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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 81

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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
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81
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Bucknell 28 Penn 21 Temple 18 Hofstra 7 Uillanova 16 Delaware 14 Colgate 7 Princeton 0 Notre Dame 32 11 Carolina 0 Michigan St. 11 Ohio State 8 UCLA 49 Penn St. 11 Navy 24 Pitt 7 SPORTS Also in this Section Boat News Additional Classified SUNDAY. OCTOBER 16. 1966 SECTION no -J ra 1 Unbeaten UCLA Jars Penn State Temple Beats Hofstra on Passes 5St lis mmmmmmm a- aassrv 41,105 See Beban, Farr Lead Rout Special to The Inquirer LOS ANGELES, Oct.

15. Owls Win 4th; Waller Sets Mark By JOHN DELL Of The Inquirer Staff HEMPSTEAD, N. Oct. 15. The combination of John Tommy Prothro's undefeated Waller throwing and Arnold 1 -ILL A UCLA Bruins thrive on Pennsylvania meat.

And tonight here in an in-tersectional clash, the No. 4 rated Bruins cleaned the bone dry, routing coach Joe Pa- Smith catching did something brand new for Temple's unde feated football team Saturday, terno's undermanned Penn It gave the Owls their first vie tory ever here, an 18-7 triumph over Hofstra. State brigade, 49-11, before a crowd of 41,105 fans. Waller, 19-year-old substitute Inquirer Magic Eye Photos by Robert L. Mooney, Staff Photographer sophomore quarte a who fired six touchdown passes in Temple's 82-28 rout of Bucknell With ball on the Delaware seven-yard line early in the third period, quarterback Gerry Bellotti begins rolling out to right.

Just last month in the opening game of the season in the mammoth coliseum, the powerful California contingent routed the Pittsburgh Panthers, 57-14. BEBAN SCORES TWO The same as it was in the Panther walloping, Gary Beban, the Bruins' all-American quar- last week, threw two more in the Owls' fourth victory to set a school record of 11 touchdown passes in a season. Waller is only four payoff passes from tieing the career record of 15 by Joe Petro, of the class of 1966. RECORDS Smith a fast, 5-foot-10 junior, was outstanding at catching the ball for Temple but he wasn't Sent. 17-Sept.

24- Oct. 1- 8- Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct.

Nov. Nov. Nov. RECORDS TEMPLE LOG Sept. 24 Defeated Kings Point, 48-0.

Oct. 1 Defeated Boston 9-6. Oct. 8 Defeated Bucknell. 82-28.

PENN STATE LOG -Defeated Maryland. 15-7. -Lost to Michigan 42-8. -Lost to Army, 11-0. -Defeated Boston ollege, 30-21.

-Lost to UCLA. 49-11. -At West Virginia. -California. -Syracuse.

-At Georgia Tech. -At Pittsburgh. U.C.L.A. LOG -Defeated Pittsburgh. 57-14.

-Defeated Syracuse, 31-12. -Defeated Missouri, 24-15. -Defeated Rice, 27-24. -Defeated Penn State, 49-11 -At California. -Air Force.

-At Washington. -Stanford. -Southern California. Oct. 15 Defeated Hofstra, 18-7.

Oct. 22 Connecticut. Oct. 29 Delaware. Not.

5 At Rhode Island. Nov. 12 At Gettysburg. Nov. 19 Bowling Green.

Sept. 17 Sept. 24 Oct. 1 Oct. 8 Oct.

15 Oct. 22 Oct. 29 Nov. 5' Nov. 12 Nov.

19 While one tackier hits him from below, Penn's Denny Blake (80) and George Burrell (82) grab BucknelPs Bruce Smith topside Saturday to halt a punt return. Quakers did job well but not wisely, drawing piling-on penalty. HOFSTRA LOG Lost to Gettysburg, 17-16. Lost to Delaware, 35-13. Defeated Lafayette, 9-6.

Defeated Otterbein, 35-0. Sept. 17-Sept. 24 Oct. 1-Oct.

8- Oct. 15 Lost to Temple, 18-7. Oct. 22-Oct. 29 Nov.

5-Nov. 12-Nov. 24- At Bridgeport. So. Connecticut State.

Kings Point. Muskingum. At C. W. Post.

I VV' TA VTiw vt I'cta gppf "ir 1 one of Waller's receivers. Smith plays in the Owls' defensive backfield and he intercepted three Hofstra passes. terback candidate, and Mel Far, another ranking halfback, tore the Nittany Lions from limb to Umb. Although Beban, a guy who is both adept at. running and passing, wasn't around at the finish, the flashy 185-pound bomber tallied two touchdowns.

Beban, who clicked on eight of 13 attempts and ran for 48 yards for a total of 180 for the evening, was sent to the sidelines when Frank Pringle, the big Penn State right end, smacked him to the ground on a vicious One was nullified by a penal ty, but the other two had a bear I ing on the game. His first grab It's Clear Now: Eagles Hexed OWENS reached into the black briefcase and dug out a sheaf of papers, half an inch thick. "This is my file on the Eagles," he said, and handed the papers across the table. It was Friday night, and the restaurant, The Venice, at 12th and Filbert, was almost empty. The top paper was a carbon of a letter to Joe Kuharich, dated Oct.

19, 1965. A paragraph in the that counted slowed Hofstra when the Flying Dutchmen were at a hot point. The second launched Smith on a 33-yard run to the Hofstra 20. It set up the Bucknell Rally Surprises Penn In 2d Half, 28-21 By JOE McGINNISS Of The Inquirer Staff Carroll Huntress, the man who coaches football at Bucknell, did not do much talking last week. For two reasons.

First, he figured that when your team loses, 82-28, you are better off not talking. Also, he was busy making changes. WHOLESALE SHIFTS Changes like putting his quarterback, Bob Marks, in the defensive backfield, and one of his linebackers, Mike Vincent, at offensive tackle, and his defensive middle guard, Bill Lud-wig, at offensive guard. Changes I touchdown that increased Temple's lead from 11-7 to 18-7 and assured Hofstra of its third loss in five games. I.

The touchdown was Waller's 1 second scoring hit. He fed the At Blue Hens' 12-yard line, Bellotti turns on the speed in an effort to turn ball to Jim Callahan, a 6-foot the corner as two Delaware defenders attempt to stop him. tackle. LEAVES IN THIRD Gary, a strong man in the first four Bruin wins, had the wind knocked out of him. After the trainers worked him over, Beban left under his own power midway during the third quarter.

Norman Dow, a second string quarterback, took over and guided the Bruins to two more touchdowns. Farr, the 198-pound senior sophomore end, who made a standstill catch in the right flat, then ran past three defenders into the corner of the 1 3 BELLOTTI 5'' end zone. The sprint extended a re markable skein for the 20-year- old Cardinal Dougherty High middle was underlined in red ink. It read: "Since you will not take me seriously, and graciously meet with me to discuss the matter, from, now on, in each Eagle game, I will use my PK system." Owens looked contrite. "I'm not trying to be mean," he said.

"I don't like using PK against the Eagles. I want to use it to help them. But Wolman and Kuharich- are hardheaded, bull-headed men, and the only way I can make them believe in it is to clobber them with it." He was dressed, as he had said he Continued on Page 9, Column 6 Continued on Page 6, Column 8 3 Lady Pitt Takes RECORDS mm mm i-i uci i 1 i I SI? JOE McGLNNISS Illiiil PENN LOG -Defeated Lehigh, 38-28. -Defeated Brown, 20-0. -Lost -to Cornell, 45-28--Lost to Bucknell, 28-21.

-Princeton. -At Harvard. -Yale. -At Columbia. -Dartmouth.

BUCKNELL LOG -Defeated Gettysburg, 16-10. -Lost to Maine. 7-6. -Lost to Temple, 82-28. 'Defeated Penn, 28-21.

-Lafayette. -Rhode Island. -Colgate. At -At Delaware. Sept.

24-Oct. 1-Oct. 8-Oct. 15 Oct. 22-Oct.

29-Nov. 5-Nov. 12-Nov. 29- Sept. 24-Oct.

1-Oct. 8-Oct. 15-Oct. 22-Oct. 29-Nov.

5-Nov. 12-Nov. 19- At four-yard line, tackle Harry Starrett and corner back Don Keister make contact ith hard-running Bellotti, but they can't stop him. Vineland 'Gap With Fast Finish By BILL HALL Of The Inquirer Staff Walter Blum drew a 10-day suspension a couple of days ago at Aqueduct. And, because of this, he couldn't ride Golden Triangle Stable's Lady Pitt in the 25th running of the Vineland Handicap at Garden State Park on Saturday.

Maybe it was a turn of fate for Blum. For, after the ride Cajun Ray Broussard gave the I College FOOTBALL LOCAL Bucknell 28... Penn 21 Colgate 7 Princeton 0 Drexel6 Wash. 6 Stroudsbur 41 Cheyney 7 Glassboro 7 (tie). 7 Trenton St.

17 Nichols 7 Villanova 16 Delaware 14 West Chester 41 Bloomsburg 21 IVY LEAGUE Dartmouth 49 Brown 14 Harvard 21 Cornell 0 Yale 44 Columbia 21 Standings Pet. Dartmouth 2 0 0 1.000 Continued on Page 13, Column 2 would be, in black suit and black hat, which made him look like a minor league evangelist. "PK," he said, "means Psycho-Kinetic force, or Psychokinesis. It ah, it's very hard to explain, but basically it is a power from another dimension that I have learned to tap and control. The ancient Egyptians used it, but no one since, until I stumbled upon it a couple of years ago.

"When I use it against a football team, like the Eagles, it blankets the field and attaches itself to each man. Basically, what it does is magnify human error. Everything goes wrong for the team under the spell. The other team will get 10 scoring opportunities for every one the team I'm working against gets. If they take advantage, even a little bit, well, they win the Continued on Page 13, Column 1 that made Bucknell a better team.

In the last minute of the first half, Huntress made one more He took out his new quarterback, Mark Vetter, and put in a newer one. This one was so new that he was wearing No. 84, which is the number of a split end. Which 1 1 I 1STARRETT (Dj Picture and Charts, Page 12 Jty Continued on Page 6, Column 1 By Lawrence S. Hitter N- The Glory of Their Times' ft: Mays, George Foster, Joe Bush, Sam Jones and Babe Ruth in 1 Fifth in a series of six Sunday articles excerpted from "The Glory of Their Times," recollections of baseball's earlier dav bv famous ballplayers.

In the I I 1915 or so. Babe Ruth joined us in the middle of 1914, a 19-year-old kid. He was 'a lefthanded pitcher Bellotti goes down but not before ball reaches goal line. Score gave Villan-ova 13-0 lead and Wildcats eventually eked out 16-14 win. Field Goal, Interception Help Villanova Halts Delaware following" articles Harry Hooper, great outfielder, of i the Boston Red Sox, remembers other outfielders.

chestnut daughter of Sword Dancer in the mile and one-eighth event for fillies and mares aged three and up, maybe the Louisianan will become her regular jockey. Rarely has a horse been seen to move so fast so late in a race and win. After Walter M. Jeffords, Juanita had led for most of the running and appeared to have the $58,400 venture sewed up, Broussard brought Lady Pitt from seemingly out of nowhere. They caught the front-runner inside the 70-yard-pole and spurted to a three-quarter length triumph.

WINNER PAYS $8.40 The Lady was clocked in an excellent 1:49 over a fast strip and paid $8.40, $5 and $4.20 to her backers in the crowd of 27,542. Owner Tom Eazor pocketed a hefty winner's share of $37,960. Juanita, a Pennsylvania-bred from Jeffords' Glen Riddle, then, and a good one. 3 one in 1915; the Dodgers, four AS TOLD BY HARRY HOOPER Ex-Boston Red Sox Star YOU have to have a little luck, you know. That year, 1909, and the next we started to form the.

nucleus of what was to become a great, great. Red Sox ball club. We won the American League pennant in 1912, '15, 'lo and '18; in between we finished second twice. From 1912 to 1918 we won four pennants and four World Series. They neve' did beat us in a World Series.

Never. We played four different National League teams in four different World Series and only one of them even came close. That was the Giants, in 1912. We beat them, four games to three. We beat Grover Cleveland Alexander and the Phillies, four games to games to one in 1916, and the Cubs, four to two in 1918.

The best team in all of baseball for close to a decade! There reallv were two teams. By FRANK DOLSON Of The Inquirer Staff Villanova got the jump on an opponent for the first time in nearly two years Saturday, then had to fight for its life to knock linebacker Fred Levinsky. saved the day for the Wildcats. Case, a 21-year-old senior who hadn't kicked a field goal since his freshman year, boomed a 26-yarder to provide the whining margin. Levinsky helped make it stand up by picking off a pass on the Delaware 35 with 1:54 to You probably remember him with that big belly he got later cn.

But that wasn't there in 1914. George was six-foot-two and weighed 138 pounds, all of it muscle. He had a slim waist, huge biceps, no self-discipline, and not much education not so very different from a lot of other 19-year-old would-be ballplayers. Except for two things: he could eat more than anyone Continued on Page 10, Column 4 and Forrest Cade caught that whole time. But at first base it was first Jake Stahl and then Doc Hob-litzel: at second, Steve Yerkes was eventually replaced by Jack Barry; and at short it was first Heinie Wagner and then Everett Scott.

And, of course, the whole pitching staff turned over from Smoky Joe Wood, Hugh Bedient, Charlie Hall and Buck O'Brien in 1912, it became Ernie Shore, Dutch Leonard, Carl was rewarded with the game ball a belated wedding present for the 222-pound junior who was married a week ago. Fine offensive performances by Mike Purzycki, the best pass-catcher in Delaware history, and 25-year-old halfback Stu Green made the late dramatics necessary. Purzycki caught seven passes, most of them in a the 1912 team and the 1915 one. The outfield was the same on both Tris Speaker, Duffy Lewis and mvself I think acknowl off Delaware, 16-14, before edged by most as easily the homecoming day crowd of at Villanova Stadium. A third-period field goal by Jim Case, the first of his varsity career, and an interception by greatest defensive outfield ever.

Larry Gardner was at third base on both teams, and Bill Carrigan go. After sealing the visitors' first loss in four games, Levinsky Continued on Page 12, Column 6 Continued on Page 4, Column 5.

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