TODAY'S GAMES
None scheduled.
WEEKEND RESULTS
Men's basketball 70, Merrimack 69
Women's basketball 84, Hartford 49
Men's fencing d. Brown, Holy Cross, Trinity
Women's fencing 10, Brown 6
Women's fencing 14, Holy Cross 2
Women's fencing 12, Trinity 4
Men's hockey 7, Wester Ontario 2
UCLA 2, men's soccer 0
Women's squash 4, Trinity 3
Men's swimming 90, Columbia 24
Women's swimming d. Maine, Boston College
Army 83, men's track 53
Army 81, women's track 19
Wresting fourth at Coast Guard tournament
NFL
Cincinnati 20, Cleveland 17, OT
St. Louis 33, New England 10
Dallas 26, Philadelphia 10
Kansas City 16, Denver 13
Buffalo 21, Indianapolis 15
San Francisco 35, Atlanta 17
Green Bay 27, Tampa Bay 14
Houston 23, Pittsburgh 20, OT
Seattle 38, Detroit 17
Los Angeles Rams 34, New Orleans 21
Los Angeles Raiders 45, Miami 34
NBA
Boston 122, Cleveland 99
Philadelphia 114, New Jersey 112
Chicago 113, L. A. Lakers 112
NHL
Washington 9, Pittsburgh 1
Winnipeg 8, Calgary 6
Olympic Boycotts
LAUSANNE, Switzerland--The International Olympic Committee (IOC) yesterday rejected proposals to exclude boycotting nations from subsequent Olympics, saying such action would punish the athletes more than the governments initiating the boycotts.
But a special two-day session of the 88-member committee decided that national sports officials will be barred in future from any Olympic Games where their teams are absent.
The committee renewed its "full support" to the organizing committee of the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul, South Korea, which are threatened by a renewed Soviet bloc boycott.
IOC President Juan--Antonio Samaranch told a news conference he was "very optimistic the world is at the beginning of a new period of detente" that would help to avoid a new boycott.
"But if the political situation is any worse, or the same as it is today, we can be sure that we will once again face difficulties" at the Seoul Games, he said.
"We cannot rule the world," he added. "The world is ruled by politicians, not by sports officials."
The IOC denounced "the punishment of athletes" caused by political boycotts of the 1976 Games in Montreal, the 1980 Games in Moscow and the 1984 Games in Los Angeles, and declared:
"The solution to this serious problem does not consist of imposing further punishment affecting the athletes for whom the Olympic Games exist. Rather, it lies in identifying the true motives for non-participation and pointing out that such actions will isolate the representatives of the National Olympic Committees of such countries, upon their own volition, from the Olympic Games."
Samaranch said no representatives of National Olympic Committees of boycotting teams would be given Olympic credentials, the national quota of media representatives from boycotting countries would be halved and the IOC would ask national sports federations to reduce judges and referees from boycotting countries to a minimum.
But Samaranch said IOC members from boycotting countries would not be barred.
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