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Pampa Daily News from Pampa, Texas • Page 9

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Pampa Daily Newsi
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Pampa, Texas
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9
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rish Pound North Carolina SOUTH BKND, Jnd. Fourth ranked Notre Dame stumbled and fumbled for tliree quarters today before dashing Nick Eddy woke up the Irish long enough to score a 17-0 victory over North Carolina. Notre Dame went into the game looking as if it expected a pushover warinup to next week's big game with Michigan State. Instead of an easy victory, the Irish had to cram all their points into 10 minutes of the fourth quarter to pull it out. Kddy, playing left halfback instead of his Usual post at, the -right side, broke the Tarheels open with a 66-yard scoring spring with less than eight 'minutes to play.

And after Irish line-backer Mike McGill intercepted a pass in North 'Carolina terrain. Eddy scored i again on a three-yard sweep to jwrapup the decision. Ken Ivan accounted for (he other Irish points, two on conversion kicks and the other 'three on a 38-yard field goal on i the third play of the last 1 period. The kick put Notre Dame's first points on the board and marked Ivan's sixth i field goal of (lie season, a Notre IDame record. Notre Dame controlled the ball throughout, but three fumbles and the tough Tarheel defense held the Irish scoreless until the fourth quarter.

Eddy was the culprit on two of the fumbles. One cost, the Irish the ball on the Carolina 35 and another on the Carolina 47, Quarterback Bill Zloch lost the ball once after the Irish had advanced to the Tarheel 4. Another Notre Dame try bogged on the Carolina 6 when the Tarheel defense stopped 5Jloch an inch short of a first down on a fourth down keeper. North Carolina got into Notre Dame country only once in the i first half, reaching the Irish 25 before Tom Lampman fumbled and Notre Dame recovered. i In the second half the heels crossed into Irish territory twice, their best advance going to the 27 before Danny Talbott missed a 43-yard Held goal try.

Today's win was the seventh of the season against one loss for Notre Dame. It was North Carolina's fifth loss in nine I games, their 12th loss In 13 I games against Notre Dame, and the first time they have been shut out in 26 games. (Notre Dame 000 i North Carolina Scoring: JND FG Ivan 38 IND Eddy 3 run (Ivan kick) Nebraska Holds Back Oklahoma DALLAS CUPI) Arkansas coach Frank Broyles found himself on the horns of a three- pronged dilemma back in September trying to settle on Jon Brittenum, Ronny South or Harry Jones to guide the destinies of his Cotton Bowl cham- passer, Cowboys Put Scare InNU STILLWATER, Okla. (UPI) Second ranked Nebraska, facing a stunning upset, pushed over a touchdown with 38 seconds left fo edge inspired Oklahoma State, 21-17. Razorbacks.

day and immediately accepted South was the best an Orange Bowl bid. I Jones wa best runner and The Cornhuskers whose prob- Brittenum was a 1964 "red- able opponent in the New shirt" holdout who had shown Year's night classic will be Al-j signs he could do a bit of both abama, clinched at least a the occasion demanded for their third straight Big when he exhibited bursts of Eight Conference championship, brilliance as a 1963 sophomore. But it was a hard-fought, pul- Broyles waited until the week satin" victory and Nebraska.before the season started and defenders 'had to halt a th finger on Brittenum, ditch Oklahoma State drive promptly guided the Hogs the 5-vard line to preserve it. to eight consecutive victories ithat ran the Razorbacks' streak Oklahoma State, winner of; to 20 in a r()Wi longest in lne only one game this season, ut na on on 'a magnificant swarming de- fensive show and appeared to! Brittenum wa at his versa- have scored one of the season's jtile best Satu. when he ran biggest upsets when pitched Arkansas to a 24-3 back Glenn Baxter rammed showdown victory over upstart over from the 3-yard line to put the Cowboys ahead 17-14 Arkansas Rips SMU, 24-3 of the crown or the "whole hog" for the Hogs.

Tech beat Baylor Saturday for an 8-1 season record and 5-1 for league play. Brittenum scored once from a yard out, threw a line drive 25-yarder to Jones for another touchdown and touched off Arkansas' final 67-yard scoring surge with a 14-yard helter-skel- ter run. His 47 yards net rushing are deceptive of their real worth. He proved so great at scrambling that often he gave up the impulse to run for big yardage on the option plays to stop and throw telling passing strikes because the SMU defense had blitzed itself out of position. It seemed fitting that Broyles found a place on his all-victorious squad for all three of his problem children.

South took over at quarter- back late in he game and di- reced the Razorbacks well. He reeled the Razorbacks well. He also kicked three extra points 34th, 35th and 36th of the season in 38 tries for a new school record. And Jones came in just in time to make a great diving, rolling catch of Brittenum's scoring toss in the second quarter when the outcome still seemed in doubt. SMU, which had built up a tremendous following with a tie with mighty Purdue and a blasting of once-haughty Texas enroute to a 4-2-1 season record going into this game, started out well before 67,000 fans.

The Mustangs took the ball on its first series of downs and marched nearly the length of the field strictly on the ground against the league's staunchest rushing defense. It had to settle for a field goal by Dennis Partee, but it proved it could move the ball and hope still ran high. The Methodists "started, another march only to have a penalty ruin it. And that was it for the day. Brittenum, South, Jones and a bruiser named Bobby Burnett, who gained 119 yards rushing, took command.

SMU Arkansas 7 10 7 Scoring: SMU-FG Partee 33 Ark-Brittemim 1 run (South kick) Ark-FG South (DMT Keif Photet A WEEK TO GO The Parnpa Harvester basketball team opens the 1965-66 cage season next Saturday when they host Dumas in Harvester fieldhouse. Coach Terry Cully expects a lot of action out of, left to right, Doug Altom, Mike Wise, David Cain, David Frashier, Kenneth McWilliams and Steve Williams. Ark-H Jones 27 25 pass from Brittenum (South kick) Ark-Burnett 1 run (South kick) challenger Southern Methodist for victory No. 21. It also enabled the Razorbatcks to clinch No.

Michigan State Rambles by Hoosiers with 5:19 to go a tie for their fifth Southwest But unruffled Nebraska now. Conference cham pionshi in 9-0. roared back with a a seven march in the osing mmu 182-pounder from! EAST LANS IN i h. will play in the Rose Bowl Jan. Brinkley, hit eight of 17; (UPI) Quarterback Steve jl.

Only the formality of a vote for 119 yards and one! Juday threw three touchdown i next weekend by conference Omwine on the clock 'touchdown and gained 47 im- passes as No. 1 directors remains. seconds snov ing portant yards in 14 carries while Michigan State won its first But MSU's spectacular year Oklahoma State. Delighting scoring anot her touchdown and undisputed Big 10 football was near i ru i ne by the lowly sped 31.500 partisan Homecoming helping set a third and a i championship and a Rose Bowl i Hoosiers who played their vtrAo-nssf-tttiirrtAH 1 i i The fans, was not finished. Cowboys, with fullback Garrison doing the damage, pul on one last drive to pull it out.

27-yard field goal by South. berth by rallying NNau The 24-3 victory set the stage Indiana 27-13. to at Fayetteville! The victory closed out the Saturday vvith Tech firsl unbeaten Big 10 campaign whip; finest game of the year. Indiana, behind the passing duo of quarterback Frank Garrison broke loose for an 18- for fl Cotton host role and in Michigan State history and yard run but was pulled down the djfference between a share Jassured the Spartans of sole by Nick Czap on the a-yard line D0ssess i on of top spot in the as the game ended. I Duke Sails By It was a see-saw battle all the way and the outcome was always in doubt.

Oklahoma State, a three-touchdown unuer- dog. scored first after recovering a fumble by quarterback Fred Dudn on the Nebraska ft. Three plays later Larry Elliott banged over right guard for the touchdown with 2:03 leit in the first quarto'. Nebraska tied it up shortly of before halltime. eoing 58 yards to in 10 plays, with lanky Ron Saturday.

Wake Forrest DURHAM. N. C. (UPIl Duke's Blue Devils, riding the; passing arm of quarterback i Todd Orvald and charging of halfback Sonny Odom and full- back Calabrese. broke out) a four game losing streak defeat Wake Forest 40-7 possession of top spot conference for the first time.

It was the ninth victory for the undefeated Spartans, seven of them in eliminated any Big 10. and doubt that MSU Stavroff and end Bill Malinchak led 13-10 going into the final period and appeared ready to pull the upset of the year. But the tide turned on a broken fourth period play that Juday and end Gene Washington improvised into a 43-yard Auburn Holds For Victory Over Dogs ATHENS, Ga. hand for Georgia's last home more Robert Fulglium, a of'the season. Kirkland scoring from the two The Cornhuskers then went The Blue Devils hadn't been able to win since star quarter defensive back, recovered a Gcorcia fumble on the Auburn one.foot line late in the fourth It-was a wild and woolly fight from start to finish and the victory put Auburn in position ahnaH incf aftorthc eprnnrl half i one.1001 1111C 1316 in IHC IOUI 111 i began after was injur-; iod Satur(iay (o the to win the SEC championship 011 to holdSn to a thrilling the Tigers can get past six began after Elliott kickoff on his 22.

a and the s(and in again scored from the two and made hjs entjre team good it was 14-7. Saturday Georgia, down 21-12 going into the final period, had scored one Oklahoma State narrowed the Duke waited until the 14-10 touchdown and appeared about ranked Alabama two weeks from now. Auburn scored early in the game on a twisting, driving 41- yard run by junior 'Pom Bryan score. The play began as a run by Juday. The little quarterback spotted Washington 10 yards down the middle and lobbed the ball to him.

Washington, the Big 10 hurdles champion, turned to his left and outraced three Hoosiers to the end zone for the go-ahead touchdown. Juday hit Washington on all three of his touchdown passes. The touchdown passes and Washington's three TD receptions were both MSU single- game records and gave Juday eight for the season. Juday hit Washington with a 27-yard touchdown pass in the second period that combined with barefoot Dick Kenney's field goal to give the Spartans a 10-0 lead. But Stavroff and Malinchak hooked up on a 10-yard scoring pass with 46 seconds left in the half.

Then the same combina- tion featured a 77-yard Indiana drive that was climaxed when i Stavroff sneaked over from the; one to put the lioosiers ahead. MSU rebounded to score on the second Juday to Washington pass which was followed by Kenney's second 27-yard field Iowa State Hands K-State 38-6 Loss Ames, Iowa (UPI) Quarterback Tim Van Galder put on a record passing and running display Saturday to lead Iowa State to a 38-6 Big Eight victory over Kansas State. Van Galder completed 21 of 44 passes for 293 yards as he directed the cyclones to their biggest conference victory in three years. Van Galder also ran for 51 additional yards. His total yardage of 344 broke the old Iowa State mark of 320 set by Dave Hoppmann against Detroit in 1960.

The 293. yards gained passing broke thej Cyclone record of 281 by Billj Weeks against Oklahoma in 1950. Van Galder, a 173-pound junior, broke the one-game total offense and passing yardage records on the final play of the game when he completed a pass to tailback Leslie Webster for 26 yards. None of Van Galder's passes went for touchdowns, although he ran for a score in the closing second of the first half when he scampered right end for three yards, giving Iowa State a 24-0 halftime margin. The Cyclones were in control of the game throughout, rolling! up 28 first downs to 9 for thej Wildcats.

The Cyclones had tal yardage of 523 to only 160 for K-State. OFFENSE VS. OFFENSE Tech. Runs By Baylor, 34-22 LUBBOCK. Tex.

(UPI) Quarterback Tom Wilson ignited a bogged-down Texas Tech attack Saturday to repel an up. set bid by the Baylor Bears, 34-22, and set the stage for a showdown with Arkansas next week for a berth in the Cotton Bowl. Wilson connected for three touchdown passes to push the llth-ranked Red Raiders to their seventh consecutive victory and keep them within range of a share of the Southwest Conference crown with AT- kansas. Wilson was off the mark in the first period and a determined Baylor line turned back the Raider running game. Baylor was picking its holes through the Tech defense, however, and halfback Billy Hayes climaxed a 58-yard drive early in the first quarter with a five- yard plunge to send the Bears into a 6-0 lead.

Three plays after the ensuing kickoff, the Bears again got good field position with an intercepted Wilson pass and Bob Purvis booted a 47-yard field goal, the second.longest, in Baylor history, to hike the margin to 9-0. With an overflow crowd of 45,619 looking, on, Wilson connected with Terry Scarborough on an 18-yard scoring strike in the opening minutes of the second quarter. Later in. the-stanza, fullback Kenny Baker squirmed over from five to put the Red Raiders ahead to stay. Tech carried the 14-9 margin into the dressing room after missing on a 47-yard field 'goal try with two seconds left in first half.

Anderson put the game out reach almost personally iri third quarter, catching a'- 43. yard scoring pass from and then plunging two yards another score. That- ran' tally to 27-9. The Bears put on an sive show late in the contest, 1 but it was far from enough. Bear quarterback tallied on a two-yard keeper and then hit end Harlan Lane on.

a 20-yard touchdown strike in the fourth period. th1 lea ie iWho switched from quarterback fullback for the afternoon up more than 154 In the afternoon when sophomore fullback Ron Jenk- i an( ro ec margin to 14-10 in the fourth quarter was over before it he- quarter on a 45-yard field goal gan to move but once they to by Charles Durkee. Minutes' did move, they were unstop- later, after a drive bogged: able. down on the 14. Durkee carne Contributing mightily to thej ins wno had scored twice lo st yards rushing in for another field goal at- effensive play was the Duke de-! as he appeared Georgia st ruc tempt, but Nebraska was off- fensive play was the Duke de- sides and the Cowboys got a fensive unit, which deviled first down on the 8, setting the Wake runners all dav and held goal and a clinching Juday to Washington scoring pass in the final moments.

I pushing time. across for the third back and scored seven minutes later on a three-yard plunge by Jenkins. The alert Fulghum John Cochran blocked Bob stage for Baxter's go-ahead them to but seven first downs on the ball to break the hearts extra point try and kept Slin touchdown. i in the contest. i of most of the 46,812 fans on i the Tigers in the lead, PAMPA DAILY NEWS Sports 14, 1965, 10 Scores By United Press International Princeton Yale 6 Harvard 17 Brown 8 Dartmouth 20 Cornell 0 Penn St.

14 Navy 6 No Car St. 3 FJa St. 0 Notre Dame 17 No. Car 0 Mich St. 27 Indiana 13 Cincinnati 41 South Dakota 0 Whichita 21 Utah St.

19 TCU 25 Tex 10 Tex 14 Rice 13 Ark. 24 SMU 3 Tex Tech 34 Baylor 22 Army 13 Wyoming 0 Duke 40 Wake Forest 7 Syracuse 41 West Va. 19 Maryland 6 Clemson 0 Va. Tech. 21 Villanova 19 Purdue 35 Minnesota 0 Ohio St.

38 Iowa 0 Missouri 30 Oklahoma 0 Drake 32 Louisville 17 Nebraska 21 Oklahoma St. 17 Auburn 21 Georgia 19 Florida 51 Tulane 13 Mississippi 14 Tenn. 13 Miami Fla. 28 Vanderb. 14 Colorado 21 Kansas 14 Colo.

St. 26 Brig. Young 22 UCLA 30 Stanford 13 Wash. 28 Oregon St. 21 USC 28 Pittsburgh 0 California 24 Oregon 0 Texas Western 20 Utah 19 LSU Tigers Blitz Miss.

State, 37-20 BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI) Joe Labruzzo and Jim Dousay paced a relentless LSU ground attack Saturday night with a pair of touchdowns each to lead the Tigers past Mississippi State 37-20. LSU, rebounding from a two- game losing streak, returned to the explosive power-packed form it displayed in early season victories. Labruzzo turned in the longest run from scrimmage of the night, 46 yards, for one of his touchdowns. Pat Screen hit Dave McCormick on a tackle-eligible play for 13 yards and a touchdown and Doug Morgan added a 42- yard field goal for the Tigers' scoring.

Mississippi State's Marcus Rh den, the SEC 200-yard dash champion, set up the Bulldogs' first score with a 36-yard run to the LSU five in the first quarter. Dan Bland swept end for a 6-0 lead on the next play, the only one the Bulldogs' enjoyed. In the second half, Mississippi State pulled back into con- I tention on Ashby Cook's passing. Cook hit Don Saget with a 13-yard scoring pass and Mississippi State trailed 20-14. But Labruzzo put it out oC each two minutes later oh' his 46-yard scoring dash.

Tommy Garrison added the final Mississippi touchdown on an 11-yard run at the end of an 80-yard drive in, the fourth quarter. Much of the distance came on Cook's passing. The loss was the fifth in a row for Mississippi State, which, like LSU, had been ranked in the top 10 earlier this season. Mississippi State was held to two first downs in the first 'half and 17 yards rushing by LSU'a swarming defenders, forcing them to take to the air after intermission. Mike Robichaux, Mike Vincent, and Bill Bass top hands in LSU's gang-tackling defense.

Typical of LSU's command on the ground was the 66-yard 15- play scoring drive in the ond quarter. Lamar Tech Upsets West Texas State, 21-14 By LOi: SPRY BEAUMONT fSpl) West Texas State players set three individual season records last night but the Buffaloes dropped a 21-14 decision to Lamar Tech before 10,400 fans in Beaumont's Cardinal Stadium. Roy Armentrout set two rec- Don (Preacher) Armetrout caught six (tor And fcrtagtof hit waion's yard HHrfvtef total to brt- tenng the mark set by Bill Cross in 1950. In the third period Armentrout, a 200 pound senior end Jrom Azle booted from the Buffs 18 to the Cardinal seven, a distance of 75 yards, bettering Don Logan's 67-yard boot in 1362 against Texas Tech Dennis returned one kickoff 13-yards, breaking his season's total in that department. 380, and bettering another of Lo- fan'i standards.

All this, however, was overshadowed by the perform- ance of Cardinal Phil Primm. quarterback First Downs Yds. Rushing Yds Passing Passes Penalties Punts Fumb, Lst Passes Int. tarn T. WT 17 .15 151 166 141 113 11-30 12-34 61 36 6.43,3 0 0 1 2 Primm passed for 141 yards and ran for 35 more, including a 12-yard keeper on a fourth down situation in the Cardinal's winning drive.

He took Lamar Tech SI and 55 yards for touchdowns and guided them 75 yards following Armentrout's record setting punt. But the drive died with a missed field goal attempt. Primm accounted for all but 15 of Tech's winning 55-yard drive. The crucial play was a 12- yard run by Primm on fourth and two at the Buffalo 37, liu seven yard pass to John Fuller put the Cardinals in the lead for good. The two teams scored 21 points in two minutes in the middle of a wild first quarter.

Primm took the Cardinals 51 yards in seven plays to score with 10:39 remaining. Mike Allman kicked the conversion after Bill Kilgore caught a 5-yard Primm pass for the score. The Buffs went 69 yards immediately thereafter with Hank Washington hitting ArmenU'out on fourth and three from the Tech 41 for the touchdown. Mankin kicked the point to tie it. Cardinal tailback Hal LaFitte returned the ensuing kickoff 89- yards to put the Kedbirds into a lead.

With Washington and Barry Johncour alternating at quarter- beck the Buffs went 59. yards to tie the game in the second period. Bryan Deady scored from one yard out. Tommy Fanbrough converted to it. The Buff made only one ser.

ious threat in the second half, reaching the Cardinal 19 surrendering the balj on downs. SCORING: LT-Krlgore. five pass from Primrn (Allmon, Kick) WT-Arrnentrout, 41-pass from Washington (Mankin kick) LT-LaFitte, 89 kickoff return (Allmon kick) ough kick) seven pass from, Primm (Allmon kick).

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About Pampa Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
191,180
Years Available:
1930-1977