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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • 20

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Binghamton, New York
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20
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2-B SUNDAY, Blighamtw, N.Y. October 1, 1878 Med grounds Colgate While the Big Red defense was shooting down the aerial attempts of Colgate's Alex Mancini and John Marzo, Cornell passed only three times for 30 yards and instead ground out two long touchdown drives. Qiarterback Jim Hofher, who'd thrown both of his completions for the day in the drive, swept across the right corner of the end tone from the 2 to give Cornell a 7-0 half time lead and then directed a long time-consuming 'By SUNDAY Wire Service HAMILTON Joe HoDand ran for 84 yards and a touchdown and Cornell took advantage of five interceptions yesterday to score its first victory, and hand witless Colgate its third loss, 21-12. The Raiders, who actually outgained the victors 279 yards to 219, have suffered 17 turnovers in three games, compared to 33 in last year's fine 10-1 performance. 0-4 SU loses 28-14, fx9 Iff worst Maloney start scoring drive in the third quarter.

Tailback Holland, the nation's leading rusher entering the game after his 186-yard opener in 'last Saturday's 14-14 tie with Princeton, capped the IS-play, 66-yard drive with a 1-yard plunge. Cornell iced the game with five minutes left when safety John Cur ran intercepted a pass from Owego junior Manto and returned it 34 yards to the Colgate 14. Holland alternate Ken Talton carried on all four plays needed to put it across. Curran intercepted two passes and recovered a fumble and linebacker Jim DeStefano also picked off two aerials to spearhead the Big Red defense. Colgate scored both its touchdowns hi the fourth quarter.

The Red Raiders moved 35 yards following a Cornell fumble early in the period, with Angelo Colosimo scoring from the one Colgate's other score came when safety Tom McGarrity caught a blocked punt on the Cornell three and carried it into the end zone with only seconds remaining. Colosimo led all rushers with 95 yards on 22 carries. Talton was 17-for-52. J). 2 Cornell quarterback Mike Tanner appeared only briefly and left with an injury.

Electrical power was out during the afternoon in the village of Hamilton because of a fallen tree but it did not affect the game which a' Homecoming crowd of 8,500 watched except that the Colgate offense comcidentally was being short-circuited all fey- "The offensive was there but we made a lot of mistakes," Coach Fred Dunlop said. "Every team makes mistakes, it's the degree to which they effect the team that makes the difference" Colgate's best scoring opportunity of the first hah was foiled when Cobb intercepted a Mancini pass in the' end ne. Mancini was shaken up slightly soon after intermission, and from there on, Dunlap turned over the controls to Owego grad Marzo. He was 5-for-16 for 61 yards with four of the interceptions. Mancini was 4-for-ll for 66 yards.

Tight end Mike Getman (Oneonta) was the game's leading receiver with three catches for 55 yards. Cornell leads the series, 42-20-3. -Next Saturday Colgate plays at Harvard while Cornell hosts Bucknell. PHOTO SY AP Cornell's Ken Talton, who scored the insurance touchdown in a 21-12 victory overColgate, up yardage near his own goal line before defenders Jon Kimmel (81), freshman from Susquehanna with the performance of freshman running back Joe Morris, 1978 Massachusetts school-boy sprint champion, who collected 117 yards on IS carries. It was the season high for an Orange runner, and believed to be the all-time high for an SU frosh.

Though Morris has yet to start, he was also the Orange rushing leader last weekend, with 72 yards. However, SU quarterback Ron Fame ski failed to put together a passing attack, hitting on only six of 18 for 62 yards and giving up three interceptions. Tim Wilson, the sophomore who in a surprise start' at North Carolina State generated the best Orange attack of the season, was not used at all after a disappointing game last Saturday at Michigan State. McCullough completed seven of 10 for 101 yards, with only one picked off. Powell collected 79 yards on 22 rushes and two touchdows for the Illini.

Maloney, who formerly served on the same University of Michigan staff as Ulsiois coach Gary Moeller, is of to the worst start of his five seasons here Predecessor Ben Schwartzwalder opened 0-8 in 1973, his final season, the onnly other time it has happened here since 1893. For Moeller, who has been under fire, it ended a 7-game win less streak. A yeaf ago, Syracuse won at Champaign, 30-20. Syracuse travels to West Virginia on Saturday while Illinois is at Missouri Valley, and Paul Lawler pull him down. Willi SYRACUSE (UP!) Quarterback Lawrence McCullough rushed for 73 yards on IT carries and added two touchdowns yesterday, leading Illinois to a 38-14 win over Syracuse before 30,101.

Syracuse is 0-4, Illinois 1-3-1 with a scoreless tie against Northwestern. The Orange, a major disappointment since opening-game injury to quarterback Bill Hur- ley, seem to bring out the best in the opposition's standby QBs. McCullough was filling in for the Illini regular hurt two games ago, while last week at Michigan State, a similar fill-in, Bert Vaughn, threw two long scoring passes early in the game Coach Gary MoeDer's Illini took command early, when sophomore tailback Gregg Foster ran back the opening kickoff 82 yards to the SU 15. Three plays later, junior tailback Larry Powell took it in from two yards out. Later hi the quarter, McCullough put together 10-play, 80-yard scoring drive, relying heavily on the option play, 'which con-' founded the Orangemen defense througout the -game.

The, march was capped by Powell taking it in from the three In that drive, sophomore fullback Wayne trader collected 26 yards on three carries, on his way to a 96-yard performance for the day. Coach Frank Maloney's Orangemen got on the board late in the first quarter with a 16-play, 73-yard scoring march, topped by a one-yard plunge by sophomore running back Dennis Hartman. But, Illinois put a third touchdown on the board just before the end of the half with a one-yard plunge by McCullough. The mini's final scoring march came over 80 yards early in the third quarter, when McCullough rushed for 46 yards on six carries and scored from one yard out The score put the Illinois out in front 28-7. The Orangemen picked up their final score on a 4-yard rush by junior running back Art-Monk, finishing off an 11-play, 77-yard march.

the loss, SU received a major' surprise ki seemingly impotent attack Scores and standings Pro football School football SO. TIER ATHLETIC CONF. Johnson ly 10, Seton CC Maine-Endwell 7, Susa Valley 0 Clarion St. 43, EdinsoroSt. 7 Columbia 11, Lafayette 0 -mm Post 51, Wagner 13 Dickinson 24, Sworthmore21 mti Fordham 34.

Seton HaD 22 Gettysburg 13, Juniata 0 Harvard It Massachusetts NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE American Center once East Pet. PF PA Miami 0 SOS) tt 74 England 1 .500 71 70 500 74 7 JS0 SI 131 250 15 KY JeB I Beltimore 1 Mir III t-i Buffalo 7 7-n n-ii Central Holy Cross 35, Dartmouth 0 Indiana Pa 21, Lock Haven St. Lebanon Val. 37. Ursinus 10 Lycoming 21, Susquehanna Maine 33, Cent.

Connecticut Md -E. Shore 17, DelawareSt. I uwi Mass. Maritime 21. Nichols 7 MillersvilleSt.

13, Kutttown St. 7 Montdair 13. Keen 7 1 Moravian 7, Widener 0 Pro baseball NATIONAL LEAGUE Yasfara'ar's Gamas PtiiladUDtoa 10. Pittsburgh! Chicago 7, Nc Van St Louis Montreal I Cincinnati 4, Atlanta 0 Houston 7, San Francisco 4 Los Angelas 7, San Diego 0 EAST ay pa. i PMeaeiphia 71 55 Pittsburgh 17 73 .544 Chicago 7f 13 491 Montreal 75 .464 St Louis at 2 421 New York as a 404 WEST Los Angeles at .5 Cincinnati 41 44 544 San Francisco San Diego 43 71 Sit Houston 73 .453 Atlanta at Alt llkieis Syracuw Ill-Powell 7 run (Flnter kick) II Powell 3 run (Finaar kick) SU Hartman 1 run (Jacobs kick) III McCuNough 1 run (Finier kick) ll-4McCullough 1 runlFnia- kick) SU-fWnk4run (Jacobs kick) email Celgate i Corn Hottwr I run (Mam kick) Corn Holland I run (Mam kick) Colo Colosimo I run (Conversion failed) Corn Talton I run (Mans kick) Cotg McGarrity 3 run (Conversion tailed) Pittsburgh 4 0 0 1009 tl 3t Cleveland 3 1 0 .750 70 41 Houston 1 2 0 .500 to tt Cincinnati 0 4 0 .000 54 5 Owego It.

Oneonta 0 Union-Endicott 44, Central 0 WMtal 27, Chenango Valley 0 NenNeguo Utica FA 12, Norwich 4 SUSOUENANGOASSN. Alton t. unatego 0 Chen. Forks 31, Windsor 14 Deposit 32, Harpursville 0 B-G J), Oiford Oelhi30. Hancock 0 Sidney Newark Valley Walton 20, Whitney Pt.

14 INTERSCHOLASTIC ATM. CONF. Groton 42, Lansing 0 Moravia A Elmira Hts. Spencer-Van Etlen Union Spgs.O Tioga 33, Odessa-Montour 0 PENNSYLVANIA Carbondale IJ, Wallenoaupadt 7 0 Car nek Cetoate .750 73 500 at 300 12 .150 tl .250 41 15 IS Oakland 1 Seattle 1 Kansas City 1 San Diego 1 Navy it, Bolton Coiege New Hampshire 21, Chester St: 0--; New Haven 21, W. Connecticut Norwich 2t.

Coast Guard 2t Pace 21, St. John's 17 Penn St. SS, Texas Christian 0 3Vj 11 It Ul Syracwa JS Jl 71-S4 HSI Ml 42 131 135 It-M 114-1 2-40 A4I 3-1 0-4 Mt 4.) First downs Rushes, yds Passing yds Return yds Passes Punts Fumblesjoat Penalties First dooms Rushes, yds Passing yds Return yds -Passes Punts Fumbles, lost Penalties 70-23t 20 44 2-3-0 a-171 l-l Mi 44-147 -127 4 MM S-I7I l-l M0 Marieaal csnferenca East 0 0 1 000 101 57 .750 107 t3 Washington 4 Dallas 3 Giants 3 Phitdlphia 2 St Louis 0 750 tt t7 500 15 71 000 31 12 750 73 47 .750 tl SS 5(0 70 7t .500 SO S3 .350 31 07 College football's Top 10 Chicago 3 1 Green Bay 3 1 Minnesota 2 1 Tampa Bay 2 2 Detroit 13 Rhode Island 17, Brown 3 Rutgers 24, Princeton 0 St. -Madison 0 Slippery Rock 22, Shippensburg IS Springfield 34, Connecticut 10 Temple 31, Delaware 7 Thiel 37, Bethany.w Va. 24 -u Trenton St.

45, Hofstra 21 Trinity 14, Bates 7 Upsala 20, Wilkes 10 Wesleyanll, Colby Westmnstr 31, California, Pa. 7 Williams33, Middleeuryll-" Yale 1), Connecticut 7 -nj 7 SOUTH Alabama 51, vanderbilt 2a Auburn 2t, Tennessee 10 Bucknell 21. Davidson 20 California 31. Virginia 21 CfemsonSt, VillanovaO ro E. Carolria 33 Texas-Arllngton 17 E.

Kentucky 14. Austin PaayO Florida 3A Mist, state 0 Los Angeles 4 0 1 009 43 34 Orleans 1 2 0 500 15 tt Atlanta I 3 0 .250 IS il San Fran. 0 4.4' .000 4t 87 x-clinched division title Today's Games Philadelphia (CIistensoi13-l4l at Pittsburgh (Candelaria 12-11). 1:35 p.m. New York (Ki 4-4) at Chicago (Burris 7-13).

1:15 p.m. Montreal (Grirmlev It-ID at St. Louis (VuckoviOt 13-12), 1:15 Atlanta Bouton 1-1) at Cincinnati (Seever 14 )4), isp m. San FranciscolMonfekiKel1-t)'at Houston Niekro 13-14). 3 05 rn Los Angeles (Rhodefl 104 or John 14-10) at San Diego (Perry 21-4), 4 p.m.

a End Regular Seatan AMERICAN LEAGUE Yesterday's Gamas Detroit S. Baltimore 4 New York 7. ClevelandO Boston Toronto 1 Milwaukee Oakland Minnesota 7. Kansas City 3, 11 Inn. Chicago at California, (nl Texas at Seattle, (r EAST Pel.

Gt Ifs Sooners by land, 45- 23 Crestwood 14, Wayne 0 Lack Trail II, Bishop O'Hara 0 Montrose 22, W.Side Tech 1 North Pocono 30, Old Forge 14 Scranton Cent Mid-Valley STAC JUNIOR VARSITY Maine-E ndwill 21. Susq. Valley 14 North 30, Ithaca 4 Norwich 41, Utica FA 14, Chen Valley 11 Union-Endicott 43, Central It SULU VAN TRAIL LE AGUE Elmira FA 21. Corning East SYRACUSE AREA Cicero 3S, Baldwinsvifte 7 Henninger7S.CBA0 Central Square 7, Westhill College soccer Broome CC 3, Sullivan CCC 0 Cornel 2. SUNY Binghamton I Stafel Delhi Tech I.

Cayuga CCC 0 Hartwick 5, Brookpon 1 Syracuse 1, Colgate 0 Cortland St. 0. Albany St. 0 College baseball Ithaca 2-1, Oneonta St. 0-5 Furman 52, Appalachian St- 34 Georgia Tech 21.

Citadel 0 ant. I Houston 17, Fla state 31 Louisville 31, Indiana St. 12 ledtv's Games Houston at Cleveland, 1 p. m. 1 Kansas City at Buffalo, 1pm.

Minnesota at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. New York Giantsat Atlanta, 1 p-m. Pittsburgh at New York Jets, I p.m. St.Louisat Miami, 1 p.m. Sa Diego at New ngiand.

1 rn Detroit vs. Green Bay at Milwaukee, 3 p.m. Los Angeles at New Orleans, 2 p.m. Philadelphia at Baltimore, 2 p.m Cincinnati at San Francisco, 4 p.m. Oakland at Chicago, 4 pm.

Seattleat Denver, 4p.m. 1 Mandav's Gamas Dallas at Washington, m. tt tl .115 tt 13 tot 1 tl tt .571 7 71 55t VI It 7S .534 1 3 tl .430 It' V) 101 3tt 3tvi New York Boston Milwaukef Baltimore Detroit Cleveland Toronto Maryland 30, Kentucky 3 Zl' Mddl Tenn. 14, Tenn -Chttnga 14 Mississippi It. S.

Mitt. 13 N.C. state 34, wake Forest 10 Pitt 30, N. Carolina It Randolph-Macon 21. wash.

A Lee 14 Richmond 51, Cincinnati 30 S. Carolina 37, Georgia 10 TennesseeSt. IS.Cent. Ohio II VMI 17. Virainiji a Women's field hockey Cayuga CC 3, Delhi Tech 2 4' S1 WEST K-KansasCity tl California aa Teas 15 Minnesota 73 Chicago 70 Virginia Tech 33, William A It sts .531 .531 .453 .440 .4 It .354 Girls' swimming II 10 21 33 4 Oakland Seattht Semi-pro football ATLANTIC FOOTBALL CONF.

St 102 3Ui It 44 Champion ship East Connecticut 54, Pittsburgh 14 EMPIRE FOOTBALL LEAGUE Last Nkstit't Games Hudson It, Chenango Storm 0 Valley Dnisiae) 1 PF PA Hudson Fals 7 2 0 211 131 Troy I 1 I It! II Hudson 2 I 0 141 202 Chenango Storm 2 I 0 lot 333 Central Division Johnstown 0 0 21 t7 Albany 7 2 0 lt3 120 Watertown 4 0 225 211 Syracuse 0 0 104 304 i-dinched division title Todays Games Baltimore ID Marine! 15-11) at Detroit I Roiemat-ll) Cleveland (Waits 12-15) at New York (Hunter n-5) Toronto (Kirkwood 4-4) at Boston (Tiant 13-41 Minnesota (Zahn 1413) at Kansas CitylSplittorff lt-13) Chicago (Barriost.4)atCalifornia (Aase ll-i) Milwaukee (Sorenson 17-12) atbak-land (Johnson ll-t) Texas (Jenkins 174) at Seattle (Mitchell 1-14) End regular season W. Carolina 31, Marshall 14 MIDWEST Bldwn-Wallacel7. Muskngm a Butler 24. Valparaiso 30 Dayton 10, Miami. Ohio E.

Mich. 17, Toledo 12 lowa St. 35, Drake 7 Kansas St. 34, Air Force 31 Kent St 20, Ohio 14 Loulsvile31, Indiana SI 12 Miamt Fla 31. Kansas Michigan S3, DukeO Nebraska at, Indiana 17 N.

Michigan 4H Colorado 37 Notre Dame 10, Purdue 4 Ohio St. 34, Baylor 71 Oklahoma 45, Missouri 23 S. Illinois 43, N. Mexico St. 3t Wayne, Mkh.

35. FerrjsSt II W. Mchigan 24. Bowling Green Wisconsin 32, Oregon It Wittenberg 24, Ohio Weslyn 7 woosier St, Oberlin 0 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 21, Tulsa 13 LSU 37, Rice 7 -N Texas St. II Oklahoma Slate i lit Oneonta 5, Central 77 Ithaca 126.

North 42 Vestal t7, Norwich 75 -Maine-End 51. Chen. Valley 32 Scholastic soccer Oneonta 0, Union-Endicott 0 Maine-End. 3, Johnson City 0 Vestal 3 Susq. Valley 0 Central-North 5, Chen.

Va.1. 3 Ithaca 3, Seton CC 0 Oxford 3, Norwich 2 Harpursville 4, Central Bapt. 1 College football UPSTATERS Albany St 42, Brockport 21 Canisius40, RPI 0 Cornell II. Colgate II E. Sl-oudsburg 44.

Cor I and St 7 Hamilton 20, TuftsO Illinois 21. Syracuse 14 lone 30, Marls! I Ithaca 35, Alfredo St. Lawrence 35, Motor 1 2t Union 14, Worcester Tech 7 Washington. Mo II. Rochester 10 Waynesburg 30, Buffalo 13 EAST Adrian 14, Geneva? Albright 35.

Delaware Val. American I ntl. 20, Kings Point 7 Amherst 20, Bowdotn 10 Army 21, Washington St. 21 Bktomsburg 7, Mansfield St. I 1 Boston u.

25, Northeastern 24 Brdgwater 19, Maine Maritime 12 I ont Jets1 bonus: 7 all-stars plunges and rushed for 84 yards as Michigan clobbered Duke, 524 the Wolverines scoring six of the first seven times they touched the ball. The sparkling performance by the 6-f oot-2, 200-pound senior speedster from Detroit enabled Huckleby to pass fabled Tom Harmon for sixth place on Michigan's all-time rushing list. Huckleby's yardage total put him at 2,141, seven more yards than Harmon who played from 1938- 40. No. 5 Perm St.

an apology STATE COLLEGE, Pa. "WeYe making progress," said coach Joe Paterno in somewhat of an understatement after Penn State crushed Texas Christian, 58-0, to extend the nation's longest major college football winning streak through 13 games. Perm State rolled up 450 yards total offense to 181 for the Homed Frogs. TCU managed only 55 yards on the ground against the rugged Nittany Lions' defense Quarterback Chuck Fusiia completed 11- of-14 passes for 165 yards and two touchdowns, and Booker Moore, ran for three more Penn State led, 7-0, only 10 seco'nds into the game after recovering a fumble. Penn State led, 28-0.

at the half after a 3- yard run by freshman Joel Coles. Paterno said he apologized to TCU coach F. A. Dry for throwing so much, especially after Penn State had built its big lead in the third period. Paterno said be explained that he was trying to give backup QB Tony Capozzoli some much needed game experience.

No. 6 Texas hams it up LUBBOCK, Texas Texas pinned Texas Tech down with its defensive muscle then unleashed Leroy King and Johnny "Ham" Jones on touchdown sorties to deal the Red Raiders a 24-7 loss last night The defending Southwestern Conference champion Longhorns, boasting the No 1 defense in the country, rattled Tech freshman quarterback Ron Reeves and made him pay for every mistake to the dismay of the standing room only crowd of 51,012. Texas linebacker Bruce Schoitz intercepted Reeves' third pass of the game on the Tech 39 to set the tone for the one-sided match. King followed Ham Jones' block to score on a 10-yard run to capitalize on the first Longhorn break. Texas, struck in the second quarter to make it 144 when Steve McMichael forced Reeves to make a bad pitcbout and then claimed the ball on the Red Raider 21.

Eleven seconds later Ham Jones slashed 14 yards for the touchdown. Ham Jones; who had over 100 yards rushing, bolted 16 yards for a third period touchdown after Reeves had fumbled and Rudy Izzard recovered on the Tech 34. Russell Errleben also kicked a 37-yard field goal as Texas held a comfortable 17-0 lead at intermission. 'Reeves finally got the frustrated Red Raiders on the board with a 47-yard touchdown pass to flanker Godfrey Turner. By the Associated Pre NORMAN, Okla.

BiDy Sims wriggled through Missouri defenders for four touch- downs and bad another called back on a penalty and Uwe von Schamann set an. NCAA record for consecutive extra points yesterday as No. 1-ranked Oklahoma opened its Big Eight football season with a surprisingly easy 45-23 win over Missouri. Sims and quarterback Thomas Lott were the cogs that geared an impressive Sooner machine that ground out 484 yards and 32 yards in the air during the game, virtually putting it out of reach at the half 28-7. Although Missouri was completely out-manned, Tiger quarterback Pbfl Bradley and backs James Wilder and Earl Gant never seemed intimidated.

Bradley's squad kept the ball for nearly nine minutes on a final drive in the first half, getting 82 yards in 29 plays and leaving Oklahoma only 1:11 on the dock to gain back momentum before the players went to the lockerroom. Sims made several track meet-style runs, -scoring the game's first tocbdown just over two minutes after the opening whistle with a 42-yard sprint The junior, from Texas, also scored on a 50-yard run in the first quarter and one-yard plunges in the second and third periods. He also romped for 78 yards into the end ne in the third quarter, but the play was nullified by a holding penalty. Sooner kicker von Schamann set the national record for consecutive point-after attempts with 93 and kicked a 54-yard field goal- No. 2 Arkansas by a TD FAYETTE VI LLE, Ark.

Ben Cowins rushed for 118 yards and two touchdowns to spark Arkansas to a 21-13 victory over previously-unbeaten Tulsa. Behind 7-0, the Razorbacks finally began clicking offensively in the third quarter and after stopping Tulsa on a fourtb-and-3 situation at the Arkansas 31 The Rar-backs marched 68 yards ki six plays with Cowins darting the final 24 on a straight dive. Following a 31-yard Tulsa punt, the Razorbacks drove 44 yards in eight plays on their next possession to take the lead for good on Cowins' 2-yard leap. No. 3 USC sluggish LOS ANGELES "I don 't know, we just seemed flat," said Southern California coach John Robinson after the Trojans whipped Michigan State, 30-9, Friday night.

"We played withtout emotion, but we played efficiently and effectively. It was obviously a letdown from last week (24-14 win over Alabama)." USC spotted the Spartans a field goal then drove 80 yards for their first score, a 14-yard pass from Paul McDonald to James Hunter. Charles White scored the first of his two IDs on a one-yard dive to make it 14-3 at the halt No. 4 Michigan piles it on ANN ARBOR, Mich. Tailback Harlan Huckleby scored two touchdowns on No.

7 'Bama: late uprising TUSCALOOSA, Ala. Halfback Tony Nathan, embarrassed by two miseries, sprinted 63 yards on a draw play, to start sputtering Alabama to a 51-28 victory over Vanderbilt Vanderbilt had the lead, 21-16, on Van Heflin's passes and Frank Mordica's runs when Nathan surprised the Commodores on a third-down play late in the third period. That opened the gates and Alabama put away the tired Commodores with 27 points in the final quarter. 1 No. 8 Texas awesome COLLEGE STATION, Texas Sprinters Curtis Dickey and Mike Mosely scored four touchdowns without being touched as Texas crushed Memphis State, 58-0.

Dickey, the NCAA indoor sprint champion ki the 60-yard dash, flashed 65 yards on first offensive play for a touchdown and zipped 31 yards, with a Mosely pitchout for a 14-0 lead. Mosely, a sophomore hurdler in track, 'operated the I-and-Wishbone formation almost flawlessly, sprinting around the right side for six yards and a touchdown and -running an option left for a 3-yard score. No. 9 Pitt paws back PITTSBURGH Fred Jacobs caught a 13-yard touchdown pass from Rick Trocano late in the fourth quarter to lead Pittsburgh to a 20-16 win in a see-saw battle over North Carolina. Jacobs scored two other touchdowns on short runs as Pitt rallied from behind three times.

The final scoring drive covered 80 yards in 12 plays. Doug Paschal put North Carolina ahead, 16-13, with four minutes left in the game on a 2-yard touchdown run. NC got control of the ball after Pitt QB Rick Trocano fumbled the snap at his own 24. Jacobs scored from three yards out to put Pitt ahead, 7-3, in the third quarter following a second-quarter field goal by North Carolina's Jeff caught an 11-yard pass from backup quarterback Clyde Christensen for a TD that again put the Tar Heels on top, 9-7. Then Jacobs fought six yards to give Pitt a 13-9 lead in the fourth quarter, but Pitt quarterback Rick Trocano fumbled the snap from center and North Carolina got the ball at' the Pitt 24.

No. 10 Florida St upset TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Danny Davis used the triple option in awesome style as. Houston scored on its first four possessions and held off a late Florida State comeback for a 27-21 last night Emmett King rushed for 107 yards in the first half as Houston took a 27-0 lead. Davis completed seven of 10 passes for 79 yards and kept the FSU defense baffled with his sleight-of-hand baOhandling.

Reserve quarterback Wally Woodbam came off the bench late in the second quarter and gave the Seminoles three touchdowns by the end of the third quarter, i Texas 24, Texas Tech 7 -Texas Tex. Southern 0 Texas St, Memphis St. 0 FAR WEST Adams St. 17, S. utaht Colorado 55, Northwestern 7 Montana 17, Weber state 7 Montana State 31, Boise Sf It' 37, Francisco St 14 Stanford 17, Tulane 14 Utah St 30, Wyoming 13 Washington 34, Oregon St 0 t'-7 iHlt Carnegie-Mdlon 17, Case Western 14 1 i Wiumm WALT DAVES Tl I I CALL CARAfiE BLDRS.

l-l COLLECT 748-6770 BOX 244 VESTAL N.V SAVE 10 THIS MODEL Special to SUNDAY NORWICH, Com. Though they failed to reach the Atlantic Footbafl Conference championship game, the Triple Cities Jets fared well in balloting among league owners and coaches for the AFC all-star squad yesterday seven Jets named to the first team. Jets owner-quarterback Ray Stanton was named the league's Offensive Player of the Year and was joined on the first team offensive all-star unit by his two favorite receivers, split end Earl Rogers and tight end Joe Greco. AD three were unanimous. Other Jets on the first team are offensive guard Don Keesler, linebacker Al "Yogi" Lol lie though he played defensive end all year, defensive back Kevin Sabin and placekicker Tony Roach.

East Connecticut's Bob Anderson was named Coach of the Year and Rich Fenton, one of his defensive backs. Defensive Player of the Year. The first teams: OFFENSE SE Earl Rogers Jats)i Flanker Tom Burke Northeast); TE Joe Greco (Jets), Tackles-Chuck Chulada (Northeast), John Cedro (Twin City); Guards-Dan Keesler (Jets), Greg Demelros (EC); enter -George Sergienko(EC); OB Ray Stanton (Jets); Running backs Dennis Greene (Twin City), Ed Farmer Pitts K-Tany Reach Jets). DEFENSE Ends Sam Pecoraro (Twin City), Jim Chapasl Pitts Tackles-Mark Antollk (Pitts). Dan Grillo (EC); Lmehecken-AI Lellie (Jets), Luther Palmer Fran Lavigueur (EC); Backs Kevin Sabin (Jits).

John lliott Syracuse), Mike Jones (Pitts), Rich Fenton (EC); Punter Dave Smith (Twin Cly); Punt returner Bob Reeves (Syracuse)? Ktcbo returner Paul Murray Pitts I. second team (jets an): Center Kell Purdy, tackle Dave Demkovich and fullback Dave Bango on offense and end Mike Prislupsky and linebacker Kevin Loveland on defense. IN OTHER BUSINESS, the AFC received five new requests for admission to the league in 1979 from Youngstown and Columbus, Ohio; Allentown, Lewiston and Troy, N.Y.. CUSTOM-BUILT PREFAB GARAGE DURING OUR SEASON-END OCTOBER SALE the SQCIJR6 Horner IN OBSERVANCE OF A RELIGIOUS HOLY DAY WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY 52-54 Court Binghamton.

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