The Key West Citizen Newspaper, October 31, 1953, Page 10

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Co “The Key West Conchs from behind last night when they defeated the Miami: Beach Typhoons, 13-6 in a ballgame that left some 4,000 fans limp from excitement. The Typhoons did what no other club has managed te do in five ballgames — ‘Fe. Fie i Hq mae “Lam a man of a few words. 25. is gE Ph “Things of value should not be wasted. So, to the point. Fees de nt HH eli int | ze Fee a H i g i & “Also modern equipment, as garbage trucks; there- Preventing the scattering of garbage all over city streets. “§. Adequate street lighting. “6. Adequate storm sewer sys- 5 f “Sincere and honest decisions on all problems that city may con- “Courage of self-convictions and Plain common sense.” (Pd. Pol. Adv.) The Yardstick Key West Miami Beach Yards gained rushing __ 231 169 Yards gained passing Ci) First downs ss 8 Passes attempted 11 3 Passes completed 6 gee Passes intercepted ___. 0 1 Fumbles s 5 2 Own fumbles recovered. 3 1 hout the half of the contest, But, the Conch jugg- ut started to ‘roll in the final period and they scored Ba cH Proved that they can come they held a six point lead Fre Frei at : peer es BsEee ict He rzigigi tee cel te Eis PLR HE sitlvige! Citizen Staff Photo, Finch, g F f : E : run, faked to Stickeney to the Y\right and lofted a pass into the Typhoon defense tightened *™S of/ Ralph White who was after waiting in the end zone. og hep se pie et the| Jimmy Solomon suppled the clin- cher when he split the uprights Inspired defensive play bYiwith a perfect kick. The Conchs were apparently on {FESS ithe whistle blew. GRIDIRON GLEANINGS: It might have been the law of aver- lage which caught up with the ‘Conchs when their goal line was crosses, It might be a good deal i— the pressure is off and they can concentrate on winning _ ball- -| games, Defensively, it was the Solomons, John Carbonell, Red Stickeny, Stu ‘Logun and a host of others who aided the Conch cause most. The locals came out of the game in good shape physically except for a few painfl bruises. Center Glynn Archer, Ronnie Pinder and Gibby Gates, in particular, got their t jumps. A wierd 3-3-3-2 Beach defense contributed greatly to a success- ful Conch passing attack. The flats were wide open and Joe Pineda took advantage of the sit- vation to click consistently with Red Stickney. Referee Phil Sistik, former Uni- versity of Miami star, averred as how a crucial fourth period Conch then tos-|first down was the eloset he's ever measured. He said that the ball fwent dead with it pointing toward the sidelines and the pole barely touched it when it rolled inches in z |the right direction. Athletic Direc- Satisfied |tor Win Jones said it was a platoon |with a tie, however, and they made of trained Cinch bugs which inched jimmediate plans to do some more/the ball ‘along. If the Conchs had ‘scoring, not gained that first down it might || They played bruising defensive/ have been a different story, |ball to force the Typhoons to kick} There were weird happenings from their own 35 down to the Key} West 40. The Beachmen again had 2 hard time stopping punt reciev- jet Gates and he fought his way] “Key West Natio: down to the Typhoon 45 to set up| and then scoreboard operator ithe tie breaking score. Pineda! Billy Ousterhoudt dropped a key Picked up five yards only to see it} piece of equipment under the nullified by a penalty. stands when he got excited after He then clicked on a pass té) a Conch score. He scooted down Red Stickeney out in the flat down| the ladder, recovered the switch to the 25. box, and was back in position — Stickesey Dbulled the be down} only slightly fatigued, before the lto the 20 yard marker. kickoff. | Pineda iced the game moments} Four members of the Key West Zack intercepted a Conch aerial. John Carbonell, Stu Logun RED STICKNEY latches on to Joe Pineda’s pass to set up game-winning TD in late action dur- ing last night’s Key West-Miami Beach grid battle—in upper photo. Jim Steig (22) makes fu- tile attempt to stop him. In lower photo, Joe Pineda is stopped by a host of Beach tacklers in action typical of bruising clash. Conchs preserved their unbeaten record with 13-6 win— ear.|later when he faded back on the| squad looked like the House of Dela ilin Races jvid last night, They’ve vowed not} to shave their chin whiskers until) | | lafter the South Broward clash in Slated Sunday |two weeks, “John “Wambo” Car- |bonell, Bill Salgado, Red Stickeny| There will be a program of sail- |Stu Logun is making a noble at- |Beach defender commented “All Key West Sailing Club. the better to take you by, ’mboys.””| This will be the first opportuni- | Former Conch athlete © John (ty to hold class races since the | Cruz, cousin, of Wingback Don |Program scheduled two weeks ago Cruz was a visitor to the Key |Was rained out. West bench, He’s in the Air Force, Classes will be heid for Penguin, at Elgin Field. |a Sailfish and free for alls for all | Next start for the Conchs is Nov-/other types. jember 13 when they journey to later with their perrennial jinx, Pete in the race program. Sts. Peter and Paul supplying the | opposition. |Subseribe To The Citizen! WHAT SHOULD A COMMISSIONER HAVE? A lot has been said in this campaign about experience and qualifications, 1 have never been on the commission, but sub- mit the following information as to myself for the information of these who de not know me well: 2 1 have been an attorney since 1921. In this field | have served as County Judge, Judge of the County Court, Circuit Court Commissioner, and as City Judge (Interim). As a Federal investigator in the Treasury Department | have worked with municipal officials in three states. During the war, while in service, served as deputy shipping commissioner for the Port of Jacksonville, Fla. As such | had to handle maritime personnel matters including the settlement of disputes involv- ing maritime unions. During the past war | enlisted at 41, served 27 months in the Coast Gu. ind was Honorably Dis- charged at Long Beach, California, as a Chief Petty Officer. 1 was born in Key West, on Eaton Street and still live on Eaton Street. | attended local schools and studied Law at Stetson Unive: 1 am a member of ‘Bar, the Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity and Pi Kappa In _busi- a use my name as B. W. KETCHUM. My frie: cali me As a member of the Commission ¥ will seriously try to serve you. As far as | am concerned the commission meetings will not be sideshows or grandstand plays’ but wil! be meetings to carry out the public business. 10-A KETCHUM For Commissioner — Group Three (Pd. Pol. Ady.) jfour games. Purdue must be good, jand Gibby Gates are the quartet,|ing races tomorrow aternoon at] :15 p. m. off the north end of their way to another score when|tempt at raising a beard. As one|Sigsbee Park, sponsored by the| At least 12 boats are expected | South Broward. A host of Key to compete. Spectators are wel-| West rooters are expected to make ©Ome and all non-members who \the trip. They'll be home a week’ 2Te interested are svited to com- | LEAHY TO MISS NOTRE IDAME-NAVY ENCOUNTER By ED CORRIGAN but tied, Southern California, in- Florida-Auburn, Mississippi - Louls- NEW YORK -- While Coach ¢ligible for the Rose Bowl, tangles iana State, Wake Forest-Clemson, ‘Prank Leahy frets in his home, With Oregon. Duke-Virginia, William and Mary- Notre Dame, the No. 1 football! Michigan State, which fell to No. North Carolina State, ‘team in the country, will take on & in the national rankings after) Midwest — Northwestern ~ Ohio ‘Navy at South Bend, in the top having its 28-game winning streak State, Iowa - Wisconsin, Missouri- game of the collegiate football Snapped by Purdue, plays Oregon Indiana, Kansas-Nebraska, lowa jeard today. \State, while Georgia Tech, its 31- State-Colorado, But The Master—a siy one, he—/S&me undefeated skein Sroken by| Southwesi — Rice ~ Kentucky, is not without ideas. He will watch Notre Dame, should pick up the)Texas - Southern Methodist, Texas the action on television and advise)threads against Vanderbilt, Okla- A&M-Arkansas, West Texas State- his assorted aides before the game,"0ma, No. 9, faces Kansas State, Arizona. land between halves. and this could decide the Big 7) Far West — Washington State- [the calendar is” spotted with|Winner. Stanford, Utah-Washington, Brig- jother interesting action, the best, The television fans around the ham Young - Wyoming, Montana- jof which seem to be the Mlinois-\COUntry wil get a chance to see|Utah State, Idaho State-Montana Purdue and West Virginia-Penn Minnesota’s spectacular All-Amer- State, IState affairs. jica, Paul Giel, in action when the! In the most important game last Tlinois, the leader of the Big| Gophers Play host to Pitt in the night, Marquette defeated Boston |10 now that Michigan State has/NCAA’s TV game of the day, |University, 7-6, on Bob Girman’s |been beaten, will have to be at its| Other leading games: 41-yard run and Don Molenda best against the Boilermakers, the , ©2St—Miami_ (Fla.) Fordham, conversion. same blokes who polished off State Dartmouth Yale, Brown-Prince- Virginia Tech turned back The last week after being beaten in ‘0%, Columbia - Cornell, Syracuse-|Citadel, 22-0, and Sam Houston ted cross, Colgate-Rutgers, Rich-|State crushed Tampa, 26-6, anova. | oye ayn psy South — Texas Tech-Mississippi} Crude oil as it comes from the weeks, State, Army-Tulane, Tennessee-|ground can be one of many thou- The Boilermakers, incidentally, North Carolina, Alabama-Georgia, sand different types of compounds, were squashed by Miami the next week after breaking long Notre} Page 10 Dame winning streak two rear ago. West Virginia, one of the few) THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Saturday, October ‘3, W953 remaining unbeaten-untied major outfits, are on the spot. They are iranked No. 5 in the Associated R G A i Pa s Press poll, but they haven't played | ‘ a strong schedule. Penn State is 16 USES Cc ARS 1 lone of the better teams in the | East, so it behooves the Mountain. | AS W 5 eers to make a good showing to | prove the skeptics wrong. As for Notre Dame, even with- out Leahy, the Irish are favored Balance Mon! heavily over Navy, the victim of - thly a 9-7 upset at the hands of Penn, - Military Personnel Welcome The big problem of the Middies | will be to contain the heavy Notre | Dame line. / Otherwise, most of the powerful | clubs seem to have easy going (the same was said last Saturday, Black Saturday.) Maryland, sec- ond in che land, takes on South |Carolina, and figures to win as it pleases, Baylor, which has had clear go- so far, meets last place Texas |Christian, If George Sauer’s Bruins | jare wise, they won't relax. In the |Southwest Conference. the tailend- jers have an annoying habit of ing to the occasion when they) °48 Pecksed<..-. 008 °40 Dodge ___. $190 °48 Nash ___. $298 °41 DeSoto __ $291 SEDAN CONVERTIBLE *48 Lincoln __ $298 °41 Chevrolet __ $121 CONVERTIBLE _ CONVERTIBLE °47 Buick __. $397 °40 Smdebaker . $60 2-DOOR SEDAN °41 Packard ... $191 °41 .- $121 ac] i ; Mercury *42 Buick... $252 °37 Chevrolet. ___ $27, SEDAN TUDOR meet the leaders, °41 Chevrolet. $171 48 Kaiser ___. $298 Tenth-ranked UCLA, trying for! SEDAN the Rose Bowl bid that goes with} 9, °46 Nash $296 the Pacifie Ceast Firdicon, 42 Pontiac $192 "46 ‘CLUB COUPE crown, meets California, Unbeaten] SEDAN Pes QUALITY USED Cars ra quart ussocars! Motor Mart Inc. TWINS GARAGE STOCK ISLAND 1130 DUVAL ST. DIAL 2.2461 $$$ SAVE $$ % $ q 's Late Drive Edges Miami Beach, 13-6 | Key West Racks Up Fifth Win Against Valiant Visitors Friday By JIM COBB, Citizen Sports Editor

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