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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 107

Location:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
107
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Pcnn ,7 2 Penn State 17 Ducknell 14 Temple 3 Uillanova 22 Holy Gross 14 Princeton 34 Brown 13 Delaware 34 Buffalo 6 Ya .10 Dartmouth 6 Havy. 35 flotre Dame 14 Also in this Stamp News Additional Classified land 15 ftfo JfulaklpEfet Jnrjturcr cWJtoMrisss.ftin iftii hi- stmri 1 i iY 1 1 HlH-toA---. A A. a 't'i SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 3, 1963 M-yjfcso www- hock Harvard Uarv ia vbsv c- Ifenh Concedes Safety to Quakers Win Grid Gamble In End Zone Moiloy's Punting, TD and 2-Pointer Key to tvy Surprise By FRANK DOLSON For weeks Penn coach John i 1 I I rtLTy- jj SMITH PI Magic Eye Photos The play began with only 3:30 remaining and Molloy, apparently back to punt on fourth down from Penn's 7, tries to use up time.

As Harvard tackier closes in, Molloy cuts back. by Robert L. Mooney, Inquirer Staff photographer Molloy continues to dart about in end zone, but moments after this photo allowed Harvard's Brad Stephens to tackle him for the safety. Leading, 7-0, late in game with Harvard, Penn made an intentional safety. Tailback Bruce Molloy took snap from center in end zone, hesitated for a moment, then ran to his right.

rs' Run and Pass Ruin Rodge Zolak Throws 3 TD Passes Temple as Bucknell Wins As Delaware Jars Buffalo the keeper play around the By CHARLES FRUSH Inquirer Reporter LEWISBURG, Nov. defense backed Tern- $9 up against a wall, then Bison quarterback Don Rodgers executed the Owls without ben of even a blindfold Satur day, ruining their hopes of an unbeaten season, 14-3, before ouiciai witnesses and an trea television Audience. By RON SMITH Inquirer Reporter NEWARK, Nov. a rback Chuck Zolak strongarmed unbeaten Delaware Sequence pictures' on Page 8 to its sixth straight victory Saturday, hoisting three touchdown passes and setting lip an other score as the Blue Hens Penn State Maryland Dunn Dashes 99 Yards Carry Back 1st By VA Lengths In Trenton -Gap By BILL HALL It was "hail the returning hero" day as Mrs. Katherine Price's famed Carry Back, who already had stolen the heart of America's racegoers, won the 22d running of the $59,400 Tren ton Handicap to the tremendous cheers of 26,935 spectators Sat urday at Garden State Park.

The brown Saggy-Joppy 5 year-old stepped off the gruel- Picture and charts, Page 10 ling mile and one-quarter, Cherry Hill's toughest grind, in 2:01 45 and carried his 119 pounds, including jockey Johnny Sellers, to $16, $8.60 and $5.20 payoffs, Runnerup in the race for 3 year-olds and up was Mont pelier's Mongo, Wayne Cham bers the reinsman, who trailed CB by two-and-a-half lengths and paid $4.80 and $3.60. Christiana Stables' Eldon Nelson up, lagged by an addi tional length and returned $5.20. AVENGES DEFEAT For the fabulous CB, it was all kinds of things. First, he avenged his defeat in the 21st running by Mongo through slop that was barely imaginable and after he went to his knees coming out of the quarter-mile chute. Secondly, he belied the reports he came back sore from.

the Man hattan, in which he finished 11th. And he scored his first major stakes success since com ing out of retirement earlier this season. As to whether he now will be retired, Mrs. Price said, emphatically, that he would. And Continued on Page 10, Column 8 Liske's 2 TD Aerials As Villanova Rallies To Defeat Holy Cross By JOHN I' Bob Dunii ran 99 yards with the second half kickoff to rocket Villanova to a 22-14 football victory over Holy Cross Saturday at Villanova Stadium.

Dunn, a slim 6-foot-l swift By BOB SERLING COLLEGE PARK, Nov. 2 (UPI). Aggressive Penn time this year Delaware beaten a major school has HARRISON SCORES Leading 12-6 at the half, the Hens couldn't go through Buffa lo's rugged line so Zolak took' them over it. He drove the team 54 yards, with the payoff a 34-yarder to end Tom Harrison, who made an overhead catch at the 20 and raced down the middle for the touchdown. That made it 18-6.

In the fourth quarter Zolak led his team to the Buffalo 23. When the attack bogged down halfback Joe Slobojan ran 16 yards around the right side on a fake field goal. Zolak passed to Harrison for two extra points and the score climbed to 26-6. With seven minutes to play Zolak put the game out of reach with a 42-yard pass to Bill Drueding. That made it 32-6, and moments later Blue Hen guard Don James spilled Buf falo second-string quarterback Don Gilbert in the end zone for a safety.

STUBBORN AT START Before the fourth-quarter ex plosion, however, the Bulls were very much in the game. A powerful line, anchored by 235-pound tackle Gerry Philibin, limited Delaware to a meager 24 yards on the ground in the first half. The Hens came into the game averaging more than 300 a game with their running attack. Two fumbles and several poor punts kept Buffalo in trouble. One of the punts traveled only nine yards and led to Dela ware's second touchdown.

It came midway through the second quarter and rolled dead on the Buffalo 23. Zolak passed Continued on Page 8, Column 8 routed major college 34-6. Zolak, a senior from Donora, was unable to get the Blue Hens' running attack in gear throughout lhe first half, but his passes tumedjhe game upside down in the second half. Delaware's Impressive victory may lift the Hens into the No ranking among the nation's small colleges. It was the third Subdues on Defense, Saturday on two touchdown Terrapins passing atiacK un der control until the closing moments.

Stunned and surprised by a Maryland ground attack that Picture on Page 11 produced an early 7-0 lead, the beefy Lions dominated the game by jolting the Ter ps into fumbles that wrecked their offense. Penn State's first two points, a safety in the second period, turned into the victory margin and they were set up by the Lion's defense. After Frank Hershey drilled a punt out of bounds on the Maryland one, State's heavy line smacked Dick Shiner into a fumble, recovered Continued on Page 11, Column 5 State edged Maryland, 17-15, passes by Pete Liske and a crunching defense that Kept tne Stiegman had been telling his players: "Hang in there. Your day will come." It arrived Saturday. Sophomore tailback Bruce Molloy carried it on his broad shoulders, scoring the touchdown, punting brilliantly and even killing precious seconds on an intentional fourth-period safetyas Penn scored its biggest football victory in five years, shocking previously unbeaten Harvard, 7-2, before 11,144 fans at wind-swept Franklin Field.

Molloy and Whit Smith his sophomore backfield partner who contributed two vital first- half interceptions rammed out 24 yards in eight running plays early in the third period following a Harvard fumble to give Penn the touchdown it needed to pull off the tremendous upset. PLAYERS HOIST COACH But before the day ended with Stiegman riding the shoul ders of his players to the center of the field renn needed a remarkable defensive effort to make the hard-earned lead stand up. Penn stopped two Harvard scoring bids in the tense fourth quarter, the second on the 16 with 90 seconds to go, after Stiegman made one of the most daring decisions of his coaching career. The second-guessers were ready to strike when Molloy dropped back into the Penn end zone in punt formation on fourth down and took an intentional safety instead of kicking into the strong wind. ROOM TO KICK The calculated gamble gave Harvard two points and gave tackle Sig Molnar, one of Penn's many standouts, a chance to kick off from the 20.

Molloy ate up close to 10 seconds running back and forth in the end zone before permitting Harvard's Brad Stephens to tackle him. But it took senior end John Packard the player Stiegman sent in with the un orthodox play considerably more time to convince the play ers in the huddle that he was serious. I came in and said: 'Don't kick it. Just run around in the end zone and use up as much time as you can'," reported Packard. "He said: 'What Everybody else just stood there with their mouths open.

But they sure blocked on the play." Continued on Page 8, Column 1 Army Subdues Air Force With Late CHICAGO, Nov. 2 (UPI). -Halfback Ken Waldrop's spectacular broken field running, capped by a 17-yard touchdown dash with 81 seconds to play, brought Army a come-from-be-hind 14-10 victory over Air Force Saturday before 76,660. The victory was Army's sixth against one loss. It was the third defeat in seven games for Air Force, which has yet to beat another service academy.

Waldrop, Army's leading ground gainer, carried a punt 78 yards to the Air Force one in the third period. He got the touch down Army first on a one-yard plunge. After Air Force went aneaa again, Waldrop powered a 65-yard drive for the Cadets. He carried four times for 34 yards, including the 17-yard touchdown jaunt. Air Force's Terry Isaacson completed a 47-yard pass to Fritz Greenlee to set up a one-yard scoring plunge by Isaac son for the Falcons' only toucn-down.

Bart Holaday kicked a 36-yard field goal for the Falcons' other points. Air Force got into Army territory only two other times during the game, with one drive stop- Continued on Pag 12, Column 6 Sports Results College FOOTBALL LOCAL Penn Harvard 2 Bucknell 14 Temple 3 C. W. Post 19 Pel. Valley 16 Delaware 34 Buffalo Villanova 22 Holy Cross 14 MIDDLE ATLANTIC CONFERENCE (University Division) Gettysburg 14 Lafayette 12 (College Division) Albright 28 Moravian 7 Juniata 7 Wilkes Continued on Page 12, Column 2 A one-man firing squad, Rodgers ran and passed like no Buck nell quarterback in recent mem oryeven Bison great Paul Ter hes, a little Ail-American.

The 5-9, 175-pound Pittsburgh senior ran for 138 yards and a touch downand passed for 106 and Bucknell other touchdown. Temple had tried to take away die Bisons' passing game and when Rodgers started running Isenior halfback from Oneida, N. missed a record for a Villanova player Bob Poli-dor carried a kickoff 100 yards against Miami of Florida in 1946 at Shibe Park but he set another Villanova record of 141 yards on kickoff returns in a game. MANGER BREAKS TIE Prior to Dunn's long run he returned a kickoff 42 yards, so Picture on Page 2 his two returns exceed the 139 yards Polidor made in an unlisted number of returns the day Bob made his record run. Dunn's dash created a 14-14 The first of Mike Manger's two extra points gave Villanova a 15-14 lead.

The Wildcats added another touchdown within four minutes and they had their final margin for the cold, windy day. STRONG WLD FACTOR The 30-MPH wind was a big factor in the game. Holy Cross elected to have it at its back in the first quarter and Villa nova, given the second half choice of goals, chose to have it in the last quarter. Strangely, though, all but one of the game's five touchdowns were scored against the wind. But the wind, which chilled a crowd of 10,000, played havoc with punts once restricting a boot by Villanova's Dave Con-nell to three yards and it in-' duced Bill Sherlock, Villanova's game legged, game hearted quarterback, to put Villanova in the air only four times.

He completed only one pass and that was a nine-yard touchdown peg to end Jack Clifford. This score came only 3:39 after Dunn's long run, which started with his momentarily hobbling Holy Cross captain Jon Morris' kickoff. He regained the ball on the Cats' one and ran it between a wall set up by his blockers in the vicinity of the hash marks and the north side line. Clifford blocked out the man who seemingly had the belt Continued on Page 2, Column 2 flanks, the Owls ended up de priving them of neither. At that, the Temple defense played creditably indeed, but on offense the Owls forked over! the ball four times on intercep tions, the last time just as they seemed to be going in for what would have been a go- ahead score near the end of the third quarter.

A few, moments more and Temple would have been in position to gamble with an aerial, for mere seconds remained until the fourth quarter and then they would have had their backs against the nasty, chill wind which made kicking and passing hazardous activ ities all day. 1. OWLS COME UNDONE Instead, Bucknell intercepted, quick-kicked, recovered a Temple fumble thret plays lat er and put the game out of reach with Rodgers' 23-yard touchdown strike to sophomore end Tom Mitchell on the next play. That unstarched the Owls, in evitably led to their first loss in seven games (against one tie) and removed a lot of the luster from what had been ex pected to be next week's cli mactic Middle Atlantic Confer ence showdown at Delaware The wind was a factor in the Owls' only score, Chick Chiu- Continued on Page 11, Column 3 Navy Scores 21 In 3d Period to Rip Notre Dame SOUTH BEND, Nov. 2 (UPI).

Navy's Roger Stau- bach, the Nation's leader in total offense, tossed two touchdown passes and set a Navy offense record Saturday in a 35-14 rout of Notre Dame. The Middie All-America candidate gained 114 yards 91 Picture' on Page 12 through the air and 23 on the ground in directing Navy to its sixth victory in seven games before 59,362. Staubach had efficient help from Navy's ground which eclipsed Notre Dame's by 191 yards to 109. Staubach scoring passes went for two yards to Gary Kell ner and for eight to Pat Donnelly, two Middies who also ac counted for two mors Navy touchdowns. Kellner intercepted a Notre Dame pass for one of three Navy touchdowns in the third period and Donnelly ran 41 yards to boost Navy's lead to 35-7.

Staubach, getting up steam in the third quarter, boosted his total offense season record to 1420 yards, surpassing the old Continued on Page 12, Column Princeton Rolls Over Brown as By JOHN LAKE Special to The Inquirer And N. Y. Herald Tribune PRINCETON, N. Nov. 2 Princeton knocked over Brown for the ninth straight time Saturday, 34-13, which makes this little football rival Picture on Page 3 ry sound about as suspenseful as the one between Perry Mason and Hamilton Burger.

Princeton, which Is unbeaten nd untied, did try hard, to make hamburger out of the Bruins. But the fact and 15,000 spectators at Palmer Stadium found it a cold one was that Princeton nearly lost its own fingers in the meat-grinder. The lads on both sides were playing for keeps. A Jolting tackle lata in the first period laid out Bob Hall, Brown quarterback, with a broken leg Continued on Page 3, Column 3 Player Retains Australian title, -MELBOURNE, Australia, Nov. 2 (AP).

Gary Player, of South Africa, sue cessfully defended his Australian Open golf championship Satur-; day with a 72-hole score of 278 over the Royal Melbourne course. 70 and 68 on the final two rounds, the Johannes burg ace finished seven shots ahead of Bruce Devlin, of Australia, who closed with 72-70 for 285. 1 Another stroke back at 286i came- two veteran Australians, Eel Nagle( with 70-70, and Peter Thomson, 70-72. lacavazziGefsB l10A.Tr XT', "mt. 9- JJ.U Man.

AP Wirci hoto whose head is on ground after driving tackle. Cadet Lee Crasfeder (56) watches. Army prevailed, 14-10. Air Force halfback Dick Czarnota (27) hangs onto ass after being spilled by Army's Tony Pyrr, i.

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Pages Available:
3,846,583
Years Available:
1789-2024