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Panama City News-Herald from Panama City, Florida • Page 8

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Florida Rallies But Loses to Vanderbilt, 20 to 13 Gators Score Twice Late in Final Period NASHVILLE. Oct. 18 Vanderbilt and Florida tried- then- best to fumble away a football game in the opening quarter Saturday before Commodores picked up the pieces for as thrilling a 20-13 ccrision as Dudley Field has seen in years. Freshman quarterback Bill Krietemeyer's passing and senior halfback Dick Foster's ruining featured a Commodore offense that piled up a 20-0 lead. Then.

Rick Casares and Reed Quir.n tecs over the ball game to lead the Gators to a pair of lightning fast touchdowns and almost to" a third one which died out on the Vanderbilt three-yard line with only 35 seconds left to play. The thrilling final period had some 20.000 Vanderbilt partisans hanging on the ropes. It was Vanderbilfs first victory of the season, following two Saturdays of holding favored Northwestern and Mississippi to ties. The loss was Forida's second against three victories. Both teams were keyed to the last notch and fumbles dominated first quarter play.

Florida fumbled three times and Vanderbilt twice before they could settle down to play football. Actually, the first touchdown was punched over by Foster with only 24 seconds remaining in the first 79 yards in 15 plays, with Krietemeyer's passing to Ben Riderick and Malcolm Cook covering most of the distance. The 18-year-old passing wizard found his "mark six straight times during that a a Foster rammed over guard for the final yard and then converted. The Commodores needed less than 3Vi minutes to score after the second half started. Senior end Bob Hines blocked a Florida punt by Quinn and stumbled 19 yards it to the Gator 1.

from where Foster scored and converted. Don Gleisner intercepted Doug Dickey's pass a few minutes later and set up a third Vanderbilt tally. Eight plays, including two. passes, carried to" the Gator 26. and Kriete- tneyer passed to Cook for the score.

The final period was nearly all Florida, with the Gators making a determined bid to pull the game cut of the well. Krietemeyer's fumble on his own 21 set up the first Florida touchdown. Steve D'Agostino fell on it and the Gators scored in seven plays, with Qui diving over from the one. Arlen Jumper intercepted a Krietemeyer pass a few minutes later to give the visitors possession on the Commodore 2. Casares and Quinn of the scoring drive with Buford Long skirting: left end for the tally.

Vanderbilt fumbled on the next kickoff and g-ave Florida the ball on the Vanderbilt 23. Casares picked up two, Quinn 16 and Casares PANAMA CITY NEWS HERALD i Sunday, October 19, 1952 On Your Dial Ole Miss Cops BIG SNAPPER CATCH--Mrs. W. McKlrny i a Bae Strickland and Mrs. Harry W.

Ahner caught 250 pounds of red snapper on the Queen Mary (Photo by Yon). Sports Slants Bay High Discovers Fine Field General From Tulane NEW ORLEANS. Oct. 18 Halfback Dick Westerman built a blaze under Mississippi Saturday and then led the Rebels to a 20-14 Southeastern Conference football victory over tired Tulane. Mississippi, tied twice in three Conference starts, found the spark in Westerman's two touchdown smahes to ignite its offens-e.

The 175-pound left halfback from Hernando. snared a flat pass in the second quarter and burned up the remaining 54 yards to send Mississippi into a 7-0 lead. Tulane tied it up in the third quarter, but Westerman applied the torch again to Mississippi's offense with a three yard touchdown plunae. Hairoack Wilson Dillard climaxed a 38-yard -fourth quarter drive to give the Rebels their game- clinching touchdown. Quarterback Jimmy Lear converted after the first two touchdowns.

Tulane pushed over its final touchdown in the last second on a one-yard plunge by halfback Roy Bailey, but for all practical purposes the game was over after Dillard's scoring run. Chapman Takes lU Tussle With Sopchoppy APALACHICOLA -Chapman High of iie- feated Sopchoppy, an Apalachicola Valley conference rival, 27 0, here Friday night. Charles Smith scored three touchdowns for Chapman and was the outstanding offensive star of the game. One of his touchdown 1 runs was for "70 yards on the game's first play. Bobbie Carnes got the other touchdown.

Chapman's line played a great defensive game. Chapman plays Bristol here Friday night. SEE HOW THEY RUN--College football has uncovered a classy band of ground gainers this Fall. Quarterback Lou D'Achille, left, picks 'em up and lays 'em down for Indiana. Halfback Jim Sears, center, leads Southern California's potent attack.

Navy banks on Fullback Fred Franco. (NEA) Moorhead Proves Star as Tech Crushes Auburn, 33-0 Basketball Plans Under Way Here City Recreation Department is busy with plans for basketball leagues to be conducted in Panama City this winter. The number of leagues, teams and athletes is expected to be greater this winter than ever before. By FRANK PERICOLA News-Herald Sports Editor Oklahoma Blasts Jayhawks, 42-20 LAWRENCE. Oct.

19 Oklahoma's magnificent Sooners, When the experts tabbed the Bav High-Leon football with football magician Eddie Crow- as even, thev knew what they were saying. Fans who I der faking and-passing in superb Pmat he ag UP- i i i i S1V6 Opened 106 gav.CS IOr lli- I By STERLING SLAPPEY ATLANTA, Oct. 18 LP--Hungry- handed Bobby Moorhead. a defen- i sive halfback with an appetite for Auburn passes, ran back two in- terceptions for touchdowns as I Georgia Tech whipped Auburn Saturday, 33-0. Ycftmg Moorhead.

a Miami. Fla. Frank Secory. new umpire in the National League, works ior an oil company during the winter. FOOTBALL RESULTS saw the 19-19 deadlock in Tallahassee Friday night (and there TM i beaten Tech with a 46-yard run- were hundreds from Panama City really enjoyed a thriller.

ence championship today by blast- i b-ack for a touchdown the California Coach Sees De-emphasis BERKELEY. Calif. --Edgar (Eggs; Manske. who's played or coached football two-thirds of his 20 years, said today he's quitting as end coach at undefeated California after this season "because de- emphasis is inevitable. "College football is on its way out," he declared.

"There is no future in the game, even for a head coach. 'For the present, college presi- The highspot in the game, from I ing the Kansas Jayhawks, 42-20. our standpoint, was the discovery of a fine quarterback in Ronnie ond a He practically v. wrapoed up the game in the third A capacity crowd of about 40.000 oua er with a 41 ard excursion saw Coach Bud Wilkinson's Oklaho-! 1 TT aan -OUU WUK.111SUU5 VJiiailU- Brock. He called plays well, hand- i ma ns win their third vlctorv of i led the ball more than adequately the year against one tie over a i Nineteen games have passed and was an outstanding.performer Kansas outfit that suffered its first! since Tech lost the last time in No- generally.

Leo Baggett played his usual fine game in the line. Ineffective pass defense, particularly on the screen pass that gave Leon its tying: touchdown, cost Bay High a victory but we are well satisfied to settle for a tie against an up and coming: Leon team that played Us best game of the season. Sherrill Balkcom and Johnny Nunnery, two very fast By the Asosciated Press EAST Yale 13. Cornell 0. Penn State 10.

Nebraska 0. Harvard 21. Colgate 20. Princeton 48. Lafayette 0.

Holy Cross 46. Brown 0. Pittsburgh 2TM. Army 14. Quanticu Marines 21, Fordham Dartmouth 29.

Rutgers 21), Pennsylvania 27. Columbia 17. Connecticut 13. Maine 7. Rochester 12.

Vermont 7. Springfield 14, New Hampshire (tie). Aiford 19. St. Lawrence 14.

Northeastern 20. Bares 7. Trenton Teachers 41, National gies 0. Ag- nts are tolerating big time teamed up in a passing- combina- ball. But they don't like it, and tion that clicked.

Nunnery prob- eventually they'll get what they ably would have scored a touch- want." Lynn (Pappy Waldrof. coach of California's No. 3 down had he not stumbled deep head ln eon territory in the second rated! quarter. Balkcom had a 41-yard team in The Associated Press poll, touchdown run called back because coaching position without ever hav- bore the brunt I team Qf a Ing held position of head coach. loss in five games.

The victory i vember, 1950, to Alabama. The rec- left Oklahoma with a conference i ord is third best in major college record of a tie with Colorado and football, topped only by the slightly one triumph. Kansas now has two better strings of Michigan State Teacl ers 6 league successes and one loss. and Maryland. The Sooners spotted Kansas a The Southeastern Conference vie- seven point lead early in the game tory with 37,000 fans on hand, was by hobbling the ball deep in their Tech's fifth of the season.

own territory. But after catching During- the first half Auburn m- up at 7 to 7." they barrelled ahead tercepted three Tech passes but for a 14 to 7 quarter, and a 21 to they didn't do any good on the 13 halftime were never Scoreboard. Tech pulled in one Au- chaeis 7 caught by the eager Kansans. QTlH ac: worth a a COACH MADE BIG JUMP ANNAPOLIS, Md. (JPi Eddie Erdlatz.

football coach at Navy, jumped into his present Norwich 43. Champlain 19. Adelphia 14, Brooklyn College 0. 35, Bethany 0. Clarion State Teachers 26.

Brockport Slippery Rock Stale Teachers 32. Indiana State a Teachers 6. F.dinboro State Teachers 39. Thiel 7. Westminster (I'a) 14.

Grove City 12. Carnegie Tech 19. Allegheny 0." Kinss Point 13. Wagner 6. Buckneil 22, Buffalo 0.

Lehigh 15, Gettysburg 7. American International 13. St. St. Augustine 18.

St. Paul's fi. Carthage (111.) 33; Augustana (111.) 13. St. Thomas (Minn.) 13.

MacAIester 0. Washburn 21: St. Benedicts 20. St. Cloud (Minn.) TC 20; Bemidii (Minn.) TC 0.

i Minot TC 38; Bouineau i Forestry 0. Valley City TC 57: a i I TC 20. i FAR WEST Colorado A 41, Montana 0. Michigan 48. Northwestern 14.

Indiana 33, Temple 0. Oklahoma 42. Kansas 20. Colorado 21. Iowa State 12 UCLA 24.

Stanford 14. Idaho 34. North Dakota State 3. Southern a i i a 2 8 Oregon Slate 6. New Mexico 7.

Wyoming 0. Utah 35. Denver 0. Washington 49. Oregon 0.

California 27. Santa Clara Eastern New Mexico 20, Colorado Mines 7. SOUTHWEST TCU 7. Texas A 7 i Texas Arkansas 7. Southwest Texas 20.

Stephen Austin 10. Mi- burn pass and it was worth touchdown. Moorhead a Dudley been in football 27 years-arid I've enjo3'ed every minute of it." That record ranges from school boy games through stardom at Northwestern, pro ball with the Phila- CU. Li IJ V. H-ii-ii! A emu vo drove to the 2.

But Long was stop- delphia Eagles and Chicago Bears, ped at the 3-vard line on fourth I and coaching at Boston University, AV disagreed. Manske said and boy, I've down. FIELD GOAL WINS CHAPEL HILL. N. C.

-An 18-yard field goal by quarterback Charles George, with 76 seconds to play, carried favored Wake Forest to an uphill 9-7 Southern Conference football victory over North Carolina. DOUBLE COACHES DURBAN, N. C. UP) --Five members of the Duke football coaching staff are also coaches of other athletic teams at the university. Line coach Dumpy Hagler is golf coach.

Defensive backfield coach Carmen Falcone is wrestling mentor. Jayvee coach Bob Cox is tennis coach. Offensive backfield coach Clarence (Ace.) Parker is End coach Hershel Caldwell is the junior varsity baseball tutor. Bobby Mount's i I A graduating from St. Mary's again outstanding thoueh he kirk- i Colle where he was an outstand- A 1 A 3 ed only once.

It was out of bounds on Leon's five-yard line in a real coffin corner boot. The Tornadoes played without the services of Jerry Stafford, Reid Moon and Dick Muter- spaug-h, all of whom were on the injured list, and their absence was felt, particularly on defense. Bay High has played much improved ball against each of the ing end on the '33, and Maryland and California. Southern Cal. Wins Over Oregon State PORTLAND, Ore.

Un- first four opponents it has faced beaten Southern California rolled this season. Let's look at the re- to its fifth victory of the season with a 28-6 decision over Oregon State. Oreson State proved unexpectedly tough in the line, and it was the" speed of the Southern California backs that brought the victory. AGGIES BEAT MISSOURI teams, Ed stayed on at his Alma Mater as line coach in '36 and '37. After holding other assistant positions at San Francisco, Navy and the professional San Francisco 49'ers, Erdlatz was named head coach at the Naval Academy in 1950.

BIG AND LITTLE GRIDDERS Spence's throw on Auburn's 46, twisted around three Auburn men, jerked free of two others and ran over the goal. Pepper Rodgers capped the run with a conversion, giving Tech a 7-0 halftime lead. During the first quarter Auburn pushed to Tech's 1-yard line and on another shove went to Tech's 17. Auburn continued to fade after intermission as the outgunned Tigers tired. Tech's Bill Teas, with his stove- shaped legs churning, scored on a wide left end run from the 6.

Three plays later Moorhead scored No. 2--this one going 41 yards after another interception. The game came to pieces in the UNIVERSITY. Miss. UP) --Left final quarter with two more Tech guard Knox Gary of Memphis is the lightest lineman on the Uni- scores.

Leon Hardenran slugged for 2 yards for one touchdown. versity of Mississippi football Rodgers, a third string quarter- Last year against Marianna. Bay squad. He weighs only 177 pounds. I back, passed 28 yards to end Dave High lost 20-0.

The season the Big Gary plays alongside the squad's Davis for the last score. Red beat the Bulldogs by the same i largest performer. 240 pound Rodgers converted three times. score. I Charles Morg-anti, the left missing the uprights on one try In 1951 against Albany.

the i tackle Both are junior lettermen i and getting another blocked by a Tornadoes were STILL WATER. Okla. --A wide-awake Oklahoma A. M. football team, stabbing to touchdowns in the first two quarters and stifling a fine Missouri pass- High by 13-7 and the Lions were ing game with a leak-proof de- swamped.

54-0. This year Albany won by only 27-0 with a much improved team. Last season Pensacola beat Bay High, 34-0. This year the Tieers won by 32-7 after being held to a 7-7 halftime deadlock. Last season Leon defeated Bav and play on oi'fense.

1 mass of Auburn men. Hamilton 26. Cortland Teachers 39. Ithica 6. i Montclair State Teachers 14, New Britain Teachers 0.

Villanova 28; Boston College 7. SOUTH Tennessee 20, Alabama 0. AVake Forest 9. North Carolina 7. West Virginia 31, Washington Lee 13.

Maryland 38. Navy 7. Duke 57. North Carolina State 0. Georgia Tech 33.

Auburn 0. George Washington 6. Virginia Tech 0. Florida A. M.

27, Morris Brown 7. Virginia 33. VMI 14. Centre 26, Southwestern (Tenn) 6. Louisiana Tech 22.

Northwestern (La) State 0. Vanderbilt 20, Florida 13. Mississippi 20. Tulane 14. Mississippi State 27.

Kentucky 14. Citadel 7: Furman 7 i Chattanooga. 23; Memphis State 6- Miami (Fla.) 41; Richmond 6- Tuskegee 59: Morehouse 7. Tennessee A and I 22; West Va. State 7.

Xavier 1 2 48: Alabama State 0. Stetson 6, Tampa 6 (tie). MIDWEST Minnesota 13. Illinois 7. Notre Dame 26, Purdue 14.

Michigan State 43, Syracuse 7. 42. Inwa 14. Ohio State 35. Washington State 7.

Oklahoma A 14, Missouri 7. Bradley 40. Wayne 21. Western Reserve 20. Washington University (St.

Louis) 16. Hiqh School Football Port St. Joe 26. Vernon 6. Flomaton (Ala) 33, Baker 0.

Perry 32, Quincy 7. Bay High 19, Leon (Tallahassee (tie). Blountstown 14. Carrabelle 12. 26.

Bristol 6. Monticello 25. -Jasper 0. Pensacola 7, Jackson a i 35. Walton (DeFuniak) 19, Bonifay 0.

Chipley 20. Marianna 13. Pensacola Catholic 26, Jay 0. Crestview 46, Century Milton 33, Pensacola High 0. Tate-UMS (Mobile).

Saturday ni.cht game. Frink. open date. Chapman (Apalachicola) 27, Sopchoppy 0. Chattahoochee 29, Florida Industrial (Marianna) 0.

Walnut Hill (Ernest ard) 7. Choc- tawhatchee (Shalimar) 6. Dothan A a 26. Anniston (Ala) 13. Crawfordville.

open date. Jacksonville Lee 13. Miami High 7. Darlington (Rome. a 12.

Bolles (Jacksonville, Fla.) 3PREE PRINCETON ON PRINCETON, N. J. A pair of long runs by Bill Tryon and Earl Byrne touched off a Princeton scoring spree to give the Tigers an easy 48 to 0 victory over outclassed Lafayette. October held to a tie night before last and fense. rolled to a 14 to 7 victory.

were glad to get even a Our next opponent. Perry, is brand new on the Bay Hisrh schedule but the Taylor County lads beat Quincy. 32-7, last weelc- end and should be hard to han- die. Bay Hijfh will probably so I into the jame as a seven-point i favorite. Bay High is a vastly improved ball club.

It should hit its peak I next season when the Tornadoes I will field an experienced team. Spartans Show Way College Behemoths Continue To Pile Up Football Triumphs By ED CORRIGAN NEW YORK. Oct. 18 behemoths of college football--almost without exception--continued to pile up victories today as )he campaign reached the halfway a for most Mighty Michigan State, the No. 1 team" in the Associated Press poll, led the parade with a 48-7 crunching of Syracuse, which had been regarded as one Of the better outfits in the East.

overwhelmed North Carolina State, 53-0. The Big Seven title was all but decided when Defending Champion Oklahoma whipped Kansas. 42-0, in a battle of the two leading teams of the loop. The way now appears clear few- the Sooners to wrap up the title again. Southern California and UCLA both of which have hopes of upsetting California for the Rose Bowl nomination, also came through as FLORSHEIM (Listen a Pr-ricola's Republic- Oil sportscast Monday through Friday at 7 p.m.

and his I Powell and Co. FootbaH Scorc- board Final Saturday at 10 p.m. Over station i i Leon Harrionr.m i the scrimiiip.be 1'2K times for a and 8 touchdowns at Grortiin Tech during: the 1951 pea- son. Not to be outdone, second-ranked expected. Seventh-ranked Southern Maryland clubbed Navy into its i Cal defeated Oregon State.

28-6, first defeat. 38-7. But California. third, and toward the Pacific Coast Conference title and a bid to the Rose made it close over Santa Clara. 27-7.

Georgia Tech and Duke, two of the leading Hehts in the South, both scored impressive shutouts as they roared toward their showdown i bashed A 38-0. while Duke and UCLA dumped Stanford, the defending Rose Bowl champion. 24-14. Upsets--as has been the custom this season--were few and far between. Notre Dame Purdue in a minor reversal.

26-14: Minnesota triumphed over Illinois. 13-7. and Tennessee beat Alabama. 20-0. The three results were un- i U-Wings The original louver window a tried and proven by over 600,000 installations in 15 years.

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H. A. Terms with no down payment. Out-of-Town calls welcome within 100 I I I I A I I FW iouvi WINDOW 1303 Beck Avenue, Panama City, Florida Phone 8454 (DIRECT FACTORY BRANCH OFFICE) meeting on Nov. 1.

The Engineers expected but hardly of. a startling i nature. In the Southwest Conference, a race that still is far up in the air. Texas showed considerable by submerging Arkansas, I 44-7. i Pitt slugged Army.

22-14. in the I top game in the East, while Penn continued its ride toward the Ivy I League title by thrashing Colum- i bia. 27-17. i i Other leading scores included: i East--Yale 13. CornellO: Penn State 10.

Nebraska 0: Harvard 21, Colgate 20: Princeton 48. Lafayette 0: Holy Cross 46. Brown 0: Dart- mouth "29. Rutgers 20: Quantico Marines 21. Fordham 8.

South--Wake Forest 9. North Caroline West Virginia 31. inston and Lee 13: Geroge a inaton 6. Virginia Tech 0: Vander- bill 'JO. Florida 13; Mississippi 20.

Tulane 14: Mississipp 37. 14: i i i a 33. i i i a i i a Institute 14. Midwest--Wisconsin 42. Iowa 13: Ohio State 35.

Washington State 7: Oklahoma A and 14. Missouri Bradley 40. Wayne 21. Southwest--Ter as Christian 7. Texas A and 7.

Far West--Utah 35. Denver 0: Idaho 54. North Dakota State 9. New Mexico 7. Wyoming 0: Colo- rado A jmd Montana 0.

i SPEEDY COLE'S KELL DRIVING SHOW Sunday, October 10th 2 P. M. Be sure to see Speedy Cole and his ''Hell Drivers" at the Fort vVa'ton Motor Speedway. Do the Wall Crashing, a Driving. a Ram.

House Crash. Ice Crash. Car Roil. Crash Dive. High Ski's.

Car Jump. There will be i and Spills and Cars Demolished. Speedy Cole and "Hell Drivers" tear them up. If nerves are bad and can't stand excitement--Don't. Come-Fort Walton Motor Speedway Fort Walton, Florida Included Trim and neater looking through.

More and more men arc wearing Florshrim Tips. First for the distinctive look of ihoir trimly tailored styling; second for the neatness in appearance thry always retain through the longer wear that Florsheim Quality pro- Perfect for the man who wants the latest well the finest. nr CLOTHING Inc. 213 Harrison Art. Ph.

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About Panama City News-Herald Archive

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