San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, November 13, 1964 Page: 5 of 8
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JLiSL
wwisti
Lions Close Season With
k (
Aldine in Houston, Nov. 20
Bt v. JAY
), ta
jVXXT Friday, Hot. 20, in Hmuton, PhillU Wheatley Lloni
O will briny a ituon of football fruitratlon to a close when
Ee/ meet Carver high of Aldine in a Diitrict 3-AAAA fame.
• Through their flrit eight garnet, the Lioni have won two,
X five, tied one. They might have won them all with one
sible exception. Bnt they could juit never jell, Jnit could
"" 1 off the ground.
This will b* ■ rubber (am* la tbe
1jjj
lever get their potential
, INBKLIKVABI*
I Incredible i* it m sound, la
hose *<(ht fames tin* ran up
first downs—*n arerage of
llmoot II ■ |MM Tkv tMmt*
1.11 IS jnrfc —
»VI|I
t
I
pound. UJO Iff air—aa
of mu run P" n
from all thli thai HMl onljr It
touchdown* and > (rand Utal
pt only 7» palate. And the yard!
(ainrd don't kirlude rnnbarki
Of kicks!
Penalties, fumbles, break* that
irer, nerer cam* their way, bare
warted the Lion* *(*ln and i(><n.
But In * gam* that th«y won, they
thn wortt mil at th* year. Clyde
ow >11 threw « beautiful, Jarring
lock in tin- Midland (am*; It was
rfe< .ir eiccutfd and called the bent
(K'k of the season ae l'a(* fleM.
u l nn ofiielnt called it clippin(!
Wo know not what welnBe* the
shincro (nine brought, Wednes-
y Din lit. hut w* can well under-
nnd how the Lion* might go Into
irir final fume literally with blood
their eyes.
ort Wheatlar-Aldlaa aerlna, each
having beaten the other twice. Aldine
la the only Houston achool with
which the lion* hare a .1100 average,
and they bopa to go ahead, n«t
week.
Last year, Wheatley mauled Al-
illna, 24-0, for th* Llona' bomscom-
ing, and aqusred the aerlta at 3-2.
Carver won, 30-6, In lBOOj
Wheatley was the winner in 1001,
2M>; In lOtW, Carver cilged the
lions, 20-18, and. In 1003, It was
Wheatloy, 24-0.
Aldlna ha* had Its lumps, thl*
waaon. In district play, Aldine start
ad out by npendlng Washington, 30-
8, then took t plaatering from Jack
Yates 4M; lost to Kaatunere, 1B-7,
and was downed by Houston'* Wheat
ley, 14 to 13.
By compariaon, Whaatley, although
outgniuinc and outdownlng Wash-
ingtun, dropped a 12-8 decision to th*
Eagles. Th* Lions wtra beaten by
Jack Tatea, 36-8; tied Wheatley, 14-
11
The TJons, certainly, will be hun-
gry for Aldine meat.
State-Wide Attitude Suggests
Change ii Cotton Bowl Classie
ALLAS, Texae—Diasatisfaotion with the perennial dwin
attend an oe to th* Frairie fief-Wiley football
lag the annual flat* fair, is the Ootton bowl,
m exprweed from all section* of the tiaiU following the small
owd that attended the
The classic, which haa been
je fair for fver 3p yeari, haa
into, ' 1—
id
ite
ft wee#
nthera wij
from
itlon.
ie On
tbe
Other
00*1
•evlo
in'
zed*
rnirlo View «
The Prelrfte
when tbe
rno classic, wmcn nan dm
fair for over 30 years, hai
t>. favorlnff nalrta View. Conches
sohoal officials throughout the
■ fas! the nn ahonld be rutat*d
4TJJ
k oppoL^ tn to be selsa*
i other conference In tl •
1 nsnferenc*
tl<a 1* almlijf
i Ml promo
«Mh y*ar,
i ud'ide mail a*
the two Col
a tenasa of the
even augcest
between sine of
'iUtntUoa and
Bnntp&
vt
en^ Ifcn *ny a< th*
one-sidi
V lf*(ro day
time, th* two
this ana la
Tlay haa
tns (n the
Wiley has
th* ranka.
Loulaia-
Arkaasaa
waa that Lu|.
v*6r~-
aa la, haa oanaad to draw
(ate beennna sathwaifn
far e Oerifated promotion haa wan
sd wtfr Ml lntatrntlon et th* ta|f.
Rllcy Beats Emerson .
In Last Two Minutes
THK Big B grid machine qt Biley Junior school literally pull-
ed oke out of the fire, Thmdw, aa it scored a touehdbwn,
£nd tallied a two-point bonus in toe last two mlnntee of play,
j defeat hitherto unbeaten Bmenon Junior Ugh, 14-13.
There was no aeoring in the first period, but, in ite waning
moments, the Big B started a drive that rolled from ite own
80 to the tmerson 40 as the quarter ended.
On t^e firet play of the second pe- *
riod. Johnny Braggs paaecd to willte
wicka for a &yard fain to ujjt the
ball on the wmerson one. On the
next play. Ilraggs went orer on a
^nnrterbeok keep.
The try Cor extra points was ae
fiMMl. and the score stood. <M), (tiley.
Hut Emeriton roared back to go
IK) yards to the xloryland. Taking the
ball on its t*n, the Rmersoy march-
ed to the ltiley eight, t)ien XJlee Ziuff-
l<*r slanted in, frpm that point, fur
thi» six-^H»iuter. The cont'ereion try
(ailed, aii'l the score was tied at the
bnlf. 0-41.
The third period waa scorelcss.
I .ate in the final stanza, Kuiornon
launched a determined drive from its
own 130, and rolled to the Riley 10.
Then, Bunald Samples pusncd for the
ten and touchdown to left end, James
J men. The conversion try waa no
sofwi, but Emerson waa in front, 1245,
with two minutes and ten seconds re-
aiaiuing in the game.
Braxi:* Hits
Then the Big B, starting on Its
own 14, went to the air, with Johnnr
liraitcH ci»mpletiug five of six push-
es. The fourth consecutive comple-
tion to Karl Uichardson, carried the
ball to the Emerson 40. Ae fifth
Completion was the big one, from
Brugge to Charles Dukes covering
the 40 yards for the touchdown. That
tied the score, 1212.
Then Braggs daringly rolled out
ind passed to Dukes for the two
Joint conversion. That made the score
14-12, ltiley.
In the waning seconds, Emerson
frsntically took to ths sir, but ltiley
withstood ths barrage, to win, 14-12.
Standiug out, defenalvely, la the
Big H's victory wsa the work of
two halfbacks^ the quarter-pigt Ber-
nard Walker, who stands five fe«*t,
one Inch tau, snd weighs all of 85
pounds, dripping wet; and Sherman
Edwards.
Playing flae ball for Emerson were
two tan bacfi, ADee Ziegler and Bon-
ay Samples. And Samples and Ri-
ley's Johnny Braggs staged a passing
duel the llket el which are seldom
aesn en a jual<
iter school eridlron.
Attention! Gob,
Church Reporters,
Correspondents!
DSOAVSB •( the Thanks.
U giving holiday, Thurs-
day, Bov. 96, Begister will
be published a day earlier
that week, on Wednesday,
Nov. 36. All deadlines are
one day earlier.
All news reports MUST
be received NOT LATER
THAN MONDAY NOON,
Nov. 23.
All paid publieity, an-
nouncements, o a r d s of
thanks, memorials MUST
be received NOT I^LTER
THAN MONDAY NOON,
Nov. 23.
Display and classified
advertising MUST be re-
ceived NOT LATER
THAN TUESDAY MORN-
ING, 10 o'clock, Nov. 24.
Pictures from which
cuts are to be made must
be received by 12 o'clock,
noon, SATURDAY,
21.
Nov.
Lions Lose, 12-8,
To BTN, in lain,
Mud, in Honston
HOUSTON—In a era of mud and
xlush, with rain ateudilr falling
throughout the fame, Booker T.
Washington Kaflra defeated the
Phlllin Wheatley Llona of Ban An-
tonio, 12-8, iu n Diatrict 8-AAAA
fracaa, Wednrwlay nlfbt, Not. 4, at
Jeppeaen atadium.
Whentlej enUaanad and out-
gained Waahbiftan. bnt it waa
an aid atarjr aI hnrta* arorlng op-
portunltlea thwarted bjr penal-
The first half waa acoreleaa, hut
Waahlngton, with the apeedj Uriel
Johnaon Ita threot, struck twice In
tha third period. Midway the quar-
ter, n Johnsun-to-rioyd Wilaon pass
waa food for 85 yarda and a touch-
down. The Eaglea failed to convert,
the score reading. 6-0, BTW.
23 aeconda remaininf la the
Johnson broke louw and
yarda for the Eaflea' second
| the score
I With :
(quarter,
)q>rd 29 j
Kaslimere Gardena (Houston) 25,
Phillls Wbestley 0.
Biley Junior 14, Emerson Junior
12.
Punhsr Junior 12, Irving Junior 0.
Poe Junior 2X, Douglass Junior 0.
Burbank "B" 2B. Wheatley "B" 6.
SOUTHWEST
Southern 38, Wiley 13.
Pralrla View 28, Bishop 14.
Langston 14, Northwestern Okls-
homa T.
Orambling 00, Arkanssa All and
N 0.
Jackson 24, Texas Southern 0.
OTHEKS
Tennessee Stste 58, Fort Bragg T.
Maryland State 22, Delaware State
0.
North Carolinn college 28, Morris
Brown 19.
Virginia State 22, Norfolk State 0.
Morgan 68, Virginia Union 0.
Fort Valley 28, Bethune C'ookman
14.
Allen 19, Benedict T.
£llaabeth State 44, Fayettevilie 12.
Florida A and M 46, North Caro
lina A and T 24.
Knoirills 20, Morehouse 6.
Albany Rtata 18, Olaflin 0.
flak 28. Lana 20.
MUea 12, Tuskegee 12.
Shaw 28, Hampton 24.
Lincoln (Mo.) 23, Southern Illi-
nois 21.
Wlnaton-Salem S3, St Augustine
6.
Alabama State 27. Dillard 6.
Central 20, South Carolina State
10.
HK.H grHOOLA
November 14
Boaenwald (Lnling) 28, Asberry
(Yoakum) 8.
Bdwarda
(Oarrer) 0.
(Gonaalea) 12, B<lna
November SO
Phlllia Wheatley va. Aldine Carver
(Honston) at Houaton.
SOUTHWEST
November 14
Biahop vs. Bust at Holly Springs,
Misa.
Alcorn ra. Pralrla View at Pral
rla View, Texaa.
Arkansas All end N Ts. Taiaa
Southern at Hna Bluff, AHt.
Oramblinf tl. Wiley at Marshall,
Texas.
Jackaon Rtata ra. Mlsaisaippl In-
dustrial at Holly Springs, Mian.
South era re. Florida A and M at
Baton Kongo, Ln.
Mlylsaippl Voaatl.mal ts. Sarsa
ih State at Sarannali, Ga.
II
IJnealn (Mo.) ts. Xbnneaaaa State
at Naahri
sshTiUe* Tenn.
llan ra. Fort Valley State at Fort
Valley, Oa.
KnonvlUa va. Lam at Jackson.
^SSaware State «. St. Paul's at
Dov(r, Del.
Wlnaton-Sulem ra. Fayettevilie at
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Tuskegee vs. Hampton at Tuskegee,
Ala.
Livingstons vs. Allen at Salisbury,
N. 0.
North Carolina a and T vs. Vir-
ginia Stats at Greensboro, N. C.
St. Augustine's vs. Johnson 0.
Smith at Italetgh, N. C.
Shaw vs. Morgan at Raleigh, N.
0.
Virginia Union TS. North Carolina
college at KIcbmond, Va.
Morehouse vs. Howard at Atlanta,
Oa.
HIGH SCHOOL
Edwards (Gonxnles) vs. Daule
(Cuero) at Gonxales.
Gross (Victoria) vs. Carver (Ed-
na) at Victoria.
Wharton Training (Wharton) v».
Ball (Seguln) at Wharton.
November 17
Yotea (Houston) vs. Worthing
(Houston) at Jeppesen stadium.
November 18
Knshraere (Houston) vs. Whcst-
ley (Houston) at Jcppesen stadium.
November 10
Washington (Houston) vs. Elmore
(Northesst Houston) at Jeppesen
Stadium.
Bigotry, Ignorance
NoRnies ColorMVP
Voting,Scribe Says
NEW YORK—"Bigotry, lgnoronce
and n dearth of rules clarifjiug whut
constitutes the 'Most Valuable l'lnj-
er,' make baseball's highest award a
farce," churgea aportswritor Jock
Dunbar Puts
12-6 Whammy
On Irving
Southern Rips
Wiley Defenses
Far 39-13Win
Dsuksr Junior school Tigers were
Just thst, Thursdsy, Nor. ft, ss thej
put the whsmmj ou hitherto unde-
feated Irving 12-0.
There wss bo scoring in ths first
hslf.
Dunbar csrried ths second hslf
klrkoff back to it* own 40. Then,
William Chlldresa, Tiger right hslf-
back, explwli'd through right tackle
for 61 yards to the Irving three.
Olen Hlley, the left half, banged orer
from that point to make the score
0-0. The Tigers failed to convert.
Irving cams right bsck, took the
kickoff, and drove to a touchdown,
the big gainer iu the drive being a IW-
yard pnss. Irving scored from one
yard out, failed to convert, and the
scors was tied, 0-0.
The Dunbar second tesm put the
ball on the Irving 45, then the first
unit waa inserted, and Willie Spears
promptly tore around right end 45
yards to the glory land. Ths try for
the extrs point failed, and the score
wss 12-0.
Then ths inspired Tigers threw
bsck every effort mede by Irving to
psnetrate Dunbar territory. As the
game ended, Dunbar was on the Irr-
ing 30.
Burbank Hands
Wheatley "Bn Its
First Defeat
The unbeaten Luther Tturbank high
school MB" team handed the Thillia
Wheatley "IT aggregation its firat
defeat of the sesson, dumping the
young Lions, 2»0, in a game played
at Burbank, Saturday afternoon.
Burbank eoored early in the first
period, the second time the Bulldogs
got ths bsll, going 4ft ysrds in three
plsys, with Itobert Villarresl break-
ing off tackle for 38 yards f"r the
teeriee. Burbank did not convert.
Burbank scored again, Just before
the half, after holding the lions and
taking the ball on downs on the
Burbank 20. They went SO yarda in
eight plays, with Dsvid Amires going
over for the touchdown from nine
yards out. Burbsnk tallied a two-
point convention to make the half-
time score, 14-0.
Tfce lions lost the services of
Toauay McVea late in the half with
an. ankle injury, and his absence
was keenly felt.
An Intercepted Wheatley pasa set
up the Bulldogs' third period score.
Deep la their own territory, the
Wheatlays passed and it was swiped
on their ewn 15. On tbe second play,
David Amires traveled ths last nine
>sirds for ths tmlee. Conversion try
fsUed, but the score hsd mounted to
20-0.
The Lions made the scoreboard
with lens than three miuutes remain-
ing in the game, on a 2H-yard paas
from Clennon Shannon to Stanley
Rand. They did not convert.
Burbank came right back, took
the kickoff to the Wheatley 30, snd
a play later, Robert Villarreal pass-
ed 27 yards to Mark Hombella for
the final point* of the day. The ex-
tra-point try was no good, and the
final score was 20-0.
ool
Hy BKNNIK THOMAS
<»!» lal lo San Antonio Register)
BATON ROL'GE, La. _ Jamea
Uttl a pint-sixed frrnhrran half-
back from Tiesyune, Miss., raxed Wi-
lef coll.fa defenses for four touch-
dawn< la lesding Southern university
ts • .'M-l.'i victory over the Wildcats
ta University stadium Saturday aft-
touchdown. Try for extra points fail-
ed, and the score waa 12-0.
Time was running out when the
Lions made It to the promised land,
Floyd Wright bashing over from the
one, with Just 58 seconds remaining
in the game. Clyde Glosson had set
up the scors with a 54-yard run.
Wright also pounded over for two ex-
trs points.
Wheatley ontgained the Eagles on
the ground, but Waahington did the
better passing in the rsin.
Statistics
Wheatley BTW
Firat downs
Ysrds ruathing
Yards passing
rassea attempted .,.
Passes completed ....
Passes Intercepted ky
Total yards gained ..
Fumbles
Ball lost, fumbles ....
Penalties
Yards penalised
Punts
Average, punts ......
10
8
.180
or.
. »
04
. s
K
. 1
8
. 0
0
ltw
ISO
. 2
0
. 2
2
. «
5
. MM
<5
. 8
4
. V
40
Lang In a hard-hitting article ia a
national magazine.
'Malice on the part of ccrtain elec-
tors has rennlted in the Knobbing of
logical winners down through the
years," according to Lang's article in
a recent issue of Sport magazine, and
the lack of rules haa enabled other
voters to develop their own varyiug
criteria for making and Justifying
their selections.
'Vindictivencss halted Ted Wil-
liams' bid for MVP honors in 1947
when he won the 'triple crown,' and
again in 11)57 when lie hit .388 with
38 homers at the nge of 30. In those
years, certain prejudiced voters
placed him ninth or tenth among
motit valuable player candidates,
while others ignored him altogether,'
asserts Lang.
Jackie Jloltiuson and Joe Black,
too, had their problems in vying for
the MVP award. "One reporter an-
nounced that he would never vote for
Robinson, a Negro, to win the awurd
in l!*40," says I«ang. Black, also n
Negro, won 15 gnmes, saved 15 oth-
ers, and was the man most respon-
sible for the Dodgers' winning the
pennant In 1952, but failed to gain
even a tenth-place selection ou three
of the 24 ballots cast for the MVP.
The Ignorance of some of the elec-
tors has been documented over the
years by ballots listing 10 rookies,
ballots with mixtures of National and
American league stars, and late bal-
lots turned in after the completion of
the World series.
However, the biggest stumbling
block to rational Totiug by the base-
ball-writing electorate is a lack of
set rules governing the selectors, ac-
cording to author Lang. ''The most
important atep in changing the situ-
ation is the creation of a working
definition of 'Most Valuable Player,' *
ssys Lang. "Even today, some writers
will only select a ball piayer from a
pennant-winner, while others refuse
to consider pitchers for the award."
"Also, a screening committee should
be established to reduce the list of
candidates aud weed ot|t 'favorite son'
votes," he continues. "Given a choice
•f eight or ten men, the committee is
much more likely to come up with the
proper decision," he concludes.
Tskitig the •; ing kickoff, Little
thre;i! I In a way 90 yards to a
tSMfcdown, scored one in the a*c-
oad qnarter with a 38-yard scamper,
broke -.ff t in k Is for 14 yards snd
tba only touchdown of the third qusr-
ter, then spiced his sfternoon's per-
forma with a dascling 10-yard
aeorinc junket in the closing minutea
of the fourth period.
John Clayton booted a 40-yard field
goal and three extra pointa from
placement for six points, snd Wil-
liam Davis blocked a Wiley punt,
then fell on it for a touchdown to
gira Southern the half-time edge over
Wiley hy 21-7.
Wiley quarterback Clarence Jones
hit halfback Fred Lewis with a 41-
yard touchdown pasa in the first
quart'r, and James Johnson kicked
ths extra point.
bliii Clay, on a one yard pick-up,
•nHI Wiley's second touchdown snd
a try f..r two points, ria a pass with
Olay throwing, wrapped up scoring
far the visiting Texans.
Southern's victory over Wiley kept
ths Wildcats in the cellar of the
Southwestern Athletic conference and
gave the Jnguars their second triumph
of the season in seven games. Little
rambled for 102 yards in his four
tMBChdown jaunts, and ended up the
game's leading ground-gainer with 199
yarda in six carries from scrimmage.
JTronh fullback Robert Holmes
picke<l up 48 yards in two carries and
senior fullback Charlie Moore, lug-
ging ths ball five times, picked up
44 fards as Southern soared to its top
ground effort of the season, 287
ysrds.
Karly In the first quarter. South-
sAy Frank Pitt* enme within a
whiaker of going all the way when u
bit of Jaguar razzle-dazzle, a hand
off from quarterlniek Willie Johnson,
alsa of Picayune. Miss., to Little to
Moore and hnck to Johnson, who
to Pitts, caught the speedy
end dewn field to the Wiley 24 yard
line, a play which was good for f»2
ysrds
It was from this point that Clsy-
'oa, with the point of the kick at the
;»0-far«l lit.e, split the uprighta to
giro .Southern a 9-0 lead over the
Wildcat |
Early in the second quarter, Little. 1
on haau-off from Johnson, exploited
for 25 yards snd ended up on the
Wiley 38 ysrd line, the Jaguars' firat
u«ge of the quarter.
next play, the 154 pound
n squirmed, wormed snd pick-
way 38 yards for the tally,
yton Hcfcod mtoctmafully from
pla<< -lit, Southern's lead stretched
to 10-7.
—D.ivis made It somewhat s banner
for freshmen as the little 210
pour I guard bolted in snd blocked
Oacur I.a mbert's punt, then covered
it in the end zone for a touchdown.
Except for nn intercepted pass by
dofeuMve luck Rudy Myers, first
half hostilities ceased with the Jag-
uars »tp by 23-7 over the Wildcats.
M'»>re seemingly had cranked up
the Jaguars' offense for a third
quart r run a* he literally fought
and battered his way f«»r 39 yards
aad ended up at mid-field, but this
Jagn;ir move was drowned out when
^-Jolmsou pans was intercepted.
v}Viley. with the help of three ma-
Jot penalties, moved as far as the
MBiliem 25 in the third period, hut
■aytbern's defenses, bolstered by
ta<&les Pete Barnes, Jeff Addie. and
Jan. s Rattle, nnd defensive bucks
Mfrrr*. Karl Kiuchen, Kenneth Sav-
age and Larry Rowley, snuffed out
the uprising.
;Wiley was In a gambling mood on
ita own 44 yard line in tbe third pe-
riod. but the stout Jaguar front held,
and in two plays, the stage was bet
for Little's 14 yard touchdown.
Johnson reversed and darted for 28
jrarti- u the Wiley 10 yard line before
Little picked up two to the Wildcats
Wheatley Drops Final 1964
Home Game to Kashmere
By U. JAY
KASHMERX Oardeni Kami, leading PhillU Wheatley Lions,
9 0, through three periods, tallied 16 points In the final
quarter for a 35-6 victory over the Lions in their last home
appearance of the 1964 season, Wednesday night, before 1.938
paying fans and some 350 freebies in Alamo stadium.
A 62-yard run, a point after touchdown, and a safety gave
the Rams their points in the first half. A roUicldng ground
game gave ths Lions their six points,
and It looked like anybody's ball game,
with Wheatley, at half time, having
an advantage in the statistics.
But the loeolf tu'*kered out la the
second hslf, snd the final period aaw
Kashmere adding a safety, two touch-
downs, aud two PATs.
The Rams hsd a bevy of backs—
Kdward Sullivan, Raymond Johnaon,
Willie Limbrick—who dealt misery,
with Johnson being the big gun.
Ural Whito and Henry Polk were
the big gainers for the Lions, but
the vaunted Wheatley air attack waa
non-existent.
For alx minutes snd 40 seconds,
the two teams bsttled on even terms,
then, suddenly, 8ulllvan exploded
through the Wheatley defenders snd
sped 02 yards to a touchdown. Rob-
ert Miller kicked the extra point,
and Kashmere led 7-0, with 6:15 re-
maining in the quarter.
In the laat 00 seconda of the period,
a tremendous W-yard punt by Rob-
ert Miliar pnt the bsll on the
Wheatley four. Tten, on the Lions
first play from scrimmage, Robert
Taylor waa tackled in the end sone,
to give Kaabmere two points on the
safety, to maks the score 9-0.
Spectacular running by Ural White
and Henry Polk gave the Llona their
teedee late In the secoqd period.
Kaahmere blocked a Wheatley kick
and got the hall on the lions* 29, but
Wheatley held, took the ball on
downs, on Its ocven, and five plays
and 08 yards later, had themselves a
touchdown. Polk with a 80-yard dash.
White, with a great 40-ynrd sprint,
and then Polk with 18, delivered the
Mg blows. White crashed over from
the one. The attempted kick for the
extra point waa blocked, and the
score was 0 6, ftashmere. It remained
94 until three minutes and OB NO1
onds had been played tp the fourth
period, when another Wheatley kick
was Macltid an! deflected Into the
end tone, where It was recovered for
safety nnd two pointa for Kash-
mere, making ths scors 11-0.
Both blocked kicks came on bad
passes from cetitor that almost rollod
along the ground.
Kashmere took the kickoff on tbe
Wheatley 34, and hard running by
Raymond Johnaon, and a pass, put
the ball en tha acven, from which
point Johnson acored. Miller kicked
tbe point after touchdown, and the
score wsa 1H-0, with 0:O« remaining.
Later Kashmere took the ball
downs on its own 44, snd, five plays
later, Willie Limbrick ran 26 yarda
to a touchdown. Miller strain kicked
the point, to make the final score
25-6.
Playing outstanding defensive ball
for the lioni wss sophomore end,
Paul Wllllama. Floyd Wright, David
Harria, another sophomore, and Wil-
liam Smith slno delivered key defen-
sive plsys. Clyde Glosson Intercepted
two Ram passes.
Ural White waa the T,Ions' leading
ground-gainer, with 10*> yard* in 14
carries. Polk gained 75 fardl in
seven tries.
Statistics
Wheatley Kashmere
First downs ..
Tarda rushing ...
Yards lost ...
Net yards, rushing
Yards passing ....
I'aasee attempted .
Passes completed .
Passe* Intercepted I
Punts
Average, punta ....
Fumbles
Bsll lost, fumbles
Penalties
Yards penalised
10
... 20i
.... 14
,...1*>
.... 1
.... 13
.... 1
. t
7
(2 blkd.)
.... 251
.... 1
.... 0
.... 5
... 4ft
13
811
19
2W2
78
12
6
1
6
87
2
2
ft
G3
FJoridian Making
History with
General Electric
(Special to San Antonio Register)
BOSTON, Mass.—A Florida A and
M university graduate, Theodora
Nims, Jr., is making history here us
one of the firet members of lu<t race
to work aa divisional repre*cntati\e
of the General Electric company.
Nims, who came to work here lt«t
summer following his grsduation iu
August from FAMtT, has spent the
ptg| two months st the OB fcooie*
wares dlviaional headquarters in
Bridgeport, Conn. There he became
familiar with the products of the dlvi-
aion and acquainted himself wilh
the personnel there and their func-
tions.
He la preeently working out of the
Boston office la the second pha»e
of his training.
son added 10.
High pointer of the game was
Chsrlie Parks of Brooks who cut
ths cords for 3ft points, and Jim
Leslie hit for 23 for the airmen.
St. Philip's
Wins Cage
Opener, 95-92
With four men hitting In double
figures, nt. Philip's College Timers
pried tbe lid on their 1904-6>r» basket-
ball etusou, Tuesday night, with s
w-92 victory over Brooks Air Force |
base.
Fred Applewhite led the Tiger at-
tack with 27 points; Denxil Baine
netted 20; Richard Carriugton con-
nected for 15, and Lawrence John-
Repair-Remodel
Your Home and Pay
Up Your Taxes
AU under (1) loan to
suit you. By people
you know. Your
neigh borhood con-
tractor
For Free Estimate,
Terms, Call
CA 6-2632
fillero-atok bed
A word ta tha wife la never suffi-
cient.
Why ae alack la
a'a aiacita?
V> \ unl line, point from which Lit-
OeV storing burst originated.
fXambrisht. handling the kicking
<*,o - for Wiley, ran into trouble
wh> i lie failed to gd his kick off, nnd
In circling around iu the cud-zone,
va* tagged by Bnrncs and finish-
ed off by Battle for n safety to make
the core "2-7.
£ Jjttle ended up as he started, as he
HOred the final touchdown of the
(ajn< as he cashed in on n rollicking
yard Wilev kickoff following
Bu) 's touchdown and was finally
rnn out of bounds ou the Wildcats'
ifyard line. Little, iu one play, ccv-
tre<i the distance, and Clayton kick-
ed t lie conversion to give Southern
fJSD-13 margin.
Even Walking
Is "Syndicalism"
In Mississippi
* Ni";ro 1'n's.s International
BKI.ZOM. Miss.—The "irlnil-
n.i i s) n J i c mIImii" statute,
liaised liy the alale legislature
last spring, roiers just about
everything, trtm walking down
the street—s« William Ware »1
Minneapolis. Minn.: Ilohert Bass,
I Kills .lark son and Joe Louis
Sligier, of Atlanta, learned laat
week. The foursome were walking
down a stroet la tfco Ne*t»
neighborhood, when a policeman
approached Uieni, saying they
were wanted at polio b'ad-
,nailers. When Uiey refused to
fH into the police car, th«y
wen arrested aad charged with
"cfiadaal syndicalism."
PATRONIZB SAN ANTONIO
IKUISTER ADVERTISERS.
t
(axoapt tha paoplo who drMt ID
r's whsrt Old Ti
feshiortscKSroo
[Old TP3F86 arts'
smart,1 '<MBminaSo|. And
W sad ywl join ttipfiT
Silfii|M*6wbonWTii5key", 86 Proof.tin Old Taylor OiSHSor Co..
—-U'.
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Andrews, U. J. San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, November 13, 1964, newspaper, November 13, 1964; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth403727/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.