Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 33, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 12, 1957 Page: 6 of 8
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TIMES—REVIEW
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LSU
ing serious has developed.”
Brennan said Notre Dame train-
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Brennan said the team couldn’t
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6—Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1957-CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW
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CLARENCE CRAWFORD
J. T. REID
X& D
-
6.
Nov 12-13
By OSCAR FRALEY
United Press Sports Writer
WEST POINT, N.Y. (UP)—Bob
Anderson, a husky choir singer
who dotes on baseball, was 110
yards short of Army football his-
tory today.
Anderson is the workhorse half-
back of the Cadet grid team who
leads the nation’s touchdown scor-
ers this season with a total of 13.
But his specialty is eating up
yardage in huge chunks and it’s
the main reason why Army has
lost only one game this year.
It’s an ability which menaces
the Army ground-gaining record
established by the immortal Glenn
Davis of Davis-Blanchard fame
during the war years when the
Cadeta were the scourge of the
I
WISMER’S OUTLOOK
I
i
I
Cleburne Fimes-Review i
mmu
upsets are frequent Ohio State
goes all out for the Rose Bowl
bid in their game with Iowa at j
Columbus. If the Bucks win, they- l
’re Pasadena bound. However, a |
defeat by Iowa would make the j
following week the clincher. Mi- |
chigan State in the meantime, I
plays Minnesota and hopes Woody
Hayes’ Crew drops two.
The other big one is' in the
Southeastern Conference; Missis-
sippi and Tennessee at Memphis.
The winner of that one will go to
the Sugar Bowl for sure.
On the West Coast Oregon still
has an edge for the right to go
to the Rose Bowl. Oregon still has
to play Southern Cal and Oregon
State and a win in either game
will do it. Stanford is the only
other team with a chance.
MESHACH INKS CONTRACT I
BROOKLYN(UP)—Marvis Me
shach, a Blairstown, N.J., basket-
ball and baseball star, has been
signed by the Los Angeles Dodg-1
ers and assigned to their Kokomo, i
Ind., farm club.
ft
89
i 1
2820
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Hoi Egg and Potatoes Tongs ______
Tea Strainers, fine mesh steel ....
Roast Holder Prongs __________________
Bowl Pictures ~
Army's Choir-Singer Halfback Nearing Record May Take Shape
the Western Division. By the time
next Monday rolls around three
teams could be tied for first place,
San Francisco, Detroit and Balti-
more, and right now every team
but Green Bay still has a chance
to win. The Rams’ victory over
the Forty-Niners really tightened
things up and only two games se-
parate the first five elevens.
Browns vs Giants
In the East, things have boiled
down to the Cleveland Browns
and the New York Giants. Paul
Brown’s club and the 1956 cham-
pions have a good edge on the
others and will battle it out.
We had five winners in our pro-
selections this week, only the
Forty Niners crossed us up. Van
Brocklin’s passing was better than
Y. A. Tittle’s.
Everything went pretty well ac-
cording to form in intercollegiate
ranks Saturday. Illinois again
humbled Michigan, Duke’s tie of
Navy was a mild upheaval, and
North Carolina State got a major
809
01
31110)
Whatever Happened To . . .
EARLE (GREASY) NEALE
By UNITED PRESS
One sport at a time never was
enougt for Earle (Greasy) Neale.
A major league outfielder for nine
years, he continued to coach foot-
ball. One season, he spent the
summer with the Cincinnati Red-
legs and the fall directing a bril-
liant Washington and Jefferson
eleven that wound up in the Rose
Bowl. In 1949 he was “pro coach
of the year” for his job on the
Philadelphia Eagles but after 36
years of coaching the string ran
out when the Eagles dropped him
in 1951.
Whatever happened to Greasy
Neale? In all his years in pro
sports he annually saved exactly
half his salary and in New York
today, at 64, “I’m doing nothing
and love it, nothing except play
2392
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Tickets on Saley
HOUSTON (UP)- Wets xo
on sale at Rice Field today • for
1,000 temporary bleacher seats
behind the north end zone for
Saturday’s Rice-Texas A&M
game. All other seats are sold
out. ___
- ‛ -
I
Texas Belter Wins
Bout hi Caracas
CARACAS, Venezuela (UP) —
Paul Jorgensen of Port Arthur,
Tex., scored a 10-round decision
Monday night over Venezuelan
featherweight champion Sonny
Leon in their bout before a crowd
of 5,000 at the new Caracas bull-
fight arena.
The U.S. fighter, who is ranked
seventh in the world in the feath-
erweight class, came back to win
after taking a heavy beating dur-
ing the seventh round.
- “
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Reg.
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catching him.
One of the strange facets of the
Anderson story is that he was a
sickly youngster who almost never
got to West Point. A severe nasal
condition caused his family to
move to the South when he was
six years old and at Cocoa he was
one of the finest athletes ever
turned out in Florida.
Young Bob won 15 letters in
football, baseball, basketball and
crack and 20 schools were after
him when he earned high school
All-America honors. Bob wanted
to go to West Point but the family
thought it was a matter of money
to get in and he had about given
up the idea when Army athletic
authorities cleared up that little
misunderstanding.
Score
FOR TOTAL SCORE, select one game, estimate
combined total scores of BOTH teams. This will be
used ONLY in case of ties. Best nearest total score
estimate will be the winner. If tie still exists, prize
money of $75 will be split. _
LIMIT: Entries must be in The Times-Review ottice
oy NOON, Friday. Entries received after that time
for ANY reason .will not be counted.
dm
" 50
Eaoge
E 88
Against Oklahoma
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP) -
Notre Dame may become Okla-
homa’s 48th consecutive football
victim at Norman next Saturday,
but Irish Coach Terry Brennan is
sure his charges won’t be led in
like lambs to the slaughter.
Brennan even harbors a slight
dream of knocking off Bud Wil-
kinson’s high-flying Sooners, but
even he admits it will ‘ take the
luck of the Irish. ’
Brennan said, “we’d sure like
to be the ones to break that win-
ning streak of theirs, but they’ll
be the heavy favorite, even
though they’ve had a couple of
close games this year.”
The young Irish mentor said his
team came through its defeat at
120%
j A E E
amount of bruises you get in ev- „
ery tough game, but so far noth- setback by William and Mary.
—ht,
I
338113128
8888888
*222
This Weekend
By HARRY WISMER
NEW YORK (UP) - The in-
creasing popularity of profession-
al football was again demonstra-
ted this past weekend when an-
all-time record for attendance
was set at Los Angeles, and a
new high was set in the overal
picture for the entire National
Football League. More than 102,-
000 saw the Rams take the Forty
Niners at the Coliseum and more
than 311,000 saw the six games
on Sunday for a new high for a
single day’s attendance for the
league.
There were three sellouts, in
Washington, Chicago and Los An-
geles. That’s proof positive that
pro football has gripped the fans
in more convincing fashion than
any other professional spo;
Still on the pro front
that things are tightening up in
. 3 3 9 5 '
p-,0
k-
SEWELL’S MOTHER DIES
WETUMPKA, Ala. (UP)- Mrs.
Susan T. Sewell,86, mother of for-
mer St. Louis Browns’manager
Luke Sewell who died here Mon-
day, will be buried today. SeweH,
who makes his tme in Akron,
Ohio, also managed the Cincinnati
Redlegs. He won • catcher with
Cleveland, Washington, Chicago
and the Browns.
WANT ADS
TWeMARkefruacE
| Of MILLIONS
important games this coming
from Monday to Friday. “With weekend. In the Big Ten, where
$2
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CLOSE OUT SPECIAL STOCK
OF RUBBER MAID ITEMS
Shelf mats, eggbaskets, steel wool hold- « F
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mats. Colors: red, yellow, black and white 4 t
ONSIDE FUMBLE—An onside kick by Rice in the final
moments of the second quarter is fumbled by Arkansas
during game at Houston. Rice recovered. The Owls
defeated the Razorbacks I3-.7 (NEA Telephoto)
ADDRESS ________________________________________ PHONE ............
Send as Many Entries as You Wish!
WINNERS WILL BE ANNOUNCED NEXT MONDAY
a
—9
$7k Times-Review $7K
I • Football Contest H •
Order Your Cards Now. Come by
and Make Your Selections Now or Call i
5-2441
nothing distrubed the three lead-
ers in the nation, Oklahoma, Tex-
as Aggies and Auburn, and ap-
parently nothing is going to. '
OSU Seeking Bowl Bid
On the bowl front we have two
Note: Place X by winnerTlf prediction is a tie,
place "T" in both boxes. Unless predicted, ties count
.4
2808 83388 8838
SR W JaK
R "32
college gridiron.
Davis’ Record in Danger
Anderson seems a cinch to
smash the Davis record in this,
his first year of varsity football.
For Rambling Rob is only a year-
ling (sophomore) ahd as such still
is a growing boy.
But apparently he. isn’t going to
wait until he grows up. For he’s
that mere 110 yards away from
the Davis record with two games
to go.
Davis, it ‘ can be said, ran
against a group of sub-par oppo-
nents during the war years when
college boys were really boys.
Still, his 930 yards gained in 82
carries during 1945’ was some
pumpkins even against Vassar.
You can’t say that Army olavs
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002898 s. *&
—#G22
Saturday without serious in-
jury. “We took the normal
the toughest schedule in the world
even today. It is a spotty one with
rhe few tough games well scat-
tered. Yet, even so, every one of
these clubs lays for the Cadets
and proof of the tapioca is the
way thrice-beaten Utah barely
bowed, 39 to 33, Saturday.
One-Man Show
Still, it was another one-man
show from the Army side of the
ledger as Anderson cracked to
three touchdowns — one on a 54-
yard sprint — and pitched a
fourth. It was his greatest day as
he rolled up 214 yards for a total
of 820 yards in seven games and
moved to within easy striking dis-
tance of the Davis record.
He’s big for a halfback, this 19-
year-old who was born in Eliza-
beth, N.J., packing 200 pounds on
a six foot, two inch frame. This
lets him drive inside but he also
can run with the elusiveness of a
pony back and once he gets be-
yond the secondary there’s no
ae
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 33, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 12, 1957, newspaper, November 12, 1957; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1532314/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.