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Show Coie S m ashes 3 o UOVil UDQH 0 a rs mes in inol Hound i " 15,123. Only a fat fee from nationwide television made the game worth-Whil- e financially for the two teams,; who split 75 per cent of the i. total proceeds. TV rights were ' estimated at $100,000. Baylor Ace Ronnie Bull smashed through Utah State's , three-quart- K 15-ya- rd and another apparent Baylor score in the third period, a Trull pass to Jim Ingram, was nullified by ' an offside penalty. High Scoring Team Utah State, the nation's highest scoring major college team with a 38.7 average, failed to get out of its territory in the first half but scored in me iniru penou on a field goal by Jim Turner run in fourth on a the and was Utah Munson. It Bill by State s fourth bowl appearance and fourth defeat. g game in It was a on (Continued Page .18) Welterweight champion Benny ;( Kid) Paret heads for the canvas as NBA Middleweight titleholder Gene Fullmer looks on. The Cuban went down for the third time and outin the' 10th; round of their, fight at Las Vegas Convention Hall Saturday night. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto). GOING DOWN . .:: X mm ; mediately. Two seconds later, the" ' final right to the face dropped Paret for the count ,. ' Fullmer, stretching his unbeatr v ah eWnir n 17 Tvinfs v " InrludinffJ g two. draws achieved his .' and defense eighth thereby bettered the mark of seven for the middleweight class that had been held jointly by Gene, Sugar Ray ' Robinson and i the late Harry Greb. v s x " 'Y Y ; , ld fered his 11th i . f " . knockout in 47 fights. ; The estimated crowd of 6,500, which had booed Fullmer at times 'because of' his persistent bulling tactics that put' the challenger into a position for. hammering against the ropes, gave Gene i a tremendous ovation when hs achieved his knockout in the 10th. Gene's face appeared to have taken far more punishment than Paret at the finish. The, old middleweight wag bleeding from; a cut over the right eye, a cut at the corner of his left eye, a nicK m tne miaaie of his forehead,- and from his nosei In , addition. Gene's right ' eye was badly swollen. AH .three ring officials had well ahead at the end of the v ninth round. Scoring on a must basis. Referee Krause 9 favored Gene Judge BiR of Stremmil Reno, Nev., favored 4 and Judge John him 1 eiU VcT6ts ,6t. r"' United Press International', also x uixuxex, AO 90 xavorea9 T71..H In the dressmg room, uumer 7assured reporters that he is ready now to fight Terry Downes for the undisputed world title, or, it Downes insists upon aeienamg .Paul Fender .of against Boston and Fender wins, ruiimer would meet Pender, wnom ne de feated before either was a champ. lU A '.VW,VtV.YVi CONNECTSj-Middleweigh- t Champion Gene Fullmer smashes a to the jaw of welterweight titleholder Benny (Kid). Paret in an early round of their title fight Saturday.: Fullmer slammed; the game Cuban, to the canvas three times in the tenth round of the fight to win by a knockout. (Herald-UP- I ' A STIFF LEFT stiff ' left .- .Tplephoto) . 30-ye-ar - five-poi- nt 42-3- 43-3- m . ex-cha- '" : : . , x . " ' 1. -. ' i McGill Scores 41 As Utes Dump Loyola 101-7- 1 Pender in Boston, Jensen hedged a little and' admitted the site and Editor Herald Sports terms would, have to be decided Jensen said "Paret was a YuUmer said in the dressing later. somewhat underrated opponent. room Saturday night following his He a jis tough fighter,, make ho taockout victory over Kid .Paret mistake about that, and he cer that the welterweight champion two cents worth in his tainly got was the toughest fighter to put most of the time until the knock ' on the canvas he had ever fought. out." Ue may not ber the best fighter as f ar as stvle and abilitv coes. Harry Krouse, the referee, said Dut ne certainly Is the toughest became confused on the first he wnen it COmes to taking a punch," knockdown in the final round and Fullmerjsaid. VI hit him with some forgot that the eight- terrific blows, but he just would count had been mandatory waived for the nt go aown SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) - Big Billy (The Hill) McGill scored 41 -- By RAY SCHWARTZ . . ;, S i . Ags Gof ham Defeat Heads Safurday BovI Report By "United Press International Baylor turned four recovered fumbles into three touchdowns and a field goal to score a 24-- 9 victory over previously unbeaten Utah State Saturday: in the first annual Gotham Bowl. d Pittsburg State defeated to win the of Oregon, 12-National Small College (NAIA) championship. Bob (Steamboat) Fulton ran 64 yards on the first play from scrimmage to give Pittsburg the lead , and the Gorillas scored again in the fourth period on Gary Snadon's : Lin-fiel- 7, football . ' V . ; New Mexico defeated Western in the AviaUon Michigan, 2S-1Bowl at Dayton, Ohio; the Cam eron Aggies downed Bakersfield College in the 16th annual Junior Rose Bowl game at Pasadena, 2, Calif., and Panhandle A&M top in the ped Langston, Bowl at Oklahoma City. Quarterback Fran Curci threw three touchdown passes as Fort Eustis, Va., rallied from an 18-- 0 deficit to beat the Quanitico in the Missile Marines, Bowl and win the National Service football championship. ; 28-1- 4, 25-2-4, nd 150-poun- d , All-Sport- s The fight started out so fast and furiously that many of the fans at ringside were extremely doubtful it would go the full 15 rounds, especially after the first two. Both fighters were beginning to show the wear and tear of the furious action by the time the sixth round was reached. However, Marv Jensen had a confident look on his face through out the fight. ; 101-7- cold-shooti- Brigham Young for the second night in a row,, Friday's score was Broncos 64, BYU 53. Pacing Bob Feerick's men were stringbean forward Joe Weiss with 19 points and guard Ron McGee with 18 as they helped run the Bronco's record to four wins and no defeats. For the stunned Cougars who had come to Santa Clara with national ranking and left with two losses, it was a disastrous 71-5- 5. I the Cougars with markers- - 13 i i ! . , f-- i 1, ng ) Colle giaie Cage Scores It SANTA CLARA, Calif. (UPI) weekend. Bob Skousen, averag Santa Clara turned on its famous ing more than 20 points for the zone defense Saturday to throttle season, managed only 21 points New DAYTON, Ohio-(UPIMexico's Loboes ran through snow, sleet and rain to, defeat Western Michigan, 2842, in the first Aviation Bowl football game Saturday,?' 0, 1961 Stop Gats I wice I h Weekend Cage Ti Its ,7': ..;.New Mexico punched across two quick touchdowns, in the opening minutes of the game to take command. They were held scoreless in the second and fourth quarters but scored twice in the third ' Y, period. 4 A disappointing crowd of shiv ering fans, estimated at up to 6,000, saw an excellent running game ,by the Skyline Conference Loboes. Western Michigan's aerial attack was hampered by PiU. the weather. This possibly was the last Bowl game. Bowl Chair man Don Miller said "We may have dropped between $7,000 and $8,000. So we will not know SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) whether we will go again until Robert (Steamboat) iFulton's we learn actually how we came International on the first play touchdown Press United By out." 66 from Detroit Purdue 91, scrimmage provided the a was The minute bid 67 game just Wisconsin Cincinnati 86, victory margin Saturday as the New when favored Mexico, 78 by Indiana Pittsburg State Gorillas staved Kansas St. 88, 56 yards off last one marched touchdown, 68 (overtime) Princeton 72, Army quarter drives by to score in three quick plays of Oregon to win 12-- 7 and Toledo 68, Iowa St. 64 with quarterback Jim Cromartie take i the National Small College Penn State .71,' Colgate. 59 rolling but and over from the (NAIA) football championship. Pennsylvania 62, Navy 58 three. Moments later Chuck CumPushed around the field by the Michigan St. 90, Tulsa 70 a Mich Western recovered 58 mings Island small but fast Linfield team dur Kordham 76, Rhode Loboes on the 42, fumble, igan of the St. last half, the Gorillas got Providence 75, Frances ing Mexi New nine and later,: plays the break of a pass interception (Bklyn) 51 scored from co's Bobby Santiago 55 that was returned 87 yards to set Iowa 75, Miami (CO 10. the 67 up a'second score, to get the. vie Georgia 70, Georgia Tech The Broncos picked up one tory. , Y Butler 69." Michigan 61 Oklahoma St. 65, New Mexico &c. touchdown in the first quarter, Playing before a disappointing when Bob White plunged over crowd of about 10,000 in the first , u from the four, and another in the annual Camelia Bowl game, the uei-ai, fourth, when Dave Cook took a Pittsburg team got into scoring fbL YUKUua 7u, a wmau but capi Minnesota 70 Southern Methodist five- - yard pass in the end zone territory only twice from Ed Chlebek. talized both times; L points Saturday night as the Uni versity of Utah Redskins dumped at Loyola of Los Angeles, ' Ute Fieldhouse. The Utes, in their runaway vic tory, managed to hold a lead that varied from 21 to 30 points during the second half. Only the efforts of Lion center Ed Bento kept the margin from being much more. Bento scored 27 points to lead his team., McGill poured in 20 points in the first half during the 15 minutes he played. Coach Jack Gardner put the first string back in after the half and kept them in until the final three minutes of the ball game. It was McGill, holder of the fieldhouse scoring record witni 51 points, who first brought the Red-cVinc tn a i7irt TfLnnint arivanfooo with six minutes left in the sec- ond half. The two teams stayed UOnneCUCUt W, UOSUJn U1X J. fair-lwor ihf rpct nf the wnv uiemson u, Virginia oo, uvejumc The box: Creighton 73, Notre Dame 71 UTAH (101) N.Y.u; 103. Toronto 49 G F P T tvaIo mil 0 Wavno st AS 1 15 2 .... 7 Crain ' ............. niinois 70, Oklahoma 60. 2 . 15 3 41 wmiams 64, Columbia 42 McGill u & Rowe . j. Yale 73, Holy Cross 71 4 4 4 14 Texas 90, Tulane 65 Farrell 1 4 6 villanova 64, 3 . Hawes ... Niagara 55 1 3 . 0 4 Colorado 60, Arizona 57 Moon .. 1 0 0 2 0hio state g4 wake Forest 62 Allen 1 2 15 Dartmouth 7 Aufderheide ... 68, New Hampshire 50 w o .... " Utah 101. Loyola (Calif) 71 Hetherington 0 2 0 Black ........ Wyoming 82, Oklahoma City 66 IMJ U UtTHr-,7Hanson Tvuiislana St 67 Texas Tech 74, Vanderbilt 71 15 101 Harvard 72, Boston U. 66 41 3 Totals LOYOLA (71) Missouri 84, Northwestern 69 G F P T Auburn 56. Florida St. 52 2 4 5 10 Baylor 75 Trinity (Texas) 62 . Krallman 2 4 5 Canisius 89, Scranton 63 2 . Bowler jL 1 27 Clemson 70, Virginia 63 ... Bento - .. 9 0 5 Minnesota 70, SMU 56 1 ..... 2 Grote 5 5 12 Eastern New Mexico 61t Western 4 . . . Quinn Av-ati- on State Tips Oregonians, Nabs NAIA Grid Title I j I k See Page 19 for report on Firday night J j Cougar-Bronc- o game in Skyline roundup. .. : ;, : : : j ., The Broncos, who shot a hot 52 per cent Saturday, return to ac tion next Tuesday against the University of California at Berk eley ' i Oldahomans Win Junior Rose Bowl 64-ya- rd Lin-fie- ld . - 'j PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) Bill Harper, a quarterback from Detroit Saturday retrieved the honor of Oklahoma as he led the' Cameron Aggies to a 0 victory over Bakersfield College in the 16th annual Junior Rose Bowl football classic. 1' The Detroit quarterback had plenty, of assistance from half back Bob Kelley and fullback Joe Don Looney in guidhig Cameron to the upset victory over favored Bakersfield. It was the first victory by an Oklahoma school in the game emblematic of the national junior college 28-2- . ? championship. I VV 4 v 1-- 11-1- . u-- 2-- 0-1-- "-0-- 19-2- 2-1-- 9-- 10 The referee wiped off excess grease from the faces of both fighters in the second round and Simeon repeated this procedure on Paret Flanagan in the later rounds in spite of the Totals (es INTERESTING Fge IS) Fdrrell Fires Fat 69 To Tie Up Coral Gables Lead 4-- 0-- - : 160-pou- Saturday his game lost money but both Baylor and Utah State will be paid their guarantees within 14 days and "we'll put on another game' next year. Curran said his group had to as sume heavy losses from the com mittee that tried and failed to staee a. Gotham Bowl game last year and added, "We think we'll be ready to do good business wun another game next year. Although the atendance was only 15,123, Curran said more than 20,000 tickets had been sold tn vawious people who were in terested in getting the game off the ground. , 1 B roncos ; Interesting Sidelights on The Fullmer Paret Fight fight. Several of the fans, realiz ing! that Krouse had made a mis Somebody suggested to "Fullmer take, the champion should have let as he stood, up toand booed loudly counted eight. Paret fa!! on several occasions, GIANTS SIGN CHOICES Gene did however, said, 'I try The scene in Kid Paret's dress NEW YORK (UPI) G. Reed to, but he wouldn't go down, he ing room was in great contrast Bohovich, a tackle from Lenign, just kept fighting.' to the jubilant one in Gene's after and linebacker Dave Bishop from the fight.. It was a somber, some the University of Connecticut, Fullmer's manager, Marv Jen- - what subdued Paret that admitted , signed contracts with the New sen, said the middleweight chain oot- pion was YorK Giants of tne JNationai to fight either through an interpreter to report ready Gene was a little too League Friday. The new Paul Pender or Terry Downs any ers; ;that , ball him.. "I tried to keep for strong Giants were the club's No. 9 and (time, anyplace, but when pressed off him but I couldn't do it" me, 11 choices in tne xmul. draft. as to whether Fullmer would fight he said. One of Paret's handlers said he ;too felt Genei was too strong for the welterweight champion. "It was a fighter against a fighter, the handler said. ; Yl UTAH SUNDAY, DECEMBER Famed Santa Clara Zone Defense Does NEW YORK Bowl promoter Bob Curran 1 i Paret sufdefeat, afld .third ' " ion " hard-hittin- Gotham Bowl Lobos Garner Committee 28-1- 2 Win in Loses Money Gotham Aviation Bowl (UPI) said - Twenty-four-year-o- . PROVO. UTAH COUNTY, record-breakin- YY; . rd ' ' ' 'GET THAT MAN! Baylor's Tommy Minter (28) takes off with ball in hand as teammate takes Utah State's Roger Leonard (40) out of play in first period of Gotham Bowl game in New York Saturday. Herby Adkins (66) runs interference. Other Utah State players are Bill Dickey (66) and Clark Miller (74). Bill Hicks (55) of Baylor is in background. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto). , j ' : " 36-ya- rd The referee then remembered that the : eight count had been waived and let Paret continue Im- 4 - ; I - to-h- is I r s of two. - v - er touchdown ton line on a run in the first period Don Trull contributed a , two- yard scoring plunge, then a 39 yard touchdown pass to end Tom Plumb. , In between,! end Carl Choate, who. kicked all three con field versions, added a V U ; goal. Bull also fumbled away an air most-certai- n touchdown on Utah 15 as the first half ended State's . WW I 22-ya- rd bull-shou- 5 k ) ; . 5 j 15-rou- nd ; Y 9, r4 ' V I i I Fullmer, who weighed 159 to 156 , gave the .game Cuban a terrific battering during most of the rounds" as he bulled Benny about. the ring and hammered him with short straight books to body and head in corners and against the topes.: r There were no knockdowns in bout until the scheduled a left when in the 10th, early hook dropped Paret to one knee in a corner. Referee Krause forgot that the mandatory eight count had been, waived fo this ' title fight: .Although Benny rose at the count of one, the referee held him: in the corner to the count of eight and then let him resume fighting. '? Paret tried, to rally and threw la flurry of punches at into the was belted and Gene dere : and to a body ropes by. barrage head. A right sent him stagger and then two ing along the ropes to the head dropright smashes a count for knees ped him Paret's . yQT in sun Bow I By STEVE SNIDER United Press International Ballhawk- NEW YORK (UPD ing Baylor converted four of its five fumble recoveries into three touchdowns and a field goal Satur day and whipped previously unin the beaten Utah State, 24-first Gotham Bowl footbalf - game before a box office flop crowd of Y .. . es n to yinniLO Bull's Running t - on o 1 By Passes, ed lay-'wjt- h sion. If f Win IPs, Utahns Beaten X United Press International LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) Gene Fullmer, Na tional Boxing Association world middleweight champion, made a record eighth defense. Saturday "by flooring welterweight cham pion.. Benny (Kid) Paret three times in the, 10th round for .a knockout at Convention Center. Paret, - of Cuba, whose welter crown was not at stake, was counted out at 2:30 of the 10th round by referee Harry Krause ' as the game . former sugar cane plantation worker was trying to pull himself up as he his back, on the canvas. He had "been smashed .backward to the floor by a t right to the chin for his third knockdown in that ses- Aggie "urn: T By JACK CUDDY bull-shoulder- W Oft i 1-- 2-- . .... 4 2 3 0-- 0 0-- 0 15-13- 18 CORAL GABLES, Fla. (UPI) Bill Farrell of Springfield, N.J., a chip off a championship block,1 69 Saturday shot a to continue for the third staight day in a tie for the lead in the $20,000 Coral Gables Open Golf ronto, with a 71 Saturday for 207, which gave him sole possession of third place. ' Tommy Aaron of Gainesville, Ga., Chico Miartuz, Miami Beach, and Bill Collins of Miami were tied for fourth at 208. Aaron, forTournament. mer Western Amateur champion Former national public links shot a 67 Saturday and Miartuz champion Dan Sikes of Jackson- a 69. Nine pros were at 209, including ville, Fla., eased home with a 68 to vault from a tie for fifth place Chick Harbert of Port St. Lucie, to a tie for the top with Farrell. Fla., and Frank Wharton of Dal Farrell and Sikes showed las, who had the day's best rounds cards of 205, eight under par of 66; Sam Snead of Boca Raton Biltmore golf Fla., and Don. Fairfield of Chanv for the 6,563-yar- d course. 3 8 Colorado St59 paign, 111,, each with 68 Saturday; 0 4 New Mexico Highlands 75, Way- Two strokes behind the leaders and Gay Brewer Jr., Crystal Riwas George Knudson, intense lit- ver, Fla., and Ed Furgol, Pitts lands 51 Canadian from To burgh, who shot 71s. 711 Cornell 7S, EuddEU 1 tle two-under-p- ar 54-ho- le 145-pou- nd Rams Thump Colts 34-1- 7 NFL In 'Ragged' Grid Battle LOS ANGELES (UPI) A 68-ya- rd pass from Zeke Bratkowski to Carroll Dale on ' the second play of the third quarter gave the Los Angeles Rams the score Saturday as they defeated the favored Baltimore Colts, in a ragged National Football League game. field goal And it was a errant sometimes Danny by a few plays later which provided the Rams with an operating margin. While Bratkowski, who has his bad games more often than his good ones, had an exceptional one Saturday afternoon, it was the fancy-Da- n running of halfback Jon Arnett and stubby little fullback Dick Bass that kept the crowd cf 41,203 excited. go-ahe- ad 34-1- 7, 20-ya- rd Vil-lanue- va . 4. )' 'i |