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e . ~ Just A Bomb Explodes For Victory Monday At Key West Kennel Clu "Is Slated Key West Kennel Club Results TONICHT’S NCAA —_ Convention In Cineinna ii By FRITZ 7 igi’ mee EB ee _NTRIES | cote“ Duquesne Gains On Kentucky It was “Just A Bomb” Hr 3.60 = Quiniela (7-8) cagA \aay af aie tears bo Recents) which exploded last night at business today at its 48th annual | convention, July Fourth SECOND RACE Blue Manikin the Key West Kennel Club. Winner—Don Branson’s Fawn D., May, 1952, Tumbling Weed—Miss Pacific In National Court Ratings Lodi The American Football Coaches x in the 7m 5 Jevisi By BEN PHLEGAR [beaten twice in three games when s dog by that name Bow MANY = 30 rt Quiniela (3-8) 15.40 Poissons I Flax rea boo paves ie sire NEW YORK u — Duquesne’s/Dixie Classic, dropped from captured the feature of th VIKING LOVE 260 Tenney C. ites aneaias, Bet nea presto: 70° ey 2 ee ne eres Sol North Carolina State.am evening going away by 2! ee en cones Tae ant ee a co be near prea ree Press basketball poll but the all-|Fordham, 8, 9 and 10 a week ag } th i THIRD s: winning Wildcats held on to first|dropped out of the top 10. against the cream. sa pr beige Fon en ee ene Bo Meee, Te OO 2% onto . ees ae Pcsgee spars ry _ nie Lone by a marrow margin of 81/ ‘The results, with first - place , ‘ gg points. ‘ : Grade One talent at the oven ny SHOULDER 1080 480 420 En 82 That’s My Gal string along with the one-platoon|" They teq by.as0 pointe“a week} "tes in parentheses: » Fred Whitehead’ R. 0. 'S NEW HEEL 240 240 Quinicla Camalinda system, with proposals to liber-|a¢5 but Duquesne’s eweep through, + track, ead's SOPHINO 2.60 Little Trouper alize substitutions to some extent.|11 straight games and the Garden| 2 Dud ; two-year-old lounged along FOURTH RACE Madeline’s Choice Some also want to do away with iHoliday Festival in New York sent 3. Indiana (0) in second place for a goodly Winner—Overseas Kennel’s Dark Brindle D., June, 1952, Rural Streak— Casey Hare |the four-min le a nd ofthe Dukes’ stock soaring, Du-| * Okla Es tterling Acro the second and fourth periods, ‘ 5. Western Kentucky (6)....S82 portion of the race and then LERKO 11.00 1260 © 2.60 Shorty Mohegan forcing an “aN-the-way” game un-| {vein jan «geet the paltg| 6 Minnesota (3). a) with a tremendous burst of RURAL COUSIN 280 2.20 Quiniela (1-8) 8.60 Taffy Hil der the same set of rules. closed. The Wildcats have won 8,| 7 speed, clamped on to the R. 0. ’S RUBE ae acre pag — 516 mile In the television sector oe only ‘Duquesne 12. BS lead at the three-quarter : FIFTH RACE fight against the current restrict Indiana stayed in third place and | 10. inner—Walter Owen’s Brindle B., , 1951. Be Black—My Little Susie R. 0. ‘S. Morning Glory Program appears to be coming) Minnesota in sixth but the rest of FINAL REWARD do 5.60 5.00 is ne ae oe from the Big Ten a. It|the Positions corey a Gan a SNOW TWINKLE Quiniela " i would like to have one games| ough shakeup, mainly as a result! SALTER PATH 5.00 Flashy J. C. televised on a regional basis each|of holiday tournaments. ~ ter SIXTH RACE . i Sis Saturday, and the ee circuit Piva reset eae hese ts the 18. _ ”s Brindle Oklahoman—Bonnie Valkaria may lead the way toward some lege Tourney at jahoma 5 ee ee Pixie Pan loosening of the restricted plan in|City, moved up from fifth to fourth,| oes “DIAN HILL $00 400, 400 ad ig Wava : vogue in 1953, and Western Kentucky, great a) leh een SIR OMAR ' 1220 ° 340 Quiniela : FOURTH RACE — 5-16 mile The Television Committee meets|Week ago, jumped to after) 29 FANCY TROUBLES 3.80 Johnny Nell today and tomorrow, and will sub- winning the Louisville Invitational. 20. N. C, State. SEVENTH RACE Carlton mit its recommendations to the| Western has taken 12 straight this Winner—M. W. Fage’s Brindle B., September, 1949. Lucky Pilot—Lou Ann Lady Fiction NCAA business session Friday. The | Season. ea ON $$S$S3$ SAVE $9898 KAY ROO 14.00 9.00 «3.40 x Stop: Joking coaches will offer any rule change|_ Holy be roke into the top BRAVE PAL 7.80 4.80 Quiniela (5-8) 45.40 Little Darlin suggestions to the NCAA Rules|2° edits a6 , Place dey rds its TWINS GARA MY BITSY 3.80 ; Sooner Senator Committee, which meets Jan, 11/F°Cor’ 10 80 in tat Meee Ocleee, . EIGHTH RACE Black Bomb in Sarasota, Fla. ithe hamie ivites skate Means QUALIT ef Winner—F. B. Stutz’ Red Fawn B., Jt . Razor’s Edge—All Over Town Jake H. A year ago the Rules Commit- : ? shee REPAIRS CAPRICORN 12.60 wie 4.00 ; FIFTH RACE — 5-16 mile tee ipuwadi a coaches’ poll which be ppt ree : — ee AUTO > BODY WORK GAY SKIPPER 2.60 aA Quiniela (7-8) 14.00 Grade 3 favored the two-platoon system by|were unranked a week ago. This PAINTING CAPEHART Lady Crystal a 91 margin, and installed the!week they finished eighth in the AND USED CARS NINTH RACE Fair Monarch limited substitution plan. Lou Lit- tle of Columbia, chairman of the coaches commitee on rules, said the current poll was overwhelm- ingly in favor of the single platoon style of play. ni voting by 99 sports writers and broadcasters. Ten points were awarded for a first-place vote, vote, nine for second, ete. Oklahoma City moved up from 1ith to ninth and Oregon State, Connie Lou Steel Band Trade In Speed In Review Fearless Warrior Three Dots SIXTH RACE — 5-16 mile At the RIGHT PRICE NEW STUDEBAKEh CARS AND TRUCKS Mean Maximum Economy iF inner—Fred Whitehead’s Brindle D., July, 1951, Portis Bomb—Just Becky Just A BOMB. ee ee 3.20 : QUEEN O MINE 10.40 21.80 = Quiniela (6-8) 67.80 MIDNIGHT CAPER 3.80 if i as zt in : 3 S< TENTH RACE : Winner—Royal ©. Seymour’s Brindle D., July, 1951. Mixed Harmony— eres Kay SIR McKA' : [ ‘ : Grade 3 . ° FORUTO DEMONSTRATION. Other satel MILL GALE camer Tear Y Quiniela (1-2) 44.40 Matthew Hill Seixas Bows To Hartwig Monday Come By hi MOP ESATDE. . : today @ py iat Attila ae wall first in a Thursday semifinal. 1130 DUVAL STREET mt Page MW. EAgdi| Paaw 6 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Toesdey, Jory 5, 11 |ceeneeeeeen| SU Froft cceet seer ele, cs Ton el ae DUAL SSO Girl. Sports Roundup A-Head eran Vic Seixas of Philadelphia to-|set up Australia’s final 3-2 Davis $$$$$$ SAVE Flirty Myrt day in the’ quarterfinals ‘of the|Cup edge. Bill Sams South Australian Tennis Champion-| Bob Perry of Los Angeles was CHARLEY ve ACndataditboes thd SEVENTH RACE — 5-16 mile ships. eliminated yesterday by Rose in a NEW YORK # — The Tommty|Grade 3 Hartwig won the match, 5-7, 6-3,|bitter struggle, 6-4, 46, 5-7, 7-5, YOu Lewis, or 12th man, episode in| Pretty Blossom 61, 6-2. 6-1. Trail Guide Riviera Pamadon Wheat Tony Trabert of Cincinnati, prob- able opponent of Australia’s 19 year old wonder Lewis Hoad in the finals, entered the semifinals with the Cotton Bowl game only serves to point up the dismal fact that there is very little opportunity or reward for free enterprise in the SAVE MONEY WHEN YOU BUY A_ DEPENDABLE Boxing Results Concu’s SELECTIONS a 6-3, 6-3, 6-3 straight set conquest MONDAY’S FIGHTS lag ae sal lta threya Howe] y THE ASSOCIATED Peas HESTER > : as’ loss wy redictions — Walter Cartier, ferme pail day Rett INE Tonigat’s Xennel Club feature Third Race: R. 0.’s Morning Glo-|kept pecking away at the regula-| Modern Age fais tas geen oth ent por abt Sous Magis ondeeieae eee BA Y presents a real problem. The line-jry, Valkaris and Viking Sis. up is sprinkled with at least four} Fourth Race: Little Darlin, dogs who are potential favorites,|Black Somb and Sooner Senator. tions with their whereases and|/EIGHTH RACE — 5-16 mile Trade Secret Honest Buddy in the professional coaching field but said his. coaching. plans were “just for one week.” With Its Self-Charging Feature duce several replays of last week’s Davis Cup matches between the Americans and Australians. Sandy, 158%, New York, 10. BOSTON — Curley Monroe, 137,| ’ wherefores. There was a time not too many ‘At Texas A&M game here. 'y Wheeler. trea the dict that Timber Range will-be the| seventh Race: Selada, Riviera of Rice’s Dickie Moegle, would Roll Lassie battle last week virtually decided Keeler, 141, Greensburg, Pa., 2. Worcester, Mass., jinted Fred- whipping lany one of which could come up} Fifth Race: Connie Lou, Fair|years ago when the Alabama ful]-| Tissort. However, Trabert and Hoad are aie Mentone a9 Breakion 4 Ape re Ae mooth aoe ae nodes th a win, Monarch and Speed In Review. back iar from being -~ object of} Wicked = fn separate brackets and will like-/ HOLYOKE, Mass, — Joe Miceli, DOWN , ume a Fonay Bowl| But we'll “pa . Pg look Partai Matthew Hill, Die-/derision for his impulsive tackle| Sleeping Trouble’s ly meet in the finals. Their terrific|145, New York, stopped Jesse into the magic Conc! pre-jhard ai You Help By Buying have returned home to torchlight! Glory Hill the fate of the Davis Cup. Hoad| BILLINGS, Mont. — Freddie’ A HESTER BATTERY The veteran coach * des in his honor. There, they; Memory Time in fi "| ; ; jwinner, We'll even go so far &S/anq Trail Guide. Laces , lo Sa ry won in five sets and Australia kept (Babe) Herman, Los Angeles, gate dtr aioe if oe te bi, say that he’s the best, bet Pe peo hoon Trade Secret, |WOW4 have said, is an Alabama|NINTH RACE — 5-16 mile the cup. stopped Don Rogers, Spokane, LOU SMITH for Jowell, The the evening. si Troubles and Tissort, |” Who showed them how to use/Grade 1 Trabert must get past Ken Rose-|Wash., 2. mera neet assistants, Jim Lee Howell. MT Other selections: leeping the old head. Carlita removal apparently gave him extra incentive for victory here in his rivalry with Paul Brown, Cleve- land Browns’ boss and coach of the North squad, \ His professional record against Brown is even at 44, but since! ae <9 ay peor oe a only pen-| Micky W, > . ecru! a am _ whic! Brown beran contin inthe sane| Yankees Are Voted Nation’s — |*sescnaun! soa‘astm "Met Pagode sy man here he has beaten Owen in both’ First Race: Debra’s Boy, July Fourth and Tenny C, Second Race: Madeline's Choice, Ninth Race: Timber Range, Bar- dhal and Modest Blonde Tenth Race: Lady Russet, Lin- ‘Shorty Mohegan, and Taffy Hill, |da Hill and Flakes of Fire. crite ea'ova tt Outstanding Team By The AP boys down here.” And he has some prime mater- fal to do a good job with—such Zeke Bratkowski; Texas Tech’s | most valuable Gator Bow! perform-| er, Bobby Cavazos; Alabama’s im- pulsive off-the-bench tackler, Tom- my Lewis; and All-America line men Crawford Mims of Mississippi .and J. D. Roberts of Oklahoma, To achieve victory over Brown’s That would have been back be- fore my fine Texas friend, Pete Cawthon, then coach of the Austin College Kangaroos, boned up on the fine print in the rule book on the field while a play was in Progress was to get fined half the distance to its own goal line. That was-in the mid-20’s when the Kan- garoos were a minor power in NEW YORK (#—The New York,in the playoff for the National/Texas football circles. standouts as Georgia’s passing ace,| Yankees, who won an uaprecedent-|Football League title. ed fifth straight American League pennant and followed up with their This year’s poll was similar to 1952 in one respect—a college foot- ball team was second to the Yan- Well, as the story came to me at the time, it seemed that almost every time an opposing back broke loose for what looked like a touch- fifth consecutive World Series|kees. However last year, with 45|down run against Cawthon’s team championships, were voted the out-/first place votes, Michigan State|there would come tearing out from standing team of 1953 today in thejcame much closer to the Yanks,|the sideline an eager Austin Col- 23rd annual Associated Press year- end poll. who had 65. The unbeaten but once - tied lege substitute to haul him down well short of the goal. All the offi- As they have monopolized base-;Notre Dame football team, sixth|cials could do in such instances squad, however, Owen will have felt so have the Bronx Bombers|in the 1952 poll, was fourth this|was gravely step off the penalty come up with a defense ready to swept top honors in the AP poll,|time, followed by the Indiana bas-jyards while the p weoting coach stop some of the nation’s top of! fensive players, for this is the fourth consecutive|ketball team, Big Ten and NCAA/quietly threw ineluding ear that Casey Stengel’s menjchampion; the Milwaukee Braves, oa, on cae — Al have been voted “best team of the|who shifted from Boston and were|bad, one coach who had been thus Michigan State; big Marland Carl. of Wisconsin; £ man of West! Virginia; Ralri Selton of Mary- Jo"; and 51 Stits of UCLA. Kay veorgeOui COLLEGE STATION, Tex. w— ‘The resignation of Ray. George as head football coach at Texas A&M, following closely the departure of two caggenae an almost entirely new gridiron Tegime for the Aggie school. > George, whose team lost its last, games, quit yesterday with the announced intention of entering private busi-| ness. He told reporters he is out af the coaching business, Speculation today on his succes-) sor turned on these names: J. V. Sikes, former Texas A&M! football star who resigned as coach! at Kansas last November after a’ bad season. Sikes reportedly has visited the A&M campus recently. Dick Todd, former Aggie and professional football player year.” It was a runaway for the Yan-|race, finishing second; the Detroit|at least kept all the members of.line belong to the American Guild’ Lions, National Football League|his small squad on the bench with!of Vaudeville Artists, also AFL, | kees, who received 79 first place votes from a total of 125 ballots cast by the nation’s sports writers and sportscasters. The Yankees, who defeated the Brooklyn Dodgers in the World Series 4 games to 2, rolled up 289) Points on a 3-2-1 basis. The University of Maryland, un- beaten in 10 regular season football games and named 1953's No, 1 college team in the AP poll last month, edged the Cleveland Browns for second place, Maryland had 10 first place votes, while the Browns got 13, but the Terrapins had suf-' ficient second and third place sup port to run up 109 points to 106: for Cleveland. Maryland, like Cleveland, came to the end of the road as the grid season ended. The Terrapins} were upset by Oklahoma 7-0 in| . jthe Orange Bowl at Miami after| Mike Michalske, A&M line coach. the Detroit Lions beat Cleveland’ assistant on the Southern Method- ist staff. in the National League champions for a second straight tional Basketball Association cham- two years of competition; and ee National League cham- TV Reunion OKLAHOMA CITY w — Cari Harms, a Cheyenne, Wyo., heating and plumbing contractor, flew here yesterday and decided to telephone a cousin, Mrs. Bertha Korff, at Bristow, Okla., to inquire about another cousin, Mrs. Hennie Rin- derhagen of El Reno. Okla. “Why"' she’s on a television pro- gram there right now,” Korff said. Harms ran to the hotel loboy and switched on the TV set. There jwas his long lost cousin being in- terviewed'on an afternoon show.” phoned Mrs. Rinderhagen at the TV station and arranged a re- union. He told reporters later, “Boy, was she surprised!” Mrs, | After the program, Harms tele-|J. Monahan, a father. He took one a Tt wouldn’t have been quite so victimized said later, if Pete had him. But, no, he complained, year; the Minneapolis Lakers, Na-|there always was one Kangaroo AGVA broke a union agreement, lying Wrapped in his blanket down this was something more than a coincidence, How many times the Kangaroos employed their “sleeper” play in the course of that embroiled season we are not in position to| say, but it must have been too| many, for the rules body got busy at its next meeting and wrote in the clause which nullified Lewis’ | electrifying play on New Year's Day and sent him home a crushed young man instead of a state hero. JUST A BURP PAWTUCKET, R. I. W—A baby isitter’s frantic report that a baby | was choking to death brought a’ fire truck, two police cars and a| ity company emergency ¢ar to a home last night. 4 First in was Fire Capt. Eugene up and = baby sitter—a bachelor un- Profusely. The cl look at the gasping infant, picked burped him. i Modest Blond Rocket Jet Mischief Girl Timber Range Bardahl Grade S$ Tow-Ee Shining Sue Linda Hill Wes Hardin } Forward Lady Russet Yardley Baker Boy t Petrillo Ban BOSTON #—The pretty chorus line swung onto the night club floor last night and the band stopped playing abruptly. Who stopped the music? Presi- dent James C. Pei. .llo of the AFL American Federation of Musi- cians, Hl Why? Because the girls in the Petrillo was quoted as saying! by working with nonunion mem- pions; the Navy crew, unbeaten in|on about the 20-yard line. He sus-bers. He ordered his members not to play for AGVA acts. Wheel Alignment $5.50 Complete Electrical TUNE-UP $5.50 for 6 Cyl. $6.50 for 8 Cyl. (PLUS PARTS) SATISFACTION CUARANTEED CARBURETOR GENERATOR BATTERIES STARTER GENERAL TUNE-UP Murray Auto Electric 10 Adm. 25c PARI-MUTUEL RACES NIGHTLY Beautify] state supervised New Grandstand EVERY RACE DAILY DOUBLES 1st AND 2nd RACES