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The High Point Enterprise from High Point, North Carolina • Page 29

Location:
High Point, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
29
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

USC Tops ovc By 26-6 LOS ANGELES (AP)-Southern California's Trojans crushed UCLA 26-6 Saturday with a football attack that was equally devastating on the ground and in the air. It was each team's Big Six Conference finale. The favored Trojans scored in each of the four quarters. The honors were divided between halfbacks Willie Brown, Mike Garrett and Ron Heller as quar- THE YARDSTICK First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passts Passes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized UCLA 16 76 238 15-30 1 3-35 1 28 UK 26 322 208 19-2? 2 1-38 0 46 terback Pete Beathard directed a perfectly executed game. A crowd of 82,460, the largest college gathering of the year in Los Angeles, sat under summery skies to view this annual crosstown struggle.

Beathard sent Southern Cal into a 13-0 lead in the first half on a six-yard touchdown strike to Hal Bedsole and a two-yard plunge he made himself. The UCLA Bruins pulled to a 13-6 threatening position in the third quarter as they sailed 85 yards--53 of them on a pass from Larry Zeno to Kurt Altenberg with Zeno scoring from the three. But the Trojans promptly re- attacked on the dynamic running of Garrett. He uncorked one run of 46 and accounted for 62 of the 68-yard ground attack and left it to Brown to smash for the final two yards. Southern Cal swept 80 yards in 10 plays for its final touchdown in the fourth quarter.

Rich McMahon drove the final yard. By this time Coach John McKay had emptied his bench and the seniors--among them Beathard, Brown, linebacker Damon Bame and Bedsole--were given a rousing sendoff as McKay sent them to the dressing room. 0 0 6 0 6 7 6 7 6-26 from Beathard UCLA USC USC--Bedsole 6 pass (Brownell kick) USC--Beathard 2 run (kick failed) UCLA--Zeno 3 run (kick failed) USC--Brown 2 run (Brownell klffc) USC--McMahon 1 run (run failed) Attendance 82,460. Purdue Tights 7 To 21-15 Win BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Purdue won the Old Oaken Bucket football trophy by beating Indiana 21-15 Saturday in a game that ended with squads fighting in midfield.

Ron DiGravio, Purdue's all- Big Ten quarterback, threw his third touchdown pass of the game with less than three minutes to play, just 23 seconds after Indiana had gone ahead on a two-point conversion. A couple of fleet sophomore THE YARDSTICK First down Rushing yardage i Passing yardage Passes PUftDUl INDIANA halfbacks helped UiGravio. Randy Minniear caught the Purdue quarterback's first and last scoring passes, and Gordon Fumbles lost Yards penalized 14 18? 10-M 3-35 3 21 1M 14-25 1 1 45 Teter took the second one. Teter set up Purdue's winning urdue touchdown by running back diana touchdowns, OD runs of eight and nine yards, and his two-point conversion pass to Trent Walters gave the Hoosiers their brief lead. It wasn't clear what started the fight at the end.

But it was a not uncommon finish to the intrastate rivals' big game. 7 7 0 7-21 0 7 0 8--19 I Pur Minniear 55 pass from DiGravio sickoff 68 yards to the Indiana (Hogen kick) Ind--Badar 8 run (Nowatzke kick) Pur--Teter 2 pass from'DiGravio (Hogan kick) Inti--Badar run (waiter pass from Badar) Pur Minniear 25 pass from DiGravio (Hogan kick) Attendance 33,987. 25 after the Hoosiers took their late lead. DiGravio threw a strike to Minniear on the next play. Rich Badar scored both In- Missouri Win Over Kansas VPI Drops Richmond Club 77-53 BLACKSBURG, Va.

(AP) Hot-shooting Virginia Tech spw away to 21 point half time leac Saturday night and went on to an easy 77-53 Southern Conference basketball victory over Richmond in the season opener for both teams. Barry Benfield and sophomore Paul Long paced the early assault that sent the Techmen into a 44-23 advantage ai the intermission. Benfield, high scor er for Tech with 15 points, scored 13 in the first half. Long had all his 10 points in that spsn. High Point Enterpritt, Sunday, 1, 19(3 LAWRENCE, Kan.

(AP) Missouri combined a 22-yard field goal by Bill Leistritz with and a 102-yard run by Vince Turner with a recovered fumSls for a 9-7 victory over arch-rival Kansas Saturday. The winning field goal came after Missouri's only sustained drive of the game, 77 yards in 17 ground plays, to the Kansas five. Turner's run stunned the record Kansas crowd of 45,000 in the first period. Kansas had moved 74 yards on the ground to the Tiger two-yard line. Fullback Ken Coleman was hit at the one, the ball squirted into the end zone.

Turner picked it off and had a clear field for his 102-yard jaunt. Kansas struck back in the second period after fleet halfback Gale Sayers grounded Tony Leiker's 67-yard quick kick at the Missouri one. The Tigers punted out to their 44 but Kansas drove in to'score in 10 plays, Steve Renko plunging from the one. Gary Duff's kick put Kansas ahead 7-6. Missouri made only one first down in the first half.

Gary Lane, Tiger quarterback, who leads the Big Eight in total offense, played most of the second quarter and all of the last half on offense. He had spent a week in the student clinic with tonsilitis. Sayers was held to 68 net yards in 13 trips by the tough Mizzou defense. But he reached 2,042 yards rushing for his career--917 this season--and became the first back in Big Eight history to reach the 2,000 mark in his junior year. TITLE (FROM PAGE 1C) their games at home, against Philadelphia and Dallas, while Cleveland closes on the road, against Detroit and Washington.

Cleveland fullback Brown rushed for 154 yards the last time out against the Cardinals and now needs only JO yards to break his uwn league rushing record. i Tittie, too, is within sight ofi a record, Bobby Layne's career mark of 196 touchdown passes. The old Bald who needs only one to tie it, two break it, threw four the last time the Giants played the Cowboys, winning that one 37-21. little is four short of his own league mark of 33 touchdown passes in a season. The game is New York's last on the road, and the Giants must keep on winning to stay in the running.

TVy close at home against Washington and tough Pittsburgh. Eddie LeBarcn did most of the quarterbacking in the earlier Dallas loss to New York, but Don Meredith has taken over since. He's been getting a good running attacK from Amos Marsh and Don Perkins. Chicago is expected to retreat 0 7 0 0 7 Missouri Kansas Mo--Turner 102 run with recovered fumble (kick failed) Kan--Renko 1 run (Duff kick) Mo--FG Leistritz 22. Attendance 45,000.

behind its best m-tne-league dp- UHVERFERTH STARS Ohio St. Holds Off Michigan 14-10 ANN ARBOR Mich (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 watched ss Unverferth rolled around left end for the come- from-behind touchdown midway in the final quarter. The Ohio State quarterback broke with tradition in this tradition-filled Big Ten battle when he passed to Paul Warfield for 35 yards and the first OSU touchdown. It came with 41 seconds remaining in the first half.

Michigan had held a 10-0 lead up until the long Unverferth pass. With time running out, Michigan marched to the OSU seven But a fourth down pass into the end fell out of the hands of halfback Dick Rindfuss. However, Holy Cross Defense Aids 9-0 Win WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) Holy Cross overcame the odds, a chill capricious wind and one of the nation's top offensive stars Saturday and upset Boston College 9-0. The Crusaders, two-touchdown underdogs, parlayed a first period safety, a fourth period touchdown and a superb line into the victory.

Jim Marcellino scored touchdown, going over from the three after sparking Holy Cross' solitary offensive splurge of the gray, cold afternoon. But it was the Crusader line, anchored by All-East center Jon Morris, that spelled the differ- THE YARDSTICK First downs OHIO STATE MICHIGAN Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized 17 192 105 5-13 1 5-35 1 29 188 35 7-1 1 5-32 0 30 OSU couldn't move and punted. Michigan tried to pull the game out of the fire with sideline passes, but an Ohio State interception saved the game. The normally ground-minded Buckeyes tried 14 passes and completed seven for 105 yards while Michigan, more of a passing team before Saturday, threw 13 times, completed five and gained only 35 yards. Michigan opened the scoring with less than four minutes gone in the game when Bob Timberlake booted a 28-yard field goal.

Jack Clancy had recovered a fumble by Matt Snell on the OSU 27 on the second play from scrimmage to set up the score. The Wolverines marched 63 yards in 10 plays at the start of second quarter with Rindfuss leaping in from two yards out to cap the march. Ohio State threatened just before going in for its first half touchdown when it marched toj. Field Goal Good For Stanford Win STANFORD, Calif. (AP) Braden Beck booted a sensational 48-yard fourth quarter field goal that put Stanford ahead and the Indians swarmed to a 28-17 triumph over California Saturday.

The big game crowd of 82,000 saw Beck, a junior end, kick two other long field goals nnd Steve Thurlow add two Stanford touchdowns. California a rolled to a 17 9 lead on two touchdowns within three minutes of the third period before Stanford's running game exploded for the victory. With 11:18 to play, the Bears still led 17-15 and Stanford had a fourth down at Cal's 31. The crowd mumbled in disbelief when Beck set down his kicking tee even though he had kicked a 36-yarder in the first period. But his boot from an angle slightly to the right sailed squarely through the uprights.

Just for good measure, he added a 46-yarder for Stanford's final points. Coaches Herb Hipps (left) and Joe Hipps (right) of High Point Central High School watch as Charlie Harville presents the annual Moose Lodge Blocking Trophy to guard Larry Culler. Also watching is Mrs. Evelyn Culler, Larry's mother. The award goes each TOP BLACK BISON BLOCKER year to the boy selected as the best blocker on the Black Bison football squad.

Harville, local television sports announcer, was the chief speaker for the banquet held at the Moose Lodge on Winston Road. (Staff Photo by Dick Swalm) al sto Hand, Tart Unanimous Picks Makes Bid In Davis MELBOURNE (API-- Dennis Ralston made a strong bid for a singles berth in the Davis Cup challenge round by demolishing promising young Australian Owen Davidson Saturday in a third round match of the Victorian Tennis Championships. Ralston polished off Davidson, seeded No. 7 among the Aus- Callfornia itanford CAL--FG Blanchfield 37 itan- Saln 3 0 0--17 0 3 12 13--23 Beck 36 -Thurlow 5 run (run failed) Cal--Blakeney 7 run (Blanchfield kick) Cal--Blanchfield 69 punt return (Blanchfield kick) Stan--Babajian 1 run (run failed) Stan--FB Beck 48 Stan--Thurlow 5 run (Beck kick) Stan--FG Beck Attendance 82,000. fense in the Bears' attempt to retain their Western lead.

The defense set up all the scoring in an earlier 28-7 victory over Minnesota. The Bears have games with San Francisco and Detroit remaining. Pittsburgh is just one game out in the East and one of the reasons the Steelers trail is a 21-21 tie with Philadelphia earlier when Lou Michael's potential game-winning conversion hit an upright. Los Angeles has won four of its last six games, including a 28-21 affair over the 49ers. The Rams are a solid favorite to do it again.

The Baltimore-Washington gama is the 12th inter- conference game of the season with the East leading 6-4-J. It figures to be a passing duel between the Coils' Johnny Unitas and the Redskins' Norm Snead. sies, in little more than an hour, 6-1, 6-3, 6-1, and moved into the quarter-finals. The near-perfect performance of the Bakersfield, player boosted his chances for the second singles spot on the American team that will meet defending champion Australia for the Davis Cup at Adelaide, Dec. 26-28.

Chuck McKiniey, the Wimbledon champion trom St. Ann, who has been sidelined by back trouble, will play No. 1 singles. Frank Froehling of Miami, another ailing member of the American cup team, was eliminated in a second- round match by local club player Paul Hearnden. In a match frequently halted by rain, Hearnden won in more than three hours, 6-4, 6-2, 7-9, 9-7.

Florida Bang FSU 7-0 GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)Larry Dupree powered Florida to a 7-0 victory over Florida State Saturday in another thril- er typical of their football rivalry. Florida missed scoring oppor- THE YARDSTICK FSU FLORIDA lrst downs 12 1' iushlng yardage 125 205 Passing yardage 76 50 Passes 7-13 5-9 'asses Intercepted I 'unts -1-37 3-36 umbles lost 2 Yards penallezd SI 40 reached the Florida five in the final period. But sophomore quarterback Ed Pritchett's inexperience showed in each case. The first time, as he was tackled he threw and Hagood Clarke intercepted for Florida On the other FSU drive, Pritchett was rushed and threw two incomplete passes which turned the ball over to Florida.

Florida State 0 0 0 0--0 Florida 0 7 0 0--7 Fla-- Dupree 2 run (Hall kick) i For All-Carolinas Squad WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. Beightol of Catawba of Elon and Bill Mc- Larry Hand, a of Lenoir Devitt of Catawba. outstanding tackle, and Willie Tart, a steady, all-around backfield star for Elon, are unanimous choices for the 1963 All- Carolinas Conference football team as selected by conference' coaches. The two led balloting among the seven coaches for the 11- man first team selection, according to results of voting announced today by Conference Commissioner H. C.

(Joby) Hawn. Appalachian, Catawba, Elon and Newberry each place two men on the first team, with Guilford, Lenoir Rhyne and Western Carolina contributing one player each. Catawba and Elon gain three berths on the second team, Appalachian and Lenoir Rhyne two each and Western Carolina one. Other first team backs are Tom Gorman of Brian Applefield of Catawba and Jimmy Williams of Guilford. Ends are Fred Haley of Newberry and Bucky Pope of Catawba.

Tackles are Hand and Frank Stankunas of Western Guards are Greg Van Orden of Appalachian and Cameron Little of Elon. Howard 1 Barnhardt of Lenoir Rhyne is the center. Named as second team selec- itions are: ends--Larry Harbin of Appalachian and Dan Kelly i of Elon; tackles--Gene Appier of Catawba and Larry Crutch-1 field of Appalachian; guards Rhyne; center--Tommy Mitchell of Elon; backs--Ken Sanford of Western a i a Craig Wardlaw of Lenoir Rhyne, Ed Applefield and Williams are sophomores, Hand is a junior and the other eight members of the first team are seniors. BETTER with Martin Marietta Ready-Mixed HOUSE PAINT Gives you BEAUTY PROTECTION ECONOMY This attractive, long-lasting finish protects against weather, sun, rain and snow--won't blister, peel or crack. It saves needless repair bills, and adda to the value of your home.

MARIETTA PAINT STORES the Michigan six. Unverferth passed to Warfieid in the left corner of the end zone on fourth down, but the Buckeye halfback dropped the ball. Ohio State 0 7 0 7--14 0 0 3 7--10 ence. The Holy Cross defense muffled Eagle quarterback Jack Concannon, the first draft choice of the Boston Patriots of the American Football League just before game time. He was able to complete only one pass va Academy, in the first half and ended up Michigan Mich--FG Timberlake 58 Mich--Rindfuss 2 run (Timberlake kick) OSU--Warfletd 35 pass from Unverferth (Van Raaphorst lineioSU--Unverferth 5 run (VanRaaphorst kirk) Attendance 36,424.

the Stauboch Way Down Among AFL Draftees NEW YORK (AP) Roger Staubach, Navy's Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback, was a 16th-round future pick by Kansas City in the American Football League draft Saturday. Staubach is a junior, but eligible for the draft because he was a junior college performer at New Mexico Military Insti-j tute prior to going to the Na- San Jose St. Wins 32-20 SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)-Senior quarterback Rand Carter, passing for 20 points, led San Jose State to a 32-20 football victory Saturday over University of the Pacific before 6,000 in Spartan Stadium. On the second play, after a bugler sounded taps in memory of President Kennedy, Carter threw a screen pass "to speedster Wait Roberts, who went 83 yards for the first SJS touchdown.

in every quarter, but Dupree's scampers and a fake field goal run by Jimmy Hall' gave the Gators a touchdown early in the second quarter that'' held up. I Dupree ran for 131 yards and figured in all of Florida's six drives deep into FSU territory. Fumbles and an intercepted pass thwarted Gator threats, along with a tough goal line defense by the Seminoles. Florid'a State threatened twice, once in each half, and VJ frorrssionai Lire insurance Service Pacific San Jose State SJS-Roberts 83 pass 0 8 4--20 8 8 0 14--32 trom Carter (Robert! pass from Carter) UOP--Machado 34 Intercepted pass (Ford ptss from Strain) SJS--Colletto 5 pass from (Owens pass from Carter) '--Strain I run (pass failed) -Engel 1 piungt '-Ytm Carter) SJS--Bonds 38 Intercepted past (Kellogg pass from Carter) UOP--Del Nero 34 Intercepted pass (pass failed) Attendance 6,000. with six completions for the day Boston College Holy Cross 0 0 0 0--0 2 0 0 HC--Safely ball went out of end lone HC-Marctlllno 3 run (McCarvilU kick) Attendance 25,000.

Staubach is committeed to three years of Navy service after leaving the Academy before he can consider pro foot- FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS High Point's Leidinc Florist GRACE FLOWER SHOP Phoact tt S-UW and tt GEORGE P. CLARK, C.L.U. NEW ENGLAND LIFE fo help you plan row for the years ahead Founder of Mutual In America In I8JS N. Main St. PHONE 882-1816 All Weather 1645 English Rd.

High Point Phone 88 2-9327 1217 E. Wendover Greensboro Phone 858 W. Fourth St. Winston-Salem Phone PA 4-1414 COATS For Juniors, Preps and Men 142 Church St. rig "For The Best In Mens Wear" Phone 88 8-4078 136 N.

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About The High Point Enterprise Archive

Pages Available:
148,309
Years Available:
1906-1977