Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 314, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 25, 1945 Page: 4 of 12
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Texas Christians Smother
Rice Owls' Conference
Hopes; Leaves T.U. At Top
Pag* 4
Sunday, November 25, 1945
Burger. T*k*»
Under New Management
Top Candidate
For All Slate
J
^*Sm
>
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
FORT WORTH, Tex.. Nov. 24
—iTf’l—Rice’s championship hopes
in the Southwest Conference foot-
ball race flickered!' out today,
smothered by Leon Joslin’s pass-
ng arm . . . Texas Christian be it
the Owls 14 to 13 to leave the
.niversity of Texas alone at the
top f»t the standings.
Joslin pitching and the gifted
toe of Hurry Mullins, who last
year booled the Christians to the
title, spelled defeat for the gal-
lant Owls who had made one of
the most amazing comebacks i
conference history to drive into
tie for the lead with Texas nft.',
lour licking*.
Joslin’s passing set up both
Horned Frog touchdawns, one
scored by Norman Cox in a sma: :i
from the Rice three-yard line,
the other by El wood Turner on
a plunge from the Owl two.
The Frogs twice came from be-
hind. Rice had counted first on
a 45-yard punt return by George
I Walmsley with Mickey Macaluso
| j converting. TCU tied it up on
Josiin’s passing that swept the
Frogs from their 41-yard line
down to the three. Mullins kicked
j the extra point. The second Rice
touchdown was on a 61-yard drive
with Huey Keeney going the last
17 in a drive over guard. But this
time Macaluso’s try for point was
law and the bait went into the
TCU line. In lour plays after the
ku.k on TCU won the game. Jos-
lin threw 49 yards to Jimmy Jones
who was downed on the Rice 11.
PEMEMBEP. MOM-
MO MOPE HAMGlHM
APOUMP MEM THOSE
PH!LLtE5...
MO MOPE LOMEf? ISO
,M THAT
SEE OSD - VMiSiOS
POOL HALL- J
i>
,.k ' .‘V *
) ¥
■ft/.
Pete Runnells, 157-pound back
of Lufkin's unbeaten Panthers,
plays a merrv touchdown tune
along the schoolboy football trail.
He has scored 104 points and oass-
ed for 12 touchdowns and lor six
extra points—thus has accounted
tor 182 ot Lufkin's points. He is a Turin r in three lunges went over
lriple-threaler de luxe, rolling up for a touchdown. Mullins booted
820 vards on 130 carries, com- the point that killed Rice’s hopes,
pleting 25 ot 51 passes for 621 ; A crowd of 14,000 saw the bit-
yards and puntina 15 i'mes for an terlv-fought game.
average of 30 yards despite one -------
blocked kick and four short ones
aimed at the coffin corners. Run- |
nells is one of the fop candidates
for all-state honors. IAP Photo)
east circuit, 21 to 7. A week ago
Clemson drubbed Tulane.
Penn, walloped by Army only
a week ago, came back with a 59
to 6 conquest of Cornell that
brought the Quakers the Ivy
league laurels. Yale had to come
from behind to down Princeton,
20 to 14, in the first of the big
three battles. Harvard got ready
for the Elis by crushing Boston
university, 60 to 0.
Texas' chances of winning the j
Southwest title increased with
Rice's 14 to 13 loss to Texas Chris-
tian, primarily on the pitching of
Leon Joslin. Southern Methodist
had no trouble with Baylor, 34
to 0.
Washington State annexed the
northern division of the Pacific
coast conference by conquering
Washington, 7 to 0, and Southern
California emerged as the probable
Rose Bowl host with a 34 to 7 vic-
tory over Oregon State.
ATE WITH HATS ON
PRODIGY
Thomas Young, physician
and
ccn-
1C-4A champion.
A field of 72 runners competed,!
with eight teams entered. Behind „ ln ,,le t!me of Louis XIV of ...
Drake and Notre Dame ip the France, it was proper etiquette to; scientist, born In the 18th
team scoring jvere: Wisconsin 81, Ynur hat nl the table. Noble- turv, read the Bible twice before
Miami University 91, Ohio State men dined with their hats on. dof- |n,_ fourth birthdav, and could
1 Michigan State 154, Uni- *n8 'hem politely when passing. . , a1
VC! .,1 o! Kansas 190. and Wyne 1,10 nleut or spearing a piece ot wait sttttai toieign language
t'nivi rsity 208.
i bread.
the age of eight.
Fighting Irish
Baiter Tulane
FOOTBALL RESULTS T m- fi
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TV 111y 0fa~U
Texas U. To Play
Aggies, Thursday
Drake Wins Nafional
College Championship
EAST LANSING, Midi., Nov.
24—(/Pi— Drake University, led |
by its defending champion Fred l
Feiler, won the National Collegiate
Cross-Country championship on!
a snowy course here today with j
50 points, 15 fewer than second-’
place Notre Dame.
Feller led all the wav and at
the end of the four-mile firm'll
which he completed in 21:14.2.
held a 40-yard advantage over!
John T. Hanley of Dartmouth,
Pampa Rodeo
Attracts Top
Calf Ropers
Rid" Whatle.v and Perry
Franks will be matched against
each other 12 times, for a thou-
sand dollars each time, in the
Call Roping event ol tho Pamiri
Rodeo to be held at 2:30 p.m. De-
cember 9th. These boys are con-
siderod top performers in the Ro-
deo world, both taking part m
championship rodeos through-out
the country. They have com-
peted against each other several
times in the oast, and decision us
to whom is the better of the two
still hangs in the balance. This
contest snould settle the question
once and for all, as each man is
putting fits own money into the
purse.
Rodeo funs in this vicinity
slu uhl mark Deeembei Uth on
their calendars, as this promises
to be a red letter day in the1
* s i.! .it ki.irse . nil saddle".
Traditional Religious Customs
Unaffected by Modern Changes
Deep in the hearts of our peo-
ple is reverence lor their loved
ones who have passed on.
Streamlined modernity may ai-
led some o( our old-fashioned
customs, but the traditional re-
ligious rites observed in funeral
services will continue to reveal
the laith that governs and gives
purpose to life.
*Tfm**r: J
Blackburn-Shaw
OuahajoU Qu/iectou.
fOWIN CO CWfttH- MC4
GQRGtft PM 51* TKXAt
j COLLEGE STATION, Texas,
; Nuv. 24—i/P)—Texas vs. Texas A
SCORES
Crozier Tech (Dallas) 21, Sun-
set (Dallas) 7
Harlingen B. Brownsville 32
Galveston 6, Goose Creek 28
Lufkin 52, Jacksonville 7
Palestine 48, Livingston 0
Wharton 18. i'alnea Park 13
San Marcos 26, Yoakum 0
Conroe 53, Grateland 6
Sealy 14, Hempstead 0
Liberty 19, Dayton 7
Lagrane 64. Bellview 6
Amarillo 33, Lubbock 6
Midwest
Northwest err* 13, Illinois 7
Indiana 26, 1 urdue 0
Michigan 7, Ohio State 3
Wisconsin 2t Minnesota 12
Missouri 3J, Kansas 12
Nebraska 13, Iowa 6
Oklahoma Aggie- 47, Okla. U
Southwest
Texas Christian 14. Rice 13
Southern Methodist 34, Baylor 0
t South
Tennesse 14, Kentucky 0
Maryland 19, Virginia 13
Duke 14. North Carolina 7
Little Cieek Navy 12, Flordia 8
Presbyterian Vs Georgia Can-
celled.
Clemson 21, Georgia Tech 7
Alabama 55, Pensacola Navy 6
Auburn 29, Louisiana Tech 0
Mississippi U 7, Mississippi State
6
Notre Dame 32. Tulane 6
Third Air Force 15, Air Trans-
port Command 6
East
Harvard 60, Boston U 0
Yale 20 Princeton 14
Kings Point 58, Brooklyn 6
Pittsburgh 7. Penn State 0
Columbia 21, Dartmouth 0
Pennsylvania 59. Cornell 6
Far West
Texas Tech 6, New Mexico 6
'tie»
Colorado A&M 7, Colorado Col-
lege 7 itie'
California 6, UCLA 0
Washington State 7, Washing-
ton 0.
By KRIS KREEGER
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 24—(/P)!
—Notre Dame's fighting Irish had
to come from behind and weai ^meant'' nothing"i»“ a chain- j
»»--hip war-, yet that never
Indiana Wins
Its First
Big-10 Title
and M.—the bitterest football riv -
airy of them all; a game in which
anything can happen, and usually
does.
Yes. the Longhorns and Aggies
will meet Thursday for the fifty-
second time over a span of fifty- _
two years. On many occasions the]
By HAROLc GLAASSEN
lane Green Wave here* twYav” win* ,!?,msa"1> ,v‘av’ .yul . laat .. *»«v*r I NEW YORK, Nov. 24 — ..-Pi-
ning 32 to 6 before 63,000'spec- tom "rl ° <he flRlt j Indiana won its first Big Ten title,
tators—the largest crowd ever to • Thursday T'will mean a lot J M,ssouri #rabbt;d the Six
see a regular season football game t J,nl , a> 11 , , 1 crown and Duke remained on
in the south. I rexas bTUU2e lbe Longhorns are the Southern Conferee throne
Tulane, rated by the experts as! t‘.l,1£mR at f Sou Invest Conference today as many of the nation's col-
I scarcely capable of giv ing Notre' w"nr,*t • ' ° l,e f The log*-' football teams completed I
Dame a hard scrimmage out- hd'fe ..,niKb t‘1ani< their seasons and set the fori
fought the Irish J a share ot the champion-j next Saturday's clash between
losing to them 15 times. Four-| cousin dumped Minnesota into the
to Nebraska. 13 to 6, in a non-title
affair.
kicked* 1ihe*'fir’?^aiiH^f*mMi c,“,p'! kamey ended in ties. Texas rolled , cellar alongside Iowa by downing ,
points! missing *the^othel-s*" ! “p with 3051 the Gophers, 26 to 12. Iowa tost
The yelling spectators wondered 1
what kind of a miracle Coach!,....
Monk Simons had performed on I WIDE OPEN SPACES
his Tulane team, as the Green _______ ..
Wave surged to a touchdown from! people live In two-tenths of one
the opening kickoff. The Greet, per rent ol the total land area,
line opened big holes for Dick and 75,900,000 on the remaining
Hoot. Marvin McCain and Jack ninety-nine and eight-tenths per
Counce, and Ernest Crouch hit ]tent-
his receivers with passes, ending !--
with Angsman’s one-yard scoring 1 CAMOUFLAGE IS AN ART
buck.
Missouri’s 33 to 12 conquest of
In the United States 47 non nnn I ^ansas ended Oklahoma’s two-
T'™0 -vw»' domination of the Big Six
on the same day that the Sooner;
were taught a 47 to 0 football les-
son by Bob Fenimore and his Ok-
lahoma A. and M. mates.
OLD DINING CUSTOM
Children hud to stand at the
table while eating, according to
a dining custom of colonial times
In some families they had to take
their places behind their parents
and food was passed back to then,
The drive covered 68 yards in
15 plays, Counce bulling over from
the one-yard line. Little Harrv
Levonian went in to placekic-k
but John Mastrangelo blocked his
attempt.
Four times in the second period
Tulane took the ball awav from
No,re Datne on downs, as the in-
spired Green line stopped the
I'ish offense cold and the Greenie
backs, particularly Hoot, blocked
desperate pass attempts. Late in
the half Coach Hugh DeVore sent
in a new quarterback on every
piav in a Vain attempt to spring
a scoring pass to Brennan.
WEIGHTY STONE
Largest hewn stones in the world
are to b- found in a ruined temple
Baalbae, Syria. One stone
Shills properly camouflaged for
one theater of war would not be
painted properly for other regions,
due to different water colors and
atmospheric conditions in various some of its glory
ocean areas.
Duke, still tiie only coll°ee team
to score twice on Army, improved
its bowl chances by subduing a
stubborn North Carolina aggrega-
tion. 14 to 7. that ensured it the
Southern Conference title for an-
other year although it must share
with Clemson
which defeated Tech of the South-
r.ananas were practicallv un.
Known .n inland twons c( the ..........
50ywr*SlgoS “ lit,k more ‘han | teef iong, 14 feet 'wide “and
weighs 150 tons and measures 69
17
feet thick.
Brady and Bolin
BODY SHOP
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Body Work of All Types
212 South Main Phone 1020
Just A Reminder—We re Open
SUNDAYS—8:00 A. M. till 8:00 P. M.
FLAT HEADQUARTERS
PLENTY ETHYL PLENTY
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»n n M«i»
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Personal loans to $50 on signature
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COURTESY LOAN COMPANY
604 B N. Main
Phone 458
WE HAVE PLENTY OF
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IF IT IS TO BE HAD Wf HAVE IT
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played and outfought the Irish , . “ ^ o,c next Saturday’s clash between
in all departments during the an ^lse ju!d Uw 's un!'' " I miuhty Armv and ambitious Navy,
first two periods and led 6 to Oj The rivalry between these Thcse achievements were ex
" half «>ne. teams goes back to nre u-sr rise • 1,1 ‘‘ontrast to California’s,
Tc. i-v Brennan’s 47-yard touch- j 1-pre-Sp^nLsh-Ame ic- n'v-‘ • (h?v 6 to 0 over UCLA that1
down run early in the third per- ! lVl"1 Wi,rn4iy‘s : muddled the western Hose Row I
iod put Notre Dame into the ball! Barnes Loneho,-.-, st-,,-* . | ni( Hire even more and the terrific
came, and thereafter the Irish ! niac in W94 Tha vc-, wl - •! I^,lt butun by Tulane befor.
S’, ,. , , ! of Texas, then known as the V , - ,atlve 111 the Rose Bowl game, used
Notie Dames last touchdown 1 sltv. That apparently was a me-, !- ’-‘-ula,.-; sparingly while drub- ’
came ,,,, rrank Tnpucka s 21-ya, d ,.-,kc because the Farmers TpU ! b;,ly ^’"^‘eola .Navy, 55 to 6.
?a?d pcnultv alsmsf'T, !na, ; ii3fl 0’ and thUi b,!wm a nvalry i Michigan collected a louchdown
...u1' 4i . *: L S‘1.ln,4 u ®ne lui L that has carried with only twoi m the final seven minutes to edge
P {nto pwtlwn. | breaks: 1895-97 and 1912-15. ] past Ohio State, 7 to 3. in the
m-'in -indSnhifp - i Texas holds a wide margin in struggle that determined the run-
man’s 11 .-'ini t b, and Ratter- victories, having taken the meas- ] nerup. Northwestern’s young-
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Phillips, J. C. Borger Daily Herald (Borger, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 314, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 25, 1945, newspaper, November 25, 1945; Borger, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth520659/m1/4/?q=kitchen: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hutchinson County Library, Borger Branch.