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The Central New Jersey Home News from New Brunswick, New Jersey • 28

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New Brunswick, New Jersey
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28
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BRUK8WICK. K.J IVNDAY, OCT. 19. J74 triumph State, Pittsburgh, Temj we. -narvar fullback Mike Bright him- scored from tha two on a keep an early lead as Penn's Adolpb STATE COLLEGE, Pa.

(AP) n.i-.H4kAU iVm cVuiwisn ran for two touchdowns and pawed for a third as llth-ranked Penn State came frnm behind In the second half yesterday to beat a surnrisinclv tnuch Syracuse football team 30-14. In addition to scoring on a two-yard keeper with 1:55 left In the first half to slice the Syr- aeuse early load to 14-10. Shu- man swept nine yards for the ffft-ahpart tnnrhrinn'n In tha third period and passed 10 BG enn NEW man's 10-yarder to Taylor, and h. iet rfiv. iw Dorsett, Daniels 'or ranmers PITTSBURGH AP)-Toi (AP)-Tony Dorsett scored three touch- downs, including runs of 61 and 74 yards, and Billy Daniels fired two scoring passes as Pitt crusneo Boston college yesterday.

The Panthers, 4-2, held an un- comfortable 14-3 lead at half- murine ai-rns frnm tha nn In make, it 14 3. Donoghue high- lighted the drive, with pass -uk i yards. half nrfrf. hnw, renn state Eot it 0fffrse rolling an(J drove vards mi is plays to make it 14-10 at the half. Donehez carried seven times for a total of 50 yards and Shuman completed a 13- yard pass in the drive.

Shuman Ohio State romps; i it jt 5' i I 48-0 4 AP photo football gam In Austin, won 38-7 over the Raiorbacki In tha conference race. MAN IN THE MIDDLE Texas full, back Rootavelt Laaki (4) It being brought down by Arkansas' Floyd Hogan aftor picking up a first down in yesterday's South- North Carolina upsets No. Carolina 33-14 time until Dorsett, who ran for 101 varrf nn carries, broke the game open midway in the third period with his first long scoring run, a 61-yard burst up the middle. It was third and four at the Pitt 39 when Dorsett through a hole in the got line, veered to his left, then eluded tackier who tugged desperately at his jersey. It was clear sail- ing the last 30 yards, On the next Pitt series.

Dan- lels found Kevin Farmer one- on-one against defensive back Ken Ladd and hit him with a perfect 51-yard pass wnich Farmer grabbed on his finger tips, then raced untouched into the endzone. Harvard rallies tO top Cornell. 39-27 CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) Harvard, ignited by a diving pass interception by tackle Charlie Kaye, struck for four touchdowns in the third period yesterday in rallying for a 39 27 Ivy League football victory over Cornell. Plagued by mistakes, Har- vard trailed 21-10 at halftimo, but came alive with a staunch defense at the outset of the third quarter for its second league victory in two starts.

On the third play of the sec- ond half. Harvard linebacker Eric Kurzweil batted a pass by Cornell's Devin Siglcr and Kaye made a spectacular catch at the Big Red 29. Five plays later Milt Holt passed 16 yards to Jim Curry in ine ena zone. The Crimson struck again quickly to go in front to stay. Sigler fired a long pass which Mike Page picked off and returned 41 yards for a touchdown.

Three minutes later. Bob Shaw forced a fumble which Hardy Wiedemann recovered from Harvard at the Cornell 15. Halfback Tommy Winn took a pitchout and passed 11 yards to Pat Mclnally for another touch- down. Cornell scored after a fumble recovery, Dan Malone racing 39 yards to set up a five yard touchdown burst by Don Fa-nelli. However, the Crimson quickly matcned that as Holt imipea a screen pass to vvinn who picked up blocks and snrinted 69 yards for the final score.

Dartmouth defense stops Brown, 7-6 John Souva 'raced 51 'yards for a touchdown late in the first half and Dartmouth's rugged defense stopped tw. fourth defending Ivy League football champions 14 victory over It was Dartmouth's first triumph this season after three loses. Jose Violante kicked field goals of 44 and 22 yards for Brown's points. but missed two other tries, including a 37-yard-er in the fourth period. Violante's first boot gave Brown a 3 0 lead" until Souva burst through left tackle and went al the way untouched be- Wl1' son late in the first half.

Brown, now 1-4, marched to the Dartmouth five at the start of the third period but on fourth down with three' yards to go settled for the field goal to make it 7-6. Pete Beatrice's passing drove the Bruins from their own 16 to a first down on the Dartmouth six early in the fourth quarter. However, the Big Green de fense threw the Bruins back to the 20 from where Violante's 37-yard field goal attempt went wide to tne leit. Brown came back with another threat which reached the Dartmouth 36, where Jim Con-terato recovered a Beatrice fumble. on Vaughn passes EASTON, Quar- terback Marty Vaughn fired four touchdown passes as Penn outclassed Lafayette College, 37 7 in a non-conference football game yesterday.

Vaughn, who was fourth-string until last year, hit 11 of 18 passes for 188 yards and his four scoring throws broke the Penn career record. Penn. 3-0-1. spotted Lafayette a Bewzeare lost a rumen at oil own 30-yard line, Eight plays later, tailback Dean Colwes dived over from the one for the TD and Dan Kuhn's conversion kick gave Lafayette a 7-0 lead at the end of the quarter. After Bellizeare's one-yard run tied the score in a second period drive highlighted by Vaughn's 32 yard pass to Bucky Bucola, Penn took a 10-7 lead on Tim Martin's 32-yard field goal.

Vaughn then passed for his first two scores before the half ended with the Quakers on top ,47. Vaughn hit Bucola for 10 yards and the first score and then nassed 21 yards. to Mark Stra'uss shortly before the half. IX'JS? nd Bucola connect ed anoth- "ore. thisvtim yard play.

Vaughns 16-yard pass to Carl Smith ended the Penn scoring. n'L' i ale romps over Columbia. 42-2 NEW, HAVEN, Conn. (AP) Don Gesicki dashed 66 yards down the right sideline on Yale's first play from scrim- mage, then ran a half yard four plays later for his first of three touchdowns as the Elis' romped 42 2 over Columbia yesterday in the 52nd renewal of the Ivy League's oldest football rivalry. Columbia ran 40 times for 47 varav compared to Yale's 62 rushes for 315 yards.

After Gesicki 's opening score, Yale linebacker John Cahijl recovered a fumble by running back Mike Hansen, giving Yala possession for the second time. Coach Carmen Cozza's Elis then marched 79 yards in plays, including a 19-yard toss from quarterback Tom Doyle to Bob Fernandez. Rudy Green wiggled his way through' the right side for two a standup touchdown. Green, Yale's premier rusher, suffered a bruifed rib and was sidelined shortly thereafter for the rest of the game. Yale is 4-0 overall and 2-0 in (he.

Ivy league Columbia, 0-4 overall and 0-2 in league action, managed to get on the' scoreboard be-caise of a had -snap to Yale punter Bill West fall. He chased it into his own end1 zone and was downed for a Columbia safety that made the score 14-1 in the Eecond Temple stretches winning streak to 13 PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Sieve Joachim passed for live touchdowns and ran for another as Temple defeated Holy Cross, 56-0. in college football yesterday. The win extended Temple's streak, second longest In the nation, to' 13, including five this season. Joachim, who entered the game as the nation's offensive leader averaging '238 yards a game, played only half the game but managed to get 23o total offensive He had194 yards Passing and 36 yards on the He found Jeff Stempel for two first half touchdown passes, completed two to flanker Pete Righi and a 22-yarder to split end P.J.

Salin. The five TD passes left him one short of a Temple record. Soccer-style kicker Don Bit-tcrlich got all eight extra points, giving him 40 consecutive conversions to tie the Temple record set by Nick Mike- Mayer, now with the Atlanta Falcons, in 1961-62. Boston University tips Bucknell, 14-10 BOSTON (AP) George Ka-tapodis' fourth-quarter touchdown sparked a 1410 come-from-behind football victory from Boston University over Bucknell yesterday. A senior fullback, Katapodis ran all seven plays in a 31-yard drive that put the Terriers ahead 14-10 for good with less than a minute gone in tha fourth quarter Bucknell took a 3-0 lead early in the game when a Boston fumble set up sophomore kicker Conrad Stcinhart for a 37 yard field goal that hit the crossbar and carried over.

yards to Duane Taylor for an incnronr trnra In tha fnnrth The 194-pound Shuman, who appears to just getting used lu new w'n-' fense, completed 13 of zo passes for 139 yards in leading the Lm 10 LTir Illin win o- Shuman was aided by J(m Dnnenez 'arris rusnln2 on 23 carries. Syracuse lost its fifth game nf tha aeasnn aeainst. tun wins, but the Orange, under horns stayed alive In the South-west Conference race with a 33-7 rout of the Razor- backs. The 6-fnot-l, 223-pound Camp- bell, the top schoolboy running back in the state in 1973, made his two big plays in the second quarter and Texas never looked back in the nationally televised game. Campbell bolted over right tackle on his long-distance jog and stiff-armed Arkansas nose guard Wayman Hawkins off stride.

With a Memorial Sta- Midwest dium crowd of 66.700 on their feet, Campbell outraced Ar- kansas defensive back Smith to the flag Michigan edges stubborn Wisconsin MADISON, Wis. (AP) -Scrambling Dennis Franklin passed for the go-ahead touch ft down the imrd quarter ana, directed a Dau control oitense to two fourth period scores, leading third-ranked Michigan to a 24-20 Big Ten college football victory over Wisconsin yesterday. Tied 7-7 at halftime. the Wol-verines drove 70 yards in 12 plays to take the lead for good on an eight-yard pass from Franklin to tight end Greg Ben-Boer early in the third quarter. Mirhittnrt's rtofoncp first in the Big Ten hpld wis.

consin to three scrimmage pays in the quarteri Fullback Chuck Heater ran 20 tjmps for 101 ds incIudjng a burst up the for the wolverines' first touchdown in the second quarter. Purdue slips past Northwestern, 31-26 EVANSTON, 111. ((AP) Qliarterback 'vitali scored three touchdowns and defensive tackle Stan Parker intercepted a pass and recovered a fumble yesterday to Purdue to a 31-26 victory over Northwestern in a Big Ten football battle. Vitali scored twice on one- aiuunu cnu iui a iivc-vctiu touchdown, giving Purdue its first conference triumph of the season and boosting the Boilermaker over-all record to 2-3-1. Northwestern, winless in the Big Ten, dropped to 1-5.

Michigan State ties Illinois, 21-21 CHAMPAIGN, 111. (AP) Quarterback Charlie Baggett smashed for two touchdowns and Pased for a third in a 21- point Michigan State second quarter to help the Spartans to a 21-21 Big Ten football tie with TOPS IN BIG TEN Ohio became hte greatest ruher in when ha picked up 146 yards In over Indiana. Griffin has 3,321 than the previous record held by rw Armv. If is it first year coach Frank Malo- nv threw a spar Intn Vi Lions and a partisan crowd of 59,100 at Beaver Stadium. They .1...

scrimmage or tne game -a 77. yard pass from quarternacK Jni uonognue 10 spin ona Lon- me Allgood. renn State came back with a 25-yard field goal by John Rein- nor, but the aroused Syracuse offense ran off a 14-Dlaw 71 yard drive that wound up with slightly favored Illinois yester- day and mar Red Grange Day for the Illini. In the final three seconds, little Illini kicker Dan Beaver was short and wide on a 41- yard field goal try. I mr rorce sinks Navy AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo.

AP) Dave Lawson kicked four field goals, the final one with eight seconds left to play, as Air Force came from behind to defeat service acade- my rival Navy 19-16 in college 'ootoau yesteraay. Navy had jumped out to a 16- 6 lead when fullback Bob Jack-son ran four yards for a touchdown on the opening play of the final quarter. The Midshipmen then began playing giveaway, however, fumbling the ball away twice, having a punt force converted tne second turnover into a touchdown Far West after punt returner Chet Moel-ler fumbled at the Middies' 19-yard line. Split end Borr hauled in a 7.r3rA nice thn T7r.l.Av..r first completion of the game- and Sophomore tailback Ken Wood pounded over from the one with 8:23 left, Randy Spetman of the Air Force then blocked a Navy punt and teammate Bill Mur ray recovered at the seven- yard Une. But the Falcons wens unaoie to convert wnen Lawson missed a 30-yard field goal try.

Oklahoma drubs Colorado, 49-14 BOULDER. Colo. (AP) corked four lethal loT'raiS cuifteu lour letnai, long, rapid- Second-ranked Oklahoma fir. in half anrl rnutart TnlnrHn AO.H yesterday as slippery Joe Washington carried 18 times for 200 yards and four touchdowns. It was the conference opener for the defending Big Eight football champions.

Oklahoma is 5-0 overall and stretched the nation's longest winning and unbeaten streaks to 14 and 23 games, respectively. Colorado, which had won three in a row, 3 3 and "has split a pair of Big Eight contests. Washington scored Oklahoma's first three touchdowns on runs of two, six and 18 yards and the awesome Sooners made 28-0 on Steve Davis' 10-yard pass to Wayne Hoffman just eight seconds before halftime. AP photo State's Archie Griffin (45) Big Ten history yesterday tha Buckeyes 49-9 victory yards which Is six mora Ottis Armstrong of Purdue. 0 failed a 12 play, 'so yard drive and scored from the nine tn und Penn stata ahd f.ir h- first time In the came Tha Lion added twn final nnar(r mmmmmmmmmmm East touchdowns, the first on Shu John Schultz following a 62- yard kickoff return by Lou car- ter, but then had difficulty against Wake's 44-point under- dogs.

Maryland, which took over the ACC jead with a 3 0 rccol.d as North Carolina upset North Carolina state 33-14. lost three furnhies in the first half in- Sn? two 1 the Seacons' a and But Jim Brechbiel returned an interception 11 yuiuu lur 4.. I second quarter score and Avel- wmammmmmsmmm South lini passed five yards to Bob uaba with 18 seconds remain- ing before halftime. Miami squeezes by West Virginia MORGANTOWN. W.

Va. (AP) Kary Baker'a 12-yard Pass to' Larry Bates with 1:41 to av cave heavi favored to play gave heavily favored Miami a 21-20 victory over determined West Virginia in an intersectional college football game yesterday. The Hurricanes drove 50 yards in 10 plays for the winning, score, and Chris Dennis added the winning point on a conversion kick. WVU had taken a 20-14 lead three minutes into the fourth period on Ron Lee's two-yard run. But Emil Ros' extra point kick failed by a wide margin.

Texas wears down Texas Christian COLLEGE STATION, Tex (AP Eighth-ranked Texas triple mule team of run-. ning backs wore down a Texas Walker 4 had his best career passing performance in a J7-0 Texas Southwest Confer- ence football victory yesterday TTI b' scores and stopped TCU's most serious scoring threats when the- Sputtering, rebuilding Horned Frogs still had a 'chance. After a third interception, this time by reserve linebacker Ken Stratton, the left-handed Walker threw a third-period screen to right halfback Ronnie Hubby, who scampered 60 yards for the Aggies' final touchdown. Fifth-ranked Auburn defeats Georgia AUBURN. Ala.

(AP) Fifth-ranked Auburn's top-rated defense came unglued Saturday but managed to stick together just enough to get by Georgia Tech 31-22 and give freshman defensive back Chuck Jones a chance to become a football hero in his first game. Jones, a rookie from Lake Wales, blocked a punt and ran it in 42 yards for a touch- down and, later, put undefeated Auburn in scoring range with a fumble recovery, But the suprise performer of a long afternoon wore a Tech jersey. Second-string quarter- back Rudy Allen scored-two of the Yellow Jackets' touchdowns and kept Tech in the game with his running and passing. Allen west Conference Tex. Texas and stayed aliva Irish COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Archie Griffin of Ohio State be- came the greatest rasher in Big Ten football history yesterday, grinding out 146 yards and two touchdowns and leading the top-ranked Buckeyes to a 49-9 rout of Indiana.

The junior tailback from Co- lumbus, Ohio, now has 3.321 ca- reer yards, shattering the Big Ten record of 3,315 yards established by Purdue's Otis Arm-atrong two seasons ago. The 180-pound Griffin broke the mark with more than 11 minutes to play. He was carried off the field by his joyous teammates, still clutching the football. A sellout Ohio Stadium crowd of 87,671, second largest in the school's history, gave Griffin a standing ovation while the Buckeyes mobbed him on the sidelines. Meanwhile, quarterback Cornelius Greene engineered the Buckeyes to their sixth straight victory of this season, prolonging their unbeaten streak to 17 games.

Indiana fell to 1-5. Greene piled up 330 total yards, running for one touchdown and passing for two others as the Buckeyes pushed their Big. Ten record to 3-0. Indiana, now 1-3 in the conference. never challenged the Buckeyes after Ohio State scored the first three times it had the ball for a 21-0 lead in the first 12'A minutes.

Griffin darted 20 and 12 yards for- the first two Ohio Slate touchdowns. Greene squirmed 19 yards for one touchdown and passed yards to Dave Hazel and eight yafds to Brian Baschnagel. Ohio States alternating uiu- backs, Pete Johnson and Har- old, Henson, nammereo one yard apiece for the other touch- Bullock, Kornman, Samuel pace Irish SOUTH BEND. Ind. (AP) fullbacks Wayne Bullock and Russ Kornman each scored two touchdowns and halfback AI Samuel added a game-high 127 yards rushing yesterday as sev-e h-ranked Notre Dame pounded Army 48-0 in an inter-sectional college football game.

AJ mixture of snow and rain Jnmnn vAet tha fircf half and caused numerous fumbles by both teams but Notre Dame clurtg to the ball long enough to score at least as many points in the.first half than it had scored in each of its last three games. The Irish built a 20-0 lead and coasted the rest of the way to their fifth victory against one loss. It was the fifth straight loss 1-5, and ran the Ca- dets' losing string against the Irish to six games. Riitinrif uhn entered the game eighth in the nation in scorlng with eight touchdowns, scored the first two Irish touchdowns and barely missed a third. He had the ball knocked from his grasp inches from the encfj zone midway In the first quarter but came back to score on runs of six and nine yards later in the half.

Hamm on target as Nebraska breezes LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) -Dave Humm knocked the props from under Kansas with the most dazzling aerial performance of his career, throwing three touchdown passes to Don Westbrook as 12th-ranked Nebraska mauled No. 13 Kansas 56-0 in a Big Eight football mismatch yesterday. HUmm, who hit 23 of 27 tosses for 230 yards and no interceptions, found Westbrook, senior vingback from the Wyoming Jlatlanrls, for touchdowns of 7. 1Q and 3 yards and broke two Big -Eight career records.

Humm's three-yard shot to Westbrook late in the third quarter was his 36th touchdown pass, breaking the 1971-73 record by Dave Jaynes of Kansas.1 Humm also completed 15 consecutive throws, shattering the old mark of 14 by Jaynes. Texas Longhorns rout Arkansas, 38-7 ATjSTIN, Tex. (AP) Texas freshman fullback Earl Campbell stiff-armed his way 68 yards for a touchdown and blocked an Arkansas punt which tackle Doug English joyously converted into another score yesterday and the Long- started in place of injured Danny Myers. Georgia outlasts Vanderbilt, 38-31 ATHENS, Ga. (AP) Sopho more Matt Robinson of Georgia a one vard ouarter.

K-neL JhTsecondf? Dac.K.snealc Wlt" 24 secm re- j2 a li Jrn HSncl football victory over Vanderbilt. notimsons winning loutimuwii thwarted a tremendous fourth- quarter comeoacu Dy vanner- bill which produced 24 points and a 31-31 Ue after Georgia had taken a 24-7 lead after three periods. Clemson snaps Duke's ACC string CLEMSON, S. C. (AP) -Clemson's defense repelled Duke three times inside the 10-yard line yesterday and the Tigers scored a 17-13 victory, ending a four-game Blue Devii win streak in an Atlantic Coast conference football game, i.

ni Duke quarterback Hal Spears passed for two touchdowns but had a desperation toss knocked down In the Clemson end zone after time had expired to seal the Blue Devils' fate. Clemson quarterback Mark Fellers, taking advantage of four, Duck fumbles and an intercepted pass, worked the option as it was designed to go by scoring once from seven yards out in the first quarter and handing off to Don Testerman for a touchdown from four yards away later in the same period. Duke went to the Clemson six in the second period, to the Tigers' four in the third and to the six again late in the game but was turned back each time. Bob Burgess kicked a 33 yard nninte Randy Cobb for a second-quar ter touchdown and 26 yards to Troy Slade for another in the altme fourth period. After that touch down, Duke Coach Mike McGee elected to try for two points but a pass was incomplete.

The victory was Clemson's third in six outings but its first this season in the conference, Duke dropped to 4-2 overall and 1-2 in the loop. LMAl'JLL, JUL, CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) North Carolina, led by quarter back Chris Kupec, exploded for three quick first period touch- downs and went on to upset lOth-ranked North Carolina State 33-14 yesterday. A chilled crowd of 47,400 saw the Tar Heels snap State's 14- game Atlantic Coast Confer- ence victory streak and at the mrSMosS Setmes hi. 1 this season.

Th-, c.nt frnm fhn Bowl, two from the Gator Bowl Allies QLUUIO J' 'Jlli un, VU" II and one from the Sugar Bowl got an eyeful as the Tar Heels struck with lightning speed to score three touchdowns in. six minutes of the first quarter. State went ahead 7-0 on a five- yard run by Roland Hooks. The 40-yard drive was set up when Danny Rhoden recovered a lumuie ay oim ueiieisou. In four plays, North Carolina rolled 67 yards for its first touchdown with Mike Voight scoring on a 36-yard dash off left tackle.

The Tar Heels sue- negotiated an on side M. tw-m kickoff which Jimmy Duratt re. cov State's 31. Six plays later Kupec went over from the three. The Tar Heels got a break moments later when Ron Johnson recovered Hook's fumble on the UNC 46.

North Carolina drove to the 10 from where Bet-terson slashed over. North Carolina, 4-2 for the season, drove 75 yards for an early third-quarter touchdown, with Kupec scoring from the one. State came back with an 80-yard drive that ended with Hooks scoring from the three. The Tar Heels scored again early in the fourth period on a four-yard pass from Kupec to Dick Oliver to cap 57-yard drive. Alabama belts Tennessee, 28-6 KNOXVILLE, Tenn.

(AP) Willie Shelby scored two touch- downs anH spf nn annthor uiil-h a 4i yard punt return yesterday, leaning lourth-ranked Alabama to a 28-6 boutneastern Conference football victory over Tennessee. Shelby, a 172-pound junior, ran over a defender on a 13-yard scoring trip in the second quarter: He put the undefeated Crimson Tide in control in the third quarter with a 19-yard touchdown run and his long punt return within a two-nimute span. Calvin Culliver also scored twice for Alabama, ramblin 30 yards on the first play after Shelby's punt return and add- ing another on a six-yard run in the final period. It was the 17th straight regular-season victory for Alabama, including six this year. The.

Tide has a 3-0 record in its drive for fourth straight SEC championship, Maryland swamps Wake Forest, 47-0 COLLEGE PARK. Md. (AP) Bob Avellini nasserf for 157 yards and two touchdowns as' 18th ranked Maryland, aroused after a lackluster first half, gwamped Wake Forest 47- in an Atlantic Coast Confer- enee football victory yesterday, The Terns scored on their first play from scrimmage, a 27-yard pass from Avellini to A 'l 1 i Vi "ft IW1 TS AP phote first quarter action against Boston College at tha homa of the Panthers. Pittsburgh won, 35-11. MAKING ELEVEN Pittsburgh tall-back Tony Dorsett (33) picked up 11 yards on this play to the Pittsburgh 44-yard line in ,1.

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