HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968 A&M v. Baylor Program
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Read
a bo u t
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SPORTS SECTION
Written And Edited By A Prize-Winning Staff
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(2)
BA YLOR
1968 Official Football Program
Prepared and Edited by Department
of Athletics Sports Information Office
CONTENTS
Welcome to Baylor .................................. 5
Baylor Trustees and Athletic Council .................... 6
Baylor Stadium Corporation Officers .................... 7
A Record of Success ................................. 9
The Coaching Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10
NCAA Spotlight .................................... 12
Meet the Bears ...................... 15, 16, 17, 18 & 19
Today's Game. .... " . . .. " . . .. .. " . . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. . .21
A Part of Baylor Life ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . '. . . . . . . . .22 & 23
Baylor Numerical Roster ........... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24
Starting Lineups ....... . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . , , . . . . . . . . , . .27
Visitor's Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29
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Opponent Facts ............................31, 32 & 33
Scouting the Opponents ..............................34
Athletic-Scholarship Donors ......,.........36, 37, 38 & 39
Baylor Athletic Staff .................................40
Baylor Spirit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42
That Good Old Baylor Line . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . .44
Baylor Trainers and Managers ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46
Explanation of Penalties ..............................48
Bay lor Footba II Records ......... '. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Baylor Bear Club ...................................51
Basketball Preview............................ . . . . . . .52
"".
BAYLOR is the official souvenir program for home football games of Baylor Uni-
versity. Published by the Department of Athletics, edited by Sports Information
Director David Cawood.
_ ::::l
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FOR THIS GAME
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(4)
JUDGE ABNER V. McCALL
President; Baylor University
Homecoming has long had a special meaning for Baylor University,
and today we are doubly pleased to welcome our returned ex-students
and their families. Weare also happy to welcome our Texas A&M
University guests, as well as all others.
The "Aggies" and Baylor have a lasting friendship which we value
highly. The first contest in Baylor's recorded football history was with
the Aggies, a 33-0 Baylor victory in 1899. Since that historic beginning
Baylor and Texas A&M have enjoyed an enduring competitive friend-
ship, regardless of the game scores.
Baylor has a measure of pride in the fact that her leaders were
among the earliest in the nation to recognize the values inherent in a
healthy intercollegiate athletic program. Baylor's first official football
team took to the gridiron in 1899; Baylor representatives were present
at the May 6, 1914 meeting in Dallas when the Southwest Athletic
Conference was organized.
Baylor, today, values its background and its historic foundations,
but is striving to keep pace with the future in all our endeavors. We
hope your visit with us will include the opportunity to view the significant
advances we have enjoyed in area, structures and quality in recent years.
"". 'At Baylor, we genuinely enjoy your company, and it's our sincere
hope that you'll have a pleasant visit, and will return often.
Abner V. McCall
Presiden t
(5)
L_
BA YLOR TRUSTEES
JUDGE FRANK WILSON _________._____ ______________________Chair11lan
DR. JOE L. ALLBRITTON ___ __ ___________________________Vice-Chair11lall
DEWEY PRESLEY _____ __ __ __ _ _____ _____ --- - --- -- -------- Vice-C f1air111all
H. HART N ANCE_____________ ________________________________Secretan;
L. E. \VOOD-------- ______ ____ _ - -- - -- --- _____Assistant S ecretar)'- Treasltrei.
.1
DR. JOE L. ALLBRITTON
1IR. GEORGE C. ANSON
DR. JOE W ELDON BAILEY
MR. HUFFMAN BAINES
MR. Roy BASS
MR. DONALD E. BOWLES
MR. E. B. BURLESON
MR. CARL CASEY
DR. CHARLES L. COCKRELL
MR. LESTER B. COLLINS, JR.
1lR. CLIFTON H. CU~Il\lINGS
Gov. PRICE DANIEL
DR. RUSSELL H. DILDAY, JR.
MR. GUY DRAPER
MR. JAMES L. ERWIN
DR. RILEY EUBANK
DR. H. J. FLANDERS
MR. GRADY GOODPASTURE
MR. MILTON T. GREGORY
MR. FRANK GUITTARD
MR. T. J. HARRELL
DR. J. G. HARRIS
MR. W. EARL HARRISON
MR. OMAR HARVEY
MR. NOBLE HURLEY
DR. SID JONES
JUDGE FRANK WILSON
Chairlllan
II
THE BAYLOR ATHLETIC COUNCIL
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.'dR. T. E. KENNERLY
MRS. ED LANE
1IR. R. H. LINA:-'l
REV. BRUCE McIVER
DR. B. J. MARTIN
DR. L. L. :MORRISS
MR. CARLOSS MORRIS
MR. Q. C. MURPHY
.j\IR. HART NANCE
l\IR. FRAKK H. NEWNA:-'l, JR.
l\IR. H. H. NULL
MR. DEWEY PRESLEY
MR. ]. NEWTON RAYZOR
MR. VVILLlAM J. REDDELL
DR. CHARLES G. SHELLEKBERGER
DR. \VlI.LIAl\l B. TRAYNHA:-'l
DR. HORRACE H. TRIPPET
MR. CHARLES E. WATSON
DR. E. H. \VEsnlORELAND
JUllGE CT.AUllE \VlLI.IAMS .
JUDGE l'IL\NK \VILSON
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DR. MONROE S. CARROLL
Provost
Chairman of Athletic Council
President
Southwest Conference
EDWARD P. HORNER'
Professor of Law
DR. J. W. DIXON
Chairman of Geology
Department
DR. JAMES W. PARSONS JR.
Professor of Accounting
DR. ROBERT G. PACKARD
Professor of Physics
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(6)
JACK WILSON
President
.._._- ....
J. R. CLOSS
Vice President
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BILL HENDERSON
Vice President
1968 BAYLOR STADIUM CORPORATION DIRECTORS
Harold McNabb
Albert Witcher
Stanley Williams
Grover Wilcox
Carroll Sturgis Jr.
Ed Martin
Latham Downs
Joe Kendrick
JACK JEFFREY
Past President
Jerome Cartwright Jr.
J. R. Closs
Leon Moses
Dr. Jack Wentworth
Leo Bradshaw Sr.
Frank Latham
Bill Baggett
Paul J. Meyer
TRUETT SMITH
Past President
(7)
W. J. (Bill) Patterson
Ben Williams
T. E. Sanderford
Jack Wilson
H. J. Korsmo
John Bridgers
Jim Sample
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L. E. WOOD
Secretary- Treasurer
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DIVISION OFCERrAIN'rEEO PRooucrs CORPORArlON
JOHN D. BRIDGERS
Athletic Director and Head Football Coach
If you took the case to a court of law, it wouldn'.t be
hard to find supporting evidence the man is a credit to
his profession.
Everyone who knows him would speak of his charact.er,
and then without hesitation, his next words would wish
him luck in the future.
His peers would go one step further, they would say
he is the greatest football coach in Baylor history.
The man is John D. Bridgers.
And his record clearly indicates he has tasted success
more than any other football coach at the world's largest
Bapdst university.
Let's take a look at it.
vIn nine seasons at the helm, his teams have broken
even with 46 wins. 46 losses and one tie. And in, those
years, the outside competition has been against perennial
powers such as Syracuse, LSU, Southern California and
Auburn.
But more important is this fact, Baylor is one of only
three Southwest Conference teams that has played .500
per cent football in the past nine years.
Texas has won 75, lost 20 and tied two games since
1959, and Arkansas has established a 72-23-1 mark.
, vHis SWC record, 28-33-1, has been surpassed by only
one former Baylor coach. Morley Jennings (1926-40) won
34, lost 45, and tied five in conference competition.
vBaylor hisLOrically has participated in seven bowl games,
Bridgers-coached teams have won two and lost one. The
Bears defeated sixth-ranked Utah State in the 1961 Gotham
Bowl, 24-9, and LSU, 14-7, in the 1963 Bluebonnet Bowl.
A two-point conversion gamble, going for the win, gave
Florida a 13-12 win in the 1960 Gator Bowl.
vBridgers' renowed football reputation has earned him
coaching assignments in post-season games seven of his
nine Baylor years, and only a bowl game prevented him
from accepting his eighth.
His first post-season "star" assignment was the N orth-
South Shrine game in 1961. The next two years, he worked
the East-West Shrine classics, and then went to the All-
America game (Buffalo) in 1964. He served in the Blue-
Gray contests at Montgomery, Alabama, the next two years
and returned to the North-South game in I967.
yHe has been the principal offensive football speaker
at the All-America clinic (Atlantic City), and at prep coarh-
ingschools in Alabama, Florida, Minnesota, Oklahoma,
Tennessee and Texas.
Even after experiencing his worst year ever as a coach
in 1967, Baylor was 1:8-I, Paul "Bear'" Bryant showed his
confidence in Bridgers by asking him to lead the offensive
discussions in the University of Alabama's summer clinic.
(Incidentally, a note for the superstitious crowd, 1967
was his 13th as a head coach.)
ySeven Bridgers-coached athletes are active in pro-
fessional football, and 16 have made it to the "money league"
since 1959.
Ronnie Bull was the No.1 draft choice of the Chicago
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Bears in 1961 and earned National Football League "Rookie
of the Year" honors in 1962. Lawrence Elkins was the top
choice of both Green Bay and Houston in 1964, and was
the Southwest's first two year consensus All-America since
Doak Walker.
This is a true indication his sound football philosophy
and training have been advantageous to Baylor athletes
wanting a professional career. .
Bridgers arrived on the Waco campus after two years
with the Baltimore Colts. He was the defensive line coach
of the 1958 World Championship team that defeated the
New York Giants, 23-17, in a sudden death overtime.
One of his first changes at Baylor was to spread the
offense, and initiate the aggressive pro-set passing attack.
This new-look earned Baylor a reputation as one of the
most exciting teams in America.
Baylor has led the SWC in passing six of the past eight
years. In five of these seasons, the Bears had the league's
passing leader, twice the national champion, and once the
nations top receiver. Four of the five years Baylor pro-
duced the conference's total offense king.
Bruin passers own five of the top seven single-season pass
completion totals in SWC history. Don Trull's 174 (1963)
and Terry Southall's 173 (1966) are at the top. These two
quarterbacks own almost all conference passing records.
Trull was the NCAA passing champion in 1962 and 1963,
and Lawrence Elkins' 70 receptions in 1963 was the best
in the land_ Buddy Humphrey was the national passing
leader in 1958. ..
Although Bridgers is best known for f,roducing top
athletes, he is proud of the increasing number who earn
degrees. About 80 per cent of Baylor's scholarship athletes
meet graduation requirements.
And some of these student-athletes have distinguished
themselves in the classroom with the same enthusiasm thev
display on the field. Bull and Trull led the nation in vote's
for the All-America scholastic team in 1961 and 196.1 re-
spectively. And guard Mickey Kennedy and halfback Eddie
Whiddon (1965) received NCAA graduate academic-achieve-
ment scholarships for athletes. Kennedy had the highest
grade point average of the 22 athletes receiving NCAA
national grants in 1964.
Bridgers was born January 13, 1922, in Birmingham. Ala-
bama. He and his identical twin brother, Frank, played
guard at Auburn in 1940-41-42, helping the Tigers post a
16- I3-3 record. .
With the presence of World War II, he left the university
in the middle of his senior year and joined the enlisted
reserve with the rank of private. He became a captain of
artillery in the European campaign, and again served in
that capacity in the Korean War.
During the war interim, he returned to Auburn to com-
plete his degree requirements. Bridgers graduated with
honors and was presented a scholarship key for the highest
four-year g-rade point in the School of Business.
His coaching career also began at Auburn; he doubled as
"B" team coach and full-time instructor in Economics in
1946. The next year Bridgers was accepted for entrance in
the Yale law school. but he chose a job with Sewannee Uni-
versity where he served as line coach for five years.
Following the Korean War Bridgers assumed head foot-
balI and track coaching duties at Johns Hopkins Universitv,
winnin~ the Mason-Dixon Conference football championship
in 1956. He joined the professional ranks in 1957 and was
named head football coach and director of athletics a~ Baylor
in 1959.
Bridgers also is recognized as one of the top athletic
directors in the country, and has been the instrumental
factor in the success of Baylor's total athletic program.
He initiated the Academic Athletic Scholarship Program,
providing grants for studen'-athle.+es who have distinguished
themselves academically and as citizens of their community.
Religion has long played an important role in Bridqers'
life. He has twice served as president of he national
council for the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and is an
ordained deacon at Waco's Seventh and James Baptist
church.
He and his wife, Frances, have two sons, Don and Dixon,
who are student-athletes at Richfield High School.
Bridgers' record spells success.
If you took it to court, case dismissed.
(9)
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Baylor Football Coaching Staff
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COACH CHUCK PURVIS
COACH KEN CASNER
COACH JACK GREEN
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COACH PETE McCULLEY
COACH JACK LITTLE
COACH JACK THOMAS
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COACH TAYLOR McNEEL
COACH BEN 'NICHOLSON
DAVID HUFFSTETLER
Head Trainer
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(10)
-- -- - - -
8S-
Miles
Fresher
the Pure Milk People
SERVING CENTRAL TEXANS LIKE NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS. . 39 YEARS
(11)
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FOOTBALL: Thl! Raw Farll!
by GEORGE 51 ADE
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T HERE ARE many ways in which
football is unique among sports, and
as many others in which it is the full-
est expression of what is at the heart
of all sports. There is no other major
sport so dependent upon raw force,
nor any so dependent on a complex
and delicate strategy; none so wide
in the range of specialized functions
demanded from its players; none so
dependent upon the undifferentiated
athletic sine qua non, a quick-witted
body; none so primitive; none so fu-
turistic; none so American.
Football is first of all a form of
play, something one engages in in-
stinctively and onIy for the sake of
performing the activity in question.
Among forms of play, football is a
game which means that it is built on
comrr:unal needs, rather than on pri-
vate evasions, like mountain climb-
ing. Among games it is a sport; it re-
quires athletic ability, unlike check-
ers. And among sports, it is one whose
mode is violence and whose vioIence
is its special gIory.
In some sports-basketball, base-
ball, soccer - violence is occasional
(and usually illegal); in others, like
hockey, it is incidental; in others
still, car racing, for example, it is ac-
cidental. Definitive violence football
shares alone with boxing and bull-
fighting, among major sports. But in
bullfighting a man is pitted not
against another man, but against an
animal, and boxing is a competition
between individuals, not teams, and
that makes a great difference.
If shame is the proper and usual
penalty for failures in sporting com-
petitions between individuals, guilt
is the consequence of failing not only
oneself and one's fans, but also one's
teammates. Failure in football, more-
over, seems more reIated to a failure
of courage, seems more unmanning
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than in any other sport outside of
bullfighting. In other sports one loses
a knack, is outsmarted, or is merely
inferior in ability, but in football, on
top of these, a player fails because he
"lacks desire," or "can't take it any-
more," or "hears footsteps," as his
teammates will put it.
These physical and mental risks, the
fact that pain and injury are not only
commonplace but inevitable, dignify
the game, give the playing of it grav-
ity and the watching of it zest. For in
sports, as in gambling, and as in most
of the activities that we think of as
peculiarly masculine, the greater the
risk, the more serious the play, the
keener the fun. The football player
risks the violation of his being, and
risks it in public. Every forty-five
seconds or so he must endure the in-
timacy of a violent collision with an-
other man; he must pit his skill,
courage, and strength, the qualities
that define him, against another's,
and then consult his flesh and emo-
tions to see whether he has been di-
minished or increased in the process.
Many sports, especially those in
which there is a goal to be defended,
seem enactments of the games ani-
mals play under the stimulus of what
ethnologists, students of animal be-
havior, call territory-"the drive to
gain, maintain, and defend the ex-
clusive right to a piece of property,"
as Robert Ardrey puts it. The most
striking symptom of this drive is ag-
gressiveness, but among social ani-
mals, such as primates, it leads to
"amity for the social partner, hostiI-
ity for the territorial neighbor."
The territorial basis of certain kinds
of sports is closest to the surface in
football, whose plays are all attempts
to gain and defend property through
aggression. Does this not make foot-
ball par excellence the game of in-
(12)
-
stinctual satisfactions, especially for
Americans, who are notorious as vio-
lent patriots and instinctive defend-
ers of private property? And what is
it that corresponds in football to the
various feathers, furs, fins, gorgeous
coIors by means of which animals
puff themselves into exaggerated
gestures of masculine potency? The
football player's equipment, of course.
His cleats raise him an inch off the
ground. Knee and thigh pads thrust
the force lines of his legs forward.
His pants are tight against his rump
and the back of his thighs, portions of
his body which the requirements of
the game stuff with muscle. Even the
tubby guard looks slim of waist by
comparison with his shoulders, ex-
tended half a foot on each side by
padding. Finally the heImet, which
from the esthetic point of view most
clearly expresses the genius of the
sport. Not only does the helmet make
the player inches taller and give his
head a size proportionate to the rest
of him; it makes him anonymous, in-
scrutable, more serviceable as a sym-
bol. The football pIayer in uniform
strikEls the eye in a succession of ges-
talt shifts: first a hooded phantom out
of the paIeolithic past of the species;
then a premonition of a future of
spacemen.
In sum, and I am almost serious
about this, football players are to
America what tragic ac.tors were to
ancient Athens and gladiators to
Rome: models of perennially heroic,
aggressive, violent humanity, but
adapted to the social realities of the
times and places that formed them.
For only American money, only the
American educational system, onIy
the American life-styIe couId have
produced football or created an audi-
ence capable of responding to its
unique beauty. Who else but a people
now grown sederitary on profits from
the violence that continues to be
their nationaI habit are likeIy to feeI
the psychosociaI reIevance of foot-
ball with any sort of poignancy or
see in football the testing of their na-
tional aspirations? OnIy Amer-icans
could. And that is why, every year
from September through January,
Americ'an men negIect their wives
and daydream at their jobs.
Football is at once the expression
of what has made us Americans and
our human response to what has
made us Americans. It is the product
of a perfect fusion of our human na-
ture with our national character.
So there is no use asking whether
football is immoral or brutal or cost-
ly. No use asking whether it is a sign
of health or disease in our civiliza-
tion. It is a part of things as here and
now they necessarily are. And it is
one of the few thin.gs of that sort that
can make you feel good.
~
How you can
"join"
America's
Olympic Team
,You can be there at the Meldco
City Olympic Games as a wel-
come contributor to the Olym-
pic Fund. And be proud of it!
Training, transportation, housing
and equipping America's top com-
petitors in the Olympic Games is a
major financial task. Because the
United States Team is maintained al-
most entirely by public subscription.
without government subsidy of any
sort. the interest and support of
every American is needed to reach
the $3.500.000 goal.
If you haven't already done so,
"join" in the Olympic movement now.
Fill out the attached coupon, with
your check for $5.00 or more and
mail - today. In acknowledgment. the
United States Olympic Committee will
send you the handsome men's tie bar.
(by Dante) illustrated below. Or, if
you prefer, you may select a women's
bar pin with safety catch of the same
design. For a $10.00 contribution, you
will receive two gifts of your choice.
make checks payable to:
U.S. OLYMPIC COMMITTEE
All Contributions are Tax Deductible
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BY THE ~
U.S. OLYMPIC k .
COMMITTEE ~
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We're proud...
that pHisoHex@ has been selected as the antibacterial wash
to be used by the U.S. Team for the 1968 Olympie Games!
A winning athlete takes special care
of his skin. Above all, he protects it
against bacteria that can cause infec-
tions and lead to missed practice ses-
sions and games.
If you've ever tried to play with an
infected blister on your heel or an
abscess on your finger, then you know
the role of healthy skin in sports. And
that's why pHisoHex is an important
partof an athlete's daily health routine.
pHisoHex is America's leading liquid
antibacterial skin cleanser in homes
and in hospitals. Used regularly in
place of soap, pHisoHex produces a
superclean skin and builds up an in-
visible antibacterial film of hexa-
chlorophene to protect your skin
against germs between washings.
And if you have problem skin,
pHisoHex is often valuable. The anti-
bacterial film it leaves on your face
will ward off blemish-infecting bac-
teria. pHisoHex also helps to soften
and wash away blackheads.
Use pHisoHex, the skin cleanser of
winning athletes.
Made by Winthrop Laboratories, 90
Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016.
Available in drugstores in 5 oz. and
16 oz. plastic squeeze bottles.
[mmnroEJ
Winthrop Laboratories, New York, N.Y.10016
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A Tribute to . . .
BAYLOR ATHLETICS
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A UNIVERSITY is more than just an institution of higher learning.
Certainly, its purpose is to arm students with the knowledge necessary
to pursue their chosen vocations. But in a larger sense, a university is
charged with the awesome responsibility of schooling young people in
all the skills of life.
BAYLOR ATHLETICS, under the capable guidance of Head Coach
and Athletic Director John Bridgers, provides University students with
an important motivational supplement to education.
THROUGH its well-developed Southwest Conference athletic progcam,
Baylor teac~es students both on and off the playing field that the quali-
ties of sportsmanship, competition, and athletic endeavor are desirable
traits in a well-rounded personality.
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WE SALUTE the Baylor University Athletic Program for its unswerv-
ing dedication to the ideals of higher education. We believe that success
is related to the development of all facets of the personality: body, mind,
heart, all(~ spirit. It is making the most of your total self.
SUCCESS MOTIVATION INSTITUTE, INC.
"".
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La.kewood Drive PAUL J. MEYER. President Waco, Texas
Dedicated to "Motivating People to Their Full Potential"
IlI;t
(14)
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1968 BAYLOR BEARS
Alvin Flynn-QB
Steve Stuart-QB
Laney Cook-QB Tom WelIs-OG Gilbert Beall-LB
David Jones-DE
Walter Groth-DT
John Annstrong-C Lanus Treadwell-OT Trent Phipps-MG'
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Those words were part of Humble's first broadcast of And now for the 35th year, wherever Southwest
a Southwest Conference football game on October 27, Conference football games are played, Humble's
1934. It was Rice against Texas before a sellout top-flight broadcast teams will be there to bring you
crowd at the old Rice Field in Houston. And what a all the exciting action. Check the poster at your
ga~e! Aside from being Humble's very fiWt liv~ ~adio neighborhood Enco ?ealer's for times and stations.
broadcast of a Southwest Conference game,: the ,fans And when you can t attend the games in person,
saw, and heard. some of the wildest grid-iron.' '. .' tune in for the play-by-play, brought to you by the
action of the day. With three minutes left to -. . S"HapPY Motoring!"~ people.
~:;.~~~~et:i~;o~~~oo~::~~~n~o::~~~~- .. ,~: ENCO Humble Oil & Refininq Company
went on to win the Conference Championship. America's Leading Energy Company
,
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1968 BAYLOR BEARS
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Bob Henderson-MG
Mike Beane-S
Terry Cozby-Kicker -Ronnie Evans-DT
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Randy Cooper-LB
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Terry Jackson-DE
Kent Starr-OG
Derek Davis-FL
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Gary Alexander-SE Wayne Roberds-LB
What's Behind the Gold Medallion?
Take a Look!
There's a whole new world of comfort and con-
venience waiting for you behind this famous
symbol of all-electric living.
- Automatic heating and cooling to give you
the best year-round indoor climate control.
- A modern, all-electric kitchen for faster,
easier meals... a cleaner, cooler kitchen.
_- Labor-saving electric laundry appliances
to lighten your housekeeping chores.
- Quick-recovery electric water heating to
give you'all the hot water you want, when-
ever you want it.
That's Gold Medallion comfort and convenience.
And Texas Power & Light Company's low-cost
electric service makes it the biggest bargain in
the family budget. Come live the Gold Medallion
way. A bright new world is waiting for you.
TEXAS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
A tax-paying, investor.owned electric utility
--
A
(16)
~......,.~~ --~.;-::::;
"- . '~. .-...
Good Luck BAYLOR BEARS of 1968
GOOD
STUDENT
PERFORMANCE
DEPENDS
ON
PLANNED
NUTRITION
TV e are proud to cheer for you on the athletic field.
In the classroom and on the athletic field, per-
formance depends on the physical fitness of the
student. Good health often depends on planned
nutrition: balanced meals served in an ap-
petizing fashion.
ARA Slater is proud to provide a quality dining
service for this institution whose administration
has made a wise investment in good food and
modem management. I t is a challenging as-
signment, made pleasant by many fine associa-
tions with students and faculty.
SLATER SCHOOL AND COLLEGE SERVICES
SLATER NOW SERVES MORE THAN 252 SCHOOLS IN 42 STATES AND PUERTO RICO
1968 BAYLOR BEARS
,
.
John Westbrook-TB John Mosely-DT Dennis Whitley-MM
David Black-C
Jerry Smith-FL
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Richard Stevens-OT Jessie Young-OT
John Kelly-OT
Ted Gillum-TE
Calvin Hunt-C
(17)
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1968 BAYLOR BEARS
Jack Allen-S
John Lerma-RB Don Huggins-FL Tommy Reaux-DT Gordon Utgard-TB
Ed Marsh-DHB Dennis Watson-DE Gene Rogers-TB Pinkie Palmer-FB Bob Stephenson-OG
II 11__1______._._._.__.__._.___._.__1____._
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CHURCH FURNITURE
COMPLETE CHURCH INTERIORS
BACKING 'the BEARS.
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FOR MORE THAN 60 YEARS
-
AND SONS
RIVER AT LA SALLE
WACO, TEXAS
(18)
JOHN BRIDGERS
Head Coach
Baylor University
KWTI
TIIEI JOHN RIDGERS
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presents-
SHOW
-IN COlOR-
Sundays following NFL Football
on Channell 0
featuring COLOR FI lM highlights
of the Baylor Bears
Spons'or,ed by
HICKS RUBBER CO.
NEWMAN Oll-CONOCO
PURE MilK CO.
SlUMBERlAND
On KWTX RADIO - 1-2-3 On Your Radio Dial
SATURDAYS 12:30
SPONSORED BY RILEY INSURANCE-1809 COLUMBUS AVE.
1968 BAYLOR BEARS
Russell Serafin-DHB Tom Bambrick-MM Mark Lewis-SE Rollin Hunter-TE Brian Blessing-FB
John Miller-DHB Steve Lane-DHB Richard Dennard-OG Ronnie Woodard-DT Roy McDearmon-DE
(19)
.0:",
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The Inside Story
of Pro Football
MY GREA TEST CHALLENGE
$4.95
the latest book by
BILL GLASS
Former Baylor All-American
All-Pro Defensive End - Cleveland Browns
LIVE. . . the exciting moments of verbal and
physical exchange across the line and in the
locker room with a 12-year vet of pro football.
READ. . . what an all-pro e,!d has to say about
the giants of the gridiron. . . their conflicts and
their triumphs.
DISCOVER. . . his "Greatest Challenge" as it
emerges from the day-to-day give and take in the
tension-filled world of pro football.
TWO OTHER GREAT BOOKS BY BILL GLASS
STAND TALL AND STRAIGHT
$3.95
A concerned professional
athlete and psychologist offer
guidance to teenage boys. Sections
on building a powerful body, a
dynamic personality, and Christian
values.
With Dr. Leslie Moser & Stan Moser
GETIN THE GAME!
$2.95 . (
True stories from the tough life
of the pro football player, mixed
with basic Christian insight from a
giant of a man. Enjoyable reading
for both adult and teenager.
* Also available in paperback for 95t
Order your books TODAY by mailing this coupon to one of these stores:
The Baylor Book Store
P. O. Box 6325
Waco, Texas 76706
The Book Nook
225 Lake Air Shopping Center
Waco, Texas 76710
Please send the following books:
"".'
_ copies of MY GREATEST CHALLENGE@$4.95 each
_ copi~ of STAND TALL AND STRAIG HT @ $3.95 each
_ copies of GET IN THE GAME! @$2.95each
_ copies of GET IN THE GAME! @ $ .95 each (paperback)
TO:
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP
TOTAL COST OF ORDER
o C.O.D.
o Check Enclosed
Waco,Texas
WORD bool~s
All orders plus 3% sales tax
-~
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NOTES ABOUT Today' s Game
By David Cawood, Sports Information Director
W. J. RITCHIE COACHED 1901 BEARS
Nothing exemplifies Bay]or Homecoming more than the football game. And today, it is only fitting that we
recognize the first man ever to assume the duties of head coach for the Bears-\iV. J. Ritchie.
Ritchie coached the Bears in 1901 and had a 5-1 won and loss record. He beat Texas A&M twice, 46-0
and 17-6, and lost to the Aggies once, 0-6. His team scored 163 points and held the opponents to 52 points.
Ritchie currently resides with his son, William, J r., in Citrus Heights, California. Welcome back Coach
Ritchie, and thank you for starting a tradition.
RIDLEY GIBSON PRESENTED BOBBY JONES MEMORIAL
, Today, the third annual BOBBY JONES MEMORIAL AWARD will be presented to
Ridley Gibson, hard-hitting defensive halfback at Baylor in 1965, '66, and '67.
The presentation will be made by the th:-ee sons, of the former Baylor quarterback and
coach at Baylor, Air Force ~cademy and Tenne3see, Bobby, Stephen and Mark.
Previous awards have been presented to Donnie Laurence
and Richard Defee.
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BOBBY JONES
The award is presented to the sen-
ior member of the Baylor team who,
in the opinion of the Baylor coaching
staff, contributed the most in the
Homecoming game. The player se-
lected from today's game will be hon-
ored at the 1969 Homecoming game.
Leadership, sportsmanship, team
play and performance in practice the
week prior to the game are considered
by the coaching staff. .
I'
RIDLEY GIBSON
NCAA FINALISTS RETURN
And the 1948 Basketball team is observing its 20th anniversary today. In case your memory is foggy,
Coach Bill Henderson directed the Bears to the Nc:AA finals and to the Olympic trials. Jackie Robinson was
selected to the United States Olympic team and received a go!d medal, the U.S. didn't lose a game. Incidentally,
no other SWC basketball team has ever advanced to the NCAA finals. ~
Members of the team were Robinson, Don Heath,ngton. Ralph Pulley, Jim Marion, Bill Scrack, Clarence
McGowan (deceased). Bill Hickman, Red Owens, Odell Preston, Bill DeWitt, Bill Johnson, Chuck Daveraux,
manager Jim vVard and trainer De]mer Brown.
..
WACO MERCHANTS SUPPORT HOMECOMING QUEEN
Baylor would like to thank the following \iVaco merchants who have donated gifts for the Homecoming
Queen and her Court: .
Sach's Lavender's Cafeteria George's Chef L. Fred & Son
Goldstein-Migel Comal Cottons Youngblood's Booterie
Cox's American Ckaners & Laundry David-Beverly Beauty Salon Monnig's
Mr. Jack's Montgomery Vvard . Sew-N-Sew Armstrong Jewelry
Cathav House Holt's Blanton's Holiday Cleaners & Laundry
Picadflly Cafeteria Hickory Stick Cliff Shelly Photo J. C. Penny Co.
M r. Raymond's Coiffures Casual Colony Bertrand's Morris Jewelers
L1fke Air Record Sl10p Thompson's Beauty Salon 25th Street Theater Merle Norman Cosmetics
Career Girl Nick's Radio City Howell, The Florist
Nanette Fashions Wyatt's Cafeteria Larry Robinson Cinderella
Black Angus Harold's Jewelry Chicken Shack Grayson's Ready-To-\Vear
EI Chico's Reed's Florist Italian Village Zale's
K-Mart J. Willis Studio Robt. Cox Jewelers Lewis Shoe Store
Mickle Studios
(21)
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1968 Homecoming Queen Nominees
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Mary Ann Long
1967 Homecoming Queen
. Homecoming
Queen
Cand:dates Shown
in Alphabetical
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Order
Photos by
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Jimmie WiIli.
Scherry Brownfield
Si~a Tau Epsilon
Marian Cate
Phi Beta Mu
Beauty, grace, charm. But never so abunda~t as in the
sparkle in the eyes of a lovely Baylor coed, especially a
nominee for Homecoming Queen.
The Homecoming Queen will reign with her three Prin-
cesses in the Court of Baylor Spirit. Tonight's halftime
ceremony will be the crowning moment of a long-to-be-
remembered week of fun, excitement, and hard work.
I
From presentations at Pigskin Revue and other campus
events to riding in this morning's Homecoming Parade, each
nominee has spent many hours representing her respective
class or club, and her schooL
Each girl is to be congratulated for the fine job she
has done. Truly, each is worthy of the title which only one
can receive.
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Frances Bryant
Circle K
Kathy Burns
Sigma Pi Delta
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Amanda Davis
Kappa Theta
Sharla Freeman
Pi Alpha Lambda
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Robin Griffith
Alpha Phi Omega
LuElla Hales
Freshman Class
Glenda Holton
Kappa Kappa Psi
(22)
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1968 Texas A&M Aggies
GENE STALLINGS
Location: College Station, Texas
Enrollment: 13,000
President: Earl Rudder
Faculty Chairman: Dr. O. D.
Butler
Nickname: Aggies. Cadets
Colors: Maroon and White
Stadium: Kyle Field (48,000)
Conference: Southwest
1967 Record: 6-4'
1967 SWC Record: 6-1, first
Lettermen Lost: 9
Lettermen Returning: 33
System: I formation
Information Director: Spec-
Gammon
SID Phones: Office 845-1241
Home 822-3572 Area 713
Athletic Director: Gene Stallings
(Texas A&M. 1957)
Head Coach: Gene Stallings
Assistant Coaches: Elmer Smith
(Hendrix, '31); Dee Powell
(A&M, '57); Loyd Taylor (A&M,
'59); Jack Hurlbut (Ala., '64); J.
W. Helms (Texas A&I, '56); Bud
Moore (Ala., '61); Don Watson
(A&M, 57); Ralph Smith (A&M,
'6I); Lide Huggins (So. Carolina,
'65); Jim Keller (A&M '64)
Athletic Department Phone:
845-1241 Area 713
Record With Bears: Won 37 Lost 20 Tied 7
(Baylor Scores First)
1899 "0-33 1912 "0.53
1901 "46,0 1913 .14-14
1901 .0-6 1916 0-3
1901 "17-6 1917 0,7
1902 .6,11 1918 0.19
1902 "0.22 1919 0.10
1903 "0-16 1920 0,24
1903 .0.5 1921 3-14
1903 "0-0 1922 13-7
1904 "0,5 1923 0,0
1904 "0.10 1924 15-7
1905 .0-42 1925 0-13
1905 "5.17 1926 20,9
1908 "6-5 1931 7-33
1909 "6-9 1932 0,0
1911 "11-22 1933 7.14
* Non -Conference
1968 Schedule
Sept. 21 at LSU
Sep 1. 28 at Tulane
Oct. 5 at Florida 5t.
Oct. 12 Texas Tech
Oct. 19 TCU
Oct. 26 at Baylor
.".. Nov. 2 Arkansas
Nov. 9 at SMU
Nov. 16 Rice
Nov. 28. at Texas
EARL RUDDER
1934 7-10 1952 21,20
1935 14-6 1953 14-13
1936 0-0 1954 20.7
1937 13.0 1955 7,19
1938 6-6 1956 13-19
1939 0,20 1957 0-14
1940 7-14 1958 27-33
1941 0.48 1959 13-0
1942 6-0 1960 14-0
1945 13,19 1961 0-23
1946 0-17 1962 3-6
1947 0-24 1963 34-7
1948 20,14 1964 20,16
1949 21-0 1965 31-0
1950 27-20 1966 13-17
1951 21-21 1967 3-21
1967 Results A&M Opp.
SMU 17 20
Purdue 20 24
LSD 6 17
Florida State 18 19
Texas Tech 28 24
TCU 20 0
Baylor 21 3
Arkansas 33 21
Rice 18 3
Texas 10 7
(31)
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Carl Gough
SG
Curley Hallman
DHB
Allan Hanson
SE
Edd Hargett
QB
Barney Harris
WB
Jim Piper
DE
Charlie Riggs
QB
Tom Sooy
DHB
Larry Stegent
TB
Jack Whitmore
SE-DHB
Buster Adami
LB
Jimmy Adams
WE
Harvey Aschenbeck
DT
Ross Brupbacher
DHB
Tom Buckman
SE
~.
Mike Caswell
WT
Jerry Campbell
DE
Mike DeNiro
DE
(32)
Dave Elmendorf
DHB
Gary Gruben
WG
...
Bob Long
WB
Tommy Maxwell Lynn Odom
WE-Saf. MG
Steve O'Neal
Punter
Jim Parker
WG
Leroy Hauerland
DE
Bill Hobbs Wendell Houseley
LB FB
Jack Kovar
C
Rolf Krueger
DT
Jim Lewis invites you to follow
the progress of the BAYLOR
BEARS throughout the 168
season on. . .
~.
KCEN~7i
II
KCEN-TV . . . FIRST IN COLOR PROUDLY BACKS THE BEARS!
(33)
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SCOUTING THE OPPONENTS
INDIANA
Indiana 40, Baylor 36
Indiana 20, Kansas 38
Indiana 28, Illinois 14
Indiana 38, Iowa 34
Indiana 22, Michigan 27
Oct. 26-Arizona
Nov. 2-at Wisconsin
Nov. 9-at Michigan State
Nov. 16-Minnesota
Nov. 23-at purdue
MICHIGAN STATE
Mich. State 14, Syracuse 10
Mich. State 28, Baylor 10
Mich. State 39, Wisconsin 0
Mich. State 14 Michigan 28
Mich. State 13, Minnesota 14
Oct. 26-Notre Dame
Nov. 2-at Ohio State
Nov. 9'--Indiana
Nov. 16-Purdue
Nov. 23-at Northwestern
LOUISIANA STATE
LSU 13, Texas A&M 12
LSU 21, Rice 7
LSU 48, Baylor 16
LSU 0, Miami (Fla.)-30
LSU 13, Kentucky 3
Oct. 26-TCU I
Nov. 2-Ole Miss
Nov. 9-at Alabama
Nov. 16-Mississippi State
Nov. 23-Tulane
ARKANSAS
Arkansas 32, Oklahoma State 15
Arkansas 56, Tulsa 13
Arkansas 17, TCU 7
Arkansas 35, Baylor 19
Arkansas 29, Texas 39
Oct. 26-North Texas
Nov. 2-Texas A&M
Nov. 16-SMU
Nov. 23-at Texas Tech
TEXAS A&M
A&M 12, LSU 13
A&M 35, Tulane 3
A&M 14, Florida State 20
~ A&:NJ: 16, Texas Tech 21
A&M 27, TCU 7
Oct. 26-at Baylor
Nov. 2-Arkansas
Nov. 9-at SMU
Nov. 16-Rice
Nov. 28-at Texas
TCU
TCU 7, Georgia Tech 17
TCU 28, Iowa 17
TCU 7, Arkansas 17
TCU 14, SMU 21
TCU 7, Texas A&M 27
Oct. 26-at LSU
Nov. 2-Baylor
Nov. 9-at Texas Tech
Nov. 16-Texas
Nov. 23-at Rice
TEXAS
Texas 20, Houston 20
Texas 22, Texas Tech 31
Texas 31, Oklahoma State 3
Texas 26, Oklahoma 20
Texas 39 Arkansas 29
Oct. 26-at Rice
Nov. 2-SMU
Nov. 9-at Baylor
Nov. 16-at TCU
Nov. 28-Texas A&M
TEXAS TECH
Texas Tech 10, Cincinnati 10
Texas Tech 31, Texas 22
Texas Tech 43, Colorado State 13
Texas Tech 21, Texas A&M 16
Texas Tech 28, Mississippi State 28
Oct. 26-SMU
Nov. 2-at Rice
Nov. 16-at Baylor
Nov. 23_Arkansas
SMU
SMU 37, Auburn 28
SMU 14, Ohio State 35
SMU 35 North Carolina State 14
SMU 21, TCU 14
SMU 32, Rice 24
Oct. 26-at Texas Tech
Nov. 2-at Texas
Nov. 9-Texas A&M
Nov. 16-at Arkansas
Nov. 23-Baylor
RICE
Rice 35, Washington 35
Rice 7, LSU 21
Rice 0, Tennessee 52
Rice 24, SMU 32
Oct. 26- Texas
Nov. 2-Texas Tech
Nov. 9-Arkansas
Nov. 16-Texas A&M
Nov. 23-TCU
Nov. 30 at Baylor
,(34)
RAMADA
Rickety-rackety ree
Here's the place' to be.
Rickety-rackety russ
Come and visit us.
Good food. Swingin'
surroundings. Meeting
rooms. Swimming pqol
and a management
that loves its
university neighbors.
CHOOSE WACO'S
RAMADA FOR YOUR
NEXT SOCIAL
FUNCTION. DINING,
DANCING FOR UP
TO 200 PEOPLE
IN ONE ROOM.
SIMPLY EXCELLENT
FACILITIES.
RAMADA@INN
~~rc#~
'i
WACO RAMADA INN
4201 Franklin Avenue
756-7461
Nearby Ramada Inns:
Austin
5656 International Highway
452-2581
Dallas
6900 E. Cedar Springs Rd.
357-3451
Grand Pr.irie '
1000 West Main Street
264-24,11 (Dallas)
274-5548 (Ft. Worth)
"
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All grants under the Baylor Academic-Athletic Scholarship Program are
based on scholarship, character, leadership and athletic ability. The grants are
awarded by a faculty scholarship committee of Baylor University.
The Baylor Academic-Athletic Scholarship Program is a cooperative
endeavor which gives business and professional men, ex-students and friends
of Baylor University an opportunity to provide a college education for worthy
young men who qualify scholastically and participate in athletics, A faculty
scholarship committee administers the program. This committee prescribes
regulations under which the program is administered, including the selection
of candidates and the awarding of scholarships.
The scholarship shall not exceed the maximum benefits permitted by
the S@uthwest Athletic Conference and shall be renewed each year or until
the student has completed his undergraduate program, provided he continues
to meet all requirements.
Baylor University's athletes who are placed on the Baylor Academic-
Athletic Scholarship list not only have first earned their places thro.ugh
scholastic achievement, the honor also has inspired the great majority of
these student-athletes to achieve further scholastic improvement to the point
where the average grade of these student-athletes is at least the equal of the
scholastic level of virtually any similar group in the University.
The Baylor Academic-Athletic Scholarships, sponsored through the
loyalty of many ex-students and other friends of Baylor, also have proven to
be a financial boon to the growing Baylor athletic budget.
Some of the University's finest scholars are enrolled in this program. The
past spring semester, for instance; two football players achieved a perfect
4.00, or straight A average, and 45 of those assigned to this program had B
or better average for the full year.
~
DON TRULL
An outstanding student with a ma-
jor in mathematics, Don Trull now
is playing professional football with
the Houston Oilers. He was top
vote getter for the 1963 Scholastic
All-America team.
DAVID HUPP
David Hupp accumulated a 3.8 gra<
point in accounting and was pr'
sented the Phillips-Hall Award, re
ognizing the senior athlete .with tl
highest four-year average.
AN EXPLANATION
In the past, individual athletes were assigned to a maximum of 70 scholarships which have been in effect
~. for the longest period of time. Now 100 full scholarships are in effect. Due to the difficulty of assigning
athletes to particular scholarships, it has been decided that in the future athletes will be selected on the
basis of their scholastic record, athletic ability, character and leadership, for the honor of being assigned
to the Academic-Athletic Scholarship Program and will not be assigned to a particular scholarship
unless specifically requested.
(36)
"
Athletes Assigned to Individual Academic-Athletic Scholarships
JOEL ALLISON, JUNIOR
Religion Major-Football-Mrs.
Grace M. White Jr. Scholarship
LANEY COOK, SOPHOMORE
Pre-Dental Major-Football
Jamie Parker Scholarship
TED GILLUM, JUNIOR
Mathematics Major-Football
Dealers Electrical Supply
CO-CAPTAINS JACK ALLEN (I.) AND PINKIE PALMER have been assigned to academic-athletic scholarships
the past four years. Allen is a senior safety from Dallas South Oak Cliff and Palmer is a senior fullback from Olney.
Additional Athletes Assig ned to Academic-Athletic Scholarships
Name Major Sport Jimmy Miller Sophomore Business . Track
Joe Allbright Sophomore Undecided Football John Miller Junior Math Football
Jack Allen Senior History Football David Moore Sophomore Business Football
Gilbert Beall Sophomore Pre-Med. Football John Mosley Junior Pre-Law Football
Mike Beane Sophomore Education Football Terry Newman Sophomore Business Football
David Black Junior Business Football James Nunn Sophomore Business Football
Brian Blessing Junior Pol. Sci. Football Pinkie Palmer Senior Business Football
Randy Cooper Sophomore Business Football Guymon Phillips Junior Math Football
James Crow Senior Business Football Tommy Reaux Junior Math Football
Stan Curry Senior History Track Russe'l Serafin Junior Business Football
Danny Cushman Senior Sociology Football Jerry Smith Junior Math Football
Derek Davis Sophomore Psychology Football Kent Starr ) unior Pre-Den. Football
Larry Eixmann Junior Math Football Bob Stephenson Senior Soc. Sci. Football
Alvin Flynn Senior Business Football Richard Stevens Junior Business Football
Eddie Frazier Senior Math Basketball Steve Stuart Sophomore Pre. Den. Football
RonaId Garner Senior Pol. ScL Track Randy Thompson Senior Pre-Law Basketball
O. B. Goolsby Senior Business Football Lanus Treadwell Sophomore Business Football
Calvin Hunt Junior Math Football Ronald Urbantke Senior Education Track
John Kelly Senior Business Football Gordon Utgard Junior Education Football
Steve Lane Senior Education Football Gregg Vardaman Sophom ::lre Education Football
i John Lerma Senior Edu. & His. Football Keith Wagner Sophomore Education Football
I Mark Lewis Senior Edu. & His. Football Dennis Watson Sophomo.'e Business Football
J Gene Mahurin Senior Sociology Football Tom Wells Senior Math Football
Jay Mason Senior Business Football John Westbrook Senior English Football
] Ronald Woodard Senior Psychology Football
FRESHMAN ATHLETIC-ACADEMIC SCHOLARSHIPS
'I
Name Town State Sport Si SOuthall Brownwood Texas Football
John Burkholder '. Dallas Texas Football Don Stephenson Palestine Texas Football
Glen Chmelar Rockdale Texas Football William Stewart Odessa Texas Football
Grifgs DeHay B'rownwood Texas Football Gary Sutton o zona Texas Football
Pat Fees Lamesa Texas Basketball
Leonard King Port Arthur Texas Football Glen Treadwell El Campo Texas Football
Gerald LindhoIm George West Texas Track Mike Vahrenkamp Fort Worth Texas Football
John Malone EI Paso Texas Football Mike Virdell Llano Texas Football
Martin Mathis Houston Texas Football David Walters Longview Texas Football
Barry Morgan Bossier City Louisiana Football
Jim Renault W. Palm Beach Florida Track Allen Wilson Tracy California Basketball
(37)
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Abilene Baylor Club, Abilene Monroe Ferrell Concrete Pipe Co., Baylor "B" Association, Waco
Houston .;
Martha and Guy Crouch, Alvin Baylor "E" Association, Waco
Buddy Gatewood Memorial, Houston
Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Bernard, Ark. Mr. and B & B Sporting Goods Co., Inc., Waco
Mrs. Earl C. Hankamer
National Western Life Ins. Co., Austin Houston Brown-Dossett, Waco
Baylor Professional Football Players E.W. Hopkins, Houston Roy Cashion, Waco
Gibson Discount Center, Beaumont Houston Business/Law, Houston Central Freight Lines, Waco
Ed W. Streetman, Beaumont Houston Businessmen, Houston Central Texas Iron Works, Waco
T. E. Sanderford, Belton Houston Jockey Club, Houston Citizens National Bank, Waco
Halbert's, Inc., Bronson Houston MD's, Houston Clark Concrete Company, Waco
Dr. W. C: Smith-John C. Brown Ralph B. Lee, Houston Clark Concrete Company, Waco
Carthage
Charles B. Mahaffey, Houston Coca Cola, Waco
Charles Robert Ferrell Mem., Cypress Milton T. Gregory, Houston
Jerry Dee Mangum, Houston Columbus Ave. Baptist Church, Waco
Andrea del Sarto, Dallas
James K.Marrs, (Houston Baylor Club) Ross Combest-Wm. Rountree, Waco
B & B Restaurant, Dallas
Carl Casey, Dallas William H. Olds, Houston Austin A. Cooper. Waco
- Cox Department Stores, Waco
Carr P. Collins, Dallas Richard J. Parma, Houston
C. Cantrell, Irving H. M. Fentress, Waco
Carr P. Collins, Dallas J.
J. C. Cantrell, Irving First National Bank, Waco
Dallas Baylor Boosters, Dallas
Baylor Friends, Longview Gibson Discount Center, Waco
Dallas Friends, Dallas
Shreveport Baylor Club, Louisiana International Marketing Corp., Waco
Dallas Baylor Friends
H & H Oil Company, Louisiana "Boody" Johnson Memorial, Waco
Dallas Friends of Baylor, Dallas
I ... Lubbock Friends of Baylor, Lubbock Bobby Jones Memorial, Waco
Dallas Baylor Friends
Dallas Park Cities, Dallas C. W. Gound-J. W. Sutton, A. H. Kirksey, Waco
N acogdoches
The Higginbotham, Dallas Mr. and Mrs. F. T. McCollum, Waco
Ray Parker, Odessa
A Baylor Friend, Fort Worth Paul J. Meyer-Success Motivation
Ray Parker, Odessa Institute, Waco
A Friend, Fort Worth
Ray Parker, Odessa Arthur Mitchell-Jack Kultgen, Waco
Fort Worth Baylor Club, Fort Worth
Guardian Title Company, Fort Worth Ray Parker, Odessa Pure Milk, Waco
Obie A. Baker Memorial, Gilmer Ray Parker, Odessa Mr. and Mrs. Ross Sams, Waco
J. W. Marshall Sr., Memorial, Gilmer "Bully for a Better Baylor Bunch" 7th and James Baptist Church, Waco
Olney Texas Power & Light, Waco
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Rush, Graham
Henderson Clay Products, Wright McClatchy, Olney Drs. Trippett, Shellenberger,
Inc.,
Henderson Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Parker, Sonora Scruggs & Oliver, Waco
John Bridgers, Houston Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Parker, Olney Waco Medical, Waco
(MI'. and Mrs. C. H. Underwood)
Tyler Baylor Club, Tyler Mrs. Grace M. White, Waco
Cal-Tex Foundation, Houston J. M. White, Jr., Meredian
Rex Clawson, Houston. .' A Baylor Friend, Waco Word, Inc., Waco
:N.orris Clark, Lubbock American-Amicable Life Ins. Co., Waco Mrs. Ed Lane, Wortham ,.
Full Scholarships
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Partial Baylor Academic and Athletic Scholarships for
1968-69 were provided by these groups and individuals:
First National Bank, Killeen I I
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jacobs, Liberty I I
Clyde E. Fant, Shreveport, La. I I
Jack Salley, Shreveport, La. I
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Williams
Shreveport, La.
Lufkin Friends, Lufkin
Leon O. Moses, McKinney
Baylor Friends, Marshall
Brooks Harman, Odessa
Dr. and Mrs. "Choc" McCollum,
Odessa
Houston Baylor
Lawyer Friends, Houston
Houston Friends of Baylor, Houston I
MICKEY KENNEDY
Voted Baylor's Best Lineman in
1964, Mickey Kennedy was one of
the Nation's top athletes in Scho-
lastic achievement. He won the
Woodrow Wilson Fellowship and
now is doing advanced study in
History at Tulane University.
..".
Houston MD's, Houston'
Michael J. Lewis, Houston
(39)
Phil Parker, Odessa
Edward L. McVey, Columbus, Ohio
A Friend, RockdaIe
San Antonio Friends of Baylor
San Antonio
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Herman Baker, Sherman
Murray H. Nance, Jr., Shennan
Dr. David Wells, Sherman
Dr. and Mrs. James H. Witt, Shennan
'John G. Reynolds Memorial, Tyler
I American Income Life Ins. Co., ~
I Bankers & Farmers Life Ins. Co., Waco
I Stanton Brown, Jr., Waco
I F. A. (Jim) Crow Memorial, Waco
I Dr. Stanley P. Howard, Waco
I Ray Hicks, Waco
I Kim's, Inc., Waco
I Ed Martin, Waco
I Pure Milk Company, Waco
I Carlton Smith, Waco
I Dr. Joe Woodward Memorial, Waco
I George B. Wright, Sr. Memorial, Waco
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Athlectic Staff
M A. "CATFISH" SMITH
Promotions Director
BILL HENDERSON
Assistant Athletic Director
DAVID CAWOOD
Sports Information Director
Office Staff
.J'>.
Left to right: Mrs. Bertha Acrey, Mrs. Marie Abel, Mrs. Louise Hamilton, 11 rs. Phyllis Brown and
WI rs. Janet Saunders.
(40)
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If you're
planning a big
vacation soon, may we suggest a spot
verv few Americans seem to know
abo'ut.
America.
Chances are, there are just as many
things in America that you haven't
seen as there are in Europe or South
America.
And wouldn't you feel like a
dummy if you went to Europe and
some Frenchman asked you what
New Orleans was like during Mardi
Gras and you couldn't tell him.
This doesn't mean you should
never visit Europe or South America.
You should.
But not until you visit New Orleans
during Mardi Gras and about a
million other places right here in
America that most Frenchmen
would give the Eiffel Tower to see.
Braniff International
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Baylor University Band's Golden Girls Ready for 1968 Season
Standing left to right: Janie Hansard, Bellville; Sue Plack, Houston (withdrawn). Kneeling left to
right: Jeanie Wiess, Lone Star; Glenda Holton, Jasper; Cynthia Yelderman, Needville.
"".
PATSY FOSTER
MIKE PLUNK
PEGGY PATE
GENE CASON
(42)
MARY MATTHEWS
WARREN GRIFFIN
cr...,. 'J'.. FA.... '68 VN.vz...'I'r LooK!
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unibersitp men's wear
506 SPEIGHT 754-444'
Good Luck, Bea rs
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.American Bankers
Insurance Company
. (43)
BIRD-KULTGEN, INC.
III IBm I
1225 Franklin Ave.
VISIT US AT OUR LOCATION IN
North Wing of Union Building
ON OR OFF THE CAMPUS
WE SERVE YOU
Mail Orders Filled Promptly
BAYLOR BOOK STORE
Owned by Baylor University
Waco, Texas
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THAT GOOD OLD BAYLOR LINE
"Long Yell"
BA YLOR BEARS FIGHT
BAYLOR BEARS FIGHT
(4 Loud Claps)
FIGHT HOLD GREEN GOLD
BAYLOR BEARS
FIGHT HOLD GREEN GOLD
BA YLOR BEARS FIGHT
THAT GOOD OLD BAYLOR LINE
That good old Baylor Line,
That good old Baylor Line,
We'll march forever down the years
As long as Stars shall shine.
We'll fling our green and gold afar
To light the ways of time
And guide us as we onward go-
That good old Baylor Line.
Enid Eastland Markham
"Bear Growl"
(Low) BEARS FIGHT!
BEARS FIGHT
YEA BEARS FIGHT!
(Loud) BEARS FIGHT
BEARS FIGHT
YEA BEARS FIGHT!
(Yell) BEARS FIGHT!
(Pause) BEARS FIGHT!
YEA BEARS FIGHT!
, NEW FIGHT
Bear down you Bears of 'ole Baylor U
We're all for you
We're going to show that ole Baylor
Spirit through and through-
YEA TEAM!
Join in the fight then with all your might
You Bruins bold
We'll win all our victories
for the Green and Gold
" Locomotive"
(Slow) B-A-Y-L-O-R
BEARS FIGHT
BEARS FIGHT
(Fast) B-A-Y-L-O-R
BEARS FIGHT
BEARS FIGHT
S-s-s-s-s-s-sss
BOOM
FIGHT BEARS
(CHANT)
Fight! Fight! Baylor U
We're for you-Go Bears!
Fight! Fight! Baylor U
We'll win through-Yea Team!
Join in the fight then with all your might
You Bruins bold
We'll win all C~lr victories for
the Green and Gold!
"Short Yell"
BA YLOR BEARS FIGHT
(Pause)
BA YLOR BEARS FIGHT
(Pause)
Y -E-A - BEARS
FIGHT
"Baylor Whisper Yell"
-". (Talk) B-B-Bay L-L-Lor
Bay-Lor, Baylor
(Yell) B-B-Bay L-L-Lor
Bay-Lor Baylor-
Bears Fight!
(44)
TE
FORA
HEALTHY
CONSTITUTION
~p- -~
" '-. ~.
.OUR
100D HIALTH
PlaTFORM:
WELL-BALANCED
'DIET
PROPER AMOUNT
. OF REST
DAILY EXERCISE
PERIODIC CHECKUPS
AND
HpY
VJ:TAMJ:NS
the camplete line a/vitamins
far yaur entire family!
Available At Your Neighborhood Drug Store
"'. '
Truett Laboratories
Dallas, Texas
MRS BAIRD~
MRS SAlRDS--
~., .~~~~~
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Stays Fresh Longer
Compliments of
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GRUBBS VOLKSWAGEN
4824 West Waco Drive-772-7940
"Central Texas' Only Authorized
V olkswagen Dealer"
PUBLIC NOTICE!
WE CANNOT ACCEPT PRAISE FOR
CLOTHES THAT FOOTBALL PLAYERS
WEAR ON THE FIELD.
BUT WE ARE PROUD
OF THE WAY OUR CLOTHES FIT
THESE PLAYERS OFF THE FIELD.
&JOIN THE CROWDS
~ll1lfik~
MAN S SHOP
@
GULF OIL PRODUCTS
CLARENCE H. LANDER, Distributor
(45)
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* Restaurant-open
6 a.m. to 10 p.m.
* Banquet and Meeting
Rooms
* 8 Hour Valet and
Laundry Service
Reasonable Rates
5 minutes to Downtown
3 minutes to Baylor
Stadium
Holidex Service
772-6640
TRAINERS and MANAGERS FOR 1968 FOOTBALL TEAM
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Top row, left to right, Dayid Huffstetler; Seth \Vitcher; Claude Bookout (withdrawn) ; Sam Crouch;
Robert 'Watson. Bottom row, left to right, Don Zylks; Ewell Balltrip; Bill Trippett (withdrawn); James
Blackstock: and Richard Karr.
~.
"BUD" GUINN
West, Texas
FRANK SHOFNER
Special Representative
JOHN BURLESON
Gulf Coast Representative
BOB LIVELY
South Texas Representative
O. L. "Bull" Bradley
President
Mrs. O. L. Bradley
Secretary & Treasurer
Frank Dickson
Vice President
Sporting Goods Co., Inc~
1018-20 Austin Avenue Waco, Texas
P. O. Box 665
(46)
Phone: 752-5517
Res: 772-5533
Curtis' Surgical Supply Co.
GORDON L. RILEY
501 Lake Air Dr.
772-6121
Riley Insurance Agency
Life, Accident and Health
Auto and Fire
Representing "The Customer"
Surgical Instruments, Hospital,
Laboratory, and Sick Room Supplies
1809 Columbus
Waco, Texas
Compliments
of a
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You can rent your sheets, pillow cases,
and towels for less than you can have
them laundered.
BUCHANAN/S
Friend
"".
Rental Service
Contact our offices in Penland, Ruth
Collins, or Russell Dorms.
(47)
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2 0 TOUCHDOWN
OR FIELD GOAL
1 9 BAll DEAD; IF HAND
IS MOVED FROM SIDE
TO SIDE: TOUCHBACK
----
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5 ILlEGAL RETURN,;) ,~. )-: ,
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2 2 TlME.OUT; REFEREF5
DISCRETIONARY OR
EXCESS TIME.OUT FOllOW WI1ll
TAPPING HANDS ON CHEST
2 4 BAll READY
FOR PLAY
25 START THE CLOCK
Represented for National Advertising by SPENCER ADVERTISING COMPANY. INC.
271 Madison Avenue-New York 16. N. Y.
~ ~ ~~
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J). 2 IllEGAL PROCEDURE, 3 IllEGAL MOTION
,- /'. POSITION OR I.~.
1 OFFSIDE (INFRACTION SUBSTITUTION 4 t~h'
OF SCRIMMAGE OR ~
FREE KICK FORMATION) '\.. \\ .... ~~ I 1- ~
~ ~~ 11 IllEGAL USE OF
~ ~~ t I" 1 0 UNSPOR:SMANUKJi HANDS AND ARMS
"',__' _ ....... ' CONDUCT 12 INTENTIONAL
. __ r GROUNDING
7 ,,"'.... OOOA Do. 9 :~~=~ /f:;" Q """ t.& fZ;l
8 "'ffiNG --.2)- .~:C,,;," .<: >' -. W
(6') ~ - Ql ~/\' 16:,~~"I::-- 17::,d~.~~ D\I .~:\
~ I ~~ >--...... - TOUCHED. KICKED OR NO SCORE -l \:
~.,J' 14 FORWARD ~' OR " . OR BATIED ~ I \J
13 IllEGAllY PASSING OR KICK CATCHING 1 5 INELIGIBLE RECEIVER J~ 18 HElPING RUNNER,
HANDING BAll FORWARD INTERFERENCE DOWNFIElD ON PASS i:. 1 ' OR INTERLOCKED
--r.- T. ,... INTERFERENCE
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21 SAfm
1. OFFSIDE by either team; Violation of
scrimmage or free kick formation; En-
croachment on neutral zone-Loss of Five
Yards.
2. ILLEGAL PROCEDURE, POSITION OR
SUBSTITUTION-Putting ball in play be-
fore Referee signals "Ready-for-Play";
Failure to complete substitution before
play starts; Player out - of - bounds when
scrimmage begins, or on free kick forma-
tion; Failure to maintain proper alignment
of offensive team when ball is snapped;
False start or simulating start of a play;
Taking more than two steps after Fair
Catch is made; Player on line receiving
snap; Free kick out-of-bounds - loss of
Five Yards.
I I
3. I llEGAl MOTION - Offensive player
illegally in motion when ball is snapped
-loss of Five Yards.
'~
4. IllEGAL SHIFT-Failure to pause one
full second in shift play-loss of Five
Yards.
"".
5. IllEGAL RETURN-Infraction of sub.
stitution rule-loss of Five Yards.
6. DELAY OF GAME-Consuming more
than 25 seconds in putting the ball in
play after it is declared ready-for-play;
Failure to remove injured player for whom
excess timeout was granted; Crawling-
loss of Five Yards. Team not ready to
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play at start of either half-loss of 15
Yards.
7. PERSONAL FOU l-Tackling or block-
ing defensive player who has made fair
catch; Piling on; Hurdling; Tripping;
Grasping face mask of opponent; Tackling
player out-of-bounds, or running into
player obviously out of play; loss of
15 Yards. (Flagrant offenders will be dis-
qualified.)
8. CLI PPI NG-loss of 15 Yards.
PENALTIES
9. ROUGHING THE KICKER or holder
-loss of 15 Yards.
10. UNSPORTSMANLIKE CONDUCT -
Striking an opponent with fist, forearm,
elbow or locked hands; Kicking or knee-
ing-loss of 15 Yards (offenders will be
disqualified); Violation of rules during
intermission; Illegal return of disqualified
player; Coaching from side lines; Invalid
signal for Fair Catch; Persons illegally on
field-loss of 15 Yards. (Flagrant offend-
ers will be disqualified.)
11. IllEGAL USE OF HANDS AND
ARMS by offensive or defensive player-
loss of 15 Yards.
12. INTENTIONAL GROUNDING of for.
ward pass-loss of Five Yards from spot
of pass Plus loss of Down.
,(;4&)
13. IllEGAL FORWARD PASS OR IL.
lEGAllY HANDING BAll FORWARD-
Loss of Five Yards from spot of foul Plus
loss of Down.
14. FORWARD PASS OR KICK CATCH-
ING INTERFERENCE -Interference with
opportunity of player of receiving team
to catch a kick-loss of 15 yards. In-
terference by member of offensive team
on forward pass-loss of 15 Yards Plus
loss of Down. Interference by defensive
te.am on forward pass-Passing Team's
Ball at Spot of Foul and First Down.
15. INELIGIBLE RECEIVER DOWNFIElD
ON PASS-loss of 15 Yards.
16. BAll IllEGAllY TOUCHED, KICKED
OR BATTED-Forward pass being touched
by ineligible receiver beyond the line of
scrimmage-Loss of 15 Yards from Spot
of Preceding Down and loss of a Down.
Eligible pass receiver going out-of-bounds
and later touching a forward pass-loss
of Down; Illegally kicking the ball-loss
of 15 Yards; Illegally kicking or batting a
free ball-Offended team's ball at Spot of
Foul.
17. INCOMPLETE FORWARD PASS -
Penalty declined; No play or no score.
18. HELPING THE RUNNER, or inter-
locked interference-loss of 15 Yards.
Phone: 752-5537
Franklin at 17th
qooJ .fuclz Bealtd.
'7~
PROGRESS
LAUNDERERS AND
DRY CLEANERS
FUR STORAGE
"The Progress W ny Pleases"
real thirst-
quencher "'"
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Wauo, Texas
WELCOME BAYLOR ALUMNUS
MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT
WQr ialark Angus
18pstaurant
serving 'til midnight
AT THE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PRESTON BAUMGARDNER
Managing Director
Gordon Rountree
OLDS-CADI LLAC
Safety Tested
Value Rated
Guaranteed Used Cars
Franklin at 28th
Phone 756-4461
"<lite qoJJ.en Ruk--
(!)UIl, Rule Ut Bu4ineU,"
(49)
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BAYLOR FOOTBALL RECORDS
Total games played: 621 in 66 seasons.
Total games won: 328.
Total games lost: 256.
Total games tied: 37.
Undefeated and untied teams: 1900 (3-0-0).
Undefeated but tied: 1910 (6,0.2).
Longest string of games without defeat: 10 (1936-37) and 10 (1909.
1910-1911).
Longest winning streak: 10 (last four games 1936 and first 6 games
1937).
Longest losing streak: 8 (1946).
Top scoring team: 1916 (314 in 10 games).
Unscored-on seasons (If none, fewest points scored by opponent):
1900 (played 3). 1910 team allowed 17 points for 8 games;
1915 team permitted 22 for 8 games.
SINGLE GAME
Team
Most points scored: 103 (Hardin-Simmons, 1917).
Most points scored in SWC play: 60 (Arkansas, 1922).
Largest victory margin: 103 in 1917.
Largest victory margin ,n SWC play: 47 (60-13, Arkansas, 1922).
Largest defeat margin: 89 (0-89, LSU, 1908).
Largest defeat margin in SWC play: 48 (0.48, A&M in 1941).
Most yards rushing: 331 (Wake Forest, 1951).
Most yards passing: 387 (Rice, 1958).
Most total offense: 574 (Rice, 1958).
Most passes attempted: 50 (SMU, 1966)
Most passes completed: 29 (SMU, 1966).
Most interceptions: 9 (TCU, 1949).
Most passes had intercepted: 6 (Arkansas, 1965).
Most punts: 13 (SMU, 1947).
Individual
Most points scored: 30, Wesley Bradshaw (Arkansas, 1922).
Most touchdowns scored: 4, Wesley Bradshaw (Arkansas" 1922).
Most yards rushing: 138, Charles Wilson (Arkansas, 1967).
Most yards passing: 387, Buddy Humphrey (Rice, 1958).
Most total offense: 405, Humphrey (Rice, 1958).
Most times carried: 27, Pinkie Palmer (Texas Tech, 1966).
Most passes attempted: 50, Terry Southall (SMU, 1966).
Most passes completed: 29, Terry Southall (SMU, 1966).
*Most touchdown passes: 40, Larry Isbell (A&M, 1950); Billy Pat-
terson (Loyola of Los Angeles, 1938): and Terry Southall
(Syracuse, 1966).
Most passes caught: 12, Lawrence Elkins (Texas, 1963); Tommy
Smith (SMU, 1966).
Most offensive plays (rushing and passing): 50, Don Trull (TCU,
1963); Terry Southall (SMU, 1966).
Most punts: 13, Jack Price (SMU, 1947).
Most TD's responsibility (run and pass): 4, Wesley Bradshaw (Arkan-
sas, 1922); Billy Patterson (Loyola, 1938); Larry Isbell (A&M,
1950); and Terry Southall (Syracuse, 1966).
Most fouchdown passes caught: 3, Lawrence Elkins.
Most points by conversion: 6, Wesley Bradshaw (Arkansas, 1922).
Most conversions kicked: 6, Wesley Bradshaw (Arkansas, 1922).
Most field goals: 2, Bob Nelson (Centenary, 1939); Jack Jones (SMU,
1925); and Bob Purvis (SMU, 1965).
Longest run from scrimmage: 80, Virgil Gilliland (TCU, 1928).
Longest pass play: 89, Pearce to Reeves (TCU, 1931).
Longest punt: 89, Jack Wilson (Rice, 1940).
Longest kickoff return: 94, Bob Masters (Oklahoma City, 1936).
Longest punt return: 95, Milton Evans (Oklahoma City, 1937).
Longest runback of interception: 99, Joe Joiner (TCU, 1945).
'Buddy Humphrey threw five TD passes in the 1959 North.South
Shrine Game at Miami.
SEASON
Team
Most victories: 1916 (9-1-0) and 1956 (9-2-0).
Most defeats: 1946 (1-8-0) and 1967 (1.8.1).
Most ties: 2 (by 9 different teams).
Most points scored: 314 in 1916.
Fewest points scored: 13 in 1918 (4 games).
Fewest points by opposition: 0 by 1900 foes (3 games).
Most yards rushing: 2,231, 1954 (records back to 1949).
Most yards passing: 2,159, 1963 (records back to 1949).
Most total offense: 3,439, 1951 (records back to 1949).
Most passes attempted: 363, 1966 (records back to 1949).
Most passes completed:_ 177, 1963 (records back to 1949).
Most punts: 84, 1945.
Fewest yards rushing by opponents 1,243, 1951 (records back to
1949).
Fewest yards passing by opponents: 709, 1959 (records back to
1949).
Most interceptions: 27, 1951 (records back to 1949).
Most passes had intercepted: 25, 1965.
Individual
Most points scored: 119, Wesley Bradshaw, 1922.
Most touchdowns scored: 14, Wesley Bradshaw, 1922.
Most yards rushing: 670, Larry Hickman, 1958 (151 carries).
Most yards passing: 2,157, Don Trull, 1963.
Most total offense: 2,276, Don Trull, 1963.
Most times rushing: 151, Larry Hickman, 1958.
Best rushing average: 6.4 (70 attempts), Del Shofner, 1956.
Most passes attempted: 337, Terry Southall, 1966.
Most passes completed: 174, Don Trull, 1963.
Most touchdown passes: 16, Terry Southall, 1966.
Most passes caught: 70, Lawrence Elkins, 1963.
Most touchdown passes caught: 8, Lawrence Elkins, 1963.
Most TD's responsibility (run and pass): 22, Don Trull, 1963.
Most punts: 61, Larry Isbell, 1951.
Best punting average: 41.1, Larry Isbell, 1950.
Most points by conversion: 26, Hank Dickerson, 1949.
Most conversions by kicking, 26, Hank Dickerson, 1949.
Most field goals: 6, Wesley Bradshaw, 1921, and Bob Purvis, 1965.
CAREER
Individual
Most points scored: 182, Wesley Bradshaw.
Most Touchdowns scored: 22, L. G. Dupre, Dell Shofner, Ronnie
Bull.
Most yards rushing: 1,713, Larry Hickman (1956.57-58).
Most yards passing: 4,143, Don Trull.
Most total offense: 4,501, Don Trull (1961-62.63).
Most times carried: 388, Larry Hickman.
Most passes attempted, 629, Terry Southall.
Most passes completed: 328, Terry Southall.
Most passes caught: 144, Lawrence Elkins (1962,63.64).
Most yardage on passes caught: 2,094, Lawrence Elkins.
Most touchdown passes: 29, Terry Southall.
Most touchdown passes caught: 19, Lawrence Elkins.
Most TD's responsibility (pass and run): 41, Don Trull.
Most points by conversion: 85, Hank Dickerson (4 varsity seasons).
Most conversions by kicking: 85, Hank Dickerson.
Most field goals: 10, Wesley Bradshaw, (1921-22).
Most punts: 122, Larry Isbell (1949-50-51).
Best punting average: 38.2, Larry Isbell.
(50)
What is
the
BEAR CLUB?
SUPPORT YOUR TEAM-MAKE
I
The Bear Club is a non-profit organization of former
students and friends of Baylor who are interested in
helping Baylor build and maintain a better athletic
program.
WHY SHOULD YOU JOIN?
Your school needs scholarships to attract outstanding
athletes to Baylor. All funds collected by the Bear
Club go directly to the Athletic Department to provide
these necessary scholarships. The Athletic Department
must be supported from gate receipts and from con-
tributions.
HOW DO YOU JOIN?
Membership is open to any former student, friend of
the University or present student. Annual dues of
$50 entitle you to all benefits of the Bear Club. All
contributions are income tax deductible.
WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS?
Every member receives a newsletter, sent out during
spring practice and after each game. These inform-
ative letters will be packed with the latest informa-
tion on the football team, coaches, and the prospects
for the future, as well as information on all the other
sports. Press guides prepared for each sport are also
sent to members.
Every Bear Club member is entitled to ticket priority;
All Bear Club members receive two Class B options for the purchase
of season football tickets and basketball tickets. If a member already
owns two Class A options or Box Seat options, his two Bear Club
options automatically become two additional. options of the type
that he owns. If a dub member owns only one Class A or Box
Seat option, one of his Bear Club B options becomes an additional
Class A or Box Seat option giving him two Class A or Box Seat options
and leaving one Class B option. Football options must be exercised
within certain dates, usually by July 1.
Each Bear Club member also receives a brass mem-
bership plaque suitable for display in the office, home
or business.
Baylor Bear Club
YOUR CHECK TO: P. O. Box 6365
Waco, Texas 76706
------------------------------------------------.
BAYLOR BEAR CLUB
Name
Address
"".
Firm
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Address
Phone
Phone
(51)
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Bill Menefee
Bowman
Gatewood
Frazier
Sibley
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1968-69 Baylor Basketball Outlook
By David Cawood, Sports Information Director
WACO-It doesn't really concern Baylor basketball coach Bill Menefee that
his team has been picked to finish in the Southwest Conference's second di-
vision by the pre.season prognosticators.
As a matter of fact, he even thinks it might be a good omen.
You see, the experts placed Baylor in the league's cellar last year and
Menefee led his Bears to a second piilce SWC finish.
A loss to champion Texas Christian in the season's finale erased Baylor's
bid for the league crown, dropping the Bears one game behind the Frogs
with an 8-6 SWC record, and a 15.--; overall mark.
Baylor led the conference most of the season, but lost five of its' last six
league games.'
Menefee talks about Baylor's chances for a repeat performance cautiously.
He'll begin by saying something like this:
"The conference is stronger than it's been in years, and you have to consider TCU,
SMU, A&M, and Arkansas as contenders. They have everyone back from last year.
We were hurt by graduation, but we do return Tommy Bowman."
back from last year. We were hurt by graduation, but we do return Tommy Bowman."
Russell Kibbe, who earned AII-SWC mention at forward, g'Jard Bob Porter and
center Ed Thorpe terminated their eligibility last year. So Menefee must first find
replacements for these dependable front-line performers before the Bears can be con-
sidered a contender in the pre.season analysis.
But then, one must remember he has Bowman on the asset side of the balance shef,t.
And that, in itself, gives Baylor a deserving. long look from other SWC coaches a;l.'
followers.
Bowman, a 6-4 forward, was fifth in league rebounding with 9.5 grabs per game
and fourteenth in scoring with a 13.5 average.
He was eighth in field goal accuracy hitting 123 of 251 shots for 49.0 per cent and
tenth from the charity line with a 79.6 percentage, making 78 of 98 'attempts.
These statistics eanned him SWC Sophomore of the Year honors and berths on the
all,conference and Look Magazine All-District Six teams.
Senior guard Randy Thompson and junior center David Sibley should add quality to
Baylor's attack. Both were part-time starters last year. '
Thompson is an excellent playmaker and is being counted on to assume team leader-
ship responsibilities. He averaged 4.1 points last year.
Sibley is blessed with basketball savvy and is one of the league's top defensive per-
formers. He was second in team scoring (12.5) and rebounding (4.4) as a sophomore.
Forwards Larry Gatewood and Steve Bartels and guards Richard Scallorn and Ed
Frazier will battle for the other two starting vacancies.
Gatewood is an explosive offensive threat with a great variety of shots, but lacked
consistency last year. He averaged 10.2 points per game.
Bartels could add both rebounding strength and scoring-punch. He averaged only 5.5
points and 3.3 rebounds last year, but showed much potential two years ago as Baylor's
third best scorer (11.7) and second leading rebounder (6.6). He averaged 25.3 points and
11.7 grabs in freshman competition.
Scallorn and Frazier are both pressure defensive players, but need to gain offensive
confidence. They had a combined 4.1 scoring average as reserves a year ago.
Junior college transfer Joe Lanning and sophomore center Tom Friedman could add
needed support.
Lanning, a 6-3 guard, hit 52 per cent from the field and averaged 19 points per game
last year at Grayson County Junior College. He could supply the needed outside scoring
punch.
Friedman displayed much ability in freshman competition averaging 21.2 points and
10.4 rebounds per game.
"Overall, we have good team speed but below average height," said Menefee. "Our
tallest starter will be 6,5 or 6-6 and we'll have a lot of trouble guarding the good,
big man. .
"We'll have to make a minimum of errors, play good defense, hit a high percentage
from the field and improve our rebounding to have a good year."
Baylor runs a double.post offense and a strict man-for-man defense.
In addition to a tough SWC schedule, the Bears have non-conference games against
Loyola of New Orleans, Tulane, New Mexico State, Texas Lutheran and Tarleton State.
Baylor will participate in the Bayou Holiday Classic at Lafayette,' La., against Hawaii,
'Aississippi State and host Southwest Louisiana, and in the East Carolina Classic at Green-
vi lie, N. C.
Other teams in the Carolina touonament are Air Force Academy, Delaware, Cornell,
Virginia, Virginia Tech, William & Mary and host East Carolina.
Baylor begins competition, December 3, against Texas Lutheran in Waco's Heart
O'Texas Coliseum.
And Menefee hopes it'll be the first step toward proving the prognosticators wrong
again.
1968.69 BAYLOR BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Dec. 3 Texas Lutheran Heart O'Texas Coliseum Jan. 25 Texas Tech
Dec. 6 Loyola New Orleans Jan. 28 Arkansas
.,.. Dec. 7 , Tulane New Orleans Feb. 1 Rice
Dec. 14 New Mexico State Heart O'Texas Coliseum Feb. 4 Texas A&M
Dec. 20-21 Bayou Holiday Classic Lafayette, La. Feb. 8 Texas
(Baylor, Hawaii U., Mississippi St., Southwest La.) Feb. 11 Rice
Dec. 26-2B. East Carolina Classic Greenville, N.C. Feb. 15 Texas
(Air Force Academy, Baylor, Delaware, Cornell, Vir- Feb. 18 Texas A&M
gioia, Virginia Tech, William" & Mary, East Carolina) Feb. 22 SMU
Jan. 7 SMU Heart O'T ex as Coliseum Feb. 25 TCU
Jan. 10 TCU Fort Worth March 1 Arkansas
Jan. 23 Tarleton State Marrs Mclean Gymnasium March 4 Texas Tech
All games begin at 8:00 p.m. Reserve seats: $1.00.
(52)
Carroll Dawson
Thompson
Schlueter
Bartels
Scallorn
Heart O'Texas Coliseum
Fayettevi lie
Houston
Heart O'Texas Coliseum
Austin
Heart O'Texas Coliseum
Heart O'Texas Coliseum
College Station
Dallas
Heart O'Texas Coliseum
Heart O'Texas Coliseum
Lubbock
eo-.
DIVISION OF
WHOLESALE AND MANUFACTURING DIVISION
Waco
THREE LOCATIONS
Houston
Lubbock
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