The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 16, 1971 Page: 11 of 36
thirty six pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I Bridge |
'ZT
THEBAYTOVVNSUN_. Thwda,,*^
ly Oswald & Jom« Jacoby
TEST (D) EAST
k K 104 *J7»
i KQ J 74 ¥98653
ijti ♦ *
>64 AQ983
loun
*AQ93
¥ AM
♦ A K 10 9 6
' fii-
North-South vulnwabl*
esc North Emi South
us Pom Pom 1 ¥
¥ 3 4 3¥ 3*
us 4* Pom 6#
im Pou Pom
Opening lsod—¥ K
umy he remarked. "I
in't trying for a slam. I
ited to tell you what tc
I against hearts in case
hadto defend."
>uth said nothing. He had
ned by lone experience
the less a declarer con-
ies the more contracts he
tes.
i took his ace of hearts:
ed out the diamond ace
stopped to study the rest
te play. In a bridge Uto-
West would hold the
in and two other clubs
South would make seven.
South ftad little intereat
tat. He wanted to be as
of six at possible,
nally he found tile best
He cashed the trump
and noted that East
ed out. When he led the
dubs and let it ride,
st took his queen and
e his best play which
to force dummy with a
t. South trumped- and
i low cliib to his jack,
■ed dummy with the
p queen as West’s jack
and discarded three
*s on the good clubs,
s key play on the hand;
not to lead the " third
p before settingup the
. If South hatWone that'
mid have bq£n forced to
ake his club jack and
•2 split would have de-
i him.
ilMMI fNTIKMISC ASSN.)
bidding his been:
North East ‘ South
1 ¥ Dbie
1* , Pass 2 ¥
-24-____Bus------.?. ....
South, hold:
«¥K6«AQ10854K109
t do you do now?
Sid three spades. Your
r may have a bad hand
ave forced each of hi-
)DAYS QUESTION'
ad of bidding two spades,
artner -has bid two no-—
over your two hearts,
lo you do now?
L.nswer Tomorrow
mtrnmmtfmi.
F
ibulary?
mfsfsmwww&i
e> le Pre»touv fur lie
nicknair
42 Fertile >
(2 words)
35 Tax bureau
(init.)
39 Pull behind
41 Girl’s
ickname
spot
i in desert _
43 Territory r ,
deal (ab.)
i) 44Sign
45 Get up
iry 47 Tissue (anat.)
48 Conceits
me 49Passe car
-atin) 5l Bu«hy clump
52 Sea eagle
■cial 53 Detachment
play fab.)
I
47 48 49
iander Truck Coach Buried Wednesday - -
Coach Roy Hutchins Was Respected By All
'aS."*
| would have been succeaaful. He was successful In everything Rockhold went on to say that Hutchins was "certainly my
««fcWd „ SSSSfoS * * *tnew 60,1 “d te’
^^n^hVeStR“kh0 d'*^^i^threeyear8asanas- "Many of the kids from Sterling and Lee were at his
sistant In the RELprogram and two more at Cedar Bayou. funeral,” Rockhold said.
Hutchins was highly sue- Pete Sultia. athletic director of Baytown schools, was asso-
: m. ** a “ ""“■ ‘ "•>*- "*
His teams finished second six more times
mike
finley
said. "All I can say is Roy Hutchins was a fine man. He was a
good man. Just a good man.
"Time was of no concern to Roy when it came time to work
with kids," Kramer said.
Rival coaches had all the respect in the world for Hutchins
Drew Dunlap, a cross-town rival at Ross Sterling, is a prime
example
"He was a great coach,” Dunlap said. “He worked real well
with young men and he was dedicated to youth. I never knew of
• boy he coached who didn't like him
■■m death was . tmnavta. to. I. » «M " Hg k" “»** ■*»”* *» *
iltis pointed out. “Not nnlv a« a mar* h»t.. ■ w. ,tavou had aU the ^*1*^in the world for hlm, Dunlap said,
ity Cage
Teams Enter
Tournaments
City basketball teams take to
tournament action Thursday,
Friday and Saturday with Rob-
ert E. Lee entering the Neder-
land event and Sterling going
to Conroe.
Everyone associated with Hutchins praised him as a coach He was an outstandin8 individual,” Sultis said. “He was In- Su,“* P0*"**1 out “Not only as a coach, but as a teacher. He f ^ ^ J P1. . ’,wadneariav)
rtprimtt. * h'm as ■ cosch Everyone thought a great deal o> him, H> fell dtd n, «,tMu,dlng J*. Atow.II
this, he was a great track coach. ”'' " , _ He wa* an ““‘“"ding individual,” Dunlap summed up.
1 Dm. UntrtkU. »» O..UI. .«IJ .
Many of his ex-athletes and students were scheduled to be at
■He couldn’t be^beat as an Individual. I think Roy was one of nerai Wednesday, continued. “Th7kids loved him, it didn’t ,^“n.Kjamer’ *ho coached football with Hutchins at Lee for star receiver for the Minnesota Vikings,
close to HE
i^fiaarffsassass
itar receiver for the Minnesota Vikings. y r‘
!■ to« to XU. to. to
Robert E. Lee.
WA
\
Ohio U. Takes Big 10 Rivals
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Four days earlier, they toppled a M lead In the first three min-
Ohio University’s Bobcats
have not yet bobbed up in the
nation's Top 10 basketball
teams this season, but if they
continue beating Big Ten
teams, they might join the
elite
The unheralded Bobcats post-
m tncir secuna
over a Big Ten Conference
club, upsetting 12th-ranked In-
i straight victory
Ohio State, ranked fourth at the
time, 77-89.
Hoosiers’ Coach Bob Knight
said, “Ohio University just
came to play harder than we
did, and that was it in a nut-
shell. They played well at both
ends. They grabbed loose balls.
We didn’t underestimate them.
BelpMwiiMywviKQll
The Bobcats, 3-1, showed
diana 79-70 Wednesday night, theirstrengthquiddy, grabbing beate„i
utes and never relinquishing it.
Tom Riccardi's 18 points paced
Ohio University’s balanced at-
tack. Tom Corde added
points and Bob Howell scored
IS. _ ,
Indiana's Joby Wright led all
scorers with 35 points. It was
the Hoosiers first setback in
five games.
Meanwhile, sixth - ranked
Brigham Young remained un-
Cteportmont Store*
T IDEAS.
Ladies’ Shag Slippers
CnWful and co/y.mop
style wth soft podded vole
a#d■ ;pluiH uppers,, in
vof,ted colors, Ipdiev sues 5
to 10.:
1
AFTEk SALE
PRICE 1.99
$ \ C WOOLCO
in discount
I V P«I«
Sturdy 14'' leothor bo«*
*ilb tioroeo *H)'
eeV'.Bdei toe. Durotie
borAo solo;, smooth browr,
leotbor. M»n’> sizes 6V..I1
12.
Soft and supp'e tsdttief-lile
New Three-Strap
r
Perf. toe, in leather-like
vinyl, molded toles ond
heels. 8rown( women's
sizes 5-10.
AFTER SALE
PRICE 144
Football,
Sun Bowl
The King
> EL PASO, Tex. (AP) — Foot-
ball never will replace bull-
fighting as the heartthrob of
the 438,890 residents of Juarei,
Mexico, located just serosa the
border from El Paso.
But “futbol Americano,” as
the people across the border
Tsn, is making inroads.
This year one of the Juarei
high schools, Colonia, played
two good American teams to a
standstill.
And this week, with the com-
ing of Saturday’s Sun Bowl be-
tween Iowa State and Louisiana
State, football is at a fever
pitch in Juarez.
• Thees futbol, ees beeg thing,
eh?” said LuTs, a taxicab driv-
er whose amazing reflexes
have kept him alive in the daily
jungle of traffic in Juarez.
“I go sonfe day and see it,”
he said with a smile. “I go with
friends.”,
This year about 2,000 Juarez
residents and their friends will
see the Iowa State-LSU clash, if
pre-game ticket sales are any
indications.
This is a far cry from the 20,-
10 or more fans who jam
themselves into one of the Jua-
i arenas to watefi a bullfight
But it is a start.
In a way, it was the Sun
Bowl that has kept American
football alive in Mexico.
Back in 1945, the Sun Bowl
hosted what proved to be the
first international bowl game
when the University of Mexico
played‘ Southwestern Univer-
sity.
Mexico lost 35-0 and has nev-
er been back.
The University of Mexico still
has a football team, but it con-
fines its schedule to small col-
leges and freshman teams.
It would be murder if it had
play either LSU or Iowa
State,
But then, several American
teams have been murdered by
die Bengals and Cyclones Oils
year.
LSU blasted such schools as
Notre Dame, Florida, Rice, Tu-
lane, Texas A&M and Mis-
sissippi State this year.
Iowa State whipped Missouri,
Kansas; Kansas State, Okla-
homa State, New Mexico and
San Diego State on its way to
an 8-3 record one of the finest
in the school’s 76-year football
history,
Griese Tops
AFC Slats
NEW YORK (AP) - The
leading passer in the National
Football League’s American
Conference is Bob Griese of the
Is Hughes Next To Be Fired?
HOUSTON (AP)-This has lover. It seems to be every-1 Club owner Bud Adams hu (even started. The pace has
been a. banner year for the body’s guess that coach Ed wieldad the quickest ax in the picked up in the past month.
Houston Oilers—they’ve bag- Hughes will be next. ' league but he can’t take credit Adams and general manager
sr .“3xrs«; ^
and an equipmqnjiihanager. their 12-year history, this one ager Bob Brodhead and trainer coach Ernie Zwahlen last
And huntina an arm lan’t ihfl.o tn vo into the record books. 'Bobbv Brown before the aeaaon'month.
Jay Bollinger’s Ganders
were scheduled to play Beau-
mont Charlton-Poliard at 11
a.m. Thursday in the first
round while Sterling will meet
Aldine at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in
its opening round game.
REL is 7-8 on the season
while Woody Walker’s Rangers
wtM.- —--
bee College gets back into
action at 7:30 p.m. Saturday
against Temple in a Texas
Junior College Athletic Confer-
ence battle at the LC- field-
Mike Hefley’s Rebels will be
trying to snap a two-game los-
ing streak against Temple.
Also Thursday, Crosby will
meet Hitchcock at 6 p.m. in the
Santa Fe tournament.
In an area game, Anahuac
puts its perfect 124) record on
the line when Russell Boone's
Panthers tangle with Daytoi
at Anahuac Friday. Game h
7:30 p.m.
Foshloiiable Strap
Jut
Our teardrop amrrtTtrp.......
in Jcnnkto potenl uppers, .
wiili new fimwl iirrl nt)H
.VNirh fne. IMml
t- 10
ing scorer in the AFC is Garo
Yepremian of the same Miami
Dolphins. So is it any wonder
that Miami is one of the team
in the NFL’s postseason play-
offs?
Statistics released by the
league today show Griese with
Z - a S4J per cent average on 132
—» ' onrrsrslofinnc nf 919 Qftomnfo in-
AFTER $Al(
PRfCE 4.96
H./UI
tlppf ond mold#
toftrwid h«»!>. Owitt «l
colox, SUM
PHONE 427-6681
TEXAS AVE AT ALEXANDER DR
#aus*j ♦
BAYTOWN
completions of 242 attempts in-
cluding 19 touchdowns this sea-
son. Yepremian has scored 108
points including 26''of 37 at-
tempted field goals.
Griese’s passing game is[
complimented by the rushing of
Larry Csonka, whose 983 yards
gained are second only to Den-
ver’s Floyd Little, who has
gained 1,054. Csonka’s running
mate, Jim Kiick, has gained
684 yards, eighth best in the
conference.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 16, 1971, newspaper, December 16, 1971; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1065853/m1/11/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.