Word: pounders
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Carl Kludt, at 130, and Rick Sullivan, at 177, lost by decisions after one and two victories, respectively. Meanwhile, 147-pounder King Holmes, making his first start, joined Foster in the undefeated ranks with a clear-cut win. Other Crimson winners were Dave Skeels, in the opening 123-lb. match, and heavyweight Ted Robbins...
Other unbeaten Crimson wrestlers are Carl Kludt at 130, victorious in his only start against Dartmouth, and 167-pounder Rick Sullivan, who beat both his Dartmouth and Columbia opponents. Heavyweight Ted Robbins, after losing against Cornell and Franklin & Marshall, has won three in a row and will face Penn's Smith, whom Pickett calls a "pretty good heavyweight...
Capt. Joe Noble and Bob Foster, the Crimson's two unbeaten members, stretched their winning streaks to four apiece. Noble, at 157, shut out the Indians' John Chilson, 5-0. Foster recorded an equally one-sided win, beating 177 pounder Jay Crane...
...outdo his previous exploits as a canny hooker of the skittery bonefish (the Miami Chamber of Commerce once cited him for landing an unusually healthy 13-pounder), ex-President Herbert Hoover, 84, relaxed aboard a yacht after his arrival in Florida with gee-whiz approval of his first jet ride: "It's a true revolution in air travel. It's going to make a great change in the American scene...
...even more convincing decision was scored by Bob Foster, the varsity's other unbeaten wrestler, over Tech 177-pounder Bob McCullough. Foster, swarming all over McCullough from the start, gained a quick takedown and earned another point for a predicament in the first period. In the second frame, Foster appeared to have pinned his man, but the referee had an obstructed view and was unable to call it. Three points for this near-fall and six more for a reversal, another near-fall and a one-minute time advantage made Foster's final margin...