Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 232, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 3, 1954 Page: 2 of 28
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1
:ff.
Sweetwater Reporter, T«ii, Sunday, October 3, 1954
Irish Surprised.
By Purdue, 27-14
SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. 2—UP 1 for eight yards and a touchdown
—Purdue's sophomore sharpshoot- i in the first four minutes. Two min-
er, 19 - year - old Lennle Dawson, I utes later he connected to Rex 1 4 passes completed
Christoval Nips
Divide, 20-18
GAME AT A GLANCE
DIVIDE CHRISTOVAL
« first downs 0
112 net yards rushing 122
5* . . net yards parsing l!>
passes attempted 12
Bobcats Smother Ponies, 21-0
"
« i
passes intercepted by
'l fumbles lost by
2 for 35. . punting average .3 for 21.7
1 for 1 •> penalties 4 for 50
fired four touchdown passes Satur-1 Brock for 41 yards and another
day to pilot the underdog Boiler- ; game.
makers to an upset 24-14 triumph ' Fires Two More
over to-ranked Notre Dame before i Then he gave up the quarter-
58,256 fans. backing duties to Froncie Gutman CHRISTOVAL—(Spl.)—A two-
The Purdue victory. Us second and Stan Eaton. But when he re- i touchdown fourth quarter rally by
of the season, snapped Notre turned in the second half, his first [ Divide's Trojans fell short by the
Lorighorns Power
Cougars, 40-/4
Dame's string of games without
defeat at 13 and Purdue's score
fell only one point short of equal-
throw covered 73 yards to Lamar! Friday night as Christival eked
Lundy for a tie-breaking tally and ! margin of the extra point here
for insurance he made a screen
ing its point in the last victory 1 pass to Bill Murakowski good for
over the Irish, a 28 to 14 decision i 34 yards and another touchdown,
in 1950, which broke a Notre Dame | Dawson, though he played only
out a 20-18 victory in the opening
district game for both teams.
Down 20-6 with only six min-
utes left in the game the Trojans
AUSTIN, Oct. 2-UP—Washing-
ton State fullback Duke Washing-
ton made a sparkling debut Satur-
day as the first Negro to play in
the University of Texas' Memorial
Stadium but Texas power proved
too much and the Longhorns rolled
to a 40 to 14 victory.
Washington, 180-pound fullback
from Pasco, Wash., gained the ap-
plause of 27,000 fans in Memorial
string of 39 games without a loss, half the game, had exceptional ac- put on a scrappy rally that almost Stadium as he raced 73 yards in
Saturday the story was Dawson I curacy with his passes, but he had brought them victory. Don Bird : the second period to score one of
pounced on a Christoval fumble on Washington State s
just as it was Dale Samuels four \ the benefit of good receivers, too.
years ago. He passed to John Kerr In all, he gained 213 yards on seven
— — —— ; completions in 11 efforts, and Kerr
Brock and Lundy, the latter a six-
foot seven-inch bean pole, spear-
ed the ball despite the Irish de-
fense.
Dawson in addition converted
after the first three Boiler maker
touchdowns and made all the Pur-
due kickoffs.
Irish Errors
Southern Cal Edges
Northwestern, 12-7
EVANSTON, 111., Oct. 2 —UP—
Southern California, sparked by a
68-yard first period gallop by tow-
ering tackle Ed Fouch, took ad-
vantage of 10 fumbles by North-
western University Saturday and
won a 12-7 victory over the Evan-
ston Big Ten entry for its third
consecutive triumph of the year.
Northwestern lost the ball three
times on fumbles inside its oppo-
nents' five-yard line and fumbled
on three other occasions inside a
visitors' 20. In all, the defeated
team lost the ball six times to
Southern California on bobbles.
Fouch, who is six feet 3 1-2 inch-
es tall and weighs 240 pounds,
grabbed a juggled ball from the
reach of Northwestern quarterback
John Rearden in the first period,
tucked the ball under his arm and
ran to the goal line for the first
score of the game.
Up to this point, Northwestern
had seemed on the way to an up-
set victory over the heavily favor-
ed visitors.
Rearden then completed two long
passes to put the ball on the South-
ern California nine. But fullback
Bob Lauter fumbled on the USC
six yard line, and the Northwest-
ern threat was ended.
In the second period, Southern
California added its winning touch-
down. John Arnett threw a looping
aeriai good for eight yards to
Chuck Greenwood, who grabbed it
on the two-yard line and chalk-
walked into the end zone.
Sam Tsagalkis missed the first
Southern California try for extra
point, and Fouch missed on the
second.
Northwestern rallied after the
second half kickoff, mainly on the
ability of its second - string back-
field.
Rearden had dropped the ball
five times and didn't see much
action in the second half. John
Pienta, a second - string quarter-
back, started the second half and
engineered Northwestern's only
... | ed around left end for the tally on
The defeat, the first for new the next play. But Barron Bird's
coach Terry Brennan of Notre: tick was blocked.
Dame after an opening win over 1 ™. . .
Texas, could be charged partially . Christoval took the initial lead
to Irish errors. Don Schaefer's fum- •ln the flrst garter Carl Cochran
two touch-
the 40-yard line to set up one ■ downs'.
score. From there Barron Bird I But Texas, bouncing back from
passed to Don Moore for the tally a 21 to 0 defeat by Notre Dame
but Bird's kick was no good. i last week, scored in every period
In the wanning minutes of the j b(l,ttou., th ?"d amassed a total
game Moore recovered another 01 300 yards while Coach Ed Price
Christoval fumble on the 35-yard used, ^second and third teams
line. Barron Bird hit Don Barton ™uch ,of th''«ai,u'' T,he ?ontest was
with a 25-yard pass to the Christo- | P!ayetl ln„^;deir®e„?la/.
val 10 and Gayland Ashton scoot-
ble preceded Purdue's first score,
and a poor punt by Ralph Gug-
j went around right end from the
eight after a 37-yard run by Jack-
Ground Offensive
Texas relied on its ground offen-
sive in the first of its six touch-
down drives. Fullback Don Maro-
ney scored from the two at the
payoff end of a 77-yard drive, tak-
ing 12 plays. The drive was spark-
ed by a 14-yard run by halfback
lielmi went out of bounds on thJ! jL^,lkinSOn had PUt th<? ba"
29 Teams Drop
Notre Dame 41 to set up the sec- i ., . , , . . ..
on(j 1 | Divide came back later in the
accounted for ^^otre Dame's first
Gary P Jewel/°raced' 23 ' val'ds^for I FrOfll Unbeaten
accounted for Notre Dame s first, the ^.irst score Barron Bird,s try
Schoolboy Ranks
a,t tv,,. u .11 . . . , . . .. i Billy Cochran scored to put
pnH t«ip .!nH hr S head, h ? th<! i Christoval ahead again in the last
!^P.v Th n P ! H r a part of the first quarter and Carl
pH Ph J f vH°^Ting re, UT ' Cochran ran over the extra point
ed Purdue s tree kick 61 yards to '
the 2, and Nick Raich plunged
over.
Billy Quinn, while Maroney also
unreeled a 19 yard run. Tackle
Buck Lansford converted.
Lockhorn quarterback Pat Rolar
scored the first of his two markers
early in the second quarter, plung-
ing over from the 2 at the end of
a 74-yard sustained attack.
A third touchdown followed min-
utes later when halfback Joy
Youngblood intercepted a pass by
Washington State quarterback
Frank Sarno and later scored from
the 2. Youngblood also converted.
Washington Score j
But Texas' scoring was inter- j
rupted midway in the second peri- j
od when Washington, a 5-foot 11 i
inch senior, on a delayed Buck !
raced through the middle, cut to |
the left and went 73 yards to score. |
Washington was his team's top'
ground gainer with 94 yards.
Texas scored again twice in the I
Mustangs Have
Open Dale Friday
Sweetwater's Mustangs will
take a welcome open date
next Friday, allowing Coach
Pat Gerald two weeks to re-
vamp his grid forces before
the district opener with Sny-
der here on October 15.
There are no more non-con-
ference games on the sched-
ule and no more AAAA teams
to play. All the contests are
for keeps from here in.
After Snyder the Mustangs
play Lamesa, Vernon, Plain-
view, Levelland, Brecken-
ridge, and Big Spring.
By MURRAY FORSVALL
Sports Editor
! The Sweetwater Mustang marching band put on an im-
pressive show Friday night at Mustang Bowl.
| The quick-stepping band under the direction of Pat
I Patterson and .featuring top hat twirlers Joy Pace, Mary
[Beth Absher, Sandra Rhodes, Elinor Sealy, Mavadean
I Kouri, and Carol Sealy presented a sparkling performance
i before 7,000 fans.
i Sandwiched around the band's show was a iootball
game. The Sweetwater representative didn't do so well in
that part of the evening's festivities. San Angelo's Bob-
cats thoroughly trounced the Mustang footballers, 21-0.
The Bobcats used the breaks, a
Aggies Rock
Georgia, 6-0
ATHENS, Ga., Oct. 2 — UP-
solid football triumph.
The District 1-AAAA team had
to drive only 13, 38, and 10 yards
ft.AMK AT A (.I.AM K
i SWEE'rWATKIt SAX ANttW.O
0 first downs .10
I lij net yards rushing l!'8
12 net yards passing Hi
t 8 passes attempted II
2 passes completed -J
I 1 ... . passes intercepted by I
j 4 fumbles lost by I
i I for 2N.N iMiutiiiK average :i for 11
j 0 penalties :i for
for their tallies. All of the scores
came within ten minutes of the
frim Tnirakrd^y 'Innoi I Quarterback Elw'ood Kettler found second period. The game's other
™ r„i H ™ li on,' soft spot in Georgia's clutch-! 38 minutes were-void of any scor-
E Tnf r from V.^ *4"? Saturday and punning.
terference. Tolar scored from 15 . , ., ..... . , „
edlgaTn. T^wrKfn^Il'How^! T&TZe tand" u^ lor "I
covery°on^theWWa^h\ngtorestate £ | ® victory before 23 0?0 fan,
G&x sr,ht'4- I -ss; E-sj: ry^bK
n . . , . ; I tne tirst score. Barron tsirn
points, as Brock was back to punt ,- . , . t ,_trav
from his own 25, Don Fife center-! p astray.
Texas
Washington State
Texas scoring:
7-26-7-0—40!
and four times the inexperienced
Touchdowns-
Hornung's conversion was wide
and then Guglielmi sparked the
Irish 91 yards downfield to score
in 16 plays to open the second half.
Score by periods:
Purdue 14 0 7 6—27
Notre Dame 0 8 6 0—14
Purdue scoring: Touchdowns—
Kerr, Brock, Lundy, Murakowski.
Conversion — Dawson 3. Safety-
Brock.
Notre Dame scoring: Touch-
downs—Raich, Schaefer.
John Paul Cain Plays
On Tech Golf Team
John Paul Cain, the current
Sweetwater city golf champion,
is on the golf squad at Texas Tech
this fall.
Cain is a freshman at the Red
Raider school and this weekend
played in duel competition
against Oklahoma A&M.
He, along with Bunky Johnson
of Abilene, lead the qualifying for
spots on the squad with a 69 over
the Lubbock course.
By UNITED PRESS
Twenty
football
The second and third quarter went j the unbeaten list Saturday
scoreless but early in the fourth shocking round of upsets that saw
Bulldog line held. But Kettler de-
cided the game in the one time
m , „ ,, , , , i the Bulldog' defense collapsed.
Maroney Tolar 2, Youngblood, Th tj * h A f unsuccess-
- Lansford' fully tried for field goals.
® Kettler, a 21-year-old junior from
sopho-
powerful single wing attack, and Mus(angs tried again but couldn't
the running of workhorse Marvin g0 Hob))s went back to punt on
. Lasater to strike for three sec- fourth (]own but substitute center
I ond-quarter touchdowns and a ; Edwin Etheredge's pass-back
sailed high over his head. Hobbs
chased the ball to the goal and re-
turned it to the 10 but was swarm-
ed under at that point.
Carrol Green, the regular cen-
ter, had left the game with an in-
jured ankle only a few minutes
before. Green played only a
couple of plays the rest of the
night.
From the 10 it took Lasater two
tries, lie got seven on the first
and then headed to his right be-
hind a wave of blockers but cut
hack and dashed through a gap-
ing hole at right guard for the
score. It was the same play he
had scored on earlier. Smith
again kicked the point and only
1:45 was left in the half.
On the first play of the second
half the Mustangs fumbled again.
This time the Bobcats came out
in their spread formation for the j
first time in the game. They j
Christoval tallied again when Carl ; touted Abilene and Lubbock and
Cochran passed 20 yards to Clay ' Odessa go crashing to defeat in
Atkins. Sam Soloman ran over the | startling reversals of football form,
extra point. ! Breckenridge's brash Buckeroos,
The Trojans then came gallant- j unawed by all the press notices
ly back with their last-ditch rally surrounding Abilene's unscored-on
that closed the gap.
Three Divide freshmen lead
Texas j, .'SS.'to £«
aaaw i puraMi- s"°°- ss. sssat
Miami Rocks Baylor
With 19-13 Surprise
MIAMI. Oct. 2— UP— The Uni-
Eagles. ripped the Class AAAA! versity of Miami, which has stag-
j eleven apart 35 to 13 to establish 1 gered through a couple of lean
I themselves as an almost certain (football years, may have vaulted
choice to move into the Class AAA j into the big time again with a
| finals. ! sound 19 to 13 victory over high-
S Lubbock, not quite as publicized i ranking Baylor.
: as Abilene but impressive in ear-! Not since the Orange Bowl and
i lier games, fell before Fort Worth ! Gator Bowl teams of 1950 and 1951
I North Side 13 to 7, but perhaps! has Coach Andy Gustafson's Hur-
r,. ... , „ , the biggest shocker of all was j ricane squad shown such a display
Divide visits rough Garden City Odessa's 14-to-0 loss to a Highland ' of strength. Even Gustafson ad-
next Friday in another district ( pa,^ team that had been walloped j mjts that he may have it this year,
contest. by Abilene and beaten by South Baylor Coach George Sauer had
Scoie by penods _n Oak Cliff. Odessa was not among no excuses for his team's drubbing
Christoval 13 0 0 7—20 ,he unbeaten, but the Broncs rated at the hands of the fired-up Mi-
ri^fc „„'oi r high with cnly a loss to amians. "It rained just as hard
Christoval sconng.^TD—C.^Coch- Port Arthur charged against them. |on Miami as it did on Baylor,''
Joining Abilene and Lubbocknhe said.
among the Class AAAA teams top- ; Miami halfback Whitey Rouvlere
their team in the narrow loss.
Gayland Ashton. Don Moore, and
Don Bird all played good games
as did senior Gary Jewell before
he was hurt in the first half.
Outstanding for the Christoval
team were Billy Cochran, Solo-
mon, and Wilkinson.
A fumble recovery, a short
punt, and a bad pass from center
on a fourth-down punt attempt set
up the Bobcat scores. Fullback
Pat Adams tallied the first on a
three-yard plunge and Lasater got
the other two no spurts of two and
three yards. Bobby Smith kicked \ j^uy have forgotten about it be
all three extra points. | oaUse it scored no touchdowns and
It was a dark and dreary night j didn't gain a lot of yardage,
for the Mustangs. They couldn't The third quarter rocked back
nine-
ough
Georgia defenders for five more
and the only score of the game. ; Mustang pass.
Sets Up Score
Don Kachtik, a hard-hitting 190-
pound Aggie fullback, set up the
lone score for the Texans by steal-
ing a Jimmy Harper pass and re-
turning the ball 18 yards to the j
Georgia 30.
ball four times on fumbles that last play of the period the Mus- I
resulted from errant pitch-outs tangs began their only real drive
and hand-offs that never quite got ()f the night. It all started on the j
to the man they were intended. ; Sweetwater 31. Hobbs picked up ^
The Bobcats also intercepted a j seven and then, gaining momen- .
turn, got 15 on the next try. |
But through the pitch blackness | From the San Angelo 47. Hobbs
there shown two outstanding took a handoff from Smith on the
lights for the Mustangs—halfback belly play right and cut down the
Harold Hobbs and tackle Roland right sideline to the five but two
Powell. plays later the fumble spoiled it. j
.. . . ., - _ ,, The Bobcats threatened once
Hobbs was the leading ground
: more after recovering another
Kettler fired a quick spot pass! fainer for the Ponies^as^he pick- pony bobble on )he Sweetwater
23. But the Mustangs held tipht.
to end Jack Pardee, good for 16 l,P scant yards
yards, and then tossed to his oth- : gained by the Mustangs on the
er end. Stallings, on the same play i ground and came ever so near to
for the score. Kettler's attempt at Preventing the shut-out.
the conversion was wide. He raced 42 yarfls down ,ho
The first time the Aggies got the I ri<?ht sideline early in the fourth
ball they drove from their own 10! quarter on a brilliant scamper
yard line to the Georgia 20 before before he was halted 011 tlu' Bo1?-
the Bulldog line dug in. When the i cat But 'wo P13^, latei", a Pltch
Texans failed to dent the Georgia
out bounced squarely off James
ran, B. Cochran. Atkins. PAT—
Solomon. C. Cochran. Divide scor-
ing: TD—Jewell, Moore, Ashton.
wall, halfback Gene Henderson Harvey^ face and Jack Butler
tried for a 25-yard field goa, but
the kick was wide.
Line Holds Again
The Aggies drove to the Georgia
eight yard line early in the second
Marciano Aide Suspended
; pling from the undefeated ranks j intercepted a 12-yeard desperation ' |,e!'.10.(i; bul ,a^aln ,hf Bulldogs stift- ' ■
; were Dallas Sunset, beaten by Ty- j pass from Baylor quarterback j a, lleld Boal, ,fnSln the *"'■ His kick . j,
ler 14 to 7; Corpus Christi Ray, Bobby Jones in the closing seconds ! also was Wlde- Powell stoo
losing
[ defeated by defending AAAA cham- j to stamp out the Bear's final
NEW YORK. Oct. 2— UP— A j pion Houston Lamar 13 to 7; Hous- J threat and give Miami its victory,
representative of the New York! ton Reagan, downed by Port Ar- j The Hurricanes shook the Tex-
Boxing^ Commission confirmed re-1 thur 45 to 6, and Houston Davis, ' ans with two touchdowns in the
first five minutes, once when Bay
There's Always a First Time
. GREENBAY, Wis., Oct. 2— UP i ports Friday night that AI Colom- beaten by Baytown 32 to 0.
touchdown. He elected to run on —Guard Dick Aiflis intercepted the bo, boyhood
an option play and gained 121 first pass of his football career I trainer of Rocky
yards. George Gondek came oif \ last Sunday in the Green Bay j been suspended
the bench and snake-hipped 13 Packers' 21 to 20 loss to the Pitts- I "coaching in
yards for the touchdown. burgh Steelers. 1 last month's Ezzard Charles' fight, beaten by AA Weatherford 32 to 13. lor 27.
Povich Heads Baseball Scribes
pounced on the loose pighide to
squelch the threat.
Powell was the ever-present de-
fender. He was in on tackle after
tackle and when he hit them it
was secure. Other Mustang de-
re good at times but
airie to consistency
Powell stood out above them all.
Lasater paced the Bobcat
I ground attack, carrying 30 times
! to pile up 112 of the total of 198.
CLEVELAND, Oct. 2 — UP — And Fullback Adams was always
Shirley Povich of the Washington there when that vital short yard-
Meyer played some good defen- j
sive ball, as did John Chance, m
Gary Carson, and Dave Roberts w
while Connie Rudd and Harvey
each got in a couple of good licks.
But Powell was the defensive
star., t
As advertised, the Bobcats three
big 'uns were their top stars in
the line. Gary Mcllroy, Charles
Terrell, and Smith were towers of
strength all night. They and their
hard-charging mates hounded
quarterback Smith on nearly
every play and made it extremely ^
difficult for him and the other ™
Mustang backs.
It just wasn't the footballing
Mustangs night. But the band did
perform well.
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I * meeting.
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though
both sides of the fence.
The Mustangs, who used passes
so brilliantly in their first game,
1 were credited with only two com-
pletons—one of those came on a
; pass interference penalty—out of
eight tries for a mere 12 yards
and the Bobcats did little better
with 3 of 11 for 16 yards.
Harvey threw one in the third
quarter to Bubba Meyer who was
behind all the Bobcat defenders
, but it slipped from his fingers and
went—like a home run that's foul
by inches—only for a long strike.
Three Bobcats' passes almost
went for touchdowns or would
have set them up inside the 10 if
the near misses would have been
held by the intended receivers.
It was just a case of too much
Lasater and too manv blockers—
plus a fine job of ball control by
the Bobcats. They ran (!4 plays
from scrimmage compared to 45
for the Mustangs.
Sweetwater kicked off to open
the game and neither team could
go anywhere to speak of in the
first two times they handled the
ball but the third time the Angelos
took over they started a drive.
From their own 32 the Bobcats,
using the single wing almost ex-
clusively, rolled to the Sweetwater
24 but the Mustangs held there as
a fourth pass went incomplete.
However, on the next play quar-
terback Fiank Smith's pitch out
went behind Harvey and before
the halfback could retrace his
steps Bobbv Joe Walker had col-
lapsed on the ball for the Bobcats
on the Mustang 13.
T.asater carried twice for five I
yards each time to gain a Bobcat
first down on the three and
Adams bulled throueh the middle
for the score. Smith's kick was ;
good That was 45 seconds deep in
1he second quarter.
The kickoff went into the Mus-
tang end zone and the Ponies
couldn't gain so Hobbs went back
to punt. He got the kick away but
it went for only 17 yards out on
the Sweetwater 38.
Kleven plays later the Bobcats
lead. 14-0. Adams carried twice
and Lasater once to gain the 20
and a first. Two passes were in-
complete but then Lasater took
charge and carried the next six
plays himself for the touchdown.
The last play went for two yards ]
through right guard. Smith con- ;
i verted.
T (' (i.-iiii l.ost Net
Av.
lit
bbs
.8 6S 17 51
0 4
11.
milton
21 10 11
3.7
Smith ...
13 12 35 7
.5
II
SWI
5 0 14 -8
KTWATKIt PASSIVt;
No. Comp. Int. Yda
•1 0
Av.
Smith ....
5 2 0 12
0.0
Hobbs ....
1 0 0 0
0
H;
rve.v
J 0 0 0
0
Nc
eper
10 10
0
s\vni l \\
\ IT.R l'\SS WK( ITVINTi
No. Caught Yds.
Av.
Brothers
2 12
0.0
s \\ 1.1
TWVrKR itntint;
No. Ydn.
Av.
H
nbbs
•1 114
28.8
M \\ I.I TU ATI R PI \T Uirrf RNR
No. Yds.
Av.
11
>l)bs
2 14
7.0
swi;
riAVATFR KHKOITS
No. Yd«.
Av.
Cr
een
I 10
40.0
L.-i
S.W
sti ter
\Nl,l.l.( UtSHIN(.
'l'f' (i.iln 1/Oftt N'<*t
:?( 130 24 112
A v.
3 7
W
ilker ...
li 43 0 43
7.2
\<
nms
tl 23 t) 23
2 0
M
IN
irshall
well . .
1 lb 0 10
2 8 5 3
10.0
1.5
Abbott
2 1 1
.5
SAN
A N (.lil.O P A SSI N < •
No. < oan|>. Int. ViIh
A v.
Wt
Iker
8 3 1 10
5.3
La
•inter
3 0 0 0
.0
S\N Wt.lT.O PASS KWHIVINT;
No. Caught Yds.
A v.
La
Bntcr
2 14
7.0
Ad
1 2
2.0
HA N
an<;i;m> pi ntin«
No. Yds.
Av.
W;
lker
3 123
41.0
0
Blue Devils Trip
Tennessee, 7-6
DURHAM. N. C'.. Oct 2 UP—
Duke turned Tennessee's flank for
one blazing touchdown run and
then held on hungrily against a
drumfire of single wing power Sat-
urdav to beat the tough Volunteers
7 to (i before 30.000 fans.
Guard Jim Nelson's pcrfect ex- *
tra point was Ihe actual margin of
victory in humid, 91-degree weath-
er. But only traditional Tennessee
alertness staved off other Duke
touchdowns.
Tennessee, using the twosome of
fullback Tom Tracy and tailback
John Majors, marched 90 yards to
a third period touchdown which
Tracy scored on a slashing 28-yard
burst through the Duke line. But
Tracy's placement was high, wide*
and short. w
Duke, the nation's seventh-rank-
ed football team and 13-point fa-
vorite. drove back immediately to
threaten on the Tennessee eight
yard line but a Volunteer inter-
ception by tailback Pat Oleksiak
stopped on the Tennessee two.
Duke speedster Hob Pascal took
a pitchout from quarterback Sonny
Jurgensen wide around right end
for 10 yards to score standing up
with five seconds left in the first#
After the ensueing kickoff the period.
&iurpturatpr Snrartrr
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wnlrr Reporter, Inc., ut Hweetwater, TVxn*.
Rntercd ns neroml dam matter at Pontofflre In Hweetwator, T«>xan, niKfer ar#
ot March , 1H72 "Cl
Any «>rr neoiiH reflection upon tin* character or reputation of any pernon, firm
or corporation, which may appear In the roluninn of the Hweetwater Reporter will
be gladly corrected upon Itn being brought to the attention of tlie publisher.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Hweetwater end adjoining counties by mail: $5.93 one yeari by cerrter. Uc
week, (1.10 per tuunlb. Kl.ewl.ere bjr wall 7.M. *"
V
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Sweetwater Reporter (Sweetwater, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 232, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 3, 1954, newspaper, October 3, 1954; Sweetwater, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth284249/m1/2/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sweetwater/Nolan County City-County Library.