The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 190, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1965 Page: 6 of 14
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OFF TO SAN ANTONIO — Orange's 15-
packs up his clubs- as he leaves for the 39th ann
State Junior Golf tournament in San Antonio. Some 268 boys
will compete Monday for flight classification, with «4 quali-
in the championship flight. The tournament will be match
and will continue until next Friday
Miller
Texas
Hilton - Etoln
Ivttt, Ann aiy«tto
South-
Nederland Moves
Into Ruth Semis
OPEN
INTERSTAT
PAC KAGE STORE
TORMIM.* JIMS >KG STOM
ROSWELL, N. M. (AP)
Nederland, Tex., meets Tulsa,
Okia., tonight in semi-final ac-
tion in the southwest regional
Babe Ruth Baseball Touma
ment. The winner tangles with
New Orleans Saturday.
Steve Stuart's four - hit pitch-
ing and á two-run home run
blast by Mike Jagneaux led
Nederland to a 5-1 victory over
San Antonio, Tex., Thursday
night.
CANADIAN
v.o.
11 CELLARS
WIN
20% by volume
5th
JOWATKINS, owner
Haverford (Pá.) College
scored a touchdown in every
game last fall but failed to win
The Scarlet and Black lost six
and tied one.
OttN TIL 10 P.M.
SATURDAY—9 A.M. HI 10 P.M.
Buy
at.
listed below
GET THE
2nd TIRE
FOR ONLY
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By FRED CERVELLI
HERSHEY, Pa. (Spl) — Texas sends four of the
greatest backs it has ever produced behind a wall of
seven blue-chip linemen against the Coal Crackers of
Pennsylvania here tomorrow night in the Big 33 foot-
ball classic at Hershey Stadium.
A standing - room - only
crowd of some 23,000 will
see coach Bobby Lavne
throw Texas' prize-winning
football players against the
best of Pennsylvania, with
Lyndon Johnson's and every
other Texan's pride at stake.
Pennsylvania whipped Texas,
12-6, last year in the first meet-
ing between the two states.
Layne has vowed to avenge the
loss
Yanks Try
Germans
MUNICH, Germany (AP) —
America's youthful .resurgent
track and field team takes on
For offensive weapons he has West Germans here tonight
available the mist heralded and brings an end to the 1965
boys in Texas. Layne, a genius odyssey dedicated to interna-
when it comes to picking the ,t¡ , ^ ^
best boy at quarterback, has ¡ 6
chosen Rusty Clark of Houston Good .will..
Westbury tó punch the buttons The Americans accused the
in the attack. Russians of using subtle delay
Teamed with Clark in the ing and harassing tactics . io
backfield will be Chris Gilbert soften them up for the kill at
of Spring Branch at left half-'Kiev.
back, Jerry Levias of Beaumont "I'll never go to Russia
Hebert at flanker back and Ron- again," vowed Ralph Boston,
n.te Scoggins of Garland at full- the world record-holding broad
back. jumper. •
w The Poles p id M * z'°tys *
n?r£a L h! «y the rat® o' 24 to l when the go-
dieted to D6 ÍS good Bs the WAS 72 to 1 ffivinor th*
Southwest Conference has ever^J^ U|J* gpendin|^^
At end. he'll employ Gilbert Germtns put in their
Ash of Galena. Park and Ken hcks by saying the Yanks ate
Spain of Houston Austin. At 0f- too many eggs-five and six at
tensive tackles will be Galeaa
Park's BUI Cloud and Bryan's
Rolf Kreuger.
At euard, Lsyne has selected to 91 rout of tne Germans
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a time. This upset the financial
arangements.
The U.S. men completed a 142
READY FOR PENN8Y — A pair of Texas coaches and
four Big 33-ers "take a break from workouts for the big game
with Pennsylvania tomorrow night. Left to right, back row,
are coach Doak Walker, Nederland's Ronnie Bell, coach
Bobbv Layne, and Beaumont Hebert s Jerry Levias: front
row, La Marque's Norman Bulaich and Spring Branch s
Chris Gilbert. With the 1965 contest just hours away, Layne,
the head coach of the Texans, has vowed his club will get
revenge for last year's loss to the Pennsy stars. Texas lost
that tilt, the opener of the Big 33 series, by a 12-6 count.
Reports from the Texas camp indicate that the Lone Star
starters might well turn the trick this time around.
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NO
TRADE
IN
NEEDED
Thursday night in Augsburg, a
picturesque Bavarian city. The
Americans finishing on a high
note, won 16 of 21 events and
redeemed their showing against
Russia and Poland.
Bukich,
Rudy Bukich led the Chicago
Bears Thursday night in their
National Football League exhi-
Nederiand's Ronnie Bell and
Wichita Falls' Don King, joined
at center by Odessa's SkiDpy
Soruill. On defense, it'll be Fort
Worth's Tommy Buckman and
Spring Branch Memorial's Ice-
land Winston at end. with Long-
view's Terry Don Phillios and highlighted by a brrilliant 10,ooo.
Sweetwater s Craig Jolley on meter mn by Olympic champi-
mMin^rlc/>r« will K Am. '0n Bill'S Mil,S of O^nside,
riiiís K£J Abbott círíSÍ eralieiavndeff*ortliStering 18°<',net"
Gene Mayes, and Midland's Ross | the Dart Indian Marine'^y over Washington.
r- ■*$«?= ~««««..
Chicago
on
Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ception With a chance-to tie, j
however. Seedborg's extra point.
The final evening's show was bition opener, making an im
i .. — pressive debut in his battle with
Billy Wade for the No. 1 quar
Iy rated Luti Philipp in winning
in 2Í minutes, 17 6 seconds. This
was 6.8 seconds faster than his
winning time at Tokyo and sl-
moft as good as the 27:10.6 he
recorded for six miles in the
Harris and Richardson's Wen-
dell Houskiy. The safeties are
Palestine's Bill Bradley and
Houston's Glenn Smith.
Actually. Layne has all sorts
of highly Regarded reserves. He . ...
said that everybody will play championships at San Diego,
and that many other boys other Other U S winners were Jim
than probable starters will be'Ryun of Wichita, Kan 1.500
employed from time to time at meters in 3:41.6; Ron Whitney
all positions.
For example, he mentioned
that Smith or Bradly would
rest Clark at quarterback, that
La Marque's Norm Bulaich may
see as much time at halfback
as Gilbert, and that Harris. Dal-
las' Jackie Allen, Waco's George
Danford and Housley will see
plenty of offensive action.
Before yesterday's big parade
in Harrisburg, in which both
were honored, Layne
said he was convinced that his
club had reached the point
where it could compete with
any in the land.
Layne and his assistants,
Doak Walker awl Harley Sewell,
commented that the biggest
thrill for them would be to take
this same- ¿roup and coach it
aD the way through college.
"We'd put it on somebody,"
said Layne. All of Texas hopes
he "puts it on Pennsylvania to-
morrow night."
Teen-Age Girls
Add Four Stare
of Ledale. Calif., the 400 meters
hurdles in 50 2; Adolph Plum-
mer of Los Angeles, the 200 in
hurdles'! in 50.2; George Young
of Casa Grande, Ariz , the 3,000
meters steeplechase in 8:41:8;
John McGrath of Los Angeles,
attempt was blocked
The AFL kicks off the busy
weekend program tonight with
$400,000 quarterback Joe Na-
^ _ math making his first start for
terbacking post by completing the New York Jets against Ros-
13 of 19 passes for 206 yards and ton at Allentown, Pa. Namath's
three touchdowns in a 31-30 vie- $200,000 challenger. John
¡Huarte. also is expected to see
action for the first time. '
sellout crowd of 45.142 into Saturday's schedule - shows
Washington's D C Stadium, be- four NFL games — Baltimore
gan a four-day schedule of ex-¡vs. St. Louis at New. Orleans,
hibition plav in which all 22 Dallas at Los Angeles. New
teams in the NFL and rival York at Green Bay and Mio-
American League will see ac- nesota vs. Pittsburgh at Atlanta
tjon |— while the AFL has a two-
Bukich. a 10-year veteran. 8*™® Pro^r*m — "Í
got the Bears off rolling in the f "«ak and^Denver vs. Oakland
first quarter with a 14-yard , j . 'c „ .
scoring strike to Johnny Morris , .
before hitting rookie Dick Gor- *"^ Detroit at Philadelphia in
don on a 75-yard play and Jim Sunday NFL exhibitions
Marconi on a five-yard maneu
ver.
The pass to Gordon Rave the
Bears a 24-14 lead but the Red- i
the shot put with 62 feet, 3 inch- skins closed the gap on a 41-'
an as C. Burrel, the high jump yard field goal by John Seed-
with 6-9*^4, and Bill Floerke of borg and a 44-yard scoring jaunt
Kansas City, the javelin in 261-5. Iby Paul Krause with an inter-1
Clean, Clear and
Sparkling Bright
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 190, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1965, newspaper, August 13, 1965; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143113/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.