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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 42

Location:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
42
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Sunday. Oct. 14. 1979 Philadelphia Inquirer Inquirer Classified Gives You a jump on Top Results Brown outlasts stubborn Penn 81) FIIID PETS MOST ADS MOST ACTION L03-5OOO APPhGy'ED MEOlCAat 'ULTIMATE SOLUTION NATURAL GROWING GUARANTEED FOR LIFE FREE CONSULTATION FOR INFO. CALL 665-1777 VERTEX LAB.

1518 WALNUT, SUITE 6Q0 GAS PRICES ARE GOING UP, UP, UP! fc --nJ Beepers Make It Cheaper for 57c per day just think of the gas you will save! Our Dock! DWKTS will anobia your Mcretory or onswermg service to reach you anywhere at orty time. Jom the smart business ond CaH professional people who use The Airsional People Deeper today for a free demonstration. PA: 677-9845 N.J.: 962-6877 ATLANTIC CITY: 344-7179 Local Wid Area Covro9 AIRSIGNAL By Bill Simmons bu)airer SUft Wnur "I'd hate to be playing for Lafayette," several Penn players screamed in the locker room yesterday after the Quakers' heartbreaking 24-18 loss to Brown University's Bruins at Franklin Field. And considering the way 28-point underdog Penn stood up against the team that many consider best in the Ivy League this year, Lafayette's Leopards will be put to a severe test when they visit here Friday night. "It was a great game, a great effort by our players," said Penn Coach Harry Gamble after the winless Quakers Tiad gone down to their fourth defeat.

Penn made two big mistakes that turned what might have been its biggest upset victory in years into just another loss, much to the dismay of the crowd of 5,651. The first came midway in the third period when Brown was clinging to a 16-10 lead. The second came with just under six minutes remaining and Brown up by 24-18. In the third quarter, a bad pitch by Brown quarterback Larry Carbone was recovered by Penn's Tom Mazich at the Quaker six-yard line. On Penn's first play, halfback Ron Gray broke through the left side on a belly play that Gamble said was designed to gain four or five yards.

But when he got that far, there was nobody there, so Gray kept running and got all the way to the Brown 11. Two plays later, quarterback Doug Marzonie sent tight end Jerry Smith to the left corner of the end zone, where Smith made an acrobatic catch. The mistake was that he got caught pushing off on safety Woodrow Pugh. Not only was the touchdown wiped out, but, under NCAA rules, offensive interference in the end zone turns the ball over to the defensive team at its 20. "It was a good call," admitted a graduate of Bishop mann (now St.

John Neumann) High School. "When I saw the ball coming, I gave him (the safety) a nudge so I could get ta it, and they called me on it." The Bruins, given another chance, proceeded to march those 80 yards in 7 -fi 5 a Philadelphia Inquirsr GERALD S. WILLIAMS Penn's Gib Carter scrambles but can't outrun Brown's Rock Tate (standing) and Mike Michuda DATA PROCESSING Programmer Analysts Individuals will be involved with varied applications utilizing IBM 370 and planned 4300 hardware. We require 3 to 5 years COBOL experience with DOSVS operating system. Broad application background with analysis and design capability.

Planned applications include DL1 data base management and CCS communication software. For immediate consideration, please mail resume and salary requirements to Fersunnel Department: WHITMAN'S CHOCOLATES 9701 Roosevelt Blvd. Philadelphia, PA 19114 An Equal Opportunity Employer Brown 47. It was the Bruins' sixth turnover of the game. In eight plays, Penn was on the Brown six and threatening to steal the game.

But two running plays gained nothing, and then the Quakers beat themselves with a procedure penalty. Marzonie's ensuing pass toward Smith at the goal line was broken up by Pugh, and Brown ran out the clock. "Just too many mistakes," said Gamble. "But we're getting better." and one, Gamble sent the offense back on the field and the Bruins came early again, giving the Quakers a first down at their own 33. Penn did not waste the opportunity.

Wide receiver Nelson Johnson streaked down the right sideline, getting behind Pugh as the ball arrived from Marzonie at the 40. Johnson loped the rest of the way for the score. It was a carbon copy of a 70-yard left-sideline bomb from Marzonie to Smith that had given Penn a 7-0 lead in the first quarter. Three plays after Johnson's TD, Carbone was trapped in the Brown backfield and unloaded a desperation pass that came down in the arms of Penn safety John Farmer at the 13 plays, with fullback Marty Moran diving into the end zone from less than a yard away for the score. Even though they gave up what proved to be the winning score, the Penn defenders came of age on that series.

Three times they stopped the bigger Bruins inside the six, and when Moran finally did get in, on fourth down, it was by mere inches. And the Penn offense grew up in a big way on the next series. It got a little help from Brown, which made more mistakes than a championship-caliber team should. With Penn in punt formation at its own 23 after gaining but four yards, the left side of the Brown line jumped offsides. Now, with fourth 7 mmmmntmmmmmmmtimmmtmmiimmt ill! ill iijMMMM'i-'rlliir Princeton triumphs, 35-0 (1 OPEN DAILY T7rklmtm t- 1-r1-1 SUNDAY 11-5 f) LP I OCT.

14 thru LaamM THE SAVING PLACE OCT. 16 i m.i pyagpr" pfSl If CTif- iy-' A T--C-av fi tit ji, 'a" V7 II Tr By Paul Smith Special to The Inquirer PRINCETON, N.J. Princeton's football team, in need of a miracle cure after two straight poundings from Rutgers and Brown, found its Lourdes right at Palmer Stadium yesterday. Columbia. In their 900th varsity football game, the Tigers forgot recent history and did a 35-0 number on the Lions that included a rushing offense 332 yards that was reminiscent of their single-wing glory days.

A crowd of 8,705 watched in delight. Said Pririceton Coach Frank Navarro: "To get two shutouts in four games is impressive, but we got back some of our offensive punch, too." Columbia's defense was a willing punchee most of the day. In one memorable first-half sequence, during which Princeton built a 14-0 lead on short touchdown runs by Steve Reynolds and Larry Van Pelt, Columbia began operations on its six-yard line three straight times, then gradu attempt prevented a Lion touchdown. But instead of working the same play again, Columbia coach Bill Campbell decided on a halfback pass that fizzled. Then the Tiger defense stopped Larry Biondi for no gain.

Columbia rarely got its hands on the ball again. The quarterback option was a automatic said Campbell. "Tbey were in a shift (S3 defense). We wanted to get the big play in that series, but the option pass got blocked." For most of the rest of the game, so did Columbia's defense. Princeton (2-2) even scored a final touchdown with 3 minutes 28 seconds left, on Mike Neary's one-yard run.

"After Rutgers and Brown, we were not where we need to be for teams like Colgate," concluded Navarro. "I've said all along we can't dwell on shortcomings." Thanks to the Miracle of Columbia-Lourdes, the Tigers had very few to talk about yesterday. ated to the 21, 18, and back to the 5. The Tiger offense, which also included fourth-quarter touchdown passes of 18 and 16 yards from Reynolds to Lew Leone, owned the ball more than 36 of the 60 minutes. "You just feel, you know you're better than them," said Reynolds, a senior who completed 7 of 12 passes for 122 yards and ran option plays for 65 more.

"Columbia has some good players like those two defensive ends (Mario Biaggi and Bob Haskins, who pressured Reynolds occasionally), but they had trouble stopping the big play." Columbia (1-3) spent most of the day looking for The Big Play any big play. The Lions' best offense proved to be Randy Mickens' block of a third-quarter Ken Buck punt that set the New Yorkers up on the Princeton 17. On second down, Columbia quarterback Bob Conroy executed a perfect option play for seven yards. Only a slight slip after a shoestring tackle ITED RADIAL HIGHWAY OR iUBSM WHITEMLL TIRES MUDSNOW TIRES Our Reg. 45.88 BR78x 13 HIGHWAY TIRES Our Reg.

42.88 AR78x13 PlusF.E.T. 1.87 Each PlusF.E.T. $2 Each Rutgers rallies past UConn, 26-14 for intentional grounding in his own SIZE REG. SALE F.E.T. Ef)7h14 M.M 39.831 144 FH7h14 M.M l.H 43.88T 1.71 HP.7h14 M.M 44.88T l.H M7li15 4I.M 31.881 1.17 fH7ti1l I7M TO8T l.H 4188T l.M 45.88U4I U7Jtl MJI 48.88UT tan RE6.

UL F.E.T. 138.88 I mo I ER7li14 4I.H 1.40 FK7li14 UM 141.88 I i.u I M7I.14 HU J.7I GfUlilO MM l.U MR7li14 44.88 Nr)7lttl MM 45.88 I.OJ MM J.M end zone. $88 While Connecticut (0-4-1) had dominated the first half, the Huskies were completely subdued in the final two periods. UConn defense, which EACH Associated Preai STORRS, Conn. Capitalizing on good field position throughout the second half, Rutgers rallied yesterday to defeat the University of Connecticut, 26-14.

Trailing, 14-7, at the half, Rutgers didn't allow winless UConn to cross the mid-field stripe for the final two periods. Meanwhile, the Scarlet Knights tallied a field goal in the third period and got 16 points in the final quarter. Rutgers (4-2) took the lead with five seconds elapsed in the fourth quarter as tailback David Dorn scored his second touchdown of the day. Rutgers' final touchdown came with just under Vi minutes remaining on a rollout pass from quarterback Ed McMichael to tight end Steve Pfirman. The Scarlet Knights added two more points when Connecticut quarterback Alan Arison was called held Rutgers to 122 yards in the first All Tires Plus F.E.T.

Each two periods, committed several costly penalties. In addition, Rutgers freshman linebacker Jim Dumont picked off two passes, the second leading to the final touchdown. 72m 'OUR BEST" MAINTENANCE-FREE 672 BATTERY Our Reg. 71.88 With Exchange R(o)8 PJ(O) Qjjr 0w With Exchange Sealed, lead-calcium constructed battery; never needs water. Quality-engineered for many large cars and light trucks.

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Pages Available:
3,846,195
Years Available:
1789-2024