page twenty-four gridiron powers attempt to retain high … 23/rome ny daily sentinel/ro… ·...

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PAGE TWENTY-FOUR DAILY SENTNEL, ROME, N. Y. t THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 20,1958 WRUN AM—1150 • WRUN FM—106 Fronds Regan'i Sports Views and Reviews RFA Penalized More Than 3 Opponents For the benefit of anyone taking aeriously the pur- ported •Rome fan" letter to a Syracuse newspaper con- cerning questionable officiating at RFA football games. the seasons recapitulations show that Rome suffered more lost yardage on penalties than the visitors in three of its sewn home games this year. Neither Auburn nor Whitesboro lost a single yard here through penalties in games in which Rome was penalized 40 yards and New Hartford lost only 10 yards to 30 for RFA In RFA's only road game with Mont Pleasant, Schen- ectady official* walked off 10 yards in penalties against RFA and 55 against the Dorps. Officials Appointed by Commissioner For one as unversed in the rules as Mr Gajewski's correspondent who apparently is unaware that the pass in- terference penalty in high school differs from the pros and college in that the 15 yard penalty is assessed from the spot at which the play started, it is pointless to debate football officiating, ethics or sportsmanship. For those unfamiliar with the situation, however, it should be clarified that officials at high school games in this area are appointed by their own chapter commission- er. Schools do not request specific officials nor do they re- ject those assigned to the contests, once their names have been approved from a pre-season list. . Anyone who saw RFA come from behind on two oc- casions to tie the Syracuse city champions, the last time going 52 yards in 10 plays, realize that the visitors* bark was worse man their bite. Granted that Paul dciarelli was" a standout high school performer, CBA could hardly be considered the equal of this year's UFA team. The truth of the matter is that Syracuse high school football, on the whole, is hardly on a par with the brand played by most schools in this area. If CBA excels in any particular department it must be as alibi artists at which Coach Walter Ludovico proved a Gridiron Powers Attempt to Retain High Rating Afternoon Basketball Here Rome Free Academy will try something new this sea- son by scheduling all its home basketball games as after- noon contests. The court campaign opens with a game at New Hart- ford on Dec 5. The out-of-town games will be played at mght Last season playing at night. RFA averaged only 27 adults and less than 150 students at the basketball games in Laurel St. School. Under a new plan at which a 25 cent game ticket also will provide student admission to simultaneous volleyball matches, ping pong and badminton engagements as well as dual swimming and wrestling meets, the school authorities hope for larger patronage by the students. All home games here will start at 4:30 o'clock and in- clude in addition to the varsity contests at Senior High School gymnasium, a JV game at George R. Staley School and freshman games in Laurel St. School. The high school has seating accommodations for 500. There are 1,200 seats at Laurel and 500 at Staley, Rome's first home date Dec. 9 with Oneida includes basketball competition for the varsity, jayvees and fresh- The complete schedule: December S, at New Hartford 9, Oneida 13, UFA 17, at S t Francis 19, Carthage January T, Proctor 9, at Whitesboro f 14, Herkimer 16, Utica Catholic 23, 30, 4. 6. 11. 13. IS. 20. 27. January at Oneida New Hartford February at UFA St. Francis Canastota at Proctor Whitesboro at Utica Catholic at Carthage Ball Players Want Slice Curly Smart Drives Pacer Of TV Money f 0 Upset Win Syracuse Favored By Seven By DR. ALLEN N SMITH With the oh;ps down from c-oast to coast, next Saturday's games will find tho lending teams in col- lege football in a last gasp at- tempt to retain their high ratings. This will probably hold true at Houston where Texas Christian, No. 9 in the Smith Touchdown Tendency System of Rating*, grapples with Rice in a struggle which the latter has been point- ing for all year. In this showdown affair, the System sees Texas Christian overpowering the Owls by 7. seventh • ranked Iowa handing Another thriller should result in Notre Dame, the System's No. 11 club, a 7-point defeat. In this fray, traditionally a keen vendet- ta, both teams possess tremen- dous touchdown tendency poten- tials, but the Hawkeyes have the edge in defense and reserve strength. The game is to be tele- cast nationally. In addition to the Iowa City bat- tle, Purdue is rated two touch- downs superior to Indiana in their "Old Oaken Bucket" feud, and Northwestern is calculated to edge Illinois by 6 in another old neighborhood rivalry. Dartmouth Picked The eastern spotlight will be focused on the Princeton - Dart- mouth clash. The Indians are rat- ed a bare one-point advantage In another tradition - steeped struggle, Harvard can down Yale by 7. At Chapel Hill, N.C., Duke and North Carolina collide in the At lantic Coast Conference game of the day. The Tarheels are given a 7-point advantage. In other Southern stadia, eighth- ranked Auburn is 21 point choice over Wake Forest, South Carolina is expected to subdue N.C. State by 7, Tennessee is a 6- point pick to trip Kentucky, and second - ranked Louisiana State can defeat Tulane by 14. In the top intersectional tilts, it's Miami (Fla.) over Houston by 1, Gemson by 6 over Boston Col- lege, and Syracuse by 7 West Virginia. The Southwest conference is as wide - open as its spaces. In one of this week's top contests, South- ern Methodist should gain a 2- touch-down decision over Baylor. MAJOR GAMES Winner Loser Margin Air Force — New Mexico —19 Alabama — Memphis State _20 Arizona State — Arizona — 2 0 Arkansas — Texas Tech — 1 9 Auburn — Wake Forest —21 Boston U. — Connecticut — 1 3 California — Stanford 8 Clemson — Boston Col. 6 Col. of P'fic — San D'go St. _41 Colorado — Colo St. U 13 Dartmouth — Princeton — 1 Davidson — Furman 6 Detroit — Dayton 7 Florida — Fla. State 7 Georgia — Citadel 20 Harvard — Yale 7 Holy Cross — Marquette 8 Iowa — Notre Dame 7 Lehigh — Lafayette 6 Louisiana State — Tulane __11 Alley Aties JOHN DONOVAN and JIM HORIGAN, GAFB Men's Lea- gue, 243 and 629. DON CIERI and NICK SERINO, Major League, 226 and 628. JACK BERG and DANNY GUGGI, Tradesmen's Lea- gue, 235 and 618. TOM DE VITO. Material Control Coed, 239 and 616. CAROL SCHILLER, Ma- terial Control Coed, 235 and 614. BILL PRICE and BILL HINTON, Manufactur- ing Men, 225 and 585. PAT CARMELLA and JIM MANTON, National League, 223 and 585. BOB ROSEN and JOE GRAZIANO, Service Clubs League, 219 and 581. H. TIERNEY and CHAR- LIE BROOKS, Y o u n g Bus- inessmen's League, 211 and 580. STAN CHILKOTOWSKY and CARL SAMSEL, Odd Fellows League, 222 and 576. STAN SCHWARTZ, Pro- curement Coed, 222 and 573. JOHN DONOVAN, Six Aces League, 221 and 572. PEGGY NOLE, Procure- ment Coed, 189 and 537. HELEN ZYGAS and BERT GAWARECKI, Rainbow League, 202 and 485. ERNESTINE CROZIER and JOSEPHINE CHILKO- TOWSKY, Girls Independ- ent League, 174 and 483. ESTELLE ROSS and ESTHER SELL, GAFB Offic- ers Wives League, 173 and 477. S. RODEN and ANN STEL- LATO, Gliders League, 158 and 420. A. CAPPONI, Fair Ladies League, 147 and 393. Coach Won't Compare Two Stars MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Com- ers 1 Rome Girl Among 8 With 600s Eight 600 scores, including 614 series for Carol Schiller, subbing in the Material Control Coed League, marked an eve- ning of heavy maple mauling here last evening. For Miss Schiller, an Air Base employee here, the series was the ninth of her bowling career and the third she has posted here this season. She had a 609 in the Girls All-Star League last Friday and a 604 for the Women of the Moose early last month. All three scores were rolled at the King Pin Lanes. Jim Horigan of the GAFB Men's League was Wednesday's top scorer with 629. Three other league mates, Sam Bell (617), John Donovan <609) and Hank Krull (602) also finished among the leaders. Donovan, whose 243 was the league and city single high last night, also copped honors in the Six Aces League where he roll- ed 221 and 572. Nick Serino was a close run- nerup to Horigan. Rolling in the Major League he finished with a 628, 10 points higher than Danny Guggi's 618 in the Tradesmen's League. Sharing Material Control Coed laurels with Miss Schiller was Tom DeVito whose 239 and 616 headed the men's scoring. Miss Schiller's series included the ladies high game of 235. The scores: GAFB Men'* League Duffy's Tavern 2, L a u r e l Homes 1 Ferlo's Bakery 3, King Cole 0 Utica Club 2, Tubby's Lounge 1 Coleman Brothers 2, Rome TV Center 1 Northern Lights Restaurant 2, Jack's Cleaners 1 Bravo's Poultry Market 2, Rome Electronics 1 Major league Rome Insurance 2, Jet Clean- Lonesome End's Step-Father Works With Navy Brass Carpenter Plays for 'Wrong pare Elgin Baylor with George r Mikan? The man doing the neat profes- sional job of sidestepping that one is Coach Johnny Kundla of the taurant 1 Rubino's 2, Ryan Motors 1 Bottini Funeral Home 2, Lupica Brothers 1 Sports Center 2, Walker's Res- Minneapolis L a k e r s , a battle- scarred vet of 11 years in the Na- tional Basketball Assn. "They're two different kinds of players," Kundla said. Tradesmen's League Jewel Box 2, Les Clemens 1 Ulrick's 3, Chick's Tavern 0 Jim's Restaurant 2, Rosch's 1 Rome Rams 3. J. Carello and 'the man amazes me," saidS° ns 0 NEW YORK (AP) - Major league baseball players want a slice of the radio-television money melon, and apparently they won't take no for an answer. - One of the 16 player represen- tatives told The Associated Press Wednesday the players already have discussed "the possibility of taking drastic action," should their demand for a 25 per cent cut be turned down by the dub owners. The player, who asked not to be identified, declined to say what such drastic action might be. League representatives Robin Roberts and Eddie Yost have been authorized to ask the own- ers for a quick reply to their de- mand when the major leagues meet next month at Washington. The players are asking for a slice of regular season revenues They already receive 60 per cent of the 3% million dollars baseball receives for TV and tadio rights to the All Star game and World Series. That cut goes to the play- ers'fund. Player representatives will meet in Washington Dec 1 to decide a course of action. A report sent to all major i than a lOmillion-dollar increase league players by their attorney,tin the clubs' gross income from •j, Norman Lewis, showed more'1950 through 1956. Kundla. "To think that a rookie could lead the club in points, as- sists and rebounds even at this stage of the season! And be way up among the leaders in the league to boot. "I had a lot of hopes for him when he came to us from Seattle University. But I didn't dream he'd take hold so fast." The 6-5 All-America college star has come onto the pro scene like a volcano. In 12 games he has averaged 23.8 points a game, snagged an average of 16 rebounds and made about five assists a gamp. "He's been in the league for 10 games and he's already one of the 10 best players," said Coach Fuzzy Levane of the New York Lakers B. J. Lucarelli 2, King Pin 1 Deming Trucking 3, Surace's 0 Material Control Coed Blackfeet 4, Commanches 0 Apaches 4, Shawnees 0 Mohawks 3, Chippewas 1 Sioux 4, Cherokees 0 Manufacturing Men Personnel 2, Receiving 1 Steel Tube 2, Tool and Die 1 Shipping 3, Tool Room 0 Laboratory 2, Forge 1 Engineers 2, Traffic 1 Service Clubs League B'nai B'rith 3, Spoilers 0 Acme Two 2, Jaycees 1 Kiwanis One 2, Optimist One 1 Optimist Two 2. Kiwanis Two 1 National League Selrite 3, Record Shop 0 MESA 2, Stanwix Market 1 Hyde's 2. Feole's 1 Rome Musical Club 2, Bosco's City Service 1 Young Businessmen's League Simpkin's 3, Sears - Roebuck 0 Goldberg's 2, Rome Strip Steel 1 Star Bottling 2, Acme I r o n Works 1 Lee Center Inn 2, Kobus Grill 1 Odd Fellows League Past Grands 3, Conductors 1 Noble Grands 4, Wardens 0 Chaplains 3, Vice Grands 1 Procurement Coed Hustlers 3, Mysteres 1 Spitfires 4, Spads 0 Sabre Jets 4, Scorpions 0 Gooneybirds 4, Lightnings 0 Mustangs 3, Thunderchiefs 1 Thunderbirds 3, Fokkers 1 Delta Daggers 3, Green Quails 0 Jets 3, Starfighters 1 Six Aces League California House 2, Ozalid Prod- ucts 1 Canterbury Press 2. Gryziec Capoccia 2, Team One 1 Rainbow League Kobler's Dairy 2, Blue Valley Inn 1 Parker's 2, Greenbrier 1 Mapledale 2, White Front 1 Rome Collision 2, Bowling Cen- ter 1 Girls Independent League Open Kitchen 2, Margo Studio 1 Chick's TV 2, Atlas Auto 1 Barney's 2, Washington Bar- bers 1 GAFB Officers Wives GoofbalLs 2, Fireballs 1 Pin Pacers 3. Scuttlebutts 1 Spotters 3. Sparrows 1 Alley Cats 3, Weaklings 1 Roly Polys 2, Shadows 2 Four Spares 2, Comets 2 Gilders League Ann's 3, Uvanni's 0 Mary Dees 2, Acchino's 1 Zullo's 3, Stewart's 0 Fair Ladies League Jewel Box 3, Telephone Co. 0 Rebisz Insurance 2, St. Gregory 1 La Petite 2, Engelbert's 1 SPRINGFIELD. Pa. (It - Bill Carpenter, Army's Lonesome End, may be lonely on the foot- ball field, but at least he's among friends. His step • father, Cliff Dunn, is lonesome, too — in a hotbed of hostility. The breadwinner of'the Dunn family, residents in this Dela- ware county suburb of Philadel- phia, spends his working hours surrounded by Navy brass. He is a civilian budget officer at the Philadelphia Navy Yard. "Imagine what my life Js down there," he said the other day. "The Navy people complain that I didn't see to it that Bill went to Annapolis, Then, with the Army - Navy game coming up, everyone thinks I have hundreds of tickets. It makes life pretty terrible." Cliff married Bill's mother, Helen, several years after the Lonesome End's father was kill- ed while serving as a Pfc in the 99th Infantry in Europe in 1945. Bill was six years old when s «s father, William Stanley Carpenter Sr., an automobile salesman, en- tered the Array in 1943. Cliff, a former Army officer and a University of Delaware graduate, and the former Mrs. Carpenter have rooted for Bill through grade, high and prep school. And just because the weekly family paycheck comes from the Navy Department, the D u n n s haven't stopped rooting for their Army son. Bill p a s s e d the West Point exams twice. "Col. Red Blaik (Army coach) heard that Bill's father was killed in action," says Mr. Dunn. "He made no demands on Bill but he mentioned that as a son of a sol dier killed in action Bill was en titled to a Presidential appoint ment. "To get that appointment it meant taking the examinat'ons all over again. Col. Blaik explain- ed that in qualifying for the Pres- ident's appointment, the coneres- sional appointment would be made available to some other boy. Bill made it possible for some other boy to get there by taking a second examination That's the kind of a boy he is.' Blaik had little to fear that Car- nenter would miss out because Bill had excelled in his studies at Springfield Hia;h, where he cap- tained the football, basketball and track t e a m s , and at Manlius S c h o o l in New York where he prepoed a year before going to the Military Academy. In the "beast barracks," where academy Plebes are quartered, Bill's roommate was Boh Ander- son, now star right halfback of the Cadets. They have remained close friends ever since and both are looking forward to appoint- ments as paratroop officers (sec- ond lieutenants) when they leave West Point in 1960. The Dunns live in a spacious home they say Is almost as lone- some as Army's Lonesome End | formations. When Bill went to school here friends were always barging in and out. Mrs. Dunn, an attractive wom- an, wears the jeweled pin which Cadets usually give their best girls. "At this point," says Mrs. •THAT'S MY BOY' — Mrs. Helen Dunn's smile reflects her pride as she holds a trophy won by her son, Bill Carpenter, Army's lonesome end and former Manlius School athlete. Bill's dad was killed in action and his mother remarried. Dunn, "I'm Bill's only girl. He plays the field." And he's rarely lonesome in that department. - Syracuse Touts Luciano As All-America Material INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)- Wayne (Curly) Smart is the hero of the hour among sulky fans after piloting Gold Worthy to victory over the favored Widower Creed in an unprecedented match race for pacers at Hollywood Park. The non-betting race Wednes- day was for a $10,000 purse with the winner getting $6,750 and the loser $3,250. It also settled the championship of the American pacing classic. A crowd of 10,000 which had turned out for the final day of the Western Harness Assn. meet- ing, saw Smart drive Gold Worthy in by a length and a quarter. The time for the mile was a relative- ly slow 2:00 3-5. Gold Worthy is owned by Dr. A. B. Thompson of Pulaski. N. Y. Each horse had won a leg of the classic — Widower Creed the first heat and Gold Worthy the third. Wednesday's event would have been a three horse race-off except that Shadow Wave, winner of the second heat, developed a bad left fore leg and was de- clared. Maryland — Virginia 13 _ Miami (Fla.) — Houston — 1 ikniXertockers'' on the Mich. State — Kansas St 20 Eastern swing. Missouri — Kansas 7| gigi n - s spectacular coming-out North Carolina - Duke _ 7 is all ^g more note worthy torsi SYRACUSE, N. Y. (AP)-Tac- kle Ron Luciano bounced from a hospital bed into contention for a place on the All-America football squad. The college career of the Syra- cuse University senior from Endi- cott is checkered with illness and injury. But he has emerged as one of the nation's top linemen and a definite candidate for selection as an All-America tackle. Luciano is 21 years old, stands 6-3 and weighs 235 pounds. Syra- cuse Coach Ben Sehwartzv,.i itr says he is "the best lineman I've ever had." Cornell coach Lefty James echoes "the best lineman we have faced." In earning those tributes, Luci- ano has had more physical set- backs than usual for college foot- ballers. He has suffered a knee injury in his sophomore year and was out of action most of that season. He underwent an operation for re- moval of cartilage that winter. In his junior year, he suffered a broken sternum—a small chest bone. He was plagued by throat infections and last winter had his tonsils removed. His senior year brought a virus infection that made him miss the Penn State game. Syracuse won but Penn State gained 176 yards, the most ground of any club that faced the Orange this season. Luciano starred in the Pitts- burgh game and the opposition was held to 101 yards on the ground. After the game, Luciano went from the gridiron to the hos- pital, that time in a "generally fatigued' condition. He has since returned to action with performances that have kept him a national figure on the col- legiate football scene. Luciano is a major in geogra- phy and averages B-minus marks. He hopes to play some profession- al football and then go into teach- ing. NBA Basketba Wednesday Result Cincinnati 119, Boston 103 ADVKKTISEMENT BEWARE Phony Price-Tag "Bargains"! • Would it be possible that you actually paid more for that "bargain" than its regular price? This consumer report in December Reader's Digest shows how phony many reduc- tions are on TV sets, jewelry, appliances, cosmetics and other products . . . And what you can do about M Pick up December Reader's Digest at your newsstand today I OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND MONDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 »*&«K), No. Texas - - Louisville 19 Northwestern — Illinois 6 Ohio State — Michigan 14 Oklahoma — Nebraska —27 Oregon State — Oregon 8 Purdue — Indiana — * 14 Rutgers — Columbia 20 San Jose St. — Iowa St. 6 So. Calif. — UCLA f—. 7 Co. Carolina — N. C. St 7 So. Methodist — Baylor 13 Syracuse — West Va. 7 Tennessee — Kentucky 6 Texas Christian — Rice _ „ 7 Trinity (Tex.) — Tex. West. 1 W. Tex. — New Mex. A.&M. 1 Wash. State — Wash 6 Wichita — George Wash. __ 8 Wisconsin — Minnesota „,__14 Wyoming — Brigham Young 6 OTHER GAMES Winner Loser Margin Dickinson — Ursinus 7 Florence St. — Austin Peay 6 Gettysburg - F 4 M 13 Haverford — Swarthmore _,13 Johns-Hopkins — West. Md. 7 Muhlenberg — Moravian — 1 3 Scranton - - Albright "6 Tampa &x&mm this: He was a pivotman in col- lege, seldom having to worry about corner shooting. With the Lakers he's a corner man. Stole Movie And Won Job LOS ANGELES (AP) -"Little John" Baker is a tackle for the Los Angeles Rams, the largest man they ever had. He got into the organization mainly because he kept butting into a movie film when the Rams were trying to get a line on another player. Eddie Kotal, head of the Rams' scouting system, recalled they were screening a reel on a Florida A & M - Norm Carolina college game. "We were scouting a Florida back, but every time there was a kickoff or a punt, all we could see was some enormous North ;:.ir> : «Wv :" V "'"YM ROEBUCK AND CO ..Carolina tackle charging down Appalachian 14j the fieldt .. Mld KotaL W. Chester — Baldwin-Wal. 19 Wittenberg — W & L 27 TicWed to Death' • — ^ i Texas Tackle Lineman of Week FORT WORTH, Tex, (AP) —Big (Stopping a dangerous T e a s drive .Michigan State center; Bob Bryant Den F l o y d , who plays such as the Horned Frogs beat the!Texas end; Zeke Smith, Auburn perfect football spearheading the'Longhorns 22-R and pulled to thr ; guard: Max Fugler, Louisiana mighty Texas Christian line that he has had only one small penalty called against him, was "tickled to death" today at being named national Lineman of the Week by The Associated Press, top of the Southwest Conference State center; John Gurik, Pitts- race. Also, during the-»game Floyd twice dropped Texas backs for long losses to kill budding drives. "You know only about 10 or 11 His coach, Abe Martin, rejoiced guys a year can toe. "We're real proud of Donnie." honor." said Floyd Martin said. "He certainly is de- serving of the award. He's done g grand job for us all fall." It was the work of the 215-pound tackle in the game with Texas last week that earned him the honor MartJa said "this game was prob- ably fist finest of any of the TCU Mnemen this year. He made sev- ers! of the best moves I ever had • lineman make for me at TCU." Against Texas, rToyd W*J cred- ited wtta 10 tackles and came up *Mi two Wg plays, one setting up receive this "I just hope burgh guard, and Ted Aucreman, Indiana end. Dave Hodges, Mississippi State guard, and Rod Breedlove, Mary- land guard, furnished Floyd some strong competition. Hodges set up Mississippi State's touchdown "He'd do his part in holding up the defense, then take off and still j be tiie first man down to make) the tackle." Eddie was impressed by the speed and the size of the tackle. I So he caught the jersey number and finally unearthed "Little John," who towers 6 foot 6H and is now a slim 290 compared to his original 315. Coach Sid Gillman says 22-year- old John has much to learn in pro football but expects he'll become a truly great player. Bnasen» jflBeannnnnn^""~ W3F 7 * ^saf V\MTH \\o^ M*D rAUD I'm deserving and I do feel that against Louisiana State by recov- the Texas game was the best of ering a fumble. Breedlove mtrr- my football at TCU. I want to cepted a pass to set up a tourh- ihank my coaches and trammat.- down and made six tackles and and I know some of the other fellows are as much deserving of this award." Floyd won the honor in • week Comets Hold Slight Edge CLINTON — Clinton hung on to its two - point edge over runner- up New Haven as both teams won Eastern Hockey League games Wednesday. The Comets delighted 1,- 300 Arena fans with an 8-3 victory one assist against Miami. Other linemen getting mention were Jim Norton, Idaho end; Opie Bandy, Tulsa tackle; Roger John that saw some great games turned son, Oregon State end; Ken Beck, oveTthe" SiladeTphia Rambler in by linemen over the country. Texas MM tackle; Billy Gilliow, 1 ,^^ New Haven also won at He wss the second tackle to be Arkansas guard; Al Ectryer, Notre home turning back Washington elected Lineman of the Week this Dame guard: E. J llolub, Texasf t0 n. Bin Leeka of UCLA was Tech center; Bob Bryant, Texas New Haven plays at Philadel- tbe other. Others getting the end, and Bob Harrison, Oklahoma lP hia Friday and meets Clinton and one« award have been Jim Chastain, center. * I p i i i a t t juajr anil nit there Saturday mght. Tube Type Black Walls sin 4.70.15 7.1 fall 7.40.1 S Outfight Frtr» P«tr Fla* T*» 16.95 17.95 19.25 S»tf TrlfK Pair I'lu. Tax 12.88 13.88 15.88 SEARS METROPOLITAN SNOW TIRES > ' / / 14-IN BLACK WALLS Sin 7.50 x 8.00 x OeJtr" MHer Prise Pair Pisa fen 17.95 8.50 x 14 18.95 20.25 fash. Prise PsJr Pin To. 15.88 16.88 17.88 4.71s I I SSkwsll fa Pies Tas NO TRADE IN REQUIRED Here's the snow tire that gives you the non-skid action you must have, and the power traction you need for the ex- tra go thru snow, ice and mud. Expertly retreaded to take beatings on any road in any weather. SALE PRICED 14-IN. SIZES TOO Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Page 1: PAGE TWENTY-FOUR Gridiron Powers Attempt to Retain High … 23/Rome NY Daily Sentinel/Ro… · affair, the System sees Texas Christian overpowering the Owls by 7. seventh • ranked

PAGE TWENTY-FOUR DAILY SENTNEL, ROME, N. Y.t THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 20,1958 WRUN AM—1150 • WRUN FM—106

Fronds Regan'i Sports Views and Reviews

RFA Penalized More Than 3 Opponents

For the benefit of anyone taking aeriously the pur­ported •Rome fan" letter to a Syracuse newspaper con­cerning questionable officiating at RFA football games. the seasons recapitulations show that Rome suffered more lost yardage on penalties than the visitors in three of its sewn home games this year.

Neither Auburn nor Whitesboro lost a single yard here through penalties in games in which Rome was penalized 40 yards and New Hartford lost only 10 yards to 30 for RFA

In RFA's only road game with Mont Pleasant, Schen­ectady official* walked off 10 yards in penalties against RFA and 55 against the Dorps.

Officials Appointed by Commissioner For one as unversed in the rules as Mr Gajewski's

correspondent who apparently is unaware that the pass in­terference penalty in high school differs from the pros and college in that the 15 yard penalty is assessed from the spot at which the play started, it is pointless to debate football officiating, ethics or sportsmanship.

For those unfamiliar with the situation, however, it should be clarified that officials at high school games in this area are appointed by their own chapter commission­er. Schools do not request specific officials nor do they re­ject those assigned to the contests, once their names have been approved from a pre-season list. .

Anyone who saw RFA come from behind on two oc­casions to tie the Syracuse city champions, the last time going 52 yards in 10 plays, realize that the visitors* bark was worse man their bite.

Granted that Paul dciarelli was" a standout high school performer, CBA could hardly be considered the equal of this year's UFA team. The truth of the matter is that Syracuse high school football, on the whole, is hardly on a par with the brand played by most schools in this area.

If CBA excels in any particular department it must be as alibi artists at which Coach Walter Ludovico proved a

Gridiron Powers Attempt to Retain High Ratings

Afternoon Basketball Here Rome Free Academy will try something new this sea­

son by scheduling all its home basketball games as after­noon contests.

The court campaign opens with a game at New Hart­ford on Dec 5. The out-of-town games will be played at mght

Last season playing at night. RFA averaged only 27 adults and less than 150 students at the basketball games in Laurel St. School.

Under a new plan at which a 25 cent game ticket also will provide student admission to simultaneous volleyball matches, ping pong and badminton engagements as well as dual swimming and wrestling meets, the school authorities hope for larger patronage by the students.

All home games here will start at 4:30 o'clock and in­clude in addition to the varsity contests at Senior High School gymnasium, a JV game at George R. Staley School and freshman games in Laurel St. School. The high school has seating accommodations for 500. There are 1,200 seats at Laurel and 500 at Staley,

Rome's first home date Dec. 9 with Oneida includes basketball competition for the varsity, jayvees and fresh-

The complete schedule: December

S, at New Hartford 9, Oneida

13, UFA 17, at S t Francis 19, Carthage

January T, Proctor 9, at Whitesboro

f 14, Herkimer 16, Utica Catholic

23, 30,

4. 6.

11. 13. IS. 20. 27.

January at Oneida New Hartford

February at UFA St. Francis Canastota at Proctor Whitesboro at Utica Catholic at Carthage

Ball Players Want Slice

Curly Smart Drives Pacer

Of TV Money f 0 Upset Win

Syracuse Favored By Seven

By DR. ALLEN N SMITH With the oh;ps down from c-oast

to coast, next Saturday's games will find tho lending teams in col­lege football in a last gasp at­tempt to retain their high ratings.

This will probably hold true at Houston where Texas Christian, No. 9 in the Smith Touchdown Tendency System of Rating*, grapples with Rice in a struggle which the latter has been point­ing for all year. In this showdown affair, the System sees Texas Christian overpowering the Owls by 7. seventh • ranked Iowa handing

Another thriller should result in Notre Dame, the System's No. 11 club, a 7-point defeat. In this fray, traditionally a keen vendet­ta, both teams possess tremen­dous touchdown tendency poten­tials, but the Hawkeyes have the edge in defense and reserve strength. The game is to be tele­cast nationally.

In addition to the Iowa City bat­tle, Purdue is rated two touch­downs superior to Indiana in their "Old Oaken Bucket" feud, and Northwestern is calculated to edge Illinois by 6 in another old neighborhood rivalry.

Dartmouth Picked The eastern spotlight will be

focused on the Princeton - Dart­mouth clash. The Indians are rat­ed a bare one-point advantage

In another tradition - steeped struggle, Harvard can down Yale by 7.

At Chapel Hill, N.C., Duke and North Carolina collide in the At lantic Coast Conference game of the day. The Tarheels are given a 7-point advantage.

In other Southern stadia, eighth-ranked Auburn is 21 point choice over Wake Forest, South Carolina is expected to subdue N.C. State by 7, Tennessee is a 6-point pick to trip Kentucky, and second - ranked Louisiana State can defeat Tulane by 14.

In the top intersectional tilts, it's Miami (Fla.) over Houston by 1, Gemson by 6 over Boston Col­lege, and Syracuse by 7 West Virginia.

The Southwest conference is as wide - open as its spaces. In one of this week's top contests, South­ern Methodist should gain a 2-touch-down decision over Baylor.

MAJOR GAMES Winner Loser Margin Air Force — New Mexico —19 Alabama — Memphis State _20 Arizona State — Arizona —20 Arkansas — Texas Tech —19 Auburn — Wake Forest —21 Boston U. — Connecticut —13 California — Stanford 8 Clemson — Boston Col. 6 Col. of P'fic — San D'go St. _41 Colorado — Colo St. U 13 Dartmouth — Princeton — 1 Davidson — Furman 6 Detroit — Dayton 7 Florida — Fla. State 7 Georgia — Citadel 20 Harvard — Yale 7 Holy Cross — Marquette 8 Iowa — Notre Dame 7 Lehigh — Lafayette 6 Louisiana State — Tulane __11

Alley Aties JOHN DONOVAN and JIM

HORIGAN, GAFB Men's Lea­gue, 243 and 629.

DON CIERI and NICK SERINO, Major League, 226 and 628.

JACK BERG and DANNY GUGGI, Tradesmen's Lea­gue, 235 and 618.

TOM DE VITO. Material Control Coed, 239 and 616.

CAROL SCHILLER, Ma­terial Control Coed, 235 and 614.

BILL PRICE and BILL HINTON, M a n u f a c t u r ­ing Men, 225 and 585.

PAT CARMELLA and JIM MANTON, National League, 223 and 585.

BOB ROSEN and JOE GRAZIANO, Service Clubs League, 219 and 581.

H. TIERNEY and CHAR­LIE BROOKS, Y o u n g Bus­inessmen's League, 211 and 580.

STAN CHILKOTOWSKY and CARL SAMSEL, Odd Fellows League, 222 and 576.

STAN SCHWARTZ, Pro­curement Coed, 222 and 573.

JOHN DONOVAN, Six Aces League, 221 and 572.

PEGGY NOLE, Procure­ment Coed, 189 and 537.

HELEN ZYGAS and BERT GAWARECKI, Rainbow League, 202 and 485.

ERNESTINE CROZIER and JOSEPHINE CHILKO­TOWSKY, Girls Independ­ent League, 174 and 483.

ESTELLE ROSS a n d ESTHER SELL, GAFB Offic­ers Wives League, 173 and 477.

S. RODEN and ANN STEL-LATO, Gliders League, 158 and 420.

A. CAPPONI, Fair Ladies League, 147 and 393.

Coach Won't Compare Two Stars

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Com- ers 1

Rome Girl Among 8 With 600s

Eight 600 scores, including 614 series for Carol Schiller, subbing in the Material Control Coed League, marked an eve­ning of heavy maple mauling here last evening.

For Miss Schiller, an Air Base employee here, the series was the ninth of her bowling career and the third she has posted here this season. She had a 609 in the Girls All-Star League last Friday and a 604 for the Women of the Moose early last month.

All three scores were rolled at the King Pin Lanes.

Jim Horigan of the GAFB Men's League was Wednesday's top scorer with 629. Three other league mates, Sam Bell (617), John Donovan <609) and Hank Krull (602) also finished among the leaders.

Donovan, whose 243 was the league and city single high last night, also copped honors in the Six Aces League where he roll­ed 221 and 572.

Nick Serino was a close run-nerup to Horigan. Rolling in the Major League he finished with a 628, 10 points higher than Danny Guggi's 618 in the Tradesmen's League.

Sharing Material Control Coed laurels with Miss Schiller was Tom DeVito whose 239 and 616 headed the men's scoring. Miss Schiller's series included the ladies high game of 235.

The scores:

GAFB Men'* League Duffy's Tavern 2, L a u r e l

Homes 1 Ferlo's Bakery 3, King Cole 0 Utica Club 2, Tubby's Lounge 1 Coleman Brothers 2, Rome TV

Center 1 Northern Lights Restaurant 2,

Jack's Cleaners 1 Bravo's Poultry Market 2,

Rome Electronics 1 Major l e a g u e

Rome Insurance 2, Jet Clean-

Lonesome End's Step-Father Works With Navy Brass

Carpenter Plays for 'Wrong

pare Elgin Baylor with George r Mikan?

The man doing the neat profes­sional job of sidestepping that one is Coach Johnny Kundla of the taurant 1

Rubino's 2, Ryan Motors 1 Bottini Funeral Home 2, Lupica

Brothers 1 Sports Center 2, Walker's Res-

Minneapolis L a k e r s , a battle-scarred vet of 11 years in the Na­tional Basketball Assn.

"They're two different kinds of players," Kundla said.

Tradesmen's League Jewel Box 2, Les Clemens 1 Ulrick's 3, Chick's Tavern 0 Jim's Restaurant 2, Rosch's 1 Rome Rams 3. J. Carello and

'the man amazes me," saidS°ns 0

NEW YORK (AP) - Major league baseball players want a slice of the radio-television money melon, and apparently they won't take no for an answer.

- One of the 16 player represen­tatives told The Associated Press Wednesday the players already have discussed "the possibility of taking drastic action," should their demand for a 25 per cent cut be turned down by the dub owners.

The player, who asked not to be identified, declined to say what such drastic action might be.

League representatives Robin Roberts and Eddie Yost have been authorized to ask the own­ers for a quick reply to their de­mand when the major leagues meet next month at Washington.

The players are asking for a slice of regular season revenues They already receive 60 per cent of the 3% million dollars baseball receives for TV and tadio rights to the All Star game and World Series. That cut goes to the play­ers'fund.

Player representatives will meet in Washington Dec 1 to decide a course of action.

A report sent to all major i than a lOmillion-dollar increase league players by their attorney,tin the clubs' gross income from

• j , Norman Lewis, showed more'1950 through 1956.

Kundla. "To think that a rookie could lead the club in points, as­sists and rebounds even at this stage of the season! And be way up among the leaders in the league to boot.

"I had a lot of hopes for him when he came to us from Seattle University. But I didn't dream he'd take hold so fast."

The 6-5 All-America college star has come onto the pro scene like a volcano. In 12 games he has averaged 23.8 points a game, snagged an average of 16 rebounds and made about five assists a gamp.

"He's been in the league for 10 games and he's already one of the 10 best players," said Coach Fuzzy Levane of the New York

Lakers

B. J. Lucarelli 2, King Pin 1 Deming Trucking 3, Surace's 0

Material Control Coed Blackfeet 4, Commanches 0 Apaches 4, Shawnees 0 Mohawks 3, Chippewas 1 Sioux 4, Cherokees 0

Manufacturing Men Personnel 2, Receiving 1 Steel Tube 2, Tool and Die 1 Shipping 3, Tool Room 0 Laboratory 2, Forge 1 Engineers 2, Traffic 1

Service Clubs League B'nai B'rith 3, Spoilers 0 Acme Two 2, Jaycees 1 Kiwanis One 2, Optimist One 1 Optimist Two 2. Kiwanis Two 1

National League Selrite 3, Record Shop 0

MESA 2, Stanwix Market 1 Hyde's 2. Feole's 1 Rome Musical Club 2, Bosco's

City Service 1 Young Businessmen's League Simpkin's 3, Sears - Roebuck 0 Goldberg's 2, Rome Strip Steel

1 Star Bottling 2, Acme I r o n

Works 1 Lee Center Inn 2, Kobus Grill 1

Odd Fellows League Past Grands 3, Conductors 1 Noble Grands 4, Wardens 0 Chaplains 3, Vice Grands 1

Procurement Coed Hustlers 3, Mysteres 1 Spitfires 4, Spads 0 Sabre Jets 4, Scorpions 0 Gooneybirds 4, Lightnings 0 Mustangs 3, Thunderchiefs 1 Thunderbirds 3, Fokkers 1 Delta Daggers 3, Green Quails

0 Jets 3, Starfighters 1

Six Aces League California House 2, Ozalid Prod­

ucts 1 Canterbury Press 2. Gryziec Capoccia 2, Team One 1

Rainbow League Kobler's Dairy 2, Blue Valley

Inn 1 Parker's 2, Greenbrier 1 Mapledale 2, White Front 1 Rome Collision 2, Bowling Cen­

ter 1 Girls Independent League

Open Kitchen 2, Margo Studio 1 Chick's TV 2, Atlas Auto 1 Barney's 2, Washington Bar­

bers 1 GAFB Officers Wives

GoofbalLs 2, Fireballs 1 Pin Pacers 3. Scuttlebutts 1 Spotters 3. Sparrows 1 Alley Cats 3, Weaklings 1 Roly Polys 2, Shadows 2 Four Spares 2, Comets 2

Gilders League Ann's 3, Uvanni's 0 Mary Dees 2, Acchino's 1 Zullo's 3, Stewart's 0

Fair Ladies League Jewel Box 3, Telephone Co. 0 Rebisz Insurance 2, St. Gregory

1 La Petite 2, Engelbert's 1

SPRINGFIELD. Pa. (It - Bill Carpenter, Army's Lonesome End, may be lonely on the foot­ball field, but at least he's among friends.

His step • father, Cliff Dunn, is lonesome, too — in a hotbed of hostility.

The breadwinner of'the Dunn family, residents in this Dela­ware county suburb of Philadel­phia, spends his working hours surrounded by Navy brass. He is a civilian budget officer at the Philadelphia Navy Yard.

"Imagine what my life Js down there," he said the other day.

"The Navy people complain that I didn't see to it that Bill went to Annapolis, Then, with the Army - Navy game coming up, everyone thinks I have hundreds of tickets. It makes life pretty terrible."

Cliff married Bill's mother, Helen, several years after the Lonesome End's father was kill­ed while serving as a Pfc in the 99th Infantry in Europe in 1945.

Bill was six years old when s«s father, William Stanley Carpenter Sr., an automobile salesman, en­tered the Array in 1943.

Cliff, a former Army officer and a University of Delaware graduate, and the former Mrs. Carpenter have rooted for Bill through grade, high and prep school.

And just because the weekly family paycheck comes from the Navy Department, the D u n n s haven't stopped rooting for their Army son.

Bill p a s s e d the West Point exams twice.

"Col. Red Blaik (Army coach) heard that Bill's father was killed in action," says Mr. Dunn. "He made no demands on Bill but he mentioned that as a son of a sol dier killed in action Bill was en titled to a Presidential appoint ment.

"To get that appointment it meant taking the examinat'ons all over again. Col. Blaik explain­ed that in qualifying for the Pres­ident's appointment, the coneres-sional appointment would be made available to some other boy. Bill made it possible for some other boy to get there by taking a second examination That's the kind of a boy he is.'

Blaik had little to fear that Car-nenter would miss out because Bill had excelled in his studies at Springfield Hia;h, where he cap­tained the football, basketball and track t e a m s , and at Manlius S c h o o l in New York where he prepoed a year before going to the Military Academy.

In the "beast barracks," where academy Plebes are quartered, Bill's roommate was Boh Ander­son, now star right halfback of the Cadets. They have remained close friends ever since and both are looking forward to appoint­ments as paratroop officers (sec­ond lieutenants) when they leave West Point in 1960.

The Dunns live in a spacious home they say Is almost as lone­some as Army's Lonesome End

| formations. When Bill went to school here friends were always barging in and out.

Mrs. Dunn, an attractive wom­

an, wears the jeweled pin which Cadets usually give their best girls.

"At this point," says Mrs.

•THAT'S MY BOY' — Mrs. Helen Dunn's smile reflects her pride as she holds a trophy won by her son, Bill Carpenter, Army's lonesome end and former Manlius School athlete. Bill's dad was killed in action and his mother remarried.

Dunn, "I'm Bill's only girl. He plays the field."

And he's rarely lonesome in that department. -

Syracuse Touts Luciano As All-America Material

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)-Wayne (Curly) Smart is the hero of the hour among sulky fans after piloting Gold Worthy to victory over the favored Widower Creed in an unprecedented match race for pacers at Hollywood Park.

The non-betting race Wednes­day was for a $10,000 purse with the winner getting $6,750 and the loser $3,250. It also settled the championship of the American pacing classic.

A crowd of 10,000 which had turned out for the final day of the Western Harness Assn. meet­ing, saw Smart drive Gold Worthy in by a length and a quarter. The time for the mile was a relative­ly slow 2:00 3-5. Gold Worthy is owned by Dr. A. B. Thompson of Pulaski. N. Y.

Each horse had won a leg of the classic — Widower Creed the first heat and Gold Worthy the third. Wednesday's event would have been a three horse race-off except that Shadow Wave, winner of the second heat, developed a bad left fore leg and was de­clared.

Maryland — Virginia 13 _ Miami (Fla.) — Houston — 1 ikniXertockers'' on the Mich. State — Kansas St 20 Eastern swing. Missouri — Kansas 7| gigin-s spectacular coming-out North Carolina - Duke _ 7 i s a l l ^g m o r e noteworthy torsi

SYRACUSE, N. Y. (AP)-Tac-kle Ron Luciano bounced from a hospital bed into contention for a place on the All-America football squad.

The college career of the Syra­cuse University senior from Endi-cott is checkered with illness and injury.

But he has emerged as one of the nation's top linemen and a definite candidate for selection as an All-America tackle.

Luciano is 21 years old, stands 6-3 and weighs 235 pounds. Syra­cuse Coach Ben Sehwartzv,.i itr says he is "the best lineman I've ever had."

Cornell coach Lefty James echoes "the best lineman we have faced."

In earning those tributes, Luci­ano has had more physical set­backs than usual for college foot­ballers.

He has suffered a knee injury in his sophomore year and was out of action most of that season. He underwent an operation for re­moval of cartilage that winter.

In his junior year, he suffered a broken sternum—a small chest bone. He was plagued by throat infections and last winter had his tonsils removed.

His senior year brought a virus infection that made him miss the Penn State game. Syracuse won but Penn State gained 176 yards, the most ground of any club that faced the Orange this season.

Luciano starred in the Pitts­burgh game and the opposition was held to 101 yards on the ground. After the game, Luciano went from the gridiron to the hos­pital, that time in a "generally fatigued' condition.

He has since returned to action with performances that have kept him a national figure on the col­legiate football scene.

Luciano is a major in geogra­phy and averages B-minus marks. He hopes to play some profession­al football and then go into teach­ing.

NBA Basketba Wednesday Result

Cincinnati 119, Boston 103 ADVKKTISEMENT

BEWARE Phony Price-Tag "Bargains"!

• Would it be possible that you actually paid more for that "bargain" than its regular price? This consumer report in December Reader's Digest shows how phony many reduc­tions are on TV sets, jewelry, appliances, cosmetics and other products . . . And what you can do about M Pick up December Reader's Digest at your newsstand today I

OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND MONDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 »*&«K),

No. Texas - - Louisville 19 Northwestern — Illinois 6 Ohio State — Michigan 14 Oklahoma — Nebraska —27 Oregon State — Oregon 8 Purdue — Indiana — * 14 Rutgers — Columbia 20 San Jose St. — Iowa St. 6 So. Calif. — UCLA f—. 7 Co. Carolina — N. C. St 7 So. Methodist — Baylor 13 Syracuse — West Va. 7 Tennessee — Kentucky 6 Texas Christian — Rice _ „ 7 Trinity (Tex.) — Tex. West. 1 W. Tex. — New Mex. A.&M. 1 Wash. State — Wash „ 6 Wichita — George Wash. __ 8 Wisconsin — Minnesota „,__14 Wyoming — Brigham Young 6

OTHER GAMES Winner Loser Margin Dickinson — Ursinus 7 Florence St. — Austin Peay 6 Gettysburg - F 4 M 13 Haverford — Swarthmore _,13 Johns-Hopkins — West. Md. 7 Muhlenberg — Moravian —13 Scranton - - Albright "6 Tampa

&x&mm this: He was a pivotman in col­lege, seldom having to worry about corner shooting. With the Lakers he's a corner man.

Stole Movie And Won Job

LOS ANGELES (AP) -"Little John" Baker is a tackle for the Los Angeles Rams, the largest man they ever had. He got into the organization mainly because he kept butting into a movie film when the Rams were trying to get a line on another player.

Eddie Kotal, head of the Rams' scouting system, recalled they were screening a reel on a Florida A & M - Norm Carolina college game.

"We were scouting a Florida back, but every time there was a kickoff or a punt, all we could see was some enormous North

;:.ir>: «Wv : "

V "'"YM

ROEBUCK AND CO

..Carolina tackle charging down Appalachian 14j t h e f ie ldt.. M l d K o t a L

W. Chester — Baldwin-Wal. 19 Wittenberg — W & L 27

TicWed to Death' • — ^ — i

Texas Tackle Lineman of Week FORT WORTH, Tex, (AP) —Big (Stopping a dangerous Teas drive .Michigan State center; Bob Bryant

Den F l o y d , who plays such as the Horned Frogs beat the!Texas end; Zeke Smith, Auburn perfect football spearheading the'Longhorns 22-R and pulled to thr;guard: Max Fugler, Louisiana mighty Texas Christian line that he has had only one small penalty called against him, was "tickled to death" today at being named national Lineman of the Week by The Associated Press,

top of the Southwest Conference State center; John Gurik, Pitts-race.

Also, during the-»game Floyd twice dropped Texas backs for long losses to kill budding drives.

"You know only about 10 or 11 His coach, Abe Martin, rejoiced guys a year can

toe. "We're real proud of Donnie." honor." said Floyd Martin said. "He certainly is de­serving of the award. He's done g grand job for us all fall."

It was the work of the 215-pound tackle in the game with Texas last week that earned him the honor MartJa said "this game was prob­ably fist finest of any of the TCU Mnemen this year. He made sev­ers! of the best moves I ever had • lineman make for me at TCU."

Against Texas, rToyd W*J cred­ited wtta 10 tackles and came up *Mi two Wg plays, one setting up

receive this "I just hope

burgh guard, and Ted Aucreman, Indiana end.

Dave Hodges, Mississippi State guard, and Rod Breedlove, Mary­land guard, furnished Floyd some strong competition. Hodges set up Mississippi State's touchdown

"He'd do his part in holding up the defense, then take off and still j be tiie first man down to make) the tackle."

Eddie was impressed by the speed and the size of the tackle. I So he caught the jersey number and finally unearthed "Little John," who towers 6 foot 6H and is now a slim 290 compared to his original 315.

Coach Sid Gillman says 22-year-old John has much to learn in pro football but expects he'll become a truly great player.

Bnasen» jflBeannnnnn^""~

W3F7* ^saf V\MTH

\\o^ M*D rAUD

I'm deserving and I do feel that against Louisiana State by recov-the Texas game was the best of ering a fumble. Breedlove mtrr-my football at TCU. I want to cepted a pass to set up a tourh-ihank my coaches and trammat.- down and made six tackles and and I know some of the other fellows are as much deserving of this award."

Floyd won the honor in • week

Comets Hold Slight Edge

CLINTON — Clinton hung on to its two - point edge over runner-up New Haven as both teams won Eastern Hockey League games Wednesday.

The C o m e t s delighted 1,-300 Arena fans with an 8-3 victory

one assist against Miami. Other linemen getting mention

were Jim Norton, Idaho end; Opie Bandy, Tulsa tackle; Roger John

that saw some great games turned son, Oregon State end; Ken Beck, oveTthe" SiladeTphia Rambler in by linemen over the country. Texas MM tackle; Billy Gilliow,1,^^ New Haven also won at He wss the second tackle to be Arkansas guard; Al Ectryer, Notre home turning back Washington elected Lineman of the Week this Dame guard: E. J llolub, Texasf t 0 n.

Bin Leeka of UCLA was Tech center; Bob Bryant, Texas New Haven plays at Philadel-tbe other. Others getting the end, and Bob Harrison, OklahomalPhia Friday and meets Clinton

and one« award have been Jim Chastain, center. * I p i i i a t t j u a j r a n i l n i t

there Saturday mght.

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