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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • Page 8

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Binghamton, New York
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8
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Sta bach Unsinka IXLA Washington (Story on Page D) 1 1 1 Mieii. Slale 12 0 ilr I)nm 7 (SCory on Page 2D) Xrlliuv.it'rn 17! Pill 2 Ohio Mali' K.Armv 0 (Story on Page 2 D) (Story on Page 3 D) Duke's 4 in Half Don't Faze Middie Durham, N. C. JF) Marvelous Roger Staubach's Texas 9-0 --Pickin' Is Easy Austin, Tex. Cf) Unbeaten, 3L Oklahoma 13 Missouri 3 (Story on Page 2 D) Alabama 27 11 (Story on Page 5 D) Illinois 17 Wisconsin 7 (Story on Page 2D) Princeton 27 Yale; 7 (Story on Page 3D) running and passing ignited a devastating Navy of jfense in the first half yesterday and the second-ranked i "i tin i wl in Middies defeated Duke, 38-25, in a wild-scoring re gionally televised football game.

The crowd of 41,000 saw Navy and Duke score a total of 56 points during the first half. The Middies, now 8-1 for the season and apparently headed for a post-season bowl game, scored every time they got ff V1SP untied and top-ranked Texas clinched the Southwest Conference football title and became the Cotton Bowl host on Jan. 1 by whipping Texas Christian University, 17-0, yesterday. the ball during the first two periods, to mam a 31-25 The Sunday PnEss sul jVi Vv z- edge. Neither team could come back in the second half, with both appearing exhausted from the frantic Sophomore backs Phil Harris and Tommy Stockton took the scoring honors for Texas, both taking in touchdowns from three scrambling of the second period.

Section November 17, 1963 (livid Results yards out. Stocking-footed kicking specialist Tony Crosby provided the other Texas scoring with a 42-yard field goal and two conversions, running his string to 24 straight conversions this season. STOCKTON, a sophomore fullback, joined with tailback Tom Syracuse, 50-0 my Ford in providing the Long- Statistics SCHOLASTIC PENNSYLVANIA Wyalusing 41 Lackawanna Trail Clarks-Summit-Abington 2i Scran. T. 13 Scranton Central Dnunmore a Tunkhannock 21 West.

Pitt. 13 (Friday) COLLEGIATE UPSTATE Takes Richmond Duke threaten several times in the closing quarter but the Middies held each time and forced the Blue Devils to punt. Navy halfback John Sai raced 93 yards off tackle for a touchdown in the closing minutes to seal the victory. It was the longest scoring run in Navy history. 8 STAUBACH RAN FOR 95 yards in the first half to set up two navy touchdowns, scored by Sai and fullback, Nick Mark-off, but ended the day with only 72 yards running.

That plus 111 passing gave him a total offense mark this season of 1,727 yards. He broke the Navy record for most passes completed in a single season and most yards gained passing in a single season. Navy jumped off a 7-0 kad in the opening minutes by rolling 68 yards in 10 plays. Staubach banged over right tackle from the four for the touchdown. Duke, with th-ee soonomores in its starting backficld, came back with the kickoff and swept 65 yards in seven plays with halfback Biff Bracy going over from the three.

Navy, withStaubach turning in a 44-yard run, mov-d into high gear again and scored on 8 72-yard first period Sai TCU Texas First downs 12 II Rushing yardage 34 150 Passing yardage 136 91 Passes 13-26 7-19 Passes intercepted by 1 2 Punts 5-26 Fumbles lost 0 3 Yards penalized 15 33 Texas Christian 0 0 0 0 Texas 0 10 7 0-17 Tex. Harris, run (Crosby kick). Tex. FG, Crosby 42. 3 run (Crosby kick).

(PICTURE OX PAGE 3D) By Press Wire Services Syracuse Quarterback Rich King unleashed an unexpected air attack good for three touchdowns yesterday to lead Syracuse in a 50-0 crushing victory over outclassed Richmond. poll ff. 5 In. its final warmup for the Statistics $yr. 17 10 Rich.

First downs Rushing yardage ot the touchdown from tne one -1 17-40 1 2 43 199 11-25 5 1 130 Thanksgiving Day meeting with Notre Dame in New YorkCity's Yankee Stadium, the Orange-pien gave the school a 100-point weekend: the frosh team whipped the University of Buffalo) freshmen by the same score on Friday. i KING.WHO also passed for a 2-point conversion, completed seven of 12 passes for 212 yards. He opened his aerial barrage Passes Passes intercepted by Fumbles lost Yards penalized Punts UPI TELEPHOTO. THE JOLLY ROGER'S ABOUT TO FLY Navy's Heisman Trophy candidate, quarter-back Roger Staubach, is in midair as he finds his passing plans squelched by Duke end Bill Simpson (84), but Roger turned dodger and ran the ball (or 45 yards in the first half of the 38-25 Navy TV victory. to give the Middies a 14-6 lead, DUKE QUARTERBACK Scot- ule.

Last year It was George Washington, next year a Vir ginia Tech team which bettered with a 67-yard scoring strike to Mike Koski in the first quarter. IJast Saturday's Syracuse effort Deacons Win For a Change by whipping West Virginia 28-3 The following quarter, the yesterday. 190-pound junior found end Dick r- nnn i v. (Ua mA nrtn a uwiuiii ujjcii in uic cuu j-uiiv, Syracuse Winston-Salem, N. (UPD 1 14-50 o- 14 for a 19-yard scoring pass, ne Richmond Colgate Can 9t Sit on Stofa Buffalo (P) Quarterback John Stofa passed for horns with running power to bowl over stiff TCU defenses.

Quarterback Duke Carlisle kept TCU defenses loose by hitting several passes and using his always-dangerous run-pas option plays. Texas has only Texas remaining on Thanksgiving Day in its quest for the national championship. THE VICTORY assured Texas of being Cotton Bowl host since it has beaten all other conference title contenders. It will be the thrid straight year for Texas to be Cotton Bowl host. Texas Christian staged two drivesdeep in Texas territory but failed to penetrate the Long-horn defense to bring a tally across.

1 TEXAS broke the scoring ice when safety man Tony King picked off a long pass by Donny Smith and returned it 21 yards to the TCU 46. Ford and Stockton punched through the TCU line for short gains. Wingback Harris took a pitchout from Carlisle to carry itin for the first touchdown from three yards out after Stockton threw a vital block. Texas took advantage of another TCU miscue in the second period to pad the score 10-0 at the halftime. TCU punter Garry Thomas got a bad snap on a fourth down situation and got caught on his own 31-yard line.

Texas failed to make yardage, and Crosby put a field goal throught the uprights from 42 yards out. TCU DEFENDERS Jield Teas to no yardage the first two times Texas had the ball. But Texas picked up four first dwns in the second quarter scoring drive drive in making ty got the touchdown from the one to give the Middies a 14-6 lead. DUKE QUARTERBACK Scot-ty Glacken circled left id from the Navy five midway the second quarter tj cap a 70-yard scoring march. Navy went ahead a few minutes l.rer 17-12 when Fred Marlen kicked a 31-yard field goal.

The Blue Devils roared back son. A pass interference ruling gave Duke the ball on Navy Navy, continuing to g'ind out to score on an 11-yard pars from Glacken to end Stan Crls huge yardage, bok next kickoff and slammed yards in five plays with Markoff scoring from the five. Wake Forest overcame a 12-point deficit to upset South Carolina 20-19 yesterday and snap the longest current losing streak in major college circles at 18 also connected with George Kon-trvaecki in the final quarter on a 37-yard touchdown play. John Snider squashed a last quarter threat by Richmond by intercepting a pass and racing 91 yards for a touchdown. Fullbacks Jim Nance and Bill Schoonover and halfback Ray Free added the other touch 38 run (Paglio kick).

Syr Koski, 67 pass trom King (Paglio kick). 19 pass from King (Paglio 3 run (Brown, pass from King). 37 pass from King (Paglio kick). 91 pass Interception (Paglio kick). INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Richmond rushing: Depo 5-10; Moore 3-7, Silvi 1-5; Stoudt 4-minus 4, Smith 5-minus 27, Britton 2-2, Wilbourne 2-1, Peacock 2-3, Gordon 2-1.

Syracuse rushing: Mahle 8-41, Free 2-3, Nance 4-45, Roberts 1-6, Humphreys one touchdown and scored another yesterday as Buffalo completed ts football season by verpwering Col games. Quarterback Karl a scored from four yards out to tie the score midway in the final period and fullback Brian Syracuse 50 Richmond Dartmouth II Cornell 7 Buffalo 21 Colgate 0 Cornell Frosh 31 Penn Frosh Hamilton 42 Union 23 Rochester 44 RPI 3' Kings Point 2( Hobart 13 EAST Penn State 21 Holy Cross 14 Princeton 27 Yale 7 Pittsburgh 21 Army 0 Columbia 33 Penn 1 Boston College 30 Virginia 21 Susquehanna 22 Temple II Harvard 24 Brown 12 Delaware 14 Rutgers 3 Amherst It Williams 13 Wesleyan 44 Williams 13 Coast Guard 12 Springfield 0 Massachusetts 41 New Hampshire 2 Wilkes 14 Haverford 0 Albion, Mich. 35 Hofstra 12 Swarthmore 7 PMC i Quantico Villanova 0 Bucknell 34 Lehigh 12 Trenton St. 21 Montclair St. 20 Thiel 31 Allegheny I W.

Post 21 King's, Pa. 0 West Chester 34 1 Slippery Rock 7 Upsala 24 Wagner Millersville 4 Del. Valley 0 Juniata Westminster 14 Lebanon Valley 21 Ursinus 19 Wittenberg 41 Gettysburg 3i SOUTH Navy 31 Duke 25 Wake Forest 20 South Carolina 1 Virginia Tech 21 West Virginia 3 William I Mary 34 Davidson 5 VMI 33 Citadel I Clemson 21 Maryland North Carolina 27 Miami, Fla. 16 Florida St. 14 N.

State 0 Hampden-Sydney 14 Randolph-Macon 7 Auburn 14 Georgia 0 Western Maryland 7 Drexel Tech 4 Dickinson 44 Johns Hopkins 7 Sewanee 14 Washington U. (Mo.) 13 Mississippi 20 Tennessee 0 Alabama 27 Georgia Tech 11 Vanderbilt 10 Tulane 10 John Carroll 14 Wash, i Jeff. Florida 37 Southern U. 0 SOUTHWEST Texas 17 TCU 0 Texas 13 Rice a Kentucky It Baylor 7 MIDWEST Michigan St. 12 Notre Damt 7 Iowa 21 Michigan 21 Purdue 13 Minnesota 11 Northwestern 17 Ohio State I Kansas St.

21 lowaSt.10 Louisville 21 Western Michigan 7 Illinois 17 Wisconsin 7 Oklahoma 13 Missouri 3 Bradley 37 Evansville '20 Wheaton 41 Valparaiso 13 Miami, O. 27 Dayton 27 Nebraska 20 Oklahoma St. la Omaha 34 Drake if Cast Tech 15 Western Reserve 13 gate, 23-0. The bulls' staunch defense kept Colgate off-balance most of Piccolo, co-hero of the electrifying comeback, kicked the downs on the ground. Overall, the Syracuse defense held Richmond to minus two yards on the cold, windy afternoon, forc Statistics First downs 15 14 Rushing yardage 102 12 Passing yardage 102 Passes intercepted by 1 5 Passes 15-? 4-18 Punts -27.

5-25 Fumbles lost 2 4 Yards penalized 10 51 ground. Syracuse had 11; Koski 2-13, Hunter 1-3, King 2-1, scnoo- the completions out of 25 attempts' '-s. sith 3-11, Brown 4-9. 1 1 1 -t Richmond passing: Smith 17 for 39, for 270 yards and a total of ing fumbles and interceptions. Only once in the first half did the Red Raiders drive over mid-field.

COLGATE, which lost to Buf Interceptions, 188 yards; Silvi 0 for 1. Syracuse passing: King 7 for 12 one Interception, 212 yards, 3 TD; Mahle 3 for 7, 48 yards; Rooney 1 for 5, 10 yards; Holman 0 for 1. Richmond receiving: Deco 1-6, Kressler 5-68, Stoudt 4-48, Emelianchick 3-25, fense of 469 yards. NANCE, in the first quarter, got the first touchdown of the dav when he slammed through INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Drobney 2-26, Ring 1-9, Aldridge 1-6. winning extra point.

Terp Fumbles Fatten Clemson Clemson wi Clemson capitalized on Maryland fumbles for a pair of final period touchdowns and a 21-6 Atlantic Coast conference football victory yesterday. Maryland 0 0 0 66 Clemson 7 0 0 14-21 1 run (Pearce kick). CI. Ray, 1 run (Pearce kick). CI.

Meadowcroft, 8 pass from Ray (Pearce kick). 85 pass Interception (pass failed). the richmond line and galloped; Syracuse receiving: Nance 1-1, Cripps i vnrrte tn the pnd 7onp Schoon- 3 31' Giarc)i M'' Koskl 1 TD' Bow' JH yaras 10 ine ena zone, auiuuii )msn 7 TD Kontr8beckj TR, over went in from the three to ciarke 1-24, Free 1-15. falo last year, 6-0, now has lost four of its last outings by shutout. It's the first time since 1911 that a Colgate team has suffered four goose-eggs in a sea-to burn.

The Raiders wind up at Colgate rushing: Heilman 6-34, Bor-cyzewski 3-2a Court 3-l, Woltman 6-18, Carpenter 7-18, Barudin 9-13. Buffalo rushing: Ryan 10-54, Ratkewicz 6-36, Butler 9-27, Condino 3-17, Stofa 6-15, Edward 4-10, Gilbert 5-2, Adam 1-1. Colgatt passing: Banudin 15-for-28, 178 yards. Buffalo passing: Stofa 6-for-13. 114 THE SECOND-PERIOD fireworks continued as Navy end Dave Sjuggerud interceoted a Glacken pass and race 34 yards for a tou-hdown to give Navy a 31-19 edge.

But it was not all over for Duke as the Blue Devils drove 71 yards with halfback Jay Wilkinson going over from the one as the half ended. A 44-yard Dass from Glacken to end Chuck Drulis set up the Duke touchdown. The victory meant Navy might very well receive a bid to play Texas in the Cotton Bowl New Year's Day regardless of the results of next week's game with Army. However, Navy always has made beating Army a condition of bowl acceptance. Puck Results NATIONAL LEAGUE Buffalo's first touchdown iyards; Gilbert 0-for-5.

close out' the first half with Syracuse leading, 29-0, and the next period Free crashed in from the four. John aglio added six conversion kicks in helping Syracuse to an undefeated home season came on a 33-yard run by Gerry Detroit 1, tie New York 4 Boston 1 Toronto 5 Colgate receiving: Lomas 4-56, Heilman 3-30, Kasprzak 2-35, Rippie 3-25, Jones 1-18, Woltman 1-7. Buffalo receiving: Ratkewicz 3-37, Ryan 2-26, Gergley 1-51. With 5:30 left in the first half, version run boosted the bulls' gone in the third perioood. Bob AMERICAN LEAGUE the 44-yard touchdown drive.

Tiger Workout! Atlantic City, N. J. (pi Middleweight champion Dick Tiger of Nigeria sparred three rounds yesterday in his first Atlantic Edward ran for the extra points. Baltimore 2 Springfield 3, overtime Buffalo 3 Montreal 2 and its seventh victory overall Pittsburgh against two losses. ilyV Richmond, now 3-5-1, was Chicago 5 SEC Standings Turbo Jets Home Chicago Wl Turbo, a 36-1 Jim Duprey, a sophomore shot, led every step of the way City workout for his Dec.

7 helpless against the beefy Syracuse defense and only threat-eed twice, both broken up by intrceptions. linebacker, intercepted three passes for Buffalo but Colgate quarterback Gerry Barudin managed to pick up 178 yards on 15 pass completions. College Soccer Area 3 NAIA Playoff Trenton St. 4 Robert Wesleyan 1 14 Duke Navy 0-23 7-38 All Conference Games I wit wit Mississippi 5 0 0 7 0 1 1 Alabama 6 10 7 10 Auburn 5 10 7 1 0 1 xLouisiana St. 3 1 0 6 2 0 xMississippi St.

3 1 1 5 2 11 Georgia Tech 3 3 0 3 0 Georgia 2 3 0 4 4 1 Florida 3 3 1 4 3 1 Tennessee 15 0 3 5 0 Kentucky 0 4 1 3 5 1 Vanderbilt 0 4 2 0 6 2: Tulane 0 5 1 1 7 RICHMOND Was the second Princeton 2 Yale 0 championship bout here against Joe Giardello. Both fighters are training in the Convention Hall Arena, where they will meet for the title bout. Buffalo finished with a 5-3-1 in a series of Southern Confer-: Connecticut 3 record. Colgate now is 3-4-1. Rhode Island 0 Brown 0 Cornell 0 nunn Annnnn cf nr tho Or on an Harvard Colgate 0 0 0 00 c.c 1: "7.

Dartmouth replacing Colgate on the sched- seten hii NYU 1 yesterday and won the $28,150 Chicago American's Handicap at Sportsman's Park, bringing to a close the Chicago thoroughbred racing season. The crowd of 24,346 wagered $2,115,822, the biggest day in Sportsman's history. Four 'members -of the 1963 Harvard soccer squad are Africans; three from Nigeria and one from Ghana. Buffalo 7 0 0-23 Buf Ratkewici, 33 run (Ratkewicz Buf Gergley, 51 pass from Stofa (Sto x-Played last night. Navy-Staubach, run (Marlin kick).

Duke-Bracey, 3 run (kick failed) Navy-Sai, 1 plunge (Marlin kick). Duke Glacken, run (pass failed). Navy FG, Marlin 31. Duke-Crisson, 11 pass from Glacken (Holloway kick). Navy-Markoff, run (Marlin kick).

Navy-Siuggerud, 36 pass Interception (Marlin kick). Duke-Wilkinson, 1 plunge (kick failed). Navy-Sai run (Marlin kick). Attendance 41,000. fa run).

Buf-Stofa, 1 run (Edward run). Lightest man on Michigan State's football team is No. 1 left halfback and top runner Sherman Lewis, squad cocap-tain who tips th scales at only 152 pounds. Red Maher scored 30 points against Kalamazoo in 1923 and it's still a Notre Dame football record. The New York Yankees had a team batting average of .170 in the 1963 World Series.

(Continued on Page 5 D) Gogolak P-A-S-S at Finish Lacks Legs CORNELL GETS ITS PLOTS MIXED cvl scoring on Gary Wilson's second-period field goal, but Cornell drove back immediately for the touchdown, although it took one big break from the officials, when Dartmouth's apparent recovery of a Mike Strick fumble at the Green 41 was ruled a dead ball. Two plays later Wood found Ponzer open. Gogolak added the conversion point, his 42d without a miss since a 1961 failure against Brown. Cornell had little in the way of major threats thereafter. Earlier in the second period, it had been stopped at the Dartmouth 14 where on a 4th-and-1, as neither Wood's run nor his belated pitch-out to Bryan Westfield on the play could pick up an inch.

The defeat eliminated Cornell's la st mathematical hope in the Ivy race, while Dartmouth conceivably could tie Princeton for the title by beating the Tigers next weekend and having Yale urjset Harvard. Cornell 00 7 0 0-7 Dartmouth 0 3 0 9-12 Dart-FG, Wilson 29. Corn Ponzer, 38 pass from Wood (Gogclak kick). Dart-Span-jenberg, 2 run (Wilson kick). Safety-Soonaugie tackled in end zone by Pierce.

First downs 12 II Rushing yardage 174 171 Passing yardage 45 210 Passes 2-7 14-24 Passes Intercepted by 3 1 Punts 4-37 1-36 Fumbles lost 1 1 Yards penalized 35 43 pass completion until Gogolak stepped out of character had been Gary Wood's 38-yard toss to end Bill Ponzer on a stop-and-go pattern down the middle about five minutes before halftime. Wood, the leading rusher in the East, picked up 77 yards in 19 carries, but wasn't up to his performance in a one-point defeat here as a sophomore, or the 28-21 scare of last year's Dartmouth unbeatens. A hip injury idled him the last 11 minutes. Spanganberg, hero of last year's win but hurt most of this fall, dived two yards over right guard to cap a 63-yard advance in nine plays. Halfback Jack McLean accounted for 48 of the yards, 40 on a great pass reception and brilliant broken field run on the end of the Dana Kelly pass.

Noted for its frantic finishes, such as beat Columbia and Brown this month, Cornell couldn't pull its fourth Ivy victory out of the fire. Except for Wood, no Cornellian ran for more than 26 yards. The Big Red didn't get a first down until the last minute of the first quarter, and by then had stopped Dartmouth three times inside the Cornell 30. Dartmouth opened the Cornell soph Marty Spo-naugle was thrown for a safety after a Dartmouth punt to the 1-yard line. Until Tom Spangenberg and zone with 7:37 left on the clock, the Cornellians had looked as if a 7-3 margin over Dartmouth would finally stand up.

(It was 24 years ago this week that an unbeaten Cornell team poshed over a touchdown in the last half-minute of play to apparently avert a 3-0 touchdown, only to have the famed "Fifth Down" exposure lead to return of the game to Dartmouth). Cornell's only score yesterday and its only Hanover, N. H. Cornell's most elaborate attempts at hokum in many a year failed in the waning minutes yesterday, and Dartmouth's fourth-quarter rally pulled out a 12-7 Ivy League victory. Kicking specialist Pete Gogolak, a man without a position who in his Cornell career has never been used except for his toe, faked what would have been a game-tying field goal and completed a screen pass to halfback Bob Baker.

But Dartmouth's defense smoked it out and held it to a negligible 7-yard gain. The score had been 10-7 at the time, then on the final play of the game 1 -Associated Press WIREPHOTO. CAPTAIN. MY CAPTAIN Dartmouth's captain, end Scotty Creelman (88) tries to pot the stopper on Cornell captain Gary Wood (19), but it takes a "Green Indian hug" from behind to bring down Wood after a 5-yard second-period pickup. Dartmouth won, 12-7..

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