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Brownwood Bulletin from Brownwood, Texas • Page 10

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Brownwood, Texas
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Page:
10
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Sunday, NW. By tttfc ASSOCIATED PttfcSS Stit floss 36, McMurry 23 Bast Texas State 42, Sam Houston Stale 28 ifcfttoff 47, Tulsa 14 Arkansas 30, Rice 6 fefcas 56, Baylor 14 Tefcas Christian 35, Texas Tech 26 North Texas St. 47. Wichita State 0 Texas ASM 20, Southern Methodist 10 Cast Colgate 28, Bucknell 7 Cornell 14, Brown 7 Syracuse 23, Arizona 0 Vale 21, Pennsylvania 3 Union 10, Alfred 7 Amherst 35. Trinity.

7 Colby 14, Bates 13 tJpsala 30, Moravian 26 Connecticut 28, 22 Cincinnati 31, Louisville 21 Richmond 37, Furman 0 Florida 26, North Carolina 9 Dartmouth 37, Columbia 7 Buffalo 35, Boston College 21 Princeton 51, Harvard 20 Notre Dame 49. Pittsburgh 7 Dayton 27, Villanova 20 Kings Point 21, Hofslra 13 New Hampshire 14, Springfield 8 Gettysburg 16. Temple 14 Delaware 42, Lehigh 17 South Wake Forest 23, Virginia 21 Florida State 10 Virginia Tech 10. tie West Virginia 31, William Mary 0 Duke 34. Clemson 27 Miami, Ohio, 34, Maryland 21 North Carolina 61, Virginia Military 11 Georgia 13, Florida 13.

tie THE HUNT IS the first Brown County deer hunters to haul In bucks Saturday were Ralph Davis, left, of Early and Don Jones Jr. of May. Davis' eight-point trophy bagged at 8:15 a.m. 2Vi miles east of Brown wood Municipal Airport weighed at 127 pounds. Jones downed his 10-point, at 7:15 a.m.

three miles west of May. (Bulletin Photos) Ailing 'Horns Roll, 56-14 By ROBERT HEARD Associated Press Writer 14 AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) Virus Davidson 42, East Carolina 27 weakened Texas blasted across Tennessee 29, South Carolina First downs Baylor Texis 31 13 Tulane 14, Georgia Tech 7 Auburn 52, Mississippi State Vanderbilt 42, Kentucky 6 Midwest Iowa 28, Indiana 17 Ohio State 62, Wisconsin 7 Missouri 44, Oklahoma 10 Minnesota 28, Northwestern 21 Bowling Green 23, Ohio U. 16 Purdue 41, Michigan State 13 Toledo 35, Northern Illinois 21 Michigan 57. Illinois 0 Oklahoma State 28, Kansas State 19 Colorado 17, Kansas 14 Ntbraska 17, Iowa State 3 Marshall 31, Kent State 20 West Texas St.

28, Western Mich. 20 Michigan 25, Indiana State 24 Denison 27, Wabash 6 Arkansas State 21, Drake 21, tie Augustana, 111., 35, Illinois Wesleyan 34 Army 17, Oregon 17, tie Stanford 21, Washington 7 Western Illinois 55, Illinois State 13 Air Force 38, Utah State 13 Arizona State 48, New Mexico 17 Utah 34, Wyoming 10 Oregon State 35, California 0 Southern California 28, Washington St. 7 Yards rushing 388 Yards passing 110 U7 Return yardage 0 73 Passes 8-27-5 12-23-0 Punts S-52 4-3? nl i Fumbles lost 2 0 five tOUChdOWn in tile first iVn yards penalized 72 to minutes against winless Baylor Chamberlain Has Surgery Saturday, and reserves ran the final score to 56-14. The second-ranked Longhorns set a new school record of 16 straight victories. Their nation leading ground LOS ANGELES (AP) Tow-1 attack crunched for 388 yards, Thirty Texas players, Including 14 starters, were stricken with the virus Friday.

All but two saw action against the anemic Bears. Texas drove 80, 51, 14, 80 and 65 yards to put the game out of reach at 35-0 with 8:38 to play in the second quarter. The Long- homs used 49 players in the first half to gain 244 yards on the ground to 18 for the Bears. Halfback Jim Bertelsen carried four times for 80 yards, in- 1 i A tWW-l ering Wilt Chamberlain of the i sent Baylor down to its seventh eluding 66 on the first touchdown Los Angeles Lakers underwent defe a and ke Ll Texas Ued with dr ve and left the game. A iV-irt liiifsirrf I surgery Saturday for a knee Arkansas for the Southwest Con injury that could sideline him ference lead.

for the remainder of the National Basketball Association season. But as orthopedic surgeons went to work on a ruptured tendon in Chamberlain's right knee cap, Laker Coach Joe Mullaney mulled over two possible replacements and warned against counting out the defending Western Division cham Texas plays Ahkansas on national television 6. Reserve fullback Bobby Callison, filling in for Steve Worster, who re-injured an ankle on the opening kickoff, ran 54 yards in nine carries for three touchdowns in the first half. Quarterback James Street, one of those hit by the virus, left the game after the third touchdown. Texas came into the game averaging 358 yards in whipping six opponents this year, and scored an average of 37.5 yards while holding the opposition to nine.

Only center Forrest Wiegand and defensive halfback Tom Campbell failed to start for Texas. The old school record for consecutive victories was 15, set by the 1963 and 1964 Longhorns. pions. Mullaney said Chamberlain's doctors, including orthopedic specialist Dr. Robert Kerlan, told him the 7-foot-l center would be in a cast for six to eight weeks, followed by an indefinite recovery period, which could mean the remainder of the season.

The injury, Cahmberlain's first serious one in 11 NBA seasons, came Friday night in a Top Teams Take Easy Wins By SHEILA MORAN Associated Press Sports Writer Ohio State and Texas, college football's unbeaten 1-2 punch, Coatta compared the nation's top-ranked team to supermen. Fourteen Texas starters were stricken by virus Friday but all but two played. The Longhorns, Javelmas Win, 27-0 Stops HP KINGSViLLE -Powerful Tex- I as sputtered at times butjs put it all together in the last half here Saturday night to shut out the Howard Payne Yellow Jackets, 27-0, in a Lone Star Conference football game. The victory allowed the Jave- linas to keep pace in the tight LSC title chase with a 4-1 record and dropped HPC to 1-4. 6AMB At A OLANCB Firs) downs ill yards rushing 41 Yards passing 4 6f 31 completed 4 Passes inteot.

by 18 for 42.9 Punts 1 4 for 48 Penalties 2 Fumbles tost Sebrg by quarters: Ail 0 7 14 HPC 0 0 i 383! Hopkins converted fof a ,331 score just 38 seconds after thft previous Javelina score. got on the Scoreboard fourth time only two secdjldf deep in the fourth period, ith Douglas tossing 8 short pasj Small, who legged into or I i for ii I 4 by James Harris with 29 on 181 zone The play It trips. Despite the shutout, HPC Cameron said af- yards. TEXAS piled up a wide statistical edge as they used a rugged defense to go with warm Howard Payne made its most serious scoring threat early in iu i' the second quarter, driving to satf did not seriously threaten to score except for a 32-yard field goal attempt which failed early in the second quarter. Jim Allee led the Hogs on the ofense with 146 yards in 25 plays and Mike Williamson had 104 in 13 plays.

Bobby Hammer was tops for the Jackets with i to break the scoreless tie. Jav Tlie Yellow Jackets will out their home season this Satter the game he was pleased urd night agalnst the with the Yellow Jacket effort noss lobos in lon Stadlutt. But Damon Smith's kick went astray from the 22 to end the drive. Big piay of the drive was a 38-yard' pass piay from David Pratt to Harris. DROVE right back, cov-, ering 80 yards in only six plays 0 6 i rvU (1 CJHtYlP James, East Tux; Overtake 'KdtS COMMERCE, Tex.

(AP) Arthur James ran for three touchdowns 'and rushed 169 yards to lift East Ttxas State to a 42-28 come-from-behind victory over Sam Houston State 56 yards in 14 plays, followed S. R. Outscores McMurry 36-23 ABILENE, Texas (AP) Sul Ross, which upset powerful Texas last week, continued its winning ways with a 36-23 Lone Star Conference football victory over McMurry Saturday night. Lobo quarterback Joe Priest threw for three touchdown passes, two for 44 and six yards to Chris Byerley and the other for 68 yards to Mack Murphy. Murphy took the opening kickoff 96 yards for a touchdown.

McMurry quarterback Richard Puckett ran one and six yards for McMurry touchdowns. McMurry now is 1-7 for the Quarterback Karl Douglas pass- gam James ran for touchdowns of ed to Eldridge- Small for 34 J. and 3 in yards and ran" 24 more when he half spurt hat pujed East couldn't find a receiver to highlight the drive. as from a 25-14 halftime deficit, James went over the 4,000 yard career rushing mark and his 42 Douglas scored the TO on a career rusmng a.m a i-H n.n anH AnHv Hon. carries set a conference record.

three-yard run and Andy Hopkins converted to make it 7-0 with 11:35 left in the half. drove deep in Jacket territory just before halftime but Alice was jarred loose from the ball at the HPC 5 and Gary Manasco scooped up the pig- hide. Missouri Whips Sooners, 44-10 By LEW FERGUSON Associated Press Sports Writer Manasco raced 54 yards to COLUMBIA, Mo. the Moggie 41 before being down- i SOU ri clamped Oklahoma's Steve ed, with Douglas again getting Owens in a tight defensive vise the six-point credit. This time the early going, then rode the he ran 10 yards and Hopkins depth passing of Terry McMil- converted for a 14-0 score with i an 0 a record smashing 8:39 left in the third period, the Sooners before 61,000 Not content, however, fans and a regional television came roaring back with an on-! audience Saturday, sides kick attempt which work-j It was the most points and cd as they got the ball on the; biggest victory margin the Ti- showed just how good they are 7 SC()red fiye toucnc owns in Saturday.

Ohio State buried, fjrst minules aga nst Wisconsin 62-7 despite the ab- th winless Bears then sent sence of quarterback Rex Kern and Texas, weakened by an onslaught of virus, whipped Baylor 56-14. The Buckeyes, 7-0, called on No. 2 qiiarte'rback Ron Maciejowski as starter Kern rested a game here with the Phoenix bruised shoulder and when it Suns. Chamberlain moved for' the basket, then went down as the knee gave way. Razorbacks Tame Rice Owls, 30-6 Arktnsit First downs 21 15 Yards rushing 2M 110 Yards passing .149 Return 1 Passes 171 JI 10-14-0 17-34-0 Punts 7-3S 838 Fumbles lost 1 Yards penalized 30 22 HOUSTON, Tex, (AP) Quarterback Bill Montgomery cranked up a sputtering Arkansas offense in the second half Saturday and guided the fourth- ranked Razorbacks to a 30-6 Southwest Conference football Davis second goal came victory over the stubborn Rice time had run out in the Owls.

With the highly favored Porkers leading only 10-6 at halftime, Montgomery took his in the reserves. Elsewhere in the Top Ten No. 3 Tennessee, 7-0, beat South Carolina 29-14; No. 4 Arkansas, 8-0, crushed Rice 30-6; No, 6 Southern California, 7-0-1, defeated Washington State 28-7; No. 8 No- Ire Dame, 6-1-1, stopped Pitts- was over Wisconsin Coach John! burgh 49-7; No.

9 Missouri, 8-1, Houston Ace Wins In Cross-Country A University of Houston har- Ivan McClerry, University of rier who has finished first se- Houston, David Nail, ven times this year turned the Wayland, Walter Harris, overland trail trick again Sat-! HPC, and Everett Mor- urday when he won Howard ris, Dallas Baptist, 21:03. thumped Oklahoma 44-10, and No. 10 Purdue, 7-1, blasted Michigan State 41-13. No. 5 Penn State, 7-0, and No.

7 UCLA, 7-0-1, were idle. Penn State entertains Maryland and season and 0-5 in the LSC. Sul I jacket 29. On the third play af-1 gcrs ever posted against Okia- Ross is 4-4 and 2-3. ter that, Allee ran 23 yards to lioma in 60 games.

Late Aggie Surge Wraps Up 20-10 Win Over SMU Ponies COLLEGE STATION, Tex. i Steve Burks, UCLA is at Oregon this week. sophomore who logged little The Buckeyes boosted their! h'ttle playing time, exploded on winning streak to 21 games a 37-yard touchdown jaunt in the Maciejowski rolled up 247 yards fourth quarter Saturday and Yards penalized so First downs Yards rushing Yards passing Relur yardage Passes Punts Fmbles lost 13 20i .242 13 14 J2-J3 2 6-16-1 J-4S 1 Texas fired-up defenders i junjor defensive end har shut down Southern Methodist J. flssed SMU quart erback Chuck aerial circus for a 20-10 South- in 2Mi quarters and engineered the Buckeyes to 34-0 halftime lead. The Buckeyes' meanwhile, intercepted two west Conference football victory.

nasses and recovered two Wis-1 Burks ed through th passes ana recovered iwo wis gMU secondary and Marc Black consin fumbles and did not per- cut down tne Mustang safety) mil the Badgers past the State i with a classic block as the Du- 38-yard line until their touch-1 mas, dandy breezed to Hixson, passer, AAM i ball deep in (he end zone to give a quick 7-0 lead in the first quarter. SMU tied the score when Bicky Lesser recovered a fumble by Gordon Gilder in the end zone. The Aggies took a 14-7 lead to the dressing room at halftime on Larry Stegent's one-yard run the nation's leading i huVxsmfa" ne threw" which was sct when Self con hit Hixson as he tnicw, necte(J lhree crudal third la team to touchdowns on its first two possession in the third quarter to pull the game out of reach of the Owls, Montgomery hit John Rees with a 14-yard touchdown pass fat the first second-half score and Bill Burnett, workhorse Porker tailback, raced 23 yards for the other score as the unbeaten Razorbacks ran their winning streak to 13 games including seven this season. Burnett also chipped in a one- yard touchdown run and bill McCJard added a 43-yard field goal. No, 2 Arkansas quarterback John Eichler scored from two yards out to round out the Arkansas scoring.

Rice's scoring came on a first- half field goals by Tim Davis, a 33-yarder and a 24-yard iort. Rice lost its sixth game in a row against a season opening victory. The Razorbacks, racing toward 9 December showdown with, found the going twgh in the first half fired-up Owls, were especially three scoring threats two i x. McClard put Arkansas in the ead in the fading seconds of the first half with his field goal, Payne College's invitational cross-country meet at Brownwood Country Club. Leonard Hilton, a 21-year-old distance specialist from Houston who has set six cross-country marks this season, shattered a record for the Brownwood with a top time of 19:59 University of Houston, down in the closing minutes.

Kern rested up for next week's important Big Ten date with Purdue. "I forgot to go over and check to see if they have Big Ss for supermen on the chests," Wisconsin Coach Coatta said afterwards. "This is one of the greatest college teams I have ever seen and I don't think I will ever see one better." the goal with 9:01 to play. held a precarious 14-10 lead at the time. plucked off the fluttering to enable to protect i SMU narrowed the count to its lead in the waning moments.

14-10 early in the fourth quarter Hixson hit 22 of 33 Chipper Johnsons 29-yard ned ball mostly of tiie short variety, for 242 yards but suffered two interceptions. qyarterback field goal to set the stage for Burks' stirring run. Darj'l Doggett, the SWC's lead ucfJUuna. nucm tjrcii ici wauix 1 i i Rocky Self hit 9 of 16 for 145 i ing rusher, gouged out 94 yards gained 100 yards He also had dg jndud ng a touch- in 19 carries for the Mustangs, a 57-yard run which almost went down to ht end Ross i A crowd 33i220 walched the hi Brupbacher. i Aggies run their over-all record Brupbacher outreached defen-! in the series to 24-22-6 in the sive back Larry Tunnell for the I homecoming battle.

but was hauled down by the SMU safety. The Aggie victory gave both and SMU 2-3 SWC rec- and SMU is 2-6. Mike DeNiro, a raging 208- i I V.VMJI TtJUt IrWff v- After Davis 1 first three point-j ta the meet four-mile featur- er tied the game, Burnett put i ed event the Porkers ahead 10-3 for good popg Rccord Hilton's performance, just vflrf i eight tenths of a second better i la-yuiui i an a with a dive over the middle Frogs Blast Tech Hopes; Win 35-26 run by Burnett and a Montgom- the old tfe ery to Chuck Dicus pass that i University of Houston team to carried to the one-yard line to a Jjfst place finish in the meet set up Burnett's touchdown. But the Owls took advantage nts Howr a of the remaining 51 seconds to second-place showing by Jun- move 55 yards in eight plays lor 66 was Wlth 4 to set up field goal to make it close in the first half. Montgomery completed 9 of 21 passes for 128 yards Burnett carried 25 times for 130 yards.

Stable Vincent, Rice's sophomore quarterback completed 15 of 27 passes for 155 yards and picked up 62 yards on 13 rushing attempts. oints finlshed the flc 3 The New York Racing Association's fall meeting at Belmont Park will be 48 days, ending Oct. 18. Then the thoroughbreds return to Aqueduct for 49 days, through Dec. 15, The University football (earn includes 28 lettermen.

This is college football's cen- tenjujl two Japs around a two-mile circular course with a time of 20:09. Other teams placing in the meet included Wayland Baptist College, third with 109 points; Dallas Baptist College, fourth with 120 points; Pan American College, fifth with 121; and St. Edward's sixth with 199. Ue Stays Close a senior crosscountry runner whose hometown is Cross Plains, stayed from 15 to 20 yards behind Hilton throughout the race. Lee's times at the three check points were 4:40, 9:49 and 15:04.

Other harriers who finished in the top ten included Fred Cooper, University of Texas, BJlly Ford jour, Howard Payne, Nehdi Joahar, University of SJric FORT WORTH, Tex. Texas Christian doused Texas Tech's flickering title hopes 3526 Saturday on the glittering offensive fireworks of sophomore Steve Judy and lightning Lindsey cole. Judy passed for two touchdowns and darted two yards for TCU Plrtt downt 13 JO Yards rushing 37 242 Yards passing 221 140 Return 92 141 Passes 14-28-2 15-28-1 Punts 7-40 0 79 Yards penalized 28 24, and the second on a 63 drive. Judy circled right end from the two for the go-ahead TD and Confer- lhen tossed a 7 splu end Jeny bujlet to thfi third straight ence football verdict. Cole, setting up one touchdown clincher.

with a 66-yard kickoff return, Sophomore Charles Napper snared an 11-yard pass from brought Tech back into the bat- Judy for one score and killed tie with a four-yard scoring pass the Raiders later with a dazzling 81-yard punt return. The triumph put asunder Tech's outside chance of a share of the SWC crown as the Baid- ers absorbed their second conference setback against three victories, Tech Is now 4-4 and TCU 3-5 for the season. Trailing 16-14 at half time, TCU romped back with two third period touchdowns, the fjrst after a Clay M-chell fum- We ft to Danny Hardaway after Ken 41-yard punt return put the Raiders in possession at the TCU 16. Napper's passing, including a 39-yard shot to Ken Kapner, carried Tech back into scoring range but the Raiders, stifled by an alert Christian defense, had to settle for Jerry pon Sanders' 31-yard goal, Judy, with NojTnan giriajch and Marty Whelan ripping off key yardage, guided TCU 65 yards and assigned Bulait-h to carry the ball in from the one for the final score. Cole stole the show in the half, returning the opening kickoff 66 yards to send the Christians toward their first touchdown, and then streaked 81 yards with a punt for a second score.

Cole grabbed an yard, fourth down pass from Judy for the original six pointer after Whelan ted rambled 18 yards for a big gain. Cole electrified the homeconv ing crowd of 25,278 nine minutes deep in the second period as he pulled in a Tech punt at the 19 and, tiptoeing down the sidelines behind a wave of Wopkers, skipped over the goal. End Richard Campbell tied the score for at in the first period when he broke through to block Billy Fondren's punt and tumbled on across the TCU goal to cover the ball. Tech moved ahead in the second quarter as Matulich directed the Raiders 49 yards, assisted by 25 yard holding penalty, and sent Reagan Young in from Uw one, TWO'S A CROWD Ktjtfi Ward ill) Santt Arma'i Danny UngM up iiriy ptff during Qiitrict 9-A ftmt Frit dty night, ftll incomplete Stuff Annt rolled to 47-31 (Bwdttm.

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About Brownwood Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
108,695
Years Available:
1894-1977