TUESDAY, JANUARY I, 1961
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE.
t -a
1 '
Duke Scores 7-6
Upset Victory
Dallas, Tex.-IUPD-Duke'i
, was really lonesome without an Arkansas man around him
', when he caught the nine-yard pass that propelled the Blue
; Devils to an upset 7-6 victory over Arkansas in the Cotton
Bowl.
It was such a neat bit of
' Blue Devil trickery that
' Duke's Don Altman pulled on
' the usually quick wilted
: Razorback that Arkansas was
; sucked into defense of an out-
side reverse running play,
: leaving Moorman - the na
: tion's No. 1 receiver - ell
; alone in the end zone.
! Fancy Fakery
Some fancy fakery by
Arkansas' Lance Alworth had
paved the way for the Razor-
backs' touchdown earlier, but
' the difference in the game
KC Shakeup
Is Rumored
" Kansas City, Mo. - 4UP1I - A
. shakeup is brewing in the
; front office of the Kansas City
; Athletics and Parke Carroll
'. Is expected to be relieved as
general manager.
United Press International
: learned today from a reliable
! source that Carroll will be
relieved before the Athletics
begin spring training, but that
: lie will remain with the club
: as vice president.
; He has been serving in the
. dual capacity of vice presi
, dent and general manager.
; Fans Critical of Carroll
Carroll, a onetime Kansas
'. City sports writer, has been
widely criticized by Athletics
' fans for some of the recent
trades with the New York
I Yankees. He was blamed for
; the trade which sent home
run king Bob Cerv to the
i Yankees for injury-plagued
; third baseman Andy Carey,
and also was accused for ped
, dling Roger Maris to New
; York in a multiple-player
; deal. '
'. Many of the Kansas Cily
I New York trades, however,
; were manufactured by the
late Arnold Johnson, who died
! last year while in Florida lo
watch the A's train.
' End "Farm Club" Adage
' New A's owner Charles Fin
! ley of Gary, Ihd., promised
' upon purchasing, the eontrol-
ling interest in the club that
: he intends )o put an end to
; the adage that the Kansas
City team is a Yankee farm
i club. And, although he ad
; inlts he intends to retain Car
; roll "because of his vast base
! ball knowledge," he . did not
promise to keep him as gen
; nral manager and vice prest
' dent. . '' "
I Finley reportedly is pleaded.'
to have Joe Gordon as man
' ager. The one-time Cleveland
! and Detroit manager recently
I signed a two-year contract to
skipper the Athletics.
' The new A's owner declined
; to cpmmenl on other possible
1 personnel changes in the or-
ganization.
Oregon
By MILT CUYMON
i Portland - "this is the time
of year when ' game agents
" throughout the state travel far
' and wide conducting inventor
" ies on Oregon's big game re-
" sources. It's an annual task
that begins shortly after the
hunting seasons and continues
- through the winter Into March
7 or April.
First phase of the big game
- Inventories is herd compost
Z tion studies to determine the
; ratio of bucks, does, and
- fawns on each range. Biolo-
- gists begin gathering herd
. composition information im-
mediately after the hunting
seasons are over when they
make a systematic survey of
( all big game ranges. All aul-
- mals observed are classified
as to sex and age and express-
; cd in a ratio to the number
- of bucks or bulls, fawns or
- calves per 100 adult females.
. Herd composition must be
; completed before buck deer
I or bull elk lose their antlers.
" By mid-January herd compo-
sitlon on deer is no longer
" feasible as bucks rapidly shed
their beams, and by early Feb
.' ruary there Is little rcscm
; blance to the proud animals
nimrods observed during the
. hunting seasons. Elk often re
; tnin their antlers as late as
Mid-march before the massive
". beams are dropped and new
I growth begins.
; Antelope by Air
' Surveys are made by auto
' mobile, on foot, horseback,
" and on some ranges by air-
plane. Almost without exrep-
tion surveys on antelope arc
: made from the air, preferably
: when snow Is on the ground.
At this time the animals are
. bunched on the winter ranges
; and the short sage country In
which the animals live makes
', aerial observation quick, easy,
; and accurate. Some elk herds
are also censused by airplane,
! especially in rough, mountain
country which prohibits
' other means of travel. Deer
' rauuei are travelled primarily
' by horse brk, although on
' ume rig. depending on
now, sample routes arc tun
"lonesome end," Tee Moorman,
came when Duke end Dave
Unser blocked Mickey Cis
sell's try for the extra point
while Duke's Art Browning
converted perfectly.
Alworth, the nation's No. 1
punt returner and voted the
outstanding back in this silver
anniversary Cotton Bowl
game, had put Arkansas out
in front in the third quarter
with a 49-yard punt return
and had to fake Duke safety
man Randy Clark "out of his
boots" to do it. He left Clark
standing flatfooted 10 yards
away with his darting fake.
Arkansas Coach Frank
Broyles, stunned by the great
Duke comeback surge of 73
yards for the winning touch
down, called the Duke touch
down play "perfect execu
tion," but said that the Blue
Devils' passes to Moorman on
key third downs hurt his team
a great deal.
The comeback was a real
tribute to the team's determ
ination in the mind of Blue
Devil Coach Bill Murray.
Raider Office
Head Resigns
Oakland, Calif, -IUPII- The
Oakland Raiders were search
Ing for a new general man
ager today following the resig
nation of Y. C. "Chet" Soda
Soda Monday resigned his
post as president and general
manager ' but said he would
slay on as one of the team's
eight owners.
Raider ' head coach Eddie
Erdelatz, rumored as a possi
ble candidate for Soda's post,
said he had no desire for the
Job.
"I'm not old enough to quit
coaching," he said, "but it
would be too much for me to
take on the general manager's
Job as well."
With Erdelatz out of the pic
ture, Paul Hastings, the assist
ant general manager, appear
ed to have the Inside track
on the job.
The Raiders dropped an
estimated $400,000 in their
first season of operation in
the new American Football
league. ';
TITLE NOT AT STAKE '
Paris - IUPII - Davey Moore's
featherweight championship
will not be at stake next Mon
day night when he, opposes
Gracleux Lampei'tl in a 10
round bout at the Palais des
Spprts. Willy K e t c h u m,
Moore's manager, said "a
friendly agreement" not to
have the crown at stake was
reached when the French pro
moters failed to put up the
money guarantee contracted
Game Inventory Being Conducted
by automobile as well as foot
travel by snowshoe.
Rain, snow, wind, and cold
are no deterrent, for game
agents must travel in all kinds
of weather if the status of Ore
gon's big game herds is to be
accurately determined. Na
ture's hand Is at work around
the calendar affecting the big
game herds through the sea
sons. Contrary to the fall hunting
seasons enjoyed by Oregon
sportsmen, the winter months
might aptly be called the
hunting season for game
agents where l.n llw cold and
snow they hunt out the big
game animals, watch them as
tlwy so, through the winter,
slutly their fowl supplies,
keep a critical eye on. herd
condilion, record, mortality,
sex, and age and the number
of animals observed on each
range.
GAME MEN WORK FAST This proud
trophy bui.k sunn Vill lose us auuers as ine
herds concentrate on the bleak, snowbound
ranges In the dead of winter. New growth
will begin la iiirtng and develop Uiruuftu.
FLEMING DRIVES George Fleming was
driving on this play during yesterday's Rose
Bowl at Pasadena, Calif. Fleming accounted
for Washington's first points as he booted
Ole Miss
New Orleans - IUPII - Every
body ought to be happy today
-even the loser in the 27th
annual Sugar Bowl game.
Mississippi proved that it
was as good as everybody said
it was, and Rice proved it was
better than most people
thought by holding Ole Miss
lo a narrow 14-6 victory.
The Rebels were favored
by 10 points, but it looked
for awhile" as if they would
be lucky to win by one, al
though the outcome never
really seemed in doubt.
Lack Experience
Coach Jess Neely's Owls'
main hindrance was a lack of
experience, but for sopho
mores, quarterbacks Billy Cox
and Ratidv Kerbow did an ex
Rogue, Jackson Leagues
Open Rivalry
Rogue and Jackson County
B leagues begin their slates
and the Southern Oregon con
ference has its second week of
contention this week- In prep
basketball.
Friday nigiit games In the
A-2 Rogue league will have
Lakeview at Eagle Point,
Phoenix nt Illinois Valley and
Hcnrey at Rogue River. On
Saturday night Henley will be
at Eagle Point and Lakeview
at Rogue River.
There is just one B loop
fracas this week with Pros
pect at. Butte Kails.
Friday tangles in the a-i
Southern Oregon circuit are
Herd composition doesn't
complete the winter surveys
and about live first of Febru
ary game agents start all over
again, this time to census
animals numbers on each big
game winter range. Observa
tion continues until the herds
disband with the spring
breakup.
Although herd composition
may be conducted throughout
the ranges and at all eleva
tions, the annual census is
more or less confined to the
winter ranges at lowed alti
tudes, v
During the lale winter
snows are deep In the moun
tain ranges, forcing big game
animals ever downward lo
the biviiks and scablands near
the valley floors.. Animals
from an entire watershed cov
ering thousands of square
miles may be forced by the
winter snows and cold into a
narrow belt a few miles long
the summer Into die beautiful racks prucd
uy huniers. Game ant-nts must work fasi
during early winter to classify bucks, does
and fawns In each herd before antlers e
shed, Ulioin faim vnmimpuin)
u 9
a field goal
shown being
Bill Munsey
17-7.
Wins Sugar Bowl
emplary job of directing the
team.
Mississippi, winning its
fourth straight bowl game and
its second straight Sugar
Bowl, had the essence of the
perennial winner - it could
almost always come up with
the big play.
The big plays in Monday's
affair were four interceptions
of Rice passes, two of which
stemmed touchdown - bound
drives. Rice tried and failed
three times before it was able
to push across its touchdown.
The Owl defense was its
stellar point, however. Missis
sippi's only threats - until
the closing moments of the
game vhen Rice apparently
realized all was lost - were
This Week
Medford at Grants Pass and
Klamath Falls at Ashland.
Ashland will encounter Crater
at Central Point on Saturday
night and Klamath Falls goes
lo Grants Pass.
Anon-league scrape toni.ght
has Rogue River at Prospect.
St. Mary's journeys to Riddle
pn Friday.
At the freshman level Mc
Laughlin is at Hedrick on
Friday afternoon and Crater
entertains North Grants Pass.
On the senior high wres
tling front Grants Pass has a
return match at Medford on
Friday everting. Crater Will go
to Roscburg on Saturday.
by a mile or so wide. Heaviest
concentration of animals will
be found In the food produc
ing areas within the belt.
Critical Time.
This is the critical time of
year and the time which game
agents dread the most. For if
the winter is long and severe
they will witness first hand
many animals dying of cold
and hunoer.
There Is llille to worry
about during mild winters,
broken by periods of thawing
and sunshine. During such
winters, animals remain scat
tered at all elevations of the
winter range and mnnnge lo
find enough food to keep
them healthy and alert.
But hunger alone, is the
driving force wficn snow piles
deep or temperatures drop to
sub-zero levels, The winter
range produces limited food
supplies to begin with and
when much of it is buried be-
in the first quarter. He is
stopped by Minnesota halfback
(28). Washington won the clash
. (UPI. Telephoto)
turned into its two touch
downs. Gibbs Outstanding Player
Jake, -Gibbs, the All-America
Rebel quarterback, was
the outstanding player of the
game his last with Missis
sippi. .'Although Gibb's pass
ing was well below his aver
age - 5 of 15 - they were
big ones and he also suffered
from unaccountably butter
fingered receivers. On one oc
casion, fjiree straight passes
dribbled out of the hands of,
his targets.
Jim Arl-derson was the big
rusher for Mississippi, as he
was ail year, although Gibbs
scored both touchdowns on
runs.
Rice outdid. Mississippi in
the statistics, but most of
Rice's action was between the
20-yard lines.
Lindquist and Koblik
Win Golf Sweepstakes
Ray Lindquist fired a 75
lo win low gross honors in
the golf sweepstakes tourna
ment held Saturday and
Sunday at Rogue Valley
country club. '
Bud Brooks and Dr. Ralph
Odell fashioned 77s to trail
Lindquist.
Dave Koblik won low net
honors with a 67. Floyd
Pickell and Howard Cuiic ,
finished second with 69s.
Ray Mencke and Dr. Ralph
Thompsen finished fourth,
with 70 each.
FIGHTS
By United Pren International
New York (St. Nicholas
Arena) - IUPII - Rodolfo Diaz
178V4, Buenos Aires, stopped
Clarence Floyd, 173, New
York City (8).
rieath deep snow, competition
is- keen for the meager sup
plies that remain. Danger is
forgotten, senses dulled, ex
cept the gnawing urge for
food, and even this may be
come dulled in time.
Under such conditions many
animals may starve before
spring, with fawns the first to
go followed by old animals
and yearlings. Extreme cold
may also take a heavy toll,
mainly of'weakened animals
unable from the meager food
supplies to generate body heat
to withstand the frigid tem
peratures. Sample Routes
Permanent sample routes
are established on all big
game winter ranges.! Small
winter ranges may have only
two or three sample routes,
while large ranges may have
a dozen or more traversing at
intervals from low lo high ele
vations. These routes are travelled
systematically. A 1 1 animals
observed are recorded and ex
pressed in the ratio of animals
observed per mile of travel.
Mortality is also recorded and
expressed in the same man
ner. Records on all ranges are
kept from year to year and
comparisons made to deter
mine if the herds are increas
ing, decreasing, or remaining
constant. Some 7,000 miles of
sample route are travelled
each year by game agents to
determine the status of the big
game herds.
attemplTj made to count
all big game animals. This
has long been recognized as
impossible. If the trend in
numbers can be accurately de
termined game managers arc
satisfied. Q 0
The winter surveys give an
accurate picture of the popu
lation trends, numbers of
buck deer or bull elk in each
herd, fawn or calf production,
mortalities, range condition?
and food supplies. This and
other information gathered
around the calendar serve as
a basis for next year's hunt
ing tcaioni.
Two Touchdowns and Field Goal
Give Washington 1 7-7 Bowl Win
Bucks Are
Undisputed
Top Team
New York -ttJPD- Ohio Stale,
which remained undefeated
by winning the Holiday Bas
ketball Festival in New York,
missed a perfect score in the
United Press International
ratings by a single point to
day for the third time this
season.
Following t h e Buckeyes'
tournament-victories over St.
John's and St. Bonaventure,
two strong Eastern teams
rated among last week's first
five, 34 of the 35 coaches who
comprise the UPI rating board
again voted Coach Fred lay
lor's defending national cham
pions No. 1 in the nation.
One coach, however, cast
his ballot in favof of runner-
up: Bradley and picked Ohio
State No. 2.
That gave the Buckeyes 349
out of a possible 3S0 points
Until this season, no team
ever had scored that high in
the weekly UPI ratings. Ohio
State now has led the nation
five straight weeks.
Bradley, which stretched
its winning streak to 10 with
a pair of non-tournament tri
umphs last week, remained in
second place for the fifth
week in a row. The Braves'
264 points left them 85 be
hind Ohio State.
North Carolina, Kansas
State and Iowa were this
week's newcomers in the top
10 group following holiday
tournament championships.
North Carolina (7-2) won
the Dixie Classic and jumped
from 11th to 5th place; Kansas
State (9-2) took the Big Eight
lournamenl and moved from
12th to 7th: while Iowa (8-1),
unranked last week, vaulted
into the No. 9 spot following
its triumphs in the Los An
geles Classic.
St. Bonaventure, beaten 84-
82 by Ohio State in the Holi
day Festival final, moved up.
one place to No. 3, while St.-
John's, which lost to the Buck
eyes by 5 points in the tourney-:
semifinals dropped one
notch to No. 4. -'
Louisville, with an 11-game
winning- streak, ia d ,v a n c e d
from 9th to 6th place; UCLA
was 8th, Iowa 9th and Duke
remained 10th.
Indiana, beaten twice in the
Los Angeles Classic, St. Louis
and Detroit dropped out of the
lop 10 group.
Detroit. St. Louis and In
diana were the first three
teams in the second 10 group
in that order. Vanderbilt,
Utah and West Virginia's Su
gar Bowl champions were tied
for No. 14, followed by Wichi
ta, Kansas and Auburn. There
was a 5-team tie for the 20 .h
ranking among Mem? liis
State, Providence, North
Carolina State, Southern Cali
fornia and Iowa State.
New York-IDM-The Unit
id Press International col
lege basketball ratings
(with first-place votes and
won-lost records in paren
theses); Team Points
1. Ohio State (34, 9-0) 349
2. Bradley (1. 10-0) 264
3. St. Bonaventure
(9-1) 243
4. SI. John's (8-1) 168
5. North Carolina (7-2). 164
6 Louiiville (11-0) 124
7. Kansas Stale (9-2) .103
8. UCLA (7-2) 89
9. Iowa (8-1) 81
10. Duke (9-1) 69
11. Detroit (52); 12, St.
Louis (48); 13, Indiana (45):
14, (tie) Vanderbilt, Utah
and West Virginia (12 each);
-17. Wichita (11): IB, Kansas
:..(10); Auburn '(8); 0
(tie) Memphis Stale, Pro
vidence, North Carolina
Staii;, Southern California
and Iowa State (7 each).
Mays and Wife
Are Feuding
New Rochelle, N.Y. - 0IPII -Willie
Mays, San Francisco
Giants outfielder, packed
most of his wardro'.e al a
television set into his car anJ
left his sv,ank 15-rootn house
here during tho Week fcnd, it
was reported today. p
His f.fn KargUvrito, re
fused to deny or confirm re
ports that she an(3 My-j ti'o
separating.
Friends close to the family
told newsmen that on New
Year's Eve Ma.vs moved tiut
of the $75,000 home he pu
chased on exclusive Croft
Terrace about six rj-onths
Mrs. Mays, twice oivorccci
wIil.i she married the star
outfielder Feb. 14, 1956, in
Elkton, Md., conceded ,'iere
had been "frictions" between
them. But she would not say
whether cither is takinac-
tion toward permanent separ
ation or divorce.
Mavs was believed to be
heading for Birmingham, Ala.,
where members of his family
live, to startoMvorce proceed
ings, friends taid.
Huskies Claim
National Title
Pasadena, Calif.-IDPD-Washlngton's two-time Rose Bowl
victors today laid claim to
championship honors as a result of the Huskies 17-7 victory
over top-ranked Minnesota.
Both Coach Jim Owens and1
Washington quarterback Bob
Schloredt, voted the "Player
of the Game" for the second
straight year, felt Washington
had" deposed Minnesota as the
national champion football
team-
"It - was a championship
bout and when you win a
championship match don't
you get "the title?" Owens
asked in reply to whether he
considered his Huskies the
top team in the nation as a
result of' Monday's win.
Schloredt, who emerged as
one of the nation's top foot
ball stars despite being un
able to see in one eye as a
result of a childhood acci
dent, added, "I don't think
the Gophers are the country's
No. 1 team now."
Two Football Games
The 97,314 fans who
jammed the Rose Bowl for
the 47th annual New Year's
holiday classic actually saw
two football games. The
Huskies won the game in the
first half when they ppored
17 points, and the Minnesota
Gophers had the edge both
in ground-gaining and scoring
in the second half when they
had a 7-0 margin of su
periority. But football being a game
of two halves, the Huskies
today received the acclaim of
the football world for being
the only Western team to
beat the Big Ten twice in a
row since the Midwestern con
ference and the coast have
been playing in the Rose Bowl
on a yearly basis.'.
Schloredt Sparks Huskies
There was no question in
the minds of the spectators
that Schloredt was the spark
that ignited the fire the
Huskies put into their game.
The rugged quarterback pass
ed three yards for .one touch
down, and ran for the other,
scoring from the one, with
halfback George Fleming
kicking a 44-yard field goal
and two conversions fc the
rest of Washington's points.
Jackson, Root Win
Indoor Net Crowns
Ashland - Jim Jackson and
John Root emerged chatnps
in close competition in men's
and college men's singles, re
spectively, in the Southern
Oregon Indoor Tennis tourna
ment h.ere.
A husband ana wife team,
Ellis and Valerie Williamson,
Eureka, Calif., took home
three first place trophies at
the conclusion of the tourney
which opened Saturday a.id
ended yesterday in the South
ern Oregon college gymna
sium. Jackson, Portland, claimed
men's singles honors after
subduing Ellis Williamson,
6-3, 6-4 in the holiday finale.
Root, Medford, was victor
over Jerry Joy, Ashland, 4-6,
6-3, 6-3, in the college men's
concluder.
Take Mixed Doubles
Mr. and Mrs. Williamson
combined in mixed doubles
for a 7-5, 6-3 win over an
AShlund brother and sister
team, Jerry and Julie Joy.
Jack Yieder, Eureka, and Mr.
Williamson too the men's dou
bles title match from the Port
land father and son duo, Phil
and Jim Jackson, 7-5, 7-5.
Mrs. Williamson defeated
Kathy Schultz, Grants Pass,
6-0, 6-2 for the women's tro
phy. Junior vets championship
was claimed by Earl Brooks,
Klamath Falls, after a 6-1,
6-1 verdict over Yieder in that
division's finisher.
In the hotly contested men's
singles, Jim Jackson beat Jt-
Tluee Games On
Tonight's Schedule
By United Press International
3 Thrca baskotball games aro
on tap tonight foj Oregon col
leeg basketball squsit. East
ern 'bresOB downed Whitman
0-19 at La Grrf-o Motvday
nM-.t.
Uaivor-Hif of Pertlur, J'.? Pi
lots will m.rrt hleh-ircorii-j;.
Scatt'ff University at (Seattle
i th first of foul' contci
bctwve;- tti?j t5Vo Northwest
independents.
Seattle and Portland both
competed In the H'fth annual
Far ifVest classic at Port&.id
last week 'with Seattle finish
ing second to Oregon State
and Portland finishing sixth.
In other action Portland
State tangles with Lewis and
Clark and Orison College of
Education travels to Forest
Grove to meet Pacific Univer-
post - season national collegiate
Minnesota had its heroes in
a losing match. Coach Murray
Warmath singled out All-
America guard Tom Brown
for his all-around line play,
end Tom Hall for a great
defensive effort and' quarter
back Sandy ' Stephens, who
was Minnesota's l'e a d i n'e
ground-gainer with a 5.1 yajdj
average on lp carries. ';?f
A break set up the lone
Minnesota touchdown. -The
Gophers took the opening
kickoff of the second half and
marched to the Washington
35 where the -Huskies lield
for" downs when end Stan
Chappie held fullback Roger
Hagberg for no gam on fourth
down.
But on the very first play
after that stand, quarterback
Bob Hivner fumbled and Go
pher end Bob Deegan recov
ered on the 35. On the third
play Stephens pitched out to
halfback Bill Munsey, who
raced 18 yards to score.
Triumph Is
Credited
To Tactics
. Pasadena-fllPD-A little mil
ter of strategy, used on the
first three Washington offen
sive plays of the game, was
being credited today with the
Huskies 17-7 victory over
Minnesota in the Rose Bowl.
Quarterback Bob Schloredt,
voted the "outstanding player
of the game" for the second
year in a row, gave the credit
to the Husky coac'ies-and the
execution by starting quarter
back Bob Hivner.
"The first three p'lays we
called set the pattern of the
game for us," said Schloredt.
"Our coaching staff said if
we ran a few plays up the
middle, we would bring in
their defense. Sure enough, it
worked. ,
"We pulled them in, then
we ran wide the rest of the
time."
ry Joy and Williamson won
from Brooks, in the semi
finals; Root eliminated Keith
Baxter, Klamath: Falls, 'a n d
Joy beat Teddy Jacksqn.'Port
land, in the college men's sin
gles. There were eight entries in
men'a singles, six each -in col
lege men's -and Juniorveter
ans and. six-each inimen's'and
mixed doubles.
Robertson Has
Top NBA Field
Goal Average
New York - fflPlI - Oscar
Robertson is unlikely to win
the individual scoring title in
his rookie National Basketball
association season but he may
achieve an unprecedented all
round offensive performance.
Oificial NBA statistics re
veal today that the Cincinnati
Royal star is leading in field
goal percentage and assists,
ranks third in scoring behind
Elgin Baylor and Wilt Cham
berlain and is fifth in free
throw percentage. This marks
the first lime in NBA history
that any player nns ranked
so high in so many offensive
departments.
Robertson, who has scored
1217 points for a 30.4 aver,
age, has a .475 field goal pc--"entae
and has 371 assists
for a 8.3 average. He's made
3fi5 of 437 free throw tries
for r.i ,S35 percentage.
Dnylor, 6-5, 225-pound ace
of the Los Anodes Lakers,
leidi Philadelphia's Chamber
Icin by 20 point?, 1305 to
12&7, but Iws played three
miVc i3a;:',e?. Chamberlain's
avprse if 88.7 comparejl to
Baylor's H4.8.
Ch-dinb' -rliiH to !!, tp re
bounder with a 27. T af-r;
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Tigers Top
Navy 21-14
At Miami
MiamMUPD-Missourl's testy
Tigers, six points behind and
with the White House against
them, clawed from behind to
chew up Navy 21-14 in the
blossom scented Orange Bowl
football game.
While huge blowers wafted
orange blossom perfume over
the crowd of 71,218, the Ti
gers caught the smell of vic
tory and won their first bowl
game in seven tries.
Pulling for them to lose a
seventh time was President
elect John F. Kennedy, an ex
Navy, torpedo boat officer
whose influence couldn't help
the Middies.
Neither did the reputation,
of All-American halfback Joe
Bellino. Missouri's thundering
line,-with giant end Dan La
Rose in the van, stopped the
chunky Bellino and held Navy
to a minus eight yards rush
ing for the game.
Just Too Strong
"They were just too strong,"
admitted saddened Navy
Coach Wayne Hardin after
the game.
"Washington was the only
team on our regular schedule
that compares with them in
strength."
Not that Navy didn't try.
Kennedy barely had time to
shuck his coat in the hot,
humid bowl when Navy end
Greg Mather picked off a Mis
souri lateral and skipped 95
yards to put the Navy out
front 6-0 in the firsi quarter. 0
Mather's run set a record ilr
the classic. ,,
That was Navy's finest me
ment. It faded in the same
quarter when Tiger halfback
Norm Beal grabbed a Navy"
pass and raced 90 yards to
score. i.
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