The Lone Star Lutheran (Seguin, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, October 30, 1959 Page: 3 of 4
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THE LONE STAR LUTHERAN
Page 3
lZI
drive,
Good food for all
We have served TLC
students for more
than 30 years
Compliments of
SCHUESSLER & SONS
J. B.'s BARBER SHOP.
Quality Insurance since 1924
PR9-II04
109 E, Market St.
ES
Naumann's Super Market
MICHNA FIRESTONE STORES
At 4 Corners & Downtown Seguin
IOO%? BULLDOG BOOSTER
Seguin
New Braunfels
Del Rio
Kraushaar Top .....
Consolidated .........
North Hall .............
Kraushaar Bottom.
West Side ...............
East Side .................
.5
.3
.3
.3
.1
.0
27-26 behind the three touch-
downs of Charlie Key.
SPURRIER'S
Steaks & Seafood
ARLINGTON defender comes
in to tackle Billy Larson. Arling-
ton. went on to win the game
BRADY'S
REXALL DRUG STORE
Seguin’s Most Complete
Drug Store
Phone FR 9-1412
ODORLESS CLEANERS
Cleaning—P ressing—Alteration
— SEE —
Mark Streng, Gerald Johnson, Bob
Goodhart, Fred Bohls, Stanley
Sultemeier
carries. Larson also picked up 57
yards on four passes. He reeov- ~
ered a fumble ary^, intercepted a
pass. _
The other starters will be Larry
Franklin and I. J. Brown at ends,
Frank Annweiler and Ross Early
at tackles, and Bill Lehman and
Santos Ortiz. Johnny Schrank
will be at fullback, to complete
the backfield.
Won Lost
0
2
2
2
4
5
Maurice Peterson threw to Larry
Wiliamson for ASC’s second
touchdown and Ron Southerland
kicked the extra point. Charlie
Key scored another touchdown
from the 3-yard line and Souther-
land ran around right end for a
2-point PAT to make the score
21-0 at the half.
In the second half, Billy Larson
and Charlie Edwards scored on
running plays. Miffy Kaase threw
a touchdown pass to Larry Frank-
lin and two more to I. J. Brown.
Out of these five touchdowns, the
Bulldogs could collect only two
extra points, coming on a pass
play from Kaase to Brown.
With 5:40 left in the third, Key
scored his third touchdown, and
the Rebels’ winning score. This
came on a nine-yard run after an
88-yard drive.
Texas Lutheran led 18-14 in week picking up 73 yards in 12
first downs, and 261-206 in total
yardage.
r
L
BILLY LARSON — The little
halfback that took over Satur-
day night in the Arlington game.
Larson picked up 73 yards on 12
carries. On four passes Larson
picked up another 57 yards.
Kraushaar Top
Wins Tourney
In the final week of play on the
intramural football schedule, two
teams forfeited and Kraushaar
Bottom beat Consolidated by a
score of 12-6. East Side forfeited
to North Hall, and West Side for-
feited to Kraushaar top.
This left Kraushaar with an un-
beaten season, and undisputed
first place in the round robin tour-
nament.
Bulldogs Face Tough McMurry Team for Homecoming Game
The Bulldogs meet the powerful
McMurry College Indians this
Saturday afternoon at 2 o’clock.
The TLC team will be out for
blood this year after having ab-
sorbed a 63-0 loss at the hands of
the Indians last year. Another
factor which should contribute to
a hard-hitting game is that this
is their Homecoming game.
The McMurry Indians have
come up with a potent offense this
year, picking up an average of 345
yards a game, to be ranked sec-
ond in the nation in NAIA statis-
tics.
Terry O’Brien, the Indians’ sen-
ior quarterback, is one reason, as
he is also ranked as one of the
top passers in the nation. The
6’3”, 195 pounder has thrown 87
and completed 35 for 664 yards
and six touchdowns.
The big spark all season has
been Gerald Combs. Combs, only
5’4”, 135 pounds, is the leading
pass receiver with 10 catches for
223 yards and two TD’s. On the
ground the little halfback has
picked up 226 yards on 36 carries.
Starting for the Indians will be
Dalton Hicks, the top receiver last
year, and Tim Jackson, at tackles
Bill Gorman, and Robert James,
at guards Charles Baldwin and
John Thomas, and Elmo Cure at
center. Terry O’Brien, quarter-
back, and Gerald Combs, left
half, will be joined by Don How-
ard at right half, and Don Davis
at fullback.
Another reserve halfback' who
has proved valuable is George
Bridges. In 26 carries he has clip-
ped off 141 yards for a 5.4 yard
average.
The TLC Bulldogs will be ham-
pered by injuries received in the
last two games. Gerald Johnson,
the starting center until he broke
his leg, is still out, and Lindon
Creel will be starting at center
again. John Bryan, the freshman
center who received a brain con-
cussion, is also back again.
In the backfield, Eddie Marbur-
ger is still slowed by- an ankle
sprain, and Miffy Kaase is suffer-
ing from an injury received in the
scrimmage against Lackland AFB
Senior halfback Billy Larson
filled in for Eddie Marburger last
I B
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I
Rebels Slip By TLC Saturday
The form held true again last
Saturday as the Texas Lutheran
College Bulldogs won in statistics,
but went down to defeat at the
hands of the Arlington State Col-
lege Rebels.
Although the Bulldogs’ power-
ful offense again won in the sta-
tistics column, they couldn’t move
the ball across the goal line often
enough. The Bulldogs fumbled
twice and both times the Rebels
recovered to score a touchdown
in the next series of plays.
In the first quarter, the Bull-
dogs lost the ball after a bad cen-
ter on an attempted punt. The
Rebels recovered the ball on the
18-yard line and Charlie Key
moved the ball across from the
one. The point after was blocked.
In the second. quarter TLC
again fumbled and was forced to
punt on their own 16.
Climaxing a 77-yard
rill
From the ‘‘Talk About Guts”
department.’ John Bryan, who has
received two severe jolts on the
cranium this season, was out on
the practice field again last Tues-
day. Doctor’s reports from Hous-
ton OK’ed the freshman center
for service in the remaining con-
tests. That’s the last time we’ll
second-guess the medical men.
* * ®
From 'the “Things Aren’t As
Bad As They Seem” department:
The Manitou Messenger, student
newspaper from St. Olaf College
in Northfield, Minnesota, reports
that for their September 19 foot-
ball game with Beloit College,
there was a grand total of four
students in the cheering section
(reserved seats, too!) St. Olaf
has an enrollment of 1800 stu-
dents. Brookover — you think
you’ve got troubles!
■fcday, October 30, 1959
I Stick's Pickin's
I By LUNDQUIST
I Welcome back, exes and alums.
[Get ready to sit back in the vast-
Expanses of Matador Stadium to-
MM^Tow afternoon, and witness a
Eard-hitting, hard-fighting Bull-
Kog football team.
I Tomorrow’s contest migjht be
Iclassified as “The Game”. It’s
difficult to forget last year’s hu-
miliating 63-0 defeat which came
^F the hands of these same Mc-
Haurry Indians, and you can bet
lyoUr tomahawks that the Bull-
Ldogs haven’t. Various ways and
■means of holding on to those
■calps have been worked on all
tvveek long. The Bulldogs’ teeth
pave been honed to “Indian hunt-
ling” sharpness and they’re about
faue to sink those fangs into some-
lone.
r The McMurry tribe outclassed
I the SWT Bobcats by a 20-7 tally
^hree- weeks back, but the score
Breesn’t do justice to the caliber
lof play that was shown. McMur-
ry’s main asset seemed to be out-
standing bench strength. They
Isimply wore the San Marcos
Lbunch to a frazzle through the
kjge of unit substitution. Yet, face
Hrts. Their total offense averag-
es 345 yards per game.
| Just as a good cake has many
components, a victory must be a
I combination of many elements.
i-Ad'd the desire of the team, the
spirit of the student body, Home-
doming activities, and the mem-
ory of a 63-0 defeat, and make of
[it what you will. Because of my
'thus far worthless contributions
rto the art of prophecy, and be-
jifiuse of the importance of this
"particular contest, I’m keeping
|ny big fat mouth shut.
r ss 9 9 :j:
L As for last week’s game, any
outfit that can come from behind,
.^specially when the opposition has
■^21 point lead, is a more than
ERerage” team. In reference to
phe Dallas Morning News sports
Jwriter, who stated that TLC had
Ito “jell” some before they could
Ltake on the likes of Arlington
fetafe, we’d say we have a pretty
^‘solid” team. Six points and three
Ketnes lost!!!
It * g: ¥ «
Lr Gerald Johnson, junior center
From Victoria, has had the cast
pemoved from the knee that he
[fractured in the A&I game. John-
|S0p’s goal is to be ready for play
'in the’Austin College game.
® *
’ Charlie Rheinlander and Tom-
pny Eddy, Physical Education ma-
jors from New Braunfels, are
spending their afternoons coach-
jipg the New Braunfels Junior
Eigh football team, gratis. An at-
LEON STUDIO
PORTRAITS
PHOTO FINISHING
COLOR and BLACK & WHITE
Phone FR 9-1374
tribute to their skill is the fact
that so far the team has a 6-0
record, and they have scored 80
points to the opposition’s 0.
(Rheinlander is my Phys. Ed.
teacher—I should be set for the
year!)
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The Lone Star Lutheran (Seguin, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, October 30, 1959, newspaper, October 30, 1959; Seguin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1301254/m1/3/: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas Lutheran University.