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The News and Observer from Raleigh, North Carolina • 17

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Raleigh, North Carolina
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17
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Section Section Want Ads Want Ads Sports The and Observer Sports News Raleigh, N. Sunday Morning, September 25, Wolfpack end Capuano leads lunging defenders. Capuano succeeds in grabbing Talbott's jersey, Talbott Guns UNC Past State Tar Heels Rally To Win It, 10-7 NCS UNC First downs 22 15 Rushing yardage 278 126 Passing yardage 77 139 Passes 8-19 11-15 Passes Intercepted 2 Punts 3-29 6-39 Yards Fumbles penalized lost 20 60 By DICK HERBERT CHAPEL HILL--Danny Talbott and Tom Lampman combined talents on a fourthperiod touchdown drive of 63 yards to give Carolina its second straight 10-7 victory over rival State here Saturday hefore a capacity crowd of 000. was a 15-yard scoring pass on a third down and five situation that settled this chapter of the ancient rivalry. Talbott rolled to his left and as the defense came up to stop a run, he found Lampman all by himself in the end zone.

The lob toss was on target and the Tar Heels had the winning score. It came with 4:41 left to play on this beautiful football day. State, with sophmore quarterback Jack Klebe at the controls and working for his second touchdown, got to the Tar Heel 37, where a fourthdown pass intercepted by sophomore "Gary Bomar, a freshman quarterback last fall. Battle of Defenses The Tar Heels took a 3- 0 lead late in a defensive first half on a 33-yard field goal by sophmore Bill Dodson. It came with only 24 seconds left in the period and ended the Tar Heels' lone threat of the half.

Early in the third period the Wolfpack marched for 87 yards, mostly on the ground, but wound up two yards short of a score when Bill Darnell just got a defensive hand on Charlie Noggle's pass intended for Gary Rowe in the end zone. The Wolfpack finally made good on an opportunity early in the fourth quarter when Klebe, making his varsity debut, directed a 28-yard touchdown drive. Senior Don DeArment, who had the best day of his career, went the last 15 yards on a pitchout. This touchdown chance came when Talbott lost trol of the ball and linebacker Dave Everett pounced on it for State at the Tar Heel 28. After Klebe ran four straight keepers, for over 13 to yards, DeArment.

he He went the last 15. Harold Deters' thirteenth successive placement made it 7-3 State. The Tar Heels then lost a chance when Everett scoring, Dodson for a fouryard loss on a fourth-downand-one play at the State 28. Carolina had advanced from its 37 after the kickoff and appeared to be on its way to a score. Daily 10c, Sunday S.

Do Talbott starts past State defenders. Terps Swamp Deacs, 34-7 Wake Forest Maryland First downs 11 Rushing Yardage 86 62 Passing Yardage 231 Passes 4-11 11-18 Passes Intercepted by 0 2 Punts 10-39 Fumbles penalized 35 COLLEGE PARK, Maryland blew by Wake Forest and shortcircuited the Deacons at almost every turn Saturday on the way to a 34-7 football victory. Coach Lou Saban's revamped Terrapins struck with two bombs and turned two fumbles into two more touchdowns for a 28-0 lead. With the sting of a stirring pep talk and the cheers of 26,500 fans ringing in their ears, the Terrapins yielded only one first down until neophyte quarterback Alan Pastrana had them to four touchdowns. He connected on a fifth touchdown in the fourth quarter before Wake converted a fumble into a score.

Pastrana, who connected on 11 of 18 passes for 231 yards, first struck with a 49-yarder to halfback Ernie Torain midway of the first quarter. The Deacons appeared to be holding their own until an estimated four minutes remained in the first half. The clock had stopped running and no one was sure what time remained. 50-Yard Play Pastrana could not care less. He lofted a 17-yard pass to fullback Ralph Donofrio, who took it on the Wake 35 and rambled down tht left sideline and completed a 50-yard play before safetyman Andy Harper stopped him on the two.

Two plays later Train swept right end, where cornerback Buch Baker latched onto his legs on the five. Torain appeared to be down on the two but he put forth a long reach and plunked the ball down on the goal line. Bernardo Bramson, the soccer-style kicker, made it 14-0. Until this point, it appeared Wake Forest had come to terms with the football it had fumbled six times in losing the opener to Virginia last week, 24-10. However, Darrell Buck coughed up the ball while running back the kickoff and John Hetrick recovered on the Wake 15.

Maryland worked out a first down on the three, from where Pastrana scored. Bramson made it 21-0. Wake Fumbles By all mental calculations the half should have been nearly over. But unfortunately for Wake's Barry Hickman it wasn't. Hickman, running the kickoff, had a head-on collision with Joe Ganley and Hetrick was again "Johnny on the the 25." slanted faked the Donofrio to right flat and took a 15-yard pass to the 10.

Two plays later Pastrana faked to Torain and hit Donofrio in the left flat. Donofrio skipped down the sidelines and past two Wake defenders for a nine-yard touchdown. Bramson made it, 28-0. Wake held the ball on the next kickoff and managed to work out its second first down to its 33 before another mishap bogged the Deacs. the backer Jon Ron umpteenth Wilson, Pearson, time harrassed by aimed line- for a wobbly pass for wide end Butch Henry.

However, Maryland's Hetrick made the catch on the Wake 45 and returned to the 41. Wake held and a field goal attempt by Bramson missed. Wake was able to put more pressure on Pastrana in the half, but in turn received just as much from the hard-hitting Terp forwards. See DEACS, Page 7. Louisianans Clip ECC Bucs, 21-14 N.La.

ECC First downs 16 17 Yards rushing 331 274 Yards passing 17 Passes 3-11 10-31 Passes Intercepted Punts 6-34 5-41 Yards Fumbles lost penalized 40 By GRADY ELMORE GREENVILLE Dalton Leblanc already is president of the Northeast Louisiana State student body. He could get a lot of votes for governor of the state on the program he put forward here Saturday night. LeBlanc, a senior sprint star who has had a 9.5 in the 100, came out for football for the first time this fall, after using up his track eligibility. Most of the 14,000 fans in Ficklen Field pulling for East Carolina wish he had cocentrated on his studies instead. The speedster suddenly burst into the open and dashed 63 yards for a fourthquarter touchdown, his second of the night, to provide Northeast State's Indians with a Bucs, Giants Win; Dodgers Lose-Page 3 4 A (Staff photo) Wall of Tar Heel defenders swarms in on State's struggling DeArment.

Football Scores ACC North Carolina 10, North Carolina State 7 Duke 14, Pitt 7 Clemson 40, Virginia 35 Maryland 34, Wake Forest 7 Memphis State 16, South Carolina Memphis State 16, South Carolina North Carolina Frosh 21, North Carolina State Frosh 7 STATE Chowan 34, Potomac State 0 Allen 15, North Carolina College 6 Hampton Institute 46, Shaw 16 Kentucky State 54, Winston-Salem 0 Norfolk State 16, Elizabeth City State 6 Northeaster Louisiana 21, East Carolina Lenoir Rhyne 24, Presbyterian 6 Appalachian 35, Western Carolina 33 Guilford 35, Elon Furman 28, Davidson 26 Newberry 14, Catawba SOUTH Ferrum 34, Newport News 14 Florida 28, Mississipp State 7 Alabama 34, Louisiana Tech 0 Virginia Tech 49, George Washington 0 West Virginia 24, William and Mary 13 Tennessee 26, Auburn 0 Georgia Tech 42, Vanderbilt 0 Hampden-Sydney Sewanee 35, 28 Shepherd 0 Howard University 17, St. Paul College, Randolph Macon 28, Washington and Lee 0 Georgia 43, Virginia Military 7 arida State 23. Miami (Fla.) 20 Tampa 20, Bowling Green 13 Citadel 24, Richmond 6 Mississippi 17, Kentucky Rice 17, LSU 15 Wofford 22, Frederick 17 EAST Middlebury 14, Wesleyan Colgate 38, Columbia 0 Penn 38, Lehigh 28 Ohio University 23, Boston College 14 Villanova 20, Toledo 11 Army 14, Holy Cross 0 Colby 18, New Hampshire 14 Dartmouth 17, Massachusetts 7 Cornell 28, Buffalo 21 Yale 16, Connecticut 0 Princeton 16, Rutgers 12 Boston University 20, Maine Harvard 30, Lafayette 7 See SCORES, Page 7 19 Calabrese TD Moves Blue Devils Past Pitt Duke Pitt First downs 19 17 Rushing yardage 214 105 Passing yardage 50 105 Passes 6-9 15-30 Passes Intercepted by Punts. 5-40 5-34 Fumbles lost Yards penalized 27 88 By GEORGE KOLB PITTSBURGH, Pa. Duke defeated Pittsburgh 14-7, here on a cool football Saturday that went wild.

The Panthers worked 72 yards for a touchdown with the opening kickoff, requiring the Blue Devils to come from behind as they had to do in their opening last week against West Virginia. Duke did all it could to make it close in the first half, fumbling twice and losing the ball another time on a pass interception in four possessions. But the Blue Devils, once faking a field goal and later gambling at their own 28 with the score tied, pulled it off as Jay Calabrese capped a 56- yard third quarter maneuver after Andy Peath scored on a 49-yard punt return in the second period. Host of Panthers greet Duke's Orvald (19). though, was not wasted as Talbott took himself off the hook for his fumble by directing the winning touchdown drive.

He got it off to a great start by running to his right and locating Lampman free at the State 38. The Tar Heel senior got five more yards after the catch. The play was good for 30 yards. After Lampman made two, Talbott elected to run: instead of pass and got seven to the 24. On third down and one he sneaked at left guard for four yards.

Dave Riggs could get only a yard, and on second down Taibott went around right end for four to the 15. Now it was third down and five and almost everyone present knew Talbott would go with the pass-run option. He went to his left and then found Lampman alone in the end zone. State players protested that Lampman did not have control in bounds, but the officials ruled otherwise. The second half was far more exciting than the first.

The Tar Heels stuck to the ground almost all of the way before the intermission and could not make much headway against State's stubborn defense. The Wolfpack did not dress four of its starters who were hurt in the opener at Michigan State last week, but the replacements performed well. State's running attack found some big holes, and DeArment, who last week found himself the prey of Michigan State's great linebacker, George Webster, took full advantage of most of them. He ran for 149 yards in 25 carries. The Tar Heel defense.

helped along by one fumble the Wolfpack lost at the 15, managed to stop all but one threat. Deters, who kicked a 49- yard field, goal last week, missed three attempts this Saturday. Two of them were from very long range and would have tested the best kickers in the pro leagues. State had more chances, but Carolina was better at getting points when it managed to get close. The victory against the surprising Panthers, who never got inside the Duke 40 after their opening thrust, probably cost the services of quarterback Al Woodall for next Saturday's conference opener with Virginia.

Woodall, who moved into a starting role after a good showing in Duke's 34-15 victory over West Virginia, suffered a dislocated left elbow in the Blue Devils' first series of plays. Pitt, tortured by UCLA opening day, 57-14, was frequently hampered by penalties, three for personal fouls. The Panthers rolled up 310 yards total offense to 264 for Duke. Backs Dewey Chester and Mike Raklewicz got good yardage through Duke's middle and quarterback Ed James and split end Bob Longo were a tough tandem upstairs. Duke Intercepts Two Longo made eight catches for 99 yards and James completed 15 of 30 passes.

Two of his throws were intercepted. James and Longo, who was double covered all day, connected on 12 and 13 yard pass plays in the Pitt scoring march which ended when Raklewicz barged through from the one. An offside penalty moved it there from the three. Howard Heit converted and Pitt had itself a 7-0 lead after only 6:18 had elapsed. That kept most of the 684 present happy until Beath took an Al Zortea punt at the Pitt 49, broke to the right side and went all the way for a touchdown.

Bob Matheson kicked the point and it was even. Tailback Jake Devonshire nixed Duke's first possession when he fumbled and Bob Dyer caught the ball at his own 29. The next time Duke got it a personal foul penalty put it at the Pitt nine for a first down, but fullback Calabrese fumbled and Paul Killian covered it at the five. Gamble Pays It was on the next series by Duke that the Blue Devils went for the first, down on fourth and inches their own 28 after Calabrese failed on third and one. It worked and Duke marched on to the Pittsburgh 18.

There, however, quarterback Todd Orvald, who got 71 yards in 15 carries, threw an interception. It. was intended for Dunaway in the end cone, but he and Joe Curtin went up for it together and Curtin came down with it. It wasn't until the last play of the first half that Duke did not goof a scoring chance. After a 39-yard pass interference penalty advanced to the Pitt 21, Glenn Newman tried a 36-yard field goal.

It was short and off to the right. Not long before that with fourth and three at the Pitt 28, Duke faked a field goal. Orvald, who got down to hold the ball, got up and threw to sophomore end Henley Carter for a first down. Twice the Panthers went for the first down on fourth and one, once at their own 19 where they made good. Not long after that, James passed 27 yards to Skip Orszulak to the Duke 40, but Beath knocked the ball out of his hands and Matheson was around to recover it.

See DUKE, Page 2 Pitt Duke 9 7 7 8 Pitt- 2 run (Heit kick) Duke- -Beath 49 punt return (Matheson kick) Duke--Calabrese 14 run (Matheson kick) Attendance 24,684. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING DUKE (carries, yards gained;) Woodall 3-6; Calabrese 17-60; Devonshire 21- 77; Orvald 15-71. PITTSBURGH: Chester 15-40; James 5-7; Raklewiez 9-31; Jones 7-27. PITTSBURGH: James 15-30-205. The next opportunity, See UNC, Page 2.

(Start DeArment streaks into end zone despite Bomar's efforts. Passing DUKE: (completions, attempts, yards gained) Woodall 1-1-9; Orvaid 5-8-41. 278 Rushing Yards The Wolfpack had one of its more productive days carrying the ball, making 278 yards. The Tar Teels gained 126. In the air, though, Talbott connected on 11 of 15 passes for 139 yards and the winning touchdown.

State managed 77 yards on eight completions of 19 tries. Two were intercepted. Talbott ran with the ball 18 times for a net of 41 stunning 21-14 upset victory over ECC's Pirates. Northeast didn't look at all like the club clobbered 45-0 in the first meeting with the Bucs last year, in large part Steve Mansur and the swift LeBlanc. Mansur raced 40 yards for a first-quarter touchdown and 7-0 lead for ortheast, which had won only one game the past two years but now stands 2-0 for 1966.

East Carolina got going late in the first half and knotted things as Neal Hughes joined Bill Bailey in sparking a touchdown thrust, with Bailey scoring from nine yards out a minute before half time. The Pirates went ahead the first time from the second half kickoff as Bailey ran 45 yards to the Northeast two, then Jim plunged across for the touchdown. Northeast came right back for a 14-14 tie, however, with Mansur's 31-yard run igniting the push. Leblanc went off right end for the last three yards. ECC got down to the Indians' eight early in the final quarter, but fourth-andthree there Hughes was thrown back.

Leblanc set his sail five game-winning plays dash. The slam-bang offensive yards, and with a 71 to 17 See ECC, Page 7..

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