The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 266, Ed. 1 Friday, November 27, 1959 Page: 7 of 10
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Longhorns Look Toward Mighty Syracuse
THE ORANGE LEADER
MAKES LONG KICKOFF RETURN—Robert
Sanders (30), Texas A&M halfback took the open-
ing kickoff of this Turkey Day classic and return-
ed it to the Texas University 40-yard line in
game at College Station. Also in th? play is
AIM end Ralph Smith (86) and Texas’ end
Monte Lee (86). (AP Wirephoto).
Stopping Syracuse
Next Texas Target
is
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1959
Nederland Attacks La Marque
Ray, Temple in Prep Feature;
Port Arthur Hosts Texas City
By JACK CLARY
Associated Pren Sports Writer
Texas, nfter squeaking by so-so
Texas A&M Thursday, is no long-
er worried about a spot in the
Cotton Bowl. No siree, all the
Longhorns have to worry about _ __ __________ _____o
now is how to stop Syracuse, top- lead. But Texas, led by quarter-jthe worst defeat ever on Duke as
ing, w' ...... ‘ .....
fears Da;
stop
ranked in everything, when the
two meet New Y<
>ay.
ndou
Texas put on a tremendous sec
end-half spurt to overcome a 10-0
Texas A&M lead for a 20-17 vic-
tory and a tie for the Southwest
Conference title with Arkansas.
The Longhorns got the Cotton
Bowl spot since they had beaten
Arkansas earlier in the season.
Texas Christian is still in the
SWC picture but they were in the
Cotton Bowl since Texas' last trip
and thus can’t qualify.
The Longhorns’ victory was the
highlight of- one of the wildest
major undefeated team, still must
play UCLA Dec. 5.
The Aggies’ little Randy Sims
took a scoring pass from quarter-
back Charley Milstead. and kicked Wichita. Young completed six of
a conference record-tying 52-yard <11 throws for 96 yards,
field goal for A&M'a 10-0 first half j Underdog North Carolina hung
lead. But Texas, led by quarter- the worst defeat ever on Duke as
back Bobby Lackey and halfback fullback Don Klochak, demoted to
Mike Dowdle, who scored two the scrubs earlier in the season,
touchdowns, sneaked through, j scored two touchdowns, one a 93-
Lackey scored the clincher on a yard kickoff return.
1-yard plunge after A&M had ln other games Thanksgiving
taken a 17-13 lead in the last Day: Colgate 33. Brown 14: Rich-
period
Quarterback Howard Dyer
passed for three .touchdowns to
pace VMI, which killed Virginia
Tech’s vsilnted aerial game with
six pass interceptions.
George Koval once more came
to Penn’s rescue as the second-
string quarterback fired three
touchdown passes to bring the
Thanksgiving Dav football pro- Quakers from a 13-7 deficit to its
grams in years. Virginia Military
upset Virginia Tech 37-12 to win
the Southern Conference title,
Penn took the Ivy League crown
with a 28-13 comeback over Cor
nell, Wichita prevented Tulsa
from moving into a three-way tie
for the Missouri Valley title with
a 26-21 victory, and North Carolina
finallv hit its potential with a 50-0
victory over bitter rival Duke.
The Longhorns, ranked fourth in
the current Associated Press poll,
showed the jitters they’ve had
aince a Nov. 14 upset by Texas
Christian obliterated an unde-
feated season and their confer-
ence leadership.
That defeat came shortly after
Syracuse, top-ranked nationally in
total offense, defense, rushing de-
fense, scoring and the nation's
No. 1 team, had announced it ac-
cepted a Cotton Bowl bid to meet
—at the time—undefeated Text*.
The Orange now 9-0 and the only
m
i
West Orange
Books Game
At Pineland
PINELAND (Spl) — West Or-
ange goes in search of its first
win of the young basketball sea-
son here tonight, meeting tall
Pineland in a non-district engage-
ment;
B squad teams from the two
schools will start things off in a
preliminary game at 7 p.m. to
be followed by the A squad con-
test at 8:15 p.m.
West Orange is the only Orange
County team booked for action
during the schoolboy Thanksgiv-
ing holidays. Other county units
start up again on Monday and
Tuesday.
Pineland. holding a 6-7 record to
date, hosts a West Orange team
that is winless in two starts, los-
ing to Deweyville and Little Cy-
pres*.
Pineland has all of its starters
back from last year’s team, which
tied for third place in District- 64-
B. Forwards John Berryman (6-1)
and Bobbv Amason (6-0) are av-
eraging 15 to 20 points a game
for Pineland and are top rebound-
ers.
Other Pineland stsrters include
center John L. Fults (8-2) and
guards Charles Lindspv (5-11) and
Harrison Graham (5-10).
West Orange Adoloh (Chuck)
Hryhorchuk will go with p:stmen
Ernie Runnels (6-0) and Robert
Sims (6-1), forwards W. L. Peery
(5-10) and Roland Guillot (5-7),
and guard Robert Petry (5-3).
NorsemenWin
National Title
TEXARKANA (AP)—The Gold-
en Norsemen from Northeastern
Oklahoma A&M headed home to-
day, bearing the National Junior
first Ivv League title since 195*
and Coach Steve Sebo’s finest
By WHITEY SAWYER
Associated Presa Staff Writer
Mighty Corpus C h r i s t i Ray
clashes with Temple Friday night
in the feature game of the day’s
schoolboy football warfare.
Clas AAAA shows six bi-district
games while AAA has three Fri-
day. Saturday the top two classes
maybe last—season finish the bi-district playoffs and
‘led Dean’s two touchdowns and !h* !°wer tW° MnferenCM wrap
Dick Young’s passing paced "P the re*ional g«mes.
Ray, undefeated and undid and
a threat to defending champion
Wichita Falls of Class AAAA,
clashes with Temple at Tenple.
Fort Worth Carte r-Riverside
tries Dallas Samuell at Fort
Worth, Dallas Highland Park vis-
its Tyler, Houston Reagan tries
Houston Bellaire, Port Arthur
hosts Texas City and San Antonio
Edison clashes with San Antonio
Burbank in AAAA Friday.
; Saturday Abilene plays host to
V.lotA -__I A___:n_ uv.|.
Cougars Glad
To See WSU
Leave Town
HOUSTON (AP)-Gail Cogdill,
a glue-fingered end, and Keith
Lincoln, a halfback, made the
Univeraity of Houston Cougars
thankful that Washington State
was on its way out of town.
The Pacific Coast team’ beat
Houston 32-18 Thursday.
Lincoln knifed in and around
the Houston ends for 153 yards,
one try a 54-yard romp from his
own 8-yard line which set up a
Washington State touchdown from
the Houston 39.
Five plays later quarterback
BKt P”8
to Cogdiir who made a diving,
end-over-end catch behind the
goal for the winning margin in the
third quarter.
Houston made a game of it for
two quarters, matching Washing-
ton State with a touchdown in both
stanzas, but failed in conversion
attempts as the visitors ran up
a 16-12 halftime lead.
WSU threw 27 passes and com-
pleted 11 for 195 yards. They
plowed for 268 by land to give
them a 463-vard offensive against
the limited Houston defenses.
Houston ground out a respecta-
ble 198 yards rushing and 86 in
the air behind the quarterbacking
of Don McDonald and Lonnie Hol-
land.
mond 20. William & Mary 12; Cin-
cinnati 14, Miami (Ohio) 7; Wyo-
ming 45, Denver 0: Washington
State 32, Houston 18. ^
Saturday marks the -traditional
windup of the season with the big
Army - Navy classic in Philadel-
phia before over 100,000 spectators
and millions more over national
television — NBC-TV, 1:30 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time.
There are still five bowl spots
to be filled with Mississippi meet-
ing Mississippi State and hoping
for the second spot in the Sugar
Bowl; Georgia will announce
whether it uses its Southeastern
Conference title to bowl advantage
(probably Gator against Arkan-
sas) after playing Georgia Tech;
TCU, already in the Bluebonnet
Bowl, plays Southern Methodist,
a possible for Philadelphia's Lilv
erty Bowl against Penn State; and
Miami (Fla), if it defeats Florida
is hopeful of landing the second
The day's other top game pits
Southern California against Notre
Dame.
field playi London at Longview
and Freer meets Sinton at Alice.
Saturday Bellville and Jasper
play at Huntsville and Palacios
meet Hallettsville at Gonzales.
Stinnett whipped Idalou 42-20 at
Canyon Thursday to atari the re-
gional warfare in Class A.
Friday Sinton plays Menard at
Big Spring, Albany meets Crowell
at Seymour, Lrberty-Eylau and
Forney pHfy at White Oak, Garri-
son and Madiaonville play at
Groveton, Elgin hits Ananuac at
Huntsville, Katy tries Boerne at"
Seguin and Kenedy clashes with
Bishop at Beeville.
For'Cotton'
Ysleta and Amarillo visits W:chi- fir*t time in many years it ap-
ta Falls. I pears the pageantry, not the foot-
In AAA. Andrews upset Level- bal1’ »' luring some 100,000 fans
COLLEGE STATION. Tex. (AP)
-Texas, which had to come from
behind twice to beat lowly Texas
A&M 26-17 in one of the great
games of the storied 66-year-old
Thanksgiving Day series, looked
toward the Cotton Bowl and migh-
ty Syracuse today.
Bobby Lackey piloted the Long-
horns from a 10-6 halftime deficit
to their glittering triumph yester-
day. It earned Texas a tie for
the Southwest Conference cham-
pionship, a 9-1 season record and
the host spot in the Cotton Bowl.
They’ll be talking for many
years of how little Randy Sima
scored all the points in the first
| half, three of them with a confer-
ence record-tying 52-yard field
goal: how Aggie quarterback
MILSTEAD STOPPED—Charlie Milstead, Texas A&M quarter- iChsrley Milstead played his finest
back, is flipped upside down in the second quarter of the Texas- Pme and almost carried his
Texas A&M game at College Station. Shown in the foreground is , m to victory, and of how Lac-
Randy Sims 440). Aegie halfback, and Jack Collins (49), Texas “ey pick?d VPL the ,rantic Lon?*
back. Plav netted 6 yards. (AP Wirephoto) horns and I«d them to three touch-
------- -- downs.
Syracuse scouts Roceo Pirro and
Joe Srombathy would not give
their opinions of the strength of
the Texas team and what it might
do against Syracuse Jan. I at
Dallas. ^
Syracuse Coach Ben Schwartz-
walder said at Syracuse last night,
“We hoped Texas would make it.
“They’ll be a fine opponent.
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—For the football picture. Several times, a for the cadets since the years ofiThey have Iots of sPeed and a bi*
----- — *“ victory meant a bow! bid for the cribbing scandal In 1951 thei,ine and the Texas coach, Darrell
- • it '7ml1 “ » - 0EL
Pageantry. Not Football. Leads Fans
To Philly for Army-Navy Meeting
land 18-14 Thursday, as Tommy
Walker scored twice. Mt. Pleas-
ant, tied 12-12 by Carrollton, won
on penetrations 4-2 with Kelly
g
into Philadelphia Stadium for
Saturday’s 60th meeting of Army
and Navy.
In recent seasons this tradition-
Navy. Last year Armv assured it- cadets won 2 and lost 7. The fol-
self of Eastern football honors! lowing year, as former coach Earl
with a 22-6 win. Blaik rebuilt his shattered forces,
Such has been the picture-;the mark was 4-4-1. Both years
color, excitement and prestige J Navy won the service game.
But not this year. The cadets and As for the middies (4-4-1), you
Roberts gaining 137 yards rushing jal c,ash of cadets and midship- middies have naught at stake but have to go back to 1951 for
and scoring a touchdown. men has had an important bear: personal pride. poorer Navy record. That year
Army’s 4-3-1 record is the worst Navy brought - * “ ’ *---
....... ~ the
scoring
Friday Kilgore plays Abilene at
Athens, San Antonio Sam Houston
visits San Marcos and Kingsville
hits Falfurrias.
Saturday the defending cham-
pion, Breckenridge, plays host to
Lamesa, Cleburne tries Brenham
and Nederland, the power of the
south, attacks La Marque-
Denver City crushed Olton 50-6
in a regional Class AA game
Thursday. Friday the
. »• ,iUB. lIlc fcsturc
spot in the Orange Bowl against game matches champion Stam-
Big Eight representative Missouri, ford and Cisco in a battle of un-
defeated, untied teams at Abilene.
Olney, also undefeated and untied,
tries Bonham at Denton, Dainger-
Detroit Loses 24-17
Lion Fans Have Had Turkey
On Their Hands All Season
DETROIT (AP)—True, Thanks- and most of the excitement,
giving Day comes but once a year,
but Detroit football fans have had
a turkey on their hands all season
e Lions, playing give - awa;
crammed into the first half.
The futility of the season was
illustrated in the secood half when
the Lions, trailing by one touch-
... . y down, could not get inside the
while the opposition plays football. Green Bay 25-vard line although
made it seven defeats against:they had the ball for twice as
only two victories and a tie Thurs- manv plavs as did the Packers,
day by dropping their annual! This was the ninth game in the
Thanksgiving Day contest to the holiday series and the first time
Green Bay Packers 24-17. jn a dozen seasons the Packers
have scored a season sweep. They
beat the Lions earlier this year
in Green Bay 28-10.
This time, they had so much
The Lions fumbled themselves
into three Green Bay scores be-
fore 4,9221 of the faithful and
hearty and a nationwide television
Lamar Cards To Invade
Lafayette on Saturday
.-College Championship and a 16-7
victory over Texarkana in the Na-
tional Junior College Athletic
Assn. Bowl game.
The Norsemen used the runs of
fullback Dean Hendryx. the pass-
ing of halfback Eli Walker and
the catching of Donne Pittman
and—most important—the kicking
of Gene Hart for their scores
Thursday night.' ,
Northeastern Oklahoma followed
with a stone wall defense that held
Texarkana to 143 yards rushing.
Oklahoma got 171.
The Norsemen used a 6-yard
Texarkana punt to set up their
first touchdown and scored it on
a 12-yard pass from Walker to
Pittman in the second period.
Hart then kicked true.
Later in the same quarter, the
tame pass play set up a field goal
and Hart booted it from the six.
BEAUMONT (Spl) — Setting
their sights on their second vic-
tory in as many outings, Lamar
Tech’s Cardinals invade Lafayette,
La., Saturday for a return engage-
ment with the Bulldogs of South-
western Louisiana Institute.
Lamar will be seeking to ring up
a second conquest to go with their
80-68 triumph over the Caninea
here Tuesday.
Redbird Coach Jack Martin was
undecided on his starting five for
the Saturday night fray but is ex-
pected to go along with James
IVJeliard cncf Bob Shepherd at the
forward posts and Johnny John-
s cn at center. He probably will
chose from among Guy Davis,
Charles Anderson and Wayne
Aaron at guards.
Shepherd and Johnaton ahared
scoring laurels for the Cards In
their opening conflict, notching 18
and 17 points, respectively. The
Birds sank 45 per cent of their
shots from the floor to SLI’s 38 per
cent and snared 37 rebounds to
27 for the Bulldogs.
Lamar compiled a 17-7 won-lost
record last season, its best since
becoming a four-year college, and
haa back this year four of its top
five pointmakers of 1958-59.
Cage Games Set
At Cove Saturday
Four Independent basketball
teams are scheduled for action to-
morrow night in the Cove Gymna-
sium.
The Orangefigld Baptist Church
and Simmon’s Jawelry of Beau-
mont will match talents in a girls
game, which will serve as the
opener at 6:30 p.m.
The Cove Independents and Port
Arthur Independents will clash in
the second game starting at
8 p.m.
audience that saw all the scoring, | help from the Lions they could
hardly miss.
The Lions moved In front 3-0 on
Jerry Perry’s 22-yard field goal
that followed a Green Bav fumble
on the opening kickoff. The Pack-
ers drove 65 yards in six plays
for one score, got another 95 sec-
onds later following a Detroit
fumble, added a field goal and
led 17-3 before the Thanksgiving
stay-at-homers started to work on
the second drumstick.
The Lions fumbled again In the
second period and the Packers
promptly moved 49 vards in eight
plavs for a 24-3 lead.
Two long drives got the long-
suffering Detroit club back into
contention but it lacked the stuff
te keep its offense rolling. Two
late interceptions killed off hopes
for a deadlock.
Paul Horaung scored all but six
of the Green Bay points, although
he suffered a cracked rib and car-
ried the ball only five times. Hor-
nung scored the Packers’ first two
touchdowns on runs of 11 and six
yards. He booted a 39-yard field
goal and kicked all three extra
points.
The Packers picked up only 73
yards on the ground and lost the
statistics battle to the Linns bv a
wide margin. 354 to 242. But
auarterback Bart Starr hit with
deadly and timelv accuraeY'tm his
oasses. He completed 10 of 15 for
169 yards and didn't suffer an
interception.
Johnston led In both Lone Star
Conference and seaaon scoring
with a 16.3 average in 24 games
Shepherd, an all-LSC performer,
averaged better than 11 points •
game. Mellard and AnderaOn are
the other returnees who were
among the leading point produc-
ers.
Other Cardinals likely to see
considerable service are Dale God-
frey and Jerry Cammack.
Expected to see considerable ac-
tion for the Bulldoga are Valdo
Zavich, Shelby Aulds, Bill McHar-
ris, Howard Humphries, Larry
Simon, Tim Thompson and Harold
Howard.
mm
tm
Pfrni as. Cornell 13
Colgate 33. Brown 14
Hofitrn 35. Scranton t
East 17, Wait IS (0«m Bowl)
South
North Carolina SO. Duka 0
Richmond 30. Wm -Mary 11
Virginia Military IT. Virginia Tteh 11
Presbyterian 10. Newberry S
Memphis State 15. Chattanooga 1
Tenn Tech 11, Middle Tenn 31 (tie)
Virginia State 13. Morgan 7
Morrla Brown If, Clark (Ca l •
Tan A I State II, Jaekaon ilflu) ■
Lenoir Ithyne SO. Catawba S
South Carolina State 30. Benedict IS
Port Campbell 15. Auatln Peay o
Port Valley iQa.i 14. Albany (Oa.) S
Clallln 11, Morri* (SC) 0
North Carolina A T 3. North Carolina
College 0
Bethune-Cookman II. Allan (SC) 14
Mldweit
Cincinnati 14, Miami (Ohio) 7
Wichita ». Tulsa 31
Sowthwast *
Texas 10. Texas AdrM IT
Washington State 11. Houston !g
McMurry 14,. Abilene Chrlstlsn 7
Delta (Mils) State 11. Quachlta 7
Texas Collsge 21. Wiley 30
Northeastern Okla. A&M 10. Texarkana
JO 7
Par Waii /
Wyoming 45, Denver 0
Humboid U, Whittier 31
ing on the national or sectional
Gone Fishi...
Red Fish Have Arrived;
Plenty Being Caught
to South Philadelphia to see the
cadets and middies parade, for a
glimpse of some celebrities, for
the social prestige, just might see
a darn good football game.
Both teams are believed better
than their records. Injuries have
hurt the middies and cadets this
frustrating season. If the lame
- fishing three lines at once and it happen- crowd^ls^ma^be'^reate^to13^
may sound like something out trf -------- -* -l-- crowa 81,0 maY De trcatM t0 ■
Royal, is a sharpie.”
Schwartzwalder indicated weath-
er was a big worry. “If the weath-
er is bad and we can’t work prop-
erly, we’re in trouble,” he said.
Texas had to beat A&M to get
a tie for the conference title with
Arkansas and also $et into the
a 2-6-1 slate into i Cotton Bowl. Texas did it because
Army game, but laced the It defeated Arkansas ia regular
decimated West Pointers 42-7. Two:season play,
years later, with a 4-3-2 log, Navy| Texas Christian still can tie for
won the Army game 20-7. the title if it beats Southern Metho-
However, those making the trip dist at Fort Worth tomorrow but-
By RICHARD CORDER
This scribbling about
a vacation travel folder or the
pipe dreams of a frustrated fish-
erman, but here goes!
The reds have come home, and
a lot of diem were taken during
the past seven days. Red fishing
has been very good in the Shell
Hole and in Sabine Lake. Not just
the small rat reds but some of
the real battlers.
Rob Bailey's Bridge City Fish
Camp saw the best action of the
rear on reds and specs, and the
'ollowing is an account of some of
the fishing done.
The biggest catch honors go to
Tommy McElwee and Kenny Mil-
ler. They came into the boat land-
ing with 44 reds that ran from 5
to 6 pounds. They compared the
day’s work to trout fishing and
said the fish hit in much the same
manner.
etL.Three bwisers hit at the: same:thriHing contest.
«•««•« SS
Pfrfonnance of taking two at Erdelatz at Annapolis, and Dale
Hall succeeding Blaik at West
Point. By official proclamation,
the city has changed the name of
one time later that day.
We were using slip corks and
fishing about 12 feet deep with
live mullet. The fish were running £ to PUl^
m schools and it wasn t uncommon I• -. j-
to see three or four anglers doing
battle at the same time. As crowd-
delnhia Stadium
The Philadelphia area also has
. .. .. . . . provided both captains. Navy
ed as it was. the fish were trying|Capt Jim Dunn j? hails froi£
to knot the lines together and that nearby Rutledge, while Bill Car-
added to the challenge. ipenter, the Army leader, makes
In other fishing areas, the reds his home in suburban Delaware
also have led the list. Charlie!County. Navy’s athletic boss,
Faegart reports reds, drum and|Capt. Asbury (Red) Coward, is a
whiting being caught in the gulf.‘native Philadelphian.
Dead bait is available. Huntingl Both coaches have indicated
has been just fair and the water they feel it will be an aerial battle
is in good shape. | with quarterbacks Joe Tranchini
Joe Dougas at Big Lake has and Jim Maxfield pitching fpr
dead bait on hand for the weekend; Navy against Joe Caldwell of
[and predicts good drum and Army. Hard running Joe Bellino
The most In number award was:sheepshead fishing. \\s the ground power for the Navy. .
claimed Sunday by Clem Harmon! One fellow caught 110 drum andj“alle.^#^b^Anderson is the Army s for the winning touchdown. Lackey
and hi* brother - in - law. They Merle Vincent took
can’t get into the Cotton Bowl re-
gardless.
The often-beaten Aggies out-
played Texas thoroughly in the
first half and with a 10-0 lead ap-
peared on the way to one of the
great upsets of conference history.
They got a touchdown when Mil-
stead passed four yards to Sims.
Sims kicked the extra point then
short! v afterward booted his 52-
yard field goal that tied the record
set in 1938 by Joe Pasqua of South-
ern Methodist.
But Texas came swirling back
for a touchdown in the third peri-
od, with Lackey’s passing push-
ing it on an 89-yard drive. Big
Mike Dowdle went acrosa from the
four and Jack Collins, another
hero in the Texas triumph, passed
to Bobby Gurwitz for two points.
Texas went ahead early in the
fourth period after recovering an
Aggie fumble on the A&M 55.
Dowdle made the touchdown,
again with a 4-yard blast.
But the Aggies came back to
drive 49 yards on Milstead’* run-
ning and passing for another
touchdown, this one made on a
5-yard pass from Milstead to Jack
Estes. Sims converted.
Then Texas staged an 80-vard
surge speared by Lackey’s passing
caught 60 nice specs.
Joe Gilmore and Ron Hennegan
>gar
Col
put 30 specs away, and Bill (
lins took 19 reds in two days.
and added 15 more for good meas
ure.
10 reds and big infantryman.
75 sheepers and drum.
Catches of 14 and 18-pound
reds highlighted the fishing.
Herschel Hodge is back to work
Cheater Cartlege and Harold'this week and reported that Joe
Gilmarf boated 38 reds Tuesday Guesp and son took a 12^ pounder
and Chester went back Thursday from the Shell Hole. The only fresh
water report in was a catch of
white perch up the river by Mr.
That same day Henry Miller M^uj*y out near Fredricksburg.
brought in 19 reds.
*u°zgK
basketball coach, Alex Groza, All-
America and hfro-time All - Pro-
fessional whose career was cut
short by point-shaving scandals.
The small Catholic college opens
made it with a 1-yard smash.
Alex Groza Named Head Cage
Coach at Bellarmine College
Tex ,.must be pretty good. A grotipR^rrigan.^prS-
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)— more conscious now about right
“Everything about Mr. Groza has|and wrong than I was before it
impressed us very much, and we!happened. My past is my best
think he’s the kind of man we j safeguard for the future.”
In 1952, Groza and two former
lenty of live bait, both
mullet, on hand. Most
20 specs.
There is pi
shrimp and
of the fishing has been during the
daylight hours with both shrimp
and mullet as bait. The Shell Hole
produced some fine fishing last
Sunday. Tubby Johnson got 31
ere and later took
14 more.
week.
We hope to have a more com-
To me. It seemed the reds were piete story with pictures sometime
acting differently. There was none, this coming week,
of this slow, almost inperceptiblc| Four other 0ranpa hunters _
bitinr Just a slashing strike and j Lawrence Dupuyi Frank Owens,
a battle from the word “go.” |John Heathcok and Fred Stephen
Joe Coulter and myself managed Hogg—returned from the Angelina
at Harper to bring home the ba-
con.
Jesse Parish droped two 8-
pointers and Leon nailed a 7 and
8 pointer.
Dr. W. B. Hightower got what
he went after in a 7-point buck, against the Cleveland Pipers of
Pat Collier got an 8-pomt kill last the AAU National Industrial Bas-
Kentucky teammates admitted
taking money to hold down the
point spread infghmes In 1949.
The disclosure forced the Mar-
tins Ferry, Ohio, native to sell hi»
partnership in the now defunct pro
Indianapolis Olympians.
its season here Saturday night
Three Share Lead
In Florida Open
to take two apiece in the 5 to 6-
pound bracket. There Is no ac-
curate way of estimating the num-
ber of fiah caught, but I will say
Reservation at Cayouga Wednesday
night with three doe.
Dupuy has the prize kill. His doe
dressed out 93 pounds. Hogg’s
b*j;!“.were lined wlrtl 150815'dressed out at 83 pounds and
Owens' 73. Heathcok returned home
and walkfais.
One fellow really had his share
of excitement. He was fishing with
Abilene by 14-7
ABILENE (AP)—McMurry beat
Abilene Christian College 14-7
Thursday night with fullback Joe
Master crashing over from the
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., “• ^lth. minutes left for
(AP) - The forefront was crow- ttoHShdownA.» . ...
ded today in the second round of Terry.,.° Bn.e0n M
the 72-hole, $15,006 West Palm end Dal,°" H,cks Wlth 8 1!| y«rd
Beach Open Golf Tournament.
Forty-five contenders matched or
bettered par in the first 18 holes
over West Palm Beach Country
Club’s 6,745-yard course.
Three were grouped around the
best acore — a 4-under-par 68.
They were George Bayer of Glen
Eagles, 111., and two newcomers
to tournament golf, Frank Whar-
ton of Dallas, Tex., and John
Berry of Tallahassee, Fla.
empty handed.
The local hunters praised the
.game wardens who supervise the
McMurry Nudges ,(*(*,,
hunting was,” Dupuy said, “and
passed out an invitation to the pub-
lic to make use of the reserva-
tion’s camp sites and good fish-
ing”
ketball League.
Groza is the first person impli-
cated in the scandals to return to
the college sport in any capacity.
"Everybody is entitled to one
mistake." he says. “I’m a lot
CUSTOM MADE
HIAVY ALUMINUM SCREINS,
VINETIAN HINDS & AWNINGS
MORROW’S
105 BORDER — TU 1-1431
scoring pass earlier in the fourth
period to tie the score. O’Brien
completed 9 of 19 passes for 135
yards.
Davia Rucker of Abilene, the
game's leading gainer with 114
yards in 22 carries, put ACC ahead
in the first half .with a 13-yard
scoring dash.
ACC finished the season with a
5-5 mark and McMurry with 8-2.
ACC leads the intra-city series 15-
FOR
I On Fire and Auto Insurance
Allen E. Brown
INSURANCE AGENCY
1611 Green — TU 6-3654
5^
IMFOtTtO It TNI IMgOMOIMM COtfOUIIO*
Or-
-*T ”,
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 266, Ed. 1 Friday, November 27, 1959, newspaper, November 27, 1959; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth557852/m1/7/: accessed April 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.