just 24 hours before. Judffe'trv tn nfnrrv thp nrHAr havelNL DENIED DELAY the bench games, came ott in Connecticut's favor, 62-34, the Washington neasKins. will not be easy for Otto Graham to Dick uo the reins and Elmer Roller of Milwaukee! some feeling that the courts ofiIN ANTITRUST SUIT scored 23 Friday night and points with a dazzling display Wltn Corley 8rabbIng 14 and County Circuit Court ordered, Wisconsin will not be quote MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) of jump shooting in leading the i Thompson 10.

the Braves to make tentative defied closed quote. Circuit Judge Elmer W. Roller plans to play their 1966 home The state of Wisconsin, in a rejected Friday a plea by the games in Milwaukee rather suit before Judge Roller, con-1 National Leaeue and its mem- University of Connecticut bas-jRitter For Steinberg ketball team to a runaway 97- with Ritter replacing sopho- 74 victory over Colgate. I more Bob steinberg the start. Libertoff canned 11 of 14 shots, pulled down seven mg lineup as the latter sat out Pistons Surprise Celtics than Atlanta.

He also ordered tends that the Braves move to'bers to delay the trial of Wis-the league to prepare an expan-Atlanta violates the anti-trust jconsin's baseball antitrust suit drive his team into a championship playoff, or even into titular contention. Graham's only association with coaching success at anywhere near the professional level is the stickout job he has done with the College All-Stars against the National sion plan which would include laws. Milwaukee franchise. bounds and made good his onlyje game wun a neavy coia, free throw (he's now nine for the Huskies quickly carved a Judge Roller, after hearing Atlanta Authority Backed Several weeks ago, the Superior Court of Fulton County, where Atlanta is located, order Tn rawfW nine at the foul line) as the BOSTON Giles' statement, said "I'm not making any comment at all." Steven Keane. sneeial rounspi Football League champions in 10-1 advantage before the visitors could manage a field goal, uuonns ronea to tneir sevemn career high of 29 points gave the annual mid-summer mad ed the Braves to meet their ob- 'victory in 13 games this win- OTTO GRAHAM ness at Chicago.

I the Detroit Pistons the impetus until June 1. Judge Roller ordered the trial to start the morning of March 7. "There is nothing to warrant an adjournment for that length of time," Judge Roller said. Earl Jinkinson, an attorney for the Milwaukee Braves, whose proposed transfer to Atlanta formed the basis for the suit, told the court "the time is too short and highly prejuducial to the defendants." and led at five minute intervals for Wisconsin in the case, saia! ligations as set forth in the con-throughout the first half, is a matter of persons who! tract with the stadium authori- This is perhaps the accomplishment that made the Redskins for a jo8-105 victory Friday; Four other Huskies scored in niPht over fhP Roslnn Celtics, double fieures in the one-sided 14-5. 32-19.

43-33. 55-45 at half- are SUDJe to tne jurisdiction of ty. eager to get Captain Graham's name on a coaenmg cumi who missed an nDDortunitv to contest which saw Connecticut: time the court deading whether they In a statement, Giles said: who missed an opportunity to time. are going to obey it. "The National League in No- gain ground the National jZi in the scor- 11,6 Huskl6S brke fr0m 3 have been other peo- vember, 1964, before the Mil- Basketball Association Eastern ing for the winners were Bill Pmt lead five minutes into the: pie who have decided to disre-l waukee suit was filed, author- GOOD ENOUGH COACH TO GET JOB DONE Obviously, if Graham can take a squad of comparatively green college football players and weld them into a unit good enough to carry the pro champions right down the wire and sometimes beat them, he is a good enough coach to do a job with experienced professionals.

Captain Graham did not set the small college New England wnrlH aflame at Coast Guard Academy. He did, however, fash Division race. Corley with 14 points, Wes second half to outscore the Red Strawder sparked Detroit into Bialosuknia with 13, Ron Ritter Raiders 16-3 in the next five a 12-point lead late in the second Wlin ana U1CK 1110II1PbUI1 minutes and wipe out any ele ment of a contest. Palmer Shoots 66, But Beard's 67 Good for Three-Shot Luckv Lead period and Ray Scott's two freejwltn throws with nine seconds re-Hot UConn Firing Colgate now has eight losses ion an overall winning record with a type material the average The Red Raiders were led its612 startSi Mninmff nc, AMrttH (tin niltl ovon rtnr tn nurinp sonni; i it: 10 amuiuous timege cuav-u v.v... -r veteran nm vigrabs wun id, Connecticut Colgate 74 Pt SAN FRANCISCO (AP) left for Palm Springs and! stroke to par at the 11th when 0 0 0 2 2 6 i 3 is Frank Beard, from the Blue next week's Bob Hope tourna- he hooked his tee shot to the 0 1 1 praC.tice a i a rnJ took Bill Russell out for a rest an with 17 as At Coast Guard Academy, the former Cleveland Browi, trailing 41 mid- they kept within shooting dis-Hesford quarterback did a top drawer job in every respect.

He will 'gnj uarter Stance for better than one-half a be missed there. His personnel at Washington will be enormously i fh on fine medium range Bialosuknia different, but the Redskin players won't be any stronger in! Tefoft built tnp! jump shooting. character than the young men Captain Graham was preparing; main. Connecticut's shooting pleased mcn left. Grass country, found San Fran- ment there.

1 1 Pt 4 4 12 Barrett 3 0 6 Blongiewicz 7 0 14 Brown 4 0 Calvert 5 3 13 Chambers 11 1 23 Clark 2 1 5 Oalzell 0 0 0 Vigrass 5 0 10 Zamat 2 0 4 Ryan Former U.S. Open champion Gene Littler had only a 74-72- 3 cisco greens to his liking again 2 ii i Friday when fine putting 1 brought him a four-under-par 67 i con for service in the United States Coast Guard. 146 and Canadian Al Balding a DETROIT 1M BOSTON 103 uuwu ui wnu Laiiic uui i Holowaty Pts ftn frirriH ujintor'c pvAninff tn Whitney FPU 1 I and a 133 total to lead the 74-73-147. I Scott iDeB'c'e SOME DIDN'T THINK HE WOULD STAY 1 000 Lucky International Open! A half-dozen challenged from 0 0 0 Tiffany Kenna 1 0 2 0 0 0 44 7 Totals watch the Huskies launch the; erer I 5 second half of their Coach Fred Shabel's squad con-' golf tournament at the mid-way; tie 138 scoring position Count me among those stunned by the news Graham was leaving the no-pressure surroundings of Coast Guard 11 21 Nelson 9 2 20 S'ldsb'y 11 29 Russell SS IK. Jones 2 0 4 S.

Jones. 5 0 10 Naulls 2 0 4 Sanders 0 0 0 Counts 5 1 11 Siegfr-d 101 Totals Academy for the dog-eating atmosphere of the National Pro-jjhi 2 nected on 44 of 87 shots for a point. inoiiipson, ueorge cay- The 26 year old pro from er and Terry Dill with 69s, Joe Louisville, who held a one Taylor with 68 and Al Mengert Pro Hockey Tresvant 4 3 2 1 Vaughn Totals 45 15 105 stroke advantage at the end of i and Joe Campbell with 70s. the first day, increased the lead 33 Break Par a van Rftwc fessional Football League. When Graham first took the Coast Guard job, I was mystified.

He kept talking about preferring the non-recruiting evenness of life at New London to the tormenting competition of the big time. Graham had played college football at North WARRIORS 114, HAWKS 104 ST. LOUIS Mo. (AP, RickjTo NYAC, 82-69 American League Cleveland 5. Hershey 3.

Springfield 4, Pittsburgh 0 Buffalo 3, Rochester 2 Eastern League Nashville 3, Greensboro 2. Knoxville 5, Charlotte 3. Clinton 6. New Haven 1. Johnstown 5, New Jersey 4 Long Island 1, Jacksonville 1 (lie, to three with his second great Thirty-three finished under round one which included par for 36 holes in quest of an birdie putts on the 16th and 17th $8,500 first prize.

It started out holes. to be $7,500 but television reve- Deadlocked in second place nues caused tournament offi- western, a member of the Big Ten group that is called tne tougn uai i CApiuutU 1UI au 111 going into Saturday third cials to boost the total first prize round were live pros, including money. est league in college football. He played with Cleveland in the the third period to pace the Sanl NEW YORK Special )-Wes-All-American Conference and when that league folded was a Francisco Warriors to a 114-104 went t0 bat for the first key member of the Brown team that continued to dominate jCOmeback victory over the St. time since Jan and ran out the pro football world.

Louis Hawks in a National Bas-Lf gas agajnst the New York After five or six years of watching Graham remain happy I ketball Association game Fri-'AC qUjntet Friday night The at Coast Guard Academy, I began to think he hadn't been kid-1 day night. 'college grads won 82-69 in the ding about wanting to escape the pressures of win-or-else. It Barry's effort enabled the exhibition eame which saw the College Hockey- Ken Venturi, the 1964 U.S. Open! Mowry, Jerry Steelsmith and He birdied the 16th and 17th with his putts of six and four feet. "I only missed two greens and never was in serious trouble," he said.

"I hit all my shots well except the hook tee shot on the sixth and 11th." Leaders: Frank Beard 66-67133 Ken Venturi 68-68136 Mike Souchak 68-68136 Raymond Floyd 69-67136 Larry Mowry 67-69134 Dave Ragan 69-67136 Tom Weiskopf 68-69137 Rocky Thompson 69-49 13 Terry Dill 69-69138 Joe Taylor 70-68 138 Al Mengert 68-60138 George Bayer 69-69138 Joe Campbell 68-70138 Jay Dolan 70-69139 Dudley Wysong 70-6913? Miller Barber 73-66139 Arnold Palmer 73-66139 Harold Kneece 67-73140 Ken Townes 71-69140 Ken Still 71-69140 Bill Martindalt 72-68140 Doug Sanders 72-68140 Billy Casper 70-70140 Steve Reid 74-66140 Chuck Courtney 72-68140 Dutch Harrison 71-69140 Jack Burke 70-70140 Dick Sikes 69-71140 Steve Oppermann 70-71141 Doug Ford 73-68141 George Knutson 73-68141 Jim Ferriell 70-71141 Dan Keese 70-71 Ul Charles Siffohrd 70-72142 Jerry Steelsmith 67-75142 Joel Goldstrand 68-74142 Lou Graham 72-70142 George Archer 73-69142 Larry Mancour 74-68142 Frank Wharton 68-65143 Bob Goalby 72-71143 Rex Baxter 71-72143 John Lotz 73-70143 Dow Finsterwald 69-74143 Dick Lytle 70-73143 San Reynolds 76-67143 Terry Wilcox 72-71143 Billy Maxwell 72-71143 Babe Hiskey 73-70143 Howie Johnson 69-74143 Bill Ezinicki 68-75143 Buster Cupit 71-72143 Michigan 3,. Michigan Tech 1. Boston College 5, Colgate 4. Salem, Mass. State 5, Oswego, N.Y.

State 4. Minnesota 6, Michigan State 5, overtime. Salem, Mass. State 5, Oswego State Hockey Club 4. an Ul us wuu ucucvcu utanaiu wuuiu nut icuiam aii vvarriui IU LUC JUU Ul PoHinole oaHma champion now on a comeback.

Harold Kneece had deadlocked He learned much of his game at 67, one stroke off the pace, at this Harding Park Municipal after the first round. Mowry Golf Course, where his dad runs stayed near the top but Kneece the pro shop. shot 73 for 140 and Steelsmith a Venturi shot a 68 for his 136, 75 for 142. as did Mike Souchak. Raymond Beard goes into the third Floyd and Dave Ragan put 67s round nine strokes under par.

'II VUUlltLlt-LlL, VC11 UlllCllO l.dUlllg wiping out a 15-point lead held 35.34 at the half by St. Louis early in the second Th Yo New London had been wrong. HOW WILL GRAHAM PLAY IT NOW? quarter. The Warriors started ft intermission into 1 1 a it 1 ii il i 1. eft College Basketball inow suaaeniy ana unexpectedly into is gone.

He is me mira penoa iraniug vo-ov 1Q jnt egj an)j maintained 1. I.J I t. 1. ,1 l.l 1 I 1 1J AO 04 ..1 IIih nfld neduea oauK 10 me mat-isiroin in wnicn a coacn rnusi win or 1 anu icu 00-01 ai me cnu. Connecticut 97, Colgate 74 unneciicuT ft, loigaie i Fairleigh-Dickinson, Madison, 86, Suf- Slong With Opening 69s While ST.

LOUIS 104 firnH ac linpAromnnirmclv ac pArnnratinn wrtnlrl fir thl 5AM FRAN. 114 Pt MJt UJ UllVt.1 1' 1 1 1I U.J li I. a v. Ub.VI. UU'VJ V- BFPt folk 66.

a commanding bulge the rest of the way. John Werle, Wesleyan ace, hit for 25 points but picked up his guy wno Drusnes out me executive oitices ana sweeps airtiMties 3 2 0 1 1 5 1 11 Larry Mowry shot a 69 on his second round after opening with 67. Barry SAeschery Neumann Thurmond under the boss's rug. Graham yielded to the lure of heavy pressure football after all. Well, who could resist $50,000 and fringe benefits, which the io 28, fourth personal foul just before 6 5 17 Tim Weiskopf of Columbus, 3 21 Beaty 12 14 38 Bridges 2 7 11 Guerin 4 1 9 Haqan 11 3 25 Wilkens 0 1 1 Caldwell 3 0 6 Thorn 10 2 Tormohlen 0 1 1 Washngton 42 30 114 Totals Erickson He collected his first second-round birdie at the second hole when he dropped a 12-foot putt.

He added another from eight feet on the third hole. On the sixth, he hooked into the trees, chipped off and missed a six-foot putt for a bogey five. After a part on No. 7, he fin Ohio, shot a 68-69, for a 137 Redskins are supposed to be guaranteeing a man who will now Mciemor I jthe half ended. That meant he i 2 1 had to play with caution there- 3 0 anrl thic hurt iha Tarrls total.

be asked to build a winning team in a city that hasn had a Rodqers fcv, uiiu viiiu diua. tiv vu Sunny, warm weather again 40 24 104 6ERS 125, ROYALS 103 PHILADELPHIA (AP) The helped pros give par a pasting on the par 36-35 course, extending 6,692 yards on a peninsula edged on two sides by Lake Morris Harvey 109, Davis Elkins 80. Miami 101, Florida Southern 80. Bryant, (Providence) 110, Babson 62. Canton Tech 86, Alfred Tech 83.

Lynchburg 67, Old Dominion 61. Rutgers of South Jersey 86, Frost-burg, 72. Georgia Tech 88, Arkansas 75. New York AC 82, Wesleyan 69. Chicago Loyola 102, UCLA 96, overtime Beloit 103, Lawrence 77 Univ.

of Buffalo 117, Plattsburgh State 94 RPI 79, Potsdam State 68 Knoxville 119, Morehouse Of Duquesne 78, Ttilelo 60 Arizona 94, Stanford 54. Hiram 66, Allegheny 48. Clemson 70, Virginia 69. Georgetown 98, Mexican Olympics 16. Belmont Abbey 93, Wofford 70.

Colorado St. 91, Montana State 62. Hampton Inst. 91, Delaware State 49. St.

Peter's, N.Y. 93, Seton HII 82. Jersey City State 75, Pace 53. Wyoming 113, New Mexico St. 80.

under the boards. West Hartford's Dick Stabnick caged 16 points for the winners and teamed with Werle as the Cards built a six point lead be- ished his first nine with two Philadelphia 76ers, paced by Wilt Chamberlain's 43 points, winner in 21 years nor a league championship since 1942. We wish him luck and he will need it. Otto Graham has the talent to put the Redskins back on top but it is not going to be easy. And one wonders whether Coach Graham will send In every play or let the quarterback call them the way Otto himself yearned to call plays back in the period when the domineering Paul Brown sent in all the strategy from the sidelines to a quarterback named Otto Graham who burned because the coach treated him like an automaton.

Merced. more birds, dropping an 18-foot putt at the eighth hole and an eight-footer at the ninth. wallooed Cincinnati 125-103 Fri- fore intermission day night, virtually deadlocking Larry Rafferty, former Fair the Kentuckian lost one (Gary Bill 72-71143 field collegian, had 19 points for the AC and Ben Schnappauf, three teams for the National Basketball Association's East Arnold Palmer and two others toured the course in 66. Arnie admitted he was "somewhat frustrated" to start with a 31 and wind up reducing the leader's margin by only one stroke. ern Division lead.

who played for Manhattan, caged 16 points. CINCINNATI Pt NEW YORK AC 12 WESLEYAN 9 4 6 18 Palmer's second round left Terrell Refused License; NY Fight with Clay Off NBA Pt Pt Kenya's Featured Keino Withdraws From BAA Games Tonight on Orders PHILA. Jackson Walker Chmbrl'n Greer Jones 1 Rafferty Schanpauf A Mullen Zaccagna him at 139, as did Miller Barber's 66. Steve Reid wound up in a group at 140. Officials slashed the 144-man field to below 70 for the Satur- 4 1 5 3 3 5 3 3 2 Detroit 108, Boston 105.

San Francisco 114, St. Louis 104. Philadelphia 125, Cincinnati 103 Scholastic Skiing Choate 99, Jonson 90. 12 1 25 7 2 16 3 1 7 2 0 4 2 0 4 2 0 4 1 1 3 1 0 2 Pt. 4 3 11 Lucas 5 11 Hawkins 19 5 43 Embry 7 5 19 Robertson 4 2 10 Smith 10 2 Hairston 6 3 15 Dlerking 2 0 4 McGlocklin 2 0 4 Wilson 4 2 10 Thacker Twyman 52 21 125 Totals Bianchl Link Cunningham NEW YORK Iff) Ernie Ter- on the application was behind 1 19 Werle 7 3 16 Stabnick a 2 14 Bensinger 4 3 11 Mayer 2 3 7 Beik 2 0 4 Ryan 1 1 3 Davidson 10 2 Mannel 0 0 0 Rainey Emerson 34 14 12 Totals da's Bill Crothers in the run and John Pennell In 0 10 0 a 0 6 0 4 Cole Markquard Steincke Thaxter closed doors.

rell, the World Boxing Associa- Ward Ward Gambee Totals 1 0 2 Scholastic Wrestling 5 4 14 40 23 103 the pole vault. Crothers, undefeated in seven Boston starts, will risk his string 1 0 1' Conard 28. Eastern 17. 35 5 69 1 Manchester 26, Glastonbury 19. Totals day and Sunday rounds.

It tookjtions heavyweight cham- golfer to stay in and one ama-r teur, Guy Bill of Oakland, Calif. cense in New York Fndav and made it with a 72-71 for 143. a proposed March 29 title bout E. J. Hickox Dies, Ex-Basketball Coach SPRINGFIELD, Mass.

UP) -Edward J. Hickox, retired Although Raymond Lee of Lockport, N. one of the three commissioners, had to leave before the decision was announced, Chairman Melvin Krulewitch said the ruling was unanimous. The investigators said: "The association of Ernie Terrell with Bernie Glickman in the Some big BOSTON iff) -Kipchoge Keino, the Kenyan cop who was scheduled to run the two-mile race as a feature of Saturday night's Boston Athletic Association meet, was forced to withdraw Friday. Keino, who won the mile in a disappointing 4:03.9 in New '-York's Millrose Games Thursday, received a telephone call from the Kenya Athletic Commission instructing him to return to Africa immediately, "They want me to come home names went out, with Cassius Clay at Madison Square Garden went out the window.

Harry Markson, Garden boxing director, had planned to Springfield College coach and member of the Naismith Me including Don Massengale, who last Sunday stood off a Palmer charge to win an $11,000 prize in the Bing Crosby tournament by one stroke. Massengale carded a 76-72 against an international held that includes Volker Panzer of Germany, Jan Kasal of Czechoslovakia and Keith Forman of the Quantico Marines. Meet Director Will Cloney looks for a record in the pole vault. The record is 16-lVi and Pennel previously eclipsed that mark in the Garden. Uelses vs.

Pennell Matched against Pennel will be defending champion Mel morial Basketball Hall of Fame, died Friday at Springfield Hos i 4u entertainment field and in the Terrell-Clay fight fpsssinnfll hnxirl(T ovpr pital. He was 88. Hickox, whose basketball of years is detrimental to the right away," Keino said in New with a middleweight championship bout between Dick Tiger and welter champ Emile Griffith. The show hinged on teams compiled a record of 209 victories and 85 losses in a 16-ycar span, retired in 1943 afler Springfield Blanks Pittsburgh by 4-0 SPRINGFIELD, Mass. Uh York.

"I wanted to run in Boston, but I have to do what I'm 76res Must Pay Royals $5,000 For Non-Arrival in Cincinnati PHILADELPHIA (UPI) The Philadelphia 76ers have been ordered by the National Basketball Association (NBA) to pay the Cincinnati Royals $5,000 for failing to appear for a game there last Saturday, owner Irv Kosloff said Friday. Snow grounded the 76ers in Cleveland and they were unable to proceed to Cincinnati, Kosloff said. He added he plans to appeal the fine to NBA president J. Walter Kennedy. Pepper Wilson, Royals' general manager, told Kennedy the Royals had sold nearly 9,000 tickets for the game, which will be made up at a later date.

Wilson claimed the 76ers could have taken an earlier plane and beaten the snow. Kosloff said his team left Philadelphia by plane before noon on the day of the game because it had played the previous night. A flight about 4 hours earlier was available but would have given his players only a few hours sleep, Kosloff said. The flight was rerouted from Pittsburgh to Cleveland because of snow. More snow stranded the 76ers at Cleveland.

best interests of professional boxing." Terrell had fought in Nevy York previously but his license expired last September, and Hein, a teammate from the Cal 21 years at Springfield. approval of Terrell's application by the New York State Athletic Since his retirement, Hickox The Springfield Indians cooled ifornia Striders; John Uelses of Philadelphia, Bob Seagren of Mt. San Antonio College, Klaus Lehnertz of Germany and Ru has worked toward construct Commission. Markson said hejwas not renewed at the time. off the Pittsburgh Hornets, 4-0, Glickman, a Chicago boxinir ion of a Hall of Fame building on the Springfield campus would have to think it over for a few days before making his an American Hockey League game Friday night.

figure, had advised Terrell in dolf Tomasek of Czechoslovak FIRST PERIOD: 1, Springfield. White next move. connection with theater and ia. where Dr. James Naismith vented the game.

told." Permission Withdrawn Keino originally did not have Boston on his schedule during his visit to the United States. He accepted an invitation later. Permission was withdrawn Friday by the Kenya group that governs amateur athletics In that country. His withdrawal was a maor disappointment for the meet, (Kilreal, 2:08. Penalty-Goegan 12:55.

rof. Second Period: None. Penalties-KII night club appearances of a group known as the Heavy real, Jarrett Wood 18:29.1 Terrell. Who had finished a Laurel Pin Event Off The Annual Laurel City Open, MIAMI, Fla. (UPI) Train Third Period: 2.

Springfield, Rolfe (Kllrea, Plager), 1:58. 3, Sprlnglleld, An-iU'SlU Club appearance in CtllCa- er Homer T. (Casey) Hayes derson, (Plager, Kllrea), 4, Spring. Thursday, appeared before originally scheduled for Saturday has been canceled accord tield, Locas, 13:16. Pena es-Whlte, r.

1 1 26. the commission with two law- weights. Terrell said he had terminated this association, had never been managed by Glickman and had no manager at the present time. uses sugar-cane pulp for the bedding of his Meadow Stable ing to a notice received from Jyers, Elmer Gcrtz and Malcolm horses' at Hialeah Park. and put the spotlight on headquarters.

iwood 7 4 -2o Brown, of Chicago. The neanng.

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