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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 88

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
88
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

60 ETAIL lEfiSWEAR Pri ton arvara wings nee Harvard, 26-7 Harvard (1-0) 0 19 0 7-26 Columbia (0-1 1 0 0 0 77 Harv Tom Beatrice 24 pass from Burke St- John (Arnold kick). Harv Dave Otto 10 interception return (kick failed). Harv St. John 1 run (kick taileo) Col Steve Wallace 43 pass trom Bob Conroy (Mazur. kick).

Harv Paul Connors 1 run (Arnold kick) Alt: 4525 1 Col umBia past ree sluggis Assistant Managers Retail Experience Preferred This is an outstanding opportunity to join a well established menswear specialty firm with store locations from the East Coast to the Southwest. Good starting salary, excellent benefits and plenty of career potential for those willing to relocate (at company expense) as promotion opportunities arise. Successful applicant must be both sales and customer oriented. Send Complete Resume in Confidence to: 69, Glebe Office First Downs Harvard Columbia Rushing yards 16 10 Passing yards 33-64 Return yards 153 156 Passes 30 29 Punts 10-17-1 12-26-2 Fumbles lost. 6-38 8 Penalties yards 4-2 2-2 6-59 2-30 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Ruthlng Player (School) Att.

Yds. Avg. LG P. Connors (Harvard)35 80 10 J. H'lingsw'th 11 32 3.0 7 B.

St. John (Harvard) .8 18 2.1 5 Joe Ciulla (Columbia). 7 23 3.1 9 8. Conroy (Columbia). 9 -9 10 3 Passing Comp.

Att Yds. TD Int. St. J'n(Har 10 17 153 1 1 Conroy (Colum.) 12 26 156 1 2 Receiving No.Yds. TD Tom Beatrice (Harvard) 2 39 1 Connors (Harvard) 2 9 0 Rich Horner (Harvard) 3 75 0 Bay Stukes (Columbia) 2 27 0 Steve Wallace (Columbia) 2 54 1 McAvoy (Columbia) 2 24 0 ESI CONTINUING quarterback Reynolds, "but he told me, 'I might get tired but I won't get hurt.

Keep it This game had two key turning points, both in the opening quarter. After the opening kickoff, new Dartmouth quarterback Jeff Kemp drove his team 53 yards in four running plays to the Princeton 27. A holding penalty on the last play, however, movtd the Green back over midfield. Kemp tried to throw the ball after that and it was obvious this junior son of the former Buffalo Bills star does not yet have his old man's passing touch. Princeton found it could gang up on the Dartmouth running game, gamble on single and zone coverage on All-Ivy receiver Dave Shula.

In the final three quarters, the Big Green got across mid-field only once, to the Princeton 32 in the third period. The other turning point was a poor pitchout to Grey Henry, which Princeton's Matt McGrath recovered at the Dartmouth 11. Five plays later, Van Pelt dived over from a yard out for a 6-0 lead and the Tigers played with new confidence after that. Vaccarello finished a 66-yard drive after the second-half kickoff with his 26-yard field goal for a 9-0 spread. And Reynolds, the Ivy's only experienced quarterback this season, swept two yards around left end on a pass-run option to conclude the scoring in the last quarter.

"Dartmouth still has a good team. But they're young and we were fortunate to catch them early," Reynolds said. first-game jitters as they combined for five turnovers. Fortunately for the Crimson, the biggest turnovers of the first half belonged to Columbia. With Harvard leading, 7-0, in the second quarter on a 24-yard pass from St.

John to Tom Beatrice, Columbia quarterback Conroy tried to get his team back in contention. On third and five from his 15, Conroy dropped back and was chased out of the pocket by linebacker Bob Woolway. Conroy barely escaped a safety by passing right into the hands of Harvard defensive end Dave Otto, who cha-chaed into the end zone from 10 yards out. "It was our defense that kept us in the game. They were tough, and they put us into a position to score," said Harvard coach Joe Restic, who somehow mystified the Lions with his multiflex sets during most of the game.

The Crimson came back out with a 19-0 lead after the half, the last touchdown having come on a six-play, 52-yard drive capped by a St. John keeper for one yard. Then Conroy suddenly caught fire after a dismal first half. First, he hit speedster Steve Wallace with a 43-yard TD pass to start the fourth quarter, making it 19-7 and giving the Lions some hope. But the Harvard defense, led by Wool-way, dispelled whatever thoughts Columbia had of pulling a minor upset.

Conroy fumbled with 9:26 to go in the game, and Harvard's Chuck Durst recovered. Then the Crimson, who amassed 328 yards in total offense, put another score on the board on a Paul Connors halfback dive. After that, the final score was academic. As for the fans in section 28, well, they made it through yet another Saturday. By Walter Haynes Globe Staff NEW YORK The game started with questions.

Questions about Harvard's offense after exodus of seniors from last year's team, namely Larry Brown and Ralph Pollilio. Then a question about Brown's successor, Burke St. John, a sparingly used backup whose biggest experi-. ence has been learning patience on the bench. And finally a question of whether the folks in section 28 would fall through the old pine seats at Baker Field, a historic stadium that seems destined not to make it into the 21st century.

But before the game was over, St. John had answered the first two questions. The Harvard quarterback led a dominating offense, which was bolstered by a stubborn Crimson defense, to crush Columbia, 28-7. It started off as a game of turnovers. On the second play from scrimmage, St.

John dropped back from the Lion 24 yard-line and threw a perfect strike right at Columbia cornerback Mike Brown. Brown returned the ball to the Crimson 24, but Columbia couldn't capitalize on the break. After four plays, a Marc Ma-zur 44-yard field goal attempt sailed wide to the right. "I was disappointed to start off that way, with an interception. But when I came back in, I thought of it as starting the game all over again," said St.

John, who ironically had been recruited by Columbia from his home town of Chappa-qua. And his Columbia rival. Bob Conroy, happens to be a Boston College High School grad. By the middle of the second quarter, both teams seemed to be suffering from By Ernie Roberts Globe Staff HANOVER, N.H. Halfback Cris Crissy rose to speak to his victorious Princeton teammates after their 16-0 season-opening triumph over Dartmouth yesterday.

"Guys, Princeton has not had a winning football season for 10 years," shouted this former schoolboy All-America, "but our team was reborn today." Then the underdog but dominant Tigers rightfully serenaded themselves with a happy, hearty chorus of "Happy Birthday." Why was Crissy singled out? He hadn't scored a touchdown or made a tackle in this, the first Ivy League shutout of Dartmouth since 1960 (Princeton also perpetrated that 7-0 whitewash). Well, although quarterback Steve Reynolds and fullback Larry Van Pelt, on short runs, and Lou Vaccarello, on a 26-yard field goal, put all the points on the board, Crissy 's teammates and the 14,500 in Alumni Stadium knew whoTrinceton's main man was yesterday. This 190-pound junior tailback, tabbed the Penn Yan Express during his New York schoolboy career, carried the ball often and well despite stern pursuit. Crissy wound up with 28 rushes including 25 in the final three quarters and six plays in succession in a crucial second-period stretch. He totaled 106 yards running, got another 47 on two pass receptions and also did all the punt-return duty for Princeton.

He kept the Dartmouth defense continual on duty, thereby severely limiting the opportunities of the misfiring Big Green offense. "I got a bit worried about using Cris so much in that second quarter," admitted NAVIGATE BY THE STARS Bentley College's Center for Continuing Education is offering a twenty-session course, "Celestial Navigation" a practical, no-nonsense instructional program for those who sail small ocean-going yachts, or those who are fascinated by trie stars. Taught by blue water sailors, this course requires only high-school arithmetic and the desire to navigate by the stars. Starts: October 15. 1979 20 Monday evenings p.m.

Fpr more information, contact Bentley College's Center for Continuing Education, (617) 891- 2135. Bentley College enter lor Continuing Education Ortiiam MA 021S4 (617! 891-2135 UCATION Princeton, 16-0 Dartmouth 0 0 0 00 Princeton 6 0 3 716 Pnn Larry VanPelt 1 run (pass failed). Pnn Lou Vaccarello 26 fg. Pnn Steve Reynolds 2 run (Vaccarello kick). Attendance: 14,500.

Dartmouth First Downs Princeton Rushing yards 12 12 Passing yards 77 255 Return yards 99 105 Passes 81 54 Punts 9-23-0 8-15-0 Fumbles-lost 10-37 7 Penalties yards 3-2 2-2 4-25 5-35 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Player (School) Att. Yds. Avg. LG Chs Crissy IP) 28 106 3.7 10 Steve Reynolds 77 3.7 20 Larry Van Pelt (P) 15 54 3 6 14 Jeff Dufresne (D) 9 49 5 4 11 Greg Henry (D) 8 43 5.4 13 Lew Leone (P) 2 10 5.0 13 Fred Rosenberg 7 3.5 5 Passing Comp. Att.Yds.

TD Int. Steve Reynolds 15 105 0 0 Jeff Kemp (D) 9 23 99 0 0 Receiving No.Yds. TD Eric Cutter (D) 5 66 0 Lew Leone (P) 3 28 0 Cns Crissy (P) 2 47 0 DaveShula(D) 2 27 0 TomTrkla(P) 1 22 0 Mark Akey (D) 1 9 0 Letters fo The Editor on the Editorial Pages of The Boston Globe record public opinion. Have you seen The Globe today? 1 11 i 111 ritf-Jir-aiV-'- ''''tiJ- "ft lirr i ft -itnumWlP COMPLETE PACKAGES FROM unt rush revives Yale flRFN'S PAHKARFK PRfiM 5C ffcOO We will not be knowingly LOWEST PRICES: BESTSXIS: BEST SERVICE: BEST STAFF: Yale, 13-12 Yale (1-0) 7 0 0 6-13 Brown (0-1) 0 9 3 012 Yale Ken Hill 5 run (Dave Schwartz kick). Brown Marty Moran, 2 run (kick failed).

Brown Bob Granfors. 38 FG. Brown Granfore, 33 FG. Yale Mike Sullivan 1 run (run tailed). 15.000.

Yale Brown First Downs 14 11 Rushing yards 48-155 44-143 Passing yards 63 106 Return yards Passes 5-12-0 9-25-2 Punts 5-34 7-32 Fumbles tost 4-4 1-0 Penalties yards 7-65 11-93 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Player (School) Att. Yds. Avg. LG Ken Hill (Yale) 13 50 3.7 Scotf Dumont (Brown) 17 46 2.7 JoJo Jaiel 39 3.5 Phil Manley (Yale) 7 32 3 5 Marty Moran (Brown)12 27 2.2 Steve Curtin (Brown). .4 15 3.7 John Rogan (Yale) 4 11 2.7 We sell WOOD or WOOD CORE Fiberglas skis.

We do not sell plastic core skis. Best national brands. Bonna Asnes skis, Alfa Boots. NO "unknown" brands. ONLY Boston Dealer who hot waxes X-C skis as recommended by ail manufacturers.

ONLY Boston shop that matches skis to your height and to your weight. We spend time to do it right! ALL staff are certified as professional X-C ski instructors by EPSTI. We know what's best for beginners because we teach beginners in our local Ski School. Yale quarterback named Brian Dowling, started it for Yale when he blocked his first punt in the first quarter. Fred Leone recovered that one at the Brown 24, and four plays later Hill ran the final four yards through right guard.

That was about it in the first half for Yale (three first downs, 64 total yards) and Brown moved in front, 9-7, when Marty Moran ran in from two yards out at 12:43 and Bob Granfors kicked a 30-yard field goal at 14:53 following a fumble by Dunn at the 19. Yale lost starting quarterback Dunn with a shoulder separation late in the first half and Manley, his backup, with a knee injury after his fumble in the third quarter set up a 32-yard Granfors field goal. Sophomore John Rogan came in and, when Czinger did his thing once again, Yale survived. This was an important Ivy League opener between the two teams generally picked to be the co-favorites. "It was about as exciting as you could possibly makj it for an opener," Cozza said.

"We just didn't block Czinger," Anderson said. "It was inexcusable. He's got to be blocked." By Joe Concannon Globe Staff NEW HAVEN "When you're small," said a Yale middle guard named Kevin Czinger, "you have to be quick. You just have to get off the ball. I went to the right of the center one time.

The next time I Went to the left. After the first time, I thought they'd tighten up. They didn't." The punt rush, something of a lost art, right? Well, at Yale it has been dusted off and put into the playbook. And because Czinger busted past Brown center Garry Daitchman to block two punts by Tom Thurow in the gloom of the Yale Bowl yesterday, the final score read Yale 13, Brown 12. With 4:42 left in a game Brown had all but dominated, Czinger slipped in to block his second punt and, after Ron Barlow fell on it at the Brown one, Yale finally punched it in on its fourth try from the one, with fullback Mike Sullivan just getting over with 2:27 left on a play Brown disputed.

"I talked to (linebacker) John Woodring," Brown coach John Anderson said, "and he said he hit him. He said, 'He did not get The official came in late. The Yale players were yelling. It was an awful late call. But that's beside the point.

They shouldn't have been down there in the first place." "My legs weren't in," said Sullivan, "but I had the ball over the goal line. One of the officials spotted it. I thought I was over the first time (when he hurdled the middle on a second-down play from the one) but they didn't give it to me. I thought I scored twice." It was an instant replay, to a degree, of game between the two teams in an Ivy League opener two years ago in the Bowl. Brown had four cracks at it from inside the two that time and never made it.

The final was Yale 10, Brown 9, as Yale took a late safety to wrap it up. Yale did its own part to give it away, losing four fumbles inside its own 40. Ken Hill (at the 38) and Dennis Dunn (at the 19) fumbled in the second quarter and Sullivan (at the 39) and Phil Manley (at the 20) followed suit in the third quarter. Out of them Brown generated one touchdown and two field goals. Czinger, a native of the same town (Parma, Ohio) that produced Yale coach Carm Cozza and a graduate of the same high school (St.

Ignatius in Shaker Heights) that produced a 'WE ARE THE BEST SELL FOB LESS!" "CUTBACK Where tha experts go." Downhill X-C touring In Aspen 13 Days12 Nights at Christmas $750 Incl. Airfare FREE waxing clinics, X-C Ski School. Passing Comp Att.Yds. TD Int Scott Dumont (Brown) 9 25 106 0 2 Dennis Dunn 2 3 22 0 0 Phil Malley (Yale) 1 3 24 0 0 John Rogan 6 20 0 0 Receiving NoYds. TD Metz, Mitch (Brown) 3 48 Mark Franham (Brown) 3 36 Rich Diana (Yale) 2 29 Dan Straiten (Yale) 2 28 Rostomily lYale) 1 6 484-1663 362 TRAPEL0 BELMONT, MA 02178 Cornell clobbers Penn in season opener, 52-13 IVY LEAGUE Conf.

All W-L-T W-L-T. Cornell 2-0-0 2-0-0 Harvard 1-0-0 1-0-0 Yale 1-0-0 1-0-0 Princeton 1-0-0 1-0-0 Brown 0-1-0 0-1-0 Dartmouth 0-1-0 0-1-0 Columbia 0-1-0 0-1-0 Penn 0-2-0 0-2-0 ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT HE i RADIAL DETROIT'S MISFORTUNE CAN BE THE SMART BUYERS GAIN. DUN I MlbS I hit BILiljtljl bAVINCj IN I IMbi. YUU LL btt CUM YhAHS WHILE I HfcY LA5 I SAVE 15.80 to 40.00 MM JtUi Cornell, 52-13 Coriwll 3 7 14- 51 Pennsylvania 7 4 0 CorrvFG Mara 41 Corn-Sepessy 2 run (Mara kick) CorrvRyan 1 run (Mara kick) CorrvOoooenet 21 pass from Tanner 1 (Mara Kick) Corn-dasby 1 run (Mara kick) Perav Jerry Smrrh 46 pass from Carter (Dwyer kick) ConvTanner 4 run (Manz kick) Perm-Jean 2 run (pass failed) Corn-Muna run (Mara kick) Corn-vveidenkopf 15 run (Mara kick United Press International PHILADELPHIA Cornell scored at will yesterday for a 52-13 victory over Pennsylvania in tfie opening game of the season for the Ivy League rivals. Juniors Mike Ryan, Paul Gooberlet, Dick Clasby and Tom Weidenkopf and sophomore Bob Muha wrapped up the contest in the second quarter with four touchdowns.

Cornell opened the scoring when Keith Manz booted a 41-yard field goal in the first period. The Big Red then began a series of successful drives in the second period. Ryan broke open for 32 yards to the Penn 18 and a few plays later Keith Sepessy went over from the two. A Mike Cobb interception of a Gib Carter pass put the ball on the one-yard line for Cornell and Ryan went over for another score. A faked field goal attempt led to a touchdown when Mike Tanner tossed to Gooberlet.

The Big Red continued their scoring spree on a 47-yard punt return by Steve Vago and Dick Clasby's two-yard rush. Penn scored when Carter threw a four-yard touchdown pass to Jerry Smith two seconds before the half ended. The Quakers' other score came on a two-yard run by Ralph Jean. Tanner ran four yards for a touchdown in the third quarter to make it 38-7 and Muha and Weidenkopf added touchdowns to end the Cornell scoring. ()( A 571 iwllW trulls 1 (y WiwW Cor 24 67-421 56 127 SIZE i8580R13 Ptnn 15 a-n 5-15-2 5-13J 5-3 2-10 First downs Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts Fumbles lost Penalties-yards 3-37J 2-2 7-59 SAVE 40.00 1 REG.

69.95 TREAD PATTERNS MAY VARY PLUS 2 11 F.E.T. C. W. Post stifles NU, 9-7 C.W. Post, 9-7 CW Post (1-1) 7 2 0 09 Northeastern (1-1) 7 0 07 Post Tom Bennett 9 run (Steve Tomlinson kick).

NU Shawn Brickman 21 pass from Alien Deary (Brian Shawn kick) Post Paul Lopresti tackled Allen Deary in end zone. NU CW Post First Downs 10 15 Hushing yards 37-51 62-179 Passing yards 87 46 Return 127 105 Passes 26-9-2 7-4-1 Punts 9-316 10-315 Fumbles lost 2-1 6-3 Penalties yards 7-72 6-60 Slt PRICE SAVE alt PRICE SAVE BR78-14 40.95 62.95 22.00 HR78-14 50.95 81 75 30 80 CR78-14 42.95 64.85 21.90 FR78-15 47.95 74.95 27.00 P20570R14" 45.95 80.85 34.90 GR78-15 62.95 78.75 "1580 FR78-14 47.95 74 75 26.80 HR78-15 63.95 83.75 19 80 GR78-14 49.95 80.30 30.35 LR78-15' 64.95 90.80 25.85 Plus 2 04 to 3.30 F.E.T. "(Fits DR70-14) 'Cadillac white BLACICWALL SUPER SPECIALS SAVEOT3 SIZE I REG. I SYAVUE II SIZE I REG. P205-70R14 37.95 69.65 31.90 HR78-14 39,95 75 30 35.35 P19575R14 38.95 68 25 29 30 FR78-15 34.95 63 25 28.30 Pioneer tackle Paul LoPresti broke a 7-7 tie with 45 seconds remaining in the first half when he tackled NU QB Allen Deary for a safety.

Deary dropped back to pass on a second and 36 from the 13 after a clipping penalty, and LoPresti chased him back for the two-pointer. "He (LoPresti) tackled me at the one-yard line and pushed me back," said Deary, arguing the call. The Pioneers opened the scoring with just under four mihutes gone in the game when Bennett capped the first drive by taking an option pitch and racing for a nine-yard touchdown. Steve Tomlinson added the extra point. Northeastern came back 1:15 into the second quarter when Deary found Shawn Brickman in the corner of the end zone and floated a pass to him from 21 yards out Brian Snow tied the game with the extra point, and it remained deadlocked until LoPresti's safety.

"We have some fine players on defense," said Anile, "and today they played super. That was a fine football team we beat. They won't lose too many games." The loss stung Northeastern, which had shocked Rhode Island, 17-7, last week in Boston. And it dropped the Huskies' record in Greenvale to 0 5-1 since they started playing here in 1964. By Ken Gordon Special to.The Globe GREENVALE, N.Y.

Yesterday's sloppy conditions at C.W. Post's Hickox Field dampened the hopes of Northeastern University, but proved to be just what the hosts needed to skip by the Huskies as junior halfback Tom Bennett rushed for 157 yards in a school record 41 tries to lead the Pioneers to a 9-7 victory over the visiting Huskies before 3247 fans. "Bennett really had the hot shoes today," said Post coach Dom Anile, whose team climbed to 1-1 on the season. "We didn't put many points on the board but he really helped us to control the Ball." Bennett attributed his yardage to team play in the backf ield. "I never could have done it without the blocking of fullbacks Joe Puca and Jim (Ferguson)," he said.

Northeastern coach Bo Lyons was not as happy. "We couldn't even buy a break today," said Lyons, "and that's the truth. Everything we did just came up short." "I thought our two quarterbacks played well," said Lyons of the Huskies' 89 yards passing. "It's just that our receivers weren't catching the ball. We had a couple of touchdown passes if they were only caught." Pius 2.36 to 2 96 T.

LIMITED QUANTITIES no trade needed free mounting ti nun nnnn It. ill 2I INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Ptaver (School) An. Yds Avg LG Tom Bennett (Post). 41 152 3 7 16 Cknt Mitchell 37 2 6 9 Joe Buca (Post) 5 31 6 2 15 Bill Pinto (NU) 30 2 7 13 Robin Rosa (Post) 2 25 12 5 20 Passing Comp Art Yds TD tnt Allen Deary I NU) 6 14 58 1 1 Lou Buscln (Post) 4 7 46 0 1 Pinto (NU) 3 12 29 0 1 Rsceivtng NoYds. TD Shawn Brickman 4 46 1 Rosa (Post) 2 22 0 UUUl 1299 Boyfeton Boston BROCKTON 753 Belmont St.

LAWRENCE 314 S. Broadway NATICK Sherwood Plazi. 9 PAWTUCKET 21 D.vis.onSt EVERETT 1885 Revert BMChPlmry. LOWELL ZOOAppHtonSt. QUINCY 234 OuincyAve PEABODY 175 Washington St.

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