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Daily News from New York, New York • 124

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
124
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4 1NYU Nips Lafayette, Clifton Paces Knicks Over Bullets, 69-53 Tigers Trounce Brown, 39-0 14-7 in Last Period Easton, (JP). A 17-yard touchdown pass, two minutes before the end of the game, gave NYU a 14-7 victory over Lafayette here today. A Founders' Day crowd of 6,000 saw Lafayette suffer its sixth defeat in as many A bulgring crowd of 18,311 came to the Garden last night to watch the comedy of the Harlem Globetrotters then staved to see the tragedy of the Knickerbockers without Dick McGuire. Although the Knicks eventually beat the aged A Standing Baltimore Bullets, 69-53, in their NBA opener, they just didn't jell in the absence -of their playmaker. who has yet to sign his contract.

While meandering aimlessly with no one to guide them, the Knicks did manage to eome up with a CI 03 rr couple of heroes. Harry Gallatin, a 49-minute woi knorse, was cnmu-in? the boards all night. He made ILTIMMI! mi MW X.lmcir 1 Hnfiuan 1 .1 ko. rt Hti rii k-fa a 3 --i-tari 4 iNw Zu-it-lka rz 4 -a Rallatin.Tt 4 2 4 rl 1 1 5 an-ic-rch 5 1 ,7 A. M.

1 LPoiuc 3 11 I luiun it 2 i Bilnf.tK 1 l.uinpp 3 4 14 a I I 1 Txala SO 13 63 Toola total of 28 rebounds, second only to the 36 made last season by Minneapolis tleorge Mikan. tinne, intprove rk A SW r.fcl a Clifton, who eon- games. The Violets' winning touchdown came on a Ray Cadieux pass into thfc end zone which Bob Lynch jug-fled several times before mating the catch. Lafayette scored in the first period after Joe O'Lenic returne.l 99 till thp NVTI 9rt fnlhom. -noV.

interception. The Maroon touch down, first in four games, came when Gene Harrison raced across from the 5 after recovering his t'exnolnt- trt.t l-wli jvrvuiltu it tn the thirl' -r -r, i rernicoiai crashed across from the one on the i i i ui a oo-jara auvance. Vin DiGaspari intercepted a Joe Callahan pass at midfield with three minutes remaining to set up the winning NYU Cadieux passed 15 yards to Bob Boettcher. Cadieux and Boettcher carried to the 17, whence Cadieux passed to Lynch who made the end zone catch with two defenders around him. NYU FAILED TO capitalize on five other threats.

The Violets moved from their 29 to Lafayette's 4 in the first but fumbled, advanced from their 30 to the Maroon 30 in the second and lost the ball on downs, and marched from their 33 STATISTICS nvo 24 3H'! 48 J4 6 LAFA TETTB -First down -Rushihic yardate- Pasatliff yardage Patses attempted-. -Passes f-ompleted 1 -15 a 3 8 -48 10 -Passes inten-euted by- 1 3 10 Punlmsr aterase funis 1 itmblea lost Yards penalized- to loser 10 only to have a P.f ththLrd- The SfL" 4 lujl0" JlS moving from the loser's 31 to the 4. nkw york 7 7 14 IUKATETTE NYU -nm: Tuu.bdowna Fern-ola. "VSt LArAYtTTR sorjng Touchdowns-. Harrison: i-onversions Mears.

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4th C. WA 4-7S45 (ROla 8 wa the main reason tne KnicKs broke awav from a tight 34-33 atrocious la-for-33 from the halftime deficit. Most of his 20 foul line. Baltimore's rate on the points came in the second semester, floor was only 20-for-67 and an when the poor Bullets, incidental- even .500 13-for-26 at the foul Iv. were swishing but six of 32 line.

shots from the floor. Ttfe Globetrotters pulled out all Baltimore didn't score a point the stops in their bag of tricks wfor the first five minutes, either. while toying with the Wash-But, with New York's Braun and ington Generals. 67-63, in the open-Boryla off in their shooting, the ing- exhibition. They had their foot-BullVtj soon caught up and went ball and baseball games, showed ahead.

1S-12, by the end of the off Marcus Haynes' brilliant drib-quarter, i bles artd. of course, put the spot- 1 I.IFTOX. ERNIE Yandeweghe and Braun got hot enough upon cca-iion in the second quarter to I4-HDAY FMEE TKHAIL nEr.iiriGTon "60" tgf 75c Weekly niier i rial reriov 'Little Toe' of Ohio St. Boots Wildcats, 24-21 Evanston. 111., Nov.

1 (U.R). The smallest player in the Big Ten. tinv Thurlow Weed, a 5-5, 128-pounder, booted a 17-vard lield goal with less trran six minutes to play to give Ohio State a 24-21 victory over Complete A Shave in 60 seconds or less'with the aTl -cut pm. Princeton threw' everybody but its Tiger-suited mascot into action while manhandling outclassed" Brown, 39-0, yes terday at r-iew Brunswick, coasting home after a four- i touchdown binge in the first i period Coach Charlie Caldwell used his entire 50-man squad as he expert- mented with subs for his Big Three tests ahead. IT WAS OBVIOUS that Brown was doomed to its 11th straight loss over a two-season spread wben Princeton marched 62 yards in six ground plays after the opening kickott to score at on cob i i i 2 0 39 van Jnu after louiu-Jowo: P-inteion i Anger's 2t-yard sweep of left end.

But th nly th beginning Unger whipped a 27-yard scoring pass to Frank McPhee, Dick Frye threw to Pete Van Gytenbeek for a 37-yard TD play and Bill Tryon slashed 24 yards for a fourth score. WHILE CALDWELL juggled various backfield combinations, Princeton struck for two more scores. The fifth came on a four-yard pass from Tryon to Dick Emery in the second period and Xo. 6 on a two-yard smash by Somers Steelman in the third. Lnger converted three times.

Jack Newell, the usual extra-point man, missea an inree attempts. It was an all-time lopsided score in the Princeton-Brown series dat ing back to 1898. Pitt Overwhelms Hoosiers, 28-7 Pittsburgh. Nov. 1 An in-and-out Pittsburgh team was defi nitely "in" here this afternoon aJ the Panthers rolled to an easy 28-7 victory over hapless Indiana before a homecoming crowd of 19.907.

Highlight of the festive afternoon was a 55-yard run by Bobby Epps of Pitt late in the second stanza. The Panthers were quick to capitalize on a Hoosier fumble early in the first period when Paul Hoffman went over from the 3. Adding TDs in each period, the Panthers got back on the winning road after being upset last week by West Virginia. liuiiana Put 7 7 14 7 JS liHltana sriiiK- ioti-mlown bHrnio. ronve-si-in: IVA'-tailte.

Put swn: Tuu-li. Jowna Hoftm-tii elt. Cua -fen-ton: Btamla, 4. DELIVERS THIS STURDY. ATTRACTIVE, ROOMY i WOOD GARAGE ekMSl Fran Tw Uw-Cott tM I.

Ertct It YtiirstK Mi SAVE! 2. We'll Ertct All tr Part FN TH M-Uala A-Mott CMt.) Mvnth ta Pa itri Put It ONt 0AYI Diffwcnt Gar Sm (I-nt 4 t-r A BtmfshiiT v4 Cttita Stt (n-i. mint at wr yvi AM Prteat 0 LmftiK. I I. htM FAr RKttawty 7-7M Ctiarhrt 9- tRukln a aali CMIMN Bl MKI -Lvsit-tnte' a-a-B-a-R-a-R-a--i'Bai I LOCK-RITE STRUCTURES.

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V. kMlim a 0 aaragat. thti Urt yoa aiir airMaai I MMatt-M- aia I Ma aalitatiaa. I I Nta Ma taattn-ct-ta vaart. I Rj3 new the shave in the world! yourself! If you are FREE DEMONSTRATION IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OPEN EVENINGS 14 LA-T NIGHT "Sf.W YORK Ballimorf 53.

Rn.l.--.lrr U4. Fort 'ajw Mnmrai-olia 4. KMlon IM-l-aa-iki-i. 73 Ii-HliaiiaT-olis 71. u-- 8-.

rimni WESTER! n. YORK i i.Jmw Rorwer l'lVYnoo Piiii phia iMMiMmn poh l.ntm Bono 1 1 Milwaukee 1 0 1.IMK) Svra.ii-- 1 JMtO'Kt. Wayne 1 BailiDMMC lud'oap lia tt 3 .00 it 11IA "Ptiil-Klell-illia at in i rmai.l at Fort Ki.n-. keep the Knicks going-. But it wasn't until thev started to run.

Willi laiiuv auu viiiiun, 1 1 finishers. finishers, that tuey moved mto control earlv after intermission. It wat all hut over before the end of the third Quarter, when New York led 52-44. team looked sharp. The light on Goose Tatum's pivot work.

Evervone had a great time until I the Knicks took the floor. 1 Northwestern. The boot -capped a 17-point fourth-quarter rally which saw the Buckeyes come from a 21-7 deficit. A pair of second-period TD passes by Wildcat Dick Thomas built up the lead, and broke up a 7-7 first- quarter deadlock. Ann Arbor, Nov.

1 (U.R). Quarterback Tom O'Connell engineered Illinois to a 22-13 upset of Michigan before 64.753 fans. The loss knocked the Wolverines out of the Conference leadership, leaving Purdue the only unbeaten club in Conference play. O'Connell completed half of his 28 passes for 124 yards and had Michigan in a dither all afternoon. The Illini were leading, 22-0, at halftime.

Houstin. Nov. 1 (JF). Jim Hal-uska scored one touchdown and passed for two mors as Wisconsin walloped Rice, 21-7, in the Texas heat. The Badgers ground out 224 yards rushing and added 139 in the air while holding the Owls to 75 on the ground and 92 upstairs.

Rice had just 26 plays in the entire first half. Minneapolis. Nov. 1 CUR'. Minnesota turned two costly Iowa fumbles into touhdowns and Geno Cappelletti kicked a 33-yard field goal against the wind to throttle the Hawkeyes.

17-7, before a i Hoipecoming crowd of All the Gopher scoring came in the final 15 minutes and the victory put them in a second-place tie with Michigan in the standings. RUPTURE TIE LIEIItSI TRUSS I EVEI WOII NEVEI Kll BETTER EY De Luxe Alll-I I IN MY tt Strin Bulbs FREE Vr--wffAl it mi nati on A with- Hi chliclia. Imm4at m4 Satisfartary Ftttt Mt SI-VtMt Hoiible SENO FOR FREE CIRCULAR 'Hu 3 P.M. Iim4. SAT.

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JUL Terps Trample Terriers, 34-7 Boston. Nov. 1 (JP). A devastating opening attack that reached almost point-a-play proportions gave iiighty Maryland its 19th consecutive football -rk-tory, 34-7 over hopelessly outclassed Boston L'niversity today at Fenway Park. The Terps from Maryland, who rank second nationally, clinched matters by scoring thrioe on 2S plavs during the opening period.

Ralph Felton tallied two touchdowns on a four-yard slam and by snatching a lateral from winger Lou Weidensaol, who had completed a pass from C'het Hanulak on Boston's 20. Between those counters. Bob I-aughery smashed from 10 yards out after the Terps had moved there from their 47 on seven plays. BEFORE THE FIRST half ended. C'het Hanulak and Leland Ijebold had counted to run up Maryland's lead to 41-0, thanks to fjur conversions by Don Decker.

While Maryland's split-T offensive was stunning most of the crowd, its defenders smeared all three of Harry Agganis' passim? attempts while holding the Terriers" crowd attack to minus 14 yard. Agganis was under terrific pressure at all times and took such a poundin? that he was forced to turn over his quarterbaiking to ISS-oound Johnny Nunziato Startling as it may seem. play improved as soon as little Nunziato took over and the Terriers held Maryland scoreless the rest of the way. Late in the final period Joe Terrasi. saved Bl from a shutout by running a punt 53 yards" for a touchdown 11 34 B.In III 7 larttl -rmc FWioa ft l.uhr-r'- H-inntnk.

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