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

Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • Page 6

Location:
Binghamton, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Oklahoma A Loon Tune in Score From The Sunday Press Syracuse 7-3 Loser Sept. 23, 1962 Section $evK lS-f By Tress Wire Services Norman, Okla. Reserve fullback Joe Don Looney, inserted in the fourth quarter to give Oklahoma more run-ring punch, twisted into the clear with 2:07 remaining, and sped 60 yards to give the Sooncrs a 7-3 opening day victory over Syracuse yesterday. Looney, son of former Texas Christian great Don Looney and star of the Junior Rose Bowl last season with Cameron College, did exactly what he was supposed to do. Once in the game he presented Oklahoma the running attack it had lacked most of the game.

His oashing runs featured an earlier drive which stalled because of a rash of penalties. Then, with time running out, Oklahoma got the hall on its own 28 when Syracuse fullhac kJim Nance failed to make a first down. Three plays later, Looney burst through the entire Syracuse team, jerked away from three tacklers and sped into the end zone. George Jarman converted. Looney has been running only third unit but his teammates knew he was a good strong runner especially senior quarterback Monte Derre who called the key play.

"I knew what play I was going to call when I went into the huddle," Derre confided in the dressing room. "But as I was walking up to the hud- Duke 7 Army 10 So. II Forest 11 (Story on Tag 3 F) (Story on Page 3 D) ril in 7 Missouri 21 Wellington 7 10 (Story on race 5 D) (Story on Taee 4 D) Whiiiioy l'oint Sua. Valley 20 TIipii. Forks Aflon 0 (Story on Page 5 D) (Story on Page 4 D) Maryland 7 Wallon 40 S3III IMhi (Story on Page 6 D) (Story on Page 4 D) cv QMS Snap in Rough 9' s.

At Norwich LOOXEYS SHOT DOWN the sideline must have startled just about everybody in die, Looney leaned over and told me, 'just give me the ball and I'll score a So I just gave him the ball." the stadium. It appeared as though he was stopped with nothing more than a two-yard gain. Then, suddenly, he veered out of the mob and swept to his left to score. Until Looney's heroic run, Syracuse looked to be the winner with Tom Mingo's 35-yard field goal, which he booted with 49 seconds left in the first half. Syracuse, with Nance and halfbacks Bill Schoonover and Augustine Giradi doing the damacc, continued to hammer On Central Norwich Norwich High's football team scored a leadoff home run last night, but then lobbed up a go pher ball to Chenango Valley with two out in the ninth as CV pulled out a 13-12 victory before a big Vis crowd of 2.500 at Alumni Field Special to The Press Oneonta The Yellowjackets of Oneonta High stunned Binghamton Central by thwarting an early drive deep in Oneonta territory and then went on to a 26-6 victory in the football opener for both schools CV end Mike Ryan, who had blocked a punt for naugh only moments earlier, recovered a bad snap from center that had bound Statistics -Associated Press WIREPHOTO.

THE SOONER THE BETTER Oklchom a halfback John Benigm recdies to try a first-half pass in the Sooners' intersectional game with Syracuse yesterday at Norman, as Orangemen Brian Howard (87) and Jim Wilson (64) rush in in attempt to grab him. Oklahoma won on late TD, 7-3. SYR. OKL yesterday at Neahwa Park. ed 34 yards into the Norwich end IS IS Billed as a contest between zone to score the winning toucn- two inexperienced football down with about 90 seconds left Til TALK SECOND PERIOD First Downs Rushing Tardace Passing Tardage Passes Pass Intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards Penalized teams, the game started just to play.

207 41 3-11 2 I 30 213 2 3-10 1 65 that way, but once the Oneonta Norwich had struck at the start on a 47-vara gaiiop in wnicn not SCHOOLBOYS 12 13 19 2(1 20 0 Jacobsen 10-yard run 0 C. Cill 1-yard plunge 0 L. Gill pass from Smith THIRD PERIOD ft Smith 1-yard plunge C. Gill plunge 6 Bess fU-yard kickoff a CV hand was laid on sophomore sprinter Don Cooper and had apparently sewed the game up on Oneonta 27 Central Yanks Playing Rick westover secona-nau toucn- down pass to cocaptam George BASEBALL SUMMARY Elmiri SS Norwich 12 Elmira FA 7 Afton 0 Windsor 7 return FOURTH PERIOD 28 L. GUI 39-yard run I 25 Chen.

Valley Ithaca Susq. Valley 28 Newark Valley 33 Sidney 14 Coon. machine began to click on the sturdy legs of Carl Gill and Pete Jacobsen and some tough defensive football It was no contest. An 87-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by big John Bess was the highlight of Central's sputtering offense, which only clicked in the game's dying moments. The final gun caught Central at Oneonta's one-yard stripe.

FOUR CENTRAL fumbles! Norwich coach Joe Grzibowski mav have had the mistaken idea Statistics that CV would have a big full ickball, Too SATIFnAT'S MSFRMX back, but with the Purple de 10 lni fit S-1S 1 fense consistently massed in the middle. CV let 1961 high scorer 14 278 Ifl 2-2 0 2-38 20 1 NATIONAL I Milwaukee J. 0 Chicago 9, New York 2 San Francisco at Houston, niotit Lot Angeles at St. Louis, mcht Cincinnati at Philadelphia, mzht Greene 0 Delhi 0 Chen. Forks 0 I'nadilla 0 Harpursville 0 Hamilton 0 Candor Tlosa Center 0 Archibald (Pa.) 7 Ilinn 19 Walton 46 Whit.

Point Rainbrirtge 21 Hancock 14 Sherburne 21 Van Etten 19 Romulus 19 Lack. Trail 19 First downs Yards rushing Yards passing Passes Pass Inter, by Punting Penalties Fumbles lost Don Link play decoy and worked Chicago CP A throwing er-' home run came with Mickey Man by rookie shortstop Phil Linz.Ue aboard on a walk. 2-47 mainly around slants and pitch-outs involving halfbacks Slo- Hon Lost Pel. Behind 40 4 91 found their way into Yellow-jacket arms and twice Oneonta was able to turn the miscues into touchdowns. Some hustling jopened the door for a three-run Raipn Terry, seeking his 23rd xtos Anseie.

seventh inning yesterday that triumph, had limited the Sox to "Jan Francisco CARL GILL rammed for nine cum. Art Hierl and Tom Hauser. Norwich had run 15 plays before CV ever huddled. And it almost had a 2-TD edge by then. me cnicago wnue nits untii the seventh.

Al Smith walked and Mike Hersh-i Milwaukee DO 2 79 58 62 74 75 77 92 over the New jrtJ hprrpr anH T.uis Annririn Kinlrirf xSt. Louis .623 .581 .511 .313 .395 .247 3 6 111 -20 2m 38 61 had Coon not dropped a West- to fill the bases. Deacon Jones1 -g xorK ianKees. The outcome. I'tica FA 39 New Hartford 1J Seneca Falls 13 Dolgevllle 13 West Winfield 12 Cooperstown 40 N.

Y. MUIS 21 Waterboro 27 Eastwood 27 Frankfort 7 Mohawk 13 Little Falls 0 Sauquolt 0 Watervule Westmoreland 0 Oneida 0 Central lech 12 pincn-hit sacrifice tiy scored Chicago 57 99 Smith with Hershherepr enins York 38 116 coupled with line play by Oneonta helped blunt Central's ground game which managed a total of 101 yards. Quarterback Bob had trouble hitting with the aerial game, too, as he connected on but 5 of 16 tosses, all during the last-quarter march. yards, Pete Jacobsen for five more and then, after a penalty momentarily set Oneonta back, Jacobsen dashed around right end to score from 10 yards out. Oneonta's second tally climaxed a nicely-executed 61-yard march.

Jacobsen's two 15-yard sprints were the features of the hut-th goal (Later Ryan over pass with nothing near him returned the favor, by dropping an even surer TD toss after he entered the game as a 5-3 loss by the second place Minnesota Twins at Baltimore, left the Yankees' magic number at third. Aparicio stole second as ay Gam. pinch hitter Charlie Maxwell Chicaw (Gertwrman o-0) at New York struck out. L. Cincinnati (O'Toole 16-13) at Philadelphia Then came Linz blunder.

Jim I (Short nn Landis was safe when Linz hw is-9 at Pittsburgh his routine grounder and threw iDrysdale 25-7) at st. Loai high to first baseman Bill Skow-i (Jackson 14-m ron. Hershnrrgcr scored and Sa Jranf'c" (0De11 1MS at Jloata Binghamton opening kickoff march which was capped when at the Sooner line. But three big chances were killed with three fumbles, all of which were recovered by Oklahoma end Rick McCurdy. The Orangemen, who had not lost an opener since in55, headed for what seemed like an insurance touchdown in the fourth quarter with a devastating; ground attack.

But quarterback Bob I.elli, attempting: to pitch out, fumbled. Oklahoma broke loose halfback Jackie Cowan on a 47-yard sprint down the sideline to put the Sooners in contention again. But three penalties stopped that drive. An earlier Oklahoma drive sputtered when Syracuse halfback Bill Hunter intercepted a Norm Smith pass in the end zone for 'a touchback. PLAYING BEFORE A SUN-DRENCHED crowd of 54.000, Oklahoma won its sixth consecutive game and took its firsts opening game victory since 1958.

Wilkinson had an opening quip when he greeted newsmen in the dressing room. "Maybe sometimes it's better to be lucky than good," he said. But Wilkinson quickly indicated that he knew it wasn't all luck that won the game. "Syracuse moved the ball well, but our defense didn't let them score a touchdown," he said. "I think perhaps the key play was when we stopped them on fourth down at the 27 with less than a yard to go.

If they had kept the (Continued on Page 4 D) turned Into a successful on-sideirari r.ni -mm i two. kick as it dribbled just into One- the one Barret Smith passed t0 4 1 onta territory where John Cos I Lee Gill for the conversion. The only way New York can cinch its 27th pen COLLEGIATE IPSTATERS Oklahoma 7 Syracuse Brown 6 Colgate 2 C. W. Post 7 St Lawrence Cortland St.

19 Alfred 12 EAST Lycoming 20 A'bright Boston College 27 Detroit 0 Army 40 Wake Forest 14 tello fell on it for the Bulldogs. THERE WERE RAISED EYEBROWS when Norwich chose to try a fake punt on fourth-and-10 from the CV 40 in the first period, a lineman plodding for only a yard or two. But later developments involving its kicking team showed the merit of avoiding it at all costs. Oneonta made it 19-0 in the lAparicio took third. Fox singled! home Aparicio.

America league I Terry was knocked out in the rhu-aco is, New York 2 eighth as the Sox scored three "7', Cip e.ann at Los Ansoles. nicnl more times. Boston at Washinetnn. mcht nant and its 13th in the last 15 seasons Sunday is un7, bv defeating the Sox while the WITH BESS, Tony Fiorelli! third period by marching 50 and Lou Zajicek doing the run-iyards in nine plays after rceov-ning, Central quickly churned ering a Central fumble. Rely-deep into OHS territory, but theiing primarily on a ground game.

Besides the blocked punt and; Detroit at Kansas ity 1 Wan night Lost Tel. Behind Jackets stiffened and, on aitne Jackets only pass during Twins lose at Baltimore. Both are NEW T0RK chk r.o single games. i irhw' Linz 5 (I 0 0 Lanriis ef .583 this drive was a little looper ah nl York 91 5 0 10 Minnesota 7 racing me laimti's oiu oim- Rich'son 2b i 0 0 0 fox 2b 4 0 11 xLos Angeles S3 Springfield 10 Carnegie 0 Maine 0 Bates 12 Wagner 8 Indiana (Pa.) 7 Delaware 12 If 4 0 10 Cun'ham lb 3 0 0 0 Chicago ford will be Early Wynn trying Ohio Wesleyan 7 Massachusetts 10 Tufts 30 PMC 15 Shippensbtirg 13 Slipper Rock 21 ratal snap, oom ivorwicn extra point attempts failed when Drake's dropkicks were blocked. Bucky Morris, this town's punt-ing-dropkicking great of a quarter-century ago, would have shuddered.

Mantle et 110 0 Robinson If 4 110 vtietroit 44 7 10 1414 15' 16 21 31 .554 .539 .532 .519 .484 .477 .448 .372 83 80 76 75 74 Lopei rf 4 0 1 0 A. Smith 3b 3 1 1 0 Baltimore Howard 4 1 3 2 Espisito 3b 0 0 0 0 xCleveland Skowron lb 4 0 2 0j H'shb'ger rf 4 2 2 lixBoston 69 Boyer 3b 4 0 1 01 Aparicio sa 3ZZ0iXKansas city again for his 300th victory. The Yanks were cruising with a 2-0 lead on Elston Howard's two-run homer in the second inning until the dam burst in the seventh. Howard's 425-foot shot into the Montclair 12 Delaware Valley 11 Lock Haven 34 Bloomsburg 14 3 0 0 Louar 2 0 0 OixWashington 58 The all-important point-after 0 0 0 0' ajonea Terry Boutpn dBerra 0 0 0 Play niitht game fourth down play at the 5, the ball got away from Congdon and squirted to the one where Lee Gill covered it for Oneonta. A second fumble later In the period gave a hint of things to come for struggling Central, though Oneonta was unable to do much after recovering it But another fumble on the fourth play of the second quarter opened the gates for Oneonta's first tally.

John Anderson recovered a Bulldog bobble en the Central 17 and Oneonta was in business. 6 0 0 0 from Smith to Lee Gill for seven yards. Smith ended the drive by rolling out to cross the goal from two yards out. Carl Gill smashed over for the conversion, BESS GAVE the Central fans something to shout about on the ensuing kickoff when he took the ball on his 13, swerved to his right and then sprinted straight for the OHS goal line. He burst clear at the 45 on a (Continued on Page 4D) 10 10 2 0 0 0 10 0 0 oooo 10 0 2 0 0 0 0 Carreon Herbert bMaxwell Fisher cMartin Lown Today's Gamn New York (Stafford 13-8) at Chicago (Wynn 7-13) Minnesota (Stigman 11-5) at Baltimore (Estrada 9-15) Boston (Spanswick 0-0) at Washington center field bullpen for his 20th came when Hieri dived through the right side after Link had pushed his way backwards into the end zone to climax a 72-yard drive in CV's first chance at the ball.

It was a disappointing loss 0 0 0 0 Eaumann (Osteen B-13 Edinboro (Pa.) 7 Villanova 24 Bucknell 22 Lafayette 17 Trenton St. 7 Delaware 27 Penn State 41 Kutztown 32 Northeastern 28 Norwich 22 International 14 Grove City 0 vmi a Gettysburg 21 Muhlenburg 0 King's (Pa 8 Lehigh 0 Navy 7 Central conn. 13 Rhode Island 0 Colby 19 Vermont Totals lllll. Totals Detroit (Aguirre 14-8) at Kansas City a Hit sacrifice fly for Lollar in 7th; i (Piister 4-13) at Los Angeles for Grzibowski, whose two sets Struck out for Herbert is 7th; Hit 1 Cleveland (Perry 11-12) into force play for Fisher in 8th; (Chance 13-91 Walked for Bouton In 9th. U-E Strikes Early, Whips New Tork S0 duo ono Chicago 000 000 J3i Linz.

PO-A New York 24-11, Chi-1 cago J7-9. DP Herbert, Aparicio and Cunningham. LOB New York 9. Chicago 7. TODAY'S LINE of running backs performed commendably.

LATER, WITH MORE than half of the final period gone, Westover hit Cooper with a flare pass that carried inside the 10-yard line. However, there had been Norwich clipping on the play and suddenly the "sewed-up" decision became unraveled. Westover was blitzed on the 2B Landis. Bobinson, Hershberger. SF tones.

ER BB SO Favorite Odda Long Season A -Bruin For Colgate, Lahar? 4 3 3 Giant 8 HR Howard. SB Aparicio. Terry 1L. 22-12) Bouton 2-3 Herbert (W, 18-9) 7 Fisher 1 0 0 0 0 0: Chicago Underdog PHILADELPHIA LOS ANGELES MINNESOTA DALLAS San Francisco St. Louis Washington 2 2 2 8 Baltimore 5 0 0 1 0 i Pittsbursh 0 0 0 1 1 DETROIT 7 Lown 1-J 3 Baumann 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 i GREEN BAY 14 Carrigan, Hurley, Flaherty.

Bunge. CLEVELAND 16 I Home team in caps. (Continued on Page 2 D) ESS, 25-7 Special to The Press Elmira Union-Endicott unleashed a solid running attack and John Dellos' veteran right throwing arm oh defending Southern Tier Conference champion Elmira Southside last night and raced to an easy 25-7 victory. The Endicotters, who won only three games in 1961, ran up a 2:40. A 17,454.

Smothers Navy, 41-7 By JOHN W. FOX Hamilton Brown defeated Colgate yesterday by a 6-2 score, a dull set of tennis in any league. Damon Runyon's historic comment after covering an America's Cup race, "It was like watching grass grown," SOUTH West Virginia 28 Vanderbilt A Maryland 7 SMU 0 North Carolina St. 7 N. Carolina Georgia Tech 26 Clemsnn 9 Virginia 19 William Si Mary 7 West.

Maryland 14 Bridgewater 0 Virginia Tech 15 Geo. Wash. 14 Furman 34 Wofford 21 Rand. Macon 22 MU'sviUe Pa.) 8 Wash, Lee IS 8 MIDWEST Northwestern 37 South Carollrj 28 Indiana 21 Kansas St 0 Miami (Ohio) IS Quantico 8 TCU 6 Kansas 3 Ohio 31 Toledo 8 Drake 14 Southern Illinois 13 Nebraska S3 South Dakota 8 Youngstown 14 Central Mich, 7 SOUTHWEST Texas 33 Trinity (Tex.) 27 New Mexico 25 Wyoming 21 Air Force 34 Colo. St.

Univ. 8 Missouri 21 California 10 Southern California 14 Duke 7 Wash. State 49 San Jose 8 Washington 7 Purdue 7 Utah State 45 Idaho 7 PROS AMERICAN LEAGUE New Tork 17 Buffalo TATE ROLLS 25-0 halftime lead and coasted home as coach Fran Angeline used his second-stringers. South s'de's lone TD came in the third I Til TALE period. Dellos tossed touchdown passes of 16 and 6 yards to Bob Atkinson and Dick Streno, respectively.

Streno scored the game's first TD from one yard and Ted Liburdi got U-E's other score on a 20-yard sweep. Mike Selvanik booted the lone Tiger touchdowns. Roger the Lions leading candidate for All-America honors, carried eight yards around right end for the second score while Liske bootleged across from the Navy 16 for the other TD. Navy's lone tally came in the second period on a draw play with halfback John Sal, on the injured list earlier last week, barreling up the middle 35 yards for the score. The Lions also had another touchdown called back in the first quarter because of a clipping penalty.

Liske hit Powell on Navy's 40-yard line and the halfback went the rest of the way. But the clipping penalty on the 32-yard line nullified the play. Later in the period an attempted field goal by Chuck Ricevuto, who kicked three extra points in the game, was wide. It was Barney who grabbed Jim Deegan's fumble at the Bruins' 7-yard-line after Colgate had moved. At that time with apparent relentlessness, 63 yards in the first 12 plays of the game.

And was the same Barney the Bear who came up hugging pigskin on his 1-yard-line after Colgate halfback Jim Heilman had dived off left guard on a third-and-goal play from inside the two. Because of injuries, Lahar had to start four sophomores in the line 18-year-old Bob Hyde at guard, John Breiten at tackle and the Kasprzak brothers, Chet and Mike of Melrose, at ends. All did a fairly creditable job in stifling the Brown offense, but fiireiten's over-exuberance may well have cost the ball game. A piling on Infraction against him turned a no-gain, first-down play into a 15-yard advance to the Colgate 19, and two plays later sewior quarterback Dennis Hauflaire, providing himself plenty of time with a good fake, found Seiple open on the 11. It was the fourth time he'd hit Seiple after a Barudin fumble had given BroWn the ball on its 39, and Bob left defenders Heilman and Jim Klein pawing on the ground.

Colgate middlemen blocked the conversion attempt and (Continued on Fag 4 D) became fair comment once Colgate helmsman Dan Keating broke a spinnaker or thereabouts midway in the second quarter and had to retire. Brown, which lost all its nine games last year with an average yield of 27 points per opponent, scored the game's only touchdown on a 19-yard pass play early in the fourth period and gave Colgate its points on an intentional safety in the last 30 seconds of play Perhaps 6,000 fans, who watched the windy proceedings on the first day since Summer, went away shivering at the thought of how long and cold it may be for Colgate football between now and winter. Hal Lahar's return to the Eastern coaching scene was a game decided by sophomores, and he had the wrong ones. Keating, whacked in, the jaw as he tried to get off a last-second lateral, spent the remaining minutes on the sidelines and soph Gerry Barudin of Leonis, N. J.

was a poor facsimile of captain Dan, who last year accounted for 1,961 yards of offense. Brown not only got its touchdown on four consecutive catches by a soph, 6-1 end Bob Seiple of Phillipsburg, N. but got even a bigger shot in the arm from another teenager, 185-pound center Alfred Barney of Braintree, Mass. Bulletins extra point. Mulaski Out For Month Johnson City guard Bill Mulaski was scheduled to leave University Park, Pa.

WV- Penn State's Nittany Lions, sparked by the spectacular running and defensive work of halfbacks Al Gur-sky and Junior Powell, trampled Navy, 41-7. yesterday in a battle between two of the East's top-ranked college football powers. Both Gursky and Powell scored two touchdowns each and came up with stunning pass interceptions to break the Middies' backs. Gursky electrified some 41,000 spectators In the second period by grabbing a Navy pass on his 23-yard line and racing 77 yards untouched for Penn State's third tally. Powell did the same In the last period, Intercepting a pass on his own 48 and scampering 52 yards to score.

Both also scored on pass plays from State quarterback Pete Liske, Gursky's covered five yards and Powell's nine. Except for several moments In the second and third periods, it was Penn State all the way both on offense and defense in this opening game of the season for both teams. Liske and reserve quarterback Ron Coates, getting excellent protection from Penn State's front line, teamed to complete 16 of 23 passes for 234 yards. Liske's aerials also played a key role In setting up State's second and fourth Scoring Play Time Fourth Quarter 6 0 Seiple 19. pass from Hauflaire Walsh placement blocked 2:25 Seiple ran ball out of end zone for intentional safety 14:38 Statistics Brown Col.

First Downs 8 15 Rushing Yardage 64 156 Passing Yardage 76 94 Passes 7-12 6-18 Passes Intercepted by 0 0 Punts 9-27 8-30 Fumbles Lost 2 3 Yard! Penalized 20 60 INDIVIDUAL Colgate rushing: Heilman 13-57, Deegan 18-53, Keating 6-28, Wolt-man 3-6, Baungartner 3-5. Bar-udin 7-4, Irwin 2-2, Kelin 1-1. Brown rushing: Lemire 9-23, Mover 12-16. Antifonorio 4-8, Meeker 3-7. Vareschi 2-6, Hauflaire 3-5.

Dunda 3- minus 1. Colgate passing: Keating l-for-4 for 14 yards, Barudin B-for-14 for BO. Brown passing: Hauflaire for 76, 1 TD; Dunda 0-for-l. Colgate receiving: Lomas 2-43, C. Kasprzak 2-18, Irwin 1-14, Heilman 1-13.

Brown receiving: Seiple Greene 2-24, Ferris 1-10. Officials: Referee Walter Scholl, (Cornell, umpire Louis McKenna (Manhattan), head linesman Benjamin Zecker (Colby), field Judge George A. (Spud) Forbes (Niagara; electric clock operator C. Eurdette Paikhurst (Springfieetd). Wilson Memorial Hospital today, but doctors told the 214-pounder 0 7 1441 Navy Penn State 0 14 7 13 St.

Louis (VP) The Los Angeles Dodgers, driving for the National League pennant with a 3-game lead and a week to go, held a 4-0 lead over the St. Louis Cardinals after seven-innings of play last night. Tommy Davis hit a 2-run homer for LA. Houston (JP) San Francisco's desperate Giants took a 4-1 lead over Houston after three innings of play last night, striving to keep alive their National League pennant chances. he have to stay away from football for at least a month.

Mulaski was knocked unconscious on the opening play of the JC-North game, Friday night at North, and taken to Wilson in an ambulance with a PS Gursky 5 pass from Liske (ricevuto kick) PS Gursky pass from Liske (Ricevuto kick) PS Gursky 77 Interception (run failed) Sal 35 run (Von Sydow kick) PS Ll'ke 16 run (Ricevuto kick) PS Powell 8 pass from Liske (kick failed) PS Powell 52 Interception (Robinson pass from Liske) (estimated) ce rebral concussion. Bill's mother reported last night that there had been no evidence of internal bleeding, and other than a bad headache, he's OK..

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 Press and Sun-Bulletin
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Press and Sun-Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
1,852,743
Years Available:
1904-2024