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A-18 Sports WIN, LOSE OR DRAW THERE WAS TO HAVE BEEN the fes tive pilgrimage to Tale Bowl yesterday for the Big Game. Instead, the big, old arena lay desolate in the cold, gray rain and the Yales and Harvards grieved with the rest of the Nation. How ironical that, once, the game with Tale culminated what the most famous of Harvard’s coaches designated as Joy Week. Percy Haughton, when he became the Cantabs' mentor in 1908, split the sea son into Accuracy Week, Fight Week, Speed Week and Joy Week. The period preceding the clash with Yale was Joy Week, and how unimportant football and other such children’s games were yesterday. How hollow the echo of the words of the legendary Tad Jones, when the Yale coach began an address to his squad: “Gentleman, you are about to play foot ball for Yale against Harvard. Never in your lives will you do anything so im portant.” **• • - THERE IS NO TELLING how many times John F. Kennedy and the other Kennedys sat in Yale Bowl or Harvard Stadium. For the late President stood at the top among all Chief Executives as a sports fan. He was one as a youth, as a rising politician and as a President, who as no other sat in the Orange Bowl, Phil adelphia Stadium, the ball parks in Wash ington, and in D. C. Armory for the Inter national Horse Show. There may have been other Presidents who found as much pleasure at a sporting event. There is no way to measure this. But none looked more like a fan or acted more like the best and most dignified of buffs than Mr. Kennedy. Harry Truman was close, among the more modem Presidents. He, too, looked as if he would have paid his way. And Woodrow Wilson, who, when the cares of the day permitted, used to be driven in his high, thin-tired black limou sine to Griffith Stadium for an afternoon of baseball. ** * * IT WAS NOT AN UNFAMILIAR sight to see Mr. Wilson, when he was not so ambulatory as to climb to a box seat, watch the Senators through the windshield of his car. It was parked along the rightfield line in the old park, midway between first base and the fence, next to where the Washing ton relief pitchers warmed up. It was a position of some hazard, per haps, but Mr. Wilson didn’t seem to mind. Clark Griffith used to designate a bullpen catcher to protect the windshield and the player, mitt on his hand, sat on the bumper. Some Chief Executives seemed to look on the first-ball ceremony on opening day as a chore, a command performance with vague political overtones. Mr. Kennedy needed no urging to perpetuate the custom. *• • « HE WAS ALMOST ALWAYS barehead ed, and disdained a topcoat or overcoat if possible. His entrances were almost casual, not at all similar to the dramatic entrances of, notably, Franklin D. Roosevelt. He was the unpretentious honor guest. He was at the Orange Bowl game on January 2,1962 and the Navy man in him came out as Missouri defeated the Middies, 21-14. Jacketless in the Miami sun, wearing dark glasses that made him look so like Schedules of Area College Basketball Teams MARYLAND Dec. 2—Virginia. Dec. 4—At Georgetown. Dec. 7—At Penn State. Dec 10—North Carolina State. Dec. 14—West Virginia. Dec. 16—Cl cm son. Dec. 20-21—At VPI Invitational. Dec. 27-28 —At Holiday Tourna ment, Evansville. Ind. Jan. 6—South Carolina. Jan. 11—At Navy. Jan. 13—At North Carolina. Jan. 18—At North Carolina State. Jan. 20—At Wake Forest Feb. I—At George Washington. Feb. 6—At West Virginia. Feb. B—Duke Feb. 14—Wake Forest. Feb. 18—North Carolina. Feb. 20—At Virginia. Feb. 22—At Duke. Feb. 25— Georgetown. Feb. 28—At Clemson. Feb. 20 —At South Carolina. Mar. 5-7—At ACC tournament. Ral eigh, N. C. GEORGETOWN Dec. 4—Maryland. Dec. 7—Fairleigh Dickinson Dec. 10 —American U. Dec. 12 —At Manhattan. Dec 16—At Delaware. Dec. 19 —At Loyola New Orleans. Dec. 21 At Georgia Tech. Dec. 27-30 —At Quaker City tour nament. Philadelphia. Jan. 4—At George Washington. Jan. 7—Canisius. Jan. 11—At Fordham. Jan. 14—Navy Jan. 25—La8alle. Feb. I—At Beton Hall Feb. s—At Bt. Joseph s. Feb 9—St. Peter’s. Feb. 12—George Washington. Feb 15—New York U. Feb. 17-—Fairfield Feb. 21—At Boston College. Feb 22—At Holy Cross. Feb 25—At Maryland. Feb 29—Rutgers. GEORGE WASHINGTON Nov. 30—At Cincinnati. • Dec. 3—At St. John',. Dec. 6-7—At Steel Bowl tournament. Pittsburgh. Dec. 10 —Virginia Military. Dec. 13—Furman. Dec. 16—Citadel. Dec. 18—At Richmond. Dec. 27-28—At All-American tourna ment. Owensboro, Ky. Dec. 30—At Virginia Tech. Jan. 4—Georgetown Jan. 6—Virginia Tech. Jan. 11—West Virginia. Jan. 18 —Richmond. Jan. 28 —Centenary. Feb. I—Maryland. Feb. 4 —At Virginia Military Feb. 6—William & Mary Feb. R—At West Virginia. Feb. 11—At Georgetown. Feb. IS—At William * Mary. Feb. 22 —Navy. Feb. 27-29—At Southern Conference tournament. Charlotte, N. C. (All home games at Fort Myer -xeept West Virginia, which will be olayed at Washington Coliseum.) NAVY E. 3—Baltimore U. . 6—At Manhattan. . 7. —At Pennsylvania. . 11— Gettysburg. ■ li—Princeton. ; |fclwake r *Poreat at Oreens *°&c. 30— Georgia at Atlanta. Dec. 31 —At Georgia Tech. Tragedy Adds Irony To Lore of Big Game Jan. 4 —T?mple. Jan. B—Long Island U. Jan. 11—Maryland. Jan. 14 —At Georgetown. Jan. 29—Rutgers. Feb. I—At Duke. Feb. 6—Delaware. Feb. B—Penn Btatc. Feb. 14—At Virginia. Feb. 15—At Virginia Tech. Feb. 18—Bucfcnell. Feb. 22—At George Washington. Feb. 29—At Army. AMERICAN UNIVERSITY Nov. 30—At Duouesne. Dec. 2—At Bucknell. Dec. s—At Mount St. Mary’s. Dec. 7—Quantico. Dec. 10—At Georgetown. Dec. 14—At Temple. Dec. 20—Stetson. Dec. 23—Army. Dec. 27-28—At Battlefield tourna ment. Gettysburg. Pa Jan. 3-4—At Rubber City Classic. Akron. Jan. B—Susquehanna. | Jan 11—At Rider. Jan. 14—Baltimore U. Jan 28—Lafayette. Jan. 30—At Villanova Jan. 31—At Loyola. Peb. B—At St Bonaventure. Feb. 11—Mount St. Mary's. Feb. 15—Loyola. Feb. 21—At DePaul. Feb. 22—At Adelphi Feb. 25—At Quanticc. Feb 29—Utah BtaU. SOUTHEASTERN Nov. 29—Alumni. Dec. 3—At Richmond Prof. Inst. Dec. 6—At Castleton. Dec 7—At Windham. I Dec. 13—At Salisbury State. Dec. 14—At Coppin State (aft.). Dec. 23—Goldey-Beacom. Jan. 3—At Newport News Appren i tice. Jan. 4—At Frederick College. Jan. 7—At D. C. Teachers. Jan. 10 —Salisbury Btate. Jan. 11—At Frostburg State (aft.). Jan. 17—Richmond Prof. Inst. Jan. 18—At Gallaudet. Jan. 24 —Coppin State. Jan. 31—At Bowie State. Feb. s—Frederick College. Feb. 7—Newport News Apprentice. Feb. 14—Frostburg State. Feb. 15—C. W. Post. Feb. 21—D. C. Teachers. Feb. 22—Pace. Feb. 28—Bowie State. PRINCE GEORGES COMMUNITY COLLEGE Dec. 3—Essex. Dec. 7 —Baltimore JC. Dec. 11 —At Montgomery JC. e Dec. 13—Allegany JC. r Dec. 14—Potomac State. * Dec. 18—At Charles County. Dec. 21 —Harford. Jan. 4—Catonsvllle. Jan. 9—Shenandoah. Jan. 11—Wesley JC. Jap. 15—Hagerstown. Jan. 18 —At Harford. Jan. 25—At Shenandoah. Jan 29 —Montgomery JC. Feb. I—At Anne Arundel. Feb s—At Catonsville. Feb. B—At Essex. Feb 10 —Charles County, i- Feb. 12—At Baltimore JC. Fsb. 15—At Hagerstown. Feb. 21-22 —At Tri-state Conference tournament. Dover. Del. THE SUNDAY STAR Washington, 0. C . No—iber 14, 1 963 the famous photo of the bare-to-the-waist PT boat commander, Mr. Kennedy leaped to his feet and cheered when Navy End Greg Mather ran 96 yards for one touch down. He shouted, “Go, Go!” when Joe Bellino, the Middle halfback, made an in credible catch for another TD. Mr. Kennedy brought more enthusiasm to the Senators’ opening games than luck. There were wily three in the tragically short life of the President, and twice the home team lost. •* • * HE WAS THE LAST PRESIDENT to throw out the first ball in Griffith Stadium. This was in 1961, and the White Sox won by 4-3, and still remembered is the fact that Mr. Kennedy threw out two baseballs (the second for the benefit of the photogra phers i. Jim Rivera of the Chicago team caught the first one, brought it to the presidential box and begged for an autograph. Unerring, Mr. Kennedy spelled the name correctly. But the second was captured by Pitcher Hal Woodeshlck of the Senators and this time the late President, with an abashed grin, had to ask for the spelling. In 1962 the Senators beat the Tigers, 4-1, but rain delayed the game for 22 minutes. The President ducked down the players’ ramp at D. C. Stadium and spent 17 minutes in the umpires’ dressing room. There he smoked a small cigar and picked the brains of and autographed baseballs for the Messrs. Berry, Pap&rella, Hurley and Soar. ** * • THIS WAS THE DAY when a high, windblown foul by Willie Tasby narrowly missed hitting Mr. Kennedy on the head as he unflinchingly proved he was either a good judge of a fly ball or a bad one. It landed only a few feet away and bounded high off the dugout roof as the President laughed with the crowd. He had a 4:30 ap pointment with the Laotian Ambassador that day but stayed until the end of the game. It was 5:30 when the White House limousine arrived at 1600 Pennsylvania avenue. Last April was to be his last baseball opener. Jim Piersall, benched and soon to be sold, came to his box for an autograph. “I hope to see you in the lineup soon.” Mr. Kennedy told the outfielder from Massa chusetts. “My wife campaigned for you, Mr. Pres ident,” Piersall told him. “I know,” Mr. Kennedy replied with a smile. ** * * THE LATE CHIEF EXECUTIVE was the first since Mr. Truman in 1949 to at tend an Army-Navy game. This was in 1961, r and Navy won, 13-7. i Last fall Mr. Kennedy sat for half the r game on the Navy side, half on the Army. As lie changed sides at intermission he walked between honor rows of Cadets and Midshipmen, spread the width of the field. ' Everywhere were police and Secret Service men, yet somehow an ill-dressed kook i managed to get on the field and rush to ward Mr. Kennedy with outstretched hand. He was belatedly intercepted and led away—a harmless, inebriated well-wisher, not a sober, demented sniper gazing into a telescopic sight mounted on a rifle. Almost visibly the crowd shuddered. The memory came back early Friday afternoon. VIRGINIA Nov. 30—At Kentucky. Dec. 2—At Maryland. Dec. 7 —Richmond. Dec. 13—Phillips Oilers. Dec 17—Clemson. Dec. 19—At Duke. Dec. 27-28—All American City tour ney at Owensboro, Ky. Jan. 2—At VPI. Jan 4—South Carolina. Jan. B—N. C. State. Jan. 11—At Davidson. Jan 13—At Wake Forest. Jan. 25—VPI. Feb. I—N. C. State at Greensboro. Feb. 3—At North Carolina. Peb. B—At William & Mary. Feb 10—Duke. Feb. 14—Navy. Feb. 15—Wake Forest. Peb. 20—Maryland. Feb. 24—North Carolina. Feb. 28—At South Carolina. Feb. 29—At Clemson. March 5-7 —ACC tourney at Raleigh. HOWARD Dec. 2—At Gallaudet. Dec. 6—At St. Paul’s. ! Dec. 7—At Hampton. | Dec. 14—St. Paul's. Jan. 3-4 —At Gallaudet tournament. Jan. 6—At CCNT. Jan. B—Hampton. Jan. 10—At Morgan State. Jan. 11—At Virginia State. Jan. 13 —Lincoln. Jan. 25 —At Millersville. Jan. 30—Kutstown. Jan. 31—Bloomfield. Feb. I—At1 —At Maryland State. Feb. 3—At Delaware State. Feb. 7—At Catholic. Feb. B—Delaware. Feb. 11—At D. C. Teachers. Feb. 13—At Rutgers (Newark Branch). Feb. 15— Virginia State. Feb. 18—Maryland State. Feb. 19—Morgan State. Feb. 21—At Glassboro. Feb. 22—At Monmouth. CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY ! Nov. 30—Providence. Dec. 3—Seton Hall Dec. s—Baltimore U. Dec. 9—Shepherd. Dec. 11—At Johns Hopkins. Dec. 13—Mount St. Mary's. Dec. 14 —Roanoke Dec. 17—At Washington i Lee. Jan. 4—Washinaton College. Jan. 10—At King's College. Jan. 14—At Randolph-Macon. Jan. 16—At Loyola Jan. 18—At Detroit. Jan. 31—Towson. Feb. I—At St. Peter’s. Feb. 4—At Fairleigh-Dicklnson. Feb. 7—Howard. Feb. 9—At Xavier. Feb. 11—Gallaudet. Feb. 15—At Mount St. Mary's. Feb. 20—At Susquehanna. Feb. 22—Rider. Feb. 27-29—Mason - Dixon Conferenci tournament. D. C. TEACHERS Dec. 4—At Gallaudet. Dec 6—At Coppin State. Dec. 10—Delaware State. Dec 13—At Bloomfield Teachers. Jan. 3-4—At Gallaudet Tournament Jan. T—Southeastern. Jan 10—At Frostburg State. Jan. 14—Gallaudet. Jan. 28—Bloomfield Teachers. Feb. 4—Frostburg State. Feb. 7—Coppin State. Feb. 12—At Howard. t Feb 14—At Delaware State. Feb. 21—At Southeastern. . By FRANCIS STANN . il * - -** I 1 r ||| _ 4 I * I ft* ,4 I § I • i w jM ijjj : k' 4 . lv i m v \ * W I •JH THE GROWING MARIS BROOD Roger Maris, the Yankees’ slugging outfielder, holds Richard, the newest addition to the grow ing Maris brood at his Independence, Mo., THE SEASON APPROACHES Coaches Show Optimism Over Basketball Outlook By DICK SLAY Star Staff Writer Among coaches of the Big Three in area college basket* : ba.ll. Tommy O’Keefe of Geor getown is talking post-season tournament, Bill Reinhart at George Washington is at least; talking 1 n s t ea d of grumbling | and Maryland’s Bud Millikan appears to be whistling in the dark. During six weeks of practice | Millikan has been saying that he will have a better and more interesting team than last sea son. If the Terps win nine games they’ll be better, but that could be a tall order. Maryland won eight of 21 games last winter and GW fin ished 8-5. Georgetown had a better chance at a winner but dropped its last three games to wind up even at 13-13. Play Virginia First The Maryland coach said j last week that six of his first seven players are sophomores, according to his current rating list Sophomores can be inter esting. all right, but too often ! painfully. Scott Ferguson, a 6-foot-8 senior, is the lone holdover who figures prominently in Terp GALLAUDET Dec. 2—Howard. Dec. 4—D. C. Teachers. : Dec. 7—At Bowie Btate. 1 Dec. 10—Towson. Dec. 12—Randolph-Macon. i Dec. 18—Salisbury State. ! Dec. 19—At Western Maryland. Jan. 3-4 —Gallaudet Tournament. I Jan. 7—Baltimore U. I Jan. 14—At D. C. Teachers. Jan. 17—Italian team. Jan. 18—Southeastern. Jan. 25—At Baltimore U. Jan. 29—At Marian (Indianapolis). Feb. :i—Washington College. . ! Feb. 7—At Towson. Feb. 11—At Catholic U. Feb. 14—At Salisbury. Feb. 18—Bridgewater. Feb. 27-29—At Mason-Dixon Confer ence tournament. MONTGOMERY JUNIOR COLLEGE Dec. .s—American U. Frosh. Dec. 9—Catonsville. Dec. 11—Prince Georges. Dec. 14—Hagerstown Dec. 16 —Baltimore JC. Jan. H—Shenandoah. Jan. B—At Wesley. Jan. 10—At Baltimore JC. Jan. 14 At George Washington Frosh. Jan. 17—Bainbridge Prep. Jan. 29—At Prince Georges. Jan. 30—Charles County. Feb. I—At Hagerstown. Feb. 7—At Allegany. Feb B—At Potomac State. Feb. 11—At Bainbridge Prep. Feb. 13—At Bhenandoah. Feb. 17—At American U. Frosh. Feb. 21-22—At Tri-State Conference tournament. Dover, Del. t Top Boys Eleven From California To Visit Capital The unbeaten and unscored on Mallards of Pittsburg, Calif., the top-ranking Pop Warner football team from California, will arrive in Washington to morrow morning for a three day tour of the city. The Mallards are stopping here on their way to Philadel phia, where they will meet the Mayfair Athletic Club at the ce Northeast High School Stadium at 3 p.m. Friday in the Disney | land Bowl game. In eight games the Mallards scored 331 points while holding the opposition not only score ,t. less but to minus 141 yardi from scrimmage. They will leave for Phlladel phia Wednesday, following t 2:30 practice session at St. Al bans School. plans at the moment. Maryland graduated its four best players from the 1962-63 team—Jerry Greenspan, Bob Etcher, Connie Carpenter and Bill Stasiulatis. The young replacements will be thrown into heavy fighting ; early. The Terps. who open atl home against Virginia a week from tomorrow, will participate in two holiday tournaments in order to gain experience for the bulk of their Atlantic Coast Conference schedule. The idea must be contagious because George Washington and Amer ican University also play in two early-season invitationals. GW is one of five teams be ginning their schedules next , week end, if Southeastern’s ; game with its alumni Friday is , counted. The other four step out in rough company Satur day, GW at Cincinnati, AU at Duquesne, Virginia at Ken [ tucky and Catholic U. at home against Providence. GW Coach Please Reinhart, believe it or not. has said he actually is quite pleased with the workouts so ,; far in the GW gym. Last year’s , sophomores apparently have , come of age. Including Phil | Aruscavage. ■ ; A fine prospect as a fresh man two years ago, the 6- foot-3 Aruscavage couldn’t seem to get in the groove last , winter, but this fall has been NYU RATED SECOND Loyola Runaway As Top Cage Pick NEW YORK, Nov. 23 (AP)— The Ramblers of Loyola of Chicago are an overwhelming , choice to win the national col legiate basketball champion ship for the second straight ’year. With only All-America Jerry , Harkness missing from the team that upset Cincinnati in the NCAA final last March, the Ramblers polled 335 of a possi ble 360 points in the Associated Press pre-season poll. , Os the AP panel of 36 sports writers and broadcasters, 23 picked the Ramblers No. 1. Far behind in second place at 251 points came New York University, which beat out Cin cinnati and Duke for the run- Inerup spot. i Kramer, Hairston Back NYU, which has its one-two i punch of Barry Kramer and ~ Happy Hairston back, got six r first-place votes. Cincinnati got t, two first places and took third • with 243 points. Duke, expected - to be strong despite the loss of Art Heyman, received tnree g firsts and 224 points. Wichita, with star Dave e Stallworth returning and fa s vored by many to dethrone 0 Cincinnati in the Missouri Val * ley Conference, landed fifth place with 191 points, including Is one first-place vote, g Arizona State University, - Ohio State, Michigan, Ken is tucky and Oregon State round out the pre-season Top Ten. 1- Arizona States is favored to a romp in the Western Athletic 1- Conference; Ohio State and Michigan are co-favorites in home. Left to right are Kevin, 3; Roger, jr., 5; Roger and Richard, who is 1 Vx weeks old; Randy, 2; Mrs. Pat Maris and Susan, 6. AP Wirephoto. the big surprise. He twisted an ankle early this week but still figures in the starting lineup along with Joe Adamitls, Ken ny Logins, Duke Farrell and Mark Clark. Ric Duques, trans fer Harvey Mallis and Soph Irv Dieterle are the front-line res erves. The most discussed basket ball injury around town the last couple weeks has been Jim Barry’s knee. As of now it doesn’t need surgery and thoughts of a post-season bid still dance in O’Keef’s head. “I’m very encouraged.” Tom has been quoted. "This year well have the depth.” Sophs Have Height 1 Joining Barry in the likely 1 opening lineup is Capt. Jim 1 Christy, Chuck Devlin, John Prendergast and Joe Fran. Joe ' Mazelln and Buddy O'Donnell are senior veterans, but OX -1 eefe probably will dip into his sophomore group to find height. Barry stands 6-foot-6 and . Delvin and Fran 6-foot-5 each, ! and they might not be > enough. Sophs Owen Gillen ; and John Gibbons go about 6-6 > and might be called on early. I The Hoy as open at home against Maryland two nights . after the Terps entertain Virgi . nia next week. Anything less t than a decisive victory by t Georgetown could be forebod l ing. the Big Ten; Kentucky is ex pected to bounce back from a sad season and be a contender in the Southeastern Confer ence, and Oregon State is rated the top independent on the Pa cific Coast. Oregon State gained the No. 10 slot with 40 points, just enough to edge UCLA, with 39, and Kansas State, with 38. North Carolina, with 34, and San Francisco, with 33, also were in contention for the last spot in the Top Ten. Vic Rouse, Les Hunter, John Egan and Ron Miller are the four returning regulars on Coach George Ireland's cham pionship Loyola club. It was Rouse who tossed in the win ning basketball in overtime last March in the Ramblers' come from-behind 60-58 title victory over Cincinnati. i l Potent Scorers Loyola, 29-2 last season, was [ the highest-scoring collegiate l team, with an average of 91.1 t points per game. ! The Ramblers play their first ; NEW TRUCKS ; '/S-TON GMC PICKUPS 5 New for *64 $1,779 Comp Ute With Heoter. CENTRAL MOTOR CO. OV. 3-1500 610 N. Henry Street Alex., Vo., on U. S. Rte. 1 1 Sol.* Open Dolly Til 9 P.M. Arkansas Tips Texas lech on Gray's Dash FAYETTEVILLE. Ark., Nov. 23 (AP)Arkansas wrapped up a break-even football season today by edging Texas Tech, 27-20, in a Southwest Confer ence game on a 24-yard touch down run by Quarterback Billy Gray. Arkansas jumped ahead. 20-0, with three touchdowns, one on an 80-yard punt return by Kenny Hatfield. Then the Raiders unleashed a three-touchdown blast en gineered by Quarterback Ben Elledge, who scored the third touchdown on a short run, for a 20-all tie. Elledge Cuts Loose Jack Brasuell, broke loose for a 34-yard off tackle sprint ear ly In the second quarter after Bobby Nix scored first for Ar kansas from 1 yard out. Suddenly lt was Ell edge ’ s show. First he executed a 17- yard touchdown pass to End i Tommy Doyle and four min -1 utes later fired a 40-yard Scor ing heave to End David Parks. Drive Knots Score j The Raiders tied the score , with Elledge’s 1-yard sneak, l which climaxed a 76 - yard march. Parks caught four passes for . 80 yards and set a Tech season record for passing yardage. HU season total was 499 yards, 1 breaking Robert Bake Turner’s ’ 1959 mark. Less than 10 minutes were left when Arkansas started its final 85-yard trip which ended . with Gray’s 24-yard touchdown run and victory. TEXAS TECH 0 13 7 o—2o ARKANSAS —7 13 O 7—21 Arkansas—Nix 1, run (McKnelly kick) Arkansas—Brasuell 34, run iklcl failed). Arkansas—K. Hatfield 80. punt return (McKnelly kick). Texas Tech—Parks 40. pass from El ledge (kick failed). Texas Tech—Parka 40, pass to Ell edit (kick failed). Texas Tech Elledge 2. run (Daniel! kick). Arkansas Gray 24. run (McKnellj kick). Attendance 25.000. ■ game this season against Nortl l Dakota December 2. r For comparison purposes . here’s the final Associated l Press poll for last season: 1 ■ Cincinnati. 2, Duke. 3, Loyola 4, Arizona State. 5, Wichita. 6 Mississippi State. 7, Ohio State t 8, Illinois. 9, NYU. 10, Colorado , The pre-season Top Ten .. with first-place votes in paren 1 theses, last-season records ant j points on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3 t 2-1 basis: 1. Chicago Loyola (23) 29-2 33: 2. New York University (6) 18-5 25: . 3. Cincinnati (2) 26-2 24: 1 4. Duke (3) 27-3 22- » 5. Wichita (1) 19-8 19 e 6. Arizona State 26-3 13! i 7. Ohio State 20-4 9 8. Michigan (1) 16-8 8< - 9. Kentucky 16-9 5: . 10. Oregon State 22-9 4: 5 Others receiving votes, listed alpha . betlcally: Bradley. Creighton. Colored . State University. Davidson. Oeorgl t Tech. Indiana. Illinois, Kansas Stat< Louisville. Minnesota, North Carolina - Notre Dame. Mississippi State. North „ western. Oklahoma State. Princetor ' Providence, Pitt. Ban Francisco. Seto: Hall. St. Louis. Southern California Stanford. Seattle. Texas. Toledo UCLS Utah Btate, Virginia Tech. Vanderbilt Villanova. West Virginia and Wester Michigan. S ____________ * KUESkZliSlSfli Sidle Sparks Auburn Over r Florida State 4 AUBURN, Ala Nov. 23 <AP). —Quarterback Jimmy Sidle of Auburn scored three touch downs today, pacing the ninth ranked Tigers to a 21-15 victory over Florida State Even though he watched part of the game from the bench. STATISTICS _ , FSt) Auburn First downs 7 gmhlnt yards** -2 241 Passlnc yardage 10a 54 Panes i-15 5-11 Passes intercepted by 1 Yards penalised 18 Ml resting for next week’s en counter with Alabama, Sidle picked up 132 yards rushing. With Sidle in the game. Al burn had the drive needed to turn back the Seminoles and to capitalize on the breaks. Without him, the Tigers were in trouble. Stiffens Defense Florida State, badly out played in the first half, stif fened its defense after the in termission and made it more and more difficult for Auburn to break through. A pass interception gave the Seminoles one scoring opport unity and a 5-yard punt rec tum put them in position for another. They made good on both of them. Sidle got the first score early in the game with an eight-yard sprint, ending an 82-yard drive. The 200-pound junior from Birmingham, who leads the Southeastern Conference in total offense, dived over from the 2 for another touchdown in the second quarter, and bulled his way into the end. zone from seven yards out for the final Auburn score. Misses FG Attempts Woody Woodall booted th» three extra points, but missed two field-goal attempts after touchdown drives bogged down. Quarterback Steve Tens! threw a 27-yard scoring pass to John Wachtel for one Florida State score. Ed Pritchett jumped over from the l for the final score after Windred Bailey had returned a punt 56 yards to the Auburn 12. > BTATT n o 7 s—is i SUB URN 7 7 7 o— -1 Auburn—Sidle 8. run (Woodall kk*7. Auburn—-Sidle 2. run (Woodall kick). * —Wachtel 27, pass from . . Tensl (Mesker kick). s“ b 7. run (Woodall kick). - Plorlda State—Pritchett 1. run (Cal houn run). y Attendance. 28.000. i, I, | LSU Blanks ! Tulane, 20-0, r For 7-3 Year - BATON ROUGE. La., Nov. r 23 (AP).—Louisiana State - used its running power and the toe of Doug Moreau to 8 down Tulane, 20-0, today in - the season finale for the d Southeastern Conference - teams. - Don Schwab broke through i. right tackle and ran 66 yards for one touchdown. Danny Le- Blanc cracked over from the e 3 for the other. Schwab, the i. game’s top rusher, picked up d 154 yards in 20 carries. Moreau booted two field >r goals in the third quarter from n 40 and 31 yards out. a LSU Ends at 7-3 s. Tulane, which wound up s with a 1-8-1 season record, held the Tigers to one touch * down in the first half, and got a close enough for Don Bright to d try two field goals. Both were n short. The victory gave LSU a 7-3 n mark and kept the Tigers in - the running for a bowl bid. LSU piled up 314 yards or the ground and held Tulane to" n minus-1. LSU accumulated *- 59 yards ip the air. Tulane 88. i* Schwab’s fourth period is touchdown was the game’s out iy standing play. The 195-pound fullback appeared momentarily stopped after three defenders ” met him when he slanted off tackle, but he twisted free and h ran by the surprised Tulane secondary. s, Last Game for 18 d Ten LSU seniors saw their 1. last scheduled action, including 8 Halfback Dwight Robinson and 6, Ends Bill Truax and Danny e. Neumann. Fullback Buddy o. Hamic, another senior, has a, been sideline' 4 since mid-sea- 1 i.! son. 1( 1 Eight Tulane seniors bowed l_ out, including starters Quar terback A1 Burguieres. End is Clem Dellenger, Guard Russ [3 Galliano and Tackle Mike Cal it J TULANK 0 0 0 0— 0 SO LgP 7 0 6 7—20. S 9 LBU—Leßlanc 3. run (Moreau kick). 10 LSU—FG Moreau. 40. a- LSU—FG Moreau. 31. do LSU —Schwab 6ti. run (Moreau kick). :1a Attendance. 65.000. te. & H STEWART S II - H CAR CARE CENTERS Mon.-Tues.-Wed. H RECONDITIONING H b s ioi H DOWNTOWN ME. 8-0525 H II 100 New York Ay*. N.W. II JH GEORGETOWN FE. 3-6230 K I| 26**5 M St. N.W. H- I WHEATON. MD WH 9-5114 ■ a® 11158 Georeia Ave. mW H ARLINGTON. VA. JA. 4-2166 ■ 1» H 2115 Wilson Blvd. ALEXANDRIA. VA. KI. 8-6611 K | 1912 Duke St.