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The Huntsville Times from Huntsville, Alabama • 8

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THE UJtsvILL TIMES, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 1 19S4. Fat Gtgni SPORTS Navy Blasts Cadets; Greenies Upset L.S.U., 13 To 12 1 SPORTS Combs Ready To Go Again And Fooball Is Rough! 30,000 Watch Hueys Tigers Lose To Wave MONK SIMONS STAR Tech Stages I Fierce Fight But Loses 7-0 OUTPLAY BULLDOGS Dallas Cops Twin Victory To Open Year REGULARS WIN, 46-35 Cutter Kicks Goal Beating Army, 3 To 0 80,000 SEE BATTLE Sailors End West Pointers Domination On Muddy Field Outshines Abe Mickal In Great Duel At Baton Rouge Reserves Trounce Lincoln Quintet By Score Of 33-22 Georgia Scores Winning Touchdown In Last Few Minutes FRANKLIN FIELD, PHILADELPHIA Dec. 1 (fft The boom of Slade Cutters muddy boot slogging into football, like the crash of a battle cruiser broadside, signalled the end of Armys 13-year domination over Navy today as 0,000 rain-drenched partisans howled. By that boot a placement as dead on the bulls eye as any the Riant midshipman from Oswego, HI, ever will draw when he comes 1 to man the navys guns the sailors rocketed to a 3-to-0 triumph. It was the first time Army has crumpled under their fir since Baseball experts predicted that Earl Combs, Yankee outfielder, never again nnid play after he was seriously injured in crashing into a wall at St.

Louis last season in pursuit of a fly ball But Combe is back in condition again and expects to be in a Yankee uniform next spring. Here he is shown, at left, as he conversed with his boss, Joe McCarthy, at the minor league meeting in Louisville, Ky. FOOTBALL SCORES' Showing the same das and speed that carried them to a state championship last year, Dallas Y. M. C.

A.s cagerg opened their 1934-35 season Friday night by defeating Grove Oak of Sand mountain, 46 to 35. The reserves also started their season with a victory, trouncing Lincoln, 33 to 22. The visiting mountaineers held the locals on practically even terms until the last quarter, but a barrage of field goals soon turned it into runaway. Dallas rookies. Pinion and Snipes, stole the show in the opener, although the veterans Blount, Stone, Goodson and Fiske showed they were ready for a strenuous campaign.

Pinion, who replaced Goodson at forward, was all over the floor and was shooting goals from difficult angles, while Snipes was guarding like a real veteran, showing that he will be hard to keep off the starting lineup. Grove Oak held Dallas to an 11-8 score in the first quarter and was trailing, 22-to-19 at the half. At the beginning of the final stanza, Dallas was leading. 36 to 29. Hub Myhand used 10 men in the reserves victory, with Webb, Lackey, Allen and Daye showing up fine.

Dallas has four games this week. Tanner playing the regulars Wednesday night and the reserves meeting Monrovia. Both these games will be played at Dallas. On Friday night, the regular quintet meets Central M. C.

A and the girls play Monrovia's girls at Dallas. i By The Associated Press SOUTH Florida 14; Stetson 0. Georgia Georgia Tec ft. Duke St; North Carolina State ft Tulane 13; Louisiana State 12. Mississippi Mississippi State 8.

EAST Navy A ny ft Holy Cross Boston College t. Western Maryland 18; Georgetown 0. SANFORD FIELD, ATHENS, Dec. 1 MV-In the waning minutes of a bitterly fought gridiron battle, Georgia drove 56 yards for a touchdown today to conquer Georgia Tech. 7 to 0, in the 29th renewal of their annual football classic.

More than 14,000 boisterous fans witnessed the spectacular struggle, which saw the Yellow Jackets succumbed to their ninth successive enemy after one of the greatest exhibitions of the season. Georgia Tech throttled the Bulldog offensive throughout the first half and threatened to score twice only to lack the necessary driving power in the shadow of the goaL The winning touchdown was Georgia's only threat and the score came on a short pass over the center of the line by Maurice Green to Henry Wagnon, who leaped above two Golden Tornado players to snag the hall. The victory pass came on the fourth down after the gallant band of yellow shifted gridders had stopped two line plays and a pass from the five yard line. It was the fifth successive triumph for the Bulldogs, who turned what appeared to be a disastrous campaign into a good season, triumphing over Florida, Yale, North Carolina State and Auburn in their last engagements. This football classic ended the gridiron wars for both teams, and, although the Yellow Jackets dropped the decision after weakening near the end, there wag some consolation for the Tech supporters that the men of Bill Alexander played exceptionally well to check Georgias offensive from the start until rive minutes before the final whisle Techs line played superbly and to the backfield it was the fleet footed 135 pound back, Skippy Roberta, who performed brilliantly in running and passing, and Captain Jack Phillips, who bucked through for gains And helped the Jackets immensely with long punts.

Georgias touchdown parade started when Phillips kicked out of bounds on Georgias 44-yard line, On a sweep around end, Anderson got nine yards and Johnson made it first down on the 46. Green raced through tackle thro plays later for 16 yards and a first down on the Jacket 30. Johnson picked up nine and a few minutes later he cut through tackle 1ft yards to the flva yard stripe, when Green fired the winning forward pass to Wagnon who whipped around from end to snag the ball standing inces across the goal. If you think football Is a bone-crushing, nerve-jarring contest, just occapy a ringside seat at a hockey game some dull evening and witness a few scenes similar to those above. This knock-em-down, drag em-out action was snapped during a game between the New York Rangers and Detroit Redwings in Gotham.

Above the boys are enjoying a free-for-all party of fisticuffs, which came after a run-in between Lynn Patrick of the Rangers, and Ebbie Goodfellow of the Redwings. Below, Patrick, son of the Rangers manager, has just scored a goal. Redwing Goalie Smith is down on the ice. SOUTHWEST Bice Institute 32; Baylor 0. Southern Methodist 19; Texas Christian ft WEST Detroit Washington State ft Washington 14; Southern California 7.

Old Alabama Men To Play Pooley Hubert, Others To Take Part In Charity Game WASHINGTON. Dec. 1 (AV-Alabama football stars of other years will clash in a charity classic with an eleven from universities In Washington and environs next Saturday. The roster of the southern team comprises a virtual roll call of players for Bama in its three Rose Bowl games. Pooley Hubert, the driving power at the university ten years ago when it rose to football fame, will don a Crimson uniform and run the pigskin again to the cheers of a colorful capital football throng.

The lineup will include euch other familiar names as Hurry Cain, Holm, Hughes, Brasfield, Suther, Holley, Hupke, KimbreU, Leach, Dildy, Kirkland, Hewes, Jones and graduated stars from other Alabama colleges. Hank Crisp, athletic director at Alabama, will coach the invading team. Against such a formidable array will be pitted the best eleven that can be assembled from former players at Washingtons three major universities and from stars nearby. Jim Ptxlee, head coach at George Washington, is tutoring the local all-stars. Sporting circles predict a crowd of 15,000 for the game.

Interest in the charcity affair was brought to a high pitch by Alabamas fourth invitation to the Tournament of Roses. Three years ago Alabama sent its first all-star team to Washington; and In one afternoon played three 20-minute games, defeating Catholic University 7-0 and battling George Washington and Georgetown each to a scoreless tie. Howell Cops Scoring Lead Bama Back Piles Up 60 Points; Demyanovich Next The 1934 AU-America Football Team Second Team Positions Third Team James Moscrip, Stanford Lawrence Kelley, Yale James Steen, Syracuse Slade Cutter, Navy William Bevan, Minnesota Charles Mucha, Washington John J. Robinson, Notre Dame Franklin Meier, Nebraska Regis Monahan, Ohio State Kenneth Ormiston, Pittsburgh Joseph Ferrara, Columbia Charles Galbreath, Illinois Lester Borden, Fordham Joseph Brogdanski, Colgate Arleigh Williams, California Miller Munjas, Pittsburgh John J. Berwanger, Chicago Millard Howell, Alabama Izzy Weinstock, Pittsburgh Substitutions: Dallas: Pinion (6); Substitutions: Dallas, Primm (4), Daye (4), Allen (2), Burkett, Harris (3).

Lincoln, Curley. Referee, Buford. Howell Runs Up Big Score During College Career He Has Countered 155 Points BATON ROUGE. Deo. 1 By th thin margin of one point.

Huey Longs Louisiana Tigers were defeated by Tutanes Green Wave, 13 to 12. here today before a crowd of 30.000 in one of the most thrilling games ever played on Louisiana soil. If two teams ever were evenly matched these were the two. The great Tiger halfback, Abe Mickal, was pitted against the great Greenie halfback. Monk Simons to a duel of punts, passes and broken field runs.

The Green Wave had an advantage in that Mickal had a bad knee that probably account-ed tor his missing his two kicks for the extra point that lost the game. Mickal was taken off the field on a stretcher as his team mates were battling the charging Green Wave on L.S.U.s five yard line. A few minutes after he had gone, his arch opponent. Monk Slfiions charged over the Tiger line to a 43-yard run for the deciding touchdown. Huey Long, who had boasted that the Tigers could lick anything to football uniform, took the defeat with a grin.

They just beat us, thats all, he said as he walked across the. field and out of the grounds. He was clearly keenly disappointed. It was a great ball game with flashes of brilliancy that lifted the spectators to shouting frenzies. Win or lose both teams came out of the contest greater than they went in.

They played hard, clean football, and showed the spectators how the game can be played. Tulane broke the ice in the first quarter, when Tulane worked the ball to yie Tiger 27 yard line to an exchange of punts between Yates and Simons. Here Simons threw a pass to Hardy, Tulanee end, who raced over tor a touchdown. Barney Mitz kicked the extra point, the only one of the game and the winning point. In the second quarter each team really put on the heat.

Abe Mickal, who had sat on the bench in the first quarter, went in and his teammates rallied around him to drive the Greenies nearly off of their feet. Despite his injured knee, he kicked, blocked and carried the ball with marvelous daring, speed and flash. If Mickal had been fit and could have stayed in the game, there might have been a different story. In the second quarter, with the ball on the 23 yard line, Sijhons stepped back to kick. Tinsley, LSUs brilliant end, leaped into the air and blocked the kick, spinniug the ball into the air and into a group of Tiger and Greenie players.

Suddenly Seago, Tiger fullback, wheeled out of the heap and raced over tor LSUs first touchdown. Mickal missed the extra point from a placekick, making the score 7 to 6. The half ended with Tulane having the ball on the Tiger 20 yard line after a pass from Simons to Hardy. During the third quarter, each team ran into a flock of fumbles but the Tigers came through the mess with a decided advantage. Nearly the whole quarter was played In Tulane territory.

With the ball in mid-field, Mickal hurled a fast ball to his end, Barrett, who started for a touchdown but was thrown on the five yard line by a hard side tackle from Loftln. Mick-al, on a well blocked play, dashed through right tackle and scored for LSU standing up. His place kick went aside. A few minutes later, the Tigers almost made another touchdown but Sullivan, who was headed tor the goal, dropped the ball and didnt know it until he had gone several yards. Brownson recovered the ball and stopped the Tiger threat.

The spectators thought they had seen football in the first three quarters, but that was all shaded by the playing in the fourth. Here the teams rose to lofty heights, Twice each team stopped on the four-yard line in touchdown parades. Early in the quarter, Mickal miss, ed making first down by a foot on the tour yard line and a few minutes later Mintz failed the same way and the opposing teams got possession of the ball on downs and kicked out of danger. But the startling and brilliant play of the whole game came with only three minutes left to play. Yatew, Tiger back, punted from the tour-yard line to the Tiger 43 yard line.

His kick was received by Bucky Bryan, Tulanes fast and tricky halfback. He ran a few yards and as Tiger tacklers were about to throw him, he tossed a short lateral to Monk Simons, who gave an exhibition of perfect broken field running, tor 43 yards for a touchdown that won the game. Bob Simon, Tulane guard, missed the extra point With only two minutes left of the ball Fame, the Tlgens fought in desperation, hoped tor breaks and fumbled, but the Greenies played a foxy game. They hit the line, took no chances on passes or fancy plays and clung to defensive ball until time expired. On the fourth down, Monk Simons punted to the Tigers 25 yard line and the timekeepers whistle blew.

Camera Outpoints Victorio Campolo BUENOS AIRES, Dec 1 (IP) Prtmo Camera, giant Italian who formerly held the worlds heavyweight championship, outpointed Victorio Campolo, the Argentine fighter, who is only one size smaller, in a 12-round bout her today. Bama Lands Lee, Hutson On First AP Selection South Has Monopoly On Team Dixie Howell, Tides Great Back, Makes Second Eleven, Monk Simons On Third 1021. Twice since then. In 1923 I when neither could score, and in PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 1 HP) I Fred Buzz Berries, Navys All-ASnerica halfback, had his i good luck token with him today, despite complications, and eo all went well with the mid- shipmen.

Borries on a cruise with his class last summer bought a I small ebony Buddha statue in Gibraltar, and has carried it I with him ever since. He started i wearing it on a string around I his neck at the start of the football season. It worked I against everybody but Pitt. In the hustle and excitement of getting away from Annapolis, Borries forgot his Buddha. He was so worried a midshipman was dispatched back to the Acadamy to retrieve it.

It arrived in time. Buzz wore it around his neck, and Navy beat Army for the first tijne in 13 years. ItIHIIHimillllltllltUtlllllliltWWIIItllllliraUUillHIUlllM 1926, when 110,000 saw them struggle to a fantastic 21-21 tie in Chicago, there was no decision. The remainder of these great climaxes of the regular season all have been Armys. So it wag that the greatest throng since that 1926 duel, filling every nook and cranny of the huge Franklin Field horseshoe stands, rocked through their discomfiture in extra glee as Cutter, a magnificent right tackle, smashed his shot home from the 19-yard line almost the dose of the first period.

Navy Needs Boot AH the might of Cutter, of the All-America ball-carrying jack rabbit, Fred Buzz Borries, of the Fullback Bill Clark, a remarkable kicker, of every man Navy could heave in there in fact, was necessary to hold luckless Army on a battlefield that was a mess of slime. Army could do little in the morass with Texas Jack Buckler, Cadet counterpart of the irrepressible Borries, helpless in the first half, and not even able to play in the second, due to a leg injury he has suffered most of the season. What opportunities Army did have. Navy gave. Once in the third quarter, when Borries tossed the sticky hall In the only sailor attempt at a forward pass, Maurice Simons, the big gun in Army's attack as Bucklers replacement, intercepted the heave and came back 15 yards to the sailors 35.

Final Hope Dies The Army surge carried over into the fourth quarter, but it died on Navys 22, as Bill Clark, a heroic figure in the mud-plastered setting, dragged down Simons pass one of five Army attempted The Cadets had three intercepted, one incomplete, and one complete for a hare one-yard gain. Clark made the interception on Navys 15, and blasted West Points best scoring chance. Burly 202-pound Carl Miller, Armys left tackle, gave the storm-tossed Cadets a final thrill after i Clark had kicked Navy out of that hole with a boot that sailed from I his own 19-yard scrimmage line all I the way over Simons head to I Armys 12, 69 yards in all, A few plays later, Miller smash-I ed through on Clark as the kicker I was trying to hit the coffin corner. He had done it earlier, leading ap to Navys score in the first period. Miller smothered the ball, picked It up on his own 40, and got to Navy's 46 before Borries, who was everywhere, dragged him down I from behind.

Chuck Meyer, sub- atitute for Simons, promptly fumbled the ball away on Navys 43. Clark grabbed it and Army was done for the day. Navy made only three first downs, and gained 109 yards from scrimmage. Army made two first downs and picked up only 70 yards running. The condition of the playing field, applying to all but Borries, accounted for that.

But to Borries, named today an All-America back on The Assocl- ateil Press first eleven, it meant nothing more than have all the other tremendous odds be has faced all season a8 the Midshipmen walloped Columbia, Penn and Notre Dame in major victories up to today, losing only to the crush' tog power ef Pitt Borries, who gained 81 of Navy's 109 yards, and Clark set the scene for Cotter's perfect smash, the Joorth he hae kicked In four attempts this season against Maryland. Notr Dame and today. Army. Borries whirled off a 32-yard run around hie own right end tongeat run from rorimmage. on tha second play of the game, to set Army definitely on tha defensive.

In the kicking due) that fallow ad, Clark steadily out punted Buck Series Swept By Johnston Williamson, Schiff-man Hold Tie For League Leadership Game Is Won By Ole Miss Defeat Turned Into Victory In Last Five Minutes MONTGOMERY, Dec. 1 (A) Dixie Howell, the Crimson Tides great halfback, crossed the goal lines of Howard, Clemson, Sewa-I nee, Georgia, Georgia Tech and Vanderbilt to garner 60 points and win high scoring honors of Alabama's big five for the 1934 season. The brilliant Howell, who may increase his scoring total against Stanford in the Tournament of Roses game, scored once on Howard and Clemson, and twice on Sewanee, Georgia, Tech and Vandy but went scoreless against Mississippi State, Tennessee and Kentucky. Three touchdowns away, with a total of 42 points, came Joe Demyanovich, the Tides line-driving fullback, to win second honors by a single point from Riley Smith, Alabamas quarterback. But Smith scampered away with goal kicking honors, booting 23 points during the season win comfortably from Davis, Birming-ham-Southerns great end, who kicked 15 extra points and scored four touchdowns to win fourth honors among the high scorers with 39 points.

Davis led the linesmen in scoring honors, his 39 points standing above his wing-mate, Haygood, who scored 35 points, Hutson of Alar bama with 32, and Snell, Howard's brilliant end, with 31. Other high scorers among the states five colleges were Boozer of Alabama 36, Teel of Birmingham-Southern 31, Angelich of Alabama 30, McKay of Southern 25, Riley of Alabama 18, Karam of Auburn 18, Morris of Auburn 18, Penrod of Howard 17, and Traynor of Spring Hill 14. Alabama ran away with team scoring honors, piling up 287 points to nine games, against Birmingham-Southern 143, Howard 89, Auburn 58, and Spring Hill 41. Johnston, setting the scoring pace himself, led his team to a clean sweep of the series against Pope-joys outfit at the Central Y. M.

C. A Friday night Johnstons average was 185 and his highest single score 193. This match was the last of the week, which saw Schiffman and Williamsons teams, both of which were idle during the period, retain their tie for the league leadership. Scores in Friday nights match follows: Johnstons Team By ALAN GOULD (Associated Press Sports Editor) NEW YORK, Dec. 1 M) As seemingly befits the performances of the three outstanding undefeated college football teams of the 1934 season, the individual stars of Minnesota, Alabama and Stanford capture the major portion of all-America honors awarded today in the tenth annual Associated Press consensus selections.

Each of these tremendously powerful aggregations, dominant, in their own gridiron bailiwicks, gains two places on the all-star eleven. The remaining five positions go to individual heroes of North Carolina, Rice Institute, Texas Christian, Pittsburgh and the Naval Academy after one of the keenest battles ever waged for membership on the football roll of honor. Despite Minnesota's clear-cut ranking as the nations No. i college team, by an overwhelming vote of the experts and a substantial preponderance of evidence, sectional honors pass from the Mid-dlewest to the South, which combines the rugged Southwest sector to land a leading share of all-time to history. The first eleven includes three from the Old South, besides two from the Texas area and two each from the East, the Middlewest.

and the Pacific Coast. UNIVERSITY, Dec. 1 Millard Dixie" Howell has engaged in 24 contests as a member of the mighty Crimson Tide. His first game wag against the Ole Miss team in 1932. He has tallied In the Tides favor the sum total of 155 points.

This gives Dixie an average of one touchdown per game throughout hig career. Howell has carried the ball 303 times, to gain a total yardage of 1964. This gives him an average of 6.5 yards every time he carried the ball. Dixie has been the leading passer of the South, with a record of having fired the ball into the air 135 times, to complete 61 for a gain of 833 yards. This is just three short of having completed one-half of all his passes.

The average of the completed passes is 13.6 yards per completed heave. Howell boasts a record in punting that will be hard to match. He has kicked the ball 136 times for a distance of 5824 yards. This is an average of 42.6 yards per kick or a distance of a little over three miles. The longest run made by Howell was in the Vanderbilt game in 1932 when he intercepted a pass and ran 84 yards tor a touchdown.

The longest punt on his record is the kick against Tennessee last year tor 89 yards. The longest pass which he has had completed is the 40-yard heave to Hutson in the Georgia Tech game this year. Howell has played in but two losing contests, Georgia Tech and Fordham; in one tie, Ole Miss, in 1933, and has come off the field victorious in 20 games. Dixie weighs 163 pounds, is five feet and 9 inches tall and is 24 years old. He will receive his degree from the College of Arts and Science this year at the university.

Coach Frank Thomas, Alabama mentor who developed Howell compares him to Gipp, immortal of Notre Dame. JACKSON, Dec. 1 Turning apparent defeat into victory in the last five minutes of play, the University of Mississippi scored a 7-to-3 victory over its ancient rival, Mississippi Stale, before a crowd of 10,000 fans here this afternoon. Trailing 3 to 0 with only a few Jninutes remaining in the final quarter, Ole Miss launched an inspired drive that swept over the Maroon defense to a well-deserved touchdown. With the victory.

Ole Miss re tained possession of the "golden egg, annual football trophy awarded to the winner of the state's featured gridiron clash, and continued supremacy In state gridiron circles. The battle had been on even terms until the final quarter when Mississippi State opened an attack that carried the ball deep into Mis sjsslppi territory. Unable to penetrate the Ole Miss line when a sustained attack meant a touchdown. Captain Jess Haley dropped back on the Ole Miss 35 yard Une and booted a perfect one through the uprights to send his team out in front 3 to 0. The tally seemed to set the Ole Miss gridders afire and they took the kickoff on a sustained drive down the field for a touchdown In the dying minutes of the game, with Hutson and Rodgers lugging the ball, Rodgers going over for the score from the five yard line in one last desperate charge.

Duke Hands State Its Worst Defeat Grown Squirrel Found In Rattler By Cullman Trio CULLMAN, Dec. 1 Three Cullman county hunters went squirrel hunting in the Alabama national forest recently, killed a five-foot rattlesnake and in the snake found a full grown gray squirrel. Dr. T. A.

Robinson, T. J. Vogle and Clarence egg, all of Cullman, had bagged 14 squirrels when their dogs started barking at the snake. After dispatching the rattler, which had 11 rattles, the hunters noticed a bulge in the snake and cutting it open, found their 15th squirrel. DURHAM, N.

Dec. 1 HP) Showing a flashing and powerful attack, Duke University closed its 1934 football season in brilliant style today by trouncing N. C. States Wolfpack, 32 to 0, in a Southern conference game. Some 8,500 persons watched Coach Wallace Wade use 25 men, including a starting team of eleven second-stringers, to hand Hunk Andersons eleven the worst defeat a Duke team ever gave the State team.

Rison Cage Teams Face Four Scraps Risons basketball teams will be busy this week, playing tour games at Dallas. The first cage attraction will be staged Tuesday afternoon when the junior and senior girls meet a couple of teams from Riverton. Monrovias boys and girls will meet Rison at Dallas Friday afternoon. Both bills are scheduled to begin at 3 o'clock. Gators Have Hard Time Winning 14-0 GAINESVILLE, Fla, Dec.

1 (fPy Florida found unexpected opposition In the alert Stetson Hatter today, but scored two touchdowns, one on a break, tp end the season with a 14-to-0 victory. Stetson resorted to a batch of trick playx, none of which worked. One, in which three backs bandied the ball before Gannerelll let go a forward, resultad in the Gators second touchdown as Alton Brown grabbed the hall and ran 3ft yards over the goal line. Navy (3) Rodnin Lambert Burnt CO Robertahaw Morrell Cutter Mandelkorn Doug Nott Stars As Detroit Wins Head Re-Signed As Smoky Pilot KNOXVILLE, Dec. 1 MV-Lee Head, manager of the Knoxville Smokies laet season, today was re-eigned tor the 1935 season, Edgar Allen, club secretary, announced.

Head will be playing hU third season with Knoxville. The catcher, who led other Smokies In the rune-batted-ln column, signed a one-year contract. The manager came to Knoxville from his Alabama farm to discuss the new contract and he Immediately signed. Head said he was highly pleased" with tha hook-up with Boston Red Sox, and believes tbe Smokies should go places" in the 1935 race. Central Team Will Play Friday The first game of the season for the mens independent team at the Central Y.

M. C. A. will be played on the Dallas court next Friday night. Players expected to take part In the contest Include John McDonald, Eugene Seymour, Red Law-son, Robert Warden, BUI Cummings, Ukovitch, Bob Hopper and Oliver Johnson.

Rice Takes Title With 32-0 Victory WACO. Texas, Dee. 1 (ff) Coach Jimmy Kitts Rice Institute Owls won the 19th annual Southwest conference football championship today by smothering Baylor university, 32 to 0. Th Owls paraded five touchdowns over a bewildered Baylor team that threatened only once, and that late in the fourth period. 8ome 8,000 persons saw the blue and white warriors trot off the field as champions, led by Bill Wallace, All-America halfback, and John McCauley.

all-Southwaat conference quarterback. MOROLINE SHOW WHIli Pi THOliUM HUY DETROIT, Dec. 1 MV-Closing his collegiate grid career to brilliant style, Doug Nott led toe University of Detroit Titans to. a 6-tofl inter-sectional victory ove'r the Cougars of Washington Stat here today as 6,000 fans shivered The blood of fists and turtles contains nearly three times as much phosphorus as trait of the higher mammals. Pratt Borries King Clark When a dollar may mean anything at all or nothing an egg is always an egg.

Raquel Torres movie star. a I am not afraid of my record. Mr. Gloria Vanderbilt 5 ommuonn Mmm fQMMifFiv j9 nr I T. I The male and female albatross take turns sitting on the eggs to hatch their brood.

A.

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About The Huntsville Times Archive

Pages Available:
236,850
Years Available:
1910-1963