The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 1, 1963 Page: 6 of 10
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Cawthon Honored
By Former Stars
At Burial Rites
_ the regular season discov-
ered-
Add the fact that it U Rose
Bowl appearance No, 13 for the
i «rf Troy. No other team has
like to win one.
The Longhorns, coming into the
big game uft.......
tor the seasc
Cotton Bowl seven t
than any other school
fiSjUSST*
13 for the Louisiana State, on the other
team in the country, and' the only
Big Ten sdiool that has appeared
in the Rbse Bmvl without winning.
In fact, the Big Tor has lost
only three times since
____E1
and Wisconsin has dropped two of
those games, one to Southern Cal.
Hie Badgers are determined
that this sort of thing can
Bat go on.
The oddwnakers, who obviously ®oo * Site year
are nc* the same men who vote
; to the national ranking poll, have
established Wisconsto'The favorite
despite the 10-0 record of the
Trepans. Wisconsin had an 8-1
ptark, losing only to . Ohio State.
Each hag an All-America player,
guard Damon Bame of Southern
Si ai '
and end Pit Richter of Wis- Louisiana State wen the l»<
eonsin., gtmetoevteytttfn^ tat too-sewej
The, game heads the
Four bowl line-up, with
5 p.m., EST. NBC will carry the
1
hand, has played in die Cotton
Bowl only once. That was an un-
satisfactory tie with Arkansas in
fee-snow, raiiif ice and aleet ‘
No-! bum to «n tt
any of the bowls for feat matter,
winning only three out of nine.
Texas has played
jSSrev*.ch
tian’s No. 7 team, is about a fi
goal favorite Mr Texas, No.
Some wags have been picking 1
wags have been
score as 3-2.
* crowd of 75,504—capacity—
be big saucer at fee
game
by CBS.
No. 4. through a similar dHJl. He had no Vaught’s teams
range JHI
MIAMI (AP) - Alabama vs.
Oklahoma was the Orange Bowl fW),
in all the major
bowls except the Rose Bowl and
has a career record of 6*2.
So it will be the pridf ot the
Southeastern Conference at stake
as Louisiana State, led by AIL
America halfback Jeriy Stovall,
seeks to close out in glowing fash-
Tigers
At least
which the
ipiled an 8-1-1* record.
Louisiana State won’t
be handicapped by bad weather,
if all predictions hold up. The
Weather Bureau ha* promised
partly cloudy weather, with terns
peratures ranging from SO to 60
degrees and no rain.
Louisiana
dena stands.
The other games line-up like
ttis:
Sugar Bowl, at New Orleans-
Mississippi, 94, and third-ranked
meets Arkansas, 9-1, sixth-ranked.
Attendance, 83,000, and NBC at 2
p.m., est;
Cotton Bowl at Texas-Texas,
9-0-1, fourth-ranked, against Lou-
isiana State, 8-14, ranked sev-
enth, Attendance 75,000 and CBS
at 3 p.m., EST.
Orange Bowl at Miami—Ala-
bama, 9-1
homa, 8-2, eighth. Attendance is
. moving the ball but
D a defense’that , kept
football fare today, figured as a
high-pressure; - low-scoring battle
between ranked elevens.
The show was scheduled to in-
dude fee appearance of President
Kennedy shortly before the kick-
off as one of the 72,000 specta-
tors.
Television cameras from ABC
also were trained on the proceed-
ings matching Alabama's fifth-
ranked Crimson Tide, 9-1 and the
No, 8 rated Sooner*, 8-2, who had
games, will see only nine ural.'
Wisconsin
i continue to weave-i
oyec Arkansas mentor Frank
meetings
such trouble pegging Alabama, Broyles’ Arkansas units every
have solid support from ________
tfho watched them post an __
record, despite a rugged Big Ten
schedule,___ ' '
WiscoMto, led by quarterback
28, as the pre-game choice. Mississippi saw the last per-
Although fee game is fee first forrr.ances of ace quarterback
meeting ever between the schools, I Glynn Griffing and 270-pound
neither is an Orange Bowl strang-tackle Jim Dunaway. Six other
er. ‘Bama has won both its ap-|«tatiers will also —J"—
pearances whili
beaten here
Oklahoma is un- But the depth-laden Rebels
under Wilkinson have junior fullbadc Perry Lee season.
Dunn and sophomore signal caller
Sugar-Bowl [solid tocl^^aucleiis^ ^ _ game. He called his Southern Cal
NEW ORLEANS (AP)-Nomat-l. Mississippi will shape its 1963
ilMlSf
but- West Coast
Southern Cal one of the .
in Trojan history and -
.............J—§
MEXIA (AP).- A Cavalcade
of honor was to be tanned today
tar the late coach Pete Cawthon
athletes who played under his
Ron VSnderKelen and a fleet of
***> topped
non with an average of 3L7
the nation with an average
points per game. Southern Cal av-
eraged 31.9 jpftints but was noted
V
\ ar —
I !■■■ i
Trojan Coach John McKay be- I
Jim Weatherly returning for a lieved defense would be key to the
snliH hsHfftpIri niirlpiis. . —oomn Ha nallo^ Kie CmifKcm Pol
iL. We$k
■
coaching fraternity’s most color-
ful members, died Monday at the
uled at 11 a.m. after the body had
lain in state at fee Corley Funeral
Home here.(
lie)
defense "very good" but admitted
high respect for Wisconsin’s coun-
terpart. minting out that the
Badgers did not allow more than
| two touchdowns ft any game. ■
McKay and Wisconsin Coach 1
The bad news for their 1963 “j11 Bnihn pronounced feeir
ponents is this:
Third-ranked Mississippi, which |Bitty. Gray
turned back nine rivals for its]
luiHcu ____- .....r liycus Returning in the line will____
first perfect season, will lose only sophomore end Jen* Lamb, who
won their last seven -starts while 10 seniors. And the sixth-ranked I snagged 23 tosses for 378 yards,
trumpeting a Return to national Razorbacks, who lost only to Tex-1
er starters.
Gander Workout-
U Rose Bowl
. , PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Na-
Byers' Ankle Heals; EgtSKSg
Smith's Ankle Hurt G&EftSW
Baytown opened this
workouts Monday afternoon
received some good news plus a will
flash on the darker side. . the
Roger Byeri, M co-captain and Arthur
high, postman, returned to work
Monday after a three-week
out with an ankle injury suffered
■1, and fifth exposes Okla-
‘ eighth. Attendance
73,000 and ABC at 1 p.m., EST.
Hie lineup produced the top
eight teams of fee country, al-
though ninth-ranked Penn State
demonstrated in the Gator Bowl
last Saturday that it takes more
than credentials. Florida, four-
times beaten and unranked,
trounced fee Nittany Lions 17-7 in
Hie 28th annual Sun Bowl game
The Buffaloes came from be-
hind twice, fee second itaie on
30-yard pass from Hoot Gibson to
Jerry Richardson. Quarterback
Jim Dawson then threw the win-
congratulai
hill of Arkansas on his goal line
defense.
“Well," said Barnhill, whose
team had
son
the other teams from scoring and [hi practice.
•' The high scoring three-year let-
terman looked sharp Monday con-
sidering his long absence. And his
ankle was still holding strong af-
ter fee two-hour practice..,
Left flanker Robert Oliver, an-
other three-year letter winner who
missed the Port Arthur Basketball
week’s certain about fee length Smith I With a forecast of sunny sldef
and would be out. Richard Hargraves and a temperature in the nud-60s
49th Rose Bowl Classic.
With a forecast of sunny skies
rULlKUU ntUXloVCO V* Ui uib MMbTn/Oi
probably fill in tor Smith" in forc^edfiret W8S dSefte*
'■I. geiUiy11wtowPme in P°rt between fee Nation’s two
ranked powers. .
| Tournament last Friday, returned
a Christmas
I to practice after a (
j day vacation to New Mexico.
iholi-
i
jj*
gate
SMITH
V • 7
* 1rore Cut
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
fjMefcated Clnelnn»H
firm grip on first place
Press basket-
held
s in the
weekly Associated
ball poll today, but Southern Cali-
Hie Bearcats, with a 27-game
winning streak going, were
awarded 42 of fee 43 first-place
votes cast by a panel of sports
writers and sportscasters around
fee nation.
They finished with 429 points.
Loyola of Chicago, the highest
scoring team - to the country,
edged Illinois far second [dace
331 point* to 313, Illinois receiver
fee one first-place vote not award-
ed to Cincinnati. Both Loyola and
Illinois were undefeated through
Sunday.
Hien came, to order, Arizona
State, Ohio State, Kentucky,
Duke, Wichita, UCLA’ and Au-
burn.
The votes were tabulated Hy fee
usual method of 10 points tar first
place, nine for second and so on.
Wichita, UCLA and Auburn all
are newcomers to the top ten.
Wichita pushed to alter handing
-— - — ~ - - - UCXiA
Ohio State its first defeat. _
was the surprise Winner of fee
Los Angeles Classic. Auburn cap-
tured fee {Sugar Bowl
jnent. ^
Hie log Angeles Classic spelled
trouble for both Southern Cal and
Stanford. Each went to undefeat-
ed, but was beaten ft two of three
games.
W L Pts.
L Cincinnati (42) ..... 9 0 429
1 Loyola Chicago .... 10 0 331
1 Illinois (1) ....... 8 0 313
f. Arizona State ..... 9 1 185
5. Ohio State ........ 7 1 173
6. Kentucky ......... 7 2 159
i. Duke 8 3 157
S. Wichita 9 2 116
»% UCLA .......A.... 10 2 87
] ), Auburn............. 8 0 35
AVTOMOMI
MfHOtiTIRINjB
JOHN'S TWH SHOP
MtW.lteto MM
ABL Throws
100 Players
On Market
CHICAGO (AP)—With all clubs
operating in the red, the Ameri-
can Basketball League has sus-
pended operations and thrown
some 100 players on fee market
as free agents.
cinirl.
‘Not a single club was operat-
* Mack,” said Commis-
tog to the
sioner Abe Saperslein, who an-
nounced fee decision to suspend
Monday after telephone confer-
ences with club directors.
“About 100 Mayers arc involved
and they now can be considered
free agents. We hope to help
them get employment. A great
many should be picked up by the
National Basketball Association.”
Several NBA clubs reportedly
were contacting ABL player:
whom they have NBA rights
through draft and trade proce-
dure.
The fe. Louis Hawks were said
to be interested to Bill Bridges of
Kansas City, the ABL’t top scor-
er, and his 6-foot-9 teaftfnate,
Gene Tormohleh.
_ Larry Staverman arid Morris
King of Kansas City and Roger
Kaiser of Pittsburgh, were said to
be on the shopping list of the
Chicago Zephyrs. Hie Z’s draft-
ed Kaiser and K’ • - - -
Daye Piontek to
the fights to S
chose to join .fee
ed Kaiser and King and traded
to Cincinnati for
Staverman, who
ABL.
Syracuse was said to be anxious
I get Ben Warley ofLoi
whom they drafted last
Warley of Long Beaph,
______drafted last summer.
San Francisco was interested ir
Willie Spraggins of Philadelphia,
a Warrior draftee last year, ,
Hie prize catch could be for-
mer Ohio Stat
Lucks. The
Cleveland Pipers, who later
from the ABL and
Se
sought an NBA franchise without
avail. Lucas has not played a: pro
game so far. He was a draft
choice of fee NBA’s Cincinnati
Royals.
Some reports placed losses of
fee ABL at M million last year
and said they were J250.000 to ar-
I rears so far this season.
John H. Kilgore
REAbY MIX
: \ ' ' p.:'
STABILIZED
CONCRETE
/
MATERIAL
!: '
582-8118
3S i-f I'
*¥___* ' •- '
't.
Jay Bollinger was send-
ing his troops through offensive
and defensive drills when he
learned of new injury trouble.
Middle guard Gailand Smith,
5-9 three-year letter winner,
sprained his right ankle in a- dte
fensive drill and had to be re-
moved from the, workout. Smith’s
ankle was already swollen before
a manager could remove his shoe.
Trainer George Crow was un-
Hie game shaped up as a “nat-
cterges in shape and “ready to
However, a few of fee Trojans,
including fullback Ben Wilson and
halfback Ron Heller - were boifc
ered by minor injuries and the
Badgers lost guards Dion Kemp-
thome and Jon Hohman because
of ailments. *
The Trojans spent much of feeir
time on the practice field in near-
by Los Angeles mapping strategy
to stop Wisconsin’s free-wheeling
attack revolving around Vander-
Hie flamboyant Cawthon
coached from hl$i school to the
pros, always turning out teams,
as eotaftd as Ms o "
His famed Red Rawer* or Texas
Tech at Lubbock beciftie the
toast of the nation during the 11
years he was .head mentor there.
A four-sport star at Southwest-
ern University ft Georgetown;-
Cawthon coached- at high schools
in Beaumont and Terrell, at Rice
Univesity and Austin College,
with the Detroit lions and the
Brooklyn football Dodgers and the
University of Alabama. He was
as
a pro football scout and to recent
’ ’ n the
years grew rich in
oil busi-
approv
SST
Mrs,
actress
dent ol
Univer
baU
\ said, ,
, for Sts
;.,v.AvV> .J||
Wm
i, an awesome scoring Helen, a 176-pound senior vfeo had
en route to the Big Ten played a mere 90 seconds before
Glynn Griffing
Billy Moon
The Wisconsin team wait into
virtual seclusion Sunday except
for a 35-minute loosening up drill
Monday. The squad Md only one
goal—to take some of the sting
from a 7-0 defeat to Southern Cal
in 1953 and a 44-8 humiliation by
FOR THE 26TH TIME,, Arkansas and Mississippi meet on fee
-gridiron when they tangle in their first poet-seaaon engage-
ment, the Sugar Bowl, New Tear's Day. Arkansas (9-1)’
is led by Billy Moore, stellar quarterback who scored 14
touchdowns this year. Mississippi, which went through an
undefeated (9-0) season, is guided by quarterback Glynn
Griffing, who completed 72 of 122 passes for 882 yards and
11 touchdowns. Hie series now stands at Arkansas, 13
Washington in 1960 on previous
Wisconsin trips to the Rose Bowl.
wins; Mississippi, 12 wins.
(Central Pres*/
-4
SPECIAL
WEDNESDAY
Beg. 88c
Chicken
BROWN'S
CHICKEN SHACK
E.Texas Hwy. 149
r at
iblici
“Woi
■ *...
world,’
area ’
...............—
..
limited
The
with n
“they
when 1
FIRST-O-YEAR SALE
BYERS
New Year
Yet Same
Start 1963 By Buying m
The Best For Uss At KOVAR'S
1 • ^ .i •••?■•«• ;• ) ' ' ■ ■' • f
convin
hav
“Act
" an ha
once s
of her
Urban
less,
say
that n<
Mrs.
baseba
to gair
going
remen
She
the ag
degree
Variet;
as’an
InT
Hale,
Comin
her to
ter.
as "a
‘I-f
ing,"
some
the ct
place
your a
“Bai
to be
budgel
house\
why a
cessfu
Mrs
age.
Spm» iotrcK*
r
You may have read this before. It first ap-
peared in The Sun Jan. 1,1962. While all things
change with time, a man’s basic convictions are
seldom altered, exeept perhaps through refine-
ment.
These have been my feelings for quite some
time; they are the same today as they were a
year ago today.
Dear Friend, Casual Acquaintance, Reade'
Not king nor millionaire nor genie am
, if I were or if I could make this gift on th ;
Of this new year, I would give you t|?es< .A
/—k love for and a capacity to enjoy poi..<
dt all kinds as spectator or participant, ich
man to his own choice;
—An understanding of the complexities, &
goals, the rewards, the luck, the pressures, tht
penalties and the price of athletics;
—Some winning and some losing;
/ —A quiet day on a stream or a lake or a bay,
a bright crisp morning waiting for the ducks or
the geese, or a hunting trip with friends or family;
—A frequent round of gptf with close com-
panions, or bowling or tennis or badminton or
swimming or whatever physical activity best re-
moves the tensions and the hard facts of today
and the worry of tomorrow and tomorrow;
—A long, leisurely walk in the country with
no one there but you and the trees and the sun
-and the air, the Way things were in the begin-
ning. -where a man can rediscover those comfort-
ing but Dften forgotten facts that grass and
leaves grow and flowers bloom without a thought
for a dollar, that man in all his vast knowledge
cannot increase his stature one inch, that Now is
a grain of sand in a long, long beach;
—A desire to learn more of the subtleties and .
techniques of games and players, an appreciation
for and the ability to recognize those intangibles
that divide the good and the great;
—Enough pride and vanity to spur you up-
ward and enough humility to keep your feet on
the ground; ' < ' »,
-*-A pleasure in excellence and a tolerance
forfailure;
—The understanding that sports arc games
with which we amuse ourselves, youngster and
adult, even ,those of us who make a living’from
them; and when games become too serious, they
lose their amusement and they are no longer
games;
-—The realization that it isn’t the money, the
titles, the press clippings, the slaps oh the back
or people telling you how great you are that
'really matter; that, in the final analysis, it is
simply your own knowledge that you have been
true to yourself in the strictest sense of the word
and that you have done, without excuse, the very
be$t you could do. ,
Onr the open market, one or all of these,
wouldn't bring you the. price of a cup ot coffee.
But should I receive them, I would cherish theih
as a priceless treasure. They are as necessary to
a man as food and cl rink and twice as satisfying.
Save on
these Radios
at Big, Big
Reductions!
■ Y" '
TtMJTH
The Sale
of the Year
'• /. Vv. ' . • ;S“-
*rrrr-Y . •
Is At Kovar's
RCA
PHILCO
PHONOGRAPHS
W.<
tivp ol
Insure
nurnbi
field f
al Oct
Fift<
invitee
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six til
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compt
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cau
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SERVING BAYTOWN
FOR li BIG YEARS!
V
221 E. Texas
<A—
wr^r.
_
y *
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 1, 1963, newspaper, January 1, 1963; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057245/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.