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The Selma Times-Journal from Selma, Alabama • 12

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Selma, Alabama
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12
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THI SClMA IM IS-JOURNAL SUNDAY, OCTOBER, 30, IfSS ar Eagles (He Miss Rebels Bantam Bowl Games Won Saturday Night By All-Star Groups Defeat Stnbbun LSU Boys, 29- VarideiW Long Rons Net Winner In 34-7 Contest i v' Hudson Goes 94 Yards For One Touchdown Newton Has lif icent Day For Homecoming Green WaYe Smothers Offensive Chance By JAMES SAGGUE NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 29 OB Magnificent Gene Newton threw two touchdown passes today in guiding sizzling Tulane to a 27-13 upset victory over Auburn, the nation's eighth ranked football power, Newton kept Tulane spirits soaring and bis fired-up mates allowed Auburn to cross mid field only once before the final period. He got Tulane off to a running start late in the opening quarter with inilfc a Last period all-star teams spelled defeat for the Midget Football League titUsts, the Green Wave, and the Flyweight Football League champions, the Fighting Irish her Saturday night when tome 500 estimated fans watched two exciting Bantam Bowl contests between these two outstanding young football teams and the other teams to the league. The AU-stafs defeated the Fighting Irish 19-13, while the All-stars to the Midget League won over the Green Wave, 6-0. The contests were staged by the Selma Quarterback Club, assisted by the City Recreation Department and the Selma YMCA, the proceeds to go to the Scholarship Fund, set up by the Quarterback Club for Parrish High.

The Flyweight all-stars made it Tarheels Absorb Worst Defeat In Ten Years, 48-7 Vols Go Berserk For Offensive Romp By REESE HART CHAPEL HILL. N.C., Oct. 29 18-A hoard of hard running Tennessee backs cut North Carolinas defenses to shreds today as the rapidly improving Volunteers handed the Tar Heels th4ir worst football defeat in 10 years, 48-7. A crowd of 18,000, including 58 bands, saw the Volunteers completely outclass North Carolina to win their fourth straight aftei early season losses to Mississippi State and Duke. It was North Carolinas fifth loss against one win.

The defeat was the worst Tennessee has handed the Tar Heels to their 24 game series which began to 1893. Tailbacks John Majors, bobby Gordon, and A1 Carter led a host of backs that piled up tremendous yardage In the lopsided win. Majors scored twice in the first period as thJ touchdown dikes burst. Tennessee added two more touchdowns in the second period, another in the third and closed out with two in the fourth. North Carolina scored in the closing minutes when quarterback Dave Reed sneaked over from the 2 foot line.

Tennesee 14 13 7 14 48 North Carolina 0 0 0 7 7 Tennessee scoring Touchdowns: Majors (5, plunge; 15, run); Herl-brun (1, plunge); Anderson (51, pass play from Gordon); William (21, picked up blocked punt) Glas-cott (1 foot plunge); Hutcheson 7 yard pass from Gordon). Conversions: Priest 4, Cantrell 1. Williams 1. North Carolina scoring Touchdowns: Reed 2 foot, plunge). Conversion: Keller.

College Scores IF THE FISH ARE BITING its time te fish no matter hew cold the weather is Shanny Buxton, left, and Arthur W. Moseley believe. And the whopping strings of blue gill bream they are proudly displaying Indicate they know what the score Is. Buxton and Moseley, employed at the local ABC store and a party of other fishermen braved the seasons coldest day on Wednesday te make the big catch In the Tombigbee River backwater near Demopolls. thafr sight over file Fighting Irish when the Bulldogs tallied twice to the second period and the Wildcats added the winning touchdown to the third and final quarter.

In the first quarter the Fighting Irish tangled with the Crimson Tide and both found the going tough with the period ending to a scoreless tie. Charlie Morris scored on a 15-yard romp for the Fighting Irish against the Bulldogs, added the extra point and then electrified the crowd with a 85 yard kickoff return against 4he Wildcats. Billy Johnson scored the first Bulldog touchdown a 25 yard run and Charlie Goodson scored the extra point The second Bulldog score came on a one yard plunge by Goodson. George Fletcher tallied for the Wildcats on a 40-yard dash. Standouts for the Fighting Irish were Charlie Morris, Leslie Lilien-thal and Charlie Worrell; turning to good games for the Bulldogs were Joe Solomon, George Blanton, Jim Voltz, Charlie Goodson and Billy Johnson.

Johnnie Norton, George Fletcher, Sterling Rainer and Mike Bailey were outstanding for the Wildcats. Score by Periods: Irish 0 7 6 12 All-stars 0 13 819. Chick Brown, Vince Grizanti and Jimmy were standouts for the Crimson Tide. Bill Jones of the Mustangs was the hero of the Midget all-star victory. He set up the winning touchdown with a 55-yard run in the final period and scored from one yard out a minute later to capture the close 6-0 contest.

Jones was joined by fellow Mustangs Buster Creemer and John Falkenberry in the standout bracket. The Green Wave gave an excellent account of itself with Doodle Mackin and Antone Troha standing out. Huston Edwards and Jim Cha-vers played well for the Wolverines while Kirby Sims, Gerald Wilson, Jim Elliott and Roy Robinson turned in good games for the Tarheels. Score By Periods Green Wave 0 0 0 0 All-Stars 0 0 66 NASHVILLE, Oct 29 Vanderbilts. Commodores put on a stirring demonstration of long distance touchdown-making today to smother Virginias Cavaliers 34-7.

Of five touchdowns, four came on jaUnts ranging from 40 to 94 yards, with halfback Charlie Horton pacing the victors with two spectacular runs. Horton, a senior from St. Petersburg, took a sharp pass from quarterback Don Orr in the first quarter for a 43-yard scoring run, and in the second quarter he put on another touchdown junket, this time for 74 yards. On a second quarter reverse play, halfback Jack Hudson galloped 94 yards for a Vanderbilt score. On still another long haul, Phil King, fleet sophomore from Dyersburg, sped 40 yards for a Commodore tally.

The other Vanderbilt score, by halfbcck Don Hunt from the one, was the result of three quick first down sweeps from midfield. Fullback Jim Bakhtiar, Virginia's iron man from Ababan, Iran, and halfback Charlie Jenkins of Newport News, pierced Vanderbilts line for numerous gains. But for the one scoring thrust, the Cavaliers just couldnt get going when the yardage counted. Virginia garnered 18 first downs to Vanderbilts 15. One factor in the Vanderbilt victory was that its passing, heretofore not too productive, accounted for five first downs.

The Commodores completed five out of 11 tosses and these five counted. Virginia tried six throws, com-pleating only one. Vanderbilt now has a season total of four victories and two sex. Vrivtoia has won only one of six starts. Virginia 0 7 0 0 7 Vanderbilt 7 20 0 734 Virginia scoring Touchdown: Lawyer (1, plunge).

Conversion: Bakhtiar. Vanderbilt scoring Touchdowns Horton 2 (43, run-pass from Orr; 74, run); Hunt (1. plunge); Hudson (94, run); King (40, run). Conversions: Jalufka (2); Stephenson; Demmas. Its, Oct.

St (AP)-Statts-Auburn Tulane game today. Sahara Talana Unt dona IS IS Storing yardage 18 IS Pairing yardage 4 Paaaea attempted Paeeet completed I 1 Knet smelt apt ad Pasta Punting areraga 38.3 X.l Pamblaa loit 3 Tarda paaaUaed lit 38 three yard touchdown pitch to SBd Will Billon. Before a homecoming crowd of 33,000. The score seemed to inspire his ewtweigked line and it took sharge and held the advantage until Auburn same to life against Tulane substitutes midway of the final Fullback Joe Children aad halfback Fob Jaaaoa ignited Auburn i Offense against the second-stringers la the final period. Fighting to keep aliv their post-season bowl hopes, they carried Auburn 55 yards on six plays for the first touchdown.

Childress smashed the final three. Fullback Jim Walsh recovered a Tulane fumble by halfback Otis Gilmore on the Tulane four to set i top the second, by James on a four-yard sweep. Quarterback Howell Tubbs converted after the James amm says. Days Passes Joined By Cothren Toe By W. B.

RAGSDALE. Jr. BATON ROUGE, Oct 29 (A Mississippi used the pinpoint passing of quarterback Eagle Day and tiie deadly kicking of halfback Paige Cothren to bypass a stub born Louisiana State University line tonight for a 29-26. football But the Rebels bad to fight off a furious fourth quarter rally by LSU that netted two touchdowns. Az the game ended, LSU waa throwing desperation passes from midfield.

Sophomore quarterback M. C. Reynolds tossed scoring passes of 25 and nine yards to the closing minutes as a crowd of 43,000 cheered the Tigers. In all, he passed for three touchdowns and scored the fourth on a quarterback sneak. Day threw scoring aerials of 14 and 19 yards and set up the third Rebel score with a 22-yard heave.

He completed 10 of 15 passes for 154 yards. Cothren kicked two field goals, one 22 yards and the other 13, and added three extra points without a miss to swell his Southeastern Conference leading total to the scoring derby. His nine points increased his season total to 53 points. Cothren led SEC scoring before todays game. The victory gave Mississippi a 6-1 season record with a 4-1 mark in conference play.

LSU has a triumph and a tie in six games with a 1-3 SEC mark. The victory tonight tied the Rebels with Mississippi State for the conference lead. Balked on the ground by a stubborn LSU defense, Mississippi moved to a 10-0 lead in the first quarter when Days passes set up Billy Kinards eight yard scoring dash and Cothren, acclaimed back of the week by the Asociated Press last week, kicked his first field goal of the game. LSU charged back with two touchdowns in the second quarter to lead 13-10, but Mississippi regained the lead with a safety and a touchdown to show a 19-13 margin at halftime. Mississippi 10 9 3 9 29 LSU 0 13 0 1326 Mississippi scoring: Touchdowns; Kinard (8, plunge), Blair (14, pass-run from Day), Drewry (19, pass-run from Day).

Field goals, Cothren 2. (22, 13). Conversions, Cothren 3. Safety, Reynolds (tackled in end zone). LSU scoring: Touchdowns, Johns 2 (13, pas-run from Reynolds, 25, pass-run from Reynolds), Reynolds (1, plunge), Gonzalez (9, pas -run from Reynolds).

Conversions, Graham, Gonzalez. PHILADELPHIA (NANA) 8 On the streets leading to Franklin Field there were hustler selling tri nkets which proved you were rooting for Penn. There were also pen ants and footballs which showed you were for Navy. You could also go down to the nearest recruiting office and enlist if you were crazy about Navy. I didnt hear of any one that demented although Navy beat 33-0 in what was supposed to be a football game.

Prince John Has Rich Stakes Win 24-1 Outrider Snare Photo Finish Race SATURDAY'S SCORES My THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SOUTH Georgia IS, Alabama 14 Tulane 37, Auburn 13 Kentucky 30, Rice IS Oeorgla Tech 37, Duke Mill, state 30, North Teaas State 7 Vanderbilt 34, Virginia 7 Tennessee 4S, North Carolina 7 Maryland 37, South Carolina Clemton IS, Wake Forest 13 Howard (DC) IS. Fayetteville (NCI 14 Virginia State 17, Virginia Union 0 Randolph-Macon IS, Dickinson (Pk) 0 Bowling Green 37, Marshall (WVa) 30 North Carolina State 33, Furman 7 William dc Mary 30, V.M.I. 13 George Wash. 13, Virginia Tech Hampton 38, Lincoln (Pa) Allen (SC) 30, Knoxville Lenoir-Rhyne 30, Emory A Henry Maryland State 48, Wilkes iFai Morris (SC) 38, Paine (Oa) 0 Albany State 33, Savannah State 7 Shephem (WVa) 41, Oallaudet 13 Southwestern Tenn i 33, Mlllsaps 7 Florida ASM 0, Xavier (New Orleans! 1 Delaware State 37, St. Paul Poly (Va) Albany (Oai State 33, Savannah 8tate 7 Louisiana Tech 38, Southwester La 14 Southern (Lai 38, Texas College 14 Hampden-Sydney 34, Bridgewater 0 Orambling 48, Jackson 7 Murray (Kyi 33.

Morehead 7 McNeese 17, Lamar Tech 2 North Carolina ATAT 14. Morgan St. 0 Cenral Okla 31, Memphis Navy EAST Columbia IS, Cornell 34 Syracuse 4. Holy Cross Massachusetts 84, Vermont IS Geneva 30, Slippery Rock I Westminster (Pai 7, Waynesburg 7 (tie) 8hlppensburg 14, MlllersvlUe 2 California (Pa) IS, Clarion Upsala IS, Kings Point 12 Cortland State 38. Holstra 0 Rochester 20, Oberlln 7 Hobart 30, St.

Lawrence 14 Indiana (Pai 13, Lock Haven 0 Bethany (W.Va.l 27, Allegheny 13 Thiel IS, Grove City 12 Mlddlebury 7, Norwich 0 American Inti 32, New Britain 7 Tults 48. Amherst 30 Gettysburg IS, Lafayette 14 New Haven 38, Bloomsburg (Pa) 31 Urslnus 14, Wagner Carnegie Tech IS, Wash, A Jefferson Edfnboro 12. Mansfield iPa) Maine S3, Colby 0 Drexel 34. Johns Hopkins 13 Moravian 35. Albright 13 Cheyney (Pa) 7, Trenton Bruins Demolish California Foes Another fumble recovery by Walsh less than a minute later put Auburn only 24 yards from a potential third touchdown, but halfback Tommy Warner of Tulane intercepted a past by Tubbs and sprinted 87 yards to scora and ice the game for the Green Wave.

Tulane bad scored in the second quarter on a 24-yard Newton to Gilmore paaa and in toe third on a three-yard plunge by fullback Bonnie Quillian. Tackle Emmett Zelenka converted after toe first three touchdowns. Powerful UCLA Routs Rose Bowl Block Gophers Spatter Trojans By 25-19 Quick Scoring Seen In Surprise Tilt Western Maryland 13, Franklin Mar- MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 29 (F Weather-hardened Minnesota rev eled in a swirling snowstorm today to beat heavily favored Southern Juniata 54. Suequehanna 0 Worcester Tech 48, Rensselaer Rhode Island 28, Springfield 7 Oklahoma Mauls Kansas State, 40-7 Sooners Capture 25th Straight Easily CAMDEN, N.

Oct. 29 IF Prince John, a 24-1 outsider owned by a New. York clothing merchant, staved off the closing rush of Career Boy today to capture the $282,370 Garden State stakes worlds richest horse race by a nose. A record Garden State park crowd of 44,737 roared at the photo finish, and there were many sad customers as Needles, the 8-5 favorite, finished in third place after it appeared he might win during a furious charge down the home stretch. Needles was a length behind Career Boy while Happy New Year came home fourth.

Prince John is a. chestnut son of Prtocequillo-Not Afraid, and is owned by the Elmendorf Farm of Max Gluck, who entered racing only five years ago. The triumph was worth $157,918.50 to Gluck. This third Garden State stake in which the 2-year-old championship is supposed to be fairly well established, was the first stakes victory for Prince John. Mrs.

Anson Bigelows Nail, who won the $125,125 Belmont Futurity Oct. 6, carved a scorching pace before quitting at the head of the stretch to the mile and one sixteenth classic contested by a dozen juvenile stars. The winner steppied the route in 1:42 3-5 on a fast track. The time was only three-fifths of a second off the track record set in 1950 by Friendly Frank, a 4-year-old under only 109 pounds. All the starters today carried 122.

Prince John paid $50.00, $18.80 and $8.20. Career Boy, ridden by Eric Guerin, returned $5.60 and $3.40. Needles, piloted by John Choquette, was $2.80 to show. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 2 9 The UCLA Bruins moved another stride toward the Rose Bowl today, using their reserves to the main to smash California, 47-0 in a Pacific Coast Conference game.

The whitewash was the worst de-feat suffered by California since COACH Lynn O. Waldorff took charge at Berkeley in 1947. Historians have to go back to 1930 for a larger score Southern California's 74-0 victory over the Bears. Registering their fourth conference triumph against no defeats, UCLA unloaded three touchdowns in a big second quarter to clinch the game, that is any clinching where needed Halfback Ronnie Knox, whose transfer from California after his freshman year stirred up an uproar, took the field for the first time against his alma mater and turned to a fine performance. He scored two touchdowns and was the passing star of the game.

California 0 0 0 00 UCLA 7 20 7 1347 UCLA scoring: Touchdowns Peters 2 (1 yard, plunge: 1 yard, dive); Knox 2 (4, run: 3, run): Holloway 1 (45, pass-run from Mc-Dougall); Loudd, (55. pass run from Bradley); Bradley 1 (1 plunge). Conversions Brown, Decker 2, McoDugall, Bradley. Michigan Knocks Hawkeyes, 33-21 Iowa Led By 14 For Half of Contest Bowdoin It. Bates 0 Tale 34.

Dartmouth 0 Penn State 20. Penn 0 Vlllanova IS, Richmond 14 Miami 21. Pitt 7 Princeton 14, Brown 7 Army 27, Colgate 7 Bucknell 36, Harvard 2 (tie) Lehigh 37, Temple 14 Delaware 33. Rutgers 7 Connecticut 20, New Hampshire 7 Union 14. Williams Dover APB 38, Newport NAS Wesleyan 3.

Swarthmore 7 Trinity 37. Coast Guard 0 National Aggies (Pa.) 30; C. Tchrs. 0 Scranton 35, Muhlenberg 12 East Stroudsburg 40, Kutstown (Pa) 14 Rrockport 21, Ithaca Bluefleld (WVa) State 20. Weat Virginia State 7 West Va.

Wesleyan 35. Davls-Elklns North Dakota 21, North Dakota State 0 Dickinson (ND) 13, Valley City (NDl 0 South Dakota State 27, South Dakota 7 St.eCHaf 47. Monmouth 0 Moorhead i Mian. I 13. Michigan Tech 0 Bluff ton 30, Manchester 7 Centra 37, Hanover 13 Depauw 10, Beloit 13 Franklin 11, Earlham 7 Indiana Central 7, Taylor 0 Valparaiso 34, Butler 14 Maryville (M0.) 11, Rolls Northwest Oklahoma It.

Sterlln (Kan.) California 25-19 behind the sledgehammer blows of sopnomore fullback Dick Borstad. A homecoming crowd of some 60,000, huddling to 33 degree weather, saw the lOth-ranked Californians outpowered by a team which had won only one game in five tries but which was almost faultless in the face of wretched weather. The Gophers grabbed a 6-0 first quarter lead when Bob Schultz scooted 15 yards around end after a blocked kick, and lengthened the margin to 13-0 early in the third quarter when Borstad blasted over from the 3. The touchdown was the first of three during a wild two minutes. Gordon Duvall raced the ensuing kick off 73 yards toa touchdown, but Gopher quarterback Don Swanson responded two plays later by rambling 65 yards on a keeper By SKIPPER PATRIC MANHATTAN.

Oct. 2 9 Moving relentless towards an Orange Bowl date, the Oklahoma Sooners i tl past Kansas States Wildcats 40-7, for their 25th successive football victory before a homecoming gathering of 18,500 today. It was almost an effortless success for Oklahoma, the nations No. 2 team. The Sooners hit quickly for three touchdowns the first quarter, two more to the second and had a 33-0 advantage by halftime In winning, Oklahoma marked its 50th Big Seven tilt without a defeat.

Clendon Thomas, a 185 pound sophomore from Oklahoma City, scored two of the six Sooner touchdowns as coach Bud Wilkinsons second unit scored hree touchdowns to divide offensive honors with the starting crew. Bob Whitehead, Kansas States fine little quarterback, scored the host's touchdown from the 1-yard line for the only tally in the last quarter. Oklahoma 21 12 7 8-4Q K-State 0 8 0 7 7 Oklahoma scoring: Touchdowns, Harris (7, run); Thomas 2 (4, run; 1, run); O'Neal (3, run); Wood-worth (35, pass Interception) -McDonald (9 run). Conversions Pricer Dodd I. Kansas State scoring: Touch down, Whitehead.

(1, plunge). Conversion, Rusher. Llaeoln iMo.) 14, Alcorn ARM (Mist.) play for a 19-6 Minnesota advan- Penn then had lost 15 consecutive games; the last time they won was two years ago when Navy was the mark. They havent even tied since they hired Steve Sebo to coach them although this isnt a rap against him. 1 admit it doesnt make him another Knute Rockne, either.

But all they give him is a lot of students who must pass their examinations. At Penn football players must show up in classrooms and read something else beside the racing form. Anyone will tell you its a big mistake to have a college football team made up of students. But Penn Is going into the Ivy League next season and will play team such as Columbia and Harvard instead I outfits lika California ftnd Notre Dame. They intend to keep going with Navy.

Considering the favor Eddie Erdelatx, the Navy coach, did for them, they should. It wasnt bad enough that George Welsh, the regular Navy quarterback, was laid up with a hangnail or something on his big toe and didnt play. Lot Of Strangers Eddie sent in a lot of strangers to keep the score down, so he wouldnt embarrass the Penn kids. Even so, look at the score. Penn made one first down which wouldnt be a miracle if Vassar performed it.

Im following Eddie's policy. 1 dont intend to mention -anyone on the Penn squad until they publish their first sonnet. It's no use taking it out on kids who pretend to be football players. 1 identify Sebo as the coach because he gets a salary for coaching a football team but no football team showed up. Maybe, he will develop a tot of philosophers and scientists but he sure isnt going to produce any football players.

The Penn kids dont get a dime, which gives me the impression theyre probably the greatest group of poets in collegiate history. Poets who make the rent are disqualified as being commercial and they have to pay for their own coffee when they hang around the Greenwich Village saloons. In some brain stores a good back can make $10,000 a season. Tehy also get his old man a Job some-wheres and make sure he doesnt have to ride on buses with tackles and guards. They generally chuck in a car in such deals.

There was one kid who was grabbed by a university in the Midwest after he had decided to attend a Southern school. They paid off the mortgage on his familys farm. Cheering Lout They had a cheering layout on the Penn side of the field. I guess they were there to cheer to case no one was killed. They had a band and all, just like it was a football game.

The team ran out with the musicians marshalled to form an aisle for them, like loud pallbearers. Young guys shot off cannons to honor them, like they do at military funerals. It seemed wrong that the goat waa Navy's mascot They had songs to the program. One waa: Fight on, Pennsylvania. Put toe ball across toe line.

Fight, you Pennsylvanians, There it goes across this time. Red and blue, were for you. And were cheering for your men. Then fight, fight, fight, Pennsylvania. Fight for you.

Its the wfong kind of music The lyrics couldnt cheer the Penn' kids up. It reminded me of the lushes who go screwy tor wrong dames gnd go around asking cocktad-tounge entertainers to sing about beautiful love. I guess with record like this Kentucky Blasts Rice Owl, 20-16 Tulane capitalized oa breaks core its first two touchdowns. The first cam on a 20-yard drive in fight plays after a James fumble was recovered by Warner. Newton Showed his fancy running style While waiting for Billon to break into toe open.

Ha ran laterally SO yards -before making toe pitch which Billon grabbed on his fingertips Just before stepping out toe The second Tulane drive was set 0, when sub quarterback John Caruso punted out out of bounds on Auburn's one-foot Una, midway in to second period. Auburn waa rushed badly and quarterback Bill Burbank got off a punt that went nly to toe Auburn 24. Newton naught toe defense flatfooted again with a scoring pass to Gilmore on the Brat play. Another short punt by James set qp toe third quarter touchdown anarch tost covered 42 yards in Jour plays. A 19-yard Newton pass to Gilmore act up QuilUans three-yard buck.

Tulane capitalized on its team speed throughout the game and broke through to smear Auburn backs at crucial points. Guard Tony Sardisco set Tubbs back for Mg losses twice on Auburns first aeries on downs and Plainsmen, a two-touchdown favorite, were unable to regain their aggressive Spark until the fourth period. After Auburn scored two touch-downs and seemed headed for a third. Sardisco smeared James for an eight-yard loss at his 23 to force toe desperation passes that pro-dosed Warner a sensational touchdown gallop. Childress' powerful! smashes gave him rushing honors with 82 yards in 16 attempts, mostly in to quarter uprising.

James up 77 on 13 try and was other effective Auburn 'back. dented the massive line By 43 yards on 13 while Newton got 31 on number. i medicre passer, tfowtaj spots so well fotft completions in attempts tor yards. Tubbs leted two of six for Auburn 3 yards, but both were in the minutes and had no effect on outcoine. 7 7 7 8-27 0 8 0 1212 scoring: Touchdowns (3, run), James (4, Conversion, Tubbs, te scoring: Touchdowns (3, pass from Newton), Gil-24, pass-run from Newton), 'I, plunge), Warner (87.

return). Conver- Hr Razorbacks Earn 7-7 Ag Deadlock Texans Stumped Thru Late Game Scare Fort 8M1 (Okla.) 41, Fort Carson (Colo.i I Southern Illinois 13. Western 111. 13 (tie) Cheato mini IS. Rote Poly Oreat Lakes It.

Balnbrtdfe is Western Reserve 7, Wayne iMtchi Albion 30, Alma 13 Concordia (Neb) 14, Dana 7 vansvllle 33, Indiana Btate IS Mlehlfaa Normal 14, Easters Illinois 7 Iowa State Teachers 13, Morslnfsklt 12 Coe 33, Knox Parsons 30, Wartbur 18 Buena Vista 14. Dubuqut 0 Lather (Iowa) 30, Aunstana (HI) 14 Cornell (Iowa) 13. Ortanell 7 Stmpeon 28, Central (leva tsge. Late to the same period Ernie Merk took a Gopher punt on the 7 and galloped 93 yards up the sideline to score, Soun. Calif 0 0 12 719 Minnesota 8 0 13 6 25 Southern California scoring Touchdown: Duvall (73, run back kickoff); Merk (93, punt return) Leimbath (4, pass from Kissinger) Conversion: Arnett Minnesota scoring Touchdown: Schultz (15, run); Borstad (2, 3, plunge) 4, plunge); Swanson (65, run).

Conversion: Cats Stage Comeback Twice For Win ANN ARBOR, Oct. 29 IF Mighty Michigan, in an emotional avalanche of touchdowns, poured across 20 points in the final nine minutes to prove its erfect record and national ranking is no illusion with a magnificent 33-21 uphill victory today over Iowas forlorn Hawkeyes. While a- crowd of 72,096 went Into near hysterics, quarterback Jim Maddock, a cool Chicagoan, fired touchdown passes of 65 and 60 yards and Tony Branoff swept 30 yards in the dying minutes to climax one of the greatest rallies in Big Ten football history. The dramatic triumph, achieved before a national television audience, gave third ranked Michigan its sixth straight victory making the Wolvrin' than ever choices for a spot to the Rose Bowl game For Iowa and its luckless coach. Forest Evashevski, it was another to a painful string of defeats by Michigan.

Iowa 7 7 7 021 Michigan 0 0 13 20 33 Iowa scoring Touchdowns: Vincent (24, run); Dobrino 2 (1, run; 27 pas run from Reichow). Conversions: Freeman 3. Michigan scoring Touchdowns: Baldacci (1, plunge); Kramer (65, pass run from Maddock); Maentz 3 (33. pas fee-" P-ar-') 80, pass run from Maddock); Branoff 3 run). Conversions- iuamtr 3.

riod, twice getting close enough to try field goals. Foodren the versatile aoph. more, passed for oae touchdown, caught a pass for another, hammered the SMU line, kicked beautifully and all-in-all was the big man that kept Teaa to the conference race. Lnghsru Edge SHU Wild 19-18 Boat DALLAS, Oct 29 (Fj-Texas rode with Us Walt Foodren and Joe Clements and a rougbouse line to a 19-18 victory over Southern Methodist today to knock the Methodists out of a first place tie to the Southwest Conference football race. In one cf the wildest offensive Iowa 31, Michigan 33 a Navy 7, Notre Dame 31 Purdue 13, Illinois Detroit It Cincinnati (tie) Michigan State 37.

Wisconate West Virginia Marquette Miami (Ohio) It. Kent 7 Minnesota 3t, Southern California 11 Indiana 11. Ohio Univ. 14 Ohio State 61, Northwestern Oklahoma ARM 14. Tulsa Xavier (Ohtei is.

Rotten College 11 Denleon 13, Wittenberg I Oklahoma 46, Kansas state Nebraska IS, Kansas Akron 83. Wooster Wheaton 12. North Central OB) Eureka (Hi) 13. Pttaelnta 6 Lake West (HI) 31 tomRarst Tl feels State Noma) M. Lewis to (tta) Hina a.

Oetsrtute 31 Washington (1 Lewis) 37, Wash. Las 8 Casual is ns It Marietta 2 Dayton 7 (tta) Me 'amn1 chm Dasha 17. Northern TBteett IS Bethel (Kan) I. Baker Oba) Pittsburgh (Kan) 7, BapaSstate Cape Girard esa (Mol 13, Onbnl (M late 13 FAYETTEVILLE, Oct. 29 IF The Arkansas Razorbacks, outgunned for three quarters, came back with a 79-yard drive to the last five minutes to tie the favored Texas Aggies 7-7 before a homecoming crowd of 27,006) here today.

Texas which had won five straight before this game, scored on a 59-yard march just after the half. They penetrated inside the Arkansas 20 on four other occasions. But the Aggies couldnt get the extra touchdown they needed to keep their Southwest Conference record clean. has won two conference games against no defeats. Arkansas big play was a past from quarterback George Walker to Preston Carpenter which covered 28 yards and set up the tying touchdown on the Aggie four.

The pass traveled about 10 yards to the air and Carpenter made 18 more with a fine bit of broken-field It took the Porkers for plays to cross the goal with Walker sneaking the last few inches Texas' 0 0 7 8-7 Arkansas L. 0 8 8 77 Texas scoring Touchdown: Taylor (10, pass fro Wright). Conversion: Taylor. Arkansas scoring Touchdown: Walker (1 foot, sneak). Conver-Walker.

LEXINGTON, Oct 29 (F-Quarterback Bob Hardy twisted through the Rice line for a dramatic1 12-yard touchdown run to bring Kentucky off the floor and to a 20-18 football victory today. Hardya daring kept alive a 84-. yard scoring drive when on fourth down and 10 to go on the Rice 42 he fired an 18-yard strike to end Bradley Mills. Hardy put over the Clincher with three minutes and 40 seconds left and Kentucky then staved off a desperate last minute passing attack by Rice. Fortunes changed swiftly to the last half and Rice twice took the lead, first at 9-7 oh a 22-yard field goal toy Jerry Hall and later op a 15-yard touchdown sprint by Page Rogers.

But each time that Kentucky was down, it found a counterpunch, first to Dick Moloney's 43-yard run around right end with a pitch-out and finally with Hardys game-winning score. Rice 8 0S 718 Kentucky 7 9,8 7- Rice scoring: Touchdown -Nes-bit, (1, plunge), Rogers US, run). Conversion HiH Field Goal Hail 22 yards). Kentucky scoring Hardy 3 (1, plunge; 2, run); toney (43, run). Conversions Hardy 2.

Willie Mays tied a record by hitting nine home runs to Baltinore Defeats 6 reel Bay By 14-10 BALTIMORE, Oct 29 (F Long gone Dupre joined his rookie mate, workhorse Alan Ameche, to run the Baltimore Coltg to a third-period touchdown tonight for a 14-10 victory over the Green Bay Packers and undisputed second place -to the Western Conference of the National Football League. Dupre, playing his first full game in the league after being hobbled by injuries, sprinted 23 yards for the second and winning touchdown. He and Ameche, who has been carrying the load for the newly -espected Colts, had largely cf ried the HU from their tom 20 to come from behind and tain. Ameche, the leagues leading ground gamer, carried the ball 32 time and smashed for yards. It was the fourth victory in six games for the Colts.

this series has known, the edged through on toe toe yt Joe Youngblood and a defense that stymied every charge of an SMU teem that camped to Texae territory tin entire last pe- Texas is, Banlhsia Mi fetter (Tex) IS. fetaader Safe (Ask) 1 Prairie View (Tex) St, Aik. ARM Bast tuna State H. Saa Houston at Conforms Poly IS. Midwestern (Tun.) 3 Texas fem fe sasitoa (Otto.) FAR WEST Wyaasto H.

Bifeaw Tans WATCH REPAIR SPECIAL Your Watch Cleaned for Only $4.50 i S3 Dr. JdHi Griy't Jewdry fir Optical Store 4 T43L, (F) Mr. Ros-lng up i la four of Old World landed toe down the Navy has beaten William and Mary 13 times to 21 rims of foot- 1.

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About The Selma Times-Journal Archive

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Years Available:
1897-2021