The Rice Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 8, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 30, 1963 Page: 6 of 8
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Six
THE THRESHER
WEDNESDAY. OCT, SO, 196S
JA 3-4338
ROAD SERVICE
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CENTER
TEXACO PRODUCTS
John West
owner
AUTO REPAIRS
2531 Rice Blvd.
In The Village
Minit Man
Car Wash
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5001 S. MAIN
6900 HARRISBURG
$1 with Rice ID
Two Barber Shops
Serving Rice
SOUTH MAIN
4 BARBERS
SPECIAL MONDAY PRICES
COLLEGE STUDENTS ONLY
6626 S. Main JA 8-8118
TIMES
"In the Village"
FLAT TOP SPECIALTY
2434 Times JA 8-9440
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIP
Royal On lace
"It was brutal," Coach Dar-
rell Royal said about the Rice
game on his Monday night TV
show. "Rice is one of the better
drilled football teams in the
country."
On Jerry Kelley's 53 yard
run: "Coach Neely ' says its
good running; I say it's poor
tackling."
"The thing that Rice did
best was pick up third down
and long yardage," Royal said.
Tommy Nobis, Texas! line-
backer had this to say: "They
were tough. Tougher than OU
and Arkansas. No doubt about
it."
Amen.
FRESHMEN FLY HIGH
Shorthorn Polled As
Even
"Wait til next year" has be-
come a familiar retort in the
bitter Rice-Texas rivalry, but the
Owl faithful needn't look far to
find a bright glow in the Rice
future. Pouncing vigorously on
every Shorthorn error, the Rice
Owlets streaked to a lopsided 37-
7 victory over a very highly re-
garded freshman crew.
Coach Allen Davis, his "thin
thirty" crippled by four key in-
juries, thus had the distinction of
decisively defeating Texas in his
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initial attempts as a coach—no
little feat against the awesome
quantity of Shorthorn talent.
THE PATTERN of the
struggle was keynoted when
Tony Laboy crashed through to
.'smother a Texas field goal try
in the second period. The Owlets
then drove 75 yards in nine plays
behind the explosive running of
Dennis Gann and R. V. Benning-
field. The final 31 yards was
covered when Gann threw a half-
back passi to Benningfield.
Later, Mickey Holder's punt
put the Shorthorns on their own
seven-yard line. Again the hard-
hitting Owlet forwards forced a
break, with Dick Lagow pouncing
on a fumble at the 19. Work-
horses Gann and Benningfield
alternated carries, with the lat-
ter again crashing over from the
two.
Fired up now, the youthful
Teasips regained the ball and
began a sustained march to the
Owlet 25. Here Bellaire ex Doug
Nicholson made his first of two
key interceptions, picking off a
pas:s at his 15 and rambling 85
yards for a vital touchdowjj.
REFUSING TO concede de-
feat, the Steers rambled again
to the Rice 8. Once more Nichol-
son was Doug-on-the-spot with
an interception return to the
Texas 22. Gann capped the 5-play
drive with a smash from the two,
and the Owlets had a 24-7 lead.
Late in the game Stan Smith
halted a Teasip passing flurry
with an interception. Quarter-
back Nicholson fired a 44 yard
strike for the final points of the
afternoon.
The frosh, with a 1-1 record
make their first home appearance
Thursday night at 7:30 against
Texas Tech.
WADEMAN'S
FLOWERS FOR
THE LIVING
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JA 6-1231
C. E. Wademan, '21
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OX 7-8781
Akira
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Hidden
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TOSHIRO
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admission (Thurs., Oct. 31 only)
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Keilin, Eugene. The Rice Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 8, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 30, 1963, newspaper, October 30, 1963; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth244897/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rice University Woodson Research Center.