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Panama City News-Herald from Panama City, Florida • Page 13

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Don Trull Sets Marks En Route To Baylor Win By MAX B. SKELTON HOUSTON (AP) Don Trull set two National MANAMA CITV MSWS-HERALD, Panama City, Sunday, December 1, 1963 Page passing records three touchdowns and scored Saturday to lead the Baylor Bears to a Bluebonnet Bowl football invitation with a 21-12 victory over Rice. The invitation to meet Louisiana State in the Dec. 21 classic in the Rice stadium was extended immediately after the game. The Baylor athletic council is expected to accept at a Monday meeting in Waco.

A dozen Louisiana State and Bluebonnet stands as scouts Trull were in the set national THE YARDSTICK BAYLOR RICE 17 16 104 207 187 Fitst downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes Intercepted by Punts fumbles lost Yards penalized 161 18-33 8-17 1 0 5-386 3-388 1 26 5 marks for the most pass completions and the most yardage gained on passes for a single season. The Baylor victory nailed down second place behind undefeated Texas in the Southwpst outcome of this week's delayed game with Southern Methodist. The Bears are 6-3 for the season and 5-1 in conference play. Trull scored on two short plunges and on a 26-yard run but his passes figured in every Baylor drive. The teams exchanged touchdowns the first times they had the ball, but Baylor broke the game wide open with a 21-6 lead after Rice fumbled on each of the first five times the Owls owned the ball in the second half.

Two of the fumbles were turned into touchdown drives of 42 and 35 yards. Trull completed 18 of 33 passes for 187 yards. This ran his season completions to 160, one more than the old mark of 159 set by Don Klosterman of Loyola of Los Angeles in 1951. 187 yards for the day gave Trull a season total of 2,047, compared to the old record of set by Stan Heath of Nevada in 1948. Baylor 7 0 7 7--21 p.lcc 6 0 0 6--12 Boyl--Trull 1 run fDavtes kick) Concannon Top Draft Choice By JACK HAND NEW YORK (AP)-Jack Concannon, Boston College's fine quarterback, was drafted No.

1 in the American Football League Saturday by the Boston Patriots who acquired the first pick from Denver in a late trade. Many of the big names in this year of the quarterback were passed over in the early rounds as AFL coaches and scouts con- on massive line sixth round that also saw Willie Brown, Southern California halfback, picked by San Diego. Bill Sullivan, president of the about the deal that gave him a chance to pick Concannon. "He is the best all-around athlete in the Boston area since Harry Agganis," said Sullivan. 'The whole city is excited about him." Concannon has a quick release for his passes and can hit either talent.

The Draft, of course, only established rights in the AFL. The National Football League will hold its annual draft of the same crop of college talent Monday in Chicago. None can be signed until all regular season games and bowl games are over. Wide open bidding is expected. Pete Beathard, Southern California's bullet passer who also I short or long targets with ac- curacy while running full speed.

He ranked fourth in the nation in total offense and had gained 1513 yards passing and running going into Saturday's season finale with Holy Cross. If the Pats can sign Concannon who also has attracted much attention from NFL scouts he will be given a good chance of beating out the veteran Babe Parilli for the quarterback job nest fall. Bob Locey, North Carolina end; Rudy Johnson, Nebraska fullback; Jeff Ware, Pitt linebacker; Charles Brooks, Memphis State end; Herman Johnson, Michigan State halfback; Ray Popp, Pitt linebacker; Bob Lehman, Notre Dame guard; Bill Scott. Memphis State guard; Glenn Condren, Oklahoma tcckle; Dick Shiner, Maryland quarterback. BOSTON Jack Concannon, Boston College quarterback; Jim Kelly, Notre Dame end; Jon Morris, Holy Cross center; Jim Mazurek, Syracuse guard; T.

W. Alley, William and Mary tackle; J. D. Garrett, Gramblmg halfback; Roger LaLonde, Muskfngum tackle; Leonard St. Jean, Northern Michigan end; John Barrett, Boston College; Joe Scarpati, North Caroline State halfback; Jim Wilson, Georgia tackle; Tony Gibbons, John Carroll tackle; Pete Pedro, West Texas State halfback; Gary Wood, Cornell quarterback; Joe Tiller, Montana State tackle; Bill Dawson, Florida State end; Lonnie Farmer, Chattanooga Linebacker.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL KENTUCKY QUINTET WNS CAVALIERS Staters Preserve Win Over Michigan ANN ARBOR (AP)--Don Unverferth threw for one touchdown and ran for the second, but the Ohio State defense had to fight off a furious, last-minute Michigan attack to preserve a 14-10 football victory Saturday. A crowd of 36,424, smallest in Michigan Stadium in 20 years. LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP)-Kentucky's ninth ranked Wildcats threw their one-two punch of Ted Deeken and Cotton Nash Dick i at Virginia Saturday night and Evey, Tennessee tackle; George Rose, 175-64 in the College basketball Carl Eller, BUFFALO Minnesota Auburn halfback; George Byrd, Boston University halfback; Paul Warfield, Ohio State halfback; Mike Reilly, Iowa line- opener for both schools. Deeken, a 6-foot-4 senior from backer; Roger Pillath, Wisconsin tackle; Louisville Kv and Nash, a 6-5 Paul Pitt halfback; Vl' Simpson, Auburn end; Earl Lattimer, Senior irom Pittsburgh 82, Fairfield 62 Ohio State 68, California 42 THE YARDSTICK OHIO STATE MICHIGAN First downs Rushing yardage Qrdoge Passes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost yards penalized 17 192 105 5-13 1 5-35 1 29 14 188 35 7-1 1 5-32 0 30 is a master of me rollout option, Don Klosterman, the Kansas was grabbed by the Kansas City City talent scout who looked Chiefs in the first round, the over Beathard for the Chiefs, second of 200 players to be se- Soutnern al player 1 Michigan State fullback; Bobby Smith, North Texas State halfback; Cloyd Webb, scored lected in 25 rounds.

The New York Jets, who have been priced out of the market in recent drafts, picked Matt Snell, a Locust Valley N.Y., boy who played fullback at Ohio State. The new owners who took over the Jets this season are confident they will be able to hold their own in the scramble to sign the collegians. Denver gave up its first pick in a deal that brought Boston's No. 1 and No. 3 round choices to the Broncos as well as a player to be announced later.

The Broncos hungry for offensive linemen, quickly snapped up Bob Brown, a 269-pound guard in Nebraska's Orange Bowl- bound Cornhuskers. Two agile tackles were next in line in the first round. The Buffalo Bills took Carl Eller 6- foot-5, 241-pounder from Minnesota and Houston quickly drafted Scott Appleton, the 6-3, 235- pound bulwark of the Texas line. OWQ WU i Nebraska half- 28 a strong tuwu CTIU, vviiiit: nun- i back; Pete Gogolak, Cornell kicker; lel se "the best potential pro prospect I ever saw." His most enthusiastic boosters call Beathard "the new Paul Hornung," for he can throw bullet passes as well as run the option. The San Francisco 49ers of the NFL also were reported interested.

NEW YORK (AP)--Saturday's Amer- can Football League draft selections by team. O'Donneli, Michigan guard; Remi Prudhomme, LSU tackle; Bill Simpson, Baylor tackle; John Hilton, Richmond end: Larry Kramer. Nebraska tackle; Hagood Clarke, I -TM, most Florida halfback; Don Montgomery, North i the 1SSU6 Carolina State end; Robert Duggan, Game scoring honors went to Virginia's Chip Connor, who had PITTSBURGH (AP) Pitt's 1 COLUMBUS, Ohjo (AP)--Ohio veteran basketball team caught State tolled up a 21-point half- Fairfield late in the first half, time margin Saturday and then went on for an 82-62 victory cruised to a 68-42 basketball tri- Saturday night in the teams' umph over the University of. opening game California at Davis in the open- Unverferth rolled Duquesne clashed with Amer- er for both schools. aia und end for the come Slfhir game All-America Garv Bradds led from-behind touchdown midway Substitute Darrell Rubv's field a first half assault with 18 the final quarter.

left in the first lnts hl ei of eld them already had half brought Pitt even with the been Connecticut school. Then Brian, ln a ree throw, DENVER Bob Brown, Nebraska guard; Marv Woodson, Indiana halfback; Matt Snorton, Michigan State end; Don Shackleford, U. of Pacific tackle; Alfred Denson, Florida AM end; Ray Kubala, Texas AM tackle; Jerry Richardson, West Texas State end; Wally Hllgenburg, Iowa linebacker; John Mims, Rice tackle; Paul Krause, Iowa flanker back; Charles Parker, Southern Mississippi linebacker; Robert Hayes, Florida AM halfback; Chuck Logon, Northwestern end, Robert Cherry, Wittenburg end; Jim McNaughton, Utah State linebacker; George Mlra, Miami quarterback; Odel! Berry, Findlay College halfback. KANSAS CITY Pete Beathard, Southern California 1 quarterback; Billy Martin, Georgia Tech Oakland's first round pick end; Ken Kortas, Louisville was fullback Tony Lorick, a 9.7" sprinter, top flight punter and alert State. receiver Another from Arizona Arizona State back, Charley Taylor, was taken by Houston in the second round.

San Diego, drafting for lineman and linebackers, selected linebacker Ted Davis of Georgia Rice--Parry 49 pass from McReynolds Tech in the first round. (kick failed) griyl--Trull 26 run (Davles kick) Bayl--Trull 1 run (Davles kick) Rice--Fleming 3 (pass failed) Attendance 40,000. Holt Loses Ten-Rounder To Pastrano JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (UPD--Light heavyweight champion Willie Pastrano of Miami Beach completely outclassed wild swinging Mike Holt, champion of South Africa, Saturday night in their non-title bout herp to win the 10-round decision. Fast footed Pastrano had been favored to win, but Holt's excellent workouts had indicated he would at least give Such name George Mira quarterbacks as of Miami, Billy Lothamer, Michigan State tackle; Tom Keating, Michigan tackle; Duke Carlisle, Texas halfback; Joe Don Looney, Oklahoma halfback, John Simon, Notre Dame end; Hal Bedsole, Southern California end; Tony Westchester State, tockie; Clay Stephens, Notre Dame I slssippi State tackle. HOUSTON Scott Applefon, Texas tackle; Charles Taylor, Arizona State halfback; Bill Truax, Louisiana State end; Bob Crenshaw, Baylor tackle; Ode Burrell, Mississippi State halfback; John Varnell, West Virginia tackle; Sid Blanks, Texas' minutes to go.

Al halfback; Dave Wllcox, Oregon I guard, Erell Feals, Prairie View half-' back; Jerry Burton, Northwest Louisiana halfback; Sammy Odum, Northwest Louisiana linebacker; Owen Dejanovlch, Arizona State guard; Benny Nelson, Alabama halfback; Ken Henson, TCU center; Pat Crain, Clemson fullback; Bill Munson, Utah State quarterback; Richard Leeuwenburg, Stanford tackle; Bob Nichols, Stanford tackle; Cane Robinson, Prairie View tackle; Pete Jaquess, East New Mexico halfback. OAKLAND Tony Lorick, Arizona State fullback; Dan Conners, Miami tackle; George Bednar, Notre Dame tackle; Bill Budness, Boston U. linebacker; Don Green, quehanna halfback; John Sapinsky, William and Mary tackle; Vince Petno, Citadel halfback; John Williamson, Louisiana Tech center; Herschel Trner, Kentucky tackle; Mel Renfro, Oregon halfback; Larry Rakestraw, Georgia quarterback; Billy Lothridge, Georgia Tech quarterback; Mickey Babb, Georgia end; Charles Fred Polser, East Texas State guard; Mike Giers, Southern California tackle; Ron Wilkening, North Dakota halfback; Fred Lewis, Massachusetts halfback; Ron Calcagno, Santa Clara quarterback; Tom Michel, East Carolina fullback; Ed Beard, Tennessee tackle. SAN DIEGO Ted Davis, Georgia Tech linebacker; IPri 4M9 at Panthers never trailed. ynioans cc Kentucky which led I at, rf pm starters vetumin? mated the action.

The Ohio State quarterback starters were in double figures broke with tradition in this tra- as the Taller and more experi- 1 dition-filled Bis Ten battle when enced Ohioans completely dom- he passed to Paul tt arfield for anrl first OSU in the final period and built up to the margin with in double figures. They were margin, 09-41 witn fay Sheffield, flipped in eight of 12 field goall tries and two free throws for points. West Virginia 67, Furman 65 GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) Ricky Ray hit a jump shot from the free throw line with one second left Saturday night to give West Virginia a 67-65 victory over Furman in the opener for both Southern Conference basketball teams. West Virginia's defendins champions held a 10-point lead with 11:25 to play but Furman pecked away until Leroy Peacock hit a jumper with 50 sec- yards and the first OSU touchdown It came with 41 sec- It was the 49th consecutive onr in the first half, scored home court ctO ry for Coach Michigan had held a 10-0 lead Tailor's team dating a i ji the long Unverferth pass.

10,521 watched Harvard 84, 60 CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP)-Harvard romped to an 84-60 victory over Bowdoin Saturday night as both teams opened their basketball seasons. Merle McClung of the Crimson led all scorers with 19 points. Capt. Bob Inman had 16.

High for the losers was Howie Pease with 14. Harley Schward- A crowd of Ohio take a 5-4 lead early in the contest. The Buckeyes were never headed. They led 21-12 midway through the first half and steadily pulled away to a 41-20 halftime bulge. Ohio State 0 7 0 7--U Michigan 3 7 0 0--10 Mich--FG Timberlake 28 Mich--Rindfuss 2 run (Timberlake kick) OSU--Warfield 35 pass from Unverferth kick) run kick) Attendance 36,42.

onds left to tie the score at 65- ron contributed 12 for Bowdoin. end; Tommy Crutcher, TCU linebacker; John Kirby, Nebraska linebacker; Perry Jack Adams, Virginia Tech end; Orvllle Lee Dunn, Mississippi quarterback; Dave Lot bridge of Georgia Tech, Dick Shiner of Maryland and Larry Rakestraw of Georgia were not picked in the early rounds. Indiana's Marv Woodson, Jay Wilkinson, Duke halfback; Paul Costa, Notre Dame halfback; Jim Snowden, Notre Dame back; Roger Staubach, Navy quarterback; Jack Peterson, Omaha tackle; Jerry Knoll, Washington tackle; Jerry Lamb, Arkansas end; Sandy Sands, Texas end; Bob Hohn, Nebraska halfback. NEW YORK Matt Snell, Ohio State fullback; Lloyd Voss, Nebraska tackle; Gerald Philbin, Buffalo guard; Jim Evans, Texas Western West Virqmia center; Gary Kirner, Southern California tackle; Willie Brown, Southern California halfback; Roger Anderson, Virginia Union tackle; Pat Batten, Hardm-Simmons fullback; George Seels, Missouri end; Bob Long, Wichita end; Dick Bowman, Syracuse end; Bob Horton, Boston U. fullback; Ron Carpenter, Texas AM end; Ken Graham, Washington halfback; Howard Kmdig, Los Angeles State center; Ed Mitchell, South- halfback; Ben McGree, Jackson State, lern University tackle; Bob Dougherty, a tackle; Ralph Baker, Penn State I Tulsa halfback; John Farns, San Diego halfback Who recently under- linebacker; Steven Wright, Alabama went knee surgery, was drafted by Denver and Paul Warfield, fleet Ohio State halfback, was taken by the Buffalo Bills.

Kansas City selected Joe Don Looney, the Oklahoma halfback who left the team in a mid-season controversy. Looney was drafted in the tackle; Sherman Lewis, Michigan State halfback; Ken Bowman, Wisconsin center; State tackle; Bobby Robinson, Mississippi guard; Paul Cercell, Pittsburgh center; Dick Klein, Wichita tackle. Rebels, Tide In Sugar Bowi Willie a hard fight. Hence, the tee made it official Saturday- Alabama will play Mississippi islood several challenges in the "final weekend and won this NEW ORLEANS (AP) The! year erald Football Experts Sugar Bowl Selection Commit- 1 Carswell Wins Experts Contest R. K.

(Bubby) Carswell with-1145-82 (.639) for- the season. at Rand Stadium much disappointed with 32-year-old Mike's perform- 1,000 fans were very ance. Moreover, a a a promised Holt a February shot at the world 175-pound crown if Holt beat him. Veteran Pastrano, weighing in the New Year's Day classic here. The announcement of the two Sugar Bowl teams was made simultaneously in New Orleans and at Birmingham, where Alabama lost 10-8 to Orange Bowl bound Auburn, and at Stark- I Cl i C3 177 pounds to Holt's 172 was soiville, where Mississippi was fast and clever that he seemed tied 10-10 by Mississippi State, to win seven of the 10 rounds It will be the first post- complete season match for the two South- Contest in the most torrid race over in the six-year history of the event.

CarsueH, hitting 19 of 29 winners in Thanksgiving Day and Saturday football games, finished a mere three points ahead of Wilbur James in second place. Carswell's overall record for the season was 146 right picks and 78 incorrect choices for a percentage of .652. James also as he gave Mike boxing lesson. eastern Conference giants. Southern ATLANTA We've Got Good Connections with UNITED all.

West Virginia called time out with 22 seconds left and set up its winning play. The ball was thrown in to backcourter Ray. who dribbled in to the lane and his his shot just before the buzzer. The Mountaineers led at the half 36-35, building their lead on free throws as they hit 12 of 14 to Furman's nine of 16. Ray was high scorer with 16 points and Bill Maphis and Tom Lowry handled the rebounding chores to lead the winners.

Duke 92, Penn State 62 DURHAM, N.C. (AP) Jeff Mullins scored 25 points as Duke opened its basketball season Sat- uday night with an easy 92-62 victory over Penn State. Mullins, the 6-foot-4 Blue Dev- Missouri 65, Air Force 64 COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) Bob Price hit a jump shot from the corner with 48 seconds left to give the Missouri Tigers a 65-64 Celtics Win Eighth In Row; Baltimore Wallops Detroit BOSTON (API--Sam Jones! NEW YORK (AP)--Walt Bel- and Tom Sanders sparked a a scored 11 of his 36 points third period outburst that as-1 during a four-minute period sured the Boston Celtics a 109-96 victory over the San Francisco Warriors Saturday night. It was Boston's eighth straight victory and 15th in 16 National Basketball Association starts basketball victory over Air this season.

Force Saturday night. The Celtics trailed in the early Price's shot marked the first; stages but gradually forged time Missouri was ahead in the! lead that mounted to DD-48 at contest. It held UD as Air Force I halftime. stalled for a final shot by its' Then. Jones and Sanders sup- ace.

Mike Pavich, with 10 sec- Plied most of the scoring onds left, but it rolled off the! Boston sprinted to a 22 point lead, 79-57. San Francisco never challenged afterward. nm. Northeastern 85, Brown 58 PROVIDENCE, R.I. Seniors Fran Ryan (AP)- Malvey with 30 and 25 Th'rm'nd respectively, powered Northeast- i il captain, scored 19 points in TM the first half.

Three other Blue rn TM to an 85-58 basketball vic- Thus the margin separating first and eight places on the 13- man panel was a scant 13 percentage points closest ever in the contest history. Dr. Jimmy Poyner was ninth on the strength of a 142-83 (.631) season's total. He was 20-9 in the concluding weekend. Jimmy Patronis and Len Register completed the season in a tie for tenth, both owning 140-85 (.622) records.

Patronis was 1910 and Register 18-11 this weekend. M. A. (Alf) Coleman nosed out Devils also scored in double figures: Buzzy Harrison, 14; Brent Kitching, 11 and Jay Buckley, 10. Penn State was paced by Career Clinton, who scored 21 points, and Bob Weiss with 19.

Duke charged to a 16-6 lead in the first 10 min-ites of the game with Mullins scoring nine of those points. With their fast break clicking, the Blue Devils ran up the score to 42-22 by halftime. Creighton 85, Colorado 72 tory over Brown tonight. It was Windsor the first game of the season for both teams. Malvey and Ryan broke open, the game after a close 36-33 first' SAN FRANCISCO BOSTON Hight'w'r 2 0-0 4 Hemsohn Mesch'ry 2 3 4 7 Sanders Ch'b'l'n 10 3-9 23 Russell 2 0 1 4 S.

Jones 11 2-3 24 Jones 5 0-0 10 2 3-4 7 Naulls 4 0-0 8 Hill 10 3-3 23 Ramsey 1 0-0 2 Sears 0 0 0 0 H'vlicek 10 5-6 25 0 0 0 0 Lov'll'te 1 2-2 4 Loscutoff McC'thy Siegfried 40 16-26. 96 Totals 47 15-24 109 the fourth quarter and led the Baltimore Bullets to a 120-101. victory over Detroit Saturday night in the first game of Basketball Association doubleheader. Philadelphia met New York in the second game. Bellamy pulled the Bullets safely out front in the fourth period after the Pistons who lost their fifth in a row, had closed to within six points, 91-85.

Bellamy then hit on three, three-point plays and added another basket as the Bullets built their lead to 109-91. 2 0 0 4 BALTIMORE 5 2-3 121 8 3-5 19 11 5-6 27 Cab Disch'g'r Green Hardnett Hogue Johnson Kofis Loughery Shue DETROIT 1 0-0 0 0-2 0 0-2 0 0 0 Totals half. Warriors Celtics 22 26 21 27-- 96 27 28 30 24--109 Personal fouls--San Francisco, High- quarter Malvej tower 2 Meschery, Chomberlam, Phillips In the third ran up of norfheastern's 1012, Rodgers 3, Thurmond 3, Hill 5, Lee, points and gave the visitors a Windsor. Boston, Hemsonn 5, Russell 3, -i -irt Jones 2, K. C.

Jones 3, Noulls 2, 55-41 edge with 12 minutes avhcek, Loveiiette, Locutoff. maming. Attendance 8,108. Thorn Totals 12 12-17 36 Egan 3 0-0 6 Ferry 4 5-6 13 Howell 4 -6 12 Imhoff 0 2 3 2 Jones 0 1-1 1 Miles 6 1-1 13 Morel'd 4 1-5 90hl 2 1-2 5 Scott 3 3 4 9 Stav'rnan 7 0-0 14 45 3tMS 120 Totals 4 2-3 10 3 5-8 11 5 10-11 20 2 1-3 5 5 0-0 10 1 0-0 2 6 6-9 18 5 3-4 133 4-5 10 1 0-0 2 35 31-43 101 Baltimore Oelroit 37 30 JO 33--120 15 34 23--101 Personal fouls--Baltimore. Bellamy 5, Cable 4, Dischinger 5, Green 2, Hogue, Johnson 6, Kofis, Loughery 3, Shue 3.

Detroit, Egan 2, Ferry 2, Howell 5, Imhoff 3, Jones 3, Miles Moreland 4, Ohl 3, Scott 5, Staverman 3. tabbed 19 of 29 winners and Dn sidney Da ffin for 12th place, wound up with a seasonal mark of 146-79 for a percentage of .649. .649. Joe Ovca, 1961 winner, rallied strongly and gave the front runners quite a scare. Eighth Coleman, 17-12 this weekend, finished at 137-78 (.612) and Daffin, logging a strong finish, was 138-88 Another record was estab OMAHA (API Creighton mastered a taller Colorado team in the basketball opener for both teams Saturday night 85-72.

The Silas Bluejays led by Paul who scored 20 points, oi'o snapped a 26-all deadlock late in the first half with 11 straight points and at the half were ahead by 44-28 over the defending Big Eight Conference cham- entering the final week, Ovcailished in the margin from nailed 23 winners and was' to last place. Carswell finished i pions. wrong only six times to finish I percentage points ahead of Colorado, ranked 10th in the with an overall ledger of 147-80i Daffin, 12 places in arrears, 'nation in the final Associated and a percentage of .648. Carswell held first place the Fourth Johnson, place went also 1o five weeks and occupied finishpc strong. Eleventh just six weeks ago and sixth last week, Johnson hit 20 of 29 this week and gained an additional win under contest rules by hitting the only score on the nose.

He correctly I whole, forecast Maryland's 21-6 tri-l umph over Virginia. Johnson overall was 146-80, a i percentage of .646. Clay Cogbum and Rowe Sudduth wound up in a tie for fifth place. Each was 18-11 this weekj and had identical seasonal records of 145-81 Wilbur (Buck) Wilson pulled down seventh place with a fine 20-9 showing the last weekend. His totaled 141 correct picks and 81 incorrect ones for a .640 season's record.

One percentage poinl back of the lead position for eight of the 11 weeks the contest ran. Consensus selections of the panel were right 18 of 29 times this week and showed an overall 13985 (.619) for the season as a Press poll last season, went scoreless for three minutes and five seconds while Creighton fashioned its intermission margin- Charlie Brown and Elton Mc- riff 5-foot-9 and 6-8 respectively, each got 14 points to help the Bluejays. Douglas Passes Texas Southern To Upset Win Over Rattlers JACKSONVILLE (AP)--Johr Douglas passed Texas Southern Hayes. Florida A tied it up with to an upset victory over Florida I 3-42 left in the game on Haves' A University 20-14 Saturday night in the Gator Bowl. All the Texans' touchdowns him in eighth place is Ted Cooper who tumbled from third place after a 17-12 weekend card.

Cooper's record showed came on passes from Douglas. Florida scored on a 44-yard run bv Bobby Felts and an R5-yard punt return by speedster Bobby WITH A FUTURE 15 Pay Free Trial ONE-CLASS SERVICE TO NEW YORK For Reservations Call Southern Airways or Your Travel Agent run and Douglas passed to Herman Driver for 34 yards and winning touchdown with only nine seconds left. Flonda had a scorinc chance in the second quarter hut fumbled at the one-vard line and Texas recovered. Later Jim Tullis of Florida fumhled on a bad pitchout and Southern recovered at the 12 Two nlavs later Dnu- passed to Warren Wells for a touchdown to give the With Surgical Stainless Sfeel Cutting Head a 14 8 lead Start Sharper Stay Sharper. Texas rolled up 38 first downs to 15 for Florida.

Texas South- em ended the season with a record while Florida A has a 7-2 season's record and plnvs Morgan State of Baltimore in the Orange Blossom game at Miami SCHICK SUPER SPEED Authentic Pendleton Start your Christmas shopping here. Our Pendleton collection of Men's offer? a wealth of happy supjrestions for i i (and Virpin wool Pendleton-; featuring the new Holiday Plaid are as colorful as the Oregon Country that inspired them. Heetrie SHAVER DOWN 50c WEEKLY I Vin9 On tough beards, other 7 1 For ect shavin 8 comfort. fANAHA CUTS WATCH DtiflAr FREE TRIAL CHRISTMAS DAY lo Til 537 HARRISON JACKLF, a S-M-L-XL, M8 J3 SPORT SHIRT, IIMI -S-M-L-XL, $14 95 Dec. 14.

Texas Southern 8 0 6 6--20 Florida A 0 8 0 6--14 Tex-- Driver. 6 from Dou- slas (Wells pass from Douelas) Fla-- Felts 44 run (Felts run) Tex-- Wells 11 pass from Douglas fnass failed) Fla Hayes, 85 punt return (kick failecH TPX-- Driver pass from Douclas pass failed) ALWAYS VIRGIN" WOOL JUST 20 SHOPPING DAYS UFT 'Til CHRISTMAS USE OUR 30-60-90 DAY CHARGE ACCOUNTS Clothing of Panama City Free Christmas Gift Wrapping Downtown 213 Harrison Avenue -3-3.

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About Panama City News-Herald Archive

Pages Available:
149,666
Years Available:
1940-1977