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Page 6 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Saturday, November 1, 1952 Attack Miss-Fires @ VIVE Y77'D J OSS FOR THE VIE (No. 88) for the | and We Pineda Goes Around En JOE PINEDA, around his ¢ him. Citizen Staff Photo 1 for Key West, s mpers ght .attempt to stop Yow’ve Had Tt, Brother!! WHEN THE RAM'S SCHLECTOR found the ¢ sent him ree Shortage Seen In Bow! Talent ATLANTA T age of fo: All of which Is fine for m of the S est and eon fade ve s own $ expe borhood of $60 Ss are gold » Batur aad budding sta ee a Touchdown Pass ta Citizen Staff Pho Citizen Staff Photo LUCY GONZALEZ (No. 25), is shown as he latched on to‘a pass near the end zone for the initial Conch score in last night’s tilt. The Golden Ram’s Howe makes a futile attempt at stop- ping the aerial. wned McCleod No ©-'n For Rams . Citizen Staff Photo THE ENTIRE CENTER OF THE KEY WEST LINE ganged up on Belle Glade’s Schlector when he attempted to pick up some ground last night, West (No. 9), along with two other Conchs was in on the tackle, West played a bang-up game defensively, including the interception of a Belle Glade aerial, Football Results | Drive Is Launched | The -HIGH SCHOOL SCORES iTo Assist Cuban he iated P. . . . ‘on ~~ | Hurricane Victims Cocoa 19 % Chcad ese rt Needy victims of Hurricane tis 0 Fox which swept over the south- cksonville) ern coast of Cuba last weekend eg to be aided by Key West | 8 Kissin | citizens, The San Carlos Insit- asiarusanisiiog ts | tute Board of Directors are spon- | soring a campaign to collect | clothing, shoes, canned goods and | money. WEATHERMAN Says voweneemene Key West and Vicinity: Mostly cloudy with scattered’ light rain- showers thru Sunday; not much | temperature change. Gentle to} | moderate east and northeast winds, | 27 Lenoir “ee Close Squeak THE RAM'S McCLEOD, broke last night but a crucial tackle Citizen Staff Photo into the clear on this occasion by Conch end John Carbonell, who paced the locals defensively saved the day for Key West, Duke-Georgia Tech Clash Is Nation’s Tops By ED CORRIGAN NEW YORK (#—The eyes of the ollege football world turned today fo Durham, N. C., and Berkeley, Calif., where the two battles of the nation’s grid Goliaths were sched- uled, At Durham, before a’ sellout crowd of 45,000, Georgia Tech| went against Duke, while on the other end of the country, the Uni- versity of California tangled with UCLA. All told these four powerhouses have lost exactly one game—a California defeat at the hands of Southern California last week. All the others have identical unblem- ished records, six victories and no defeats, Rumors were circulating in Dur- ham that Georgia Tech would be given a Sugar Bowl bid no matter how the contest turned out, and that its opponent would be Villa- nova, one of the top teams in the East, which preserved its un- beaten record with a 20-20 tie against the Parris Island Marines last night. The Engineers were expected to rely on the running ability of Leon (Shorty) Hardeman while Duke was banking on the accurate passing of Worth Lutz, a bloke who hastn’t had one of his passes in- tercepted ‘this season. Georgia Tech rates No. 4 in the weekly Associated Press Football poll and Duke No. 6. The UCLA-Cal game will have a big bearing on the Pacific Coast Conference race and who gets the Rose Bowl bid. The Golden Bears were rated the team to beat until they were dumped by Southern California. Now USC and UCLA are thé only unbeatens in the con- ference. The two teams are so evenly matched that the pregame line listed UCLA as a mere half-point choice. The big one in the East pitted Penn, the potential champion of The material may be deposited at the San Carlos school or the theater. All those interested in ood Bi helping in any way can do so ofl sly Bache by calling Julio Cabanas, Jr., president of San Carlos organi- zation at 1112-XM, Cabanas said that all the de- tails would come from Cuba tay At the present time, he said, a iarge mumber of werk- ing people suffer in the storm and in some remote spots it has been impossible ‘to survey the damage thoroughly as yet. The entire group of directors are working hard to push the program of relief, fresh at times offshore. | Florida: Mostly cloudy and scat-| tered showers extreme south por-} | tion and partly cloudy north por-| tion thru Sunday. | Jacksonville. thru the Florida Straits and East Gulf: Easterly} moderate to fresh over south | ion and light to moderate over | north portion thru Sunday. Mostly | cloudy and scattered showers over south portion and partly cloudy | | north portion j Western Caribbean; Fresh to) | moderately strong northeast to southeast winds and. cloudy with} showers over north portion... Mod-| tarke) 37 Macclenny 13 j erate variable winds and mostly! Seabreeze (Daytona | é ae | cloudy weather with widely scat- 7 (Pavoes | CONVICTS END HUNGER| fred showers over the asus por| PRR TRI STRIKE IN OREGON j tion thru Sunday. SALEM, Ore. A 29-ho ger strike by 16 hardened c hepa Bey og wun in the Oregon State Penit There is a flat low pressure area d last night after prison offi- | inst south of Swan Island. Else- threatened to use force t© | Shere conditions are about normal. restare. order. ihe } The convicts, all in a segregation | TOMORROW HIGH 10:24 a.m, 9:35 p.m, Stuart 0 ksonville Beach) 35 ch 6 SLOW IN P SETUP WASHINGTON (Price Stabil 4 vest y or. ne u were exercising in the corri- | dor of their cell block Thursday | when they began their hunger ike to protest being served mac- | i and cheese as a substitute potatoes. They refused to re + their cells had been ing around the Low 3:44 am 3:66 p.m. Oo ADDITIONAL TIDE DATA R ference Station: Key West | Bahia Honda (bridge) ———oh 10m 9.0 ft. No Name Key {cast end) —+2h 20m Boca Chica Station— Tide high water Sendy Pt.) —oh (Om Caides Channel north end) +t itm i +4. INC PRICE FAILING Nw SINGAPORE @—Pang Ah Lan. the Malayan rebel Communists ost notorious woman leader, as shot dead yesterday by Brit- sh troops in Segamst, Jobore er of renewed Guer- Jess Larson the Ivy League, against its intra- state rival, Penn State, which it hasn’t beaten since 1936. Penn is unbeaten, though tied twice, while the Nittany Lions were unbeaten until they ran into Michigan State. The Quakers were rated one-touch- down favorites. Michigan State, rated the No. 1 team in‘the country, took the field against Purdue, which currently is tied for the Big Ten leadership and a trip to the Rose Bowl with Michigan. The Boilermakers are undefeated in the league, but, strangely, haven't been able to win outside the loop. Dhey figure to be the toughest bunch the Spartans have faced this season, and if Biggie Munn | and his operatives are going to be victimized at all, this seems to be the time to do it. But it’s unlikely, The country’s other two big boys, Maryland and Okishoma, which rate second and third re. spectively, were paired with set- ups. The Terps had Boston Univer- sity, which, in turn, hed Harry Agganis and not much more. Okiahoma’s opposition was lowa State. Kansas, which still hes a chance of beating cut Oklahboma-—sight though it may be—for the Big | Seven crown, played Kansas State. | Methodist in the top Southwest } Conference game, and Michigan \tangled with Mlinols in an effort to grab undisputed lead in the Sig Ten. (—)—Minus sign: Corrections | produced a hi to be subtracted. | (+)—Plus sign: i be adced. al Corrections to crust Gators Tackle Auburn Today By F. T. MACFEELY GAINESVILLE (®—Auburn’s Ti+ gers, who have done the least to put Florida at the bottom of the all-time Southeastern Conference standings, loom as another ledge for the Gators to climb on today, Rick Casares, Buford Long and | Papa Hall ran Georgia right into {the ground last weex and they are favored to keep right on rolling over Auburn. The experts say Flor- ida by 14 points. Auburn’s fortunes ride on the | passes and kicks of Dud Spence. He is tops in the SEC with a throwing average of 60.9 per cent . on 42 completions in 69 tries for 528 yards, He also leads punters with a 41.4-yard average. Over the 19 seasons in SEC his- tory, Florida stands last with 22 wins, 65 defeats. Auburn, which is in 10th place, has a 15-11 edge over Florida in time competi- tion. But since 1933 it is Auburn by only 86 (two ties). Florida's strong defensive line can look for its easiest time yet unless the Auburn running attack has picked up a lot of steam this week. In five games Auburn run- ners have been able to gain only TIT yards. Vince Dooley, billed asthe quar- terback to make Auburn's split T roar, has been injured most of the season, So has been Jackie Creel, the speediest runner. If Florida’s pass. defense is at least as good as it was in shutting out Georgia's Zeke Bratkowski last week, today’s game with Au- burn is likely to make the 39,000 homecoming crowd happy about Coach Bob Woodruff’s Gator team. But if the pass defense reverts to the form it used against Georg: jia Tech and Vanderbilt, Spence | and his favorite receiver, Lee Hay- ley, could repeat last year’s upset } 14-13 Auburn win. Kentucky Climbs Up Grid Ladder By BEN FUNK MIAMI wW—Kenwueky's football |team is in the rebuilding stage | after three glorious “bowl” years and Coach Paul “Bear” Bryant has a solid foundation of young | manpower. The Wildcats, dominated by freshmen and sophomores, proved | that Friday night by smashing Mi- ami's favored Hurricanes 29-0 on water-covered Orange Bowl field. | Steve Meilinger, a great pass | catehing end moved into the quar jterback role for the first time in his eollege career, engineered the victory that indicated that Ken | tucky, after floundering through the early part of its schedule, has found its way into high gear, The 212-pound Meilinger called the signals in two touchdows drives, setting up both scores with his own sparkling runs and passes, | and caught a touchdown pass while loperating at his familiar Jeft end | post f | Twenty sophamores gai) 17 fresh- | men participated in tfe Halloween trout, which should have assured | Kentucky fans thet Bryant has the i makings of a great’ new team. “They beat us to @ pulp,” eom- | mented Miami's Cogeh Andy Gue- tafson. “1 feel braifed myself.” Bryant deciared ( Geefully that “my boys are stafting to move* ! Time of Height of | Texas was favored over Southern | from the newly-adbpted T forma. | tion, } “The weather( was perfect jus,” Bryant a@ded. “Mi | loves to rum in that mod.” The Mays Indians whe ence civilization in is now Mexico are still the mportant element ia the i population of Fucatan what