The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 6, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 5, 1966 Page: 4 of 4
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page 4—the campus chat
Maintains Perfect Record
NT Wins. 20-19
Defensive mil Lee Allen starred as
the big barber Saturday night as North
Texas In-at Louisville, 20-19, in the Ea-
gles' closest shave of the season.
Allen cut the Cardinals short when he
hatted down a desperation two-point
conversion pass with just two minutes
remaining in the fame at Louisville. It
was reported that Joe Greene saved the
Eagles' first Missouri Valley Confer-
ence name, but Coach Odus Mitchell
saui Monday that name films show Al-
len made the save.
The Cardinals came within a whisker
of victory, partly because of a tough
pass defense They had six interceptions,
including a bin one for their first score.
Halfback Danny Hednarski picked off
a flat-zone pass from Vidal Carlin and
rati 79 yards for a first-quarter touch-
down. Pete Compise's conversion kick
made it 7-0 for the Cardinals.
I'HE KACiLES quickly retaliated as
Carlin guided them to Louisville's one
yard line Fullback Willie Cherry scored
from there, and All America candidate
John Love converted to tie the name at
7-7.
The North Texas defense kept the
Cardinals in their own half of the field
the rest of the first half.
Carlin retrained his composure after
the multitude of interceptions and passed
1(1 yards to end James Russell for anoth-
er first-half touchdown. Lov's conver-
sion was good and NT led 14-7.
Despite mistakes on both sides, the
first half belonged to the North Texans.
But in the second half, a lone Eagle tal-
ly was all that kept the Cardinals from
winning the conference opener.
The Kentuckians shut the Eagles out
in the third quarter, and almost tied the
game with a touchdown. Cardinal quar-
terback Benny Russell lofted a 29-yard
pass to Mike Dennis to add six points
Russell's pass for two extra points was
incomplete, leaving the Eagles with a
one-point margin.
I ME NORTH TEXANS came to life
again in the final period. Only 10 min-
THE FIFTH ANNUAL
TEXAS/O.U.
BLAST
THIS YEAR FEATURING
FOUR GREAT BANDS
5AMERICANS
Just Back from Hollywood
vHOT
NUTS
Wildest Campus Show in World
it
THE
RCCN MEN
Direct from Honolulu
me
PITMEN
Dallas' Favorite Show Band
SATURDAY
OCT. 8
8 P.M. TILL?
At the Showplace of the Southwest
Market Hall
2200 Stemmons Freeway
Tickets: $4. in Advance
$4.50 at the Door
Each Ticket Includes
Free Setups and
Free Parking
rickets Go On Sale Friday, Market
Hall
Angus Wynne III and
Jack Calmes present
Production
utes remained when Carlin threw a 17-
yard pass to James Russell for the
clinching score. Russell had to evade
the Cardinals' Wally Oyler and Andy
Williams to slip into the end zone.
Love missed the point after on a wide
kick, leaving the score 20-13.
Louisville soon threatened again af-
ter tackle Bill Downs fell on a fumble
by Cherry at the Eagle 25. After mov-
ing to the 15, Benny Russell found Car-
dinal end Jim Zamberlan open on the
sideline near the eight, and Zamberlan
dashed the final distance.
A strange series of events stopped the
vital Louisville conversion. Trying for
two, the Kentuckians were first pen-
alized for delaying the name. They
threw an incomplete pass, but North
Texas was penalized for having 12 men
on the field. So they tried again.
Then came Allen's bin play. He bat-
ted down an apparent scorinn pass to
fullback Wayne Patrick, and the Ea-
nles kept their 20-15) lead.
Tackle Greene led the Eagle de-
fense with nine unassisted tackles. Quar-
terback Carlin accounted for 222 yards
in the air, hittinn 18 of 4.'1 passes, in-
cluding' tw'o for touchdowns.
1
y
Cisco Nips North Texas Frosh
Eaglet fullback Bobby Benton (44) makes short yardage
on this play at he meets a tough Cisco Junior College de-
fensive line. Benton ran five times for 32 yards and one
touchdown Thursday in the Eaglets' 34-31 loss to Cisco.
Wednesday, October 5, 1966
GirlsToShow
Tennis Power
It's time for girls to get their boy
friends and show them what kind of
partners they will make.
Tennis partners, that is.
Entries are due Eriday, for men and
women's doubles teams in tennis. All
entries must be turned into the Intra-
mural Office, Room 119 of the Men's
Building, by 5 p.m. Friday.
A meeting of players is scheduled at
4 p.m. Monday in Room 125 of the
Women's Gym. Competition in the first
coeducational intramural sport will be-
gin Tuesday.
i'lay got under way Monday in men's
singles competition. Jerry Wood defeat-
ed Richard Buckner, <5-0, (J-0, and Alex
Morgan whipped Buster Shores, 6-0, 0-0,
in Independent League action.
In Fraternity League tennis, Tommy
Smith, John Westerbeck, Jerry Smith
and Jerry Atherton advanced into the
second round by default.
Monday's action saw the Headknock-
ers shut out the Baptist Student Union
team, l.'J-O, the University House Black
Eagles edge the University City Cow-
boys, 12-7, the West Dorm Rumbles beat
the Quad II Intruders, 7-0, and the Play-
mates win by forfeit from the Univer-
sity House Red Eagles.
Eagles Begin Preparations
For U of Tampa Reunion
The undefeated North Texas Eagles
returned to the practice field Monday
following their 20-19 victory over
Louisville Saturday night. They were
beginning preparation for the Univer-
sity of Tampa, which they will face at
Fouts Field Saturday.
The Eagles are the first North Texas
team to win three straight games at the
beginning of a season since the team of
1959, which featured Abner Haynes.
Coach Odus Mitchell found comparison
between the two teams difficult Monday.
"This team doesn't have the speed we
had in '59," he said. "We were a run-
ning team then, and we throw most of
the time now."
Mitchell noted, "We've got to have a
better running game. Of course, you've
got to stress one or the other (running
or passing) but we want a better run-
ning game to at least keep the defense
honest."
The Eagles returned from Louisville
with no major injuries, although
Steve Rose has a knee injury and may
not start Saturday. Mitchell was opti-
mistic about, the probable return of tight
end Bob Anderson. Anderson has been
sidelined all season with a back injury.
The coach indicated that either James
Russell or Willie Cherry will probably
take over place-kicking chores from
John Love this week, "John has a late
class and can't practice too much. Right
now Russell is the surest kicker we have.
We'll use him for long kicks."
Mitchell said he expects another close
game. "Tampa beat Bowling Green,
which beat Dayton, which beat Cincin-
nati. On this basis we'll have our hands
full," he said.
The interseetional contest begins at
7:30. It's the fourth consecutive week
for the Eagles to seek out revenge since
the Spartans scored a 17-14 veridet at
Tampa last year.
And as long as the Eagles keep pay-
ing debts they'll have a good year. A
3-7 record as in 1965 offers a lot of
revenge chances. So far, NTSU has beat-
en three teams it lost to last year.
♦1
N.T.S.U. VS. TAMPA
TEXAS VS. OKLA.
Parties-Parties
Parties
WHAT WILL YOU nVEAR?
YOU'LL NEED A JACKET
THAT IS STYLED FOR COM-
FORT (NOT TOO HOT FOR
THIS TIME OF THE YEAR] AND
GOOD LOOKS. TRY A JIM
STONE SPORT COAT WITH
A TEXTURED LOOK.
Just Arrived! A Special Shipment of
Transitional Season Sport Coats Too
Late for Our Formal Opening
Reg. 30.00 Now 20.00 While They Last
H
Jim Stone i
Thirteen Twenty-Two West Hickory Avenue
Campus Town Shopping Center
Free Parking Adjacent to Store
Open Monday Thru Thursday 9 a.m. til 7 p.m.
Open Friday and Saturday 9 a.m. till 5:30 p.m.
SHOP PENNEY'S MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9 'TIL 9
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY 9 'TIL 6
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY'® 1^X0 Bfi KjCeOfi
rr
A. Hopsack Jacket
Three-button cotton homespun
jacket with flap pockets.
7.98
B. Hipster Skirt
Flared A-line skirt with piping at
contour waist.
3.98
C. Turtleneck Top
Sold color 100% cotton double
knit turtleneck top . . . sleeveless.
4.98
D. Homespun Pant
Trim, tapered ankle pant of cot-
ton "Homespun."
4.98
Everything s coming up roses in these great green casuals you'll wear now and
through all the winter long. You II love their great, good looks , . . they're easy-
caro 100% cotton Homespun' ! They're flower sprigged all over for the very newest
look in town! Mix the parts to your heart's content for several outfits that belie their
tiny Ponney prce! Sizes 3 to II.
DENTON CENTER PENNEYS-PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
■
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Hines, Cragg. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 6, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 5, 1966, newspaper, October 5, 1966; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth307304/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.