Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 99, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 2, 1964 Page: 4 of 6
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/AGE 4 '
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
THURSDAY, JANUARY 2,1964
Texas Szvamps Nav
BOWLER
As Linemen Battle
I!
10-Pendulum Swing
to fleet wingback Phil Harris in 31 tries for 228 yards — both
doaches agreed, today-that the 4-ered. Navy's hopes before half-
3’
time.
an lanes to lay the ' foundation
nation snatronat Ch ampron Lon g-
A GRAYSON S SCOREBOARD ★
A813
BILLY G’s swing is fashioned after clock pendulum
speed without any help
Ry United Press International
FORSWCRACE
spue bw
By United Press International
collegiate basketball |
back
1
lock did not completely
super-
Challenge Bozvi To
Baedeker^
BARGAIN DAYS SPECIALS
“SAVE~Gt
q,“*eidt
sPkzy==
sis
u-
his group will
put the ball in
the Southwesterners w o u Id
61
ap-
haveany say, and according to
thp nlavprs An hand thau 12,3117
Boat Show in
re-
Dallas Jan. 31
from a year ago: 6,390,000. out-
y—
1
FK
or
or
Fit
Travis Perkingson, space sales
phone TU 3-9251.
.cent, managers and proprietors
-W—
DEPENDabE
T
Bervies
T)
Nt
IP
GR 6-2692
N
d
M
1
€
„3e"qzagaqm".
BOEDEKER'S
k
f h •
mot-
quiring registration u n
Federal Boating Act of
If you prefer, select your
Suit from our Made-to-Measure
line with
। and darting nine big yards for
another touchdown to boost Tex-
as into a 21-0 lead that smoth-
nv r the
1958 was
see them.
FARMERS-MERCHANTS
. LUMBER COMPANY
400 8. Austin- GR -3641
The neeessity for a better
ignition .system ip military and
sporting arms that would elim-
And Its Advantage
With your purchase of any
Sport Coat and Pants, you
Pete Jacquess of Eastern New
Mexico was the second leading
scorer in the nation this year
right off' We
have all the
new colors.
Come in and
Th
mil
up of the mammoth fleet—as
.follows:
'813.000 inboard boats,' including
auxiliary-powered s a i l b o a ts,
4.239.000 outboard ‘boats, 495,000
3'
slipped from (8.107,562 in
to $6,806,000 in 1962.
—The numbee of boa}
140.000 over 1962; and 3,290,000
boat .trailers in use, both fac-
tory and homemade, na in-
crease of 90,000 over the pre-
vious year.
—The average horsepower of
outboard motors sold in 1963 in-
creased again from 30.3 in. 1962
to 30 5 this year. Outboard mot-
ors of more than 20 horsepower
accounted for 57 per cent o f
total sales, with those of 45
more horsepower claiming 2 2
"8
d
fexagre and larger spaces far
exceed the previous seven Boat
Shows. General interest and en-
thusiasm in the annual show
gives promise that the marine
displays will be mhore extensive
than ever before. • -
'“simply kept coming, and com-
ing." . 1" -
a 28-6 victory over Navy in the
28th annual Cotton Bowl.
Texas deserted ils sual ball
control tactics, and ‘took to the
Prescrip-
tion
Cotton Bowl record total offense
of 267 yards.
All-America tackle Scott Ap-
pleton, who shared "outstand-
Thursday night, but
limited scale.
or
SWIFT, SIMPLE
SOLUTION
TO MONEY
PROBLEMS
NOW IN BOTTLES
Washington County
Bottling Co.
1 "youm
Kem-
Tone
Select Any Pair of Pants
from our stock for only $5
with your purchase of a Botany or
Rhapsody Suit. -
• By ID UTE
UPI Sports Writer
DAI LAS (UPI) — The bac ks
made the headlines, but both
Fame beginning Monday.
CANCEL RACES
NEW ORLEANS (UPI)-The
racing program at Fair Grounds
scheduled today was canceled
by officials due to snow.
An inch of snow, the city's
fourth snowfall of the century,
forced cancellation of Tuesday’s
program as well. The cancella
tion was ordered when the jock-
eys refused to ride on the snow
covered track.
She
he
tion Company producing t h •
water-sport extravaganza. 1 t
will be staged in the recently
completed 213,000 square foot
Market Hall. According to show
officials display space com-
mitments already received
indicate every available space
allocation will be filled before
show time.
tary weapon. Being comprisuu
of a complicated mechanism; the
tween two f reescoring teams
if the coaches of the squads
7.
ACk rifle was temporarily.:
7w fth themtFductionor
I3-g
MORE FAMILIES WITH KIDS
K ""PAINT THEIR WALLS WITH
Sherwin-Williams
SUPER KEM-TON
IT’S GUARANTEED ;
WASHABLE
Fingermarks,
even crayom
marks, wash
Player Vote Produces
First Dual NEA Award
BY HARRY GRAYSON
Newspaper Enterprise Sports Editor
HAYES ENTERS MEET
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Bob
Hayes, holder of the world's
record for the 100-yard dash,
has entered the Loe Angeles in-
vitational track, meet Jcz 38m
Hayes, from Florida A & M,
set the record in St. Louis last
summer when he covered the
distance in 9.1.
mimhiiiiihiiiiiih^
CHRIS CAFE
MOM JOHN
IS NOW SERVING
HOT BISCUITS
AT BREAKFAST AND
SUPPER WITH ALL
MEAT ORDERS
OPEN 5 a. m. - 10 p. m.
East Main & St Charles
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii
the muzzle-loading wheel lock,
according to the National Rifle
Association, a non-profit mem-
bership organization recognized
as the governing body for shoot-
ing in the U. S. The wheel
Hundreds of Fabrics__
to choose from, and get your
EXTRA pair of Pants for
Only $5
NOTICE
BILL” SCHMITTS STORE
has MOVED COMPLETELY to its new
location WITH the BRENHAM SADDLE -
SHOP on Hiway South.
INCOME TAX PAPERS FILED HERE
a—-f -
..... —-a
8
sailboats without auxiliary pow-
er and 2,131,000 rowboats, ca-
noes, dinghies-and.othermisdel- .
laneos craft. ___
ner- c of -h--skeb we
-- - » -I -3
to 16-foot class remained t h e
men which held Navy to a min-
us 14 yrds rushing was per-
forming an equally magnificent
chore on offense by giving him
Yon
list
Cotton Bowl records. Ed Orr
caught nine of them for another
bowl high.
Satisfaction Limited
But, his moments of satisfac-
tion were limited to one 75 yard :
Texas
clubs get
A late-season surge in
sale of outboard boats and
swing is performed properly.
You might almost say the ball
swings itself, finding a natural
for 11.3 per cent, service work-
ers for 6 9 per cent, factory
workers for 4.2 per cent, and
farmers and farm laborers for
3.4 per cent. Persons not em-
ployed, such as students and re-
tired people, accounted for 8.3
H2 -- i? ka?Fseles: —
—The dollar value of U. S.
exports of pleasure boats in-
creased by some $500,000 i n
1962 to $7,828,013. Import value
tween New York and Chicago director., said, primary requests
will be displayed in the Nation- -
alProfessionaFootbatt Hall of
New Mexico at Silver City,
- - -N.M
Action picks up slightly Fri-
day night, and will turn into a
flood Saturday night when the
Southwest Conference begins its
_______ league race. .
' < TFt ‘ <
Be Scoring Battle
P ♦ 7
+i
.
Mk
igley of LSU will anchor
s 55-2--- gn
Ke men in the National for-
■o^thc, slow_match_othe
m atsek - 1 -A- ——“-----
ranking as one of the all-time
offensive players in • the Coug-
ar's histery: Gary Hogan of
Purdue , is the third passer.
Besides Rohrschneider, there
are a multitude of great re-
ceivers. Did Limerick was the
team’s leading scorer at Iowa
State this year and lead his
team in receiving white being
chosen to the All-Bigl 8 team.
Don Caun was the top target for
Pete Liske at Penn State, and
such ends as All-American Don
Montgomery of North Carolina
State and - Matt Snorden . o f
Michigan State give the quart-
erbacks other top receivers.
Houston Oiler Coach Frank
Dates for the eigth annual
Great Southwest Boat Show have
been set as January 31 through
February 9 with the 1964 ver-
sion of this well accepted dis-
play of all types of boats, mar-
ine accessories and equipment
giving indications of being the
most extensive and entertaining
ever offered.
The Great Southwest Boat
Show is again under the joint
ward wall will be All-American
Bob Brown of Nebraska, Earl
Lattimer and Charles Brown of
Michigan State, Ken Dill o f
Mississippi and Gene Oliver of
Missouri.
Tickets for the game are cur-
rently on sale in Corpus Christi
at the School's Athletic office,
515 Carancahua. The ducats will
be on sale from 8 a. m. Until
9 p. m... including New Year's
Day. For information on tickets..
cost of producing A wheel lock
was great. Thy precipitated the
introduction of the flintloc(cir-
ca 1615), the . next major pro-
gressive Step in firearms igni-
tion. • .
--other team’s line was the key
factor in Texas quarterback
airlanes to lay the inundation ample jme_to thrqw or work
Tor victory and the coach of the his xun-pass optons to a new
HAVE KIDS?
(UPI) Stands for United Pres*
International The World's be.*:
coverage of the World's biggest
news.
the air.” But the long suit for
> pear to be backfield speed.
the players on hand, they will! n Second Leader
lock, invented in the early
1500‘s, worked like , a modem
cigarette lighter and had to be .
wound up With a - key before
use’. Unlike the matchlock, .the
priming pan had a cover- on it.
and weather wasazlessimnar..
tant consideraton.*%~ spi - -oFc
all its advantages, the wheel
team mates as tackle Staley
Faulkner and guards George
Brucks and Tommy Nobis.
Staubach, who was thrown for
Spending on recreational boat-
ing reached an all - time high
in 1963, according to the annual
year-end report of the Out.
board Boating Club of America
motors, trailers, accessories,
Engine and Boat Manufacturers.
In their new report, “BOAT-
ING — 1963,” OBC and NAEBM
estimated that $2,581,000,000 was
* - ==
wi
most popular, claiming 36.4 per
cent of sales. Average length
was 15.2 feet.
—Skilled workers are still
the best customers for out-
board motors, accounting for
22.2 per cent of sales to e m •
ployed persons Sales-and cler-
ical people, however, moved
up, accounting for 19.1 per
cent. Professional people a c •
counted for 16 6 per cent, semi-
skilled, workers Tor 16.3-pe r
OR 6-4819 ■
108 North Part (Io 30)
was honored as the collegiate
golfer of the year today by the
All-America Golf Committee.
Zarley won a record five col-
lege tournaments this year.
TO DISPLAY FOOTBALL
CANTON, Ohio (UPI — The
kickoff football used this Sun-
day in the National Football
League championship game be-
I I
drive in the fourth period —
after Texas had a 28-0 lead —
when he passed the Middies
down to the two-yard line from
where he ran it over.,
—Texas, which Hardin and his
once-skeptical players admitted
had convinced them it really
was the nation’s No, 1 team,
collected its fourth . touchdown
after Carlisle had gone to the
sidelines with 19 minutes left in
the game.
It came on a two-yard surge
by fullback Harold Phillip after
reserve- —quarterback Tommy
Wade had passed the Longhorns
to within that range.
Staubach probably summed
up the game in 22 words:
"Texas didn’t mess around.
They hit bard and. they kept the
pressure on all the time. No. 1
they deserve to be,"________
A C
-
sflrr
9rs was enough to offset sharp ,
declines recorded in the esly
months pf the year and mTPe
the outboard segment of th 3
boating industry its best year
since I960., Preliminary data ,
indicates outboard motor sales (
of 362,000 units, as compared
with 360,000 in }962; outboard
M Eslescst —a,- eh.m,.
pared with 239,000; and boat
At Pasadena, Calif.
IIinois 17 "WaahingtorirT
1 Cotton Bowl
At Dallas
Texas 28 Navy 6
ingly unsuccessful because, of a
Texas- Hine- that, in Middle
Coach Wayne Hardin’s words,
55 yards in losses by this rag-
t arlisle was the hero of the ing front foursome, wound up
game offensively- by—Hi rowing with a deceptively impressive
58 and 63-yard scoring passes 4 looking passing record of 21 hits
..... b ■ Work Well Offensively :
Duke Carnslesarchitecture of But, the same crew of line-
estimated at 4,624,8%. (The 1962
hgure was 4,515.458.) The fig-
uresaredervedffrom actual
state and U. S.Coast Guard
registrations as of June 3, plus
additional registrations to be
made in the remainder Of the
year as estimated by state
boating authorities and e s t i -
mates of similar fegistrations
made by the industry for states
which did not submit their own
estimates. ____ ____
"jammed up on us."
. Navy^s heralded All-America ing" honor with Carlisle by
Heisman Irophy winning quar : overwhelming vote margins, led
------terback. jofty RogerStaubach, this Longhorn line stampede.
-e--- hada-lineaamclazistically, but ' But, at best his play was just
his,eliectivenesswas-aumliata-shade-better-thanthat-of-sueh
• • •
Tittle threw a record-shattering (hit own) total of 38 touch*
down passes while leading the Giants to their third straight
Eastern Division championship. His 221 completions upped
his,14-season career total to 1,971 and pushed him past Bobby
Tanerasthe most successful passer in history. That doesn’t
include 309 passes completed in two years with the old All-
America Conference.
amassing 15 touchdowns. H i s from a year ago; 6,390,000. out-
jakrbft partners are Pete -bened-matots.in.yseagain.of
Pedro of West Texas State, Sid *— --------
■
mtmient-mettotor
fuel, insurance, docking, launch-
mg, storage, maintenance and
repairs. The figure topped last
year's mark by some $75 mil
lion and exceeded the previous
high —set in 1960—by $56 mil-
lion. , —"
The two associations estimat.
ed that 38.390.000 persons went
boating on a- more-thah-casuat
basis in 1963, an increase o f
more than a million over 1962.
. The report placed the num.
d.H —sdsi 5 e.u.
types in use on the nation's wa-
terways at 7,676,000. the 1962
-' hfhrown waseqalyhappreeSfngettause hrmatettt
yardage the hard way, through, huge tacklers who prevail in
professional balL And in chunks never attained previously.
He was the first to exceed the mile mark for a sjhgle season.
He has led the NFL in rushing six of the seven seasons he
has been a pro.
Brown’s 1,863 yards on the ground this year (845 more
than nearest competitor Jim Taylor) established him as the
leading running back in history, with a career total of 9,322
yards (more than five miles). The 228-pound fullback is 27
a decade younger than Tittle. " »
,' • • •
coach for the National A 1 1-
Stars has a bevy of talented
quarterbacks who like to throw,
including George Bork of. North-
ern Illinois, who was, the total
offense leader for all colleges in
the nation. Bork averaged 327
yards per game and his favorite
receiver, Hugh Rohrschneider
will be on hand to give support)
Rohrschneider caught pusses
for 1,036 yards in 1963. and was
the second leading receiver i n
the nation.
Passing
But the National —passing ot--
fense does not end with Bork.
me-used-to
Al Davis. head coach of the
Oakland Raiders, and a l s $
1/, CALORIES
PER OUNCE
8axa--E22E-
Blanks of /Texas A & I a n d
Bobby Smith of North Texas
State. Fwllbacks on the roster
are Jerry Rogers of Texas
A & M. Dalton Hoffman of Bay-
lor and Ollie Ross of West Tex-
as State.
Such Southwest standouts a s
Jerry Kelley and John Mims of
Rice, Ronnie Carpenter of
A & M, Bobby Mangum o f
TCU, John Hughes of MU and
sede_she matchlock .as„a—mth 7,4684)66. —-----
tary weaDon: Being cnmOYised • report shews the maken
horns,. Durrell Royal, said the
change in strategy was forced
by Navy's defense which
Boat Spending
Hits All-Time..
High in 1963
— A mere trio of the state':;
clubs will take the court, and -
only one of those will do it in
"■ Texas . '
TheK nM:--m Rouston is
_ the only homebody. The Cou -
gars' v-l entertain the Air
— Feree Academy.------—
. .. Nouth"exas . -q. eq-ermwm
ference season by tackling
Bradley at—Peoria.—ILL, Eagle ,
fans will be relying on All-Amer-
ican candidate John Savage, |
who they believe will lead ,
North-Texas to its best basket-
ball .year since joining the ■
Tough Missourf valley Conler - -
ence. a
Sul Ross also makes an out ।
___of. staeAsip.to.tag kle Western •
Washington. States DavMe* 535
SOn, attain -r-poea.
U-ALAMERICAa
naa ------* ------ ----r---dTT*
H 311 E. Main GR 6-3227
Brenham, Texas
By BAY BLUTH
Newspaper Enterprise Asan.
As the old song says, "It
don’t mean a thing if you ain't
. -got—thatswing"—-pendulm-
swing, that is.
Billy Golembiewsk has a
pendulum swing that would do
credit to the finest grandfather's
clock, which is exactly what it
is fashioned after The truly
great swing, such as Billy
G's, is as smooth and effortless
as the movement of the pendu-
lum on an old-fashioned h al I
timepiece.
When you have, learned t o
swing as the- clock pendulum
swings— you have more than
half the problems of bowline
completely - licked. The pendu
Humswing begins when the-
lynd has taken -leave of
tKe balT'D1 W finish o f-the
pushaway and the first step.
The arm should swing free-
ly. extended, taking its natural
arc under the weight of the
ball which, paradoxically
enough, seems to become a l -
mo s t . weightless when the
GOLFER OF YEAR--------------- sponsorship of the Dallas Mar
HOUSTON, Tex (UPI)-Ker- ine Assciatin-ae,HllasL. _____
. mu Zarley -22-weeg old-ej . ' ■ ■ •• 2.7, Tr
- te of th Ontvrsity of Hous-FM, rV’WithNattonal Exhibi- *
ton who recently, turned pro.
MOVE OUT—-Kansas City A‘s general manager, Pat Friday, left, and Jim
Schaff, publicity director, right, help load uniforms on a. truck as the A’s mov-
ed out of Municipal Stadium. The A’s, whose lease expires Dec. 31, have been
negotiating with the Mayor and City Manager for a new lease, but have not ,
reached an agreement.
If you master the penduh m
swing and learn to keep it
straight toward your target
throughout you will be a long
Way on- the road to becoming .
the complete bowler
'Billy Golembiewski
Detroit's Billy Golemb.ewski
IV 34 and one of the most color-
ful bowlers in the game He
has won the ABC Masters titke
and was-a member- of rhe
1959 ABC team and all events
team champions. Elected to all.
America first team in 1960 Bi:
ty G has scored two sanctioned
300 gapeehas theheame pti—mHasmuk
836 and a best season average —E
of 228. ■ — .....— - —
•-jgmesHaThepsunc2e"dk
A M d here Jan. 4 will be a show be-
■
KEG. 4.95 Jt'OS
= $345
PASKvAi Bowl Scores
RESUMES PACE
in"r8SS0havinnsrsoorhecuimvTborFarTorhzi nvguratgd
Frank Gifford of New York, Johnny Unitas of Baltimore,
ok
Jim Brown and Y. Ax/Tittle said, the last time esch was
notified of the distinction: “It’s the greatest honor thst can
come to a player—to be vted the best by his fellow players
it smy proudest achievement in football.” ___
"mhkhem, the- henors kA gpiagkgp. Eh-------
—--thei personalachievementsasail-timefootball greats.
______' - — ..Mm—
Sugar Bowl
Orleans
Alabama 12 Mississippi 7
Orange Bowl
At Miami, Fla.
Nebraska 13 Auburn 7
AEW. YORK—(NEA)—Y. A. Tittle of the New York
- ’ Giants and Jim Brown of the Cleveland Browns
were named co-winnersof the ninth annual Jim Thorpe
Trophy, awarded by Newspaper Enterprise Association
to the most valuable player in the National Football
League.
The unprecedented tie was the result of the closest ballot-
ing in the history of the trophy. The men who see them on
the field under the stress of competition, the players, are
the electors.
“It has haan apparent,” said lisebseker Bill PrfHngtoii
of the Baltimore Colts, “that without Tittle, the Giants are
just another club—with him, champs.” '
“It’s a repeat,” wrote defensive end Paul Wiggin of Cleve-
land, as he jotted down the name of Brown. “Who else*”
Wiggin referred to the fact that Brown won the Thorpe
award in 1958. Tittle was a previous recipient in 1961.
It would have been unfair to,ignore the contributions of
either man this year to the scrolls of professional football
into action I __ .A
l on a very The Wheel Lock
trailer sales of 148,000 as a -
gainst 160.000.
The OBC-NAEBM report also
noted that:
—There are 949,000 inboard
gasoline and diesel marine
engines in use, including autos,
motive conversions, up 33,000
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Blanton, Ben F. & Blanton, Carolyn W. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 99, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 2, 1964, newspaper, January 2, 1964; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1556074/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.