Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Daily Press from Newport News, Virginia • Page 33

Publication:
Daily Pressi
Location:
Newport News, Virginia
Issue Date:
Page:
33
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY PRESS, Newport News, Nov. 1, 1964 3nCAROLINAS LOOP VMI Crushed By Tulane, sr 5. Catamounts Get 3LateTDsTo Nip Elon, 21-20 CULLOWHEE, N.C., (UPI)-Quarterback Jim Williams sparked Western Carolina to 25-6: Suffers ichmond II -UM WAV: THE. J7 BALL Holy Cross Loss, 36-22 NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Tulane out classed the visiting Virginia Military Insti tute squad today to chalk up a 25-6 homecoming victory. WORCESTER, Mass.

(AP) Sophomore Jack Lcntz and senior Jim Marcellino put on an exciting touchdown show as Holy Cross raced and passed to an easy 36-22 victory over the University of Richmond today. Lcntz, who broke his week-old school By BOB MOSKOWITZ The Grcenics showed strength both on the ground and in the air as they dominated the field throughout their first win since VMI Tulant ON LATE TALLY First Downs 22 Rushing Yardagt 59 267 Passing Yardaga 100 65 Passes 7-19 6-16 Richmond HC First Downs 14 23 Rushing Yardage 51 353 Passing Yardage 193 193 Passes 12-3 7-21 Passes Intercepted By 0 2 Passes Intercepted By 0 2 Punts Fumbles Lost 1 2 Punts Fumbles Lost 0 0 Yards Penalized 32 105 Yards Penalized 32 70 Yards Penalized 32 70 last year's 20-7 win over South East Carolina, Cline Smack Citadel, 19-10 ECC Cit. rushing record by gaining 173 three touchdowns in the last six I minutes Saturday night as the (Catamounts defeated Elon 21 1 20, in the major Carolinas Conference upset of the season. Down, 20-0, in the final period, Williams tossed a 31-yard touchdown pass, and ran for two others to stun the Carolinas i Conference leaders and hand lhe Christians their first loss in seven outings this season. 1 Williams completed 17 of 29 passes for 212 yards.

He had four tosses picked off by Elon 'defenders. All three Elon touchdowns came on the first play from scrimmage. David Gentry ran 66 yards for the first Christian I touchdown but the kicked failed. Fred Stewart scored the second Elon touchdown on a 51-yard pass play from quarterback Ed Wheless. This time Sonny Pru-iette took a pass from Wheless for a two-point conversion.

Elon 0 14" 0 li Western Carolina .0 0 0 il il ELON Gentry 66 run failed) ELON- Stewart 51 oass Wheless (Pruetta Pass from Whelessi ELON Harrison isj pass from Whelesi (kick faIM) WEST Holding 31 pass from Williamt i iStavton k.ck) 'WEST Williams 1 run (Stavton kick) iWEST Williams 1 run (Stavton kick) APPALACHIAN. 10-0 BOOXE, N. C. (UPI) -Fullback Larry Lawing ran for a touchdown and quarter back (Dennis Saunders kicked a 27- yards in 20 carries, scored the Crusaders' first two touchdowns. Carolina.

The first Wave score came Marcellino, who had been benched the past two weeks for" disciplinary delivered early in the second, quarter after taking a VMI punt on their own 45-yard line. Quar three scores and junior halfbact First Downs 20 14 Rushing Yardage 238 70 Passing Yardage 125 130 Passes 13-22 11-20 Passes Intercepted By 0 0 Punts 5-3V 6-33 Fumbles Lost 1 0 terback Dave East started tin Earl Kirmser produced the drive with a pass to left em other. fx Ron Krajewski on the VMI 41. lhe Crusaders, enjoying a wide superiority in, the scrim CHARLESTON, S. C.

(UPD- Fullback George Smith took A BASEBALL TALE AND OTHER BOUNCES For most the recent World Series was basically a case of pulling either for or against the Yankees. For lanky, personable Ferguson Assistant Coach Bill Cox, however, it was a case of rooting hard for an ex-opponent. St. Louis pitcher Bob Humphreys, it may be remembered, once was a pretty fair chucker at Hampden-Sydney. The 28-year-old native of Covington, who now resides in ViLamont, was a Tiger star at the time Cox was contributing his bit as an outfielder to the Randolph-Macon cause.

Cox, In typical modesty, recalls the last time he faced the 5-foot-ll, 165-pound righthander in the Randolph-Macon lair at Ashland. Humphreys fanned Cox four times, but apparently it aroused something in the slender youngster. The next time out at Hampden-Sydney Cox found the range for a four-run homer and a single and the Yellow Jackets escaped with a 5-4 success. It was one of the few times Humphreys lost at It was a day, too, that begins to become understandably more important to Cox as time goes on A Grays' Note The Peninsula pitching staff in 1965 may include such tongue twisters as Scarpatti, Stuckenschneider and Kazakavich. Paired with outfielder Tony Grizwacz, already on the local roster, the outlook is anything but a bright one for broadcasters and printers True Eagle Eye Florida State's pass-catching great, Fred Biletnikoff, is preparing for a career in criminology A Texas Flavor William and Mary Football Coach Marv Levy follows the progress of Dallas star Don Perkins, who was Levy's pride and joy as a fullback at New Mexico University several years ago A FUTURE POWER? On "Piracy" East Carolina, which carries a freshman football sauad of 52.

"will be in the thick of things all the way." mage line, handcuffed the pass over irom there and bulled East Carolina came storming from behind in the final period ing efforts of Richmond's Ron on the running of 178-pound tail three times, moving the ball to the VMI 2V2. Left half Jerry Graves cut to the left for the JIM MARCELLINO ON MOVE FOR HOLY CROSS CRUSADERS Halfback picks up first down in first quarter of Worcester, contest with University of Richmond. Joe Stromick (32) and John Hilton (88) arc Spider tacklers. Smith, but eventually yielded to three air scores by reserve Bill Silvi. The last two of these came touchdown.

back Bill Clme to down The Citadel 19-10 Saturday. Cline led the Pirates through their fourth period scoring The second Greenie score against the Purple reserves after the Crusaders had built a came minutes later When de QUARTERBACK McCUNE SHINES spree, with runs of 51, 16 and 36-6 lead fensive back Jim Davis stole 17 yards. He passed, ran, punt Lentz swept 10 yards for the a VMI pass on the Tulane 38, ed, and occasionally caught a pass to overwhelm The Citadel. and punched his way to the VMI 12. His 50-yard gallop was first touchdown which climaxed a drive that rolled 58 yards in ten plays.

He. 5-11 senior, had passed for probably the most spectagular two touchdowns and maneuver Marcellino intercepted a poo- ed East Carolina's single wing play ot the game. Three plays later, East went over from the West Virginia Topples Kentucky Team, 26-21 fly screen pass and raced 2fl yards early in the second quar yard field goal to give Appalachian a 10-0 victory over Wof-ford here Saturday night. Lawing's seven-yard run capped a 68-yard drive covered in 10 plays in the first period with the fullback, the Carolina Con- fnrfinrnc loarlinr rn-cllAr Inintf at will, when he broke loose for two. ter.

Shortly afterwards. Len struck outside his left end A pass attempt for two ex three long runs to set up a two-yard scoring plunge by tailback George Richardson. eluded two tacklers and fled 1 MORGANTOWN, W.Va. () Quarterback Allen McCune led rebounding heaw work For the' nicht vards down the sideline for the longest run of the day. tra points from East to Graves failed.

After another Tulane drive ended on the two-yard line, the half ended with the Greenies ahead 12-0. Cline dominated the field throughout the game, confusing The Citadel with the single wing attack, passing to receivers con Virginia to a 26-21 upset victory over Kentucky here SaturJay as the faltering Wildcats, Lawing picked up 99 vards in Holv Cross produced three lost their fourth consecutive game. 24 carries. Saunders added the touchdowns in the third auartpr on the passing of Mike Cunnion McCune connected for three touchdown passes and ran for another in personally ac- extra point stantly in the open, and pick The third Tulane score cot Appalachian ing up long rushing gains when 7 1 ft-ia counting for each WVU score. says truly impressed Ed Merrick, whose Richmond team handed the Pirates their first gridiron loss of the Fall last week.

East Carolina, actually a Southern Conference member but as yet ineligible for any competitive title, "will be a very representative member of the conference," asserts Merrick A Prodigy Rising star at Blacksbure Hieh is one Frank R. Moselev. son Wotford started with another interception, this one by center Bill The Citadel moved back to stop after Lentz had been put under blankets on the bench. The Mountaineers, crushed 38-7 last week bv Penn State, scored on their first play (Saunders kick) Lawlng 7 run his passing. Saunders 27 FG Cunnion first hit Kirmser when McCune hit Dick Madison on a 24-yard touchdown pass.

The play came with only Goss. The play ended on the VMI 17. The cadets were pen Attendance 2,000 with a short scoring Pin after Cline and the Pirates look over on their own 32 in the Kentucky WVU alized to their own seven for of Virginia Tech Athletic Director Frank 0. Moseley, an outstanding player at Alabama in another era. On the young long aerial parade.

Then he 15 first quarter, scoring 17 plays fired two long scoring tosses to Moseley, a guard, Frank isn sure where he attend college, later on a 14-yard pass from 145 127 8-17 1 a personal foul. Quarterback Mac Brousseau passed to right end Mike Marcellino, who both times wis Cline to wingback Jerry Tolley. First Downs 15 Rushing Yardasi 2J Passing Yardage 2" Passes U-26 Passes Intercepted By 1 Punts Fumbles Lost 1 Yards Penalized 4i far beyond the Spiders' last defender. The first of these scores The kick by Elmer Krusa was NEWBERRY. 20-3 NEWBERRY, SC.

(UPI)-Newberry broke into the winning column for the first time this season, downing Guilford, 20-3, here Saturday night on the passing of quarterback Ben Kirkland. Some 2,000 fans saw the Caro- Steeves who was all alone for good to put ECC in the lead Kelso WinsAqueduct Feature, Sets Mark NEW YCRK (AP) Kelso, racing to an American Americanilinas 48 covered 75 vards, the other 5 The Citadel came back in the The Crusaders had a wHe 58 seconds gone in the game and advantage in th satisties second period to score on a 23-yard pass from quarterback was set up by a Kentucky fum rushing for 351 vards and nass- but it appears it won De eitner uecn or vmi Detailing Victory Meticulous planning provides the road to success in any field and football at William and Mary is no exception. Triumphs by the Indians under new Coach Levy this Fall have been achieved for a variety of seemingly small reasons. One is the Levy theory on rushing the kicker. "We assume the kicker will be approximately nine-and-a-half yards from the rusher," says Levy.

The boy is taught to go eight yards, then use the high jump technique." The idea, of course, is to avoid roughing the kicker while not curtailing the speed of attack. The results aren't necessarily miraculous, but it might be hard to convince Tribe alumni they're not John Breedlove to halfback Jim ble. Conference battle become the touchdown. Another pass try for the extra points was unsuccessful. VMI came back almost immediately after Tulane tried an on-side kick.

Quarterback Charlie Snead passed from his own 46 to end Jamie Browder on the Tulane 19. Then left ino- for 193 others. RirhmonH unable to move the hall hv nnr? a Kirkland show of aerial Parker, and Pat Green's kick was good, ending the half in a The favored Wildcats came back minutes later to go ahead record for two miles, won the Jockey Club Gold Cup for K( hit with of 31 nasses for tie. brieflv when quarterback Rickptne fifth straight year Saturday and became the world's lead- vards and its three downs. Newberry Guilford ng money-winning horse with total earnings of $1,803,362.

Norton hit Bill Jenkins with a H.C. failed to convert affer nine-yard pass in the end zone Rich Tucci's kick made it 7-6. half Ted Mervosh raced around Green's toe put The Citadel ahead in the third period with a 15-yard field goal, but tough ECC linemen swarmed through on passing star Breedlove, bottling The Citadel for the rest of NEW Charpia 17 run NEW Charpia 49 pail from Kirkland GUIL Vadereen 27 FG NEW Charoia 17 pass from Kirkland. The 7-year-old gelding from Mrs. Richard C.

duPont's Bohemia Stable sped over the Aqueduct course in 3:19 15 to cut one-fifth of a second off the standard he set in winning anv of its six scores. On Kicking Ferguson's Glen Greening, who may play The Mountaineers, now 4-3 for right end for a touchdown, without running into any Tu It 32 Richmond Holy Cross the season, came back to score 34 the Gold Cup for the first time lane defenders. An extra point college football at Randolph-Macon, didn't surprise his coaches with his 41-yard field goal against Oscar Smith. The bespectacled pitching star has connected: more than once in practice on 50- the game Brother from Lou Wolfson's 'SPORT FANS! try for two failed. as a 3-year-old i960.

He earned $70,590 to pass on a 70-yard drive that took 17 plays. The score came on the first play of the second quarter i i i 0 1219 East Carolina 7 The Citadel Round Table's $1,749,869. Kelso 3 010 VMI 0 66 Tulane I 12 1325 HC Lent! 10 run (rush failed) HC J. Marcellino 29 Intercepted pass (rush failed) HC Lentz SI run (rush failed1 RICH Hilton 16 pass from Sllvl (kick failed) HC Kirmser i pass (pass failed) HC J. Marcellino 75 pass (rush failed) HC J.

Marcellino 45 pass (pass failed) RICH Emelianchik 6 oass (Aldrlch pass) 14 ECC-Tolley pass from Cline (Kriz wnen weeune nu ena wiui ciegg on an eight-yard aerial. hit the finish line 5Ms lengths in front of the 3-year-old Roman kick) CIT Parker TUL Graves 3 run (kick failed) TUL East 2 run (pass failed) pass from Breedlove yara attempts ine uiaaei nas an outstanding punier in Kroghie Andresen, but his chances of setting a school record on one boot are pretty dim. The top punt there was for 85 yards by Al Salvato against Furman in 1941 The Shy Side Lack of three points prevented the West Virginia freshmen from finishing 3-0 instead of 1-1-1. They lost 8-7 to Pittsburgh and tied Ohio University, 12-12 TUL Steeves 5 pass from Brousseau McCune tossed his third pass shortly before the half (Green kick) CIT FG Green 33 Harbor View Farm. Paul Mel-Ion's Quadrangle, also a 3-year-' old, was another six lengths1 back for third place in the field of six.

I Kelso, strong favorite of the cheering throng of 51,122, paidj $2.90. $2.30 $2.10. Roman Broth-i I Bet You RICH Emellanchik 14 pass (Emelianchik ECC Swindell 11 pass from Cline (run ended, hitting end Bob Dun- (pass failed) VMI Mervosh 19 run (pass failed) TUL Higgins 3 run (Bright kick) (EST.) pass) Attendance 7,500. failed) ECC Richardson 1 run (kick failed) leavy on a fourth-and-15 situation from the WVU 25. West Virginia scored again Islanders Slip after intermission with McCune 1: er returned $2.90 and $2.10 and njfjn'f Quadrangle paid $2.10.

I sneaking over from the one, and then withstood Norton's aerial bombardment that gave the The race, at a distance sel- Past Winless Know slsvm KOinri in Vi a TTnifof Cfaffie I Wildcats their last two scores. Both of Norton's touchdown tosses came in the fourth quarter. He hit end Dan Spanish on a DukesByl4-6 was a contest only until Milo' By TY TYSINGER Valenzuela decided Kelso hadi waited long enough. That wasF Here" an amazuig football t. A tt, about Notre Dame as the field headed into the back Everybody knows ty used a stretch with about three-quar-." t0 have some great teams, 24-yard scoring play and then WIN SIEGFRIED P.S.C.'S GUEST Winston (Win) Siegfried, Hampton High football and track coach and former great at Duke University, will be the Peninsula Sports Club's guest speaker at Monday's 12:30 p.m.

meeting at the Warwick Club. Siegfried, in his third year at the helm of the Crabbers, has built the club up from a winless season the Fall prior to his arrival to a current State Group 1-A title contender. The unbeaten Crabbers have been tied twice 13-13 by Maury and 6-6 by Princess Anne. Hampton, which defeated Granby, 20-6, Friday night, has games remaining with Warwick (this Friday), Norfolk Catholic and Newport News. GLOUCESTER (S i a 1 to passed 38 yards to halfback Rodger Bird.

Daily Press) Poquoson High held off a determined fourth- ters of a mile to go. i lout to show how great, look" Valenzuela th From 1889 thru 7 I 14-11 (14 Up to that point, Kentucky West Virginia WVU-AAadison quarter drive here Saturday night then added an insurance touchdown to squeak by winless 24 pass from McCune Lions Capture 17-14 Verdict At Catawba SALISBURY Jerry Cross scored two touchdowns and Dennis Kozlowski kicked a 40-yard field goal Saturday to lead Frederick to a 17-14 football victory over Catawba. Cross, leading ground gainer for Frederick with 22 carries for 117 yards, scored on a 12-yard run in the second quarter and a 26-yard run with four minutes left in the game. Catawba had recovered a Frederick fumble late in the third quarter and marched in six plays to a touchdown with David Robbins scoring on a 27-yard pass from John Scott. A 16-yard pass from Marshall Murphy to a Lutz in the second quarter climaxed a 60-vard scoring drive for Catawba.

had been content to let Kelly, as yearsNotre Dame had only the Bohemia colt is popularly a one losing season! called around the stable, race1 Their only losing year in an -first in third and then in fourth," that time was in 1933. uioucester, 14-6. (kick failed) KEN Jenkins pass from Norton (Tucci kick) WVU Clegn I pass from McCune (Madison pass from McCune) Gloucester's Dukes (0-7) fell with Cedar Key out in place by one touchdown for the fourUijwvp-DJl)v McCune time this reason and droDDed wvu-Mccune i run (pass failed) front and Quadrangle in closest their fifth Oroim Two District KEN-Spanish 24 pass from Norton (Tucci pursuit. kick) Here's one to bring back me contest Poauoson added its KEN Bird 31 Fast from Norton (Tucci kick) Attendance: 20.000. (Est.) fifth season win and fourth straight.

Paced bv the fine runnine of Bobby Watkins, Ronnie Fenster-micher and Donnie Parks, the Islanders started their scoring I in ies for you It was just 24 years aso this Reason that Stanford revo- I lutionized college football by I popularizing the formation Can you recall their 1 sreat backfield which made I the so famous? They were Frankie Albert. Pete I 1 Kmetovic, Hugh Gallarneau aj I and Norm Stand lee. 1 XXX Smith Leads Davidson's Rout Over Furman, 23-0 after receiving a punt at mid- field. Poauoson marched to the one where halfback Watkins ji)rori tho piH.Tone. Bob Petters' kicks were good Oloucpster started a drive First Downj Rushing Yardage Pac.ina VarHjia lite in the game with a fifi-vrd Furman I 74 41 7-tC 0 10-37 after both Indian touchdowns.

Roger Bouchard intercepted a Murphy pass on Frederick's 48 and returned it to Catawba's 12 to set up Cross' first touchdown. "ss nlav fmm R1alr to Marshall. Wavne rar.1, By "'pd. thfn BIp, who is in'pufnwes tost ttw. f.

ij (Yards Penalized back Bill Rikard broke through 'to block a Furman punt on Ithe Paladins' 20 yard line. The ball bounced to the four where Rikard snatched it up and ran for a touchdown. TULANE BALL CARRIER DAVE EAST WRAPPED UP TIGHTLY Virginia Military's Larry Wertz (73) tossed East (12) for nine-yard loss in early action at New Orleans. East had faded to pass but failed to get ball away as Wertz broke through. Dennis Kozlowskrs kick was bbstpd through the'linp for 10 DAVIDSON, N.C., (UPI) vards and a SfOre.

A taSS''n n-nMrtcnn cmathoH its wav nut good with 45 seconds left in the half. "TRY atrmr)t for (hp eXtm nnmt nf ha Cmtthom rnnforonra ral. -1 7 )4-aj Frederick evened its record at fiW the Dukes trailed by jer nere Saturday by chalking KING unt- Inn ita firef loaotio win with 3-3 with the win, while Catawba now is 3-5. 7 OAV Safety Zube'er tackled in end tone DA Rikard 20 blocked Punt (Terry kick) Thp Is'andcrs had Olowestprj a 91.n rnnt nf Furman EDWARD Virginia Bob Davis Sparkles, Again Netting Over 100 Yards dav 5mitn run (Terry Kick) nown on tne vo pnn Did you know there was Diice a major football game I in which the score and even lhe inner were changed 48 tiotirs after the game was ivcr It happened in 1940 Cornell beat Dartmouth 7-3 But on the Monday a alter that Saturday game. of both schools look- al at movies of the game and realized Cornell had scored gits touchdown on an illegal" i down Kvcn Cornell had an unbeaten sea- goins, they said they i would give up the touchdown, and thereby give up the vie- tory the result was de- dared reversed andi it's of- I ficially listed in record books now as: Dartmouth 2, 0 7 1 717 I he Wildcats diant get roll- DAv-smim run (Terry kick) Amenct't largest.

Selling C'gar t. Frederick Catawba 5,000. 7 714 Kai nnnc iJ. the second half when scored all three of, Attendance mi iiuniici. "i mice tnur-hrlAumc hnf tho rnrlr.

hard defense kept the Paladins! CAT Lutz. 1. Ps from Murphy (Petters kick) FRE-Cross 12 run (Kozlowski kick) CAT-Robblns 27 past from Scott (Petters kick) FG-Kozlowskl 40 field goal FRED Cross it run (Kozlowski kick) Attendance: 4,300. fh Islanders tallipd on four-ard run by Parks. WatV'ns thn r-icVpd h'i second extra "flint of the night.

vuuieu u(j cm ciuci iiiiuii Biiu unable to move the ball. The Davidson touchdowns 7.t4 and a safety were set up by hard-charcins Wildcat de Poquosm Gloucester NED JARRETT EDGES PETTY FOR POLE SLOT POOU Watkins 1 run (Watkln kick) GLOU Blake 10 run (pass failed) POOU Parks 4 run (Watkins kick) Cornell 0. fense which held Furman quarterback Sammy Wychc, who was the conference's total offense leader going into the game, to a net total of 23 consecutive extra point kick of the year and the 21st in a row over two seasons before holder Bell shot a pass to Cooper for the two-pointer. Virginia's Bob Davis once again had a total offense of over 100 yards. He picked 119 yards through the air and 77 rushing, while Hodges had 100 on passes and 27 on runs.

Since becoming a starter three games ago against Wake Forest, Hal Davis has picked up 357 yards on 37 attempts. He had 87 yards against ake. and 91 last week against TCU. SWORDS POINTS Saturday's eighth meeting between these ACC rivals was IPTAY day (1 pay ten a year) for Clemson in the half-filled Memorial Stadium. yards.

Ladies' Las Cruces Golf Led By Haynie LAS CRUCES, N.M. (AP) -Sandra Haynie took a four-stroke lead over Betsy Rawls Saturday after two rounds of the bhortly after intermission, the Wildcats scored their first I bet you didn't know Hiat Dodge continues on a hot ftrcak. Sales continue to increase and Ty singer Dodge rontinue-s to give the best I deals. If you're thinking of buying any car shop the Dodge boys at Tysinger Dodge. You'll be able to i deal.

Prudential Mortgage 3 the Tigers' two attractive baton twirlers, both freshmen, are state champs Dynva Ed-ens and the Palmetto National Onen Grand Champion, and Sandy Tarquino was Miss Majorette of West Virginia. Saturday was Virginia coach Bill Elias' first journey to "death valley" and only the second time a team coached by him has played Clemson (the Tigers whipped the Cavaliers by a 35-0 score last year in Charlottesville) Clemson Coach Frank Howard ranks sixth in the nation among the major college coaches for victories with 139 before this game. As head coach, celebrating his 25th anniversary here at the foothills of the Blue Ridge mountains, his teams have been defeated 91 times with 11 games ending in a tie The Virginia game ended a five-week road tour for Clemson after opening the season at home against Southern Conference Furman Winning the toss Saturday, Clemson has won three out of the seven toss of the coins this year Continued From Page C-l punts, UVA put the ball in play on its 14. With Davis at the helm, tho Cavaliers quickly marched down the field to the Clemson 31, where on second down Hodges came in and fired a pass to Carrington at the 10. But the clipping penalty shoved Virginia back to the Tigers' 42 and on the next play Billy Ward intercepted Hodges' aerial.

Early in the final quarter, following a 14-yard punt by Virginia's Tom Shuman, the Tigers started goalward from their 38. Hal Davis ran the ball to the Virginia 25. but a clip charged against Clemson placed the ball on the UVA 46. Three line smashes put the ball on the 35 and first down. Bell handed off to Hal Davis, who darted around the right side and broke into the clear.

He managed to pull himself free of Depenbrock, who had a partial hold of his jcrsev at the 15, to score standing up. After Bunion's scoring interception, Frank Pearce appeared set to go for his 14th Ladies Professional Golf Asso PAY OFF ALL YOUR BILLS NOW OFFERS: Refinance Plom Onh tn bitmrnnafri miitr at ktl Itirrt f- ritt lh Hnmt DIAL 595 0385 for InfiinnatlA Copyright 1964 'Ml' AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) Ned Jarrett of Camden, S.C., nosed out NASCAR champion Richard Petty of Ran-dleman, N.C., Saturday for the pole position in today's "Jaycee 300" at the Augusta International Speedway. Jarrett his 1964 Ford around the half-mile oval at 82.455 and Petty drove his Plymouth at 82.342 for the No. 2 position.

Jim Paschal, of i Point, N.C., was left without a ride when Lee Petty withdrew the Plymouth Paschal was to have driven in the competition. More than $10,000 in prize money will be at stake in the 300-lap, 150-mile race. TURKEY SHOOT Every Sal. Sun. 1 to 6 P.M.

al Tidewater Gun Shop RL 134 York County For Information Ph. Sponsored By BUCK BUN HUNT CLUB ciation Las Cruces Open golf tournament. The Texan shot a four-under-par 68 for a two-round total of 139. Miss Rawls had a 73 and held second at 143. Tied for third at 145 were Kathy Whitworth, Marlene Hagge, Shirley Engle-horn and Jo Ann Pretice.

The No. I money winner on the current tour, Mickey Wright, dropped ten strokes off the pace with a 76 and a wo-day total of 149. 2M' Mon- Ttrwi i tta Anmal ihlf i Irt SI 7to.ln U4 I I If I n. ATHENS, Ohio (AP) Ohio University coasted to a 24-0 victory over Dayton Saturday with substitutes playing much of the second half. The Flyers deepest penetration in a frustrating afternoon was their own 49-yard line.

59 Bridge St. Downtown Hampton Dial PA 3-3301 10369 Worwick Blvd. CMS Hilton Villoga DIV,.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Daily Press
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Daily Press Archive

Pages Available:
2,151,916
Years Available:
1898-2024