The Sunday Spokesman (Pampa, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 297, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 21, 1954 Page: 4 of 35
thirty five pages : ill. ; page 22 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBEB 21. 1
Buckeyes Gain Rose Bowl Berth
iri-j,Come From Behind
Irish snake _
For 21 to 7 Victory
COLUMBUA. Ohio. Nov 20 &—
Ohio State's . unbeaten Buckeyes
made good on a four-way bid for
gridiron glory here today, coming
from behind with two long touch-
down drives in the final period to
defeat Michigan 21-7. A crowd of
82.438, J '
Syracuse Downs
Fordham, 20 to 7
IOWA CITY. Iowa. Nov. 20 A»—
Vengeanc e-bent Notre Dame
pounded Iowa 34-18 today and ex-
acted rich revenge lor the famous
14-14 tie that coat the Irish 'the
national football championship a
year ago.
I Notre Dame, under the cunning
leadership of Ralph Guglielmi, the
passing genius, roared through
Iowa for a 34-6 lead midway
through the final quarter. There
was no need this chilly, crisp day
for the feigned injuries that stop-
ped the clock last year to give the
Irish the precious Unit necessary
for tying touchdow.is.
| Only in the late stages did Iowa
ramble through Noire Dame to
furnish some con.sol.ti ion to the
'lowans in the crowd of 52,756, a
sellout gathering that had been as-
sured when the tickets first went
on sale last July.
Coach Terry Brennan's Irish
were in command all tne way until
t they were far out if danger and
both squads were dominated by re-
serves in much of the late going.
Terry did hustle in .tis first team
when Iowa threatened a fourth
touchdown,,a maneuver that died
with the final gun on the Notre
Dame 5.
After a scoreless first quarter,
Notre Dame sailed to two touch-
downs for a 14-0 advantage in the
second period bcfoit-siowa came
up with a touchdown on a 44-yard
pass play, Jerry Riehcow to Frank
Gilliam. The Iowa end made the
catch on the 18 and dragged Notre
Dame defender Joe Heap with him
the final five yards.
Notre Dame, its ground cover-
age featuring top-fli jnt passing and
slashing drives, went 75 and 81
yards, respectively, for. its first
two touchdowns. Jim Morse
crunched through from 6 inches
away for the first Irish score and
Heap hit from the 1 'or the second.
Iowa ............ 0 6 0 12—18
Notre Dame ...... 0 14 14 6—34
Iowa scoring: Touchdowns, Gil-
liam, Stearnes, Smith.
Notre Dame scoring: Touch-
Howard
sSfrciaw: gjs zssnttb. sr js
championship, a beith in tho Rose cepted a pass and inn it back to
Bowl, a hefty claim to the national hls ^ 3g, and 11 ph.ys later he
title, and their first unbeaten, un- ended the (j2-yard dnvc with a 1-
tied season in 10 years. yard piunge f0r the final score.
In beating Michigan for only the Little Tad Weed, 145-pound place-
third time in 12 seasons, Ohio be- kicking specialist, booted all three
came only the second Western Con- placements for Ohio,
ference team in history to win sev- Michigan marched 68 yards in 12
en straight games in the rugged plays at the start of the game for
league. Only Chicago's 1913 team its only touchdown, an Intricate
had done it before. jbuck lateral play sending left half-
The Bucks came from nowhere [back Dan Cline into the end zone
to climb back on the football I for the score. Ron Kramer, Michi-
throne. Held to only four first1 gan’s great sophomore —1
Didrikson - Baugh
Make Hall Of Fame
NKW YORK, Nov 20 /P-Syra-
cuse’s grinding-ground attack pow-
ered principally by a couple of
190-pound-plus backs, Ray PerkiQ
and Bill Wetzel, and two costly
Fordham fumbles, gave the Or-
angemen a 20-7 victory today in
the gloomy fog and drizzle of the
Polo grounds.
Tho Orangemen, .vho had been
unable to win against Fordham
in two previous games at the
home of the New York Giants,
were the masters for the first
three periods today as they took
advantage of Ram miscues to roll
DALLAS. Nov. 20 (P—Babe Did-
rikson Zaharias, the greatest wom-
an athlete of the half century, and
Sam Baugh, the greatest passer
in football history, will be inducted
into the Texas Hall ol Fame Dec.
30
They are the third and fourth
athletes to attain the honor, which
comes through vote of the Texas
Sports Writers Association.
Previously Tris Speaker, one of
the greatest baseball players of all
time, and Ben Hogan, greatest
golfer, were voted into the hall.
All are Texans who through their
achievements "brought honor and
glory to Texas."
The coremony placing Mrs. Za-
harias and Baugh in the hall, will
be at a luncheon Doc. 30 in the
Grand Ball Room of the Adolphus
Hotel in Dallas. It will be a feature
of Cotton Bowl Week in Dallas.
At the same time the memory
of the late Bo McMillin, famous
football player and coach, und Billy
Disch. great baseball coach of the
University of Texas, will be hon-
ored. They are the second and
third deceased athletic heroes to
be placed in the hall, Joe Routt,
All-America guard of Texas A&M.
preceded them.
The Dallas Salesmanship Club
will co-sponsor the orogram with
the Texas Sports Writers Assn.
Mrs. Zaharias was picked for her
achievements that covered more
than 20 years in which she was
the outstanding star of the Olympic
Games, was the greatest woman
golfer of all time and excelled in
many other sports.
throne. Held to only four first1 gan’s great sophomore end, who advantage ot Itam mi
downs in the first three periods, played a fine game on both offense'up a 20-0 advantage.
DAN CLINE (44), of Michigan, is
brought down by Dave Lettatt of Ohio
State in the first quarter of the Colum-
bus, Ohio Game yesterday. Ohio march-
ed on with a 21 to 7 victory over Wol-
verines to gain a berth in the Rose Bowl.
(UP Telephoto)
Football Scoreboard Harvar(l Rdwunds-
To Nip Yale, 13-9
MvtoImnimi UL Huh •
Ohio Woolr>m 19, Mewm* 0
Shm* 0, JohnM*n ('. Smith t (Ur)
MIOWENT
Wyoming 20, TnKa 17
MImhmbiI 41. Kmmimm III
Oklahoma 55. Nrbmoks 7
Alim 59, Olivet 0
Wrote hi Illinois It. Non the hi lUlnoU 17
Mlehtgon State 40. Mftvqaett* 10
OMo Stale tl. Michigan 7
Northwestern 20. IllinoU 7
WiM-nniiln 27, Minnesota *
Notre Dame 31. Iowa 10
Purdue 13, Indiana 7
Day Ion 13. Xavier 9
Ohio Lnlvemity 20. MarohaH 25
IIHnnlN Normal 27, Illinois Wesleyan 7
ft astern Illinois 20, Northern Illinois 9
SOUTH WENT
Baylor 33. HMU 21
Riee 0. TCU tl
Texas Terh 01. Houston L\ It
Ml Ross 27, Umftr Terh 13
AMIene Christian 53. Arkansas State 0
Texas Freshmen 29. * Texas Frrsh-
. men 7
Colorado 30, Kansas State It
Bradley 30, Washington (Hi.Leals) 19
Kent state 29. Western Michigan 13
Wooster 20, OberHn 12
Bailer 13, Western Reserve 13 (tie)
New Mexico 39. New Mexico ARM 27
New Mexico 39, New Mexico ARM 27
Tarfeton State 27. Arlington State 29
Wiley t§. Paal Quinn 9
PAR WEST
Idaho 7, Brigham Yonng •
CaHfomta 20. Stanford 29
UCLA 34, Soathera California 9
Oregon 33. Oregon State It
Washington State 29, Washington 7
Utah tl. Montana 29
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 20 /P
—Senior wingback Frank White,
playing lor Bob Cowles, injured
on the opening kickoff, threw a
40-yard scoring pass to end Bob
Cochran with less than 5 minutes
to play today as Harvard staged
a magnificent comeback to defeat
Yale 13-9.
The victory brought Harvard’s
first Big Three championship since
1941 and may have cost Yale a
clear hold on the Ivy title.
Trailing 9-0 as the fourth period
began, Harvard drove 80 yards for
its winning score with sophomore
Jimmy Joslin, at tailback for Matt
Botsford, who was hurt on Yale’s
touchdown, putting on a sensation-
al display of football skill and grit.
It took the Crimson 6 plays to
score with the key play, a fourth-
down, 2-yard gamble by Joslin who
made the first down at Yale's 40
on the play before the winning
pass. *
Harvard had closed the gap to
9-7 with 34 seconds gone in the
final period as sophomore fullback
Tony Gianelly fought tiis way over
from the 1.
The drive began after Harvard
took a short punt on the Yale 28
and featured Joslin’s 13-smash to
the 10. ,
mm*
downs: Morse, Heap, Shaefer,
Matz, Kapish. Conversions: Shaef-
er 4.
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CHAMPIONSHIP MATCH
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Wheels and side panels are
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Southwest State Junior Heavy Weight
2 out of 8 falls—90 Minute Time Limit
BOB (iBIGELL champion vs PEPPER GOMEZ. Challenger
Semi-Final—2 out of 8 falls—45 Minute Time Limit
CHET WALLICK vs VERN TAFT.
Preliminary—One Fail—20 Minute Time Limit
FRANKIE MITRDOGK va TOMMY MARTINOALE
Gen. Adm. — $1.00 ' Res. Bleachers — $1.25
Ringside — $1.50 Children — 25c
Best Dressed Cowpoke
in Town!
Accurate Scale Model
RINGSIDE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT MODERN PHARMACY
Sul Ross Slops
Umar Toch, 27-13
ALPEINE. Tex., Nov. 20 -UP—
Sul Ross came from behind in the
last half Saturday to top Lamar
Tech 27 to 13 and gain its first
Lone Star Conference victory.
Sul Ross is now tied with Tech
for the cellar with a 1-4 mark.
Fumbles cost the Tech team in
the final half, with Sul Ross cap-
italizing on two miscues with
touchdmvns.
Tech scored In the first quar-
ter, with Raymond Meyer going
over from five yards oul. SuJ Ross
matched the score in the second,
with Ray McGregor's one - foot
run. But Meyer went over again
before the half ended to put Tech
ahead 13 to 7.
In the third quarter. Sul Ross'
Jim Skinner passed 41 yards to
Richard Stanfield for a score. In
the fourth quarter, after Lamar
fumbled on its own 15, Norman
Cash picked up 15 of his 111 yards
for the day for a touchdown.
Another Lamar fumule, on its own
41 led to a Sul Ross tally, on a
Skinner to Royce Mullins pass
covering 20 yards. ,
Cash picked up his 111 yards in
only 11 carries, bringing his sea-
son’s total to 1,112 yards. -
Thrill DAD With a Really Practical Gift!
STRUCTO • w
ROAD GRADIR
Scraper blade am
raises, lowers. 'Je
Bright orange. 18 . ■
in. long. yW
MAIL BOX | 9g
BANK I
Scale model of a U. S. mail
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holds it on layawayi
TAKE DELIVERY FOR CHRISTMAS . . ,i
mo Villanueva to end Bob Heyden-
feldt.
Held scoreless ihe second and
third quarters, UCLA buried the
Trojans under a barrage of four
touchdowns in the fourth to keep
alive the Bruin bid for the mythi-
cal national collegia le champion-
ship.
The Trojans marched across the
midfield stripe for the first time
late in the third period on a pass
interception by center Marvin
Goux and then moved from the
UCLA 44 to the Bruin 8, first down
with a touchdown oooortunity.
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Getty, Bob. The Sunday Spokesman (Pampa, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 297, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 21, 1954, newspaper, November 21, 1954; Pampa, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1118406/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .