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&#13;
June in Buffalo provides young composers the opportunity to work with senior composers from around the world. The invited faculty members not only have works performed at the festival, they also present lectures, seminars, and master classes. The student composers have the opportunity to hear their works in performance by professional musicians of the highest caliber.&#13;
&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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The Irene Haupt Photographs of June in Buffalo document the annual contemporary music festival held at the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York. The festival was begun in 1975 by composer Morton Feldman who directed the festival 1975-78 and in 1980. The festival was dormant from 1981 through 1985. David Felder revived the festival in 1986 and has been its director since that time.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
Complete details about the annual collections can be found in their respective finding aids.&#13;
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&#13;
June in Buffalo provides young composers the opportunity to work with senior composers from around the world. The invited faculty members not only have works performed at the festival, they also present lectures, seminars, and master classes. The student composers have the opportunity to hear their works in performance by professional musicians of the highest caliber.&#13;
&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
June in Buffalo provides young composers the opportunity to work with senior composers from around the world. The invited faculty members not only have works performed at the festival, they also present lectures, seminars, and master classes. The student composers have the opportunity to hear their works in performance by professional musicians of the highest caliber.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
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&#13;
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This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
Complete details about the annual collections can be found in their respective finding aids.&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
June in Buffalo provides young composers the opportunity to work with senior composers from around the world. The invited faculty members not only have works performed at the festival, they also present lectures, seminars, and master classes. The student composers have the opportunity to hear their works in performance by professional musicians of the highest caliber.&#13;
&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
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&#13;
June in Buffalo provides young composers the opportunity to work with senior composers from around the world. The invited faculty members not only have works performed at the festival, they also present lectures, seminars, and master classes. The student composers have the opportunity to hear their works in performance by professional musicians of the highest caliber.&#13;
&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
Complete details about the annual collections can be found in their respective finding aids.&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
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&#13;
June in Buffalo provides young composers the opportunity to work with senior composers from around the world. The invited faculty members not only have works performed at the festival, they also present lectures, seminars, and master classes. The student composers have the opportunity to hear their works in performance by professional musicians of the highest caliber.&#13;
&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
Complete details about the annual collections can be found in their respective finding aids.&#13;
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&#13;
June in Buffalo provides young composers the opportunity to work with senior composers from around the world. The invited faculty members not only have works performed at the festival, they also present lectures, seminars, and master classes. The student composers have the opportunity to hear their works in performance by professional musicians of the highest caliber.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
Complete details about the annual collections can be found in their respective finding aids.&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
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The Irene Haupt Photographs of June in Buffalo document the annual contemporary music festival held at the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York. The festival was begun in 1975 by composer Morton Feldman who directed the festival 1975-78 and in 1980. The festival was dormant from 1981 through 1985. David Felder revived the festival in 1986 and has been its director since that time.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
This online collection is a compilation of photographs by Irene Haupt beginning with the 2000 June in Buffalo. Haupt, a graduate of the State University of New York at Buffalo, has been documenting the Buffalo arts scene through her photography since 1976. During that time she has worked for, or with, some of the most notable institutions in Buffalo, including the Irish Classical Theatre, Studio Arena Theater, the Kavinoky Theatre, the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the Theatre of Youth, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and the State University of New York at Buffalo. In addition to her specialty of theater photography, Irene Haupt has also devoted much of her career to the photography of musicians and musical events, especially the contemporary music scene in Buffalo. A broader representation of Irene Haupt's photographs of musical activities in Buffalo are also available online in the Irene Haupt Photographs of Musicians in Buffalo .&#13;
&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
The musicians who have participated in the June in Buffalo festival include University at Buffalo faculty members David Felder, Cort Lippe, Jeffrey Stadelman, Cheryl Gobbetti-Hoffman, Jonathan Golove, Tony Conrad, Stephen Manes, Tony Arnold, Magnus Mårtensson, Jon Nelson, Movses Pogossian, and Jan Williams. Visiting artists have included Lukas Foss, Amy Williams, Helena Bugallo, Charles Wuorinen, Joji Yuasa, George Crumb, Augusta Read Thomas, Bernard Rands, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, Harvey Sollberger, Roger Reynolds, John Harbison, Dora Ohrenstein, Philippe Manoury, Jonathan Harvey, John Corigliano, and the New York New Music Ensemble.&#13;
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                    <text>TEMPLE

BUFFAL

TEMPLE ILLUSTRATED

•

FIFTY CENTS

�THE 1970 TEMPLE UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF

Kneeling: Head coach Wayne Hardin.

Standing left to right: Tony Trentini, John Drew, Vince Hoch, Joe Petro, AI Wilson, John Brunner, Frank Massino and Earl Cleghorn.

�TEMPLE UNIVERSITY STADIUM

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
vs

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
NOVEMBER

14,

1970, 1:30 P.M.

•

TEMPLE

STADIUM

PRICES: $4.00--$2.00. PRICES INCLUDE TAX.
Temple University Ticket Office, McGonigle Hall
787-7451

Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.

12-Akron-Temple Stadium
19-Buckneii-Lewisburg, Pa.
26-Holy Cross-Worcester, Mass.
3-Boston U.-Boston, Mass.
lo-U. Conn. -Temple Stadium

8:00P.M.
1:30 P.M.
1:30 P.M.
1:30 P.M.
8:00P.M.

Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

17-Xavier U.-Xavier Stadium
2:00P.M.
31-U. Delaware-Temple Stadium 1:30 P.M.
7-U. Rhode lsi.-Temple Stadium 1:30 P.M.
14-U. Buffalo-Temple Stadium
1:30 P.M.
26-Villanova U.-Temple Stadium 12:00 Noon

VARSITY FOOTBALL HEAD COACH- WAYNE HARDIN

"THE

TEMPLE

ILLUSTRATED"

Official Football Publication of Temple University
of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education
ALLEN SHRIER and JOHN EVERTS, Editors

ERNEST C. CASALE, Director of Athletics

"THE TEMPLE ILLUSTRATED" is published by the Department of Athletics, Temple University, for each football game played at Temple University
Stadium. For advertising rates or other information please call or write Director of Athletics, McGonigle Hall, Temple University, Philadelph ia, Pa.
19122. Phone 787-7445 . Price per issue-SO¢.
Represented for national advertising by SPENCER MARKETING SERVICES, INC. , 370 Lexington Ave., New York City

�The Temple Illustrated

Page 2

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�Page 3

The Temple Illustrated

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
PRESIDENT

DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS

DR. PAUL R. ANDERSON

ERNEST C. CASALE

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
PRESIDENT

DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS

DR. ROBERT L. KETTER

DR. HARRY G. FRITZ

�The Temple Illustrated

To scale drawing of new Amherst campus of U-B now under construction three miles north of the present campus. Total cost-$650 million.

THE STATE UNIVERSITY
OF NEW YORK
AT BUFFALO
History

The State University of New York at Buffalo is
today the largest, most comprehensive undergraduate and graduate center of the I ew York Sta~e
University System, enrolling 23,764 students m
the fall of 1969 ( 14,600 full-time). Established in
1846 the University was a pioneer in adapting educatio~al service to the specific needs of a developing
urban complex.
Today, the University is headed by ~obert L.
Ketter, a civil engineer, who was at one time dean
of the U-B Graduate School and also served as
vice president for facilities planning. Ketter is the
eleventh executive officer of the University, whose
first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the United States.
Samuel Paul Capen, a former director of the
American Council on Education, was the first fulltime chancellor and served in that capacity from
1922-1950. Dr. Clifford Furnas, nationally-known
scientist and educator, became chancellor in 1954.
In 1962, when the University merged with the
State University, Dr. Furnas became the first president of State University at Buffalo, a post he held

Page 4

Hayes Hall Tower-traditional land
mark of the U /B campus at Hayes
Hall, main administration building.
One of the original campus buildings
on Main Street.

until retirement in August, 1966. The Furnas administration laid the groundwork for the development of the University as a major national center of higher learning. Dr. Furnas led the University through an extensive program of building to
meet the enrollment demands.
A well-known scholar of urban affairs, Martin
Meyerson, who will soon beccme president of the
University of Pennsylvania, was president from
1966-70. In addition to the fashioning of the new
Amherst campus, the Meyerson years saw the University gain national attention for its rapidly-developing, innovative academic programs. The overall feeling left by the Meyerson years is one of intellectual breadth and a freedom from disciplinary
rigidity and over-specialization. "The bachelor's
degree," Meyerson said, "should represent a qualitative standard rather than a measure of time
spent."
Founded as a medical school, the Univesrity toward the close of the 19th century, expanded to
embrace three other professional schools, pharmacy,
dentistry and law. A college of arts and sciences
was added in 1913. Other divisions of study were
established as follows: Summer sessions, 1915; evening session, now known as Millard Fillmore College, 1923; business administration, (now management) 1927; education, 1931; social welfa~e, 1936;
Graduate School, 1939; nursing, 1940; engmeering,
1946; University College, 1958; hea~th related professions, 1965; information and library studies
1966; architecture and environmental design, 1968:

�Page 5

The Temple Illustrated

Acheson Hall-houses chemistry and selected biology laboratories.

Present campus with downtown Buffalo north. Running left
to right is Bailey Avenue cutting across photo is Main Street
to the metro area.

Enrollment

calaureate studies.
The geographic distribution of the University's
student body in the fall of 1S69 was: Buffalo Metropolitan Area, 51.6 per cent; New York City Metropolitan Area, 26.7 per cent; rest of New York
State, 18.2 per cent; out-of-state and foreign countries, 3.5 per cent.

University enrollment figures for the last decade
indicate that full-time day undergraduate enrollment jumped from 4,289 in 1960 to 10,640 in 1969.
Full-time graduate enrollment (day and evening)
increased even more dramatically from 286 in 1960
to 2,847 in 1969.
Enrollment in the professional schools of dentistry, law and medicine rose from 730 in 1960 to
1,190 in 1969, with the largest increase being noted
by the School of Law which grew from 176 to 485.
The comparative figures for Medicine are 308 and
418 and for Dentistry, 247 to 287.
Attesting to an increasing quality of students
enrolling, in 1963, 90 per cent of entering freshmen
scored 130 or better on the Regents Scholarship Examination; in 1969, 90 per cent of the freshmen
scored 184 or better.
In terms of high school rank, 27.6 per cent of
1960's freshmen were in the top one-fifth of their
graduating class; in 1969, 85 per cent of freshmen
were in that top fifth.
The University demonstrates also an increasing
commitment to developing academic skills among
the underprivileged. A variety of special programs
have been instituted to extend social, economic
and educational opportunities to students recruited on the basis of potential, rather than on
their ability to pay for higher education or the level
of academic skill they demonstrated in high school.
Three such programs are EPIS (Experimental Program in Independent Study), SEEK (Search for
Education, Elevation and Knowledge) and the Student Tutorial Program, whose unconventional admissions criteria and curricular innovations not only
open the University's doors to the educationally deprived but also provide academic and financial assistance for the successful completion of their bac-

Facilities and New Campus

Resources and facilities have been improved and
enlarged in the wake of enrollment expansion. The
number of volumes in the University libraries has
tripled since 1962 and is now above the 1,500,000
mark.
To provide for continued extension of operations
pending completion of a new campus, the University is occupying a series of off-campus locations, including an "interim" facility of several buildings
on Ridge Lea Road in the nearby Town of Amherst.
The new campus will be located on a 1,200-acre
tract of land in Amherst. Construction has begun
since Governor Rockefeller lifted the moratorium
on construction and agreement was reached between contractors, unions and minority organizations.
At a total cost of $650 million by 1975 the new
campus will include all facilities existing on the
present campus plus theaters, galleries and special
complexes for the colleges. Since the colleges will
provide not only residence but social and educational environments, they will have reading rooms,
dormitory space, dining rooms, classrooms and special studios and offices. A complete health sciences
facility will also be located on the new campus.
Preparation of the site for construction began
in spring and the first contracts were awarded
in early summer of 1970. The first buildings to be
constructed will be the first six colleges which will
be built in four phases.

�THE 1970 TEMPLE UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL TEAM

Kneeling: team captain Joe Mesko.

TEMPLE
SQUAD

First row, left to right: Frank DiMaggio, Nick Mike-Mayer, Bill Singletary, Sam Jones, Jake Hagopian, Mike Zanghi, Dan
Lorenzini, Joe Gifford, Charles Grim, Neil Gale and Don Carden.
Second row: Joe lnjaychock, Doug Shobert, Sal Licata, Steve Giordanengo, Bill Anzalone, John Freihofer, George King, Bob
Sanders, Ron Kachuriak, Bob Melling, and Mike Semler.
Third row: Mike Tomasetti, Don Roberts, Tom Klemick, Rich Lee, Wayne Jordan, Mark Andrejco, Lou Russo, Harry McElhone,
Terry Scalise, Joe McColgan and Ron Nemshick.

-t
:::r
()

~

3

'C
(i'

[

Fourth row: Kessler Giles, Paul Loughran, Kevin Mulvihill, John Hovington, Joe Tokar, Bob Hallman, Frank Fucetola, Bob

0

Kuhlow, John Small, Doug Podia and Ray Cassol.

a.

Fifth row: Harold Sutton, Clint Graves, Nate Hollander, Jim Mullen, Joe Sieminski, Randy Kerstetter, Tom Milligan, Garry
Schultz, Ed Biernacki, Vic Amoruso, and Joe Burton .
Sixth row: Bob Thornton, Pat Barrett, Gene Brett, Tom Kilburn, Paul Hughes, Frank McFillin, Ron Paterra, Frank Letino, Joe

Grenfell, Dave Korczykowski and Joe Famille.

~

0"

co
()

0.

�Page 7

The Temple Illustrated

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�The Temple Illustrated

Page 8

COLLEGE OF
ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY
NEWEST PART OF
TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
When cla ses resumed for this fall semester on
September 9, Temple University opened a new
school, the 17th in its academic family, the College
of Engineering Technology.
Hesd of the new college, who has spent the past
year developing a curriculum, recruiting faculty and
reviewing hundreds of student applications, is its
dean, Dr. John L. Rumpf.
Dr. Rumpf was formerly head of the department
of civil engineering and mechanics at Drexel University. He holds degrees from Drexel, the University of Pennsylvania and Lehigh, has done extensive
research in structural steel, and was a professional
engineer and consultant.
The new four-year college is initially offering
baccalaureate degree programs in three curriculum
areas: Mechanical Engineering Technology, Electronics Engineering Technology and Architectural
Design and Construction Technology.
These programs, Dr. Rumpf explains, "will educate students for careers in the team practice of
architecture and engineering. It is expected that
graduates will be sought for positions in engineering
sales, production and operation engineering, applied
architectural and engineering design where the technologist will be working in close support of professional architects and engineers."
Dr. Rumpf describes the new curriculum as having a flexibility that permits a student to select a
program of study that is related to his own career
objectives. It also allows for transfer into the program from junior colleges and other universities.
Along with their technology courses, students
are taking a heavy schedule of required and elective
subjects in other schools of the University-mathematics, basic sciences, liberal arts, business and
management courses.
"In order to function effectively, the technologist
must have a broad, liberal education to understand
and appreciate the viewpoints and methodologies
of persons educated in other disciplines," Dr.
Rumpf says.
He explains that in the total spectrum of skills,
the technologist lies above the craftsman and technician, and just beneath the professional architect
or engineer with whom he works in close support.

Four-year baccalaureate programs in engineering
technology are relatively new in this country and
have developed only in recent years because of the
changing emphasis of the curricula in the established engineering schools.
Engineering undergradate programs have become
more scientific in content, according to Dean
Rumpf, educating students for careers in research
and development following graduate study. In contrast, the new College of Engineering Technology
program will emphasize the practice of engineering
according to the latest technology.
While only the three programs in mechanical,
electronics and architectural/ construction technology are being offered this year, Dean Rumpf
hopes to add two new ones, Urban Engineering
Technology and Biomedical Engineering Technology in September 1971.
"These two areas will afford Temple students an
opportunity to develop skills to help them do something about problems facing our society and about
which young people are so vitally concerned,'' he
said.
"Furthermore, these particular programs will
draw on the total academic resources of the University in providing a technological education along
with a thorough background in the humanitarian
fields that so greatly influence decision-making
today,'' he added.
Although there are no plans for a graduate program in the near future, Dean Rumpf is considering
an extensive effort in continuing education for those
already employed in the professional architectural
and engineering fields.
The new college is located in Stauffer Hall, on
the southeast corner of Broad street and Columbia
avenue, also the home of the University's Technical
Institute, which will continue to offer its three-year
associate degree program.

�Page 9

The Temple Illustrated

TWO MORE BUILDINGS
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
There are two new buildings under construction
on Temple University's main campus at Broad st.
and Montgomery ave. One is an $8 million center
for the School of Law and the other is a $7.1 million
structure for the departments of psychology and
speech.
-The Law School facility is on the southeast
corner of Broad st. and Montgomery ave., where
the Guest Parking lot used to be--or if you go back
further than that in your days at Temple, where
the gas station and Zavelle's once were.
It will be a multi-story building, built of concrete
and enclosed in part with precast concrete panels
and metal and glass curtain walls. The new facility
will provide large lecture and seminar halls and will
include a self-supporting, 12-story, multi-tiered
library bookstack which will be accessible from all
levels. The building will be fully air conditioned.
The Law School building was designed by Eshbach-Pullinger-Stevens and Bruder of Philadelphia,
and is expected to be completed by mid 1972. General contractor is McCloskey &amp; Co. It is being funded by the General State Authority.

Artist's rendering of Temple University's new $8 million Law
Center being constructed now on the southeast corner of
Broad st. and Montgomery Ave. Expected completion date
is mid 1972.

The psychology and speech building will be
named Weiss Hall in recognition of a gift from Mr.
and Mrs. Abram H. Weiss to help furnish and equip
the building. The site of Weiss Hall is on the north
side of Columbia ave., between 12th and 13th
streets, on the other half of the block occupied by
the new Student Activities Center.
Weiss Hall will be a 10-story, fully air conditioned building with seminar rooms, instructional
laboratories, teaching and special purpose rooms, a
library, audio-visual equipment, and faculty and
staff office space. The building, designed by NolenSwinburne and Associates of Philadelphia, is expected to be completed early in 1972. General contractor is Wark &amp; Co. It is being funded by the
General State Authority.
Construction is also going on at Temple's Health
Sciences Center and at the Tyler School of Art. A
new School of Pharmacy and College of Allied
Health Professions building is being built at Broad
st. and Rising Sun ave., and two buildings consisting of classrooms and studios are under construction at the Tyler School of Art in Elkins Park.

Abram H. and Helen L. Weiss Hall
Psychology and Speech Building
Temple University

�Page 10

The Temple Illustrated

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�The Temple Illustrated

Page 14

Jay Kirsh

Temple University Stadium

Temple University is proud of its athletes and
takes just as much pride in the excellent facilities it
has for intercollegiate athletics. Temple Stadium
and the adjoining Erny Field complex is one facet
of Temple's athletic physical plant.
Temple University Stadium, completed in 1928,
was built through the generosity of the late Charles
G. Erny, former chairman of the Board of Trustees.
It was built for a cost of $400,000 but could probably
not be duplicated today for less than $1,500,000.
The Stadium remains essentially unchanged in
its brick and concrete construction. The seats, originally all wooden, are gradually being converted to
aluminum. Present seating capacity is 20,54 7 although additional seats can easily be added in the
west end of the stadium which would bring the
seating to near the 30,000 mark. Crowds of over
30,000 were not uncommon during football's golden
era in the 1930's.
The lighting system was first installed in 1930.
The towers holding the lights are sunk through the
last row of the stadium, thus affording an unobstructed view. The lighting system was modernized
in 1961 and new lamps were installed in 1966 with
enough candle power for color television broadcasting.
The turf in the stadium and all of the Temple
University landscaping comes under the green

thumb of Jay Kirsh. Jay has been with Temple
since 1966 after spending considerable time as a
landscape architect in both New York and Philadelphia.
Jay is a 1942 graduate of Syracuse University
and from 1945 to 1958 he worked in New York.
He was primarily responsible for the landscaping
at the United Nations Building. Moving to Philadelphia in 1958 he managed the DeKalb Nurseries
whose projects included work on the Marriot
Motor Hotel, Cherry Hill Mall, Parktowne Apartments, Cedarbrook Apartments and Mall and Society Hill Towers.
Jay is especially proud of the turf in Temple
Stadium. Originally 100% Merion Bluegrass, other
varieties were added in 1967 resulting in a field
that has stayed in excellent condition despite
heavy use that included professional football and
soccer.
"We aerify the turf twice a year and fertilize it
at least six times yearly," Kirsh remarked. After
each football game damaged turf is replaced in
eight inch sections with new turf from another area
of the stadium. Watering is done only in times of
extreme drought and then only once a week until
the water penetrates six inches deep.
The Owl located at midfield and the patterned
end zones are painted on the field. Kirsh, working
in conjunction with head coach Wayne Hardin,
came up with this year's end zones patterned after
Dr. Russell H. Conwell's famous "Acres of Diamonds" speech. Conwell, the founder of Temple,
expounded the theory that there are plenty of
"diamonds in the rough" to be found right in the
Philadelphia area and Hardin has adopted that
theory as a basic tenet of Temple football.
The Owls located atop Temple Stadium's East
Gate area were erected with the original complex
in 1928. The Owl as a mascot was adopted sometime prior to that and has stayed with Temple
team to this day. The term "Templars," an earlier nickname, has all but faded into oblivion in
recent years.
Temple uses the adjoining Erny Field complex
for intercollegiate soccer, baseball and tennis while
track is run here in the stadium. In recent years
the university has, on many occasions, opened the
stadium area to the needs of the community.

�Temple University 1970 Alphabetical Football Roster
Head Coach : WAYNE HARDIN
CL .

POS.

AGE

NO.

PLAYER

35

Amoru so, Victor ..........•.......... So .

HB

19

6 .2

HT.

196

Garfield, Garfield , N. J .

38

Anzalone , Will iam ........•..•.•..... So .

DB

19

6 .0

183

Wyoming Area , West Pittston, Po .

88

*Barrett, Pot ......................... Jr.

DE

20

6 .2

228

Rivers ide, Moos ic, Po.

78

Biernacki , Edward ....•..•........... So.

OT

20

6 .3

249

South River, South River, N. J .

76

Burton , Joe .•.................... · · . So.

OT

19

6 .4

218

Dunmore, Dunmore , Po .

52

*Carden , Don ........................ Jr.

DT

20

6 .1

228

Hampton, Hampton , Va.

42

Cassol , Raymond ...•..........•..... So .

SE

19

6 .2

190

Elizabeth-Forward , El izabeth , Po.

S

*DiMaggio , Frank .............•...... Jr.

QB

20

6 .1

198

Now Milford , Now Milford , N. J .

WT.

HIGH SCHOOL AND HOMETOWN

49

Dulin , J im ................•.•....... Jr.

DB

19

6 .0

176

Archb ishop Wood , Hatboro, Pa .

72

*Familia, Joe .....•..........•....... Sr.

OT

21

6 .3

230

Triton , Runnemede , N. J .

66

Fucetol'!, Frank ....•..•.......•..... So.

LB

19

6 .0

196

Hammonton, Hammonton, N. J .

55

Gal e,

......................... Jr.

LB

20

S.10

197

Woodbury,

*Gifford, Joe .........•..•............ Jr.

FB

20

5 .10

190

West Catholic, Ph ilo ., Po .

36

Ne il

Wood ~ ury ,

N. J .

81

Giles, Kessler ................•...... So .

SE

19

6 .3

193

Aberdeen , Aberdeen, Md .

56

*Giordanengo, Steve ..•..•............ Jr.

c

20

6 .0

212

Charleroi Area, Charleroi, Po .

44

Graves, Clinton ......•.•............ So.

FL

19

6 .0

180

First Colon ial , Virg inia Beach , Va .

60

Grim, Charles ....•..•.......•..... .. Jr.

OG

20

5 .10

210

York Suburban, York, Pa .

57

Hagopian, Jacob ..........•......... So .

c

19

6 .1

222

Abington, Roslyn , Po .

68

Hallman, Robert .......•..••........ So .

LB

18

6 .0

226

North Penn, lansdale, Po.

74

Hollander, Nate .......... . .......... Jr .

DE

20

6 .2

227

Fair Lawn, Fair Lawn , N. J .

1S

Hughes, Paul ........•.•............ So.

QB

19

6 .5

217

Middletown, Middletown , N. Y.

43

lnjaychock, Joe ................•.... So.

DB

19

6 .2

176

Jonathon Law, Milford , Conn .

65

Jones, Sam .........•.....•......... So .

OG

20

S.10

224

Salem , Woodstown, N. J .

82

Jordan , Wayne ..•.... . .....•.. . .... So.

LB

19

6 .1

196

Newburyport, Newburyport, Mass.

84

Kilburn, Tom ....•..• . •......•.•.... So.

LB

19

6 .2

190

El izabeth- Forward, Elizabeth , Pa.

69

*King , George •.....•.... . .•..•...... Sr.

OG

21

5 .11

209

Atlantic City, Margate, N. J.

40

*Kiemick, Tom •.............•..•..... Jr.

SE

19

6 .0

179

St. Joseph ' s, Philo., Po .

73

Korc:z:ykowski, David . ................ So .

DT

19

6 .2

246

Holy Name, Wyom issing, Po .

20

Kuhlow , Bob ........................ So.

DB

19

6.1

174

Valley Central, Walden, N. Y.

32

*lee, Rich ...... . ..•....• . ........... Jr.

DB

20

5 .11

173

West Catholic, Ph ilo ., Po .

77

*letino, Frank .......•............... Sr.

OT

21

6 .2

240

Hammonton, Hammonton, N. J .

27

Lorenzini, Dan ............•.•....... So .

HB

19

5 . 10

189

Wyom ing Area, Exeter, Po .

30

Loughran, Paul .......•.....•........ So .

FB

20

6 .0

189

Roxborough, Philo. , Po .

33

*McColgan, Joe ............•..•...... Jr.

LB

21

6 .1

201

Camden Catholic, Camden, N. J.

SO

Mcfillin, Frank .....•.......•....•... So .

DT

19

6 .2

222

St. Joseph ' s Philo ., Po.

31

*Mesko, Joe •• . .................. . ... Sr.

FB

21

5 .11

197

Scranton Central , Dunmore, Pa.

K

20

5.8

1S3

Passaic, Glen Rock, N. J .

80

*Mullen , Jim ...............•......... Sr.

DE

22

6.1

240

George C. Marshall , Vienna, Va .

67

Mulvihill , Kevin ......•.............. Jr.

DE

20

6 .0

221

South Hills Cath ., Pittsburgh , Po .

23

*Nemshick, Ron ..........• . ...•.. . ... Jr.

FB

20

6 .0

190

Madison Township, Old Bridge, N. J.

87

*Podia, Doug ........................ Sr.

TE

22

6 .2

211

Ridgefield, Ridgefield, N. J .

48

Roberts, Don ........................ So .

HB

19

6 .0

175

Pennsauken, Pennsauken, N. J.

10

*Scalise, Terry ........................ Sr.

QB

21

5 . 11

200

Wintersville, Middleton, Wise.

Mike·Mayer, Nicholas .....•..•.•..... So.

75

*Schultz, Garry ....•......... . ...•.... Jr.

OT

21

6 .1

224

Holy Spirit, Pleasantville, N.J .

58

Semler, Mike .....•................. Jr.

OG

20

5 .10

20S

St. Bened ict's Prep, Newa rk, N. J.

11

Shobert, Doug ......•..•..•..•..•... So.

QB

20

6 .0

192

Central Bucks, Chalfont, Po .

71

Sieminski, Joe .............. • ....... So .

OT

19

6 .4

237

Wyom ing Valley W., Swoyersville, Po .

64

Singletary, Will iam ....•. . ........... So.

OG

19

6 .3

220

Woodrow Wilson , Camden, N. J.

21

*Small, John ..•. · • · · · · · · · · ........... Sr.

HB

21

6 .2

204

West Cathol ic, Ph ilo ., Pa.
Lakewood , lakewood , N. J .

86

*Sutton, Harold ...•..... · .•..•........ Jr.

DE

21

6 .4

215

85

Thornton , Bob ... · · • · · • · · · · · · · ....... Jr.

SE

20

6.3

194

E. Paterson Mem ., E. Paterson , N. J.

63

Tomasetti, Mike .... · · · · · · · · ......... Jr.

LB

20

6 .0

198

Blakely, Olyphant, Po.

41 *Zanghi , Mike ... · · · · • · · · · · · · · · ...... Sr.
*Denotes Lettermen

FL

21

5 .11

173

Technical High , Scranton , Po .

�Wouldn't an ice cold Coke
taste good right now?

�90
79
78
96
92
32
53
36
42
47
40

85
71
61
58
73
74
89
15
49
20
35

r

J

11

12
14
15
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
26
29
30
32
33
35
36
37
39

I 41

40

l

42
43
46
47
49

53
54

OFFENSE

DEFENSE
PRENTIS HENLEY o o o oLE
BARRY ATKINSON
o o oLT
BILL ELLENBOGEN
o oRT
oRE
TOM VIGNEAU o o o
o oOLB
TED BUTLER
o o o oiLB
LARRY MADDEN
DAVE MAJCHER o o o .I LB
.OLB
BRUCE FRASER
o .LHB
LEN NIXON
MARK MAC VITTlE o
RHB
TOM ELLIOTT
o
oS
0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

•

0

0

•••••

0

••

0

0.

0

0

0

85
75
64
56
69
72
87
35
11
31
44

•••

•

0

0

••••

BOB THORNTON o o o
SE
GARRY SCHULTZ o o
LT
BILL SINGLETARY o o
LG
STEVE GIORDANENGO
C
GEORGE KING ••.••..• RG
JOE FAMILLE ••..••.••. RT
DOUG PAOLA ••.••.••• TE
VIC AMORUSO •••....• HB
DOUG SHOBERT .••
QB
JOE MESKO .•..•..•••. FB
CLINTON GRAVES .•..•• FL
0

0

0

BUFFALO

TEMPLE

OFFENSE

DEFENSE
86
71
52
88
33
63
66
84
49
43
32

JOE HUDSON ..
TE
oo
oLT
BILL WINNETT
o .LG
JERRY ELWELL . o
CHUCK DONNOR ..
o. C
TOM CENTOFANTI . o .RG
o ..... RT
JOHN RIO
o .SE
MIKE SHARROW
KIRK BARTON . .. . o ... QB
JOHN FALLER o o .. o LHB
o o .. oRHB
GENE NANCE
o
FB
JOE ZELMANSKI
0

0

••

0

0

••

•••

0

0

••

••

0

0

0

•

•

0

•

0

•••

0

•

0

0.

0

•

0

0.

0

0

•

0

0

•

••

BUFFALO SQUAD
55 Siedlecki, OLB
*Perry, QB
57 Johnson, C
Nichols, HB
58 *Donnor, C
Baker, FB
60 Chamberlain, G
*Barton, QB
61 *Elwell, G
Boughton, DB
62 Bauch, G
Philp, QB
66 • Jones, DT
Osika, P-S
67 Forness, DT
Nance, HB
68 Albaneze, G
*Woodward, HB
69 Ziegler, G
layo, HB
71 Winnett, T
Harrison, DB
73 *Centofanti, G
Jackson, HB
74 *Rio, T
Stiscak, HB
76 Adessa, T
Homo, ILB
78 Ellenbogen, DT
*Madden, ILB
79 • Atkinson, DT
Smith, ILB
* Zelmanski, FB
80 • Moresco, SE
81 Domino, SE
*Fraser, OLB
85 Hudson, TE
*McCullough, ILB
86 Bouck, TE
Kozel, HB
87 *Herlan, SE
*Elliott, S
88 Eagen, T
*Constantino, K
89 *Sharrow SE
*Nixon, DB
90 *Henley, DE
Griffiths, G
92 Butler, OLB
Hannah, DB
95 James, DE
*MacVittie, DB
96 *Vigneau, DE
• Faller, HB
97 Poytok, DE
Majcher, ILB
99 Pescrillo, DT
Conaway, OLB
*Denotes lettermen

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

•••

HAROLD SUTTON ••.••.• E
JOE SIEMINSKI •.••...••• T
DON CARDEN .•..•••.•• T
PAT BARRETT •••..•••••• E
JOE McCOLGAN •.•.•. OLB
MIKE TOMASETTI .•..•• ILB
FRANK FUCETOLA ••.•• ILB
TOM KILBURN •• •• •.•• OLB
JIM DULIN ••..•.•..•• LHB
JOE INJAYCHOCK ••••••• S
RICH LEE ••.•• • •..••• RHB
TEMPLE SQUAD

1
5
10
11
15
20
21
23
27
30
31
32
33
35
36
38
40

41
42
43
44
48
49

50
52
55
56

Mike-Mayer, K
*DiMaggio, QB
• Scalise, QB
Shobert, QB
Hughes, QB
Kuhlow, DB
*Small, HB
* Nemshick, FB
Lorenzini, HB
Loughran, FB
*Mesko, FB
*lee, DB
*McColgan, LB
Amoruso, HB
*Gifford, FB
Anzalone, DB
* Klemick, SE
*Zanghi, Fl
Casso!, DB
lnjaychock, DB
Graves, Fl
Roberts, HB
Dulin, DB
McFillin, DT
*Carden, DT
Gale, LB
*Giordanengo, C
*Denotes

57 Hagopian, C
58 Semler, OG
60 Grim, OG
63 Tomasetti, LB
64

Singletary, OG

65 Jones, OG
66 Fucetola, LB
67 Mulvihill, DE
68 Hallman, LB
69 *King, OG
71 Sieminski, OT
72 *Famille, OT
Korczykowski, DT
74 Hollander, DE
75 *Schultz, OT
76 Burton, OT
77 *letino, DT
78 Biernacki, OT
80 *Mullen, DE
81 Giles, SE
82 Jordan, LB
84 Kilburn, LB
85 Thornton, SE
86 *Sutton, DE
87 *Padla, TE
88 • Barrett, DE

73

lettermen

TODAYOS OFFICIALS

Referee ............ Samuel J. W interberg, Villanova
Umpire . . . . . • . . • . . . . . . . Louis F. McKenna, Manhattan

Linesman .....• . .•.•... ..•. Philip Genthner, Delaware

Field Judge ... .. ... .... Anthony S. Minisi, Pennsylvania
Bock Judge .............. James V. Egan, Georgetown
Clock Operator ..................... Edward J. Cave

" COCA-COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS OF THE COCA- COLA COMPANY.

It's the real thing. CQ)Se.

�The Temple Illustrated

Page 18

University of BuRalo 1970 Alphabetical Roster
Head Coach BOB DEMING
NO .

76

AGE

HT .

WT .

HIGH SCHOOL AND HOME TOWN

T

18

6-2

232

St . Mary's Cortland, N . Y.

Stuyvesant, Elmhurst, N. Y.

CL.

Adesso ,

Phil

POS.

..... . .• . .• .. • . .•. • .. . . So.

PLAYER

68

Albaneze, Denny . .. .... .. . ••... . .... Sr.

G

21

6-2

207

79

*Atkinson, Barry .. .. ............... . . Sr.

DT

21

6-2

266

East Deer- Frazer, Tarentum, Po.

14

Baker, Bill . .. .....•..• .. •..... .. .. . So.

FB

20

5-10

200

Gri ffiths lnst. , Colde n, N. Y.

15
62

*Borton,

Kirk

. . ....•. . •........•... . . Jr.

Bauch, John .. . • . .•.•• . .•.••.. ... ... Jr.
Mike

QB

20

6· 2

195

Union-End icott, End icott, N. Y.

G

20

6·0

236

Tallmadge, Tallmadge, Ohio

86

Bouck,

. .. ...• ..... • . ..... . ... So.

TE

20

6-0

220

lllion, lllion, N . Y.

17

Boughton, Buddy . . .•.............. . . So.

DB

19

5-10

177

Kenmore West, Kenmore , N. Y.
Sharpsville, Sharpsville, Po.

92

Butler, Ted ....... . •..... • .. • .... . . . So.

OLB

18

~ - 11

195

73

*Centofanti , Tom . ... . •..•..•.. • ...... Sr.

G

21

6-0

210

Bishop Duffy, Niagara Falls, N. Y.

60

Chamberlain, Tom . . . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . So.

G

19

5· 10

200

Jamesville,-Dewitt, Dewitt, N . Y.

54

Conaway, Don .... .... .... . .. . ...... Jr.

OLB

22

6 -1

194

Kenmore East, Tonawanda,

44

Constable, Ken

ILB

19

5· 11

205

Mayfield , Cleveland, Ohio

K

20

5-11

185

Jamestown, Jamestown, N . Y.

SE

19

5·11

175

Depew, Depew, N. Y.

c

21

6-1

215

East Aurora, East Aurora, N. Y.

T

19

6-2

218

Elk County, Ridgway, Po.

..... . ... . ..•. . .. . . .. So.

41

* Constantino , Mike ... . .. . . ... , . . , .... Sr.

81

Domino, Tom .. . ............ . .•..... So .

58

*Donnor, Chuck (CCI . . ..•. . ......•.. ·. Sr.

88
78

40

Eagen,

John

..............•..•..... So.

Ellenbogen, Bill ....• • . .•..•......... Jr.

*Elliott, Tom

......... .• ..• . .•..•.. . . Sr.

. NY.

DT

19

6-3

224

New Rochelle , New Rochelle , N. Y.

s

21

5-11

181

Canandaigua, Canandaig ua , N. Y.

61

*Elwell , Jerry . . ...........•. . •..•.. . . Sr.

G

22

6-0

200

Card inal Mooney, Roche ster, N. Y.

49

*Faller, John .......•. .•. ...... . ... .. Sr.

HB

21

5-10

215

Greece-Arcadia, Rochester, N. Y.

DT

21

6 -0

256

Riverside , Buffalo, N . Y.

OLB

19

6-1

1 as

Wheatfie ld, Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Johnson City, Johnson City, N. Y.

67
36

Forness, Chorley

. .. •..•..• . . . ... . ... Sr.

* Fraser, Bruce .. ... . .. ... . .......•... . Jr.

63

Griffiths, Bob

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... Jr.

G

20

5-11

210

46

Hannah, Bill

......••.•...... • .. .. . . So.

DB

20

5-10

164

Emerson Vocation, Buffalo, N. Y.

23

Harrison, Morvin ..... . . . ..•..•..... . So.

DB

19

5-8

161

Bennett, Buffalo, N. Y.

90

*Henley, Prentis ICC) ....... . ...•..... Sr.

DE

23

6·0

236

South Park, Buffalo, N . Y.

87

*Herlon,

SE

22

6·1

198

Grand Island, Grand Island, N . Y.

30

Homo,

ILB

19

5-11

217

New York Mills, New York Mills, N. Y.

Scott

........ . •..•..... Sr.

Dave ...• . . . . . . . .• .. • . •.. . .. So.

85

Hud son, Joe . . .. ..• . .•..• . .• .. ..... . Sr.

TE

22

6-1

222

Cheshire Academy, New City, N. Y.

26

Jackson, Don . . .. • . •...• . ••......... So.

HB

20

5-10

190

Monnheim , Ft. Hood , Texas

95

James, Mike .... . .......•....... . . . . Sr.

DE

21

6·7

238

Penn Hills, Pittsburgh, Po.

57

John son, Joe ... ... ....•..•......... So.

c

19

5-11

195

East Je fferson, Birmingham , Mich.

48

Jones,

20

5-10

167

Emerson Vocation, Buffalo, N. Y.

Clifton

....•.••. .• ..•..•..... Jr.

.. .... ... . . • ... . ....... Sr.

DT

21

6·2

260

Buchetel, Akron, Ohio

39

Kozel , Doug .. . .. . •..•..•..•.. • ... .. Jr.

HB

20

5-11

189

Binghamton Catholic, Johnson City, N. Y.

22

Loyo, Bob . . .... . . .. . •..•..•..•.. . . . Jr.

HB

6· 0

182

Portage Area, Portage, Po .

5-10

181

Will iamsville, Will iamsville, N . Y.

66

*Jones, Rove II

47

*MacVittie ,

32

*Madde n ,

53

Mark

. . ...• .. • . ••..•..... Jr.

19

DB

20

.....• . ....•..•... . .. Jr.

ILB

20

6· 0

205

Catholic Central , Dearborn, M ich .

Ma jcher, Dave . . . . . ..... . ........... Jr.

ILB

19

6·0

210

Bishop McCort, Johnstown , Pa.

Lorry

37

* McCulloug h , Ste ve ...•. . •.. . ....•.... Sr.

ILB

22

5-11

212

Coshocton, Coshocton, Ohio

80

*Moresco, Joe

.. . .......•........... . Sr.

SE

21

6 -2

176

Ithaca, Ithaca, N. Y.

20

Nance, Gene .. .• .. •..•. . •.......... So.

HB

20

5-11

171

Ind iana , Indiana, N. Y.

42

*Nixon , Len .. . ... •. . . .....•. . ... . .. . Sr.

DB

21

5-11

187

St. Joseph , Willowick, Ohio

19
11

........... . .. . .. . .... .. So .

p.s

19

6 -0

180

New York M ills, Yorkville, N. Y.

.. . .... . .• .. .. ... ...... . . . Sr.

QB

21

6· 3

208

Bethlehem Central , Delmar, N. Y.

O sika, Tom

*Pe rry,

Ed

99

Pescrillo, Dave ...• .. •............... Jr.

DT

21

6-2

247

18

Philp, Doug ......•..•. . •..• .• ....... Jr.

QB

19

6 -1

205

97

Potyok, AI ...... . ..... . ............ So.

74

*Rio, John

89

*Sharrow,

55

.........•..•............. Sr.
Mike

.. .. .. . .. . ...•..•.... Sr.

Siedlecki, Stan .. . • . .•.. • .•• . •.... . .. Jr.

DE

19

6 -0

180

T

21

6-0

235

SE

21

6·0

175

OLB

19

6· 2

184

LaSalle, Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Humbersid e Coli. , Toronto Ont.
St. Clement, Centerline, M ich.
St. Mary's, Byrnedale, Po.
Moriah Central , Witherbee, N. Y.
Carthage, Carthage, N. Y.

33

Smith, Phi l .. .... .•..... . ............ Jr.

ILB

22

5·11

198

Ridgeway, Ridgeway , On t .

29

Stiscak, Bob .... • ..•... . .•..•..... .. Sr.

HB

21

5·10

189

Aliquippa, Aliquippa, Po.

34

Tobe r, Owen

91

Vandenbe rgh , Barry

96
71

*Vigneau, Tom
Winnett,

Bill

FB

19

5- 11

195

Be nnett, Buffalo, N. Y.

........... Jr.

DE

20

6· 6

230

Albany, Albany, N. Y.

..•.•. . •. . •..... Sr.

DE

21

6-1

212

St. Cleme nt, Ce nte rli ne , Mich .

20

6-2

226

Jackson, North Canton, Ohio

........... . •..•..•.... Jr.

21

* Woodward, Barney

35

* Zelmanski, Joe

69

.....•.... . ...... So .

. .. . ........•..... Sr.

HB

21

5· 9

205

Peru, Pe ru , N. Y.

.. .. .. ........... . ... Sr.

FB

21

6- 1

205

St. Clement, Center Line, M ich .

G

21

5-10

217

Cardinal O ' Hara, Tonawa nda , N. Y.

Zie gl e r, Joe .......•.. •. .• . •........ Jr.

* Denotes lettermen

�Page 19

The Temple Illustrated

MEET THE TEMPLE VARSITY COACHING STAFF
Named the 19th football coach in Tern·
pie's gridiron history on Monday, Jan . 12,
1970, Hardin has a record that few col·
lege coaches can match and is the per·
feet man to move Temple up on the football map. The former Navy coach compiled
the best won-loss record in Naval Academy
history while serving as head coach there
from 1959 through 1964. The Middies
compiled a 38-22-2 record under his direction , beat Army in five of six games
and appeared in two bowl games. Wayne
and his wife Pat have four children .

Head Coach
WAYNE HARDIN

Hoch, who joined the Temple staff this
year after eight seasons in high school
ranks, has always been a winner. His com·
bined assistant and head coaching duties
show a 60-16·2 record. Vince was at Mill·
ville, N. J. High until coming to Temple
and had a 31-12·2 record there. Hoch
and his wife Dolores have a three-year·
old daughter.

Defensive Line Coach
VINCE HOCH

Brunner joined the Temple staff in February, 1970 after serving three years as
backfield coach at Villanova University.
John was a very successful high school
coach, in six years compiling a 38-16 -1
record with his teams winning five championships. John and his wife Barbara have
seven children.

Trentini rejoined his former boss Wayne
Hardin when he became a member of the
Temple staff this year. Trentini served as
an assistant to Hardin with the Philadel phia Bulldogs when the team won the
Contintental League title in 1966. He has
also been a high school winner. Tony and
his wife Jean have three children.

Offensive Backfield Coach
JOHN BRUNNER

Offensive Line Coach
TONY TRENTINI
Drew joined the Temple staff in July,
1970, bringing with him a varied career as
an outstanding collegiate and professional
player and a fine record as an assistant
and head coach in high school ranks. In
a six year period, his high school team
had a 45-3 record. He and his wife Nancy
have four children .

Jr. Varsity and
Receivers Coach
JOHN DREW

Wilson was appointed to the Temple staff
last February after several seasons as an
outstanding high school coach. His overall
high school coaching record stands at
46 -33-1 including a 44 -15·1 mark in his
last six years. He had several champion·
ship teams. AI and his wife Judy have a
daughter and twin boys.

Defensive Backfield Coach
AL WILSON

))) ))) )))~'*H)) ))) ))) )))((( ((( ((( ((( ((( ((( ((( (((-(((-

T.. shiRTS, SpORT..y shiRTS,
jAckETS ... ThE bEST STylES
WEAR This lAbEl

WELCOME TO

THE SHACK
RESTAURANT &amp; TAVERN
Wonderful Food Served in
a Relaxing Atmosphere
Super Cocktails and Drinks
Banquet Facilities
7133 ROOSEVELT BLVD.

GET youR's AT ThE

7101 MARSHALL RD.

e

e PHILADELPHIA
UPPER DARBY

STUdENT STORE

ENTERTAINMENT NITELY

Student Activities Bldg.

Where Dining is an Event But Not an Extravagance
~

))) ))) )))'*H)) ))) ))) )))((( ((( ((( ((( ((( ((( ((( (((-(((-

�CHARLES GRIM

RON NEMSHICK

DAVE KORCZYKOWSKI

WAYNE JORDAN

Responsible, dependable service for
trips in this area or out of state.

CHARTERING
BUSES?
SEPrR

DA 9-4000
SOUTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA
TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY
and Trenton- Philadeiphia Coach Co.
operating deluxe buses for out-of-stale trips.

200 W. Wyoming Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 19140

NATE

HOLLANDER

BOB KUHLOW

RON KACHURIAK

ED BIERNACKI

�--

(
VIC AMORUSO

BILL ANZALONE

MIKE TOMASETTI

KESSLER GILES

JOE McCOLGAN

PAUL HUGHES

FRANK FUCETOLA

DOUG SHOBERT

A. H. KROEKEL &amp; BRO., INC.
PRINTERS AND ENGRAVERS

THE GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
solicits the support of students
alumni, parents and friends
for the Annual Fund for Temple University.

249 N. Fourth Street
Philadelphia, Pa. 19106
The Honorable Ethan Allen Doty

President

�TERRY SCALISE

MIKE ZANGHI

BOB HALLMAN

STEVE GIORDANENGO

KEVIN MULVIHILL

JIM MULLEN

JAKE HAGOPIAN

FRANK McFILLIN

Make TALLY-HO Inn and Hotel
Your

Meetin~

Place

Before and After the Bi~ Game!
Excellent food in a delightful setting
Luxurious overnight accommodations
Official pre-season training headquarters of the Temple Owls

Route 202 and 363 overlooking Valley Forge

•

Phone: Niagara 4-7000

�Page 23

The Temple Illustrated

Why buy? RENT!
... Coats

Host of the Town
You can rely on the Bellevue as the
perfect Host when you meet friends for
an enjoyable Luncheon or Dinner in the

... Linens
... Towels

STRATFORD GARDEN

... Dresses

Superb cuisine, gracious service
Enjoy Cocktails mixed to your taste
by skilled experts .

... Uniforms
. . . Walk-Off Mats
... Washroom Services

*-

KI.JNE

UNEN &amp; UNIFORM SERVICE
Our 50th Year

4100 FRANKFORD AVE., PHI LA.· CU 9-5300

HUNT ROOM
A Quaint English Tavern
Open for Luncheon, Dinner
After Theatre Drinks and Snacks

SUNDAY-Enjoy your Favorite Cocktail from 1 to 10 P.M.
THE BELLEVUE STRATFORD
Broad Street at Walnut Philadelphia
735-0700

KULZER ROOFING, INC.
Roofing and Sheet Metal

EASTERN ASPHALT
Contractors

IN THE BUSINESS SINCE 1898

COMPANY
SALUTES
THE 1970 TEMPLE OWLS

3334-40 North Tenth Street
Philadelphia, Pa. 19140
Baldwin 3-7200

�The Temple Illustrated

Temple Stadium Game
and Team Records
GREATEST MARGIN OF VICTORY
Temple 110, Blue Ridge 0, 1927.
HIGHEST POINT TOTAL, ONE TEAM
Temple 110 points, vs . Blue Ridge, 1927.
HIGHEST SCORING GAME
(Both teams scaring) Temple 82, Bucknell 28, 1966.
GREATEST MARGIN OF VICTORY, VISITING TEAM
Texas 54, Temple 0, 1949.
MOST POINTS, VISITING TEAM
Texas, 54, 1949.
LOWEST SCORING GAME
(Bath teams scaring) Georgetown 3, Temple 2, 1939.
MOST TOUCHDOWNS, GAME
Temple, 17, vs. Blue Ridge, 1927
MOST TOUCHDOWNS, GAME, VISITING TEAM
Texas, 8, 1949.
MOST EXTRA POINTS, GAME
Temple, 10, vs. Bucknell, 1966.
MOST EXTRA POINTS, GAME, VISITING TEAM
Drake, 7, vs. Temple, 1930.
MOST POINTS, ONE PERIOD
Temple , 51, (2nd) vs. Blue Ridge, 1927.

Temple Stadium Individual Records
LONGEST RUN
Jimmy Powers , 105 yards (kickoff) vs. Michigan Stole, 1940.
LONGEST RUN FROM SCRIMMAGE
Jim Monahan , Rutgers, 89 yards vs. Temple, 1951
LONGEST FIELD GOAL
Ed Pyne, Temple, 48 yards (placement) vs. Bowling Green ,
1966.
LONGEST SCORING FORWARD PASS (VISITORS)
Tam Gastoll to Ken Hagerslrom, both of Baston U. 96 yards,
vs . Temple, 1954.
LONGEST SCORING FORWARD PASS (TEMPLE!
John Woller to Jim Callahan, 86 yards, vs. Bucknell, 1966.
LONGEST SCORING RETURN OF PUNT
John Fonash, Temple, 96 yards vs . Rhode Island, 1965.
HIGH SCORER, GAME
Jim Callahan, Temple, 30 points (5 Td's) vs. Bucknell, 1966.
MOST TOUCHDOWNS, GAME
Jim Callahan , Temple, 5, vs. Bucknell, 1966.
LONGEST SCORING RUN, RETURN OF INTERCEPTED PASS
Joe Buffalo, Drexel , 95 yards, vs. Temple, 1960.
MOST TOUCHDOWN PASSES, ONE GAME
John Waller, Temple, 6, vs . Bucknell, 1966.
LONGEST PUNT
Jim Hobin, Holy Cross, 97 yards (including roll) vs . Temple,
1934.
MOST EXTRA POINTS, MADE, ONE GAME
Ed Pyne, Temple, 10 vs. Bucknell, 1966.

MOST POINTS, ONE HALF
Temple 78 (lsi) vs. Blue Ridge, 1927.
MOST POINTS, ONE PERIOD, VISITING TEAM
Delaware, 26 (3rd) vs. Temple, 1968.
MOST POINTS, ONE HALF, VISITING TEAM
Texas, 34 (lsi) vs. Temple, 1949.

FOR THAT TOUCH OF ElEGANCE, INSIST ON

FOLD FINISHING

Open D aily
11 :30 A.M . to 1 :30 A.M .
Charming D ecor
Drinks Mixed Perfectly
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After Theat re Snacks

MANHEIM
DRAPERY CLEANERS

Division of Manhei m laundry Co. Est. 1900

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DRAPERY SERVICE CENTER

5344 GERMANTOWN AVE., PHilA., PA .19144
PHONE: GE 8-4116

Page 24

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SUNDAY
DINNER AND
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1 P .M. to 10 P . M.

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�Page 25

The Temple Illustrated

Win
with
Winchell!
Wise Owls know Winchell represents the epitome in fine printing and creative skill. Gold medals attest to that. And for Service-would you believe
a Winchell Man is on campus every day. Call Walt Richards at LO 8-1770
and he'll be there before you can emit a long "R-a-a-y W-I-N-C-H-E-L-L."

THE
13 1 5

W IN C H E LL
CH ER R Y

CO M P A N Y

S TR E ET

•

•

CREATIVE

P HIL AD E LP HI A ,

PRI N TERS

P ENN S YLVAN IA

19107

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Best Wishes for a Successful Season

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from

MERIN STUDIOS, INC.
298 1 Gran t Avenue
Gra nt Ave. &amp; As hton Roa d
Philadelph ia , Pa . 19 114

Servicing the TEMPLAR since 1948

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Black and White and Natural Color

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COFFEE SHOPS

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A complete photographic service both in

DEWEY'S

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Weddings, Bar Mitzvahs, Studio portraiture.

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AT ANY PRICE"

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�The Temple Illustrated

Page 26

ROSS ELECTRIC CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.
Electrical Construction
106 FAIRMOUNT AVENUE
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA

19123

1970 Fall Schedules

Temple Songs
ALMA MATER

FRESHMAN FOOTBALL

Onward with Temple, banners all unfurled,
Wide flung our standards, to the winds they're hurled.
Following our Founder to immortal fame,
Making true his vision of a deathless name.
Haill Alma Mater, honor, praise to thee;
We pledge our lives, our hearts in loyalty.
Wisdom, truth and virtue built our Temple great;
Perseverance conquers, higher to create.

Head Coach-FRANK MASSINO
Oct. 2-Naval Academy Prep . . .......... . Home
9-Hofstra .. ..... ........ .. .. .. .... Home
Oct.
Oct. 16---Drexel .......................... Away
Oct. 23--Delaware ... .... ...... ...... ..... Home
ov. 5--Villanova ...... ............... .. . Home

SOCCER

LET'S CHEER AGAIN
Let's cheer again for Temple,
For Temple plays to win;
With a smash we'll go right through now
All our foes will have to bow.
Through thick and lhin we'll cheer for
The Cherry and the While,
So let's sing again that old refrain,
Let's cheer, cheer again for Temple.

FIGHT! TEMPLE! FIGHT!
Fightl Temple fight on.
Fightl with all your might.
Fightl far the Cherry and While,
Keep the colors bright.
Hold the ball and hit that line,
All the Temple stars will shine,
Skill and courage win the game,
Fight onl Temple, Fightl

ALL HAIL!
All Hail, All Hail to Temple.
Let us stand as our flag goes by.
Our hearts are ever loyal,
As we raise our praise on high.
We're in the game for Temple
and no matter what the score may be,
We will fight 'til each mighty endeavor
Brings forever a victory.

Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
ov.
ov.

Head Coach-PETE LEANESS
26---Pennsylvania .................... Home
3--Rider .. ...... .... ..... ........ .. Home
10-Pittsburgh ...................... Home
17-Hoffstra ....... .. ........ ........ Away
20-LaSalle ....... . . ................ Away
24-New York U ..................... Home
28-Drexel .... . .. ...... ............. Away
31-Delaware ........................ Home
4-West Chester .. .... ......... ..... Away
7-Penn State .. . ...... ...... .... .. . Home
11-St. Joseph's . ........ .. . . .. . ...... Away
14-American U ...................... Home

Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
ov.

Head Coach-JACK ST. CLAIR
26---Pennsylvania and Lehigh ........ at Penn
3--Albright and Gettysburg ... at Gettysburg
6---St. Joseph's and Rider ............ Home
14-St. Joseph's and Delaware .. .. .. .. Home
24-Drexel and LaSalle . .............. Home
31-Philadelphia Metropolitans
7-St. John's and Seton Hall ... at St. John's
12-American U . and West Chester ... . Home
16---IC4A Championships
20-MAC Championships

CROSS COUNTRY

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�Page 27

The Temple Illustrated

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL TEAM MANAGERS

Left to Right, Terrell Burnett, head manager Bruce Feldman, and Bob Logan

THE TEMPLE UNIVERSITY TRAINERS STAFF

Left to right: Ted Quedenfeld, John Logan and Jim Rogers.

�THE 1970 BUFFALO FOOTBALL SQUAD

BUFFALO
SQUAD

First Row (/eft to right): Coach Bill Dando, Tom Elliott, Joe Zelmanski, Edward Perry, Gary Chapp, Steve McCullough,
Co-Captain Prentis Henley, Head Coach Bob Deming, Co-Captain Chuck Donnor, Jerry Elwell , John Rio, Rovell Jon es,
Barry Atkinson, Tom Centofanti, and Coach Terry Ransbury
Second Row (left to right): Coach Rick Lantz, Mike Constantino, Mike Sharrow, Barney Woodward, Denny Albaneze,
Joe Hudson, Joe Moresco, Ed Kershaw, Ron Rakowski, Don Van-Dusen, Mike Gasper, Marv Harrison, Bill Hannah, and
Coach Jim McNally
Third Row (left to right): Coach Werner Kleemann, Dan Conaway, Scott Herlan, Len Nixon, John Faller, Karl Zalar,
Phil Smith, Clifton Jones, Ted Butler, Paul Carbonaro, Tom Domino, Joe Ziegler, Doug Philp, and Coach Joe Griffith
Fourth Row (/eft to right) : Coach Russ MacKeller, Larry Madden, Kirk Barton, Doug Kozel , Bruce Fraser, Gene Nance,
Bill Winnett, Bill Baker, Owen Tober, Phil Adessa, Tom Osika, Scott Savickas, and Coach Vin Keough
Fifth Row (/eft to right): Coach Gary Grubbs, Tom Chamberlain, Ken Constable, Mark MacVittie, Bill Ellenbogen, John
Eagen, Don Jackson, AI Potyok, Ken Bork, Mike Bouck, Dave Majcher, Bob Layo, and Charley Forness
Sixth Row (/eft to right): Kerope Armon, Dave Pescrillo, Tim Bancroft, Steve Goniwiecha, Joe Johnson, Walt Nichols,
Larry Huff, Mike James, Barry Vandenbergh , John Bauch, Buddy Boughton, and Stan Siedlecki
Seventh Row (left to right): Trainer James Simon, Assistant Trainer Don Earl, Dave Homa, Pau l Williams, Eric Filipowicz,
Byron Brown, Bob Griffiths, Tom Vigneau, Bob Stiscak, Manager Allen Wright, and Assistant Tra iner Dennis Kasprzyk

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The Temple Illustrated

Best wishes for a successful season •••

SHELLY ELECTRIC
COMPANY, Inc.
Electrical Contractors

Philadelphia, Pa.

MA 7-0400

LET'S CHEER AGAIN FOR TEMPLE

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY 1970 CHEERLEADING SQUAD-Front, captain Reesa Guller. Cheering (left to right) Linda
Termine, Bobbie Ibarra, Karen Kesluk, Perry Shackleford, Helene Abrams, Vicki Isaacson, Judy Terpack.

�The Temple Illustrated

Page 30

1970 FOOTBALL SEASON BOX HOLDERS
SOUTH STANDS
Charles M. Johnson
Dr. F. A. Harold Sanders
Irving Kutcher
Charles Freiberg Insurance
Carlton W. Rowand
A. B. Cimino
Paul J. Vagnoni
Edward Zipay, Jr.
Zipay Pontiac-Buick, Inc.
leonard Cantor
Morton Tabes
Dr. lewis B. Udis
Sid Uhr
Fairlite Electric Supply Co., Inc.
J. Myron Honigman
Dr. Warren Bieler
Bernard Flitter
Alex Bonnie

David Altman
Altman Bros., Inc.
Jack B. Gansky
Harry Block
District Council
1
IUE-AFl-CIO-ClC
Ruben Rosen
Progress lighting
George Kooperman
S. W. Kooperman, Inc.
Dr. John Vivacqua
John Durkin
Durkin World Travels
Albert Pearson
Pearson Sporting Goods
William R. Pearson
Herman, Pearson and Dubler
louis S. Hankin
Richard M. Litman

::=

Nick Caterina

Thomas F. Wilson
Dr. Harry levin
Dr. Jay H. Eshleman
Michael Bruno
Globe Sanitation Service
Isadore Kirschner
Kirschner Bros. Oil Co.
Samuel Seidman
Park Distributing Co.
Alvin Wolf
Stuart W. Kline
Kline's, Inc.
M. Mark Mendel
John J. Ahrin
East-West Products Co.
Jerry Stein
Camp Green lane
Klovsky, Kuby and Harris
Gabriel Berk
Maximillian J. Klinger

Dr. l. W. Krumperman

Jack Schwartz-Real Estate

Moe Katz
Myer M . Kotzin

Harry Shulman
Drake Motor lines

Stanley E. Axenfeld
S. E. Axenfeld and
Associates, Inc.

Samuel M. Keck

Dr. Jerome S. Rooklin
Dale Reese
Bogley, Harting and Reese, Inc.

Phillip M. Wernick
Alex Garrison
Reuben E. Cohen

Paul Ginsburg

Donnelly and Suess, Inc.

I. Budd Rockower
Joe Nejman
Camp Anglewood

NORTH STANDS
Martin E. Halpern
Pennsylvania Valley
Machinery Co.
Jack S. Cohen
Melrose Hardware Co.
Melrose Hardware Co.

Eric Pfefferkorn
Chevron Oil Co.

Fred B. Gable
Dr. Michael Ferringo
A. A. Coates
Walter Richards
The Winchell Co.
Gerald Kramer
Jerico Beef, Inc.
Abraham Chesin
David Getz Buick, Inc.
Robert Nilon
Nilon Brothers
Reuben Katz
George Keister
Irvin B. Fineman
Herbert Fineman
Dr. James D. Morrison

Dr. Raymond Goldstein

Frank Keane
Warehouse local 169
E. Archie Mishkin
Bayuk Cigars, Inc.
Dr. Bernard Cramer
Harold Barsky
Allen M. Metzger
Jay Braman
George McKinley
Irvin Saltzman
Director of Athletics
John Huber
Insurance and Financial
Planning, Inc.
Joseph J. Hutton
Hutton and Feather
Harry Paul
Paul Brothers

The Stan Barnetts
Active Management Services, Inc.
M. Thomas Sharpe
Robert Cohen
Doral Caterers
leo Rosenblum
leo's Apparel Shop
William H. Yarrington
Yarrington Mills, Corp.
Joseph Merback
Hillel Levinson
Stanley Angelo
Angelo Bros. Co.
Marvin Hirshfeld
Distributive Education Staff
E. Clifford Durell
Boardman-Hamilton Co. Insurance
Jay loux
BP Oil Corporation
Frank A. Mintz
A. Freedman-M. Zarge
Paul R. Anapol

�Page 31

The Temple Illustrated

air conditioning

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electrical

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For over twenty years,
Hirsch, Arkin, Pineherst
has been serving the
Delaware Valley area with
complete mechanical
contracting service to architects and general contractors. From small alteraliens through complete
air conditioning, electrical,
heat i n g, pI u m b i n g , a i r
conditioning service,
sheet metal or ventilation,
HAP has over 200 employees dedicated to work
excellence, 40,000 square
feet of shop and office facilities and 30 radio controlled vehicles and trucks.
You can see our most
recent work throughout
the Delaware Valley at:
Merck Sharp and Doh me,
West Point, Pa.; William H.
Rorer, Inc., Fort Washington, Pa.; Temple University, Whitman's Chacolates, Eastern Airlines , Bell
Telephone , Triangle Publications, and 1528 Walnut
Street Build ing ... all in
Philadelphia.
Read what is currently
happening at HAP. Write
or phone for a copy of the
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�The Temple Illustrated
0 PE P5r.COL A" AN D "PEPSI" ARE REGISTERED TRA DEt-'ARKS

Page 32
F PepsiCo, INC.

Pepsi's got a lot to give
There's a new national pastime:
living, and making every second
count. Pepsi's part of it all, with
the energy to let you live big,
and a taste that's bigger than life.
Pepsi-Cola ... it's got a lot to give.

�The Doors of

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY

Temple University is determined to provide educational opportunity
without regard to race, creed, or station in life. Its doors are open
(within the limitations of its facilities) to all whose backgrounds and
abilities qualify them for higher education. It seeks to keep tuition
as low as resources and the demands of quality education permit. It
fosters the maximum intellectual and moral development of the individual. Your opportunities are unlimited through education.

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education

PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19122

�Vega 2300 is here at last.
We'd have brought it out sooner, but
you know how it is. We've got a lot riding on
this little car and we wanted it to be right,
really right, before turning it over to you.
Now we're ready.
And you were wise to wait.

MJ.IIK OF

UCELLE~CE

Because now you can buy what we at
Chevrolet have come to modestly believe is
the best little car in the world.
We don't expect this ad to convince you.
We expect the car to, though.
Vega. The little car that does everything
well. Look into it.

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
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 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL PROGRAM FIFTY CENTS

SEPTEMBER 12

ROTARY FIELD

BULLS AT ROfARY
Ball State
Sept. 12
Toledo
Sept. 19
Oct. 3 Massachu etts (HC)
illanova (80)
Oct. 10
Oct. 31 Holy Cross (ABC-TV)

BULLS ON THE ROAD
Sept. 26
Oct. 17
Oct. 24
Nov. 7
Nov.14
Nov. 21

at Kent State
at Dayton
at Virginia Tech
at Boston College
at Temple
at Northern Illinois

�Eastern Airlines is a billion dollars wo1th of aircmft.
one of the most sophisticated maintenance systems in the
world, the largest real-time airline reservations computer
in existence, 1400 take-offs and landings every day;
acres of terminals, hangars, warehouses and buildings:
32,000 of the most dedicated people in aviation,

and one dream:
make flying a~ natural for you
as it is for him.

~ EASTERN The Wings of Man.

�CAPTAIN DONNOR

CAPTAIN HENLEY

COACH DEMING

�TODAY'S GAME
~69

Buffalo Football News
BUFFALO VS. BALL STATE

September 12, 1970

Rotary Field, 1 :30 p.m.

Editor: Richard E. Baldwin
Local Advertising: Howard L. Daniels
National Advertising: Spencer Marketing Services, NYC
CONTRIBUTORS: Office of Information Services, Jim DeSantis, ECAC Service
Bureau, National Collegiate Sports Services, Dick Johnston, Bob Powell,
NCAA Public Relations Committee, Linda Martz, Chris Kabel, Collegiate
Commissioners Association, Steve Lipman, Scott Slesinger, Earl Yestingsmeier,
Norm Harmeyer and the Ball State Office of Sports Information.
PHOTOGRAPHY: Ed Nowak, Rick Swenson, Office of Information Services
and Ball State Office of Sports Information.
PRINTING: Goodrich Printers &amp; Lithographers, Inc., Clarence Center, N.Y.

State University of

@

New York at Buffalo

s
than

c

The Bulls and the Cardinals get
together for the second time this
afternoon after opening the new
series in Muncie last fall. Coach
Wave Myers built his team to a
pre-season peak and upset Buffalo
10-7 last September 13, not a particularly rewarding birthday gift
for Coach Bob Deming's debut.
State came back from a 7-0 third
period Bull lead to score its ten
points for victory. A 41-yard field
goal by Bob Greenlee broke the late
tie with 2:19 remaining.
QB Mick Murtha directed the
Bulls to the BSU one with seconds
left. An offside penalty moved the
ball back to the nine. Murtha stopped the clock with an out-of-bounds
toss and the final play of the game
was an incomplete pass in the end
zone.
Football contests between Buffalo and Ball State will be rare in
the future, each team heading in
an opposite scheduling direction.
There were plenty of fireworks in
the initial contact, and this afternoon's clash should provide still
more. U B defeats to college division opponents smart. Ball State
major division victories are imagebuilders.

�SHAKING THE WEBS
by Bob Powell

COURIER-EXPRESS

In the calm of a summer's evening, a football coach
can find time to relax. That's what Bob Deming was doing
when a sports writer interrupted his catnap with a
question.
"Hey, coach, what was the hairiest game you've had
to sit through as a UB coach?"
Shaking the Webs, the young Colgate man chased his
mind through the seasons he had been an assistant to Dick
Offenhamer and Doc Urich. The upset over Harvard in
1958 was a big moment, he said. Certainly that was a
satisfying affair.
And he spoke of that squirrelly afternoon in 1962
when John Stofa and the Bulls scored twice in the last
eight minutes- including a thrilling 99-yard scoring drive
in the final 33 seconds- to push Delaware out of football's
undefeated ranks.
Then a glimmer of a frown swept his face. He had the
look of a man listening to fingernails on a slate. The
look shortly turned to a smile.
Time had softened the nightmarish finish that had
tested many an aorta in September of 1963 when the Bulls
played Ohio University in Athens, Ohio.
"We had scored first. Stofa went 12 yards and Jim
Burd kicked the point. That was in the second quarter,"
Deming spoke.
The Bobcats, a 41-6 winner over the Bulls a year
earlier, had manpower aplenty and the depth was showing
in the third period. Buffalo had the ball only enough to
run four plays and get off two quick kicks. Ohio started a
drive from its own four in the last stages of the period and
when the final quarter opened, the 'Cats were at the Buffalo four with a first down.

JOHN STOFA '64
Formerly with the Cincinnati Bengals and now back to the
Miami Dolphins.

GERRY PAWLOSKI '65

"I can't remember who carried, but their fullback went
up the middle from our one. Before he got over the line,
the ball squirted from him and into the waiting arms of
Stofa," Deming continued.
Time was running out when Ohio U got another drive
going. It looked like curtains for Buffalo when quarterback Wes Danyo hit flanker Glenn Hill on a sprint pass as
the latter hurried toward the UB goal.
He, too, lost the handle and Dick Condino swarmed
over the pigskin in the end zone for another touchback.
Less than four minutes remained, but the Bulls weren't
out of the woods yet.
"Ohio got the ball back," Deming explained, "and
started a drive from about their 35. Danyo tried a pass
again but Johnny Cimba played it perfectly and took it
two yards in our end zone.
"The trouble is, John didn't down it. He decided to
run it out. I almost ran out on the field and tackled him
myself. I wish I had, because he got tackled on the six
and HE fumbled."
That gave the 'Cats one more shot with less than 30
seconds to play. A pass was dropped and Danyo let go
with another 13 seconds to play.
"Jerry Pawloski picked that one off, but he didn't try
to run it out. He just knelt down and let the clock run out.
"Yeh, that was a dandy. I had been coaching only a
short time and it left me weak as a puppy. Probably do
the same thing today," he laughed.
The Bulls have had other cliff-hangers against MidAmerican Conference teams. Bet, Deming would settle for
even that kind of a finish - hairy or otherwise.

Bob Powell joined the Courier-Express sports staff in 1963 after seven yt
with Associated Press in Albany, Syracuse and Buffalo. A native of Albany,
started his Tri-City athletic career at Albany High School. He attended Syrac
University as a top recruit in football and track. Married and the father of
he served in the Air Force (B-17's). Special interests other than his regular
lege sports beat are track and golf. Powell is as versatile a reporter as the C&lt;
ier features and his reporting tours are as complex as any writer in the a,
Entertaining conversationalist.

three

�Scouting Ball State

Nickname: Cardinals
Stadium: BSU Stadium (16,002)
Colors : Cardinal &amp; White
Coach: Wave Myers '50 (3rd)
BALL STATE
FACTS and F IGURES

QB WILLARD RICE

Ball State is anticipating a solid '69 season, mainly on the strength
of 30 returning lettermen with 18 starters back . . . The Slot-1 served
Coach Wave Myers well last year and his team during a 5-5-0 season
upset the Bulls 10-7 and later Eastern Michigan 31-22 . . . Much of his
talent is back, plus a rash of 20 quality sophomores . . . Pre-season
accounts credit the team with its best ability and depth of any BSU
team in history . . . Watch out! . . . Better than 95 per cent of the
squad's total offense of 1969 is back . . . QB Willard Rice, who has
rewritten the State record book in passing, is being pressed by soph Phil
Donahue. TB Dave Means, SB Willie Lenzy, TE Don Burchfield, safety
Jerry Burns, guard Gary Lietz and premier punter Jack Morse are also
expected to figure prominently in this fall's success ... 30 lettermen are
split 15 on offense and 15 on defense ... No New York State representatives on the BSU roster . . . BSU is a member of the new CMU, Conference of Midwest Universities . . . Along with QB Donahue sophs to
watch include SE Ralph Sanders and FB Mike Anderson .. . Defensive
formation is Split-Six . . . Total 69-man squad includes 20 seniors . . .
Basically native-bred team with only ten players hailing from other
states ... Team strength is in offensive backfield ... Team weakness in
offensive line.

Scouting Buffalo

Rushin g
Att.
Net
Avg.
Means
128
468
3.7
Lenzy
111
403
3.6
Van Pelt
49
199
4.1
Crable
41
179
4.4
Passing
Att. Comp. Int. Yds. TDs
Rice
233
117
1408
9
13
Schuttrow 24
1
101
6
3
Receiving
Caught Yds. TDs
186
Allen
19
1
Comparetto
14
227
2
177
Burchfield
14
1
124
Lenzy
11
1
Punting
No. Yds.
Avg.
63
2547
Morse
40.4
No.
Punt Returns
Yds. TDs
26
Carter
224
0
No.
Kickoff Returns
Yds. TDs
17
Lenzy
388
0
TDs PAT FG Pts.
Scor ing
6
0
0
Means
36
5
0
Lenzy
0
30
4
Van Pelt
0
24
0
Greenlee
0
11k
2
17

Nickname: Bulls
Stadium: Rotary Field
Colors : Buffalo Blue &amp; Gold
Coach : Bob Deming (2nd)
BUFFALO
FACTS and F IGURES

QB KIRK BARTON

DT BARRY ATKINSON

Buffalo will execute its refined Bulls "I" this afternoon with a
"Top Ten" defense ... Junior QB Kirk Barton takes over for graduated
Mick Murtha, record-holder in the air and for career total offense . . .
Barton drew some starts in '69, but mostly worked in reserve of veteran
Murtha . . . Senior lefty Ed Perry is the No. 2 signal-caller with Junior
Doug Philp next in line ... Center Chuck Donnor is All-East caliber and
could climb right into the All-America spotlight at the skilled position
. . . The Bulls will mix speed and power at running back with senior
John Faller and junior Doug Kozel . . . Sophomore Gene Nance is set
to make his Buffalo debut . . . Most of the "hard yards" again goes to
senior FB Joe Zelmanski, who needs 557 more to become U / B's career
leader . . . Joe Hudson makes the switch official today from defensive
end to tight end, replacing record holder Paul Lang . .. Defense was the
key last year and Coach Deming has ten regulars back to defend again,
featuring a Bull Barricade in the front four- ends Tom Vigneau and
Prentis Henly with king-size tackles Barry Atkinson (266) and Rovell
Jones (260) ... Charley Forness (256) is a third round-robin tackle ...
Soph defensive back has impressed in pre-season camp for Coach Rick
Lantz . .. Converted split end Scott Herlan and SE Joe Moresco have
been sharing punter duties . . . Kickoffs, PATS and FGs are assigned
against senior Mike Constantino.

four

Att.
Net
Avg.
Rushing
128
540
4.2
Zelmanski
99
506
5.1
Faller
34
155
4.6
Woodward
29
Herlan
66
2.3
Att. Comp. Int . Yds . TDs
P assing
34
12
3
172
1
Barton
12
5
1
52
Perry
0
Cau ght Yds. TDs
Receiving
9
83
0
Faller
8
131
0
Zelmanski
7
80
1
Moresco
6
76
0
Fraser
67
6
0
Her! an
34
6
0
Woodward
Avg.
N o. Yds.
Punting
No punters back
No.
Yds. TDs
Kickoff Returns
1
27
193
Elliott
70
0
10
Nixon
Yds. TDs
No.
Punt Returns
104
0
6
Faller
104
0
6
Woodward
TDs PAT FG Pts.
Scoring
30
0
5
0
Faller
22
16k
2
Constantinto
0
20
1p
0
Zelmanski
3
12
0
2
0
Woodward

�Welcome to Rotary Field
YOUR COOPERATION PLE ASE - To students and guests at the University today, your
cooperation is required in maintaining the dignity and reputation of this institution. We request
t hat you observe the r ules and regulations pertaining to this sanctioned event by the National Collegiate At hletic Association and the Eastern College Athletic Conference.
WELCOME - We respectfully appreciate your attendance at today's football game, and we
hope t hat you will enjoy both the game and the various new facilities in the stadium. On behalf of
the State University of New York at Buffalo and the Athletic Department, its staff and players,
we welcome you.
Dr. Harry G. Fritz
Director of Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

REST ROOM FACILITIES: Rest rooms
(Ladies) are at the north end locations
under both Bailey Avenue and Main
stands. Rest rooms (Gentlemen) are at
the south end locations under Bailey
A venue and Main stands.
LOST AND FOUND : All lost and found
items should be reported to the Campus
Police. The Campus Police main office is
192 Winspear Avenue, 831-5555.
REFRESHMENT BOOTHS : There are
three main refreshment areas in the stadium. The booths are both at the north
ends of the Bailey and Main stands and
are operated by University Food Service.
For most games the third booth is open
at the south end of the Bailey stands.
BUSTER TH E BULL: The mascot on the
field is Buster VIII, a direct lineal descendent of Buster I, who was a gift
from Elizabeth Taylor and the late Mike
Todd to the University in 1958. Buster
is under the care of Chester :Malach. He
is quartered at the Malach farm in nearby E lma.

your all-star
financial center
~!*

~ERVICE~~
~/ BANK~

*-¥®
M em be r: Fede ral Deposit In sura nce Co r p .

**
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Savings accounts
Checking accounts
Auto loans
Home improvement loans
Mortgage loans
Commercial loans
Vacation loans

BANK oF BUFFALO
• BANK OF BUFFALO·· 17 Court at Pea rl • EAST
SIDE Office·· 694 Fillmore at Broadway • SOUTH SIDE
Office ·· 215 7 Seneca near Cazenovia • TOWN OF
TONAWANDA Office· · 4 2 48 De laware at Dreyer
• TOWN OF AMHERST Office·· 4954 Harl em at
Sheri dan • TOWN OF CHEEKTOWAGA Office·· 3817
Un ion at George Urban • TOWN OF WEST SENECA
Office·· 4184 Seneca at Mill Road • STUYVESANT
PI.,AZA Office-· 274 Elmwood at Summer • KENMORE
Office • • 2858 Delaware at Mang.

five

�Siegfried builds on
its reputation
Siegfried is proud of the
many impressive buildings
it has built over the years,
but they also take pride in
something that cannot be
built with concrete and
steel- a reputation for
unexcelled craftsmanship,
dependability and integrity.
Thinking of a new build ing, an addition , or remodeling? Think of Siegfriedyour assurance of a job
well done . .. done on time .
That's Siegfried Construc tioneering.

ailing and cory
BUFFALO'S
PAPER DISTRIBUTION CENTER

SIEGFRIED
CONSTRUCTION CO INC

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with Western
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•
873-4200
Post Office Box l 068
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Buffalo, New York 14240

western

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Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

six

�YOUR HOMETOWN SUPERMARKETS ARE PROUD
TO SUPPORT THE HOMETOWN UNIVERSITY
OF BUFFALO "BULLS" FOOTBALL TEAM!

--

seven

�SUNYAB
Information Services

STATE UNIVERSITY

The State University of New York at Buffalo is today the largest, most comprehensive undergraduate and graduate center of the New York State University System,
enrolling 23,764 students in the fall of 1969 (14,600 full-time). Established in 1846, the
University was a pioneer in adapting educational service to the specific needs of a developing urban complex.
Today, the University is headed by Robert L. Ketter, a civil engineer, who was at
one time dean of the U B Graduate School and also served as vice president for facilities
planning. Ketter is the eleventh executive officer of the University, whose first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the United States.
Founded as a medical school, the University toward the close of the 19th century,
expanded to embrace three other professional schools, pharmacy, dentistry and law. A
college of arts and sciences was added in 1913. Other divisions of study were established
as follows: Summer sessions, 1915; evening sessions, now known as Millard Fillmore
College, 1923; business administration (now management), 1927; education, 1931; social
welfare, 1936; Graduate School, 1939; nursing, 1940; engineering, 1946; University
College, 1958; health related professions, 1965; information and library studies, 1966,
architecture and environmental design, 1968.
ENROLLMENT
University enrollment figures for the last decade indicate that full-time day undergraduate enrollment jumped from 4,829 in 1960 to 10,640 in 1969. Full-time graduate
enrollment (day and evening) !ncrea5ed even more dramatically from 286 in 1960 to
2,847 in 1969.
Enrollment in the professional schools of dentistry, law and medicine rose from 730
in 1960 to 1,190 in 1969, with the largest increase being noted by the School of Law which
grew from 176 to 485. The comparative figures for Medicine are 308 and 418 and for
Dentistry, 247 to 287.
Attesting to an increasing quality of students enrolling, in 1963, 90 per cent of
entering freshmen scored 130 or better on the Regents Scholarship Examination; in
1969, 90 per cent of the freshmen scored 184 or better.
In terms of high school rank, 27.6 per cent of 1960's freshmen were in the top onefifth of their graduating class; in 1969, 85 per cent of freshmen were in that top fifth.
The University demonstrates also an increasing commitment to developing academic
skills among the underprivileged. A variety of special programs have been instituted
to extend social, economic and educational opportunities to students recruited on the
basis of potential, rather than on their ability to pay for higher education or the level of
academic skill they demonstrated in high school. Three such programs are EPIS (Experimental Program in Independent Study), SEEK (Search for Education, Elevation
and Knowledge) and the Student Tutorial Program, whose unconventional admissions
criteria and curricular innovations not only open the University's doors to the educationally deprived but also provide academic and financial assistance for the successful
completion of their baccalaureate studies.
The geographic distribution of the University's student body in the fall of 1969
was: Buffalo Metropolitan Area, 51.6 per cent; ew York City Metropolitan Area, 26.7
per cent; rest of New York State, 18.2 per cent; out-of-state and foreign countries, 3.5
per cent.
FACILITIES AND NEW CAMPUS
Resources and facilities have been improved and enlarged in the wake of enrollment
expansion. The number of volumes in the University libraries has tripled since 1962 and
is now above the 1,500,000 mark.
To provide for continued extension of operations pending completion of a new campus, the University is occupying a series of off-campus locations, including an "interim"
facility of several buildings on Ridge Lea Road in the nearby Town of Amherst.
The new campus will be located on a 1,200 acre tract of land in Amherst. Construction has begun since Governor Rockefeller lifted the moratorium on construction.
At a total cost of $650 million by 1975 the new campus will include all facilities
existing on the present campus plus theatres, galleries and special complexes for the
colleges. Since the colleges will provide not only residences but social and educational
environments, they will have reading rooms, dormitory space, dining rooms, classrooms
and special studios and offices. A complete health sciences facility will also be located
on the new campus.
Preparation of the site for construction began in spring and the first contracts were
awarded in early summer of 1970. The first buildings to be constructed will be the
first six colleges which will be built in four phases.
RESEARCH
Through research, higher education is a combatant in a never-ending war on disease,
learning problems, and other areas of concern that have universal scope. It seeks
knowledge, technology and applications of the traditional, and is a contributor to our
economy, comfort and well-being.
Research at the State University of New York at Buffalo covers a wide spectrum
of fields of knowledge- from anthropology to obstetrics to zoology. Of the University's
more than 90 instructional departments, almost all have research programs of some
magnitude.
Research is expensive. It takes a continuous flow of money to conduct research on
a large scale: to pay the salaries of research personnel, to buy and build equipment,
t&lt;&gt; purchase supplies and chemicals, to provide travel, to buy computer time, to cover
publication costs and other expenses.
A decade of research has brought in more than $88,790,000 in research funds to the
University. In 1960, the private University of Buffalo received $3,870,000 in research
monies, 78 per cent of which was channeled into the health sciences areas.
With the merger into the State University of New York system, the Research
Foundation administered $5,080,000 in funds in 1962. The 1969-70 estimate shows a
jump of almost $10 million (making a total of $15,000,000) in funds, which were distributed by the Foundation, with only 60 per cent of these funds going to health sciences.
Thus, not only is the University receiving at least a million dollars more each year, but
there is also a trend toward equalization of funds between the sciences and other areas.

�OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

DR. HARRY G. FRITZ
Director, Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

FACULTY
A vigorous program of recruitment combined with
competitive salary levels has resulted in a faculty of outstanding calibre. Scholars and artists of national renown,
including a Nobel Laureate, National Academy of Science
members, and holders of other awards for distinguished
academic achievement, have come to Buffalo. The ratio of
one faculty member for every 13 students is often cited,
but is not indicative of class sizes which range from small
seminars to lectures for the hundreds. The number of fulltime faculty members has tripled from 440 to 1400 in the
last ten years, while the number of students has doubled.

President

Part-time faculty memberships has doubled during the past
decade from 1,215 in 1960 to 2,425 in 1969.
ACADEMIC DEVELOPMENT
In 1967 a major restructuring of the academic organization of the University was accomplished at the instigation of President Martin Meyerson. Existing departments
and divisions of study were regrouped into seven broadly
interdisciplinary faculties, which incorporate and build
upon traditional disciplines while implementing novel combinations of customary fields of concentration with new
areas of study and research.

The University at Buffalo
Alumni Association
Wishes to thank our alumni and other friends for their support of the
GOLDEN BULL ATHLETIC FUND.
If you have not yet joined the Golden Bull Fund, you may do so by
sending a donation or pledge to the U/B Alumni Association, 250 Wins pear
Avenue, Buffalo, New York, 14214. Gifts of any size are gratefully accepted.
Four clubs have been established within the Fund on an annual participation
basis:

Co-Captains Club
Golden Bull Club
Blue Chip Club
Honorary Coaches Club

$

25
$ 100
$ 500
$1,000

minimum
minimum
minimum
minimum

contribution
contribution
contribution
contribution

Please make checks payable to the Golden Bull Fund. All donations
are tax-deductible.

nine

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tappon1 hands on dots!.

First Down

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llltlll uu of

lntonllonal

Hands anll '""'

CreuiMiinl

Fonrard l'on or

~~"t.~::~~~

Every kind of Sportsman knows
DICK FISCHER'S the greatest!

·.·

27

(
,;.·j" ·

~

Start ltlo Cia

Lon If Dowo

GOOD LUCK BULLS

DICK FISCHER

SFoKYts

Mr. &amp; Mrs. A. V. Bellanca

699 Main St.

Thruway Plaza -

44 Main St. Ilona. )

gealieJJ MILK
SERVICE AT YOUR DOOR OR AT YOUR STORE

853-3860
SEALTEST

FOODS

DIVISION OF KRAFTCO CORP.

General Offices &amp; Plant
202-208 WALDEN AVE., BUFFALO, N.Y.

ten

~~££W~SHOPS
~APPAREL

FOR MEN AND BOYS

2900 DELAWARE AVE. • KENMORE, N.Y. 14217

�El
I

Now here's an easy way to keep your
Stroh 's nice 'n cold all afternoon long.
Our aluminum-insulated Stay Cold
Pack.
Just make sure the whole box is
nice 'n cold to start with. Then , the beer

II
inside will stay that way for hours.
Mind you, we're not saying a Stay
Cold Pack full of Stroh's is more lovable
than an ice chest full of Stroh's.
But it 's sure a heck of a lot more
portable.

Stroh's •.. From One Beer Lover to Another.

THE: STROH BREWERY COMPANY, OE:TROIT, MICHIGAN 48226

eleven

�Van, Stan &amp; Rife Have It All Figured Out!
FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WBEN-Radio
VAN
STAN
DICK
MILLER BARRON RIFENBURG
WBEN Radio/930
The Sports Voice of Buffalo

�,... ..

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"

1970 Buffalo Football Roster

Player
No.
Pos.
Cl.
tAdessa, Phil
76
T
So ph.
Albaneze, Denny
68
G
Sr.
Armon, Kerope
3
K
So.
79
*Atkinson, Barry
DT
Sr.
14
Baker, Bill
FB
So.
tBancroft, Tim
50
OLB
So.
15
*Barton, Kirk
OB
Jr.
62
Bauch, John
Jr.
G
98
tBouck, Mike
TE
So.
17
tBoughton, Buddy
DB
So.
Brown, Byron
51
OLB
Jr.
tButler, Ted
92
OLB
So.
64
tCarbonaro, Paul
T
So.
73 ** Centofanti, Tom
G
Sr.
60
tChamberlain, Tom
G
So.
38 (*) Chapp, Gary
ILB
Sr.
54
Conaway, Dan
OLB
Jr.
44
tConstable, Ken
ILB
So.
41
*Constantino, Mike
K
Sr.
81
tDomino, Tom
SE
So.
58 **Donnor, Chuck (CC)
Sr.
c
tEagen,John
88
T
So.
Ellenbogen, Bill
78
DT
Jr.
40 **Elliott, Tom
Sr.
s
* Elwell, Jerry
61
Sr.
G
49
*Faller, John
HB
Sr.
27
tFilipowicz, Eric
TE
So.
67
Forness, Charley
DT
Sr.
36
*Fraser, Bruce
OLB
Jr.
65
tGasper, Mike
T
So.
Goniwiecha, Steve
16
s
So.
43
Griffiths, Bob
Jr.
G
46
tHannah, Bill
DB
So.
23
tHarrison, Marvin
DB
So.
**Henley, Prentis (CC)
90
DE
Sr.
87
*Herlan, Scott
SE
Sr.
30
tHoma, Dave
ILB
So.
Hudson, Joe
85
TE
Sr.
tHuff, Larry
52
c
So.
26
Jackson, Don
HB
So.
James, Mike
95
DE
Sr.
57
Johnson, Joe
c
So.
48
Jones, Clifton
s
Jr.
66 **Jones, Rovell
DT
Sr.
59 **Kershaw, Ed
OLB
Sr.
39
Kozel, Doug
HB
Jr.
22
Layo, Bob
HB
Jr.
47
*MacVittie, Mark
DB
Jr.
32
*Madden, Larry
ILB
Jr.
53
Majcher, Dave
ILB
Jr.
37
* McCullough, Steve
ILB
Sr.
80
* Moresco, Joe
SE
Sr.
Nance, Gene
20
HB
So.
12
tNichols, Walt
HB
So.
42 **Nixon, Len
DB
Sr.
19
tOsika, Tom
P-S
So.
11 (*)Perry, Ed
OB
Sr.
Pescrillo, Dave
99
Jr.
DT
Philp, Doug
18
Jr.
OB
97
tPotyok, AI
DE
So.
70
Rakowski, Ron
DT
So.
74 ( * )Rio, John
T
Sr.
25
Savickas, Scott
HB
Jr.
*Sharrow, Mike
89
SE
Sr.
Siedlecki, Stan
55
Jr.
OLB
33
Smith, Ph i l
Jr.
ILB
29
Stiscak, Bob
Sr.
HB
34
tTober, Owen
FB
So.
91
Vandenbergh , Barry
Jr.
DE
Van-Du sen, Don
93
Jr.
DE
96 **Vigneau, Tom
DE
Sr.
71
Winnett, Bill
Jr.
T
21 ** Woodward, Barney
HB
Sr.
24 ( * )Zalar, Karl
DB
Sr.
35 * * Zelmanski, Joe
FB
Sr.
Ziegler, Joe
69
Jr.
G
* Varsity Letter (22 from 1969)
(* )V arsity Letter (4 from 1968)
tFreshman Numerals (20 from 1969)
SENIOR MANAGER : Allen Wright, '71 , Mt. Vernon,

Age
18
21
20
21
20
19
20
20
20
19
21
18
19
21
19
22
22
19
20
19
21
19
19
21
22
21
19
21
19
19
19
20
20
19
23
22
19
ss
19
20
21
19
20
21
21
20
19
20
20
19
22
21
20
19
21
19
21
21
19
19
20
21
20
21
19
22
21
19
20
21
21
20
21
21
21
21

Ht.
6-2
6-2
5-8
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-0
5-10
5-8
6-1
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-3
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-8
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-1
5-11
5-10
6-7
5-11
5-10
6-2
6-1
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-6
6-6
6-1
6-2
5-9
5-11
6-1
5-10

Wt.
232
207
195
266
200
190
195
236
220
177
190
195
230
210
200
211
194
205
185
175
215
218
224
181
200
215
185
256
185
227
165
210
164
161
236
198
217
222
224
190
238
195
167
260
208
189
182
181
205
210
212
176
171
182
187
180
208
247
205
180
228
235
187
175
184
198
189
195
230
235
21 2
226
20 5
188
205
217

Major
Psych.
Psych.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
Psych.
Dent.
Hist.
Engr.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Acct.
Law
P. Ed.
Bio.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Hi st.
Ph arm.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Law
Psych.
Bus. Ad.
Anthrop.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Hi st.
Pol. Sci.
Bus. Ad.
En gr.
L. Arts
Pharm.
L . Arts
P. Ed.
L . Arts
P. Ed.
Phil.
P. Ed.
0 . Ther.
Pol. Sc.
Med.
0. Ther.
L. Arts
Pol. Sc.
Math.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Psych.
Soc.
L. Arts
Econ.
Pol. Sc.
Bus. Ad .
P. Ed.
Engr.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
Engr.
A cct.
L. Arts
Hi st.
Art
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
Bus. Ad .
L. Arts
L. Arts
L . Arts
P. Ed.
Bus. Ad .
P. Ed .
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.

School
St. Mary's HS
Stuyvesant HS
North Syracuse
East Deer-Frazer
Griffiths I nst.
Johnson City
Union-Endicott
Tallmadge HS
lllion HS
Kenmore West
Aurora HS
Sharpsville HS
Mt. Carmel HS
Bishop Duffy HS
Jamesville,-Dewitt
St. Clement HS
Kenmore East
Mayfield HS
Jamestown HS
Depew HS
East Aurora
Elk County
New Rochelle
Canandaigua HS
Cardinal Mooney
Greece-Arcadia
Canisius HS
Riverside HS
Wheatfield
Cath. Central
St. Clement
Johnson City
Emerson Vocation
Bennett HS
South Park HS
Grand Island
New York Mills
Cheshire Academy
Silver Creek
Mannheim HS
Penn Hills
East Jefferson
Emerson Vocation
Buchetel HS
Elyria HS
Binghamton Catholic
Portage Area
Will iamsville HS
Cat hoi ic Central
Bishop McCort
Coshocton HS
Ithaca HS
Indiana HS
Irondequoit HS
St. Joseph HS
New York Mills
Bethlehem Central
LaSalle HS
Humberside Coli .
St. Clement HS
Rome Free A cademy
St. Mary's HS
St. Joseph HS
Moriah Central
Carthage HS
Ridgeway HS
Aliquippa HS
Bennett HS
Albany HS
Homer HS
St. Clement HS
Jackson HS
Peru HS
Calvert HS
St. Clement HS
Cardinal O ' Hara

/\\' ~
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.-_, .;

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y

Hometown
Cortland, N.Y.
Elmhurst, N.Y.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Colden, N.Y.
Johnson City, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Tallmadge, Ohio
lllion, N.Y.
Kenmore, N . Y .
Aurora, Ohio
Sharpsville, Pa.
Auburn, N . Y .
Niagara Falls, N . Y .
Dewitt, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Tonawanda, N . Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Jamestown, N.Y.
Depew, N.Y .
East Aurora, N . Y.
Ridgway, Pa.
New Rochelle, N.Y.
Canandaigua, N. Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Rochester, N . Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Binghamton, N . Y .
Centerline, Mich.
Johnson City, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Grand Island, N . Y .
New York Mills, N . Y.
New City, N.Y.
Irving, N.Y .
Ft. Hood, Texas
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Birmingham, Mich.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Akron, Ohio
Elyria, Ohio
Johnson City, N . Y .
Portage, Pa.
Williamsville, N.Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Johnstown, Pa.
Coshocton, Ohio
Ithaca, N. Y .
Indiana, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Willowick, Ohio
Yorkville, N . Y.
Delmar, N . Y .
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Toronto, Ont.
Centerline, Mich .
Rome, N. Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Wickl iffe, Ohio
Witherbee, N. Y .
Carthage, N. Y .
Ridgeway, Ont.
Alquippa, Pa.
Buffalo, N . Y .
Albany, N . Y.
Cortland, N . Y.
Centerline, Mich.
North Canton, Ohio
Peru, N . Y .
Tiffin, Ohio
Centerline, Mich.
Tonawanda, N.Y.

N . Y.

t h irteen

�Wouldn't an ice cold Coke
ta te good right now?

�1

85
71
61
58
73
74
80
1S
49
39
35

Offense
JOE HUDSON .......... TE
BILL WINNETT ......... LT
JERRY ELWELL ......... LG
CHUCK DONN OR (CC) .... C
TOM CENTOFANTI ..... RG
JOHN RIO ............ RT
JOE MORESCO ......... SE
KIRK BARTON ......... QB
JOHN FALLER .......... LH
DOUG KOZEL ....... .. RH
JOE ZELMANSKI ....... FB

89
78
70
55
65
62
46
80
25
36
11

Defense
GREGG GLASS .. .. ... .. LE
JOHN SCHEUMANN .... LT
CLIFF DAVIDSON ...... . RT
GREEN RISNER .. ....... RE
GUS NIERMAN ....... LOLB
TERRY HOPKINS .. . ... LILB
RUSTY CLIFFORD ... ... RILB
RANDY JOHNSON .. .. ROLB
JOHN CARTER ...... .. LHB
AL MARTHA ......... RHB
JERRY BURNS . .. .. .. . ... S

90
79
66
96
59
32
37
55
42
47
19

Defense
PRENTIS HENLEY (CC} ... . LE
BARRY ATKINSON ...... LT
ROVELL JONES .. . ...... RT
TOM VIGNEAU ......... RE
ED KERSHAW .. ... .... LOB
LARRY MADDEN ....... LIB
STEVE McCULLOUGH ... RIB
STAN SIEDLECKI ...... ROB
LEN NIXON ........... LH
MARK MacVITTIE ....... RH
TOM OSIKA ............ S

83
68
63
53
74
72
40
14
20
1S
33

Offense
VIC COMPARETTO ...... SE
BOB MUIR ............. LT
CHRIS BOGUNIA ....... LG
JIM CRISTIANA ......... C
GARY LIETZ .......... . RG
MIKE BRADLEY ......... RT
DON BURCHFIELD .... .. TE
WILLARD RICE ......... QB
DAVE MEANS .......... TB
WILLIE LENZY ...... .. .. SB
JIM CRABLE ........... FB

BUFFALO

THE CARDINALS SQUAD

THE BULLS SQUAD

j

3
11
12
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
46
47
48
49

Armon, KSP
Perry, QB
Nichols, HB
Baker, FB
Barton, QB
Goniwiecha, S
Boughton, DB
Philp, QB
Osika, S-P
Nance, HB
Woodward, HB
Layo, HB
Harrison, DB
Zalar, DB
Savickas, HB
Jackson, HB
Filipowicz, TE
Stiscak, HB
Homa, ILB
Madden, ILB
Smith, ILB
Tober, FB
Zelmanski, FB
Fraser, OLB
McCullough, ILB
Chapp, ILB
Kozel, HB
Elliott, S
Constantino, KSP
Nixon, DB
Griffiths, G
Constable, ILB
Hannah,DB
MacVittie, DB
C. Jones, S
Faller, HB
50 Bancroft, OLB
51 Brown, OLB

52 Huff, C
53 Majcher, ILB
54 Conaway, OLB
55 Siedlecki, OLB
57 Johnson, C
58 Donnor, C (CC) )
59 Kershaw, OLB
60 Chamberlain, G
61 Elwell, G
62 Bauch, G
64 Carbonaro, T
65 Gasper, T
66 R. Jones, DT
67 Forness, DT
68 Albaneze, G
69 Ziegler, G
70 Rakowski, DT
71 Winnett, T
73 Centofanti, G
74 Rio, T
76 Adessa, T
78 Ellenbogen, DT
79 Atkinson, DT
80 Moresco, SE
81 Domino, SE
85 Hudson, TE
87 Herlan, SE
88 Eagen, T
89 Sharrow, SE
90 Henley, DE (CC)
91 Vandenbergh, DE
92 Butler, OLB
93 Van-Dusen, DE
95 James, DE
96 Vigneau, DE
97 Potyok, DE
98 Bouck, TE
99 Pescrillo, DT

BALL STATE

11
12
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
23
24
25
26
27
28
30
31
32
33
36
37
39
40
41
43
44
45
46
48
49

Burns, S
Donahue, QB
Rice, QB
Lenzy, SB
Ricke, QB
Schuttrow, QB
Smrcina, S
Means, TB
Allen, SB
VanPelt, TB
Mack, DHB
Carter, DHB
Schloot, DHB
Poelstra, S
Briggs, FB
Fisher, SE
Anderson, FB
Hayden, DHB
Crable, FB
Martha, DHB
Hayden,SB
Ballenger, K
Burchfield, TE
Howard, TB
Goodwin, LB
Hilton, LB
Palmer, SB
Clifford, LB
Curtin, LB
Lax, DE
50 Zurcher, C
51 Greenlee, DT
52 Rhinehart, C

53 Christiana, C
54 Mattix, DE
55 Risner, DE
56 Berning, OT
58 Derringer, DE
59 Cunningham, LB
60 Mattingly, OG
61 Frame, L B
62 Hopkins, LB
63 Bogunia, OG
64 Barber, OT
65 Nierman, LB
66 Kent, OG
68 Muir, OT
69 Swartz, LB
70 Davidson, DT
71 Arment, OT
72 Bradley, OT
73 Delamarter, OT
74 Lietz, OG
76 Morse, DE
77 Guimont, DT
78 Scheumann, DT
79 Adams, OG
80 Johnson, LB
81 Hickman, OG
83 Comparetto, SE
84 Bell, TE
85 Sacchini, LB
86 Sanders, SE
87 Butler, TE
88 Hays, LB
89 Glass, DE

NEXT HOME GAME - ROTARY FIELD
Toledo- First Meeting
September 19-1:30 P.M.

"COCA-COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY.

It' the realthi

�1970 Ball State Football Roster
No.

Name

79
Adams, Tim
21 • • Allen, John
31
Anderson, Mike
71
Arment, Bob
Ballenger, Pat
39
64 *Barber, Jim
84
Bell, Doug
Berning, Dick
56
63 **Bogunia, Chris
72

*Bradley, Mike

28
Briggs, Tom
40 **Burchfield, Don
11 **Burns, Jerry
87
Butler, Tom
25 *Carter, John
53
Christiana, Jim
46 *Clifford, Rusty
83 *Comparetto, Vic
33 **Crable, Jim
59
Cunningham, John
48
Curtin, Dennis
70 *Davidson, Cliff
73
Delamarter, Gary
Derringer, Dan
58
12
Donahue, Phil
Fisher, Bill
30
61
Frame, Jim
Glass, Gregg
89
43
Goodwin, Dick
Greenlee, Phil
51
77

32
37
88
81
44
62
41
80
66
49
15
74
24
36
60
54
20
76
68
65
45
27
52
14
16
55
85
86
78
26
17
18
69
23
50

Guimont, Rick
**Hayden, Kim
Hayden, Mike
Hays, Dennis
Hickman, Tom
Hilton, Mike
*Hopkins, Terry
Howard, Jesse
**Johnson, Randy
Kent, Dave
Lax, Art
* Lenzy, Willie
**Lietz, Gary
Mack, Greg
*Martha, AI
Mattingly, Joe
**Mattix, Bob
**Means, Dave
• Morse, Jack
*Muir, Bob
*Nierman, Gus
•Palmer, Harry
Poelstra, Dave
Rhinehart, Ed
**Rice, Willard
Ricke, Larry
*Risner, Green
**Sacchini, Pat
Sanders, Ralph
*Scheumann, John
Schloot, Bob
Schuttrow, Mike
Smrcina, Rick
*Swartz, Steve
*VanPelt, Charles
*Zurcher, Bob

*Varsity Letter

sixteen

(30 from 1969)

Pos.
OG
SB
FB
OT
K
OT
TE
OT
OG
OT
FB
TE

s
TE
DHB

c
LB
SE
FB
LB
LB
DT
OT
DE
QB
SE
LB
DE
LB
DT
DT
DHB
SB
LB
OG
LB
LB
TB
LB
OG
DE
SB
OG
DHB
DHB
OG
DE
TB
DE
OT
LB
SB

s
c

OB
OB
DE
LB
SE
DT
DHB
OB

s
LB
TB

c

Cl.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
So ph.
Soph.
Sr.
So ph.
So ph.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So ph.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So ph.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
So ph.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Soph.
Soph.
So ph.
Jr.
So ph.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So ph.
Soph.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Soph.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.

Age

Ht.

Wt.

19
21
19
19
19
21
19
19
21
20
23
21
22
19
20
18
19
21
21
19
22
21
19
19
19
19
20
20
19
19
20
21
19
24
20
19
23
20
21
19
19
22
21
19
20
20
20
22
20
25
20
22
20
19
22
19
21
21
18
21
19
20
19
20
20
21

6-1
6-1
5-11
6-3
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-8
5-11
6-3
5-9
6-2
6-1
6-1 y,
5-11
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-2
5-11
5·10
5·11
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-1
5-10
6-1
5-9
5-9
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-2Y,
6-2
6-1
5-9
6-2
5-9
5-11
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-3
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-2
6-2
6-0
5-11
5-10
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-0
5-11
6-1

221
187
193
220
181
220
211
270
217
240
190
214
182
182
178
265
232
168
224
211
203
220
230
220
175
169
185
207
209
265
230
172
157
195
205
195
215
174
195
227
205
170
225
160
175
218
215
210
220
210
215
180
195
200
185
175
190
190
176
270
168
180
174
195
189
210

High School
Elkhart HS
Speedway HS
St. Laurence HS
Central HS
Hartford City
LaPorte HS
Rex Mundi HS
Clay HS
St. Joseph's HS
Washington HS
Jeff HS
Southport HS
Marion HS
Delta HS
Crown Point
Roosevelt HS
North Central
East Leyden HS
Kokomo HS
Shelbyville HS
Rita HS
Kokomo HS
Central Catholic
Washington HS
Palatine HS
Southside HS
Jackson HS
Kokomo HS
Lebanon HS
Plymouth HS
Brebeuf HS
Morton, Ill. HS
Plymouth HS
Mishawaka HS
Twin Lakes HS
Hamilton Heights
Warsaw HS
Aust111 HS
Manon HS
Elder HS
Central HS
Howe HS
Kokomo HS
Grlffrth HS
Churchill Area
Brshop Luers
Hobart HS
Logansport HS
Wyomrng Park
Andrean HS
Southport HS
Elkhart HS
Jeff HS
Monroeville HS
Kokomo HS
New Albany HS
Wheatfield HS
Logansport HS
Austin HS
Jeff HS
Wabash HS
Griffith HS
Springfield HS
Cathedral HS
Central HS
Horace Mann HS

Hometown
Mishawaka, Ind.
Speedway, Ind.
Chicago, Ill.
Muncie, Ind.
Hartford City, Ind.
LaPorte, Ind.
Evansville, Ind.
South Bend, Ind.
South Bend, Ind.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Lafayette, Ind.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Marion, Ind.
Muncie, Ind.
Crown Point, Ind.
East Chicago, Ind.
Indianapolis, Ind.
River Grove, Ill.
Kokomo, Ind.
Shelbyville, Ind.
Muncie, Ind.
Kokomo, Ind.
Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Palatine, Ill.
Muncie, Ind.
South Bend, Ind.
Kokomo, Ind.
Lebanon, Ind.
Plymouth, Ind.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Plymouth, Ind.
Plymouth, Ind.
Mishawaka, Ind.
Monticello, Ind.
Arcadia, Ind.
Warsaw, Ind.
Chicago, Ill.
Marion, Ind.
Cincinnati, Ohio
South Bend, Ind.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Kokomo, Ind.
Gnffith, Ind.
Prttsburgh, Pa.
Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Habart, Ind.
Logansport, Ind.
Wyomrng, Mich.
Gary, Ind.
I ndranapol is, Ind.
Elkhart, Ind.
Lafayette, Ind.
Monroeville, Pa.
Kokomo, Ind.
New Albany, Ind.
Michigan City, Ind.
Logansport, Ind.
Chrcago, Ill.
Lafayette, Ind.
Wabash, Ind.
Gnffrth, Ind.
Springfield, Ill.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Gary, Ind.

�BOOSTING THE BULLS
Program
Patrons

For the past 54 years as the University has expanded and altered its structure, so
has the U / B Marching Band, "The Pride of the East." During the last two decades the
Band's spirit and overall musicianship has added a popular flare to various athletic
events, home and away.
Frank J. Cipolla (Eastman School of Music) will direct his eighth band at U / B this
year. Cipolla came to Buffalo following a brass and band instructorship at the University of Missouri.
The instrumental unit on the field consists of approximately 200 members, including
drum majors, majorettes and a flag corps. After the final football game members audition for selection to the Concert Band and University Band. From the main organization
various pep bands are formed, also.
The Band makes national concert appearances and has performed in Carnegie Hall.
In 1968 the Band represented New York State in President Nixon's Inaugural Parade.

1970 VARSITY CHEERLEADERS

Sue Pierotti
Senior
Williamsville, N.Y.

jan Anderson
junior
Corry, Pa.

Capt. Alice Cypin
junior
Levittown, N.Y.

Beth Hurwitt
Junior
Plainview, N.Y.

Charlene Gmerek
Sophomore
Cheektowaga, N.Y.

Kathy Mclane
junior
Lowville, N.Y.

Karen Schuler
Senior
Williamsville, N.Y.

Wendy Ambrico
Sophomore
Far Rockaway, N.Y.

Dr. Charles Banas
Dennis J. Brinkworth Jr.
John Carter
Kevin Carriero
Edward Dzielski Inc.
Jim DeSantis
James P. Donnelly
Chas. Diefendorf
Steve Frey
Paul A. Foley
Howard Flaster
Dr. Edmond Gicewicz
Dr. Allan V. Gibbons
Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne
Chester P. Glor Jr., D.D.S.
George L. Grobe Jr.
Sheldon Hurwitz
Houdaille Industries Inc.
Irvin V. Iversen
Dr. Russell Kidder Jr.
Edward W. Kinney
Seymour Knox
Leo H. Less &amp; Associates
State Mutual of America
Robert Lipp
Dr. Harold F. Meese
Massachusetts Mutual Life
Ins. Co.
Dr. Robert F. Milks
Palace Theatre
Dr. William R. Root
Howard A. Potter, Inc.
Dr. Gertrude Swartout
Leonard Swagler
Dr. Vincert Scamurra
Harlon Swift
Stewart &amp; Bensen Travel Ser.
Turley, Stievater, Walker
&amp; Mauri
University Manor Motel
William G. Willis
Dr. Reinhardt W. Wende
Dr. Frederick B. Wilkes
Manuel S. Wortzman
Don Kroeger - Londes Press
Bud Boughton

seventeen

�CHEERS for the largest selection of quality paperback
and hard cover books in Western New York.
CHEERS for a complete array of sweatshirts, ceramics,
cards to send home to mother (some not to
send home to mother), stuffed animals and
campus necessities.
CHEERS for an exciting collection of glassware bearing
the grand old UB emblem (a collector's item).

THE

.

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

eighteen

'

'

�The Buffalo Coaching Staff

ROBERT C. DEMING
Head Coach

Bob Deming officially assumed the football fortunes
at Buffalo February 15, 1969 as the University's 15th head
coach, immediately following the resignation of Doc Urich
(now head coach at Northern Illinois and a November 21
Bull opponent). He had been on the UB gridiron scene
since 1959, thus he was no stranger to the key campus
assignment.
Deming's first band of Bulls played 6-3-0 last fall
(Holy Cross cancelled) and ran ninth in the annual Lambert Trophy race. His chief aim is to enter Buffalo in the
East's Top Five to battle Penn State, Syracuse, Pittsburgh
and Boston College for the coveted crown.
A 1957 graduate of Colgate, where he received a B.A.
in natural sciences, Bob played three years at fullback for
the Red Raiders. Upon graduation he went with Head
Coach Hal Lahar to Houston and coached in the Cougar
program through 1958. After a tour in the Air Force
Reserve he joined the Houston staff again until accepting
an assistantship under Dick Offenhamer at Buffalo.
Deming tutored both offensive and defensive backs in
1959-60. From 1961-65 he handled defensive backs under
Offie and retained the same position under Urich.
Not a superstitious mentor, he was born on Friday
the 13th, 1935, in Ilion, N. Y. Bob opened his head coaching career on his birthday at Ball State last fall.
An accomplished outdoorsman, hunter and fisherman,
he enjoys antiques and wood refinishing with wife Jean
(University of Rochester). Prior to starting their family,
which now includes Laura, 4, and Leslie Ann, 2, Jean was
a hostess with American Airlines. Deming family headquarters is in suburban Eggertsville.
In association with his head coaching position through
1969-70, Deming also served as acting director of athletics.
He originated the Buffalo Football Camp for high school
players (held on campus this season from August 2-7) and
made numerous area and regional appearances on behalf
of the athletic program at the University.
Deming's main forte is his ability to communicate in
modern education. His liaison with players, students, faculty, alumni, the press and the community is exemplary.

1970 BUFFALO VARSITY COACHING STAFF (1-r) Front: Bob Deming (Colgate '57), head coach; Bill Dando (Detroit
'59), linebackers; Jim McNally (Buffalo '66), offensive line; and Rick Lantz (Central Connecticut '63), secondary. BackWerner Kleeman (Springfield '63), defensive front four; Russ MacKellar (Buffalo '67), assistant offensive line; Vin
Keough (Ithaca '67), head freshman coach; Joe Griffith (Miami, 0. '61), receivers; and Terry Ransbury (Brockport St.
'51), offensive backs.

nineteen

�ROBERT

c.~
TROPHIES
tng11mrs iH .Metal or Plfls/i(

• GAVELS • PEWTERWARE
• PLAQUES • SILVERWARE
!' p nrtin,.: t'qUIJHIIt·nt Jl('C'(f:.. for t·\-~· r y ~J),l r t

508 WASHINGTON ST.
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14203

Call 853-6860

S(' h _•l,:t!PII

at

O n k d('h r un·~.

thp

**
ir

~ P I• r bman·~

Chtl il'f' 1

Nort htown "oto
Southga t• , lena
T r o~n $1 fow n rl•u

134-3331
674-4180
632·5626

Open ' t il 9 N ightly!

The Sound System for today's game
is provided by .•

goBULLS1n
go ... .. .

LARKIN SOUND SERVICE

Everyth ing goes great on

KAUFMAN'S
Kaujinan 's fam o us rye bread
-and delicio us specialty loaves
make e11ery sandwich and e11n y
meal a f east.
Buy 'em at yo ur f ai'Orite f ood sto re.

K~m~!!!'!!,lo,NY
lbu'vef}OI
alottolwe
Pepsi's got
a lotto give

PUBLIC ADDRESS - INTERCOM
and PHONE SYSTEMS

977 Niagara Street
Buffalo, New York

~

PEPSI
~

GOOD LUCK U. B. BULLS
Rud y Bersani -

U. B. 1967

lunch, dinner or late mpper; eat like a
Roman Emperor on centurion's pay
In the North Win&amp; of the MAPLE. LEAF MOTOR LODGE
1620 Niagara Falls Blvd.
'

twenty

83 5· 261 0

1 Mole. North
of Sherodon Dr.
Parking for Your Chariot

DAIRY PRODUCTS
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14209

•

AC 716-883-4080

�BUFFALO SENIORS

CAPTAIN
CHUCK DONNOR
58 Physical Education C
East Aurora, N. Y.

DENNY ALBANEZE
68
Liberal Arts
G
Elmhurst, N. Y.

BARRY ATKINSON
79
Physical Ed.
DT
Tarentum, Pa.

MIKE CONSTANTINO
41
Pharmacy
KSP
Jamestown, N. Y.

40

TOM ELLIOT
Business Adm.
S
Canandaigua, N. Y.

SCOTT HERLAN
Liberal Arts
SE
Grand Island, N. Y.

85

JOE HUDSON
Philosophy
TE
New City, N. Y.

87

TOM CENT OFANTI
73 Physical Education G
Niagara Falls, N. Y.

38

GARY CHAPP
Physical Ed.
LB
Center Line, Mich.

JERRY ELWELL
Anthropology
G
Rochester, N.Y.

49

FALLER
Physical Ed.
HB
Rochester, N. Y.

MIKE JAMES
95 Political Science DE
Pittsburgh, Pa.

66

ROVELL JONES
Psychology
DT
Akron, Ohio

61

twenty·one

�853-7266

OPEN EVERY EVENING EXCEPT WEDNESDAY

FRANK O'CONNOR

FRED RONEKER'S

ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT

School and Team Outfitters

UNIVERSITY SHOP

See: AI Henningham (Sales Manager)

5548 MAIN ST., WILLIAMSVILLE
632-7833

499 Washington Street
Men's and Boy's Wear of Distinction

Buffalo, New York 14203
FOOTBALL HEADQUARTERS

Wqr

14nr~

1\mqrrst

MOTOR MOTEL
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

5000 MAIN ST.

852-2769
853-2737

Locksmiths - Safe Experts

The Safe, Lock &amp; Key Corp.
"Call us to discuss any lock problem"

Exit 50, Main St. West. N. Y. Thruway

204 PEARL STREET, BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

Phone 716-839-2200
SALES- INSTALLATION -

REPAIR

Air and Sound Conditioned Rooms, T.V., Radio, Dining Room
Coffee Shop, Cocktail Lounge, Banquet Rooms

Safes, Locks, Keys, Door Closers

Member Quality Motels, Inc. - AAA Rated Excellent

Distributors - Consultants

!

EATON OFFICE SUPPLY CO., INC.

GOOD LUCK - U. B. BULLS

"for Office Needs -

Eaton Leads"

NEWMAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION

II
I

- located at 15 University Avenue
(cor. Main St. &amp; Niagara Falls Blvd.)
- Phone 834-2297

Diocese of Buffalo

Father Ed Fisher, Moderator

EATON INTERIORS
for complete layout and design service
1155 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

PHONE: 837-6800

II

I'
li

BUSINESS FORMS
PRINTING

OFFICE SUPPLIES
OFFICE FURNITURE

- open to U. B. students

To Games; on Ski Weekends; on Tours;
Everybody Goes First Class in the
Area's Largest Charter Bus Fleet

II

A SK

I

US ABOU T

CLASS, CLUB or
GROUP CHARTERS
For

'f rip ~

\\ i th

to

. \ nywhc~ re

RECONDITIONERS FOR THE BUFFALO BULLS"

MARBA INC.
Reconditioners of Athletic Equipment

.-\1 1 ( ' onvt•niC'tl('f' S

BUFFALO 852-4900

BLUE BIRD COACH LINES, INC.

twenty-two

"THE OFFICIAL EQUIPMENT

1200 Niagara Street

•

Buffalo, N. Y. 14213

882-9330

�BUFFALO SENIORS

CAPTAIN
PRENTIS HENLEY
90
Physical Ed.
DE
Buffalo, N. Y.

ED KRESHAW
59 Political Science LB
Elyria, Ohio

74

96

JOHN RIO
History
Byrnedale, Pa.

T

TOM VIGNEAU
Physical Ed.
DE
Center Line, Mich.

STEVE McCULLOUGH
37
Liberal Arts
LB
Coshocton, Ohio

80

JOE MORESCO
Economics
SE
Ithaca, N. Y.

42

LEN NIXON
Physical Ed.
DB
Willowick, Ohio

ED PERRY
Physical Ed.
Delmar, N.Y.

QB

89

MIKE SHARROW
Physical Ed.
SE
Witherbee, N. Y.

29

BOB STISCAK
Business
HB
Aliquippa, Pa.

BARNEY WOODWARD
21
Physical Ed.
HB
Peru, N.Y.

24

KARL ZALAR
Physical Ed.
DB
Tiffin, Ohio

35

JOE ZELMANSKI
Physical Ed.
FB
Center Line, Mich.

11

twenty-three

�more
excitin •I

GOHR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY INC.
80 METCALFE STREET, BUFFALO, NEW YORK

853-2121

twenty-four

fl

.J

�BALL STATE
IICARDINALSII

CLIFF DAVIDSON
Kokomo HS
DT
Kokomo, Ind.

80

DON BURCHFIELD
40 Southport HS TE
Indianapolis, Ind.

11

70

20

DAVE MEANS
Logansport HS TB
Logansport, Ind.

RANDY JOHNSON
Marion HS
LB
Marion, Ind.

JERRY BURNS
Marion HS
Marion, Ind.

S

JACK MORSE
76 Wyoming Park DE
Wyoming, Mich.

15

WILLIE LENZY
Howe HS
SB
Indianapolis, Ind.

JOHN CARTER
25 Crown Point HS DB
Crown Point, Ind.

68

BOB MUIR
Andrean HS
Gary, Ind.

T

GARY LIETZ
Kokomo HS
Kokomo, Ind.

G

36

RUSTY CLIFFORD
46 North Central HS LB
Indianapolis, Ind.

33

GUS NIERMAN
Southport HS LB
Indianapolis, Ind.

55

74

65

AL MARTHA
Churchill Area DB
Pittsburgh, Pa.

JIM CRABLE
Kokomo HS
Kokomo, Ind.

LB

GREEN RISNER
Wheatfield HS DE
Michigan City, Ind.

twenty-five

�Coach Wave Myers and the Ball State Staff

1970 Cardinal Staff: Kneeling - Head Coach Wave Myers. Standing (1-r)-Al Faunce, offensive coordinator and offensive line coach; Jim Morel, receivers; Frank Houk, backfield; Dale Scrivnor, defensive line; Pete Samuels, linebackers;
and Gary Tranquill, defensive secondary.

BALL STATE UNIVERSITY
Ball State University at Muncie, Ind., in East-Central
Indiana, is shuated on a 812-acre campus with a student
enrollment of more than 16,000. The student population
is growing at a rate of more than 1,000 each year.
Students come to Ball State from most Indiana counties, more than 40 states, and from approximately 40 foreign nations. In addition to its full -time undergraduate and
graduate programs, the university has evening, Saturday,
and a wide variety of community education classes, workshops and seminars for special groups, and a summer
schedule of graduate and undergraduate courses.
The university is also offering graduate work at three
U. S. Air Force bases in England and three in Germany
and the Virgil I. Grissom Air Force Base, Bunker Hill,
Indiana.
There are 46 buildings on the Ball State campus, 15 of
which are residence halls or facilities for married students.
Two additional buildings are located off the campus, the
Kitselman Conference Center and the Bertha Crosley Ball
Art Center.

printing management, urban and regional planning, international studies, the pre-professional programs for medicine, law, dentistry, pharmacy, and engineering. The uni versity also prepares social workers and Boys' Club personnel. There are two-year secretarial, printing technology,
food management, and general arts programs.
The university confers the Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor
of Science, Bachelor of Architecture, Master of Arts,
Master of Arts in' Education, Master of Business Administration, Master of Library Science, Master of Science,
Master of Music, Specialist in Education, Doctor of Philosophy, and Doctor of Education degrees. It has a faculty
of more than 700 who hold degrees from most major universities in the United States and abroad.
Ball State became a state institution of higher learning in 1918 after a 20-year history of serving as a private
normal school. As Ball State Teachers College, the school
gained an international reputation for excellence in teacher
education.

Opened for the first time this fall is the new five-story
Life Science unit in the Robert H. Cooper Science Complex.
This all-modern facility houses the departments of medical
education, biology, and physiology-health science.

By Act of the 1965 Indiana General Assembly, Ball
State became a university and is now organized into five
colleges-College of Architecture and Planning, College of
Business, College of Fine and Applied Arts, College of
Sciences and Humanities, Teachers College-and a Graduate School.

Ball State offers quality programs in architecture, education, business administration, landscape architecture,
liberal arts, dietetics, nursing, medical technology, music,

A rare combination of private philanthropy and state
financial support has made this a unique institution.

twenty·si x

�1970 COLLEGE FOOTBALL RULES CHANGES
By Ellwood A. Geiges
Assistant to Commissioner, Eastern College Athletic Conference
Considerable time and effort was spent by the NCAA Football Rules Committee directed toward
keeping the offense and defense in optimum balance. In addition, proposals were made to more clearly
project the rules governing false starts and encroachment on the neutral zone. No action was taken
but a committee was appointed with instructions to study this problem and report findings and recommendations to the 1971 meeting.
Most changes in the rules and interpretations for 1970 are minor. Those listed below are the more
important ones and should be of interest to spectators and important to players and coaches:
1. The time factor restricting forward pass interference from the time the ball is snapped until it is
touched applies equally to both offensive and defensive players. However, the regulation permitting the defense to legally contact an opponent before the pass is thrown has not been altered.
2. The definition of a "catch" has been revised which should clarify the completion, incompletion or
interception of a forward pass when caught by a player off the ground in contact with an opponent.
Where he first strikes the ground in or out of bounds will determine the completion of the catch.
This regulation will also apply to the catch of a backward pass or fumble in similar situations.
3. Studies by medical authorities have determined that the cause of prevalent knee injuries may be
attributed to the length of shoe cleats. Consequently the maximum cleat length of one half inch
will be mandatory in 1972.
4. Spearing, which is the term applied to the deliberate and malicious use of the head and helmet to
punish the ball carrier, has been defined and prohibited.
Other changes and alterations affect regulations governing decorative markings on the playing field,
mandatory numbering of players, blindside blocking and non-contact fouls.

TO DAY'S
· OFFICIALS

LINESMAN
GILBERT W . MACE-Resident of Pittsburgh, Po .
Graduated from Westminster College. Soles
manager of Stewort-Dowlite Vault Company
of McKeesport, Po . Won three varsity letters
in basketball as on undergraduate. Member
of the board of directors, West Penn Basketball
Officials Association .

CLOCK OPERATOR: Donald F. Burns (SUNY at Albany)
PUBLIC ADDRESS : James R. DeSantis (Canisius)

REFEREE

SCOREBOARD: Raymond W. Reinig

JAMES H. ALEXANDER-An electrical engineer
employed by I.B.M. Resides in Vestal, N. Y.
Graduate of Northwestern University . He is
currently engaged as a staff engineer with the
Federal System Division of I.B.M. specializing
in guidance systems for the Gemini Saturn
space vehicles.

FIELD JUDGE
ROBERT E. DUFF-Resides in Ben Avon Heights
of Pittsburgh , Po . He is a vice-president of
on insurance agency. Graduate of Thiel College. Captain of Thiel 's varsity basketball team
for three years. Also, won three varsity tennis
letters.

BACK JUDGE
JAMES R. SHEEHAN-Associated with Eastman
Kodak Company in Rochester. Serves as a subcontract representative. Graduate of Clarkson
College of Technology where he won three
varsity basketball letters with the Golden
Knights. Army service in 1956-57.

UMPIRE
MITCHELL J. OLENSKI-G roduote of the University of Alabama. Mode All -Southern Conference Team at tackle. Played with the Crimson Tide in the Cotton and Orange Bowls.
Served in quartermaster corps during U. S.
Army duty. Played with Miami Seohowks and
Detroit Lions.

Restaurant owner and proprietor.

Resides in Vestal, N. Y.

twenty-seven

�Editor's Bullpen
TOLEDO LOOKS TOUGH

Toledo's 56 points was a Tangerine Bowl record,
too. The Rockets posted 42 by the half.
Five Toledo players were drafted by professional football from 1969's championship club.
When Toledo finished No. 1 in the nation in
total defense among major colleges last season, it
marked the fourth time in the last five years that
the Rockets have been in that Top Ten. The Rockets were also in that select company in 1965, 1966
and 1967.
The best game of the Rotary decade is in store
next Saturday.
Aloha Dr. Fritz
Attending his first football game at Rotary this
afternoon is the University's new director of physical education, recreation and athletics, Dr. Harry
G. Fritz (Transylvania '46). The veteran Fritz has
devoted his life to sport and he knows the "game."
He won letters in high school athletics, ten varsity
college letters in football, basketball and baseball
and was a two-year captain on the gridiron and
court for the Pioneers.
He played professional and service following
graduation and has based his athletic philosophy
on a rich competitive background. In football he
has been a head and assistant coach.
Dr. Fritz best expresses his intercollegiate
thoughts this way, "I'm basically concerned with
what the ball will do to the boy, and what the boy
does to the ball."
President's Box
The U B President's box has a new host. Dr.
Robert L. Ketter, Buffalo's 11th executive officer,
is a Lehigh fan of long standing, but his loyalty
to the Blue and Gold is beyond question.

To state that one of the nation's powerhouse,
"darkhorse" football teams will visit Rotary next
Saturday is putting it mildly. Toledo's Rockets
under Head Coach and AD Frank X. Lauterbur
are a good football team, in fact the Midnight
Blue and Gold could be one of the best elevens in
the land and will be out to prove it against Buffalo. Toledo opens at home thi s evening in the
Glass Bowl (16,500) against East Carolina, a new
opponent.
Toledo Football reached sky-high proportions
in '69. At year's end the Rockets ranked 20th
in the final AP Poll. Following a perfect 10-0-0
season and Mid-American Championship, UT
easily whipped Davidson 56-33 for the Tangerine
Bowl title. The Rockets led the country in total
defense and were among the Top 20 in rushing
defense, defense against ·Scoring, total offense,
rushing offense and scoring. Much of that slick
talent is back (25 lettermen returning and 15
lost).
There appears to be a scarcity of problems this
season at Toledo. Finding a kicker for graduated
Ken Crots, fourth highest kick-scorer in college
history, and holes to fill at offensive right guard
and both defensive ends loom as ma jor.
The Rockets have team depth, so much so at
linebacker and in the secondary that they could
trade away proven talent with no ill effect.
Coach Lauterbur likes the long gainer on offense. Of 45 team TDs last season 16 came on
plays of from 43 to 81 yards. He likes points on
the board in general. His team outscored the opposition 329 to 127 last year for a school record.

1970 Buffalo Composite Schedule
BAll STATE

TOlEDO

Sept. 12

Sept. 19

Sept 26

Oct. 3

Oct 10

Oct 17

Oct. 24

Oct . 3\

Nov 7

Nov. 14

BUFFALO

E KENTUCKY

BUTLER

AKRON

INDIANA ST.

EVANSVILLE

NO ILLINOIS

MIDDLE TENN

SO . IlLINOIS

EAST. MICHIGAf\

at
Buffalo

at

at

at

Munc•e

at
Muncie

at

lnd•onopol.s

at
Terre Houle

at

Munc•e

Munc•e

Murfreesboro

at
Munc•e

Yps.lonl•

E CAROLINA

BUFFALO

MARSHAll

OHIO UN IV

WEST MICHIGAN

KENT STATE

MIAMI , O

NO ILLINOIS

DAYTON

at

at

at

at

at

at

at

at

at

at

at

Buffalo

Toledo

Athens

Toledo

Kolomaz.oo

Kent

Toledo

Toledo

Dayton

Toledo

OHIO UN IV

BUFFALO

PITTSBURGH

TOLEDO

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�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1970-09-12 U.B. vs Ball State</text>
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                <text>September 12 Rotary Field</text>
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                <text> Official program fifity cents</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>�.'

�Official

Northern Illinois University
The Department of Physical Education and Athletics for Men at Northern Illinois University is
delighted to have you as its guest. Northern's
Stadium is a modern facility with many areas of
service which you might wish to avail yourself.
In order to acquaint you with the stadium accommodations. we are citing several important areas
wh ich may be of interest to you. We welcome suggestions and will make every effort to make our
Stadium comfortable and enjoyable. Please direct
any suggestions to Dr. Robert J. Brigham, Athletic
Director, Northern Illinois University, OeKalb, Illinois 60115.

Football Program

CONTENTS
SQUAD LISTS
Northern Illinois University Alphabetical Roster ................ 20
Northern Illinois University Numerical Roster .................... 23
Buffalo Numerical Roster ---·---- --·- ..... .................. ............... 23
Buffalo Alphabetical Roster -·-- .. -·-· -·---·---- ·-- ..... .................... 25

PUBLIC TELEPHONES
Public pay-station telephones are available
under the concrete stadium stands on the west
side of the football field near Gates 4 . 5 , 7 , &amp; 8 .

PICTURES
Administration

4

Physical Education, Athletic Administration ....... ·---- ---·--·---

6

Huskies' Football Board of Strategy .................................. 12
Huskie Players ·-·-· --- ·-·- .. ··-- .................................... 14, 16, 18
Pom Pons .. ______ . _. ___ . __ ... _..... ____ .. _. ____ . _. __ ................ _.. __ _... __ . _. _ 21
Cheerleaders . __ .... ___ ... __ .. ______ ..... ___ ... _... ___ .. __ ______ .... -·- -·- .... __ .. _ 24
Buffalo Administration, Football Coaches .......................... 26
Busy Bulls --···---·- ·-- --·----- -- ·--- --·· ----·-··------···--- .. ·-·-·-- .. ·-· ---·--- -- 30
Cross Country ... _. __ ... --- _____ .. ......... _.. ...... -....... _. _-· ........... _..... 34
Hustl in' Huskies __ ..... _... _.......... _... __ .... ____ . ___ . _. __ .. _.............. _. 36
Soccer ·-- ____ ... ..... .. ...................................... __ .. .. __ ... . __ .. _. _..... _38
Trainers, Equipment Managers ...... ·-·--·····---·------- ·- .. ··-·-----·- 40

The President's Page

2

Eng I ish Department Bulges -------- ·-· -- ·- ............ .................... . 8
Seniors Bid Farewell --- ·- ·--- -·-·---- .. --- .. -· -·-·-------·- ·-·- --·-·- -- ----·-· 10
Buffalo Faces Urban Needs

28

Conference of Midwestern Universities ...... ...................... 32
NIU Basketball Prospects, Schedule -·-·····-------· .. ·---- .. ···· -- --- 42

Owen W. (Bud) Nangle; Miss Shirley Miller, Typist. EDITORIAL
CONTRIBUTIONS by University Relations staff members Joseph Marsh, lrvan J.
Kummerfeldt, Donald C. Peterson , Douglas W . Spangler, Robert L Woggon. PHOTOGRAPHY: University Relations Photo Department and John Patsch of the North-

EDITORIAL STAFF:

ern Star.

~

•

LOST AND FOUND
Should you lose an article while attending the
game, call at the Ticket Office which is located
on either side of the elevator shaft on the ground
level Df the concrete stadium stand on the west
side of the football field. After each game, em ployees make an extensive search of the stadium
for lost articles and turn them in at the Ticket
Office. May we request your cooperation in turning in any articles you find to the Ticket Office.
FIRST AID
A First Aid service area is located on the
ground level near the immediate proximity of
Gate 7. Access to the First Aid service area can
be gained by passage through gates 4 , 5 . 7 . 8 .
10, 11 , 13. or 14. A red cross with an arrow
indicates the direction you should take in order
to reach the area. A physician is in attendance
at this station throughout the entire game.
Patrons should report any illness or injury in the
stadium immediately to the nearest usher.
SERVICE FOR PHYSICIANS
Physicians attending the games are requested
to register at the Will Call W indow adjacent to
the Press Box elevator located to the rear of the
concrete stadium on the w est side the football
field. It is also requested that physicians register
their seat locations in order that any emergency
calls might be delivered to them without delay.
PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM
No special announcements wi ll be made over
the Public Address System except in cases of
dire emergency. We ask your cooperation in not
requesting this service .

DEPARTMENTS

OFFICIAL PROGRAM sity Ath~etic Depart~ent.
Advertismg by .David E.
Marketing Services, Inc.,

TICKETS
Please read the directions on your ticket as to
the location of your seat. If you are unable to
find it. a blue-uniformed Andy Frain usher is
available at most tunnel entrances and will be
only too happy to assist you in finding your seat.
Please keep your ticket stub on your person at
all times during your visit to our Stadium. It will
assure you of your seat and minimize any confusion.

Published by the Northern Illinois UniverEdited by ~wen W. (Bu~)- Nangle. Local
Bucher. Natwnal Adverhsmg by Spencer
New York, New York 10017.

REST ROOMS
Ground level Rest Rooms are located on both
sides of the concrete stadium west of the football field and are easily accessible through Gates
4 , 5. 7 . 8 , 10, 11 , 13, and 14. Ground level Rest
Room facilities are also located immediately to
the rear of the steel bleachers on the east side
of the football field . Additional Rest Room accommodations for women are located on the top
level of the ramps to the back of the concrete
stadium between Gates 6 and 9 . and at Gate 16.
M en's Rest Rooms on the top ramp are located
between Gates 12 and 15 and at Gate 3 .
REFRESHMENTS
Counters are located under the concrete stadium west of the football field in both the South
and North lobbies _ and are readily accessible
through Gates 4 , 5 . 7 , 8 , 10. 11 , 13, and 14.
The steel bleachers located east of the football
playing field will be serviced by refreshment
counters near the North and South terminal
points of the bleachers.
PARKING
Parking is permitted in all student parking lots
and on the intramural fields located immediately
east of the stadium. Additional parking is avail able on the freshman football and baseball fields
located immediately west of the West Stadium
Drive across from the varsity baseball and football practice areas. Parking may be restricted at
both the intramural and freshman sites in the
event of inclement w eather.

1

��Everybody -Is Sold On

ROYCE THOMPSONI
Royce Thompson

Sue Skoglund

Phyllis Wit

Tom Courtney

• HOMES
• FARMS
• APARTMENTS
• MANAGEMENT
• COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES

151 WEST LINCOLN HIGHWAY

DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115
3

�"'

DR. RICHARD C. BOWERS
Vice President. Provost
DR. ERNEST E. HANSON
Vice President, Student
Personnel Services

DR. PETER D.
ABRAMS
Director,
University
Research

DR. ROBERT W.
BUGGERY
Acting Dean ,
College of Fine
and Applied Arts

4

DR. WILLIAM P.
FROOM
Director,
University
Relations

DR. PAUL
BURTNESS
Dean, College
of Liberal
Arts and Sciences

DR. JOHN B.
GARDNER
Assistant
to the
President

DR. JAMES E.
HEALD
Dean, College
of Education

DR. WAYNE J.
MciLRATH
Dean,
Graduate
School

DR. RICHARD J. SMITH
Vice President,
Business Affairs

DR. JOHN C.
MITCHEM
Special
Assistant to
the President

DR. VIRTUS W.
SUHR
Acting Dean.
College of
Continuing
Education

JOHN J.
TEMPLIN
Legal
Counsel

DR. ROBERT L.
TH ISTLETHWAITE
Dean,
College of
Business

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What You Can Find
at Terwilligers
ATHLETIC SUPPLIES FOR
ATHLETES OF ALL AGES
From Little Leaguers to Joggers
--o--

Custom Lettering on
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Jackets

TERWILLIGERS

"your kind of place"
-0-

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NOW

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100% PURE BEEF HAMBURGERS ....... ......................... .......... ......... . 20C
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CHRIS BOULOS, Owner

5

�iD~

&amp;eteeeat«ue

/ll'ed
/ltldettu ?(J'l,

~

DR. ROBERT J. BRIGHAM
Director, Department of
Physical Education and
Athletics for Men

DR. NYE L. LaBAW
Chairman of
Intercollegiate Athletics

OWEN W. lBUDJ NANGLE
Sports Information
Director

6

KENNETH L. PRENTICE
Business Manager ·of
Athletics

DR. MARK E. DEAN
Coordinator of Student
Athletic Affairs

DR. ROBERT W. KAHLER
Chairman of
Physical Education

DR. J. HUBERT DUNN
Director of
Graduate Programs

�·Our H kies Enjoy Solid
Footi g On Asphalt Bases
Produced and Installed
By

STA

Over 28 Yea s of Quality Work

Foundations for Northern Illinois University athletic facilities. inclu · 9 the new
AstroTurf football field. are the product of • • •

Barber-Greene Road

A

DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115
MAILING ADDRESS: P. 0. BOX NO. 514

TELEPHONE 756-7853

7

�Gerber

Meeter

Hagelman

Mellard

O ggel

Pry

Ferstel

Largest Unit At NIU

English Department Bulges
Any time you collect 160 teachers together with several
thousand students, you must have at least a fair-sized college
if not a full-scale university, right?
Not with today's huge public universities and their phenomenal growth .
At Northern Illinois University, for example, the English department alone boasts a full-time faculty of 90 plus another 70
part-time instructors who are graduate students. Total departmental teaching staff: 160. And this is only one of 17 departments in NIU's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, which is
only one of four colleges. The department is NIU 's largest.
Of NIU's 22 ,817 students, thousands each semester take at
least one of the more than 110 courses the department offers.
In fact, nearly 900 Northern students are English undergraduate
majors and about 300 are listed as English graduate students.
There are more than 125 sections of just freshman English
courses.
In order to cope with such vast numbers, the department has
had to create its own bureaucracy to assist Chairman Charles
W. Hagelman, Jr. , a Texas native who has been honored by
one of the nation's biggest corporations with its excellence-in teaching award.
Working with him are Drs. Helmut Gerber, Glenn A. Meeter,
and James Mellard, all of whom have reduced teaching loads
to provide them with time to help administer their special areas :
Gerber as director of graduate studies in English . Meeter with
the equivalent post for undergraduates, and Mellard handling
the English courses required of all NIU freshmen.
An English honors program is administered by Lynwood T.
(Terry) Oggel and students contribute to departmental policies
through the English Graduate Student Advisory Committee and
the undergraduates' English Students Association. Elmer Pry,
a Ph.D. candidate who now calls DeKalb home, heads the grad uate committee and John Ferstel , a senior from Chicago, heads
the undergrad group.
All of this substructure under Hagelman seems to work
effectively enough that there are few complaints about the department being too big or too impersonal. In fact, most think
the s ize is an advantage particularly at the graduate level because so many more courses can be offered by a large variety
of experts on diverse subjects .
"Our most dramatic progress in the past few years has been
at the graduate level," says Hagelman , who along with a great
many of the English faculty has been at NIU only about two
years.
Gerber , who has headed the graduate studies program the

8

two years since he came here, notes that about 75 of the approximately 300 English graduate students are working on doctoral degrees with the rest seeking Master of Arts or Master
of Science in Education degrees.
"Certainly in the last few years the reputation of this department has gotten outside the Midwest, " Gerber says. "This
is quite evident just from the places we're drawing faculty from
such as California, Wisconsin , Texas. We're getting good
people."
Student opinion seems to agree with Gerber's assessment
and grad student Pry, who himself plans to teach college
English, describes the department as "excellent, although comparatively young. We're attracting grad students from many
places outside the area and the quality of the faculty and the
department is indicated by the greater number of better quality
students we're getting."
Pry and undergraduate leader Ferstel find one thing that
impresses, and surprises , many elsewhere is that NIU English
students are allowed to interview prospective faculty and then
submit individual reports to the department's steering committee , which apparently often takes the students' advice.
"We've taken a big leap since I transferred here as a sophomore ," says senior Ferstel. "The faculty is probably younger
than at many places, but that makes for more enthusiasm
although I would not cut short many of the older profs."
Ferstel and about 75 other students active 'in the ESA are
undertaking a large number of projects to improve the department even more. including publication of a newsletter started
in August. They plan to bring more literary lecturers to campus
and the ESA members also are promoting coffee hours to get
English students and faculty together more informally. Next
spring, they plan to publish evaluations of all teachers of upper
level (junior and senior) courses .
Out of all these activities, Ferstel hopes, undergraduate
English majors will gain familiarity with the department, faculty and each other going a long way to make up for some
of the disadvantages that unavoidably result from the department's huge size.
Meeter, director of undergraduate English studies, and
Mellard , freshman English director, both consider the amount
of student involvement in departmental policy-making highly
unusual both for NIU and in comparison with other universities.
General faculty reaction appears to be positive, they believe,
and many have praised the students not only for their interest
in curriculum and quality of instruction but al so for their increasingly better qualifications for NIU as a result of tougher
and tougher admissions standards.

�Lf.lf.lking
For
Santa's Helper?
®

. GL1fJJq:ew
@

tThe Gu·d
J e
I"'Tcf'&lt;l.~oo'
0 select the
~ Perfect
gift!

We will help you find the right Gift
for your loved one in Wednesday's
DEKALB COUNTY

D

�Tlaey'll Be Bemembered

15 NIU Seniors Bid Farewell
It happens every year, but you never
seem quite prepared.
The last game of the football season
and the f inal appearance of young men in
Huskie uniforms .
It's going to seem strange next August
when Coach Doc Ur ich issues the Call to
Arms not to take a look at 75 young men
prancing onto the AstroTurf carpet and not
see the broad grin on the face of John
Lalonde among them.
Nor the countenances of Tom Bastable .
Mike Batina , Dick Ciesla, John Combs ,
Dan DeVito , Bill Dial , Ed Freza , Bob Hastings , Mike Lariccia. Roy May. Chris Richter, Phil Szukis , Mike Wadzita, or Dave
Weisendanger .

University from College Division status to
major college ranking . .. University Di vision . if you will . .. in the National Col legiate Athletic Association.
They completed their sophomore year
as the final NIU College Division team .
There has followed two years of moving
up against nationally ranked teams , All America players, huge crowds, the works.
It 's been demand ing , extremely so . In
the projection of future schedules , few
Huskie elevens will tackle a schedule so
rugged as the 1970 campaign .
And our Huskie seniors were not with out their moments of glory .

Leo). Weisendanger (Freeport). and Szukis
( DeKalb) . Wadzita (Arlington Heights).
Dial
( LaSalle-Peru),
Lariccia
(Calumet
City / Thornridge),
Ciesla
(Waukegan) ,
Hastings (Cary -Grove), and Bastable (Arlington Heights / Wheeling) played regularly for the past two years. Freza (Cicero /
Morton East) earned a starting job this
fall. but was hampered by injuries. May
(Oglesby / LaSalle -Peru) and Combs (Rockford I East) saw action as reserves.
"I am more than satisfied with the performance of our seniors . " declared Urich .
"They are a dedicated group of young men
.. . good leaders. This is especially important to a program that is being rebuilt
around to many young players.

For three summers and three falls most
of these young men have been wearing the
Cardinal and Black with distinction . But
after today's game against Buffalo , they
enter the archives as just another statistic.

Lalonde . for example, appeared to thrive
on rugged opposition . He slammed his
way to the season net-yards-rushing record
with 866 yards as a sophomore . This sea son he added the career rushing mark to
h is accomplishments with over 2 .000
three-footers .

In reality , they are not just another statistic .

But John came to play. He was a three year regular .

So it is with the 68th Northern Illinois
University football team that the demands
of Father Time are met.

These are the young men who ran the
gamut in the transition of Northern Illinois

So were Richter (Algonquin / Crown).
DeVito (Wheeling). Batina (Chicago / St .

It's been a memorable three years . gents ,
and thanks for the memories.

"In addition to accepting the responsi bility of being the leaders in our program ,
a Jot of them played very well throughout
the season ."

1970 Results &amp; Schedules
NORTHERN ILLINOIS

SEPTEMBER
12-San Diego State 35, NIU 3
19-Montana 30, NIU 6
26-NIU 18, Xavier 10.1 0
OCTOBER
3-Miami 10.1 48, NIU 0
lO-West Texas 24, NIU 22
24-NIU 31, Ball State 14
31-Dayton 21, NIU 20
NOVEMBER
7-Toledo 45, NIU 7
14-Western Michigan 38, NIU 18
21-BUFFALO

BUFFALO

SEPTEMBER
12-Ball State 14, Buffalo 7
19-Toledo 27, Buffalo 6
26-Kent State 27, Buffalo 21
OCTOBER
3-Buffalo 16, Massachusetts 13
1 0-Villanova 17, BuHalo 7
17-Dayton 41, BuHalo 0
24-Virginia Tech 31, BuHalo 14
31-Buffalo 16, Cross 0

STEVE GOEHL (29) dashes toward Huskie goa/line as he breaks into open momentarily
in Homecoming game against Dayton. The Huntley junior was cut down after a 13-yard
gain by Dayton 's Jim Tierney (50) and Don Simpson (23).

10

NOVEMBER
7-Boston College 65, Buffalo 12
14-Temple 21, Buffalo 8
21-At Northern Illinois
!HOME GAMES CAPITALIZEDJ

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DEKALB

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1312 West Lincoln Hwy.
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OTHER LOCATIONS:
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"DELIGHTFUL DINING ON A COLLEGE BUDGET"

11

�RICHARD W. (DOC) URICH
Head Football Coach

CLIFFORD R. (KIP) CRAMER
Front Four Coach

12

JERRY A. IPPOLITI
Offensive Backfield Coach

JOHN L. LUCKHARDT
Varsity Receivers,
Head Freshman Coach

CHARLES A. NICKOSON
Strong Side
Offensive Line Coach

SAM L. SANDERS
Linebacker Coach

OTIS R. WAGNER
Defensive Backfield Coach

RALPH ZURBRUGG
Short Side
Offensive Line Coach

WILLIAM ANDERSON
Graduate Assistant
Freshman Coach

TERRY M. HARMSTON
Graduate Assistant
Freshman Coach ·

THOMAS J. ROSE
Graduate Assistant
Freshman Coach

�THE I
I

Now here 's an easy way to keep your
Stroh 's nice 'n cold all afternoon long.
Our aluminum- insulated Stay Cold
Pack.
J ust make sure the who le box is
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Mind you, we ' re not saying a Stay
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But it 's sure a heck of a lot more
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Stroh's •.• From One Beer Lover to Another.

THE STROH BREWERY COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48226

13

�Arlington Heights
(Wheeling)

Chicago
(St. Leo)

LARRY CLARK
Winnebago

DAN qeYIT9
WJ!eeli~

Calumet City
(Thornton Fractional
North)

Chicago
(Brother Rice)

TIM HOLT
Sauk Village
(Chicago Heights!
Bloom Twp.)

�Bradt.- Milner Travel Service
1(1~

II

Sewtee

~e4 ?ilz4t

Go Get 'Em Huskies! ,,

Charlie .. Jane .. Betty .. Beverly .. Claire .. Kathy

247 North Second Street
DE KALB. ILLINOIS
TELEPHONES:
DE KALB AC/815 758-8173

CHICAGO AC/312 782-7569

DeKALB SAVINGS
Third &amp; Locust Streets •

AHD LOAH ASSOCIATION

DeKalb, Illinois •

Phone 756-6314

15

�CLEO HUSBAND
Chicago
(Wendell Phillips)

PAUL JANIK
Chicago
(Brother Rice)

LARRY KAPPEL
Chicago
(Marist)

Calumet City
(Dolton I Thornridge)

CEDRIC Mc:LAUGHLIN
Joliet
(Central)

16

TODD KRUEGER
Elgin
(Larkin)

JOHN LaLONDE
Downers Grove
(North)

Chicago
( DeLaSalfe)

Rockford
(East)

Chicago
(Lindblom)

RICHARD MOREHOUSE
Lancaster, Wis.

�Here's a big cheer for the 4111!!1!111!1!!1111970 NIU Huskies from
the Innovators at the
DeKalb Bank.

THE DEKALB BANK
'"I

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1....11

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BOOKS Almost I 50,000 books to choose
from, in both hard cover and paper back,
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THE

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NEWSPAPERS Including local, out-oftown, foreign and financial publications.
CIGARS AND TOBACCO

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�1970

~et~

NORM NUZBACH
Chicago
(Oak Lawn/
St. Laurence)

GEORGE O'MEARA
Chicago
(St. Patrick)

ROGER PASSAGLIA
Cary
(Cary-Grove)

VALDIS SPURIS
Chicago
(Lane Tech)

PHIL SZUKIS
DeKalb

MIKE WADZITA
Arlington Heights

STEVE WARE
St. Charles

DAVE WEISENDANGER
Freeport

MIKE WEISKIRCHER
Loves Park
(Rockford /Boylan)

FRED WITTENMEIER
Evergreen Park
(Oak Lawn/
St. Laurence)

TOM WJTTUM
Round Lake

DON WNEK
Chicago
(Lane Tech)

18

�THE

ENTERTAINMENT
SPECIALISTS
722 West Lincoln
(Across From McDonald's)

GUITAR SHOP AND
STUDIO
e Offe ring Specialized
Instruction In All
Fie lds Of Guitar

• We oHer in private,
or class form, a folk
and pop guitar course
which is ideally
suited to the student
who has limited
practice time available, but who wants
to learn to p1ay in
a short time.
e

W e Have A Very Large
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Electric Guitars And
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Phone 758-8898

JUST OPENED
A Complete
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WAY

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ASUR

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YOUR HOME 0

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APARTMENT IS

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And Profile SKI WEAR
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STEREO
Finest Component Stere o
At Chic'1l&lt;fo Prices

Skis, Boots And Poles
Regularly Scheduled
SKI TRIPS

st

Every Weekend and
Two Nights Weekly
Phone 758-8898

19

�NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY
1970 VARSITY FOOTBALL ROSTER
No.

Name

76
58
80
24
50
63

Ainsworth, Jeff
Arnold, Jerry
Bastable, Tom*
Bateast, Mitch
Batina, Mike **
Bonin, Jim

72

Ciesla, Richard *
Clark, Larry
Davis, Lou
DeVito, Dan **
Dial William *
Dodd, Jim
Drugan, Terry

55
59
47
67
34
10
86
39
40
29
78
71
81
68
69
74
42
30
52
65
61
87
33
70
57
28
88
25
45
26
83
79
44
60
14
II
77

31
21
32
38
89
64

53
75
49
12
56
93
90

Feaman, Scott*
Freza, Ed *
Garrett, Dave *
Goehl, Steve
Hamilton, Dennis
Hastings, Robert*
Hatter, Willie
Holt, Tim
Holt, Tom
Hoover, John
Hudetz, Leo *
Husband, Cleo*
Janik, Paul *
Kappel, Larry
Kowalczyk, Don
Krueger, Todd
Lalonde, John **
Lariccia, Mike *
Lindstrom, John
Mackey, Steve
May, Roy*
Mclaughlin, Cedric
Meader, Gary
Montgomery, James*
Morehouse, Dick
Nokes , John
Nuzbach, Norm
O'Meara, George
Passaglia , Roger
Piazza, John
Pubentz, Jim
Richter, Chris **
Rose , Bill
Rudecki, Bob
Spuris, Valdis*
Szu kis, Phil **
Wadzita, Mike*
Ware, Steve
Weisendanger, Dave**
Weiskircher, Mike
Wells, Rich
Wittenmeier, Fred
Wittum, Tom *
Wnek, Don

Yr.
T
2
OG
3
HB
4
HB
2
c
4
WSLB 2
Pos.

OT
ILB

c

DHB
DT

s

QB
TE
HB
DHB
HB
OT
DT
SE
G
G
TE
SSLB
FB
ILB
G
DT
SE
FB
DT
ILB
HB
DE
HB
DHB
DHB
DE
DT
SAF
ILB
SE
QB
OT
DE

s

FB
WSLB
DE
G

c

OT
SAF
QB
SSLB
K
DE

Age

Ht.

Wt.

Hometown

20
20
21
24
20
21

5-11
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-1
6-0

231
190
174
190
210
195

4
2
3
4
4
2
2

20
19
21
21
19
18

6-3
6-2
6-3
5-10
6-3
6-0
5-11

216
205
225
189
230
179
179

3
4
3
3
2
4
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
2
2
2
4
4
2
2
4
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
4
2
2
3
4
4
3
4
2
2
2
3
2

20
21
19
20
19
22
19
19
19
21
20
21
20
19
19
18
22
21
20
18
21
18
18
19
19
19
19
19
19
18
20
21
19
19
20
21
22
20
21
20
19
18
20
19

6-1
5-1 I
5-9
6-0
6-4
6-7
5- 11
6-0
6-0
6-4
6-0
5-9
5-1 I
6-1
6-4
6-3
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-8
5-10
5-10
6-1
6-3
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-9
5- 10
6-0
6-3
5-11
6-4
6-2
6-2
5-9
6-0
6-0
6-2

223
174
167
193
225
253
167
216
209
232
210
192
198
211
218
201
200
223
215
174
192
185
170
168
212
236
185
207
171
166
225
197
161
208
192
230
209
196
221
176
180
204
182
216

Geneva
Geneva, Jerry Auchstetter
Chicago
DuSable, Bob Bonner
Arlington Heights
Wheeling, Bill Daletski
Chicago
Farragut, Guido Marchetti
Chicago
St. Leo, Robert Hanlon
Calumet City
Thornton Fractional North,
Ronald Tomczak
Waukegan
Waukegan, Walter Rucks
Winnebago
Winnebago, Arnie Vesely
Chicago
DuSable, Bob Bonner
Wheeling
Wheeling, Bill Daletski
LaSalle
LaSalle-Peru, Gene Cherney
Highland Pk. Highland Pk., John Chickerneo
Berkeley
St. Joseph's, Westchester,
Jack Annetti
Chicago
Brother Rice, Thomas Mitchell
Cicero
Morton East, Bill Vohaska
Chicago
DuSable, Bob Bonner
Huntley
Huntley, Homer Barry
Oglesby
LaSalle-Peru , Ed Bender
Cary
Cary-Grove, Willie Mack
Evanston
Evanston, Murney Lazier
Sauk Village
Bloom Twp., Charles Sides
Sauk Village
Bloom Twp. , Charles Sides
Gary, Indiana
Tolleston, Robert Stearns
Warrensville
St. Francis, Mike Mariani
Chicago
Wendell Phillips, Carl Bonner
Chicago
Brother Rice, Thomas Mitchell
Chicago
Marist, Tony Pietrzak
Chicago
Taft, Chuck Dobrath
Elgin
Larkin, Ray Haley
Downers Gr.
Downers Gr., Dick Carstens
Calumet City
Thornridge, Jack Robinson
Calumet City
Munster, Ind., John Friend
Chicago
DelaSalle, Pat Cronin
Oglesby
LaSalle-Peru, Ed Bender
Joliet
Central, Ken Robbins
Rockford
Rockford East, Bob Pellant
Chicago
Lindblom, George Von Bremer
Lancaster, Wis.
Lancaster, Richard Bixby
Niles
Lakeview, Chicago, Ray Jacobson
Chicago
St. Laurence, Frank Minik
Chicago
St. Patrick, Larry Scannell
Cary
Cary-Grove, Jack Siatta
Glenwood
Bloom Twp., Charles Sides
Plainfield
Plainfield, Clint Forsyth
Algonquin
Crown, Robert Seamans
Chicago
St. Patrick's, Larry Scannel
Chicago
DelaSalle, Pat Cronin
Chicago
Lane Tech, AI Manasin
DeKalb,
DeKalb, Bob Heimerdinger
Arlington Heights
Arlington, AI Allen
St. Charles
St. Charles, Leo Vitali
Freeport
Freeport, Nate Johnson
Loves Park
Boylan , Ben Murray
Morris
Morris, Larry Kane
Evergreen Park
St. Laurence, Frank Minik
Round Lake
Round Lake, James Rogers
Chicago
Lane Tech, AI Manasin

* Indicates number of varsity letters won.

20

22

High School &amp; Coach

�FRONT ROW. LEFT TO RIGHT:
Jean Peterson , Pat MeA leer. Beth
French (Co -Captain ). Nancy Hin ricks . Sue Iverson. Char Freeman
(Co -Captain) . Georgeanne Paugh ,
Debbie Bogert .

MIDDLE ROW. LEFT TO RIGHT:
Pat Pettito , Pat Powers . Stephanie
Fraggos . Sheila Gallichio , Debbie
DiOrio, Julie Sorenson . Debbie
Skonecke . Lisa Shakman .

BACK ROW. LEFT TO RIGHT:
Debbie Corcoran . Vicki Anderson ,
Nancy Waters . Bette Beer. Margie
Twardy. Joy Toman . Patti Clancy,
Sue Schoij, Denise Rode .

FEATURING THE WORLDS MOST FAMOUS
NAMES IN FRAGRANCES AND COSMETICS
AT

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with low prices for the

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263 EAST LINCOLN HIGHWAY

1328 SYCAMORE ROAD

DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115

DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60 I 15

756-2622

758-3785

21

�I

~ ---------------------

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LaLonde Sparks Huskies, 43 to 26
of reach. And of those 16 plays, j the record of Coach Richard I
carried the ball 12 [Doc] Urich of Northern Illitimes, s_coring fr~m one yard nois in this series. In l968, the
DEKALB, Ill., Nov. 21:-W~en
6- 26 out to g1ve the wmners a 30 to only other time the two schools
John _LaLonde scored ~1s third Buffalo
TELEVISION
0
1 12
and fmal touchdown this after- Northern
111.
11
1 12
7-43 14 advantage.
have met ufl'ch wa S In
· h'IS 11 a.m. WCIU·TV 1261 Wrtstilnt Cham·
Ill' ·
W'tt
2'
N rt •·
pions.
noon, it not only assured North- fi:td·;~~~ onoos: ' um, ryard 3•0 I Not only did LaLonde score .
'
Noon: WMAQ·TV [5] Pro Footbath
ern Illinois of a 43 to 26 con- Northern Illinois: LaLonde, 12-Yard
, three times but the 5-9 205- fmal season at Buffalo, and Houston Oilers vs. Cleveland Browns.
10
0
Noon:
WCIU-TV [261 Roller oerbr: Oakquest of Buffalo, but showed N!~t'l;.~wi~~:;;.k,ickkudecki, 20.ran1 ' · pound fullb~ck also rush~d for coached the Bulls to a 20 to 7
land Bar Bombers vs. southern Mustangs.
what a winner the all-time run. [Wittum,_ kickJ
11-o . 132 yards, closing out his illus- triumph.
3 p, m. WBBM·TV [2) Pro Football:
•
.
Northern llhnoos: Lalonde, 2-rard
•
• h
Husk1e rusher IS.
run. !Wittum. kickJ
24-o
tnous career w1t 2,127 yards,
Tom Wittum, the fine kicker st. Louis Cardinals vs, Kansas City Choets.
4 p. m. WFLD-TV [321 Drag Racint:
.
d
Buffalo:
Moresco,
21·rard
pass
from
the
best
ever
at
Northern
Illi
.
.
.
.
L a Lon d e and the HuskJes ha
Borton. [Faller, pass from BartonJ 24-8
•
• for Northern lllmms had h1s 1970 Supernational Drat Racint ChamPiOII'sh&lt;pS.
it Very
easy
in
the
first
half
Buffalo: MacVallie, 37-rard run with
nOJS.
t'
·
t
f't
t
h
.
'
intercepted fumble. £Pass failed! 24-14
T
•
•
consecu JVe pom s-a er- ouc RADIO
Not only d1d the VICtors have down rna k broken After the 12:45 p.m. W·G·N [7201 Pro Football:
carrymg a 24 to 8 lead to the Northern Illinois: LaLonde, 1-rard
locker room And Northern llli- run. !Kick. failed!
. 30·14 a standout on offense but Mike
r
·
· Buffalo BillS vs. CHICAGO BEARS .
•
• •
•
Buffalo: Elhott, 4Hard run woth
·
•
'
third touchdown by LaLonde
no1s received the kickoff to intercepted tumble. [Run failed! 30·20 Wwsktrcher, a 6-2, 176-pound
.
· .
• 8:15 p, m. IWMAQ [670] Pro HockeY!
Seats vs. CHICAGO B~ACK
start the second half But on Northern Illinois: Pima. Nard run .
I sophomore safety from Loves , the Huskies were penahzed 15 California
HAWKS.
•
[KICk failed!
36·20 I
,
.
·
the second play of the third Buffalo: zetmanski. 14 • rard run.
Park, Ill ., gave the Buffalo of- yards followmg the first try for
quarter LaLonde fumbled and ~~:~.:~·'~f,~noiS weslkircher, 25 • 36 ' 26 fense mutiple woes . He inter- an extra point. Kicking into a
Tom Vigneau, a defense man urd pass onterceptoon return. !Wot·
cepted three passes, returning ' 30-mile per hour wind from the
43 ' 26 the last one 45 yards for a 1 25, the Round Lake junior's astound stallsticians, but the
picked up the ball in mid-air, tum, kiCk!
schedule this season was the
lateraled to Mark 1\IacyVittie i
1 touchdown on the final play of kick sailed wide, breaking his
who ran it in for a TD to pull
the game. He also recovered string at 29, a school record. toughest in Northern Illinois
the Bulls within striking dis- 1 It took the Huskies but 16 I a Buffalo fumble.
For Urich and his Huskies, history. Buffalo closed its sealance, 24 to 14.
plays later to put the game out
The victory kept ''perfect" the 3-7 won-lost record will not son 2-9.
BY PIERCE WHITE

[Chicago Tribune Press service!

1

1

Johnny on the Spot

ILaLonde

On the Air

I

..... ;--e.- -

~~...:

.· ... . ~~f'~--

�81
75
64
50

69
72
83
10
80

29
33

OFFENSE
WILLIE HATTER __________________ SE
DAVE WEISENDANGER ...... LT
M IKE WADZITA __________________ LG
M IKE BATINA ______________________ C
TOM HOLT _______________________ RG
RICH CIESLA ______________________ RT
DICK MOREHOUSE ------ .....TE
TERRY DRUGAN ----------------9B
TOM BASTABLE __________________ FL
STEVE GOEHL
_________________ TB
JOHN LaLONDE ________________ FB

DEFENSE

90 PRENTIS HENLEY ________________ LE
79 BARRY ATKINSON ______________ LT
78 BILL ELLENBOGEN ............RT

96 TOM VIGNEAU __________________ RE
92 TED BUTLER ____________________ LOLB
32
37
36
42
47
40

NIU -if~

LARRY MADDEN .............. LILB
STEVE McCULLOUGH ___ RILB
BRUCE FRASER ______________ ROLB
LEN NIXON _____________________ LHB
MARK MacVITTIE ............ RHB
TOM ELLIOTT _________ _____________ S

BUFFALO ~cx
OFFENSE

DEFENSE
89 PHIL SZUKIS ________________________ LE
67 BILL DIAL ___________________________ LT
79 JOHN NOKES ___________________ RT
31 C HRIS RICHTER .. ____________ RE
42 LEO HUDETZ . ___ ___ __ _ ____ LLB
55 LARRY CLARK . ______________ MLB
38 VALDIS SPURIS _______________ RLB
47 DAN DeVITO _ ______________ LHB
44 NORM NUZBACH .
.... FS
49 MIKE WEISKIRCHER .
...SS
26 JIM MONTGOMERY ____ RHB

89
71
61
!iS
73
74
88
15
35

MIKE SHARROW _____ ..........SE
BILL W INNETT _____________ ..... LT
JERRY ELWELL ____________ . LG
CHUCK CONNOR _ .
. ... C
TOM CENTOFANTI . . .. RG
JOHN RIO __
__ _____ ... RT
JOHN EAGEN . . ... __ TE
KIRK BARTON ..
____ .... 9B
JOE ZELMANSKI
FB
49 JOHN FALLER
TB
20 GENE NANCE .
HB
BRAWNY BULLS

HUSTLIN' HUSKIES
I 0 Drugan, QB
I I Piazza, QB
12 Wells, QB
14 Passaglia, SE
21 Rose, HB
24 Bateast, TB
25 McLaughlin, TB
26 Montgomery, DHB
28 Mackey, FL
29 Goehl, FL
30 Husband, FB
3 I Richter, DE
32 Rudecki, FB
3 3 LaLonde, FB
34 Dodd, S
38 Spuris, LB
39 Freza, TB
40 Garrett, DHB
42 Hudetz, LB
44 Nuzbach, S
45 Meader, DHB
47 DeVito, DHB
49 Weiskircher, S
50 Batina, C
52 Janik, LB
53 Ware, C
55 Clark, LB
56 Wittenmeier, LB
57 Lindstrom, LB

58 Arnold, DE
59 Davis, C
60 O'Meara, LB
61 Kowalczyk, DT
62 Combs, K
63 Bonin, LB
64 Wadzita, OG
65 Kappel, OG
67 Dial, DT
68 Ti. Holt, OG
69 To. Holt, OG
70 Lariccia, DT
71 Hastings, DT
72 Ciesla, OT
74 Hoover, OT
75 Weisendanger, OT
76 Ainsworth, OT
77 Pubentz, OT
78 Hamilton, OT
79 Nokes, DT
80 Bastable, FL
81 Hatter, SE
83 Morehouse, TE
86 Feaman, TE
87 Krueger, SE
88 May, DE
89 Szukis, DE
90 Wnek, DE
93 Wittum, K

II Perry, QB
12 Nichols, H B

14 Baker, FB
15 Barton, QB
I 7 Boughton, DB
18 Philp, QB
19 Oskia, S-P
20 Nance, HB
21 Woodward, HB
22 Layo, HB
23 Harrison, DB
26 Jackson, HB
29 Stiscak, HB
30 Homa, ILB
32 Madden, ILB
33 Smith, ILB
35 Zelmanski, FB
36 Fraser, OLB
3 7 McCullough, I LB
39 Kozel, HB
40 Elliott, S
41 Constantino, K
42 Nixon, DB
43 Griffiths, G
46 Hannah, DB
47 MacVittie, DB
49 Faller, H B
53 Majcher, ILB
54 Conaway, OLB

55
57
58
60
61

62
66
67

68
69
71
73
74
76
78
79
80
81
85
86
87
88
89
90
92
95
96
97
99

Siedlecki, OLB
Johnson, C
Donnor, C
Chamberlain, G
Elwell, G
Bauch, G
Jones, DT
Forness, DT
Albaneze, G
Ziegler, G
Winnett, T
Centofani, G
Rio, T
Adessa, T
Ellenbogen, DT
Atkinson, DT
Moresco, SE
Domino, SE
Hudson, TE
Bouck, TE
Herlan, SE
Eagen, T
Sharrow, SE
Henley, DE
Butler, OLB
James, DE
Vigneau, DE
Potyok, DE
Pescrillo, DT

-Officials Referee .. ...... ...................... Donald Wedge
Linesman .. ...... .. .... ................ Robert Fallon
Umpire .. ............................ Russell Kemper
Field Judge ................ .... Eugene Carabine
Back Judge .. .. .................... William Quinby

ROCKFORD COCA COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
314 Pra irie Street, Rockford, Illinois 611 05

.la/1/Uf $~, $ale4. A1~
"COCA-CO LA" AND "COKE" ARE REG ISTERED T RADE-MARKS OF THE COCA -COLA COMPANY.

It's the real thing. C~lke.

�1970-71

~&amp;U~ie e~ee'tteade"l&lt;t

KNEELING : Captain D arcy Taheny . STANDING , FROM THE LEFT: Phyllis Mcintosh , Ron Yablun , Rosaline Hedgley ,
Randy Eller , Linda Toch , Lance Welter , D onna Ko pczynski. ELEVATED , FRO M THE LEFT : Louise Feltmann , B arb
Womer , Cathy Siwinski.

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

.. The Place to Reside at Northern ..
Approved University Residence Hall for Women and Men
Casual Living
Visitors Welcome
24

Academic Atmosphere

�UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
1970 FOOTBALL ROSTER
No.

1'

76
68
79
14
15
62
17
92
73
60
54
41
81
58
88
78
40
61
49
67
36
43
46
23
90
87
30
85
26
95
57
66
39
22
47
32
53
37
80
20
12
42
19
II
99
18
97
74
89
55
33
29
96
71
21
35
69

Name
Adessa, Phil
Albaneze, Denny
Atkinson, Barry
Baker, Bill
Barton, Kirk
Bauch, John
Boughton, Buddy
Butler, Ted
Centofanti, Tom
Chamberlain, Tom
Conaway, Dan
Constantino, Mike
Domino, Tom
Donnor, Chuck
Eagen, John
Ellenbogen, Bill
Elliott, Tom
Elwell, Jerry
Faller, John
Forness, Charley
Fraser, Bruce
Griffiths, Bob
Hannah, Bill
Harrison, Marvin
Henley, Prentis
Herlan, Scott
Homa, Dave
Hudson, Joe
Jackson, Don
James, Mike
Johnson, Joe
Jones, Rovell
Kozel, Doug
Layo, Bob
MacVittie, Mark
Madden, Larry
Majcher, Dave
McCullough, Steve
Moresco, Joe
Mance, Gene
Nichols, Walt
Nixon, Len
Osika, Tom
Perry, Ed
Pescrillo, Dave
Philp, Doug
Potyok, AI
Rio, John
Sharrow, Mike
Si e dlecki, Stan
Smith, Phil
Stiscak, Bob
Vigneau, Tom
Winnett, Bill
Woodward, Barney
Z e lmanski, Joe
Ziegler, Joe

Pos.
T
G
DT
FB
QB
G
DB
OLB
G
G
OLB
K
SE

c

T
DT

s

G
HB
DT
OLB
G
DB
DB
DE
SE
ILB
TE
HB
DE

c

DT
HB
HB
DB
ILB
ILB
ILB
SE
HB
HB
DB
P-S
QB
DT
QB
DE
T
SE
OLB
ILB
HB
DE
T
HB
FB
G

Yr.

A9e

2
4
4
2
3
3
2
2
4
2
3
4
2
4
2
3
4
4
4
4
3
3
2
2
4
4
2
4
2
4
2
4
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
2
2
4
2
4
3
3
2
4
4
3
3
4
4
3
4
4
3

I8
2I
21
20
20
20
19
18
21
19
22
20
19
21
19
19
21
22
21
2I
19
20
20
19
23
22
19
22
20
21
19
21
20
19
20
20
19
22
21
20
19
21
19
21
21
19
19
21
21
19
22
21
21
20
21
21
21

H9t.
6-2
6-2
6-2
5- I 0
6-2
6-0
5-10
5-11
6-0
5- I 0
6- I
5-11
5-11
6- I
6-2
6-3
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6- I
5-11
5-10
5-8
6-0
6- I
5-11
6-1
5-10
6-7
5-11
6-2
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-2
5-1 I
5- I 0
5-11
6-0
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
6- I
6-2
5-9
6- I
5- I 0

W9t.
232
207
266
200
195
236
177
195
210
200
194
185
175
215
218
224
I8 I
200
215
256
185
210
164
161
236
198
217
222
190
238
195
260
189
182
181
205
210
212
176
17 I
182
187
180
208
247
205
180
235
175
184
198
189
212
226
205
205
217

Hometown

Hi9h School

St. Mary's
Cortland, N. Y.
Stuyvesant
Elmhurst, N. Y.
East Deer-Frazer
Tarentum, Pa.
Griffiths Institute
Colden, N. Y.
Union-Endicott
Endicott, N. Y.
Tallmadge
Tallmadge, Oh io
Kenmore
Kenmore, N. Y.
Sharpsville
Sharpsville, Pa.
Bishop Duffy
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Jamesville-Dewitt
Dewitt, N. Y.
Kenmore East
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Jamestown
Jamestown, N. Y.
Depew
Depew, N.Y.
East Aurora
East Aurora, N. Y.
Elk County
Ridgway, Pa.
New Rochelle
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Canandaigua, N. Y.
Canandaigua
Cardinal Mooney
Rochester, N. Y.
Rochester, N. Y.
Greece-Arcadia
Buffalo, N. Y.
Riverside
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Wheatfield
Johnson City, N. Y.
Johnson City
Buffalo, N. Y.
Emerson Vocation
Buffalo, N. Y.
Bennett
Buffalo, N. Y.
South Park
Grand Island, N. Y.
Grand Island
New York Mills, N. Y.
New York Mills
Cheshire Academy
New City, N. Y.
Ft. Hood, Tex.
Mannheim
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Penn Hills
East Jefferson
Birmingham, Mich.
Akron, Ohio
Buchtel
Binghamton Catholic
Johnson City, N. Y.
Portage Area
Portage, Pa.
Will!amsville
Williamsville, N. Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Catholic Central
Johnstown, Pa.
Bishop McCort
Coshocton
Coshocton, Ohio
Ithaca
Ithaca, N. Y.
Indiana
Indiana, N. Y.
Irondequoit
Rochester, N. Y.
St. Joseph
Willowick, Ohio
New York Mills
Yorkville, N.Y.
Bethlehem Central
Delmar, N. Y.
LaSalle
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Humberside Coli.
Toronto, Ont.
St. Clement
Centerline, Mich.
St. Mary's
Byrnedale, Pa.
Moriah
C e ntral
Witherbee, N. Y.
Carthage
Carthage, N. Y.
Ridgeway
Ridgeway, Ont.
Aliquippa
Aliquippa, Pa.
St. Clement
Centerline, Mich.
North Canton, Ohio
Jackson
Peru, N.Y.
Peru
Centerline, Mich.
St. Clement
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Cardinal O'Hara

25

�State~

ol

~ ~M' at '8~a

DR. ROBERT L. KETTER
President

DR. HARRY G. FRITZ
Director, Athletics, Physical
Education and Recreation

TERRANCE J. RANSBURY
Offensive Backfield

JAMES C. McNALLY
Offensive Linemen

ROBERT C. DEMING
Head Football Coach

WILLIAM R. DANDO
Linebackers

26

WERNER R. KLEEMANN
Defensive Linemen

RICHARD A. LANTZ
Defensive Backfield

JOE N. GRIFFITH
Head Freshman Coach

�Nobody Can Stop Pagliais Delivery Service
It's The Fastest Service In Town
In just a few short months, Pagliais Pizza has become DeKalb's
favorite Pizza Restaurant. We have done this by offering you
more service, such as pre-baked pizzas and the fastest delivery
service. We offer free Cokes with pizzas ... The bottomless glass
.. . heart-shaped pizzas, and shamrock pizzas.
Now . .. Pagliais announces the eat-now-and-pay-later plan. You
can charge your pizza ... Yes, charge, your pizza at Pagliais. All
Midwest Charge Cards are accepted at Pagliais, 131 South Fourth
in D eKalb. C all 758-5471 or 756-5923 and charge !

WE DELIVER
•

isPMLfAJ~ 131 South Fourth Street
DE KALB, ILLINOIS

These Men Care
About YOU!
THEY WORK TO GIVE YOU
INDIVIDUALIZED SERVICE

WM. F.
WILTBERGER CO.
" Insurance S p ecialists"
231 S. SECOND ST.

•

DE KALB

•

PHONE 75.6-4878

1J1tuu'n
FEATURES THE EUROPEAN EXCELLENCE OF
ADAM RACHW ALSKI
•

Master of Tailoring Arts

•

30 years of experience and
craftsmanship

•

Custom Suitings

•

Complete alterations serv1ce

THE

JUNCTION

Choose from DeKalb's largest
selection of sport coats and suits
. over 1,000 in stock

Charge accounts invited

SHOPPING

HOURS : 9-9 MON.-FRI. -

9-5 SAT. -

CENTER
1-5 SUN.
27

�New Campus Construction Underway

Buffalo Faces Urban Needs
The State University of New York at
Buffalo is today the largest, most comprehensive undergraduate and graduate center
of the New York State University System,
enrolling 23 ,764 students in the fall of
1970 ( 14,600 full-time). Established in
1846. the University was a pioneer in
adapting educational services to the specific needs of a developing urban complex.
Today, the University is headed by
Robert L. Ketter, a civil engineer, who was
at one time dean of the U I B Graduate
School and also served as vice president
for facilities planning . Ketter is the eleventh executive officer of the University,
whose first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the United States.
Samuel Paul Capen, a former director
of the American Council on Education , was
the first full -time chancellor and served in
that capacity from 1922-1950. Dr . Clifford
Furnas, nationally-known scientist and edu cator. became chancelbr in 1954. In 1962,
when the University merged with the State
University, Dr. Furnas became the first
president of State University at Buffalo, a
post he held until retirement in August
1966. The Furnas administration laid the
groundwork for the development of the
University as a major national center of
higher learning . Dr. Furnas led the University through an extensive program of
building to meet the enrollment demands.
A well-known scholar of urban affairs,
Martin Meyerson , who will soon become
president of the University of Pennsylvania ,
was president from 1966-70. In addition
to the fashioning of the new Amherst
campus , the Meyerson years saw the University gain national attention for its rapidly-developing, innovative academic programs . The over-all feeling left by the
Meyerson years is one of intellectual
breadth and a freedom from disciplinary
rigidity and
over-specialization.
"The
bachelor's degree," Meyerson said , "should
represent a qualitative standard rather than
a measure of time spent."
Founded as a medical school. the University toward the close of the 19th century, expanded to embrace three other
professional schools, pharmacy, dentistry
and law . A college of arts and sciences
w as added in 1913. Other divisions of
study were established as follows: Summer
sessions. 1915 ; evening session , now
known as Millard Fillmore College, 1923;
business administration, (now management) 1927 ; education. 1931: social wel fare . 1936; Graduate School. 1939 ; nursing , 1940: engineering, 1946: University

28

NORTON HALL, student center and busiest building on the Buffalo campus. It serves
as the home for all student offices and general recreation.
College, 1958; health related professions,
1965; information and library studies,
1966; architecture and environmental design, 1968.
University enrollment figures for the last
decade indicate that full-time day undergraduate enrollment jumped from 4 ,829 in
1960 to 10.640 in 1969 . Full-time graduate enrollment (day and evening) increased even more dramatically from 286
in 1960 to 2 ,847 in 1969.
The University demonstrates also an increasing commitment to developing academic skills among the underprivileged . A
variety of special programs have been instituted to extend social. economic, and
educational opportunities to students recruited on the basis of potential. rather
than on their ability to pay for higher edu cation or the level of academic skill they
demonstrated in high school. Three such
programs are EPIS (Experimental Program
in Independent Study). SEEK (Search for
Education , Elevation and Knowledge) and
the Student Tutorial Program , whose unconventional admissions criteria and curricular innovations not only open the University's doors to the educationally deprived but also provide academic and
financial assistance for the successful completion of their baccalaureate studi es.
Resources and facilities have been improved and enlarged in the wake of enrollment expansion. The number of volumes

in the University libraries has tripled since
1962 and is now above the 1,500,000
mark.
To provide for continued extension of
operations pending completion of a new
campus , the University is occupying a
series of off-campus locations, including an
"interim" facility of several buildings on
Ridge Lea Road in the nearby town of
Amherst.
The new campus will be located on a
1 ,200 acre tract of land in Amherst. Construction has begun since Governor Rockefeller I if ted the moratorium on construction
and agreement was reached between contractors , unions and minority organizations.
At a total cost of $650 million by 1975
the new campus will include all facilities
existing on the present campus plus theaters , galleries and special complexes for
the colleges. Since the colleges will provide not only residences but social and
educational environments, they will have
reading rooms . dormitory space, dining
rooms , classrooms and special studios and
offices. A complete health sciences facil ity will also be located on the new campus.
Preparation of the site for construction
began in spring and the first contracts were
awarded in early summer of 1970. The
first buildings to be constructed will be the
first six colleges which will be built in four
phases .

�]Jtllagt Qlnmmnun innk

~tnrt

Commons Shopping Center

CB

1---9-o_1_L_u_c_IN_o_A_A_v_E_.- - - Across from the Field House

*
*

SCHOOL SUPPLIES
ART SUPPLIES
GREETING CARDS
PARTY GOODS

* GIFTS
AND
NIU SOUVENIRS

DOWNTOWN

GALE•s PHARMACY. INC.
161 East Lincoln Highway
Phone 758-3416
FREE DELIVERY

*

*
*

Two Convenient
Locations in
DeKalb, Illinois

TEXTBOOKS
NEW &amp; USED
BEST SELLERS
REFERENCE BOOKS
PAPERBACK BOOKS

CAMPUS

UNIVERSITY CITY SUNDRIES STORE
817 West Lincoln Highway
UNIVERSITY CITY SHOPPING CENTER
Telephone 756-7770

29

�1. JOE ZELMANSKI , 6-1 , 205-pound
senior fullback . Two-year letterman
with outstanding credentials . Topped
Bulls in rushing f irst two years with
1,014 yards on 257 rushes . Needed
556 net yards to erase Buffalo 's career
record. He has 420 net yards on 131
carries coming into Huskie game . Needs
136 yards to erase standard . Best day
was a 144-yard performance turned in
last fall against Villanova. Excellent
blocker, fine receiver, and kickoff return man .

***

0

2. TOM VIGNEAU , 6-0, 209 -pound
senior defensive end. One of the finest
in Buffalo's history. Excellent speed,
good mobility, extremely alert. Regular
for the past two seasons and pushing
linebackers for leadership in tackles.
Going into Temple game had 58 solo
tackles and 55 assists. Named to first
team All - East last year and also All Eastern College Athletic Conference.
Received honorable mention on the All America team.

***
3. PRENTIS HENLEY, 6-0, 236 -pound
senior defensive end. Just a step be hind Vigneau in defensive statistics .
Real bargain for the Bulls . Was a walkon but grabbed a starting berth almost
immediately. Pro scouts regard him as
a fine prospect. Received special Coach es ' Award for 1968 and 1969 performances . Regarded as one of the best
ends in the East. Strong , quick, and
agile. Co-Captain of the Bulls .

MASON'S DEEP ROCK
1120 West Lincoln Hwy.
Telephone 758-8040
DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115

DOUBLE PLAID STAMPS
TUESDAYS ONLY

GASOLINE
(A ll C red it Card s Acce pted )

•

Dash into the football season with
Deep Rock!
30

�WE MAKE COMPLETE ARRANGEMENTS
FOR DELIVERY OF YOUR NEvv CAR
IN EUROPE AT LOW EUROPEAN
PRICES . . . .

European Delivery Specialists

~~G

@klifli\

S~WYE~ .lmfm~n
Fifth and Lincoln Highway
DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115

Phone 815/758-5451

Wallpaper

Floor Covering

Paints

DELANO'S
•
HERITAGE PAINTS ••• COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL CARPETS
Drapes . . . . Custom Picture Framing
Floor and Wall Tile

•
Phone 756-2951

125 South Fourth Street
DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115

INBODEN'S SUPER MART
SUPER MEATS
Phone 756-5852

11 06 North First

DeKalb, Illinois

Ground Beef Patties
Wholesale and Retail

-

R£NTAL·
CENTER.

RENT

-o-

• Banquet Facilities
• Reservations Accepted
-o-

most anything
most any time

Tools and Equipment For Work and Play
Rent At Reasonable Rates

Camping Needs
Floor Care Equipment
Guest Needs
Invalid And Health Equipment

Lawn and Garden Tools
Painters' Equipment
Party Accessories
Plumbing Tools - Powered Tools

EZ HAUL TRUCKS AND TRAILERS
LOCAL AND ONE WAY
110 INDUSTRIAL DRIVE

Gracious Dining

• Accommodations for 300

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK

~

and
Without Extravagance

We Sell Beef Sides or Quarters
For Your Home Freezer

We Feature Special
Individual Cuts

fll_~

Fine Food

A FIVE-MINUTE WALK FROM
THE STADIUM

to

928 West Lincoln Highway
DeKalb, Illinois 60115
James Mathews, Manager

PHONE 758-7421

PHONE 758-6681
31

�After competing in intercollegiate athletics for four years
without a conference affiliation, Northern Illinois University
joined four other dynamic and emerging Midwest universities
Sept. 22, 1969 to form a new conference.
Members of the new league in addition to
NIU include Ball State University at Muncie, Ind ..
Illinois State University at Normal, Indiana State
University at Terre Haute, and Southern Illinois
University at Carbondale .
The corporate, or formal, title of the new
union is the Academic and Athletic Association
of Midwest Universities (AAAMU). For academic
McCLELLAND matters, the group is identified as the Academic
Affairs Conference of the Assoc iation of Midwest Universities
(AACAMU) . For intercollegiate athletic competition, the fiveschool organization has been designated as the Conference of
Midwest Universities (CMU) .
In athletic competition, conference champions will be declared in 10 varsity sports, including baseball. basketball , cross
country , football , golf. gymnastics, swimming , tennis, track , and
wrestling.
Conference activity in athletics was launched last spring
(1970) when Southern Illinois University became the first CMU
champion by edging host Indiana State University for the gym nastics crown.
Competition in eight other varsity sports will commence with
the current school year (1970-1971 ). The exception will be
football, which is not scheduled to be contested on a conference
basis until the 1974 season . This is due to previous contractual
commitments on the part of the membership.
In mid-April this year , the AAAMU Presidents' Council ,
chaired by NIU President Rhoten A. Smith , announced that Jack
McClelland , former Drake University athletic director and North
Central Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Commissioner, had
been employed as the commissioner of the CMU.
The 50-year-old McClelland assumed his new duties July 1,
1970 and moved into the conference's new headquarters in
Indianapolis . Ind ., Sept. 1 , 1970.

SERVING YOU IN

DE KALB COUNTY, "THE LAND OF OPPORTUNITY"
McCABE and CRUM· HALSTED REALTORS
" Its greof to

ho~

a profeuiona"y q110liR.d friend in the pfdure .

PHONE
756-6641

PHONE
895-2111

FOR YOUR PLEASURE:

•
•
•
•

I 14 Modern Rooms
Dining Room, Coffee Shop
Cocktail Lounge, Banquet Rooms
Swimming Pool
To Serve Your Convention NeedsFrom Housing To Business Meeting
To Banquet

HOLIDAY INN OF DE KALB
1212 West Lincoln Highway
(815) 758-8661
REG. U.S. PAT. Off.

32

�ADOLPH MILLER
REALTOR
MILLER REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
COMPLETE REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE SERVICE
Farms - Homes - Insurance
111 0 North First Street
Phone -

DeKalb, Illinois
Day or Night 756-7845

CAMPUS WEAR FOR MEN
WHAT EVERY (NIU)
STUDENT should Know

-at-

TIE BULL PBX

when company
comes to visit . . .
Any Friend of Yours, 1s -

WELCOME

IN UNIVERSITY CITY

Open 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m . Monday through Friday
Saturday to 5:30 p .m .

..flfona

'Widow. 'W~and, ..ftJ.
•

Complete Window Treatments
• Custom Draperies
• Bedspreads
• Window Shades
• Venetian Blinds
• Decorator Drapery Rods
• Carpeting

1303 Pleasant Street
Phone 815/758-6644
DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115

GO!

HUSKIES!

GO!

•

DEL MONTE CORPORATION
DeKalb. Illinois

Company

To

VAGABOND!
RESORT MOTEL
FOR
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

I I 0 Luxurious Rooms
Fine Dining
Cocktails (4 Bars )
Entertainment
DANCING
Indoor-Outdoor Swimming
Health Club
Roman Bath
(Sauna &amp; Steam)
Banquet and meeting facilities
for groups of all sizes

AND IT'S ONLY
14 SHORT, FAST MILES TO THE
FUN CAPITAL of NORTHERN
ILLINOIS - AT . ..

ROCHELLE

•
A

to The

Grow

With

PHONE 562-2166
FOR RESRVATIONS

33

�NIU CROSS COUNTRY
SCHEDULE FOR 1970
11/ittie fl. 7:::~. ~ead (foad.
SEPTEMBER
12-CHICAGO STATE COLLEGE AT NIU , 11 a . m.
19-at Wisconsin State (Platteville), 11 a .m.
2(&gt;-..at Illinois State, Normal, 11 a .m.
OCTOBER
3-DePAUL UNIVERSITY AT NIU , 11 a.m.
111-at Wisconsin State !Platteville) Invitational,
11:30 a . m.
13-LOYOLA AT NIU, 4 p .m.
24-BALL STATE AND ILLINOIS !CHICAGO
CIRCLE! AT NIU , 11 a .m.
27-BRADLEY AT NIU , 4 p. m.
31-at Illinois Intercollegiate championships,
Carbondale , 11 a.m.
NOVEMBER

FROM THE LEFT: Ste ve Mangun, Don Gereau , J im Schaefer, Tom Detzner, B ill Glasner,
B i ll Tree ce.

Roy Ro9ets®
F&amp;MILT IIST&amp;VI&amp;NTS
1115 W. Lincoln Highway
DeKalb. Illinois

FOR CARRY OUT
SERVICE CALL

758-7600

7-at Conference of Midwest Universities
championships, Carbondale , 11 a .m.
14-at Central Collegiate Conference meet,
Carbondale, 11 a .m.
I Home meets co ntested on North Forty course I

ROAST BEEF
Roy Rogers Roast Beef Sandwich -------------$ .79
Ranch Hand P latter (Roast B eef Sandwich,
Fries, Cole Slaw) ------------------------------------ 1.19

HAMBURGERS
Great Western Hamburger P latter
(Hamburger, Fries, Cole Slaw) ----~---------- .99
Great Western Cheeseburger Platter
(Cheeseburger, Fries, Cole Slaw) __________ 1.09

WESTERN STYLE FRIED CHICKEN
Chicken Platter (Quarter Chicken,
Fries, Cole Slaw, Biscuit, Honey) ___________
Bronco P ak (8 Pieces) _______ -------------------------Bunkhouse Pak (12 Pieces) ---------------------Hoedown Pak (20 Pieces) ------------------------------

WE DELIVER
EJE:JEJ

Open II A.M. - II P.M.
7 Days a Week

AFTER
THE
GAME

HOME MEETS CAP ITA LIZED

BEVERAGES
Creamy Milk Shakes ---------------------------------Ice Cold Drinks -----------------------------------------Coffee --------------------------------------------------------------Hot Chocolate -----------------------------------------------

.35
.15
.15
.15

Billa
• P IZ Z A
• S P A G H ET T I

Open 7 Days
A Week

• SANDWICHES
• SEATING FOR 350

824 W. LINCOLN HWY. - DEKALB
34

1.15
2.25
3.25
4.95

�GREENACRE CLEANERS
1334 East Lincoln Highway
PHONE 758-3471

•

DeKalb's Complete Hallmark
Social Expression Shop
Hallmark Cards ... Gift Wrap
Stationery ... Party Accessories
and Candles

•

Finest in Dry Cleaning

Fannie May Kitchen Fresh Candies

- and -

•

Shirt Laundering

Unusual Gifts from Around
the World

•
Campus Pick-up • • •

THE BULL PEN -

UNIVERSITY CITY
131 East Lincoln

JOLLY'S

Downtown DeKalb

GOOD LUCK HUSKIES!
FROM YOUR LOCAL

F0 RD ...
DOWNTOWN DE KALB
-o-

MERCURY
LINCOLN . . .
MARK Ill •..
DEALER

For Complete Men's Wear
Tuxedo Sales and

Remember, this is Ford Country!

Rentals

•

•

BRAD MANNING FORD, INC.
223 North Fourth St.

JOLLY'S
127 East Lincoln Highway

Phone 815/756-6325

DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115
Phone 758-3331

35

�1. LARRY CLARK. 6-1. 197-pound
sopohomore linebacker. Standout from
undefeated frosh team. Tremendous instincts and defensive intelligence. So
much so, Coach Urich tabbed him to
call defensive signals. which is unusual
for a soph. Great physical prowess with
potential to become one of NIU's alltime excellent linebackers. Won three
varsity football letters while playing for
former NIU gridder Arnie Vesely at
Winnebago High School. Co-Captain as
junior, captain as senior. Most Valuable
Player and Little All-State final two
campaigns. Treasurer of National Honor Society senior year and ranked
among top ten students academically.

***

0

2. TERRY DRUGAN, 5-11, 168-pound
sophomore quarterback. Fits into Coach
Urich's offense by virtue of multiple talents. Handles roll-out options with dispatch. Exercises razor-sharp quickness
in making decision. One of the better
NIU running quarterbacks in recent
years and can throw accurately with a
fast release. Played his high school
football at St. Joseph's in Westchester
under tutelage of coach Jack Annetti.
Captained team, was voted Most Valuable Player, and named to Chicagoland Prep League All-Star team.

***
3. JAMES MONTGOMERY, 5-9, 161pound junior defensive halfback. Lack
of size no handicap. Extremely fast and
quick with excellent perception and
hands. Crisp, certain tackler who rarely
misses.
Prepped at Lindblom High
School in Chicago where he played for
Coach George (Dutch) Von Bremer.
Voted team captain senior season and
led Eagles. who finished second in the
Public League in 1968, in tackles as a
two-way halfback.

***
4. BOB RUDECKI. 5-10, 208-pound
fullback. Originaly tabbed to see action
as John Lalonde's replacement. Stepped
into breech when Cqach Urich changed
Huskie offense and sparkled in Xavier
game, his first starting role. Took heat
off Lalonde, who was switched to tailback. Came on strong with each game.
Big, burly driver with fine balance and
evasive tactics when opportunity arises
in secondary. Second in team rushing
statistics with 336 yards on 89 carries
for a 3.8-yards-per-try average. Shares
Huskie scoring leadership with five
touchdowns. Played his high school
athletics at DelaSalle in Chicago under
Coach Pat Cronin.

***
5. JOHN NOKES, 6-3, 228-pound
sophomore defensive tackle. Battled
way into starting role through sheer
hard-nosed tough football. Mobile and
quick for his size. Improves with every
game. Hampered by injuries in midseason. but came back strong. Product
of Lake View High School in Chicago
where he played two years for Coach
Ray Jacobson. Performed as a tight
end on Wildcat eleven which annexed
Public League 's White Division crown
in 1968. Also was a standout in track
and basketball.

36

�FOR ALL YOUR

BANKING
NEEDS!
MEET THE WINNING TEAM !
Meet the winning financial team at
The National Bank &amp; Trust Company.
They're ready to QUARTERBACK all
your money matters. Their FULL BACKground of I 03 years in banking means
that they can TACKLE just about every
banking service, and END up with what
is best for you. Their attention is
CENTERED on you, and you always receive prompt, courteous service. Come
in and meet our team.

e
e
e
e
e

SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
CONSUMER LOANS
COMMERCIAL LOANS
FARM LOANS

e
e
e
e
e

TRUST DEPARTMENT
SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
FARM MANAGEMENT
WALK-UP TELLERS
DRIVE-IN WINDOWS

A BIT OF EUROPE
IN THE FOX VALLEY
Excellent cuisine served
with a dramatic flair in a
charming Old World Atmosphere

THE

STEAKS

•

SEA FOOD

•

SUNDAY BRUNCH

NATIONAL BANK &amp;
TRUST COMPANY
OF SYCAMORE

SYCAMORE, ILLINOIS
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the ftder11l Reserve System

ONE MILE NORTH OF NORTHWEST TOLLWAY
ON RT. 31 I DUNDEE, ILL. • TEL. HA 6-4801

37

�HUSKIE SOCCER
SCHEDULE FOR 1970

'Dewe

'8~. ~ead ~

SEPTEMBER

19-at Wisc:onsin (Green Bayl,
2:30 p.m.
23_;_at Marquette, Milwaukee
4 p.m.
26-WISCONSIN fPARKSIDEl
AT NIU, 2 p.m.
OCTOBER
3-WASHINGTON (MO.l AT
NIU, 7:30 p.m.
9-AIR FORCE ACADEMY AT
NIU, 1 p.m.
10-VALPARAISO AT NIU,
1 p.m.
16 &amp; 17-at Mic:higan State Tour-

nament, East Lansing, Mic:h.
23-BALL STATE AT NIU,
7:30 p.m.

31-at Wisc:onsin, Madison,
10 a.m.
NOVEMBER
7-MICHIGAN AT NIU, 2 p.m.
HOME GAMES CAPITALIZED

FROM THE LEFT: Pete Glon , Ed Kositski , Coach Dave Bucher, Co-Captain Bill Morgan , CoCaptain John Wells.

B. C. by Johnny Hart

JAKE,WHATS THE QUICKEST WAY

TO SPREAD THE WORD ON
THE FREE B.C. GLASSES

HEY MAUDE,YOURE ON!

FROM MARATHON ?

......
.

. ,· .

• • #
~

© Field Enter p rises, Inc., 1970

Maude, the not-so-softspoken lady ant, wants you
to know that you can get
a B.C. glass free with any
8-gallon or more purchase
of gasoline at participating
Marathon dealers. And

38

while you ' re there, be sure
to ask about o ur matching
B.C. pitcher. Offer begins
September 27. You have
until November 22 to
get a full set for yourself.
Or your Aunt Maude.

.

•

..

�Smart People Buy Pontiac

Compliments of . . .

CHUM-HALSTED AGENCY,
- INC. •

And That's Saying a Great Deal !
More people have purchased PONTIACS than
any other cars in our price range for the last
ten years .

INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE

•

-0-

111 East Elm Street

RIGHTWAY PONTIAC INC.

SYCAMORE. ILLINOIS

160 West Lincoln Highway
DE KALB, ILLINOIS

895-2111

Phone 756-9588

Authorized Pontiac and Jeep Dealer

MEET YOUR FRIENDS
CA.fte1' the same ...

-at-

For those " extra points"
that make the difference
between "just a place to eat"
and really excellent d ining
pleasure, follow the Ranch-set
to the Ranch that Kendall bui lt.

LUNCHEON •

DINNERS •

~ndall's

COCKTAILS

Ranch

4 miles East of Sycamore on Route 64
For reservations, phone 895-5466

BOB STAPLETON'S

Sandwiches

Package Liquors

147 North Third Street

DE KALB. ILLINOIS

.,q_n-k1m
""7

Budweiser and Michelob on Tap

STUDIO

COFFEE
DONUTS
H 0 T D 0 G S (Vienna J
Ham Sandwiches

Drinks

THE
HUSKIES ' CHOICE
- FOR -

Open 7 Days A W ee k
4:00 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Friday-Saturday Eve ning s

•

PUBLICITY
PHO TOGRAPHS

PHONE 758-6909

Hol'n One Donuts
136 North 3rd St.

DE KALB

148 North Second, DeKalb

758- 5 711

39

�Cht

~torr

NORTHERN
ILLINOIS•

•

MOST FRIENDLY

•

MOST CONVENIENT

•

MOST ACCESSIBLE

•

MOST COMPLETELY STOCKED
LIQUOR STORE

VETERAN NIU HEAD TRAINER AL KRANZ, second from left, introduces his new assistant. Randy Ryan, far right. to one of many up-to-date therapeutic devices in NIU's
modern training room . Student assistants include, from the left in back, Bill Tessendorf
(Chicago/Luther North), Roger Kalisiak (Hillside/Proviso West) , Mike Hall (Chicago/
Quigley), and Bill Meier (St. Charles) .

...

.•...

lflllC liST

Dl

Open 9:30 a.m. to 12 p.m.
except Sunday

129 Hillcrest Drive
DE KALB, ILLINOIS
PHONE 758-2100

Owned and Operated by
Pour Pat

40

EQUIPMENT MANAGER GEORGE BELK, center, advises student managers Ron Alvarado
(Ottawa/Marquette), left, and Mike Hepfinger (Carpentersville/Crown) on the proper
installation of a face mask to a helmet. This trio helps keep Huskie gridders among the
best-dressed and most-protected college football teams in the nation.

�~

~
~
~
~
~
~
~

~

~
~

There's a lot
of talk about
the low prices
at Famous
159 West Lincoln Highway

Liquor Stores

DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115
PHONE 815/756-2223

~

~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~

... AND
IT'S ALL

TRUE! !

MARION A. HITCHCOX

JACK HITCHCOX

E!B FIRST
._,PLACE
Award Winner
BRAND NAME
RETAilER-OF-THE-YEAR

the

MARCY'S

Winged Ear

Story

FITNESS &amp; RECREATION CENTER
Pool
Tables
Weights

Ping-Pong
Tables
Benches
Rollers

Vibrators
Treadmills
Exercise Bikes
Steam Cabinets
&amp;
The Slim-Gym

FINANCING AVAILABLE
665 East Lincoln Hwy.
DeKalb, Illinois
Phone 758-5429
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9-8 - Tues. through Thurs. 9-6
Saturday 9-5

What would ever possess
a modern and progressive
agricultural firm to use
an ear of corn with wings on it for a trade-mark? The answer
to this question lies back in those gray days of the depression. During those years farmers tried to I itt the mortgages
on their farms by raising large crops of hogs, the most profitable crop they could find.
In 1934 we started changing all that with the introduction
of hybrid corn. Land that previously produced 61 bushels per
acre produced over 80 when our seed was used. Midwestern
farmers had a new mortgage lifter. In 1936 we drew an ear
of corn with wings on it for one of our advertisements, and
this symbol of the mortgage lifter just sort of stuck.
Things have changed since those days. Land that produced
60 bushels to the acre in 1933 may produce close to 200 in
1970. We've carried our flair for hybridization to sorghum,
wheat. and poultry. Our products are used all over the
United States and in 20 foreign countries as well. About
the only thing that hasn't changed is our symbol. Why should
it? Our products sti II I itt mortgages.

DEKALB

~~~ck.
~D

SYCA M 0 RE R0 A D,

EK A L B ,

ILLIN0 IS

41

�1970-71 Home Schedule Is Attractive

NIU Cagers Boast Experience
1970-1971 HUSKIE
BASKETBALL ROSTER
Name
** John Benson
Robert Foster
Don Hamel
Billy Harris
* Cleveland lvey
Larry Jackson
** Bruce Janus
*Tom McKiernan
*Dave Naves
Gordon Nuber
Jim O'Brien
Walter Perrin
** Art Rohlman
Morrey Scott
Dennis Taylor
* Larry Turner
* Jerry Zielienski

* Indicates

Pos.
G
G
G

G
F

G
F

G
F
F
F

G
G

c
F

c
F

Hgt.
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-2
6-4
6-2
6-4
6-4
6-6
6-7
6-4
5-10
6-2
6-8
6-7
6-9
6-4

Wgt.
165
145
175
170
198
190
218
180
183
210
193
160
180
208
225
210
195

number of varsity letters won

For Northern Illinois University head
basketball coach Tom Jorgensen. the 19701971 season can only duplicate 1969-1970
in one aspect a final won-lost record
above 500 per cent.
Of course, Jorgensen is
thinking in more generous
terms compared to the 1312 ledger accomplished last
year and there are reasons
to agree.
The main one is the return
of eight lettermen six of
whom were starters at one
time or another last year.
JORGENSEN
Jorgensen figures his jun ior-to-be front-1 ine combination of Jerry
Zielinski (6-4, 195) and Cleveland lvey
( 6-4, 198) make up one of the best onetwo offensive punches in the Midwest.
Zielinski. undoubtedly one of the country's best long-distance operators, averaged
19.8 points-per-game as a sophomore to
lead the team . The Big "Z" reached the
30-point plateau five times, including a
season high of 35 against Bowling Green.
lvey, second in scoring with a 14.9 ppg
average, is extremely difficult to stop 10to-15 feet from the basket, especially on
the baseline. Cleve's not bad underneath
either since he led the Huskies in rebounding with 197, or, 7.9 per game.

Jorgensen's three seniors are led by
team captain Art Rohlman, who isn't a prolific scorer but one who usually stops prolific scorers. Effective at guard or forward .
Rohlman ( 6-2. 180) personifies the traits
Jorgensen admires- rugged , gutty, quick.
and versatile.
Challenging Rohlman's playmaker role
are sophomores Don Hamel (5-11, 175).
an 18.8 ppg scorer as a freshman. and
flashy Billy (The Kid) Harris (6-2, 170).
a 320-point. 24.6 ppg performer with the
frosh . veteran John Benson ( 5-11. 165).
and Junior College transfers Larry Jackson
(6-2, 180) and Walter Perrin (5-10, 160).
Up front. newcomers Morrey Scott ( 6-8.
208) , and Gordon Nuber (6-7, 210) figure
to push senior lettermen Dave Naves (6 -6 ,
183) and Bruce Janus (6-4. 218) for consideration as topflight replacements for
starters.

Rohlman

lvey

Zielinski

1970-1971 SCHEDULE
DECEMBER
1-Michigan State University at East Lansing, Mich.
5-CALIFORNIA POLY !POMONA)
9-Central Michigan University at Mt. Pleasant
12-ILLINOIS STATE UNIVERSITY*
17-UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
21-ST. JOSEPH'S COLLEGE !INDIANA)
23-CORNELL UNIVERSITY
28-Western Michigan University at Kalamazoo, Mich.
30-KENT STATE UNIVERSITY
JANUARY
2-lndiana State University at Terre Haute, Ind. *
4-IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY
11-University of Cincinnati at Cincinnati, 0.
21-Ball State University at Muncie, Ind.*
23-Loyola University at New Orleans, La.

Sycamore Road, DeKalb, Illinois
RICHARD E. DAILEY, M9r.

PHONE 756-9697

Gourmet's Delight
Featuring Our Famous Buffet

* Specialty
Catering Our
*

See us FIR T before you arrange your
n·edding reception , private banquet,
or party

LET'S GO, YOU HUSKIES!

42

FEBRUARY
1-lndiana University at Bloomington, Ind.
3-WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY
8-BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY
13-WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY
15-BALL STATE UNIVERSITY*
18-lllinois State University at Normal, Ill. *
20-SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY*
27-INDIANA STATE UNIVERSITY*
MARCH
4-Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Ill. *

*

Indicates Conferenceof Midwest Universities game.
HOME GAMES CAPITALIZED
Tipoff for home varsity games at 7:30 p.m. !CST)
Preliminary games start at 5:30 p.m. !CSTl

�THE COMPLETE STORE
FOR THE STUDENT ...

Just Across the Street From The Field House
Phone 758-2451

THE
PIZZA
WHEEL
THE ONLY ESTABLISHMENT
with

PABST
BLUE RIBBON BEER

BEER - WINE - PIZZA

•

Schlitz On Tap

KONITZER DISTRIBUTING

Carryout Service

•

PHONE 895-2222
441 SOUTH HIGH

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43

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I

,

one
It's a Camara.
Driving one is like nothing you've
ever done before. Unless, of course,
you've driven one before. It gives you
a whole new outlook toward what
a car should be. And how

a road should feel.
For '71, we didn't change it very
much. Just get behind the wheel of one
and you'll see why.
But be prepared. It
might change you.

1971 Camaro Sport Coupe with
RS package.

197I.You've changed.We've changed.

MMK OF EXCEU£Nct

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1970-11-21 Northern Illinois - Buffalo</text>
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                <text> November 21, 1970 - 1:30 P.M.</text>
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                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1970-11-21</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>Rotary Field 1:50 p.m.

EASTERN

Program SOc

REGIONAL TV

UB WELCOMES
LITTLE LEAGUE FOO"'."BALL

�Eastem Airlines is a billion dollars worth of aircmft,
one of the most sophisticated maintenance systems in the
world, the largest real-time airline reservations computer
in existence, 1400 take-off" and landings every day;
acres of terminals, hangars, warehouses and buildings;
32,000 of the most dedicated people in aviation.

and one dream:
make flying as natural for you
as it is for him.

~ EASTERN TheWingsofMan.

�TODAV'S GAME
~69

Buffalo Football News
BUFFALO VS. HOLY CROSS

Rotary Field, 1:50 p.m.

October 31, 1970

Editor: Richard E. Baldwin
Local Advertising: Howard L. Daniels
National Advertising: Spencer Marketing Services, NYC
CONTRIBUTORS: Office of Information Services, Jim DeSantis, ECAC Service
Bureau, National Collegiate Sports Services, Dick Johnston, Bob Powell,
NCAA Publ ic Relations Committee, Linda Martz, Chris Kabel, Collegiate
Commissioners Associa tion, Steve Lipman, Scott Slesinger, AI Aversano,
Rich Lewis and the Holy Cross Office of Sports Information
PHOTOGRAPHY: Ed N.,wak, Rick Swenson, Office of Information Services,
HOLY CROSS Office of Sports Information and BUG(Fox).
PRINTING: Goodrich Printers &amp; Lithographers, Inc., Clarence Center, N.Y.

State University of

The Bulls and Crusaders meet for the
tenth time today before an Eastern Regional television audience on ABC-TV.
U / B will be making its debut in the
NCAA coast-to-coast package. Holy
Cross has been on a New England Regional several times, including recent
dates with Dartmouth and Syracuse.
HC's most recent TV appearance was in
1968 at Harvard.
Holy Cross leads in the series since
1923, 6-2-1. The game at Worcester last
fall was cancelled when the Crusader s
were felled by a hepatitis outbreak after
two games.
Coaches Bill Whitton and Bob Deming,
both second-season leaders, meet for the
first time.
THE SERIES:

19~ 3

&gt;!' 1961
1962
1963
':'1964
1965
':'1966
1967
':'1968

New York at Buffalo
'''at Buffalo

than

c

Year

I

•

U/B
0
8
6
6
14
6
35
25
10
110

OPP
37
20
16
6
20
20
3
38
9
169

�Buffalo's Golden Bull Fund Says Thank You
Honorable Norman A. Stiller

Mr John J. Gmerek
Or Pasquale A . Greco
Dr Avrom M Greenberg
Or Arnold Gross
Miss Emily H. Webster
Or Anthony J Gugmo
Or. Everett H. Wesp
Dr. 8o Mrs. Donald W Hall
Mr. William G. Ziegler
Mr . Percy Hall
CO-CAPTAINS CLUB
Hare Photographers. Inc .
Mr . Rtchard B. Adams
Mr. Fenton F . Harnson
Dr. &amp; Mrs. Kenneth M . Alford
Mr Eugene S. Htller
Badger &amp; Gunner, Inc .
Hodge Flonsts. Inc.
Dr. Donald R. Barber
Mr . &amp; Mrs. Henry M . Holste
Mr . Robert G . Btedenkopf
1/ Lt . 8o Mrs. Thomas E . Hurd
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Cratg A . Bontface
HONORARY COACHES CLUB
Mr Alvm Hyman
Mr . 8o Mrs. John A . Boughton
Mr. William C. Baird
Mr. Anthony C. llardo
Mr . Gordon E . Bradfteld
BLUE CHIP CLUB
Honorable Rudolph U Johnson
Dr. &amp; Mrs. Melvtn M . Brothman Or. Glenn E. Jones
Mr. Richard A. Hammond
Mr. Karl Brownell
GOLDEN BULL CLUB
Mr. H . Clifford Jones
Dr. L. H . Brucker
Mr. Albert N. Abgott
Or . Chester J. Ktmtnskt
Mrs. Ju I ia L. Brush
Dr. James J. Ailinger
Mr . &amp; Mrs. Walter J Ktcmskt
Mr. Joseph Such
Mr. Carl D. Anderson
Mr . Ernest J. Ktefer
Mr . J. Gordon Bukaty
Mr. Harold G. Boughton
Dr. John C. Kmzly
Dr. Paul A . Burgeson
Mr . Charles C. Krawczyk
Or. William J. Breen
Mr. Wtlham G . Burrell
Mr. &amp; Mrs. John A . Krull
Mr. John M. Carter
Mr. Walter E. Came
Or E J. Kucto
Mr. Herman Cohen
Mr. Alton D. Cathcart
Or. Harry G. LaForge
Dr. Philip D. D'Angelo
Dr. Max Cheplove
Dr. &amp; Mrs. Salvatore A LaTona
Mr. Allen E. Dekdebrun
Dr.
Alfred
V
.
Cherry
Or. Robert A . Laudtco
Mr. &amp; Mr$. Robert C. Deming
Mr. Raymond C. Clatr
Mr . Neat W. Leavell
Dr. Edward A. Dunlap, Jr.
B. Coburn Company . Inc .
Mr. Maunce Lutwack
Dr. &amp; Mrs. Robert H. Evans
Mr. Henry Collins
Dr. James D . MacCallum
Mr. Douglas H. Fay
Dr . Robert J. Collms
Mr. Harold C. Magoon
Mr. William C. Fisher
J.
M
.
Cranz
Company,
Inc.
Mr. Charles M. Fogel
Mr. Rtchard I. Mulvey
Mr . Ken Crone
Mr . Mark M . Murtha
Dr. &amp;: Mrs. Edmond Gicewicz
Dr. Dame/ E. Curtm
Mr. Byron R. Goldman
Mr . John E. Newton
Mr. Wtlllam R . Dando, Jr.
Mr. 8o Mrs. John F . Haas, Jr.
Mr. James J. O ' Bnen
Mr. Howard L. Dantels
Dr. &amp; Mrs. Norman Haber
Mr. Atchard W. Offenhamer
Mr . &amp; Mrs. Kenneth P. Davts
Mr. Simon B. Jacobs
Oltver Gear &amp; Machme Company
Mtss Jane A . Domanskt
Mr. Seymour H. Knox Ill
Mr. James A . Olsen
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robert Donnor
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Howard H. Kohler
Dr. Harold R . Ortman
Mr. S. G. Easterbrook , Jr.
Mr. M. Robert Koren
Mr . Louts A . Parent
Dr. Robert W. Edmonds
Mr. Robert E. Lipp
Or. Mtlton Plesur
Mr . Charles D . Emach
Dr. Charles E. May
Mrs. Sarah E. Preston
Mr. Willie R . Evans
Dr. Edward F. Mimmack
Dr . William W. Rathke
Mr . Gary F . Eye
Mr. Gerald R. Mittlefehldt
Honorable Wtlliam J . Regan
Mr . Howard R . Flaster
Mr. Jack O'Bannon
Mr . James R. Remollard
Mr . Carl Frey
Mr. Raymond V. Paolini
Mr . Everett F. Reynolds . Jr
Or. Victor L. Pellicano
Mr. Stephen S Frey
Mr . G . Wtlltam Rose
Mr. 8o Mrs. John G. Rombough, Sr. Mr Henry J Galla
Dr. lltde Rose Rosso
Mr. 8o Mrs. Ralph W. Seiler
Mtss Elsa S. Gtelow
Mr. Stephen Satasny
Mr. Robert F. Shields
Mr. Robert A . Glasser
Mr. James W. Sarra
Mr. Paul L. Snyder
Mr . &amp; Mrs. Oltver J. Glidewell
Dr . Anthony B. Schtavt

Mr. Morley C. Townsend
Dr. Roger Triftshauser
Mr. George Voskerchian

Mr . Thomas J. Schillo
Mr . Roy P. Ohltn
Mr. R . Frank Pegrum
Or. Harvey L. Schtlowttz
Dr. Howard J . Po sener
Mr. George Schlottner
Mr . Robert A . Pot ter
Dr. Clyde B. Somson
Mr . Charles L. Pror ok
Mr. D o uglas A . R oess
Dr . Charles A . Smoth
Dr . Fulton A . R o gers
Mr. Roger K . Smoth
"'Ar. Chester E. R ost nSkt
Mr. Felix P. Stamszewskt
Dr . John B . Schamel
Dr. Lasca H . Bogdn o ve Schroeppet
Mr. Wolllam C. Styslonger
Mr . Douglas D. Schubert
Mr. Dante! T . Sulltvan
Mr . Ralph E . Sharpe
Dr . Eugene M . Sulltvan, Jr.
Dr . S. Aaron S1mpson
Mr . D on ald E. Spars
Or. Eugene M . Sullivan, Sr.
Mr . Steve T . St•scak
Or. James R . Sulltvan
Mr . &amp; Mrs. Wtlltam Wardle
Mr . Albert J. Wrtght Ill
Dr. Mtchael Swados
Dr. Robert J. Swart
Mr. Saul Taub
Dr . Howard Tteckelmann
Mr. Donald J. Tnpt
Or . Frank Ulnchs
Mr. Rem Vladov
Dr. John R . Vona
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Leonard F . Walentynowtcz
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Eugene W. Wallace
Dr. Walter S. Walls
Dr. Wtlltam J. Wembach
Mr. N. Robert Wtlson
Dr. Leonard Wolm
Mr . Guy R . Yannello
Mr. Robert J. Zawadzkt
Mr. Gary Zimmerman
OTHER DONORS
Or . Anthony M . AwUihna
Capt. John J. BelltZZt, Jr .
Mr. Carl E. Burner
Mr . Raymond C . Boehmke
Mr . H o rton Brewer
Mr . &amp; Mrs. Wtlltam Brucker
Mr s. Phyllts F . Caltor
Mr . Alan S . Carrel
Mr. James E. Corngan
Or . R o bert J. Dean
Mr . James W. Dtetz
Or. Oavtd L. Drake
Mr . Fredertck G. Fletschmann
F ox &amp; F ox, Inc.
Mr . Davtd G. Gaebel
Mr . &amp; Mrs. Arthur C. G oe tz mann
Mr. C . Peter Goltber
Dr. Jacob H . Greenberg
Or . RIChard C. Hall
Mr . John w. Hartman
Mr . Leroy J. Jaeckle
Mr . Clarence Kabel
Mr . Ntcholas P. Kafasts
Dr. Stephen Ktssel
Mtss Dons Kostrtnsky
Mr. Alexander Kushner
Mr . Laurence D. Lockte
Mr. Nicholas E. Marchelos
Mrs. Fredrtca v. Morrts

Chevy Gives Bulls A Lift

CHEVROLET PICKS UP THE PACE-Through the cooperation of the Chevrolet Motor Division the Buffalo ~ffice is
providing a 1971 custom pickup truck for use at today's game. (1-r) : K. C. Womack, Zone Manager; Dick Baldwm, U / B
DSI; and D. R. Pockrus, Zone Merchandising Manager - New Trucks.

�Not Too Many Games Ago . ..
Today, you can't tell the coaches without a
program. Buffalo's coaching corps started
football careers in high school and continued
as active players in college. It's a fact in the
coaching fraternity that the best players don't
necessarily make the best coaches, but U / B's
eight-man staff did distinguish itself in college.
How many former collegians can you identify?

Red Raider Fullback

Titan Halfback
Blue Devil Center
Golden Eagle Quarterback

Bull Guard

19, ("OJ !We!w 'LfJ!JJ!JD aor - sur&gt;fSpai::J
£:9, Pf8!J6UfJdS 'uuewaat&gt;f JawaM - SJ8!l.f:J
99, OfeJJn8 'AIIeN:JW W!r - Sl/n8
£:9, ·uuo:; tenua:; 'zJUe7 &gt;f:J!I::J - SJIItaa an18
19, JJOd&gt;f:JOJ8 'Amqsuei::J ADa.l - sa16e3
69, J!OJJaa 'opuea 11!8 - sueJ!.l
[9, aJe6JO:J '6utwaa Q08 - sJapfei::J

Chief Guard

Redskin End

three

�Scouting Holy Cross

Nickname: Crusaders
Stadium: Fitton Field (25,000)
Color: Royal Purple
Coach: Bill Whitton (2nd)
HOLY CROSS
FACTS and FIGURES
Rushing
Joe Wilson, FB
Ed Jenkins, HB
Mark Monty, FB

HC could start any of three signal-callers today-soph Colin Clapton,
soph Gerry Lamb or senior Mark Mowatt ... Roverback Mike Jordan is
one of the best in Cross history and anchors the secondary, one of the
team's fortes ... DB and punter Mark Becker hails from Tonawanda and
is currently lOth in the nation with a 41.6 avg. for 34 boots ... Additional
"local" talent leading the Purple are DE Mike Pullano from Niagara Falls
and DB Bill Stachowski, Bishop Ryan ... LB Tom Lamb is tops in that
category ... Defensive ends Dan Harper and Ed McGilvery are leaders
. . . Stachowski in his first start here in 1968 intercepted a pass and
recovered a fumble during Bull win 10-9 ... Holy Cross offense has not
been consistent ... Breakaway threats are HB Eddie Jenkins and FB Joe
Wilson ... Wilson ran 94 Yards for TD vs. B.U.... QB Clapton teamed
with Jenkins for 99-yard TD pass play against the Terriers, the longest
in college history . . . Clapton in his first start threw his first pass to
Kevin Frawley for 47-yard TD ... The Crusaders played only two games
in '69 (no letters awarded) when hepatitis felled the entire squad ... In
two dates HC lost to Harvard 13-6 and Dartmouth 38-6 ... Coach Whitton, his school's 21st head mentor, was a two-way end at St. Lawrence
and co-captain of the Larries . . . After graduation in 1947 he coached
at North Tarrytown HS, Lehigh and joined the Princeton staff in 1955.

Scouting Buffalo

Att.
43
54
46

Net Av. TDs
247 5.7 3
178 3.2 1
158 3.4 0

Passing
Atts.Comp.lnt. Y ds.TDs
Gerry Lamb, QB 101 45
9 429 1
Mark Mowatt, QB 44 26
1 271 2
Colin Clapton, QB 31 10
1 284 4
Receiving
Jack VonOhlen, SE
Jim McClowry, TE
Joe Hart, FLK
Kevin Frawley, TE
Mark Monty, FB
Ed Jenkins, HB
Punting
Mark Becker
Kickoff Returns
Fran Meagher, DB
Scott Lodde, HB
Rob Orellano, HB
Scoring
Joe Wilson, FB
Ed Jenkins, HB
Jack VonOhlen

Caught Y ds. TDs
19
184 2
15
169 0
12
118 0
9
122 1
8
143 1
5
136 1
No. Yds.
41 1693

Av.
41.3

No. Yds. TDs
12 264 0
8
85 0
6
81 0
TDs. PAT FG
3
1 0
2
0 0
0 0
2

Pts.
20
12
12

Nickname: Bulls
Stadium: Rotary Field
Colors: Buffalo Blue &amp; Gold
Coach: Bob Deming (2nd)
BUFFALO
FACTS and FIGURES

This Rotary Field appearance will be the last for 23 seniors in uniform today . . . Three additional lettermen sustained injury early and
are on the sideline-LB Ed Kershaw, LB Gary Chapp and DB Karl Zalar
.. . Senior Len Nixon completes a fine career today against the Cross
. . . The spunky defender returned to duty at Dayton following a concussion at Kent . . . HB Doug Kozel has shown steady improvement all
fall and before he graduates :·' "uld be ~ Class A Bull runner . . . He is
swift and has power . . . Graduating be:'liors have a combined 17-16-0
record at U /B, including a 3-4 freshman mark in 1967 ... Doubtful performers this afternoon are FB Joe Zelmanski, re-injured ankle at V.P.I.,
HB Gene Nance, rib problem, and possibly Nixon . . . Junior Bill Ellenbogen, fi-4, 240 defensive tackle, was honored with the COURIER Playerof-the-Week after Tech tussle . . . LB Larry Madden caught QB three
times for minus 36 yards last week ... U /B has not lost six games in a
season since 1960 when the Bulls were 4-6 ... President and Mrs. Ketter
accompanied the Bulls to V.P.I. and enjoyed the southern hospitality, but
not t~e score ... Buffalo has played in and before these mean figures in
seven games-67 degrees and 9,243 fans .. . Buffalo's most dedicated
fans remain-Jean Deming, Judy Ransbury, Cherry Kleemann, Willie
Dando, Carolyn McNally, Peggy Lantz and Maude Griffith, plus 15 assistants in the stands or around the WEEN dial at home ... Willie has the
most household support-five.

four

Rushing
Att. Net Av. TDs
John Faller, HB
98 355 3.5 5
Doug Kozel, HB
77 232 3.0 1
Joe Zelmanski, FB
49 164 3.3 1
Gene Nance, HB
21
69 3.2 0
Passing
Atts.Comp.lnt. Y ds.TDs
Kirk Barton, QB 186 79 11 864 1
Ed Perry, QB
34 10
3 103 0
Receiving
Caught Y ds. TDs
Joe Moresco, SE
19
203 0
Joe Hudson, TE
18
165 0
Mike Sharrow, SE
17
182 1
Joe Zelmanski, FB
9
120 0
Doug Kozel, HB
9
67 0
Punting
No. Blk. Y ds. A v.
Scott Herlan, SE
39 1 1262 32.4
Joe Moresco, SE
13 0
432 33.2
Punt Returns
No. Yds. TDs
Tom Elliott, DB
10 91
0
Bud Boughton, DB
10 77
0
Kickoff Returns
No. Yds. TDs
Gene Nance, HB
10 296 1
John Faller, HB
9 136 0
Doug Kozel, HB
6 136 0
Scoring
TDs. PAT FG Pts.
John Faller, HB
5
0 0 30
Mike Constantino
0
7-6 2-1 9
Joe Zelmanski, FB
1
1 0
8

�Welcome to Rotary Field
YOUR COOPERATION PLEASE- To students and guests at the University today, your
cooperation is required in maintaining the dignity and reputation of this institution. We request
that you observe the rules and regulations pertaining to this sanctioned event by the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the Eastern College Athletic Conference.
WE LCOME - We respectfully appreciate your attendance at today's football game, and we
hope that you will enjoy both the game and the various new facilities in the stadium. On behalf of
the State University of New York at Buffalo and the Athletic Department, its staff and players,
we welcome you .
Dr. Harry G. Fritz
Director of Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

REST ROOM FACILITIES: Rest rooms
(Ladies) are at the north end locations
under both Bailey Avenue and Main
stands. Rest rooms (Gentlemen) are at
the south end locations under Bailey
A venue and Main stands.
LOST AND FOUND: All lost and found
items should be reported to the Campus
Police. The Campus Police main office is
192 Winspear Avenue, 831-5555.
REFRESHMENT BOOTHS: There are
three main refreshment areas in the stadium. The booths are both at the north
ends of the Bailey and Main stands and
are operated by University F ood Service.
For most games the third booth is open
at the south end of the Bailey stands.
BUSTER THE BULL: The mascot on the
field is Buster VIII, a direct lineal descendent of Buster I, who was a gift
from Elizabeth Taylor and the late Mike
Todd to the University in 1958 . Buster
is under the care of Chester Malach . He
is quartered at the Malach farm in nearby Elma.

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TO SUPPORT THE HOMETOWN UNIVERSITY
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seven

�SUNYAB
Information Services

STATE UNIVERSITY

The State University of New York at Buffalo is today the largest, most comprehensive undergraduate and graduate center of the New York State University System,
enrolling 23,764 students in the fall of 1969 (14,600 full-time). Established in 1846, the
University was a pioneer in adapting educational service to the specific needs of a developing urban complex.
Today, the University is headed by Robert L. Ketter, a civil engineer, who was at
one time dean of the U/ B Graduate School and also served as vice president for facilities
planning. Ketter is the eleventh executive officer of the University, whose first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the United States.
Founded as a medical school, the University toward the close of the 19th century,
expanded to embrace three other professional schools, pharmacy, dentistry and law. A
college of arts and sciences was added in 1913. Other divisions of study were established
as follows: Summer sessions, 1915; evening sessions, now known as Millard Fillmore
College, 1923; business administration (now management), 1927; education, 1931; social
welfare, 1936; Graduate School, 1939; nursing, 1940; engineering, 1946; University
College, 1958; health related professions, 1965; information and library studies, 1966,
architecture and environmental design, 1968.
ENROLLMENT
University enrollment figures for the last decade indicate that full-time day undergraduate enrollment jumped from 4,829 in 1960 to 10,640 in 1969. Full-time graduate
enrollment (day and evening) increased even more dramatically from 286 in 1960 to
2,847 in 1969.
Enrollment in the professional schools of dentistry, law and medicine rose from 730
in 1960 to 1,190 in 1969, with the largest increase being noted by the School of Law which
grew from 176 to 485. The comparative figures for Medicine are 308 and 418 and for
Dentistry, 247 to 287.
Attesting to an increasing quality of students enrolling, in 1963, 90 per cent of
entering freshmen scored 130 or better on the Regents Scholarship Examination; in
1969, 90 per cent of the freshmen scored 184 or better.
In terms of high school rank, 27.6 per cent of 1960's freshmen were in the top onefifth of their graduating class; in 1969, 85 per cent of freshmen were in that top fifth .
The University demonstrates also an increasing commitment to developing academic
skills among the underprivileged. A variety of special programs have been instituted
to extend social, economic and educational opportunities to students recruited on the
basis of potential, rather than on their ability to pay for higher education or the level of
academic skill they demonstrated in high school. Three such programs are EPIS (Experimental Program in Independent Study), SEEK (Search for Education, Elevation
and Knowledge) and the Student Tutorial Program, whose unconventional admissions
criteria and curricular innovations not only open the University's door s to the educationally deprived but also provide academic and financial assistance for the successful
completion of their baccalaureate studies .
The geographic distribution of the University's student body in the fall of 1969
was: Buffalo Metropolitan Area, 51.6 per cent; New York City Metropolitan Area, 26.7
per cent; rest of New York State, 18.2 per cent; out-of-state and foreign countries, 3.5
per cent .
FACILITIES AN D NEW CAMPUS
Resources and facilities have been improved and enlarged in the wake of enrollment
expansion. The number of volumes in the University libraries has tripled since 1962 and
is now above the 1,500,000 mark.
To provide for continued extension of operations pending completion of a new campus, the University is occupying a series of off-campus locations, including an "interim"
facility of several buildings on Ridge Lea Road in the nearby Town of Amherst.
The new campus will be located on a 1,200 acre tract of land in Amherst. Construction has begun since Governor Rockefeller lifted the moratorium on construction.
At a total cost of $650 million by 1975 the new campus will include all facilities
existing on the present campus plus theatres, galleries and special complexes for the
colleges. Since the colleges will provide not only residences but social and educational
environments, they will have reading rooms, dormitory space, dining rooms, classrooms
and special studios and offices. A complete health sciences facility will also be located
on the new campus.
Preparation of the site for construction began in spring and the first contracts were
awarded in early summer of 1970. 'fhe first buildings to be constructed will be the
first six colleges which will be built in four ph ases.
RESEARCH
Through research, higher education is a combatant in a never-ending war on disease
learning problems, and other areas of concern that have universal scope. It seek~
knowledge, technology and applications of the traditional, and is a contributor to our
economy, comfort and well-being.
_Research at the State University of New York at Buffalo covers a wide spectrum
of fields of kno~ledge-:- from anthropology to obstetrics to zoology. Of the University's
more _than 90 mstructwnal departments, almost all have research programs of some
magmtude.
Research is expensive. It takes a continuous flow of money to conduct research on
a large scale: to pay the salaries of research personnel, to buy and build equipment,
to purchase supplies and chemicals, to provide travel, to buy computer time, to cover
publication costs and other expenses.
A decade of research has brought in more than $88,790 000 in research funds to the
Uni';ersity. In 1960, the _private University of Buffalo re~eived $3,870,000 in research
momes, 78 per cent of which was channeled into the health sciences areas.
With the merger into the State University of New York system, the Research
Foundation administered $5,080,000 in funds in 1962. The 1969-70 estimate shows a
jump of almost $10 million (making a total of $15,000,000) in funds which were distributed by the Foundation, with only 60 per cent of these funds going to health sciences.
Thus, not only is the University receiving at least a million dollars more each year, but
there is also a trend toward equalization of funds between the sciences and other areas.

�OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

DR. HARRY G. FRITZ
Director, Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

FACULTY
A vigorous program of recruitment combined with
competitive salary levels has resulted in a faculty of outstanding calibre. Scholars and artists of national renown,
including a Nobel Laureate, National Academy of Science
members, and holders of other awards for distinguished
academic achievement, have come to Buffalo. The ratio of
one faculty member for every 13 students is often cited,
but is not indicative of class sizes which range from small
seminars to lectures for the hundreds. The number of fulltime faculty members has tripled from 440 to 1400 in the
last ten years, while the number of students has doubled.

President

Part-time faculty memberships has doubled during the past
decade from 1,215 in 1960 to 2,425 in 1969.
ACADEMIC DEVELOPMENT
In 1967 a major restructuring of the academic organization of the University was accomplished at the instigation of President Martin Meyerson. Existing departments
and divisions of study were regrouped into seven broadly
interdisciplinary faculties, which incorporate and build
upon traditional disciplines while implementing novel combinations of customary fields of concentration with new
areas of study and research.

The University at Buffalo
Alumni Association
Wishes to thank our alumni and other friends for their support of the
GOLDEN BULL ATHLETIC FUND.
If you have not yet joined the Golden Bull Fund, you may do so by
sending a donation or pledge to the U/B Alumni Association, 250 Winspear
Avenue, Buffalo, New York, 14214. Gifts of any size are gratefully accepted.
Four clubs have been established within the Fund on an annual participation
basis:
Co-Captains Club
Golden Bull Club
Blue Chip Club
Honorary Coaches Club

25 minimum contribution
$ 100 minimum contribution
$ 500 minimum contribution
$1,000 minimum contribution
$

Please make checks payable to the Golden Bull Fund. All donations
are tax-deductible.

nine

�OFFICIALS' SIGNALS

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Every kind of Sportsman knows
DICK FISCHER'S the greatest!

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27

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Stort tilt Cltdl

Ltu of Dtwo

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GOOD LUCK BULLS

DICK FISCHER

BFo~ts

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Our aluminum-insulated Stay Cold
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Just make sure the whole box is
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eleven

�Van, Stan &amp; Rife Have It All Figured Out!
FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WBEN-Radio
VAN
STAN
DICK
MILLER BARRON RIFENBURG
WBEN Radio/930
The Sports Voice of Buffalo

�AN OPEN LETTER TO YOUTH
. . . from an

Olympic
Athlete

(Cliff Cushman, a member of the 1960 U.S. Olympic team and a University of Kansas
all-time track great, suffered a stunning disappointment at the 1964 U.S. Olympic Trials .
Having finished second in the 400 meter hurdles in 1960 at Rome, he was a top candidate
for a gold medal in 1964. But he hit and tripped over a hurdle in the Trials and fell to
the track, eliminated from the competition and the Games. When messages of sympathy
poured in, Cushman replied with a stirring open letter to the youth of his home town,
Grand Forks, N. Dak. In the fall of 1966, Captain Cliff Cushman, USAF, was shot down
over VietNam and is now listed as missing in action.
EDITOR)

Don't feel sorry for me. I feel sorry for some of you!
You may have seen the U.S. Olympic Trials on television September 13. If so, you
watched me hit the fifth hurdle, fall and lie on the track in an inglorious heap of skinned
elbows, bruised hips, torn knees, and injured pride, unsuccessful in my attempt to make
the Olympic team for the second time. In a split second all the many years of training,
pain, sweat, blisters and agony of running were simply and irrevocably wiped out.
But I tried! I would much rather fail knowing I had put forth an honest effort than
never to have tried at all.
This is not to say that everyone is capable of making the Olympic Team. However, each
of you is capable of trying to make your own personal "Olympic Team," whether it be the
high school football team, the glee club, the honor roll, or whatever your goal may be. Unless your reach exceeds your grasp, how can you be sure what you can attain? And don't
you think there are things better than cigarettes, hot-rod cars, school dropouts, excessive
make-up, and duck-tail grease-cuts?
Over 15 years ago I saw a star-first place in the Olympic Games. I literally started to
run after it. In 1960 I came within three yards of grabbing it; this year I stumbled, fell
and watched it recede four more years away. Certainly, I was very disappointed in falling
fiat on my face. However, there is nothing I can do about it now but get up, pick the cinders from my wounds, and take one more step followed by one more and one more, until
the steps turn into miles and the miles into success.
I know I may never make it. The odds are against me but I have something in my favor
-desire and faith. Romans 5:3-5 has always had an inspirational meaning to me in this
regard." ... we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and
endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not disappoint us ... " At least I am going to try.

CLIFF CUSHMAN

As an Olympian

How About You?
How about you? Would a little extra effort on your part bring up your grade average?
Would you have a better chance to make the football team if you stayed an extra 15 minutes after practice and worked on your blocking?
Let me tell you something about yourselves. You are taller and heavier than any past
generation in this country. You are spending more money, enjoying more freedom, and
driving more cars than ever before, yet many of you are very unhappy. Some of you
have never known the satisfaction of doing your best in sports, the joy of excelling in
class, the wonderful feeling of completing a job, any job, and looking back on it knowing
that you have done your best.
I dare you to have your hair cut and not wilt under the comments of your so-called
friends. I dare you to clean up your language. I dare you to honor your mother apd fathe~·.
I dare you to go to church without having to be compelled to go by your parents. I dare
you to unselfishly help someone less fortunate than yourself and enjoy the wonderful
feeling that goes with it.
I dare you to become physically fit. I dare you to read a book that is not required in
school. I dare you to look up at the stars, not down at the mud, and set your sights on one
of them that, up to now, you thought was unattainable. There is plenty of room at the
top, but no room for anyone to sit down.
Who knows? You may be surprised at what you can achieve with sincere effort. So get
up, pick the cinders out of your wounds and take one more step.
I dare you!

CLIFF CUSHMAN

As a Kansas Hurdler

Sincerely,
CLIFTON E. CUSHMAN

�Holy Cross-ABug Beats a Football Team
by ROY MUMPTON, Executive Sports Editor, Worcester Telegram-Gazette
Dartmouth, an almost annual rival
of the Crusaders the last 33 seasons,
sent a check to Holy Cross for $1,000
and suggested that other ECAC colleges also contribute to ease the emergency. Boston College, HC's dearest
enemy, sent $2,000. Army and Navy
each put $1,000 checks towards the
continuance of Crusader football. Brigham Young University, a Mormon institution, sent $500 to the Catholic
school. South Carolina, which had never played HC in any sport, was a contributor, too. So were others.
More than 500 alumni sent $15 checks
for souvenir season's tickets when
there wasn't a single home game.

HOLY CROSS CRUSADER
It was shortly after noon on Sunday,
September 28, 1969. Coach Bill Whitton appeared in a stage of shock. His
hair was mussed. His shirt collar was
open and crumpled. His tie was askew.
He had just watched, for the third
time, the films of his first Holy Cross
football team's 13-0 hiding by Harvard
the afternoon before. It was a horror
movie. Always the Crimson defenders
were swarming all over his Crusaders.
Harvard's aggressiveness, so sharp in
contrast, made it appear that HC had
no offense at all.
"I can't believe what I see," said
Whitton, who had been lured from a
top assistant's post at Princeton to revive Holy Cross' fallen football fortunes and had watched his team stumble badly in its first game.
"These are good kids; I'm sure of
that. I just can't understand it," he
mumbled repeatedly.
Only a few days later Bill Whitton
did understand.
His players, who had worked so hard
to learn the new unbalanced-line Tattack and had been mighty impressive
in a full dress rehearsal earlier, had
been so lethargic simply because they
were ill. They had been bitten by the
hepatitis bug-a slow destroyer of energy.
Whitton, of course, had no way of
knowing this.
Sure, Bob Cooney, a junior defensive
end, had been hospitalized several days
before the Harvard opener with what
was lhought to be a severe case of influenza. Other HC players became ill
during the next week. There was suspicion. of a flu epidemic.
Infectious Hepatitis
It wasn't until Thursday that Cooney's illness was diagnosed as infectious hepatitis. The next day, a few
hours before the departure for Hanover, N.H., and the game with Dartmouth, the entire squad was given immunization shots. Four boys were so
sick they were hurried from the line
to the college infirmary.
Three others became violently ill at
Hanover that night and were rushed

back to Worcester. Several others faced
Dartmouth but had to leave after a few
plays. The Indians' strong Ivy Leaguers rolled up a 38-6 score against a
HC team which started without 11 regulars.
Back home again, the entire HC
squad took a hurried blood test on
Sunday morning. All were found infected, to some degree, with hepatitis.
Some 25 were to spend several weeks
in isolation in the college infirmary.
"It's a disaster," sighed Coach Whitton, who himself had been very sick,
but had carried on during the week of
preparations for Dartmouth.
Holy Cross, the next day, was forced
to cancel the remaining eight games of
its schedule. So far as can be learned,
this had never happened to a college
football team before. So Whitton had
enco.u ntered more hard luck than any
new head coach in history.
Costly Dlness
The disaster cost Holy Cross at least
$200,000 in revenue from football,
which had supported many minor
sports. There were all the usual expenses, but no gate receipts for eight
games, including the finale with Boston College which had been HC's home
game and always a sellout as early as
September.
But the rough setback hasn't discouraged Holy Cross authorities in
their determination to build their football back to the high plane where Dr. .
Eddie Anderson placed it in the golden .
1930s.
There had been rumors in the years
before that HC might abandon football
as had many other Jesuit Colleges.
Some long-haired dissidents .and a
noisy professor or two had been taking
pot shots at HC football and lobbying
against continuing it.
Their voices became whispers once
disaster hit the football squad. The
hepatitis epidemic may have proved a
blessing in disguise.
Alumni and friends rallied their
sympathies and their dollars and made
it clear that they wanted Holy Cross to
stay in football.

Jerseys See Action
Sacramento State, which had dedicated its season to Holy Cross and
wore the Crusaders' jerseys in its final
game, launched a campaign to help.
Mike Carter, the team captain, Coach
Ray Clemons and publicist Phil Dynan
created so much interest in HC at Sacramento that hundreds of students and
friends made contributions. The HC
co-captains flew to Sacramento and sat
on the team's bench for its final game.
Later Carter, Clemons and Dynan were
feted in Boston at the Holy Cross
Club's annual O'Melia dinner.
Fans in all parts of the country sent
checks of $1, $5 and $10 with their
sympathies. The fund welled. It is not
nearly the $200,000 HC lost, but it all
helped.
It was a water fountain on the hilltop practice field, half a mile above the
campus, which led to the hepatitis epidemic. Neighborhood kids, a whole
family of which had been infected by
hepatitis, had been at the fountain during the summer.
Most of the HC players were infected on their very first day of practice.
(Federal, state and civic health officials, who probed the situation intensely because it was unprecedented,
agreed to this. None of the freshman
squad, which reported ten days later,
became ill.)
At least 10 HC varsity footballers
were so sick that they missed a semester. The ECAC granted three seniors
another year of eligibility, and will
consider the cases of the afflicted underclassmen later.
Held Spring Practice
Holy Cross, for the first time in some
20 years, had spring practice. "It was
an absolute necessity," explained Whitton, "Our squad has the equivalent of
two sophomore classes so far as football
experience is concerned. Our seniors of
this fall have played only two games,
or less, in two years."
The Crusaders may have been down,
but they seem to h~e everybody behind them. The road back will be steep,
but they hope to climb it. HC is looking to the future and ready to forget
the nightmare of hepatitis with a conviction that happier days are just
around the corner.

�.. ..,....... .''-

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/

1970 Buffalo Football Roster

Player
Pos.
CL
t Adessa, Phi I
T
Sop h.
Albaneze, Denny
G
Sr.
Armon, Kerope
K
So.
*Atkinson, Barry
DT
Sr.
Baker, Bill
FB
So.
tBancroft, Tim
OLB
So.
*Barton, Kirk
OB
Jr.
Bauch, John
G
Jr.
tBouck, Mike
TE
So.
17 tBoughton, Buddy
DB
So.
Brown, Byron
51
OLB
Jr.
tButler, Ted
92
OLB
So.
64
tCarbonaro, Pau I
T
So.
73 **Centofanti, Tom
G
Sr.
60
tChamberlain, Tom
G
So.
38 (*)Chapp, Gary
ILB
Sr.
54
Conaway, Dan
OLB
Jr.
44
tConstable, Ken
ILB
So.
41
*Constantino, Mike
K
Sr.
81
tDomino, Tom
SE
So.
58 **Donnor, Chuck (CC)
c
Sr.
tEagen, John
88
T
So.
Ellenbogen, Bill
78
DT
Jr.
40 **Elliott, Tom
s
Sr.
61
*Elwell, Jerry
G
Sr.
49
*Faller, John
HB
Sr.
tFilipowicz, Eric
27
TE
So.
67
Forness, Charley
DT
Sr.
*Fraser, Bruce
36
OLB
Jr.
tGasper, Mike
65
T
So.
16
Goniwiecha, Steve
s
So.
43
Griffiths, Bob
Jr.
G
46
tHannah, Bill
DB
So.
23
tHarrison, Marvin
DB
So.
90
**Henley, Prentis (CC)
DE
Sr.
87
* Herlan, Scott
SE
Sr.
30
tHoma, Dave
ILB
So.
Hudson, Joe
85
TE
Sr.
tHuff, Larry
52
c
So.
26
Jackson, Don
HB
So.
95
James, Mike
DE
Sr.
57
Johnson, Joe
c
So.
Jones, Clifton
48
s
Jr.
66 **Jones, Rove II
DT
Sr.
59 **Kershaw, Ed
OLB
Sr.
39
Kozel, Doug
HB
Jr.
22
Layo, Bob
HB
Jr.
47
*MacVittie, Mark
DB
Jr.
32
*Madden, Larry
ILB
Jr.
53
Majcher, Dave
ILB
Jr.
37
*McCullough, Steve
ILB
Sr.
80
*Moresco, Joe
SE
Sr.
20
Nance, Gene
HB
So.
12
tNichols, Walt
HB
So.
42 **Nixon, Len
DB
Sr.
19
tOsika, Tom
P-S
So.
11 (*)Perry, Ed
OB
Sr.
Pescrillo, Dave
99
DT
Jr.
Philp, Doug
18
OB
Jr.
tPotyok, AI
97
DE
So.
70
Rakowski, Ron
DT
So.
74 (*)Rio, John
T
Sr.
Savickas, Scott
25
HB
Jr.
*Sharrow, Mike
89
SE
Sr.
Siedlecki, Stan
55
OLB
Jr.
Smith, Phil
33
ILB
Jr.
Stiscak, Bob
29
HB
Sr.
tTober, Owen
34
FB
So.
Vandenbergh, Barry
91
DE
Jr.
Van-Dusen, Don
93
DE
Jr.
96 ** Vigneau, Tom
DE
Sr.
Winnett, Bill
71
T
Jr.
21 **Woodward, Barney
HB
Sr.
24 (*)Zalar, Karl
DB
Sr.
35 **Zelmanski, Joe
FB
Sr.
Ziegler, Joe
69
G
Jr.
* Varsity Letter (22 from 1969)
(*)Varsity Letter (4 from 1968)
tFreshman Numerals (20 from 1969)
SENIOR MANAGER: Allen Wright, '71, Mt. V ernon,

No.
76
68
3
79
14
50
15
62
86

Age
18
21
20
21
20
19
20
20
20
19
21
18
19
21
19
22
22
19
20
19
21
19
19
21
22
21
19
21
19
19
19
20
20
19
23
22
19
ss
19
20
21
19
20
21
21
20
19
20
20
19
22
21
20
19
21
19
21
21
19
19
20
21
20
21
19
22
21
19
20
21
21
20
21
21
21
21

Ht.
6-2
6-2
5-8
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-0
5-10
5-8
6-1
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-3
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-8
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-1
5-11
5-10
6-7
5-11
5-10
6-2
6-1
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-1 1
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-6
6-6
6-1
6-2
5-9
5-11
6-1
5-10

Wt.
232
207
195
266
200
190
195
236
220
177
190
195
230
210
200
211
194
205
185
175
215
218
224
181
200
215
185
256
185
227
165
210
164
161
236
198
217
222
224
190
238
195
167
260
208
189
182
181
205
210
212
176
171
182
187
180
208
247
205
180
228
235
187
175
184
198
189
195
230
235
212
226
205
188
205
217

Major
Psych.
Psych.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
Psych.
Dent.
Hi st.
Engr.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Acct.
Law
P. Ed.
Bio.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Hist.
Pharm.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Law
Psych.
Bus. Ad.
Anthrop.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Hist.
Pol. Sci.
Bus. Ad.
En gr.
L. Arts
Pharm.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Phil.
P. Ed.
0. Ther.
Pol. Sc.
Med.
0. Ther.
L. Arts
Pol. Sc.
Math.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Psych.
Soc.
L. Arts
Econ.
Pol. Sc.
Bus. Ad.
P. Ed.
En gr.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
En gr.
Acct.
L. Arts
Hi st.
Art
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
Bus. Ad.
L. Arts
L. Arts
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Bus. Ad.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.

School
St. Mary's HS
Stuyvesant HS
North Syracuse
East Deer-Frazer
Griffiths I nst.
Johnson City
Union-Endicott
Tallmadge HS
lllion HS
Kenmore West
Aurora HS
Sharpsville HS
Mt. Carmel HS
Bishop Duffy HS
Jamesville,-Dewitt
St. Clement HS
Kenmore East
Mayfield HS
Jamestown HS
Depew HS
East Aurora
Elk County
New Rochelle
Canandaigua HS
Cardinal Mooney
Greece-Arcadia
Canisius HS
Riverside HS
Wheatfield
Cath. Central
St. Clement
Johnson City
Emerson Vocation
Bennett HS
South Park HS
Grand Island
New York Mills
Cheshire Academy
Silver Creek
Mannheim HS
Penn Hills
East Jefferson
Emerson Vocation
Buchetel HS
Elyria HS
Binghamton Catholic
Portage Area
Williamsville HS
Cat hoi ic Central
Bishop McCort
Coshocton HS
Ithaca HS
Indiana HS
Irondequoit HS
St. Joseph HS
New York Mills
Bethlehem Central
LaSalle HS
Humberside CoiL
St. Clement HS
Rome Free Academy
St. Mary's HS
St. Joseph HS
Moriah Central
Carthage HS
Ridgeway HS
Aliquippa HS
Bennett HS
Albany HS
Homer HS
St. Clement HS
Jackson HS
Peru HS
Calvert HS
St. Clement HS
Cardinal O'Hara

/~ \· ~.
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-· ~

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:!_, ·~
~ ~ j :,..-'

~

=-

Hometown
Cortland, N.Y.
Elmhurst, N. Y.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Colden, N.Y.
Johnson City, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Tallmadge, Ohio
lllion, N.Y.
Kenmore, N.Y .
Aurora, Ohio
Sharpsville, Pa.
Auburn, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Dewitt, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Jamestown, N.Y.
Depew, N.Y.
East Aurora, N.Y.
Ridgway, Pa.
New Rochelle, N.Y.
Canandaigua, N. Y.
Rochester, N . Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Binghamton, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Johnson City, N. Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Grand Island, N. Y.
New York Mills, N . Y.
New City, N.Y.
Irving, N. Y.
Ft. Hood, Texas
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Birmingham, Mich.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Akron, Ohio
Elyria, Ohio
Johnson City, N.Y.
Portage, Pa.
Williamsville, N.Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Johnstown, Pa.
Coshocton, Ohio
Ithaca, N.Y.
Indiana, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Willowick, Ohio
Yorkville, N.Y.
Delmar, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Toronto, Ont.
Centerline, Mich.
Rome, N. Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Wickliffe, Ohio
Witherbee, N. Y.
Carthage, N . Y.
Ridgeway, Ont.
Alquippa, Pa.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Albany, N.Y.
Cortland, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
North Canton, Ohio
Peru, N.Y.
Tiffin, Ohio
Centerline, Mich.
Tonawanda, N.Y.

N . Y.

thirteen

�Wouldn't an ice cold Coke
taste good right now?

'f

�Offense
85
71
61
58
73
74
89
15
49
39
35

Defense

JOE HUDSON .......... TE
BILL WINNETT ••..•.... LT
JERRY ELWELL .. . ...... LG
CHUCK DON NOR (CC) •... C
TOM CENTOFANTI ..... RG
JOHN RIO ............ RT
MIKE SHARROW ....... SE
KIRK BARTON ......... QB
JOHN FALLER .......... LH
DOUG KOZEL ......•. . RH
JOE ZELMANSKI .... • .. FB

BUFFALO

89
74
78
71
35
39
64
15
23
19
18

DAN HARPER . ......... LE
MIKE LYNCH .. . ........ LT
GEORGE OLSON ....... RT
ED McGILVERY ......... RE
TOM LAMB ......... . . LB
BOB COONEY ......... LB
STEVE HICKEY ......... LB
MIKE JORDAN ........ . LB
TOM DOYLE .. . ....... LHB
BILL STACHOWSKI . ... RHB
FRAN MEAGHER ........ S

87
63
52
68
66
72
88
14
21
44
38

JACK VonOHLEN ....... SE
DOUG KANE .......... LT
BILL HAAG ..•.....•.. LG
MIKE LEHMAN .......... C
BUEL McQUAY ..•..... RG
BILL ADAMS ........ . . . RT
JIM McCLOWRY ....... . TE
COLIN CLAPTON .•.... . QB
JOE HART ............. FL
EDDIE JENKINS ........ HB
MARK MONTY .......•. FB

Defense
90
79
78
96
36
32
53
54
42
46
19

Offense

PRENTIS HENLEY (CC) .... LE
BARRY ATKINSON .•.... LT
BILL ELLENBOGEN ...... RT
TOM VIGNEAU ......... RE
BRUCE FRASER •...... LOB
LARRY MADDEN ....•.. LIB
DAVE MAJCHER ...•. . . RIB
DAN CONAWAY . .. .. ROB
LEN NIXON . .....••.•. LH
BILL HANNAH ......••. RH
TOM OSIKA •..••.••.... S

THE BULLS SQUAD
3
ll
12
14
15
16
17

18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27

1

f

29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37

38
39
40
41
42
43
44

46
47

48
49

50
51

Armon, KSP
Perry, QB
Nichols, HB
Baker, FB
Barton, QB
Goniwiecha, S
Boughton, DB
Philp, QB
Osika, S-P
Nance, HB
Woodward, HB
layo, HB
Harrison, DB
Zalar, DB
Savickas, HB
Jackson, HB
Filipowicz, TE
Stiscak, HB
Homa, llB
Madden, llB
Smith, llB
Tober, FB
Zelmanski, FB
Fraser, OlB
McCullough, llB
Chapp, llB
Kozel, HB
Elliott, S
Constantino, KSP
Nixon, DB
Griffiths, G
Constable, llB
Hannah,DB
MacVittie, DB
C. Jones, S
Faller, HB
Bancroft, OlB
Brown, OlB

52
53
54
55
57
58
60
61
62
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
73
74

76
78

79
80
81
85
86
87

88
89
90
91
92
93
95
96
97
99

HOLY CROSS

Huff, C
Majcher, llB
Conaway, OlB
Siedlecki, OlB
Johnson, C
Donnor, C (CC) )
Chamberlain, G
Elwell, G
Bauch, G
Carbonaro, T
Gasper, T
R. Jones, DT
Forness, DT
Albaneze, G
Ziegler, G
Rakowski, DT
Winnett, T
Centofanti, G
Rio, T
Adessa, T
Ellenbogen, DT
Atkinson, DT
Moresco, SE
Domino, SE
Hudson, TE
Bouck, TE
Herlan, SE
Eagen, T
Sharrow, SE
Henley, DE (CC)
Vandenbergh, DE
Butler, OlB
Van-Dusen, DE
James, DE
Vigneau, DE
Potyok, DE
Pescrillo, DT

CRUSADER SQUAD
11
12
14
15
16
17

18
19
20
21
22

23
24
27
33

35
38
39
40
41
44
45
46
52
54
56
59

•

Mowatt, QB
G. lamb, QB
Clopton, QB
Jordan, DB (CC)
Pelletier, DB
Becker, DB-K
Meagher, DB
Stachowski, DB
Murphy, DB
J. Hart, Fl
Walker, DB
T. Doyle, DB
lodde, OB
Dickerson, Fl
Orellana, OB
T. lamb, lB (CC)
Monty, FB
Cooney, lB
Wilson, FB
T. Hart, lB
Jenkins, OB
Schlageter, lB
Bolger, Fl
Haag, OG-C
Hughes, lB
Staszewski, C
Higgins, lB

61
62
63
64
65
67
68
69
70
71

72
73
74

75
76
77
78

79
80
81
82
83
84
85
87

88

Konieczny, lB
V. Doyle, DT
Kane, OT
Hickey, lB
Osier, OG
McQuay, OG
lehman, OG-C
Hahn, OG
Sutton, OT
McGilvery, DE
Adams, OT
Clemente, DT
M. lynch, DT
Veague, OG-T
Henry, OT
Weston, DT
Olson, DT
J. lynch, DT
O'Connor, DE
Frawley, TE
Pullano, DE
Harper, DE
Johnson, SE
MarcAurele, DE
VonOhlen, SE
McCiowry, TE

WELCOME ABC-TV

•

Producer ................... Geoff Mason
Director ............... .•• Mike Freedman
Play-by-Play . . . ... .•.•.•. ...• Bob Murphy
Color . .... . . . . . ...... .. .... . Dave Nelson
Production Asst. . . . . ... . .. . . . Vance Smith
NCAA Liaison ...•.. . . . .• •.. . . Ray Barbuti

"COCA-COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRA DE- MARKS OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY.

It's the real.thing. Cq)!e.

�1970 Holy Cross Football Roster
No.
72

17

46
14
73
39
27

23
62
81

52
69
83
21
41
76

64
59
54
44
84
15
63
61

12

35
68
24
79
74

85
88

71

67
18

38
11
20

80
78
33
65
16

82
45
19
56
70
75

87
22
77

40

Player
Adams, Bill
Aldi, AI
Becker, Mark
Bolger, Matt
Clapton, Colin
Clemente, Tom
Cooney, Bob
*DeWane, Mike
Dickerson, Jaffe
*Doyle, Tom
Doyle, Vin
Frawley, Kevin
Haag, Bill
Hahn, Doug
Harper, Dan
Hart, Joe
Hart, Tony
Henry, Bill
Hickey, Steve
Higgins, Brian
Hughes, Jim
Jackson, Bruce
Jenkins, Eddie
Johnson, Steve
*Jordan, Mike (CC)
*Kane, Doug
Konieczny, Tony
Lamb, Gerry
*Lamb, Tom (CC)
Lehman, Mike
Lodde, Scott
Lynch, Jim
Lynch, Mike
MarcAurele, Joe
*McCiowry, Jim
*McGilvery, Ed
McMahon, John
McQuay, Buel
Meagher, Fran
*Moncevicz, Bill
Monty, Mark
~' Mowatt, Mark
*Murphy, Ed
O'Connor, Chris
Olson, George
Orellano, Roberto
Osier, Ken
Pelletier, Rich
Polichino, Sam
Pullano, Mike
Schlageter, Tom
* Stachowski, Bill
Staszewski, Jim
Sullivan, Mike
Sutton, Bob
Sweeney, Bill
Veague, Bob
VonOhlen, Jack
Walker, John
Weston, Jon
White, Marty
Wilson, Joe
Zesk, Ed

Pos.
OT
TE
DB
FL
QB
DT
LB
LB
FL
DB
DG
TE

c
OG
DE
FL
LB
OT
LB
LB
LB
DB
OB
SE
DB
OT
LB
QB
LB
OG
OB
DT
DT
DE
TE
DE
DB
OG
DB
OT
FB
QB
DB
DE
DG
OB
OG
DB
LB
DE
DB
DB

C
OT
OT
FB
OG
SE
DB
DG
DB
FB
DB

Class
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Soph.
Soph.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Soph.
Soph.
Soph.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Soph.
Sr.
Soph.
Soph.
Jr.
Soph.
Sr.
Sr.
Soph.
Soph.
Sr.
Soph.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Soph.
Sr.
Sr.
Soph.
Soph.
Soph.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Soph.
Soph.
Jr.
Soph.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Soph.
Soph.
Sr.
Soph.
Soph.
Soph.
Soph.

* Lettermen (11)
No Letters Awarded in 1969
sixteen

Age
20
20
19
19
19
21
20
21
20
21
21
19
19
19
20
20
20
20
19
20
19
18
20
19
22
21
19
19
22
19
20
21
20
19
21
22
19
19
19
21
20
21
23
21
19
20
20
19
21
20
20
21
20
21
21
21
19
19
21
19
19
20
19

Height
6'3"
6'0"
6'1"
6'0"
6'0"
6'0"
6'2"
6'0"
5'9"
5'11"
6'3"
6'4"
6'1"
6'1"
6'1"
6'2"
6'1"
6'4"
6'1"
5'9"
6'1"
5'10"
6'2"
6'0"
6'2"
6'1"
6'2"
6'0"
6'1"
6'3"
6'1"
6'3"
6'0"
6'2"
6'3"
6'3"
5'10"
6'2"
5'10"
6'3"
5'11"
6'0"
6'1"
6'2"
6'0"
5'9"
6'3"
5'11"
6'1"
6'2"
5'10"
5'10"
6'2"
6'2"
6'2"
5'10"
6'0"
6 '2 "
6'1"
5'10"
5'10"
6'0"
5'8"

Weight

Major

245
205
190
180
180
240
210
190
165
190
230
195
220
215
215
190
205
240
220
200
200
155
195
180
195
220
220
185
225
205
190
230
205
230
220
220
155
240
180
235
195
180
185
225
200
180
240
170
195
205
200
175
225
225
225
175
245
180
175
210
160
210
155

Eco.·Acc.
His.
Eco.·Acc.
P.S.
His.
Eng.
Math
His.
Pre·Med .
Eco.·Acc.
His.
His.
Bio.
Ace.
Eco.·Acc.
Pre·Med.
Eco.·Acc.
P.S.
P.S.
P.S.
His.
Bio.
Eng.
P.S.
Soc.
Eco.
His.
Math
Eco.
Eco.
Pre·Med.
Psy.
His.
Eng.
P.S.
P.S.
Pre·Med.
P.S.
His.
Pre·Med.
His.
Eco.
His.
Eco.
P.S.
MLA
P.S.
Eng.
Eco.
His.
His.
P.S.
Eng.
Pre·Med .
His.
P.S.
Math
Eco.
Eco.
P.S.
Eco.
Eco.·Acc.
P.S.

High School
Swampscott
Mt. Pleasant
St. Joseph's
Delbarton
Newton
Christian Bros.
Manlius Prep
Marian Cent. Cath.
Arc. Carroll
Durfee
Strake Jesuit
Notre Dame
Mt. St. Michael
Manlius Prep
Notre Dame
U. of Detroit H.S.
U. of Detroit H.S.
Arch. Stepinac
Classical
Chaminade
A. G. Berner
Hillhouse
St. Francis Prep
West Philadelphia
Cheshire Academy
St. John's Prep
Chicopee Comp.
Adams Memorial
Adams Memorial
James Blair
Catholic Memorial
Chaminade
North Andover
St. Raphael Acad.
Sacred Heart
Worcester Acad.
Xavier
Mt. St. Michael
Loyola
Brockton
Assumption
U. of Detroit H.S.
Berwick Acad.
Boston College H.S.
St. Francis
Danbury
Christian Bros.
St. John's Prep
Strake Jesuit
Bishop Duffy
St. Francis
Bishop Ryan
Maloney
Stra ke Jesuit
Braintree
St. Peter's
Brother Rice
Bergen Catholic
Benedictine
Our Lady of Lakes
Roman Catholic
Assumption Prep
Middletown

Varsity Manager: Thomas Lyons '71

Hometown
Swampscott, Mass.
Schenectady, N.Y.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Edison, N. J.
West Newton, Mass.
Loudonville, N.Y.
Newport, R. I.
Mankato, Minn.
Washington, D. C.
Fall River, Mass.
Houston, Texas
Elmira, N. Y.
Yonkers, N.Y.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Rome, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Dearborn, Mich.
White Plains, N . Y.
Providence, R. I.
E. Williston, N. Y.
Massapequa Park, N. Y.
New Haven, Conn.
Flushing, N. Y.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Quincy, Mass.
Saugus, Mass.
Fairview, Mass.
Cheshire, Mass.
Adams, Mass.
Williamsburg, Va.
Elm Grove, Wis.
Wantagh, N.Y.
North Andover, Mass.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Dearborn, Mich.
Milton, Mass.
Framingham, Mass.
Yonkers, N.Y.
Baltimore, Md.
Brockton, Mass.
Davenport, Iowa
Detroit, Mich.
Dracut, Mass.
Newton, Mass.
Elmhurst, Ill.
Danbury, Conn.
Glens Falls, N. Y.
Salem, Mass.
Houston, Texas
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Toledo, Ohio
Buffalo, N.Y.
Meriden, Conn.
Houston, Texas
Braintree, Mass.
Worcester, Mass.
Birmingham, Mich.
River Edge, N. J.
Detroit, Mich.
Waterford, Mich.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Dorchester, Mass.
Middletown, R. I.

�TAILGATE
PICNIC
by CAROLYN ANDERSEN
Each fall, college football attracts
millions of fans to stadiums throughout the country.
Gridiron buffs are both male and female, young and old, rich and not so
rich. But they all share in the excitement of victory and the sorrow of defeat. AND, they all stand in line for
the traditional hot dogs!
For those Saturday sideliners who
desire something better, more original,
and certainly a. lot more fun, we suggest this recipe for a. tailgate picnic.
The essential ingredients are simple: one station wagon with tailgate
(a large woolly blanket can easily be
substituted); two good friends (recipe
may be doubled, tripled or quadrupled
for added flavor); one important college football game, and light food and
beverages.
After you've found a parking place
(you'll probably beat the crowd), open
the tailgate or spread the blanket and
arrange food and beverages, then mix
with friends to taste.
A successful, satisfying portable
meal begins and ends with plenty of
tasty food because outdoor appetites
know no bounds. These suggestions
can be quickly and easily made .at
home and they travel well in thermos
jugs and insulated chests.
Deviled Chicken Legs
Deviled chicken legs a.re perfect eatout-of-the-hand treats. Soften one-half
cup butter or margarine a.nd then
blend in one tablespoon lemon juice,
one tablespoon prepared yellow mustard, one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon
paprika a.nd one-eighth teaspoon pepper. Spread on eight to ten chicken
legs.
Place chicken legs, skin side up in a
large shallow baking dish. Bake for 50
to 60 minutes in 375-degree oven until chicken is tender. Brush with sauce
several times as chicken is baking. Allow one to two chicken legs per serving.
As a perfect accompaniment to the
chicken recipe, try this baked bean
picnic pot. Combine four pounds
canned baked beans with tomato sauce,
one envelope (one and one-half ounces)
French's seasoning mix for Sloppy

PRE-GAME PARTY-looking for an informal way to entertain friends before a game without resorting to a lot of work at home or stadium hot dogs? Try a tailgate picnic-it's an easy-to-fix and
fun-to-eat type of meal and it will add extra enjoyment to that important college game.

Joes and one-half cup brown sugar in
a two and one-half quart casserole or
bean pot. Bake, uncovered, for one
hour in 325-degree oven. Garnish top
of beans with crisp bacon if desired.
Recipe makes eight to ten servings and
is delicious served hot or cold.
Tailgate Fondue
For a surprising outdoor appetizer,
try this recipe for tailgate fondue.
While at home, rub an alcohol-heated chafing dish with one split clove of
garlic and add one cup dry white wine.
Toss one pound grated Swiss cheese
with two teaspoons cornstarch and
wrap in foil. Cut one-half loaf French
bread into one-inch cubes and wrap in
foil. Measure out four tablespoons
kirsch or brandy and one dash freshlyground black pepper and prepare to
take along.
At the game, heat the wine in the
chafing dish until bubbles begin to
rise. Do not boil. Add the cornstarchcovered cheese, one handful at a time,
to the heated wine. Cook over low
heat until cheese is melted and smooth.
Stir constantly with a wooden spoon.
Stir in kirsch or brandy and sprinkle
with ground black pepper.
Serve with bread cubes and fondue
forks when smooth. Takes about 15
minutes to prepare, and will serve four
to six as an appetizer.
If you're looking for a real surprise
treat, try this recipe for pre-game
warmup. Combine one can of green
turtle soup and one can of concentrated
pea soup. Beat until smooth. Heat until piping hot. Place in thermos. Serve
in mugs topped with unsweetened

whipped cream. It is a perfect treat
for that late-season game when the
weather is getting nippy.
If you still prefer the old-fashioned
idea of sandwiches for your pre-game
picnic, why not vary the usual ingredients and spark you meal with openfaced Scandinavian sandwiches.
The whole trick is to use sour rye
bread (pumpernickel makes a. good
substitute) cut in slices only an eighth
of an inch thick a.nd buttered evenly
and thickly. The butter adds flavor a.nd
acts as a. juice-proof seaL
The toppings can be as many and
varied as your personal tastes, but here
are a few Danish favorites. 'fry rye
bread, lettuce, pickled herring with
onion rings, and a sliver of tomato. Or,
rye bread, lettuce, sliced hard-cooked
eggs with tomatoes sprinkled with
chives. Rye bread, lettuce, liver paste,
sauteed mushrooms, and a strip of
cooked bacon will delight everyone.
Other tasty selections include rye
bread, roast beef, a gherkin and mustard pickles; rye bread, salami rounds,
onion rings, and sprig of parsley; and
1ye bread, sliced boiled new potatoes
with bacon, cocktail sausages, tomato
slivers and sprinkles of chopped parsley.
These are but a few suggestions of
good and different things to take along
for your pre-game party. Every good
cook can add many more. But whatever your particular selection might
be, you can bet it will add more fun
and enjoyment to the afternoon, and
you're bound to be a winner with your
friends or guests.

�The Story of College Football-Circa 2070
by JOHN MOONEY, Sports Editor, Salt Lake City Tribune, President, Football Writers Association of America
"Surely, that bicentennial of college
football celebration was a great promotion last fall, and the news media
got a lot of mileage out of the Third50-Year and the Second-Century AllTime teams.
"One guy attempted to pick the
greatest stars of two centuries of college footb-all and chose a couple of
guys named Heffelfinger and Nagurski.
"Now, sonny, you're a cub reporter
and I know your generation doesn't
trust anyone over 65, but let me tell
you about the guy whose likeness
should have been on the Bicentennial
medallion.
"You probably never heard of Coach
Joe Smith. He's the guy who should
have been honored. But let me take
you back to your grandpop's day to
show you why . • .
•
"Medical men credited improved
diets, vitamins, hormones and weight
programs with developing super humans. Why, by the year 2000, the AllAmerica offensive guards stood 6-11
and weighed 300 pounds and they
could run the 40 in 4.2 seconds.
"Players grew so big there was agitation to widen and lengthen the football field, which was getting as congested as the area under the basket in
the ancient game of basketball.
Field Goals Outlawed
"The field goal, which is mentioned
frequently in the first 100 years of
football, had been voted out. Kickers
were booting them from one goal line
to the other, so there was a rule passed
outlawing the field goal attempt.
"The whole kicking game went out
of football at the turn of the century.
The shattering crash of those huge
linemen mashing each other on the
punts and kickoffs had become so devastating the kicks were outlawed to
cut down on the carnage.
"You never saw a football coach in
those days, except on the television
programs. They had left the sidelines
and retreated to their command headquarters deep in the bowels of the
stadium.
"You couldn't believe these rooms.
Coaches were surrounded by closed
circuit TV sets, instant replay cameras
and micro-wave transmitters beamed
to each player on the field and the
bench.
"Each coach had a broadcast band,
aimed at the players under his command. The defensive coaches had their
sets tuned to the front four, the linebackers and the deep backs.
"Across the room the offensive assistants had their head sets beamed to
the quarterback, the wide receivers,
the interior linemen and the running
backs.
Computers Everywhere
"Computers were everywhere in this
room. The instant replay was geared to
one computer which -could break down
a play offensively and defensively in
micro-seconds.
"Players did not call offensive and

defensive signals; their coaches
watched the computers' monitors and
yelled instructions to the individuals as
the action developed.
"There even was a special counterintelligence unit in the stadium I visited. There, coaches and computers
worked to break the code used by the
rival coaches to convey instructions.
"Some coaches, who put winning
ahead 0f ethics, were said to use their
facilities to jam the wave lengths of
the opponents, and more than one
game allegedly was won when the defensive back lost contact with his instructor, when his wave length went
dead or was jammed.
"It was the opening game of the
2025 season that Coach Joe Smith revolutionized, yea, saved college football.
"Historians of the First 100 Years
can speak of the game's innovatorsRockne, Zuppke, Warner, Shaughnessy, Faurot, Yost-and Stagg-but on
this afternoon Smith stood two feet
higJ::!er than any coach in history.
"Actually, it all started when Coach
Smith, in scanning some old rules and
regulations, discovered the rules committee had outlawed the use of all instant replays and electronic devices as
coaching aids back in the latter years
of football's first century.
"Coach Smith checked quietly and
found the rules had not been relaxed.
Here was a football 'blue law' which
hadn't been enforced in 50 years, but
it still was on the books.
Individual Initiative
"Smith worked all spring stressing
individual initiative in offensive and
defensive drills. He gave the entire offensive burden to the quarterback and
the defense to the unit captain.
"All electronic gadgets were banned
from practice. The coaching staff
moved back to the sidelines.
"Just before the opening toss for
goals, Smith pulled out his old rule
book and his opponent was shorn of his
electronic gadgets and his Black Room
deep in the stadium. With no coaching
help, the rival players were in a shambles and Coach Smith won easily.

"Rival coaches were quick to demand a change in the rules.
"Some called Coach Smith 'antiquated' and a 'nit-picker' who did not
have the best interest of the game at
heart. The Football Coaches Association issued a White Paper to its members and the press corps, warning that
the public would never accept such an
inferior, non-electronic product.
"The ruling made in the 1960's had
to stick, sonny, and you know what
happened before the Rules Committee
could meet to change the rules?
"The next Saturday, football fans by
the millions, who had become accustomed to watching the game at home
on TV, suddenly wanted to be a part of
the action. The college football stadia
around the country were jammed to
watch this 'new philosophy' of football.
"The long run and the touchdown
bomb, almost unheard of in the highly
scientific game of electronic gadgets,
became popular.
"The scrambling quarterback, who
could turn a busted play into a thrilling
gain, the fine running back who broke
loose because of his desire and second
effort, the defensive ace who dared try
something different, became the new
heroes.
"Suddenly, college football was a fun
game again, sonny.
"A lot of rival coaches used some
fancy names to describe the changing
game, and mostly, Coach Joe Smith
kinda faded from the scene and the
glory.
"But I remember (I was just a cub
reporter like you, in those days) the
quote Coach Smith gave us after that
BIG GAME:
"'All I did was give the game back
to the boys,' he said. 'And they liked it
and so did I. It was fun and I'm glad to
see the fans agreed.'
"And that, sonny, is why you and I
are here this afternoon watching college football, along with millions of
fans across the nation.
"It's the greatest game in the world,
but except for Coach Joe Smith, they
would have killed it."

�BOOSTING THE BULLS
Program
Patrons

For the past 54 years as the University has expanded and altered its structure, so
has the U / B Marching Band, "The Pride of the East." During the last two decades the
Band's spirit and overall musicianship has added a popular flare to various athletic
events, home and away.
Frank J. Cipolla (Eastman School of Music) will direct his eighth band at U /B this
year. Cipolla came to Buffalo following a brass and band instructorship at the University of Missouri.
The instrumental unit on the field consists of approximately 200 members, including
drum majors, majorettes and a flag corps. After the final football game members audition for selection to the Concert Band and University Band. From the main organization
various pep bands are formed, also.
The Band makes national concert appearances and has performed in Carnegie Hall.
In 1968 the Band represented New York State in President Nixon's Inaugural Parade.

1970 VARSITY CHEERLEADERS

Sue Pierotti
Senior
Williamsville, N.Y.

Jan Anderson
Junior
Corry, Pa.

Capt. Alice Cypin
Junior
Levittown, N.Y.

Beth Hurwitt
Junior
Plainview, N.Y.

Charlene Gmerek
Sophomore
Cheektowaga, N.Y .

Kathy Mclane
Junior
Lowville, N.Y.

Karen Schuler
Senior
Williamsville, N.Y .

Wendy Ambrico
Sophomore
Far Rockaway, N.Y.

Dr. Charles Banas
Dennis J. Brinkworth Jr.
John Carter
Kevin Carriero
Edward Dzielski Inc.
Jim DeSantis
James P. Donnelly
Chas. Diefendorf
Steve Frey
Paul A. Foley
Howard Flaster
Dr. Edmond Gicewicz
Dr. Allan V. Gibbons
Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne
Chester P. Glor Jr., D.D.S.
George L. Grobe Jr.
Sheldon Hurwitz
Houdaille Industries Inc.
Irvin V. Iversen
Dr. Russell Kidder Jr.
Edward W. Kinney
Seymour Knox
leo H. less &amp; Associates
State Mutual of America
Robert lipp
Dr. Harold F. Meese
Massachusetts Mutual life
Ins. Co.
Dr. Robert F. Milks
Palace Theatre
Dr. William R. Root
Howard A. Potter, Inc.
Dr. Gertrude Swartout
leonard Swagler
Dr. Vincert Scamurra
Harlon Swift
Stewart &amp; Bensen Travel Ser.
Turley, Stievater, Walker
&amp; Mauri
University Manor Motel
William G. Willis
Dr. Reinhardt W. Wende
Dr. Frederick B. Wilkes
Manuel S. Wortzman
Don Kroeger - londes Press
Bud Boughton

seventeen

�CHEERS for the largest selection of quality paperback
and hard cover books in Western New York.
CHEERS for a complete array of sweatshirts, ceramics,
cards to send home to mother (some not to
send home to mother), stuffed animals and

campus necessities.
CHEERS for an exciting collection of glassware bearing
the grand old UB emblem (a collector's item).

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE
•

eighteen

I

I

�The Buffalo Coaching Staff

ROBERT C. DEMING
Head Coach

Bob Deming officially assumed the football fortunes
at Buffalo February 15, 1969 as the University's 15th head
coach, immediately following the resignation of Doc Urich
(now head coach at Northern Illinois and a November 21
Bull opponent). He had been on the UB gridiron scene
since 1959, thus he was no stranger to the key campus
assignment.
Deming's first band of Bulls played 6-3-0 last fall
(Holy Cross cancelled) and ran ninth in the annual Lambert Trophy race. His chief aim is to enter Buffalo in the
East's Top Five to battle Penn State, Syracuse, Pittsburgh
and Boston College for the coveted crown.
A 1957 graduate of Colgate, where he received a B.A.
in natural sciences, Bob played three years at fullback for
the Red Raiders. Upon graduation he went with Head
Coach Hal Lahar to Houston and coached in the Cougar
program through 1958. After a tour in the Air Force
Reserve he joined the Houston staff again until accepting
an assistantship under Dick Offenhamer at Buffalo.
Deming tutored both offensive and defensive backs in
1959-60. From 1961-65 he handled defensive backs under
Offie and retained the same position under Urich.
Not a superstitious mentor, he was born on Friday
the 13th, 1935, in Ilion, N. Y. Bob opened his head coaching career on his birthday at Ball State last fall.
An accomplished outdoorsman, hunter and fisherman,
he enjoys antiques and wood refinishing with wife Jean
(University of Rochester). Prior to starting their family,
which now includes Laura, 4, and Leslie Ann, 2, Jean was
a hostess with American Airlines. Deming family headquarters is in suburban Eggertsville.
In association with his head coaching position through
1969-70, Deming also served as acting director of athletics.
He originated the Buffalo Football Camp for high school
players (held on campus this season from August 2-7) and
made numerous area and regional appearances on behalf
of the athletic program at the University.
Deming's main forte is his ability to communicate in
modern education. His liaison with players, students, faculty, alumni, the press and the community is exemplary.

1970 BUFFALO VARSITY COACHING STAFF (1-r) Front: Bob Deming (Colgate '57), head coach; Bill Dando (Detroit
'59), linebackers; Jim McNally (Buffalo '66), offensive line; and Rick Lantz (Central Connecticut '63), secondary. BackWerner Kleeman (Springfield '63), defensive front four; Russ MacKellar (Buffalo '67), assistant offensive line; Vin
Keough (Ithaca '67), head freshman coach; Joe Griffith (Miami, 0. '61), receivers; and Terry Ransbury (Brockport St.
'51), offensive backs.

nineteen

�ROBERT

c.~
TROPHIES
tJ1gr11vers iH ,Metf11 tJr Pl11stk
• GAVELS • PEWTERWARE
• PLAQUES • SILVERWARE

508 WASHINGTON ST.
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14.203

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Call 853-6860

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134-3331
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632-5626

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The Souncl System for toclay's game
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go ... .. .

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Everything goes great on

KAUFMAN'S
Kaujinan's famous rye bread
-and delicious specialty loaves
make eJ!ery sandwich andeJ!f'ry
meal a feast .
Buy 'em at your fal'Orite food store.

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Pepsi's got
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-·
•

PUBLIC ADDRESS - INTERCOM
c:~nd

PHONE SYSTEMS

977 Niagara Street
NY

Buffalo, New York

~

PEPSI
~

GOOD LUCK U. B. BULLS
Rudy Bersoni -

U. B. 1967

THREE COINS RESTA l'RANT
and LOVNGE

luncb, dhmer or late supper; eat like a
Roman Emperor on centurion's pay
In the North Winiofthe MAPLE.LEAF MOTOR LODGE
1620 Niogoro Falls Blvd.
'

twenty

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1 Mile. North

of Snendon Dr.
Ample Parking for Your Chariot

BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14209

•

AC 716-883-4080

�BUFFALO SENIORS

CAPTAIN
CHUCK DONNOR
58 Physical Education C
East Aurora, N. Y.

DENNY ALBANEZE
68
Liberal Arts
G
Elmhurst, N. Y.

BARRY ATKINSON
79
Physical Ed.
DT
Tarentum, Pa.

MIKE CONSTANTINO
41
Pharmacy
KSP
Jamestown, N. Y.

40

TOM ELLIOTT
Business Adm.
S
Canandaigua, N. Y.

SCOTT HERLAN
Liberal Arts
SE
Grand Island, N.Y.

85

JOE HUDSON
Philosophy
TE
New City, N. Y.

87

TOM CENTOFANTI
73 Physical Education G
Niagara Falls, N. Y .

38

GARY CHAPP
Physical Ed.
LB
Center Line, Mich.

JERRY ELWELL
Anthropology
G
Rochester, N.Y.

49

Physical Ed.
HB
Rochester, N. Y.

MIKE JAMES
95 Political Science DE
Pittsburgh, Pa.

66

ROVELL JONES
Psychology
DT
Akron, Ohio

61

twenty-one

�853-7266

OPEN EVERY EVENING EXCEPT WEDNESDAY

FRANK 0 1 CONNOR

FRED RONEKER'S

ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT

School and Team Outfitters

UNIVERSITY SHOP

See: AI Henningham (Sales Manager)

5548 MAIN ST., WILLIAMSVILLE
632-7833

499 Washington Street
Men's and Boy's Wear of Distinction

Buffalo, New York 14203
FOOTBALL HEADQUARTERS

IDqr 1£nrb .Amqrrnt
MOTOR MOTEL
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

5000 MAIN ST.

852-2769
853-2737

Locksmiths - Safe Experts

The Safe, Lock &amp; Key Corp.
"Call us to discuss any lock problem"

Exit SO, Main St. West. N. Y. Thruway

204 PEARL STREET, BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

Phone 716-839-2200
SALES- INSTALLATION - REPAIR
Ait and Sound Conditioned Rooms, T.V., Radio, Dining Room
Coffee Shop, Cocktail lounge, Banquet Rooms
Member Quality Motels, Inc.- AAA Rated Excellent

GOOD LUCK -

U. B. BULLS

Safes, Locks, Keys, Door Closers
Distributors -

Consultants

EATON OFFICE SUPPLY CO., INC.
"for Office Needs -

Eaton Leads"

NEWMAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION
OFFICE SUPPLIES
OFFICE FURNITURE

- open to U. B. students
- located at 15 University Avenue
(cor. Main St. &amp; Niagara Falls Blvd.)
- Phone 834-2297

Father Ed Fisher, Moderator

Diocese of Buffalo

BUSINESS FORMS
PRINTING

EATON INTERIORS
for complete layout and design service
1155 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

PHONE : 837-6800

To Games; on Ski Weekends; on Tours;
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twenty-two

"THE OFFICIAL EQUIPMENT
RECONDITIONERS FOR THE BUFFALO BULLS"

MARBA INC.
Reconditioners of Athletic Equipment

1200 Niagara Street

•

Buffalo, N. Y. 14213

882-9330

�BUFFALO SENIORS

CAPTAIN
PRENTIS HENLEY
90
Physical Ed.
DE
Buffalo, N. Y.

ED KERSHAW
59 Political Science LB
Elyria, Ohio

74

96

JOHN RIO
History
Byrnedale, Pa.

T

TOM VIGNEAU
Physical Ed.
DE
Center Line, Mich.

STEVE McCULLOUGH
37
Liberal Arts
LB
Coshocton, Ohio

80

JOE MORESCO
Economics
SE
Ithaca, N. Y.

42

LEN NIXON
Physical Ed.
DB
Willowick, Ohio

ED PERRY
Physical Ed.
Delmar, N. Y.

89

MIKE SHARROW
Physical Ed.
SE
Witherbee, N. Y.

29

BOB STISCAK
Business
HB
Aliquippa, Pa.

24

KARL ZALAR
Physical Ed.
DB
Tiffin, Ohio

35

JOE ZELMANSKI
Physical Ed.
FB
Center Line, Mich.

11

QB

BARNEY WOODWARD
21
Physical Ed.
HB
Peru, N.Y.

twenty· three

�more
excitin •I

GOHR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY INC.
80 METCALFE STREET, BUFFALO, NEW YORK

853-2121

twenty-four

I

�HOLY CROSS
IICRUSADERSII

23

TOM DOYLE
Economics
DB
Houston, Texas

OT

12

GERRY LAMB
Mathematics
QB
Chesire, Mass.

MARK MOWATT
Economics
QB
Detroit, Mich.

20

ED MURPHY
History
DB
Dracut, Mass.

MARK BECKER
17
Economics DB-K
Tonawanda, N.Y.

63

11

DOUG KANE
Economics
Saugus, Mass.

83

79

DAN HARPER
Economics
DE
Rome, N.Y.

21

JOE HART
Pre-Medical FLK
Detroit, Mich.

44

ED JENKINS
English
OB
Flushing, N. Y.

JIM LYNCH
Psycology
DT
Wantagh, N. Y.

88

JIM McCLOWRY
Pol. Science
TE
Dearborn, Mich.

71

ED McGILVERY
Pol. Science
DE
Milton, Mass.

BILL STACHOWSKI
19
Pol. Science
DB
Buffalo, N. Y.

22

MIKE PULLANO
82
History
DE
Niagara Falls, N.Y.

JOHN WALKER
Economics
DB
Detroit, Mich.

twenty-five

�Crusader Coaches and Captains

1970 HOLY CROSS STAFF (1-r): Fran Donaher (Catholic '33), freshman assistant; Jack Whalen (Holy Cross '48), head
freshman coach; Jim Fox (Colby '60), defensive line; Bill Whitton (St. Lawrence '48), head coach (2nd), Tom Yewcic
(Michigan St. '54), offensive coordinator, Tom Faulkner (Gettysburg '54), defensive coordinator; and Bob Campiglia
(Colorado St. '63), defensive line.

LB Tom Lamb

twenty·six

OB Mike Jordan

�LINESMAN
EARL J. BIRDY, JR.-Assistant Professor of Physical Education at Carnegie Mellon University.
Graduate of Slippery Rock with graduate work
at University of Pittsburgh. At Carnegie he is
senior physical educator in P. E. department.
Served with the Marines in Asiatic-Pacific islands and started officiating football and
basketball while serving with the First Marine
Division in China. Secretary-Treasurer of Pittsburgh Chapter, EAIFO.

TODA···s
· OFFICIALS
CLOCK OPERATOR: Edward T. Kubiak (Canisius)
PUBLIC ADDRESS: James R. Di Santis (Canisius)

FIELD JUDGE

SCOREBOARD: Raymond W. Reinig

REFEREE
WilliAM R. PARKINSON-Associate Professor
and Assistant Dean of Student Affairs and
Services at California (Po.) State College. He
was formerly on the faculty of Wilkinsburg
High School. Graduate of Washington &amp; Jefferson where he was varsity baseball captain.

WILSON J. MclEARY-Associated with Bethlehem Steel Corporation in Johnstown, Po.
Member of Johnstown Area Recreation Authority. Three years of ETO service with the Second
Field Artillery. Active basketball official.

BACK JUDGE
UMPIRE
FOSTER M. GROSE, JR.-Vice President and
Partner in insurance firm . Attended Kiski Prep
and Princeton. Played football, rugby and lacrosse. Served as physical education specialist
with the U. S. Navy in World War II . Resident
of Pittsburgh, Po.

THOMAS W. GIBBONS- Chairman of Social
Studies Department at Carthage (N. Y.) Central School. Coaches baseball and teaches
history. Graduate of leMoyne College with
advanced work at Syracuse, St. lawrence and
Oswego St. lettered two years in varsity baseball with the Dolphins. Active basketball official, also. Resides in West Carthage.

Don Davis Pontiac Boosts The Bulls

Coach Bob Deming and his Catalina

twenty-seven

�Dick Johnston

Halfback Bob Barlette Leads Baby Bulls

Bob Barlette- Halfback 5-10, 175- Dunkirk HS, Dunkirk, N. Y.
(46) Robb Bayer- Defensive Back 5-10, 178- Herkimer HS, Herkimer, N . Y.

1871
1651
(61 l
(34)

Jim Beary- Guard-DE 6-2, 220- Keystone HS, Shippenville, Pa .
Bob Bender- Linebacker-G 5-11, 210- Cleveland Hill, Buffalo, N. Y.
John Dennison- Tockle-C 6-1, 200- Brookville HS, Brookville, Po .
Chuck Farmer linebacker-T 6-0, 195 - Christian Bros., Albany, N. Y.

(28) Dan Fouser -

1741
1801
1251
1421
1171
171 I

linebacker-FB 6-1, 190 -

{50) Nick Pimpas -

{86)
1821
1771
1351
1301

Center-LB 5-11, 200 -

Canton HS, Canton, Ohio

Tony Pisarski End 6-1, 205 - Watertown HS, Watertown, N. Y.
Dick Plumb - End 6-2, 190 - Notre Dame, Utica, N. Y.
Bob Srebnik - End 6-2, 185 - Canarsie HS, Brooklyn, N. Y.
John Stanko Linebacker-G 6-0, 185 - St. Joseph, Cleveland, Ohio
Ralph Steffanci- Guard-LB 6-1, 198- Beacon HS, Beacon, N.Y.

(27) Gary Striecher -

1481
1621
1401
(16)

Rootstown HS, Ravenna, Ohio

Chuck Gruver - Tackle 6-1, 220 - Christiana HS, Newark, Del.
Tom Grys - End 6-1, 190 - Bishop Timon, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dennis Johnson- Halfback-S 5-11, 180 - Newark HS, Newark, N. Y.
Jeff Kind - Halfback-S 6-0, 175 - Franklin HS, Livonia, Ohio
Arnie law- Halfback 6-0, 180- St. Michael's, New York City
Crai9 Myers - Tackle 6-2, 230 - St. Joseph HS, Cleveland, Ohio

Halfback 5-11, 175 -

Kenmore West, Kenmore, N. Y.

Henry Wauuuk Fullback-LB 6-1, 210 Eastdale HS, Oshawa, Ont.
Chuck Woodard- Tackle 5-11, 225- Mt. Clemens, Mt. Clemens, Mich .
Don Wyatt- Halfback 5-10, 160- East HS, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dave Yount- Quarterback-S 6-1,178- DuBois Area, Renoldsville, N.Y.

COACHING STAFF : Vin Keough I Ithaca '671 1st
Rick Wells '68 - Offensive Backs
Gary Grubbs '70 - Secondary
Tom Milarski '71 Line Assistant
lrv Wright '69 - linebackers
MANAGER:

Dennis Kasprzyk '73

RECORD:
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.

twenty-eight

2 at Manlius
17 at Syracuse
23 at Pitt - cancelled
30 at Army
13 at Kent St.

U/B
27
43

OPP
8
13

Bob Powell

The Bulls get the best!
Whether it's day-by-day press reports or play-by-play
broadcast accounts, Buffalo Football is Class A, thanks to
a corps of dedicated veterans of the Fourth Estate.
Dick Johnston, Cornell '41, has covered authoritatively
more U /B football games than he cares to remember (and
he's really not that old). For 25 years "Red" has been
where the Bulls are. Following his first high school sports
beat for the EVENING NEWS, he has mixed a variety of
college and professional sports reporting into a glossy
series of pre-game, post-game and personality specials.
Johnston fills a dual role with the NEWS. His travels
take him to many athletic hotbeds, but he is always on the
seek for interesting sidelights in sports, thus Sports Illustrated Magazine retains him under contract to furnish that
publication with a host of feature notes and quotes.
Wife Jenny takes Dick's busy schedule in stride. She is
outranked in the Johnston home (Amherst) 3-1. Rich, a
junior at Cornell, is sports editor of the CORNELL DAILY
SUN. During the summer months he attempts to keep up
the pace his Dad sets at the NEWS.
Younger Pete is a senior at Amherst High and is
activ:e in soccer, hockey and tennis. Pete is presently catalogmg Eastern colleges, but could well make Cornell his
choice to become a student member of Ben Mintz's alumnirich sports information staff.
Dick jumped into reporting as a collegian and served
as a DSI for the Big Red when the field was just forming.
One of his undergraduate highlights was reporting the
famed Fifth Down Game, Cornell vs. Dartmouth at Hanover, N. H., in 1940.
'
Johnston has been known to organize neighborhood
all-star softball teams of note, play some infield for the
NEWS SOFTBALL STARS, team with Van Miller for
serious tennis doubles and pontificate on sports in general.
His 1970-71 winter schedule will be split between
Buffalo Sabre Hockey and U /B Basketball. Dick has
covered through the years AHL Bison Hockey, so he was
a natural to cover the new NHL entry. He is offense (pronounced OH-fence) oriented.
Where you find D. J., Bob Powell can't be far removed. Bob has been on the sports staff of the COURIEREXPRESS since 1963. Previously, he served with Associated Press in upstate New York - Albany, Syracuse
and Buffalo.
Powell covers a game or story with gusto. He "charts"
football in the press box and keeps up-to-date running
statistics, not only on Buffalo players, but on all other
Western New York players in college football.
Bob enjoys all sports, but he particularly likes football
and basketball. Last spring he covered the NCAA court
championships at College Park, Md. He covers U /B basketball and will return to College park December 5 when Ed
Muto's Bulls meet the Terps in the second ga~e of the
season.
The Powells, wife Jean, make headquarters in Amherst
home for six. Bob is a putterer and keeps the neghborhood
organized, including his across-the-street acquaintance
secondary coach Rick Lantz.
'
Bob attended Syracuse University, flew crew in a B-17
during World War II and established an honor list in athletics at Albany High School. Football and track were his
top sports as a schoolboy.

�FEATURING THE LARGEST SELECTION
of IMPORTED and DOMESTIC WINES!

�Because now you can buy what we at
Vega 2300 is here at last.
Chevrolet
have come to modestly believe is
We'd have brought it out sooner, but
you know how it is. We've got a lot riding on the best little car in the world.
We don't expect this ad to convince you.
this little car and we wanted it to be right,
We expect the car to, though.
really right, before turning it over to you.
Vega. The little car that does everything
Now we're ready.
well. Look into it.
And you were wise to wait.

Mo\RK OF EXCELLENCE

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text> UB welcomes Little League Football</text>
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                    <text>Buffalo

University
vs.
Va. Tech

�Barbara Yost Miss Virginia 1968 and Harman Tourmaline Mink Cape

BEAUTIFUL WOMEN LOVE BEAUTIFUL MINK
Harman Fur Farms, since 1927 extensive producers of fine mink and foxes proudly offer
Virginia's largest selection of fine mink coats, jackets, capes, stoles and small articles in
standard colors and rare color types. Farm prices. Make her happy.
OUTSTANDING QUALITY
Worth coming here to see.
HARMAN FUR FARMS
Christiansburg, Va.

One of the mink farms

Fur Shop-Christiansburg, Va.

�*
" Highty T igh ties" In Action

A Good Place To Eat Before or After The Game
Located U.S. ll Two Miles East Of Christiansburg

Contents
Academic Va. Tech University ------------------------------ 21
Advertising Index ---------------·-----------·---------------------- 51
Athletic Department ---------------------------------------------- 12
Coaches
Head Football -------------------------------------------------- 5
Assistants -------------------------------------------------------- 7

II
ROSES

Future Schedules ---------------------------------------------------- 50
Officials of The University ------------------------------------

3

VARIETY &amp; VALUE

Officials Signals -·-------------------------------------------------- 28
Player Sketches -----------------------·----·--·------------------ 14-50
Playing It By Ear -·-------------------------------------------------- 52

Satisfaction Guaranteed

Radio Network ---------------------------------·- --------------------- 52
Rosters
Virginia Tech ---------------------------------------------------- 24
Opponent --------------------------------------······-------------- 29
Numerical and Probable
Starting Lineups ---·----·--------------------- Center Spread

•

Statistics 1970 ---------------------------------------------------·---- 23
Tech's Bowl Record -----------·------------------------------------

9

Tech's Leading Scorers ------------------------------------------ 19
Tech's Oldest Rivals -----------·------------------------------------ 50
Tech Records Since 1945 ---------------------------------------- 19
Today's Game -----------------------------------------------------·--

2

Va. Tech Colors and Customs -------------·······-···-···-··· 36

220 Main St.
BLACKSBURG, VA.

19 W. Main St.
CHRISTIANSBURG, VA.

�DOBYNS, INCORPORATED
GENERAL CONTRACTORS

Commerc ial -

Educati onal -

Industri al

DUBLIN, VIRGINIA
Mem be r of
Assoc iated Gene ra l Contra ctors
of Amer ica , Inc.

CRANE RENTAL SERV ICE
15 TO 65 TONS

Today's Game
By Wendell Weisend
A pair of teams with problems in common ... including

men are on the verge of yielding more scores to opponents
than any of Claiborne's teams. (The '64 Techmen were
touched for 25 tds; 1970 opponents so far have crossed
the Gobbler goal line 20 times.)

1-5 records ... take the field in Lane Stadium this afternoon.

After eight straight years without a losing season,
Buffalo's Bulls find themselves in a very precarious position
despite fairly veteran personnel.

On the other hand, the '70 Techmen, with what appears
to be an about-to-blossom offense, have counted only 10
tds so far. Prospects for a far more productive second
half of the sea on would be brighter if the Gobblers chief
running backs would ever become completely healed.

Like Virginia Tech, UB has had more than its hare of
crippling injurie .
Tech, with an out-for-the-season injury list that reads
almost like a World War II casualty role, at least has
immediate momentum going for it, coming off an exciting
17-14 homecoming win over Tulsa.
Three weeks ago, Buffalo posted its lone win with a
16-13 decision over Massachusetts.

The Gc::bbler defense came up with a gem of a performance ~gams.t Tulsa . . . and produced eight points (the
first lime smce 1968 that the Tech defense literally had
cored).
So '70 appears more and more like last season when the
Techmen finally exploded to finish in a blaze.

The Techmen struggled with the Bulls last year, pushing
across a second-quarter td for a 14:7 halftime margi!l and
then punching in another td early m the fourth periOd to
win, 21-7 . .. Tech's first victory of the '69 season, ending
a five-game losing streak.
Buffalo one of the nation's leaders in defense last year,
already h~s given up 139 points this year, and the Tech-

Of. course, Buffalo is looking at the possibility of recoupmg and after some of collegiate football's startling
results of last Saturday the Techmen would do well not
to get gored by the Bulls on the way to some more remote
objective.

2

�Dr. T. Marshall Hahn ]r.
Uneventful is not the word to describe the
eight years in which Dr. T. Marshall Hahn Jr.
has served as president of Virginia Tech.
The 43-year-old Lexington, Ky., native has
seen the enrollment rise from slightly more than
5,500 students in 1962 to approximately 12,000
this fall. During this same period more than 15
major structures have risen on the campus.
There has been a corresponding growth in the
academic offerings and national stature of the
University.
Dr. Hahn has always maintained a rapid pace
since his schoolboy da,vs in his native Lexington.
He graduated from the Cniversity of Kentucky
at the age of 18 with a bachelor of science degree
in physics "with highest honors." In 1950, after a
tour in the U.S. ~avy, he received the Ph.D. degree at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
at the age of 23.
While in the Navy, he was a lecturer in physics
at the U.S. Naval Academy Preparatory School.
Upon receiving his degree from MIT in 1950, he
joined the faculty at Kentucky. Four years later
he was director of the university's graduate study
in physics and of the nuclear accelerator laboratories.
Dr. Hahn originally came to Tech in 1954 as
professor and head of the department of physics.
From 1959 until 1962 when he returned to Tech
as president, he was dean of arts and sciences at
Kansas State University.
In addition to administering University affairs, Dr. Hahn is busy in other areas. A consultant for everal corporations, he has authored
numerous cientific paper .
A former president of the Southern Association
of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges,
he has served as a member of the boards of the
Air niversity and Ferrum Junior College and
of the Academic Affairs Commission of the American Council on Education.
Dr. Hahn, who this year received the Virginia
Citizens Planning Association Award for outstanding professional contributions, was named
"Virginia's Outstanding Citizen" in 1965 by
Toastmasters International.
He chaired the
Virginia fetropolitan Areas Study Commission
in 1966-68 and was a member of the Governor's
Commission on the Status of Women in 1964-66.
The 11th president of the Univer ity, Dr. Hahn
holds directorships in the First National Exchange Bank of Virginia, The Lane Co., Dominion Bankshares, Inc., and the Roanoke Electric
Steel Corp., and is a member of many educational,
honor and profes ional societies.
Dr. Hahn is married to the former Louise Lee
of Dinwiddie County, Va., and they have a son,
Bill, and two daughters, Betty and Anne.

T. Marshall Hahn, Jr.
President

William J . McKeefery

H. H. Mitchell

Executive Vice President

Dean of Business

Stuart K. Cassell

Karl T. Hereford

Administrative Vice President

Dean of Education

W. E. Lavery

Paul E. Torgersen

Vice President for Financial Affairs

Dean of Engineering

L. F. Malpass

William E. Skelton

Vice President for Academic Affairs

Dean of Extension

J ames W. Dean

Fred W. Bull

Vice President for Student Affairs

Dean of the Graduate School

Wilson B. Bell

Laura Jane Harper

Faculty Chairman of Athletics
Director of University Development

Dean of Home Economics

R. M. Robertson
J ames E. Martin

Dean of the Research Division

Dean of Agriculture

Martha B. Harder
M.P. Lacy

Dean of the Residence Programs

Dean of Admissions

J. Gordon Brown
Charles Burchard

Dean for Student Services

Dean of Architecture

Gen. Francis T. Pachler
W. C. Havard

Commandant of Cadets

Dean of Arts and Sciences

GABLES SHOPPING CENTER

Open Monday Thru Saturday
10 A. M . - 9 P. M.
Member Hokie Club

of BLACKSBURG
3

�Chas. P. Lunsford, President
W. Soiling Izard, Vice President

J . Irving Slaydon, Secretary &amp; T'reasurer

CHAS. LUNSFORD SONS &amp; IZARD
INCORPORATED

THE VERY BEST IN PROFESSIONAL
INSURANCE SERVICE
Since 1870

Associates:
Harold N. Hoback

James I. Slaydon, Jr.
Charles I. Lunsford II

Thomas W. Jamison

Don S. Hayes, Manager
Southwest Virginia Branch

SOUTHWEST VIRGINIA BRANCH:

HOME OFFICE:
1010 Col. Amer. Nat'l Bank Bldg.
P. 0. Box 2571, Phone 345-1515
Roanoke, Virginia 24010

150 1 South Main Street
P. 0. Box 1005, Phone 552-0268
Blacksburg, Virginia 24060

A Member of the Hokie Club

4

�JERRY DAVID CLAIBORNE
Head Football Coach

Va.Tech

Nine-year record: 56-33-2

Jerry Claiborne, having suffered through the most disappointing season of his 20 years in coaching (0-5 in the
first five games of '69), retains his poise and enthusiasm :
"The sun will come up again tomorrow!"
With the 1970 season he'll be rounding out a decade as
Tech's head mentor, and three times in the last six years he
has brought the Gobblers back from virtual death at midseason--but perhaps never more dramatically than last year.
The nitty-gritty of Claiborne's success has been , is and
will continue to be hard work.
His Tech teams have been noted for strong defense and
a well-schooled kicking game, and back of the Saturday
afternoon scene is top-flight organization based on minute
planning .
The same characteristics carry over into Claiborne's
community activities, latest of which have been as Cancer
Crusade Chairman for the state and representative of the
American Football Coaches' Association Tea Council.
A native of Hopkinsville, Ky., and a graduate of the
University of Kentucky, where he was voted most valuable
senior player, he began his coaching career in 1950 at
Augusta Military Academy .

JERRY DAVID CLAIBORNE, Head Football Coach

LONGEST COACHING TENURES
Seasons
F. 0. Moseley

10

Years

w

1951-60

54
56

T

Pet.

42

4

.560

31

2

.640

L

J. D. Claiborne

9

1961-69

H. B. Redd

9

1931-40

43

37

8

.534

14

2

.700

6

.688

B. B. Bocock

6

1909-10
1912-15

34

B. C. Cubbage

5

1921-25

30

12

A. F. Gustafson

4

1926-29

22

13

C. A. Bernier

3

1917-19

18

6

J. R. Kitts

3

1941
1946-47

13

12

3

R. C. McNeish

3

1948-50

25

3

He stepped into college ranks in 1952 under Paul (Bear)
Bryant at Kentucky and moved with him in 1954 to Texas
A &amp; M. Claiborne served as defensive chief for Frank
Broyles at Missouri in 1957 and then rejoined Bryant as top
aide at Alabama in 1958. He took over at Tech in January,
1961 .
A national leader in the Fellowship of Christian Athletes,
he won athletic and academic honors at UK, including
election to ODK , and a few years ago he was inducted into
the UK Monogram Club's Hall of Fame .

.625
.740

Mrs. Claiborne, the former Faye Hooks, of Hopkinsville, also is a UK graduate. The Claibornes have two sons
and two daughters.

.518

NIKON, MAMIYA/ SEKOR, MINOLTA, V IV ITAR, DURST, AGFA, KODAK, OLYMPUS
"FAST FILM PROCESSING"

BURT S PHOTO SHOP
1

ON CORNER OF ROANOKE &amp; MAIN STS.

552-2331
100 N . MAIN

Member of Hokie Club

5

BLACKSBURG, VIRGINIA

�GOOD LUCK GOBBLERS

CUPP CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
WILLIAM B. CUPP-Owner

Registered Builder

DESIGN

PLAN

-

BUILD

FOR

HOMES OF

DISTINCTION

552-1251
BLACKSBURG, VA.

A Member of the Hokie Club

THE
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE

* .
"ON THE CAMPUS"
Temporarily located in basement of Owens Dining Hall

*
Where Service Meets the Students
A Member of the Hokie Club

6

�COACHES

COACHES (cont'd)

WILLIAM B. MATTHEWS
Assistant Athletic Director
&amp; Golf Coach

GEORGE AUTHOR FOUSSEKIS

Bill (Moose) Matthews, an all-time Tech cage great and
former basketball coach (2-yr record: 28-19) is Moseley's
assistant. Tech's golf coach for the past two years, he has
compiled a record of 35-3, each year sending an NCAA
contender into competition.
A native of Claudeville, where he was valedictorian of his
Blue Ridge High class, he came to Tech on academic
scholarship and was named to ODK and Phi Kappa Phi
while compiling a 2.7 academic mark on !;lis way to his
degree in agricultural education in 1956.

Born - Charlottesville, Va., April 28, 1945
High School- Lane High, Charlottesville
College- Virginia Tech '68
Playing experience - Starting defensive end for Tech for
three years, he received honorable mention All-American (AP) as a sophomore in '65 and was named to AP's
2d team in '66.
Coaching Positions 1968
- Assistant at CuI pepper (Va.) High School
-Coach of def. line, Virginia Tech.
1969-

CHARLES HARRISON HARDING
(Charlie)
(1st season at Tech)·

JOHN STERLING DEVLIN

Born- Norristown, Pa., April 12, 1937
Hometown- Phoenixville, Pa.
High School- St. Matthews, Conshocken, Pa.
College -West Chester State College '59
Playing experience - Three year letterman tackle and
captain at West Chester, where he was tabbed as "greatest ever" by Coach W. Glen Killenger; played for Fourth
Armored Division in Germany while serving in U. S.
Army.
Coaching Positions 1960
- Line coach, Waynesboro (Pa.) High School
1961-62- 1st assistant, Fourth Armored Division
1963-65 - Associate coach under Paul Deitzel at West
Point
1966-Coach of def. ends and LBs, Virginia Tech.
Married- Irma Kleemann, of Regensburg, Germany.
Children -JohnS., Ill, Nov. 29, 1962; Elizabeth G., Nov.
10, 1963; William H., March 19, 1966; R.
Michael, Nov. 16, 1969.

Born- Fredericksburg, Va., September 7, 1931
High School- James Monroe, Fredericksburg
College- University'of Virginia '53
Playing experience - QB for Art Guepe's U.Va. teams of
the early '50's, he started a pro career with the Detroit
Lions in 1953 but played service ball at Fort Polk, La.,
and Ft. Riley, Kas., before finishing his pro career as
QB and DB in the Canadian League.
Coaching Positions1958-59- Frosh coach, U. Va.
1960
-Backfield coach, U. Va.
1961Assistant, Gov. Livingston Regional High,
Berkley Heights, N.J.
1962-64
Head coach, Wall (N. J.) Township High
(Record: 22-7; League champs '63)
1965-67 - Head coach, Middletown (Pa.) Area High
(Record: 25-7, League champs '65 &amp; '67)
1968
Head coach, winning East squad in Pa. Big 33
game.

COMER MOTOR SALES
CLEAN USED CARS
Rt. 460 South
BLACKSBURG, VIRGI NIA

951-1424
7

�D. A. CRISMOND, Manager

Phone 552-5131

CAMPUS ESSO

•

''Tillman Sandy"

LAKE TERRACE MOTEL
Inc.
53 MODERN UNITS
"Home of V.P.I."
BLACKSBURG, VA.

Phone 552-8474

•
601 North Main St.

U. S. 460 SOUTH

Y2 Mile From Downtown

On your way to or from Lane Stadium

Stop at the

GOLDEN GOBBLER
RESTAURANT
Try our Baltimore Shrimp

When the Techmen are on the road
Try one of our Steak Specials • • •
and listen to the Tech game via
Grundig

FM

A Member of the Hokie Club

8

Blacksburg, Va.

�COACHES (cont'd)

COACHES (cont'd)

1968-69 - Backfield and end coach, Dartmouth College
- Coach of offensive ends and receivers,
1970Virginia Tech .
Married -Charlotte Gush of Norfolk, Va.
Children - Steve, Dec . 24, 1960; Danny, Feb. 13, 1963;
Michael, Feb. 17, 1966.

WILLIAM NEAL MITCHELL
(Billy)

Born - at Georgetown, Ky., June 2, 1935
College- University of Kentucky '57
Playing experience - All-State and All-American in football
and basketball at Georgetown High. Halfback at UK;
SEC all-defensive backfield; also played two years of
basketball at UK; first college football coach was Claiborne. Played two years of service ball while stationed
at Mitchell AFB.
Coaching Positions 1960-61 - Head Coach, Oldham County, Ky.
1962-64- Assistant, Manual High, Louisville, Ky.
1965
- Head coach, Manual High
1966-67- Assistant at Murray State (Ky.)
1968-Coach of offensive backfield, Virginia Tech .
Married -Mary Ann Witt, of Hillsboro, Ohio, June, 1957.
Children - Tamara N., Aug. 9, 1958; Randi Jo, Sept. 14,
1959; Elizabeth Ann, June 6, 1967.

SAM R. LANKFORD

Born - Union, S.C., March 5, 1912
College- Lees-McRae Jr. College, 1932-34
University of Tennessee, 1934-38
Training experience1932-34- Lees-McRae
1934-38- Trainer under the late Gen. Bob Neyland at
Tennessee
1941-46 - Service
2 yrs, PT instructor, Miami Beach
1 yr, Conditioner for Medical Division and
trainer for world champion Ramblers, Rand olph Field, Texas.
1 yr, trainer and physical therapist under Dr.
Miles Stevens, for 1st AF Aces, Mitchell Field,
New York.
1946-50- University of Arkansas
1950-62 - University of Florida
1963- Head Football trainer and weights and isometrics instructor, Virginia Tech .
Publications - For several years training editor of the National Athletic Journal, he has written two books and 14
national articles on training and conditioning. Past
president and lifetime secretary-treasurer of the Southeastern Conference Trainers' Association, he served as
program director for the National Trainers' Association
·i n 1956. In 1970 was elected to the Helms Hall of
fame.
Married- Margaret McMillan, of Spartanburg, S.C., 1938.
Children - Sandra (Mrs. R. C. Wiggins, Bristol, Va.); Sam,
Jr. (a senior in architecture at Virginia Tech).

1946 Sun Bowl
1966 Liberty Bowl
1968 liberty Bowl

Tech's Bowl Record
Cincinnati 18
Miami (Fla.) 14
Ole Miss 34

HAROLD RICHARD REDDING
(Dick)

Born -at Lewiston, Maine, July 23, 1918
College- Springfield '40
Playing experience - end and captain in football; basketball
center; 440 and high jump in track.
Coaching positions 1940-41 -Athletic director and head football, basketball, baseball and track; Vermont Jr. College .
1941-45- Lt. Cdr., Navy pilot
1946-47 - Assistant, football and basketball, Springfield
1947-52- Assistant, football and baseball, Davidson Col lege; Head swimming, 1947-52
1953Coach of freshman squad, Virginia Tech ;
Head coach, swimming; Head coach track,
1953-58.
Married - Elva DeLaBarre, of Norfolk.
Children - Dickie, Sept. 15, 1952.

Tech 6
Tech 7
Tech 17

THE ''GREEKS'' RESTAURANT
AND CELLAR
BLACKSBURG, VIRGINIA

9

�Cooks Clean Center
ACROSS FROM V. P. I. MALL

*
SELF SERVICE LAUNDRY
Open 24 Hours A Day

*
Support

Va. Tech Student Aid Association

A Member of the Hokie Club

10

�COAC HES (cont'd)

COACHES (cont'd)

ALF SATTERFIELD

CARL WILSON WISE

Born- at Russellville, Ark., Nov. 28, 1921
High School - Russellville
College - Vanderbilt '47
Playing experience - Tackle and captain at Vandy; his
Commodore playing career was split by a 3-year army
hitch; played one season with the San Francisco '49ers.
Coaching Positions-Little Rock Catholic High
1948
1949-50 - Assistant, LSU
1951-58- Line coach, Virginia Tech
1959-63- Line coach, Maryland
1964- Coach of offensive line, Virginia Tech.
Married- Bobby Sue Wright, of Little Rock, May 30, '47.
Children- Susan, Nov. 28, 1951.

Born - at Altamount, N. C., Sept. 27, 1916
High School - Crossnore, N. C.
College - King College '37
Playing experience - A fullback at Mountain Park Jr. College, he played guard in football at King, where he also
lettered in basketball.
Coaching Positions-Newland, N.C., High School
1937
1938-41- Gate City, Va., High School
1942
- Covington, Va., High School
1943
-Bainbridge Naval Training Station
1945
-Assistant, University of Pa.
1946-51 - Football asst. and head basketball coach, W &amp;

L
1952-53 - Head football coach, W &amp; L
1954
- Assistant, Hamilton Tigercats (Canadian Pro
League)
1955-56- Assistant, Clemson
1957-58 - Assistant, Georgia Tech
1958-63- Assistant, University of Richmond
1963-66 - Assistant, Richmond Rebels (Continental League
1967-Chief recruiter, Virginia Tech.
Married- Joan Tate, of Gate City, Virginia

TERRY LEE STROCK

HOM ECOM ING

I

Homecoming football games have been an official function of the university only since 1952, although there had
been a semi-officially designated game for many seasons,
starting in 1926 when the Gobblers dedicated Miles Stadium
in a game with Virginia.
The Alumni Association in September, 1928, proclaimed class reunions in conjunction with commencement unit!
1941 when the practice was temporarily discontinued. It
was resumed again in 1952 in connection with the homecoming football game.
The first "homecoming" float parade was held in 1948.

Born- at Hagerstown, Md., March 12, 1939
High School- Hagerstown South
College- Virginia Tech '62
Playing experience -A 3-year letterman halfback, led Techmen as scorer, pass receiver and punter; co-captain of
Claiborne's first Tech team, 1961; a fine shortstop for
Gobbler baseball team.
Coaching Positions1963
- Assistant, Colonia Heights High School
1964-65- Head coach, Culpeper High School
1966
-Coach of def. backfield, Virginia Tech.
Married- Cynthia Ann (Cindy) Fralin, of Franklin Co.
Children - Cheryl Lee, Jan. 20, 1968; Christl Lynn, Nov.
11, 1969.

In the Blue Ridge Mountains

GRAVES MOUNTAIN LODGE FOOTBALL CAMP
STAFF:

Alf Satterfield, Terry Strock, Billy Mitchell, Jim Copeland
FOR DETAILS, PLEASE WRITE: JIM GRAVES

JUNE 20-25, 1971
FOR BOYS l 0 TO l 8

I

SPECIAL GUEST:
11

Carroll Dale

I

GRAVES MOUNTAIN
Syria, Va . 22743

�ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT

ATHLETIC Dl RECTOR'S OFFICE
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
ASSISTANT A. D.
SECRETARY
BOOKKEEPER

TICKET OFFICE
BUS I NESS MANAGER
TICKET MANAGER
ASSISTANT

552-6731
Donald T . Perry
Thomas A. McNeer
Linda Hardy

SPORTS INFORMATION OFFICE
S. 1. Dl RECTOR
STUDENT ASSISTANT

TRAINER
ACADEMIC COUNSELOR
SECRETARY

Jerry D. Clai borne
John Devlin
George Foussekis
Charlie Harding
Billy Mitchell
Dick Redding
Alf Satterfield
Terry Strock
Carl Wise
G. F. (Red) Laird
Sam Lankford
Bill Buchanan
Nerine Schwichtenberg

BASEBALL OFFICE
HEAD COACH

552-6368
552-6369

When he initiated "operation bootstrap" in January,
1951, he envisioned a totally competitive program of intercollegiate athletics, but he scarcely could have foreseen the
financial magnitudes of college sports across the nation.
The 1970 season will see Jerry Claiborne equal "Mose's"
10-year football coaching tenure, longest in the history of
Tech football which started in 1892.
During his first decade as football coach-athletic direct·
or, Moseley compiled a 54-42-4 record, which was high·
lighted by an undefeated season in 1954--for which the
Virginia Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association named
him Coach of the Year.

552-6410
552-6554
552·6727

G. F. (Red) Laird

BASKETBALL OFFICE
HEAD COACH
ASSISTANTS

Frank Moseley is rounding out two decades as chief of
Virginia Tech's athletic operations, and the only thing cer·
tain seems to be the guaranteed pressure of constant growth
of the university, the Blacksburg community and the athletic budget.

552-6618

H. M. (Mac) McEver
Jack Prater
Nancy Lipscomb

FOOTBALL OFFICE
HEAD COACH
ASSISTANTS

552·6726

Wendell H . Wei send
Cary Perkins

STUDENT AID ASSOCIATION
EXECUTIVE SECT.
ASSISTANT
SECRETARY

552-6721

Frank Moseley
William B. Matthews
Anne Bell
Virginia Linkous

More than a decade later, in 1967, the VSWCS honored
him with its non-member award for his contributions to
athletics in the state.

552·6725
Howie Shannon
AI Kyber
Bob Andrews

Amongst the physical landmarks established during
Mose's regime have been Tech's baseball park, the Coliseum,
and an all-weather track and Lane Stadium.

GOLF
HEAD COACH

Bill Matthews

552·6721

Dick Redding

552-6368

SWIMMING
HEAD COACH

Despite achievements during some 40 years of being
associated with intercollegiate athletics, he continues to
look for new challenges.

TENNIS
HEAD COACH

A native of Montgomery, Ala., Mose was a quarterback
for some of the Alabama Crimson Tide's fine teams of the
early '30s. He began his coaching career at Kentucky, and
following a navy hitch during World War II, served under
Paul (Bear) Bryant at Maryland and Kentucky.

TRACK
Marty Pushkin

552-6565

Ed Motley

552-6410

Frank Teske

552-6562

EQUIPMENT MANAGER Luke Lindon

552-6410

HEAD COACH

TRAINER
WRESTLING
HEAD COACH
ASSISTANT

He is married to the former Edythe Alphin, of Lexington, Va. They have a son, Rufty (now a school teacher in
Blacksburg), and a daughter, Alene (currently a student at
Virginia Tech).

Reid Arrington

12

�KANODE MOTOR CO., INC .
•
CHRYSLER

PLYMOUTH
SALES &amp; SERVICE

•
BLACKSBURG, VIRGINIA

ROUTE 460 SOUTH

A Member of the Hokie Club

THE OUTPOST

Phone EV 2-9830

Christiansburg, Va.

13

�most of '68 frosh season due to knee surgery ... redshirt- ·
ed in '69 ... quick and strong ... has the ability to play.

TIMOTHY PARRISH (Tim) BOSIACK

Jack Abraham

Dave Bailey

Bob Bond

JOHN HARWOOD (Jack) ABRAHAM

No. 21

Defensive halfback
'69 Letterman
Junior, 20, 6-1, 185, Staunton, Va.
Played at Robert E. Lee high for John Conger ... 3-yr letterman as halfback ... also 2-yr letterman in basketball and
baseball ... won and maintained starting role as soph in '69
... tied for interception lead ... became chief punt returner ... no. 1 relief at safety spot ... missed one game (Buffalo) due to injury ... one of most important contributions
of '69 was a 48-yd punt return vs. Florida State ... a primary hoss in Tech's secondary.

SAMMY ANTHONY (Sammy) BRIA

No. 50

No. 66

Linebacker
'69 Letterman
Junior, 21, 5-11, 200, Alexandria, Va.
Linebacker, 4-yr letterman and captain for AI Thompson at
St. Stephen's School ... was named outstanding football
player in Alexandria . . . and All-Metro ... saw first real
varsity action in '69 Richmond game ... lettered as guard center ... was moved to linebacker in '70 Spring drills.

Defensive guard
'69 Letterman
Junior, 20, 5-11, 180, Charleston, W.Va.
Captain under Mickey McDade at Charleston Catholic
where he made 2d team All-State ... also played basketball
and baseball . . . . played in all 10 games in '69 ... small . .
.. but quick and tough ... should be '70 starter.

CARL TON DAVIS (Dave) BAILEY, JR.

Offensive guard
Soph., 19, 5-9, 215, Chesapeake, Va.
Captain and 4-yr letterman as center and linebacker for Carl
Opauski at Deep Creek high ... 2d team All-State ... one
of most promising of '69 frosh.

GLENN IRVIN (Glenn) BROWN

No. 56
Center-guard
'68 &amp; '69 Letterman
Senior, 21, 5-10, 200, Richmond, Va.
Was captain for Bill Long at Douglas Freeman high where
he won 2d &amp; 3d team All-State recognition ... a pleasant
surprise for Tech in '68 by winning starting offensive center
job in 4th game ... sustained broken ankle in 3d game of
'69 season and sat out remainder of campaign . . . lacks
speed ... but is fine blocker ... adds much versatility to
Gobbler line because he can and does readily step into either guard or center jobs.

MICHAEL WAYNE (Mike) BURNOP

No. 81

Tight end
Soph., 19, 6-0, 200, Salem, Va.
Twice captain in football and basketball for Bob Aversman
at Roanoke Catholic ... where he lettered 3 years in both
sports . . . came on strong late in '70 Spring practice ...
leading receiver in Spring game ... could be contender for
starting job in '70.

DANNY RAY (Ray) BAILEY
Offensive guard
Transf. Ferrum Jr. College
Junior, 20,5-11,195, Richmond, Va.
Played at Henrico high ... and then guard and lb for
Hank Norton at Ferrum.

THOMAS ANTHONY (Tommy) CARPENITO
No. 30
Linebacker
Soph., 18, 5-9, 185, Martinsville, Va.
Captain, 4-yr letterman at Martinsville ... won 2d and 3d
team All-State honors as quarterback ... saw extensive action in Spring game ... and likely will see his share in Fall.

FLOYD HARDAWAY (Floyd) BERGER
Center
Transf. San Jacinto
Junior, 20,6-1, 190, Elsinore, Calif.
Played at Elsinore high ... and then center and lb at Mt.
San Jacinto Jr. College, Gilman Hot Springs, Calif.

WILLIAM HOWARD (Howie) BEVERLY

No. 64

No. 47

Defensive halfback
Soph., 18, 6-0, 180, Brookfield, Wis.
Three-yr letterman and All-Conference qb for Bob Petrusak
at Brookfield Central ... where he also played basketball
and baseball.

ROBERT CLINTON (Bob) BOND

No. 65

Offensive guard
Soph., 20, 5-11, 220, Coeburn, Va.
All-State tackle for Burchell Stallard at Coeburn ... missed

Tim Bosiack

Compliments of

GREEN ACRES MOTEL
ON U. S. 11 AT INTERSTATE 81
14

Sammy Bria

Mike Burnap

�Top-Runyon Tackles Tulsa's Dobbs for Safety.
Bottom-Schwabe Moves Offense.

VA. TECH -VILLANOVA
Lane Stadium -

November 7th
15

�DAVIDSONS
CHARWOOD SHOP

CLOTHING FOR
THE COLLEGE MAN
122 NORTH MAIN STREET

BLACKSBURG, VIRGINIA

A Member of the Hokie Club

Rolling Service Doors
Wilson Weather Doors
Underwriters Labeled Doors
Rolling Wood Closures
Midget Slat Closures
Rolling Grilles
Counter-Fire Labeled Closures
Tee-M Containers for Storage
Sectionfold Overhead Doors
Standard Tee-M units available for two to five 30-gallon cans or 55-gallon drums
J. G. Wilson Midget Slat Shutters are installed in Lane Stadium

~WILSON~
Quality Rolling Doors Since 1876
P. 0. BOX 599
NORFOLK, VA.
W. H. (BILL) WALTHALL, VPI, Closs of '32, Soles Manager

A Member of the Hokie Club
16

�Top Left-" According to My Point of View." Top Right-"Burnop Makes Yards."
Bottom Left...-"Some Kind of D." Bottom Right-"Matijevich Breaks Through."

Hurry On Down To
PROUDLY SERVING BLACKSBURG AT
17

HardeeS®
401 SO. MAIN ST.

�-

FOOTBALL FANS
NEILY'S IS YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR:
VA. TECH SOUVENIRS
MUGS
SWEATSHIRTS (Children's &amp; Adults')
TECH JACKETS
PENNANTS &amp; DECALS
OPEN 8 A.M. TO 1:15 P.M. ON GAME DAYS

NElL Y S BOOKSTORE
1

College Avenue
Across from VPI Infirmary
Privately Owned and Operated

A Member of the Hokie Club
-

ENJoY

The Best

IN MoDERN AND coNvENIENT

BANKING FACILITIES AT EITHER LOCATION

THE NATIONAL BANK OF BLACKSBURG
Blacksburg, Va.
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

A Member of the Hokie Club

NORTH BRANCH

18

�TECH RECORDS SINCE 1945

Tech's Scoring Leaders By Seasons Since 1920

INDIVIDUAL
Longest Plays
Run-- 96 yds. by Bob Schweickert vs. Wake Forest 1962
Pass-- 73 yds. From Frank Eastman to Alger Pugh ~s. West
Virginia, 1959
Kickoff Return
Scoring-- 99 by Tommy Walker vs. VM I, 1963
Non-scoring - - 91 by Bobby Wolfenden vs. East CaroJina, 1956
Punt Return-- 95 yds. by Frank Loria vs. Miami, 1967
Pass Interception Return
Scoring-- 87 yds. by Clarence Culpepper vs. W&amp;M, 1967
Non-scoring - - 88 yds. by Johnny Watkins vs. Wake
Forest, 1960
Fumble Recovery - - 46 yds. by Mike Widger vs. Kansas
State, 1968
Field Goal - - 55 yds. by Jack Simcsak vs. Kentucky, 1969
Punt - - 78 yds. by Gene Fisher vs. West Virginia, 1967

* * * * *
SCORING
Points Scored
Game-- 36 by Tommy Francisco vs. VMI, 1966
Season-- 84 by Tommy Francisco, 1966
Career-- 144 by Terry Smoot, 1967-69

Year
1920
21
22
23
24

Player
J. G. {R1p) Wallace
J. G. {Rip) Wallace
Herb Gettle
Don Rutherford
Don Rutherford

TD
5
6
14
3
1

EP
15
11
0
8
9

FG
0
1
0
9
5

TP
45
50
84
53
30

1925
26
27
28
29

"Speck" Anderson
Frank Peake
Frank Peake
Frank Peake
Phil Spear

2
8
8
10
11

2
4
1
2
0

0
1
0
0
0

14
55
49
62
66

1930
31
32
33
34
1935
36
37
38
39
1940
41

Mitt Owens
AI Casey
Ray Mills
Duncan Holsclaw
George Smith

7
4
5
3
6
7
5
8
5
6
10
4
0
6

0
0
2
0
0
4
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

42
24
32
18
36
46
30
48
30
36

42

TDs Scored
Game-- 6 by Tommy Francisco vs. VMI, 1966
Season-- 14 by Tommy Francisco, 1966
Career-- 24 by Terry Smoot, 1967-69
Points By Kicking
Extra Points Attempted
Game-- 10 by Jon Utin vs. VMI, 1966
Season-- 31 by Jon Utin, 1966
Career - - 69 by Jon Utin, 1965-67
Extra Points Made
Game-- 10 by Jon Utin vs. VMI, 1966
Season-- 28 by Jon Utin, 1966
Career - - 63 by Jon Utin, 1965-67
Field Goals Attempted
Game
Season - - 19 by Jack Simcsak, 1968
Career - - 37 by Jack Simcsak, 1968-69
Field Goals Made
Game - - 2 by John Utin, 1967; Jack Simcsak, 1968-69
Season-- 11 by Jack Simcsak, 1969
Career-- 20 by Jon Utin, 1965-67; Jack Simcsak, 196869

"Foots" Dickerson
Mel Henry
Mel Henry
AI Miller
Herb Thomas
Herb Thomas
Bobby Smith
Roger McClure
Jack Gallagher
Jay Ratliff
Ralph Beard
Ray Beasley
Ron Casto
Ron Casto

4
4
7
2
4

1950
51
52
53
54

Sterling Wingo
John Dean
Dickie Beard
Jackie Williams
Dickie Beard

3
4
5
5
4

1955

Don Divers
Leo Burke
Jimmy Lugar
Barry Frazee
Pat Henry
Alger Pugh

7
7
8
.3
7
11

0
13
2
0

Terry Strock
Terry Strock
Warren Price
Bob Schweickert
Sonny Utz
Sonny Utz

7
3
3
5
10
11
7
14
0
0
12

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
17
24
0

1960
61
62
63
64
1965
66
67
68
69
1970

Bobby Owens
Tommy Francisco
Jon Utin
Jack Simcsak
Terry Smoot

NORTH MAl N ST.

'The Ultimate In Dining

0
0

4
0

0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0

0
0
0
0

0
0

0
15

0

0
0

0

0
0
0
0
1
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
10
9
0

"Your Host Derwood"

Blackbeard's Restaurant
1

0
0
12
0

1945
46
47
48
49

56
57
58
59

0
0
0
0
0

BLACKSBURG, VA.

11

Across From Poly

19

60
24
24
36
24
24
42
12
24
18
24
30
30
39
42
42
48
34
44
66
42
18
18
30
60
66
42
84
47
51

72

�--

-

HEATING 01 LS
Tl RES- BATTERIES- ACCESSORIES

New

Coble TV

management

POOL

•

Receives

12 Channels

breeds
New

AIR
CONO·

ideas

New
Color Sets

PHONES

NEW RIVER OILS,
Inc.
BLACKSBURG, VA.

ELECTRIC
HEAT
45 SPACIOUS

WELCOME

ROOMS
I

EXCELLENT
WESTAURANTS
NEARBY

Call 552-4011

PULASKI, VA.

MAIN

ST. - BLACKSBURG , VA .

Call ahead

for reservations

Dial 980-1160

Dial 552-2101

iwKEX

THE SPUDNUT SHOP

-1430-

The Nashville Sound In Blacksburg
Home and Away follow the Gobblers on
WKEX. Tune in early for the ''BIG 5
ROUNDUP" brought to you by the First
National Exchange Bank and for "TECH
TALK" sponsored by -

STEEL ENTERPRISES INC.
7 AM TO MIDNIGHT
7 DAYS A WEEK

After the game, get the latest scores at
1430 on your dial . . . on the WKEX
College Football Scoreboard.

NEXT TO LYRIC THEATER
COLLEGE AVENUE

552-9880

20

�Ae rial View of Campus

Academic Va. Tech University
of the University's academic and student life programs have helped create
a center of learning which gains in national stature each year.
P~rhaps the ~ost difficult challer~ge of any developing uni,·ersity is the
conlmued recrurtment of outstandmg men and women to serve with an
already distinguished faculty. .\bout 150 men and women were added
to ~he Vi;gini~ T~ch facult.J: this year. They came from nearly every
maJor _umvers1ty 111 the Umted States as well as from several foreign
countnes.
A wide variety of new academic programs have been organized within
the University, providing an even broader range in Yirginia Tech's teaching, research and extension activities. Other new programs are being
de,·eloped in response to the changing educational requirements of a
university serving a state in which political, economic and social changes
are occurring with such rapidity.
Plans already are under way to establish the College of Education next
July. Currently, Tech has the colleges of Agriculture, Architecture, Arts
and Sciences, Business, Engineering and Home Economics. Officials also
are at work strengthening the programs involving instruction and research
within these six colleges.
Currently under construction at the University are Julian Cheatham
llall, to house the division of forestry and wildlife sciences; McBryde
Hall, a classroom-office building for the departments of history, mathematics and political science; " 'hittemore Hall, the new home of the departments of electrical engineering and industrial engineering and operations research, a fieldhouse, which will gh·e added facilities for both
varsity and intramural sports; and a poultry science research plant,
consisting of a two-story laboratory and a one-story modified enviromnent
house.
This fall, the department of food science and technology has a new
building as does the team of bacteriologists working in the anaerobic
bacteria laboratory.
The de,·elopment of Virginia Tech's athletic growth parallels the University's physical and academic growth. The Uni,·ersity is seeking a
balanced athletic program which is of equal stature to the academic program on the national le,·el.
.\!though Virginia Tech has not yet completed its first 100 years, Unin :rsity officials are busy preparing for the second century-one in which
they hope Tech will significantly add to its outstanding record of achievement in higher education.

BLACKSBURG-The current 1970-71 academic year marks Yirginia
Tech's last chance during its first century to add to the University's
already illustrious reputation in academics and sports.
From that small beginning in 1872 when the university faculty an.l
administration numbered a president, two faculty members and a librarian,
Tech has grown to a point where 1,100 faculty and 3,000 staff members
support a student body of 12,000.
The University began with one building. Today there are 85 major
buildings on the central core of the campus, fi,·e under construction and
several others being planned for the future.
University officials are not looking back over the first 99 years but are
plannin~ for Tech to continue its orderly growth in the next decade. The
growth 1s necessary to permit Tech to fulfill its obligation to the residents
of the Old Dominion to educate its young people.
This year, the undergraduate enrollment, which has more than doubled
during the past 10 years, now numbers more than 10,000. By 1980 it is
expected to climb to 16,800.
This year, there are 2,700 coeds on campus as compared to less than
300 sb: years ago. The number of women students is expected to increase
about 5,000 in the next decade.
The greatest proportion of gain during the next 10 years will be in the
University's Graduate School. Graduate enrollment, which is about 1,300
students today, is expected to climb to approximately 4,200. In 1980,
about one of every five students among the expected 21,000 students on
the Tech campus will be graduate students.
The need for this planned growth is evident when it is realized that in
recent years more Virginia high school graduates apply for admission to
Virginia's land-grant university than to any other state institution of
higher learning.
The University received 8,300 applications-7,200 from freshmenfor admission to Tech this fall. From these, the University accepted 3,000
freshmen and 500 transfer students .
Tech officials believe that planning for growth has been conducted in
such a way that d uring the next decade the Uni,·ersity can absorb the
additional students without affecting the quality of the existing programs.
The intellectual and academic development of the University has been
as dramatic as the physical growth. The broadening and strengthening

21

�GRAVES CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY, INC.
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
St. Reg. #4524

COMMERCIAL

•

INDUSTRIAL

•

INSTITUTIONAL

*
Is pleased to announce that it now has under construction the new Virginia
Tech Field House adjacent to Lane Stadium.

THE NEW VIRGINIA TECH FIELD HOUSE

*
Phone 552-2231

1501 South Main Street
BLACKSBURG, VIRGINIA 24060

22

�1970 Virginia Tech Stax
RECORD {1-5 )
hL

0- 7

Yirginia

&lt;:!3,000

aL

18- 51

Alabama

53,958

hL

'!?0- 21

aL

7-24

aL

9-28

h\Y

17- H
71-1!5

Name

Comp-Att

Yds.

Schwabe

37- N

460

X German

25- 49

276

0

4- 19

9

0

Strock

Attendance

VT Opp.

~fernphis

PASSING

TECH

66- HO

745

Opp.

7'l- 13'l

885

18,000

State

41,563

S. Carolina
Wake Forest

18,500

Tulsa

24,000

Name

179,021

Totals

REMAINING
Oct.

24 HERE Buffalo
31 at Wm &amp; l\fary
Nov. 7 HERE Villanova
14 at Florida State
21 Vl\H at Roanoke

Int.

TOs

4
3

8

7

7

RECEIVING LEADERS
TOs
Yds.
Cgt.

Quinn

13

'l06

Tiberio

lO

57

~latijevich

9

Polito

8

Lg
B

0

11
l

13

161

0

41

Dobbins

6

52

()

12

Russo

5

51

()

15

47

()

Burnop

4

68

0

Glatthorn

4

33

0

X Kushner

20

INTERCEPTION RETURNS
Name

TEAM STAX
!j

1st downs, rushin!(

71

j!

passing

45

12

penalty

8

89

Net Yds. Rushing

1,389

745

Passing

885

1,576

TOT.\L OFFENSE
Total No. Off. Plays
Fumbles: No./Lost

18- 10

j7- 386

Penalties: No./ Yds.

46- 519

lvanac

1

Tiberio

83

Lr

TO

322

35

3

0

14

TECH

7

95

1

40

Opp.

8

138

0

29

K. 0. RETURNS

Name

INDIVIDUAL RUSHING LEADERS
Net Ga.

40
1

~la tijevich

TC

Lr

0

Pigninelli

Dobbins

Name

TO

( -4)

Mikulski

!54

j76
'l0- 9

Yds.

Runyan

124

TOTAL FIRST DOWNS

831

No.

Holsinger

No.

Yds.

Avg.

Lr

TO

15

280

18.7

7

171

24.4

30

()

()

TECH

22

451

20.5

30

0

Opp.

13

308

'l3.7

59

0

Dobbins

50

'l45

56

3

l\Iatijevich

3'l

90

15

1

Russo

19

45

10

Name

No.

Yds.

Avg.

Lr

TO

Quinn

13

90

'l5

Bosiack

16

10'l

6.4

16

0

792

141

7

()

1,389

48

12

197

TECH
Opp

PUNT RETURNS

TECH

16

102

6.4

16

Opp .

20

216

10.8

71

PUNTING
No. Yds. Avg.

LK

37.5

50

()

SCORING LEADERS
Name

TO

Tiberio

4

Dobbins

3

EPK- P- R

FGM-A

Simcsak

~[atijevich

Simcsak

0

Name

TP

4- 5

l-7
l- 1

Polito
TECH

10

4- 5

Opp.

20

13- 15

'l- 3

l- 7

1- 2

2- 6

Blk

TECH

43

1,613

37.5

50

0

12

Opp.

32

1,192

37.2

56

0

7

SCORE BY QUARTERS

2

1- l

1,613

18

6

~likulski

43

TECH

69*

Opp.

145

*(includes safely)

23

5

'l7

'l5

H

71

32

47

45

21

145

�Virginia Tech 1970 Football Roster
Player
Pos.
*Jack Abraham .......................... LB
**Dave Bailey ............................ C
Ray Bailey ............................. OG
Floyd Berger ........................... C
Howie Beverly ......................... DB
Bob Bond .............................. OG
*Tim Bosiack ........................... DB
*Sammy Bria ........................... DG
Glenn Brown ........................... OG
Mike Burnop ........................... OE
Tommy Carpenito ....................... LB
Matt Cartwright ........................ DT
Dennis Cogan .......................... DG
Nick Colobro ........................... DT
Jon Conlin ............................. TB
*Donnie Cooke .......................... DB
*Rod Cox ............................... OG
Curt Cretti ............................. TB
Bobby Dabbs ........................... DB
**Nick Del Viscio ........................ DE
Barry DeMarr ......................... OG
Bruce Denardo ......................... FB
John Dobbins ........................... TB
*Bob German ........................... QB
*Bruce Glatthorn ........................ DB
**Butch Hall ............................. OT
Larry Hartman ......................... DB
Andy Harvey ...... . .................... DE
*Scott Hawkins ....... . .................. LB
Steve Herl ............................. OE
*Ronnie Holsinger ....................... DB
*Bill House ............................. OT
Andy Hromyak ......................... OE
Jeff Hunsucker ......................... C
*John lvanac ............................ LB
*Eddie Johns ............................ DT
Bob Karlsen ........................... OE
**Larry Kushner ......................... OE
Lou Lagana ............................ DG
Jim Lawlor ............................ OT
Steve Maguigan ........................ OG
Dick Maksanty ......................... OE
Ed Mathias ............................ DT
*Rich Matijevich ........................ TB
*Kevin Meehan .......................... DT
**Tom Mikulski. ......................... DE
Olin Phillips ............................ DG
**Jim Pigninelli .......................... DG
Jim Polito ............................. WB
David Quarles .......................... DE
*Jimmy Quinn ........................... WB
Barny Ratliff ........................ . .. WB
Don Reel .............................. OE
Paul Ritchie ............................ LB
*Bruce Runyan .......................... DE
*Vince Russo ............................ FB
John Schneider ......................... OT
*Gil Schwabe ............................ QB
Ron Sebeck ............................ OT
**Jack Simcsak .......................... K
*Larry Smith ............................ LB
**Lenny Smith ........................... Saf
Dale Sonconi ........................... DG
Bob Sporio ............................. DT
John Sprenkle .......................... DT
Don Sprouse .............•............. DB
Terry Stewart .......................... OT
Craig Stinnett .......................... DE
Wayne Stinnette ........................ C
**Larry Strager . ......................... DT
Paul Striffler ........................... DB
Dave Strock ........................... DE
Don Strock ............................ QB
Ed Tennis .............................. QB
• • Perry Tiberio .......................... TB
Bob Williams .......................... DB
Chris Woody ....................... . .. OE
Steve Zeigler ........................... LB

Class
Junior
Senior
Junior
Junior
Sophomore
r-Sophomore
Junior
Junior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore
r-Junior
Sophomore
r-Sophomore
r-Junior
Junior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Senior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore
Junior
Junior
Senior
Sophomore
r-Sophomore
Junior
Sophomore
Junior
Junior
Sophomore
Junior
Senior
Junior
r-Sophomore
Senior
r-Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore
r-Sophomore
Sophomore
Junior
Junior
Senior
Sophomore
r-Senior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Junior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore
Junior
Junior
Sophomore
r-Senior
Sophomore
Senior
Junior
Senior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore
Junior
r-Senior
r-Sophomore
Sophomore
r-Sophomore
r-Sophomore
Senior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Sophomore

*Letterman

24

Hgt.
5-11!
5-10
5-11
6-1
6- ~

5-11
6-1
5-11
5-9
6-0
5-9
6-1
6-1 !
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-1
5-10
5-9
6-1
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-4
6-0
6-2
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-11 !
6-0
6-1
5-10
5-11 ~
5-9!
6-3
6-3
5-11
5-10
6-2!
6-1
5-9
6-2
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-3
6-0
5-11
5-9
5-11
6-3
5-7
6-1
6-1
5-10!
6-1
5-11 !
5-10!
5-11
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-3
5-11
6-3
6-3
5-11
6-3
6-5
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-1 !
5-10!

Wgt.
200
200
195
190
180
220
185
180
215
200
185
205
209
195
185
182
220
183
175
205
200
190
195
209
185
229
175
186
206
180
185
215
175
205
197
220
206
188
215
230
229
180
205
180
225
195
202
230
200
190
205
176
155
190
210
210
220
210
200
180
198
180
205
204
207
187
223
191
210
210
193
195
200
179
205
180
205
185

Hometown
Alexandria
Richmond
Richmond
Elsinore, Calif.
Brookfield, Wis.
Coeburn
Staunton
Charleston, W. Va.
Chesapeake
Salem
Martinsville
Norfolk
Derry, Pa.
Bluefield, W.Va.
Nashville, Tenn.
Durham, N. C.
Fredericksburg
Brockport, Pa.
Newport News
Havertown, Pa.
Arlington
Mountain View, Calif.
Radford
Virginia Beach
Philadelphia, Pa.
Lindenwold, N. J.
Alexandria
Roanoke
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Alexandria
Broadway
Pompton Plains, N.J.
Richmond
Whitesburg, Ky.
Herminie, Pa.
Chattanooga, Tenn.
East Meadow, N.Y.
Creighton, Pa.
Charlotte, N. C.
Shillington, Pa.
Chester
Butler, Pa.
Middletown, Pa.
Weirton, W. Va.
Philadelphia, Pa.
St. Albans, W.Va.
Durham, N. C.
Belleville, N. J.
Reading, Pa.
Cumberland, Md.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Narrows
Charlotte, N. C.
Mechanicsville
Virginia Beach
Pittsburgh, Pa.
East Meadow, N.Y.
Roosevelt, N.Y.
Follansbee, W.Va.
Highland Park, N.J.
Richmond
Bunola, Pa.
Suttersville, Pa.
Clairton, Pa.
York, Pa.
Waynesboro
Weirton, W. Va.
Salem
Lynchburg
Cambridge, Ohio
Virginia Beach
Warwick, Pa.
Warwick, Pa.
Middletown, Pa.
West Mifflin, Pa.
Charleston, W. Va.
Raleigh, N. C.
Annandale

�INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
APARTMENTS
318 N. MAIN STREET
WILLIAM H. PRICE
H. RIBBLE PRICE
MORTON V. Gl LMORE

PHONE 552-1161

BLACKSBURG, VIRGINIA

Our GOAL Satisfied Clients

Public Confidence
in Our Organization Gives You Our Personalized QUALITY SERVICE

RAINES

REAL

ESTATE

BROKERS AND APPRAISERS
MRS. GEORGE FORESMAN

WILLIAM H. PRICE

Residential- Farms- Commercial Properties
318 NORTH MAIN

552-4240
552-4201

BLACKSBURG, VA.

25

�Wouldn't an ice cold Coke
taste good right now?

�DEFENSE

OFFENSE

,,

90
75
74
55
56
68
81
13
34
31
23

1

JIMMY QUINN _______ _____ SE
BILL HOUSE ______________ WT
JOHN SCHNEIDER ____ WG
WAYNE STINNETTE ____ C
DAVE BAILEY ______________ SG
BUTCH HALL ______________ ST
MIKE BURNOP ____________ TE
GIL SCHWABE ____________ QB
BRUCE DENARDO ______ LB
PERRY TIBERIO __________ FB
JIM POLITO ________ ______ WB

90 PRENTIS HENLEY _______ _LE
79 BARRY ATKINSON ____ LT
67 CHARLEY FORNESS ____RT
96 TOM VIGNEAU ______ __ ____ RE
92 TED BUTLER ______ __ ________ LO
53 DAVE MAJCHER __________ LI
32 LARRY MADDEN ________ RI
36 BRUCE FRASER __________ RO
42 LEN NIXON _______ ___ ______ LH
47 MARK MACVITTIE ____ RH
19 TOM OSIKA ______ ____________ s

VA. TECH

BUFFALO
OFFENSE

DEFENSE
85
79
66
60
73
86
51
53

BRUCE RUNYAN ________ LE
EDDIE JOHNS ______________ LT
SAMMY BRIA ______ __ __ __ __ LG
JIM PIGNINELLI ___ _____ RG
KEVIN MEEHAN ________ DT
TOM MIKULSKI __________ RE
NICK DEL VISCIO ____ LLB
JOHN IVANAC _______ _RLB
36 RONNIE HOLSINGER LH
22 DONNIE COOKE ________ RH
21 TIM BOSIACK _______ ____ _____ S
THE GOBBLER SQUAD

10 Smith, SAF
13 Schwabe, QB
15 Strock, QB
20 Matijevich, TB
21 Bosiack, DB
22 Cooke, DB
23 Polito, WB
24 Glatthorn, DB
25 Dobbins, TB
27 Conlin, TB
28 Tennis, WB
30 Carpenito, LB
31 Tiberio, TB
32 Russo, FB
33 Ratliff, TB
34 Denardo, LB
35 Brown, FB
36 Holsinger, DB
43 Simcsak, K
44 Reel, SE
45 Dabbs, DB
50 Abraham, LB
51 Del Viscio, DE
53 lvanac, LB
54 Smith, LB
55 Stinnette, C
56 Bailey, Dave, C-OG
57 Hunsucker, C
58 Brown, OG

60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
71

n
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
81
82
83
85
86
87
88
89
90

Pigninelli, DG
DeMarr, OG
Soncini, DG
Maguigan, OG
Lagana, DG
Bond, OG
Bria, DG
Bailey, OG
Hall, OT
Cogan, DG
Sebeck, OT
Strager, DT
Meehan, DT
Schneider, OG
House, OT
Cartwright, DG
Sprenkle, DT
Mathias, DT
Johns, DT -C
Burnop, TE
Karlsen, TE
Woody, TE
Runyan, DE
Mikulski, DE
Colobro, TE
Strock, DE
Harvey, LB
Quinn, SE-WB

85
71
73
58
61
64
80
15
49
39
35

JOE HUDSON ______________ TE
BILL WINNETT ___ _______ LT
TOM CENTOFANTI ____ LG
CHUCK DONNOR ________ C
JERRY ELWELL __________ RG
PAUL CARBONARO ____ RT
JOE MORESCO ____________ SE
KIRK BARTON _______ _____ QB
JOHN FALLER ____________ LH
DOUG KOZEL ______ ______ RH
JOE ZELMANSKI __ __ ____ FB
THE BULLS SQUAD

3 Armon, KSP
11 Perry, QB
12 Nichols, HB
14 Baker, FB
15 Barton, QB
16 Goniwiecha, S
17 Boughton, DB
18 Philp, QB
19 Osika, S-P
20 Nance, HB
21 Woodward, HB
22 Layo, HB
23 Harrison, DB
24 Zalar, DB
25 Savickas, HB
26 Jackson, HB
27 Filipowicz, TE
29 Stiscak, HB
30 Homa, ILB
32 Madden, ILB
33 Smith, I LB
34 Tober, FB
35 Zelmanski, FB
36 Fraser, OLB
37 McCullough, ILB
38 Chapp, I LB
39 Kozel, HB
40 Elliott, S
41 Constantino, KSP
42 Nixon, DB
43 Griffiths, G
44 Constable, I LB
46 Hannah, DB
47 MacVittie, DB
48 C. Jones, S
49 Faller, HB
50 Bancroft, OLB
51 Brown, OLB

52 Huff, C
53 Majcher, ILB
54 Conaway, OLB
55 Siedlecki, OLB
57 Johnson, C
58 Donnor, C (CC)
59 Kershaw, OLB
60 Chamberlain, G
61 Elwell, G
62 Bauch, G
64 Carbonaro, T
65 Gasper, T
66 R. Jones, DT
67 Forness, DT
68 Albaneze, G
69 Ziegler, G
70 Rakowski, DT
71 Winnett, T
73 Centofanti, G
74 Rio, T
76 Adessa, T
78 Ellenbogen, DT
79 Atkinson, DT
80 Moresco, SE
81 Domino, SE
85 Hudson, TE
87 Harlan, SE
88 Eagen, T
89 Sharrow, SE
90 Henley, DE (CC)
91 Vandenbergh, DE
92 Butler, OLB
93 Van-Dusen, DE
95 James, DE
96 Vigneau, DE
97 Potyok, DE
98 Bouck, TE
99 Pescrillo, DT

" COCA-COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS OF THE COCA- COLA COMPANY.

It's the real thing. Cq,ke.

�CODE OF OFFICIALS SIGNALS
Offsid e (Infraction
of scrimmage or
free kick for mation)

Ill egal Motion

Illegal Procedure
or Position

Substitution
Infractions

Loss of Down

Ineligible Receiver
Down Field on Pass

Illegal Shift

Rough ing the Kicker

Clipping

Ball Illegally Touched,
Kicked, or Batted

Incomplete Forward Pass,
Penalty Declined,
No Play, or No Score

tLsS'

tX~tl
~~~

Helping the Runner,
or Interlocked
Interference

Ball Dead; If Hand
is Moved from Side
to Side : Touchback

Touchdown or
Field Goal

.

. ·.·...:. ·.
',

Safety

Time out; Referee's
Discretionary or Excess
Time Out followed with
tapping hands on chest.

Illegal use of
Hands and Arms

(

·.

'

Illegally Passing
or Handling Ball
Forward

Forward Pass or
Kick Catching
. Interference

:' ' '

-- .·.,

I

\&gt; Start the Clock

Non-contact Fouls

First Down

Personal Foul

Player Disqualified

Intentional
Grounding

Illustrations courtesy Collegiate Commissioners Association

28

�Buffalo University 1970 Football Roster
No.
76
68
3
79
14
50
15
62
98
17
51
92
64
73
60
38
54
44
41
81
58
88
78
40
61
49
27
67
36
65
16
43
46
23
90
87
30
85
52
26
95
57
48
66
59
39
22
47
32
53
37
80
20
12
42
19
11
99
18
97
70
74
25
89
55
33
29
34
91
93
96
71
21
24
35
69

Pos.
Player
T
Phil Ade&gt;sa
.. G
Denny Albaneze .
K
Kerope Armon
. DT
*Barry Atkinson
FB
Bill Baker .
OLB
"Tim Bancroft ..
QB
*Kirk Barton
.G
John Bauch .
TE
" Mike Bouck
. DB
Buddy Boughton
OLB
Byron Brown
. OLB
Ted Butler ....
.T
Paul Carbonaro
.. G
**Tom Centofanti
.G
Tom Chamberlain
. ILB
(*)Gary Chapp .... .
OLB
Dan Conaway .
ILB
Ken Constable
.K
*Mike Constantino
SE
Tom Domino
c
**Chuck Donnor (CC)
.. T
John Eagen ..
DT
Bill Ellenbogen
s
**Tom Elliott .
G
*Jerry Elwell
HB
• John Faller ..
.. TE
" Eric Filipowicz
DT
Charley Forness
. OLB
*Bruce Fraser
T
Mike Gasper
s
Steve Goniwiecha
G
Bob Griffiths ..
DB
" Bill Hannah
. DB
Marvin Harrison
... DE
** Prentis Henley (CC)
... SE
• scott Herlan ..
. ILB
Dave Homa
... TE
Joe Hudson
.. C
Larry Huff ..
.. HB
Don Jackson .
.... DE
Mike James .
.... C
Joe Johnson
.. S
Clifton Jones ...
. DT
** Rovell Jones .
OLB
**Ed Kershaw
HB
Doug Kozel ..
.. HB
Bob Layo ...
. DB
*Mark MacVittie
ILB
*Larry Madder. .
.. ILB
Dave Majcher
.. ILB
*Steve McCullough
. SE
• Joe Moresco
HB
Gene Nance .
. HB
Walt Nichols . ..
. DB
**Len Nixon
.. P-S
Tom Osika .
QB
(*)Ed Perry . .
... DT
Dave Pescrillo ····· .....
... QB
Doug Philp ......... .....
.. . DE
AI Potyok . . . .
.. DT
Ron Rakowski .
... T
(*)John Rio .......
.. HB
Scott Savickas ..
... SE
*Mike Sharrow ..
. OLB
Stan Siedlecki. ....
. .. ILB
Phil Smith ....
... HB
Bob Stisr.ak ... ...
... FB
Owen Tober .
... DE
Barry Vandenbergh ....... . ...
... DE
.........
Don Van-Dusen ...
. .. DE
**Tom Vigneau ...... .......
.... T
Bill Winnett .... . . . . . ....
. HB
**Barney Woodward ......... ....
........ DB
( *)Karl Zalar ..... . . ......... .
•• Joe Zelmanski . . ............... ....... FB
Joe Ziegler ............ . . . . . .......... G

Class
Sophomore
Senior
Sophomore
Senior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Junior
Junior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Junior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Senior
Sophomore
Senior
Junior
Sophomore
Senior
Soohomore
Senior
Sophomore
Junior
Senior
Senior
Senior
Sophomore
Senior
Junior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Junior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Senior
Senior
Sophomore
Senior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Senior
Sophomore
Junior
Senior
Senior
Junior
Junior
Junior
Junior
Junior
Senior
Senior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Senior
Sophomore
Senior
Junior
Junior
Sophomore
Sophomore
Senior
Junior
Senior
Junior
Junior
Senior
Sophomore
Junior
Junior
Senior
Junior
Senior
Senior
Senior
Junior

*Varsity Letter (22 from 1969).
( *)Varsity Letter (4 from 1968).
,Freshman Numerals (20 from 1969).
TEAM CAPTAINS: Offense-Chuck Donnor
Defense-Prentis Henley
SENIOR MANAGER: Allen Wright, '71, Mt. Vernon, N. Y.

29

Age
18
21
20
21
20
19
20
20
20
19
21
18
19
21
19
22
22
19
20
19
21
19
19
21
22
21
19
21
19
19
19
20
20
19
23
22
19
22
19
20
21
19
20
21
21
20
19
20
20
19
22
21
20
19
21
19
21
21
19
19
20
21
20
21
19
22
21
19
20
21
21
20
21
21
21
21

Ht.
6-2
6-2
5-8
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-0
5-10
5-8
6-1
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-3
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-8
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-1
5-11
5-10
6-7
5-11
5-10
6-2
6-1
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-6
6-6
6-1
6-2
5-9
5-11
6-1
5-10

Wt.
232
207
195
266
200
190
195
236
220
177
190
195
230
210
200
211
194
205
185
175
215
218
224
181
200
215
185
256
185
227
165
210
164
161
236
198
217
222
224
190
238
195
167
260
208
189
182
181
205
210
212
176
171
182
187
180
208
247
205
180
228
235
187
175
184
198
189
195
230
235
212
226
205
188
205
217

HcmetoYtn
Cortland, N. Y.
Elmhurst , N. Y.
Syracuse, N.Y .
Tarentum, Pa.
Colden, N. Y.
Johnson City, N. Y.
Endicott, N. Y.
Tallmadge, Ohio
IIlion, N. Y.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Aurora, Ohio
Sharpsville, Pa.
Auburn, N. Y.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Dewitt, N. Y.
Center Line, Mich.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Jamestown, N. Y.
Depew, N.Y.
East Aurora, N. Y.
Ridgway, Pa.
New Rochelle , N. Y.
Canandaigua, N. Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Rochester, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Niagara Falls , N. Y.
Binghamton, N. Y.
Center Line, Mich.
Johnson City, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Grand Island, N. Y.
New York Mills, N. Y.
New City, N.Y.
Irving, N.Y.
Ft. Hood, Texas
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Birmingham, Mich.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Akron , Ohio
Elyria, Ohio
Johnson City, N.Y.
Portage, Pa.
Williamsville, N. Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Johnstown, Pa.
Coshocton, Ohio
Ithaca, N. Y.
Indiana, N.Y.
Rochester, N. Y.
Willowick, Ohio
Yorkville, N. Y.
Delmar, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Toronto, Ont.
Center Line, Mich.
Rome, N.Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Wickliffe. Ohio
Witherbee, N. Y.
Carthage, N. Y.
Ridgeway, Ont.
Aliquippa, Pa.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Albany, N. Y.
Cortland, N.Y.
Center Line, Mich.
North Canton, Ohio
Peru, N.Y.
Tiffin, Ohio
Center Line, Mich.
Tonawanda, N.Y .

�THE
FARMHOUSE

30

�Buffalo University
A well-known scholar of urban affairs, :\Iartin :\Jcycrson, who will soon beconw prcsidmt of the rnivcrsit~· of
J&gt;ennsylvania, was president from 1966-70. In addition
to the fashioning of the new Amherst campus, the :\Ieycrson
yea_rs saw the rniversit.v gain national attention for its
rapidly-developing, innovative acadcmic programs. The
over-all feeling left by the :\Ie.rerson years is one of intellcctual breadth and a freedom from disciplinary rigiclity
and o-:er-specia!ization. ''The bachelor's degreP," :\feycrson said, ''should represent a qualitative stanclard rather
than a measure of time spent."
Founded as a medical school, the rniversitv toward the
close of the 19th centun·, expanded to cmbra~e three other
professional schools, p'harmac,Y, dentistry and law. A
college of arts and sciences was added in 1913. Other
divisions of study were established as follows: Summer
sessions, 1915; evening session, now known as :\'Iillard
Fillmore College, 1923; business administration (now
management), 1927; education, 1931; social welfare. 1936;
~r~dua~c Sc}10ol, 1939; nursing, 1940; engineering, 1946;
~ mvcrsi~Y ( ollcge, 1958; health related professions, 1965;
mformatwn and library studies, 1966, architecture and
environmental design, 1968.

EXROLL:\IEXT

l ·n iversi ty enrollment figures for the last decade
i.ndieatc that full-time day undergraduate enrollment
JUmped from 4,829 in 1960 to 10,640 in 1969. Full-time
graduate enrollment (da~· and evening) increased even
more dramatically from 286 in 1960 to 2,847 in 1969.
Enrollment in the professional school of dcntistrv
law and. medicine rose from 730 in 1960 to 1,190, with th~
largest merease being noted by the School of Law which
grew from 176 to 485. The comparative figures for :\Iedieinc
are 308 and 418 and for Dentistry, 247 to 287.

Dr, Robert L. Ketter, President

. Attesting to an increasing quality of students en rolling,
1963, 90 per cent of entering freshmen scored 130 or
better on the Regents Scholarship Examination: in 1969
90 per cent of the freshmen scored 184 or better.
'

BUFFALO UNIVERSITY

111

The State rniversit,· of X ew York at Buffalo is today
the largest, most comprehensive undergraduate and graduate center of the Xew York State Cnivcrsity System,
enrolling 23,764 students in the fall of 1969 (14,600 fulltime). E tablished in 1846, the rniversit.'· was a pioneer
in adapting educational service to the specific needs of a
developing urban complex.
Todav the rniYCrsitv is headed bv Hobert L. J{ctter,
a civil ~;1gineer, who ":as at one tin;e c~ean of .the C/ B
graduate School and also sen·ed as \'ICC presHlcnt for
facilities planning. Ketter is the eleventh executive officer
of the Cnivcrsity, whose first chancellor was :\Iillard
Fillmore, 13th President of the rnitcd States.
Samuel Paul Capen, a former director of the American
Council on Education, was the first full-time chancellor
and served in that capacity from 1922-1950. Dr. Clifford
Furnas nationally-known scientist and educator, became
chanceilor in 1954. In 1962, when the rniversity merged
with the State "Gniversity, Dr. Furnas became the first
president of State "Gniversity at Buffalo, a post he ~~ld
until retirement in August 1966. The Furnas adnnmstration laid the groundwork for the development of the
University as a major national center of higher learning.
Dr. Fun;as led the rniversity through an extensive
program of building to meet the enrollment demands.

In terms of high school rank, 27.6 per cent of 1960's
freshm.en were in the top one-fifth of their graduating
class; m 1969, 85 per cent of freshmen were in that top
fifth.
The rniversity demonstrates also an increasing commitment to developing academic skills among the underprivileged. A variety of special programs have been
instituted to extend social, economic and educational
opportunities to stu~lents.r~cruitcd on the basis of potential,
rather than on thcu ab1hty to pa,y for higher education
or the level of academic skill they demonstrated in high
school. l~hree such programs are EPIS (Experimental
J&gt;rogram m Independent Study), SEEK (Search for
Education, Elevation and Knowledge) and the Student
Tutorial Program, whose unconventional admissions critcri::~; and curricular innovations not only open the Univcrsi.ty's doors .to the educationally deprived but also
provide academic and financial assistance for the successful completion of their baccalaureate studies.
The. geographic distribution of the University's student
body m the fall of 1969 was: Buffalo ~Ictropolitan Area
51.6 per cent; New York City Metropolitan Area, 26.7
per cent; rest of ~ew York State, 18.2 per cent; out-ofstate and foreign countries, 3.5 per cent.

31

�Main Campus-Buffalo University

Our Sports Writers
Are at the Football Action!
Team up with the sports pages of The Roanoke Times
and The World-News for outstanding coverage of football in Virginia, the Atlantic Coast and Southern Conferences, and home games of the Washington Redskins
and Baltimore Colts.
Our sports writers bring you exclusive, on-the-spot reports, interviews with players and coaches and informative columns. And there's the unsurpassed sports coverage of the Associated Press and a parade of football
features. For football at its best, read

THE ROANOKE TIMES
.

(![:he 31lllorlb ·:Nems
32

�Buffalo University

Robert C. Deming
Head Coach

Terry Ransbury

Rick Lantz

Bill Dando

W e rner Kl eemann

Jim McNally

Joe Griffith

33

�.
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We are continually striving to improve our methods and
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Our desire is to serve your every need, whether it is
250 envelopes, 25,000 magazines, or one million folders.
For more than eighty years those desiring the best in
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We are particularly proud that among these many long-time
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THE STONE PRINTING AND MANUFACTURING COMPANY
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•

116-132 NORTH JEFFERSON STREET
ROANOKE, VIRGINIA

34

�Buffalo Bulls
Ed Perry

Barry Atkinson

Kirk Barton

Steve McCullough

Jahn Ria

Paul Carbonaro

Bruce Fraser

Bud Boughton

Larry Madden

John Faller

Stan Siedlecki

Mike Sharrow

Len Nixon

Tom Ce ntofanti

Mike Bouck

Barney Woodward

Joe Hudson

35

�Hayes Hall Tower-Buffalo University

Acheson Hall-Buffalo University

Virginia Tech Colors and Customs
for writing a new cheer to replace the old V.A.M.C. yell,
and a student body contest was held for that purpose.
0. M. Stull, a student of the Class of 1896, won first prize
for his "Hokie" yell which was first used that fall and is
still heard today. Stull was later asked if "Hokie" had any
special meaning, and he replied that the word was solely the
product of his imagination and was used only as an attention-getter. When Tech's ardent fans let loose with their
"Hokie" cheer, it does get attention!

The official university colors worn by Tech athletic
teams are Chicago Maroon and Burnt Orange. The colors
were worn for the first time on October 20, 1896, in a
football game against Roanoke College. A committee
chose the colors - so the story goes - because they made a
"unique combination not worn elsewhere" at that time.
There are two nicknames given to Tech athletic teams"Gobblers" and "Hokies" - and both are used with approx ·
imately the same frequency.
Although the turkey gobbler has been adopted as team
mascot, the "Gobbler" nickname came to be applied to
Tech teams in an entirely unrelated manner. Before 1909,
the non-athletes and athletes ate in the same dining hall but
at different tables. The athletes, at their special training
tables, received a more abundant diet and were kiaded
good-naturedly by the non-athletes for "gobbling" their
food. Soon the athletes became known as "gobblers," and
later, after the 1909 football team won the southern
championship, the nickname became an affectionate one.
In 1912, a turkey gobbler was introduced as team mascot,
and the sight made such an impression on the fans and
sportswriters that "Gobblers" came to be known as one of
the names for all Tech athletic teams .
All Tech students are known by the nickname
"Hokies," and the word is also applied to athletic teams.
The word "Hokie" was born in 1896, the same year that
Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College changed its
name to V.P.I. With the name change came the necessity

36

�Buffalo Bulls
Joe Zelmonski

Ed Kershaw

Mike Constantino

Joe Moresco

Prentis Henley

Doug Kozel

Dennis Alboneze

Rovell Jones

Karl Zalar

Chuck Donnor

Jerry Elwell

Scott Herlan

Tom Vigneau

Tom Osika

Mark MacVittie

Tom Elliott

Gene Nance

37

�When it's goal to go

• • •

. . . and the goal is financial,
let First National Exchange
help you pick up yardage fast.
Zero in to a full line-up of
helpful services at either of two
convenient locations in Blacksburg.
Discover why so many Techmen
team up with us.

1k

FIRST NATIONAL EXCHANGE BANI&lt;

1dt*

~~"*"

of~

A DOMINION OANKSHAm BANK
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

OFFICES IN APPALACHIA • BIG STONE GAP • BEDFORD • BLACKSBURG • BRISTOL • BUENA VISTA • COVINGTON
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ST. PAUL • VINTON • WYTHEVILLE

A Member o the Hokie Club

VIRGINIA TECH'S
1970-1971 HOME BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Saturday, December

s ________________________________ Appalachian

State

Saturday, December 19 ____________________________________ South Carolina
Wednesday, January 6 -------------.--------------------------------Virginia
Saturday, January 9 ________________________________ George Washington
Saturday, (Afternoon ) January 23 ____________________________ Ciemson
Saturday, January 30 _____________________ .. _______________________ Richmond
Monday, February &amp;______________________________________ William &amp; Mary
Monday, February 22 ____________________________________ 0hio University
Saturday, February 27 ____________________________________________ Kent State
Lloyd King

Monday, March l ________________________________________ Georgia Southern

Away Games: December 1-3, Big Five Tournament; December 12 at N. C. State; December 15, at
Duke; December 28-29, G. W . Richmond, E. Tennessee State at Fort Mye r; J a nuary 2, at Wake Forest;
January 16, at Richmond; January 20, at Eastern Kentucky; February 3, at William &amp; Mary; February
13, at Tulane; February 15, at Tampa; February 17, W est Vi rginia at Cha rleston; Fe bruary 2 0, a t C lemson; March 6, at West Virginia .

38

�ary members ... fair speed .. . heady player .. . pre-med
student.

No. 70

RODNEY K. (Rod) COX

Offensive guard
'69 Letterman
Junior, 20, 6-1, 220, Fredericksburg, Va .
All-State tackle and MVP for Harry Caughron at Woodberry
Forest . . . also lettered in wrestling and lacrosse . . . (his
father, William J., was a tackle at Army) ... cracked starting lineup midway '69 season ... had good Spring game . ..
and should be definite starter in '70 .
Tommy Carpenito

Jon Conlin

Donnie Cooke

MATTHEW PHILLIP (Matt) CARTWRIGHT

No. 77

Defensive tackle
So ph., 19, 6-1, 205, Norfolk, Va.
Most Valuable Lineman as guard for Bob Tata at Norview
high ... will have chance to bolster one of Tech's questio·
nable spots in '70.

DENNIS LEE (Denny) COGAN

No. 69

Defensive guard
Junior, 21,6-1,209, Derry, Pa.
A tackle for two years under Bill Olezski at Derry Area
Senior high .. . '68 redshirt ... was pushing for starting job
just before '69 opener when he sustained shoulder injury
that required surgery and knocked him out of '69 action ..
. . hampered in '70 drills by injury . . . missed Spring game
... could be a contender again in Fall.

DOMINICK JOE (Nick) COLOBRO

No. 87

Tight end
Soph., 19, 6-0, 195, Bluefield, W.Va .
Captain, 3-yr letterman and All-State for John Chmara at
Bluefield high ... where he also was 3-yr letterman in basketball . . . a standout as defensive end for '69 frosh .. .
spent most of Spring at defensive tackle .. . moved to end
shortly before Spring game .. . good receiver ... caught
five passes in Spring game, including one for td . .. could
have a shot at tight end job in '70.

JONATHAN CHARLES (Jon) CONLIN

ROBERT HAMPTON (Bobby) DABBS

NICHOLAS (Nick) DEL VISCIO

No. 51

Defensive end
'68 &amp; '69 Letterman
Senior, 22, 6·1, 205, Havertown, Pa .
All-Prep lb for Phil Carletti at Staunton Military . . . outstanding lb for '67 Tech frosh . . . opened '68 season as
starting offensive center ... moved to starting lb role in 6th
game . .. started '69 campaign as lb ... moved to center in
4th game ... was switched to defensive end in '70 practice
.. . fine speed . . . fine all-round player .. . and poet laureate of Tech squad.

BARRY BOGGS (Barry) DeMARR

No. 61

Offensive guard
Soph., 18, 6-0, 200, Arlington, Va.
All-Metropolitan tackle for Ellis Wisler at Washington -Lee
high . . . played well in Spring game ... and is counted on
as one of four most likely newcomers to bolster line in '70.

No. 27

Tailback
Soph., 20, 6-0, 185, Nashville, Tenn.
Ob and dhb for Lou Catignani at Father Ryan high ...
where he also played basketball . . . '68 redshirt ... his play
in '70 Spring practice prompted Claiborne to note, "He's a
really hard-nosed football player." . .. only 21 plays in
Spring game, but capable of keeping all running backs on

_ ..
Rod Cox

their toes.

DONALD DEWITT (Donnie) COOKE

No. 45

Defensive halfback
Soph., 19, 5·9, 175, Newport News, Va.
Halfback and captain for Wayne Begor at Ferguson high .. .
where he also was cage captain ... and played baseball . . .
saw plenty of action in Spring game.

No. 22

Defensive halfback
'69 Letterman
Junior, 21,5-11,182, Durham, N.C.
Captain for Bernie Blaney at Durham high . .. pole vaulter
( 12'8") .. . '68 red shirt . . . won starting job at outset of
'69 ... second largest number of plays (561) of '69 second-

Denny Cogan

N ick Colobro

�BRUCE GLATTHORN

No. 24

Defensive halfback
'69 Letterman
Junior, 20, 6·0, 185, Philadelphia, Pa.
Qb and captain for Bill Brannau at Father Judge high ...
where he also was All-Catholic League shortstop ... won
starting job at outset of '69 but wound up sharing duties ..
. . good speed ... should improve in '70.

GEORGE HAROLD (Butch) HALL

Nick Del Viscio

Bruce Denardo

BRUCE C. DENARDO

John Dobbins

No. 34

Linebacker-fu II back
Soph., 19, 6·0, 190, Mountain View, Calif.
All -League fb·lb at Analt high .. . where he also was track
man (TJ: 45'10" and PV: 12'6") ... and 191 pound league
wrestling champ ... spent first half of Spring practice at fb
... last half at lb ... likely will play somewhere. His father.
Pat, was a c-lb for Gobblers in late '40s
nephew
of another Techman, Frank, of Bluefield.

JOHN EDWARD (John) DOBBINS

LARRY FRANK (Larry) HARTMAN

No. 47

Defensive halfback
Soph., 19,5-10, 175, Alexandria, Va.
All-State qb for Jack Miller at Mt. Vernon high ... where
he also was 4-yr letterman as baseball catcher ... did most
signal calling for '69 frosh ... switched to defense in Spring.

No. 25

Tailback
So ph., 20, 5·1 0, 195, Radford, Va .
Captain and AII·State tb for Harold Absher at Radford high
... where he was 4-yr letterman in football, basketball and
baseball ... Tech's first Negro footballer ... had fine Spring
practice ... lacks real breakaway speed ... but quick-footed ... and an especially tough runner in clutch yardage sit·
uations ... could become a real star.

ROBERT LORON (Bob) GERMAN

No. 68

Offensive tackle
'68 &amp; '69 Letterman
Senior, 21, 6·2, 229, Lindenwold, N.J.
Captain and All-State for Larry Maurelli at Overbrook Reg·
ional high ... starting guard in every game for last two seas·
ons ... moved to tackle in '70 Spring drills to fill vacancy
left by Jerry Green . . . summed up best by Claiborne,
"Physically, Butch is all a college coach could ask for in an
offensive lineman." ... tabbed by offensive line coach Alf
Satterfield as "best lineman Tech ever has had" ... tremendous blocker ... no. 1 pro prospect on Tech's '70 squad.

HARRIS SCOTT (Scott) HAWKINS

No. 52

Linebacker
'69 Letterman
Junior, 20, 5-11, 206, Pittsburg, Pa.
Fb and captain for Bill Merritt at Upper St. Clair high ...
where he was 4-yr baseball letterman ... his father, Harris,
played football as a center at Pitt ... played in all '69 games
. .. and won starting role ... slowed by back injury ...
good speed ... likely '70 starter if well.

No. 14

Quarterback
'69 Letterman
Junior, 20, 6-4, 209, Virginia Beach, Va.
2d team All-State qb for John Grady at Princess Anne high
. . . also captain and 3-yr letterman in basketball ... and
track man (HJ &amp; T J) and baseballer ... bright light for '68
frosh ... received varsity baptism vs. Alabama in '69 opener
... took over starting role in 4th game vs. Kentucky ... set
Tech record for passing yardage (221) ... really developed
in '69 . . . engineered win in Spring aerial circus ... fine
passer (long or short) ... fair runner, although not as quick
as one of his chief competitors, Don Strock ... good command of offense ... if he develops as much in '70 as he did
in '69, he could be a great one.

Bob German

Bruce Glatthorn

MONTGOMERY REAL ESTATE COMPANY
PHONE 552-2458
104 WEST ROANOKE STREET, BLACKSBURG, VIRGINIA

40

Butch Hall

�J. E. DAVIS &amp; SONS
BUILDING CONTRACTORS

BUILDERS OF:

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McBRYDE

GALAX, VIRGINIA
MEMBER OF HOKIE CLU B

41

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BLACKSBURGCHRISTIANSBURG ROAD

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42

BLACKSBURG

�somewhat lacking in physical ability ... but a 100-per center ... leading tackler in Spring game ... likely '70 starter.

RALPH EDWARD (Eddie) JOHNS

No. 79

Defensive tackle; snapper
'69 Letterman
Junior, 20, 6-3, 220, Chattanooga, Tenn.
Center and defensive end for Pete Potter at Brainerd Senior
high .. . participated in basketball, baseball, track and wrestling ... good speed ... primary job in '69 was as snapper
for punts and placekicks ... also averaged about a dozen
plays a game on defense ... where he might have to be a
'70 starter.
Scott Hawkins

RONNIE EUGENE (Ronnie) HOLSINGER
De~ensive halfback

Offensive end
Soph., 20, 6-3, 206, East Meadow, N.Y .
Captain and All-Division end for lou DeFelippo at East
Meadow high ... where he played basketball and baseball
... '69 redshirt due to shoulder injury . . . has ability toreduce Tech's problem at tight end ... good receiver ... barring injury, could be '70 starter.

No. 36

'69 Letterman

LAWRENCE JOSEPH (Larry) KUSHNER

Junior, 20,6-0, 185, Broadway, Va.
2d team All-State, captain and MVP for Tom Addenbaugh
as qb Broadway high ... where he also was basketball captain ... and hurdler in track : .. developed well during '69
season ... busiest dhb in '70 Spring game ... and capable
of being '70 starter.

WILLIAM DOUGLAS (Bill) HOUSE

No. 75

LOUIS PHILIP (Lou) LAGANA

No. 64

Defensive guard
Soph., 20,5-10,215, Charlotte, N.C.
Captain and most valuable All-County lineman as tackle
at Independence high ... where he also played baseball ...
(brother, John, was defensive tackle at Georgia Tech for
two years) ... a '69 redshirt ... played about three quarters of Spring game.

No. 89

Offensive end-punter
Soph., 19,5-10, 175, Richmond, Va.
3-yr letterman for Chester Fritz at Hermitage high ... where
he also was 3-yr letterman and All-Capital District baseballer
... punter for '69 frosh ... good speed ... played considerable in Spring game.

JEFFREY LYNN (Jeff) HUNSUCKER

No. 40

Wingback-wide receiver
'68 &amp; '69 Letterman
Senior, 20, 5-11, 188, Creighton, Pa.
Captain and AII-WPIAL hb at East Deer Frazier high . . .
where he also played basketball and baseball . .. one of
Tech's most versatile performers who has had tough time
finding a spot. to play consistently ... good speed .. . good
receiver .... proved deep threat in Spring game .. . very
capable runner and blocker ... could be starter at wingback
or split end.

Offensive tackle
'69 Letterman
Junior, 19,6-1,215, Pompton Plains, N.J.
Captain, 3-yr letterman, honorable mention All-American
tackle for Len Smith at Pequannock Township high ...
where he was district heavyweight wrestling champ ...quick
... fast ... did fine job while lettering as soph in '69 ...
with Butch Hall gives Tech an exceptionally fine set of ots.

ANDY HROMYAK, JR.

No. 82

ROBERT E. (Bob) KARLSEN

Bill House

Ronnie Holsinger

No. 57

Center
Junior, 20, 5-11, 205, Whitesburg, Ky.
3-yr letterman center for Walter Thomas at Whitesburg . . .
(John Rufus Hall, Tech center-guard of the mid-'50s came
from Whitesburg) . . . 3-yr letterman in baseball ... saw
very limited varsity action in '69 ... could see more in '70.

JOHN STEPHEN (John) IVANAC

No. 53

Linebacker
'69 Letterman
Senior, 21,5-9, 197, Herminie, Pa.
Qb and captain for John Bruno at Sewickley Area high ...
where he also played basketball and baseball ... broke in
last half of '68 varsity season ... '69 starter, logging more
playing time at lb than anybody except Mike Widger ...

Andy Hromyak, Jr.

John lvanac

Eddie Johns

BLACKSBURG LUMBER co.
400 Draper Road
Blacksburg, Virginia

BUILDING SUPPLIES- HARDWARE
BENJAMIN MOORE PAINTS
43

Member Hokie Club

�KEVIN EDWARD (Kevin) MEEHAN

No. 73

Defensive tackle
'69 Letterman
Junior, 20, 6-0, 225, Philadelphia, Pa .
Captain and All-Catholic lb for John Flannery at LaSalle
high ... quick feet ... excellent speed ... good pursuit ...
knee injury in game no. 5 in '69 sidelined for the remainder
of season and subsequent operation kep1 him out of Spring
drills .... still has ability and should be '70 starter.

THOMAS GREGORY (Tom) Ml KULSKI
Steve Maguigan

Bob Karlsen

JAMES KEVIN (Jim) LAWLOR

No. 74

Offensive tackle
Soph., 19, 6-2, 230, Shillington, Pa.
Ot, def. mg, lb, de for Ray Linn at Governor Mifflin high
. .. was named Lineman of the Year by Officials Assoc .. ..
also played basketball and baseball ... played about half of
Spring game.

STEPHEN CLUSK (Steve) MAGUIGAN

Defensive guard
Sop h., 19, 6-0, 202, Durham, N. C.
Dg-ot for Bernie Blaney at Durham high ... (brother Bill
plays at N. C. State) ... worked his way into starting role
during Spring practice ... had good Spring game ... and
stands a chance of winning starting job in '70.

No. 63

JAMES ANTHONY (Jim) PIGNINELLI

No. 60

Defensive guard
'68 &amp; '69 Letterman
Senior, 22, 6-0, 230, Belleville, N.J.
MVP for Tom Testa at Belleville high ... '67 redshirt ...
despite broken hand in '68, played in every game and was
valuable relief man ... only Larry Creekmore logged more
playing time at guard in '69 ... not too fleet ... but is
most experienced player among all of Tech's front 8 ...
and should be leader in '70.

No. 88

Offensive end
Soph., 21,5-9, 175, Butler, Pa.
Ob for Art Bernardi at Butler high ... lacks great speed and
ability ... but can catch the ball ... missed most of Spring
work, including game ... a '69 redshirt ... could be a factor in '70.

EDWARD ROY (Ed) MATHIAS

No. 62

SYLVESTER OLIN (Perk) PHILLIPS

Offensive guard
Soph., 19, 6-1,229, Chester, Va.
3-yr letterman as tackle and end for Ed Karpus at Thomas
Dale high ... where he also set school record in shot put ...
(brother Michael was tackle and trackman at VM I) ... one
of brightest prospects from '69 frosh ... missed Spring
game due to injury ... but counted on to bolster interior
line situation in '70.

RICHARD THOMAS (Dick) MAKSANTY

No. 86

Defensive end
'68 &amp; '69 Letterman
Senior, 21,6-2, 195, St. Albans, W.Va.
Captain and 2d team All-State for Mickey McDade at Catholic high ... where he also was captain and All-State in basketball . . . after two years as first rei ief at either flank,
should be '70 starter.

No. 78

Defensive tackle
Soph., 19, 6-2, 205, Middletown , Pa .
Captain, ot, dt and de for Dave Yohn at Middletown Area
high ... where he also was shot -putter ... played about half
of Spring game.

RICHARD ANDREW (Rich) MATIJEVICH

Rich Matijevich

Kevin Meehan

Tom Mikulski

No. 20
Tailback
'69 Letterman
Junior, 19,5-11,180, Weirton, W.Va .
Captain and 2d team All-State hb for Joe Krivak at Mad dona high ... where he played baseball and was dash man in
track ( 10.2 in 100 and 23.0 in 220) ... good runner ...
with breakaway speed (as he demonstrated in "turning the
corner" vs Duke last season) . .. a real threat.

I
I

HARDIES, Inc.

ESSO PRODUCTS &amp; SERVIC·E
So. Main

A MembtN of the Hokie Club

44

Phone 552- 1201

�HOWARD PAU L (Paul) RITCH I E, JR.

No. 88

Linebacker
Soph., 19,5-11,190, Mechanicsville Va
All-Central Region end and 3-yr letterm~n f~r Chester Fritz
at Hermitage high .. . played briefly in Spring game.

ROBERT STEVE N (Bob) RULLAN

Jim Pi gninelli

Dave Quarles

Jim Polito

JAMES FRAN K (Jim) PO LI TO

BRUCE DAVID (Bruce) RU NYAN

No. 23

VINCENT JOSEPH (V ince ) RUSSO

No. 90

JOHN WILLIAM (John) SCHNE IDE R

No. 74

Offensive guard
Soph., 19, 6-1, 220, East Meadow N Y
Captain and 2-yr letterman end for To~ Freda at East Meadow ... knocked through part of Spring practice at tackle
before finding a chan~e at guard . .. moved into starting
spot . . . and could still be there at '70's opening whistle.

No. 80

Defensive end
Soph., 19, 6-3, 190, Cumberland, Md.
Captain as oe-lb for Ed Schwarz at Allegheny high ... where
he al so ran track ... figures to be a leading prospect for '70
action.

ROBERT BARNS (Barny ) RATLIFF , JR .

No. 32

Fullback
'69 Letterman
Junior, 20, 5-7 , 210, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Captain and All -American fb for Art Walker at Mt. Lebanon high ... ~arrie~ load for '68 frosh ... took over starting
role a_t ope~mg of 69 and never budged . .. looks like a toy
tank 1n act1on, great blocker . .. best and most consistent
runner in Spring workouts ... tabbed by Claiborne as Tech's
most consistent player last season .. . should be one -.Jf
Gobblers' finest performers in '70 .

Split end-wingback
'69 Letterman
Junior, 21, 6-0, 205, Philadelphia, Pa .
Se for Bill Brannau at Father Judge high . .. where he also
played baseball . . . excellent speed .. . broke Tech reception yardage record with 152 yards vs. Kentucky in '69 .. .
the following week (vs . South Carolina) blossomed into
running threat ( 15 for 69) . . . slowed by toe injury in '69
. . . missed Spring work due to injury . . . always a longbomb threat ... can be as good as he wants to be .

DAVID BANKS (Dave ) QUARLES

No. 85

Defensive end
'69 Letterman
Junior, 19, 6-3, 210, Virginia Beach, Va.
All-Metro end for John Grady at Princess Anne high ...
where he also was discus man . .. bounced around at both
offens_e ~nd defense, end and tackle, before finding a spot
at de m 69 ... had good Spring game ... figures to be '70
starter.

Wingback
Soph., 20, 6-2, 200, Reading, Pa .
Hb-flanker at Gov. Mifflin high . .. and at Frederick Military ... dash man ( 10.1 in 1 00; 22.5 in 220) . .. had good
Spring practic;e ... and Spring game (leading maroon receiver with seven receptions) . . . speed is big asset on counter
plays . . . could be starter in '70.

JAMES JOSEPH (Jimmy) QUINN

No. 37

Fullback
Soph ., 19, 6-0, 200, East Meadow, N. Y.
Captain and 2-yr letterman for Tom Freda at East Meadow
· · . one of_ most promising newcomers during Spring drills
.. ._ran particularly well at times .. . if he improves as block~r In pre-season practice, could be number one backup man
In '70.

No. 26

Wingback
Soph., 19, 5-11, 176, Narrows, Va.
All-District tb-safety for Bob Price at Narrows high
where he also played basketball . .. and was a dash man in
track (9 .8 in 100 ) . . . missed Spring game ... but speed
could give him a chance to play in '7 0.

DONALD GENE (Don ) REEL

No. 87

Wide receiver
So ph., 19, 5-9, 155, Charlotte, N. C.
Captain and All -State wingback for Roy Ledford at Independence high ... where he was dash man ( 10.2 in 100 ; 23.5
in 220 ) ... stayed hurt most of Spring and missed game ...
but fastest man on squad . .. if healthy, a definite deep
Jimmy Quinn

threat.

Bob Rullan

BLA~K;~~c~G AMERICAN SERVI~E cS~~~ION
ROAD SERVICE

MOTOR TUNE-UPS

BRAKE SERVICE

B ruce Runyan

!6•)

PHONE 552-4711

BLACKSBURG, V IRGINI A 24060

25 1 S. MA IN ST.

45

�VA. TECH BOOSTERS
OF BLACKSBURG, VA.

W. Bane Atkinson, Insurance &amp; Real Estate
Blacksburg Esso Station
Blacksburg Feed &amp; Seed Company
:::Blacksburg Gulf &amp; U-Haul Rentals
Blacksburg Motor Company
Blue Grass Market
Center Drug Store
Central Service, Inc.
Cole's Fine Foods
College Inn
:::Corner Drug -

The Rex a II Store

George Greer, Realtor
Hokie House Restaurant
*Hokie Club Members

46

�Missed Spring practice due to knee and toe surgery ... if
completely recovered, Tech's kicking game threat will be
bigger than ever . . . if not, will lack range of last two
seasons ... but assuming that "Lonesome Jack" is back he
should rewrite all of Tech's records ... and achieve a ni~he
among college football's all-time top 10 in kicking marks.

LAWRENCE BENJAMIN (Larry) SMITH

Vince Russo

Gil Schwabe

Linebacker
'69 Letterman
Junior, 20,5-11,198, Richmond, Va.
All-State and All-American fb for W. E. Long at Douglas
Freeman high ... where he also was weight man in track
('67 state discus champ) ... limited to punting duties much
of ~rash s~ason due to injury ... didn't see first '69 varsity
act1on until 5th game ... but played in all the rest ... had
good Spring game ... has good shot in '70.

John Schneider

Gl LBERT DONALD (Gil) SCHWABE

LEONARD JAMES (Lenny) SMITH

No. 13

DALE ALAN (Dale) SONCINI

No. 62

Defensive guard
Soph., 19, 5-11, 205, Sutersville, Pa.
Captain and AII -WPIAL lineman for John Bruno at Sewickley Area high ... where he also lettered three years in baseball ... missed Spring game ... but will have opportunity
in Fall.

action.

No. 71

ROBERT ANTHONY (Bob) SPORIO

Offensive tackle
Soph ., 19,5-10,200, Follansbee, W.Va.
4-yr letterman as fb-lb for Anthony Paesano at Follensbee
. . . where he played baseball ... and was a weight man in
track ... played quarter in Spring game . . . could help '70

No. 78

Defensive tackle
Soph., 19, 6-0, 204, Clairton, Pa .
All-Conference g-lb for Jim Campologo at Clairton high .. .
worked on first unit considerably during Spring drills .. .
played almost three quarters in Spring game ... and could
see plenty of action in '70.

line depth.

JOHN MICHAEL (Jack) SIMCSAK

No. 10

Defensive safety
'68 &amp; '69 Letterman
Senior, 21,5-10, 180, Bunola, Pa.
2d team All-State qb at Elizabeth Forward high ... where
he. also P!ay~d bask~tball an~ baseball ... moved to safety
midway m 68 Spnng pract1ce . . . won starting job (vs.
Miami) in 5th game of season ... "quarterbacked" Tech's
green '69 secondary .. . has intercepted 10 passes in two
seasons . . . a smart football player ... good tackler ...
should be a leader and outstanding player in '70.

Quarterback
Senior, 22, 6-1, 210, Roosevelt, N.Y.
All-South Shore qb for Len Meckalavage at Roosevelt high
... an all-league baseball pitcher ... made first big impression as "pitcher" in Tech's '67 Spring game ... but sustained shoulder injury just before '67 opener and wound up being redshirted ... impressive again in '68 Spring game, but
saw limited action in the Fall (biggest chance was vs. Miami
at midseason) ... strong arm paid off in '69 South Carolina
game, his first appearance of the season, as he hit. Jimmy
Quinn with a bomb for a go-ahead td with 1:13 left m game
. .. for '69 season, completed eight passes, four of them for
tds, for 206 yards .. . showed more improvement as all-around operator during '70 Spring drills than any previous
time ... sat out Spring game ... but figures to be in '70

RONALD JAMES (Ron) SEBECK

No. 54

No.43

Kicking specialist
'68 &amp; '69 Letterman
Senior, 22, 6-1, 180, Highland Park, N.J.
Captain and All-State qb for Jay Dakelmaw at Highland
Park high ... where he also played basketball ... and was
track man (hurdles and jumps) ... good speed . . . the key
to Tech's kicking game during last two seasons ... as good
an all -around kicking specialist as there is in the nation,
witness two-season record:
Punts
148 for 39.8 avg.
EPs
49 for 51
FGs
20 for 37 (incl. Tech record 55-yarder)
KOs
Usually into end zone
Pts. scored: 109 (Tech career record: 144 byrunning
back Terry Smoot)

Larry Smith

Lenny Smith

WARRENIZING 1 HR. CLEANERS OF BLACKSBURG
PHONE 552-8920
YOUR QUALITY CLEANERS
807 Kabrich Street
Blacksburg, Virginia

Computerized Equipment
SHIRT AND LAUNDRY SERVICE

47

Bob Sporio

�VA. TECH BOOSTERS
OF BLACKSBURG, VA.

Hummell's Jewelry
Ideal Barber Shop
Kessler Supply ::~ Lyric

Mary Ava's Gift Shop

Theater

Mi ller-Ledford-Pierce, Insurance
Perdue Carpet &amp; Tile
Pete's Shell Service
Price's Gulf Service
Ridinger Hardware &amp; Gift Company
The Sportsman
Star Barber Shop
Tech Drug Store
The Flower Box
*Hokie Club Members

48

�LARRY STEVEN (Duke) STRAGER

Defensive tackle
'68 &amp; '69 Letterman
Senior, 21, 6-3, 210, Cambridge, Ohio
Captain and ambidextrous qb for his father, George, at
Cambridge high ... (father now coach at St. Clairsville, 0.)
. . . made All-Tournament team three times in basketball
... also baseball player and trackman ... de for '66 frosh
... '67 redshirt ... in '68 played in all games except opener . . . knee injury in game no. 7 of '69 sidelined him for
duration . . . and operation kept him out of '70 Spring
drills ... not too swift ... but great, uninhibited attitude
. .. should be man to "keep 'em loose" in '70.

....
John Sprenkle

Don Sprouse

JOHN WILLIAM (John) SPRENKLE

Terry Stewart

DAVID JAMES (Dave) STROCK

No. 77

DONALD JOSEPH (Don) STROCK

No. 42

ED WESLEY (Ed, E.T.) TENNIS

No. 11

Wingback
Soph., 20, 6-0, 179, Middletown, Pa.
Captain and All-Conference qb for Charlie Harding (now a
member of Tech staff) at Middletown Area high ... can run
and throw ... was moved to defense for a while in '69 ...
wound up as '69 redshirt ... good all-around athlete who
momentarily is groping for position to play.

No. 76

Offensive tackle
Soph., 19, 6-3, 223, Weirton,"'!· 'l_a.
Captain and 3-yr letterman at We1r_ h1gh ._ .. where he also
was a discus man ... developed dunng Sprmg ... and could
be one of newcomers who has to help in '70.

WAYNE KELLY (Wayne) STINNETTE

No. 15

Quarterback
Soph., 19, 6-5, 200, Warwick, Pa.
Captain and Prep All-American for Henry Bernat at Owen J.
Roberts high ... where he was basketball captain, baseball
player and trackman ... good speed ... good arm ... at
one point in '70 Spring drills held no. 1 spot ... probably
best scrambler of Tech's three qbs ... needs game experience ... but should become real good one.

Defensive ha If back
Soph., 19, 6-0, 187, Waynesboro, Va.
Captain, All-District q_b f?r three years at Waynesboro high
... captain and AII-D1stnct basketball player ... 2-yr baseball letterman ... in track, HJ and PV ... played well in
Spring game ... and appeared to have best chance of newcomers in secondary·

TERRY L. STEWART

No. 81

Defensive end
Soph., 22, 6-3, 195, Warwick, Pa.
Qb-se for Henry Bernat at Owen J. Roberts high ... where
he played basketball ... and was named outstanding baseball player ... one of most likely sophs to help Tech's de
position in '70.

Defensive tackle
Soph., 19,6-1,207, York, Pa.
Captain and Big 33 guard at West York high ... where he
also was track man ... one of most outstanding '69 frosh
... moved to lb in '70 Spring workouts ... but returned to
dt ... has the speed and all-around ability to become a truly
outstanding player ... could be '70 starter.

DONALD MELVIN (Don) SPROUSE

No. 72

No. 55

Offensive center
Jr. College Transf.
Junior, 20,6-3, 210, Lynchburg, Va.
Played at Brookville high ... then made All-American as
center for Hank Norton at Ferrum Junior College ... and
his credentials appeared qu ~te legiti~ate off his pe~formance
in Tech's '70 Spring pract1ce ... f1rst cente~ Cl~1borne has
had who has both size and ~pe~d ... and f1rst J.C. tran~fer
who apparently will ~ake 1t b1g .tor Tec~men . . . m1ght
have to battle Dave Bailey f~r startmg spot m September ...
but should see plenty of act1on.

Wayne Stinnette

49

Duke Strager

Dave Strock

�TECH'S LONGEST STANDING RIVALRIES
WITH TEAMS PRESENTLY CLASSIFIED MAJOR
Times
Met
65

Last
Met
1969

W

L

38

22

5

U. VIRGINIA
WM &amp; MARY
N. C. State
Richmond

51
45
39
39

1966
1969
1964
1969

25
26
20
29

22
15
16

4
4
3
4

Maryland
U. North Carolina
WAKE FOREST
West Virginia
Clemson

28
26
19
18
15

1950
1946
1969
1968
1960

12
13
12

16

0

7
6

6

FLORIDA STATE
Davidson
SOUTH CAROLINA
Kentucky
Navy
Duke
Marshall

14
14
10

9
8
7
7

1969
1960
1969
1969
1915
1969
1953

Tennessee
Army
ALABAMA
Tulane
VILLANOVA
Miami (Florida)
Furman

6
6
5
5
4
4
4

1937
1962
1969
1966
1967
1968
1947

Vanderbilt
Kansas State
BUFFALO
Southern Miss.

3
2

1966
1968
1969
1958

MEMPHIS STATE
TULSA
Oklahoma State
Ohio U.
Houston
SMU
Kent State
Texas A &amp; M

0
0
0
0
0
0

VMI

Don Strock

Ch r is Woody

Ed Tennis

PERRY NICHOLAS (Perry) TIBERIO

No. 31

Tailback
'68 &amp; '69 Letterman
Senior, 20, 6-1, 205, West Mifflin, Pa.
AII-WPIAL hb for Ned Mervos at West Mifflin South . . .
where he also was basketball captain .. . lettered as tb-fb in
'69 . .. logged major.ity of '69 playing time at wb . . . had
sensational day as he won MVP trophy in Oyster Bowl
game vs. Duke ( 10 carries for 170 yds., including 62-yd td
run, plus 70-yd pass reception for td) . . . leading returning
rusher with 4.7 avg . .. . co-leader of returning pass receivers ... good blocker .. . intelligent back, capable of filling
any of three (tb, fb, wb) assignments without given notice
... should be Tech's top running back in '70.

CHRISTOPHER LEE (Chris) WOODY

No. 83

Offensive end
Soph., 19, 6-1, 205, Raleigh, N. C.
MVP as fb-lb for Jim Brown at Sanderson high . .. (his
father, Floyd, played basketball and baseball at East Carolina) . .. made a run at tight end spot during Spring ... did
respectable job in Spring game . .. good receiver .. . one of
four primary candidates for tight end slot in '70.

CHARLES STEVE (Steve) ZEIGLER

No. 37

Defensive halfback
Soph., 19, 5-10, 185, Annandale, Va.
Captain, All -State lb at W. T. Woodson high . . . where he
also played baseball ... lb throughout Spring practice .. .
but considered a "sleeper" in secondary picture when moved to dhb in Fall.

0
0

Tech

6

6

11

6

8

7

6

T

10

3

1

5
3

5
4

0
2

7

0

1

6

0

5

2

0

2

4
5
5
3
0

0
0
0
0
0

0

4

0

4

0

0

2

0

1

0

0
2
4

1

0

0

0

0

1970
1970
1971
1971
1971
1972
1975
1976

FUTURE SCHEDULES
1972

1971
Sept. 18.

HERE Wake Forest

25
Oct. 2
9
16
23
30
Nov. 6
13
20
27

at Oklahoma State
HERE Florida State
at Tulsa
HERE Wm &amp; Mary
HERE Ohio Univ.
at Kentucky
at U. Virginia
at Houston
HERE Southern Miss.
VM I at Roanoke

Sept. 16
23
30
Oct.
7
14
21
28
Nov. 4
11
18
25
Dec. 2

50

at Florida State
HERE SMU
HERE Houston
HERE Oklahoma State
at Ohio Univ.
at Wm &amp; Mary
at Southern Miss.
HERE South Carolina
at Alabama
at Wake Forest

�WANT A CHEAP THR I LL?

PIZZA HUT
PIZZA ®
IS A CHEAP THRILL!
TRY OUR SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
Over 8000 varieties of cheap thrills are available.
Custom built from scratch to your personal specifications. Painstakingly prepared. Designed to
titilate the taste buds. Get your cheap thrill today
at Blacksburg's only

825 Kabrich

PIZZA HUT ®

552-4459
CARRY OUT

DINE IN
ABC on premises

Lake Terrace Motel ................................................ 8
Leggett's ......................... .......... .. .. ... . .. . ... .. .. . ... . ...... 3
Lunsford, Chas., Sons &amp; Izard................................ 4
Montgomery Real Estate Co ................................. 40
National Bank - Blacksburg ................................ 18
Neily's Book Store ................................................ 18
News Messenger .................................................... 42
New River Oils ........................................................ 20
Outpost .................................................................. 13
Pres Brown's Inc ..................................................... 42
Price Insurance ...................................................... 25
Raines Real Estate .................................................. 25
Roses ...................................................................... 1
Spudnuts ................................................................ 20
Stone Printing Co ................................................... 34
Times-World Corp ................................................. 32
University Book Store ............................................ 6
Va . Tech Basketball ................................................ 38
Va. Tech Boosters ............................................. .46-48
Warrenizing Cleaners ............................................ 47
Wilson, J . G. Corp ................................................. 16
WKEX .................................................................... 20

Index To Advertisers
Blacksburg American ............................................ 45
Bfackbeard's Restaurant ........................................ 19
Blacksburg Lumber Co. ······························--·-----·--· 43
Burt's Photo Shop ·-----···························----------------- 5
Campus Esso ---------------------------------------------------------- 8
Cheds Discount Store -------------------------·-------·-·------·· 42
Cooks Clean Center -··---·-----------··-··-··-----·----·-····----·· 10
Comer Motor Safes ··-····-----····-·---·······-··--··············· 7
Cupp Construction Co. .......................................... 6
Davidsons ································································ 16
Davis, J. E. &amp; Sons ................................................ 41
Dobyns, Inc. ............................................................ 2
Farmhouse, The ...................................................... 30
First Nat. Exchange Bank ...................................... 38
Golden Gobbler ........................................................ 8
Graves Construction Co. ........................................ 22
Graves Mountain Lodge (Football) ........................ 11
Grants Tavern ........................................................ 1
Greeks Restaurant .................................................. 9
Green Acres Motel ................................................ 14
Harman Fur Farms .......................................... Cover 2

HHardd~e'sE························::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
~~
or 1es sso ··················

Imperial Motor Lodge ············································ 20
Kanode Motor Co. ·················································· 13
51

�Play ing it by ear

RADIO NETWORK

Ch ar l ie H arville

Jack Abraham
T im Bosiack
Sammy Bria
Mike Burnap
Nick Calabro
Tom Carpenito
Curt Cretti
Nick Del Visc io
Buddy DeMarr
Andy Hromyak
John lvanac
Larry Kushner
Lou Lagar&gt;d
Steve Magu igan
Dick Maksanty
Rich Matijevich
Kevin Meehan
Tom Mikulski
Jim Pigninelli
Jim Polito
Bob Rullan
Vince Russo
John Schneider
Gil Schwabe
Jack Simcsak
Dale Soncini
Bob Sporio
Craig Stinnett
Wayne Stinnette
Perry Tiberio
Steve Zeigler

Steve Bo d ley

For the first time in many years, WRAD, Radford w ill
be the originating station for the Tech network.
Charlie Harville again will be play -by-play man, and
Steve Bodley will handle color.
Inquiries should be addressed to Ray Hatley, manager
WRAD, P. 0 . Box 1168, Radford, Virginia 24141 .
Network stations at the time this brochure went to
press were :

WODY
WWNR
WKEX
WKLV
WKOY
WOP I
WIN A
WMEK
WJJJ
WKEY
WCVA
WDVA
WFLO
WFLS
WFTR
WBOB
WSVA
WAGE
WWOD
WSIG
WPRW
WMEV
WGH
WNRV

wssv

WRAD
WRNL
WSLS
WHLF
WTON
WELC
WINC

Bassett
Beckley, W. Va .
Blacksburg
Blackstone
Bluefield, W. Va .
Bristol
Charlottesvi lle
Chase City
Christiansburg
Covington
Culpeper
Danville
Farmville
Fredericksburg
Front Royal
Galax
Harrison burg
Leesburg
Lynchburg
Mt. Jackson
Manassas
Marion
Newport News
Narrows
Petersburg
Radford
Richmond
Roanoke
South Boston
Staunton
Welch , W. Va.
Winchester

Ed Beauvais
Va . Tech
Head Manager

VA. TECH
j

Victory Stadium

Bill Whitfock
Va. Tech
Student Trainer

- VMI

Roanoke, Va.
52

ABE -ru m
BOSE -ee-ack
BREE
BURN -ap
CALL -o-bro
Carp -pen -E E-toe
CRET-ee
Del VIS-cee-o
de -MAR
ROME -ee-ac k
I ' V E-an -ac k
CUSH -ner
la-G AN -na
mug-iN I G-gan
mac-SAN-tee
muh-TE E-vich
ME-en
mih -KULL -ski
pig-nin -NELL Y
poll -LEE -toe
RULE -an
ROOS-a
sch N(EYE) -der
(rhymes w ith job)
SIM -sack
san -C-nee
SPOR -ee-o
STIN-net
STIN -net
tuh -B E E R-ee-o
ZIG-ler

Nov. 21st

�Highway Play
Can

7Urn You Off,,,

Like

PERMANENTLY/
-

.

Virginia Highway Safety Division

�Vega 2300 is here at last.
Because now you can buy what we at
We'd have brought it out sooner, but Chevrolet have come to modestly believe is
you know how it·is. We've got a lot riding on the best little car in the world.
this little car and we wanted it to be right,
We don't expect this ad to convince you.
really right, before turning it over to you.
We expect the car to, though.
Now we're ready.
Vega. The little car that does everything
And you were wise to wait.
well. Look into it.

MAftK OF EXCELLENCE

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
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 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1970-10-24 Buffalo University [sic] vs. Va. Tech</text>
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MALONE

camera stores, inc.
DOWNTOWN , 21 EAST SECOND STREET
TOWN

.~

COUNTRY , 232 E.STROOP RD.

1970-197 1 UN IVERSITY OF DAYTON BASKETBALL SCHEDULE- Coach Don Donoher
Tuesday
Saturday
Wednesday
Friday
Thursday
Saturday
Tuesday
Saturday

Dec. 1
Dec. 5
Dec. 9
Dec. 11
Dec. 17
Dec. 19
Dec.22
Dec.26

Baldwin-Wallace
Bowling Green
Louisville
Miami of Florida
Loyola I Los Angeles
Kent State
Duke
Portland

Saturday
Monday
Saturday
Wednesday
Saturday
Saturday
Monday
Saturday
Tuesday
Saturday
Monday
Thursday
Saturday
Saturday
Wednesday
Saturday
Monday
Wedne sday

H
A
A
H
H
H
H
H

THE UN IVERS ITY
OF DAYTON ARENA
The new home of the
Flyer's basketball team
opened Dec. 6, 1969 .
The four million dollar
facility seats 13,458.

HOME GAMES

Freshma n ........ 6 :30P.M.

Jan. 2
Jan. 4
Jan. 9
Jan. 13
Jan. 16
Jan.23
Jan.25
Jan.30
Feb. 2
Feb. 6
Feb. 8
Feb. 11
Feb. 13
Feb. 20
Feb.24
Feb. 27
Mar. 1
Mar. 3

UCLA
Houston
Loyola/New Orleans
Louisville
DePaul
Detroit
St. Louis
Miami/Ohio
Eastern Kentucky
Loyola;Chicago
Western Kentucky
Cmcmnati
Xavier
DePaul
Tampa
Xavier
Notre Dame
Miami/Ohio

Va rsity ... ..... 8 :30P.M.

TO NEW YORK
FLY
CHICAGO
LOS ANGELES
SAN FRANCISCO
For Reservat ions See Your Travel Agent or Call TWA 222-2511

A
A
H
H
A
A
H
A
H
H
H
A
H
H
H
A
A
H

�FOOTBALL
JOHN McVAY
Is the 19th coach in the 63 seasons of
University of Dayton football. This is his
sixth campaign with the Flyers.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Administration , University of Dayton ..... . ............ 7
Advertis ing Index . ........... . ..... . . . ...... . .... 32
Athletic Family ......... . .. . ... .. .. . ......... . ... 38
Basketball Schedule . . .. . .... . .. . ..... Inside Front Cover
Editorial Features . .... . .......... . .. . . . . 4-10-19-35-41
Freshman Football Schedule .... . . .. .. ... .. . . .. .. . .. 37
Lineups, Starting .. .......... . . . ... . . . ... . .. . .. 22-23
Opponents Pages ...... . .... . .................. 26-27
Opponents Roster ..... . ... . .... .. .... .... . . . .. . . . 24
Scoring, Keep Your Own ............. .. . .. .. .. . ... . 43
Songs and Cheers ..... . ..... .. ............ ... ... . 43
Stadium Information . ....... . . . .. . .... ... .... . ..... 3
U.D. Coaching Staff ..... . . . ....... . ... . ..... . ..... 9
U.D. Players ... . ... . . . .. . .. ... . .. . .. 11-13-15-17-29-31
U.D. Roster . . .......... . . . .. . . . . . ... .. . . . .. .... . 21
Varsity Football Schedule ... . .. ... ..... . . ... . . ..... 37

Editor: GENE SCHill, Sports Information Director
Editorial Staff: ROGER WESTENDORF
JOHN WESTENDORF
STEPHANIE WITI
Contributions : U. D. PUBLIC RELATIONS DEPARTMENT
U. D. MUSIC DEPARTMENT
PROGRAM PRODUCED by the University of Dayton, Department of
Athletics: Rev. Charles L. Collins, S.M., Chairman: Thomas J. Frericks,
Dayton, '53, Director of Athletics .

PRODUCTION BY
Make-up Artist: Ed Morris. Typesetting: Dumar Typesetting, Inc. Printing: Brown &amp; Kroger Co. Advertising Representatives: V. M. Christie
and P. A. Supensky. Photography: Ed Morris.

Yellow
Pages

L.M.BERRV
and Company

1

�Hamburger Hungry Says:

Get a Big Barney,
French Fries a d Coke
now for
just 89¢

If you haven't had a Big Barney, you don't know
what you're missing! Two delicious hamburger patties, cheese,
lettuce, pickle, and our own special sauce
on a double-deck bun.
H
-oX0·
~

e0 \De

. ~~

-.~~

ungries hit hit the Reo\?&gt;
I

~'93"= RED BARN
1144 BROWN ST.

9

�THE UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON STADIUM

®

ENTRANCE

MOVIE CAMERAS and ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES NOT PERMITTED IN STADIUM
LOCATION OF REST ROOMS
LADIES' . . . At West End of North and South Con crete Stands.
MEN'S •.. At East End of South Stand and in Zehler
Hall directly behind East Corner of North Stand.

Where is your seat in the stadium? Have you found it? Now
study the chart and , for your
own convenience, d~termine
where all facilities are in relation tt1 your seat.

U. D. TICKET OFFICE

1970

UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON

Open 8:30A.M. to 5 P.M.
Monday-Friday
Saturday, 9 to 12 Noon
229-4433

GARY McCANS
Ticket Manager

CONCESSIONS
SOFT DRINKS:
Stand

Vendor

Small ...........

15c

20c

Large ...........

25c

COFFEE ...........

15c

15c

HOT CHOCOLATE ...

15c

15c

PEANUTS . . . . . . . . . .

25c

25c

.... . ....

20c

20c

POPCORN

The home of Waldorf
ham, bacon &amp; sausage
PREPARED
TO BE THE FINEST

SERVICE WHILE
YOU SEE THE GAME

Kaylor's
Service Station
MOTOR TUNE UP
TIRE &amp; BATTERY SERVICE

. ......""

~

SANDWICHES:
Hot Dogs

••••••••

0.

30c

30c

Reliable Since the 70's

3

�HOMECOMINGS OF THE PAST

**
4

ON THE COVER
1970 QUEEN CANDIDATES
(From top of 7 down); Pat Suszek, Ann Callaghan, Kathy Agnello and Debbie Hessell.
(Clockwise in 0 starting at one o'clock): Jeane Rivara, Judy Kindy, Anne Wilhelm, Nancy Rinchiuso.

**

�when you want a beer, you want a...

LAGER BEER
join the crowd for a refreshing Schoenling Lager Beer after the game!

5

�BEST WISHES
to

THE FLYERS
The

KASTLE
Electric Company

Best Wishes
TO DAYTON "FLYERS"
FOR A SUCCESSFUL SEASON

CHAS. H. SHOOK, INC.
General Contractors
Equipment Rentals
DAYTON
6

OHIO

�University of Dayton

ADMINISTRATORS

REV. CHARLES LEES, S.M.

VERY REV. RAYMOND A. ROESCH, S.M.

University Provost

About the University of Dayton
The University of Dayton, with a total enrollment
of more than 10,000 students, ranks among the
ten largest Catholic colleges in the United States.
Today, in its one-hundred-and-twentieth aca·
demic year, the University of Dayton includes the
College of Arts and Sciences, Office of Graduate

President

Studies and Research, School of Business Administration, School of Education, School of Engineering, and Technical Institute. In all, forty departments of instruction function on the campus,
awarding twenty-six different degrees on the associate, baccalaureate, and graduate levels.

REV. CHARLES L COLLINS, S.M.

HARRY C. BAUJAN

THOMAS J. FRERICKS

Athletic Board Chairman

Notre Dame, '17
Consultant to Athletic Program

Dayton, '53
Director of Athletics

7

�GOOD LUCK U. D. FLYERS!
"HOLD THAT LINE"
It takes a powerhouse of defense to stop a
powerful offensive line on a football team and
comparing JU.t.e...an.lin drafts to an offensive line
may be a little farfetched. But, one thing is for
sure: JU.t.e...an.lin provides credit union members
with a line of on·the·spot purchasing power
that's unbeatable.

A line of power for credit union members
Welcomed by merchants everywhere
Stop by or call your

NCR Credit Union

111-113 e third st.
Dayton, Ohio 45402 ... 228-6175

461-4900

BJ

One of the nation's largest suppliers of fine
office furniture, stationery and equipment.

The

WAGNER-SMITH
Company
Best Wishes to the Flyers

for a Successful Season

PUMPING MACHINERY
MUNICIPAL &amp; INDUSTRIAL
WATER &amp; ELECTRIC
INSTALLATIONS

FRIGIDAIRE LOCAL 801
International Union of

Registered

ELECTRICAL ENGINEtRS
and

Electrical, Radio &amp; Machine Workers

IUE-AFL-CIO

CONTRACTORS

313 SOUTH JEFFERSON
3178 ENCRETE LANE
224-7658

298-7481
DAYTON, OHIO 45439

224-7659
Joe Shump, Pres.
Arch Little, Financial Sec.

P.O. BOX 672

8

45401

Lloyd Sensenbaugh, Treas.

�UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON

FOOTBALL
COACHING
STAFF
The UD football staff, headed by Coach
John McVay, is a rare mixture of youth
plus experience. They have brought winning football back to the Hilltop and fully
expect the 70's to be "Dayton's Decade."
JOHN McVAY
Miami, '53
Head Coach

JOE EAGLOWSKI
Heidelberg, '60
Offensive Line

JIM GRUDEN
Heidelberg, '58
Offensive Backfield

WALLY NEEL
Ohio University, '53
Defensive Line

LEN FONTES
Ohio State, '60
Defensive Backfield

*

*
MIKE McKEEVER
Dayton, '67
Head Freshman Coach

BILLY MAYO
Dayton, '68
Asst. Freshman Coach

TED URITUS
John Carroll, '62
Asst. Coach

9

�FOR YOUR HALFTIME ENTERTAINMENT
By SUE CLINE
A hearty welcome to the 1970 University of Dayton Homecoming game and
its half-time festivities!
The strictly feminine portion of the
half-time shows is managed by four fine
majorettes and a squad of thirty-four
Marching Coeds. Their original twirling
and dance routines both enhance and
support the

music and drills of the

Marching Band, which is under the direction of Mr. Charles W. Ritter.
Captain
Camille

of the

Buffalino.

Marching Coeds is
A

native

of

Long

Island, New York, Camille is a junior at
U. D. and plans a career teaching physical education. Last year she was Drill

Majorettes Teri Kline, Mary Keidl, Diane Marie Dabkowski, and Kathy Kiesewetter
march on campus with head drum major John Calloway (R) and his assistant, Roger
Tate.

Sergeant for the Coeds.
Camille's Co-captain is Jan Grupen-

the Coeds. An education major, she is

hoff, who hails from Cincinnati. Jan is

also a junior at U.D. Judy has the honor

also a junior and is majoring in market-

of being the 1970 Queen of the Military

ing in the School of Business. Besides

Ball at U.D.

being active with the Marching Coeds,

Head Majorette for 1970 is Teri Kline,

she is Executive Officer of the Deb Corps,

a senior majoring in elementary educa-

which is affiliated with the university's

tion. Teri has many awards to her credit

R.O.T.C. department. Judy Meineke, a

for her twirling abilities and teaches

native Daytonian, is Drill Sergeant for

twirling in association with Miller's Blackhawks. She is chairman this year for all
the on-campus Homecoming decorations.
Teri's

talented

colleagues

are

Kathy

Kiesewetter, Mary Keidl, and Diane Marie
Dabkowski. Kathy is a sophomore from
Middletown majoring in elementary education. Mary and Diane are both freshmen; Mary hails from Cedarville, Ohio
and plans a career in physical education
while Diane is from East Brunswick, New
Jersey and plans to teach in elementary
school.

* * *

The marching unit's portion of today's
half-time activities is dedicated to Newsweek Magazine's Music Man of 1970,
Burt Bacharach.
Newsweek's

Hubert Saal

has com-

pared Bacharach to such great American
composers

as

Stephen

Foster,

Irving

Berlin, Cole Porter, and George GershPictured with head majorette Teri Kline,
are officers of the 1970 marching coeds:
Judy Meineke, Drill Sergeant; Camille
Buffalino, Captain; and Jan Grupenhoff,
Co-Captain.

10

win. And his comparison seems quite
valid

presently.

Bacharach's

composi-

tional talents have proved equal to the
challenge of all types of media.

He

wrote the score to the hit Broadway
musical, Promises, Promises and earned
two Academy Awards in 1970 for his
score to the motion picture Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and for that
show's his song, "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head."
Bacharach's lengthy string of hits include such numbers as "Walk on By,"
"Do You Know the Way to San Jose?,"
and "Alfie," all of which have been recorded by hundreds of artists. "Raindrops . . . " has sold almost a million
copies of the sheet music and over three
million copies of the original B. J.
Thomas recording.
Bacharach collaborates only with lyricist, Hal David, in his work. Otherwise
the entire production of a song is his
own-music, orchestration and recording engineering. He is responsible for
and dedicated to the success of such
greats as Marlene Dietrich and Dionne
Warwick. But he doesn't compose just
for a few of his favorite artists; he's
"everybody's composer" even though he
continuously breaks the standard "rules"
of writing music.
So watch and listen carefully for some
of your favorite Bacharach tunes during
today's half-time entertainment. Unique
formations and intricate drills are the
band's way of honoring a man who has
done a great deal for America's popular music field. Please join the band then
in honoring the University of Dayton on
this Homecoming Day by singing the
U.D. Anthem, under the direction of Dr.
Maurice R. Reichard.

�THE
UNIVERSITY
OF DAYTON

LETTERMEN

FEST
COTTON
Tackle, 6-3, 250

ALBERT
BROWN

SONNY
ALLEN

Back, 5-11 , 180

Back, 5-11 , 175

FRED
BORGERT
LEO
DILLON
Center, 6-3, 235

Tackle, 6-1, 240

MARK
ELLISON
Back, 6-2, 243

11

�TOUCH DOWN
AT THE
AlFORD HOU
h

The~~

~:accommodations

of Dayton's Stratford House always
score with our guests. Richly appointed
rooms, fine dining, cocktail lounge, coffee shop and winning entertainment!

THE STRATFORD HOUSE
(A RAMADA' INN)
330 West First Street
Phone 223-7131

"Your Personalized Clfa11er"

The
BERINGER
Printing Co.
PrintPrs and PublishPrs

"No job Too Large
or Too Small''

228-1751
124 E. 3rd St.
Dayton; 0.

The
H. J. OSTERFELD
COMPANY
Plumbing

Dropery Cleoning
Speciolists

Heating

TAKEN DOWN &amp; REHUNG

Air Conditioning

Alteration &amp; Relining

278-7333
3933 FREE PIKE

12

Electrical Contractors

-

r "

�THE
UNIVERSITY
OF DAYTON

JIM
HOWARD

Middle Guard, 6-2, 206

RON
KRECHTING

Quarterback, 6-0, 180

JOHN
HAYNES

Quarterback, 5-1o, 160
BOB
PALCIC

Linebacker, 6-2, 230

TERRY
MILLER

Halfback, 6-0, 185

13

�, , ,a ~

seifllte't etJ
FEATURING
CHOICE STEAKS
AND CHOPS
SEA FOODS
FINE UQUOIIS

~~=~~~;::;:~&amp;

COCKTAILS

lESS THAN 5 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN DAYTON!
TElEPHONE

228-0454

Open 4:00p.m. to 2:30 o.m.
Closed Sundoys
AIR
CONDITIONED

• Fine Food at Reasonable Prices

1926 BROWN STREET

it's
the real
thing

Lloyd M. Meinzer

SUCCESS TO FLYERS
From

NORB and FRED BOEHMER

MEYER &amp;
BOEHMER
Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by

FUNERAL DIRECTORS

The Dayton
Coca-Cola Bottling Co.

1733 BROWN ST.
223-9119

14

�THE
UNIVERSITY
OF DAYTON

LETTERMEN

TONY
VITALE

DON
SIMPSON

Halfback, 5-11, 185

Back, 6-3, 195

j
DAVE
SCHROEDER

End, 6-4, 230

JIM
TIERNEY

BERNIE
TUCKER

Linebacker, 6-0, 220

Back, 6-1, 190
DAN
QUINN

End, 6-2, 230

224-9618

735 WAYNE AVE.
DAYTON, 0.

15

�DAYTON GEMS
1970-71 HOME GAMES
OCTOBER
10-Toledo (exhibition)
14-Nashville (exhibition)
18-Toledo
21-Fiint
25-Fort Wayne
28-Port Huron ..

8pm
7 :30pm
8pm
7 :30pm
7 pm
7:30pm

NOVEMBER
1-Muskegon
7-Fiint
8-Toledo
15-Muskegon .
25-Des Moines
29-Fort Wayne

7pm
.. 8 pm
.. 7pm
7pm
7pm
.... 7 pm

B. G. DANIS
CO .., INC.
General
Contractors
1518 East First Street

DAYTON

DECEMBER
7 :30pm
7pm
7pm
7 pm
7 pm
7:30pm

2-Fiint
6--Toledo
13-Fort Wayne
20-Toledo
27-Muskegon
29-Des Moines

press
of
business

CONTRACTORS for
SHERMAN HALL

JANUARY
1-Toledo
3-Fort Wayne
12-Des Moines
17-Fiint
19-Des Moines
24-Fort Wayne
27-Port Huron
31-Muskegon

8 pm
7pm
7:30pm
8pm
7:30pm
3pm
7:30pm
3pm

FEBRUARY
3-Fiint
7-Muskegon
lO-Des Moines
14-Port Huron
18-Fort Wayne
25-Fiint
28-Port Huron

7 :30pm
3pm
7:30pm
7pm
7:30pm
7:30pm
3 pm

STADIUM
DRILL HALL
FIELDHOUSE
R.O.T.C. BLDG.

MARCH
7 :30pm
7 :30pm
7:30pm
3pm
7 :30pm

2-Des Moines
4-Muskegon
17-Port Huron
21-Port Huron
24-Toledo

JOHN F. KENNEDY UNION
BUILDING
ENGINEERING-RESEARCH
BUILDING
CAMPUS SOUTH

Modern communications via
paper puts greater demands on

ARENA

printers and those who need
printing . And because we
understand those problems

OLD

-quality, cost, dependable

H~Ba~tBO.
STEVE KOLB

us "The Press of Business."

JOE KISS

RESTAURANT AND
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
Serving our famous
BAR-8-Q
RIBS &amp; CHICKEN
Complete menu of
STEAKS - CHOPS - SEAFOOD

3 LOCATIONS
FOR CARRY OUT OR RESERVATIONS

222 N. ST. ClAIR ST.
223-2272

BETTMAN DRUGS
3036 Far Hills at Dorothy Lane

1082 Brown St.
228-5252
1804 East Third St.
256-1111
4029 North Main St.
276-2002

298-5211

OPEN DAILY 4 P.M. TILL 1 A.M.
FRI. &amp; SAT. 4 P.M. TILL 4 A.M.
Near U.D. Fieldhouse

Printing Service Company
630 South Main Street, Dayton , Ohio 45402
5131461-4580

Best Wishes to the Flyers

CALL

Rooms for Private Parties

16

delivery-many companies call

SEITZ &amp; GEORGE
OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.
224-0658

For 60 Years
Yo,r OLDSMOBILE
deah•r in Dayton

THE CENTRAL MOTOR
SALES CO.
"Where everyone gets a good deal"

800 W. THIRD ST.

222-1101

114 N. St. (:lair

Dayton 2, Ohio

�UNIVERSITY OF DA VTON FL VERS

BILL
AXLEY

AL
BASS

KEN
BOSSART

BILL
BRADLEY

End, 6-0, 212

Fullback, 6-1, 205

Center, 6-0, 200

Back, 5-11, 180

JACOB
BURKHARDT

JOHN
CARBON

KEVIN
CARVER

MIKE
CATANZARO

End, 6-0, 190

Guard, 5-10, 210

Center, 6-1, 225

Center, 6-Jlfz, 235

JOHN
CROTTY

JOE
DAUGHERTY

JIM
FRAZIER

BOB
FURIA

End, 6-2, 190

Guard, 6-3, 215

Back, 6-2, 195

Kicker, 5-9, 165

TOM
GATES

RON
GOLOB ISH

DAVE
HAMILTON

RICK
HE BEN

Guard, 6-2, 210

Quarterback, 6-2, 190

Back, 6-0, 180

Back, 5-9, 170

Continued on Page

29

17

�Vega 2300 is here at last.
We'd have brought it out sooner, but
you know how it is. We've got a lot riding on
this little car and we wanted it to be right,
really right, before turning it over to you.
Now we're ready.
And you were wise to wait.

MARK Of DCELLE~CE

18

Because now you can buy what we at
Chevrolet have come to modestly believe is
the best little car in the world.
We don't expect this ad to convince you.
We expect the car to, though.
Vega. The little car that does everything
well. Look into it.

�THAT ALUMNUS

~~BRAIN

POVVER"

By Joe Mclaughlin, Director, General Publicity
Alumni help their university in many
ways.
An " old grad " assists students in getting appointments with Federal Government officials.
Another donates land for the construction of a building.
A third volunteers as a guest lecturer
in business courses.
More than 40 participate in a "rap"
session with "activist" students.
A group plan and build a float for
Homecoming.
Another- a celebrity-volunteers as
grand marshal for the Homecoming parade.
Dozens serve on various alumni com mittees throughout the year.

More than 100 make MBA Day a success each year.
This is participation. This is the kind
of interest university administrations
welcome from the "old grad " year after
year. Gone are the days when alumni
were strictly utilized in fund drives. Oh ,
that help is needed but we're going into
an age where alumni " brain power" is
one of the greatest assets a university
can have.
Lawyers, doctors, journalists, businessmen, clergymen, engineers and scientists, among other professionals, have
the diversified expertise which multicomplex universities of the 1970s are
going to need. Better off are the university administrators who take advantage

of such volunteer "brain power."
UD alumni like Jerry Westendorf,
Charley Graham, Fred Grimm, Stanley
Greenberg and Jack Meagher, to name
only a few, display their love for an in stitution which braced them almost to·
tally for a four-year period . It doesn 't
have to be t ime-consuming to be mean ingful. In fact, university officials recog nize ·"the pressure of time " which engulfs one in this hectic, race -around
world . It might only be a phone call to
ask advise on a subject which has the
administrator stumped. The alumnus
works in that area daily. His comments
on the subjects are a welcome assist in
conducting the affairs of the modern
university.
It's working at the University of Dayton. From the few who serve so faithfully on alumni boards, chapters and
groups throughout the country have
been added many who spend a few
minutes here and there gladly offering
sought-after advise, or who spend days
planning special university events.
This, if we may steal a phrase from a
leading company, is Go Power. The
alumn i are GOing to help. They are
making the university a GOing and
GROWing concern . They have to be con gratulated for such dedication . After
all, they have their families. They have
their businesses. They have their church.
They have their local organizations. They
need their recreation. Yet many are beginning to fit their alma mater into some
of these ever-constant plans.
Perhaps, you have an interest. Call
Joe Mclaughlin, Mary Shay, Brother EJ.
mer Lackner, or any person at the University you may care to assist. Tell them
Joe, Mary, or Elmer sent. If they say
"Elmer Who?" the Public Relations Department is in trouble.

*
The Alumni - their friends. Brother
Elmer Lackner, Vice President for Public
Relations, left; Mary Shay, Alumni
secretary, and Joe Mclaughlin, Director,
General Publicity, plan alumni participation in their alma mater's affairs.

19

�22. TIMI· OUI

~
~

5~~·
: . IUIGAL ,OSITION
Ol 'IOCIDUII

~1

21. IAfiTY

~\

I'
J, ILUOAL MOTION
OISHI"

20. tOUCHDOWN 01 flllD GOAl

8181

..

1771

SPRINGBORO
PIKE

~~-

WOODMAN

~

1624

6061

KEOWEE ST.

FAR HILLS

224-9611

434-2421

t. IOUOHNIIIANO
PILING ON

4081

4301

SALEM AVE.

N. MAIN ST.

276-2161

274-1142

4830

\

277-9344

PINALTY OfCUNED
NO 'LAY 01 NO

s'cou

222

N. MAIN ST.

E. STEWART ST.

223-9907

---- . ~--~--~~~------/l~------------------~~-----J;---~

l~fl ~~

,~~~\
... ..,.
"-::J

NSIYI HOLDING

-~.
,,__ ·-((~

AIMS
tL AND
llliGAl
USf OF .HANDI

~

' ~{,:~~-~--

Jl

{\

f). IUIGAllT

D. INnNTIONAL GIOUNDING

1\

C!;'~\
PASSI~

01
HANDING IA.Ll fOIWAIO

~
- ~ ~"~,'

'

~
&lt;q · ' ~

222·6752

• UNSI'OITSMANUKI CONDUCT

·"'lt:::::·::::::q-::=7

f1, INCOM'LITl fOIWAID ,ASS

108

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20

c=-t,~,

SALEM AVE.

293-1134

•

,~

2701

S. DIXIE HWY.

~J

... IALL DUD;
If "AND IS MOVIO fiOM
SIOl TO SID(; TOUCHIACK

253-4173

433-3721

~

... POIWAID PASS 01
~ICK CATCHING INTUfliiNCI

lt.

IALL llliGAll y IOUCHID
KICKID 01 IATTID
•

A

~-'Wt

IS. INIUOIIU IICliVII
DOWN flllD ON ,ASS

�CASSANO
1970 UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON VARSITY FOOTBALL ROSTER
*lETTERMEN RETURNING: 22
No.

87
42
89
21
75
57
20
22
81
66
51
74
86
78
85
67
54
36
33
19
65
18
77
44
11
24
56
73
76
68
60
30
14
48
45
82
94
91
88
55
70
79
32
80
83
72
23
10
84
62
29
50
64
25
12
27
71
40
61
46

Name
Pos.
OE
*Bill Adams
DB
* Sonny Allen
DE
Bill Axley
FB
AI Bass
DT
* Fred Borgert
Ken Bossart
DB
Bill Bradley
DB
* Albert Brown
DE
Jacob Burkhardt
G
John Carbon
Kevin Carver
c
Mike Catanzaro
OE
* Bob Christopfel
DT
* Fest Cotton
OE
John Crotty
G
Joe Daugherty
* Leo Dillon
FB
* Mark Ellison
DB
Jim Frazier
K
Bob Furia
G
Tom Gates
Ron Golobish
QB
DT
* Gary Hambell
DB
Dave Hamilton
* John Haynes
QB
DB
Rick Heben
MG
* Jim Howard
OT
Bob Janke
OT
Steve Jaye
G
Jim Johnston
Dan Kobie
G
* Gary Kosins
HB
* Ron Krechting
QB
HB
* Terry Miller
DB
Dwight Mosley
OE
Larry Nickels
LB
* Bob Palcic
LB
Tom Palcic
DE
* Dan Quinn
LB
Tim Quinn
Gary Radzik
OT
DT
Glenn Radzik
FB
Kevin Ryan
DE
* Dave Schroeder
OE
Bob Shepas
OT
Roger Simon
DB
* Don Simpson
DB
Adrian Skunza
OE
Bill Stevens
DT
Terry Sullivan
DB
* Jerry Sykes
LB
* Jim Tierney
MG
Dave Trinite
DB
* Bernie Tucker
Don Valentini
QB
HB
* Tony Vitale
OT
Gary Walters
HB
Ray Watkins
G
Rich Weigand
HB
Dennis Whitehead

c

c

c

(AlPHABETICAl)

Ht.

Wt.

6-2
5-11
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-1
6-3lh
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-2
6-2
5-9
6-2
6-2
6-5
6-0
5-10
5-9
6-2
6-3
6-4
6-4
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-4
6-4
6-0
6-4
6-1
6-3
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-3
6-1
6-0
5-11
6-1
5-11
5-11
6-4
5-9
6-1
6-0

195
175
212
205
240
200
180
180
190
210
225
235
210
250
190
215
235
243
195
165
210
190
225
180
160
170
206
215
220
210
200
210
180
185
175
180
230
195
230
225
235
235
205
230
190
225
195
182
190
230
170
220
189
190
180
185
230
155
220
185

Class
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.

lETIERMEN lOST: 20

Hometown
Canton, 0.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Chicago, Ill.
Portsmouth, 0.
Dayton, 0 .
Canton, 0.
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago, Ill.
Springfield, 0.
Chicago, Ill.
Canton, 0.
Springfield , 0.
Cincinnati, 0 .
Dayton, 0.
Dayton, 0.
Indianapolis, Ind .
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mansfield, 0 .
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Dayton, 0 .
Mayfield, 0 .
Royal Oak, Mich.
Toronto, Can.
Beaumont, Tex.
Massillon, 0.
Dayton, 0 .
Lima, 0 .
Twinsburg, 0 .
Columbus, 0.
Cleveland, 0 .
Dayton, 0.
Cincinnati, 0.
Portsmouth, 0 .
Pittsburgh, Pa .
Springfield, 0.
Gowanda, N.Y.
Gowanda, N .Y.
Dayton, 0 .
Dayton, 0.
Detroit, Mich.
Detroit, Mich.
Columbus, 0.
Grand Ledge, Mich .
Youngstown, 0.
Cincinnati, 0.
Painesville, 0.
Columbus, 0.
Dayton, 0.
Detroit, Mich.
Jackson, Mich .
Danbury, Conn .
Detroit, Mich.
Wheaton, Md.
Edmonds, Wash.
Canton, 0.
Flint, Mich .
Cincinnati, 0 .
Akron, Ohio
Dayton, 0.

High School Coach
Rey Dempsey
Rudy Musulin
Paul Schmidt
Ed Miller
Jim Spoerl
Rey Dempsey
Melvin Lloyd
Pat Cronin
Dale McDonald
William Niedbala
Rey Dempsey
Don La Bonte
Mike Honold
Jack Hart
Bill Rankin
Carol Purichia
Joe Bushofsky
Pete Dimperio
Len Fontes
Joe Loughran
Bill Rankin
Charles Beach
AI Francassa
Jerry Philp
Willie Ray Smith
Rey Dempsey
Dick Marquardt
Larry Lewis
Bill Eyerdom
Forrest Sharrock
Bill Gutbrodt
Hank Schneider
Mike Honold
Ed Miller
Pete Dimperio
Ron Deem
Bob Muscato
Bob Muscato
William Rankin
William Rankin
Paul Van Dam
Paul Van Dam
Dick Walker
Charles Gorman
Don Bucci
Bron Bracevich
Bob McFarran
Paul Nester
Jim McDermott
Bill Norton
James Crowley
Joe Anzalone
Merv Griffin
Andy Guida
Ron Bates
Rey Dempsey
Fred Rademacker
Tom Ballaban
John Cistone
Jim McDermott

Featuring
The Old Italian Recipes
of Mom Donisi
• Pizza
• Italian Spaghetti
• Italian Salad
• Garlic Bread
• Submarine Sandwich
• Italian Steak Sandwich
• Meat Ball Sandwich
·Tuna Boat
• Fish Sandwich
• Pizza Party Plan
Call 299-7252
Wherever you are
there's a PIZZA KING .
near you.

TOP VALUE
STAMPS, TOO!

'la. prova.

e nel gust£

THE PROOF IS IN THE TASTE

CASSANO

PIZ2~®

KING

Featuring the Old Italian
recipes of Mom Donisi

21

�jL
DAYTON

10
11

Probable Starting Offensive
Lineup

Pos.

Player

No.

TE

Adams

87
73
67
54
66
70
82
14
27
30
36

LT

Janke
Daugherty

c

Dillon

RG

Carbon

RT

Radzik

SE

Nickels

QB

Krechting

HB

Vitale

TB

Kosins

FB

Ellison

NUMERICAL
No.

FLYERS

LG

UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON FOOTBAll ROSTER

12
14
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
27
29
30
32
33
36
40
42
44

45
46
48
50
51
54
55
56
57

Name &amp; Position
Skunza, DB
Haynes, QB
Valentini, QB
Krechting, QB
Golobish, QB
Furia, K
Bradley, DB
Bass, FB
Brown, DB
Simpson, DB
Heben, DB
Tucker, DB
Vitale, HB
Sykes, DB
Kosins, HB
Ryan, FB
Frazier, DB
Ellison, FB
Watkins, HB
Allen, DB
Hamilton, DB
Mosley, DB
Whitehead, HB
Miller, HB
Tierney, LB
Carver, C
Dillon, C
Quinn, Tim, LB
Howard, MG
Bossart, C

No.

60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
70
71
72

73
74
75
76
77

78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
91
94

Name &amp; Position
Kobie, G
Weigand, G
Sullivan, DT
Stevens, G
Trinite, MG
Gates, G
Carbon, G
Daugherty, G
Johnston, G
Radzik, Gary, OT
Walters, OT
Simon, OT
Janke, OT
Catanzaro, C
Borgert, DT
Jaye, OT
Hambell, DT
Cotton, DT
Radzik, Glenn, DT
Schroeder, DE
Burkhardt, DE
Nickels, OE
Shepas, OE
Stevens, OE
Crotty, OE
Christopfel, OE
Adams, OE
Quinn, Dan, DE
Axley, DE
Palcic, Tom, LB
Palcic, Bob, LB

VITO'S VENICE INN
2001 E. DOROTHY lANE
298-8633
SUNKEN BAR
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
LASAGNA • PARMIGIANA
SPAGHETTI • RAVIOLI
SEA FOODS • CHICKEN
PRIME RIBS
CHAR-BROILED STEAKS &amp;
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RED HORSE QUALITY MOTEL
4625 SOUTH DIXIE DRIVE

1-75 at EXIT 31
5 Minutes from U.D. &amp; Arena Exit 33

Member of: Carte Blanche, BankAmericard
Master Charge and Diners Credit Cards

22

Phone: 299-3553

�--0

BUFFALO UNIVERSITY
Numerical
No.
11

\
I

15
17
19
20
21
22
23
30
32
34
35
36
37
39
40
41
42
46
47
49
53
54

No.

Player - Position
Perry, QB
Barton, QB
Boughton, DB
Osika, S·P
Nance, HB
Woodward, HB
Layo, HB
Harrison, DB
Homa, ILB
Madden, ILB
Tober, FB
Zelmanski, FB
Fraser, OLB
McCullough, ILB
Kozel, HB
Elliott, S
Constantino, KSP
Nixon, DB
Hannah, DB
MacVittie, DB
Faller, HB
Majcher, I LB
Conaway, OLB

55
57
58
60
61
64
66
67
68
71
73
74
78
79
80
85
87
88
89
90
92
96
97

Player - Position
Siedlecki, OLB
Johnson, C
Donnor, C (CC)
Chamberlain, G
Elwell, G
Carbonaro, T
R. Jones, DT
Forness, DT
Albaneze, G
Winnett, T
Centofanti, G
Rio, T
Ellenbogen, DT
Atkinson, DT
Moresco, SE
Hudson, TE
Herlan, SE
Eagen, T
Sharrow, SE
Henley, DE (CC)
Butler, OLB
Vigneau, DE
Potyok, DE

BUFFALO

BULLS
Probable Starting Defensive
Lineup
Player

No.

LE

Henley

ILB

Madden

LT

Atkinson

90
32
79
67
53
96
92
42
40
47
36

Pos.

RT

Forness

IRB

Majcker

RE

Vigneau

OLB

Butler

LHB

Nixon

s

Elliott

RHB

MacVittie

ORB

Fraser

J

I

GOLDEN
FRIED

CHICKEN.

Carry-Out
Buckets
or
Complete
Dinners

TOM HAMLIN ...
WHIO SPORTS DIRECTOR

~-~tit utfea~t ~Ce

@/ f!T/w ott. qj).
§'~

Parkmoor Packs More
Into Every Meal

Follow The

FLYERS

EXCLUSIVELY
V\1\r Curb - Carry Out - Dining Room

On

WH/0
23

�~_,;;::,~1.
=-=-~

BUFFALO UNIVERSITY
Alphabetical
No.

The burgers are bigger
at Burger King.
Home of the Whopper.®

1129 Brown St., Dayton
1431 East Dorothy lane, Kettering
3796 Salem St., Dayton
4250 linden Ave., Dayton

24

68
79
15
17
92
64
73
60
54
41
58
88
78
40
61
49
67
36
46
23
90
87
30
85
57
66
39
22
47
32
53
37
80
20
42
19
11
97
74
89
55
34
96
71
21
35

Player
Albaneze, Denny
Atkinson, Barry
Barton, Kirk
Boughton, Buddy
Butler, Ted
Carbonaro, Paul
Centofanti, Tom
Chamberlain, Tom
Conaway, Dan
Constantino, Mike
Donnor, Chuck (CC)
Eagen, John
Ellenbogen, Bill
Elliott, Tom
Elwell, Jerry
Faller, John
Forness. Charley
Fraser, Bruce
Hannah, Bill
Hamson, Marvin
Henley, Prentis (CC)
Herlan, Scott
Homa, Dave
Hudson, Joe
Johnson, Joe
Jones, Rovell
Kozel, Doug
Layo, Bob
MacVittie, Mark
Madden, Larry
Majcher, Dave
McCullough, Steve
Moresco, Joe
Nance, Gene
Nixon, Len
Osika, Tom
Perry, Ed
Potyok, AI
Rio, John
Sharrow. Mike
Siedlecki, Stan
Tober, Owen
Vigneau, Tom
Winnett, Bill
Woodward, Barney
Zelmanski, Joe

Pos.
G
DT
QB
DB
OLB
T
G
G
OLB
K

c

T
DT

s

G
HB
DT
OLB
DB
DB
DE
SE
ILB
TE

c

DT
HB
HB
DB
ILB
ILB
ILB
SE
HB
DB
P-S
QB
DE
T
SE
OLB
FB
DE
T
HB
FB

Ht.

Wt.

6·2
6-2
6-2
5-10
5-11
5·10
6-0
5-10
6·1
5·11
6·1
6-2
6-3
5-11
6-0
5-10
6·0
6-1
5-10
5-8
6·0
6-1
5-11
6-1
5-11
6-2
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-2
5-11
5-11
6-0
6-3
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-2
5-11
6-1
6-2
5-9
6-1

207
266
195
177
195
230
210
200
i94
185
215
218
224
181
200
215
256
185
164
161
236
198
217
222
195
260
189
182
181
205
210
212
176
171
187
180
208
180
235
175
184
195
212
226
205
205

Cl.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.

Hometown
Elmhurst, N.Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Endicott, N.Y.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Sharpsville, Pa.
Auburn, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Dewitt, N.Y.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Jamestown, N.Y.
East Aurora, N.Y.
Ridgway, Pa.
New Rochelle, N.Y.
Canandaigua, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Grand Island, N.Y.
New York Mills, N.Y.
New City, N.Y.
Birmingham, Mich.
Akron, 0.
Johnson City, N. Y.
Portage, Pa.
Williamsville, N.Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Johnstown, Pa.
Coshocton, 0.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Indiana, N.Y.
Willowick, 0.
Yorkville, N.Y.
Delmar, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Witherbee, N.Y.
Carthage, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
North Canton, 0 .
Peru, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.

�Put Molers' on
Y-OUr family's training table
Keep your family in shape with Molers' Country Fresh Dairy Products. Molers' products are held to strict quality standards for richness and flavor. Pasteurized and tested for purity, naturally.
You can spot Molers' Dairy Products in your grocer's dairy case as
easily as watching the game. Molers' suits its products up in convenient cartons that are color coded for easy product identification.
Put Molers' on your family's training table.

Molers' Belmont Dairy, Dayton, Ohio 45420

25

�STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK at BUFFALO

The State University of New York
at Buffalo is today the largest, most
comprehensive undergraduate and
graduate center of the New York
State University System, enrolling
23,764 students in the fall of 1969
(14,600 full-time). Established in
1846, the University was a pioneer
in adapting educational service to
the specific needs of a developing urban complex.
Founded as a medical school, the
University toward the close of the
19th century, expanded to embrace
three other professional schools,
pharmacy, dentistry and law. A college · of arts and sciences was added
in 1913. Other divisions of study
were established as follows: Summer sessions, 1915; evening session,
now known as Millard Fillmore College, 1923; business administration,
(now management) 1927; education,
1931; social welfare, 1936; Graduate
School, 1939; nursing, 1940; engineering, 1946; University College, 1958;
health related professions, 1965; information and library studies, 1966,
architecture and environmental design, 1968.
University enrollment figures for
the last decade indicate that full-time
day undergraduate enrollment jumped
from 4,829 in 1960 to 10,640 in 1969.

26

Full-time graduate enrollment (day
and evening) increased even more
dramatically from 286 in 1960 to 2,847
in 1969
To provide for continued extension of operations pending completion of a new campus, the University is occupying a series of offcampus locations, including an "interim" facility of several buildings on
Ridge Lea Road in the nearby Town
of Amherst.
The new campus will be located on
a 1,200 acre tract of land in Amherst.
Construction has begun since Governor Rockefeller lifted the moratorium on construction and agreement
was reached between contractors,
unions and minority organizations.
At a total cost of $650 million by
1975 the new campus will include all
facilities existing on the present campus plus theaters, galleries and special complexes for the colleges. Since
the colleges will provide not only
residences but social and educational
environments, they will have reading
rooms, dormitory space, dining
rooms, classrooms and special studios and offices. A complete health
sciences facility will also be located
on the new campus.
Preparation of the site for construction began in spring and the
first contracts were awarded in early
summer of 1970. The first buildings
to be constructed will be the first six
colleges which will be built in four
phases.

DR. ROBERT
L. KETTER,
President

HARRY
G. FRITZ
Director, P.E.,
Recreation
&amp; Athletics

ROBERT
C. DEMING
Head
Football
Coach

View of Buffalo's Main Campus.

�*

Introducing the BUFFALO BULLS

*

DENNY
ALBANEZE

BARRY
ATKINSON

KIRK
BARTON

TOM
CENTOFANTI

MIKE
CONSTANTINO

CHUCK
DONN OR

JERRY
ELWELL

JOHN
FALLER

PRE NTIS
HENLEY

JOE
MORESCO

JOE
HUDSON

ROVELL
JONES

STEVE
McCULLOUGH

ED

TOM
VIGNEAU

JOE
ZELMANSKI

PERRY

27

�JOHN L. MACBETH Company
the
promi.&lt;&gt;e
is
" Wh e re . - · - · - · - · - · - · - · P erfo rm d "

.~-~·-

~---~~

-

General Insurance

- ·- ·-

FIRE, A TO, LIFE AN D MISCELL"ANEOUS FO RMS
HANK SAEKS

JIM PAXSON

PHIL KLUM

Dayton, Ohio

461-4745

1212 Hulman Building

(~

24 hour ser vice
School Department

"WHERE SPORTSMEN SERVE SPORTSMEN"
We feature
Name Brand
Merchandise

WILSON
SPALDING
JACK DOOLAN
Vice Pres.
BOB DERNBAUGH

SPORTING
222-2884-5-6-7-8
132 EAST SECOND ST.

BILL McDONALD

RAWLINGS

GOODS

SPOTBELT
CONVERSE

DAYTON, 0 .

Forest Plaza and Van Buren

BEST WISH ES TO THE FLYERS

NEIL'S HERITAGE HOUSE
2189 SOUTH DIXIE AVE.

298-8611
Rooms for Private Parties
BECK'S

"All Forms of Life and Health
Insurance and Estate Planning"

WESTWARD HO

AMERICAN
UNITED LIFE
JACK TH EIN
' 61 Bus.

MIKE
M O N AGH AN
'62 Ed.

2211 South Dixie Avenue
298-7289
Career Protector Designed Specifically
For College Students

28

TWO

1064 Brown St.

LOCATIONS

2900 North Dixie

Good Roast Beef

�UNIVERSITY OF DA VTON FL VERS

BOB
JANKE

STEVE
JAYE

JIM
JOHNSTON

DAN
KOBlE

Tackle, 6-3, 215

Tackle, 6-4, 220

Guard, 6-4, 210

Guard, 6-2, 200

DWIGHT
MOSLEY

LARRY
NICKELS

TOM
PALCIC

TIM
QUINN

Back, 6-3, 175

End, 6-1, 180

Linebacker, 6-1, 195

Linebacker, 6-2, 225

GARY
RADZIK

GLENN
RADZIK

KEVIN
RYAN

BOB
SHEPAS

Tackle, 6-4, 235

Tackle, 6-4, 235

Fullback, 6-0, 205

End, 6-1, 190

ROGER
SIMON

ADRIAN
SKUNZA

BILL
STEVENS

TERRY
SULLIVAN

Tackle, 6-3, 225

Back, 6-1, 182

End, 6-2, 190

Tackle, 6-3, 230

Continued on Page

31

29

�COMPLIMENTS
of

PETE ROSE
and

JOHNNIE BENCH
Lincoln Mercury

2919 South Dixie

Dayton, Ohio

294-1421

Let Our Sale&amp; Engineen

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C. H. GOSIGER

MACHINERY CO.
from
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108 McDonough Street
Dayton, Ohio

30

228-5174

PRETZINGERS

�UNIVERSITY OF DA VTON FL VERS

DAVE
TRINITE

DON
VALENTINI

GARY
WALTERS

RAY
WATKINS

Middle Guard, 5·11, 189

Quarterback, 5-11, 180

Tackle, 6-4, 230

Halfback, 5·9, 155

RICH
WEIGAND

DENNIS
WHITEHEAD

Guard, 6-1, 220

Halfback, 6-0, 185

Johtt $£atte c.Aggoctateg
Realtors

2263 West Schantz Avenue
Dayton, Ohio 45419
Phone, 293-6994
OFFSET

LETTERPRESS

LITHOGRAPHY

'P~fJ.fJ'ee44We 'P~
INCORPORATED

884 VALLEY STREET

222-1267

BEST WISHES FOR A SUCCESSFUL SEASON

C@~ LINEN &amp; TOWEL SERVICE
80 MEAD ST.

222-4675

DAYTON, OHIO 45402

31

�INDEX OF ADVERTISERS

We're Proud
To Be a Part
Of the Dayton
Industrial Team
Industrial innovation has been the key to Day·
ton's success as a manufacturing center. And
just as the Wright Brothers developed their
aviation ideas ... and Charles Kettering created
his countless inventions . .. the most significant
device in business forms was born here, by the
founders of Standard Register.
Marginally-punched, continuous business forms
had a difficult time making the team back in
1912, but today the idea of putting holes in
paper has scored with the information processing world to the point of being the almost uni·
versal method of transferring the rapid calcu·
lations of computers into a useable form for
decision makers.
Yes, Standard Register is proud to be on the
Dayton industrial team, and we're looking forward to more victories from the Dayton com·
munity in the industrial field - and from the
Flyers on the gridiron.

THE
STANDARD
REGISTER
COMPANY
626 Albany • Dayton

Only Our Best Is Good Enough
For Our Customers

32

Aman Jewelers ................................. 33
American United Life Insurance .........•..... ... .. 28
Anticoli's Restaurant ....... . ... . ................. 39
Arby's ........................................ 42
Beringer Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . ... 12
Berry, L. M. Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .......... 1
Bettman Drugs .................... . ............ 16
Blommel Sign Co.................... ... ......... 15
Bon bright Distributors Inc. . .. . .. .. .............. . .. 5
Brooks Sporting Goods . . . . .
. ...... .. ...... 36
Brown &amp; Kroger ......... . ... . ........... . ...... 36
Burger King ............. .. ...... ..... .. ........ 24
Capri Motel . ....... .. ... . ...................... 39
Cassano Pizza King . ..... . ...... ................. 21
Central Motors .. . ... . .. . ... ..................... 16
Chevrolet ............ ... ............... . .. . .... 18
Coca Cola ..................................... 14
Culp's Cafeteria ........•........................ 40
Danis, B. G.. ................................... 16
Dayton Blue Print Co............................. 16
Dayton Monument Co. . . . ... . .. .............. .... 33
Dills Supply Co. . ......... . .. .. ............... . . 39
Dominies' Restaurant ...... . ... . ................. 12
Dumar Typesetting, Inc........................... 37
Economy Linen &amp; Towel Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . 31
Empress Chili .......................... .. ...... 33
Enterprise Roofing ............................... 44
Flynn Sporting Goods ............................ 28
Focke, Wm. &amp; Sons ........................... . ... 3
Friedlander Cleaners .......... _ .. . ... .. ...... . .. 12
Frigidaire Local 801 ...... . .. . .............. . ..... 8
Frisch's . .. . ............ ... . ... . . ........ . ..... 20
Gosiger, C. H. Machinery Co . ................. ..... 30
Helldoerfer &amp; Castillini .................... ....... 33
Hockey, Dayton Gems ................... .. . . ..... 16
Hot Twist Sandwich Shoppe ....................... 39
Jacque's Flowers ........... . .................... 33
John, The ..................................... 30
Kastle Electric Co. . ..... ...................... .... 6
Kaylor Service Station .............. . ...... ...•.... 3
Kettering Village Inn .......... . .............. . .. 39
Kramer Party Supply ......... .. ............... . .. 39
Krick Realty ............... . ... . .......... . . . ... 37
Kuntz, Peter Lumber Co. . ................. . ..•... 44
Lane, John Associates ................... .... ..... 31
Lincoln-Mercury, Pete Rose &amp; Johnnie Bench ......... 30
Lowe Bros. . .... . ......... . .................... 36
Lums Restaurant ............ ........ ....... . .... 40
Macbeth, John L. Co. . ...................... . .... 28
Malone Camera Stores .......................... IFC
Marathon Oil Co . ................................ 34
Marion's Piazza ................. . .. . ......... . .. BC
McCallister, Ken .............. . ............. .... 33
Meyer &amp; Boehmer ........ . ... . ........... . ...... 14
Moler's Dairy .............. . . .. . ................ 25
Muth Brothers .................................. 37
Neil's Heritage House ................... ... ...... 28
NCR Employees' Credit Union .............. . ....... 8
Northwestern Tool Inc... . ..............•......... 33
Osterfeld, H. J. Co............................... 12
Old Hickory Bar B·Q ............. . ............... 16
Parkmoor ...................................... 23
Penny Olds .................................... 33
Pine Club ..................................... . 14
Poeppelmeiers .................. . ....... .. . .. ... 37
Pretzinger's .................. . ................. 30
Printing Service ............................ . ... . 16
Progressive Printers Inc.............•............. 31
Quality Courts (Red Horse) ........................ 22
Red Barn ....................................... 2
Roth's Office Supply ........•......•.............. 8
Seitz &amp; George ............•.................... 16
Seven Nations Restaurant ........................ . 40
Shook Inc., Chas. H . ..................... ... ...... 6
Srepco ... .. ............ .. ......•............. 36
Standard Register ....... . ...................... . 3~
Stratford Motel ......... •.. ..............•...... 12
Surf &amp; Turf .................................... 40
TWA ......................................... IFC
University Pharmacy ...... . .................... . . 37
Urban Suburban Tavern .......................... 34
Vitos Venice Inn ................................ 22
Wagner Smith Co . ................................ 8
Wedgewood Inn, Jerry Gillotti's . . . . . . . . . . . ......... 37
Weiffenbach Marble &amp; Tile Co . . .................... 33
Westward Ho ............................... .. . . 28
WHIO ................... . ... . ................. 23
White Allen Chevrolet . ..... .... .... . ............ IBC
Wolf Creek Garden Center ..... .. .................. 44

�Five minute walk from U.D.

YOUR BEST DOLLAR DEAL IS

tm\ENNY
WotDSMOBILE
Ken McCallister Co.
AND SeRVICe

Artist materials, signs supplies
VALUERATeO
f...ISEOCAAS

CONEY ISLANDS
CHILl SPAGHETTI
3-WAY • 4-WAY • 5-WAY

picture framing, fine prints

224-9771

314-318 SALEM AVE.

ass"'· IV7Aif'.J s-r.

DAYTON 6, OHIO

224-0341

1005 BROWN ST.
(NEAR WYOMING)
FREE CONEY with purchase of two
with this coupon. Offer expires in
one week.

WEIFFENBACH
MARBLE &amp; TILE CO.
AMAN &amp; CO.
Marble, Tile,
Floor Covering and Terrazzo

DAYTON'S FINEST JEWELER

Flowers for
All Occasions

Since 1 8 89

224-1794

228-8179
20 W. Second St.

1426 S. Euclid Ave.
Dayton,

DAYTON
MONUMENT CO.
Designers and Manufacturers n/

MONUMENTS, MAUSOLEUMS,
MEMORIALS
GRANITE, MARBLE AND BRONZE

Joseph P. Engler
1424 Alberta t.

0.

731 TROY STREET

298-9994
Best Wishes For

o Successful Season
from

NORTHWESTERN
TOOLS, INC.

HELLDOERFER-CASTELLINI,

CLAMPING &amp; TOOLING

INC.

COMPONENT

2535 Needmore Rd.
Dayton, Ohio

228-1362

South of U.D. Stadium

278-5736

33

�... a new place to get together with plenty of seating and parking (Opens Oct. 1)

URBAN'S

SUBURBAN

TAVERN

"Bring the Family"
located next to the new "Chris Harris South" at Marshall &amp; Stroop

LIQUOR- Deluxe Sandwiches &amp; Soups- SCHOENLING on Tap
Fish Fry Every Friday- Cabbage Rolls on Sat.
Open 7 Days A Week
Private Party Rooms For Groups of 20 to 100 -Call 298-5000
Let's Get Acquainted

YOU MUST BE 21 OR WITH PARENTS

* HOMECOMING PARTY OCT. 17- STARTS 11 A.M. *
URBAN'S IS OWNED &amp; OPERATED BY URBAN J. GOEKE FAMILY

B. C. by Johnny Hart

4~~P~E%T~J~~~u~~~SJWAY
THE FREE

HEY MAUDE,YOVRE ON!

B.C.. GLASSES

FROM MARATHON (

(") Fidd Eaterprins, Joe., 19 70

Maude, the not-so-softspoken lady ant, wonts you
to know that you con get
a B.C. gloss free with any
8-gollon or more purchase
of gasoline at po rticipoting
Marathon dealers. And

34

while you 're there, be sure
to ask about our matching
B.C. pitcher. Offer begins
September 27. You hove
until November 22 to
get a full set for yourself.
Or your Aunt Maude.

�NUMBER FORTY-FOUR FOR SYRACUSE
by ARNIE BURDICK, Sports Editor, Syracuse Herald-Journal
indestructible athlete. He never got
hurt. In three years for us, the worst
injury he ever received was a cut over
his eye.
"We were playing Maryland-rated
No. 1 at the time. The blood was running down into his eye and I wanted
to take him out, but he said, 'I can
still see the goal line.' He could, for
he scored on the next play and we won.
"Floyd was probably the furthest
along when he came to us. He had been
to prep school and had developed a
lot of moves and tricks that made him
fabulous in the open. Jim improved
the most at Syracuse. You see, he was
so young. He was only 20 when he
graduated. We could hardly keep up
with him. He just got so good, so fast."

Say "77" to a veteran football fan,
and he'll immediately think of a "Galloping Ghost"-the spectacular Red
Grange-weaving his way through a
gridiron strewn with would-be tacklers
as he headed for another Illinois touchdown.
Mention "98" and he'll recall the
breath- taking, reversal- of- the- field
gyrations of Tommy Harmon's magnificent feats at Michigan.
Bring up "44" and . . . Well, think
"forty-four" and Syracuse's All-America ball-carriers-Jimmy Brown, the
late Ernie Davis and Floyd Little-all
pass in review. . . . An eye-popping
montage that produced a seemingly
never-ending series of heroics for
Orange fans.
These three superstars, who compressed their collegiate ball-lugging
into one decade (from the mid-fifties
to the mid-sixties) , carried the same
Orange jersey into action. But they
also formed a unique, chain-reaction
recruiting club--Jim got Ernie to follow his footsteps, and likewise Ernie
inspired Floyd to attend Syracuse. All
this added up to bringing off a 1,000
to 1 cleat parade for Coach Ben

Schwartzwalder. It's likely that any
mentor would call himself lucky if he
trotted out one of these brilliant running backs. But three? Why, all three
under one tent is a recruiter's pipedream.
2,000 Yards Each
The veteran Syracuse skipper likes
nothing better than reminiscing about
his famed "44" triumvirate, each of
whom rushed for more than 2,000
yards under his care and feeding.
"It's amazing how each improved
on the other's records while at Syracuse," recalled Ben, "though the rules
were different, too. You see, Jim
played both ways and Ernie played
some defense, but Floyd, though he
would have been a fine defensive back,
only played offense.
"Each was great in his own right.
"The death of Ernie (of leukemia)
was a tragedy. A real tragedy. Ernie
was so good, you couldn't believe he
was for real. A great football player
and the greatest guy you'd ever meet.
He had the same drive and looseness
Jim had, and he was a great team man.
What a great kid.
"Jim was a great, great athlete. An

"Jim was 228 and Ernie 220, and
they both ran the 100 in about 9.6,"
Schwartzwalder reflected. "It would
have been a great combination- to
have two runners like that in the same
backfield."
"Coach, what would you have done,"
Ben was asked, "if two of those great
ones had shown up together?"
"Well," smiled Ben, "there's no rule
that says you couldn't have 'em two
at a time. Or all three at a time, for
that matter. Wouldn't that have been
something?
Sleepy Friday Nights
"I'll tell you, if I had Jim and Ernie
and Floyd all together, I'd sleep a lot
better Friday nights. We'd have some
fun. Gosh," he dreamed, "it sure would
be a pleasure working out an offense
for them."
"Imagine those three in the same
backfield," mused a man who'd been
known to frequent a racetrack. "I
guess Ben would have to make 'em an
entry-44 A ... 44 B ... and 44 C!"
What would be more fun for Ben
Schwartzwalder would be a "44 D."
"That's what we could use," he suggested, "another Jim or Ernie or
Floyd. We haven't had a tailback since
Floyd graduated."
Dangling in the Syracuse equipment
room this fall is the famed "No. 44"
jersey. It yawns for another superstar.
Like Jim Brown . . . the late Ernie
Davis ... and Floyd Little.

35

�CHANNEL MASTER
Transistor Radios • Tape Recorders • Television Antennas and Rotators

works wonders in sight and sound...
FRANTZ FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCE
2721 Linden Avenue· Phone 254-3535

LOWE BROTHERS CO.
&gt;¥-?MJW
MINT COI.Otll

The Largest ancl Most Complete Paint Supply
Store in the Miami Valley

223-8284

110 E. Third St.

FREE PARKING

FREE DELIVERY

QUALITY PRINTING!
BROWN &amp; KROGER PRINTING COMPANY
1220 EAST THIRD STREET

I

DAYTON, OHIO 45402

I

PHONE 513

•

222-1136

SPORTING
G0 0 DS

GOLF - TENNIS - BASEBALL FOOTBALL - BASKETBALL
FISHING TACKLE- AWARD SWEATERS- TROPHIES
BOWLING EQUIPMENT

SUPPLIERS
TO THE
UNIVERSITY
OF DAYTON

SPORTING GOODS CO.

"Where the Teams Buy"
101 S. Keowee St.

36

Phone 461-5570

�Realtor

SPAGHETTI

VARSITY SCHEDULE
8:00p.m.
Sept. 12 XAVIER
Sept. 19 U.C. at Cincinnati 7:30p.m.
Sept. 26 at Bowling Green 1:30 p.m.
Oct.

1:30 p.m.

LOUISVILLE

3

10 at Ohio U.

1:30 p.m.

Oct.

17 BUFFALO*

1:30 p.m.

Oct.

24 at Akron
31 at North. Illinois

8:15p.m .

7 at Miami (Ohio)
14 TOLEDO

1:30 p.m.

Oct.

Oct.
Nov.
Nov.

1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.

* Homecoming

FRESHMEN SCHEDULE
Mon., Sept. 21

Louisville

3:30p.m.

Mon., Oct.

Miami

3:30 p.m.

Fri.,

Oct.

5

CHARLES KRICK REALTY

5~

and ASSOCIATES
5114 Far Hills Avenue
DAYTON, Of:IIO 45429

$1.95

Residential • Commercial • Farms
Photo Listing Service

CHAS. W. KRICK

Includes glass of Wine
Salad, Bread and Butter, Coffee

26 Marshall

3:30 p.m.

Mon., Nov.

9 at Xavier

3:00 p.m.

434-3263

SERVING FIIOM Spm Til CLOSING

larru

Patronize Your Nearest Drug Store

&amp;illattrs
Wedgewoad Inn

970 Patterson Road

293-6760

UNIVERSITY
PHARMACY
Brown Street

16 at Cincinnati 3:00 p.m.

Mon., Oct.

Insurance &amp;
Appraisals

at Fairground Ave.
Registered Pharmacist

DUMAR

JEROME MUTH
TOM MUTH
HOWARD MUTH
JED MUTH
GREETINGS

on duty at all times

Free Delivery Service
Call 223-4293

From

TYPESEITING, INC.

MUTH
BROTHERS.,
MACHINERY MOVING

2341 Tacoma Street

HEAVY HAULING
Dayton , Ohio 45410

RIGGING
CRANE SERVICE

Phone 253·3531
Henry Deuer

Keith Marshall

613 E. Second St.
223-2281

POEPPELMEIER'S
DECORATING
CENTERS
CARPET
PAINT
WALLPAPER
FORMICA
SHADES
LINOLEUM
TOOL RENTALS
TWO STORES
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
293-2189
1423 WAYNE AVENUE
224-7474
EASY PARKING

37

�OTHER ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT MEMBERS

DON DONOHER
Basketball Coach

HERB DINTAMAN
Director
Facilities, lntramurals

BILL CASSIDY
Basketball Asst. Coach

EDDIE KWEST
Trainer

BOBBY HOOPER
Basketba II Asst. Coach

GARY McCANS
Ticket Manager

~·

38

TOM DOWLING
Business Manager

JIM HOOVER
Admin. Assistant

DR. EDWARD
LESCHANSKY
Team Physician

SHAW EMMONS
Tennis Coach

KEN KECK
Equipment Mgr.

BOB HILDRETH
Baseball Coach

JACK BROWN
Consultant
Ticket Office

GENE SCHILL
Sports Information
Director

DR. GEORGE RAU
Basketball
Team Physician

STAM BULUGARIS
Wrestling Coach

�Jlol 'Jwisl Sandwich Shoppe
PARTY TRAY ... QUALITY MEATS BY POUND ... 23 DIFFERENT SANDWICHES
HOT SOFT PRETZELS- CALL 254-2721

1056 PATIERSON RD. IN BREITENSTRATER SQUARE

Kettering
Village Illll

c
M 0 TEL
76 Luxurious airconditioned units

For That Special Occasion

•
•

Open 6 Days

Free swimming pool

•

of course
Before or after the game
Or as an evening in itself
Cocktails
Fine Continental
or American cuisine.
Large selection of sizzling steaks
Fresh seafoods - Italian dinners
Luncheons,dinners,Sundaytoo
3045 Salem Ave.
277-2264

ENJOY THE FINEST IN
COCKTAILS • IT ALlAN
AND AMERICAN FOODS
SPAGHETTI • RAVIOLI
PIZZA • SIZZLING
STEAKS • CHOPS
CHICKEN • SEA FOOD

•

Anticoli's

FOR AFTER THE GAME
GET TOGETHER . . .

Free 1V and Tele- ·
phones in every room

•

Dining room Cocktail Lounge

1,4 Mile to 36 hole
golf course

3 Miles from Downtown
2700 SOUTH DIXIE
HIGHWAY 25 SOUTH

10 A.M. • 1 A.M.

•

298-1411

3910 Far Hills

1018 Irving Avenue
294-9141

"Where Good Sports Meet"

DILLS SUPPLY CO.
also

DAYTON, OHIO
222-5537

SPRINGFIELD, OHIO
325-6441

INDUSTRIAL AND CONTRACTOR SUPPLIES

39

�FOODCRAFT MANAGEMENT
Proudly Presents a Variety of Dining
Pleasures for Everyone's Enjoyment
Dine Royally In A
Continental Atmosphere

SEVEN
NATIONS
r
-,
Featuring

STEAK &amp;
PRIME RIBS

RESTAURANT AND
COCKTAIL LOUNGE

AT IMPERIAL
HOUSE • NORTH

•
1-75 &amp; NEEDMORE
DAYTON· OHIO
PHONE: 278-5828

2 POPULAR
LOCATIONS
2900 WILMINGTON PK.

•
STROOP &amp; FAR HILLS
KETIERING
OHIO

OPEN

L

ENTERTAINMENT
&amp; DANCING
FRID:Ys &amp; SATURDAYS
PM to 1 AM

WHERE lKE
CROWD MEElS

AftER tHE
GAME
•

HOT DOGS
LUMBURGERS
ROAST BEEF

11 AM

FUN

to 1 AM
FRI. • SAT.
2 AM

AGES

All

FOR

Elegance
IN

DINING

~~!:/~
.
\

(~\

•

•

Specializing In

StEAK&amp;
lOBStER
.
.
COMBINATIONS

LATE EVENING
SNACKS &amp; SUPPERS
pHONE FOR
RESERVATIONS

DAILY

lUNCHEON
&amp; DINNER
SPECIALS

$1 1_9

FAMILY BUFFETs
FRI &amp; SAT EVES
SUNDAYS ALL DAY

RESTAURANT AND
COCKTAIL LOUNGE

.

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
SHOPPING CENTER
4022 FAR HILLS AVE.
KETIERING • OHIO

.

Open 11 AM to 1 PM
MONDAY THRU SAT.
PHONE: 298-9872

AT 3145
FAR HILLS
KETIERING ·OHIO
HOURS:
MON., THURS. &amp; FRI.
11 AM to 2 PM
4:30 PM to 7:30 PM
SAT: 4:30 to 8 PM
SUNDAY
11 AM to 7 :30 PM

THE FAMILY

CAFETERIA
VISIT CULP'S MIDTOWN &amp; TALBOTT TERRACE
DOWNTOWN DAYTON

40

�THE VIKING
BLOOD BANK

by
RUBE
SAMUELSEN

Among the regular contributors to the Viking Blood Bank have been the three football Hall af
Famers shown above : Seated left to right-Elroy (Crazylegs) Hirsch, now Wisconsin's Athletic
director: AI Wistert, former Michigan star and Paul Schwegler, the Vikings' Chief. Standing are
Dick Winslow, accordion entertainer, and Mrs. Mike Carson, a nurse.

Meet the man who has given away
more than 10,000 pints of blood. He
personally has contributed no less than
62 pints, or close to eight gallons of his
own. His name is Paul Schwegler. Four
decades ago he was an All-America
tackle at the University of Washington. In 1968, he was inducted into the
National Football Hall of Fame.
Meet also some of the 220 footballoriented men who twice each year, if
they are in Los Angeles, donate a pint
of their blood to help those in dire
need. Virile men all, most of them have
a prominent football past, though some
are standouts of other sports.
Over all, the personable, booming
Schwegler, who has a heart THIS big,
constantly stands as the prodding chief
and cheerleader. When he grabs a fellow's lapels or buttonholes him, things
happen . What has emerged is perhaps
the most unique life-saving fraternity
of its kind extant-The Viking Blood
Bank.
It is quite a story, something different, something fine, something inspirational. It also is something that tugs at

you, and makes one glad to know such
considerate and unselfish people are
around.
The story was born in 1951. Schwegler, now a sales executive at 20th Century-Fox, was determined to help a
friend in need, Robert Welch. Welch,
who had produced NBC's "The Comedy Hour" television show, was suffering from a bleeding ulcer. Blood transfusions were desperately needed. Responding to Schwegler's hurried calls
were 10 football pals. Over a period of
months, no less than 124 pints of blood
were donated for Welch. It kept him
alive-for ten more years, in fact.
A Call for More Blood
So the story started. Now, 10,000
pints later, who can tell where this
selfless giving to the less fortunate will
end? Spurred by the stimulating motivation of the Welch case, Schwegler
moved on a much wider scale. First he
was heeding a rising call for more
blood which emanated mostly from
friends of the original donors. Then the
pleas from far and wide mounted as
the Welch story spread.

Schwegler had but one course-get
more blood and get additional men,
particularly former football players, to
participate.
He went to Ken Hansen, the owner
of Scandia, a Los Angeles restaurant.
It was there that the 10 original contributors had met at noon on Mondays,
prior to visiting the blood bank. They
were part of a frolicsome group, called
The Vikings, which lunched monthly
on the day the restaurant was normally
closed. Their Chief was Schwegler.
"Look, Ken," Schwegler said, "this
group has been meeting at Scandia for
some time before going down to the
Red Cross headquarters. Why can't we
give our blood right here? Can't we
bring a mobile unit to the restaurant,
have our usual lunch, and make a kind
of party of it?"
"I'll not only go along," Hansen
quickly responded, "I'll do more. I'll
provide the lunch and the libation for
everyone who comes and gives a pint
of blood."
500 Pints Annually
The Red Cross was agreeable if 100
pints could be guaranteed. That was no
problem whatever. The program is now
in its 19th year. The Vikings hold their
blood-giving get-together twice each
year, in the spring and in the fall. They
"play" to Scandia's capacity. That
means 220 donors at a time, served by
two mobile units. What with other contributions between times, the total
bank "deposits" come to around 500
annually.
Two Red Cross units are set up in
Scandia's main dining room. In attendance are one physician and 20 nurses.
It is a compelling sight.
Besides Schwegler, past football luminaries who have contributed their
blood include Dixie Howell, Aaron Rosenberg, Crazylegs Hirsch, Les Horvath, AI Wistert, Les Richter, Buck
Compton, Bob De Lauer, Tom Fears,
Mac Speedie, Sam Tsagalakis, Doyle
Nave, Leon Clarke, Jack Pardee, Dick
Hoerner, Ray Frankowski, Ernie Pinckert, Nick Pappas, Ernie Smith, Gus
Shaver, Hobbs Adams, Nate Barrager,
George Murphy (the ex-USC star, not
the United States Senator) and Jack
Banta.
Van Johnson of movie fame once
called upon Schwegler for blood for
Elsie Janis and was a regular donor
thereafter. Other contributors are
Evelle Younger, Los Angeles County
District Attorney, Peter Pitchess, the
county Sheriff, and Attorney Paul Caruso.
Thanks largely to eight pints of Viking blood, Keith Higgins is alive and
living a normal life today. In 1957,
when eight years old, Higgins underwent the first open-heart surgery ever
performed anywhere, at the USC
School of Medicine.
Besides the hundreds of recipients in
Southern California, patients from
such distant points as Anchorage, Alaska ; Portland, Maine; and Miami, Florida, as well as cities in between, have
benefited.
Hail to the Chief, not the President
in this case, but to the Chief and the
men of the Viking Blood Bank.

41

�... enjoy a truly different
Roast Beef Sandwich meal
at Arby's! It ' s the orig i nal
very best Roast Beef
Sandwich . Top quality ,
all lean beef . ..

tender-sliced and juicy-thin,
piled high on Arby's own
mouth -watering sesame seed
bun ... so big you have to
squeeze to eat.
you never had it so good!

Buy Two get one FREE
If you haven't tried Arby's yet ... now's your chance!
This coupon is good for a FREE delicious Roast Beef Sandwich
at Arby's ... 2848 Salem Ave .... 1158 Brown St .. . .
2305 S. Smithville . . . 4914 Airway Rd . . .. and 381 North Broad,
Fairborn .. . when you buy two Arby's at the regular price.
Offer good for next 60 days-only one coupon per family.

ARBY'S ... COME VISIT US SOON!

42

�KEEP SCORE

*

*

Oppo ne nt
Dayton
OPPONENT SCORING
DAYTON SCORING
lTD 6 pts.; PAT's 1 pt. kicking, 2 pts. pass or run; FG's 3 pts.; Safety 2 pts.l

CHEERS

University of Dayton Anthem

Cheerleader: Give me aD!
Crowd: D

On mountain high and hillside,
o'er meadow and t.hrough dell,

UD, we hear you calling;
Fidelity's the test.

Cheerleader: Give me a A!

In busy mart and hamlet where
hearts their story tell,

Your stalwart sons all answer
from north, south, east and..west.

A clarion voice is ringing; it rises
now it falls;

With measured tread advancing,
our emblem full in view,

Arouse Ye Sons of Dayton!
Your Alma Mater calls.

We sound your praise and pledge
our loyalty to the Red and Blue.

Crowd: A
Cheerleader: Give me a Y!
Crowd: Y
Cheerleader: Give me aT!
Crowd: T
Cheerleader : Give me a 0!
Crowd: 0
Cheerleader: Give me aN!
Crowd: N
Cheerleader: What have you got?
Crowd: DAYTON!
Cheerleader: Louder!
Crowd: DAYTON!
Cheerleader: Louder!
Crowd: DAYTON!

Cheerleader: Give me one big fight!
Crowd: FIGHT
Cheerleader: Give me two big fights!
Crowd: FIGHT, FIGHT
Cheerleader: Give me three big fights!
Crowd: FIGHT, FIGHT, FICHT
All: Yea Dayton! FIGHT
We're gonna fight with all our might,
We're gonna win this game tonight.
We're gonna
Beat (clap 4) Opponent (clap 4)

Beat (clap 4) Opponent (clap 4)
Beat (clap 4) Opponent (clap 4)
(clap 5) BEAT OPPONENT!
Is (opponent] gonna' win this game?
Well no!
What is then? Yell it! Spell it!
D-D-D-A-Y (clap 5)
T-T-T-0-N (clap 5)
D-A-Y (pause)
T-0-N (pause]
Dayton, Dayton, Dayton!

43

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�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1970-10-17 Buffalo vs Dayton</text>
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                <text> Saturday, October 17, 1970</text>
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                <text> Baujan Field - 1:30 P.M.</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1970-10-17</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>BUFFALO vs. VILLANOVA
Rotary Field-1:30 p.m. • SOc
·-~

OCTOBER 10, 1970
===~=======:::~

�Eastern Airlines is a billion dollars worth of aircmft,
one of the most sophisticated maintenance systems in the
world, the largest real-time airline reservations computer
in existence, 1400 take-offs and landings every clay;
acres of terminals, hangars, warehouses and buildings;
32,000 of the most dedicated people in aviation,

and one dream:
make flying a&lt;; natural for you
as it is for him.

~ EASTERN TheWingsofMan.

�KOZEL VS. MASSACHUSETTS- Jumor halfback Doug Kozel (5-11, 189, Johnson City) slants off the UMass defense on
Rotary last week. QB Kirk Barton (dark 15) checks the opposition following the handoff. Unidentified Redmen defender
(left) and defensive end Curt Bristol (82) are stalled in the area by Buffalo blockers. Fourth period U/B posse tracked down
the visitors 16-13. (BUG-Fox)

�TODAV'S GAME
~69

Buffalo Football
BUFFALO VS. VILLANOVA

Rotary Field, 1 :30 p.m.

October 10, 1970
Editor: Richard E. Baldwin
Local Advertising: Howard L. Daniels
National Advertising: Spencer Marketing Services, NYC
CONTRIBUTORS: Office of Information Services, Jim DeSantis, ECAC Service
Bureau, National Collegiate Sports Services, Dick Johnston, Bob Powell,
NCAA Public Relations Committee, Linda Martz, Chris Kabel, Collegiate
Commissioners Association, Steve Lipman, Scott Slesinger, AI Aversano,
Hugh Ortman and the Vi~anova Office of Sports Information
PHOTOGRAPHY: Ed N.,wak, Rick Swenson, Office of Information Services,
UMASS Office of Sports Information and BUG(Fox).
PRINTING: Goodrich Printers &amp; Lithographers, Inc., Clarence Center, N. Y.

State University of

@

New York at Buffalo

The Bulls and the Wildcats have
an exciting football series in the
works, this afternoon's meeting
the ninth in the exchange since
1961. Today's victor will break a
four-all deadlock in games.
Coach Lou Ferry, a former VU
captain and All-East tackle, was
an assistant at his alma mater
be~ore taking over the program
thts season, and he has the Cats in
contention for
high
Eastern
honors. Folowing his collegiate
career he served tours with the
Packers, Cardinals and Steelers.
Villanova finished tenth in the
1969 Lambert Trophy race with a
6-3-0 summary. U B was ninth at
6-3-0, but the final game of the
season for both squads, a 24-14
Buffalo triumph, boosted the Blue
in the rankings .
The series has featured "backto-hack" wins. VU opened the relationship with 28-6 and 36-6
victories in 1961 and 1962. Buffalo
countered with three straight 14-7
in 1963 .. 20-7 in 1965 and 2S-8 in
1966. Vtllanova won 41-23 in 1967
and 28-7 in 1968.
The teams are scheduled through
1976.

s
than

c

I

•

�Prentis The Player
by Bob Powell
Courier-Express
Time: 1:47 p.m. (Approx.)
Date: Sept. 21, 1968 (Documented).
Place: Kent State's Memorial Stadium
(Geographically Identified).
The University of Buffalo team was coming
off a disappointing 28-10 loss to Iowa State from
the previous Saturday as it faced Kent's ~olden
Flashes, a team victimized, 30-6, a year earller 01',1
Rotary Field.
Like the opening minutes of any game, this
was football's version of "Chicken" as the players
fiercly eye-balled each other waiting for the other
to flinch.
The Kents found themselves in a punting
situation at their 38-yard line. It was the Buffalo
decision to try to block the punt, rather than set
up a punt-return wall.
Down the throat of the Kent formation
roared outline linebacker Scotty Clark. He got a
piece of the football as it left the toe of the punter,
skittering the ball toward the Kent goalline.
Out of the confusion rumbled a young
sophomore defensive end by the name of Prentis
Henley. Up, he scooped the ball at the 12-yard line
and into the Kent end zone-almost in one motion.
The product of Buffalo's South Park High
School matter-of-factly continued his jaunt with a
circling trot to the Bull's now exploding bench as
the point-after team hurried onto the field.
It goes without saying - or writing - that
his teammates greeted him with crashing slaps
on the backside and noisy words of praise.
Whatever the action of his fellow Bulls,
Prentis Henley responded with either a "hrumph"
or a similarly throaty grunt of acceptance.
Prentis Henley wasn't a talker. Words didn't
flow easily to the South Park grad. Prcntis Henley
was a football player completely encased in a shell
of self-conciousness.
Even to his fellow players, a nod of the head
was a full sentence. His coaches knew they were
getting through to him because he did what he
was told he should do.
He simply did it. He didn't talk about it.
Somewhere, sometime between that time and
the start of the 1969 season, Prentis Henley
cracked out of the shell. Prentis Henley no longer
shied from people. He had gained the confidence
he so sorely lacked in that first varsity campaign.
It would be tremendously corny to say it was
football that brought Prentis Henley out into the
open. Who'd believe it was his association in a
closely knit organization that turned Prentis Henley from a loner into an articulate young man?
That wouldn't be scientific- right?
Everyone knows that athletics are unnecessary to the educational system-right?
Don't try and prove it by Prentis Henleyor me.

three

�Scouting Villanova

Nickname: Wildcats
Stadium: Villanova Stadium (13,400)
Colors: Blue &amp; White
Coach: Lou Ferry '49 (1st)
VILLANOVA
FACTS and FIGURES

SE MIKE SIANI

LB JOHN BABINECZ

The Wildcats are 3-1 and have packed the scoreboard with points113, but four opponents have also posted 75 ... For the second year in
succession VU and Delaware have clashed in a Wildcat come-from-behind
victory . . . In 1969 the Cats were down 29-7 at the half but tallied 29
points to win in the second half ... Last weekend at Newark the Hens
were up 24-14 at the half, and again a solid second stanza worth 20
points won for Villanova ... Dela.,.are moved the ball well-433 yards ...
QB Drew Gordon was the VU hero, coming on in the second half and
throwing 11 of 18 for a TD and 110 yards ... SE Mike Siani, who is also
an .402 BA shortstop and AU-District 2, continued his bid for All-America
with a 43-yard fingertip grab in the first half . . .Siani holds a bag of
records, including three TDs vs. Delaware last year and 186 yards and 12
receptions vs. B.C. this fall ... His 20 points in '69 vs. Delaware tied a
record ... Villanova set 11 school records losing to B.C. 28-21 . . . HB
John Heim, a line-backer last season was re-injured vs. Delaware and is
doubtful today, as are FB Mickey Kerins (Bishop Duffy), FL Steve Bilko
and HB Luke Solomon, all starters . . . There's another Moore at
Villanova-freshman tackle Chuck, 6-3, 225 . . . QB Daryl Woodring
pitched 25 for 53 and 315 yards against B.C., all records . . . HB Joe
Villanova last year FB Joe Zelmanski had 144 (27), John Faller 134 (21)
Santa Clara . . . Belasco was VU's No. 2 quarterback a year ago and
threw a record 14 TDs ... LB John Babinecz leads a sound defense.

Scouting Buffalo

Rushing
Att. Net Avg.
154
5.0
John Heim, HB
31
Joe Belasco, HB
63
269
4.0
Luke Solomon, HB
23
73
3.2
Passing
Att. Comp. Int. Yds. TDs
Daryl Woodring,
QB
106
49
5
659
7
Go_r~on, QB 37
17
1
192
2
Receivmg
Caught Y ds TDs
Mike Siani, SE
26
416 . 4
Dennis Stufflet, TE
10
92
4
8
63
0
Rick Reiprish, FL
Duane Holland, HB
7
56
0
Punting
No. Yds. Avg.
Duane Holland, HB 26
973
37.4
Punt Returns
No. Yds. Avg.
Dino Folino, S
6
33
55
John Heim, HB
3
31
10.3
Bob Milanese, DB
1
18
18.0
Kickoff Returns
No. Yds. Avg
Mark Matika, DB
4
78
19 5.
H. Wearing, SE
4
76
19.0
M~rk Miller, SE
2
32
16:0
Scormg
TDs PAT FG PTs
Mike Siani, SE
4
0 0 24
Dennis Stufflet, TE 4
0 0 24
Joe Belasco, HB
4
0
0 24
D. Woodring, QB
2
0 0 12
Mike Barrang, DE-K 0 10-9k 0 9
Duane Holland, HB
0 5-5k 1-1 8
Luke Solomon, HB
1
0 0
6
Ernie Messmer, DT 1
0 0
6

Nickname: Bulls
Stadium: Rotary Field
Colors: Buffalo Blue &amp; Gold
Coach: Bob Deming (2nd)
BUFFALO
FACTS and FIGURES
Rushing
Att. Net A vg
John Faller, HB
68 237
35 ·
Joe Zelmanski, FB
41 139
a·
D~mkgBKozel,
HQBB
45 127
2:~
Ir
arton,
25
11
Gene Nance, HB
9
12
13
Passing
Att. Comp. Int. Yds. TDs
Barton, QB 90 43
5 415
1
Perry, QB 30
9
3
97
o
Receiving
Caught Yds. TDs
Joe Moresco, SE
13
145
0
Joe Hudson, TE
9
83
0
Mike Sharrow, SE 8
75
1
Joe Zelmanski, FB 6
81
0
John Faller, HB
5
50
0
Punting
No. Blk. Yds. A vg.
Herlan, SE
29
1
298
30.9
Moresco, SE
6
0
200
33.3
Punt Returns
No. Yds. Avg.
Tom Elliot, S
7
79 11.3
72
8.0
.Buddy Boughton, DB 9
Kickoff Returns
No. Yds. Avg.
4
166 41.5
Gene Nance, HB
John Faller, HB
6
90 15.0
Doug Kozel, HB
3
50 16.7
Scoring
TDs PAT FG PTs
John Faller, HB
3
0
0 18
Joe Zelmanski, FB 1
1P 0
8
Gene Nance, HB
1
0
0
6
Doug Kozel, HB
1
0
0
6
Mike Sharrow, SE
1
0
0
6
Constantino, K
0 4-3k 2-1 6

K

LB DAVE MAJCHER

G TOM CENT OF ANTI

Junior Kirk Barton moved the Bulls against Massachusetts last Saturday and again established himself as U /B's first signal-caller ... Barton twice has engineered Buffalo back with second half attacks and
springs the Bulls quickly ... Soph tackle Mike Gasper was operated on
following the UMass game (left knee) and will be out for the final
eight dates ... Senior LB Ed Kersaw earlier was forced to retire early
with a knee problem . . . LB Larry Madden leads the defensive charts
with 36 tackles and 26 assists ... Tom Centofanti was billed as one of
the East's best guards and after a slow start again falls into that category ... He lettered two seasons at tackle before switching back to his
normal line position . . . In running up a modern record 427 yards at
Villanova last year FB Joe Zelmanski had 144 (27), John Faller 134 (21)
and Pat Patterson 119 (15) : .. ~ic~ ~urtha threw just 11 passes ...
Buffalo's secondary kept Mike Siam m check-two receptions for 19
yards ... The Bulls are home for the fourth time in five games ... LB
Dave Majcher, a junior, is locked in at a right inside spot ... Majcher
has ma.de 30. stops .and 14 ~ssists . . . Vi~ Keough's Baby Bulls opened
in fashiOn with a big 27-8 victory at Manlius Prep ... HB Bob Barlette
(9.6) scored on 85 and 80-yard runs and kicked three PATs ... Freshman game at Pittsburgh has been cancelled ... U /B has been outscored
11-7 in touchdowns ... Buffalo has run 39 more plays than the opposition, 197 running and 120 passing ..

four

�Welcome to Rotary Field
YOUR COOPERATION PLEASE- To students and guests at the University today, your
cooperation is required in maintaining the dignity and reputation of this institution. We request
that you observe the rules and regulations pertaining to this sanctioned event by the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the Eastern College Athletic Conference.
WELCOME - We respectfully appreciate your attendance at today's football game, and we
hope that you will enjoy both the game and the various new facilities in the stadium. On behalf of
the State University of New York at Buffalo and the Athletic Department, its staff and players,
we welcome you .
Dr. Harry G. Fritz
Director of Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

REST ROOM FACILITIES: Rest rooms
(Ladies) are at the north end locations
under both Bailey Avenue and Main
stands. Rest rooms (Gentlemen) are at
the south end locations under Bailey
A venue and Main stands.
LOST AND FOUND : All lost and found
items should be reported to the Campus
Police. The Campus Police main office is
192 Winspear Avenue, 831-5555.
REFRESHMENT BOOTHS: There are
three main refreshment areas in the stadium. The booths are both at the north
ends of the Bailey and Main stands and
are operated by University Food Service.
For most games the third booth is open
at the south end of the Bailey stands.
BUSTER THE BULL: The mascot on the
field is Buster VIII, a direct lineal descendent of Buster I, who was a gift
from Elizabeth Taylor and the late Mike
Todd to the University in 1958. Buster
is under the care of Chester Malach . He
is quartered at the Malach farm in nearby Elma.

your all-star
financial center
~!*7\

"'-UERVICE~.t,.,.

P\" BANK

*¥®

M ember: Federa l De p osit Insurance Corp .

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Checking accounts
Auto loans
Home improvement loans
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Commercial loans
Vacation loans

BANK oF BUFFALO
• BANK OF BUFFALO-- 17 Court at Pearl • EAST
SIDE Office· · 694 Fil lm ore at Broadway • SOUTH SIDE
Office -- 2157 Sen eca near Ca zenovia • TOWN OF
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Office-- 4184 Seneca at Mill Road • STUYVESANT
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Office -- 2858 Delaware at Mang.

five

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its reputation
Siegfried is proud of the
many impressive bu ildings
it has built over the years,
but they also take pride in
something that cannot be
bu i lt with concrete and
steel - a reputation for
unexcelled craftsmanship,
dependa bi I ity and integrity.
Thinking of a new build·
ing, an addition , or remod el ing? Think of Siegfriedyour assurance of a job
well done . . . done on t ime.
That's Siegfried Construc tioneering.

ailing and cory
BUFFALO'S
PAPER DISTRIBUTION CENTER

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CONSTRUCTION CO INC

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with Western
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Post Office Box 1068
1945 Sheridan Drive
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Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

six

�YOUR HOMETOWN SUPERMARKETS ARE PROUD
TO SUPPORT THE HOMETOWN UNIVERSITY
OF BUFFALO "BULLS" FOOTBALL TEAM!

�SUNYAB
Information Services

STATE UNIVERSITY

The State University of New York at Buffalo is today the larges~, m~st comprehensive undergraduate and graduate center of the New York State Umvers1ty System,
enrolling 23,764 students in the fall of 1969 (14,600 full-time). Established in 1846, the
University was a pioneer in adapting educational service to the specific needs of a developing urban complex.
Today, the University is headed by Robert L. Ketter, a civil engineer, who was at
one time dean of the U / B Graduate School and also served as vice president for facilities
planning. Ketter is the eleventh executive officer of the University, whose first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the United States.
Founded as a medical school, the University toward the close of the 19th century,
expanded to embrace three other professional schools, pharmacy, dentistry and law. A
college of arts and sciences was added in 1913. Other divisions of study were established
as follows: Summer sessions, 1915; evening sessions, now known as Millard Fillmore
College, 1923; business administration (now management), 1927; education, 1931; social
welfare, 1936; Graduate School, 1939; nursing, 1940; engineering, 1946; University
College, 1958; health related professions, 1965; information and library studies, 1966,
architecture and environmental design, 1968.
ENROLLMENT
University enrollment figures for the last decade indicate that full-time day undergraduate enrollment jumped from 4,829 in 1960 to 10,640 in 1969. Full-time graduate
enrollment (day and evening) increased even more dramatically from 286 in 1960 to
2,847 in 1969.
Enrollment in the professional schools of dentistry, law and medicine rose from 730
in 1960 to 1,190 in 1969, with the largest increase being noted by the School of Law which
grew from 176 to 485. The comparative figures for Medicine are 308 and 418 and for
Dentistry, 247 to 287.
Attesting to an increasing quality of students enrolling, in 1963, 90 per cent of
entering freshmen scored 130 or better on the Regents Scholarship Examination; in
1969, 90 per cent of the freshmen scored 184 or better.
In terms of high school rank, 27.6 per cent of 1960's freshmen were in the top onefifth of their graduating class; in 1969, 85 per cent of freshmen were in that top fifth.
The University demonstrates also an increasing commitment to developing academic
skills among the underprivileged. A variety of special programs have been instituted
to extend social, economic and educational opportunities to students recruited on the
basis of potential, rather than on their ability to pay for higher education or the level of
academic skill they demonstrated in high school. Three such programs are EPIS (Experimental Program in Independent Study), SEEK (Search for Education, Elevation
and Knowledge) and the Student Tutorial Program, whose unconventional admissions
criteria and curricular innovations not only open the University's doors to the educationally deprived but also provide academic and financial assistance for the successful
completion of their baccalaureate studies.
The geographic distribution of the University's student body in the fall of 1969
was: Buffalo Metropolitan Area, 51.6 per cent; New York City Metropolitan Area, 26.7
per cent; rest of New York State, 18.2 per cent; out-of-state and foreign countries, 3.5
per cent.
F AGILITIES AND NEW CAMPUS
Resources and facilities have been improved and enlarged in the wake of enrollment
expansion. The number of volumes in the University libraries has tripled since 1962 and
is now above the 1,500,000 mark.
To provide for continued extension of operations pending completion of a new campus, the University is occupying a series of off-campus locations, including an "interim"
facility of several buildings on Ridge Lea Road in the nearby Town of Amherst.
The new campus will be located on a 1,200 acre tract of land in Amherst. Construction has begun since Governor Rockefeller lifted the moratorium on construction.
At a total cost of $650 million by 1975 the new campus will include all facilities
existing on the present campus plus theatres, galleries and special complexes for the
colleges. Since the colleges will provide not only residences but social and educational
environments, they will have reading rooms, dormitory space, dining rooms, classrooms
and special studios and offices. A complete health sciences facility will also be located
on the new campus.
Preparation of the site for construction began in spring and the first contracts were
awarded in early summer of 1970. 'fhe first buildings to be constructed will be the
first six colleges which will be built in four phases.
RESEARCH
Through research, higher education is a combatant in a never-ending war on disease,
learning problems, and other areas of concern that have universal scope. It seeks
knowledge, technology and applications of the traditional, and is a contributor to our
economy, comfort and well-being.
Research at the State University of New York at Buffalo covers a wide spectrum
of fields of knowledge- from anthropology to obstetrics to zoology. Of the University's
more than 90 instructional departments, almost all have research programs of some
magnitude.
Research is expensive. It takes a continuous flow of money to conduct research on
a large scale: to pay the salaries of research personnel, to buy and build equipment,
to purchase supplies and chemicals, to provide travel, to buy computer time, to cover
publication costs and other expenses.
A decade of research has brought in more than $88,790,000 in research funds to the
University. In 1960, the private University of Buffalo received $3,870,000 in research
monies, 78 per cent of which was channele~ int~ the health sciences areas.
With the merger into the State Umvers1ty of New York system, the Research
Foundation administered $5,080,000 in funds in 1962. The 1969-70 estimate shows a
jump of almost $10 million (making a total of $15,000,000) in funds, which were distributed by the Foundation, with only 60 per cent of these funds going to health sciences.
Thus, not only is the University r~ceiying at least a million dolla;rs more each year, but
there is also a trend toward equahzat10n of funds between the sc1ences and other areas.

�OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

DR. HARRY G. FRITZ
Director, Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

FACULTY
A vigorous program of recruitment combined with
competitive salary levels has resulted in a faculty of outstanding calibre. Scholars and artists of national renown,
including a Nobel Laureate, National Academy of Science
members, and holders of other awards for distinguished
academic achievement, have come to Buffalo. The ratio of
one faculty member for every 13 students is often cited,
but is not indicative of class sizes which range from small
seminars to lectures for the hundreds. The number of fulltime faculty members has tripled from 440 to 1400 in the
last ten years, while the number of students has doubled.

President

Part-time faculty memberships has doubled during the past
decade from 1,215 in 1960 to 2,425 in 1969.
ACADEMIC DEVELOPMENT
In 1967 a major restructuring of the academic organization of the University was accomplished at the instigation of President Martin Meyerson. Existing departments
and divisions of study were regrouped into seven broadly
interdisciplinary faculties, which incorporate and build
upon traditional disciplines while implementing novel combinations of customary fields of concentration with new
areas of study and research.

The University at Buffalo
Alumni Association
Wishes to thank our alumni and other friends for their support of the
GOLDEN BULL ATHLETIC FUND.
If you have not yet joined the Golden Bull Fund, you may do so by
sending a donation or pledge to the U /B Alumni Association, 250 Winspear
Avenue, Buffalo, New York, 14214. Gifts of any size are gratefully accepted.
Four clubs have been established within the Fund on an annual participation
basis:

Co-Captains Club
Golden Bull Club
Blue Chip Club
Honorary Coaches Club

$ 25 minimum contribution
$ 100 minimum contribution
$ 500 minimum contribution
$1,000 minimum contribution

Please make checks payable to the Golden Bull Fund. All donations
are tax-deductible.

nine

�OFFICIALS' SIGNALS
•

•

·r · ·r

3~

~
·1

~~OH•"•

(lnlroctllfl
of scrlmmoro or
trot kldl lorm~tllll)

4

,._.

~

llltpl Procedure
or l'llltllll

lllo tl Motilll
I

16

~

.

. .
.
lnthl•b•t . ,...,.,
Down Field on 1'111

K•dltd, or lolled

i\

-

20

i~·~~~::dic!:.";,~~

Touchdown .,.

to Sidt: Toucllbodl

r';l./-. .......)\
~·

22

~

lncomplttt Forword 1'111,
Penalty Dtcllnod,
No Ploy, or lit Score

laH lllerolly To&lt;u:lltd,

"'':;nl~t~11r~o~~:;or'
10

17

~

Interference

lcJlJJ

"'

,l "

··~

Dtlly of Contt

9

w

Sofaly

Field Cool

23

Time out; Referee's

Roughing the Kicker
or Holder

lltn·contod fouls

Discretionarr or hcass
Time Out followed witt.

bppinr honds on cllut.

tvtA

~

Iller•• uu tt
Monds on• Arms

· ·r +l

~

'J

lilt ol nlft
I

7

su•stltutiltl
lnlrodions

15

~

FttWor• 1'111 or

lntonllonol
CrouMinr

~~':'.~::~~~

Every kind of Sportsman knows
DICK FISCHER'S the greatest!

25

First Down

~~-\ 26~

27

'

1\U(

1 ....·
.:

...._.
'·.) Sbrt tilt Cltdl

ltll If Dtwo

Pltytr Dls.uollfitd

GOOD LUCK BULLS

DICK FISCHER

SFo~ts

Mr. &amp; Mrs. A. V. Bellanca

699 Main 51.

Thruway Pla•a- 44 Main St. ITona. l

gealieJj MILK
SERVICE AT YOUR DOOR OR AT YOUR STORE

853-3860
SEALTEST

FOODS

DIVISION OF KRAFTCO CORP.

General Offices &amp; Plant
202·208 WALDEN AVE., BUFFALO, N.Y.

ten

~~££.W~SHOPS
~APPAREL

FOR MEN AND BOYS

2900 DELAWARE AVE. • KENMORE, N.Y. 14217

�Now here's an easy way to keep your
Stroh's nice 'n cold all afternoon long.
Our aluminum-insulated Stay Cold
Pack.
Just make sure the whole box is
nice 'n cold to start with. Then, the beer

inside will stay that way for hours.
Mind you, we're not saying a Stay
ColdPackfullofStroh'sismorelovable
than an ice chest full of Stroh's.
But it's sure a heck of a lot more
portable.

Stroh's .•• From One Beer Lover to Another.

THE STROH BREWERY COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48226

eleven

�Van, Stan &amp; Rife Have It All Figured Out!
FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WBEN-Radio
VAN
STAN
DICK
MILLER BARRON RIFENBURG
WBEN Radio/930
The Sports Voice of Buffalo

�r·~\~'{f\''•

~ ~- ......."'-

\,~
.; l, .. .

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I

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r

1970 Buffalo Football Roster

Player
Pos.
Cl.
tAdessa, Phil
T
So ph .
Albaneze, Denny
G
Sr.
Armon, Kerope
K
So.
*Atkinson, Barry
DT
Sr.
Baker, Bill
FB
So.
tBancroft, Tim
OLB
So.
*Barton, Kirk
QB
Jr.
Bauch, John
G
Jr.•
tBouck, Mike
TE
So.
tBoughton, Buddy
DB
So.
Brown, Byron
OLB
Jr.
tButler, Ted
OLB
So.
tCarbonaro, Paul
T
So.
**Centofanti, Tom
G
Sr.
tChamberlain, Tom
G
So.
(*)Chapp, Gary
ILB
Sr.
Conaway, Dan
OLB
Jr.
tConstable, Ken
ILB
So.
*Constantino, Mike
K
Sr.
tDomino, Tom
SE
So.
**Donnor, Chuck (CC)
c
Sr.
tEagen,John
T
So.
Ellenbogen, Bill
DT
Jr.
**Elliott, Tom
Sr.
s
*Elwell, Jerry
Sr.
G
*Faller, John
Sr.
HB
tFilipowicz, Eric
TE
So.
Forness, Charley
DT
Sr.
*Fraser, Bruce
Jr.
OLB
tGasper, Mike
T
So.
Goniwiecha, Steve
So.
s
Jr.
Griffiths, Bob
G
tHannah, Bill
DB
So.
tHarrison, Marvin
DB
So.
**Henley, Prentis (CC)
DE
Sr.
SE
Sr.
* Herlan, Scott
tHoma, Dave
ILB
So.'
Hudson, Joe
TE
Sr.
c
tHuff, Larry
So.
HB
Jackson, Don
So.
Sr.
James, Mike
DE
Johnson, Joe
c
So.
Jones, Clifton
Jr.
s
Sr.
**Jones, Rovell
DT
Sr.
**Kershaw, Ed
OLB
Jr.
Kozel, Doug
HB
Jr.
HB
L.ayo, Bob
Jr.
DB
*MacVittie, Mark
Jr.
*Madden, Larry
ILB
Jr.
ILB
Majcher, Dave
Sr.
ILB
*McCullough, Steve
Sr.
SE
*Moresco, Joe
HB
So.
Nance, Gene
So.
HB
tNichols, Walt
Sr.
DB
**Nixon, Len
So.
P-S
tOsika, Tom
QB
Sr.
(*)Perry, Ed
Jr.
DT
Pescrillo, Dave
Jr.
QB
Philp, Doug
DE
So.
tPotyok , AI
So.
DT
Rakowski, Ron
Sr.
T
(*)Rio, John
Jr.
HB
Savickas, Scott
Sr.
SE
*Sharrow, Mike
Jr.
OLB
Siedlecki, Stan
Jr.
ILB
Smith, Phil
Sr.
HB
Stiscak, Bob
FB
So.
tTober, Owen
Jr.
DE
Vandenbergh , Barry
Jr.
DE
Van-Dusen, Don
Sr.
DE
**Vigneau, Tom
Jr.
T
Winnett, Bill
Sr.
HB
**Woodward, Barney
DB
Sr.
(*)Zalar, Karl
FB
Sr.
**Zelmanski, Joe
Jr.
G
Ziegler, Joe
*Varsity Letter (22 from 1969)
(*)Varsity Letter (4 from 1968)
tFreshman Numerals (20 from 1969)
SENIOR MANAGER : Allen Wright, '71, Mt. Vernon,
No.

76
68
3
79
14
50
15
62
86
17
51
92
64
73
60
38
54
44
41
81
58
88
78
40
61
49
27
67
36
65
16
43
46
23
90
87
30
85
52
26
95
57
48
66
59
39
22
47
32
53
37
80
20
12
42
19
11
99
18
97
70
74
25
89
55
33
29
34
91
93
96
71
21
24
35
69

Age

Ht.

18
21
20
21
20
19
20
20
20
19
21
T8
19
21
19
22
22
19
20
19
21
19
19
21
22
21
19
21
19
19
19
20
20
19
23
22
19

6-2
6-2
5-8
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-0
5-10
5-8
6-1
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-3
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-8
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-1
5-11
5-10
6-7
5-11
5-10
6-2
6-1
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-6
6-6
6-1
6-2
5-9
5-11
6-1
5-10

ss

19
20
21
19
20
21
21
20
19
20
20
19
22
21
20
19
21
19
21
21
19
19
20
21
20
21
19
22
21
19
20
21
21
20
21
21
21
21

Wt.

232
207
195
266
200
190
195
236
220
177
190
195
230
210
200
211
194
205
185
175
215
218
224
181
200
215
185
256
185
227
165
210
164
161
236
198
217
222
224
190
238
195
167
260
208
189
182
181
205
210
212
176
171
182
187
180
208
247
205
180
228
235
187
175
184
198
189
195
230
235
212
226
205
188
205
217

Major
Psych .
Psych.
L. Arts
P. Ed .
P. Ed.
Psych.
Dent.
Hi st.
En gr.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Acct.
Law
P. Ed.
Bio.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Hi st.
Pharm.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Law
Psych.
Bus. Ad .
Anthrop .
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Hist.
Pol. Sci.
Bus. Ad.
Engr.
L. Arts
Pharm .
L. Arts
P. Ed .
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Phil.
P. Ed.
0. Ther.
Pol. Sc.
Med.
0. Ther.
L. Arts
Pol. Sc.
Math.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Psych.
Soc.
L. Arts
Econ .
Pol. Sc.
Bus. Ad.
P. Ed .
En gr.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
Engr.
Acct.
L. Arts
Hi st.
Art
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
Bus. Ad.
L. Arts
L. Arts
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Bus. Ad .
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.

School
St. Mary's HS
Stuyvesant HS
North Syracuse
East Deer-Frazer
Griffiths I nst.
Johnson City
Union-Endicott
Tallmadge HS
lllion HS
Kenmore West
Aurora HS
Sharpsville HS
Mt. Carmel HS
Bishop Duffy HS
Jamesville,-Dewitt
St. Clement HS
Kenmore East
Mayfield HS
Jamestown HS
Depew HS
East Aurora
Elk County
New Rochelle
Canandaigua HS
Cardinal Mooney
Greece-Arcadia
Canisius HS
Riverside HS
Wheatfield
Cath. Central
St. Clement
Johnson City
Emerson Vocation
Bennett HS
South Park HS
Grand Island
New York Mills
Cheshire Academy
Silver Creek
Mannheim HS
Penn Hills
East Jefferson
Emerson Vocation
Buchetel HS
Elyria HS
Binghamton Catholic
Portage Area
Williamsville HS
Catholic Central
Bishop McCort
Coshocton HS
Ithaca HS
Indiana HS
Irondequoit HS
St. Joseph HS
New York Mills
Bethlehem Central
LaSalle HS
Humberside Coli.
St. Clement HS
Rome Free Academy
St. Mary's HS
St. Joseph HS
Moriah Central
Carthage HS
Ridgeway HS
Aliquippa HS
Bennett HS
Albany HS
Homer HS
St. Clement HS
Jackson HS
Peru HS
Calvert HS
St. Clement HS
Cardinal O'Hara

j

' \,:y.
...

~ ~
ll.::-"''

r

:\

~·

~-~'!1\''•

le:~~ ~)

Hometown
Cortland, N.Y.
Elmhurst, N.Y.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Colden, N.Y.
Johnson City, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Tallmadge, Ohio
lllion, N . Y.
Kenmore, N. '(.
Aurora, Ohio
Sharpsville, Pa.
Auburn, N.Y .
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Dewitt, N . Y .
Centerline, Mich.
Tonawanda, N . Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Jamestown, N . Y .
Depew, N.Y.
East Aurora, N.Y .
Ridgway, Pa.
New Rochelle, N.Y.
Canandaigua, N.Y .
Rochester, N.Y .
Rochester, N.Y .
Buffalo, N. Y .
Buffalo, N.Y .
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Binghamton, N . Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Johnson City, N. Y.
Buffalo, N . Y.
Buffalo, N . Y.
Buffalo, N. Y .
Grand Island, N . Y.
New York Mills, N.Y .
New City, N. Y .
Irving, N.Y .
Ft. Hood, Texas
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Birmingham, Mich.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Akron, Ohio
Elyria, Ohio
Johnson City, N.Y.
Portage, Pa.
Williamsville, N.Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Johnstown, Pa.
Coshocton, Ohio
Ithaca, N.Y.
Indiana, N.Y .
Rochester, N . Y .
Willowick, Ohio
Yorkville, N.Y .
Delmar, N . Y.
Niagara Falls, N . Y.
Toronto, Ont.
Centerline, Mich.
Rome, N.Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Wickliffe, Ohio
Witherbee, N.Y .
Carthage, N. Y .
Ridgeway, Ont.
Alquippa, Pa.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Albany, N . Y .
Cortland, N . Y .
Centerline, Mich.
North Canton, Ohio
Peru, N.Y .
Tiffin, Ohio
Centerline, Mich.
Tonawanda, N . Y.

N.Y.

thirteen

�Wouldn't an ice cold Coke
taste good right now?

�85
71
61
58
73
74
80
15
49
39
35

Offense
JOE HUDSON .......... TE
BILL WINNETT ......... LT
JERRY ELWELL ......... LG
CHUCK DONN OR (CC) .... C
TOM CENTOFANTI ..... RG
JOHN RIO ..... .. ..... RT
JOE MORESCO ......... SE
KIRK BARTON . . . ...... QB
JOHN FALLER .. .. ...... LH
DOUG KOZEL . . ... ... . RH
JOE ZELMANSKI ....... FB

75
73
51
74
63
44
64
46
42
33
35

Defense
JOE CERVINI .......... LE
FRED CUMMINS .. . . . . .. LT
RICK WELLS .......... MG
ERNIE MESSMER ...... . RT
BILL BRANNAN .. ...... RE
PAT HURLEY . .. .. . .... LB
JOHN BABINECZ ....... LB
KEVIN REILLY . ... ...... LB
TOM MILLER ........... LH
BOB MILANESE ... ..... RH
DINO FOLINO .......... S

VILLANOVA

BUFFALO
90
79
67
96
36
32
53
92
42
47
19

Defense
PRENTIS HENLEY (CC) .... LE
BARRY ATKINSON ...... LT
CHAS. FORNESS ...... .. RT
TOM VIGNEAU .. .. .. . .. RE
BRUCE FRASER ....... LOB
LARRY MADDEN .. ..... LIB
DAVE MAJCHER ....... RIB
TED BUTLER .......... ROB
LEN NIXON ... .... .. .. LH
MARK MacVITTlE ....... RH
TOM OSIKA ...•........ S

88
76
67
50
61
77
86
15
14
30
12

WILDCAT SQUAD

THE BULLS SQUAD

1

52 Huff, C
3 Armon, KSP
53 Majcher, ILB
11 Perry, QB
54 Conaway, OLB
12 Nichols, HB
55 Siedlecki, OLB
14 Baker, FB
57 Johnson, C
15 Barton, QB
58 Donnor, C (CC))
16 Goniwiecha, S
60 Chamberlain, G
17 Boughton, DB
61 Elwell, G
18 Philp, QB
62 Bauch, G
19 Osika, 5-P
64 Carbonaro, T
20 Nance, HB
65 Gasper, T
21 Woodward, HB
66 R. Jones, DT
22 Layo, HB
67 Forness, DT
23 Harrison, DB
68 Albaneze, G
24 Zalar, DB
69 Ziegler, G
25 Savickas, HB
70 Rakowski, DT
26 Jackson, HB
71 Winnett, T
27 Filipowicz, TE
73 Centofanti, G
29 Stiscak, HB
74 Rio, T
30 Homo, ILB
76 Adessa, T
32 Madden, ILB
78 Ellenbogen, DT
33 Smith, ILB
79 Atkinson, DT
34 Tober, FB
80 Moresco, SE
35 Zelmanski, FB
81 Domino, SE
36 Fraser, OLB
37 McCullough, ILB 85 Hudson, TE
86 Bouck, TE
38 Chapp, ILB
87
Herlan, SE
39 Kozel, HB
88 Eagen, T
40 Elliott, S
41 Constantino, KSP 89 Sharrow, SE
90 Henley, DE (CC)
42 Nixon, DB
91 Vandenbergh, DE
43 Griffiths, G
92 Butler, OLB
44 Constable, ILB
93 Van-Dusen, DE
46 Hannah,DB
95 James, DE
47 MacVittie, DB
96 Vigneau, DE
48 C. Jones, S
97 Potyok, DE
49 Faller, HB
99 Pescrillo, DT
50 Bancroft, OLB
51 Brown, OLB

Offense
MIKE SIAN I ...... .. ... SE
JIM JOHNSON ........ . LT
PAUL ZANGRILLI . . . . . . . LG
JOHN ELASH ..... . . . . .. C
BILL TURCHETT A .. ... .. RG
JACK KASPER ... ..... . RT
DENNIS STUFFLET .... ... TE
DARYL WOODRING .... QB
JOE BELASCO ......... LH
DUANE HOLLAND . ..... RH
RICK REIPRISH ......... FL

10
11
12
14
15
21
22
24
26
30
31
33
34
35

40
41
42

44
46

50
51
52
53
56
60

Gordon, QB
Sunday, QB
Reiprish, SE
Belasco, HB
Woodring, QB
McManus, LB
Solomon, LB
Dobbins, S
O'Neil, DB
Holland, FB
Kirkland, FB
Milanese, DB
Matika, DB
Folino, S
Heim, HB
Selitto, DB
Miller, T., DB
Hurley, LB
Reilly, LB
Elash, C
Wells, LB
Sforza, LB
Mistelske, LB
Byrom, C
Sremenak, G

61 Turchetta, G
62 Santoro, T
63 Brannan, DE
64 Babinecz, LB
65 O'Laughlin, T
66 Bennett,LB
67 Zangrilli, G
68 Berrong, P., LB
70 Moore, DT
71 Berrong, M., DE-K
72 Seeley, T
73 Cummins, DT
7 4 Messmer, DT
75 Cervini, DE
76 Johnson, T
77 Kaspar, T
78 McDonnell, DT
80 Bilko, FL
81 Mingey, DE
83 Michaels, DE
84 Miller, M., SE
86 Stufflet, TE
88 Siani, FL
89 Schwartz, TE

FINAL HOME GAME
Holy Cross- ABC-TV
October 31 - 1:30 P.M.

" COCA-COLA" AND " COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS OF THE COCA- COLA COMPANY.

's

e ea

•

�~
.

No.

64
14
66
71
68
80
63
56
75
73
24
50
35
10
40
30
44
76
77
(31)
31
34
78
21
74
83
33
84
42
81
53
70
65
26
46
12
62
89
72
41
52
88
22
60
86
11
61
51
15
67

Name
Babinecz, John
Belasco, Joe
Bennett, Tom
Berrang, Mike
Berrang, Pat
Bilko, Steve
Brannan, Bill
Byrom, Ken
Cervini, Joe
Cummins, Fred
Dobbins, Kevin
Elash, John
Folino, Dino
Gordon, Drew
Heim, John
Holland, Duane
Hurley, Pat
Johnson, Jim
Kaspar, Jack
Kerins, Mickey
Kirkland, Mark
Matika, Mark
McDonnell, Pat
McManus, Bill
Messmer, Ernie
Michales, Ray
Milanese, Bob
Miller, Mark
Miller, Tom
Mingey, Bill
Mistelske, John
Moore, Jim
O'Loughlin, Pat
O'Neil, Dan
Reilly, Kevi n
Reiprish, Rick
Santoro, Joe
Schwartz, Don
Seeley, Frank
Sel itto, Pau I
Sforza, Ed
Siani, Mike
Solomon, Luke
Sremenak, Nick
Stufflet, Dennis
Sunday, Mike
Turchetta, Bill
Wells, Rick
Woodring, Daryl
Zangrilli, Paul

1970 Villanova Football Roster
Pas.
LB
HB
LB
K-DE
LB
FL
DE

c

DE
DT

s
c
s

OB
HB
HB
LB

T"
T
FB
FB
DB
DT
LB
DT
DE
DB
SE
DB
DE
LB
DT
T
DB
LB
SE
T
TE
T
DB
LB
FL
HB
G
TE
QB
G
LB
QB
G

Cl.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
· So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.

Age

Ht.

Wt.

20
21
20
20
19
19
22
19
21
20
19
20
21
20
19
22
21
20
20
22
21
19
19
19
20
21
20
20
19
20
19
19
21
20
19
20
21
22
19
19
19
20
20
19
19
19
20
21
20
20

6-2
5-9
5-11
6-2
6-1
6-3
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-3
5-11
6-0
5-9
5-9
6-0
5-8
6-0
6-2
6-2
5-9
5-10
5-11
6-4
6-1
6-3
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-3
6-2
5-11
6-3
6-3
5-11
6-3
6-3
5-10
6-2
6-3
5-9
6-2
6-4
6-0
6-0
5-9
6-1
6-0

213
193
215
210
210
190
220
212
218
255
170
215
160
160
200
198
210
215
235
198
180
185
257
200
220
185
182
170
170
195
205
225
220
180
203
190
220
193
230
170
198
190
185
215
195
190
215
200
190
206

School
Central Catholic
Henry Snyder
Catholic HS
Good Counsel
Good Counsel
Nanticoke HS
Memorial HS
Sto-Rox HS
Xavier HS
Cambridge HS
Cardinal Spellman
Central Catholic
Central Catholic
Bishop McDevitt
Cardinal Spellman
Conestoga HS
Archmere Academy
Lewiston HS
Marist HS
Bishop Duffy
Cathedral HS
Ambridge HS
St. Thomas Moore
Father Judge
East Meadow
Portage HS
Hillsdale HS
Central Catholic
Central Cat hoi ic
Msgr. Bonner
North Catholic
St. Joseph's
Bishop Duffy
Warren HS
Salesianum
Lourdes HS
Bishop Kenrick
Central Catholic
Bishop Neumann
Morris Catholic
lona Prep
New Dorp HS
Penn Hills
Johnstown HS
Gov. Mifflin
DeLone HS
Altoona Area
Marietta HS
Easton HS
Central Cat hoi ic

~
Hometown
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Jersey City, N.J.
Lancaster, Pa.
Silver Spring, Md.
Silver Spring, Md.
Nanticoke, Pa.
Cedar Grove, N.J.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
New York City
Cambridge, Ohio
New York City
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
New York City
Devon, Pa.
Wilmington, Del.
Media, Pa.
Bayonne, N . J.
Niagara Falls, N . Y .
Erie, Pa.
Ambridge, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Philadelph ia, Pa.
East Meadow, N.Y.
Portage, Pa.
Hillsdale, N.J.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Wickliffe, Ohio
Niagara Falls, N. Y .
Warren, Pa.
New Castle, Del.
Shamokin, Pa.
Norristown, Pa.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Morris Plains, N.J.
New Rochelle, N.Y.
Staten Island, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Johnstown, Pa.
Schillington, Pa.
McSherrystown, Pa.
Altoona, Pa.
Marietta, Ohio
Easton, Pa.
Pittsburgh, Pa.

ABOUT VILLANOVA
GENERAL INFORMATION

t.ocation ... . . - ................ Villanova, Pa.

Athletic Director ............ Arthur L. Mahan, '36

............................. 1842

Athletic Secretary . ... . . .. ...... Robert M. Whelan

Denomination ....... ...... .. Roman Catholic

Sports Information Director .. . Hugh F. Ortman, '69

President . . ... ... Rev. Robert J. Welsh, O.S.A.

Ticket Manager ... . .......... James M. Moran, '58

Enrollment . .... .. ... .4,600 Men, 700 Women

Team Physician ............. Jeremiah F. Lee, M.D.

Colors . . .. . . . .. ... ...... .... Blue and White

Trainer . . ...... . . ... .. .......... . ... Jake Nevin

Stadium ... . ... . ... .... ... Villanova 113.400)

Equipment Manager ...... ..... .. . Charley Farnan

Founded

sixteen

�BOOSTING THE BULLS
Program
Patrons

For the past 54 years as the University has expanded and altered its structure, so
has the U /B Marching Band, "The Pride of the East." During the last two decades the
Band's spirit and overall musicianship has added a popular flare to various athletic
events, home and away.
Frank J. Cipolla (Eastman School of Music) will direct his eighth band at U /B this
year. Cipolla came to Buffalo following a brass and band instructorship at the University of Missouri.
The instrumental unit on the field consists of approximately 200 members, including
drum majors, majorettes and a flag corps. After the final football game members audition for selection to the Concert Band and University Band. From the main organization
various pep bands are formed, also.
The Band makes national concert appearances and has performed in Carnegie Hall.
In 1968 the Band represented New York State in President Nixon's Inaugural Parade.

1970 VARSITY CHEERLEADERS

Sue Pierotti
Senior
Williamsville, N.Y.

jan Anderson
Junior
Corry, Pa.

Capt. Alice Cypin
junior
levittown, N.Y.

Beth Hurwitt
junior
Plainview, N.Y.

Charlene Gmerek
Sophomore
Cheektowaga, N.Y.

Kathy Mclane
junior
Lowville, N.Y.

Karen Schuler
Senior
Williamsville, N.Y.

Wendy Ambrico
Sophomore
Far Rockaway, N.Y.

Dr. Charles Banas
Dennis J. Brinkworth Jr.
John Carter
Kevin Carriero
Edward Dzielski Inc.
Jim DeSantis
James P. Donnelly
Chas. Diefendorf
Steve Frey
Paul A. Foley
Howard Flaster
Dr. Edmond Gicewicz
Dr. Allan V. Gibbons
Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne
Chester P. Glor Jr., D.D.S.
George L. Grobe Jr.
Sheldon Hurwitz
Houdaille Industries Inc.
Irvin V. Iversen
Dr. Russell Kidder Jr.
Edward W. Kinney
Seymour Knox
Leo H. Less &amp; Associates
State Mutual of America
Robert Lipp
Dr. Harold F. Meese
Massachusetts Mutual Life
Ins. Co.
Dr. Robert F. Milks
Palace Theatre
Dr. William R. Root
Howard A. Potter, Inc.
Dr. Gertrude Swartout
Leonard Swagler
Dr. Vincert Scamurra
Harlan Swift
Stewart &amp; Bensen Travel Ser.
Turley, Stievater, Walker
&amp; Mauri
University Manor Motel
William G. Willis
Dr. Reinhardt W. Wende
Dr. Frederick B. Wilkes
Manuel S. Wortzman
Don Kroeger - Londes Press
Bud Boughton

seventeen

�CHEERS for the largest selection of quality paperback
and hard cover books in Western New York.
CHEERS for a complete array of sweatshirts, ceramics,
cards to send home to mother (some not to
send home to mother), stuffed animals and
campus necessities.
CHEERS for an exciting collection of glassware bearing
the grand old UB emblem (a collector's item).

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

'
eighteen

'

�The Buffalo Coaching Staff

ROBERT C. DEMING
Head Coach

Bob Deming officially assumed the football fortunes
at Buffalo February 15, 1969 as the University's 15th head
coach, immediately following the resignation of Doc Urich
(now head coach at Northern Illinois and a November 21
Bull opponent). He had been on the UB gridiron scene
since 1959, thus he was no stranger to the key campus
assignment.
Deming's first band of Bulls played 6-3-0 last fall
(Holy Cross cancelled) and ran ninth in the annual Lambert Trophy race. His chief aim is to enter Buffalo in the
East's Top Five to battle Penn State, Syracuse, Pittsburgh
and Boston College for the coveted crown.
A 1957 graduate of Colgate, where he received a B.A.
in natural sciences, Bob played three years at fullback for
the Red Raiders. Upon graduation he went with Head
Coach Hal Lahar to Houston and coached in the Cougar
program through 1958. After a tour in the Air Force
Reserve he joined the Houston staff again until accepting
an assistantship under Dick Offenhamer at Buffalo.
Deming tutored both offensive and defensive backs in
1959-60. From 1961-65 he handled defensive backs under
Offie and retained the same position under Urich.
Not a superstitious mentor, he was born on Friday
the 13th, 1935, in Ilion, N. Y. Bob opened his head coaching career on his birthday at Ball State last fall.
An accomplished outdoorsman, hunter and fisherman,
he enjoys antiques and wood refinishing with wife Jean
(University of Rochester). Prior to starting their family,
which now includes Laura, 4, and Leslie Ann, 2, Jean was
a hostess with American Airlines. Deming family headquarters is in suburban Eggertsville.
In association with his head coaching position through
1969-70, Deming also served as acting director of athletics.
He originated the Buffalo Football Camp for high school
players (held on campus this season from August 2-7) and
made numerous area and regional appearances on behalf
of the athletic program at the University.
Deming's main forte is his ability to communicate in
modern education. His liaison with players, students, faculty, alumni, the press and the community is exemplary.

1970 BUFFALO VARSITY COACHING STAFF (1-r) Front: Bob Deming (Colgate '57), head coach; Bill Dando (Detroit
'59) linebackers· Jim McNally (Buffalo '66), offensive line; and Rick Lantz (Central Connecticut '63), secondary. Backwe;ner Kleema~ (Springfield '63), defensive front four; Russ MacKellar (Buffalo '67), assistant offensive line; Vin
Keough (Ithaca '67}, head freshman coach; Joe Griffith (Miami, 0. '61), receivers; and Terry Ransbury (Brockport St.
'51), offensive backs.

nineteen

�ROBERT

c.~
TROPHIES
811gravm ill .Metal or Plastk
• GAVELS • PEWTERWARE
• PLAQUES • SILVERWARE

508 WASHINGTON ST.
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14203

Call 853-6860

**
-tc

Northtowr'l "ozo
Southgate ltloza
Tr•n"town PI•••

134-3331
674~110
632-5626

01&gt;en ' til 9 Nightly!

The Souncl System for tocloy's game
is pro vi clecl by .•

goBULLS1n
go ...•..

LARKIN SOUND SERVICE

Everything goes great on

KAUFMAN'S
Kaujinan's famous rye bread
-and delicious specialty loaves
make ellery sandwich andetwry
meal a feast.
Buy 'em at your famrite food store.

K~m!~!!~~~uff,lo,
bl'vep

a lot to liVe
Pepsi's got
a lotto give

PUBLIC ADDRESS - INTERCOM
and PHONE SYSTEMS

977 Niagara Street
NY.

Buffalo, New York

~
PEPSI

'IIIIIIP

GOOD LUCK U. B. BULLS
Rudy Bersani -

U. B. 1967

lunch, dinner or late supper,- eat like a
Roman Emperor on centurion's pay
In the North Wini of the MAPLE .LEAF MOTOR LODGE
~

·•

twenty

1620 Niagara Falls Blvd.

83 5-2610

1 Mole. North
of Sherodon Dr.
Ample Parking for Your Chariot

DAIRY PRODUCTS
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14209

•

AC 716-883-4080

�BUFFALO SENIORS

CAPTAIN
CHUCK DONNOR
58 Physical Education C
East Aurora, N.Y.

DENNY ALBANEZE
68
Liberal Arts
G
Elmhurst, N. Y.

BARRY ATKINSON
79
Physical Ed.
DT
Tarentum, Pa.

MIKE CONSTANTINO
41
Pharmacy
KSP
Jamestown, N. Y.

40

TOM ELLIOTT
Business Adm.
S
Canandaigua, N. Y.

SCOTT HERLAN
Liberal Arts
SE
Grand Island, N. Y.

85

JOE HUDSON
Philosophy
TE
New City, N. Y.

87

TOM CENT OF ANTI
73 Physical Education G
Niagara Falls, N. Y.

38

GARY CHAPP
Physical Ed.
LB
Center Line, Mich.

JERRY ELWELL
Anthropology
G
Rochester, N.Y.

49

Physical Ed.
HB
Rochester, N. Y.

MIKE JAMES
95 Political Science DE
Pittsburgh, Pa.

66

ROVELL JONES
Psychology
DT
Akron, Ohio

61

twenty-one

�853-7266

OPEN EVERY EVENING EXCEPT WEDNESDAY

FRANK O'CONNOR

FRED RONEKER'S

ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT

School and Team Outfitters

UNIVERSITY SHOP

See: AI Henningham (Sales Manager)

5548 MAIN ST., WILLIAMSVILLE
632-7833

499 Washington Street
Men's and Boy's Wear of Distinction

Buffalo, New York 14203
FOOTBALL HEADQUARTERS

Locksmiths - Safe Experts

IDqr 1£nrb l\mqrrst
MOTOR MOTEL
5000 MAIN ST.

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14226

852-2769
853-2737

The Safe, Lock &amp; Key Corp.
"Call us to discuss any lock problem"

Exit 50, Main St. West. N. Y. Thruway

204 PEARL STREET, BUFFALO, N. Y.

14202

Phone 716-839-2200
SALES- INSTALLATION - REPAIR
Air and Saund Conditioned Rooms, T.V., Radio, Dining Room
Coffee Shop, Cocktail lounge, Banquet Rooms

Safes, locks, l&lt;eys, Door Closers

Member Quality Motels, Inc. - AAA Rated Excellent

Distributors - Consultants

GOOD LUCK -

EATON OFFICE SUPPLY CO., INC.

U. B. BULLS

"for Office Needs -

Eaton Leads"

NEWMAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION
OFFICE SUPPLIES
OFFICE FURNITURE

- open to U. B. students
- located at 15 University Avenue
(cor. Main St. &amp; Niagara Falls Blvd.)
- Phone 834-2297

Father Ed Fisher, Moderator

Diocese of Buffalo

BUSINESS FORMS
PRINTING

EATON INTERIORS
for complete layout and design service
1155 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

PHONE: 837-6800

To Games; on Ski Weekends; on Tours;
Everybody Goes First Class in the
Area's Largest Charter Bus Fleet
ASK

U:&gt; ABOUT

CLASS, CLUB or
GROUP CHARTERS
F'or

Tr·ip~

\\ith

to

.\ny\\ h£-rP

"THE OFFICIAL EQUIPMENT
RECONDITIONERS FOR THE BUFFALO BULLS"

MARBA INC.
Reconditioners of Athletic Equipment

All &lt;'onv4 niC'nc~s

Phorw

BUFFALO 852-4900

BLUE BIRD COACH LINES, INC.

twenty-two

1200 Niagara Street

•

Buffalo, N. Y. 14213

882-9330

�BUFFALO SENIORS

CAPTAIN
PRENTIS HENLEY
90
Physical Ed.
DE
Buffalo, N. Y.

ED KERSHAW
59 Political Science LB
Elyria, Ohio

74

96

JOHN RIO
History
Byrnedale, Pa.

T

TOM VIGNEAU
Physical Ed.
DE
Center Line, Mich.

STEVE McCULLOUGH
37
Liberal Arts
LB
Coshocton, Ohio

80

JOE MORESCO
Economics
SE
Ithaca, N. Y.

42

LEN NIXON
Physical Ed.
DB
Willowick, Ohio

ED PERRY
Physical Ed.
Delmar, N. Y.

QB

89

MIKE SHARROW
Physical Ed.
SE
Witherbee, N. Y.

29

BOB STISCAK
Business
HB
Aliquippa, Pa.

BARNEY WOODWARD
21
Physical Ed.
HB
Peru, N.Y.

24

KARL ZALAR
Physical Ed.
DB
Tiffin, Ohio

35

JOE ZELMANSKI
Physical Ed.
FB
Center Line, Mich.

11

twenty-three

�more
excitin •I

GOHR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY INC.
80 METCALFE STREET, BUFFALO, NEW YORK
853-2121

twenty-four

�VILLANOVA
"WILDCATS"

JOHN BABINECZ
64
Sociology
LB
Pittsburgh, Pa.

JOE BELASCO
14
Accounting
HB
Jersey City, N.J.

75

JOE CERVINI
Business Adm. DE
Woodside, N.Y.

73

FRED CUMMINS
Education
DT
Cambridge, Ohio

35

DREW GORDON
Sociology
QB
10
Philadelphia, Pa.

40

JOHN HElM
Education
Bronx, N.Y.

77

JACK KASPAR
Economics
DT
Bayonne, N.J.

MARK KIRKLAND
31 Business Adm. FB
Erie, Pa.

33

BILL MINGEY
81 Business Adm. DE
Philadelphia, Pa.

62

JOE SANTORO
Education
Norris town, Pa.

HB

T

BILL TURCHETTA
61
History
G
Altoona, Pa.

51

RICK WELLS
Accounting
LB
Marietta, Ohio

DINO FOLINO
Education
Pittsburgh, Pa.

~

BOB MILANESE
Business Adm. DB
Hillside, N. J.

DARYL WOODRING
15
Mathematics
QB
Easton, Pa.

twentv-t1ve

�Wildcat Coaches

1970 VU STAFF (1-r) : Jack Bushofsky, offensive line; Bob Capone, linebackers; John Stopper, receivers; Lou Ferry, head
coach; Fred O'Connor, offensive backs; Jack Gottshalk, head freshman coach; and Dan Laughlin, defensive backs.

twenty-six

�LINESMAN

TODA"l··s ,
· OFFICIALS

J AMES D. TROVATO-Graduate of Duquesne
and a resident of Pittsburgh. He is the superintendent of schools in East Pittsburgh. Holds
a master's degree from Pitt and is a Ph.D candidate. lettered two years in football at
Duquesne.

CLOCK OPERATOR: Harry J. Kelly, Jr. (Georgetown)
PUBLIC ADDRESS: James R. DeSantis (Canisius)
SCOREBOARD: Raymond W. Reinig

REFEREE
ROBERT L. BERTHA-Veteran collegiate official.
Salesman with the America;, Bakeries Company
of Pittsburgh, Po. U.S. Marine Corps veteran
with service in the South Pacific and China.
Director of West Pennsylvania Basketball Offi.
cials Association.

BACK JUDGE

UMPIRE
lAWRENCE R. ElliS, JR.-Captain of the 1947
Syracuse varsity football team and received the
Bill HORR TROPHY for most valuable player
award the same season. later played professionally with the Detroit lions. Resides in Auburn, N. Y., and is treasurer of the Scott and
Davis Motor Express, Inc.

FIELD JUDGE
ROBERT E. DUFF-Resides in Ben Avon Heights
in Pittsburgh. Vice-president of an insurance
agency. Graduate of Thiel College. Captain
of Thiel's varsity basketball team for three
seasons. lettered three years in tennis.

JAMES R. SHEEHAN-Associated with Eastman
Kodak Company in Rochester. Serves as a subcontract representative. Graduate of Clarkson
College where he participated in many sports,
including varsity basketball. Army servi&lt;.,
from 1956-57.

Active in Kiwanis

and American legion. In World War II he
served for three years in the United States Air
Farce.

THE BULLS SALUTE

Distance Runner-Ed Fuchs

SENIOR ED FUCHS
Distance Runner

by Steve Lipman '72
To Ed Fuchs, Buffalo's premier long distance
runner, every loss "is a disappointment." He
hasn't had many disappointments. 1n his three
years of cross-country competition, Fuchs, 5-6,
121 has won more than 70 '/&lt; of his meets, including eight of eleven last year, as well as the 1969
New York State Cross-Country Championship. All
eight of Fuch's wins last year were course records.
Fuchs, who graduated from St. Mary's H.S.
in Lancaster, N. Y., figures he's run at least six,
or seven thousand miles, practices included, in his
career. At St. Mary's he wrestled, as well as ran
track and cross-country, which he continued in
college. A "B" student in economics, Fuchs hopes
to attend grad school.
Sports runs in his family, or rather, his family runs in sports; younger brother John is a letter-winner here in track and cross-country, and
even younger brother, Jim, runs for St. Mary's.
Track-Cross Country coach Emery Fisher
calls Fuchs "a very dedicated runner. You have to
suffer a little in this sport; Eddie is what he has
made himself."

twenty-seven

�1970 Buffalo Composite Schedule
Sept. 12

BAll STATE

TOlEDO

Sept . 19

Oct . 10

Oct . 17

Oct. U

Oct.Jl

Nov . 7

Nov . l.t

AkiON
LOST
31-0

INDIANA ST .

EVANSVILLE

NO . IlliNOIS

MIDDLE TENN

SO.ILLINOIS

EAST MICHIGAN

at
Terre Houle

. at
Muncie

at
Muncie

at
Murfreesboro

at
Muncie

at
Ypsilanti

MIAMI, O .

U-7

13-12

E. CAIOLINA

BUffALO
WON

MAISH ALL

BOWliNG GREE

WEST MICHIGAN

KENT STATE

NO . ILLINOIS

DAYTON

COlORADO ST.

WON

at

at

at

52-3

42-7

Toledo

at
Kolamotoo

at

27-6

Kent

Toledo

Toledo

at
Dayton

Toledo

BUffALO
WON

I'ITTSIUIGH
LOST

WON
35-2

LOST

OHIO UNIV
LOST

IUTLEI
WON

26-13

OHIO UHIV .

WON

27-71

27-6

WON

DAITMOUTH
LOST

IUFFALO
LOST

21-0

27-0

16-13

MAIYLAND
WON
21-3

BOSTON COLL
LOST
2B-21

SANTA CLAIA
WON
37-13

OELAWAIE
WON

XAVIEI
WON

CINCINNATI
LOST
13-7

jaoWLING GIEEN
TIED

LOUISVILLE
WON
28-11

VIIOINIA
LOST

ALABAMA
LOST

1·0

51 -11

MEMf&gt;HIS ST .
LOST
21-20

MAINE

MASSA CHUSETTS

~.5-22

·~ - 1~

3~-31

·--·
V PI

HOLY CROSS

AIMY
LOST
26-0

Vl\LAHO\"A
WON
21-21

BOSTON COll

TEMPLE

NO . ILLINOIS

No¥ . 21

E. ICENTUCU

U-14

DA YT ON

Oct . J

BUffALO
WON

KENT STATE

VIl lAN OVA

Sept . 26

S. CAIOLINA
LOST
2~-7

TEMPLE
LOST
23-13

DAITMOUTH
LOST
50-14

NAVY
WON

VA MILITAIY
WON
"·3

28-1~

AliiOH
LOST
21-0

BUCKNELL
WON
10-3

HOLY ClOSS
WON
23-13

SAN DIEGO $1
LOST
3.5-l

MONlANA
LOST
3:)-6

XAVIER
WON
1B-O

BOSTON UN IV .
WON
10-7
MIAMI (0 . )
LOST
~B-0

Nov . 26 - V'•llonovo vs. Temple ot Ph•lodelphto

WEST MICHIGAN BOWliNG GREE

TOlEDO .

at
Kent

at
Bowling Green

at
Kent

BOSTON UNIV .

RHODE ISLAND

CONNECTICUT

LOUISVILLE
at

at

MARSHAll

MIAMI )O .J

XAVIER

at
Huntington

at

lout~ville

Oxford

at
Kent

VERMONT

BOSTON COll .

HOLY CROSS

NEW HAMPSHIRE

at

at

at

at

at

at

at

Boston

King1ton

Amherst

Burlington

Worce1fer

Amhent

Amherst

HOlY CROSS

XAVIER

NAVY

WEST CHESTER

BUFFALO

VA . TECH

at

at

at

at

at

at

Buffalo

Villanova

Villanova

Block1burg

Annopoli1

Villanova

AKRON

NO . IlliNOIS

MIAMI JO .J

TOlEDO

OHIO UN IV .

BUFFALO

at

at

at

at

at

at

Athens

Dayton

Akron

DeKolb

Oxford

Dayton

BUFFAlO

WM_ &amp; MARY

VIllANOVA

FlORIDA ST.

WAKE FOREST

TULSA

VA . MiliTARY

at

at

at

at

at

at

Blocksburg

at

w,nston- Solem

Blocksburg

Williamsburg

Blocksburg

Tollohouee

Roanoke

COlGATE

BOSTON UN IV .

VILLANOVA

BUFFALO

MASSACHUSETT

RUTGERS

CONNECTIC4T

at

ao

at

at

at

at

at

Worcester

Boston

Villanova

Buffalo

Worcester

N Brunsw•ck

Worcester

BUFFAlO

PITTSBURGH

MASSACHUSETT~

PENN STATE

AIR FORCE

at

at
A~t

Chestnut Hill
CONNECTICUT

force

XAVIER

ARMY
at

at

at

at

Che1tnut Hill

Chestnut Hill

Pittsburgh

Amhe~st

DELAWARE

RHODE ISlAND

BUFFAlO

at

at

at

at

at

Philadelphia

Cincinnati

Philadelphia

Philadelphia

Philadelphia

DAYTON

TOlEDO

WEST MICHIGAN

W. TEXAS ST.

BAll STATE

BUFFAlO

at

at

at

at

at

at

DeKolb

Muncie

DeKolb

Toledo

Kolomoroo

DeKolb

Nov 28- Holy Cron vs. Boston College at Chestnut Htll

Editor's Bull Pen
It's All in the Game
The firiished product is on display 11 Saturdays this
fall, but there is so much more than meets the educated
football eye. The weekend build up, home or away, requires
plenty of gusto and a good supply of cool. Let's examine
some of the supporting cast.
Linda Martz (DSI secretary) needs four more sideline
passes.
Rudy Zorich (equipment assistant) can't locate two
missing travel bags.
Red Dash (field maintenance) has to re-wire two field
phones.
Chris Kabel (business assistant) needs 40 additional
spots for four Cub Scout dens.
Tom White (game films) should order two more rolls
of Speed-X color to cover the entire halftime.
Al Aversano (statistics) has to remember carbon
paper for extra copies of final team stats on Western
Union.
Dan Daniels (business manager) must clear both
varsity and freshman game official's checks.
Jim DeSantis (public address) will talk with Villanova
Friday night at the motel for pronunciations.
Art Westphall (ticket manager) is on his way with
extra tickets for the Roger Lewis Shop and Fred Roneker's.
Scott Slesinger (DSI student assistant) can't raise
anyone at the TIMES sports desk.
Scott Savickas (artist) spelled Deming with two m's in
haste.
Jerry Singer (printer) had a press breakdown yesterday. Speed charts will be late.
Freshman Cheerleaders showed up too late last week.
Virginia Spicer (secretary) did double typing duty
while Millie Locher (secretary) improves during her second session in the hospital.
twenty-e ight

Jim Simon (trainer) will contact Dr. Gicewicz before
the swim team arrives for physicals.
AI Wright (senior manager) fixed the blocking dummy
yesterday.
Danny Earl (assistant trainer) will be in to tape right
after class.
Dennis Kasprzak (freshman manager) found the lost
travel bags.
Harry Fritz (director) will meet the flight and welcome the Wildcats.
Stan Barron (play-by-play) will handle the broadcast
with Dick Rifenburg, while Van Miller video tapes "It's
Academic."
Major Bob Garwood (ROTC) should be able to get the
color guard back from the Falls on time.
Alice Cypin (cheerleader captain) thought the response
last week for the UMass game was the best this fall.
Ray Becker (food service) will never be able to match
that beef on wick last week.
AND, does Larkin Sound know we need a field mike I
can the band add another two-minute piece of music I are
the programs ready for the president's box I will the
souvenir vendor have enough VU banners I who sent
Johnston and Powell parking passes I who checked the
visitor's number changes?
Deming can't play out back with Laura and Leslie
Ann, and Ransbury, McNally, Dando, Lantz, Griffith and
Kleeman race to beat the boss back to the office. Keough,
Wells, Grubbs, Wright and MacKellar are having a separate freshman meeting.
Seventy-six ballplayers stay on a study schedule and
some take in the second half of the Lions-Bears TV game.
Now, it's time to play. Good luck to both teams!

�FEATURING THE LARGEST SELECTION
of IMPORTED and DOMESTIC WINES!

�Vega 2300 is here at last.
We'd have brought it out sooner, but
you know how it is. We've got a lot riding on
this little car and we wanted it to be right,
really right, before turning it over to you.
Now we're ready.
And you were wise to wait.

Because now you can buy what we at
Chevrolet have come to modestly believe is
the best little car in the world.
We don't expect this ad to convince you.
We expect the car to, though.
Vega. The little car that does everything
well. Look into it.

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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        <element elementId="7">
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            <elementText elementTextId="1496320">
              <text>Programs</text>
            </elementText>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496294">
                <text>1970-10-10 Buffalo vs. Villanova</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496297">
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496298">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496299">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496300">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Archival resources.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496301">
                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
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                <text>Rotary Field - 1:30 pm - 50¢</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496303">
                <text> October 10, 1970</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University of Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496305">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496306">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496307">
                <text>1970-10-10</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496308">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496310">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496311">
                <text>en</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text> Image</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496316">
                <text>2018-06-05</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496319">
                <text>32 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1927287">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;. If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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                    <text>BUFFALO
MASSACHUSETTS /
OCTOBER 3, 1970

�Eastem Airlines is a billion dollars wotth of aircrdft.
one of the most sophisticated maintenance system~ in the
world, the largest real-time airline reservations computer
in existence, 1400 take-oft\ and landings every day;
acres of terminals, hang~. warehouses and buildings:
32,000 of the most dedicated people in aviation,

and one dream:
make flying a~ natuml for you
as it is for him.

e

EASTERN The Wings of Man.

��TODAV'S GAME
WELCOME ALTJMNI! We trust that
you are enjoying the weekend's activities.
This is the ninth annual Homecoming for
SUNY at Buffalo, New York State's
largest center of higher education.

~69

Buffalo Football News ]
BUFFALO VS. MASSACHUSETTS
Rotary Field, 1 :30 p.m.

October 3, 1970

Editor: Richard E. Baldwin
Local Advertising: Howard L. Daniels
National Advertising: Spencer Marketing Services, NYC
CONTRIBUTORS: Office of Information Services, Jim DeSantis, ECAC Service
Bureau , National Collegiate Sports Services, Dick Johnston, Bob Powell,
NCAA Public Relations Committee, Linda Martz, Chris Kabel, Collegiate
Commissioners Association , Steve Lipman , Scott Slesinger, AI Aversano,
Dick Page and the UMASS Office of Sports Information
PHOTOGRAPHY: Ed N.,wak, Rick Swenson, Office of Information Services,
UMASS Office of Sports Information and BUG(Fox).
PRINTING: Goodrich Printers &amp; Lithographers, Inc., Clarence Center, N . Y.

State University of

@

New York at Buffalo

I
I

Buffalo and Massachusetts opened
their modern pigskin series in 1964 with
the Redmen winning 24-22. The Bulls
have won the last three contests to take
the lead in the intersectional meetings.
Ul\Iass invades under veteran mentor,
Vic Fusia, with a 1-1 record, while Bob
Deming's Blue has yet to win in three
outings. Both teams would like to improve on last year's 6-3-0 records. Each
team lost a cancellation to Holy Cross.
Buffalo's defense has been especially
difficult fo r Massachusetts to solve. The
Redmen have scored but two TDs on the
Bulls in the last three meetings. U / B
won 18-6 in 1965, 23-0 under t he lights
at War Memorial in 1968 and 16-6 a
year ago.
Coach Vin Keough's Baby Bulls open
their season t his afternoon at Manlius
Prep. Keough's team boasts speed and a
quick-striking offense. The lone Rot ary
appeara nce for t he BE's is Oct ober 17
vs. S yr acuse's Tangerines.

than

c

I

•

�Checking the Records
by Dick Johnston

EVENING NEWS

Dick Johnston, Cornell '41, was one of the first DSI's for
the Big Red as an undergraduate. After his collegi!'lte
career he immediately joined the staff of the Evemng
News. He has remained with the paper since then with
only a four-year Army tour interrupting his sports beat.
He also writes Buffalo Sabre hockey for the new NHL
entry. Two sons are actively engagaed in sports-Rich,
a junior, is sports editor of the Cornell Daily Sun, and Pete
is earning credits in hockey, soccer and tennis at Amherst
High School. A Buffalo native, Dick is regional correspondent for SPORTS ILLUSTRATED Magazine. Hobbygood tennis.
Most of the names are ones you expect to see, when you
glance over the list of individual records set by University
of Buffalo football players.
You know - Mick Murtha, Lee Jones, Dick Ashley,
Don Gilbert, Ken Rutkowski, Gordon Bukaty, Paul Lang,
Bob Embow. Names that have dominated the passing, receiving, running and kicking statistics during the Bulls'
recent good years on the gridiron.
But there are a few that might surprise you.
How about Ordean Shanabrook? His teammates will
never forget the lanky quarterback from Hanover, Pa.,
whom they called Mandrake, because he wasn't exactly a
magician with his ball-handling.
Shanabrook, who was a little older than most of the
players on the squad - he was a service veteran - turned
in some good passing performances for the Bulls of 195051-52, although he was backup man for an outstanding QB
named Don Holland most of the time.
It was in a game that UB lost by 30 points, believe it or
not, that Shanabrook made the record book. One of the
Bulls' losses in a 4-4 season in 1951 was to Bucknell, 62-32.
It was one of the most unusual football games ever
played. Bucknell took about a 30-point lead in the first
half. But the Bulls, instead of collapsing, came back after
intermission and played the Bisons even. While UB was
scoring 32 points in 30 minutes, Shanabrook was passing
for the bulk of his 291-yard total, which still stands as a
school record. He lost yardage rushing but still ended up
with the total yardage record for one game, 291 yards.
That same game a receiving record was set, nine catches,
and by none other than the team physician of this year's
team, Dr. Ed Gicewicz.

QB DENNY MASON

DB PETE RAO

In 1956 Joe Kubisty, a 200-pound 6-footer from Sloan,
was dividlng time at quarterback with Bill McGarva, 5-9
and 170 pounds. Kubisty was the passer, McGarva the
runner on the option.
The site again was Bucknell University in Lewisburg,
Pa. The field was wet. In fact the entire area was wet
from torrential rains that had washed out roads.
Nevertheless, Coach Dick Offenhamer used Kubisty at
quarterback. Passing a wet and soggy ball, Kubisty
acted as though the field was dry as the Sahara. He threw
for five touchdowns, a UB mark that still stands.
Murtha the fine quarterback who finished his career
last year,' holds seven passing records. It's interesting to
note that Murtha's understudy for two seasons, Denny
Mason, stocky graduate of Bishop Fallon High, stepped
in and established five records himself when Murtha
missed the 1968 campaign because of an injury.
Early in each preseason training period, you can see a
quiet, hefty individual out on the practice field, watching
the Bulls work. He's Pete Rao and he can't be there later
because he coaches a high school team.
Rao had an illustrious career as a UB halfback in the
rugged days of 1953, '54 and '55. In those years college
football players played both ways. And Pete, a graduate
of Technical High School, set his UB record on defense.
He was a sophomore at the time and the Bulls were
having a bad season. Against Cortland Rao intercepted
four passes to help the Bulls gain a 12-12 tie, one of the
highlights of a 1-5-1 campaign.
Two athletes who came to UB as star running backs
and turned into defensive specialists hold the other interception marks. Tom Hurd and Dan Sella each stole 12
enemy arterials during their UB careers and Hurd tied
with Bukaty for the season record, six.
Bukaty, of course, was better known for his prowess on
offense. He holds the records for career touchdown passes,
25, and season scoring passes, nine.
While Jones and Ken Rutkowski have the rushing records for career and season, respectively, it was a lesserknown back, Ray Weser, a fullback from Amherst Central
High, who set the single-game mark, 205 yards, against
Rhode Island in 1949.
Lou Corriere, the Quiet scchoolteacher from Lockport,
holds only one UB record, six touchdowns in a game
against Hobart in 1942, but Lockport Lou's dazzling offensive shows never will be forgotten.

QB JOE KUBISTY

DB DAN SELLA

DB TOM HURD

three

�Scouting Massachusetts

Nickname: Red men
Stadium: Alumni Stadium (22,000)
Colors: Maroon &amp; White
Coach: Vic Fusia (lOth)
MASSACHUSETTS
FACTS and FIGURES

HB PAT SCAVONE

LB JOHN FARRELLY

UMass is on the rebound after a losing year in 1968. Last fall the
Redmen played some of their most exciting football ever in Vic Fusia's
nine years in charge ... The Maroon averaged almost 30 points a game
and in six games allowed just one touchdown . . . 23 lettermen were in
fall camp, including 13 of 22 starters ... Captain John Farl"l!lly at linebacker leads the returning lettermen . . . Lack of depth and experience
at some positions . . . Overall team s peed is good as usual . . . Coach
Fusia's multiple "T" and 4-4-3 defense remains much the same to fit
personnel ... 6-3-0 summary of '69 included losses of 16-6 to U / B, 33-21
to Delaware and 35-30 to Boston College ... Record included perfect 5-0-0
in the Yankee Conference, the '70 race apparently geared to a UMassConnecticut showdown October 24 ... Guard Bob Pena has been the top
blocker in 28-0 win over Maine and 27-0 loss at Dartmouth . . . Farrelly
was named Y. C. defensive player of the week after taking part in 23
tackles vs. Dartmouth ... Tackles Dick (senior) and Bob (junior) Donlin
were All-Yankee a year ago ... Safety John O'Neil was Y. C. defensive
player-of-the-week following the Maine game . . . Veteran Pat Scavone
led the scoring last year with seven TDs and rushing - 93-499-5.4 . . .
UMass scored 265 points in nine dates last year, but could put just six
on the board vs. U / B.

Scouting Buffalo

Rushing
Att. Net Avg.
Pat Scavone, HB
28
148
5.3
Rich Cummings, FB 24
101
4.2
Rich Heavey, FB
18
96
5.3
Mark Rusell, HB
12
85
7.1
Passing
Att. Comp. Int. Yds. TDs
Hughes, QB 30
17
1
173
1
Receiving
Caught Yds. TDs
John Hulecki, E
8
1
80
Pat Scavone, HB
2
50
0
Joe Lang, E
0
2
23
Punting
No. Yds. Avg.
John O'Neil, S
36.7
13
477
Punt Returns
No. Yds. TDs
Bill Bush, DB
19
2
0
Kickoff Returns
No. Yds. TDs
2
67
Pat Scavone, HB
0
2
24
Art Corsaletti
0
TDs PAT FG PTs
Scoring
1
0
Pat Scavone, HB
0
6
1
0
Rich Cumings, FB
0
6
1
0
Art Corsaletti,
0
6
1
0
John Hulecki, FB
0
6
Denis Gagnon, K
0 4-4 3-0 4

Nickname: Bulls
Stadium: Rotary Field
Colors: Buffalo Blue &amp; Gold
Coach: Bob Deming (2nd)
BUFFALO
FACTS and FIGURES

FB JOE ZELMANSKI

LB BRUCE FRASER

Buffalo's offense returned to form in the second half at Kent State
last Saturday behind QB Kirk Barton ... Senior lefty Ed Perry had some
success with the Flashes in the first half, but Barton moved the Blue
well later ... The 40 passes thrown, 27 by Barton and 13 by Perry, set
a modern record ... 39 was the previous high vs. Ball St. a year ago and
vs. Bucknell in 1951 ... FB Joe Zelmanski was named Player-of-the-week
in the COURIER-EXPRESS feature ... DE Tom Vigneau and LB Larry
Madden lead in total tackles with 27 ... DE Prentis Henley and DB Mark
MacVittie follow at 22 ... LB Bruce Fraser, who made his second start
at outside right has 21 stops and like Henley has recovered two fumbles
. . . Gene Nance, out for two weeks with a leg bruise from the BSU
opener, is expected back in the line-up this afternoon ... Milt Piepul of
the UMass staff scouted the Bulls at each of their first three games ...
U / B won the game on paper at Kent St. with 379 total yards against 320
by the hosts ... Buffalo had 23 first downs to 12 for Kent . . . It was
the biggest offensive show of the year for the Bulls. With a patched lineup at UMass last year Buffalo had 411 total yards, 301 rushing, to 234
by the Redmen . . . Zelmanski had 98 yards on 21 trips, while Barney
Woodward had 90 on 14 carries.

four

Rushing
Att. Net
John Faller, HB
47 154
Doug Kozel, HB
38 109
Joe Zelmanski, FB
21
89
Krik Barton, QB
20
2
Passing
Att. Comp. Int. Yds.
Barton, QB 67 31
4
291
Perry, QB
30
9
3
97
Receiving
No. Yds.
Moresco, SE
11
126
Zelmanski, FB
6
81
Hudson, TE
6
61
Sharrow, SE
6
55
Kozel, HB
5
15
Punting
No. Blk. Yds.
Herlan, SE
27
1
585
Punt Returns
No. Yds.
Bud Boughton, DB
9
72
Tom Elliot, S
3
42
Kickoff Returns
No. Yds.
John Faller, HB
6
90
Gene Nance, HB
2 120
Doug Kozel, HB
2
30
Scoring
TDs PAT FG
John Faller, HB
2
0
0
Joe Zelmanski, FB
1
1P 0
1
0
0
Gene Nance, HB
Doug Kozel, HB
1
0
0
Constantino, K
0 2-2 1-0

Avg.
3.3
2.9
3.4
TDs
0
0
TDs
0
0
0
0
TDS
31.8
TDs
0
0
TDs
0
1
PTs
12
8
6
6
2

�Welcome to Rotary Field
YOUR COOPERATION PLEASE- To students and guests at the University today, your
cooperation is required in maintaining the dignity and reputation of this institution . We request
that you observe the rules and regulations pertaining to this sanctioned event by the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the Eastern College Athletic Conference .
WE LCOME - We respectfully appreciate your attendance at today's football game, and we
hope t hat you will enjoy both the game and the various new facilities in the stadium. On behalf of
the State University of New York at Buffalo and the Athletic Department, its staff and players,
we welcome you.
Dr. Harry G. Fritz
Director of Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

.

REST ROOM FACILITIES: Rest rooms
(Ladies) are at the north end locations
under both Bailey Avenue and Main
stands. Rest rooms (Gentlemen) are at
the south end locations under Bailey
A venue and Main stands.
LOST AND FOUND: All lost and found
items should be reported to the Campus
Police. The Campus Police main office is
192 Win spear A venue, 831-5555.
REFRESHMENT BOOTHS: There are
three main refreshment areas in the stadium. The booths are both at the north
ends of the Bailey and Main stands and
are operated by University Food Service.
For most games the third booth is open
at the south end of the Bailey stands.
BUSTER THE BULL: The mascot on the
field is Buster VIII, a direct lineal descendent of Buster I, who was a gift
from Elizabeth Taylor and the late Mike
Todd to the University in 1958. Buster
is under the care of Chester Malach. He
is quartered at the Malach farm in nearby E lma.

your all-star
financial center
~~*

......_UERVICE...:_t..,.

P\/ BANK~

lf-¥®

M ember : Fe de ral Depos it I nsura nce Co rp .

* Savings accounts

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Auto loans
Home improvement loans
Mortgage loans
Commercial loans
Vacation loans

BANK oF BUFFALO
• BANK OF BUFFALO-- 17 Court at Pearl • EAST
SIDE Office - · 694 Fillmore at Broadway • SOUTH SIDE
Office- - 215 7 Seneca near Cazenovia • TOWN OF
TONAWANDA Office - - 4 2 48 Delaware at Dreyer
• TOWN OF AMHERST Office-- 4954 Harlem at
Sheridan • TOWN OF CHEEKTOWAGA Office-- 3817
Un ion at George Urban • TOWN OF WEST SENECA
Office - - 4184 Seneca at Mill Road • STUYVESANT
PI.,AZA Office-- 274 Elmwood at Summer • KENMORE
Office - - 2858 Delaware at Mang.

five

�Siegfried builds on
its reputation
Siegfried is proud of the
many impressive buildings
it has built over the years ,
but they also take pride in
something that cannot be
built with concrete and
steel - a reputation for
unexcelled craftsmanship,
dependabi I ity and integrity .
Thinking of a new building, an addition , or remodeling? Think of Siegfriedyour assurance of a job
well done . . . done on time .
That's Siegfried Construc tioneering.

ailing and cory
BUFFALO'S
PAPER DISTRIBUTION CENTER

SIEGFRIEO
CONSTRUCTION CO INC
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with Western
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Engineers - Contractors

•
873-4200
Post Office Box 1068
1945 Sheridan Drive
Buffalo, New York 14240

western
The Western Ne-w York Savings Bank

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

six

�YOUR HOMETOWN SUPERMARKETS ARE PROUD
TO SUPPORT THE HOMETOWN UNIVERSITY
OF BUFFALO "BULLS" FOOTBALL TEAM!

seven

�SUNYAB
Information Services

STATE UNIVERSITY

The State University of New York at Buffalo is today the largest, most comprehensive undergraduate and graduate center of the New York State University System,
enrolling 23,764 students in the fall of 1969 (14,600 full-time). Established in 1846, the
University was a pioneer in adapting educational service to the specific needs of a developing urban complex.
Today, the University is headed by Robert L. Ketter, a civil engineer, who was at
one time dean of the U / B Graduate School and also served as vice president for facilities
planning. Ketter is the eleventh executive officer of the University, whose first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the United States.
Founded as a medical school, the University toward the close of the 19th century,
expanded to embrace three other professional schools, pharmacy, dentistry and law. A
college of arts and sciences was added in 1913. Other divisions of study were established
as follows: Summer sessions, 1915; evening sessions, now known as Millard Fillmore
College, 1923; business administration (now management), 1927; education, 1931; social
welfare, 1936; Graduate School, 1939; nursing, 1940; engineering, 1946; University
College, 1958; health related professions, 1965; information and library studies, 1966,
architecture and environmental design, 1968.
ENROLLMENT
University enrollment figures for the last decade indicate that full-time day undergraduate enrollment jumped from 4,829 in 1960 to 10,640 in 1969. Full-time graduate
enrollment (day and evening) increased even more dramatically from 286 in 1960 to
2,847 in 1969.
Enrollment in the professional schools of dentistry, law and medicine rose from 730
in 1960 to 1,190 in 1969, with the largest increase being noted by the School of Law which
grew from 176 to 485. The comparative figures for Medicine are 308 and 418 and for
Dentistry, 247 to 287.
Attesting to an increasing quality of students enrolling, in 1963, 90 per cent of
entering freshmen scored 130 or better on the Regents Scholarship Examination; in
1969, 90 per cent of the freshmen scored 184 or better.
In terms of high school rank, 27.6 per cent of 1960's freshmen were in the top onefifth of their graduating class; in 1969, 85 per cent of freshmen were in that top fifth.
The University demonstrates also an increasing commitment to developing academic
skills among the underprivileged. A variety of special programs have been instituted
to extend social, economic and educational opportunities to students recruited on the
basis of potential, rather than on their ability to pay for higher education or the level of
academic skill they demonstrated in high school. Three such programs are EPI S (Experimental Program in Independent Study), SEEK (Search for Education, Elevation
and Knowledge) and the Student Tutorial Program, whose unconventional admissions
criteria and curricular innovations not only open the University's doors to the educationally deprived but also provide academic and financial assistance for the successful
completion of their baccalaureate studies.
The geographic distribution of the University's student body in the fall of 1969
was: Buffalo Metropolitan Area, 51.6 per cent; New York City Metropolitan Area, 26.7
per cent; rest of New York State, 18.2 per cent; out-of-state and foreign countries, 3.5
per cent.
F AGILITIES AND NEW CAMPUS
Resources and facilities have been improved and enlarged in the wake of enrollment
expansion. The number of volumes in the University libraries has tripled since 1962 and
is now above the 1,500,000 mark.
To provide for continued extension of operations pending completion of a new campus, the University is occupying a series of off-campus locations, including an "interim"
facility of several buildings on Ridge Lea Road in the nearby Town of Amherst.
The new campus will be located on a 1,200 acre tract of land in Amherst. Construction has begun since Governor Rockefeller lifted the moratorium on construction.
At a total cost of $650 million by 1975 the new campus will include all facilities
existing on the present campus plus theatres, galleries and special complexes for the
colleges. Since the colleges will provide not only residences but social and educational
environments, they will have reading rooms, dormitory space, dining rooms, classrooms
and special studios and offices. A complete health sciences facility will also be located
on the new campus.
Preparation of the site for construction began in spring and the first contracts were
awarded in early summer of 1970. 'fhe first buildings to be constructed will be the
first six colleges which will be built in four phases.
RESEARCH
Through research, higher education is a combatant in a never-ending war on disease,
learning problems, and other areas of concern that have universal scope. It seeks
knowledge, technology and applications of the traditional, and is a contributor to our
economy, comfort and well-being.
Research at the State University of New York at Buffalo covers a wide spectrum
of fields of knowledge- from anthropology to obstetrics to zoology. Of the University's
more than 90 instructional departments , almost all have research programs of some
magnitude.
Research is expensive. It takes a continuous flow of money to conduct research on
a large scale: to pay the salaries of research personnel, to buy and build equipment,
to purchase supplies and chemicals, to provide travel, to buy computer time, to cover
publication cost s and other expenses.
A decade of research has brought in more than $88,790,000 in research funds to the
University. In 1960, the private University of Buffalo received $3,870,000 in research
monies, 78 per cent of which was channeled into the health sciences areas.
With the merger into the State University of New York system, the Research
Foundation administered $5,080,000 in funds in 1962. The 1969-70 estimate shows a
jump of almost $10 million (making a total of $15,000,000) in funds, which were distributed by the Foundation, with only 60 per cent of these funds going to health sciences.
Thus, not only is the University r eceiving at least a million dollars more each year, but
there is also a trend toward equalization of funds between the sciences and other areas .

�OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

DR. HARRY G. FRITZ
Director, Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

FACULTY
A vigorous program of recruitment combined with
competitive salary levels has resulted in a faculty of outstanding calibre. Scholars and artists of national renown,
including a Nobel Laureate, National Academy of Science
members, and holders of other awards for distinguished
academic achievement, have come to Buffalo. The ratio of
one faculty member for every 13 students is often cited,
but is not indicative of class sizes which range from small
seminars to lectures for the hundreds. The number of fulltime faculty members has tripled from 440 to 1400 in the
last ten years, while the number of students has doubled.

President

Part-time faculty memberships has doubled during the past
decade from 1,215 in 1960 tu 2,425 in 1969.
ACADEMIC DEVELOPMENT
In 1967 a major restructuring of the academic organization of the University was accomplished at the instigation of President Martin. Meyerson. Existing departments
and divisions of study were regrouped into seven broadly
interdisciplinary faculties, which incorporate and build
upon traditional disciplines while implementing novel combinations of customary fields of concentration with new
areas of study and research.

The University at Buffalo
Alumni Association
Wishes to thank our alumni and other friends for their support of the
GOLDEN BULL ATHLETIC FUND.
If you have not yet joined the Golden Bull Fund, you may do so by
sending a donation or pledge to the U/B Alumni Association, 250 Winspear
Avenue, Buffalo, New York, 14214. Gifts of any size are gratefully accepted.
Four clubs have been established within the Fund on an annual participation
basis:

Co-Captains Club
Golden Bull Club
Blue Chip Club
Honorary Coaches Club

$

25 minimum contribution
$ 100 minimum contribution
$ 500 minimum contribution
$1,000 minimum contribution

Please make checks payable to the Golden Bull Fund. All donations
are tax-deductible.

nine

�i

OFFICIALS' SIGNALS

i

i

1~

~~~·~~~r4r=
-~ ·-- ,:. - ' . ., . . f . _~. -· ~·
I

2

of scriMOIIII or
froo kldl lorOIItlon)

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Infractions

3

lllopl Prouforo
or I'IIKion

Ill

Ill

4

I IIIII

....

Ill

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op

IS
~1ft

IS

'

lnlltlibtl locotwer
Down Flold .., l'lu

Hol:;•l~t':r~o~~;;er,

DolaJ of 5aMo

Interference

17

IIU llle1ally Toudlod,
••dlod, or llttn

i~a~~~::dir!:. H:1~~
to Side: Toucllbadl

""

l'lnaltJ Docllnn,
llo , ..,, or llo Scoro

Touctldawn or
Field 5oal

Saloly

23

Time out; Referee's

Cll,lnl

+
1

-

llltlal uu of
Manda and arms

Rough ing the Kicker
or Holder

lion-contact Fouls

Discretionary or hcess

Timt Out followed wittt
tappinl hands on dint.

First Down

~ :·~~···

·.;
~
1

\ ,

fonrard l'lu or

Intentional
5roundinl

~~":.~:::~•

Every kind of Sportsman knows
DICK FISCHER'S the greatest!

--...

._: Start tllo Clocll

Lou of Down

GOOD LUCK BULLS

DICK FISCHER

BFo~ts

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ten

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�El
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Stroh's nice 'n cold all afternoon long.
Our aluminum-insulated Stay Cold
Pack.
Just make sure the whole box is
nice 'n cold to start with. Then, the beer

II
inside will stay that way for hours.
Mind you, we're not saying a Stay
ColdPackfullofStroh'sismorelovable
than an ice chest full of Stroh's.
But it's sure a heck of a lot more
portable.

Stroh's ••• From One Beer Lover to Another.

THE STROH BREWERY COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48226

eleven

�Van, Stan &amp; Rife Have It All Figured Out!
FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WBEN-Radio
VAN
STAN
DICK
MILLER BARRON RIFENBUR6
WBEN Radio/930
The Sports Voice ol Buffalo

�..

""'

\. ~ ... ' .....

j

~

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\~ ~.

-2,.?'~j?-5~:·:,'
:;

•

)

1970 Buffalo Football Roster

' !

Pos.
Player
Cl.
No.
So ph.
T
76
tAdessa, Phil
Albaneze, Denny
G
Sr.
68
K
Armon, Kerope
So.
3
DT
Sr.
*Atkinson, Barry
79
FB
Baker, Bill
So.
14
tBancroft, Tim
OLB
So.
50
QB
*Barton, Kirk
Jr.
15
Jr.
Bauch, John
G
62
86
tBouck, Mike
TE
So.
tBoughton, Buddy
DB
So.
17
Brown, Byron
OLB
Jr.
51
tButler, Ted
OLB
So.
92
tCarbonaro, Paul
So.
64
T
Sr.
73 **Centofanti, Tom
G
tChamberlain, Tom
So.
60
G
ILB
Sr.
38 (*)Chapp, Gary
54
Jr.
Conaway, Dan
OLB
44
ILB
So.
tConstable, Ken
41
K
Sr.
*Constantino, Mike
81
tDomino, Tom
SE
So.
58 **Donner, Chuck (CC)
c
Sr.
tEagen, John
T
So.
88
Jr.
Ellenbogen, Bill
DT
78
Sr.
40 **Elliott, Tom
s
Sr.
*Elwell, Jerry
G
61
*Faller, John
HB
Sr.
49
27
tFilipowicz, Eric
TE
So.
Forness, Charley
DT
Sr.
67
36
*Fraser, Bruce
OLB
Jr.
tGasper, Mike
65
T
So.
Goniwiecha, Steve
16
s
So.
Griffiths, Bob
G
Jr.
43
tHannah, Bill
DB
46
So.
tHarrison, Marvin
DB
23
So.
**Henley, Prentis (CC)
DE
90
Sr.
87
* Herlan, Scott
SE
Sr.
tHoma, Dave
ILB
30
So.
Hudson, Joe
TE
Sr.
85
52
tHuff, Larry
c
So.
26
Jackson, Don
HB
So.
James, Mike
DE
Sr.
95
57
Johnson, Joe
c
So.
48
Jones, Clifton
Jr.
s
Sr.
66 ** Jones, Revell
DT
59 **Kershaw, Ed
OLB
Sr.
39
Kozel, Doug
HB
Jr.
Layo, Bob
22
HB
Jr.
47
*MacVitt!e, Mark
DB
Jr.
*Madden, Larry
32
ILB
Jr.
Majcher,
Dave
53
ILB
Jr.
*McCullough,
Steve
37
ILB
Sr.
*Moresco, Joe
80
SE
Sr.
Nance, Gene
20
HB
So.
tNichols, Walt
12
HB
So.
42 **Nixon, Len
DB
Sr.
19
tOsika, Tom
P-S
So.
QB
11 (*)Perry, Ed
Sr.
Pescrillo, Dave
DT
Jr.
99
Philp, Doug
QB
Jr.
18
DE
97
tPotyok, AI
So.
Rakowski, Ron
DT
70
So.
T
Sr.
74 (*)Rio, John
HB
Jr.
25
Savickas, Scott
SE
Sr.
*Sharrow, Mike
89
Jr.
Siedlecki, Stan
OLB
55
Jr.
33
Smith, Phil
ILB
HB
Sr.
29
Stiscak, Bob
34
FB
tTober, Owen
So.
91
Vandenbergh, Barry
DE
Jr.
93
Van-Dusen, Don
DE
Jr.
96 **Vigneau, Tom
DE
Sr.
71
Winnett, Bill
Jr.
T
21 ** Woodward, Barney
HB
Sr.
24 (*)Zalar, Karl
DB
Sr.
35 **Zelmanski, Joe
FB
Sr.
Jr.
69
Ziegler, Joe
G
* Varsity Letter (22 from 1969)
(*)Varsity Letter (4 from 1968)
tFreshman Numerals (20 from 1969)
SENIOR MANAGER : Allen Wright, '71, Mt. Vernon,

Age
18
21
20
21
20
19
20
20
20
19
21
18
19
21
19
22
22
19
20
19
21
19
19
21
22
21
19
21
19
19
19
20
20
19
23
22
19
ss
19
20
21
19
20
21
21
20
19
20
20
19
22
21
20
19
21
19
21
21
19
19
20
21
20
21
19
22
21
19
20
21
21
20
21
21
21
21

Ht.
6-2
6-2
5-8
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-0
5-10
5-8
6-1
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-3
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-8
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-1
5-11
5-10
6-7
5-11
5-10
6-2
6-1
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-6
6-6
6-1
6-2
5-9
5-11
6-1
5-10

Wt.
232
207
195
266
200
190
195
236
220
177
190
195
230
210
200
211
194
205
185
175
215
218
224
181
200
215
185
256
185
227
165
210
164
161
236
198
217
222
224
190
238
195
167
260
208
189
182
181
205
210
212
176
171
182
187
180
208
247
205
180
228
235
187
175
184
198
189
195
230
235
212
226
205
188
205
217

Major
Psych.
Psych.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
Psych.
Dent.
Hi st.
Engr.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Acct.
Law
P. Ed.
Bio.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Hist.
Pharm.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Law
Psych.
Bus. Ad.
Anthrop.
P. Ed.
L. Arts
Hi st.
Pol. Sci.
Bus. Ad .
Engr.
L. Arts
Pharm.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Phil.
P. Ed.
0 . Ther.
Pol. Sc.
Med.
0. Ther.
L. Arts
Pol. Sc.
Math.
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Psych.
Soc.
L. Arts
Econ.
Pol. Sc.
Bus. Ad.
P. Ed.
En gr.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
En gr.
Acct.
L. Arts
Hist.
Art
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
Bus. Ad.
L. Arts
L. Arts
L. Arts
P. Ed.
Bus. Ad .
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.
P. Ed.

School
St. Mary's HS
Stuyvesant HS
North Syracuse
East Deer-Frazer
Griffiths I nst.
Johnson City
Union-Endicott
Tallmadge HS
lllion HS
Kenmore West
Aurora HS
Sharpsville HS
Mt. Carmel HS
Bishop Duffy HS
Jamesville,-Dewitt
St. Clement HS
Kenmore East
Mayfield HS
Jamestown HS
Depew HS
East Aurora
Elk County
New Rochelle
Canandaigua HS
Cardinal Mooney
Greece-Arcadia
Canisius HS
Riverside HS
Wheatfield
Cath. Central
St. Clement
Johnson City
Emerson Vocation
Bennett HS
South Park HS
Grand Island
New York Mills
Cheshire Academy
Silver Creek
Mannheim HS
Penn Hills
East Jefferson
Emerson Vocation
Buchetel HS
Elyria HS
Binghamton Catholic
Portage Area
Williamsville HS
Catholic Central
Bishop McCort
Coshocton HS
Ithaca HS
Indiana HS
Irondequoit HS
St. Joseph HS
New York Mills
Bethlehem Central
LaSalle HS
Humberside Coli.
St. Clement HS
Rome Free Academy
St. Mary's HS
St. Joseph HS
Moriah Central
Carthage HS
Ridgeway HS
Aliquippa HS
Bennett HS
Albany HS
Homer HS
St. Clement HS
Jackson HS
Peru HS
Calvert HS
St. Clement HS
Cardinai.O'Hara

.:5-~~ ~ ' ' -

J ~ \' ~- .

1 ~ \

•

. , ..

l&lt;..:' ' \~If\''··
.::::':-_, :

=.

! ,_, :.-

Hometown
Cortland, N . Y.
Elmhurst, N . Y .
Syracuse, N. Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Colden, N.Y.
Johnson City, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Tallmadge, Ohio
lllion, N.Y.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Aurora, Ohio
Sharpsville, Pa.
Auburn, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Dewitt, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Tonawanda, N . Y .
Cleveland, Ohio
Jamestown, N . Y .
Depew, N.Y.
East Aurora, N. Y.
Ridgway, Pa.
New Rochelle, N.Y.
Canandaigua, N. Y.
Rochester, N. Y~
Rochester, N . Y.
Buffalo, N . Y .
Buffalo, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Binghamton, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Johnson City, N.Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Buffalo, N .Y.
Grand Island, N . Y.
New York Mills, N . Y.
New City, N.Y.
Irving, N.Y.
Ft. Hood, Texas
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Birmingham, Mich.
Buffalo, N . Y.
Akron, Ohio
Elyria, Ohio
Johnson City, N.Y.
Portage, Pa.
Williamsville, N.Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Johnstown, Pa.
Coshocton, Ohio
Ithaca, N. Y.
Indiana, N.Y.
Rochester, N . Y.
Willowick, Ohio
Yorkville, N . Y.
Delmar, N .Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Toronto, Ont.
Centerline, _Mich.
Rome, N.Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Wickliffe, Ohio
Witherbee, N. Y.
Carthage, N. Y.
Ridgeway, Ont.
Alquippa, Pa.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Albany, N .Y.
Cortland, N . Y .
Centerline, Mich.
North Canton, Ohio
Peru, N . Y .
Tiffin, Ohio
Centerline, Mich.
Tonawanda, N .Y.

N. Y .

thirteen

�Wouldn't an ice cold Coke
taste good right now?

�85
71
61
58
73
74
80
15
49
39
35

Offense
JOE HUDSON . . . . . . . . . . TE
BILL WINNETT ... . .... . LT
JERRY ELWELL ... . . .... LG
CHUCK DONNOR (CC) .. .. C
TOM CENTOFANTI .. ... RG
JOHN RIO . . ......... . RT
JOE MORESCO . .. ... . .. SE
KIRK BARTON . . . ..... . QB
JOHN FALLER . . ... . .. .. LH
DOUG KOZEL .. . ... . . . RH
JOE ZELMANSKI ... . ... FB

89
76
77
82
35
54
43
59
24
41
18

BUFFALO
90
79
66
96
59
32
37
55
42
47
19

40
41
42
43
44
46
47
48

49
50
51

Armon, KSP
Perry, QB
Nichols, HB
Baker, FB
Barton, QB
Goniwiecha, S
Boughton, DB
Ph i lp, QB
Osika, S- P
Nance, HB
Woodward, HB
layo, HB
Harrison, DB
Zalar, DB
Savickas, HB
Jackson, HB
Fil ipowicz, TE
Stiscak, HB
Home, ILB
Madden, ILB
Smith, ILB
Tober, FB
Zelmanski, FB
Fraser, OLB
McCullough, ILB
Chapp, ILB
Kozel, HB
Elliott, S
Constantino, KSP
Nixon, DB
Griffiths, G
Constable, ILB
Hannah, DB
MacVittie, DB
C. Jones, S
Faller, HB
Bancroft, OLB
Brown, OLB

52 Huff, C
53 Majcher, ILB
54 Conaway, OLB
55 Siedlecki, OLB
57 Johnson, C
58 Donnor, C (CC))
59 Kershaw, OLB
60 Chamberlain, G
61 Elwell, G
62 Bauch, G
64 Carbonaro, T
65 Gasper, T
66 R. Jones, DT
67 Forness, DT
68 Albaneze, G
69 Ziegler, G
70 Rakowski, DT
71 Winnett, T
73 Centofanti, G
74 Rio, T
76 Adessa, T
78 Ellenbogen, DT
79 Atkinson, DT
80 Moresco, SE
81 Domino, SE
85 Hudson, TE
86 Bouck, TE
87 Herlan, SE
88 Eagen, T
89 Sharrow, SE
90 Henley, DE (CC)
91 Vandenbergh, DE
92 Butler, OLB
93 Van -Dusen, DE
95 James, DE
96 Vigneau, DE
97 Potyok, DE
99 Pescrillo, DT

DE
DT
DT
DE
LB
LB
LB
LB
CB
CB
S

MASSACHUSETTS

Defense
PRENTIS HENLEY (CC) .... LE
BARRY ATKINSON . . . ... LT
ROVELL JONES ... .. .. .. RT
TOM VIGNEAU . .. . ..... RE
ED KERSHAW . . . ... . .. LOB
LARRY MADDEN . . . .... LIB
STEVE McCULLOUGH . .. RIB
STAN SIEDLECKI . . .. .. ROB
LEN NIXON . . . ... ... .. LH
MARK MacVITTlE ... . . . . RH
TOM OSIKA . . ...... . ... S

86
73
68
57
63
70
85
15
20
22
30

Offense
BOB CABRELLI
BOB DONLIN
BOB PENA
DAVE LEVINE
DICK ETNA
DICK DONLIN
JOHN HULECKI
KEN HUGHES
PAT SCAVONE
MARK RUSSELL
DICK CUMMINGS

SE
LT
LG
C
RG
RT
TE
QB
HB
HB
FB

MASSACHUSETTS SQUAD

THE BULLS SQUAD
3
11
12
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39

Defense
JIM KELLIHER
BILL DeFLAVIO
BILL SROKA
CURT BRISTOL
DOUG WINSLOW
JOHN FARRELLY
DENNIS COLLINS
JOE SABULIS
BILL BUSH
DENNIS KEATING
JOHN O'NEIL

8
10
11
12
14
15
16
18
20
21
22
23
24
25
30
31
32
33
34
35

40
41
42
43

44
45
50
51
52
53

54
55
56

Kagnon, K.
Holmes, QB
Marchev, QB
Evans, QB
Matuza, QB
Hughes, QB
Murray, QB
O' Neil, S
Scavone, HB
DiNardo, HB
Russell, HB
Filley, HB
Bush, DB
Sawyer, HB
Cummings, FB
Rendle, DB
Heavey, FB
Key, DB
Welch, LB
Winslow, LB
Bouchard, HB
Keating, DB
Daenz, DB
Collins, LB
Corsaletti, HB
Dotson, LB
Lesniewsk i, C
Edwards, LB
Gallup, C
Byron, C
Farrelly, LB (C)
Leamy, LB
Marino, C

57
58
59
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
92

levine, OC
Dyer, LB
Sabulis, LB
Queeney, OG
Moreno, OG
Etna, OG
Cronin, LB
Cunningham . OT
Hamaty, DT
Parmenter, DT
Pena, OG
Brooks, OT
Donlin Ri., OT
Harwich, OT
Scheralis, DE
Donlin Ro., OT
Mullen, DT
Viviano, DT
DeFiavio, DT
Sroka, DT
Greaney, DT
Wood, DE
Schubert, SE
lang, OE
Bristol, DE
Hanifan, SE
Flynn, DE
Hulecki, OE
Cabrelli, SE
Rockwell, TE
O'Malley, SE
Kelliher, DE
Kelleher, LB

Villanova - Band Day
October 10 - 1:30 P.M.
Holy Cross - ABC-TV
October 31 - 1:30 P.M.

"COCA- COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY.

It's the real thin· . Coke.
(R)

�1970 Massachusetts Football Roster

I
No.

40
82
69
24
53
86
43
44
64
30
65
42
76
21
70
73
45
58
51
63
12
54
23
84
8
52
78
66
83
71
32
10
15
85
41
92
89
33
81
55
50
57
11
56
14
62
74
16
88
18
67
68
61
31
87
22
59
25
20
72

80
77

75
34
35
79

Name
Bouchard, Ray
*Bristol, Curt
Brooks, Clarence
*Bush, Bill
Byron, Bill
*Cabrelli, Bob
*Collins, Dennis
Corsaletti, Art
Cronin, Dick
*Cummings, Dick
Cunningham, Dennis
Daenz, Bill
DeFiavio, Bill
DiNardo, Angelo
*Donlin, Dick
*Donlin, Bob
Dotson, Don
*Dyer, Dick
Edwards, Tim
*Etna, Dick
Evans, Marty
*Farrelly, John (C)
Filley, Kevin
Flynn, David
*Gagnon, Denis
Gallup, Steve
Greaney, Steve
Hamaty, Charles
Hanifan, Bill
Harwich, Jeff
Heavey, Dick
Holmes, Tom
• Hughes, Ken
*Hulecki, John
Keating, Dennis
*Kelleher, Dick
Kelliher, Jim
Key, AI
Lang, Joe
Leamy, Mark
Lesniewski, Ron
*Levine, Dave
Marchev, Mike
*Marino. Ron
Matuza, Len
Moreno, Vic
Mullen, Tom
Murray, Brian
O'Malley, Walt
O'Neil, John
Parmenter, Skip
* Pena, Bob
Queeney, Jim
Rendle, Jim
Rockwell, Walt
Russell, Mark
*Sabu I is. Joe
Sawyer. Mike
*Scavone, Pat
•scheral is, Marty
Schubert, Steve
*Sroka, Bill
Viviano, Pete
Welch, John
Winslow, Doug
* Wood, Russ

·varsity Letter

(23 from 1969)

Pos.

Cl.

Age

Ht.

Wt.

High School

Hometown

HB
DE
OT
DB

So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.

21
21
19
21
21
20
20
21
19
20
20
20
20
21
22
20
22
21
19
20
21
22
19
19
20
19
21
19
20
20
21
21
22
21
20
21
22
21
21
22
19
20
20
20
19
20
18
19
21
20
21
22
19
23
19
21
21
20
21
23
19
20
19
19
20
21

6·0
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-3
5-10
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-2
5-10
5-9
6-0
6-7
6-3
6-0
6-0
6-4
5-11
6-1
6-1
5-11
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-4
6-3
6-2
6-1
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-2
6-4
5-11
6-2
6-3
6-0
6-2
6-4
6-2
6-3
6-1
6-2
5-11
6-3
6-1
5-11
6-4
5-10
6-2
6-4
6-1
6-3
6-2

185
215
225
185
230
170
190
190
190
230
215
190
230
185
290
230
194
210
195
200
195
218
175
195
185
210
220
210
195
245
210
195
180
228
212
205
218
178
210
205
230
230
185
225
190
210
225
185
185
190
245
250
186
195
220
180
210
205
187
235
180
228
210
200
215
205

Fryeburg Academy
Manlius Prep
New Bedford HS
Cushing Academy
Franklin HS
Borden Military
Walpole HS
Pulaski HS
Littleton HS
Mt. Greylock Reg.
Milford Academy
Borden Military
St. John's
Somerville HS
New Britain HS
New Britain HS
Bedford HS
Nashua HS
Bourne HS
Medford HS
Borden Military
Mt. St. Michael
Ithaca HS
St. Joseph Reg.
Cathedral HS
Cambridge HS
St. Peter's
Boston Latin
Winchendon
Weymouth HS
Brookline HS
Arizona Western
Morris Knolls
Leominster HS
Arlington HS
Arlington HS
Abington HS
Dorchester HS
Xaverian Bros.
El Camino J. C.
Southbridge HS
Walter Johnson
Millburn HS
Beverly HS
Pennsbury
Manlius Prep
Bishop Gibbons
White Plains
Bridgton Academy
Worcester Academy
Shrewsbury HS
Dean Jr. College
Wakefield HS
Quincy HS
Susquehanna Valley
Borden Military
Gardner HS
Palmer HS
St. Peter's
So. Boston HS
Manchester Central
Auburn HS
Mt. St. Michael
Millis HS
Borden Military
Gov. Liv. Reg.

New Bedford, Mass.
Elnora, N.Y.
New Bedford, Mass.
Greenfield, Mass.
Decatur, Ga.
Havertown, Pa.
Walpole, Mass.
New Britain, Conn.
Littleton, Mass.
Williamstown, Mass.
Taunton, Mass.
Feasterville, Pa.
Worcester, Mass.
Somerville, Mass.
New Britain, Mass.
New Britain, Mass.
Springfield, Va.
Nashua, N. H.
Otis AFB, Mass.
Medford, Mass.
Wynnewood, Pa.
Bronx, N.Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Oradell, N. J.
Willimansett, Mass.
Cambridge, Mass
Worcester, Mass.
W. Roxbury, Mass.
Malden, Mass.
Weymouth, Mass.
Chestnut Hill, Mass.
Wakefield, Mass.
Denville, N.J.
Leominster, Mass.
Arlington, Mass.
Arlington, Mass.
Abington, Mass.
Boston, Mass.
Norwood, Mass.
Redondo Bch., Calif.
Southbridge, Mass.
Bethesda, Md.
Short Hills, N.J.
Bever I y, Mass.
Morrisville, Pa.
Agawam. Mass.
Schenectady, N.Y.
White Plains, N.Y.
Clinton, Mass.
Abington, Mass.
Shrewsbury, Mass.
W. Falmouth, Mass.
Wakefield, Mass.
Quincy, Mass.
Binghamton, N.Y.
Nashua, N. H .
Gardner, Mass.
Palmer, Mass.
Worcester, Mass.
So. Boston, Mass.
Manchester, N. H .
Auburn, N.Y.
Yonkers, N.Y.
Millis, Mass.
Scotia, N.Y.
Berkeley Hgts., N. J.

c

SE
LB
HB
LB
FB
OT
DB
DT
HB
OT
OT
LB
LB
LB
OG
QB
LB
HB
DE
K

c

DT
DT
SE
OT
FB
QB
QB
OE
DB
LB
DE
DB
OE
LB

c
oc
QB
c

QB
OG
DT
QB
SE
s
DT
OG
OG
DB
TE
HB
LB
HB
HB
DE
SE
DT
DT
LB
LB
DE

�BOOSTING THE BULLS
Program
Patrons

For the past 54 years as the University has expanded and altered its structure, so
has the U / B Marching Band, "The Pride of the East." During the last two decades the
Band's spirit and overall musicianship has added a popular flare to various athletic
events, home and away.
Frank J. Cipolla (Eastman School of Music) will direct his eighth band at U / B this
year. Cipolla came to Buffalo following a brass and band instructorship at the University of Missouri.
The instrumental unit on the field consists of approximately 200 members, including
drum majors, majorettes and a flag corps. After the final football game members audition for selection to the Concert Band and University Band. From the main organization
various pep bands are formed, also.
The Band makes national concert appearances and has performed in Carnegie Hall.
In 1968 the Band represented New York State in President Nixon's Inaugural Parade.

1970 VARSITY CHEERLEADERS

Sue Pierotti
Senior
Williamsville, N.Y.

jan Anderson
Junior
Corry, Pa.

Capt. Alice Cypin
Junior
Levittown, N.Y.

Beth Hurwitt
junior
Plainview, N.Y.

Charlene Gmerek
Sophomore
Cheektowaga, N.Y.

Kathy Mclane
junior
Lowville, N.Y.

Karen Schuler
Senior
Williamsville, N.Y.

Wendy Ambrico
Sophomore
Far Rockaway, N.Y.

Dr. Charles Banas
Dennis J. Brinkworth Jr.
John Carter
Kevin Carriero
Edward Dzielski Inc.
Jim DeSantis
James P. Donnelly
Chas. Diefendorf
Steve Frey
Paul A. Foley
Howard Flaster
Dr. Edmond Gicewicz
Dr. Allan V. Gibbons
Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne
Chester P. Glor Jr., D.D.S.
George L. Grobe Jr.
Sheldon Hurwitz
Houdaille Industries Inc.
Irvin V. Iversen
Dr. Russell Kidder Jr.
Edward W. Kinney
Seymour Knox
Leo H. Less &amp; Associates
State Mutual of America
Robert lipp
Dr. Harold F. Meese
Massachusetts Mutual life
Ins. Co.
Dr. Robert F. Milks
Palace Theatre
Dr. William R. Root
Howard A. Potter, Inc.
Dr. Gertrude Swartout
leonard Swagler
Dr. Vincert Scamurra
Harlon Swift
Stewart &amp; Bensen Travel Ser.
Turley, Stievater, Walker
&amp; Mauri
University Manor Motel
William G. Willis
Dr. Reinhardt W. Wende
Dr. Frederick B. Wilkes
Manuel S. Wortzman
Don Kroeger - londes Press
Bud Boughton

seventeen

�CHEERS for the largest selection of quality paperback
and hard cover books in Western New York.
CHEERS for a complete array of sweatshirts, ceramics,
cards to send home to mother (some not to
send home to mother), stuffed animals and
campus necessities.
CHEERS for an exciting collection of glassware bearing
the grand old UB emblem (a collector's item).

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

•
eighteen

'

'

�The Buffalo Coaching Staff

ROBERT C. DEMING
Head Coach

Bob Deming officially assumed the football fortunes
at Buffalo February 15, 1969 as the University's 15th head
coach, immediately following the resignation of Doc Urich
(now head coach at Northern Illinois and a November 21
Bull opponent). He had been on the UB gridiron scene
since 1959, thus he was no stranger to the key campus
assignment.
Deming's first band of Bulls played 6-3-0 last fall
(Holy Cross cancelled) and ran ninth in the annual Lambert Trophy race. His chief aim is to enter Buffalo in the
East's Top Five to battle Penn State, Syracuse, Pittsburgh
and Boston College for the coveted crown.
A 1957 graduate of Colgate, where he received a B.A.
in natural sciences, Bob played three years at fullback for
the Red Raiders. Upon graduation he went with Head
Coach Hal Lahar to Houston and coached in the Cougar
program through 1958. After a tour in the Air Force
Reserve he joined the Houston staff again until accepting
an assistantship under Dick Offenhamer at Buffalo.
Deming tutored both offensive and defensive backs in
1959-60. From 1961-65 he handled defensive backs under
Offie and retained the same position under Urich.
Not a superstitious mentor, he was born on Friday
the 13th, 1935, in Ilion, N. Y. Bob opened his head coaching career on his birthday at Ball State last fall.
An accomplished outdoorsman, hunter and fisherman,
he enjoys antiques and wood refinishing with wife Jean
(University of Rochester). Prior to starting their family,
which now includes Laura, 4, and Leslie Ann, 2, Jean was
a hostess with American Airlines. Deming family headquarters is in suburban Eggertsville.
In association with his head coaching position through
1969-70, Deming also served as acting director of athletics.
He originated the Buffalo Football Camp for high school
players (held on campus this season from August 2-7) and
made numerous area and regional appearances on behalf
of the athletic program at the University.
Deming's main forte is his ability to communicate in
modern education. His liaison with players, students, faculty, alumni, the press and the community is exemplary.

1970 BUFFALO VARSITY COACHING STAFF (1-r) Front: Bob Deming (Colgate '57), head coach; Bill Dando (Detroit
'59), linebackers; Jim McNally (Buffalo '66), offensive line; and Rick Lantz (Central Connecticut '63), secondary. Back Werner Kleeman (Springfield '63), defensive front four; Russ MacKellar (Buffalo '67), assistant offensive line; Vin
Keough (Ithaca '67), head freshman coach; Joe Griffith (Miami, 0. '61), receivers; and Terry Ransbury (Brockport St.
'51), offensive backs.

nineteen

�ROBERT

c.~
TROPHIES
tJtgravm iH Metal or Plastk
• GAVELS • PEWTERWARE
• PLAQUES • SILVERWARE

50S WASHINGTON ST.
BUFFALO, N. Y. 14203

~p.,rting-

Call 853-6860

t'llliLptltt·nt

~t·ll'l'ttnn

at

fl('j'tl ..

fnr l·\···ry

f)n~ulrhrun·~.

~pnrt

thr :--;p"rt:oman's Choit•f'!

**
iC

Northtown Plena
Southgate Ploao
T r~nSttown Pin•

134·3331
674~810

632·5626

Open 'til 9 :"'ightly!

T he Souncl S ystem for toclay's game
is pro viclecl by . .

go BULLS,"
go ...•..

LARKIN SOUND SERVICE

Everything goes great on

KAUFMAN'S
Kaujinan 's famous ry e bread
-and delicious specialty loa ves
make every sandwich and e11n y
meal a f east.
Buy 'em at y our fal'Orite food store.

K~m~~!!~.~!~•lo,

'\bu'vep

alottol1ve
Pepsi's got
a lotto give

-·
•

PUBLIC ADDRESS - INTERCOM
and PHONE SYSTEMS

977 Niagara Street
NY

Buffalo, New York

~

PEPSI
~

GOOD LUCK U. B. BULLS
Rudy Bersani -

U. B. 1967

THREE COINS RESTA VRANT
.
and LOVNGE

lunch, ditmer or late supper; eat like a
Roman Emperor on centurion's pay
In the North Wing of the MAPLE.LEAF MOTOR LODGE
,

1620 N iagara Falls Blvd.

83 5· 2610

twenty

1 M ile. North
of Sherodan Dr.
Ample Parking for Your Chariot

DAIRY PRODUCTS
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14209

•

AC 716-883-4080

�BUFFALO SENIORS

CAPTAIN
CHUCK DONNOR
58 Physical Education C
East Aurora, N.Y.

DENNY ALBANEZE
68
Liberal Arts
G
Elmhurst, N. Y.

BARRY ATKINSON
79
Physical Ed.
DT
Tarentum, Pa.

MIKE CONSTANTINO
41
Pharmacy
KSP
Jamestown, N. Y.

40

TOM ELLIOTT
Business Adm.
S
Canandaigua, N. Y.

SCOTT HERLAN
Liberal Arts
SE
Grand Island, N. Y.

85

JOE HUDSON
Philosophy
TE
New City, N. Y.

87

TOM CENTOFANTI
73 Physical Education G
Niagara Falls, N. Y.

61

38

GARY CHAPP
Physical Ed.
LB
Center Line, Mich.

66

ROVELL JONES
Psychology
DT
Akron, Ohio

JERRY ELWELL
Anthropology
G
Rochester, N.Y.

MIKE JAMES
95 Political Science DE
Pittsburgh, Pa.

twenty-one

�853-7266

OPEN EVERY EVENING EXCEPT WEDNESDAY

FRANK 0 1 CONNOR
ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT

FRED RONEKER'S

School and Team Outfitters

UNIVERSITY SHOP

See: AI Henningham (Sales Manager)

5548 MAIN ST., WILLIAMSVILLE
632-7833

499 Washington Street
Buffalo, New York 14203
FOOTBALL HEADQUARTERS

ID4r

1£nr~

i\m4rrst

MOTOR MOTEL
BUFFALO, N. Y. 14226

5000 MAIN ST.

Men's and Boy's Wear of Distinction

852-2769
853-2737

Locksmiths - Safe Experts

The Safe, Lock &amp; Key Corp.
"Call us to discuss any lock problem"

Exit 50, Main St. West. N. Y. Thruway

204 PEARL STREET, BUFFALO, N. Y.

14202

Phone 716-839-2200
SALES- INSTALLATION Air and Sound Conditioned Rooms, T.V., Radio, Dining Room
Coffee Shop, Cocktail lounge, Banquet Rooms
Member Quality Motels, Inc. - AAA Rated Excellent

GOOD LUCK -

U. B. BULLS

REPAIR

Safes, Locks, Keys, Door Closers
Distributors -

Consultants

EATON OFFICE SUPPLY CO., INC.
"for Office Needs -

Eaton Leads"

NEWMAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION
OFFICE SUPPLIES
OFFICE FURNITURE

- open to U. B. students
- located at 15 University Avenue
(cor. Main St. &amp; Niagara Falls Blvd.)
- Phone 834-2297

Father Ed Fisher, Moderator

Diocese of Buffalo

BUSINESS FORMS
PRINTING

EATON INTERIORS
for complete layout and design service
1155 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

PHONE: 837-6800

To Games; on Ski Weekends; on Tours;
Everybody Goes First Class in the
Area's Largest Charter Bus Fleet
ASK

US AB OUT

CLASS, CLUB or
GROUP CHARTERS
F(1r Tr ip:-- to .\ nywhf'r£"
\\.it h ,\I I ('onv(·niC'nc ·.:s

"THE OFFICIAL EQUIPMENT
RECONDITIONERS FOR THE BUFFALO BULLS"

MARBA INC.
Reconditioners of Athletic Equipment

P h on&lt;'

BUFFALO 852-4900

BLUE BIRD COACH LINES, INC.

twenty-two

1200 Niagara Street

•

Buffalo, N. Y. 14213

882-9330

�BUFFALO SENIORS

CAPTAIN
PRENTIS HENLEY
90
Physical Ed.
DE
Buffalo, N. Y.

ED KERSHAW
59 Political Science LB
Elyria, Ohio

74

96

JOHN RIO
History
Byrnedale, Pa.

T

TOM VIGNEAU
Physical Ed.
DE
Center Line, Mich.

STEVE McCULLOUGH
37
Liberal Arts
LB
Coshocton, Ohio

80

JOE MORESCO
Economics
SE
Ithaca, N. Y.

42

LEN NIXON
Physical Ed.
DB
Willowick, Ohio

ED PERRY
Physical Ed.
Delmar, N.Y.

QB

89

MIKE SHARROW
Physical Ed.
SE
Witherbee, N. Y.

29

BOB STISCAK
Business
HB
Aliquippa, Pa.

BARNEY WOODWARD
21
Physical Ed.
HB
Peru, N.Y.

24

KARL ZALAR
Physical Ed.
DB
Tiffin, Ohio

35

JOE ZELMANSKI
Physical Ed.
FB
Center Line, Mich.

11

twenty-three

�more
excitin •I •

GOHR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY INC.
80 METCALFE STREET, BUFFALO, NEW YORK
853-2121

twenty-four

�MASSACHUSETTS
"REDMEN"

82

15

CURT BRISTOL
Manlius Prep DE
Elnora, N. Y.

KEN HUGHES
Morris Knolls QB
Denville, N. J .

DAVE LEVINE
57 Walter Johnson
Bethesda, Md.

C

BILL BUSH
24 Cushing Academy DB
Greenfield, Mass.

43

DENNIS COLLINS
Walpole HS
LB
Walpole, Mass.

ART CORSALETTI
44
Pulaski HS
LB
New Britain, Conn .

73

ROBERT DONLIN
New Britain
T
New Britain, Mass.

JOHN llULECKr
Leominster HS
E
Leominster, Mass.

DENNIS KEATING
41 Arlington HS DB
Arlington, Mass.

81

JOE LANG
Xaverian Bros.
Norwood, Mass.

E

MARK LEAMY
55 El Ca'tnino J. C. LB
Redondo Beach, Calif.

JOHN O'NEIL
18 Worcester Academy S
Abington, Mass.

BOB PENA
68 Dean Junior Coli. G
West Falmouth, Mass.

25

MIKE SAWYER
Palmer HS
HB
Palmer, Mass.

RUSS WOOD
79 Gov. Liv. Reg. DE
Berkeley Heig~ts, N.J.

85

twenty-five

�University of Massachusetts
Founded in 1863, the University of Massachusetts is the
state university of the Commonwealth with campuses at
Amherst, Boston and Worcester.
The oldest campus, located at Amherst in the Connecticut
Valley of western Massachusetts, has an enrollment of
18,835 students, of whom 3,150 are graduate students. The
Graduate School offers a master's degree in 60 fields and
doctorates in 45 fields.
The Boston campus, established in 1964, has 4,000 students. A new campus for UMass / Boston is presently under
construction at Columbia Point. The first phase of this
campus is scheduled for completion in 1972.
The University of Massachusetts Medical School at Worcester enrolled a first year class of 16 in September of this
year. Established in 1962, the School is now building a
medical science complex and a 400-bed teaching hospital
on a 126-acre site overlooking Lake Quinsigamond. Designed by Campbell, Aldrich and Nulty of Cambridge,
these buildings are scheduled for completion in 1973. The
School will admit 100 students per class when the facilities are completed.
A unique ' feature of study at the University's Amherst
campus is the Five-College Cooperative Program by the
University and four neighboring private colleges. Faculty
and equipment have been pooled in a Five-College Astronomy Department and joint programs are offered in other
areas. Qualified students at any of the five institutions
may take courses offered by the other participating

schools. The Five-Colleges also maintain a public radio
station, WFCR, and publish "The Massachusetts Review."
The four neighboring colleg·es are Amherst, Hampshire,
Mount Holyoke and Smith.
As the state university of Massachusetts, the University
of Massachusetts maintains more than 20 public service
units. Among these is the Labor Relations and Research
Center for labor members and others throughout the
Commonwealth, and the Cooperative Extension Service
which conducts off-campus educational programs in agriculture, home economics, youth work and other areas. The
Massachusetts Experiment Station does agricultural research work, the Water Resources Research Center studies
pollution and environmental problems, and the Commonwealth Technical Resource Service is the University's
Research and information link with industry. The Division
of continuing Education offers University level study
through evening courses and on and off campus.
A program to help disadvantaged bla.ck students and
others with college potential is now in its third year at the
UniversiLy. Black students are given financial aid and
tutoring through the program, titled CCEBS (Community
for the Collegiate Education of Black Students). Established this year is a department of Black Studies named
for W. E. B. DuBois, black scholar and author. The University School of Business Administration conducts a
program in graduate business training for blacks and
members of other minority groups already employed by
business firms.

Coach Vic Fusia and the UMass Staff

1970 RED MEN STAFF (1-r): Vic Fusia, head coach; George Karras, Offensive line; Nick Nicolau, offensive backs;
Dub Fesperman, defensive coordinator; Bob Graham, linebackers; Dave Kelley, head freshman coach; and Milt Piepul,
defensive backs. Coach Fusia is in his tenth season at UMass. His record, 55-26-1 entering this season, is the best in the
school's history.
'

twenty-six

�THE BULLS SALUTE

Buster VIII- Chester Malach
Buster VIII is the nephew of Buster I, given
the University in 1958 by Elizabeth Taylor and
the late Mike Todd. A pure breed Scottish Angus, Buster VIII is nine months old, and weighs
more than 500 lbs. The original Buster, which
died in 1962 was a combination Black Angus
and Scottish Dexter, and weighed more than
1200 lbs. All eight Busters have appeared at UB home games since 1958, and have traveled to many
road games in owner Chester Malach's trailer.
Mr. Malach, a power engineer at General Electric for 30 years, is a 1940 graduate of local Seneca
Vocational High where he lettered in three sports, football (All-high tackle), basketball and track. He
has taken care of all the Bulls on his Elma (N. Y.) farm since he loaned the original Buster to the
University.
Mr. Malach has enjoyed tending for UB's mascots, and logging over 10,000 miles with them, but he
has had some trying experiences. Like the time the Bulls played Army at West Point in 1960 in Buster's last road game. Buster was kept in a stall overnight, and as Mr. Malach recalls, "One of the cadets
went into his stall with a pair of shears to cut the traditional Army "A" on Buster's side. Well, Buster
didn't like visitors at night, and he kicked the Cadet up the wall."
"The next morning they asked me to get back the shears which were up on a ledge near the ceiling."
Buster never got his "A".

TODA"it.'S ·
· OFFICIALS
CLOCK OPERATOR: Harry J. Kelly, Jr. (Georgetown)
PUBLIC ADDRESS : James R. DeSantis (Canisius)
SCOREBOARD: Raymond W. Reinig

LINESMAN
WILLIAM T. RICHARDS-President of the Richards Adjustment Service, Inc. of Elmira, N. Y.
Captain of both freshman and varsity boxing
teams at Penn State. later coached the sport
at Bucknell. Played football and baseball for
the Nittany lions . Formed his own company in
1956 after 17 years as an insurance adjuster.
Hobbies include raising Hereford cattle and
Morgan horses on 250-acre ranch. Resides in
Pine City, N. Y.

FIELD JUDGE
REFEREE
JOHN P. WEGERSKI-Coordinator of the mathematics department in North Syracuse Schools.
Resident of Brewerton, N. Y. Graduate of St.
Bonaventure where he lettered in football and
basketball. Football captain two years and won
All-little Three, all-state and All-Western New
York honors. Veteran high school football
coach.

WALLACE A. SCRIVENER-Employed by Beth lehem Steel Corporation as a sales representative. Virginia Tech graduate with prior enrollment at Randolph-Macon College where he won
letters in baseball, basketball, football and
track . Army Air Corps veteran.

UMPIRE

BACK JUDGE

WILLIAM J. ROMANOWSKI-Graduate of Villanova where he was a halfback for three varsity seasons. He then played semi-pro football
in the Philadelphia area. Presently employed
by the Internal Revenue Service in Scranton, Po.
Served in the Navy from 1944-1946.

ARTHUR W. BALE-Branch manager with Simplex Time Recorder Company. College career
at Harpur was interrupted by four year -tour in
U.S. Navy. Served as Chief Petty Officer
(USN R) on minesweeper in the Pacific . Football
and track honors in high school. Resident of
Vestal, N. Y.

twenty-seven

�Editor's Bullpen
U/B's HALL OF FAME
Two Buffalo sports personalities were inducted into
the SUNY at Buffalo Hall of Fame at the Faculty Club
last night, Industrialist William C. Baird and Gerald
Philbin '64 brought to 20 the men of the University who
have distinquished themselves in athletics and with athletes.
When you think of U / B athletics Bill Baird stands
alone. Buffalo's most honored football player is Gerry
Philbin Al-Pro defensive end with the New York Jets. Both
gentlemen have given to their teams what few other men
can match. The Department of Intercolegiate Athletics is
proud to inscribe their names on its walls.
An untiring good neighbor who has devoted himself
to numerous community projects on the Niagara Frontier,
Mr. Baird, Williams '28, was designated one of 1969's Outstanding Citizens by the EVENING NEWS last January.
He is chairman of the University at Buffalo Council and a
member of the UnL-yersity of Buffalo Foundation, which
supports financially a number of U / B functions, including
some athletic programs. Honored by many organizations
for his contributions Of social service to the community,
he is the chief executive officer of the Buffalo Pipe and
Foundry Company and president of the Central Foundry
Company of New York.
Bill is only the second non-graduate elected into the
Hall. Retired AD Jim Peelle, Purdue '34, was inducted in
1968.

BILL BAIRD

GERRY PHILBIN

A 6-2, 231-pound defensive tackle under Coach Dick
Offenhamer, Philbin took the Jets over the Detroit Lions
and played his way into the Super Bowl and consensus
all-league. Injured in his team's first exhibition this summer against the Bills at Birmingham, he is expected to
return to active playing status shortly.
Gerry made both wire service All-America charts as
an undergraduate and was twice All-East. He majored in
sociology and made many friends in and out of football in
western New York.
Out of Pawtucket, R. I., Philbin came to the Bulls as
a trim 195-pound lineman. A serious weight training schedule helped expand his measurements and at his graduation
he was a fine product of a fast-developing major college
football program.
A husky hand and a wealth of respect today for Bill
Baird and Gerry Philbin.

1970 Buffalo Composite Schedule
Sept. 12

BUffALO
WON

BAll STATE

at

at

Muncie

Terre Haute

Muncie

Muncie

Murfreesboro

at
Munc•e

at
Ypsilont•

BOWLING GREE

WEST MICHIGAN

KENT STATE
at

MIAMI,O
at

NO. ILLINOIS

DAYTON

COLORADO ST.

at

Kent

Toledo

at
Toledo

at

Kalamazoo

Dayton

at
Toledo

OHI O UNIV.
LOST
24-U

BUFFALO

PITTSBURGH
at

MAINE
WON
21-0

DARTMOUTH
LOST
27·0

MARYLAND
WON
21-3

BOSTON COll
LOST
2B-21

SANTA CLARA
WON
37-13

XAVIU
WON
45-22

CINCINNATI
LOST
13-7

OWliNG GREEN
TIED
14-U

VIRGINIA
LOST

ALABAMA
LOST
"-18

MEMI"HI!o ST.
LOST
21-20

AUOH
l OST
21-0

SAN DIEGO ST.
LOST
35-3

OHIO UNJV

WON
27-21

TEM,.LE
LOST
23-13

VIllANOVA
WON
21·21

NAVY
WON
28-14

BUCKNELL
WON
10-3

HOLY ClOSS
WON
23-'3

MONTANA
LOST
3;)-6

XAVIER
WON
18-0

Nov. 26- v.uonovo

t wenty·eight

Nov 14
EAST. MICHIGAN

at
Athens

BOSTONCOll

NO. ILLINOIS

Nov. 7

SO. IlliNOIS

MAISHAll
WON
52-3

27-6

AIMY
LOST
26-0

TEMPLE

Oct_ 31
MIDDLE TENN
at

BUffALO
WON

1·0

HOLY CROSS

Oct. 24
NO . IlliNOIS
at

W ON
26-13

MASSACHUSETTS

V P.l

Oct. 17
EVANSVILLE

LOST
13-12

KENT STATE

DAYTON

Oct 10

INDIANA ST.
at

BUTLER

E. CARO LINA
WON
35-2

VI~ LA NOVA

Oct.J
AKRON

E. KENTUCKY

U -7

TOlEDO

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BUFFAlO

�FEATURING THE LARGEST SELECTION
of IMPORTED and DOMESTIC WINES!

�Vega 2300 is here at last.
Because now you can buy what we at
We'd have brought it out sooner, but Chevrolet have come to modestly believe is
you know how it is. We've got a lot riding on the best little car in the world.
this little car and we wanted it to be right,
We don't expect this ad to convince you.
really right, before turning it over to you.
We expect the car to, though.
Now we're ready.
Vega. The little car that does everything
And you were wise to wait.
well. Look into it.

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1970-10-03 Buffalo - Massachusetts</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text> Rotary Field - 1:30 pm - 50¢</text>
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                <text> October 3, 1970</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496278">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1970-10-03</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>FIFTY CENTS

II

UB vs.
TEMPLE
WELCOME ALUMNI !

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The Sound System for today's game
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�e

10
Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
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INVITE ALL

AlUMNI and FRIENDS
TO

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AT THE

POST GAME TUNK
Immediately Following Each Home Game
Iroquois Beer- Pop- Chips- Pretzels- Peanuts
Featuring THE U.B. BLUES
DONATION: $1.50 Per Person

Faculty Club
four

Dress - As You Are

�Stadium Information
YOUR OOOPERATION PLEASE - As guests of the University today, your cooperation is required in
maintaining the dignity and reputation of the University. It is requested that you observe the rules and regulations of the institution.
WE WELCOME YOU to this University of Buffalo athletic contest and mvite you to relax and enjoy
exciting intercollegiate competition with our respected opponent.
On behalf of the athletic department, its staff and the players we welcome you.
Dr. Lawrence A. Cappiello
Director, Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

REST ROOM FACILITIES: Ladies' rest rooms
are situated at the north ends under the
Bailey Avenue and main stands. Gentlemen's
rest rooms are situated at the south ends
under the Bailey Avenue and main stands.
TICKET INFORMATION: The ticket office
in Clark GymnasiUm is open each weekday
of the football season from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
On game days the main ticket window is
open from 9 a.m. to the kickoff. Tickets may
also be reserved on Friday night before a
home game from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.

Buffalo's Rotary Field
(Dedicated- 1930)

,~l - 1
.fl"'

l((fl~ll

1r.··r

...

nuD&amp;o ts

''

LOST AND .FOUN D: All lost and found items
should be reported to the U / B Campus Police.
The Campus Police main office is in the Service Building on Winspear Avenue.
REFRESHMENT BOOTH S : T here are three
refreshment areas in the stadium. The locations are - practice field entrance (Gate 1) ,
Bailey A venue entrance (Gate 3) and at the
north end of the Bailey A venue stands.

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six

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The U/ B Athletic Department is grateful to the management of BARTLETT BUICK, 380 Main St.,
for the use again this football season of a 1969 Opel Kadett. The popular "Bull Wagon" serves the
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IN THE BUFFALO PRESS BOX
The Office of Sports Information would like to thank the staff at
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11

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seven

�BUFFALO ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION

DR. LAWRENCE A. CAPPIELLO
Brockport State '49, Indiana '56
Director, Physical Education, Recreation &amp; Athletics

HOWARD L. (Dan) DANIELS
Air Force Retired '68
Business Manager &amp; Promotion Director

RICHARD E. BALDWIN
St. Lawrence '54
Director, Sports Information

_ _._.. a

I

GERALD R. GERGLEY
Buffalo '61
Wrestling

DR. LEONARD T. SERFUSTINI
Buffalo '50
Basketball &amp; Golf

SIDNEY SCHWARTZ
Buffalo '40
Fencing

WILLIAM MONKARSH
Buffalo '60
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Buffalo '51
Cross-Country &amp; Track

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Buffalo '50
Basketball Assistant

DR. EDMUND J. GICEWICZ
Buffalo '52
Athletic Physician

NORBERT A. BASCHNAGEL
Buffalo '65
Basketball Assistant

JOSEPH E. STAEBELL
Equipment Manager

WILLIAM H. SANFORD, III
Buffalo '49
Swimming &amp; Tennis

JAMES E. SIMON
Buffalo '50
Trainer &amp; Physical Therapist

eight

-

ROBERT W. BEDELL
Buffalo State '51
Swimming Assistant

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Dining Room &amp;
Advance Reservations
Cocktail Lounges
* Olympic Outdoor Pool * Free Airport
* 48 Bowling Lanes
Transportation
* Indoor Ice Skating Rink * Golfing Privileges
* Room Phones TV
* Free Parking
&amp;

STATE MUTUAL
OF AMERICA

S. 5220 Camp Road
Thruway Exit 57 N. Y. S. Thruway
Hamburg, New York 14075

LEO H. LESS &amp; ASSOCIATES
STATE MUTUAL OF AMERICA
600 Liberty Bank Building

Phone 716-649-8100

Buffalo, New York 14202

nine

�(1-r) : Front - Captain Diane McMahon '71, Spring Valley, N . Y.; Sue Pierotti '71, Williamsville, N . Y .; Cheryl Mayo '71 , St. Albans,
N. Y. ; and Rita Yousey '71, Lowville, N. Y . Middle - Linda Luccioni '71, Elmont, N . Y .; Kathy Mc lane '72, Lowville, N . Y .; and
Alice Cypin '72, Levittown, N. Y . Top - Jan Anderson ' 72, Corry, Pa.

ten

�CHEERS for the largest selection of quality paperback
and hard cover books in Western New York.
CHEERS for a complete array of sweatshirts, ceramics,
cards to send home to mother (some not to
send home to mother), stuffed animals and
campus necessities.
CHEERS for an exciting collection of glassware bearing
the grand old UB emblem (a collector's item).

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

•

'

'

eleven

�The John W.
Cowper Co.
INCORPORATED

Engineers - Contractors

•
873-4200
Post Office Box 1068

1945 Sheridan Drive
Buffalo, New York 14240

852-2769
853-2737

Locksmiths- Safe Experts

SIEGFRIED

The Safe, Lock &amp; Key Corp.
" Ca ll us to discuss any lock problem"

CONSTRUCTION

204 PEARL STREET, BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202
SALES -

INSTALLATION- REPAIR

CO., INC.

Safes, Locks, Keys, Door Cl osers

•

CARL L. ANDERSON, INC•

6 N. PEARL STREET

Distr ibutors - Consultants

INTERIOR DESIGNERS

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202
Offi ce Furniture -

Drape r i.es -

Carpeting

886-2300

2222 ELMWOOD AVE.

twelve

875-2830

�~6 9

Buffalo Football News
BUFFALO vs. TEMPLE
Rotary Field, 1:30 P.M.

November 1, 1969

Editor: Richa rd E. Baldwin, Director of Sports Info rmation
local Advertis ing : Goodrich Printi ng &amp; lithog raphers
National Advertis ing : Spencer Advertising, New York
Contri butors: U/ B Info rmation Services, J im DeSantis, ECAC Se rvice Bu reau , Natio na l Collegia te Sports
Services, Bob Powell, Dick Joh nston, Spe ncer Advertising Com pa ny, NCAA Public Rela tio ns Committee,
Chris Ka b el, Dan Daniels, AI Shrier and t he Te mp le Office of Sports Info rma tion
Photog raphy: Ed Now a k, Rick Swenson, Te mple DSI O ffice and U/ B Information Services.
Printing : Goodrich Pri nting &amp; l it hogra phers, Inc., Cla rence Center, N. Y.

contents
DEPARTMENTS
5

Stadium Information

Today's Officials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Buffalo Athletic Adm inistration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

8

The Cheerleaders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

.........

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calendar, 10k gold filled case
and link bracelet. $165.

~....-

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Guaranteed accurate to a minute
a month *
Requires no batteries
Unaffected by gravitational field . . .
therefore, not sensitive
to change of position
Fully automatic
Superior protection against water,
dust, shock, magnetism
Thinner movement,
Extraordinary reliability
Tells date, hour, minute, second
Longines, only watch
ever to win 10 World 's
Fair Grand Prizes
and 28 Gold Medals.

~·.:~·

ft.'r

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\

. .

·~~'1

• ·•

F~anch.sed

Jeweler w1ll adJuSt you r
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necessary . Guarantee

15

Tem pie Coaching Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Official Temple Team Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Starting Game Line-ups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cente r Spread
Official Buffalo Team Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Buffalo Coaching Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Temple Players . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 &amp; 31
Buffalo Fall Sports Scoreboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Buffalo Players . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 &amp; 39 &amp; 41
1969 Football Program Patrons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
1969 Buffalo Squad Photo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
44

College Football Officials' Signals

FEATURES

.• Yii#f

' Yo"r Loog,nes· Wittnacer

Composite Score board . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

for one year

An Alumni Welcome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
In the Bullpen with Johnston &amp; Powell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Buffalo Salutes Its Seniors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Featuring Offense - Buffalo Quarte rbacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Six-Game Team Statistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

LONGINES
LONGINES-WITTNAUER WATCH COMPANY

Special Report- Temple University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
College Football's Centennial Queen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
32
Miss Mirta Ann Franovich
•••

Longines-Wittnauer Building, New Yort-_

0.

0

•••••

0

••

•

••

••

•••••

•

••••••

••

••

••••••

A CENTENNIAL WELCOME TO
MISS NEW YORK STATE - LINDA TRYBUS '71
MISS BUFFALO - KATHY KARPINSKI

thirteen

�G
YOUR
B

REFEREE
ALFRED M. DiSTOLADetective

sergeant

in

the Syracuse (N.Y.) Police Department, current~

ly assigned to community relations in conjunction with his duties as
physical training instructor. Active basketball
official. Christian Brothers Academy where he played and coached.
Selected (1966) by PARADE Magazine to receive recognition as one of the nation' s ten

outstanding police officers.

UMPIRE

MITCHELL J. OLENSKIGroduote of the University of Alabama . AllSouthern Conference at
tackle for the Crimson
Tide. Played in both the
Orange Bowl and Cotton
Bowl as on undergraduate. U. S. Army Quartermaster Corps. Played
professionally with the Miami Seohowks and
the Detroit Lions. Proprietor and owner of a
restaurant and lines in Vestal, N. Y.

LINESMAN

DO.

HENRY J . WOJTOWICZResides in lancaster,
N. Y. Director of Physi cal Education and coach
at Depew High School.
Graduated from Defiance College in Ohio
and took graduate work
at U/ B. Played end and
served as team captain
for the Yellowjockets. Also, played basketball
at Defiance. Coaches basketball and track.

FIELD JUDGE
WALLACE A. SCRIVENER
Employed by Bethlehem Steel Corp. as a
soles representative. A
graduate of Virginia
Tech, lost week's U/ B
opponent at War Memorial Stadium. Also,
attended Randolph -Macon College, where he
won letters in baseball, basketball, football and
track . Army Air Corps veteran.

BACK JUDGE

-

R ich Products Corp.

fourteen

JEROME P. WEISSAttorney in Manlius,
N.Y. Graduate of Princeton University and received his LL.B. from
Harvard Low School. At
Princeton he competed
in track and football
(lightweight varsity). He
coached Harvard's Lowell House football teams, while in low school
at Cambridge. He has also coached at Nottingham HS in Syracuse, N. Y.
CLOCK OPERATOR: Edward T. Kubiak (Canisius)
PUBLIC ADDRESS: James R. DeSantis (Canisius)
SCOREBOARD: Raymond W. Reinig

�An Alumni Welcome!

MARTIN MEYERSON
President
Dear Alumnae and Alumni:

DR. PETER F. REGAN
Acting President
October 24, 1969

Your University warmly welcomes you on the occasion
of this 44th Annual Homecoming! We hope that the events
of this special weekend will be most enjoyable, and they
will serve as a reminder of a welcome that is extended
you throughout the year.
As important members of this University community,
your knowledge, understanding and support of the State
University of New York at Buffalo have been essential and
will be even more important in the years ahead.
Your presence at our many and varied athletic events,
your participation in the University's educational and
cultural programs and your interest in a new, developing
alumni program are a basic part in our plans for the
future.
It is most pleasant to see you here today. May we
have the pleasure of seeing you at the University many
more times in the coming year.
Best regards,

~J~\l/1-{-tvv
Martin Meyerson, President

State University of New York at Buffalo
Office of the Presid ent

Peter F. Regan, Acting President

HAYES HALL BUFF ALO , NEW YORK 14 2 14

fifteen

�•

1n the BULLPEN with
BOB POWELL
Buffalo Courier Express
All of a sudden, it's farewell time again.
Farewell to Rotary Field for the large contingent of U B football seniors, that is.
The U B roster lists 22 last-year athletes, eight
of whom are first-stringers. with Coach Bob Deming's first platoons.

DICK JOHNSTON
Buffalo Evening News

Another overdue football team is in town to
play the University of Buffalo today. Last week
Virginia Tech was overdue for a victory and got
one. This week Temple is overdue for a victory
over U B. ever have the Owls from Philadelphia
defeated the Bulls in football.

The list is headed by Co-Captains Scott Clark
and Paul Lang and includes such standouts as
Dick Horn, Mike Luzny, Mick Murtha, Pat Patterson, Dan Walgate and Chris Wolf.

Eight times they've tried in a series started in
19?7. U B's victories have ranged from three
pomts, 16-13 by a John Stofa-led team in 1962 to
48 points, 54-6, by U B's Lambert Cup champi~ns
of 1958.

Only three of that group - Lang, Horn and
Patterson - weren't tarters when the 1967 season was launched, but before long the trio joined
the others in first team assignments.

Last year was a doozy, probably the most unusual game of the series and one that gained
national notoriety for its high score. U B won
50-40.
'

Their 1967 eleven posted a 6-4-0 record and
last year they helped post a 7-3-0 finish. Going
into today's Homecoming clash with Temple, the
Bulls are 3-3-0 with a fair chance of making it
6-3 by the time snow makes a charge on Western
New York.

Who knows what today's game will bring?
Both teams have had their ups and downs. The
Owls have a won-3 lost-2 tied-1 record to match
against U B's 3-3. When the Owls won they won
big; 47-3 over Rhode Island; 34-0 o;er Wayne
State; 34-7 over Hofstra. They lost big, too, in
one game, 33-0 to Delaware, leader in the Lambert
Cup race. The other loss was close, 7-6 to William
&amp; Mary, and the Owls tied Bucknell, 7-7.

The contributions of this year's senior group
have been many, both on and off the football field.
Lang his won varsity letters in each of his three
school terms. Walgate has earned monograms in
wrestling as well as football and Murtha has spent
one spring with the Bull baseballers.
None of their efforts in behalf of their university have been any greater, however, than
those of Dick Horn, a three-season defensive back.
Horn played a major role in last spring's student fee controversy. Through the campus newspaper, Horn enlisted the aid of many on-the-fence
students in passage of the referendum which financially endorses the University's athletic program.
A gifted young man, Horn aired his sentiments in a weekly column of the newspaper and
he deserves much credit for the overwhelming
approval of the referendum.
Today's game marks the seniors last Homecoming as players and there's nothing they'd rather do than make it a successful one for friends
and alumni of the University.
After all, starting next year the Homecoming
event will be something different for them. They'll
be able to enjoy the knocks without all the bruises
and stiffness of the ensuing days.

sixteen

A sophomore, Frank DiMaggio, has taken over
at quarterback from Terry Scalise, a transfer from
Penn State who started the season with a big
splash of publicity. DiMaggio scored twice and
threw for another touchdown in his debut as a
starter in the victory over Hofstra two weeks ago.
Delaware, however, kept Joe DiMaggio's cousin
pretty well throttled.
DiMaggio has passed for 118 yards, Scalise
for 549. Their principal receivers are split end
George Chaisson, a 6-1, 178-pound sophomore, who
has caught 18 for 344 yards, and flanker Jim
Watson, a 5-11, 173-pound senior, who has grabbed
16 for 158 yards.
John Small, 6-1 and 196 pounds, halfback in
Temple's pro-type offense, is the Owls' best running threat. He has gained 358 yards on 90 carries, a 4.1-yard average. He's best at sweeps and
off-tackle runs. DiMaggio is a good scrambler and
does quite a bit of running with the ball. He has
carried the ball 27 times for a net of 143 vards
a 5.3-yarcl average.
·
'
. Temple h.as three big, experienced guys in the
middle of their five-man defensive line. They are
Allen Smith, 238 pounds; Steve Caporiccio,· 245.
and Marteen Jones, 237.

�Co-Captains Lang &amp; Clark Salute Seniors

DICK HORN
Defensive Back

PAT PATTERSON
Halfback

PRENTIS HENLEY
Defensive End

BILL HAYDEN
Guard

DAN WALGATE
Defensive Tackle

MIKE LUZNY
Linebacker

CHRIS WOLF
Tackle

JIM MOSHER
Linebacker

STEVE McCULLOUGH
Linebacker

MICK MURTHA
Quarterback

MIKE SHARROW
Split End

PAUL JACK
Punter

TERRY ENDRESS
Tight End

GARY GRUBBS
Defensive Back

GARY CHAPP
Linebacker

PAT GARNEY
Guard

FRANK REID
Defensive Tackle

�Featuring Offense- Buffalo Quarterbacks

UIB Signal-Callers with Coach Bob Deming {1-r): junior Ed Perry, Delmar, N. Y. ; sophomore Kirk Barton, Endicott, N. Y. ; senior Mick Murtha,
Endicott, N. Y.; and sophomore Doug Philp, Toronto, Dnt. Murtha set a career total offense record last Saturday at the Stadium against VPI
with 109 yards. Heading into today's contest he has 2,753 yards running and passing. John Stofa '64 formerly held the record (1961-63)at
2, 730. Murtha also owns five individual passing records. Prior to this afternoon, Mick has completed 201 passes in 479 attempts in his career.

1969 Buffalo Composite Schedule
BAll STATE

XAVIEII

Sept. 20

Sept. 27

Ott. 4

Oct. 11

O&lt;t 18

Oct. 2.5

No¥. I

Nov. 8

EAST KENTUCKY
LOST

8UTLEI:
WON

AKRON
LOST

INDIANA S.
LOST

EVANSVILLE

MIDDLE TENN

SO . IlliNOIS

WON

NO . IlLINOIS
LOST

10·7

13-0

36-7

49-9

26-0

38-0

17- 13

M1mci e

Corbondo le

MIAMI (0)
LOST

IUffAlO

KENT STATE
LOST
23-7

CINCINNATI
LOST
17- U

OHIO UNIV
LOST
31-6

VILLANOVA
LOST
J.S-7

DAYTON

Q UAN TICO

TOLEDO

Ooyton

Ci ncinnori

Cindnnoli

BUffALO
LOST
16-6

DElAWARE
lOST
33 -21

BOSTON UNIV
W ON
14-9

RHODE ISLAND

CONNECICUT

VERMONT

HOLY CROSS

NEW HAM,.SHIItE

BOSTON COLl

WON
21 -9

WON

28-7

Amher st

A mherlf

Durhom

Che1fnu t Hill

XAVIEI

WESTEIN MICH

TOLEDO
LOST

MAISHALL

MIAMI ( 0)

23-7

17-8

IOWll NG GREEN
LOST
7 -0

LOUISVILLE

WON

BUffAlO
WON

43 -17

Kent

Kent

Kent

AUON

XAVIH

VILLANOVA

TOLEDO

LOST
U ·IO

Dayton

V iltonovo

Toledo

VIllANOVA

MASSACHUSETTS

ltuTGERS

CONNECTICUT

"

Am hen!

W orce1t er

Storu

FlOitlDA ST.

DUKE

l.S·7

LOST
17-0
MAINE

WON

MASSACHUSETTS

49-7

KENT STATE

DAYTON

DAYTON
WON

,..,.

KENT STATE
LOST

,..,.

OHIO UNIV
LOST
J.S-0

MIAMI 10
LOST

I

19. 9

HOlY CIIOSS

ALABAMA
VlltGINIA TECH

LOST
33 -13

OWLINC GIEEN
lOST

LOU ISV I LLE

lOST

BUffALO
lOST

17· 20

2ol· 17

27· 0

NO IlliNOIS
WON
.56· 2.4

HAIVAitD

COLGATE

BUffALO

SYitACUSE

LOST

DAitTMOUTH
LOST

13· 0

38·6

Cancelled

Cancelled

Cancelled

WAKE f"OitEST

lt/CHMOND

so. CAIOliNA

WM. &amp; MAltY

..

Worce1ter

..
..

LOST

LOST

LOST

KENTUCKY
LOST

lOST

BUffALO
WON

17·13

16· 10

17· 10

7 -6

17·16

21·7

ltoonoke

ltHODE ISLAND
WON

WM . &amp; MAltY
lOST

WAYNE ST.
WON

BUCKNEll
TI ED

HOfSTitA
WON

DElAWARE
LOST

BUffAlO

GETTYSISUitG

7-6

3A·O

7-7

34· 7

33· 0

Buffalo

,.h ilodel phio

NAVY
WON

TUlANE
WON

VIllANOVA
LOST

AI MY
LOST

,.ENN STATE

BUFfALO

2B· 2A

24 · 6

38· 7

Univ. ,.ork

Chetlnut Hill

• 7·3

BOSTON COllEGE

Nov. 22

Sept. 13
BUFFALO
WON

,,.,.

Nov 15
EAST MICHIGAN

..

Norfol k

..
..

NORTHEASTERN

..

BOSTON UNIV.
Philadelphi a

VIIGINIA Mil
of
Che1tnut Hill

l tMASSACHUSEnS
of
Chetlnuf Hill

BUFFALO vs. THE 1969 SCHEDULE - WON 20, LOST 17, TIED 2 (3 New Series)
BUffALO
V I llANOVA
V illonovo

No"' 29 - Xo ... ier "' · Te•o• We1tern ot El P'o1o
Vi rtinio Tech "' Virt onio M ililory ol ltoonoke

eighteen

Hol y Cro11 " ' · Botton Coli ot Woru1ter

�The Temple Coaching Staff

GEORGE MAKRIS
Head Coach
George Makris, who was named the 18th head football
coach in Temple's long gridiron history in 1960, has done
an outstanding job building the University's football program. George led the Owls to a 7-2 record and Temple's
first Middle Atlantic Conference University Division championship in 1967. Makris had directed his gridders to five
consecutive non-losing seasons until the Owls slipped to a
4-6 record during the 1968 season when the team was
riddled with injuries. During this winning period, Temple
had a 30-13-3 record. His nine year record at Temple is
now 41-39-3. The 48-year-old Makris led Temple to a 7-2
record in 1964 for the University's best showing since 1945.
Temple had a 5-3-1 log in 1963 for its first winning season
since 1951. Makris uses a pro-type attack that has made
the Owls exciting to watch.
Makris came to Temple from Bolling Air Force Base
in Washington, D.C., where he was head football coach and
director of athletics. During his five-year tenure at Bolling,
Makris compiled at 47-4-2 record and his teams outscored
their opposition, 1,417 points to 391 while winning numerous championships.
Before reporting to Bolling, Makris was employed by
the University of Wisconsin, his Alma Mater, and Michigan
State University. He was assistant football coach at Wisconsin in 1946 under Harry Stuhldreher. At Michigan State
Makris served as assistant football coach under Biggie
Munn and he was also head boxing coach and assistant professor of Physical Education. He remained at Michigan
State until moving to Bolling Air Force Base.
George earned three varsity football letters while playing right guard at Wisconsin where as a junior he was
named winner of the Harland P. Rogers Scholarship, based
on athletic accomplishments, scholastic achievement and
leadership. He also competed in boxing at Wisconsin and
won the National Collegiate Light-Heavyweight Championship in 1942 and 1943.
Makris majored in Physical Education at Wisconsin
where he earned his Bachelor of Science degree in 1943.
He returned to Wisconsin in 1946, after spending 36 months
in the service, and took graduate work in Physical Education, receiving his Master's degree in Education in 1947.
Makris is married and the father of five daughters.

JOHN ROGERS
Assistant Head Coach

JOHN McANENEY
Offensive Backfield

TONY SARDISCO
Defensive Line

FRANK MASSINO
Head Freshman Coach

TOM URBANIK
Receiver Coach

BOB MARSHALL
Offensive Line

PAUL MALATESTA
Defensive Backfield

EARL CLEGHORN
Freshman Line Coach

nineteen

�1969 Temple Football Roster

No.
9
10
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
26
27
31

32
33
34
35

39
41

42
44
46
48
49
50
51
54
56
59
60
62
63
64
65
67
68
69
70
71
72
75
76

77
79
80
82

83
84
85
86
87

88
90
91

Player
Kindregan, John
Heller, Frederick
Scalise, Terrence
Grim, Charles
Shobert, Douglas
* Puchalski, David
DiMaggio, Frank
Pratt, William
Small, John
McColgan, Joseph
Grimes, Herbert
*King, George
Lee, Richard
Nemshick, Ronald
*Barnes, Patrick
Gifford, Joseph
*Mesko, Joseoh
Zanghi, Michael
*Eastwick, Richard
*Watson, James
*Glassey, Hugh
*Fletcher, Chris
Dulin, James
*Leonard, Godfrey
Cottrell, James
Matlack, Robert
Giordanengo, Stephen
*Mackowsky, Daniel
*DeN iro, Thomas
*Fatigate, James
Tomasetti, Michael
Calabrese, Raymond
*Russo, Louis
Licata, Sal
*Kern, Chad
Semler, Michael
*Caporiccio, Stephen
Carden, Donald
*Famille, Joseph
Schultz, Garry
*Jones, Marteen
*Letino, Frank
Stec, Gene
*Mullen, James
Redick, Richard
Chaisson, George
Sutton, Harold
Thornton, Robert
Barrett, Patrick
*Padla, Douglas
Brett, Gene
Mulvihill, Kevin
*Smith, Allan
*Varsity Letter (21)

twenty

Pos.
OB
DHB
OB
LB
OB
DHB
OB
DHB
HB
FB
HB
LB
DHB
FB
DHB
HB
DE
FL
DHB
FL
DE
DHB
FL
LB
LB

c
c
c
LB
G
LB
G

T
G
G
G
MG
G

T
T
DT
DT

T
DE
TE
SE
TE
SE
DE
T
TE
DE
DE

Cl.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.

Age
20
20
19
19
19
20
19
19
20
20
20
20
19
19
21
19
20
20

22
20
21
20
18
21
19
20
19
21
20
20
19
19
20
19
21
19
21
19
20
20
20
20
20
21
19
20
20
19
19
21
18
19

20

Ht.
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-2
6-1
5-10
5-11
5·11
6·0
5·11
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-0
5-10
5-8
6·0
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-10
6-1
6-1
6-3
6-1
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-4
6-3
6-2
6-2
6-3
6-1
6-2

Wt.
196
181
205
202
186

173
196
201
196
205
190
214
176
189
186
192
200

170
179
173
208
186
171
187
195
208
211
201
214

223
206
214
215
222
198
220
245

234
239
247

237
247
245
215
195

178
215
191
219

208
190
208

238

Sch ool
Lansdale HS
East Islip HS
Wintersville HS
York Suburban HS
Central Bucks HS
Dunmore HS
New Milford HS
Bayside HS
West Catholic HS
Camden Catholic
St. Emma Military
Atlantic City HS
West Catholic HS
Madison Township
Hollidaysburg HS
West Catholic HS
Scranton Central
Technical HS
Memorial HS
Hempfield Area
Mt. St. Michael
East Orange HS
Archbishop Wood
Central HS
Wintersville HS
Neshaminy HS
Charleroi Area
Old Forge HS
Roncalli HS
Mt. St. Michael
Blakely School
Pittston Area
Holy Cross HS
Pittston Area
Plymouth-Whitemar
St. Benedict 's
Bishop Neumann
Hampton HS
Triton HS
Holy Spirit HS
St. Thomas More
Hammonton HS
Pennsville HS
Geo. C. Marshall
Archbishop Wood
Newburyport HS
Lakewood HS
E. Paterson Mem .
Riverside HS
Ridgefield Mem.
St. Joseph's HS
South Hills Cath .
Council Rock HS

H ometown
North Wales, Pa.
Great River, N .Y.
Middleton, Wise .
York, Pa .
Chalfont, Pa.
Dunmore, Pa.
New Milford, N .J.
Bayside, N . Y .
Philadelphia, Pa.
Camden , N.J .
Washington, D .C.
Margate, N . J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Old Bridge, N .J.
Hollidaysburg, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Dunmore, Pa.
Scranton, Pa.
Haddonfield, N .J.
Wendel, Pa.
Bronx , N.Y .
East Orange, N .J.
Hatboro, Pa .
Philadelphia, Pa.
Wintersville, Ohio
Feasterville, Pa.
Charleroi, Pa.
Old Forge, Pa.
Pueblo, Colo.
Bronx, N . Y .
Olyphant, Pa.
Pittston, Pa.
Maple Shade, N.J .
Pittston, Pa.
Norristown, Pa.
Newark, N.J .
Philadelphia, Pa.
Hampton, Va .
Runnemede, N.J .
Pleasantville, N.J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Hammon;on, N .J.
Pennsville, N .J.
Vienna, Va.
Hatboro, Pa.
Newburyport, Mass.
Lakewood, N . J.
East Paterson, N .J.
Moosic, Pa.
Ridgefield, N.J .
Philadelphia, Pa .
Pittsburgh, Pa .
Newton, Pa.

.

�...

BEFORE 'IOU
BU'f I SEE YOUR.
C~RYSLER.­

PLYMOUTI-\

OR DODGE
DEALER.

Cf.!RySLaR
CPRPORATION&gt;
LDNGON
STYL-ING ,
LONG ON
FEATUReS
AND ON

ENG1NE.ER.ING

Plymouth •Dodge· Chrysler · Imperial· Dodge Trucks •Simca •Sunbeam

~~ CHRYSLER
CORPORATION
~

�Things

go better
~ .--.. with Coke.
TRADE· M ARK

®

�Offense
85 PAUL LANG (CC) .•.... . TE
77 CHRIS WOLF . . ... •. .... LT
61 JERRY ELWELL ......... LG
58 CHUCK DONNOR ....... C
68 BILL HAYDEN .... .. ... . RG
73 TOM CENTOFANTI ... ... RT
80 JOE MORESCO ........ SE
14 MICK MURTHA . . ...... QB
49 JOHN FALLER .......... LH
20 PAT PATTERSON ....... RH
35 JOE ZELMANSKI ... ... .. FB

86
76
60
70
31
91
39
48
34
17
32

BUFFALO
90
70
66
96
56
32
34
59
42
47
83

TEMPLE

Defense
PRENTIS HENLEY ........ LE
DAN WALGATE .... .. .. LT
ROVELL JONES ........ RT
TOM VIGNEAU ......... RE
SCOTT CLARK (CC) .... OLB
LARRY MADDEN ...... . ILB
MIKE LUZNY ..... ..... IRB
ED KERSHAW ........ ORB
LEN NIXON . . ... . . . ... LH
MARK MacVITTIE ...... RH
DICK HORN ............ S

83
72
68
59
62
71
82
18
29
44
26

40
41
42
43
45
46
47
48
49

50
51
52
53
54

Perry, QB
Grubbs, DHB
Murtha, QB
Barton, DHB
Hart, P-DHB
Jack, P-QB
Philp, QB
Patterson, HB
Woodward, HB
Layo, K
Francis, DHB
Zalar, DHB
Jacobs, DHB
Wells, DHB
Plawiuk, HB
Stiscak, HB
Hernquist, FB
Madden, lB
Smith, lB
luzny, lB
Zelmanski, FB
Scott, HB
McCullough, lB
Chapp, lB
Kozel, FB
Elliott, S
Constantino, K
Nixon, DHB
Griffiths, LB
Herlan,HB
Hogan,S
MacVittie, DHB
C. Jones, S
Faller, HB
Mosher, lB
Graver, lB
Fortino, lB
Majcher, lB
Conaway, lB

55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
87
89
90
92
93
95
96
99

Siedlecki, LB
Clark, lB
Albaneze, C
Donnor, C
Kershaw, LB
Carney, G
Elwell, G
Bauch, G
Bork, G
Ziegler, lB
Chernega, C
R. Jones, DT
Forness, DT
Hayden, G
Kehr, G
Walgate, DT
Winnett, T
Milarksi, T
Centofanti, T
Rio, T
Murphy, G
Reid, DT
Wolf, T
Ellenbogen, T
Atkinson, DT
Moresco, SE
Dorich, TE
Endress, TE
Horn, SE
Waggoner, SE
lang, TE
Fraser, SE
Sharrow, SE
Henley, DE
Hudson, DE
Etherington, DE
James, TE
Vigneau, DE
Pescrillo, DT

Offense
GEORGE CHAISSON . . ... LE
JOE FAMILLE .... .. .... LT
CHAD KERN .. . .. ... ... LG
DAN MACKOWSKY . . .... C
JIM FATIGATE ......... RG
DON CARDEN ......... RT
RICH REDICK .... .. . ... RE
FRANK DiMAGGIO ..... QB
BOB TAROLA .. .. . ..... LH
JIM WATSON . . .... .. . RH
JOE McCOLGAN ....... FB

THE OWLS SQUAD

THE BULLS SQUAD
11
12
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
22
23
24
26
27
28
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39

Defense
PAT BARRETT .......... LE
MARTEEN JONES ... ... . LT
TOM DeNIRO .. ....... LLB
STEVE CAPORICCIO .... MG
GEORGE KING ........ RLB
ALLAN SMITH ... ... . .. RT
JOE MESKO . .. . . . . . ... RE
CHRIS FLETCHER ..... . .. LS
PAT BARNES .......... LIS
DAVE PUCHALSKI ..... . RIS
RICH LEE .... .. ..... . . . RS

9
10
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
22
26
27
31
32
33
34
35
39
41
42
44
45
46
48
49
50
51
54

Kindregan, QB
Heller, DHB
Scalise, QB
Grim, lB
Shobert, QB
Puchalski, DHB
DiMaggio, QB
Pratt, DHB
Small, HB
Klemick, K
McColgan, FB
Grimes, HB
King, lB
lee, DHB
Nemshick, FB
Barnes, DHB
Gifford, HB
Mesko, DE
Zanghi, FL
Eastwick, DHB
Watson, Fl
Hovington , DHB
Glassey, DE
Fletcher, DHB
Dulin, Fl
leonard, LB
Cottrell, lB
Matlack, C

56
59
60
62
63
64
65
67
68
69
70
71
72
75
76
77
79
80
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
90
91

Giordanengo, C
Mackowsky, C
DiNiro, lB
Fatigate, G
Tomasetti, lB
Calabrese, G
Russo, T
Licata, G
Kern, G
Semler, G
Caporiccio, MG
Carden, G
Famille, T
Schultz, T
Jones, DT
letino, DT
Stec, DE
Mullen, DE
Redick, TE
Chaisson, SE
Sutton, TE
Thornton, SE
Barrett, DE
Padla, T
Brett, TE
Mulvihill, DE
Smith, DE

"COCA-COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY

�Goodbye, Old Paint

Anti- Establish Mint
Hulla Blue
Original Cinnamon
Fre an G
Thanks Vermillion

FORD

When you make a maverick car, you
paint it maverick colors . Bright, bold
colors with names to match . And Maverick gives you much more. You get an
economy car that rivals the imports in
price-and tops them in power, performance , and room.
Maverick's 105 horses lets you get up
to 70-mph turnpike speeds in a hurry.
Yet Maverick's gas mileage is what you
might expect in an import.
Maverick's wheelbase is 8 inches
shorter than a '69 Falcon , and its turning circle is even smaller than VW.
Inside, cheerful interiors and 9-in .
more shoulder room in the front seat
than a VW. In back, a real trunk (1 0.4
cu . ft.).
Maverick is designed to be easy to
service. Parts and service are handled
by over 6,000 Ford Dealers . So say farewell to old paint. Say hello to Maverick,
the first car of the '70s ... at 1960 prices.
* Manufacturer's suggested retail price for the car.
Price does not include: optional white sidewall
tires, $32.00 ; dealer preparation charge, if any ;
transportation charges, state and local taxes.

MAVERICK

�\.

,.
1 \'
/

~

-.
.. l ...
,~·

)}'' '\\{}!_\~"";·.,.·

~

''-":'Oo.' J.

~

~~

1969 Buffalo Football Roster

Pos.
Player
OB
• Perry, Edward
DHB
* Grubbs, Gary
QB
• * Murtha, Mark
DHB
tBarton, Kirk
P-DHB
tHart, Lawrence
p
**Jack, Paul
OB
tPhilp, Douglas
HB
* • Patterson, Patrick
HB
*Woodward, Barnard
K
t La yo, Robert
DHB
Francis, Ronald
DHB
*Zalar, Karl
DHB
* Jacobs, Joel
DHB
Wells, Kevin
HB
tPiawiuk, Russell
HB
Stiscak, Robert
FB
Hernquist, Eugene
LB
tMadden, Lawrence
tSmith, Philip
LB
*Luzny, Michael
LB
* Zelmanski, Joseph
FB
Scott, Joseph
FB
McCullough, Steven
LB
*Chapp, Gary
LB
tKozel, Douglas
FB
* Elliott, Thomas
s
Constantino, Michael
K
*Nixon, Leonard
DHB
Griffiths, Robert
LB
HB
Herlan, Scott
s
Hogan, Kevin
DHB
MacVittie, Mark
s
t Jones, Clifton
HB
Faller, John
LB
**Mosher, James
Graver, Charles
LB
LB
tFortino, James
LB
tMajcher, David
Conaway, Daniel
LB
54
tSiedlekci, Stanley
LB
55
LB
56 * * Clark, Scott (CC)
Albaneze, Dennis
c
57
*Donner, Charles
c
58
*Kerhsaw, Edward
LB
59
Carney, Patrick
G
60
Elwell, Jerry
G
61
tBauch,John
G
62
Bork, Kenneth
G
63
Ziegler, Joseph
LB
64
Chernega, David
c
65
*Jones, Revell
DT
66
Forness, Charles
DT
67
*Hayden, William
G
68
tKehr, Paul
G
69
DT
70 **Walgate, Daniel
tWinnett, William
71
T
Milarski, Thomas
T
72
*Centofanti, Thomas
73
T
*Rio, John
74
T
Murphy, William
75
G
Reid, Frank
DT
76
T
77 **Wolf, Chris
78
tEIIenbogen, William
T
DT
79
Atkinson, Barry
SE
80
Moresco, Joseph
TE
tDorich, Paul
81
TE
82 **Endress, Terrence
SE
83 **Horn, Richard
SE
tWaggoner, Dennis
84
TE
85 **Lang, Paul (CC)
SE
Fraser, Bruce
87
SE
Sharrow, Michael
89
DE
* Henley, Prentis
90
DE
Hudson, Joseph
92
DE
Etherington, Robert
93
TE
James, Michael
95
DE
*Vigneau, Thomas
:::16
DT
Pescrillo, David
99
*Varsity Letter (28, including four from 1967
tFreshman numerals
MANAGERS : Allen Wright '72 (Mt. Vernon,

No.
11
12
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
22
23
24
26
27
28
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53

- "'"-

\. J--...·,

.J"""'-'.-:-...
_.. '-'--

Cl.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
- Grubbs,

Major
P.E.
P.E.
Bus.
Med.
L .A.
Chern.
Engr.
L.A.
P.E.
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
L .A.
His.
L.A.
L.A.
Bus.
L.A.
L.A.
Geo.
P.E .
L.A.
Soc.
P.E.
L.A.
Bus.
Phar.
P.E.
L.A.
P.E.
His.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E .
His.
L .A .
Bus.
Bus.
L.A.
P.E.
Soc.
L.A.
P.E.
L.A.
Soc.
Ant.
His.
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
Psych.
L.A.
His.
L.A.
P.E.
En gr.
His.
P.E.
L.A.
Bus.
Bus.
Soc.
L.A.
P.E.
Bus.
His.
Bus.
Eng.
L.A.
His.
His.
P.E.
P.E.
Phil.
P.E.
P.S.
P.E.
L.A.
R. Jones,

Ht.
Age
6-3
20
5-9
21
5-11
22
6-2
18
6-0
19
6-0
19
6-2
18
5-11
21
5-9
20
6-0
18
5-11
20
6-0
20
5-10
20
6-1
20
5-10
20
5-11
20
5-9
20
6-0
19
5-11
21
5-9
22
6-1
20
5-11
19
5-10
21
5-8
21
5-11
19
5-11
20
5-11
19
5-11
20
5-11
19
6-2
21
6-0
21
5-10
19
6-0
19
5-11
20
6-1
22
5-9
21
5-11
18
6-1
18
6-2
21
6-2
18
6-0
22
6-3
20
6-1
20
6-2
20
6-0
21
6-0
21
6-0
19
6-0
20
5-10
20
5-11
22
6-1
20
6-0
20
5-10
22
6-0
19
6-2
21
6-2
19
6-0
20
6-0
20
6-0
20
6-4
20
6-3
23
6-3
21
6-3
18
6-4
20
6-2
20
6-3
19
6-0
21
6-1
22
6-1
19
6-0
22
6-1
18
6-2
20
6-1
22
6-1
21
6-2
20
6-7
20
6-0
20
6-3
20
Murtha and Luzny)

Wt.
203
173
176
181
191
175
200
189
189
181
195
180
176
180
190
185
197
197
193
209
200
180
195
200
189
183
185
182
205
198
178
177
176
196
212
190
204
208
189
175
210
215
204
198
192
200
212
205
215
187
222
254
200
204
272
235
215
210
242
223
229
213
221
252
176
200
200
179
188
210
185
171
226
222
197
228
219
235

School
Bethlehem Central
Coshocton HS
Union-Endicott HS
Union-Endicott HS
Mansfield-Madison
Springdale HS
Humberside Col.
Ambridge HS
Peru HS
Portage Area HS
Notre Dame HS
Calvert HS
East Rockaway HS
Lafayette HS
Ancaster HS
Aliquippa HS
Olean HS
Catholic Central
Ridgway C.B.
St. Joseph's HS
St. Clement HS
Cathedral Prep
Coshocton HS
St. Clement HS
Catholic HS
Canandaigua HS
Jamestown HS
St. Joseph's HS
Johnson City HS
Grand Island HS
West HS
Williamsville HS
Emerson Voc.
Greece-Arcadia HS
Central Islip HS
Depew HS
Ticonderoga HS
Bishop McCort HS
Kenmore East HS
Carthage Central
Coshocton HS
Stuyvesant HS
East Aurora HS
Elyria HS
N . Kensington HS
Cardinal Mooney HS
Tallmadge HS
Cheektowaga HS
Cardinal O'Hara HS
Union-Endicott HS
Buchetel HS
Riverside HS
Cathedral-Latin HS
Lancaster HS
Grand Island HS
Jackson HS
North Hill HS
Bishop Duffy HS
St. Mary's HS
Bishop Duffy HS
Fisher Park HS
Solon HS
New Rochelle HS
E. Dear-Frazer HS
Ithaca HS
McDowell HS
St. Vincent's HS
Dover HS
Notre Dame HS
Ithaca HS
Wheatfield HS
Moriah Central HS
South Park HS
Cheshire Academy
Parkside HS
Penn Hills HS
St. Clement HS
LaSalle HS

f~\ \- ~-.

r

•

_, __.

~,, \~?:1~···

~

{

~~!_, :.j

Hometown
Delmar, N . Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Endicott, N . Y .
Endicott, N . Y .
Mansfield, Ohio
Springdale, Pa.
Toronto, Ont.
Baden, Pa.
Peru , N . Y.
Portage, Pa.
Batavia, N . Y .
Tiffin, Ohio
East Rockaway , N . Y.
Buffalo, N . Y .
Ancaster, Ont.
Aliquippa, Pa.
Olean, N.Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Ridgway, Ont.
South Bend, Ind.
Center Line, Mich.
Hamilton, Ont.
Coch octon, Ohio
Center Line, Mich.
Johnson City, N . Y.
Canandaigua, N.Y .
Jamestown, N . Y .
Cleveland, Ohio
Johnson City, N. Y.
Grand Island, N . Y.
Auburn, N.Y.
Williamsville, N . Y.
Buffalo, N . Y .
Rochester, N . Y .
Central Islip, N.Y.
Depew, N.Y .
Ticonderoga, N. Y .
Johnstown, Pa.
Tonawanda, N.Y .
Carthage, N.Y .
Coshocton, Ohio
Elmhurst, N . Y .
East Aurora, N.Y.
Elyria, Ohio
New Kensington, Pa.
Rochester, N . Y .
Tallmadge, Ohio
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Tonawanda, N . Y .
Endicott, N . Y .
Akron, Ohio
Buffalo, N . Y .
Cleveland, Ohio
Lancaster, N . Y .
Grand Island, N . Y .
North Canton, Ohio
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N . Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N. Y .
Ottawa, Ont.
Solon, Ohio
New Rochelle, N.Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Erie, Pa.
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Dover, Ohio
Attica, N. Y.
Ithaca, N . Y .
Niagara Falls, N . Y .
Witherbee, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
New City, N . Y .
Burlington, Ont.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Center Line, M ich .
Niagara Falls, N.Y.

N . Y .) - Lawrence Goldfarb '72 (Brooklyn, N . Y .)

twenty-five

�The Buffalo Coaching Staff

RICHARD A. LANTZ
Defensive Backfield

JOE N. GRIFFITH
Head Freshman Coach

RICHARD L. WELLS
Graduate Assistant

ROBERT C. DEMING
Head Coach
Bob Deming officially assumed the fortunes of Buffalo
football last February 15 as the University's 15th head
coach, following the resignation of Richard W. (Doc)
Urich, now head coach at Northem Illinois University.
Deming is no stranger on the crowded U B campus. He
has been on the football scene since 1959 and has served
ten years as a varsity assistant under Urich and Dick
Offenhamer.
A 1957 graduate of Colgate, where he earned a B.A.
in natural sciences, Bob played three seasons at fullback
with the Red Raiders. He played at Colgate under Offenhamer. Upon graduation he went with Coach Hal Lahar
to Houston as freshman coach and varsity backfield assistant. He remained with the Cougars through 1958 until he
went into the Air Force Reserve.
Rejoining the Houston staff in January, 1959, he completed spring practice at the University before accepting
an April assignment under Offenhamer at Buffalo, who
had taken over in 1955. Bob's first season at U B was
rewarding as the Bulls finished 8-1-0 and just missed their
second successive Lambert Cup. Deming tutored both
offensive and defensive backs in 1959 and 1960.
From 1961-65 Bob stayed with the defensive backs and
held the same assignment under Urich, plus handling game
plan formulation. With Urich he served as liaison between
the football office and various campus organizations. He
recruited New York and Pennsylvania.
Deming is not a superstitious mentor. He was born on
Friday the 13th of September, 1935 at Ilion, N. Y. His
coaching debut ·with the Bulls was on his birthday at
Ball St.
An accomplished outdoorsman, hunter and fisherman,
Bob enjoys serious antique refinishing with wife Jean, a
native of Rochester, N. Y. Jean (University of Rochester)
was formerly a hostess with American Airlines. The
Demings, Laura 3 and Leslie Ann 1, reside in suburban
Eggertsville.
Deming is an assistant professor in the Department of
Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics.

twenty-six

TERRANCE J.
RANSBURY
Offensive Backfield

WILLIAM R. DANDO
Linebackers

JOHN P. DOHERTY
Graduate Assistant

JAMES C. McNALLY
Offensive Line

MICHAEL E. MASER
Graduate Assistant

�1969 BUFFALO FOOTBALL STATISTICS
RUSHING
Att.
Pl ayer
73
Joe Zelmanski, fb
49
John Faller, hb
34
Barney Woodward, hb
33
Pat Patterson, hb
25
Scott Herlan, hb
PASSING
Passe r
Mtck Murtha, qb
Kirk Barton , qb
Ed Perry , qb

Att.
98
31
12

RECEIVING
Pl ay er
Pau I Lang, TE
Pat Patterson, hb
Bruce Fraser, se
Joe Zelmanski, fb
Scott Herlan , hb
Barney Woodward , hb
Joe Moresco, se
John Faller, hb
Mike Sharrow, se

N o.
18
7
6
6
6
6
5
4
3

N et
283
205
155
153
54

Avg.
4 .0
4 .2
4 .6
4 .6
2.2

Comp. Int.
45
4
11
2
1
5

Yds.
305
50
76
107
67
34
62
25
47

PUNTING
Punter
Larry Hart
Paul Jack

TO
2
1
2
0
1

Yds.
559
162
52

TO
2
0
0

PAT
2-1
1·1
0-0

TD
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0

SCORING
FG
PAT
Pl ay er
TD
Joe Zelmanski , fb
1P
0
2
0
Mtck Murtha, qb
2
0
0
Barney Woodward, hb
0
2
4· 1
Mike Constantino, k
0 8-7K
1P
0
1
Pau I Lang, te
0
1
0
Scott Herlan, hb
1
0
John Faller, hb
0
1
0
Kirk Barton, qb
0
1
0
Joe Moresco, se
0
Team Safety
11 7-6K
4-1
3·2RP

PTs.
14
12
12
10
8
6
6
6
6
2
82

N o.
33
9

TEAM SUMMARY
F~rst Downs
Rushing
Passing
Penalty
Total Plays
Rushing
Passing
Total Offense
Rushing
Passing
Passes Attempted
Completed
Had Intercepted
Scoring Passes

Yds.
1367
299

A vg.
41.4
33.2
OPP
71
47
22
2
385
298
87
1365
837
528
87
38
2
2

U/B
101
50
41
10
425
281
144
1685
912
773
144
61
7
2

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twen t y-seven

�Temple University
By ALBERT R. CARLISLE

ERNIE CASALE
Director of Athletics

DR. PAUL R. ANDERSON
President

Some 87 years ago a young Philadelphia printer sat in the study of Dr. Russell H. Conwell and asked for instruction
Latin and Greek in order to prepare himself for the ministry.
Dr. Conwell was then the pastor of Grace Baptist Church and the young man was a member of his congregation.
Dr. Conwell agreed to teach him one night each week. The boy asked if he could bring a few of his friends who also wanted
instruction and the first class of what was later to become Temple University numbered seven. It grew to 40 students
and the idea for a college was born.
Founded in 1 84, Temple College was chartered in 1888 with an enrollment of 590 students. The power to confer degrees
was granted in 1891 and the Day Department of the College opened in the fall of that year.
When Dr. Conwell died in 1925, Temple College had become Temple University with more than 10,000 students and
boasted seven professional schools, three undergraduate schools, three hospitals and a high school. The University continued its remarkable growth, both academic and physical, under its succeeding leaders, Dr. Charles E. Beury (1925-1941),
Dr. Robert L. Johnson (1941-1959), Dr. Millard E. Gladfelter (1959-1967), and its present president Dr. Paul R. Anderson.
The University presently consists of 21 separate schools, colleges and divisions. Enrollment, including evening and summer schools, approximates 40,000 students who come chiefly from the metropolitan Philadelphia area. Recent enrollments,
however, have listed students from all 50 states and from 47 foreign countries. Since its founding, Temple has educated
more than 500,000 students.
The University has developed physically from its four acres at Broad Street and Montgomery Avenue to a main campus
of 40 acres. The University's Health Sciences Center, with its Hospital, Medical School, clinics and research facilities, is
located at Broad and Ontario Streets. The Tyler School of Art is in Elkins Park, Pa., and in Rome, Italy, and Temple's
Ambler Campus is on Meetinghouse Road in Upper Dublin Township, Pa.
Some 16 years ago the University began an expansion program which has seen the completion of a $13 million addition
to the Hospital, new homes for the Law School and the Charles Klein Law Library, a 50-classroom building, a 300-unit
women's dormitory, a physical sciences building, a chemistry structure, a dormitory housing 500 men, a College of Education building, an addition to Mitten Hall, a School of Business Administration building and a library whose facilities house
some one million volumes.
A dormitory for 476 women and a nine-story research building have been completed at the Health Sciences Center.
Recently completed on the main campus are Hardwick Hall, a dormitory for 500 women, and a Center for the Performing
Arts and Communications which consists of the Tomlinson Theater, Annenberg Hall-a communications center, and Presser
Hall- a new home for Temple's College of Music. At the Health Sciences Center a basic science building for the Medical
School is under construction.
Opening this fall is a $8 million physical education and athletics building at Broad Street and Montgomery Avenue,
and under construction are a new life sciences building, and a student center.
In
ovember, 1965, Pennsylvania Governor William W. Scranton signed an act designating Temple a state-related
university, which brought additional financial aid from the State and enabled the University to decrease greatly it tuition
charges for its students who are residents of Pennsylvania.
Dr. Anderson assumed the presidency of Temple on August 1, 1967. He is widely recognized as an outstanding educator
and is thoroughly familiar with the policies and aspirations of the University. His was the only name submitted to the
Board of Trustees by the University's presidential selection committee. Dr. Gladfelter, whom he succeeds, is now Chancellor
of the University.
A native of Akron, Ohio, Dr. Anderson served as president of Chatham College in Pittsburgh, Pa., for 15 years before
joining Temple as vice president for academic affairs in 1960. He has taught philosophy at five colleges in the United States
and overseas at the American University in Beirut.
Dr. Anderson earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from Ohio Wesleyan University in 1928 and his Doctor of Philosophy
degree from Columbia University in 1933. He is a past president of both the Pennsylvania Association of Colleges and
Universities and the Pennsylvania Foundation of Independent Colleges, and has served on government educational councils
and commissions on both the State and Federal level.
111

twenty-eight

�TEMPLE
II

PATRICK BARNES
Senior
DHB
Hollidaysburg, Pa.

34

25

MICHAEL BUSCH
Senior
HB
Severna Park, Md.

Owls

II

STEPHEN CAPORICCIO
70
Senior
DT
Philadelphia, Pa.

60

THOMAS DeNIRO
Junior
LB
Pueblo, Colo.

FRANK DiMAGGIO
Sophomore
QB
18
New Milford, N.J.

.-

RICHARD EASTWICK
Senior
DHB
Haddonfield, N.J.

42

GREGORY JOANNIDES
12
Junior
DHB
Glassboro, N. J.

72

JOSEPH FA MILLE
Junior
T
Runnemede, N.J.

JONES
Senior
DT
Philadelphia, Pa.

JAMES FATIGATE
62
Senior
G
Bronx, N.Y.

48

CHRIS FLETCHER
Senior
DHB
East Orange, N.J.

HARRY (Chad) KERN
68
Senior
G
Norristown, Pa.

FREDERICK HELLER
10
Junior
DHB
Great River, N. Y.

JOHN KINDREGA
Sohpomore DHB
Wintersville, Ohio

93

twenty-nine

�Barbara's Busy Year

COLLEGE FOOTBALL'S CENTENNIAL QUEEN

College football's Centennial
Queen Barbaro Specht, a junior at Texas Technological
College, has spent a busy year
since she was selected by the
nation·s college football fans
and crowned at last year's
Shrine East-West Game. She
has travelled extensively to
promote the Centennial and to

talk of the values and traditions of college football and
on the activities planned for
the 1OOth Anniversary season
Here so photo report on highlights of her year. At upper
left she posed with star entertamers Art Linkletter and DenIllS Morgan at the NCAA Honors Luncheon; at top right she
visited the United Nations during a New York tour; in the
middle, she visited Army's
spring football practice and
chatted with Cadets Tom
Wheelock, a 1968 defensive
star, and 1969 Captain lynn
Moore; at bottom left, Queen
Barbara paused at Rockefeller
Center during o visit with New
York media to examine the
helmet worn by Bennie Oosterbaan, Michigan s Hall of
Fame end, in 1925-27; at the
bottom right, her reign started
just moments before this picture was token, when she was
crowned at the Shrine game;
here she poses with Princesses
Kathy Loghry Oregon State
UnivP.rsity, left, and Brenda
Shrum, University of Delaware, and Shrine greeter Tiny
Clews. Queen Barbaro will
continue her activities through
the 1969 season.

thirty

�TEMPLE

31

GEORGE KING
Junior
LB
Margate, N.J.

GODFREY LEONARD
50
Senior
LB
Philadelphia, Pa.

80

JAMES MULLEN
Junior
DE
Vienna, Va.

87

DOUGLAS P ADLA
Junior
TE
Ridgefield, N. J.

21

JOHN SMALL
Junior
HB
Philadelphia, Pa.

91

ALLA SMITH
Junior
DE
Newtown, Pa.

79

FRANK LETINO
Junior
DT
Hammonton, N.J.

DAVID PUCHALSKI
17
Senior
DHB
Dunmore, Pa.

DANIEL MacKOWSKY
59
Junior
C
Old Forge, Pa.

39

SAMUEL ROSETTI
43
Junior
DT
Pennsauken, N. J.

65

JAMES WATSON
Senior
FL
Scranton, Pa.

41

44

JOSEPH MESKO
Junior
LB
Dunmore, Pa.

LOUIS RUSSO
Junior
T
Maple Shade, N. J.

MICHAEL ZANGHI
Junior
FL
Scranton, Pa.

thirty-one

�The Bulls Salute - Queen Mirta Franovich
Miss Mirta Ann Franovich wa selected U B's Centennial
Football Queen last year and competed with eight other co-eds
for NCAA District #2 Centennial Queen at the University of
Pittsburgh. Mirta, a senior this year majoring in languages
(German major), won her crown from four other Buffalo
co-eds. The gals made presentations to the '68 varsity football squad and the team then voted for its Centennial Queen
for '69. A 5-41/:!, 108-pound personable blond, Mirta graduated
from local Grover Cleveland High School. Her well-rounded academic career started early and she is constantly in motion.
Her schedule includes part-time employment in the library
and cashier duties in two local stores. Miss Franovich is the
oldest of four children. Sister Nadia is a soph at U B, while
young brothers Wally and Denny are avid football fans. Mirta
was born in Yugoslavia and moved to Milan, Italy, at an early
age. The family arrived in the United States in 1956. Mirta's
three-minute address to the Bulls was based on spirit, devotion,
the power and contribution of college football around the land
and in the future of the University and what the game has
meant to her personally. Mirta is a true fan of the highest order.

1969 U/8 Fall Scoreboard
Date
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.

Date
Sept.

Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

Nov.
Nov.

3
17
25
31
14

FRESHMAN FOOTBAL L
Coach: Joe N. Griffith
Opp.
U/ B OPP
MANLIUS
6
31
at Syracuse
0
44
at Navy
7
38
at Army
3:30
KENT STATE
2:30

VARSI T Y CROSS-COUNTRY
Coach: Emery J . Fisher '51
Opp.
U/ B OPP
23
at Cleveland State with
43
20
Baldwin-Wallace
27
SYRACUSE with
35
20
NIAGARA CC
27
30
1
at Fredonia State
41
19
4
LeMoyne Invite
6th of 18
10
BROCKPORT STATE
43
20
17
at LeMoyne with
26
29
Rochester Tech
34
31
22
at Eisenhower with
15
47
Geneseo State
37
22
25
Canisius Invite
11th of 20
29
at Niagara with
4:00
Canisius
Gannon
Buffalo State
NYS Championship at Harpur
25
NCAA Championships

thi rty-two

Date
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

VARSITY GOLF
Coach: Dr. Leonard T . Serfustini
U/B OPP
Opp.
8
10
16
at St. Bonaventure
14'h
3Y2
18
at Buffalo State
14'h
NIAGARA CC
19
3Y2
4
ROCHESTER TECH
14
22
CANISIUS
9
24
9
7
at Niagara
11
26
15'h
BUFFALO STATE
2Y2
29
6Y2
ST. BONAVENTURE
11 'h
1
Brook Lea Invite
6th of 20
2
GENESEO STATE
12
6
6
4
13
at Canisius
14
16
NIAGARA
ppd.
21
NIAGARA
ppd.
24
at Rochester Tech
ppd .

�YOUR HOMETOWN SUPERMARKETS ARE PROUD
TO SUPPORT THE HOMETOWN UNIVERSITY
OF BUFFALO "BULLS" FOOTBALL TEAM!

t hirty-three

�tt1Sl

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Everybody Goes First Class in the
Area's Largest Charter Bus Fleet

~

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AFTER THE
GAME STOP
AT ...

GOOD LUCK BULLS

Mr. &amp; Mrs. A. V. Bellanca

thirty-four

�Van, Stan &amp; Rife Have It All Figured Out!
FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WBEN-Radio
VAN
STAN
DICK
MILLER BARRON RIFENBURG
WBEN Radio/930
The Sports Voice of Buffalo

�SPEC lA PATRONS
We Acknowledge With Thanks the Generous
Contributions of the Following:
Rich Products Corp.

Kevin Brinkworth

John M. Galvin

T. Gregory Jacobs

Charles G. Salisbury

Carl E. DeSantis

Robert D. Fernbach

PATRONS
Robert B. Adam
Harold A. Adel
James J. Ailinger
William C. Baird
Charles Banas
Donald R. Barber
Robert B. Barrett
John M. Bissell
Stanley B. Blach
Walter Brock
Milton M. Bron
Dennis J. Brinkworth, Jr.
Edmond S. Brown, Jr.
Max Burstein
Abraham Carrel
Ross M. Cellino
James P. Cole
Robert J. Collins
Kenneth L. Cooper
Joseph M. Crotty
John L. Curtis
Charles H. Diefendorf
Charles Diebold Ill
Arnold Dilaura
Edward J. Doran
George E. Easterbrook
Thornton G. Edwards
George W. Ferrick
Aaron I. Feuerstein
Paul A. Foley
John A. Krull
Harold Frantzen
Irving Fudeman
Anthony J. Renaldo
Gates Electric Co.
Allan V. Gibbons
A. Donald Gilden
Chester P. Glor, Jr.
George L. Grobe, Jr.
Norman Haber
Murray J. Hall
Nicholas Haragos
Joseph J. Ricotta
Irwin Klein

thirty-six

William W. Rathke
F. Vincent Harrington
Herbert R. Reitz
Harold M. Harris
Frank T. Riforgiato
L. Richard Hart
Waldron S. Hayes, Jr.
William R. Root
William H. Hildebrand, Jr. Leo J. Rosen
Palace Theatre
Eugene W. Salisbury
Harvey D. Sprowl
Sheldon Hurwitz
Rudolph V. Johnson
Thomas E. Sand
Edwin F. Jaeckle
Michael Swados
Vincent Scamurra
Grover R. James, Jr.
W. Hinson Jones
Houdaille Industries, Inc.
Roy Seibel
Henry W. Killeen
Kevin Kennedy
George N. Seifert
Shanor Electric Co.
Russell Kidder, Jr.
E. Perry Spink
Edward W. Kinney
Stephen F. Kissel
James R. Sullivan
A. O'Neill Kline
Leonard Swagler
Seymour Knox
Gertrude Swarthout
Gerald S. Lippes
Harlan Swift
Anchor Concrete Products Irwin L. Terry
Saul Lerner
University Manor Motel
Joseph J. Lyons
Charles J . Verbanic
Charles J. McDonough
George W. Watkins
J. Eugene McMahon
Reinhardt W. Wende
Samuel D. Magavern
Charles E. Weston, Jr.
Harold F. Meese
Massachusetts Mutual
Robert J. Metzen
Life Ins. Co.
Leo M. Michalek
Frederick B. Wilkes
Robert F. Milks
William G. Willis
RobertS. Wolfson
Edward F. Mimmack
Raymond A. Monin
Manuel S. Wortzman
Arthur F. Movalli
0. W. Shelgren
David J. Mahoney, Jr.
Pfohl, Roberts &amp; Biggie
Roland Lord O'Brian
Joseph Scaffidi
Thomas E. O'Brien
Turley, Stievater, Walker,
Charles W. Pankow, Jr.
Mauri &amp; Associates
Pearce &amp; Pearce Co., Inc. Webber, DiDonato &amp;
Howard A. Potter, Inc.
Renaldo
William E. Potter
Dick O'Connor
Optical Co.
Hugh McM. Russ, Sr.
Eugene M. Ruszaj
McKee, Phelps &amp;
Edward A. Rath, Jr.
Bowman
George H. Selkirk
Samuel Shatkin

Richard J. Attea
William Blanchard
Smolka, DiBartolo
&amp; Gibson
Albert W. Doyle
Falk, Twelvetrees,
Johnston &amp; Siemer
James P. Donnelly
Irvin V. Iversen
Townsend &amp; Lipp
Lippes &amp; Kaminsky
Richard F. Miller
James C. Kenrick
Paul H. Will
William R. Trautman
&amp; Associates
Deleuw Cather &amp;
Associates
Herbert S i mon
Gary Solomon
Arnold Stern
Edward Wasielewski
Luther Lee
James Guttuso
Joel H ittleman
Francis R. Moliterno
Lynch &amp; Nusbaum
Gary D. Schuller
Charles H. Addington
George W. Fugitt
Anthony M. Aquilina
C. S. Armenia
Julian J. Ascher
Charles W. Bankert
Ulrich Bauer
Daniel R. Botsford ·
Melvin M. Brothman
Jacob Burstein
Vincent S. Celestino
Stewart and Benson
Albert V. Cutter
Maurice R. Dewey
John W. Vance

Joseph K. Sheedy
Kenneth Eckhert
George Egri
Edward G. Eschner
Sattar Farzan
Carl A. Contino
Armand DiFrancesco
Daniel C. Fisher
Richard S. Fletcher
John J. Giardino
Stuart A. Good
Pasquale A. Greco
Benjamin G. Green
Edmond Gicewicz
lsmet Hallac
Barry T. Malin
Hans F. Kipping
Morton P. Klein
Eugene C. Hyzy
Eugene V. Leslie
Barry J. Herman
George H. Marcy
James B. McDaniel, Jr.
Sanford H. Meyers
Marvin H. Milch
Elmer Milch
Donald W. Hall
William H. Merrilees
Eisenberg &amp; Donius
Irwin Ellentuck
John Biniszkiewicz
William G. Braun
PaulS. Chojnacki
Robert H. Evans
B. D. Garliner
Clifford G. Glaser
Lyle N. Morgan
Robert J. Patterson
Eustace G. Phillies
Ramon Y. Perez
Charles Riggio
Allen L. Lesswing
Duane Lyman
&amp; Associates

�BUFFALO
IIBULLS"

BARRY ATKINSON
79
Junior
DT
Major: Physical Education

15

THOMAS CENTOFANTI
GARY CHAPP
73
Junior
T
38
Senior
LB
Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education

56

THOMAS ELLIOTT
40
Junior
DHB
Major : Business

JERRY ELWELL
61
Junior
G
Major: Anthropology

KIRK BARTON
Sophomore
QB
Major: Pre-Medical

62

JOHN BAUCH
Sophomore
Major: History

G

PATRICK CARNEY
60
Senior
G
Major: Sociology

MICHAEL CONSTANTINO CHARLES DONNOR
SCOTT CLARK
Senior Co-Capt. LB
41
Senior
KSP
58
Junior
C
Major: Sociology
Major: Pharmacy
Major: Physical Education

TERRENCE ENDRESS
82
Senior
TE
Major: Business

JOHN FALLER
49
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education

87

BRUCE FRASER
Sophomore
SE
Major: History

�Our take-home pack for real beer lovers.
TH[ STROH BR£W[R'f'COf,IPit.NY IXJRCIH

thirty-eight

~hCHIGAN48l26

�BUFFALO
IIBULLS"

LA
HART
LAWRENCE · GOLDFARB
16
Sophomore P-DHB
Sophomore Manager
Major: Liberal Arts
Major: Business

JOSEPH HUDSON
Junior
DE
Major: Philosophy

17

DOUGLAS KOZEL
Sophomore
FB
Major: Liberal Arts

85

RICHARD HORN
Senior
SE
Major: English

92

EDWARD KERSHAW
59
Junior
LB
Major: Liberal Arts

39

83

WILLIAM HAYDEN
68
Senior
G
Major: History

PAUL JACK
Senior
Major: Chemistry

PR~ TlS HENEL Y
90
Senior
DE
Major: Physical Education

SCOTT HERLAN
45
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education

ROVELL JONES
Junior
DT
Major: Psychology

JOEL JACOBS
Junior
DHB
Major: Liberal Arts

66

MICHAEL LUZNY
Senior
LB
Major: Geography

MARK Mac VITTlE
47
Sophomore DHB
Major: Physical Education

P

26

PAUL LANG
Senior-Co-Capt. TE
Ma-jor: History

34

thirty-nine

�1969 BUFFALO VARSITY FOOTBALL SQUAD
(left to right) Rows
First: Co-captain Paul Lang, Coach Jim McNally, Coach werner Kleemann, Coach Rick Lantz, Head Coach Bob Deming, Coach Terry Ransbury, Coach
Bill Dando, Coach Joe Griffith and Co-captain Scott Clark.
Second: Mike Luzny, Jim Mosher, Bill Hayden, Mick Murtha, Pat Patterson, Gary Chapp, Terry Endress, Dick Horn, Paul Jack and Chris Wolf.
Third: Dan Walgate, Barry Atkinson, Barney Woodward, Frank Reid, Joe Hudson, Ed Perry, Steve McCullough, Pat Carney, Jerry Elwell, Dave Chernega
and Gary Grubbs.
Fourth: Scott Herlan, Mike Constantino, *Rick Loundsbury, Ed Kershaw, Joe Moresco, Denny Albaneze, Karl Zalar, Gene Hernquist, Tom Centofanti, Russ
Plawiuk, Joel Jacobs and Joe Zelmanski.
Fifth: Revell Jones, Prentis Henley, Chuck Graver, *Greg Walters, *Bob Carnevale, Dave Pescrillo, Chuck Donner, Tom Milarski, John Rio, Len Nixon, Ken
Bork, Bruce Fraser and Paul Kehr.
Sixth: Bill Winnett, Cliff Jones, Kevin Wells, Mark MacVittie, Scott Savickas, Doug Kozel, Bob .Griffiths, Kirk Barton, Phil Smith, Bill Murphy, Charlie
Forness, *Steve Lipman and Bob Etherington.
Seventh: Doug Philp, Pat Bauch, Barry Vandenbergh, Bill Ellenbogen, Jim Fortino, Mike Sharrow, Joe Ziegler, Denny Waggoner, Bob Layo, Paul Dorich,
Dave Majcher, Kevin Hogan and Joe Scott.
Eighth: Larry Madden, Larry Hart, Ron Francis, John Faller, Tom Vigneau, Mike James, Stan Siedlecki, Tom Elliott, *Dan Yacobush and Bob Stiscak.
Ninth: Manager Dan Earl, Manager Allen Wright, Trainer Ken Shields, Trainer Fran Welk, Head Trainer Jim Simon, Coach John Doherty, Coach Mike Maser
and Coach Rick Wells.
*No longer member of squad

forty

�BUFFALO
•

JAMES l\IOSHER
Senior
LB
Major: History

WILLIAM MURPHY
75
Sophomore
T
Major: Business

LAWRENCE MAD DE
32
Sophomore
LB
Major: Liberal Arts

JOSEPH MORESCO
Junior
SE
80
Major: Business

50

LEONARD NIXON
42
Junior
DHB
Major: Physical Education

PATRICK PATTERSON
20
Senior
HB
Major: Liberal Arts

EDWARD PERRY
11
Junior
QB
Major: Physical Education

74

CHRIS WOLF
Senior
Major: Sociology

BARNEY WOODWARD
21
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education

ALLEN WRIGHT
Sophomore Manager
Major: Physical Education

DANIEL WALGATE
70
Senior
DT
Major: Physical Education

77

T

JOHN RIO
Junior
T
Major: Liberal Arts

14

MARK MURTHA
Senior
QB
Major: Business

THOMAS VIGNEAU
96
Junior
DE
Major: Physical Education

JOSEPH ZELMANSKI
35
Junior
FB
Major: Physical Education

forty-one

�••
•
-

.

GOOD LUCK U. B. BULLS

Rud y Bersan i -

U. B. 1967

THREE COINS RESTA VRANT
and LOVNGE
lunch, dimzer or late supper,- eat like a
Rommt Emperor on centurion's pay
In the North Wing of the MAPLE.LEAF MOTOR LODGE
1620 Niagara Falls Blvd.
'

83 5· 2610

1 Mile North
of Sheridan Dr.
Ample Parking for Your Chariot

BENTON ANNOUNCEMENTS

CHALLENGER R/T

A Large Selection of Gifts for
Showers - Weddings - Birthdays

KENTON DODGE INC.
-HOME OF THE MIGHTY MOPARS -

3445 DELAWARE AVE. AT SHERIDAN DR.
876-6900

KENMORE, N. Y.

PLANNING TO BE MARRIED?
Benton Selection of Wedd ing Invitations
Is the largest

3006 Bailey Ave . ... Near Kensington . . . 836-4100
China-Silv&amp;rware-Stainl&amp;ss Tableware-Stemware-Vases-Ceramics

* Greet ing Cords * Stationery * Party Goods
* Candles and * Floral Pieces
Open Thure. and Fri. Evenlnge till 9 PM -

105th ANNIVERSARY

~

a

1969 marks our 1 05th year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.

Sat. till

ailing and cory

Est. 1864

REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
17-21 S. Division Street

BUFFALO'S PAPER DISTRIBUTION CENTER

Ellicott Square

TL4-5700

DON'S
Mobil Service Centers
Bailey Cor. Winspear
Kensington Cor. Century Rd.

Every kind of Sportsman
knows
DICK FISCHER'S the greatest!
DICK FISCHER

TIRE and BATTERY SERVICE
BRAKES - MUFFLERS
TUNE- UP - MINOR REPAIRS
GENERATORS and STARTERS

forty-two

SFo~s
699 Main St.

Thruway Plaxa- 44 Main St. !Tona. l

�•
PARK EDGE SELECT MOUNTAIN PINK

FULL QUART

69~

forty-three

�CODE OF OFFICIALS ' SIGNALS
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OPEN EVERY EVENING EXCEPT WEDNESDAY

FRED RONEKER'S
UNIVERSITY SHOP

C9

Edward Dzielski, Inc.

5548 MAIN ST., WILLIAMSVILLE

883-4667

632-7833

INTERIOR DESIGN &amp; PLANNING

Men's and Boy's Wea r of Distincti on
853-7266
"THE OFFICIAL EQUIPMENT
RECONDITIONERS FOR THE BUFFALO BULLS"

FRANK O'CONNOR
ATHLETIC EQUIPME NT

MARBA INC.
Recond itioners of At hlet ic Equ ip me nt
1200 Niagara Street

•

Buffalo, N .Y. 142 13

882-9330

f orty-four

/

School and Team Outfitters

•
499 Washington Street
Buffalo, New York 14203

�... where you don't work hard for your

•1n

GS
• The New SENECA MALL
• BOULEVARD MALL
• 998 BROADWAY (and 1021 Broadway)
• THRUWAY PLAZA
• SATTLER'S HOME FURNISHINGS CITY, U.S.A.
(Elmwood at Hertel Ave.)

�MARk OF EXCE:UUICE:

Big cars cost big money...
ThatS the way it was.

On The Move.

0 . J. Simpson with his big, reasonably priced 1970 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe.

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>Barbara Specht the college football Centennial Queen</text>
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                <text> Rotary Field</text>
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                <text> Fifty cents</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496246">
                <text> Welcome Alumni!</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1969-11-01</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>�Cavern Spring Water-Clean Water,
Naturally Perfect Brewing Water,
gives Simon Pure Beer its perfect
blend of flavor and refreshment.
Tht Williom Simon lrtwtry, luHolo, Ntw Yorlr

�--

--

- -

�The Williamsville Inn
SEE THE ALL NEW

Located in the heart of the Historic Niagara Frontier,
situated in the center of Williamsville, N. Y.
with its quaint shops and modern
shopping facilities.

1970 LINCOLNS and MERCURYS

70 COLOR-KEYED, SOUND AND AIR-CONDITIONED
GUEST ROOMS

at

SPECIAL STUDENT FAMILY RATES

e
e
e
e
e
e

BOULEVARD MALL
LINCOLN-MERCURY

INDIVIDUAL HI-FI SYSTEM
COLOR TELEVISION
TELEPHONES
QUEEN SIZE BEDS
LIMOUSINE TO AIRPORT
DINING ROOM- LIVE MUSIC

5447 Main Street
634-1111

3900 MAPLE ROAD
ACROSS FROM JENSS IN THE MALL

HOTEL SERVICE - MOTEL CONVENIENCE
Free Parking

The Sound System for toclay's game
is provic/ec/ by . .

FOOTBALL HEADQUARTERS

IDI]r 1£nrb .Amqrrst

LARKIN SOUND SERVICE

MOTOR MOTEL

PUBLIC ADDRESS - INTERCOM

5000 MAIN ST.

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14226
Exit 50, Main St. West. N. Y. Thruway

cmd PHONE SYSTEMS

Phone 716-839-2200
Air and Sound Conditioned Rooms, T.V., Radio, Dining Room
Coffee Shop, Cocktail Lounge, Banquet Rooms

977 Niagara Street

Member Quality Motels, Inc. - AAA Rated Excellent

Buffalo, New York

SHERIDAN-AMHERST MOTORS INC.
A.M.X.
JAVELIN

AMBASSADOR

HORNET
REBEL

JIM PICONE, President

GOOD LUCK BULLS

One of the world's leading
3900 SHERIDAN DRIVE

From Your
Factory Direct- Volume Dealer

two

Phone 839-3950

AMERICAN MOTORS
DEALERS

-

�e

10
Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
You can shave it with a razor blade like your father does.
And each time you do your beard will grow back a little more
difficult. Until one day shaving's no longer a
chore. It's an agony.
Look no further than your father's face
for proof.
But fortunately, you're catching your
beard at an early age. You can break it in to be
just as shaveable 10 and 20 years from
now as it is today.
With a REMINGToN·Lektro Blade shaver.
And if you think the kind of shave we're selling wori t be
close enough for you, you're wrong.
Our new Lektro Blade shaver has very sharp disposable
blades. Just like a razor. So it gives very close
shaves. Just like a razor.
What's more, you can dial a Lektro Blade
shaver into a sideburn trimmer.
Admittedly, it costs more to buy our
electric shaver than a razor and some blades.
But it's a good investment.
These next few years will determine how
you and your beard will get along for the rest
REMINGTON
of your lives.~$PE~Y
RAI\D®

LEKTRO BLADE' TRADEMARK OF SPERRY RAND CORP. @1969 S. R.

ELECTRIC SHAVER OIYISIOJ'I,BAIDGEPORT,CONNECTICUT.

�THE

U. B. BOOSTERS
INVITE ALL

ALUMNI and FRIENDS
TO

WHOOP IT UP
AT THE

POST GAME TUN K
Immediately Following Each Home Game
Iroquois Beer- Pop- Chips- Pretzels- Peanuts
Featuring THE U.B. BLUES
DONATION: $1.50 Per Person

Faculty Club

f our

Dress - As You Are

�Stadium Information
YOUR OOOPERAT ION PLEASE - As guests of the University today, your cooperation is required in
maintaining the dignity and reputation of the University. It is requested that you observe the rules and regulations of the institution.
WE WELCOME YOU to this University of Buffalo athletic contest and invite you to relax and enjoy
exciting intercollegiate competition with our respected opponent.
On behalf of the athletic department, its staff and the players we welcome you.
Dr. Lawrence A. Cappiello
Director, Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

REST R OOM FACILIT IES: Ladies' rest rooms
are situated at the north ends under the
Bailey Avenue and main stands. G entlemen 's
rest rooms are situated at the south ends
under the Bailey Avenue and main stands.

Buffalo's Rotary Field
(Dedicated - 1930)

TICKET INFORMATION: T he ticket office
in Clark Gymnasium is open each w eekday
of the football season from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
On game days the main ticket window is
open from 9 a.m. to the kickoff. T ickets may
also be reserved on Friday night before a
home game from 6 p.m. to I 0 p.m.

...

UlJDHO n

LOST AND .FOU D: All lost and found items
should be reported to the U / B Campus Police.
The Campus Police main office is in the Service Building on Winspear Avenue.

lOUl

I

f--

your an-star
financial center
~!*

"tii;;._UERVIC~~
P\"' BANK~

M ember: Fed era l Depos i t Insura nce Co rp .

n. 1•
&gt;

IOU()

REFRESHMENT BOOTH S: T here are three
refreshment areas in the stadium. T he locations are - practice field entrance (Gate I ) ,
Bailey Avenue entrance (Gate 3) and at the
north end of the Bailey A venue stands.

*¥®

~u n

I

**
**
*
*
*

J

Savings accounts
Checking accounts
Auto loans
Home improvement loans
Mortgage loans
Commercial loans
Vacation loans

BANK oF BUFFALO
• BANK OF BUFFAlO-- 17 Court at Pearl • EAST
SIDE Office - · 694 Fillmore at Broadway • SOUTH SIDE
Office-- 2 157 Seneca near Cazenovia · • TOWN OF
TONAWANDA Office-- 4248 Delaware at Dreyer
• TOWN OF AMHERST Office-- 4954 Harlem at
Sheridan • TOWN OF CHEEKTOWAGA Office·- 3817
Union at George Urban • TOWN OF WEST SENECA
Office-- 4184 Seneca at Mill Road • STUYVESANT
PlAZA Office-- 274 Elmwood at Summer • KENMORE
Office-- 2858 Delaware at Mang.

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excitin •I

GOHR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY INC.
80 METCALFE STREET, BUFFALO, NEW YORK
853-2121

six

�BARTLETT BUICK BOOSTS THE BULLS

The U/ B Athletic Department is grateful to the management of BARTLETT BUICK, 380 Main St.,
for the use again this football season of a 1969 Opel Kadett. The popular ''Bull Wagon" serves the
staff and press box during games and makes road appearances around the nation. Thank you Bartlett
for supporting the Bulls.

IN THE BUFFALO PRESS BOX
The Office of Sports Information would like to thank the staff at
A. B. DICK COPY - DUPLICATING PRODUCTS, 842 Kenmore Avenue, for
its continued service and help in the Rotary Field press box. Play-by-play
and statistical services are supplied by A. B. Dick.

New Dominick &amp; Dominick Conference includes
Amherst -

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Members Neu• Y ork and other majo r Stock Exchanges

seven

�BUFFALO ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION

DR. LA WRE CE A. CAPPIELLO
Brockport State '49, Indiana '56
Director, Physical Education, Recreation &amp; Athletics

HOWARD L. (Dan) DANIELS
Air Force Retired '68
Business Manager &amp; Promotion Director

I

--rl..
SIDNEY SCHWARTZ
Buffalo '40
Fencing

WILLIAM MONKARSH
Buffalo '60
Baseball &amp; Basketball Assistant

EDWIN D. MUTO
Buffalo '50
Basketball Assistant

DR. EDMUND J. GICEWICZ
Buffalo '52
Athletic Physician

NORBERT A. BASCH AGEL
Buffalo '65
Basketball Assistant

WILLIAM H. SANFORD, III
Buffalo '49
Swimming &amp; Tennis

JAMES E. SIMON
Buffalo '50
Trainer &amp; Physical Therapist

-

ROBERT W. BEDELL
Buffalo State '51
Swimming Assistant

GERALD R. GERGLEY
Buffalo '61
Wrestling

DR. LEONARD T. SERFUSTINI
Buffalo '50
Basketball &amp; Golf

EMERY J . FISHER
Buffalo '51
Cross-Country &amp; Track

JOSEPH E . STAEBELL
Equipment Mana ger

eight

RICHARD E. BALDWIN
St. Lawrence '54
Director, Sports Information

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nine

�(1-r): Front - Captain Diane McMahon '71, Spring Valley, N.Y.; Sue Pierotti '71, Williamsville, N . Y.; Cheryl Mayo '71, St. Albans,
N . Y. ; and Rita Yousey '71, Lowville, N. Y. Middle - Linda Luccioni '71 , Elmont, N . Y. ; Kathy Mclane '72, Lowville, N . Y .; and
Alice Cypin '72, Levittown, N. Y. Top - Jan Anderson ' 72, Corry, Pa.

ten

�CHEERS for the largest selection of quality paperback
and hard cover books in Western New York.
CHEERS for a complete array of sweatshirts, ceramics,
cards to send home to mother (some not to
send home to mother), stuffed animals and
campus necessities.
CHEERS for an exciting collection of glassware bearing
the grand old UB emblem (a collector's item).

THE

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twelve

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~69

Buffalo Football News
BUFFALO vs. DAYTON
Rota ry Field, 1:30 P.M.

October 11, 1969

Editor: Richard E. Baldwin, Director af Sports Information
local Advertising : Goodrich Printing &amp; lithographers
National Advertising : Spencer Advertising, New York
Contributors: U/ B Information Services, Jim DeSantis, ECAC Service Bureau, National Collegiate Sports
Services, Bob Powell, Dick Johnston, Spencer Advertising Company, NCAA Public Relations Committee,
Chris Kabel, Dan Daniels, Gene Schill, John O'Brien and the Dayton Office of Sports Information
Photography: Ed Nowak, Rick Swenson, Dayton DSI Office and U/B Information Services.
Printing: Goodrich Printing &amp; Lithographers, Inc., Clarence Center, N. Y.

conten ts
DEPARTMENTS
Stad iu m Informatio n

5

Today's Offi cia ls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Buffa lo Athletic Adm inistra tio n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

8

The Cheerleaders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Composite Score boa rd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Dayton Coach ing Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Official Dayton Team Roste r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Starting Game Line-ups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ce nter Spread
Official Buffalo Team Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Buffa lo Coach ing Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Dayton Players . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 &amp; 3 1
Buffalo Fall Sports Scoreboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Buffalo Players . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 &amp; 39 &amp; 41
1969 Football PJ:ogram Patrons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
1969 Buffa lo Squad Photo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
College Football Officia ls' Signals

••

0

••••••••

0.

0

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0.

0

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0

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44

FEATURES
How Football Helped Elect A President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
In the Bullpen with Johnston &amp; Powell

16

The Evolution of Football's Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Featuring Defense - Buffalo Ends . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

LONGINES
LONGINESWITTNAUER WATCH COMPANY

longines-Wittnauer Building, New Yorj:

Four-Games Team Statistics .................... ........ ........... 27
Special Report - Dayton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Football Bloopers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

;·

thirteen

�G
YOUR
B

TO DAY'S
OFFICIALS
REFEREE
JAMES H. ALEXANDER
Electrical engineer with
IBM. Resides in Vestal,
N.Y. Graduate of North western University. Currently engaged as a
staff engineer with the
Federal Division of IBM
specializing in guidance
systems for the Gemini
space vehicles.

UMPIRE
MITCHELL J . OLENSKI
Graduate of the Uni·
versity of Alabama. AllSouthern Conference at
tackle for the Crimson
Tide. Played in both the
Orange Bowl and Cotton Bowl as an undergraduate.
U. S. Army
Quartermaster C o r p s .
Played professionally with the Miami Seahawks
and the Detroit lions. Proprietor and owner
of a restaurant and lives in Vestal, N. Y.

LINESMAN

DO.

EARL J. BIRDY, JR.
Assistant Professor of
Physical Education at
Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Graduate of Slippery Rock
STC with graduate study
at Pitt. At Carnegie he
is senior physical educator in P. E. Department. Served with Marines in Asiatic-Pacific
islands and started officiating football and
basketball while serving with the 1st Marine
Div. in China. Secretary-Treasurer of the Pittsburgh Chapter, EAIFO.

FIELD JUDGE
WALLACE A. SCRIVENER
Employed by Bethlehem Steel Corp. as a
representative.
s a Ie s
Graduate of Virginia
Tech, future U/ B opponent at War Memorial
Stadium, October 25.
Also, attended RandolphMacon College where
he won letters in baseball, basketball, fool·
ball and track. Army Air Corps veteran.

BACK JUDGE

Rich's.
Rich Products Corp.

fourteen

DAN!El R. MARTINO
Associated with the
Mine Safety Appliances
Co. of Pittsburgh for 25
years. Now serving as
assistant supervisor in
Sheet Metal Dept. Attended University of
Pittsburgh. Navy A i r
Force veteran. Chairman
of Mine Safety Credit Union, Board of Directors
of West Penn Basketball Officials Association.
CLOCK OPERATOR: Edward T. Kubiak (Canisius)
PUBLIC ADDRESS : James DeSantis (Canisius)

�THE EVOLUTION
OF FOOTBALL RULES
by BLACKIE SHERROD

Executive Sports Editor, Dallas Times Herald

THE WAY the story goes, a posse of
cowboys moseyed out of the neighborhood watering hole to hear the
dude explain this new game of football.
'·When you get hold of the ball,
kick it hard as you can," said he. "If
you can't reach the ball, kick somebody on the other team hard as you
can. Now soon as I blow up this pig
bladder, we'll get on with it."
"To heck with the ball!" whooped a
waddy. "Let's start the game!"
The toastmaster may use this with
cowboys or Polish miners or Italian
sailors or Irish hodcarriers. The idea
is that college football was played
with considerably more force than
finesse in the earlier portion of its
100 years. Anyone who got through
a season with both ears still attached
was branded a sissy. If an oldtimer
like Pudge Heffelfinger or Charlie
Gelbert had seen the padded, helmeted, tightly wrapped product of
today, with eyeshadow and teethguard, he would have excused himself and gone behind the nearest
bush. The only concession the oldtimers made to physical protection, to
hear them tell it, was to tape an old
copy of The Saturday Evening Post
over their shinbones on sub-freezing
days.
Collision, Exhaustion
Actually, the pioneers didn't have
much choice. In those days, a cen ..
tury ago, you ran until you collided
with someone or fell down through

exhaustion. The evolution of the
game is such that young citizens now
often run long distances without
making contact with other young citizens. And they have enough stamina
left at the end of the afternoon,
thanks to large squads and liberal
substitution, to lead the bugaloo at
the fraternity bash that evening.
Dave Nelson, the erudite secretary
of the NCAA rules committee, is
properly immodest in discussing his
group's therapy.
"No game has adapted to the times,
the situations and the talent as has
football," says the Delaware athletic
director, "primarily because it was
born and raised on the college campuses where change is a way of life."
Brother, he can say that again.

As all of you industrialists know,
when you remodel a product, the first
step is redesign the tools. And this
tells the story of modern footballthe change in the shai:'e of the instrument itself. The American game was
first played with a round ball, then
evolved into a fat egg that lent itself
mostly to drop-kicks (you could
hardly miss it) and provided a convenient cushion for the falling masses. Oldtimers like Walter Eckersall
of Chicago regularly drop-kicked
field goals from a block or two away,
simply because they didn't know
what else to do with the blamed
thing. In fact, if you didn't rid yourself of the ball, you were apt to be
maimed beyond recognition . So many
young citizens were being maimed

beyond recognition that Theodore
Roosevelt instituted the Big Stick
policy.
Clean up your game, he warned
the college deans, or the feds will
get you for anti-trust or income tax
evasion or maybe even jaywalking.
This is about the time some cautious
lads had begun tossing the ball back
and forth to each other, strictly as a
matter of self-preservation.
The forward pass, a scarcely recognizable forefather of today's maneuver, was legalized in 1906 but it
wasn't until the rulesmakers slimmed
down the ball that the practice became popular. In 1912 a new regulation specified that the ball could
be no more than 23 inches around
the waist. Every few years, they'd
scale it down a few more centimeters.
In 1934, there came the big, final reduction-no more than 21% inches
around the middle. It wasn't just
coincidence that Sammy Baugh and
Davey O'Brien and the like came
along a couple years later and began
threading needles.
Passing Us Dizzy
With the popularization of the pass
came the faking and trickery off the
threat of the pass, until we all became quite dizzy and remain so until
this very day.
Likewise the rules committees,
over the years, have advanced the
cause of passing. Along with the
change of the shape of the ball in
1934 came a couple more rule alterations. You could now throw the
ball incomplete in the end zone without loss of possession, for heaven
sakes, and you were no longer punished five yards for more than one
incomplete pass in the same series.
In immediate post-war years, a
rule was changed to allow passes
thrown from anywhere behind the
line (instead of five yards) and encouraged use of the modern T formation. The penalty for intentional
grounding of a pass was reduced
from 15 yards to 5 yards and it has
actually been called a couple of times.
As Mr. Nelson says, "Through its
one hundred years, intercollegiate
football has been a game of dynamic
changes in systems, techniques and
rules."
How about that dynamic change
in 1939 when it became mandatory td
wear a helmet? No longer could the
fullback raise to his full height, tear
off his helmet and fling it to the
sideline to show the crowd ole Bronk
was getting down to the nitty-gritty.
That rule did away with a Iotta dynamic drama, but it saved a Iotta dynamic ole Bronks.

fifteen

�•

the BULLPEN with

BOB POWELL
Buffalo Courier Express

Much has been written, and deservedly so, about
the Bulls' defensive front four, but there's an
offensive seven that has been doing a good job
for U/ B this season.
For the most part Buffalo's offensive line is
a veteran group and one that has constantly received high grades from the coaching staff for
its work in the first four ball games.
Tackles Chris Wolf and Tom Centofanti, Pnd
Paul Lang, center Chuck Donnor and guard Bill
Hayden were letter-winners last fall while the new
faces are Jerry Elwell, a guard, and split end Joe
Moresco.
Experience or not, this year's line has had to
make several adjustments in its assignments and
techniques as Head Coach Bob Deming revamped
the U/ B offense.
The changes have been mastered, according to
Deming, and his offensive line coach, Jim McNally.
"It's not because they are my people," McNally
says, "but the boys have been doing a steady job.
They've adjusted weekly to new defenses and have
been getting their work done pretty well."
Deming is as impressed with the line's contributions as is McNally.
"I think they have been doing a fine job. They
have absorbed the offense and haYe actually
helped it by making split-second decisions, under
game conditions, in such things as spacing (for
blocking angles) and handling games by our
opponent's defenses."
Seldom does a spectator overhear the conversations between the Bulls' linemen as they go into
a three-point position after leaving the huddle.
"You," "seal," "me," and other seemingly meaningless shouts are an every-play exchange. And,
like a baseball player's signals, they change f1·om
game to game.
"We change the code almost constantly, even
during a game," Deming said. "That way no one
can pick up the meaning."
As in the U/ B backfield, there's depth in the
offensive line, although many of the back-up men
are sophomores. As the season progresses, these
younger athletes will improve and provide a nucleus for seasons to come.
The reserve contingent includes tackles John
Rio, Bill Ellenbogen and Bill Winnett, center Dennis Albaneze and guards Paul Kehr and Bill
Murphy.
Do yourself a favor once in a while: Take your
eyes off the backfield and watch the job done by
Buffalo's hard-working ditch-diggers.

sixteen

DICK JOHNSTON
Buffalo Evening News

The University of Buffalo today seeks its first
football victory over Dayton's Flyers.
That really isn't as bad as it sounds. The teams
have met only twice on the gridiron. The first
time, in 1965, they slogged to a scoreless tie in
one of the dullest games ever played on Rotary
Field. Neither team could generate an offense
that rainy day.
In 1966, the Bulls traveled to Dayton and fell
victim to an inspired Flyer team before a nearcapacity Homecoming crowd. The score was 13-3.
Which means that the Bulls have yet to score a
touchdown against the Flyers.
This is a good time to start. The Flyers, in a
rebuilding year, come to Rotary Field with an 0-4
record. They have lost to Kent State, Miami of
Ohio, Bowling Green and Louisville. Kent, of
course, was U B's conqueror of last week.
John McVay, who has been rejuvenating Dayton
football in his four years as head coach, has had
to break in an entirely new backfield this season.
He has three sophomores, including the quarterback, plus a senior who hasn't played for Dayton
before, in the starting quartet.
The senior is the fullback, a Canadian, Tony
Moro, who transferred from Akron. He's a 215pounder, who can run and block and catch passes,
as well.
Ron Krechting, a 6-foot sophomore from Cincinnati, is the quarterback. He took over in spring
practice after quarterbacking the frosh team last
fall. Senior Dennis Schaffer, who was hurt in the
spring, returned and started the first two games
of the season but Krechting became the firststringer in the Bowling Green game and has held
forth since.
Gary Rosins, a 210-pounder, who gained 427
yards rushing for last year's frosh team, is Dayton's principal ball-carrier. He also is a leading
pass receiver. Tony Vitale, a sophomore, and Terry
Miller, a junior, alternate at the other halfback
spot.
Bob Christopfel, 6-2 split end, is main target
for Krechting's passes. One of the mainstays of
the defense is Bob Palcic, 225-pound junior middle
guard from Gowanda. He is in his second season
as a regular. His brother, Tom, is a linebacker on
the freshman team.
Jim Stangle, 230-pound senior tackle; Jim Rudzinski, 195-pound senior defensive end, and Joe
Tyler, 205-pound senior linebacker, are tri-captains
for today's game.

�A ROSE BOWL DEFEAT ...
AND THE UNITED STATES PRESIDENCY
by RUBE SAMUELSEN

(
\
President Nixon is one of the nation's most avid college football fans. Here he
helped kick off the Centennial Year by attending the 1969 Rose Bowl Game. He and
Mrs. Nixon were greeted in Pasadena by Tournament of Roses President G . L. Payne,
left, and Queen Pamela Anicich. Hall of Fame Coach Bud Wilkinson, formerly of
Oklahoma and now on the President's staff, is in the background between the Nixons.

THAT PRESIDENT RICHARD M.
NIXON is a SPQrts fan isn't newsbut he doesn't just attend sports
events, talk sports, or read the sports
pages. His association with sports is
much more personal and has had a
profound influence upon his life.
"In life, you must fight back,"
President Nixon emphasizes. "That's
why I love sports. I love the competition, I like to see the battle."
He especially likes college football.
No sooner had the votes e lecting him
President been counted than he attended the November 16 AlabamaMiami game. Last January, he flew
cross country, from Florida to Pasadena, just to see the USC-Ohio State
Rose Bowl Game. On their first date,
he took his wife, Pat, to see the 1939
USC-Duke holiday classic.
President Nixon's fondness for
sports is lifelong. Although at Whittier (Calif.) College he spent virtually the entire time during three seasons of football on the bench as a
substitute tackle, his football coach
lauded him as a determined participant:

"Never-Give-Up Guy"
"Dick Nixon rarely got into our
important games, but was a gutty,
never-give-up guy," Coach Chief
Newman recalled. "He took his
bumps while scrimmaging against the
varsity without a word of complaint."
Except for the influence of sports
upon President Nixon and the undying spirit a friend voiced recalling
a defeat in a Rose Bowl Game, Nixon
possibly would not be the Nation's
Chief Executive today.
In 1960, Nixon lost his Presidential
bid to John F . Kennedy. It was a
narrow and staggering defeat. Nixon's shock deepened when Pat Brown
bested him for the governorship of
California in 1962.
Bearing in mind that Nixon was
then written off politically, what he
penned in my 1961 newspaper sports
column, substituting for me while I
was ill, is revealingly significant. The
President, who as a youth dreamed
of being a sports writer, wrote:
"The world of sports and the world
of politics are strikingly similar. Both
put the individual under tremendous

pressure. Both also put a premium
on high-level performance. Preparation, practice and good intentions
will get you just so far. It is how you
deliver that goes into the record
book.
"The target in both cases is winning. While, over the long run, there
is no substitute for victory, there are
ground rules in PQlitics as well as in
sports. There are ways and ways of
winning.
" May I relate an experience of my
own? On a Wednesday morning last
year, Nov. 9, it became clear that I
had played out the toughest and
closest fight of my political life and lost. Making it more difficult, I
had lost by the political equivalent
of a nose.
A Real Tonic
" On that rather gloomy morning, I
received a wire from a leading
sportsman. It was a real tonic. My
friend recalled the post-game advice given one of Stanford's players
after their stunning defeat by Alabama in the 1935 Rose Bowl game.
After Alabama's Dixie Howell and
Don Hutson had routed the Indians,
a Stanford prof emphasized:
" 'Defeats are poison to some men.
Great men have become mediocre because of the inability to accept and
abide by a defeat. Many men have
become great because they have been
able to face, learn from, and rise
above a defeat. If you achieve any
success and develop superior qualities
as a man, chances are it will be because of the manner in which you
meet the defeats that will come to
you just as they come to all of us.'
"What great truth there is in those
few words. They made me reflect on
their meaning as applied to my own
life as well as some dramatic parallels in the sports world--cases in
which a man rose to his true greatness only after overcoming some setback or some challenge that would
have meant defeat and despair to the
run of us.
"My Whittier football coach, Chief
Newman, also talked of defeat in a
way I have never forgotten. 'I don't
want any part of this good loser business,' he reiterated. 'If you hate to
lose, you will correct your mistakes
and improve . yourself.' "
Richard Milhous Nixon hated to
lose. He improved himself. He overcame seemingly insurmountable odds
to become the 37th President of the
United States.

seventeen

�Featuring Defense-Buffalo Ends

U / B Defensive Ends With Head Coach Bob Deming (1-r): junior Tom Vigneau (6-0, 219, Center Line, Mich.); junior Joe
Hudson (6-1, 222, New York City, N.Y.); sophomore Bob Etherington (6-2, 197, Burlington, Ont.); and senior Prentis
Henley (6-2, 226, Buffalo, N. Y.).

1969 Buffalo Composite Schedule

....
IAlL STAJE

1J

DAYTON

TEM,LE

BOSTON COllEGE

Mwncie

E•anuille

OeiColb

M~o~ncie

CINCINN ATI
LOST
17 - 14

OHIO UNIV

VILLANOVA

DAYTON

QUANTICO

TOLEDO

Atheru

Ci ncil'!noti

oa.,.ton

Cincinnati

Cincinnati

BUffALO
LOST
16 -6

DELAWARE

BOSTON UNIV

CONNECICUT

VERMONT

HOLY CROSS

~EW HAM"5HIRE

JJ -21

Bo•lon

Storr•

Amhe r st

Amhet~l

Durham

XAVIER

BUFfALO

WESTERN MICH

TOLEDO

lOUISVIlLE

MARSHAll

MIAMI (0)

Kolomo1oo

K•nt

To ledo

K•nt

Kent

Kent

BUffALO

KENT STATE

lOST
17 -0

LOST

M... INE
WON
49 1

23-7

11

No•

'

MIDDLE TENN

No•

so.

8

ILLINOIS

No•

IS

Nov . 22

EAST MICHIGAN

o•

LOST

RHODE

ISLAND

LOST

Carbondale

o•
Amhers t

OWUNC GREEN

M~o~ncie

o•

..

BOSTON COll .
o&gt;
Che1tnut Hill

WON
HIA

35 ·0

WON
23 7

WON
17·8

KENT STATE
LOST

MIAMI 10 I
LOST

OWUNG GREEN
lOST

LOUISVILLE
LOST

BUffAlO

NO . IlliNOIS

AUON

XAVIER

VIlLANOVA

TOLEDO

HU

19.

27 -20

24 -17

BuHalo

Dayton

Dayton

Dayton

Villanova

Tol•do

HARVARD
LOST

DARTMOUTH
LOST

COLGATE

BUffAlO

SYRACUSE

VIllANOVA

MASSACHUSETTS

..

RUTGERS

CONNECTICUT

Worc••t•r

Storr.

HOLY CROSS

VIRGINIA TECH

49 -9

13-0

0"

OHIO UNIV
LOST

DAYTON

KENT STAT E

NO . ILLINOIS

AKRON

LOST

MA.SSACHUSCTTS

Oct. 25

EVANSVIllE

Oct . 4

BUTLER
WON
36 7

WON
10 7
(0'
LOST
357

Oct . 18

INDIANA S

Sept . 27

10

EAST KENTUCKY

MIAMI

XAVIER

....

BUffALO

, o&gt;

ot

o&gt;

o&gt;

..
..

..
..

..

13-0

38 -6

Homilton

Wore••'• '

Syrocu••

Worc••t•r

Amh•nt

ALABAMA
lOST

WAKE fOREST
LOST

RICHMOND
LOST

KENTUCKY

SO . CAROliNA

IUffALO

WM . &amp;.MAR'f

flORIDA ST .

DUKE

o&gt;

o•

17-13

16-10

17 -1 0

lloduburg

lloduburg

Buffo lo

Roonoke

Bl ocluburg

Norfo l k

RHODE ISLAND

WM . &amp;. MARY
LOST

HOfSTRA

DELAWARE

BUffALO

GETTYSBURG

NORTHEASTERN

BOSTON UNIV .

o&gt;

o•

N•work

Buffolo

,h ilod•lphio

ao.ton

,h ilodelph io

..

VIRGINIA MIL.

MASSACHUSETTS

Ch •• lnul Hill

Ch•tlnut Hill

WON
47 -3

WAYNE ST.

BUCKNELl

WON
34-0

o•

o•

7 -6

l•witburg

,hilod•lphio

NAVY

TULANE

VILLANOVA

ARMY

,ENN STATE

BUffALO

WON
11 -14

WON
28 · 24

Ch••tnul Hill

W••' 'oint

Uniw . 'ork

Ch• tlnut Hill

o•

ot

ot

BUFFALO vs. THE 1969 SCHEDULE- WON 20, LOST 17, TIED 2 (3 New Series)
IUfrALO

ot

VIllANOVA

V ill onovo

Now . 29- Xovi•r v1 . Te••• W•lf• rn ot El 'o•o
Virgin io l•th VI. V ir g inio M ilitory ol Roonok•

eighteen

Holy Crou vs . Botton Coli. ol Worc••t•r

�The Dayton Coaching Staff

JOSEPH EAGLOWSKI
Offensive Line

EDWARD YOUNGS
Defensive Line

JOHN E. McVAY
Head Coach
In 1965 when John McVay was starting his first
season as Dayton Head Coach, the local grandstand quarterbacks viewed the campaign with mixed emotions. They
had gone through eight consecutive losing seasons and
hopes were not particularly high that an end to the
famine was in sight. Most felt even a new coach couldn't
reverse the trend for at least three to four years.
The Flyers went 1-8-1 that first season, but the McVay
bandwagon gained support. That was due mainly to the
sound and exciting brand of football that McVay had
displayed. In 1966 the Flyers jolted the Ohio College
gridiron scene by posting an 8-2 record and the long line
of losing seasons was ended. McVay had not only broken
the string, he had demolished it. In 1967 the Red &amp; Blue
came back with a 6-3-1 mark and showed that good, solid
winning football had returned to the Hilltop to stay. In
1968 the Flyers, playing a rugged and exciting schedule,
racked up a 5-5 record.
John E. McVay had accomplished the almost impossible task - he had taken a loser and changed it into a
winner in two short years.
Now in his 16th year of coaching, McVay's overall
record is far and away a winning one. This is a carry over
from his playing days in both high school and college.
McVay started his playing career at Massillon, Ohio,
High School under the tutorship of the highly successful
Chuck Mather, who has since coached at the University of
Kansas and presently with the NFL's Chicago Bears. He
moved on to Miami and played varsity ball, 1950 through
1952 under Woody Hayes and Ara Parseghian. The Reds kins' record in those three campaigns was 24-5 and they
won the 1950 Mid-American Conference title.
He was named to All-Ohio, All-Midwest and All-MidAmerican selections and voted the most efficient offensive
lineman by the coaching staff for two seasons. He was
elected captain of the 1952 team as a senior.
He and his wife, the former Gloria Colaner of Navarre,
Ohio, have three boys, John, 16; Jim, 15; and Tim, 13.

JAMES GRUDEN
Offensive Backs

LEONARD FONTES
Defensive Backs

-

NOT SHOWN -

MICHAEL McKEEVER
Head Freshman Coach

'."'liLLIAM MAYO
Freshman Assistant

nineteen

�1969 Dayton Football Roster
No.
87
42
20
76
89
36
75
95
96
10
22
64
65
61
53
79
86
97
78
12
17
72
54
68
15
69
21
47
90
46
74
77
83
45
63
93
11
24
55
56
62
30
14
16
85
58

84
71
48
33
29
59
94
43
44
88
18
57
82
32
19
80
41
92
67
23
49
73
26
81
66
50
52
25
91
51
27
70
40
60

Player
Adams, William
Allen, Elverage
Anderson, William
*Andrick, Daniel
Axley, William
Bass, AI
*Borgert, Frederick
Bova, Frank
Bradburn, Charles
Bradley, William
* Brown, Albert
Burke, Francis
Canestro, Ronald
Carbon, John
Carver, Kevin
Catanzaro, Michael
Christopfel, Robert
Combs, Gordon
Cotton, Fest
Cully, Phillip
Dalman, Phillip
Daugherty. Joseph
Dillon, Leo
*Ellison, Mark
Festa, Michael
Foreman, Michael
Fox, Robert
Furia, Robert
Gardner, George
*Goodwin, Thomas
Greenhorn, John
Hambell, Gary
Hamilton, David
*Handley, William
Harper, George
Harris, Lawrence
*Haynes, John
Heben, Richard
Hohne, Michael
Howard, James
Kobie, Daniel
Kosins, Gary
Krechting, Ronald
Lichtenberg, Tim
Lynch, Patrick
McAuliffe, James
McDonald, Gregory
McDowell, Michael
* M iII er, Terrence
Moro, Anthony
*Nelson, Michael
O' Rourke, Patrick
*Palcic, Robert
Philpot, Weston
Powers, Peter
Guinn, Daniel
*Redrick, Mark
Regan, John
*Rudzinski , James
Ryan, Kevin
*Schaffer, Dennis
*Schroeder, David
Schroer, Leonard
Shelton, David
*Sidebottom, Dennis
*Simpson, Donald
Sperl, Frank
* Stangle, James
Sykes, Jerry
* Tant, William
* Thompson, William
*Tierney, James
Trinite, David
Tucker, Bernard
* Tyler, Joseph
Van Dresser, Frank
Vitale, Anthony
Walters, Gary
Watkins, Raymond
*Weigand, Richard
* Varsity Letter (22 )

twenty

Pos.
E
DHB
DHB
T
DE
FB
DT
DT
DE
DE
DHB
DHB
G
G

c

T
E
DE
DT
QB
DHB
T

c

G
HB
MG
DHB
K
DHB
DHB
DT
DT
SE
SE
G
FB
OB
DHB

c

LB
G
HB
QB
QB
E
T
E
DT
HB
DHB
DHB
MG
MG
HB
FB
DE
K

c

DE
FB
OB
DE
LB
DE
G
DHB
LB
T
DHB
E
G
LB
LB
DHB
LB
MG
FB
T
HB
LB

Cl.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.

Major
Bus.
Ed.
Ed.
Bus.
Bus.
Ed.
Ed.
Tech.
A&amp;S
Tech .
A&amp;S
A&amp;S
Bus.
Bus.
A&amp;S
Bus.
A&amp;S
Ed.
Ed.
Ed.
Bus.
Ed.
Bus.
Ed.
Ed.
Ed.
Med .
Ed.
Ed.
Ed.
Ed.
Ed .
A&amp;S
A&amp;S
A&amp;S
Bus.
A&amp;S
Ed.
Bus.
Ed.
Ed.
Bus.
Ed.
Ed.
Bus.
A&amp;S
Ed.
Bus.
Tech .
Ed .
Ed.
Bus.
Ed.
Ed.
Ed.
A&amp;S
Bus.
Ed.
Ed.
Ed.
A&amp;S
Ed.
Comp.
A&amp;S
Ed.
En gr.
Ed.
Bus.
Bus.
Ed.
Ed.
Ed .
A&amp;S
Bus.
Ed.
Ed.
Ed.
Bus.
Bus.
Bus.

Age
19
19
19
21
20
19
20
19
19
19
20
19
21
20
19
19
20
19
19
21
19
20
20
20
19
19
21
20
19
21
20
20
19
21
21
19
20
19
20
19
19
19
19
21
19
19
19
21
20
21
21
19
20
19
21
19
21
19
21
20
21
21
21
19
21
20
19
21
20
21
21
20
19
20
21
21
20
19
19
20

Ht.
6-2
5-11
5-11
6-4
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-2
5-11
5-11
5-9
6-2
5-1
6-1
6-4
6-2
6-0
6-3
5-10
5-11
6-3
6-3
6-2
5-9
5-9
6-2
5-9
6-1
5-8
6-2
6-2
6-0
5-11
6-1
5-10
5-10
5-9
6-3
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-3
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-0
5-9
6-2
5-11
6-2
6-1
6-0
5-9
6-4
6-5
5-10
6-2
6-3
6-1
6-3
6-1
6-5
5-11
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-4
5-9
6-1

Wt.
195
175
185
250
212
205
240
205
200
180
180
170
220
210
225
235
210
200
256
175
190
215
235
235
179
210
205
165
183
170
220
225
180
182
208
178
160
170
230
206
200
210
180
185
200
225
195
225
185
215
195
215
225
190
190
230
186
220
195
205
170
215
220
205
210
195
215
230
170
245
210
220
189
190
205
210
185
230
155
220

Hometown
Canton, Ohio
Pittsburgh, Pa .
Pittsburgh , Pa.
Elyria, Ohio
Chicago, Ill.
Portsmouth, Ohio
Dayton, Ohio
Pittsburgh , Pa.
Pittsburgh , Pa.
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago, Ill.
Washington, D .C.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Chicago, Ill.
Canton, Ohio
Springfield, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Baltimore, Md.
Dayton, Ohio
New Hartford, N.Y.
Rockaway , N .J.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Atlantic City, N .J.
Dayton, Ohio
Mason, Ohio
Brooklyn, N.Y .
Chicago, Ill .
Jackson, Mich.
Bellbrook, Ohio
Royal Oak, Mich .
Toronto, Ont.
Warren, Ohio
Springfield, Ohio
Brown Mills, N .J.
Beaumont, Texas
Massillon, Ohio
Tipp City, Ohio
Dayton , Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Dayton, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Mason, Ohio
Detroit, Mich.
Watertown, N.Y.
New Lebanon , Oh io
Lewisburg, Pa.
Portsmouth, Ohio
Toronto, Ont.
Hometown, Ill.
Cumberland, Md .
Gowanda, N.Y.
Dayton, Ohio
Jackson, Mich .
Dayton, Ohio
Dayton, Ohio
Arlington , Mass.
Detroit, M ich .
Columbus, Ohio
Akron , Ohio
Grand Ledge, Mich .
Pittsburgh , Pa.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Wyandotte, Mich.
Paineville, Ohio
Mineola, N .Y .
Dayton, Ohio
Jackson, Mich.
Detroit, Mich.
Dayton, Ohio
Danbury, Conn .
Detroit, Mich .
Wheaton, Md .
Engleside, Ill.
Detroit, Mich .
Canton , Ohio
Flint, Mich .
Cincinnati, Ohio
Akron , Oh io

�CHANGE
IS IN THE
WIND Shaped in a wind tunnel ...
Refined by the wind
at Daytona, Riverside, and Darlington.
W ind-shaped. Aerodynamic. Mode to move.

1970 Torino Brougham 2-Door

1970
FORD
TORINO
The most completely changed new cars of the
year-Torino. New size. Longer. Lower. Wider.
Quick and quiet. New shape. Shaped in a wind
tunnel for a new, low-drag silhouette.
Torino Brougham. Here's the one that has it
all. Distinctive new grille with Hideaway Head-

More luxurious than any other
car in its class. One of the
13 new 1970 Torino modelsthe most completely changed
new cars of the year.

lamps. New interiors to surround you with luxury.
More luxurious than any other car in its class.
Top pe rformance from a choice of five new V-B's,
including the super efficient 351-cu. in. 4V. Top
it all off with a glamorous vinyl -covered roof.
Torino Brougham - sweeping its class.

TORINO

�Things

go better
------ ... with Coke.
TRADE MARK®

�85
77
61
58
68
73
80
14
45
20
35

Offense
PAUL LANG (CC) ....... TE
CHRIS WOLF ........... LT
JERRY ELWELL ......... LG
CHUCK DONN OR ....... C
BILL HAYDEN .......... RG
TOM CENTOFANTI ...... RT
JOE MORESCO ........ SE
MICK MURTHA ........ QB
SCOTT HERLAN ........ LH
PAT PATTERSON ....... RH
JOE ZELMANSKI ........ FB

88
77
94
75
82
SO
91
22
42
29
23

BUFFALO
90
70
66
96
56
32
34
59
42
26
40

40
41
42
43

45
46
47
48
49

50
51
52
53

54

DAYTON

Defense
PRENTIS HENLEY ........ LE
DAN WALGATE ........ LT
ROVELL JONES ........ RT
TOM VIGNEAU ......... RE
SCOTT CLARK (CC) .... OLB
LARRY MADDEN ....... ILB
MIKE LUZNY .......... IRB
ED KERSHAW ........ ORB
LEN NIXON ........... LH
JOEL JACOBS ......... RH
TOM ELLIOTT ........... S

THE BULLS SQUAD
11
12
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
22
23
24
26
27
28
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39

Perry, QB
Grubbs, DHB
Murtha, QB
Barton, DHB
Hart, P-DHB
Jack, P-QB
Philp, QB
Patterson, HB
Woodward, HB
Layo, K
Francis, DHB
Zalar, DHB
Jacobs, DHB
Wells, DHB
Plawiuk, HB
Stiscak, HB
Hernquist, FB
Madden, LB
Smith, LB
Luzny, LB
Zelmanski, FB
Scott, HB
McCullough, LB
Chapp,LB
Kozel, FB
Elliott, S
Constantino, K
Nixon, DHB
Griffiths, LB
Herlan, HB
Hogan,S
MacVittie, DHB
C. Jones, S
Faller, HB
Mosher, LB
Graver, LB
Fortino, LB
Majcher, LB
Conaway, LB

55 Siedlecki, LB
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63

64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
87
89
90
92
93

95
96
99

Clark, LB
Albaneze, C
Donnor, C
Kershaw, LB
Carney, G
Elwell, G
Bauch, G
Bork, G
Ziegler, LB
Chernega, C
R. Jones, DT
Forness, DT
Hayden, G
Kehr, G
Walgate, DT
Winnett, T
Milarksi, T
Centofanti, T
Rio, T
Murphy, G
Reid, DT
Wolf, T
Ellenbogen, T
Atkinson, DT
Moresco, SE
Dorich, TE
Endress, TE
Horn, SE
Waggoner, SE
Lang, TE
Fraser, SE
Sharrow, SE
Henley, DE
Hudson, DE
Etherington, DE
James, TE
Vigneau, DE
Pescrillo, DT

Defense
DAN QUINN ........... LE
GARY HAMBELL ....... LT
BOB PALCIC .......... MG
FRED BORGERT ........ RT
JIM RUDZINSKI ........ RE
JIM TIERNEY ......... LLB
JOE TYLER ........... RLB
AL BROWN ........... LC
EL VERAGE ALLEN ...... RC
MIKE NELSON ......... LS
DON SIMPSON ........ RS

45
76
66
54
68
73
81
14
48
30
32

Offense
WILLIE HANDLEY ....... SE
DAN ANDRICK ......... LT
BILL THOMPSON ....... LG
LEO DILLON ...•....•.•. C
MARK ELLISON .•...... RG
JIM STANGE •..•...... RT
BILL TANT ......••.... TE
RON KRECHTING .•.... QB
TERRY MILLER ........ LHB
GARY KOSINS ........ RHB
KEVIN RYAN •......... FB

THE FLYERS SQUAD
10
11
12
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
29
30
32
33
36

40
41
42
43

44
45
46
47
48

49
50
51
52
53

54
55
56
57

Bradley, DB
58
Haynes, QB
59
Cully, QB
60
Krechting, QB
61
62
Festa, HB
Lichtenberg, QB 63
Dalman, DB
64
Redrick, K
65
Schaffer, QB
66
Anderson, DB
67
Fox, DB
68
Brown, DB
69
Simpson, DB
70
Heben, DB
71
Tucker, DB
72
Sykes, DB
73
Vitale, HB
74
Nelson, DB
75
Kosins, HB
76
Ryan, FB
77
Moro, HB
78
Bass, FB
79
Watkins, HB
80
Schroer, LB
81
Allen, DB
82
Philpot, HB
83
Powers, FB
84
Handley, SE
85
Goodwin, DB
86
Furia, K
87
Miller, HB
88
Sperl, LB
89
Tierney, LB
90
Van Dresser, MG91
Trinite, LB
92
Carver, C
93
Dillon, C
94
Hohne, C
95
Howard, LB
96
Regan, C
97

McAuliffe, OT
O'Rourke, MG
Weigand, LB
Carbon, G
Kobie, G
Harper, G
Burke, DB
Canestro, G
Thompson, G
Sidebottom, G
Ellison, G
Foreman, MG
Walters, OT
McDowell, DT
Daugherty, OT
Stangle, OT
Greenhorn, DT
Borgert, DT
Andrick, OT
Hambell, DT
Cotton, DT
Catanzaro, OT
Schroeder, DE
Tant, OE
Rudzinski, DE
Hamilton, SE
McDonald, OE
Lynch, OE
Christopfel, OE
Adams, OE
Quinn, DE
Axley, DE
Gardner, DB
Tyler, LB
Shelton, DE
Harris, FB
Palcic, MG
Bova, DT
Bradburn, DE
Combs, DE

"COCA COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY

�Chrysler weather has arrived. Falling leaves
with a run in the cars with the bumblebee stri pe:
take off on the wind - and our 1970 Chrysler
The Challenger. Charger 500. Dart Swinger 340.
Corporation lineup takes the field .
Coronet Super Bee.
For a starter, Plymouth 1970 makes it with
The loaded lineup. Performance on wheels,
the Rapid Transit System: The fabulous
waiting for the moment you take over.
Barracuda Series. Valiant Duster 340. And the
And while you're thinking about it- relax,
sit back and enjoy the game.
imperturbable Plymouth GTX.
Or you could be Dodge material. Find outA~

J4
CHRYSLER
CORPORATION

Plymouth · Dodge · Chrysler · Imperial • Dodge Trucks • Simca · Sunbeam

�1969 Buffalo Football Roster

J

Ht.
Pos.
School
Player
Cl.
Major
Age
Wt.
6-3
OB
Bethlehem Central
*Perry, Edward
Jr.
P.E.
20
203
DHB
21
5·9
173 Coshocton HS
*Grubbs, Gary
Sr.
P.E.
OB
5-11
**Murtha, Mark
Sr.
22
176 Union-Endicott HS
Bus.
DHB
6-2
181
18
Union-Endicott HS
tBarton, Kirk
So.
Med.
6-0
P-DHB
Mansfield-Madison
tHart, Lawrence
So.
L.A.
19
191
p
6-0
**Jack, Paul
Sr.
Chern.
19
175 Springdale HS
6-2
QB
tPhilp, Douglas
Engr.
18
Humberside Col.
So.
200
**Patterson, Patrick
HB
5-11
Sr.
21
189 Ambridge HS
L.A.
*Woodward, Barnard
HB
5-9
Peru HS
Jr.
P.E.
20
189
6-0
tLayo, Robert
K
18
181
Portage Area HS
So.
L.A.
5-11
Francis, Ronald
DHB
Jr.
L.A.
20
195 Notre Dame HS
6-0
*Zalar, Karl
DHB
Jr.
P.E.
20
180 Calvert HS
5-10
*Jacobs, Joel
DHB
20
176 East Rockaway HS
Jr.
L.A.
6-1
Wells, Kevin
DHB
Jr.
His.
20
180
Lafayette HS
5-10
tPiawiuk, Russell
HB
So.
L.A.
20
190 Ancaster HS
5-11
Stiscak, Robert
HB
Jr.
L.A.
20
185 Aliquippa HS
Hernquist, Eugene
FB
20
5-9
197
Olean HS
Bus.
Jr.
6-0
Catholic Central
tMadden, Lawrence
LB
L.A.
19
197
So.
5-11
tSmith, Philip
21
Ridgway C.B.
LB
So.
L.A.
193
*Luzny, Michael
Geo.
22
5-9
209 St. Joseph's HS
LB
Sr.
6-1
*Zelmanski, Joseph
FB
20
P.E.
Jr.
200 St. Clement HS
5-11
Scott, Joseph
FB
L.A.
19
180 Cathedral Prep
So.
5-10
McCullough, Steven
LB
Sr.
Soc.
21
195 Coshocton HS
*Chapp, Gary
P.E.
21
5-8
LB
Sr.
200 St. Clement HS
tKozel, Douglas
5-11
FB
L.A.
19
189 Catholic HS
So.
*Elliott, Thomas
5-11
183 Canandaigua HS
Jr.
Bus.
20
s
Constantino, Michael
Phar.
19
5-11
185 Jamestown HS
K
Sr.
P.E.
*Nixon, Leonard
5-11
182 St. Joseph's HS
DHB
Jr.
20
5-11
Johnson City HS
Griffiths, Robert
L.A.
19
205
LB
So.
Herlan, Scott
6-2
198 Grand Island HS
P.E.
HB
Jr.
21
6-0
Hogan, Kevin
Jr.
His.
21
178 West HS
s
P.E.
5-10
177 Williamsville HS
MacVittie, Mark
DHB
So.
19
6-0
t Jones, Clifton
So.
P.E.
19
176 Emerson Voc.
s
Faller, John
HB
Jr.
P.E.
5-11
196 Greece-Arcadia HS
20
6-1
212
Central Islip HS
**Mosher, James
Sr.
His.
LB
22
Graver, Charles
Jr.
190
Depew HS
LB
L.A.
21
5-9
tFortino, James
Bus.
5-11
204 Ticonderoga HS
LB
So.
18
tMajcher, David
6-1
Bishop McCort HS
LB
So.
Bus.
18
208
Conaway, Daniel
6-2
Kenmore East HS
LB
So.
L.A.
21
189
tSiedlekci, Stanley
P.E.
6-2
175
Carthage
Central
LB
So.
18
**Clark, Scott (CC)
6-0
LB
Sr.
Soc.
22
210 Coshocton HS
Albaneze, Dennis
Jr.
6-3
215 Stuyvesant HS
c
L.A.
20
P.E.
*Donnor, Charles
c
Jr.
20
6-1
204 East Aurora HS
*Kerhsaw, Edward
LB
Jr.
L.A.
6-2
198 Elyria HS
20
Carney, Patrick
G
Sr.
6-0
N. Kensington HS
21
192
Soc.
Elwell, Jerry
G
Jr.
Ant.
21
6-0
Cardinal Mooney HS
200
tBauch, John
G
His.
6-0
So.
19
212 Tallmadge HS
Bork, Kenneth
G
Jr.
L.A.
6-0
Cheektowaga HS
20
205
Ziegler, Joseph
LB
So.
L.A.
5-10
215
Cardinal O'Hara HS
20
Chernega, David
c
Sr.
P.E.
5-11
Union-Endicott HS
22
187
*Jones, Rovell
DT
Buchetel HS
Jr.
Psych.
20
6-1
222
Forness, Charles
DT
Riverside HS
Jr.
L.A.
20
6-0
254
*Hayden, William
G
His.
5-10
200
Cathedral-Latin HS
Sr.
22
tKehr, Paul
G
Lancaster HS
So.
L.A.
6-0
204
19
**Walgate, Daniel
DT
P.E.
6-2
Grand Island HS
Sr.
21
272
tWinnett, William
T
Engr.
6-2
235 Jackson HS
So.
19
Milarski, Thomas
T
6-0
Jr.
His.
215
North Hill HS
20
*Centofanti, Thomas
T
6-0
Bishop Duffy HS
20
210
Jr.
P.E.
6-0
*Rio, John
T
242 St. Mary's HS
Jr.
L.A.
20
Murphy, William
6-4
G
Bus.
Bishop Duffy HS
So.
20
223
Reid, Frank
DT
6-3
Fisher Park HS
Sr.
Bus.
23
229
**Wolf, Chris
T
6-3
Sr.
Soc.
21
213 Solon HS
tEIIenbogen, William
T
6-3
New Rochelle HS
L.A.
18
221
So.
Atkinson, Barry
DT
6-4
Jr.
P.E.
E. Dear-Frazer HS
20
252
Moresco, Joseph
SE
6-2
Ithaca HS
Jr.
Bus.
20
176
tDorich, Paul
TE
6-3
His.
200
McDowell HS
So.
19
**Endress, Terrence
TE
6-0
Sr.
Bus.
21
200 St. Vincent's HS
**Horn, Richard
6-1
SE
Eng.
22
179
Dover HS
Sr.
84
tWaggoner, Dennis
SE
6-1
188 Notre Dame HS
L.A.
19
So.
85 **Lang, Paul (CC)
TE
6-0
210
Ithaca HS
Sr.
His.
22
Fraser, Bruce
87
SE
6-1
185 Wheatfield HS
So.
His.
18
Sharrow, Michael
89
SE
6-2
171
Moriah
Central HS
Sr.
P.E.
20
*Henley, Prentis
90
6-1
DE
226 South Park HS
Sr.
P.E.
22
Hudson, Joseph
92
6-1
DE
222
Jr.
21
Cheshire Academy
Phil.
Etherington, Robert
93
6-2
DE
197
So.
P.E.
20
Parkside HS
James, Michael
95
TE
6-7
Jr.
228 Penn Hills HS
P.S.
20
*Vigneau, Thomas
96
6-0
DE
219
Jr.
P.E.
20
St. Clement HS
Pescrillo, David
6-3
99
DT
235
So.
L.A.
20
LaSalle HS
*Varsity Letter (28, including four from 1967- Grubbs, R. Jones, Murtha and Luzny)
tFreshman numerals
MANAGERS : Allen Wright '72 (Mt. Vernon, N.Y.) - Lawrence Goldfarb '72 (Brooklyn, N . Y.)
No.
11
12
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
22
23
24
26
27
28
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83

Hometown
Delmar, N.Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Endicott, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Mansfield, Ohio
Springdale, Pa.
Toronto, Ont.
Baden, Pa.
Peru, N.Y.
Portage, Pa.
Batavia, N.Y.
Tiffin, Ohio
East Rockaway, N. Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Ancaster, Ont.
Aliquippa, Pa.
Olean, N . Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Ridgway, Ont.
South Bend, Ind.
Center Line, Mich.
Hamilton, Ont.
Cochocton,Ohio
Center Line, Mich.
Johnson City, N.Y.
Canandaigua, N.Y.
Jamestown, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Johnson City, N.Y.
Grand Island, N . Y.
Auburn, N.Y.
Williamsville, N.Y.
Buffalo, N . Y .
Rochester, N.Y.
Central Islip, N. Y.
Depew, N.Y.
Ticonderoga, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Carthage, N.Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Elmhurst, N . Y.
East Aurora, N . Y.
Elyria, Ohio
New Kensington, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y.
Tallmadge, Ohio
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Akron, Ohio
Buffalo, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Lancaster, N. Y.
Grand Island, N.Y.
North Canton, Ohio
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Ottawa, Ont.
Solon, Ohio
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Ithaca, N.Y .
Erie, Pa.
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Dover, Ohio
Attica, N.Y.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Niagara Falls,~- Y.
Witherbee, N.Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
New City, N.Y.
Burlin!;JtOn, Ont.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Center Line, Mich.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.

twenty-five

�The Buffalo Coaching Staff

RICHARD A. LANTZ
Defensive Backfield

WERNER J. KLEEMANN
Defensive Line

JOE N. GRIFFITH
Head Freshman Coach

RICHARD L. WELLS
Graduate Assistant

ROBERT C. DEMING
Head Coach
Bob Deming officially assumed the fortunes of Buffalo
football last February 15 as the University's 15th head
coach, following the resignation of Richard W. (Doc)
Urich, now head coach at Northern Illinois University.
Deming is no stranger on the crowded U /B campus. He
has been on the football scene since 1959 and has served
ten years as a varsity assistant under Urich and Dick
Offen hamer.
A 1957 graduate of Colgate, where he earned a B.A.
in natural sciences, Bob played three seasons at fullback
with the Red Raiders. He played at Colgate under Offenharner. Upon graduation he went with Coach Hal Lahar
to Houston as freshman coach and varsity backfield assistant. He remained with the Cougars through 1958 until he
went into the Air Force Reserve.
Rejoining the Houston staff in January, 1959, he completed spring practice at the University before accepting
an April assignment under Offenhamer at Buffalo, who
had taken over in 1955. Bob's first season at U / B was
rewarding as the Bulls finished 8-1-0 and just missed their
second successive Lambert Cup. Deming tutored both
offensive and defensive backs in 1959 and 1960.
From 1961-65 Bob stayed with the defensive backs and
held the same assignment under Urich, plus handling game
plan formulation. With Urich he served as liaison between
the football office and various campus organizations. He
recruited New York and Pennsylvania.
Deming is not a superstitious mentor. He was born on
Friday the 13th of September, 1935 at Ilion, N. Y. His
coaching debut with the Bulls was on his birthday at
Ball St.
An accomplished outdoorsman, hunter and fisherman,
Bob enjoys serious antique refinishing with wife Jean, a
native of Rochester, N. Y. Jean (University of Rochester)
was formerly a hostess with American Airlines. The
Demings, Laura 3 and Leslie Ann 1, reside in suburban
Eggertsville.
Deming is an assistant professor in the Department of
Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics.

twenty-six

TERRANCE J.
RANSBURY
Offensive Backfield

W ILLIAM R. DANDO
Linebackers

JOHN P. DOHERTY
Gradua te Assistant

JAMES C. MeN ALLY
Offensive Line

MICHAEL E . MASER
Graduate Assistant

�1969 BUFFALO FOOTBALL STATISTICS
TEAM SUMMARY
First Downs
Rushing
Passing
Penalty
Total Plays
Rushing
Passing
Total Offense
Rushing
Passing
Passes Attempted
Completions
Had Intercepted
Scoring Passes
Punts/ Yards
Punt Average
Had Blocked
Punt Ret/ Yards
KO Ret/Yards
Penalty/ Yards
Fumbles/ Lost
Scoring
Touchdowns
PAT/ Kick
Run Pass Con
Field Goals
Safety
Total Points

U/B
66
32
28
6
279
179
100
1138
600
538
100
44
3
1
26-992
38.2
0
12-87
11 -164
15-147
7-2

OPP
52
37
13
2
256
202
54
926
592
334
54
23
2
2
27-1072
39.7
0
8-58
11 -193
14-158
7-4

6
5-5
1-1
3-1
1
48

4
4-3
0-0
3-2
0
33

BUFFALO SCOREBOARD (2-2-0)
Sept. 13 A
Ball St. 10, Buffalo 7
Sept. 20
H
Buffalo 17, Xavier 0
Sept. 27
A
Buffalo, 16 UMass 6
Oct . 4
H
Kent St. 17, Buffalo 8
Oct. 11
Dayton
Oct. 18
at
Holy Cross
Oct. 25
Virginia Tech
Nov. 1
Temple
at
Nov. 8
Boston College
Nov. 22
at
Villanova

THE UNION PAPER AND TWINE COMPANY

GOOD LUCK TO THE BULLS . . .

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I

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Power Plants -

Process Piping -

Fire Protection

Judson M . Quimby, Controller

•

Phone: 823-6300

120 W. TUPPER

TL 4-8435

590 ELK STREET

BUFFALO, N. Y.

For the Finest in Food and Beverage

AFTER THE GAME . . .

THE CLUB SHERIDAN
3500 SHERIDAN DRIVE

836-7736

BUFFALO, N. Y.

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Open 'til 9 Nightly!

twenty-seven

�A Look at the University of Dayton

THOMAS J. FRERICKS
Director of Athletics

VERY REVEREND
RAYMOND A. ROESCH, S. M.
President

The University of Dayton traces its history to the year 1850 when a modest primary school for boys,
known as St. Mary's Institute, was opened in Dayton. Operating the little school was a group of Catholic
missionaries who had left their native France just a year earlier to bring their educational work to
America. These priests and brothers were members of the Society of Mary, a religious order founded in
1817 by Father William Joseph Chaminade.
These pioneer Marianists (as Society of Mary men were called) were fortunate, while conducting
their ministry in Dayton, to become acquainted with a certain Mr. John Stuart, scion of the royal family
of Scotland. Mr. Stuart sold the Marianists his one-hundred-twenty-acre "Dewberry Farm" just south of
the city- an ideal, hilltop property for a school. The following summer, in 1850, fourteen pupils began
classes in the homestead of Dewberry Farm.
From the humble beginning St. Mary's Institute grew. Some years later, it became St. Mary's
College, and then in 1920, at age seventy, the school became the University of Dayton.
Its growth and progress continued. When the school adopted its present name, enrollment was
one hundred and seventy-one. In 1937, two years after coeducation was introduced, it passed the thousand
mark. Following World War II, enrollment at the University of Dayton- as at most other colleges and
universities around the country - expanded rapidly. In 1946, almost three thousand students registered, and today a record total enrollment of more than ten thousand has been attained.
The University of Dayton thus ranks among the ten largest Catholic colleges in the United States.
Growth in numbers does not necessarily represent progress, of course. While enrollments grew, new
programs on both undergraduate and graduate levels were initiated, curriculums and methods of presenting them were streamlined. New buildings to house various departments and activities were built at
a rapid pace. Professional and educational groups recognized the University's work with accreditations
and approvals.
Today, in its one-hundred-and-nineteenth academic year, the University of Dayton includes the
College of Arts and Sciences, Office of Graduate Studies and Research, School of Business Administration, School of Education, School of Engineering, and Technical Institute. In all, forty departments of
instruction function on the campus, awarding twenty-f&gt;ix different degrees on the associate, baccalaurea~e, and graduate levels.

·twenty-eight

�DAYTON
IIF/yers"

87

WILLIAM ADAMS
Junior
E
Major: Business

ROBERT CHRISTOPFEL
86
Junior
E
Major: Arts &amp; Science

47

ROBERT FURIA
Junior
K
Major: Education

76

DANIEL ANDRICK
Senior
T
Major: Business

89

JOSEPH DOUGHERTY
72
Junior
T
Major: Education

54

THOMAS GOODWIN
46
Senior
DHB
Major: Education

77

WILLIAM AXLEY
Junior
DE
Major: Business

LEO DILLON
Junior
Major: Business

C

GARY HAMBELL
Junior
DT
Major: Education

75

FRED. BORGERT
Junior
DT
Major: Education

ALBERT BROWN
22
Junior
DHB
Major: Arts &amp; Science

68

MARK ELLISON
Junior
G
Major: Education

21

WILLIAM HANDLEY
45
Senior
SE
Major: Arts &amp; Science

ROBERT FOX
Senior
DHB
Major: Pre-Medical

JOHN HAYNES
Junior
QB
Major: Arts &amp; Science

11

twenty-nine

�FAMOUS FOOTBALL BLOOPERS
be a goat to be remembered
by LEE MUELLER, Newspaper Enterprises Association

APART from the Knute Rockne:;,
Red Granges, Centre 6 Harvard O's,
Tom Harmons and O.J.Simpsons, college football's most remembered moments generally coincide with visions
of clo\·en hoofs and varlets in striped
shirts.
All hail, gentlemen, the goat. Poor
old goat, fumbled on the goal line in
the Wisconsin game, remember? His
kid's all right . . . he can't help it if
his old man pulled a boner.
Enter now the referee. College
football teams are named after Wolverines, Wildcats, Longhorns and
even Tigers. But a referee wears a
garment bearing the insignia of a
skunk. (Chorus of boos from crowd.)
We are told that human nature
kindly endows us with the tendency
to suppress unpleasant memories and
recall more vividly the happier experiences. Unfortunately for the individuals involved, this particular information does not apply to intercollegiate football.
Time and wry grins have proven
that blunders sometimes outlive heroics. Men, being men, can forgive a
mistake but they rarely forget it.
Who can (or will) forget California's Wrong-Way Roy Riegels,
running 69% yards to his own sixinch line in the 1929 Rose Bowl to
set up a Georgia Tech victory?
Five Downs Decisive
And who doesn't remember Referee William H. (Red) Friesen, Jr.,
who gave Cornell five downs to
score the winning touchdown over
Dartmouth in 1940?
Or Alabama fullback Tommy
Lewis, yielding to frustration and
leaping from his seat on the sidelines to tackle Rice's Dick Moegle as
he raced toward the Tide's end zone
in the 1954 Cotton Bowl?
And, more recently, Kansas' repeated 12-man defensive formations

thirty

in last New Year's night's Orange
Bowl, which, when finally detected,
gave Penn State a second, successful
opportunity to score a two-point conversion that meant victory?
The Jayhawks remember. While
Penn State was gearing up its last offensive thrust in the final quarter,
Kansas was sending in its defensive
goal line team. And, through a misunderstanding among Jayhawks on
the field-two came in, one went
out-college football collected one of
its better boo-boos.
Game films show that during the
last 80 seconds, Kansas, ahead 14-7,
conducted a brilliant goal-line stand
by using 12 men against Penn State's
11. Twice the 12-man defense threw
back Penn State runners. Then the
Lions' quarterback managed to score
on a broken play. It was not until
the two-point conversion try (which
Kansas also squashed) that an official, Foster Grose, noticed there
were several white-shirted Kansas
players on the field-like a dozen or
so. After deflating the joyful Jayhawks with news of the penalty,
Grose stepped off 1 1h yards to Kansas' 1 Ifz. This time Penn State, no
longer outnumbered, scored on a
sweep and won, 15-14.
The overpopulation of Jayhawks
probably ranks as the most prominent bowl boner since Riegels'
wrong-way run. (Alabama was already out of the game when Lewis
made his impromptu tackle.)
"Stop, Stop"
Riegels' flight to perverse fame began when he picked up a Tech fumble on the first bounce and started to
run with it (which today's rules
would not allow), turning toward
the enemy's goal line. He took a few
steps, spun to avoid being tackled
and, eureka, an open field lay before
him.

A center on the verge of scoring a
touchdown in the Rose Bowl, Riegels
streaked downfield toward his own
end zone, grinning. Behind him came
teammate Benny Lorn, shouting.
"Stop, stop!" screamed Lorn.
"You're running the wrong way!"
At the 10-yard line, Lorn caught
him, but Riegels shook him off. At
the three, Lorn grabbed him again
and this time held on. Riegels finally
realized something was wrong and
turned around. A wave of gleeful
Georgia Tech players knocked him
down.
There was no score at the time and
a good punt might have saved Riegels
some shame. The ensuing punt, however, was blocked, producing a safety
that gave Tech its eventful 8-7 victory margin.
Outcome Reversed
Referee Friesell's faux pas did not
create such lasting damage. Although
Walter Scholl's touchdown pass to
Bill Murphy on the fifth down was
the last play of the game and gave
Cornell a momentary 7-3 win over
Dartmouth, it didn't stick.
The Eastern Intercollegiate Football Association observed that since
Cornell should have lost possession
of the ball on Dartmouth's five-yard
line a few seconds before the game
ended, Dartmouth should be declared
the winner.
Cornell readily agreed in a wire
from President Edmund E. Day. The
decision marked one of the few times
in intercollegiate football's history
that a game's outcome was reversed
after its completion.
Tommy Lewis' tackle also was of
an innocuous nature. Moegle was
awarded a 95-yard touchdown run as
Rice won easily. The incident only
served to focus unwanted attention
on Lewis, wherever he went.
It was not the first time a runner
had been tackled from the bench, nor
the last, but the memory of Tommy
Lewis lives on. "I got more than 500
letters from people," he said, "some
good, lots bad."
There have been less-publicized
boners in college football, many of
more importance. There was, for example, that day in 1960 when Louisiana State University quarterback
Jimmy Field got up off the ground
and discovered that his wrist band
was gone.
All it contained was a complete
outline of the LSU plays. Field told
his coach, Paul Dietzel, and Dietzel
reported the loss to the referee. At the
end of the half-time intermission,
the official brought the missing wrist
band to the LSU dressing room.
"Where did you find it?" asked
Dietzel, obviously relieved. "In the
Florida dressing room," replied the
referee.
Florida shut out LSU in the second
half and won, 13-10.

�DAYTON
Flyers"

II

TERRENCE MILLER
Junior
HB
Major: Technical

MICHAEL NELSON
29
Senior
DHB
Major: Education

JAMES RUDZINSKI
Senior
DE
Major: Education

32

55

MICHAEL HOHNE
Junior
C
Major: Business

MICHAEL McDOWELL
71
Senior
DT
Major: Business

48

44

PETER POWERS
Senior
FB
Major: Education

88

DANIEL QUINN
Sophomore
DE
Major: Arts &amp; Science

82

WILLIAM THOMPSON
66
Senior
G
Major: Education

50

JAMES TIERNEY
Junior
LB
Major: Education

BERNARD TUCKER
25
Junior
DHB
Major: Business

91

KEVIN RYAN
Junior
FB
Major: Education

JOSEPH TYLER
Senior
LB
Major: Education

94

ROBERT P ALCIC
Junior
MG
Major: Education

DENNIS SIDEBOTTOM
67
Senior
G
Major: Education

ANTHONY VITALE
27
Sophomore
FB
Major: Education

thirty-one

�The Bulls Salute ... Their Trainers and Managers

'l'RAI ER SIMO AND STAFF (1-r) Front: Jim Simon '50, head trainer and physical therapist; and Fran
Welk '70, training assistant. Back: AI Wright '72, manager; Ken Shields '71, training assistant; and Dan
Earl '72, assistant manager.

1969 U/8 Fall Scoreboard
Date
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.

Date
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

Nov.
Nov.

3
17
25
31
14

FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
Coach: Joe N. Griff ith
Opp.
U/B OPP
MANLIUS
6
31
2:00
at Syracuse
2:00
at Navy
3:30
at Army
KENT STATE
2:30

VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY
Coach: Emery J. Fisher ' 51
Opp.
U/B OPP
20
43
at Cleveland State with
23
Baldwin-Wallace
35
20
SYRACUSE with
27
27
30
NIAGARA CC
41
19
at Fredonia State
1
6th of 18
LeMoyne Invite
4
4:00
10
BROCKPORT STATE
4:00
17
at LeMoyne with
Rochester Tech
4:00
22
at Eisenhower with
Geneseo State
1:00
25
Canisius Invite
4:00
29
at Niagara with
Canisius
Gannon
Buffalo State
NYS Championship at Harpur
NCAA Championships
25

thirty-two

Date
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

VARSITY GOLF
Coach : Dr. Leonard T. Serfustini
Opp.
U/B OPP
8
16
10
at St. Bonaventure
14Y:.
18
at Buffalo State
3Y:.
14Y:.
19
NIAGARA CC
3Y2
4
14
22
ROCHESTER TECH
ppd.
24
CANIS! US
26
at Niagara
7
11
29
15Y:.
BUFFALO STATE
2Y:.
11 y,
6Y2
1
ST. BONAVENTURE
Brook Lea Invite
2
6th of 20
GENESEO STATE
1:00
6
11
ECAC at Colgate
1:00
13
at Canisius
16
NIAGARA
1:30
ECAC at Farmingdale
18
NIAGARA
1:30
21
at Rochester Tech
1:00
24

�YOUR HOMETOWN SUPERMARKETS ARE PROUD
TO SUPPORT THE HOMETOWN UNIVERSITY
OF BUFFALO "BULLS" FOOTBALL TEAM!

thirty-three

�To Games; on Ski Weekends; on Tours;
Everybody Goes First Class in the
Area's Largest Charter Bus Fleet
ASK US ABOUT

CLASS, CLUB or
GROUP CHARTERS
For

Trip~

\\.ith

to

Anywhere

All Conv&lt;&gt;nienees

Phon&lt;&gt;

BUFFALO 852-4900

BLUE BIRD COACH LINES, INC.

FOR MAXIMUM PROTECTION AND SERVICE
Corner of
N. LONG and MAIN
WILLIAMSVILLE, N. Y.

in Buying and Selling Homes
- Deal with a Realtor - Member of Greater Buffalo

Western N . Y.'s Most
Complete Ski Shop
For the Entire Family

Board of Realtors - Exclusive M/ L Service.

Shops at Glenwood Acres &amp; Holiday Valley

Leo Sauer
FUNERAL HOME
INC.
•

1933 KENSINGTON AVENUE
833-1695
•

823 GENESEE STREET
TX 2-7183

AFTER THE
GAME STOP
AT . ..

GOOD LUCK BULLS

Mr. &amp; Mrs. A. V. Bellanca

thirty-four

�Van, Stan &amp; Rife Have It All Figured Out!
FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WBEN-Radio
VAN
STAN
DICK
MILLER BARRON RIFENBURG
WBEN Radio/930
The Sports Voice of Buffalo

�SPECIAL PATRONS
We Acknowledge With Thanks the Generous
Contributions of the Following:
Rich Products Corp.

Kevin Brinkworth

John M. Galvin

T. Gregory Jacobs

Charles G. Salisbury

Carl E. DeSantis

Robert D. Fernbach

PATRONS
Robert B. Adam
Harold A. Adel
James J. Ailinger
William C. Baird
Charles Banas
Donald R. Barber
Robert B. Barrett
John M. Bissell
Stanley B. Blach
Walter Brock
Milton M. Bron
Dennis J. Brinkworth, Jr.
Edmond S. Brown, Jr.
Max Burstein
Abraham Carrel
Ross M. Cellino
James P. Cole
Robert J. Collins
Kenneth L. Cooper
Joseph M. Crotty
John L. Curtis
Charles H. Diefendorf
Charles Diebold Ill
Arnold Dilaura
Edward J. Doran
George E. Easterbrook
Thornton G. Edwards
George W. Ferrick
Aaron I. Feuerstein
Paul A. Foley
John A. Krull
Harold Frantzen
Irving Fudeman
Anthony J. Renaldo
Gates Electric Co.
Allan V. Gibbons
A. Donald Gilden
Chester P. Glor, J r.
George L. Grobe, Jr.
Norman Haber
Murray J. Hall
Nicholas Haragos
Joseph J. Ricotta
Irwin Klein

thi rty-six

F. Vincent Harrington
Harold M. Harris
L. Richard Hart
Waldron S. Hayes, Jr.
William H. Hildebrand, Jr.
Palace Theatre
Sheldon Hurwitz
Rudolph V. Johnson
Edwin F. Jaeckle
Grover R. James, Jr.
W. Hinson Jones
Henry W. Killeen
Kevin Kennedy
Russell Kidder, Jr.
Edward W. Kinney
Stephen F. Kissel
A. O'Neill Kline
Seymour Knox
Gerald S. Lippes
Anchor Concrete Products
Saul Lerner
Joseph J. Lyons
Charles J. McDonough
J. Eugene McMahon
Samuel D. Magavern
Harold F. Meese
Robert J. Metzen
Leo M. Michalek
Robert F. Milks
Edward F. Mimmack
Raymond A. Monin
Arthur F. Movalli
David J. Mahoney, Jr.
Roland Lord O'Brian
Thomas E. O'Brien
Charles W. Pankow, Jr.
Pearce &amp; Pearce Co., Inc.
Howard A. Potter, Inc.
William E. Potter
Hugh McM. Russ, Sr.
Eugene M. Ruszaj
Edward A. Rath, Jr.
George H. Selkirk

William W. Rathke
Herbert R. Reitz
Frank T. Riforgiato
William R. Root
Leo J . Rosen
Eugene W. Salisbury
Harvey D. Sprowl
Thomas E. Sand
Michael Swados
Vincent Scamurra
Houdaille Industries, Inc.
Roy Seibel
George N. Seifert
Shanor Electric Co.
E. Perry Spink
James R. Sullivan
Leonard Swagler
Gertrude Swarthout
Harlan Swift
Irwin L. Terry
University Manor Motel
Charles J. Verbanic
George W. Watkins
Reinhardt W. Wende
Charles E. Weston, Jr.
Massachusetts Mutual
Life Ins. Co.
Frederick B. Wilkes
William G. Willis
Robert S. Wolfson
Manuel S. Wortzman
0. W. Shelgren
Pfohl, Roberts &amp; Biggie
Joseph Scaffidi
Turley, Stievater, Walker,
Mauri &amp; Associates
Webber, DiDonato &amp;
Renaldo
Dick O'Connor
Optical Co.
McKee, Phelps &amp;
Bowman
Samuel Shatkin

Richard J . Attea
William Blanchard
Smolka, DiBartolo
&amp; Gibson
Albert W. Doyle
Falk, Twelvetrees,
Johnston &amp; Siemer
James P. Donnelly
Irvin V. Iversen
Townsend &amp; Lipp
Lippes &amp; Kaminsky
Richard F. Miller
James C. Kenrick
Paul H. Will
William R. Trautman
&amp; Associates
Deleuw Cather &amp;
Associates
Herbert S i mon
Gary Solomon
Arnold Stern
Edward Wasielewski
Luther Lee
James Guttuso
Joel H ittleman
Francis R. Moliterno
Lynch &amp; Nusbaum
Gary D. Schuller
Charles H. Addington
George W. Fugitt
Anthony M. Aquilina
C. S. Armenia
Julian J . Ascher
Charles W. Bankert
Ulrich Bauer
Daniel R. Botsford ·
Melvin M. Brothman
Jacob Burstein
Vincent S. Celestino
Stewart and Benson
Albert V. Cutter
Maurice R. Dewey
John W. Vance

Joseph K. Sheedy
Kenneth Eckhert
George Egri
Edward G. Eschner
Sattar Farzan
Carl A. Contino
Armand DiFrancesco
Daniel C. Fisher
RichardS. Fletcher
John J. Giardino
Stuart A. Good
Pasquale A. Greco
Benjamin G. Green
Edmond Gicewicz
lsmet Hallac
Barry T. Malin
Hans F. Kipping
Morton P. Klein
Eugene C. Hyzy
Eugene V. Leslie
Barry J. Herman
George H. Marcy
James B. McDaniel, Jr.
Sanford H. Meyers
Marvin H. Milch
Elmer Milch
Donald W. Hall
William H. Merrilees
Eisenberg &amp; Donius
Irwin Ellentuck
John Biniszkiewicz
William G. Braun
Paul S. Chojnacki
Robert H. Evans
B. D. Garliner
Clifford G. Glaser
Lyle N. Morgan
Robert J. Patterson
Eustace G. Phillies
Ramon Y. Perez
Charles Riggio
Allen L. Lesswing
Duane Lyman
&amp; Associates

�BUFFALO
''BULLS"

BARRY ATKINSON
79
Junior
DT
Major: Physical Education

15

THOMAS CENTOFANTI
GARY CHAPP
73
Junior
T
38
Senior
LB
Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education

56

THOMAS ELLIOTT
40
Junior
DHB
Major: Business

JERRY ELWELL
61
Junior
G
Major: Anthropology

KIRK BARTON
Sophomore
QB
Major: Pre-Medical

62

JOHN BAUCH
Sophomore
Major: History

G

PATRICK CARNEY
60
Senior
G
Major: Sociology

MICHAEL CONSTANTINO CHARLES DO NOR
SCOTT CLARK
41
Senior
KSP
58
Junior
C
Senior Co-Capt. LB
Major: Pharmacy
Major: Physical Education
Major: Sociology

TERRENCE ENDRESS
82
Senior
TE
Major: Business

JOHN FALLER
49
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education

87

BRUCE FRASER
Sophomore
SE
Major: History

�Our take-home pack for real beer lovers.
TH[ STROH 8R(W[RY COMPNft' OETROIJ. MICHIGAN 48126

thirty-eight

�BUFFALO
''BULLS"

-

LAWRENCE HART
LAWRENCE · GOLDFARB
16
Sophomore P-DHB
Sophomore Manager
Major: Liberal Arts
Major: Business

PR!!;NTlS HENELY
SCOTT HERLAN
90
Senior
DE
45
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education

JOSEPH HUDSON
Junior
DE
Major: Philosophy

17

PAUL JACK
Senior
P
Major: Chemistry

26

DOUGLAS KOZEL
Sophomore
FB
Major: Liberal Arts

85

PAUL LANG
Senior-Co-Capt. TE
Ma-jor: History

34

RICHARD HORN
Senior
SE
Major: English

92

EDWARD KERSHAW
59
Junior
LB
Major: Liberal Arts

39

83

WILLIAM HAYDEN
68
Senior
G
Major: History

JOEL JACOBS
Junior
DHB
Major: Liberal Arts

MICHAEL LUZNY
Senior
LB
Major: Geography

66

ROVELL JONES
Junior
DT
Major: Psychology

MARK MacVITTlE
47
Sophomore DHB
Major: Physical Education

thirty-nine

�1969 BUFFALO VARSITY FOOTBALL SQUAD
(left to right) Rows
First: Co-captain Paul Lang, Coach Jim McNally, Coach Werner Kleemann, Coach Rick Lantz, Head Coach Bob Deming, Coach Terry Ransbury, Coach
Bill Dando, Coach Joe Griffith and Co-captain Scott Clark.
Second: Mike Luzny, Jim Mosher, Bill Hayden, Mick Murtha, Pat Patterson, Gary Chapp, Terry Endress, Dick Horn, Paul Jack and Chris Wolf.
Third: Dan Walgate, Barry Atkinson, Barney Woodward, Frank Reid, Joe Hudson, Ed Perry, Steve McCullough, Pat Carney, Jerry Elwell, Dave Chernega
and Gary Grubbs.
Fourth: Scott Herlan, Mike Constantino, *Rick Loundsbury, Ed Kershaw, Joe Moresco, Denny Albaneze, Karl Zalar, Gene Hernquist, Tom Centofanti, Russ
Plawiuk, Joel Jacobs and Joe Zelmanski.
Fifth: Revell Jones, Prentis Henley, Chuck Graver, *Greg Walters, *Bob Carnevale, Dave Pescrillo, Chuck Donner, Tom Milarski, John Rio, Len Nixon, Ken
Bork, Bruce Fraser and Paul Kehr.
Sixth: Bill Winnett, Cliff Jones, Kevin Wells, Mark MacVittie, Scott Savickas, Doug Kozel, Bob Griffiths, Kirk Barton, Phil Smith, Bill Murphy, Charlie
Forness, *Steve Lipman and Bob Etherington.
Seventh: Doug Philp, Pat Bauch, Barry Vandenbergh, Bill Ellenbogen, Jim Fortino, Mike Sharrow, Joe Ziegler, Denny Waggoner, Bob Layo, Paul Dorich,
Dave Majcher, Kevin Hogan and Joe Scott.
Eighth: Larry Madden, Larry Hart, Ron Francis, John Faller, Tom Vigneau, Mike James, Stan Siedlecki, Tom Elliott, *Dan Yacobush and Bob Stiscak.
Ninth: Manager Dan Earl, Manager Allen Wright, Trainer Ken Shields, Trainer Fran Welk, Head Trainer Jim Simon, Coach John Doherty, Coach Mike Maser
and Coach Rick Wells.
*No longer member of squad

forty

�BUFFALO
''BULLS"

LAWRENCE MADDEN
32
Sophomore
LB
Major: Liberal Arts

JOSEPH MORESCO
80
Junior
SE
Major: Business

IXON
42
Junior
DHB
Major: Physical Education

PATRICK PATTERSON
20
Senior
HE
Major: Liberal Arts

DANIEL WALGATE
70
Senior
DT
Major: Physical Education

77

CHRIS WOLF
Senior
Major: Sociology

T

50

JAMES MOSHER
Senior
LB
Major: History

EDWARD PERRY
11
Junior
QB
Major: Physical Education

WILLIAM MURPHY
75
Sophomore
T
Major: Business

74

JOHN RIO
Junior
T
Major: Liberal Arts

14

MARK MURTHA
Senior
QB
Major: Business

THOMAS VIGNEAU
Junior
DE
96
Major: Physical Education

BAR EY WOODWARD
ALLEN WRIGHT
JOSEPH ZELMANSKI
21
Junior
HB
Sophomore Manager
35
Junior
FB
Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education

fort y -one

�-·
•

GOOD LUCK U. B. BULLS

Rudy Bersoni -

U. B. 1967

THREE COINS RESTA VRANT
and LOVNGE

lunch, dimzer or late supper; eat like a
Roma1z Emperor on centurion's pay
In the North Wing of the MAPLE .LEAF MOTOR LODGE

'i

1620 Niagara Falls Blvd.

835-2 61 0

1 Mile North
of Sheridan Dr.
Ample Parking for Your Chariot

BENTON ANNOUNCEMENTS

CHALLENGER R/T

A Large Selection of Gifts for
Showers - Weddings - Birthdays

KENTON DODGE INC.
-HOME OF THE MIGHTY MOPARS-

3445 DELAWARE AVE. AT SHERIDAN DR.
876-6900

KENMORE, N.Y.

PLANNING TO BE MARRIED?
Benton Selection of Wedding Invitations
Is the largest

3006 Bailey Ave. . . . Near Kensington . .. 836-4100
China-Silverwar-Stainless Tableware-Stemware-Vases-Ceramics

* Greeting Cords * Stationery * Party Goods
* Candles and * Floral Pieces
Open Thurs. and Fri. Evenings till 9 PM -

105t:h ANNIVERSARY

a

1969 marks our 1OSth year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.

Sat. till G

ailing and cory

Est. 1864

REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
17-21 S. Division Street
TL4-5700

BUFFALO'S PAPER DISTRIBUTION CENTER

Ellicott Square

DON'S
Mobil Service Centers
Bailey Cor. Winspear
Kensington Cor. Century Rd.

Every kind of Sportsman
knows
DICK FISCHER'S the greatest!
DICK FISCHER

TIRE and BATTERY SERVICE
BRAKES- MUFFLERS
TUNE-UP - MINOR REPAIRS
GENERATORS and STARTERS

forty-two

SFo~ts
699 Main St.

Thruway Pla•a- 44 Main St. !Tona. l

�PJRK EDGE SELECT MOUNTJIN PINK

FULL QUART

69~

forty-three

�1969 College Football Officials' Signals
CODE OF OFFICIALS' SIGNALS

1111111 Slillft

" ' ' ''"'

llltll"llttt hf'Warf hu,

llltlitl~ lt lttctlwtf

~Jenalty Declined,
Nt "--J, «lilt Sc•t

DtWfl f'itld Oft hu

lltu(tllnc tile llcttr

llltpltn tf
MI!Hit ani Aunt

'~'~!~~~~·:~~,
,.,...,,..

lnttnlltn• l

cnuflllln•t

,.,...,,

......

l lcl Cttdlllll

lnhrtarnce

SbrttlatCiedl

lnsetD...

OPEN EVERY EVENING EXCEPT WEDNESDAY

FRED RONEKER'S
UNIVERSITY SHOP
5548 MAIN ST., WILLIAMSVILLE
632-7833

Edward Dzielski, Inc.
883-4667
INTERIOR DESIGN &amp; PLANNING

Men's and Boy's Wear of Distinction
853-7266
"THE OFFICIAL EQUIPMENT
RECONDITIONERS FOR THE BUFFALO BULLS"

FRANK O'CONNOR
ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT

MARBA INC.
Reconditioners of Athletic Equipment
1200 Niagara Street

•

Buffalo, N.Y. 14213

882-9330

forty-four

School and Team Outfitters

•
499 Washington Street

Buffalo, New York 14203

�... where you ·don't work hard for your

•1n

GS
• The New SENECA MALL
• BOULEVARD MALL
• 998 BROADWAY (and 1021 Broadway)
• THRUWAY PLAZA
• SATTLER'S HOME FURNISHINGS CITY, U.S.A.
(Elmwood at Hertel Ave.)

�MARk Of EltCElltHCE

..

Big cars cost big money...
ThatS the way it was.

OnTheMove.

0. J. Simpson with his big, reasonably priced 1970 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe.

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
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                <elementText elementTextId="1477964">
                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1496232">
              <text>Programs</text>
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496206">
                <text>1969-10-11 Buffalo vs. Dayton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496207">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496208">
                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496209">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496210">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496211">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496212">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Archival resources.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496213">
                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="41">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496214">
                <text>Rotary Field - 1:30 p.m. - October 11, 1969</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496215">
                <text> official program 50¢</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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                <text>University of Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496217">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496218">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
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                    <text>BUFFALO vs KENT ST.
ROTARY FIELD -1:30 p.m.- OCTOBER 4, 1989
official pro•ram SOc

�Cavern Spring Water-Clean Water,
Naturally Perfect Brewing Water,
gives Simon Pure Beer its perfect
blend of flavor and refreshment.
Tht William Simon Brewery, Buffalo, New Jorlc

��The Williamsville Inn

SEE THE ALL NEW

located in the heart of the Historic Niagara Frontier,
situated in the center of Williamsville, N. Y.
with its quaint shops and modern
shopping facilities.

1970 LINCOLNS and MERCURYS

70 COLOR-KEYED, SOUND AND AIR-CONDITIONED
GUEST ROOMS

at

SPECIAL STUDENT FAMILY RATES

e
e
e
e
e
e

BOULEVARD MALL
LINCOLN-MERCURY

INDIVIDUAl HI-FI SYSTEM
COLOR TELEVISION
TELEPHONES
QUEEN SIZE BEDS
liMOUSINE TO AIRPORT
DINING ROOM -liVE MUSIC

5447 Main Street
634-1111

3900 MAPLE ROAD
ACROSS FROM JENSS IN THE MALL

HOTEL SERVICE - MOTEL CONVENIENCE
Free Parking

The Sound System for today's game
is provided by . •

FOOTBALL HEADQUARTERS

IDqr 14nrb 1\mqrrnt

LARKIN SOUND SERVICE

MOTOR MOTEL

PUBLIC ADDRESS - INTERCOM

5000 MAIN ST.

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

Exit SO, Main St. West. N. Y. Thruway

and PHONE SYSTEMS

Phone 716-839-2200
Air and Sound Conditioned Rooms, T.V., Radio, Dining Room
Coffee Shop, Cocktail Lounge, Banquet Rooms

977 Niagara Street

Member Quality Motels, Inc.- AAA Rated Excellent

Buffalo, New York

SHERIDAN-AMHERST MOTORS INC.
A.M.X.
JAVELIN

AMBASSADOR

HORNET
REBEL

JIM PICONE, President

GOOD LUCK BULLS

One of the world's leading
3900 SHERIDAN DRIVE

From Your
Factory Direct- Volume Dealer

two

Phone 839-3950

AMERICAN MOTORS
DEALERS

�e

ID
Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
You can shave it with a razor blade like your father does.
And each time you do your beard will grow back a little more
difficult. Until one day shaving's no longer a
chore. It's an agony.
Look no further than your father's face
for proof.
But fortunately, you're catching your
beard at an early age. You can break it in to be
just as shaveable 10 and 20 years from
now as it is today.
With a REMINGToN·Lektro Blade shaver.
And if you think the kind of shave we're selling wori t be
close enough for you, you're wrong.
Our new Lektro Blade shaver has very sharp disposable
blades. Just like a razor. So it gives very close
shaves. ] ust like a razor.
What's more, you can dial a Lektro Blade
shaver into a sideburn trimmer.
Admittedly, it costs more to buy our
electric shaver than a razor and some blades.
But it's a good investment.
These next few years will determine how
you and your beard will get along for the rest
REMINGTON
of your lives. =(?SPE~Y
RAI\0® LEKTRO

BLADE' TRADEMARK OF SPERRY RAND CORP . ©1969 S. R,

[LtCTAIC SHAVCA OIVISIOH,8RIOC(POAT,CONNCCTICUT.

�THE

U. B. BOOSTERS
I NVITE ALL

ALUMNI and FRIENDS
TO

WHOOP IT UP
AT THE

POST GAME TUNK
Immediately Following Each Home Game
Iroquois Beer- Pop- Chips- Pretzels- Peanuts
Featuring THE U.B. BLUES

DONAliON: $1.50 Per Person

Faculty Club

four

Dress - As You Are

�Stadium Information
YOUR OOOPERATION PLEASE- As guests of the University today, your cooperation is required in
maintaining the dignity and reputation of the University. It is requested that you observe th e rules and regulations of the institution.
WE WELCOME YOU to this University of Buffalo athletic contest and invite you to relax and enjoy
exciting intercollegiate competition with our respected opponent.
On behalf of the athletic department, its staff and the players we welcome you.
Dr. Lawrence A. Cappiello
Director, Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

REST ROOM FACILITIES: Ladies' rest rooms
are situated at the north ends under the
Bailey Avenue and main stands. Gentlemen's
rest rooms are situated at the south ends
under the Bailey Avenue and main stands.

Buffalo's Rotary Field
(Dedicated - 1930)

TICKET INFORMATION : The ticket office
in Clark Gymnasium is open each weekday
of the football season from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
On game days the main ticket window is
open from 9 a.m. to the kickoff. Tickets may
also be reserved on Friday night before a
home game from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m .
LOST AND FOUND: All lost and found items
should be reported to the U / B Campus Police.
The Campus Police main office is in the Service Building on Winspear Avenue .

I

your an-star
financial center
~~*

~ERVICE....:_~
~BANK~

M ember : Federal Deposit Insura nce Corp.

.. I
II

I

SIOOIDH

~~; !

~

:c
1:

~lf·[~(Oi f

**
**
*
*
*

11.1.

'I

fO A l ( !

REFRESHMENT BOOTHS : There are three
refreshment areas in the stadium. The locations are - practice field entrance (Gate 1),
Bailey Avenue entrance (Gate 3) and at the
north end of the Bailey A ve nue stands.

*¥®

oa

TOT AL ll U S

f-

~

I

I
WHIH AJOO!i

~

I
I

-

~

Savings accounts
Checking accounts
Auto loans
Home improvement loans
Mortgage loans
Commercial loans
Vacation loans

BANK oF BUFFALO
e BANK OF BUFFALO-- 17 Court at Pearl • EAST
SIDE Office
694 Ftllmore at Broadway • SOUTH SIDE
Office -- 2157 Seneca near Cazenovia· • TOWN OF
TONAWANDA Office-- 4248 Delaware at Dreyer
• TOWN OF AMHERST Office-- 4954 Harlem at
Sheridan • TOWN OF CHEEKTOWAGA Office-- 3817
Union at George Urban • TOWN OF WEST SENECA
Office- 4184 Seneca at Mill Road • STUYVESANT
PLAZA Office- 274 Elmwood at Summer • KENMORE
Office -- 2858 Delaware at Mang.
0

0

0

0

five

�more
excitin •I

GOHR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY INC.
80 METCALFE STREET, BUFFALO, NEW YORK
853-2121

six

�BARTLETT BUICK BOOSTS THE BULLS

The U/ B Athletic Department is grateful to the management of BARTLETT BUICK, 380 Main St.,
for the use again this football season of a 1969 Opel Kadett. The popular "Bull Wagon" serves the
staff and press box during games and makes road appearances around the nation. Thank you Bartlett
for supporting the Bulls.

IN THE BUFFALO PRESS BOX
The Office of Sports Information would like to thank the staff at
A. B. DICK COPY - DUPLICATING PRODUCTS, 842 Kenmore Avenue, for
its continued service and help in the Rotary Field press box. Play-by-play
and statistical services are supplied by A. B. Dick.

New Dominick &amp; Dominick Conference includes
Amherst - the home financial team is practicing at

99YEAR OLD D&amp;D
MAKES TOUCH-DOWN IN
15 1YEAR OLD AMHERST

15 Rock Street (one block east of Cayuga), Williamsville,
New York 14221. The quarterback there is H. Bernard
Hammill , Manager. You'll get world·wide service and
financial knowledge. There are more than 1000 D &amp; D
people all suited up, waiting on the side lines to help
tackle your financial problems.

11

Get In Touch.

gg~~~ro~~.~c~re~?MINICK

11 22 Marine Trust Bldg., Buffa lo 14203, 856· 747 1
In Amherst : 15 Rock Srreet, Williamsville, 634· 1515
Members N ew Y ork and other major Stock Exchanges

seven

�BUFFALO ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION

DR. LAWRENCE A. CAPPIELLO
Brockport State '49, Indiana '56
.
Director, Physical Education, Recreation &amp; Athletics

RICHARD E. BALDWIN
St. Lawrence '54
Director, Sports Information

HOWARD L. (Dan) DANIELS
Air Force Retired '68
Business Manager &amp; Promotion Director

I

GERALD R. GERGLEY
Buffalo '61
Wrestling

DR. LEONARD T. SERFUSTINI
Buffalo '50
Basketball &amp; Golf

EMERY J. FISHER
Buffalo '51
Cross-Country &amp; Track

JOSEPH E . STAEBELL
Equipment Manager

eight

---rl~
SIDNEY SCHWARTZ
Buffalo '40
Fencing

WILLIAM MONKARSH
Buffalo '60
Baseball &amp; Basketball Assistant

EDWIN D. MUTO
Buffalo '50
Basketball Assistant

DR. EDMUND J. GICEWICZ
Buffalo '52
Athletic Physician

NORBERT A. BASCHNAGEL
Buffalo '65
Basketball Assistant

WILLIAM H. SANFORD, III
Buffalo '49
Swimming &amp; Tennis

JAMES E. SIMON
Buffalo '50
Trainer &amp; Physical Therapist

-

ROBERT W. BEDELL
Buffalo State '51
Swimming Assistant

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for all
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SHOP

Open up your world
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Come in and open up your world.

~:"'::~:;rs;;;yrr~y~;~RTS
.J

AND SAVE
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Sears, Roebuck and Co. - Where the new ideas are

haven't smoked in a

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of Buffab

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If you haven ' t had a cigarette in at least a year,
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Hamburg, New York 14075

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STATE MUTUAL OF AMERICA
600 Liberty Bank Building

Phone 71~9-8100

Buffalo, New York 14202

nine

�(1-r) : Front - Captain Diane McMahon '71, Spring Valley, N.Y. ; Sue Pierotti '71, Williamsville, N . Y.; Cheryl Mayo ' 71, St. Albans,
N . Y .; and Rita Yousey '71, Lowville, N. Y. Middle - Linda Luccioni ' 71 , Elmont, N.Y.; Kathy McLane '72, Lowville, N.Y.; and
Alice Cypin '72, Levittown, N. Y. Top - Jan Anderson ' 72, Corry, Pa.

ten

�CHEERS for the largest selection of quality paperback
and hard cover books in Western New York.
CHEERS for a complete array of sweatshirts, ceramics,
cards to send home to mother (some not to
send home to mother), stuffed animals and
campus necessities.
CHEERS for an exciting collection of glassware bearing
the grand old UB emblem (a collector's item).

THE

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

'

'

eleven

�The John W.
Cowper Co.
INCORPORATED

Engineers - Contractors

•
873-4200
Post Office Box 1068
1945 Sheridan Drive
Buffalo, New York 14240

Locksmiths- Safe Experts

SIEGFRIED

852-2769
853-2737

The Safe, Lock &amp; Key Corp.
"Call us to discuss any lock problem"

CONSTRUCTION

204 PEARL STREET, BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202
SALES - INSTALLATION - REPAIR

CO., INC.

Safes, locks, Keys, Door Closers

•

CARL L. ANDERSON, INC•

6 N. PEARL STREET

Distributors - Consultants

INTERIOR DESIG~ERS

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202
Office Furniture -

Draperi.es -

Carpeting

886-2300
2222 ELMWOOD AVE.

twelve

875-2830

�. . . . 69

Buffalo Football News
BUFFALO vs. KENT STATE
Rotary Field, 1:30 P.M.

October 3, 1969

Editor: Richard E. Baldwin, Director of Sports Information
Local Advertising : Goodrich Printing &amp; Lithographers
National Advertising : Spencer Advertising , New York
Contributors: U/ B Information Services, Jim DeSantis, ECAC Service Bureau, National Collegiate Sports
Services, Bob Powell, Dick Johnston, Spencer Advertising Company, NCAA Public Relations Committee,
Chris Kabel, Dan Daniels, Paul Schlemmer and the Kent St. Office of Sports Information
Photography: Ed Nowak, Rick Swenson, Kent St. DSI Office and U/B Information Services.
Printing: Goodrich Printing &amp; Lithographers, Inc., Clarence Center, N. Y.

contents
DEPARTMENTS
Stadium Information

5

Today's Officials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Buffalo Athletic Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

8

The Cheerleaders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Composite Scoreboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Kent St. Coaching Staff ........................................... 19
Official Kent St. Team Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Starting Game Line-ups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Center Spread
Official Buffalo Team Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Buffalo Coaching Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Kent St. Players ..... . ..... . ...... . .. . .. . ..... .... . ..... .... 29 &amp; 31
Buffalo Fall Sports Scoreboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Buffalo Players . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 &amp; 39 &amp; 41
1969 Football Program Patrons . ........... ·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
1969 Buffalo Squad Photo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
College Football Officials' Signals

44

FEATURES
In the Bullpen with Johnston &amp; Powell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
The History of College Football (Danzig) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16-17
Featuring Offense - Buffalo Tackles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Junior Chamber of

LONGINES
LONGINES-WITTNAUER WATCH COMPANY

Longines-Wittnauer Building , New Yor\;,

Comn~erce

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

Special Report - Kent State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
The First Intercollegiate Game (Herbert) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
The Bulls Salute ............................................... _ . 32

thirteen

�G
YOUR
B

TO DAY'S
OFFICIALS
REFEREE
JOHN P. WEGERSKIA resident of Brewerton, N. Y., he is coordinator of the Mathematics Department in
North Syracuse Central
Schools. Graduate of St.
Bonaventure. lettered in
football and basketball
and gridiron captain two
seasons. In football he was All-little Three,
All-State and All-Western NYS. Veteran high
school football coach.

UMPIRE
JOHN SOLICManager of Bureau of
Employment Security and
resident of State College
Pennsylvania. Graduate
of St. Francis College
(Pa .) where he played
football and basketball.
Football captain. Served
in Navy during World
War II .

LINESMAN

DO.

WILLIAM T. RICHARDSPresident of Richards
Adjustment Service, Inc.
of Elmira, N. Y. Captained both the fresh man and varsity boxing
teams at Penn State.
He later coached the
sport at Bucknell. Played
football and baseball
for the Nittany lions . An insurance adjuster
for 17 years, he formed his own company in
1956. Residing in Pine City, N. Y., raises Hereford cattle and Morgan horses on a 250-acre
ranch .

FIELD JUDGE
ROBERT E. DUFFA vice-president of an
insurance

agency,

he

lives in the Ben Avon
Heights section, Pittsburgh, Pa . Captain of
Thiel's varsity basketball
team for three seasons.
Won three varsity letters
in tennis at Thiel.

BACK JUDGE

-

Rich Products Corp.

fourteen

THOMAS W. GIBBONSResides in Carthage,
N. Y., where he serves
as chairman of the Social Studies Department
of Carthage Central
School._ Coach of baseball and teaches history .
Graduate of leMoyne
with additional work at
Syracuse, St. lawrence and Oswego St. Base ball letterman at leMoyne. Active basketball
official.
CLOCK OPERATOR: Edward T. Kubiak (Canisius)
PUBLIC ADDRESS: James R. DeSantis (Canisius)
SCOREBOARD: Raymond W. Reinig

�•

the BULLPEN with

BOB POWELL
Buffalo Courier Express

The football meeting today between Kent
State and Buffalo could be the pivotal clash of the
season for the forces of Bob Deming.
The club is one that has shown marked improvement in its last two starts, despite an epidemic of minor but troublesome injuries.
The loss of key players in the class of halfback Pat Patterson, quarterback Mick Murtha,
linebacker Jim Mosher and tackle John Rio have
imposed coaching problems each week for U/ B's
youngest coach, but in each of the last two Saturdays, reserves have stepped forward to fill the
vacancies.
It was the Bulls' "three-deep" strength at
quarterback that had Xavier Coach Irv Etler
shaking his head after a 17-0 setback two weeks
ago at Rotary Field.
UMass Coach Vic Fusia couldn't get over the
way Barney Woodward and John Faller took up
slack when Patterson and regular Scott Herlan
were sidelined a week ago.
The Buffalo eleven should be at full strength
today for what could be its biggest test of the
campaign.
Kent State, like U/ B, has a 2-1 record. The
difference is that the Golden Flashes would appear to have a deeply imbedded purpose for winning this one.
Since the latest series between the two schools
resumed four years ago, the Flashes have been
anything but successful in their efforts against
the Bulls.
The clubs opened the 1966 season in Ohio
with the underdog Bulls ekeing out a thriller. The
following sesaon Kent came to town and went
away with a 30-6 loss.
It wasn't any different last September when
the Bulls made it two in a row on the Flashes'
home field.
Kent is a member of the highly respected
Mid-American Conference. While members of that
group like best to succeed in conference play,
Kent must regard Buffalo with equal ambition.
In Kent, Rotary Field visitors will see one of
the tallest and heaviest football teams, not only
in the MAC, but in college football.
In their starter against Ball State, the Bulls
failed to put an offense together. They got things
going against Xavier and continued .to upgrade the
attack against UMass.
They'll have to be just that much better
against Kent, which is off to its best start in
several years.
As Buffalo seeks to improve on its 1968 record of 7-3, today's game must be regarded as a
"BIG" one.

DICK JOHNSTON
Buffalo Evening News

If ever a college team came to town due for
a victory, Kent State, U/ B's opponent of today,
is it. For three years straight the Golden Flashes
have lost to U/ B's Bulls and every one of those
years Kent expected - and was expected by most
football followers - to win.
In 1966 Doc Urich's first U/ B team opened its
season by upsetting the Golden Flashes in Kent,
0., 27-23, on a last-period pass from Mick Murtha
to Jim Barksdale.
The following year, Kent came to Rotary Field
figuring to atone for that upset, and the Bulls
stampeded, 30-7. Murtha made one of his longest
collegiate runs that day, 38 yards for a touchdown.
Last year, with Murtha resting after a
shoulder operation, U/ B went to Kent and won
again, 21-13. Prentice Henley started things by
scoring on a blocked punt.
Kent has 21 lettermen back and ten starters
today are seniors who lost twice to U/ B and they
would like very much to win one from the Bulls.
They bring a won-2 lost-1 record into today's
game, having defeated Dayton and Xavier and lost
to Ohio University. The Flashes last week won,
23-7, over the same Xavier team that U/ B defeated, 17-0, the week before.
Don Nottingham, a 205-pound junior tailback,
rushed for 186 yards in Kent's triumph over
Xavier. He's not only a good runner but an excellent blocker, too, and can throw the option pass.
Most of the passing, however, is left to Steve
Trustdorf, who set three Kent records against
U/ B last year- most passes (33), most completions (18) and most yards passing in a game
(305). Steve comes from Dover, 0., home of U/ B
defensive back Dick Horn.
A sophomore, Ted Bowersox, also played
quarterback for the Flashes and against Xavier
he threw a scoring pass, 34 yards to Ken Mogish,
a speedy sophomore split end. Tim Rubino, a
190-pound sophomore, whose father, Tony, played
for the Detroit Lions, and Robin Hinson, 180pound junior, were the other backfield starters
last week.
Ace of Kent's defense corps is Jim Corrigall,
235-pound senior linebacker from Barrie, Ont. Big
Jim last year led the Flashes in tackles and assists
as he played defensive tackle, linebacker, middle
guard, defensive end, tight end and fullback. He
was in on 191 tackles his first two seasons and
added 35 in the first two games of this campaign.
A slender sophomore 170-pounder named
Tommy McDonald is Kent's safetyman. He's fast
and loves to intercept passes. Jerry Clemens, a
5-8 senior, and Rich Ambrose, a 5-11 junior, are
the veteran defensive halfbacks.

�The History of College Football
PART THREE
FROM THE TIME Princeton and
Rutgers met in the first intercollegiate game in 1869 until late in the
1870s, organized football in the United States was confined to the Atlantic seaboard. Yale and Princeton
were the dominant teams in the
1880s, and from 1883, when pointscoring started, Yale was virtually
invincible except for its loss to
Princeton in 1885, 6 to 5. The best of
the early teams was undoubtedly the
Yale eleven of 1888, which scored
694 points and shut out all 13 opponents. Alonzo Stagg, Pudge Heffelfinger and George Woodruff were
members, and Camp was Yale's first
coach that year.
Princeton had one of its best teams
of all time in 1889. Harvard had a
superior eleven in 1890 led by Ma
Newell, "the perfect player," four
times on the all-America teams. Yale
was supreme in 1891-92 with Frank
Hinkey, "the disembodied spirit,"
four times All-American; Heffelfinger, three times ; Bum McClung; and
Foster Sanford. In 1892, Cornell also
commanded attention with Glenn
Warner and Joe Beacham. Princeton,
with Phil King's "end back," was on
top in 1893. In 1894, Pennsylvania,
with George Woodruff's "guards
back," went to the front and for five
years lost only one of 66 games that to Lafayette and its great Babe
Rinehart in 1896.
Other outstanding early teams in
the East were Captain Hinkey's 1894
Yale eleven; Captain Pop Warner's
Cornellians of the same year; Gary
Cochran's Princeton Steamroller of
1896; Coach Pop Warner's 1898 Big
Red team, the Harvard eleven of the
same year with Charley Daly and
Percy Haughton; the Princeton Tiger
of 1898, whose Arthur Poe stole the
ball and ran 100 yards to beat Yale,
and beat the Elis again in 1899 with
a last-minute drop-kick, the first he
ever booted. Doc Hillebrand and Big
Bill Edwards of those teams are Tiger immortals.
In the South and Middle West football got started about the same time.
Michigan organized in 1873, but could
not find an opponent until it played
Racine College in 1879. Two years
later the Wolverines pioneered intersectional competition, journeying
East to play Yale, Princeton and Harvard in five days. Notre Dame was
not to come into the picture until
1887, against Michigan.

sixteen

The first game in the South was
between Virginia Military Institute
and Washington &amp; Lee in 1877. In
1880, Centre College played Kentucky University (later Transylvania). In 1889, Sewanee, coached by
Herman Suter, a Princetonian, was
the South's first great team. It shut
out eleven of twelve opponents. Auburn, coached by John Heisman,
who was to win national renown at
Georgia Tech after coaching Clemson
to a perfect season in 1900, lost to
Sewanee, 10-11, its only defeat. Also
in the South, Glenn Warner, who
stands with Stagg, Rockne, Bob
Zuppke and Hurry-Up Yost among
the giants of the coaching ranks,
went to Georgia in 1895 at $35 a
week; Auburn was to know glory
days with the perfect start of the
regime of Mike Donahue, Yale quarterback, in 1904, and that year Dan
McGugin, Vanderbilt's beloved coach
from Michigan, began his illustrious
30-year career with an invincible
team.
In the 1890s, football was being
played by most of the colleges of the
East, big and small, and was spreading to the Missouri Valley, Rocky
Mountains, Pacific Coast and Southwest, as well as flourishing in the
Southeast and Middle West.
The Army-Navy game was inaugurated in 1890. Stagg started his unparalleled career at Springfield College in 1890 and in 1892 began his 41year tenure at Chicago. The classic
of the West Coast, the CaliforniaStanford game, started in 1893. In
1895, the Western Intercollegiate
League was organized, and Purdue
in 1892, Minnesota in 1893 and Wisconsin and Michigan in 1894 had
strong teams. Significant of the
West's progress, in 1898 Clarence
Herschberger, fullback on the Chicago team Stagg brought East, was
named on Camp's All-American
team-the first player beyond the
Atlantic seaboard to be honored.
That same year, 1898, another Middle West player gained national attention. Pat O'Dea, Wisconsin's Australian captain known as the "Kangaroo Kicker," amazed with his prodigious feats, kicking a 62-yard field
goal in a blizzard. Against Yale he
was to punt 100 yards. In 1898, too,
Michigan won its first Conference
crown with a perfect record and that
year also Warner took the Carlisle
Indians to the West Coast to play
an exceptional California team and
start East-West rivalry.
In 1901, Fielding H. (Hurry Up)
Yost was installed at Michigan and

by ALLISON DANZIG

his "Point-a-Minute" team became
legendary. That year the Wolverines
scored 550 points and shut out their
eleven opponents. They went to the
West Coast and in the first Rose Bowl
game at Pasadena c·rushed Stanford,
49-0. From 1901 through 1905, MiChigan won 55 games, lost one, by 2-0,
and tied one. Willie Heston, the terror of that team, scored over 600
points in four years.
The team that defeated Michigan,
ending a 56-game unbeaten streak,
was Chicago. It won 2-0 on a safety
in the final 1905 game at Marshall
Field before 25,791, a record crowd
for the West. Stagg's team was one
of his finest, scoring 245 points to 5
for the opponents. Walter Eckersall
ranked among the greatest player~
and finest field generals of all time
and three times an All-American;
Hugo Bezdek and Jesse Harper,
famed coaches later; and Captain
Mark Catlin were on the team.
The team that tied the Wolverines
was Minnesota, in 1903, the year of
the genesis of the Little Brown Jug.
The Gophers, who won their 14 other games and scored 618 points to 12,
were in their fourth season under
Dr. Harry Williams, inventor of the
Minnesota shift. Another new coach
in the conference was Phil King, who
piloted Wisconsin to a perfect season
in 1901, and another Princetonian,
Walter Booth, brought Nebraska into
national prominence as the Cornhuskers shut out all 10 opponents in
1902 and beat every opponent again
in 1903.
(This is the third of a jour-part series.)

PART FOUR
THE MODERN ERA of intercollegiate football began with the forward
pass in 1906. But it was not until after the last basic structural changes
in 1912, including the addition of the
fourth down, reduction of the field
length from 110 yards to 100, with
end zones; raising the value of the
touchdown from 5 to 6 points, moving the kick-off from midfield to the
kicking side's 40, and lifting of the
limitation on the length of the pass,
that the game began settling into the
pattern of today.
The inaugural Army-Notre Dame
game in 1913 accentuated the turning
point. Notre Dame's sensational passing display, to the surprise and 35-13
discomfiture of the Cadets, as Gus
(Continued on next page)

�Dorais fired again and again to Captain Knute Rockne, end, and Joe
Pliska, right half, awakened the East
to the great potentialities of the new
weapon. Except for St. Louis University, Chicago and Glenn Warner's
Carlisle Indians, few teams made extensive use of the pass, though Oklahoma and Texas were about ready
for aerial fireworks.
The most successful teams between
1906 and the first World War were
winning, with few exceptions, on
their running, kicking and defense.
Warner's Carlisle Indians of 1911 and
1912, with possibly the greatest of
all backs, Jim Thorpe, won far more
on his fast, powerful running and
great kicking than on passing.
It was following another appearance of Notre Dame in the East,
against Army at the Polo Grounds in
New York in 1924, that college football became a hysteria.
Grantland Rice, most famous, noble and beloved of sports writers,
wrote of the game: "Outlined against
the gray-blue October sky, the Four
Horsemen rode again. In dramatic
lore they are known as famine, pestilence, destruction and death. These
are only aliases. Their real names are
Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and
Layden."
Then and there was created the
most glamorous and publicized team
0f all time-the Four Horsemen of
Notre Dame. The press across the
nation sang praises of the horsemen
and the "seven mules," led by Captain Adam Walsh at center.
Riding into legendary fame with
them was their coach, Knute Rockne,
the flat-nosed, bald-headed immigrant from Norway whose dynamic
personality, brains, wit, caustic sarcasm, mastery of psychology and
command of men, as well as knowledge of football, contributed to making him the most celebrated of all
coaches. When he fell to his death
in the crash of a plane over Kansas
March 31, 1931, a whole nation was
stunned and grief-stricken.
There never was a decade to equal
the 1920s for the host of great
coaches, players and teams.

It was the decade of the Four
Horsemen, of Red Grange of Illinois
who was to rank on all-time teams,
of George Gipp of Notre Dame, of
Ernie Nevers of Stanford, Ken Strong
of New York University, Bronko
Nagurski of Minnesota, and scores
of other legendary heroes.
The Notre Dame shifting attack
was riding high in the 1920's, with
Rockne so successful and so many of
his disciples teaching it. Then came
successive rules changes imposing a
full stop, and the offense began to
lose favor. The Warner style of football, single and double wingback,
became more and more the vogue.
Warner, perhaps the most prolific
of coaches next to Stagg in his originations, invented the single wingback while he was at Carlisle and
the double wing came a few years
later. It was not until 1938 that the
double wing caused a great stir. That
year his Stanford Indians put on a
tremendous show in crushing Army,
26-0 at the Yankee Stadium in New
York, and coaches rushed to get on
the Warner bandwagon.
The Colgate team of 1932, coached
by Andy Kerr, used the double wing.
This was the "unbeaten, untied, unscored-on and uninvited" team,
which was passed by as a bowl attraction. Lou Little's 1933 Columbia
team, which perpetrated the Rose
Bowl upset of all time in defeating
Stanford, used the single wing, with
variations.
Bob Neyland's Tennessee teams of
1938, 1939 and 1940, which each won
all ten games, used the single wing,
as did, of course, the Stanford "Vow
Boys" of 1934, and Carl Snavely's
1939 Cornell team, which had a perfect record and continued unbeaten
in 1940 until the next to last game.
Late in the 1930s, George Halas of
the Chicago Bears worked out with
Clark Shaughnessy, University of
Chicago coach, the modern version of
the T, with a flanker in motion and
quick-opening plays. They had such
sensational success with it that football offense took on a new look in a
few years. The Warner wingback and
Notre Dame box with a shift were

supplanted as coaches made the
switch after Frank Leahy at Notre
Dame and Earl Blaik at Army were
converted.
Until Bud Wilkinson went to Oklahoma in 1948 and started one of the
most successful regimes in history,
Army and Notre Dame dominated
the 1940's, challenged by Michigan
in 1947 and 1948. Notre Dame from
1946 to 1949 won 36 games, lost none
and tied two. Army from 1944 did
not know defeat until its stunning
loss to Columbia, 21-20, in 1947.
Wilkinson exploited the Split-T
formation, invented by Don Faurot,
with wider line spacing and using
the quarterback as a ball carrier on
the option play. His Sooners won 47
games in a row from 1953 to 1957.
In the late 1950's, the Split-T formation lost in favor and the Slot-T.
was widely adopted in college ranks.
The Wing-T vogue increased and
Blaik's Lonely End formation at
Army led to the use of a widely split
end and a flanker back deployed to
the opposite side. In the past several
years, the I formation has been popular since John McKay used it extremely successfully with Mike Garrett and 0. J. Simpson at USC.
Two games in the 1960's belong
among the legendary contests in football: In 1966, Notre Dame and Michigan State, with perfect records, met
before the largest television audience
on record for a regularly scheduled
college game, 33,000,000 viewers, and
played to a 10-10 tie. In 1968, Harvard and Yale met, both unbeaten
and untied for this game for the
first time since 1909. Harvard, trailing 22-0 in the second quarter, pulled
out a 29-29 tie with two touchdowns
in the last minute, the second on the
last play of the game-one of the
most incredibly exciting on record.
Both were in keeping with the excitement and tradition of college
football, and heralded games to come.
(This is the fourth of a jour-part series.)

seventeen

�Featuring Offense - Buffalo Tackles

U/B Offensive Tackles with Head Coach Bob Deming (1-r): junior Tom Centofanti (6-0, 210); sophomore Bill Murphy (6-4,
223); junior John Rio (6-0, 242); and senior Chris Wolf (6-3, 213).

1969 Buffalo Composite Schedule
IAU STAff

XAVIU

DAYTON

Oc:t . .t

Od . 11

Oct. 18

Oct. 2.5

No¥ . I

AUON

INDIANA S.

Akron

Mur~cie

..

MIDDLE TENN

LOST
13-0

EVANSVILLE
ot
E•onuille

NO. IlliNOIS

WON
10-7

IUTLEI
WON
36-7

DeKolb

Munci•

MIAMI 10 I
LOST
J.S-7

BUffALO
LOST

CINCINNATI

OHIO UNIV

VILLANOVA

DAYTON

QUANTICO

TOLEDO

17-0

KENT $TATE
LOST
23-7

Cincinnati

Athens

Cincinnati

Dayton

Cincinnati

Cincinnati

MAINE
WON
.t9-7

IUffALO
lOST
16-6

DELAWARE
ol

tOSTON UNIV

CONNECICUT

VElMONT
ol
Amhefll

HOLY CROSS

NEW HAMPSHIRE
ol

Amherst

Durha"'

DAYTON

OHIO UNIY

XAYIEI

BUffA LO

LOUISVILLE

MARSHAll

MIAMI(O .)

WON
2.t-U

LOST

WON
23-7

B11ffolo

Kolorno1oo

ken!

Toledo

Ken!

Kent

Kent

KENT STATE
LOST

MIAMI 10.1
LOST

lOUISVIlLE

BUffAlO

NO. IlLINOIS

TOLEDO

19-9

27-20

Lo11i1¥i lle

hffolo

Dayton

XAVIER
ol
Dayton

VIllANOVA

2.t. U

AKRON
ol
Dayton

V i llono¥a

Toledo

HARVAID
LOST

DAITMOUTH

COLGATE

BUffALO

SYRACUSE

VILLANOVA

MASSACHUSETTS

13-0

Hanover

~a milton

Worcester

Syroc111e

Worcester

Amherst

RUTGERS
ol
W orcester

A lA lAMA
LOST

WAKE fOIEST
LOST

IICHMONO

KENTUCKY

50. CAROLIN A

BUffALO

WM. &amp; MARY

FLORIDA ST .

DUlCE

17-13

16-10

Richmond

Blocklb11t0

Blocklb11rg

B11ffolo

Roanoke

Bla club11rg

Norfol k

RHODE ISLAND

WM. &amp; MAIY
LOST

WAYNE ST.

BUCKNELL

HOFSTRA

DELAWARE

BUffALO

GETTYSBURG

NOITHEASTEIN

7 -6

l"hi lodelphio

Lewi sb11rg

l"hi ladelphia

Newark

B11Halo

Philadelphia

Baston

Philadelphia

NAVY

TULANE

VIJLANOVA

AIM Y

BUffALO

Vllt91NIA MIL

MASSA CHUSETTS

WON
21 -U

Cheslnvl Hill

Che1tnvt Hill

..

I"ENN STATE

West l"aint

Univ. l"orlt

Chestnut Hi ll

Chestnut Hill

Chestnut Hi ll

3'-o

HOLY ClOSS

VIRGINIA TECH

TEMI"LE

BOSTON COLLEGE

Nov. 22

Sept. 27

MASSACHUSETTS

kENT STATE

"

S.pt. 20
EAST KENTUCKY

WON
.t7-l

ot

lo1ton

AMher1t

..

OWliNG GREEN
LOST

..

..
..

..
..
..
..

RHODE ISLAND

ol
Amher1l

WESTEIN MICH . BOWLING GREEN

..
..

..

Storr•

..

TOLEDO

..
..

No• 8

No•

Sept. 13

BUffALO

so.

IlliNOIS

ol

Carbon dol•

..
..

Muncie

..

..

..

..

EAST MICHIGAN

..
..
..

..
..

IOSTON COLL .
Chestn111 H il l

..

CONNECTICUT
Storrs

..

BOSTON UNIV.

..

IUFFAlO vs. THE 1969 SCHEDUlE - WON 20, lOST 17, TIED 2 (3 New Series)
BUFFALO
VIlLANOVA

Nov. 29 - Xavier ¥1. Te•a• Western at El l"oso
Vireinio Tech "'· Vireinio Military ot Roanoke

eight een

Holy Uou vs. Boston Coli. at W..-cetJet

�The Kent State Coaching Staff

LARRY VAN DUSEN
Offensive Backs

BOB HARRISON
Receivers

AL CHRISTOPHER
Offensive Line

TERRY MALLETT
Head Freshman Coach

TOM PHILLIPS
Offensive Line

JOHN RILEY
Defensive Coordinator

BOB ROSENCRANS
Defensive Backs

SANTO PINO
Defensive Line

DAVE PUDDINGTON
Head Coach

l

Dave Puddington looks forward to his second year at
the helm of Kent football. "We've had a year to lay a
sound foundation to our program," says Puddington, "and
we feel confident we can meet the challenges ahead."
Being a believer that there is "no such thing as instant
sunshine in athletics," Puddington was disappointed but
not discouraged with his first year which ended with a
1-9 record. Adds Puddington, "sound play is based on
solid principles and objectives and we're headed in the
right direction." With his shooting "I" offense and a
stunting defense which "goes after people," Puddington
feels he can come up with the winning combination and
play an exciting type of football.
Some of "Pud's" staunchest supporters are his wife
Jean, a Phi Beta Kappa and an accomplished musician,
and their three children: Linda, eight; Jim, six; and Steve,
five.
After graduation from Canton Lehman High School,
where he played three years of varsity football as a lineman, four years of basketball and one year each of baseball and track, Puddington went on to Ohio Wesleyan
University. For the OWU footballers he played center
and end, and captained the squad his senior year. He was
a guard on the basketball team.
After graduation, Puddington served as admissions
counselor and alumni field secretary for OWU. From
1950-1954 he was an aviator in the Navy, seeing overseas
duty for 16 months in the Korean Theater of Operations.
Puddington received two Air Medals.
In 1955 Puddington went to Kettering Fairmont in
Dayton, where he assisted in football, basketball, track
and golf. He took over the head football coaching duties
in 1958, guiding Fairmont to a 9-0 record.
In 1959 Puddington came to KSU as backfield coach
under Trevor Rees and helped the Flashes stop Miami's
30-game MAC Winning streak. In 1962 he became the
head football coach of Washington University of St. Louis
and compiled a 36-16-3 record in six years at Washington.
The 40-year-old mentor guided the Battling Bears to two
first place and two second place finishes in four years of
competition in the College Athletic Conference.

nineteen

�1969 Kent State Football Roster
No.

12
57
14
75
67
61
80
50
60
22
7
40
88
59
16
48
21
79
6
68
15
28
81
41
78
64
53
52
11
63
87
3
24
89
85
2
73
36
92
31
5
84

4
37
77
66

83
18
65
54

93
76
34

35
29
56

23
32
71
33
27
46
86
99
55
10
95
58
26
74
72

62

Player
Ambrose, Richard
Andreani, Alan
Atkins, Martin
Austin, George
Baker, John
Balfe, Thomas
Benjamin, Keith
Blosser, Frederick
Bobb, Nelson
Bossell, Robert
Bowersox, Theodore
Brenning, Daniel
Cella, Lawrence
Clark, Gregory
Clemens, Jerry
Cohen, Thad
Corcoran, Michael
Corrigall, James (C)
Corsi, David
Dreier, Frank
Drennan, Dennis
Fello, Robert
Franklin, AI
Goldschmidt, Carl
Goodhart, Timothy
Greb, George
Hart, Bret
Haverland, Kenneth
Hinson, Robin
Houston, Roger
Hrenya, Mark
James, Thomas
Johnson, Charles
Kavcar, John
Kok, Eugene
Kovach, James
Kujala, Mark
Lampley, Handy
Larrigan, Anthony
Lasagna, Patrick
Long, Gregory
Lori, Charles
McComb, Thomas
McDonald, Thomas
McDougall, Charles
McDougall, George
McKay, James
Michalic, Andrew
Mogish, Kenneth
Mokros, Thomas
Moore, Neil
Mrozek, Frederick
Natalina, Carl
Neff, Douglas
Nottingham, Donald
Pinkerton, John
Renaud, Gary
Reynolds, Paul
Roberts, Viii
Rogers, Lee
Rubino, Terry
Rubino, Timothy
Schultz, Terry
Sinchak, Stephen
Smith, Douglas
Solomon, Lawrence
Stanley, Dana
Trustdorf, Stephen
Venables, Gary
Waller, Stephen
Wilson, Garland
Worthington, Robert
Young, Gregory
Young, Jeffery

=twenty

Pos.
DHB
T
OB
DT
G
T
DE

c

G
M
OB
HB
DE
MG
DHB
HB
M
LB
DHB
LB
TB
SE
DE
LB
T
T
T
G
HB
G
TE
DHB
DHB
TE
DE
TB
DT
FB
DT
MG

s

MG
DHB

s

RB "
DT
DT
G
SE
M
G

c

TE
T
FB
LB
TB
G
DHB
FB
T
FB
HB
LB
SE
K
G
OB
DE
G
FB
T
DT
DT

Class
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.

Ht.

Wt.

5-11
6-2
5-10
6-1
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-1
5-8
5-10
6-3
6-0
5-10
5-8
6-1
5-11
6-3
5-9
6-4
5-8
6-0
6-4
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-1
5-10
6-1
6-1
5-8
6-1
6-2
6-4
5-8
6-3
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-9
6-1
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-2
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-3
5-10
5-11
5-9
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-3
6-4
5-11
5-11
6-1
6-2
5-10
6-5
6-2
6-2

175
225
191
218
201
205
215
217
220
165
175
215
206
220
190
195
195
235
180
208
174
180
200
210
225
220
220
220
180
225
195
155
185
234
210
165
245
195
205
185
180
215
160
170
200
215
235
220
180
190
210
227
205
220
210
210
170
195
180
205
208
190
190
190
194
228
180
185
222
210
200
220
245
245

School
South Hills HS
Alliance HS
Machenzie HS
McKinley HS
Cadiz HS
Scollard HS
Chardon HS
Dalton HS
Lincoln HS
Avon Lake HS
McKinley HS
New Albany HS
McKinley HS
Altoona HS
East Pennsboro
East Orange HS
Mont Blair HS
Scollard HS
Steubenville
Lancaster HS
Curtis HS
Cleveland HS
Harding HS
Chaminade HS
McKinley HS
No. Arlington
Walter Johnson
Princeton HS
Ashtabula HS
Hoover HS
Parma HS
Massillon HS
Alliance HS
Westlake HS
Plymouth HS
St. Edwards
Warren Harding
Central HS
Christian Bros.
Central Cath.
Commack HS
Caldwell HS
Lamphere HS
Hoover HS
North Olmstead
North Olmstead
Lawrence Park
Monengahela
Chaney HS
Bellaire HS
Grove City HS
Martingrove Cl
East Liverpool
Maysville HS
Ravenna HS
Genoa HS
Erie McDowell
Berea HS
Edgewood HS
Columbus West
Lansing HS
Ely, Forward
Westlake HS
Ambridge HS
Earl Heig Sec.
Admiral King
Alliance HS
Dover HS
Garden City HS
London South
Nettie L. Roth
Louisville HS
Shelby HS
West Reading

Hometown
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Alliance, Ohio
Downsview, Ont.
Canton, Ohio
Cadiz, Ohio
North Bay, Ont.
Chardon, Ohio
Dalton, Ohio
Gahanna, Ohio
Avon Lake, Ohio
Canton, Ohio
New Albany, Ohio
Niles, Ohio
Altoona, Pa.
Enola, Pa
East Orange, N.J.
Washington, D.C.
Barrie, Ont.
Steubenville, Ohio
Lancaster, Ohio
New York City
Cleveland Hts., Ohio
Warren, Ohio
Dayton, Ohio
Niles, Ohio
North Arlington, N.J.
Bethesda, Md.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Ashtabula, Ohio
North Canton, Ohio
Parma Hts., Ohio
Massillon, Ohio
Alliance, Ohio
Westlake, Ohio
Plymouth, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Warren, Ohio
Akron , Ohio
St. Louis, Mo.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Commack, N .J.
Caldwell, Ohio
Madison Hts., Mich.
North Canton, Ohio
North Olmstead, Ohio
North Olmstead, Ohio
Toronto, Ont.
Finleyville, Pa.
Youngstown, Ohio
Bellaire, Ohio
Grove City, Ohio
Toronto, Ont.
East Liverpool, Ohio
Zanesville, Ohio
Ravenna, Ohio
Genoa, Ohio
Erie, Pa.
Berea, Ky.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Columbus, Ohio
Lansing, Ill.
Elizabeth, Pa.
Westlake, Ohio
Ambridge, Pa.
Toronto, Ont.
Lorain, Ohio
Alliance, Ohio
Dover, Ohio
Garden City, N.Y.
London, Ont.
Dayton, Ohio
Louisville, Ohio
Shelby, Ohio
West Reading, Pa.

"OFFICIAL WATCH FOR THIS GAME- LONGINES -THE WORLD"S MOST HONORED WATCH"

-=

f
I

�CHANGE
IS IN THE
·
WJND Shaped in a wind tunnel ...
I
\

Refined by the wind
at Daytona, Riverside, and Darlingto n.
Wind-shaped. Aerodynamic. Made to move.

1970 Torino Brougham 2-Door

1970
FORD
TORINO
f

l

The most completely changed new cars of the
year-Torino. New size. Longer. Lower. Wider.
Quick and quiet. New shape. Shaped in a wind
tunnel for a new, low-drag silhouette.
Torino Brougham. Here's the one that has it
all. Distinctive new gri lle with Hideaway Head-

More luxurious than any other
car in its class. One of the
13 new 1970 Torino modelsthe most completely changed
new cars of the ye ar.

lamps. New interiors to surround you with luxury.
More luxu rious than any other car in its class.
Top performance from a choice of five new V-S's,
including the super efficient 351 -cu. in. 4V. Top
it all off with a glamorous vinyl-covered roof.
Torino Brougham-sweeping its class.

TORINO

�Things

go better
_.. _. ........ with Coke.
TRADE. MARK®

�85
77
61
58
68
73
80
14
45
20
35

Offense
PAUL LANG (CC) .... . .. TE
CHRIS WOLF ..... . . . . .. LT
JERRY ELWELL ... . ..... LG
CHUCK DONN OR ... .. . . C
BILL HAYDEN . ....... . . RG
TOM CENTOFANTI ..... . RT
JOE MORESCO ........ SE
MICK MURTHA ........ QB
SCOTT HERLAN . . . .. . . . LH
PAT PATTERSON ... . ... RH
JOE ZELMANSKI .. . . . ... FB

80
73
84
62
68
79
68
18
16
12
4

BUFFALO
90
70
66
96
56
32
34
59
42
26
40

I(ENT

Defense
PRENTIS HENLEY .. . .. . .. LE
DAN WALGATE .. . ..... LT
ROVELL JONES . ...... . RT
TOM VIGNEAU . .. .. . . . . RE
SCOTT CLARK (CC) ... . OLB
LARRY MADDEN ... . .. . ILB
MIKE LUZNY ......... . IRB
ED KERSHAW ... . .... ORB
LEN NIXON .. . . . ...... LH
JOEL JACOBS . . ... . . .. RH
TOM ELLIOTT ..... . . . ... S

THE BULLS SQUAD
11
12
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
22
23
24
26
27
28
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54

Perry, QB
Grubbs, DHB
Murtha, QB
Barton, DHB
Hart, P-DHB
Jack, P-QB
Philp, QB
Patterson, HB
Woodward, HB
layo, K
Francis, DHB
Zalar, DHB
Jacobs, DHB
Wells, DHB
Plawiuk, HB
Stiscak, HB
Her nquist, FB
Madden, LB
Smith, LB
luzny, LB
Zelmanski, FB
Scott, HB
McCullough, LB
Chapp, LB
Kozel, FB
Elliott, S
Constantino, K
Nixon, DHB
Griffiths, LB
Herl an, HB
Hogan,S
MacVittie, DHB
C. Jones, S
Faller, HB
Mosher, LB
Graver, LB
Fortino, LB
Majcher, LB
Conaway, LB

55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
87
89
90
92
93
95
96
99

Sied lecki, LB
Clark, LB
Albaneze, C
Donnor, C
Kershaw, LB
Carney, G
Elwell, G
Bauch, G
Bor k, G
Ziegler, LB
Chern ega, C
R. Jones, DT
Forness, DT
Hayden,G
Kehr, G
Walgate, DT
W i nnett, T
M ilarksi, T
Centofanti, T
Rio, T
Murphy, G
Reid, DT
Wolf, T
Ellenbogen, T
Atki nson, DT
Moresco, SE
Dorich, TE
Endress, TE
Horn, SE
Waggoner, SE
lang, TE
Fra ser, SE
Sharrow, SE
Henley, DE
Hudson, DE
Etherington, DE
Jam es, TE
V igneau, DE
Pescrillo, DT

Defense
KEITH BENJAMIN . . . .. . . LE
MARK KUJALA .. . .. ... LT
CHUCK LORI . . ... . . . . MG
JEFF YOUNG . . ........ RT
LARRY CELLA ..... . .. .. RE
JIM CORRIGALL (C) .... LLB
FRANK DRIER ........ . RB
TOM MOKROS .. . . . . . . . M
JERRY CLEMENS .. .. .. . HB
RICH AMBROSE .. .. . .. . HB
TOMMY McDONALD ... . . S

89
53
66
50
60
64
83
10
29
34
33

Offense
JOHN KAVCAR ... .. .. . TE
BRET HART ..... .. . .. . . LT
ANDY MICHALIC .. .. . . . LG
FRED BLOSSER .. .. . . . .. . C
NELSON BOBB ... .. . . . RG
GEORGE GREB ..... . .. . RT
KEN MOGISH . . . ... . . .. SE
STEVE TRUSTDORF .. ... QB
GARY RENAUD . .. ... . . HB
DON NOTTINGHAM .... TB
TIM RUBINO ... .. .. ... FB

THE GOLDEN FLASHES SQUAD
2
3
4
5
6
7
10
11
12
14
15
16
18
21

22
24
26
27
28
29
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
40
41
46
48
50
52
53
54

Kovach, TB
55
Jam es, DHB
56
McDonald, DHB 57
long, S
58
60
Corsi, DHB
Bow ersox, QB 61
Trustdorf, QB
62
Hinson, HB
63
Ambrose, DHB 64
Atkins, QB
65
Drennan, TB
66
Clemens, DHB 67
Mokros, LB
68
Corcoran, DHB 71
Bossell, DHB
72
Johnson, HB
73
Wilson, FB
74
Schultz, HB
75
Fello, SE
76
Renaud, TB
77
lasagna, MG
78
Rogers, FB
79
Ti. Rubino, FB
80
Nottingham, FB 81
Pinkerton, lB
83
Lampley, FB
84
C. McDougall, HB 85
Brenning, HB
86
Goldschmidt, LB 87
Sinchak, LB
88
89
Cohen, HB
Blosser, C
92
Haverland, DT 93
95
Hart, T
99
Mrozek, C

Stanley, G
Reynolds, G
Andreoni, T
Waller, G
Bobb, G
Balfe, T
J. Young, DT
Houston, G
Greb, T
Moore, G
Michalic, G
Baker, G
Dreier, lB
Te. Rubino, T
G. Young,DT
Kujala, DT
Worthington, T
Austin, DT
Neff, T
McKay, DT
Goodhart, T
Corr igall, LB
Benjamin, DE
Franklin, DE
Mogish, SE
Lori, MG
Kok, DE
Smith, SE
Hrenya, TE
Cella, DE
Kavcar, TE
Larrigan, DT
Natalina, TE
Venables, DE
Solomon, K

'COCA COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE·MARKS OF THE COCA COLA COMPANY

�Chrysler weather has arrived. Falling leaves
take off on the wind - and our 1970 Chrysler
Corporation lineup takes the field.
For a starter, Plymouth 1970 makes it with
the Rapid Transit System: The fabulous
Barracuda Series. Valiant Duster 340. And the
imperturbable Plymouth GTX.
Or you could be Dodge material. Find out

with a run in the cars with the bumblebee stripe:
The Challenger. Charger 500. Dart Swinger 340.
Coronet Super Bee.
The loaded lineup. Performance on wheels,
waiting for the moment you take over.
And while you're thinking about it-relax,
sit back and enjoy the game.

CHRYSLER
CORPORATION

Plymouth· Dodge· Chrysler • Imperial ·Dodge Trucks • Simca ·Sunbeam

�1969 Buffalo Football Roster
Wt.
School
Ht.
Age
Major
Player
Pos.
Cl.
No.
Bethlehem Central
203
6·3
20
*Perry, Edward
QB
P.E .
Jr.
11
173
Coshocton HS
5-9
21
*Grubbs, Gary
DHB
P.E.
12
Sr.
Union-Endicott HS
5-11
176
22
Bus.
QB
14 **Murtha, Mark
Sr.
Union-Endicott HS
181
6-2
18
Med.
tBarton, Kirk
DHB
15
So.
191
Mansfield-Madison
6-0
19
L.A.
P-DHB
tHart, Lawrence
16
So.
Springdale HS
6-0
175
p
19
Chern.
Sr.
17 **Jack, Paul
Humberside Col.
6-2
200
18
En gr.
QB
tPhilp, Douglas
So.
18
Ambridge HS
5-11
189
21
L.A.
Sr.
HB
20 **Patterson, Patrick
Peru HS
5-9
189
20
P.E.
Jr.
*Woodward, Barnard
HB
21
Portage Area HS
6-0
181
18
L.A.
tLayo, Robert
K
So.
22
Notre Dame HS
5-11
195
20
L.A.
Jr.
23
Francis, Ronald
DHB
Calvert HS
6-0
180
20
P.E.
*Zalar, Karl
DHB
Jr.
24
East Rockaway HS
5-10
176
20
L.A.
Jr.
*Jacobs, Joel
DHB
26
Lafayette HS
6-1
180
20
His.
Jr.
Wells, Kevin
DHB
27
Ancaster HS
190
5-10
20
L.A.
So.
tPiawiuk, Russell
HB
28
Aliquippa HS
5-11
185
20
L.A.
Jr.
29
Stiscak, Robert
HB
197
Olean HS
20
5-9
Bus.
Jr.
FB
30
Hernquist, Eugene
Catholic Central
6-0
197
19
L.A.
So.
tMadden, Lawrence
32
LB
193
Ridgway C.B.
21
5-11
L.A .
So.
tSmith, Philip
33
LB
St. Joseph's HS
209
22
5-9
Geo.
Sr.
34
*Luzny, Michael
LB
St. Clement HS
6-1
200
P.E .
20
Jr.
*Zelmanski, Joseph
FB
35
Cathedral Prep
5-11
180
L.A.
19
So.
Scott, Joseph
FB
36
Coshocton HS
195
21
5-10
Soc.
Sr.
McCullough, Steven
37
LB
St. Clement HS
P.E.
5-8
200
21
Sr.
*Chapp, Gary
38
LB
189
Catholic HS
L.A.
19
5-11
So.
tKozel, Douglas
FB
39
Canandaigua HS
Bus.
20
5-11
183
Jr.
40
*Elliott, Thomas
Phar.
Jamestown HS
19
5-11
185
Sr.
41
Constantino, Michael
K
P.E.
St. Joseph's !-iS
20
5-11
182
Jr.
DHB
42
*Nixon, Leonard
L.A.
19
Johnson City HS
5-11
205
So.
LB
43
Griffiths, Robert
P.E.
Grand Island HS
21
6-2
198
Jr.
HB
Herlan, Scott
45
His.
21
6-0
West HS
178
Jr.
Hogan, Kevin
46
P.E.
19
5-10
177
Williamsville HS
So.
DHB
MacVittie, Mark
47
P.E .
19
6-0
Emerson Voc .
176
So.
48
t Jones, Clifton
P.E.
20
5-11
Greece-Arcadia HS
Jr.
196
Faller, John
HB
49
His.
22
6-1
Central Islip HS
Sr.
212
LB
50 **Mosher, James
L.A.
21
5-9
Depew HS
Jr.
190
Graver, Charles
LB
51
Bus.
18
5-11
204
Ticonderoga HS
So.
tFortino, James
LB
52
Bus.
18
Bishop McCort HS
6-1
208
tMajcher, David
So.
LB
53
L.A .
21
6-2
189
Kenmore East HS
Conaway, Daniel
So.
LB
54
P.E.
18
Carthage Central
6-2
175
tSiedlekci, Stanley
LB
So.
55
Soc.
22
6-0
210
Coshocton HS
Sr.
LB
56 **Clark, Scott (CC)
L.A.
215
Stuyvesant HS
20
6-3
Jr.
Albaneze, Dennis
57
P.E .
204
East Aurora HS
20
6-1
Jr.
*Donnor, Charles
58
Elyria HS
L.A.
198
Jr.
20
6-2
LB
*Kerhsaw, Edward
59
192
N . Kensington HS
Soc.
21
Sr.
6-0
G
Carney, Patrick
60
Ant .
Cardinal Mooney HS
6-0
200
Jr.
21
G
Elwell, Jerry
61
His.
212
Tallmadge HS
19
6-0
G
So.
tBauch, John
62
Cheektowaga HS
L.A .
205
Jr.
20
6-0
G
Bork, Kenneth
63
Cardinal O'Hara HS
L.A.
215
20
5-10
LB
So.
Ziegler, Joseph
64
Union-Endicott HS
P.E.
187
Sr.
22
5-11
Chernega, David
65
Buchetel HS
Psych.
6-1
222
Jr.
20
DT
*Jones, Rovell
66
254
Riverside HS
L.A.
6-0
Jr.
20
DT
Forness, Charles
67
His.
5-10
200
Cathedral-Latin HS
Sr.
22
G
*Hayden, William
68
L.A.
6-0
204
Lancaster HS
So.
19
G
tKehr, Paul
69
P.E.
6-2
272
Grand Island HS
DT
Sr.
21
70 **Walgate, Daniel
Engr.
6-2
235
Jackson HS
T
So.
19
tWinnett, William
71
His.
6-0
215
T
Jr.
20
North Hill HS
Milarski, Thomas
72
P.E.
T
Jr.
6-0
210
Bishop Duffy HS
20
*Centofanti, Thomas
73
T
Jr.
L.A.
6-0
242
St. Mary's HS
20
*Rio, John
74
G
Bishop Duffy HS
So.
Bus.
6-4
223
20
Murphy, William
75
DT
Sr.
Bus.
6-3
Fisher Park HS
23
229
Reid, Frank
76
T
Sr.
Soc.
21
6-3
213
Solon HS
77 **Wolf, Chris
T
6-3
New Rochelle HS
So.
L.A.
18
221
tEIIenbogen, William
78
DT
Jr.
P.E .
6-4
252
E. Dear-Frazer HS
20
Atkinson, Barry
79
SE
6-2
Ithaca HS
Jr.
Bus.
20
176
Moresco, Joseph
80
TE
6-3
McDowell HS
So.
His.
19
200
tDorich, Paul
81
TE
6-0
St. Vincent's HS
Sr.
Bus.
200
21
82 **Endress, Terrence
SE
6-1
179
Dover HS
Sr.
Eng.
22
83 **Horn, Richard
SE
6-1
188
Notre Dame HS
So.
L.A.
19
tWaggoner, Dennis
84
210
Ithaca HS
TE
Sr.
His.
6-0
22
85 **Lang, Paul (CC)
Wheatfield HS
6-1
185
SE
His.
So.
18
Fraser, Bruce
87
Moriah Central HS
6-2
171
SE
Sr.
P.E .
20
Sharrow, Michael
89
6-1
South Park HS
226
DE
P.E .
22
Sr.
*Henley, Prentis
90
6-1
222
Cheshire Academy
21
Phil.
DE
Hudson, Joseph
Jr.
92
6-2
197
Parkside HS
P.E.
20
DE
So.
Etherington, Robert
93
Penn Hills HS
6-7
228
20
TE
Jr.
P.S.
James, Michael
95
6-0
219
St. Clement HS
20
Jr.
P.E.
DE
*Vigneau, Thomas
96
LaSalle HS
6-3
235
L.A.
20
DT
So.
Pescrillo, David
99
*Varsity Letter (28, including four from 1967- Grubbs, R. Jones, Murtha and Luzny)
tFreshman numerals
MANAGERS : Allen Wright '72 (Mt. Vernon, N.Y. ) - Lawrence Goldfarb '72 (Brooklyn, N.Y .)

s

s
s

c
c

c

Hometown
Delmar, N.Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Endicott, N. Y .
Endicott, N . Y.
Mansfield, Ohio
Springdale, Pa.
Toronto, Ont.
Baden, Pa.
Peru, N.Y .
Portage, Pa.
Batavia, N.Y.
Tiffin, Ohio
East Rockaway, N. Y.
Buffalo, N . Y.
Ancaster, Ont.
Aliquippa, Pa.
Olean, N . Y .
Dearborn, Mich .
Ridgway, Ont.
South Bend, Ind .
Center Line, Mich .
Hamilton, Ont.
Coch octon, Ohio
Center Line, Mich.
Johnson City, N. Y.
Canandaigua, N. Y.
Jamestown, N . Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Johnson City, N . Y.
Grand Island, N. Y.
Auburn, N.Y .
Williamsville, N.Y .
Buffalo, N . Y .
Rochester, N.Y .
Central Islip, N.Y.
Depew, N.Y .
Ticonderoga, N . Y .
Johnstown, Pa.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Carthage, N.Y .
Coshocton, Ohio
Elmhurst, N.Y .
East Aurora, N. Y.
Elyria, Ohio
New Kensington, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y.
Tallmadge, Ohio
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Akron, Ohio
Buffalo, N.Y .
Cleveland, Ohio
Lancaster, N . Y.
Grand Island, N.Y .
North Canton, Ohio
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N. Y .
Byrnedale, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N.Y .
Ottawa, Ont.
Solon, Ohio
New Rochelle, N . Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Ithaca, N.Y .
Erie, Pa.
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Dover, Ohio
Attica, N.Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Witherbee, N . Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
New City, N.Y .
Burlington, Ont.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Center Line, Mich.
Niagara Falls, N.Y .

twenty-five

�The Buffalo Coaching Staff

...

RICHARD A. LANTZ
Defensive Backfield

WERNER J. KLEEMANN
Defensive Line

.Hffl N. 6RIFFI'l'H
Head Freshman Coach

RICHARD L. WELLS
Graduate Assistant

ROBERT C. DEMING
Head Coach
Bob Deming officially assumed the fortunes of Buffalo
football last February 15 as the University's 15th head
coach, following the resignation of Richard W. (Doc)
Urich, now head coach at Northern Illinois University.
Deming is no stranger on the crowded U / B campus. He
has been on the football scene since 1959 and has served
ten years as a varsity assistant under Urich and Dick
Offenhamer.
A 1957 graduate of Colgate, where he earned a B.A.
in natural sciences, Bob played three seasons at fullback
with the Red Raiders. He played at Colgate under Offenharner. Upon graduation he went with Coach Hal Lahar
to Houston as freshman coach and varsity backfield assistant. He remained with the Cougars through 1958 until he
went into the Air Force Reserve.
Rejoining the Houston staff in January, 1959, he completed spring practice at the University before accepting
an April assignment under Offenhamer at Buffalo, who
had taken over in 1955. Bob's first season at U /B was
rewarding as the Bulls finished 8-1-0 and just missed their
second successive Lambert Cup. Deming tutored both
offensive and defensive backs in 1959 and 1960.
From 1961-65 Bob stayed with the defensive backs and
held the same assignment under Urich, plus handling game
plan formulation. With Urich he served as liaison between
the football office and various campus organizations. He
recruited New York and Pennsylvania.
Deming is not a superstitious mentor. He was born on
Friday the 13th of September, 1935 at Ilion, N. Y. His
coaching debut with the Bulls was on his birthday at
Ball St.
An accomplished outdoorsman, hunter and fisherman,
Bob enjoys serious antique refinishing with wife Jean, a
native of Rochester, N. Y. Jean (University of Rochester)
was formerly a hostess with American Airlines. The
Demings, Laura 3 and Leslie Ann 1, reside in suburban
Eggertsville.
Deming is an assistant professor in the Department of
Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics.

twenty-six

TERRANCE J.
RANSBURY
Offensive Backfield

WILLIAM R. DANDO
Linebackers

JOHN P. DOHERTY
Graduate Assistant

~~
MICHAEL E. MASER
Graduate Assistant

�Buffalo Junior Chamber of Commerce
1932-1969
Thirty-seven years ago, 143 men got together at the Buffalo Club. The purpose of that meeting
was to form an organization bent on leadership through community service. This meeting resulted
in the enrollment of 181 charter members in the Buffalo Junior Chamber.
The sport of football and the Buffalo Jaycees are synonymous. It was in 1937 that Chairman
Owen B. Augspurger, Jr. and the Junior Chamber officially opened Civic Stadium with a capacity crowd
for a game between Colgate and Tulane. After the demise of the All-American Conference, we kept
football alive - bringing in National Football League exhibition games throughout the Fifties. It is
significant that the first exhibition game of the American Football League was co-sponsored by the
Buffalo Jaycees.
Again this football season, the Buffalo Jaycees are honored today to participate in the promotion
of U/ B football.
The Jaycees urge you to support Buffalo's only college football team. Come out and see the
Buffalo Bulls often.

GOOD LUCK TO THE BULLS . . .

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.

M &amp; (j CONVOY INC.
I

HEATING- AIR CONDITIONING
"Forwarders of Motorized Equipment"
Power Plants -

Process Piping -

Fire Protection

Judson M . Quimby, Controller

•

Phone: 823-6300

TL 4-8435

120 W. TUPPER

590 ELK STREET

BUFFALO, N. Y.

For the Finest in Food and Beverage

AFTER THE GAME . . .

THE CLUB SHERIDAN
3500 SHERIDAN DRIVE

836-7736

BUFFALO, N. Y.

**
iC

Northtow" Plaza
Southgate Plaza
r,.ln&amp;itown Plua

134-3331
67~110

632·5626

Open 'til 9 Nightly!

twenty-seven

�Captain Corrigall

KSU

DR. CARL E.
ERICKSON
Dir.- Athletics

JIM CORRIGALL
6'3", 235 Lbs., Senior, Barrie, Ontario
Few players in Kent State history have endeared themselves to fans and teammates like "Big Jim." Last season, he
became the first junior in over 20 years to be elected captain,
a tribute to his unselfish display of team attitude and pride.
The big guy combines speed, agility and hostility that
transforms his off-field gentleness into a fierce, great football
player when the whistle blows. In two years, the only limitations to his ability have been the sidelines.
Last year, he played defensive tackle, linebacker, middleguard, offensive tightend, started a game at fullback (although
he didn't carry the ball) and defensive end. Through it all, he
performed well and led the team in tackles and assists, despite
being double teamed and avoided, if possible, by opponents.
Mid-American coaches recognized his talents, despite the
many positions played, and again named him first team All
MAC defensive tackle. A solid showing this season could make
him Kent's first 3-time, first-team All MAC player.
Jim is a hard hitter with fine speed and great lateral
movement. He was in on 106 tackles despite breaking his hand
in the opening period of the Xavier game and sitting out three
quarters. In two years, he has made 103 solo tackles and
assisted on 91 others for a total of 194.
This season he will be roaming at the linebacker spot,
which may cut down the number of tackles he makes ... but
don't bet on it.

· twenty-eight

Kent State University is
Ohio's third largest university.
Established in 1910 as Kent
State Normal, a state teacher institution, the name was changed
to Kent State College in 1929 and
later, in 1935, to the present
title.
Kent is located in the heavily
populated section of northeastern Ohio and serves as a state
university for the area. Students also come from the other
parts of Ohio, other states and
several foreign countries. There
are 50 major buildings located
on the 800-acre campus and the
entire physical plant is valued at
over $100 million.
A new 8.8-million-dollar library should be finished by 1970.
The new building, including a
12-story tower, will have eight
acres under roof and will be able
to seat more than three thousand
students at a time.
The University is composed of
the College of Education, College
of Arts and Sciences, College of
Business Administration, College
of Fine and Professional Arts
and the Graduate School. Bachelor and master degrees are
granted by all colleges with a
doctorate degree available in
some fields.
Since its first commencement,
the University has awarded over
22,000 bachelor d e g r e e s and
3,200 master degrees.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Name: Kent State University
Location: Kent, Ohio 44240
Founded: 1910- First classes,
1914
Denomination: State University
Enrollment: 27,000
School Colors: Blue and Gold
Nickname: Golden Flashes
Conference: Mid-American
(18th season)
Stadium: Memorial, 28,748

�KENT STATE
"Golden Flashes"

RICHARD AMBROSE
MARTIN ATKINS
12
Junior
DHB 14
Junior
QB
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Downsview, Ont.

22

ROBERT ROSSELL
Junior
M
Avon Lake, Ohio

68

FRANK DRIER
Junior
LB
Lancaster, Ohio

75

GEORGE AUSTIN
Junior
DT
Canton, Ohio

67

JOHN BAKER
Junior
Cadiz, Ohio

G

DANIEL BRENNING
40
Junior
HB
New Albany, Ohio

LAWRENCE CELLA
JERRY CLEMENS
88
Senior
DE 16
Senior
DHB
Niles, Ohio
Enola, Pa.

AL FRANKLIN
Junior
DE
Warren, Ohio

GEORGE GREB
64
Senior
T
North Arlington, N. J.

81

60

NELSON BOBB
Senior
Gahanna, Ohio

G

JAMES CORRIGALL
79
Senior
LB
Barrie, Ont.

53

BRET HART
Senior
Bethesda, Md.

twenty-nine

T

�The First Intercollegiate Game

(The following article was written in

1933 for the Associated Press by the
late John W. Herbert, Rutgers 1872,
prominent New York corporation
lawyer, who was a member of the
Rutgers "25" which defeated Princeton in the 1869 contest.)

THE FIRST intercollegiate game of
football, not only in the United States
but in the world, was played on November 6, 1869, at New Brunswick
between Rutgers College and Princeton University. I had the proud distinction of having participated in that
game on the Rutgers team.
The challenge for the game was
issued by Rutgers to Princeton. In
the preliminary arrangements it was
agreed that there should be twentyfive players on each side and that
three games should be played, the
side winning the first six goals in
the game to be declared the winner
of that game.
Had No Uniforms
The game was called at 3 o'clock
and started with a free kickoff from
the tee, the same as now. It was
played on the commons (where the
Rutgers gymnasium now stands). On
the arrival of the players, a few
minutes before the game was called,
they laid aside their hats, coats and
vests. Neither team was in uniform,
although some Rutgers players wore
scarlet stocking-caps.
The players lined up on each side,
the organization of the twenty-five
being the same on both sides. Two
men were selected by each team to
play immediately in front of the
opponent's goal and were known as
captains of the enemy's goal.
The remainder of each team was
divided into two sections. The players in one section were assigned to
certain tracts of the field which they

thirty

by JOHN W. HERBERT, Rutgers '72

were to cover and not to leave. They
were known as "fielders." The other
section was detailed to follow t!.e
ball up and down the field. These
latter players were called "bulldogs."
The toss of the coin for advantage
gave Princeton the ball and Rutgers
the wind. Amid a hush of expectancy
among the spectators Princeton
bucked or kicked the ball, but the
kick was bad and the ball glanced
to one side. Parke H. Davis, in his
"Football, the American Intercollegiate Game," then describes the
game as follows:
Rutgers Scores!
"The light, agile Rutgers men
pounced upon it like hounds and by
driving it by short kicks and dribbles, the other player-s surrounding
the ball and not permitting a Princeton man to get near it, quickly and
craftily forced it down to Old Nassau's goal, where the captains of the
enemy's goal were waiting and these
two latter sent the ball between the
posts amid great applause.
"The first goal had been scored in
five minutes of play. During the intermission, Captain Gummere instructed Michael (the late Jacob E.
Michael, Princeton '71, who was to
become Dean of the Faculty at the
University of Maryland), a young
giant of the Princeton 25, to break up
Rutgers massing around the ball.
Sides were changed and Rutgers
'bucked'.
"In this period the game was fiercely contested. Time and time again
Michael or "Big Mike," charged into
Rutgers' primitive mass play and
scattered the players like a burst
bundle of sticks. On one of these
plays Princeton obtained the ball and
by a long accurate kick scored the
second goal."
The third goal went to Rutgers and
the fourth was kicked by Princeton.
The fifth and sixth goals went to
Rutgers, but the feature of this latter

period of play in the memory of the
players after the lapse of many years
is awarded to "Big Mike" and Large,
(The late State Senator George H.
Large of Flemington, a Rutgers
player). Someone, by a random kick,
had driven the ball to one side, where
it rolled against the fence and stopped. Large led the pursuit for the
ball, closely followed by Michael.
They reached the fence, on which the
students were perched, and unable to
check their momentum, in a tremendous impact struck the fence which
gave way with a crash and over
went its load of yelling students to
the ground.
Every college probably has the
humorous tradition of some player
who has scored against his own team.
This tradition at Rutgers dated from
this first game, for one of her players,
whose identity is unknown, in the
sixth period started to kick the ball
between his own goal posts. The
kick was blocked, but Princeton took
advantage of the opportunity and
soon made the goal. This turn of the
game apparently disorganized Rutgers, for Princeton also scored the
next goal after a few minutes of
play, thus bringing the total up to
four all.
Strategy!
At this stage Rutgers resorted to
that use of craft which has never
failed to turn the tide of every close
battle. Captain Leggett has noticed
that Princeton obtained a great advantage from the taller stature of
their men, which enabled them to
reach above the others and bat the
ball in the air in some advantageous
direction.
Rutgers was ordered to keep the
ball close to the ground. Following
this stratagem the Rutgers men determinedly kicked the ninth and
tenth goals, thus winning the match
six goals to four and with it the distinction of a victory in the first game
of intercollegiate football played in
the world.

�KENT STATE
Golden Flashes

II

KENNETH HAVERLAND
52
Senior
G
Cincinnati, Ohio

11

ROBIN HINSON
Junior
HB
Ashtabula, Ohio

ANDREW MICHALIG_
66
Junior
G
Finleyville, Ohio

18

THOMAS MOKROS
Senior
M
Bellaire, Ohio

GARY RENAUD
Senior
TB
Erie, Pa.

86

DOUGLAS SMITH
Senior
SE
Toronto, Ont.

29

89

II

JOHN KAVCAR
MARK KUJALA
Senior
TE 73
Senior
DT
Westlake, Ohio
Warren, Ohio

FREDERICK MROZEK
54
Sophomore
C
Toronto, Ont.

76

DOUGLAS NEFF
Junior
Zanesville, Ohio

PATRICK LASAGNA
31
Senior
MG
Pittsburgh, Pa.

DONALD NOTTINGHAM
T 34
Junior
FB
Ravenna, Ohio

STEPHEN TRUSTDO~F
10
Senior
QB
Dover, Ohio

62

JEFFREY YOUNG
Senior
DT
West Reading, Pa.

thirty-one

�The Bulls Salute ... Rudy Zorich
Rudolph M. (Rudy) Zorich, assistant equipment manager in the athletic department, joined
the University staff in August, 1968, and has been
a man on the move ever since. Functional, safe
and modern protective equipment and associated
athletic gear are Rudy's business. He executes his
job well.
A veteran of 32 years' service in industry,
Wickwire Spencer Steel and Semet Solvay Coke
Plant, both Buffalo, Rudy is a native of Buffalo's
Riverside section. He still resides there with wife
Helen. The Zorich's have two children, Deborah,
a graduated nurse, and Bob, recently married.
Zorich is cut from old cloth. Sound of mind
and body his youth was spiced with sports activity
of the highest order. He is still in shape. A graduate of Kenmore High School, he mixed football,
baseball and boxing in a busy schedule. He was a
fullback and third baseman in high school and
started a respected career in boxing as a light
heavy and heavyweight.
In 102 fights he lost just six times. His
amateur record, including Diamond Belt, Golden
Gloves and Niagara AAU competition, was an
astounding 73-2-0. As a professional he had a 234-0 summary.

1969 U/8 Fall Scoreboard
Date
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.

Date
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

Nov.
Nov.

3
17
25
31
14

FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
Coach: Joe N. Griffith
Opp.
U/B OPP
MANLIUS
3:00
at Syracuse
2:00
at Navy
2:00
at Army
3:30
KENT STATE
2:30

VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY
Coach: Emery J. Fisher '51
Opp.
U/B OPP
23
at Cleveland State with
43
20
Baldwin·Wallace
27
SYRACUSE with
35
20
NIAGARA CC
27
30
at Fredonia State with
4:00
Geneseo State
4
LeMoyne Invite
1:30
10
BROCKPORT STATE
4:00
at LeMoyne with
17
4:00
Rochester Tech
at Eisenhower with
22
4:00
Geneseo State
Canisius Invite
25
1:00
at Niagara with
29
4:00
Canisius
Gannon
Buffalo State
1
NYS Championship at Harpur
NCAA Championships
25

thirty· tWO

Date
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

VARSITY GOLF
Coach: Dr. Leonard T. Serfustini
Opp.
U/B OPP
16
at St. Bonaventure
8
10
14%
18
at Buffalo State
3%
19
NIAGARA CC
14%
3%
22
ROCHESTER TECH
4
14
24
CANISIUS
ppd.
26
at Niagara
7
11
29
BUFFALO STATE
15%
2%
1 ST. BONAVENTURE
1:00
Brook Lea Invite
2
ECAC at Bucknell
4
GENESEO STATE
6
1:00
11
ECAC at Colgate
13
at Canisius
1:00
16
NIAGARA
1:30
18
ECAC at Farmingdale
21
NIAGARA
1:30
24
at Rochester Tech
1:00

�YOUR HOMETOWN SUPERMARKETS ARE PROUD
TO SUPPORT THE HOMETOWN UNIVERSITY
OF BUFFALO "BULLS" FOOTBALL TEAM!

--

thirty-three

�To Games; on Ski Weekends; on Tours;
Everybody Goes First Class in the
Area's Largest Charter Bus Fleet
ASK US ATIOUT

CLASS, CLUB or
GROUP CHARTERS
For Tr·i J)!-; to .Anywhere
\\.ith All Convenienees
P h one

BUFFALO 852-4900

BLUE BIRD COACH LINES, INC.

FOR MAXIMUM PROTECTION AND SERVICE
Corner of
N. LONG and MAIN
WILLIAMSVILLE, N. Y.

in Buying and Selling Homes
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FUNERAL HOME
INC.
•

1933 KENSINGTON AVENUE
833-1695
•

Call 875·7920

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1050 M1ht.ry Road
Buff•lo. New York 1-421 7

AFTER THE
GAME STOP
AT· .··

GOOD LUCK BULLS

Mr. &amp; Mrs. A. V. Bellanca

thirty-four

823 GENESEE STREET

�Van, Stan &amp; Rife Have It All Figured Out!
FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WBEN-Radio
VAN
STAN
DICK
MILLER BARRON RIFENBURG
WBEN Radio/930
The Sports Voice of Buffalo

�SPECIAL PATRONS
We Acknowledge With Thanks the Generous
Contributions of the Following:
Rich Products Corp.

Kevin Brinkworth

John M. Galvin

T. Gregory Jacobs

Charles G. Salisbury

Carl E. DeSantis

Robert D. Fernbach

PATRONS
Robert B. Adam
Harold A. Adel
James J. Ailinger
William C. Baird
Charles Banas
Donald R. Barber
Robert B. Barrett
John M. Bissell
Stanley B. Blach
Walter Brock
Milton M. Bron
Dennis J . Brinkworth, Jr.
Edmond S. Brown, Jr.
Max Burstein
Abraham Carrel
Ross M. Cellino
James P. Cole
Robert J. Collins
Kenneth L. Cooper
Joseph M. Crotty
John L. Curtis
Charles H. Diefendorf
Charles Diebold Ill
Arnold DiLaura
Edward J. Doran
George E. Easterbrook
Thornton G. Edwards
George W. Ferrick
Aaron I. Feuerstein
Paul A. Foley
John A. Krull
Harold Frantzen
Irving Fudeman
Anthony J. Renaldo
Gates Electric Co.
Allan V. Gibbons
A. Donald Gilden
Chester P. Glor, Jr.
George L. Grobe, Jr.
Norman Haber
Murray J. Hall
Nicholas Haragos
Joseph J. Ricotta
Irwin Klein

thirty-six

F. Vincent Harrington
Harold M. Harris
L. Richard Hart
Waldron S. Hayes, Jr.
William H. Hildebrand, Jr.
Palace Theatre
Sheldon Hurwitz
Rudolph V. Johnson
Edwin F. Jaeckle
Grover R. James, Jr.
W. Hinson Jones
Henry W. Killeen
Kevin Kennedy
Russell Kidder, Jr.
Edward W. Kinney
Stephen F. Kissel
A. O'Neill Kline
Seymour Knox
Gerald S. Lippes
Anchor Concrete Products
Saul Lerner
Joseph J. Lyons
Charles J. McDonough
J. Eugene McMahon
Samuel D. Magavern
Harold F. Meese
Robert J. Metzen
Leo M. Michalek
Robert F. Milks
Edward F. Mimmack
Raymond A. Monin
Arthur F. Movalli
David J . Mahoney, Jr.
Roland Lord O'Brian
Thomas E. O'Brien
Charles W. Pankow, Jr.
Pearce &amp; Pearce Co., Inc.
Howard A. Potter, Inc.
William E. Potter
Hugh McM. Russ, Sr.
Eugene M. Ruszaj
Edward A. Rath, Jr.
George H. Selkirk

William W. Rathke
Herbert R. Reitz
Frank T. Riforgiato
William R. Root
Leo J. Rosen
Eugene W. Salisbury
Harvey D. Sprowl
Thomas E. Sand
Michael Swados
Vincent Scamurra
Houdaille Industries, Inc.
Roy Seibel
George N. Seifert
Shanor Electric Co.
E. Perry Spink
James R. Sullivan
Leonard Swagler
Gertrude Swarthout
Harlan Swift
Irwin L. Terry
University Manor Motel
Charles J. Verbanic
George W. Watkins
Reinhardt W. Wende
Charles E. Weston, Jr.
Massachusetts Mutual
Life Ins. Co.
Frederick B. Wilkes
William G. Willis
RobertS. Wolfson
Manuel S. Wortzman
0. W. Shelgren
Pfohl, Roberts &amp; Biggie
Joseph Scaffidi
Turley, Stievater, Walker,
Mauri &amp; Associates
Webber, DiDonato &amp;
Renaldo
Dick O'Connor
Optical Co.
McKee, Phelps &amp;
Bowman
Samuel Shatkin

Richard J. Attea
William Blanchard
Smolka, DiBartolo
&amp; Gibson
Albert W. Doyle
Falk, Twelvetrees,
Johnston &amp; Siemer
James P. Donnelly
Irvin V. Iversen
Townsend &amp; Lipp
Lippes &amp; Kaminsky
Richard F. Miller
James C. Kenrick
Paul H. Will
William R. Trautman
&amp; Associates
DeLeuw Cather &amp;
Associates
Herbert Simon
Gary Solomon
Arnold Stern
Edward Wasielewski
Luther Lee
James Guttuso
Joel H ittleman
Francis R. Moliterno
Lynch &amp; Nusbaum
Gary D. Schuller
Charles H. Addington
George W. Fugitt
Anthony M. Aquilina
C. S. Armenia
Julian J. Ascher
Charles W. Bankert
Ulrich Bauer
Daniel R. Botsford ·
Melvin M. Brothman
Jacob Burstein
Vincent S. Celestino
Stewart and Benson
Albert V. Cutter
Maurice R. Dewey
John W. Vance

Joseph K. Sheedy
Kenneth Eckhert
George Egri
Edward G. Eschner
Sattar Farzan
Carl A. Contino
Armand DiFrancesco
Daniel C. Fisher
RichardS. Fletcher
John J. Giardino
Stuart A. Good
Pasquale A. Greco
Benjamin G. Green
Edmond Gicewicz
lsmet Hallac
Barry T. Malin
Hans F. Kipping
Morton P. Klein
Eugene C. Hyzy
Eugene V. Leslie
Barry J. Herman
George H. Marcy
James B. McDaniel, Jr.
Sanford 1-1. Meyers
Marvin H. Milch
Elmer Milch
Donald W. Hall
William H. Merrilees
Eisenberg &amp; Donius
Irwin Ellentuck
John Biniszkiewicz
William G. Braun
Paul S. Chojnacki
Robert H. Evans
B. D. Garliner
Clifford G. Glaser
Lyle N. Morgan
Robert J. Patterson
Eustace G. Phillies
Ramon Y. Perez
Charles Riggio
Allen L. Lesswing
Duane Lyman
&amp; Associates

�BUFFALO
IIBULLS"

BARRY ATKINSON
79
Junior
DT
Major: Physical Education

THOMAS CENTOFANTI
GARY CHAPP
73
Junior
T
38
Senior
LB
Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education

THOMAS ELLIOTT
40
Junior
DHB
Major: Business

JERRY ELWELL
61
Junior
G
Major: Anthropology

15

KIRK BARTON
Sophomore
QB
Major: Pre-Medical

56

62

JOHN BAUCH
Sophomore
Major: History

G

PATRICK CARNEY
60
Senior
G
Major: Sociology

MICHAEL CONSTANTINO CHARLES DONNOR
SCOTT CLARK
58
Junior
C
41
Senior
KSP
Senior Co-Capt. LB
Major: Physical Education
Major: Pharmacy
Major: Sociology

TERRENCE ENDRESS
82
Senior
TE
Major: Business

JOHN FALLER
49
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education

87

BRUCE FRASER
Sophomore
SE
Major: History

�Our take-home pack for real beer lovers.
TH£ STROH BR£W[RY COMPANY ()(TROll. MICHIGAN 48226

thirty-eight

�BUFFALO
IIBULLS"

-

LA
NCE HART
LAWRENCE · GOLDFARB
16
Sophomore P-DHB
Sophomore Manager
Major: Liberal Arts
Major: Business

PRENTlS HENELY
SCOTT H E RLAN
90
Senior
DE
45
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education

66

MICHAEL LUZNY
Senior
LB
Major: Geography

MARK MacVITTlE
47
Sophomore DHB
Major: Physical Education

17

PAUL JACK
Senior
P
Major: Chemistry

26

DOUGLAS KOZEL
Sophomore
FB
Major: Liberal Arts

85

PAUL LANG
Senior-Co-Capt. TE
Ma-jor: History

34

92

EDWARD KERSHAW
59
Junior
LB
Major: Liberal Arts

39

ROVELL JONES
Junior
DT
Major: Psychology

JOEL JACOBS
Junior
DHB
Major: Liberal Arts

JOSEPH HUDSON
Junior
DE
Major: Philosophy

RICHARD HORN
Senior
SE
Major: English

83

WILLIAM HAYDEN
68
Senior
G
Major: History

thirty-nine

�1969 BUFFALO VARSITY FOOTBALL SQUAD
(left to right) Rows
First: Co-captain Paul Lang, Coach Jim McNally, Coach Werner Kleemann, Coach Rick Lantz, Head Coach Bob Deming, Coach Terry Ransbury, Coach
Bill Dando, Coach Joe Griffith and Co-captain Scott Clark.
Second: Mike Luzny, Jim Mosher, Bill Hayden, Mick Murtha, Pat Patterson, Gary Chapp, Terry Endress, Dick Horn, Paul Jack and Chris Wolf.
Third: Dan Walgate, Barry Atkinson, Barney Woodward, Frank Reid, Joe Hudson, Ed Perry, Steve McCullough, Pat Carney, Jerry Elwell, Dave Chernega
and Gary Grubbs.
Fourth: Scott Herlan, Mike Constantino, *Rick Loundsbury, Ed Kershaw, Joe Moresco, Denny Albaneze, Karl Zalar, Gene Hernquist, Tom Centofanti, Russ
Plawiuk, Joel Jacobs and Joe Zelmanski.
Fifth: Rovell Jones, Prentis Henley, Chuck Graver, *Greg Walters, *Bob Carnevale, Dave Pescrillo, Chuck Donnor, Tom Milarski, John Rio, Len Nixon, Ken
Bork, Bruce Fraser and Paul Kehr.
Sixth: Bill Winnett, Cliff Jones, Kevin Wells, Mark MacVittie, Scott Savickas, Doug Kozel, Bob .Griffiths, Kirk Barton, Phil Smith, Bill Murphy, Charlie
Forness, *Steve Lipman and Bob Etherington.
Seventh : Doug Philp, Pat Bauch, Barry Vandenbergh, Bill Ellenbogen, Jim Fortino, Mike Sharrow, Joe Ziegler, Denny Waggoner, Bob Layo, Paul Dorich,
Dave Majcher, Kevin Hogan and Joe Scott.
Eighth : Larry Madden, Larry Hart, Ron Francis, John Faller, Tom Vigneau, Mike James, Stan Siedlecki, Tom Elliott, *Dan Yacobush and Bob Stiscak.
Ninth: Manager Dan Earl, Manager Allen Wright, Trainer Ken Shields, Trainer Fran Welk, Head Trainer Jim Simon, Coach John Doherty, Coach Mike Maser
and Coach Rick Wells.
*No longer member of squad

f orty

�BUFFALO
''BULLS"

I

I
I
I

WILLIAM MURPHY
75
Sophomore
T
Major: Business

LAWRENCE MADDEN
32
Sophomore
LB
Major: Liberal Arts

JOSEPH MORESCO
Junior
SE
80
Major: Business

LEONARD NIXON
42
Junior
DHB
Major: Physical Education

PATRICK PATTERSON
20
Senior
HB
Major: Liberal Arts

EDWARD PERRY
11
Junior
QB
Major: Physical Education

CHRIS WOLF
Senior
Major: Sociology

BARNEY WOODWARD
21
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education

DANIEL WALGATE
70
Senior
DT
Major: Physical Education

77

T

74

JOHN RIO
Junior
T
Major: Liberal Arts

14

MARK MURTHA
Senior
QB
Major: Business

THOMAS VIGNEAU
96
Junior
DE
Major: Physical Education

ALLEN WRIGHT
JOSEPH ZELMAN SKI
Sophomore Manager
35
Junior
FB
Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education

f orty-one

�GOOD LUCK U. B. BULLS

Rudy Bersani -

U. B. 1967

lunch, dinner or late supper; eat like a
Roman Emperor on centurion's pay
In the North Wing of the MAPLE.LEAF MOTOR LODGE
1620 Niagara Falls Blvd.
'

1 Mile North
of Sheridan Dr.
Ample Parking for Your Chariot

83 5-2610

BENTON ANNOUNCEMENTS

CHALLENGER R/T

A Large Selection of Gifts for
Showers - Weddings - Birthdays

KENTON DODGE INC.
-HOME OF THE MIGHTY MOPARS-

3445 DELAWARE AVE. AT SHERIDAN DR.

PLANNING TO BE MARRIED?
Benton Selection of Wedding Invitations
Is the Largest

3006 Bailey Ave. . .. Near Kensington ... 836-4100
China-Silverware-Stainless Tableware-Stemware-Vases-Ceramics

* Greeting Cords
876-6900

KENMORE, N. Y.

* Stationery

* Party Goods

* Candles and * Floral Pieces
Open Thuu. and Fri. Evenblge till 9 PM -

105i:h ANNIVERSARY

a

1969 marks our 105th year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.

Sat. till G

ailing and cory

Est. 1864

REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
17-21 S. Division Street

BUFFALO'S PAPER DISTRIBUTION CENTER

Ellicott Square

TL-4-5700

DON'S
Mobil Service Cent:ers
Bailey Cor. Winspear
Kensington Cor. Century Rd.

Every kind of Sportsman
knows
DICK FISCHER'S the greatest!
DICK FISCHER

TIRE and BATTERY SERVICE
BRAKES- MUFFLERS
TUNE-UP- MINOR REPAIRS
GENERATORS and STARTERS

forty-two

SFo~ts
699 Main St.

Thruway Plaza- 44 Main St. Ilona . I

�SEE THE

P!RK EDGE SELEUT MOUNT!IN PINK

FULL QUART

69~

forty-three

�1969 College Football Officials' Signals
CODE OF OFFICIALS' SIGNALS

CODE OF OFFICIALS' SIGNALS

•• •
,,
,,
"~
~
~

15

~

··~~:::~~~

llltlitill•tltlctinr

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lflnterltchtl

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hrwull

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23

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w ~ "()

22

ll!ltntiMJI

...

'

teSi4t: Twdlhdl

Interference

llltPIMUof
Mlflllt IIUI Arltll

IIICM!jllltl f.,..lrlllhU ,
hiUitty Detllnltl ,
~·· · .,.

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Sbrt tu tiKI!

Hir ,,
/
fintD .. It

llllbadrttrP'tar

'

lMttfDIWI

....A- -

,..,.,., "...

OPEN EVERY EVENING EXCEPT WEDNESDAY

FRED RONEKER'S
UNIVERSITY SHOP
5548 MAIN ST., WILLIAMSVILLE
632-7833

C9

Edward Dzielski, Inc.
883-4667
INTERIOR DESIGN &amp; PLANNING

Men's and Boy's Wear of Distinction
853-7266
''THE OFFICIAL EQUIPMENT
RECONDITIONERS FOR THE BUFFALO BULLS"

FRANK O'CONNOR
ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT

MARBA INC.
Reconditioners of Athletic Equipment
1200 Niagara Street

•

Buffalo, N. Y. 14213

882-9330

forty-four

School and Team Outfitters

•
499 Washington Street
Buffalo, New York 14203

�... where you don't work hard for your

•1n

GS
• The New SENECA MALL
• BOULEVARD MALL
• 998 BROADWAY (and 1021 Broadway)
• THRUWAY PLAZA
• SATTLER'S HOME FURNISHINGS CITY, U.S.A.
(Elmwood at Hertel Ave.)

�Big cars cost big money...
That~ the way it was.

OnTheMove.

0. J. Simpson with his big, reasonably priced 1970 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe.

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1969-10-04 Buffalo vs Kent St.</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text>Rotary Field - 1:30 p.m. - October 4, 1969</text>
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                <text> official program 50¢</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496191">
                <text>1969-10-04</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496192">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>r 2 , 1969

us

icia Progr

ALUM

TADIU

5

�D. H. JONES
Real Estate Agency
200 Triangle St.
Amherst, Mass.
413-.549-3700

f

..

~.

OUR NEW LOCATION
TO SERVE YOU BETTER
200 TRIANGLE ST.
549-3700

�KICK OFF
A GREAT WEEKEND
OR

TOUCHDOWN
AFTER THE GAME
AT

NORTHAMPTON'S NEWEST
MOST COMPLETE HOTELI
YEAR ROUND SWINNING • SAUNAS • · PUTTING GREEN

COLONIAL HILTON INN
AT NORTHAMPTON
JUNCTION INTERSTATE 91 AND ROUTE 5
NORTHAMPTON, MASS. 01060
(413) 586-1211

3

�SRetcbes
Waltham Field Station

MARKET GARDEN FIELD STATION
CIRCA 1926
Agent for Market Gardeners. Tompson initially tried
to control celery blight, cabbage maggot, downy mildew
on lettuce, and red spider mite on greenhouse cucumbers, while concurrently analyzing the problems of the
B.M.G.A. members to determine how the College could
best serve these growers.
In his first report to President Kenyon L. Butterfield, Tompson reiterated the growers declared need for
a research and demonstration station near Boston. The
College agreed with Tompson. Proposals were submitted to the state legislature and in 1916 money was appropriated for a Market Garden Field Station. Due to
a meager $8,000 appropriation coupled with high land
prices, a much less than ideal 12-acre site on the westerly side of Reed St. in North Lexington was chosen. The
land was low, excessively wet and much of it was rock
and ledge covered with witchgrass.
As its first director, Tompson saw to the preparation of the land for crops, erection of buildings, hiring
of personnel while continuing to solve growers' problems and to publish a monthly journal. By 1922 it
seemed the Market Garden Field Station would overcome the rocks, water, and mud to succeed as a viable
substation. Word of the possible windfall of land from
the Warren trustees assured its success.
Tompson inspected the Beaver Street land, known
as Cedar Hill, on March 10, 1922, finding it " ... in a
very good state of tilth ..." The 50 acres divided by
Beaver Street were recommended by Tompson for acceptance by the College. Both the College and the Commonwealth agreed to accept the estate. The equipment
and staff moved to Waltham in the autumn and winter
of 1924.
In the seven years of operation from 1917 to 1924
Tompson transformed his idea into reality. His staff
provided the necessary on-the-spot research and service
desired by the growers. This service to the citizens of
the Commonwealth continues today under the title of
Department of Environmental Sciences and is housed
in more modem facilities on the Warren estate in
Waltham.

The Waltham Field Station, owned by the Commonwealth and administered by the University of Massachusetts, is located on one of the oldest acquired
-tracts of land off the Amherst campus. Its acquisition
and development was not subject to controversy, debate and delay for it was a gift of the trustees of the
estate of Miss Cornelia Warren of Waltham. It was
free! It was an ideal piece of land for field studies.
And, it was in the right location in the state. However,
the development of this eastern Mass. field station had
its beginning at the Massachusetts Agricultural College
in Amherst.
In 1886 the Boston Market Gardeners' Association
was founded by Warren W. Rawson of Arlington to
further the cause of local market gardeners. The Boston suburbs were and remained for many years a principal agricultural district in the state. The erection of
sash houses and greenhouses for lengthening the growing season of crops not only increased yeilds but also
magnified disease and insect troubles.
The farming community looked to the professors of
science at the College for agricultural innovation. Entomologists and plant pathologists of M.A.C. were continually making the grueling trip to eastern Mass. to
observe individual farming problems. But, most of the
research occurred on the Amherst campus at the Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station. After much
effort, the cranberry growers of southeastern Mass. convinced the state legislature of their need for a resident
scientist with a properly equipped laboratory. The state
responded by creating the Cranberry Experiment Substation in 1910 at East Wareham.
Also in 1910, M. Ernest Moore of Arlington succeeded Rawson as president of the B.M.G.A. Moore
spoke out forcefully in 1914 for additional " . . . small
experiment stations located in the principal growing
sections of the state ..." to constantly study local problems. The plea was heard in Amherst by William P.
Brooks '76, director of the Mass. Ag. Exp. Sta. In
June 1915 Harold F. Tompson '05, head of the Dept. of
Vegetable Gardening at M.A.C., was appointed District
BUSINESS ADDRESS
624 STATE STREET
SPRINGFIELD, MASS. 01109
413- 781-5130

COMPLIMENTS OF

RESIDENCE

JAMES E. MULCAHY

131 SUMMER STREET
NO. AMHERST, MASS. 01059
413 - 549-0641

LIFE INSURANCE BROKER

1009-1-5

4

�University of Massachusetts
Football News
VOL. 4 NO. 1

SEPTEMBER 27, 1969

THE BUFFALO GAME
FEATURES
13 COLLEGE FOOTBALL CENTENNIAL
A statement from the President of the United States concerning the ce leb ration of one hundred years of college fo otball.
15 FOOTBALL COACHING TECHNIQUES CHANGING
Arthur Simpson, Dean of New England Sports W riters, comments on the eve r
changing football coaching profession.
25 FIRST CENTURY OF COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Some of the historical highlights of the first hu ndred ye ars of college football.
29 STATE UN IVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
The campus at Buffalo is changing to meet the ever growing needs of today's
college students.
33 UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS MARCHING BAND
Band Director John A. Jenkins has composed an interesting show to kic k off
the 1969 home season.

DEPARTMENTS
II
17
21
21
23
35
37
39

Editor's Not es
U Mass Roste r
Starting Lineups
Today's O fficials
Buffalo Roster
C harting the Opponents
Stadium Information
Official 's Sig nals

PICTURES
7 Buffalo and
Massachuse tts Administration
9 UMass Individuals
16 U Mass C oaches
18 UMass Squad
24 Buffalo Coaches
27 Buffalo Squad
31 Buffalo Individuals

See
This program printed by the Department of Intercollegiate Athletics
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Mass. 01002
Warren P. McGuirk, Director
Robert J . O'Connell, Assistant Director
Richard H. Page, Editor
Richard Bresciani, A ssistant Editor
Local A dvertising : Arthur Sampson and Walter Novak
Represented for National A dvertising by H . 0. Zimma n, I nc., Lynn , Mass.

GAZETTE PRINTING CO., INC.
79 Pleasant Street
Northampton, Mass.
Phone 584-1097

TODAY'S COVER
Designed by James A. Trelease '63, staff artist for the
Springfield Daily News

Established 1786
OFFSET
•
LETTERPRESS

5

�Offering

IC€ CREAm

Career Opportunity

SHOPS

Through Growth

JOHN BEMBEN, '39- Vice President
ANTHONY CHAMBERS, '50- District Manager
JAMES P. CONNOR, '55- Mgr. Administrative Services
DONALD A. COOPER, '66- Landscape Supervisor
JOSEPH H. FARQUHAR, '55- Manager
RICHARD M. GREENE, '57- Manager
BRUCE D. KEYES, '61 -

Accountant

WILLIAM D. LEIDT, JR., '51 -Manager
PHILIP S. ORCIUCH, '56- Training Supervisor
RONALD A. PARADIS, '61- Accounting Supervisor
RONALD J. PASKAVITZ, '60- Manager
MICHAEL SPITZ, '60 - Corporate Attorney
RICHARD W. WEHREN, '63 -Manager
JOSEPH J. WERRY, JR., '50- Division Manager
JOHN YARMAC, '63 - Foreman, Quality Control
DAVID B. YOUNG, '58 - Chief Training Supervisor

Write:

Director of Personnel
Friendly Ice Cream Corporation
I 8 55 Boston Road
Wilbraham, Mass.

6

�-.

h

THE PRESIDENTS

DR. JOHN W. LEDERLE, Massachusetts

MARTIN MEYERSON, Buffalo

WARREN P. McGUIRK, Massachusetts

LAWRENCE A. CAPPIELLO, Buffalo

�Compliments of

Central Appliance Service
of Springfield, Inc.
COIN METERED WASHERS and DRYERS
ON CAMPUS

SPRINGFIELD, MASS. 01105

445 CENTRAL ST.

BANI( FROM YOUR CAR
AT ANY OF OUR FOUR BRANCH OFFICES
with Convenient Drive-up Windows and spacious parking

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF AMHERST
TRIANGLE OFFICE:

MAIN OFFICE:

with Drive-Up Window and Parking
243 Triangle Street, Amherst

with Walk-up Window
11 Amity Street, Amherst

NORTH AMHERST OFFICE:

HADLEY OFFICE:

SOUTH AMHERST OFFICE :

with Drive-Up Window
and Parking
25 Montague Road, N. Amherst

with Drive-Up Window and Parking
Night Depository
14'0 Russell Street, Hadley

with Drive-Up Window
and Parking
450 West Street, Amherst

Member F . D.I.C.

8

�MASSACHUSETTS

Tim Adams

Mike Cooney

John Decembrele

Dick Donlin

Dave Driscoll

John Dubzinski

John Farrelly

Larry Fortunoff

Bruce Fulton

Jerry Grasso

Ken Hughes

Jim Long

Craig Lovell

John Maclean

Steve Rogers

Ed Sarno

Paul Toner

Tom York

�•

THE HEALTHFUL INVIGORATING SPORT OF SKIING
The Mt. Tom Ski Area offers your best close to home skiing. Two chairlifts,
two T -bars, one J-bar, and snowmoking from lop to botton guarantee you
skiing pleasure; our ski school staff of American and Austrian instructors
is outstanding. If you wish, you con rent your equipment otthe area pro shop .
Discover the great fun of skiing at Mt. Tom.
Write or colt for our free "Complete Gu ide to the Winter Season".

MT. TOM SKI AREA
P. 0. Box 1158- Holyoke, Mass. Telephone 536-0416

DEVELOPED BY DANIEL O'CONNELL'S SONS, INC.
GENERAL CONTRACTORS, HOLYOKE, MASSACHUSETTS
10

�•
Senior qb Tim Adams completed eight of I0 passes for
154 yards, including a 24-yard touchdown pass to split end
Nick McGarry. Adams also ran for a 23-yard score. Soph
kicking specialist Dennis Gagnon booted seven straight extra
points to tie a U Mass game record originally set by Jerry
Whelchel against Rhode Island in 1963 and tied by Marty
Scheralis last fall at Vermont. Leading ground-gainers last
week were jr. fullback Dick Heavey with 67 yards, jr. halfback Pat Scavone with 63, fullback Sarno with 51, soph fullback Dick Cummings with 50 and sr. Jerry Grasso with 47.
Touchdowns were scored by Adams, McGarry, jr. halfback
Art Corsaletti, Grasso, jr. tight end John Decembrele and
two by Scavone.

Massachusetts faces a rugged foe today as the Buffalo
Bulls invade Alumni Stadium for the 1969 initial home game.
The Redmen, in their 87th year of intercollegiate football,
have one win and two losses against Buffalo. UMass won
24-22 at Buffalo in 1964 when quarterback Jerry Whelchel
teamed up with tight end Milt Morin, now with the Cleveland Browns, on a sensational 57-yard touchdown play. In
1965 Buffalo scored IS points early in the game and held on
to topple the Redmen 18-6. UMass had more first downs,
16 to 6, and more total yardage, 200 to 174, but failed to
score three times inside the I0-yard line. The only Red men
tally came on a four-yard pass from soph qb Greg Landry
to fullback Dick Benoit as time expired at the half. Last year
the Bulls blanked UMass 23-0 in a night game at Buffalo War
Memorial Stadium. Halfback Pat Patterson netted 47 yards
on 13 carries and fullback Joe Zelmanski picked up 58 yards
on I0 tries. Zelmanski also scored a three~yard touchdown
in the third period. They are starters for Buffalo today.

Buffalo players to watch today, in addition to hardrunning backs Patterson and Zelmanski, include option-style
quarterback Mick Murtha, tight end Paul Lang, defensive end
Prentis Henley, defensive tackles Dan Walgate, who weighs
262, and his parner Barry Atkinson, who weighs 252, and
stellar linebacker Mike Luzny.

Buffalo, now 1-1 after an opening game I0-7 upset-loss
at Ball State and then a 17-0 win over Xavier, has a new head
coach in Bob Deming. He is a 1957 graduate of Colgate
where he played fullback. Deming was on the coaching staff
at Houston before joining Buffalo in 1959. He served as an
assistant to Dick Offenhamer and Doc Urich. When Urich
reisgned last February to become head coach at Northern
Illinois U. Deming moved up to the top spot.

REDMEN NOTES
Massachusetts players now active in the pro ranks are
qb Greg Landry, Detroit Lions; tight end Milt Morin, Cleveland Browns; defensive end Phil Vandersea, Green Bay Packers; and defensive lineman Ed Toner, Boston Patriots . . .
Morin has made an amazing recovery from a back operation
and was activated last weekend . . . Coach Peter Broaca's
varsity soccer team opened its season this morning with a
Conference game at Maine ... Coach Ken O 'Brien's crosscountry squad started .its campaign with a tri-meet against
Northeastern and Providence this morning in Boston ... The
UMass Varsity "M " Club sponsors luncheons each Wednesday noon at the Newman Center with highlight films, comments from Coach Fusia, a scouting report and presentation
of certificates to the top Redmen performers . . . Tickets can
be purchased at the door and the luncheons are open to the
public . . . Next week's opponent here at Alumni Stadium,
Delaware, hosts Villanova today .. . The Blue Hens crushed
Gettysburg 52-0 last Saturday .. . Other games featuring
Redmen opponents last week found Boston U. blanking Colgate 20-0, Rhode Island losing to Temple 47-3 and Connecticut topping Vermont 26-6 . . . A social for Varsity M Club
members and guests and members of the athletic department
will be held after today's game in the Berkshire Club Room
of the Berkshire Commons located in the Southwest Residence Complex adjacent to Alumni Stadium off Fearing
Street.

Several Redmen players were honored for their performances in last Saturday's 49-7 win at Maine. Defensive
tackle Mark Toner was named to the weekly All East team,
defensive end Paul Toner was chosen Yankee Conference defensive player of the week, and Paul Toner and fullback Ed
Sarno were selected by the Redmen coaching staff's ratings
as the top offensive and defensive performers. Paul Toner
and Sarno received Varsity M Club certificates Wednesday
at the weekly Quarterback Luncheon in the Newman Center.
The Toners are brothers of former Red men Co-Capt. Eddie,
now a member of the Boston Patriots.
The Yankee Conference win at Maine was Head Coach
Vic Fusia 's 50th win as he starts his ninth year at UMass.
Fusia has lost only 24 times for a glittering 67"/0 that includes
a 34-6 Conference record. Only the late Harold " Kid " Gore,
who coached from 1919-27, served as many years in the head
coaching capacity.
The Yankee Conference is in its 23rd year of football
championship play. UMass has a 51-31-2 record, which is
right behind Connecticut's 51-30-6. UConn, defending cochampion, defeated Vermont 26-6 last Saturday. Other Conference records show Maine with the most wins, at 52-39-6,
New Hampshire 39-48-8, Rhode Island 36-57-6 and Vermont
18-42-2.

After the Homecoming Game, come to the AlumniFaculty Homecoming Di nner-Dance and Dixieland
at the Hutch Inn in Hadley. Cocktails at 5:00 P.M.,
the Steamboat Buffet at 7:00 P.M., and dancing to
the small hours. Tickets are $5.50 each. MAKE
CHECKS PAYABLE TO: ASSOCIATE ALUMNI,
AND MA IL TO : HOMECOMING, MEMORIAL
HALL, UNIV. OF MASS., AMHERST, MASS. 01002.

The Redmen displayed an unusually strong offense for
an opening game last Saturday. They rolled up 341 yards
rushing and 198 passing for a total offense of 539 yards that
ranks second-best in the U Mass record book only to the 651
yards totaled at New Hampshire in 1965. The sophomoreladen defense held Maine to 59 yards on the ground and
i nt~rcepted three passes. Two of the interceptions were by
sen1or safety Steve Rogers who holds the career record with
13. He also holds the game mark of four last fall at Delaware
and the season record of eight, also last year.

II

�FIRST TIME EVER! !
Every significant statistical fact of college football's first century 1s now recorded 1n
one publication . . . COllEGE FOOTBAll'S All-TIME RECORD BOOK.
A goldmine of information and history that no other publication can offer, this brand
new 1 76-page almanac features more than 25,000 facts about some 5,500 college
football players and teams. For example, did you know:
Jim Thorpe outrushed 0. J. Simpson?
Michigan scored 644 points in 610 minutes of play in 1 902?
The last change in the size of the football occurred in 1934?
Bear Bryant leads all active coaches with 187 victories?
Glenn Davis averaged 10.1 yards every time he handled the ball in his career?
Yale has won more football games (627) than any other college?
Knute Rockne and Frank Leahy lead all coaches in winning percentage?
Skipper Butler of UTexas Arlington needs four field goals for an all-time career high?
Cincinnati's Greg Cook set a 1 00-year mark of 554 yards passing in one game in 1968?
The answers, and thousands more, are all in the book that was 100 years in the
making ... COllEGE FOOTBAll'S All-TIME RECORD BOOK.
Included are 32 pages of game, season and career records for both major-college
and college-division teams and players and- for the first time anywhere- game-bygame statistical charts on such early-day greats as Willie Heston, Jim Thorpe,
George Gipp, Red Grange and the Four Horsemen. You'll find, too, year-by-year highlights of the first 100 years, pictures of many top players and coaches and illustrated
stories on 19 career and season record-holders of the modern era.
Enjoy the Centennial season even more by following the leaders and comparing them
with the all-time greats. You can do it for only $4.95.

1969- COLLEGE FOOTBALL S CENTENNIAL YEAR
1

MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY!
National Collegiate Sports Services, 420 lexington Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10017

Enclosed is $4.95 in check or money order for the College Football
All- Time Record Book.
Name ........................................................ .
Address

...................................................... .

City ............................ State .............. Zip ....... .

12

�THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON

COLLEGE FOOTBALL'S CENTENNIAL
One hundred years ago the first intercollegiate football game was played in the
United States. Since that November day when students from Princeton and
Rutgers began it all, the game has thrilled generations of Americans as players
and spectators.
During its first hundred years, football has become more than a game. It has
become a familiar and beloved part of American life and has provided an opportunity
for young boys to first learn the discipline and rewards of teamwork. The boundaries
of the one-hundred-yard field mark a special place for most Americans; a place in
which are born legends of great skill, endurance and courage.
I have always loved football. I consider the time I spent as a member of a college
football squad as one of the most rewarding periods of my life. I discovered
there- -mostly from that unique, if often frustrating, vantage point offered by the
bench- -that football is a game which engages the skills and talents of the whole
man, his spiritual as well as his physical endurance, his mental attitude as well
as his emotional conditioning.
My congratulations go to intercollegiate football--and to all those who play the
game, whether it be on a make-shift field or in the great stadiums--on its one
hundredth birthday. It is a game which not only has thrilled generations of
Americans but has also helped to develop qualities of sportsmanship and
competitiveness in those generations .

13

�15 1£. Jlrasaut

~t.

FINE FOODS . . .
Tom Jones Steak
Piccadilly Small Steak
Lady Godiva Steak
Bar-B·Q Ribs
Hot and Cold Sandwiches

Qlqnirr iitqunrs

Checquers Court, near Wendover, Buckinghamshire, England, about 30 miles
northwest of London, is the official country residence of the British Prime Minister,
and was given in trust for this purpose by Lord and Lady Lee of Fareham.

FINE DINING AND CHOICE LIQUORS

14

�by ARTHUR SAMPSON
For a former football coach who used to spend the
summer months of July and August vacationing in Maine,
the changes in college football are never more emphasized
than when visiting a New England college on a mid-summer's
day and discovering a staff of from six to I0 coaches hard
at work.
This is the IOOth anniversary of intercollegiate football
and I have been closely affiliated with only the second half
of this century-long existence. The major changes in coaching, however, have taken place during the past 40 years.
It wasn't unusual for the football coach to depart from
the college campus during the summer in the 1920's. Some
owned and operated boys' camps. Quite a number had
other full time ·\obs and coached as a sideline.
Occasiona ly, it was necessary for the coach to return
to the campus for a day or two to confer with a dean concerning a potential player's academic problems. With a few
exceptions, he did his pre-season planning at home or while
lying in a hammock at a resort.
The pre-season planning in that era consisted of diagramming the offensive plays he expected to use in the fall,
selecting the defense he preferred and classifying the players
he expected to be available according to their previous experience.
Since the assistance a football coach usually had at his
disposal in those days consisted of part-time helpers who

ARTHUR SAMPSON is well known as the dean of New England college football
writers. Sampson Is AII·New England. He was born In Weymouth, M assachusetts, and graduated from Weymouth High School and Tufts UniversitY. His
career In sparts started as coach of football, basketball, and track at M edford
High School, where he developed chamPionship teams In all of these sparts.
His coaching career continued as head football coach at Tufts and as backfield
coach at Columbia and Harvard.

FOOTBALL COACHING EXPERIENCES RADICAL CHANGES
Today, a head coach has assistants watching the play
of each position, he has others handling the substitutions, he
has some sitting in an elevated spot picking flaws in the
enemy attack and defense, and it is even being suggested to
him what plays will work and what ones should be discarded.
With all this help, most coaches prefer to wait until two
days after the game to make up their own mind on what
happened.
They make their own analysis of what took place on
Saturday only after examining carefully the slow movies on
Sunday and Monday. .
With the vast improvement in facilities and equipment
and the emphasis on specialization, football has become a
complicated squad game where one group is well trained in
the offensive tactics of each opponent, but doesn't know
much about any attack of its own. Another group spends
all its time learning a complicated attack, but knows nothing
about the various defensive tactics to be employed in a
game.
Such an arrangement requires hours of pre-season planning by the staff and numerous off the field meetings of the
candidates for the team.
Today's football is no coaching job for a head coach
with one or two part-time assistants whom he uses primarily
for demonstration purposes.
To handle all the details confronting a modern football
coach, one must assume the responsibility, directorship, and
foresight of the chairman of the board.
When a daily work schedule is necessary for a group of
defensive coaches who are teaching a wide variety of defenses and another schedule has to be designed for a group
teaching a complex offensive system, a head coach actually
becomes an organizer and a supervisor more than a teacher
nowadays.
The days when the head coach did all of the planning
and most of the teaching himself have long since gone.
This fact was vividly brought to my attention while visiting a few college practice sessions this past September.
Watching a squad of 100 candidates being trained in special
tactics on several different areas of the field one day, I
couldn't help but wonder how the late Gil Dobie, who personally and individually coached the players of both the
offense and defense during a scrimmage, would handle the
existing development of the game.

reported for work a day or two before practice started in
the fall and were seldom available except when on the field,
they participated very little in the decision of the tactics to
be employed.
Nowadays, most colleges hire not only a full-time head
football coach but a cluster of assistant coaches who are
available for work on football 12 months in the year.
"We get two weeks vacation here," one assistant coach
told me this past summer, "but we have to stagger our time
off so that there is always some of us here at the office every
day throughout the year."
Some of the major college coaches used to be business
men who didn 't even live at or near the campus except during the fall and for two or three weeks in the spring for the
purpose of holding spring drills.
Some of the small college coaches lived at the campus
the year around, but were hired to coach other sports in
addition to football so they had no time during the winter
or spring to devote to much off-season football work.
The inauguration of the use of movies as a coaching aid
in the late 20's and early 30's started to make football coaching a year around job. Then came the gradual easing in substitution restrictions which has made football a different
game and coaching it a different proposition.
One recent incident will illustrate the big change that
has taken place in the facilities provided for football now
as compared to 40 years ago when teams that had to practice after dark in the fall were often confined to a spot on
20 to 30 well worn yards of turf illuminated by a spotlight
from one or two telephone poles.
At Amherst a few weeks ago, I watched University of
Massachusetts squad hold an evening practice which was
held on three regulation gridirons completely lighted with a
full set of lights on each field.
The dependence on the study of movies for player evaluation and play analysis and the move to platoon football
and specialization are the underlying reasons for larger staffs
and year around work by the coaches.
During my days as a head coach, I had to pick my
players on what they showed me on the practice field. I had
to decide during the game whether a player was doing his
[ob properly from a seat on the sideline bench which is far
from the best spot to watch a football game.

15

�UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS 1969 FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF
(1. tor.) Dave Kelley, Bob Graham, Milt Piepul, Head Coach Vic Fusia, Dub Fesperman, George Karras, Jack Delaney.

YANKEE CONFERENCE FOOTBALL RECORDS
TEAM RECORDS
Most Points Scored
Fewest Points Scored Against

181

Total Offense !Avg. yards per game)
Total Defense Avg. yards per game)
Passing Offense (Avg. yards per game)
Rushing Offense (Avg. yards per game)
Punting Average (Per Punt)
Most Shutouts (Season)
Most Points (One Game)
Yards Rushing (One Game)
Longest Undefeated Streak
Longest Winning Streak

411
115.4
275.3
308
39.3
4
71
483
18
15

6
7

Massachusetts
Connecticut {4 Games)
Massachusetts (5 Games)
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
Rhode Island
Rhode Island
Massachusetts
Conn. vs. Mass.
Maine
UConn ( 16 wins, 2 ties)
UMass

1963
1957
1964
1965
1963
1952
1952
1951
1964
1956
1959
1956-60
1965-1968

INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
Most Points Scored
Total Offense (Season)
Yards Rushing (Season)
Yards Rushing (One Game)
Most Yards Passing (Season)
Most Passes Completed (Season)
Most Passes Caught (Season)
Most Yards by Receiving (Season)
Most TO Passes Caught (Season)
Most TO Passes Thrown (Season)
Most TO Passes Thrown (Game)

50
1295
775

306
980
80
30
30
451
4
4
4
II
4

4

Best Punt Average (Season)
Longest Punt from Scrimmage
Longest Run from Scrimmage
Longest Kickoff Return
Longest Interception Return

43.7
85
99
99
100
16

Bettencourt, Conn.
Landry, Mass.
Mitchell, Vermont
Abbruzzi, R.I. vs. N.H.
Caswell, R.I.
Caswell, R.I.
Geiselman, R.I.
Benner, Maine
Benner, Maine
Bettencourt, Conn.
O'Neill, N.H.
Morin, Mass.
DeVarney, Maine
Pappas, N.H. vs. Mass.
Whelchel, Mass. vs. N.H.
Whalen, Mass.
Serieka, N.H. vs. Vt.
Abbruzzi, R.I. vs. N.H.
Phil DeRose, Mass. vs. N.H.
D. Karponai, Conn. vs. R.I.

1952
1965
1966
1952
1967
1967
1967
1967
1967
1952
1954
1963
1965
1954
1963
1954
1963
1951
1964
1962

�UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS
No.
8
9
10
II
12
14
IS
16
17
18
20
21
22
23
24
25
30
31
32
33
34
35
40
41
42
43
44

45
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57

sa·

59
60
61
62
63
64

65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72

73
74
75
76
77

78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Name
DENNIS GAGNON
MARK GOMBAR
TOM HOLMES
MIKE MARCHEV
MARTIN EVANS
*TIM ADAMS
KEN HUGHES
MARK RUSSELL
WILLIAM POLOPEK
JOHN O'NEIL
*PATRICK SCAVONE
ANGELO DiNARDO
*JERRY GRASSO
JOSEPH LANG
BILL BUSH
MIKE SAWYER
RICHARD CUMMINGS
*EDWARD SARNO
RICHARD HEAVEY
FRANK SCHWARTZ
ROBERT CABRELLI
*LARRY FORTUNOFF
*CRAIG LOVELL
DENNIS KEATING
*DAVID DRISCOLL
DENNIS COLLINS
ARTHUR CORSALETTI
*STEVE ROGERS
*DENNIS GRAY
CURT BRISTOL
*JOHN DUBZINSKI
*BILL BYRON
*JOHN FARRELLY
MARK LEAMY
RON MARINO
DAVID LEVINE
*RICHARD DYER
JOSEPH SABULIS
EDWARD FLAIM
*JOHN MacLEAN
*BRUCE FULTON
RICHARD ETNA
JAMES KAIN
JON BORDERUD
JOSEPH RICCIO
*PIERRE MARCHANDO
BOB PENA
PETER WOJCIECHOWSKI
*RICHARD DONLIN
*MICHAEL COONEY
KEN LAPPONESE
ROBERT DONLIN
*ANDREW GUARINO
*MARK TONER
WILLIAM DeFLAVIO
*BILL SROKA
STEVE GREANEY
TONY HAYES
*NICK McGARRY
*STEVE PARNELL
*JAMES LONG
*JOHN DECEMBRELE
*THOMAS YORK
JOHN HULECKI
PAUL TONER
*RUSSELL WOOD
WALTER O'MALLEY
JAMES KELLIHER

Pos.

Class

Age

K
DB
QB
QB
QB
QB
QB
HB
HB
DB
HB
HB
HB
HB
DB
HB
FB
FB
FB
DB
DB
FB
HB
DB
DB
DB
OB

So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.

19
19
19
20
20
21
21
21
21
19
20
20
22
20
20
19
19
21
20
21
19
21
21
19
21
19
20
22
22
20
21
20
21
21
19
19
20
19
20
26
20
19
22
20
22
20
21
19
21
22
21
19
21
22
19
19
20
20
21
21
21
21
23
20
23
20
20
21

s

LB
DE

oc
oc

LB
LB

oc
oc

LB
LB
OG
MG
OG
OG
OG
OG
OG
OG
OG
OG
OT
OT
DT
OT
DT
DT
DT
DT
DT
LB
TE
SE
SE
TE
DE
DE
DE
DE
SE
DE

*Lettermen
17

1969 FOOTBALL ROSTER
Ht.
6"0"
6'1"
5'1 I"
6'0"
6'1"
6'1"
5'11"
5'11"
5'9"
6'2"
5'1 I"
6'0"
6'1"
6'1
6'0"
6'1"
6'0"
6'0"
6'0"
6'1"
5'1 0"
5'1 I
6'0"
6'3"
6'2"
6'0"
5'1 0"
6'2"
6'2"
6'1"
6'2"
6'3"
6'1
6'1"
6'2"
6'1"
6'0"
6'3"
5'1 0"
5'1 0"
5'1 I"
5'1 I"
6'0"
6'2"
6'1
6'1
6'2"
6'2"
6'7"
6'2"
6'0"
6'3"
5'11
6'1
5'9"
6'2"
6'1"
6'2"
6'5"
6'1"
6'0"
6'1"
6'1"
6'4"
6'1"
6'2"
6'0"
6'1"
II

II

II

II
II

II

II

Wt.
175
175
190
175
195
180
180
180
165
190
182
180
185
190
175
195
230
230
200
190
170
185
200
195
195
185
190
200
190
215
203
230
200
205
215 ·
225
205
210
195
205
200
218
205
215
210
230
240
230
290
235
230
230
215
225
215
218
220
220
230
184
185
218
205
220
205
205
185
210

Hometown
Willimansett
W. Springfield
Wakefield
Short Hills, N.J.
Wynnewood, Pa.
Wellesley
Denville, N.J.
Nashua, N.H.
Agawam
Abington
Worcester
Somerville
Everett
Norwood
Greenfield
Palmer
Williamstown
Waltham
Brookline
Fall River
Havertown, Pa.
Belle Harbor, N.Y.
Wellesley
Arlington
Bridgewater
Walpole
New Britain, Conn.
Springfield, Vt.
Salem
Elnora, N.Y.
Gardner
Decatur, Ga.
Bronx, N.Y.
Redondo Beach, Cal.
Bever].
Bethesda, M .
Nashua, N.H.
Gardner
Fort Lee, N.J.
Williamstown
Canton
Medford
Gloucester
Stamford, Conn.
Chelsea
Cambridge
W. Falmouth
Cheshire
New Britain, Conn.
Havertown, Pa.
Shrewsbury
New Britain, Conn.
Everett
Swampscott
Worcester
Auburn, N.Y.
Worcester
Dorchester
Arlington, Va.
Newton
Apollo, Pa.
Canton
Bedminster, N.J.
Leominster
Swampscott
Berkeley Hghts., N.J.
Clinton
Abington

�UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS 1969 VARSITY FOOTBALL
Ist row (1. to r.J Tim Adams, John Decembrele, Craig Lovell, Steve Parnell, Mark T~ner, Tom York, Ed Sarno, Jerry Grasso, John Farrelly, Dave Driscoll, Steve
Rogers, Larry Fortunoff, Andy Guarino. Second row: John Dubzinski, Ken Hughes, Marty Scheralis, Joe Lang, Jim Kelliher, Jim Long, Art Corsaletti, Bob Donlin,
Dick Donlin, Pat Scavone, Ed Sapienza, Bruce Fulton, Mike Cooney, Bill Polopek. Third row: Frank Schwartz, Bob Pena, John MacLean, Mike Marchev, Dick Dyer,
Mark Russell, Bill Byron, Russ Wood, Pierre Marchando, Bill Sroka, Peter Wojciechowski, Bill Bush, Mike Popovich, Mark Gombar, Mike Sawyer. Fourth row: Tom
Holmes, Walt O'Malley, Marty Evans, Bob Cabrelli, Dennis Keating, John Hulecki, Nick McGarry, Paul Toner, Bill DeFiavio, Joe Riccio, Jon Borderud, Angelo
DiNardo, Dick Etna, Curt Bristol, Dennis Collins, Tony Hayes, Joe Sabulis. Fifth row: Mark Leamy, Ken Lapponese, Jim Kiley, Steve Greaney, Ron Marino,
Dave Levine, Jim Kain, Dennis Gagnon, Len Fitz, John O'Neil, Dick Cummings, Dick Heavey. Sixth row: Jim Laughnane, George Karras, Dub Fesperman, Bob
Graham, Milt Piepul, Dave Kelley, Bill Smith, Vic Keedy, Jack Delaney, Vic Fusia.

�CHANGE
IS
IN
THE
WIND Shaped in a wind tunnel. ..
Refined by the wind
at Daytona, Riverside, and Darlington.
Wind-shaped. Aerodynamic. Mode to move.

1970 Torino Brougham 2-Door

1970
FORD
TORINO

More luxurious than any other
car in its class. One of the
13 new 1970 Torino modelsthe most completely changed
new cars of the year.

The most completely changed new cars of the
year-Torino. New size. Longer. Lower. Wider.
Quick and quiet. New shape. Shaped in a wind
tunnel for a new, low-drag silhouette.
Torino Brougham. Here's the one that has it
all. Distinctive new grille with Hideaway Head-

lamps. New interiors to surround you with luxury.
More luxurious than any other car in its class.
Top performance from a choice of five new V-8 's,
including the super efficient 351-cu. in. 4V. Top
it all off with a glamorous vinyl-covered roof .
Torino Brougham-sweeping its class.

TORINO
\

�Things
llllllf

go better
with Coke.
TRADE·MARK

®

�OFFENSE
85 PAUL LANG .. . .......... LE
77 CHRIS WOLF ...... . ..... LT
66 JERRY ELWELL ........ . . LG
.... C
58 CHUCK DONNER ..
68 , BILL HAYDEN . .... . .... . RG
73 TOM CENTOFANTI . . . . . . RT
RE
87 BRUCE FRASER ......
14 MICK MURTHA ....... . . QB
45 SCOTT HERLAN ........ . LH
RH
20 PAT PATTERSON .
FB
35 JOE ZELMANSKI

12
14
15
16
17
20
21
24
25
26
30
32
33
34
35
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
45
47
49
50
52
53

DEFENSE
PAUL TONER ............ LE
MARK TONER ........... LT
JOHN MacLEAN ...... . . MG
BILL SROKA ......... . ... RT
CURT BRISTOL . . . . . . . . . . RE
TOM YORK ......... . . : . LB
DENNIS COLLINS ..... . .. LB
JOHN SABULIS . . . . . . . . . . LB
BOB CABRELLI ..... . . . .. CB
BILL BUSH ...... .. ...... CB
STEVE ROGERS . . . . . . . . . . . S

BUFFALO

MASSACHUSETTS

DEFENSE
LE
90 PRENTIS HENLEY .
LT
70 DAN WALGATE .
RT
79 BARRY ATKINSON
96 TOM VIGNEAU .. .... . . . RE
56 SCOTT CLARK . . . . . . . . . . LB
32 LARRY MADDEN . ... .... LB
34 MIKE LUZNY
....... LB
59 ED KERSHAW
. . . . . . . lB
42 LEN NIXON
.. CB
.· . . . .. CB
26 JOEL JACOBS
40 TOM ELLIOTT
..... s
Punts: 17 Jack
Field Goals: 41 Constantino
22 Layo

OFFENSE
80 NICK McGARRY . .. . ..... LE
73 BOB DONLIN .. . ......... LT
62 BRUCE FULTON .... . ... . LG
56 RON MARINO ... . ... . ... C
67 PIERRE MARCHANDO ... RG
70 DICK DONLIN . . . . . . . . . . . RT
85 BOB HULECKI .. ... .. . .. . RE
14 TIM ADAMS ............ QB
22 JERRY GRASSO . . . . . . . . . LH
20 PAT SCAVONE .. . . ...... RH
31 ED SARNO .... . . . .... . .. FB
Punts: 45 Rogers
Field Goals: 8 Gagnon

•••••••

11

86
75
61
77
51
84
43
59
34
24
45

BUFFALO
Perry, QB
Grubbs, DHB
Murtha, QB
Barton, QB
Hart, P-DHB
Jack, P-QB
Patterson, HB
Woodward, HB
Zalar, DHB
Savickas, HB
Jacobs, DHB
Hernquist, FB
Madden,LB
Smith, LB
Luzny, LB
Zelmanski, FB
McCullough, LB
Chapp, LB
Kozel, FB
Elliott, DHB
Constantino, K
Nixon, DHB
Griffiths, LB
Herlan, HB
MacVittie, DHB
Faller, HB
Mosher, LB
Fortino, LB
Majcher, LB

0

•

••

SQUAD
56 Clark, LB
57 Albaneze, C
58 Donnor, C
59 Kershaw, LB
60 Carney, G
61 Elwell, G
62 Bauch, G
65 Chernega, C
66 Jones, DT
67 Forness, DT
68 Hayden, G
69 Kehr, G
70 Walgate, DT
71 Winnett, T
73 Centofanti, T
74 Rio, T
75 Murphy, T
76 Reid, DT
77 Wolf, T
78 Ellenbogen, T
79 Atkinson, DT
80 Moresco, SE
82 Endress, TE
83 Horn, SE
84 Waggoner, SE
85 Lang, K-TE
89 Sharrow, SE
90 Henley, DE

UMASS SQUAD
56 Marino, OC
8 Gagnon, K
57 Levine, OC
9 Gombar, DB
58 Dyer, LB
10 Holmes, QB
59 Sabulis, LB
11 Marchev, QB
60 Flaim, OG
12 Evans, QB
61 MacLean,MG
14 Adams,QB
62 Fulton, OG
15 Hughes, QB
63 Etna, OG
16 Russell, HB
64 Kain, OG
17 Polopek, HB
65 Borderud, OG
18 O'Neil, DB
66 Riccio, OG
20 Scavone, HB
21 DiNardo, HB 67 Marchando, OG
68 Pena,OG
22 Grasso, HB
69 Wojciechowski, OG
23 Lang, HB
70 Donlin Ri., OT
24 Bush, DB
71 Cooney, OT
25 Sawyer, HB
30 Cummings, FB 72 Lapponese, DT
73 Donlin Ro., OT
31 Sarno, FB
74 Guarino, DT
32 Heavey, FB
33 Schwartz, DB 75 TonerM., DT
76 DeFlavio, DT
34 Cabrelli, DB
35 Fortunoff, FB 77 Sroka, DT
78 Greaney, DT
40 Lovell, HB
79 Hayes,LB
41 Keating, DB
80 McGarry, TE
42 Driscoll, DB
81 Parnell, SE
43 Collins, DB
44 Corsaletti, OB 82 Long,SE
83 Decembrele, TE
45 Rogers, S
84 York, DE
50 Gray,LB
51 Bristol, DE
85 Hulecki, DE
52 Dubzinski, OC 86 Toner P., DE
53 Byron, OC
87 Wood, DE
54 Farrelly, LB
88 O'Malley, SE
55 Leamy,LB
89 Kelliher, DE

OFFICIALS
Referee: Giles Threadgold Umpire: Ronald Abdow
Linesman: John J. Daly, Jr.
Field Judge: Charles Boyle
Back Judge: Nicholas Cariglia
Clock Operator: William Halloran
Scoreboard Operator: Joseph Paradyu
"COCA-COLA" AN D "COK E" ARE REGISTER ED TR AD E-M ARKS OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY

�rea
Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
You can shave it with a razor blade like your father does.
And each time you do your beard will grow back a little more
difficult. Until one day shaving's no longer a
chore. It's an agony.
Look no further than your father's face
for proof.
But fortunately, you're catching your
beard at an early age. You can break it in to be
just as shaveable 10 and 20 years from
now as it is today.
With a REMINGTON®shaver
And if you think the kind of shave we're selling won't be
close enough for you, you're wrong.
Our new blades are sharper than anything that's been in an
electric shaver before. And there's a dial that
lets you adjust them for your skin and beard.
What's more, you can dial a REMINGTON
electric shaver into a sideburn trimmer
Admittedly, it costs more to buy our
electric shaver than a razor and some blades.
But it's a good investment.
These next few years will determine how
you and your beard will get along for the rest
R&gt;.EMINGTON
of your lives.-¢-SPE~YRAI\D®&lt;l),969S...
ELECTRIC SHAVER OIVIStON,BAIOGEPOitf,CONN(CTICUT.

+

'

�BUFFALO No.

•

Name

Pos.

QB
II *EDWARD PERRY
DHB
12 *GARY GRUBBS
QB
14 *MARK MURTHA
DHB
KIRK BARTON
15
P-DHB
LAWRENCE HART
16
p
17 *PAUL JACK
HB
20 *PATRICK PATTERSON
HB
21 *BARNARD WOODWARD
K
22
ROBERT LAYO
DHB
24 *KARL ZALAR
DHB
26 *JOEL JACOBS
FB
30
EUGENE HERNQUIST
32
LB
LAWRENCE MADDEN
33
LB
PHILIP SMITH
34 *MICHAEL LUZNY
LB
35 *JOSEPH ZELMANSKI
FB
37 STEVEN McCULLOUGH
LB
38 *GARY CHAPP
LB
39
DOUGLAS KOZEL
FB
40 *THOMAS ELLIOTT
s
41
MICHAEL CONSTANTINO
K
42 *LEONARD NIXON
DHB
43
ROBERT GRIFFITHS
LB
45
SCOTT HERLAN
HB
47
MARK MacVITTIE
DHB
49 JOHN FALLER
HB
50 **JAMES MOSHER
LB
51
CHARLES GRAVER
LB
52
JAMES FORTINO
LB
53
DAVID MAJCHER
LB
56 **SCOTT CLARK (CC)
LB
57
DENNIS ALBANEZE
c
58 *CHARLES DONNOR
c
59 *EDWARD KERHSA W
LB
60
PATRICK CARNEY
G
61
JERRY ELWELL
G
62
JOHN BAUCH
G
DAVID CHERNEGA
65
c
66 *ROVELL JONES
DT
CHARLES FORNESS
67
DT
68 *WILLIAM HAYDEN
G
69
PAUL KEHR
G
70 **DANIEL WALGATE
DT
71
WILLIAM WINNETT
T
73 *THOMAS CENTOFANTI
T
74 *JOHN RIO
T
75
WILLIAM MURPHY
G
FRANK REID
76
DT
77 **CHRIS WOLF
T
78
WILLIAM ELLENBOGEN
T
79
BARRY ATKINSON
DT
80
JOSEPH MORESCO
SE
82 **TERRENCE ENDRESS
TE
83 **RICHARD HORN
SE
84
DENNIS WAGGONER
SE
85 **PAUL LANG (CC)
TE
89
MICHAEL SHARROW
SE
90 *PRENTIS HENLEY
DE
92
DE
JOSEPH HUDSON

1969 FOOTBALL ROSTER
Class

Age

Ht.

Wt.

Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.

20
21
22
18
19
19
21
20
18
20
20
20
19
21
22
20
21
21
19
20
19
20
19
21
19
20
22
21
18
18
22
20
20
20
21
21
19
22
20
20
22
19
21
19
20
20
20
23
21
18
20
20
21
22
19
22
20
22
21

6'3"
5'9"
5'1 I"
6'2"
6'0"
6'0"
5'11"
5'9"
6'0"
6'0"
5'1 0"
5'9"
6'0"
5'1 I"
5'9"
6'1"
5'10"
5'8"
5'1 I"
5'11"
5'11"
5'1 I"
5'11"
6'2"
5'10"
5'1 I"
6'1"
5'9"
5'11"
6'1"
6'0"
6'3"
6'1"
6'2"
6'0"
6'0"
6'0"
5'1 I"
6'1"
6'0"
5'10"
6'0"
6'2"
6'2"
6'0"
6'0"
6'4"
6'3"
6'3"
6'3"
6'4"
6'2"
6'0"
6'1"
6'1"
6'0"
6'2"
6'1"
6'1"

203
173
176
181
191
175
189
189
181
180
176
197
197
193
209
200
195
200
189
183
185
182
205
198
177
196
212
190
204
208
210
215
204
198
192
200
212 .
187
222
254
200
204
272
235
210
242
223
229
213
221
252
176
200
179
188
210
171
226
222

* Varsity Letter

23

Hometown
Delmar, N.Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Endicott, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Mansfield, Ohio
Springdale, Pa.
Baden, Pa.
Peru, N.Y.
Portage, Pa.
Tiffin, Ohio
East Rockaway, N.Y.
Olean, N.Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Ridgway, Ont.
South Bend, Ind.
Center Line, Mich.
Coshocton, Ohio
Center Line, Mich.
Johnson City, N.Y.
Canandaigua, N.Y.
Jamestown, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Johnson City, N.Y.
Grand Island, N.Y.
Williamsville, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Central Islip, N.Y.
Depew, N.Y.
Ticonderoga, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Coshocton, Ohio
Elmhurst, N.Y.
East Aurora, N.Y.
Elyria, Ohio
New Kensington, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y.
Tallmadge, Ohio
Endicott, N.Y.
Akron, Ohio
Buffalo, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Lancaster, N.Y.
Grand Island, N.Y.
North Canton, Ohio
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Ottawa, Ont.
Solon, Ohio
New Rochelle, N.Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Dover, Ohio
Attica, N.Y.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Witherbee, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
New City, N.Y.

�1969 VARSITY FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF

Kneeling: Head Coach Bob Deming (Colgate '57). (1-r) First Row: Defensive line coach Warner Kleemann (Springfield '63); defensive backfield coach Rick Lantz (Central Connecticut '63); offensive line coach Jim McNally (Buffalo
'66) and offensive backfield coach Terry Ransbury (Brockport St. '61). Second Row: Graduate assistant Mike Maser
(Buffalo '69); linebacker coach Bill Dando (Detroit '59); varsity assistant and head freshman coach Joe Griffith
(Miami, 0. '61 ); graduate assistant John Doherty (Buffalo '69) and graduate assistant Rick Wells (Buffalo '68).

REDMEN!

GO! GO! CO!

20 MINUTES FROM AMHERST
Rte. 5, West Springfield
Rte. 33, Fairview
24

�COLLEGE FOOTBALL:
Over the last 100 years, millions of Americans have
played, coached, watched or worked in college football,
strengthening the foundation on which the sport is built, enriching its traditions and continuously reshaping and polishing
the game to make it a mirror of "modern" society.

-

I

First Century

place during the decade. A few years after the Wright
Brothers, college football also took to the air (via increased
use of the forward pass). And as the game's popularity
spread beyond the East, more Midwesterners and Southerners made All-America, an Indian named Jim Thorpe made
history playing for a school called Carlisle and a Norwegian
named Knute Rockne made headlines playing and coaching
at Notre Dame.

Some of the historical highlights:

~

The

1869 - The First Game. On the windy and eventful
afternoon of November 6, Princeton played at Rutgers in
New Brunswick, N.J., and that first intercollegiate football
game reflected the era's uncomplicated society. There were
few rules, no uniforms and almost as many players on the
field as spectators watching. While the couple hundred onlookers sat in their buckboards or on a wooden fence, the 25
players on each team simply peeled off their coats and waistcoats and began kicking and butting the round ball (throwing or running with it was forbidden) toward the goal posts
set 25 feet apart at each end of the 120-yard-long field.
Rutgers won the soccer-style game, 6 goals to 4.

1920s and '30s- Golden Age of Sport. In an age of
all kinds of national heroes, college football certainly had its
share. It also had its big crowds, big headlines, big names
and colorful nicknames such as the Galloping Ghost (Illinois'
Red Grange), Fordham's Seven Blocks of Granite, Notre
Dame's Four Horsemen, Tennessee's Flaming Sophomores and
Texas Christian's Slingin' Sammy Baugh. To showcase this
abundance of talent, four big bowl games in five years were
created (Orange, Sugar, Sun and Cotton), joining the older
Rose Bowl in producing post-season pageantry that captivated the country.

1880's and '90s - Refining the Rules. At a time when
individual enterprise and hard work moved mountains and
millionaires, two all-round athletes who played at Yale and
then coached college football - Walter Camp and Amos
Alonzo Stagg - did more to change the game than any
other men in history. Thanks to Camp, the "Father of American Football," some key elements were reduced (the number of players on a team to I I, the field size to I I 0 by 53
yards) and others added (putting the ball in play from scrimmage and using a quarterback, signals, a system of downs
and a numerical scoring system). Stagg, the "Grand Old
Man of Football" (he played and coach for 74 years), was
the first to use, among other things, the shift, the huddle, the
quick kick, the center snap and dozens of different formations. After Camp had the legal tackle lowered from the
waist to the knees, which made it easier to bring down the
ball-carrier, Stagg and other coaches went to work. To protect the runner, they pulled their lines and backfields into
close formations, which in turn led to such things as massmomentum plays, flying wedges, increasing roughness, bitter
feelings and downright brutality.

1940s and '50s- World War II and After. Reflecting
the might of the U.S. military in Europe and the Far East,
the West Point football team -led by its "Mr. Inside" and
"Mr. Outside," Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis - steamrollered to victory after victory and dominated the game.
After the war, with the colleges crowded with ex-Gis, the
football rules makers - purposely or not - enabled more
collegians than ever to play the game, by establishing twoplatoon play. This era also produced a second - and what
may be college football's·last- dynasty: the Oklahoma powerhouses of coach Bud Wilkinson, which rolled up separate
winning streaks of 31 and later 47 games.
1969 - Higher and Higher. Today, a century after
the first game, college football continues to keep pace with
modern wonders. While astronauts and spaceships shoot for
the moon and many Americans fly their own planes, collegians fill the air with footballs, scoring soars toward the
stratosphere and national attendance climbs toward the 30million mark. Another 25 million or so watch the weekly college games on television, marveling at the speed of 9 .4
sprinters and the grace of 260-pound linebackers via the
split-screen-slow-motion-in-color. And constantly the experimenting continues: artificial turf, Gatorade, shockproof helmets and sophisticated computers plotting play probabilities.

1900s and 1910s- Opening Up the Game. Incensed
by reports of excessive roughness, the old Roughrider himself, President Teddy Roosevelt, called college-football leaders to the White House and demanded that they stop the
brutality. Faced with reform or abolishment, college football's leaders met, instituted reforms and formed an organization that in 1910 changed its name to the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Other important changes took

What the next hundred years of college football will
hold in store for millions of spectators no one really knows,
but you can be sure the game will continue to produce thrills
and excitement that makes it the 'King of Sports'.

25

�THINI(ING
PRINTING?

C&amp; C Package

think . ....

Store

YOUR REFRESHMENT HEADQUARTERS

61 Ma in St.

Hamilton I. Newell, Inc.

AL 3-3091

NEXT TO THE TOWN HALL

65 University D rive
Amherst. Mossadm setts

GORDEN LINEN
SERVICE

MOTOR
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Welcomes the Class of 1913

North Pleasant Street,
Complete Linen Rental Service
five minutes from campus

Sheets -

Pillow Cases -

Amherst
on the Edge of University Campus

Towels

Blankets and Pillows
APPROVED

553 Main Street

NORMAN ENMAN, Owner-Manager

Call 253-3491

For Reservations: (413) 256-8111

26

�.'I

1969 BUFFALO VARSITY FOOTBALL SQUAD
11. to r.) First row: Co-captain Paul Lang, Coach Jim McNally, Coach Werner Kleemann, Coach Rick Lantz, Head Coach Bob Deming, Coach Terry Ransbury,
Coach Bill Dando, Coach Joe Griffith and Co-captain Scott Clark. Second row: Mike Luzny, Jim Mosher, Bill Hayden, Mick Murtha, Pat Patterson, Gary Chapp,
Terry Endress, Dick Horn, Paul Jack and Chris Wolf. Third row: Dan Walgate, Barry Atkinson, Barney Woodward, Frank Reid, Joe Hudson, Ed Perry, Steve McCullough, Pat Carney, Jerry Elwell, Dave Chernega and Gary Grubbs. Fourth row: Scott Herlan, Mike Constantino, *Rick Loundsbury, Ed Kershaw, Joe Moresco,
Denny Albaneze, Karl Zalar, Gene Hernquist, Tom Centofanti, Russ Plawiuk, Joel Jacobs and Joe Zelmanski. Fifth row: Rovell Jones, Prentis Henley, Chuck
Graver, *Greg Walters, *Bob Carnevale, Dave Pescrillo, Chuck Donnor, Tom Milarski, John Rio, Len Nixon, Ken Bork, Bruce Fraser and Paul Kehr. Sixth row:
Bill Winnett, Cliff Jones, Kevin Wells, Mark MacVittie, Scott Savickas, Doug Kozel, Bob Griffiths, Kirk Barton, Phil Smith, Bill Murphy, Charlie Forness, *Steve
Lipman and Bob Etherington. Seventh row: Doug Philp, Pat Bauch, Barry Vandenbergh, Bill Ellenbogen, Jim Fortino, Mike Sharrow, Joe Ziegler, Denny Waggoner,
Bob Layo, Paul Dorich, Dave Majcher, Kevin Hogan and Joe Scott. Eighth row: Larry Madden, Larry Hart, Ron Francis, John Faller, Tom Vigneau, Mike James,
Stan Siedlecki, Tom Elliott, *Dan Yacobush and Bob Stiscak. Ninth row: Manager Dan Earl, Manager Allen Wright, Trainer Ken Shield, Trainer Frank Welk, Head
Trainer Jim Simon, Coach John Doherty, Coach Mike Maser and Coach Rick Wells.

* No longer member of squad

-

· -~

.-,-

�When extra yards count, here's where Redmen boosters gain the most.

Compliments

of

POCUMTUCK PARMS
DAIRY
Deerfield,

Massachusetts

Champion Knitwear
Company, Inc.
Manufacturers of Athletic Equipment
Processed Sportswear
for Sale at University Store

115 College Avenue

Rochelster, New York

28

�This aerial view of the main campus includes the entire main campus, but there are seven additional sites within the city conducting University activity. In the immediate front of the photo are Goodyear and Clement Residences for men and women.
Bailey Avenue runs from left to right, while Main Street, leading to downtown Buffalo, crosses it at the busy college corner.

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
State University of New York at Buffalo, founded in
1846 as the University of Buffalo, is today the largest single
unit and most comprehensive undergraduate and graduate
center of State University, enrol ling 22,000 students (17,000
full-time). One of the first independent institutions of higher
learning to be established in the United States, the University
was a pioneer in adapting educational service to the specific
needs of a developing urban complex. Today, the University
is headed by a noted scholar of urban affairs, Martin Meyerson, who is the tenth chief executive officer of the University.
First chancellor of the University was Millard Fillmore,
13th president of the United States.
Building upon more than a century of public service tradition, the University has developed rapidly as a State institution since it became part of the SUNY system in 1962.
While the total enrollment has increased only 37 per
cent since 1962, the number of full -time undergraduates has
grown by 49 per cent and the full -time graduate and professional student population by 167 per cent. The number of
degrees awarded has grown more dramatically, ranging from
an increase of 200 per cent for bachelor's degrees to almost
500 per cent for Ph.D.'s. In 1969, the University conferred
2,544 bachelor's degrees, 91 I master's degrees, 219 academic doctorates and 274 doctorates in the professions.
The character of the student body has changed as profoundly as its size. In the Fall of 1959, 30.5 per cent of entering students ranked in the top one-fifth of their respective
high school classes. Of those entering in the Fall of 1968,
86.7 per cent ranked in the top quintile. Similar improvements have taken place in the quality of graduate students.
The University has recently implemented a bold new
academic play, reorganizing its schools and colleges within
seven interdisciplinary facilities - arts and letters, educa tional studies, engineering and applied sciences, health sciences, law and jurisprudence, natural sciences and mathematics, and social sciences and administration. All undergraduate instruction is offered through one division, the
University College, while the School of Graduate Studies is
expected to become the central coordinating body for all

higher degree programs, professional and academic, beyond
the baccalaureate level. A third University division, Millard
Fillmore College, administers evening credit programs and
continuing education for adults. To provide year-round operation, the Summer Sessions coordinate academic offerings in
three overlapping terms, June through August.
Dramatic as the recent growth and innovation have
been, the most significant period of development in the University's history is just beginning.
The seven broadly interdisciplinary faculties will incorporate and build upon traditional disciplines while identifying
and implementing both new combinations of standard disciplines and new fields of study and research. A series of nondegree granting "colleges" to be established in the next several years will provide for student centers of identification
a~d a diversity of opportunity for intellectual exchan9e, a.nd
w~ll .serve as a vehicle for fostering pe:sonal relat1~nsh1ps
~1th1n a large university. A program of v1gorous recruitment
I S based upon competitive salary levels and bolstered by a
climate of encouragement for creative academic pursuits and
enriched body of faculty scholars. The level of achievement
of the student body can be expected to keep pac.e with these
overall qualitative developments as enrollment 1ncreases to
approximate 40,000 by 1975, with particular growth at the
graduate level. Constant attention will also remain focused
on building a distinguished undergraduate program as the
foundation for an execllent graduate center.
Germane to a ll these intellectual prospects is the vista
of an entirely new University campus, designed especially to
facilitate implementation of educational objectives. This complex will be developed on a I ,300-acre tract in the Town of
Amherst, three miles north of the present campus. The project, which will provide 14,?00,0?0 square ~eet of education,al
space, is expected to beg1n taking shape 1n the early 1970 s.
Upon its completion, the present 178-acre Main Street ca mpus at the Northeastern edge of Buffalo will be devoted to
expanded research activities and will serve also as the site of
one of the largest centers of continuing education activities
in the nation.

29

�SCORES HIGH

IN HOSPITALITY AND SERVICE
WE OFFER
CONFERENCE ROOMS
AIR CONDITIONED

CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
SPECIAL FAMILY PLAN

TWO DOUBLE BEDS IN ALL ROOMS
COMMERCIAL RATES

,

233 N. PLEASANT ST., AMHERST

Phone 253-9511

LIQUOR AND FOOD DELIVERY SERVICE

In the heart of town

tomlinson
BUILDERS •

REMODELERS

100 MT. WARNER ROAD • HADLEY. MASSACHUSETIS

OUR WINNING TEAM

QUALITY MATERIALS AND SKILLED CRAFTSMEN -

30

�BUFFALO

Barry Atkinson

Thomas Centofanti

Scott Clark

Charles Donnor

Thomas Elliott

John Faller

William Hayden

Prentis Henley

Scott Herlan

Joel Jacobs

Paul Lang

Michael Luzny

James Mosher

Mark Murtha

Leonard Nixon

Thomas Vigneau

Daniel Walgate

Patrick Patterson

Chris Wolf

Joseph Zelmanski

�......

WHATEVER

You

PLAN

CALL THE MAN AT PETER pAN

REDMEN AND GALS RELAX WITH
PETER PAN

32

�The Band will open the Sounds of Silence show with this amoebic wedge entrance from the sidelines.

1969 UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS MARCHING BAND
John A. Jenkins, Director; Larry Weed, Assistant Director
Frank Ruggiero, Drum Major
PREGAME SHOW

FIGHT MASSACHUSETTS
TWILIGHT SHADOWS
AMERICA
STAR SPANGLED BANNER
HALFTIME SHOW: THE SOUNDS OF SILENCE

ANNOUNCEMENT: Ladies and gentlemen, students are deeply involved in the controversy of today. Simon and Garfunkle have presented our students' ideas in music
which is appreciated by all ages. In tribute to these artists and to our students, the
University Marching Band presents "The Sounds of Silence."
Amoebic wedge entrance

THE SOUND OF SILENCE

ANNOUNCEMENT: In contrast to their usual social commentary, Simon and Garfunkle
radiate optimism in " Feelin' Groovy." We feature twirlers Andrea, Darragh and
Carolyn.
59TH STREET BRIDGE SONG

Twirier feature

FAKIN' IT

Cornet feature

ANNOUNCEMENT: In a unique and current social commentary, let's play psychedelic
tic-tac-toe.
Psychedelic squad drill

MRS. ROBINSON

ANNOUNCEMENT: As the show finale, our band will present its own imaginative
setting of the Simon-Garfunkle favorite: "Scarborough Fair."

..

Percussion feature and concert finale

SCARBOROUGH FAIR
33

�REDMEN REPORTS!
Full coverage, in-depth reports and stopaction photos of all UMASS games in the
Gazette each week. First in football and
first in sports in Hampshire County.
GET ALL THE SPORTS IN THE

DAILY HAMPSHIRE GAZETTE
"Hampshire County's DAII.Y Newspaper"

BEST WISHES REDMEN !
From

*: Mortgage

&amp;

*: Savings Accounts - Quarterly Dividends
*: Savings Bank Life Insurance
PersoiUll Loans

NORTHAMPTON INSTITUTION FOR SAVINGS
Two Convenient Locations

*

*

109 MAIN STREET
DIAL 584-0997

34

BIG Y SHOPPING CENT£R

�CHARTING THE OPPONENTS
Sept. 20

MAINE
Away
Sept. 27

BUFFALO
Home
Oct. 4

DELAWARE
Home
Oct. 11

BOSTON U.
Away
Oct. 18

RHODE ISLAND
Home
Oct. 25

CONNECTICUT
Away
Nov. 1

VERMONT
Home
Nov. 8

HOLY CROSS
Home
Nov. 15

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Away
Nov. 22

BOSTON COLLEGE
Away

1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

5
3
5
5
2

3
6
5
3
7

1
0
0
1

0

Series Boston U. 8-6-0
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

GO

Five-Year Record
vs. UMass
W
L
T
3-21
3
5
0
9-30
0
8
0
7-10
4
5
0
10- 8
8
1
0
0- 6
5
3
0
Series UMass 10-4-1
23- 0
7
3
0
No Game
6
4
0
No Game
5
5
0
18- 6
5
3
2
22-24
4
4
1
Series Buffalo 2-1-0
8
3
0
28-23
2
7
0
No Game
6
3
0
No Game
5
4
0
No Game
4
.5
0
No Game
Series Delaware 3-0-0

3
6
0
6
2
1
1
7
1
2
7
0
3
7
0
Series Rhode Island 23-18-2
4
6
0
5
4
0
2
6
1
3
6
0
4
4
1
Series UMass 22-17-0
3
6
0
3
5
1
6
2
0
6
2
0
7
1
0
Series UMass 19-5-2
3
6
1
5
5
0
No
6
3
1
2
7
1
5

5

0

U-MASS
IFOUIIR.

SEASONS
PARTY &amp;

21- 7
0-24
7-12
18-34
7-28

COLD BEER
HEADQUARTERS
ROUTE 9 HADLEY

14- 9
24-28
9-H
0-3(•
0- 7
Outfitters

27-20
14-35
6-12
7-20
0-30

to
College Men
and Women

0-49
0-21
21-27
6-41
7-28
47-20
Game
16-14
0-27
6-25

Series Holy Cross 11-6-4
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

6
2
0
5
3
0
2
6
0
0
8
0
1
6
1
Series UMass 17-10-3
6
4

3
6

0
0

4
6
0
6
4
0
6
3
0
Series Boston College

35

16- 0
13-14
7-14
0-46
0-47

21- 6
25- 0
14- 7
No Game
No Game
4-3-0

ljl

·/
i

1.&gt;1

·-(!
•·I

ifnunr
®f

I

'on the Village Green'

Amherst, Mass.

�Want to Impress Your Date?

DINE HER and WIN HER
She'll appreciate your good t aste in the choice of the distJinotive surroundings and
gourmet food at the Lord Jef&gt;f. Luncheons from $1.75, !Dinners from $3. up.

The Lord Jeffery
William H. Clifford, Innkeeper
Telephone 253-2576
If visiting friends or relatives prefer superior overnight accommodations, they'll
be pleased if you arrange for them to stay here. Cocktail lounge. Excellent facilities for banquets, meetings, wedding receptions.

On the Village Common

AMHERST, Mass.

LOUIS FINE FOODS
AMHERST, MASS.

RALPH T. STAAB, INC.
FUEL OILS - HEATING SYSTEMS - AIR-CONDITIONING
AMHERST ROAD, SUNDERLAND, MASS.

TELS. Amherst 549-1000 &amp; S. Deerfield 665-3818
FOR THE WEATHER FORECAST TELEPHONE

256-67 1~

Serving Hampshire &amp; Franklin Counties For Over 35 Years

36

�STADIUM INFORMATION
MAY

WE HAVE YOUR COOPERATION PLEASE! As guests of the University today, your cooperation is requested in maintaining the dignity
and reputation of the institution.
We request that you observe the rules and traditions of this University and of the state and local laws which make it illegal to bring
on consume alcoholic beverages of any kind on this campus.

REST ROOM FACILITIES: Ladies' and Men's rest room are located on both
ends of the facilities building which is located just beyond the flagpole on
the South end of the stadium.

Bottled By
Pioneer Valley
Ginger Ale Co., Inc.
Northampton, Mass.

TICKETS: The ticket office in Room 255 Boyden Building is open each weekday during the football season from 9:00a.m. to 6 :00p.m. and on Saturday
of home football games from 9 :00 a.m. to 12:00 noon. Stadium ticket booths
pen at 12:10 p.m.

584-4191

LOST AND FOUND: All lost and found items should be turned in at the First
Aid Office which is located in the facilities building.

KELLEY'S
LOBSTER HOUSE
"It's Known
For Miles Around"

Featuring

ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM: No special announcements are made over the public address system except in cases of extreme
emergency. If any emergency does arise go to the press box and give the
message to the attendant on duty.
PRESS BOX: The University of Massachusetts press box is for the use of the
working press only, and admission is limited to newspapermen, radio, and
television men and those assigned for specific duties.
REFRESHMENTS STANDS: Refreshment stands are located on each corner of
the stadium plaza. Listed prices are - Hot dogs 35¢, pop corn 20¢, ice cream
20c, peanuts 20c, soft drinks 25c, coffee 15c, candy 20c, potato chips and
Fritos 20¢, grinders 60¢.

STEAKS
LOBSTERS

ITALIAN CUISINE

PASS OUT GATE: Spectators who must leave stadium due to an emergency
and wish to re-enter during the game, MUST obtain pass from Gate Supervisor on West side of stadium.

Race &amp; Appleton Streets
Holyoke, Mass.

TELEPHONES: Public telephones are located on West End (Press box side) of
facilities building.

Reservation" 534-7281

Banquet Rooms and Private
Parties

When leaving the stadium after today's game, may we request your
cooperation with the parking attendants as well as the local and state police.
Just a little patience will make it possible for all cars to leave with a minimum of confusion - and please drive safely and sanely.

37

�Amherst Concrete

4UDII'S

W)L

INCOAPOAATED

Plant:
Railroad Street, Amherst, Mass., ALpine 3-7891

Tobacco Shop
MAGAZINES

REDIMIX CONCRETE
WA SHED SAND &amp; GRAVEL

OFFICE:
2420

BOSTON

MONARCH OUTLINES

SKIBISKI REALTY
SKIBISKI INSURANCE
SERVICE, INC.
R OAD

NORTH WILBRAHAM
MASSACHUSETTS

PIPES REPAIRED

FOR ALL YOUR
INSURANCE - REAL ESTATE
NEEDS

Tel. AL 3-7896

MAIN OFFICE (5 min. U of M)

SUNDERLAND, MASS.
TI[L£PHON E

LYR IC

6:30A.M.- 10 P.M.

Tel. 253-7222

6 · 3964

Branch: 57 Federal Street
Greenfield 773-7176

After The Game
RAISE MONEY

HOWARD JOHNSON'S

FOR YOUR FRATERNITY OR CLUB

Motor Lodge
Restaurant

FUND RAISING SERVICE
GUARANTEED SALE OF CANDY
PREMIUMS GIVEN
FOR SALES PROMOTION

Cork &amp; Bottle Lounge

FUND RAISING DIVISION

• 58 Luxuriously Decorated Rooms
• Landmark For Hungry Americans

E &amp; J CIGAR CO., INC.

• Lineman Size Drinks

1 Mile South of Stadium
Intersection of Routes 9 &amp; 116
for reservations call 586-0114

Northampton, Mass.

38

584-3900

�CODE OF OFFICIALS SIGNALS
Offside &lt;Infraction
of scrimmage or
free kick formation)

Illegal Motion

Helping the Runner,
or Interlocked
Interference

Illegal Procedure
or Position

Illegal Shift

Ineligible Receiver
Down Field on Pass

or Handling Ball
Forward

Clipping

Ball Illegally Touched,
Kicked, or Batted

Roughing the Kicker

Incomplete Forward Pass,
Penalty Declined,
No Play, or No Score

•

Ball Dead; If Hand
is Moved from Side
to Side: Touchback

Touchdown or
Field Goal

~

\
Illegally Passing

Substitution
Infractions

Loss of Down

Forward Pass or
Kick Catching
Interference

. ....,

'

(

:' ,'

-'(&gt; Start the Clock

.(~/
Non-contact Fouls

Illegal use of
Hands and Arms

Safety

Delay of Game

First Down

'

Balf Ready for Play

Personal Foul

Player Disqualified

Intentional
Grounding

Illustrations courtesy Collegiate Commissioners Association

�(

MARK OF EKCEllENC£

Big cars cost big money•••
That's the way it was.

OnTheMove.

0. J. Simpson with his big, reasonably priced 1970 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe.

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496152">
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              </elementText>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496154">
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496155">
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496156">
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          <element elementId="41">
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                <text>September 27, 1969 - Official Program 50 Cents</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text> Massachusetts Alumni Stadium</text>
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          <element elementId="39">
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
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          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496163">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
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          <element elementId="47">
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                    <text>1969 SCHEDUlE
MASS.
SEP1. 27 KEN1 S1 A1E
*OC1. 4
DAY10N
*OC1. 11
HOL'l' CROSS
OC1. 18 \1\RG\N\A 1ECH
tOC1. 25
1EMPLE tHC)
1
*N0\1.
BOS10N
N0\1. 8
\1\LLAN0\1 A
N0\1. 22
*Home games
.
tWar Memoria\ Stad\um

BUFFALO
XAVIER
vs.

September 20, 1969

�Cavern Spring Water-Clean Water,
Naturally Perfect Brewing Water,
gives Simon Pure Beer its perfect
blend of flavor and refreshment.
Tht William Simon Brewery, Buffalo, New York

��The Williamsville Inn
SEE THE ALL NEW

located in the heart of the Historic Niagara Frontier,
situated in the center of Williamsville, N. Y.
with its quaint shops and modern
shopping facilities.

1970 LINCOLNS and MERCURYS

70 COLOR-KEYED, SOUND AND AIR-CONDITIONED
GUEST ROOMS

at

SPECIAL STUDENT FAMILY RATES

e
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BOULEVARD MALL
LINCOLN-MERCURY

•

INDIVIDUAL HI-FI SYSTEM
COLOR TELEVISION
TELEPHONES
QUEEN SIZE BEDS
LIMOUSINE TO AIRPORT
DINING ROOM - LIVE MUSIC

5447 Main Street
634-1111

3900 MAPLE ROAD
ACROSS FROM JENSS IN THE MALL

HOTEL SERVICE - MOTEL CONVENIENCE
Free Parking

The Souncl System for toclay's game
is proviclecl by ..

FOOTBALL HEADQUARTERS

UJqr 1£nrb i\mqrrst

LARKIN SOUND SERVICE

MOTOR MOTEL

PUBLIC ADDRESS - INTERCOM

500 MAIN ST.

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14226

and PHONE SYSTEMS

Exit 50, Main St. West. N. Y. Thruway

Phone 716-839-2200
Air and Sound Conditioned Rooms, T.V., Radio, Dining Room
Coffee Shop, Cocktail lounge, Banquet Rooms

977 Niagara Street

Member Quality Motels, Inc. - AAA Rated Excellent

Buffalo, New York

SHERIDAN-AMHERST MOTORS INC.
A.M.X.
JAVELIN

AMBASSADOR

HORNET
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JIM PICONE, President

GOOD LUCK BULLS

One of the world's leading
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two

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AMERICAN MOTORS
DEALERS

�e

10
Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
You can shave it with a razor blade like your father does.
And each time you do your beard will grow back a little more
difficult. Until one day shaving's no longer a
chore. It's an agony.
Look no further than your father's face
for proof.
But fortunately, you're catching your
beard at an early age. You can break it in to be
just as shaveable 10 and 20 years from
now as it is today.
With a REMINGTO~ shaver
And if you think the kind of shave we're selling won't be
close enough for you, you're wrong.
Our new blades are sharper than anything that's been in an
electric shaver before. And there's a dial that
lets you adjust them for your skin and beard.
What's more, you can dial a REMINGTON
electric shaver into a sideburn trimmer
Admittedly, it costs more to buy our
electric shaver than a razor and some blades.
But it's a good investment.
These next few years will determine how
you and your beard will get along for the rest
of your lives.~S?E~RA~~c,•••s. ..
~"~~..~.§.1..!. 2c~.

�THE

U. B. BOOSTERS
INVITE ALL

ALUMNI and FRIENDS
TO

WHOOP IT UP
AT THE

POST GAME TUN K
Immediately Following Each Home Game
Iroquois Beer- Pop- Chips- Pretzels- Peanuts
Featuring THE U.B. BLUES

DONAliON: $1.50 Per Person

Faculty Club
four

Dress - As You Are

�Stadium Information
YOUR COOPERATION PLEASE- As guests of the University today, your cooperation is required in
maintaining the dignity and reputation of the University. It is requested that you observe the rules and regulations of the institution.
WE WELCOME YOU to this University of Buffalo athletic contest and invite you to relax and enJOY
exciting intercollegiate competition with our respected opponent.
On behalf of the athletic department, its staff and the players we welcome you.
Dr. Lawrence A. Cappiello
Director, Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics

REST ROOM FACILITIES: Ladies' rest rooms
are situated at the north ends under the
Bailey Avenue and main stands. Gentlemen's
rest rooms are situated at the south ends
under the Bailey Avenue and main stands.

Buffalo's Rotary Field
(Dedicated - 1930)

TICKET I FORMATION: The ticket office
in Clark Gymnasium is open each weekday
of the football season from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m
On game days the main ticket window is
open from 9 a.m. to the kickoff. Tickets may
also be reserved on Friday night before a
home game from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.

.,

HUOfNH

LOST AND.FOUND: All lost and found items
should be reported to the U / B Campus Police.
The Campus Police main office is in the Service Building on Winspear Avenue.
REFRESHMENT BOOTHS: There are three
refreshment areas in the stadium. The locations are - practice field entrance (Gate 1),
Bailey Avenue entrance (Gate 3) and at the
north end of the Bailey A venue stands.

your all-star
financial center
~!*

~UERVIC~~
~BANK~

lf--¥®

Member : Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

*

Savings accounts
* Checking accounts
*Auto loans
* Home improvement loans
Mortgage loans
* Commercial loans
* Vacation loans

*

BANK oF BUFFALO
• BANK OF BUFFALO- - 17 Court at Pearl • EAST
SIDE Office - - 694 Ftllmore at Broadway • SOUTH SIDE
Office -- 2157 Seneca near Cazenovia • TOWN OF
TONAWANDA Office- -4248 Delaware at Dreyer
• TOWN OF AMHERST Office-- 4954 Harlem at
Sheridan • TOWN OF CHEEKTOWAGA Office-- 3817
Union at George Urban • TOWN OF WEST SENECA
Office -- 4184 Seneca at Mill Road • STUYVESANT
PLAZA Office -- 274 Elmwood at Summer • KENMORE
Office - - 2858 Delaware at Mang.

�more
excitin •I

GOHR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY INC.
80 METCALFE STREET, BUFFALO, NEW YORK
853-2121

six

�BARTLETI BUICK BOOSTS THE BULLS

The U/ B Athletic Department is grateful to the management of BARTLETT BUICK, 380 Main St.,
for the use again this football season of a 1969 Opel Kadett. The popular "Bull Wagon" serves the
staff and press box during games and makes road appearances around the nation. Thank you Bartlett
for supporting the Bulls.

/IV THE BUFFALO PRESS BOX
The Office of Sports Information would like to thank the staff at
A. B. DICK COPY - DUPLICATING PRODUCTS, 842 Kenmore Avenue, for
its continued service and help in the Rotary Field press box. Play-by-play
and statistical services are supplied by A. B. Dick.

New Dominick &amp; Dominick Conference includes
Amherst-the home financial team is practicing at

99YEAR OLD D&amp;D
MAKES TOUCH-DOWN IN
151 YEAR OLD AMHERST

15 Rock Street (one block east of Cayuga), Williamsville ,
New York 14221. The quarterback there is H. Bernard
Hammill , Manager. You ' ll get world -wide service and
financia l knowledge . There are more than 1000 D &amp; D
people all su ited up , wa it ing on the side lines to help
tackle your financial problems .

I

Get In Touch.

gg~~~!~~~~c~,e~?MINICK
1122 Marine Trust Bldg., Buffalo 14203, 856-7471
In Amherst : 15 Rock Street, W ill iamsville, 634-151 5

Mernbers New Y ork and other m ajor Stock Exchanges

seven

�BUFFALO ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION

DR. LA WRE CE A. CAPPIELLO
Brockport State '49, Indiana '56
Director, Physical Education, Recreation &amp; Athletics

HOWARD L. (Dan) DANIELS
Air Force Retired '68
Business Manager &amp; Promotion Director

I

GERALD R. GERGLEY
Buffalo '61
Wrestling

DR. LEONARD T. SERFUSTINI
Buffalo '50
Basketball &amp; Golf

EMERY J. FISHER
Buffalo '51
Cross-Country &amp; Track

JOSEPH E . STAEBELL
Equipment Manager

eight

RICHARD E. BALDWIN
St. Lawrence '54
Director, Sports Information

--rl..
SIDNEY SCHWARTZ
Buffalo '40
Fencing

WILLIAM MONKARSH
Buffalo '60
Baseball &amp; Basketball Assistant

EDWIN D. MUTO
Buffalo '50
Basketball Assistant

DR. EDMUND J. GICEWICZ
Buffalo '52
Athletic Physician

NORBERT A. BASCHNAGEL
Buffalo '65
Basketball Assistant

WILLIAM H. SANFORD, III
Buffalo '49
Swimming &amp; Tennis

JAMES E. SIMON
Buffalo '50
Trainer &amp; Physical Therapist

-

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for all
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you're entitled
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If you haven 't had a cigarette in at least a year,
it' ll cost you less to buy new life insurance
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cigarettes I pipes and ogars are OKl are better
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Thruway Exit 57 N. Y. S. Thruway
Hamburg, New York 14075

LEO H. LESS &amp; ASSOCIATES
STATE MUTUAL OF AMERICA
600 Liberty Bank Building

Phone 71~9-8100

Buffalo, New York 14202

nine

�(1-r) : Front - Captain Diane McMahon '71, Spring Valley, N . Y.; Sue Pierotti '71 , Williamsville, N . Y .; Cheryl Mayo '71, St. Albans,
N . Y. ; and Rita Yousey '71, Lowville, N . Y . Middle - Linda Luccioni ' 71 , Elmont, N . Y .; Kathy Mclane ' 72, Lowville, N . Y .; and
Alice Cypin '72, Levittown, N. Y. Top - Jan Anderson ' 72, Corry, Pa.

ten

�CHEERS for the largest selection of quality paperback
and hard cover books in Western New York.
CHEERS for a complete array of sweatshirts, ceramics,
cards to send home to mother (some not to
send home to mother), stuffed animals and
campus necessities.
CHEERS for an exciting collection of glassware bearing
the grand old UB emblem (a collector's item).

THE

UNIVERSITY

BOOKSTORE

•

I

I

eleven

�The John W.
Cowper Co.
IN CORPORATED

Engineers - Contractors

•
873 -4200
Post Office Box 1068
1945 Sheridan Drive
Buffalo, New York 14240

Locksmiths - Safe Experts

SIEGFRIED

852-2769
853-2737

The Safe, Lock &amp; Key Corp.
" Call us to discuss any lock problem"

CONSTRUCTION

204 PEARL STREET, BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202
SA LES -

INSTALLATION - REPAIR

CO., INC.

Safes, Locks, Keys, Door Closers

•

CARL L. ANDERSON, INC.

6 N. PEARL STREET

Distributors - Consultants

INTERIOR

DESIG~ERS

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202
Office Furniture -

Draperies -

Carpeting

886-2300
2222 ELMWOOD AVE.

twelve

875-2830

�. . . . 69

Buffalo Football News
BUFFALO vs. XAVIER
Rotary Field, 1:30 P.M.

September 20, 1969

Editor: Richard E. Baldwin, Directo r a f Sports Information
Local Advertising : Goodrich Pri nting &amp; Lithographers
Nationa l Advertising : Spencer Advertising, New York
Contri butors: U/ B Information Services, J im DeSantis, ECAC Se rvice Bureau, National Collegia te Sports
Services, Bob Powell, Dick Johnston, Spencer Advertising Company, NCAA Public Relations CammiHee,
Ch ris Kabel, Dan Daniels, Jack Cherry and the Xavier Office of Sports Information
Photography: Ed Nowak, Rick Swenson, Xavier DSI Office and U/ B Information Services.

contents
DEPARTMENTS
Stadium Information

5
Today's Officials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
6

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Buffalo Athletic Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

8

The Cheerleaders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Ultra-Chron 18214. automatic
calendar, 1Ok gold filled case
and link bracelet, $165.

~~

~11!11111-

Composite Scoreboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Xavier Coaching Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Official Xavier Team Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Starting Game Line-ups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Center Spread
Official Buffalo Team Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Buffalo Coaching Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Xavier Players . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 &amp; 3 1
Buffalo Fall Sports Scoreboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Buffalo Players . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 &amp; 39 &amp; 4 1
1969 Football Program Patrons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
1969 Buffalo Squad Photo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
College Football Officials' Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

FEATURES
The History of College Football (Danzig) .......................... : 15-16
In the Bullpen with Johnston &amp; Powell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Featuring Defense - Buffalo Linebackers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
1969 College Football Rules Changes (Geiges) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

LONGINES
LONGINES-WITTNAUER WATCH COMPANY

Longines-Wittnauer Building, New York

Special Report- Xavier University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Order Blank - NCAA Football Record Book . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
The Bulls Salute AI Aversano

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0

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0

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th irteen

32

�G
YOUR

TO DAY'S
· OFFICIALS
REFEREE
ALFRED M. DiSTOlADetective sergeant in
the Syracuse (N. Y.) Po·
lice Department, current-

ly assigned to commun ity

relations

in

conjuc-

tion with his duties as
physical training instruc-

tor . Active basketball official. Christian Brothers
Academy where he played and coached . Selected (1966) by Parade Magazine to receive
recognition as one of the nation 's ten outstand-

ing police officers.

UMPIRE
DONAlD W . HOGAN A native of Endicott,
N. Y., he is a senior mechanical engineer in the
General Products Division of IBM . Attended
Broome Tech and Harpur
College.

DO.

LINESMAN
CliFFORD l. FAIRSupervisor with the
County of Allegheny in
the Department of Parks
and Recreation . Resides
in Pittsburgh, Pa . Attended Salem (W. Va .)
College . Active in footboll and basketball officials groups .

FIELD JUDGE
WilSON J. MclEARYEmployed by Bethlehem Steel Corporation in
Johnstown, Pa. Member
af Johnstown Area Rec reation Authority . Three
years ETO service with
Second Field Artillery .
Active basketball official.

BACK JUDGE

-

R ich Products Corp.

fourteen

THOMAS W . GIBBONSResides in Carthage,
N. Y., where he serves
as chairman of the Social Studies Department
of Carthage Central
School. Coach of base ball and teaches history.
Graduate of leMoyne
with additional work at
Syracuse, St. lawrence and Oswego St. Baseball letterman at leMoyne. Active basketball
official.
CLOCK OPERATOR: Edward T. Kubiak (Canisius)

�The History of College Football
ON THE PLAYING FIELDS of Rugby came the genesis of the American
game of football.
Had not, in 1823, a schoolboy at the
famed English Public School by the
name of William Webb Ellis taken it
into his head on the spur of the moment to run with a ball kicked by
the opposing side, thereby outraging
propriety with this shocking violation of the rules, soccer might have
continued the only style of football
played in Britain and on the North
American continent. Then and there
(or some days later, when the indignant outcry had changed to a feeling
that maybe the revolutionary blackguard had something) was born the
game of Rugby football, or rugger, in
which running with the ball is permitted.
Had not, a half century later, Harvard University, also by chance,
played a style of football that had
elements of Rugby, soccer (Association football) might have remained
the pastime on our college campuses,
and our own style of game might not
have evolved as a predominantly
running and, later, forward passing
game. It was a form of soccer, with
twenty-five on a side, that Princeton
and Rutgers played in the first game
of intercollegiate football in this
country November 6, 1869, at New
Brunswick, N. J. It was soccer that
Yale and Columbia also played a
century ago.
Because its football differed from
the game of the others, Harvard declined to join in the first intercollegiate rules convention at the Fifth
Avenue Hotel in New York October
19, 1873, at which rules modeled after those of the London Football Association (soccer) were adopted. It
turned for competition to McGill
University of Montreal, which played
the football of the English Rugby
Union. Two games in the spring of
1874 with McGill at Cambridge, and
a third in the fall at Montreal, sold
Harvard completely on Rugby and
led, at long last, to the most famous
of all college football rivalries in the
country-the Harvard-Yale game, or
THE GAME.
The Crimson and the Blue met for
the first time November 13, 1875, at
Hamilton Field in New Haven, Conn.,
under "Concessionary Rules," playing a hybrid game of Rugby and soccer, with fifteen on a side and a
round soccer ball. Harvard was the
winner over a Yale team that scarcely knew what it was all about. A
year later, they met in Rugby, with
Yale converted to Harvard's style of
football and Harvard giving in to

Yale's demand for eleven on a side.
They played with an egg-shaped
leather ball on a field 140 yards by
70, and Yale won, one goal to none.
That same year, 1876, Princeton,
won over to Rugby, called a convention at Massasoit House in Springfield, Mass. Yale, Harvard, Columbia
and Princeton representatives
formed the American Intercollegiate
Football Association. They adopted
the code of the Rugby Football Union except for a scoring change, the
game being decided by a majority of
touchdowns and a goal being equal
to four touchdowns.
The die was now cast: Football was
to become a running as well as kicking game, and the way was cleared
for the evolution of football into a
game indigenous to the United States.
The man who led in that evolution,
whose creative, inventive mind came
up with the fundamental changes
and whose leadership in getting them
adopted brought about the development of a game of imagination, strategy, skill, speed and daring far surpassing the rather elemental structure and concepts of Rugby, was Walter Camp of Yale. He was the first
giant of American football, the father
of the game, and he helped to set the
highest standard of sportsmanship by
precept and personal example.
Camp was a contemporary of Amos
Alonzo Stagg (the most inventive of
all coaches, the Grand Old Man
whose coaching career spanned three
score and ten years until he retired
in 1960 at the age of 98, and who died
at 102 in 1965). A man of rugged
honesty and stern simplicity, Camp
was of the Spartan mold. From the
time Camp attended a rules convention in 1878 as a Yale player, he was
a member of every rules committee
until his death in March, 1925.
The first of his most far-reaching
changes came in 1880. This was the
substitution of scrimmage for the
Rugby serum. Two years later came
the adoption of his system of downs
and yards to gain-at first 5 yards in
three downs, then 10 in 3 (1906) and
finally 10 in 4 downs (1912). These
two revolutionary innovations
changed the basic structure of football and brought about a new concept and format of the game. The
principle of possession of the ball was
established and that was the most
fundamental departure from Rugby,
in which the ball changes hands endlessly, often in a matter of seconds.
Also in 1880, Camp won his long
fight to reduce the number of players from 15 to 11.
With the introduction of scrimmage, the quarterback made his ap-

by ALLISON DANZIG

pearance and also there came a new
method of putting the ball in play.
Instead of being heeled out in a melee of rival Rugby packs, it was given to the offensive center and he
snapped it back with his foot to his
quarterback.
With possession and control of the
ball, planning and strategy became
impor:tant. Also in 1882, the field was
reduced from 140 by 70 yards to
110 by 53 1/3 and took on the gridiron
appearance with the horizontal lines
every five yards for the measurement of first downs.
Simultaneously, Camp devised the
system of signals and worked out the
accepted arrangement of the eleven
players-7 forwards, a quarter, two
halfbacks and a fullback. A year
later he introduced the numerical
scoring system, assigning point values for the methods of scoring-5 for
a field goal, 4 for a goal after touchdown (try), 2 for a touchdown and 1
for a safety (made by opponent).
In 1884, another of the fundamental features of American football became established without actually being sanctioned by legislation. This
was interference or blocking. Princeton had been using convoys at the
sides of the carrier since 1879 and
now sent them ahead, a clear violation of Rugby's "offside," but passively accepted and then, in 1888,
legalized by implication.
In 1888 came the last of ·Camp's
fundamental changes that created the
structure of the American game prior
to the legalization of the forward
pass in 1906. This was permitting
tackling below the waist.
When the line constricted, the backs
-formerly spread across the fieldhad to close in also, for protection
against the deadly low tackle. Thus
resulted the close formation that
became standard- the original T,
from which a quarter century later
Notre Dame was to shift into the box
and which, approximately another
quarter century after, was to have
its revival in the modern version as
employed with sensational success
by Stanford University.
No one foresaw it at the time, but
this particular change in 1888 was to
bring about a game so brutal and hazardous as to lead to outcries for the
abolition of football. As a consequence, the far-reaching rules
changes of 1906 legalized the forward
pass and resulted in an open game so
imaginative and thrilling with its
speed, deception and skilled maneuvers as to win millions of new followers.
(Continued on next page)

fifteen

�PART TWO
THE OPEN GAME of running, lateral passing and kicking that constituted American football in the 1880s,
after the introduction of the fundamental departures from Rugby of the
scrimmage, the system of downs, and
blocking, came to an end with the
legalizing in 1888 of the low tackle
anrl the constricting of linemen and
backs from a spread to a close formation (the T). The game was now
to become a dull, unimaginative test
of brute strength, a game of increasing roughness as dangerous mass momentum plays were devised.
Designed to bring linemen into the
backfield and thrust a ponderous
mass of flesh at the enemy, such
plays jammed, tugged and catapulted
the ballcarrier through the opposing
m"assed barrier. Casualties mounted
alarmingly and fatalities resulted.
Alonzo Stagg, the most prolific of
football's inventors, conceived the
first of these mass momentum plays
while coaching at Springfield (Mass.)
College in 1890-1891. This was the
ends-back formation assault. In 1884
Princeton had used a wedge play on
the kick-off, dropped it, and revived
it in 1888. Lehigh had the "V trick,"
but Stagg's was the first, fast-moving
mass assault from scrimmage, and it
was the momentum that made the
mass plays so dangerous.
In 1891 Stagg also devised the
"turtleback" (which some credit to
Harvard in 1893) and then in 1892 at
Harvard, Lorin Deland, a chess player and follower of Harvard football,
came up with his sensational "flying
wedge". By 1893 virtually everyone
was using this dreaded kick-off maneuver, which added momentum to
the Princeton wedge and Lehigh V.
Also in 1892, Dr. Harry Williams, a
Yale graduate coaching Penn Charter school, who was later to invent
the Minnesota shift, introduced his
"revolving wedge". Then in 1894,
George Woodruff, a Yale teammate
of Stagg, devised as coach at Pennsylvania the remarkably effective
"guards back" formation. With it,
Penn challenged the supremacy of
Yale, Princeton and Harvard and
from 1894 to 1898, won 65 of 66
games, scoring 1,957 points to its opponents' 120. The year before, 1893,
Woodruff had introduced flying interference by pulling linemen into
the backfield and starting them ahead
of the ball carrier before the ball
was snapped.
Phil King's "ends back" in 1893
and "revolving tandem" in 1896 at
Princeton, Stagg's "tackles back" at
Chicago in 1894, Williams' "tackle
back" in 1899 and Camp's "tackle
back" at Yale in 1900 were other ex-

amples of the mass momentum plays.
The Deland flying wedge had become
the standard opening play of the
game by 1893. With the other mass
momentum procedures gaining followers, football so increased in
roughness, and injuries mounted so
alarmingly, that the season ended in
an uproar of protests. The Army and
Navy departments abolished the
service academies' game. Yale and
Harvard were nearing a split, and so
were Princeton and Penn.
At a meeting of Yale, Harvard
Princeton and Penn representatives
in New York Feb. 23, 1894, drastic
changes were made. The flying
wedge, Princeton wedge and Lehigh
V were banned. It was prohibited
for more than three men to start
before the snap of the ball and for
members of the offensive team to
group more than five yards behind
the line. The kick-off had to travel
at least 10 yards to be in play. Nevertheless, the game continued to be
so rough that Yale and Harvard
broke relations after their 1894 game
and Cornell's team was restricted to
its campus.
In 1895, Camp of Yale and Alex
Moffat of Princeton invited Harvard and Penn to a meeting. Yale
and Princeton were for doing away
entirely with mass play while Harvard and Penn were all for retaining
it. They were divided too on playing
graduates, Yale and Princeton being
against it. They split, and so in 1895
there were two set of rules, Cornell
joining Harvard and Penn, Navy siding with Princeton and Yale.
There was a growing dissatisfaction in the newly football-conscious
Middle West with the East's &lt;;ontrol
of the game. In 1896, the colleges
which organized into the Western
Conference projected a program of
their own in which they were to
adopt the freshman rule, limiting
varsity eligibility to three years; require a year's residence for transfers;
abolish training tables; and set up
faculty control of athletics.
To meet the challenge of the West,
the rival groups in the East agreed
in the summer of 1896 that ( 1) no
member of the offensive side shall
take more than one step toward the
opponents' goal without coming to a
full stop, and (2) at least five players
shall be on the scrimmage line when
the ball is snapped. Momentum was
thus reduced, but football continued
to be a rough and uninteresting game
of close-order mayhem in which
brute force, rather than speed and
deception, was the prime factor.
Additional changes were made to
reduce injuries. In 1903, seven men
were required on the offensive line
of scrimmage between the 25-yard
lines. In 1904, six were required in

all situations. Still the injuries continued and in 1905 the casualties
were such that football came under
its heaviest attack for its brutality
and foul play. The Chicago Tribune
reported 18 fatalities and 159 other
injuries for the season. Columbia
University abolished football for 10
years. Northwestern suspended play
for a year. California and Stanford
dropped football for Rugby.
President Theodore Roosevelt sum-·
moned representatives of Yale, Harvard and Princeton to the White
House and requested steps be taken
to clean up the game and save it.
Late in 1905, at the invitation of
Chancellor Henry M. McCracken of
New York University, representatives of 28 colleges met in New York
and, led by Captain Palmer E. Pierce
of the United States Military Academy, formed an association which was
the forerunner of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. It named
a rules committee which met with
the older group headed by Camp. The
two merged into the American InterCollegiate Football Rules Committee
and on January 12, 1906, this 14member joint committee adopted the
far-reaching changes that were to
radically alter the pattern of play,
reduce the hazards and ultimately
bring about the modern open game.
The most revolutionary and exciting change, of course, was the legalizing of the forward pass, which was
to make the game far more spectacular and attractive. In 1903, and again
in 1904, John Heisman had written
to Camp, urging the pass be put in
the game. In 1904, Dr. Harry Williams, a member of the Rules Committee, argued for legalizing it. At
the fateful 1906 meeting he, Lieut.
Paul J. Dashiell of the United States
Naval Academy and Lehigh, and
John C. Bell of Pennsylvania were
leaders in the winning fight. Eddie
Cochems, coach of St. Louis University, was another early advocate.
In addition to legalizing the pass,
the 1906 meeting ( 1) established a
neutral zone (the length of the ball
in width) separating the opposing
lines, which had stood toe-to-toe,
cheek-by-jowl in combat, (2) prohibited hurdling, (3) increased the
distance to be made in three downs
from five to ten yards, ( 4) prohibited
guards, tackles and the center from
playing in the backfield unless at
least five yards back, (5) reduced
the playing time from 70 to 60 minutes, divided into halves.
Severe restrictions were put on the
forward pass. It had to be thrown
from at least five yards behind the
line and cross the line at least five
yards to the right or left of where
the ball was put in play. Failure to
complete a pass resulted in the loss
(Continued on page 28)

�•

the BULLPEN with

BOB POWELL
Buffalo Courier Express

I shook the snow from my coat and walked
into the sports department.
It was basketball weather and that's where
I had been. As I walked by the telephone switchboard, the operator handed me a message.
"Call Terry Endress at U/ B," it said.
The story of the round ball game I witnessed
out of the way, I put through the call to Terry.
"Frank Reid and I are forming a committee to
help back the student fee referendum," the U/ B
junior said. "But we don't want any personal
publicity. We don't even want publicity for
football.
"We are simply attempting to formulate a
campaign that will insure the future of athletics
-all athletics, Mr. Powell-here at school.
"Sure, football has helped Frank and I and
many others but as students we realize the value
of all athletics."
Terry wasn't the first athlete I've ever heard
make such statements, but there was something
very un-phoney about what he was saying. At
any rate, I believed him-possibly because I have
the same feelings.
At the time of the phone call, UB athletics
were in a turmoil. Doc Urich had only recently
resigned and the future of football, basketball,
fencing, swimming and the other extra-curriculars,
operating under funds provided by student fees,
were wobbly.
The newly-formed committee wasn't seeking
space in either Buffalo newspaper, Terry said.
Mostly they were looking for ideas and a little
encouragement.
"One thing we'd like to change is the campus
image of the athlete. We're a little tired of being
looked upon as 'animals' because we participate in
athletics," he said.
Terry and Frank and a cross-section of the
student population organized a successful campaign that accomplished its aim. The student fee
system was restored to its previous level by the
students.
Dick Horn, another footballer, helped the
effort by projecting the athletes' side of the issue
in the campus newspaper.
Quite obviously, the threesome didn't do it
alone. It took the consolidated efforts of many
students, athletes and non-athletes.
But isn't it interesting that athletics at the
State University of New York at Buffalo was returned to firm footing as the result of the early
cooperation of two OHIOANS (Endress and Horn)
and a CANAD IAN (Reid) ?

DICK JOHNSTON
Buffalo Evening News

Xavier's Musketeers, playing football in Buffalo for the first time today, also are opposing the
Bulls of UB for the first time in any sport.
The Musketeers are well-known to local sports
followers, however, for their basketball teams have
appeared on Memorial Auditorium doubleheaders
against teams from the Little Three. Back in the
days when the Little Three played football, Xavier
played a few grid games against Canisius, Niagara
and St. Bonaventure. The only game against Canisius, in 1937, was played in Cincinnati.
Like the Bulls, the Muskies are attempting to
rebound today. They lost to Miami of Ohio last
week in their opener, 35-7, while UB was losing
to Ball State, 10-7.
That game was Irv Etler's debut as Xavier
coach, just as the Ball State contest was Bob
Deming's inaugural as UB coach. Etler, an Xavier
Alumnus, like Deming was elevated to the head
coaching job after serving as an assistant.
Seven members of the Xavier team which won
six of ten games last season signed pro contracts
including John Shinners, who received All-Americ~
recognition at guard.
Etler has a good nucleus back, however, including Jerry Buckmaster, who is in his third
~eason as regular quarterback. Buckmaster completed 55 per cent of his passes over the last two
seasons, for 2300 yards and 15 touchdowns. He
had only 18 of 320 passes intercepted over that
span but last week he had two stolen on his worst
passing day as a Musketeer.
Both of those interceptions led to Miami
touchdowns. Buckmaster, who completed 7 of
14 for 51 yards, threw nine yards to Danny Dever,
5-8 flanker, for Xavier's touchdown.
The Muskies, like UB, found the going tough
on the ground. They netted only 28 yards rushing,
19 of them by Ivy Williams, 180-pound halfback
from Fort Pierce, Fla. Williams has speed and
also is effective inside.
One back, Ray Baur, was badly shaken up
in the first half against Miami and is a doubtful
starter today, as are linebacker Tom Bachman and
defensive halfback Vic Nolting, both hurt in the
opener.
A Buffalonian, Mike Herr, from Canisius
High School, is a starter at offensive tackle for
Xavier for the second straight year. He's a big
boy, 6-3 and 230 pounds, who made All-Catholic
before heading for Cincinnati, where he's a junior
majoring in education, minoring in French and
making good marks.

seventeen

�Featuring Defense - Buffalo Linebackers

U/8 BULLS {1-r): senior co-captain Scott Clark (outside); junior Ed Kershaw (swingman); senior Mike Luzny (inside); senior
Gary Chapp (inside); senior Jim Mosher (outside) and senior Steve McCullough (inside).

1969 Buffalo Composite Schedule
S.pt. 1l

I All STATE

XAVIEI

WON

10-7

LOST

35-7

MASSA01USEOS

KENT STATE

DAYTON

WON

u .u
LOST

14-U

Sept. 27

Oct. 4

Oct. 11

IUTLU

AKRON

INDIANA S.

EVANSV'"ILLE
h•oftl'&lt;'ille

of

of

lic:h•ond

Mvnde

Akron

M11n&lt;ie

BUffALO

KENT STATf

CINCINNATI

OHIO UNIV

No~t .

1

MIDDLE TENH

O.Kalb

Mwncie

VIllANOVA

DAYTON

8

No• 15

ILLINOIS

EAST MICHIGAN

No•

so.

Carbondale

No .... 22

Muncie

QUANTICO

TOLEDO

of

of

of

of

of

of

of

Cincinnati

Cincinnati

Athen1

Cincinnati

Dayton

Cincinna ti

Cincinnati

MAINE

IUffALO

ltHODE ISLAND

CONNECICUT

VERMONT
of

of

of

Amhe nt

Starn

AmherJt

AmherJt

Dwrhom

TOLEDO

LOUISVIllE

MARSHALL

MIAMI (0)

HOLY CROSS

NEW HAMI'SHII!E

DElAWARE

BOSTON UNIV

of

of

Orono

A• he rd

A'"he r1t

loll on

OHIO UNIV.

XAVIEI

IUffALO
of

of

of

of

Athens

Cindnnoti

Buffalo

Koloft'loloo

K•nt

Toledo

Kent

Kent

IC•nt

MIAMI (0, )

BOWLING GREEN

LOUISVIllE

BUffALO

NO. ILLINOIS

AKRON

XAVIER

VILLANOVA

TOLEDO

Doytofl

louinille

Buffalo

Ooytofl

Doyton

Doyton

Villono ...o

Toledo

BUffALO

SYRACUSE

of

of

Of

WESTEIN MICH . IOWLING GREEN

BOSTON COLL.
of
Che1tn~o~t

Hill

of

Doyton

HARVARD

DARTMOUTH

COLGATE

VIllANOVA

MASSACHUSETIS

RUTGERS

CONNECTICUT

of

of

of

(ofl'lbridt•

Hono'&lt;'er

Ho,..ilton

Worcester

Syrocu••

Worce ste r

Afl'lhent

Worcest•r

Storrs

WAKE fOREST

RICHMOND

KENTUCKY

SO. CAROLINA

BUffAlO

WM. &amp; MARY

FLOIIOA ST.

DUlCE

of

of

of

of

of

of

lichfl'lond

Blod:sburg

Blocktbure

Buffalo

loonolr.e

Bloclr.tbure

Norfolk

WAYNE ST

BUCKNEll

HOfSTIA

DELAWARE

BUffALO

GETTYSBUIG

NOITHEASTEIN

of

of

Blocksbure

Winston-Soleft'l

IHOOE ISLAND

WM . &amp; MAIY

of

BOSTON UN IV.

of

of

of

of

of

of

of

of

of

of

ICineston

'hilodelphio

,hilodelphio

lewisbure

,hilodelphio

Ne wark

Buffalo

,hi lodelphio

lo1ton

,hiladelphio

VILLANOVA

AI MY

,ENN STATE

IUffALO

VlltGINIA MIL

MASSACHUSEnS

of

of

Ch•tlnut Hill

W•tl 'oint

Uni'&lt;'. 'ark

Ch• •tnut Hill

Ch•tlnut Hill

Ch•slnut Hill

NAVY
tOSTON COLLEGE

Oct. 25
NO. ILLINOIS

of

ALABAMA

TEM, LE

Oc:t.

lvffolo

HOLY ClOSS

VIRGI N IA TECH

18

S.pt. 20

EAST KENTUCKY

TULANE

of

of

Che tlnut Hill

Ch• •tnul Hill

BUFFALO vs. THE 1969 SCHEDULE - WON 20, LOST 17, TIED 2 (3 New Series)
BUffALO
of

VILLANOVA

Villono ...o

No .... 19 - Xa...i..- "''· T•ao• W•st• rn at El 'o•o
Virtiflio l•dt "''· Vir•inia Milito,., at loonok•

eighteen

Holy Crou "'' · lo•ton Coli. ot Worc• •t• r

�The Xavier Coaching Staff

TONY D. LANHAM
Offensive Backfield

JAMES F. LOUDER
Head Freshman Coach

HAROLD DYER
Defensive Assistant

JOHN (Whitey) SCHROCK
Assistant

IRVIN A. ETLER
Head Coach
Irvin A. (Irv) Etler, 33, was named head football coach
at Xavier University by the Very Rev. Paul L. O'Connor,
S.J., President, on January 31, 1969, succeeding Ed Biles in
that capacity who resigned to take a position as assistant
coach with the New Orleans Saints.
Etler is a 1962 graduate of the University with a B.S.
Degree in Education and becomes the third graduate of
the University to become head football coach. Etler is
the ninth football coach in the school's history.
Irv was born November 4, 1935 in Covington, Ky. and
graduated in 1955 from Erlanger, Ky., Lloyd High School
where he won sixteen (16) letters in football, basketball,
baseball, and track.
Etler then attended Allen Military Academy Prep in
Bryant Station, Texas where he played football under the
late Jim McKenzie who at the time of his death two years
ago was the head football coach at the University of Oklahoma. In 1956 Etler entered the United States Marine
Corps and played service ball for Camp Pendelton and 29
Palms, California prior to his discharge in 1958.
He then enrolled at Xavier University and was a threetime letterman playing quarterback on offense and halfback and safety on defense. As a quarterback Etler
completed 76 of 187 passes for 1150 yards and nine
touchdowns and ranks ninth on the Musketeer all-time
passing list.
Following his graduation in 1962 Etler spent one
season as backfield coach at Senior High in Mansfield,
Ohio, before returning to his alma mater in 1963 as Freshman Football Coach and in two seasons compiled a record
of 5-5-0. Since 1965 Etler has been a varsity assistant serving as defensive backfield coach in 1965 and 1966 and as
defensive co-ordinator in 1967 and 1968. In the past four
seasons the Xavier pass defense has ranked 17th, 2nd,
lOth and 11th in the nation among the 119 colleges playing
major football.

GILBERT J. STURTZEL
Offensive Line

KENNETH CALHOUN
Defensive Backs

ROBERT SCHOENHOFT
Assistant

nineteen

�1969 Xavier Football Roster

No.
Player
Fucillo, Tony
10
11
Brady, Dan
12
*Myers, Dave
Thompson, Stan
13
15 **Buckmaster, Jerry
20
Huwer, Geoff
21 **Baur, Ray
Fisher, Rick
23
24
Williams, Ivy
25 • *Otting, Gene
27
Langcaster, Ray
• Jackson, Buddy
28
32
Cogan, Ed
33
*Mutryn, Dale
34 •coughlin, Kevin
35 **Mauch, Jerry
41
McCormick, Jon
42
Nolting, Vic
43
Abranowicz, Joe
44
Feichtner, Denny
45
Brophy, Jim
46
*Dever, Dan
47
Hoffman, Bill
50
Doherty, Jim
51
• Bazzol i, Steve
*Murray, Ron
52
*Bachman, Tom
55
*DelVecchio, Tony
56
60 **Kerley, Ken
61 **Blackwell, Ken
Shriner, Fred
62
Kupanoff, Trif
63
64
Lilly, Dan
Louder, Dan
65
Fantauzzo, John
66
67 **Pilcavage, Jerry
Albers, Tim
68
Ladenburger, Greg
69
70
Smyth, Mike
Marunski, Dale
71
72
*Fuller, Dan
73
Campbell, Jim
*Herr, Mike
74
77 • • Renard, Tim
78
Hyland, Gil
Wright, Dave
79
80 **Murray, Jim
81
*Ohradzansky, Joe
82
Barry, Pat
Bernhard, Eugene
83
Chapman, Jim
84
Prater, Joe
85
Radenheimer, Ron
86
Huber, Ed
87
Murphy, Mike
88
*Prinz, Woody
89
*Varsity Letter(21)

Pos.
DHB
QB
QB
DHB
QB
FLK
TB
DHB
HB
DHB
HB
DHB
LB
FB
LB
LB
FB
DHB
FLK
DHB
FB
FLK
DHB
c
c
c
LB
LB
LB
G
DE
G
G
DHB
DHB
G
G
G
T
DT
DT
DT
T
T
T
DT
TE
TE
SE
DE
DT
DE
TE
SE
DE
DE

Cl.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.

P.S.
Bus.
Ed.
Man.
His.
Ed.
Psych.
Ed.
Ed.
Bus.
Bus.
His.
Ec.
Ed.
Ed.
Bus.
P.S.
P.S.
Man.

Age
20
19
20
19
22
19
21
20
20
21
22
20
19
20
21
21
19
21
20
19
20
20
19
19
20
20
20
22
22
21
21
19
20
21
20
20
20
20
21
21

Ed.
Ec.
Mark.
Phys.
Bus.
Com.
Com.
Bus.
Man.
Ed.
Ed.
Bus.
Fin.
Man.

21
21
19
20
21
22
19
19
22
19
21
19
21
22

Major
Ed.
Bus.
Ec.
Ace.
Ed.
Bus.
Man.
Ed.
Math
Bus.
Dent.
His.
I.R .
Com.
Ed.
Com.
I.R .
Ec.
Dent.

Ht.
5-9
6-0
6-2
5-11
6-2
5-9
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-9
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-11
6-1
5-8
6-1
6-0
6-1
6-5
5-10
6-2
5-10
6-4
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-0
5-11 ·
6-4
6-2
5-11
6-2
6-2
G-5
6-4
6-3
6-4
6-3
6-4
6-3
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-3
6-0
6-2

Wt.
175
190
205
185
181
185
200
180
180
185
181
185
211
195
202
201
197
191
175
190
205
165
180
195
196
220
200
205
190
223
185
215
205
185
190
235
210
210
200
220
240
235
230
252
240
240
220
200
195
225
220
205
205
195
195
215

School
Winthrop HS
St. Mary HS
St. Joseph HS
No. College Hill HS
Moeller HS
Memorial HS
Elder HS
Colerain HS
John Carroll HS
Elder HS
Harbord HS
Moeller HS
Fenwick HS
Holy Name HS
Johnson City (Tenn.)
Moeller HS
Bishop Hoban HS
Lockland HS
Catholic HS
Roger Bacon HS
Campion Prep
St. Joseph HS
St. Joseph HS
Elder HS
St. Joseph HS
Woodward HS
LaSalle HS
Moeller HS
Elder HS
Hughes HS
Moeller HS
Catholic HS
Gonzaga HS
LaSalle HS
Roger Bacon HS
Benedictine HS
Moeller HS
Newport Catholic
McNicholas HS
Holy Name HS
Catholic HS
Roger Bacon HS
Canisius HS
Catholic HS
Elder HS
St. Ignatius HS
Elder HS
St. Edward HS
St. Edward HS
St. John HS
Elder HS
Senior HS
Newport Catholic
Catholic HS
LaSalle HS
Barry HS

Hometown
Winthrop, Mass.
Sandusky, Ohio
Dover, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
St. Marys, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Ft. Pierce, F Ia.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Toronto, Ont.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Chicago, Ill.
Cleveland, Ohio
Northboro, Mass.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Akron, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Stuebenville, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Arlington Hts., Ill.
Cleveland, Ohio
Fremont, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Dover, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Springfield, Ohio
Washington , D.C.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Southgate, Ky .
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Springfield, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Buffalo, N . Y .
Toledo, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Lakewood, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Kenton, Ohio
Ft. Thomas, Ky.
Newport, Ky.
Cincinnati, Ohio
St. Petersburg, Fla.

--"OFFICIAL WATCH FOR, THIS GAME- lONGINES -THE WORLD"S MOST HONORED WATCH"
--_JM~~--~~.~~~------~~~~~~----

twenty

�CHANGE
IS IN THE
WIND Shaped in a wind tunnel. ..

Refined by the wind
at Daytona, Riverside, and Darlington.
Wind-shaped. Aerodynamic. Made to move.

1970 Torino Brougham 2-Door

1970
FORD
TORINO
The most com pletely cha nged new cars of the
year-Torino. New size. Longer. Lower. Wider.
Quick and quiet. New shape. Shaped in a wind
tunnel for a new, low-drag silhouette.
Torino Brougham. Here's the one that has it
all. Distinctive new grille wi th Hideaway Head-

More luxurious than any other
cor in its class. One of the
13 new 1970 Tor ino modelsthe most completely changed
new cars of the year.

lam ps. New interiors to surround you with luxury.
More luxurious than any other car in its class.
Top perfo rmance from a choice of five new V-8's,
includi ng the super efficient 351-cu. in. 4V. Top
it all off with a glamorous vinyl-covered roof.
Tori no Brougham-sweeping its class.

TORINO

�Things

go better
with Coke.
TRAO£ MARK®

�85
77
61
58
68
73
80
14
45
20
35

Defense
84 TOM CHAPMAN .... . . . . LE
72 DAN FULLER ........... LT
71 DALE MARUNSKI . . . .... RT
88 MIKE MURPHY ......... RE
56 TONY DEL VECCHIO .. . LLB
35 JERRY MOUCH (CC) ... MG
34 KEVIN COUGHLIN .. . .. RLB
42 VIC NOLTING (CC) . ... . HB
23 RICK FISHER ... . . . ..... HB
25 GENE OTTING . . . ....... S
28 BUDDY JACKSON .. . ... CB

Offense
PAUL LANG (CC) ....... TE
CHRIS WOLF . . ......... LT
JERRY ELWELL ..... .. .. LG
CHUCK DONN OR . . . ... . C
BILL HAYDEN . .. ... . ... RG
TOM CENTOFANTI .... . . RT
JOE MORESCO ..... . . . SE
DENNY MURTHA . . . .. .. QB
SCOTT HERLAN ... .. .. . LH
PAT PATTERSON . .. .... RH
JOE ZELMANSKI ...... . . FB

BUFFALO

XAVIER

Defense
PRE NTIS HENLEY . . ... . .. LE
DAN WALGATE .. ... . .. LT
BARRY ATKINSON .. .. .. RT
TOM VIGNEAU . . . . .... . RE
SCOTT CLARK (CC) ... . OLB
LARRY MADDEN .. ... .. ILB
MIKE LUZNY ..... . .. .. IRB
JIM MOSHER .... . .... ORB
42 LEN NIXON .... . ...... LH
26 JOEL JACOBS ........ . RH
40 TOM ELLIOTT . . ... . .. . .. S

80
74
67
51
61
77
82
15
21
33
43

90
70
79
96
56
32
34
50

THE BULLS SQUAD
55 Siedlecki, lB
11 Perry, QB
12
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
22
23
24
26
27
28
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
43
42

45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53

54

Grubbs, DHB
Murtha, QB
Barton, DHB
Hart, S-DHB
Jack, P-QB
Philp, QB
Patterson, HB
Woodward, HB
layo, K
Francis, DHB
Zalar, DHB
Jacobs, DHB
Wells, DHB
Plawiuk, HB
Stiscak, HB
Hernquist, FB
Madden, lB
Smith, lB
luzny, lB
Zelmanski, FB
Scott, HB
McCullough, lB
Chapp,lB
Kozel, FB
Elliott, S
Constantino, K
Griffiths, lB
Nixon, DHB
Herlan, HB
Hogan,S
MacVittie, DHB
Jones, S
Faller, HB
Mosher, lB
Graver, lB
Fortino, lB
Majcher, lB
Conaway, lB

56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73

74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
87
89
90
92
93
95
96
99

Clark, lB
Albaneze, C
Donnor, C
Kershaw, lB
Carney, G
Elwell, G
Bauch, G
Bork, G
Ziegler, lB
Chernega, C
Jones, DT
Forness, DT
Hayden, G
Kehr, G
Walgate, DT
Winnett, T
Milarksi, T
Centofanti, T
Rio, T
Murphy, G
Reid, DT
Wolf, T
Ellenbogen, T
Atkinson, DT
Moresco, SE
Dorich, TE
Endress, TE
Horn, SE
Waggoner, SE
lang, TE
Fraser, SE
Sharrow, SE
Henley, DE
Hudson, DE
Etherington, DE
James, TE
Vigneau, DE
Pescrillo, DT

Offense
JIM MURRAY (CC) . .. .. . TE
IKE HERR . . .... . ....... ST
JERRY PILCAVAGE . . ... SG
STEVE BAZZOLI . . .... . .. C
KEN BLACKWELL . . . ... OG
TIM RENARD .... . ... . . OT
PAT BARRY ....... ... . SE
JERRY BUCKMASTER .... QB
RAY BAUR (CC) ... . ... . HB
DALE MUTRYN .... . . . .. FB
JOE ABRAMOWICZ .... FLK

THE MUSKETEER SQUAD
10
11
12
13
15
20
21
23
24
25
27
28
32
33
34
35
41
42
43

44
45
46

47
50
51
52

55
56

Fucillo, DHB
60
61
Brady, QB
62
Myers, QB
Thompson, DHB 63
Buckmaster, QB 64
65
Huwer, FlK
66
Baur, TB
67
Fisher, DHB
68
Williams, HB
69
Otting, DHB
langcaster, HB 70
71
Jackson, DHB
72
Cogan, lB
Mutryn, FB
73
74
Coughlin, lB
Mouch, lB
77
McCormick, FB 78
Nolting, DHB
79
Abranowicz, FlK80
Feichtner, DHB 81
82
Brophy, FB
Dever, FlK
83
Hoffman, DHB 84
Doherty, C
85
Bazzoli, C
86
R. Murray, C
87
Bachman, lB
88
DelVecchio, lB 89

Kerley, lB
Blackwell, G
Shriner, DE
Kupanoff, G
Lilly, G
louder, DHB
Fantauzzo, DHB
Pilcavage, G
Albers, G
ladenburger, G
Smyth, T
Marunski, DT
Fuller, DT
Campbell, DT
Herr, T
Renard, T
Hyland, T
Wright, DT
J. Murray, TE
Ohradzansky, TE
Barry, SE
Bernhard, DE
Chapman, DT
Prater, DE
Radenheimer, TE
Huber, SE
Murphy, DE
Prinz, DE

"COCA-COLA" AN D "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY

�Chrysler weather has arrived Falling leaves
take off on the wind - and our 1970 Chrysler
Corporation lineup takes the field.
For a starter, Plymouth 1970 makes it with
the Rapid Transit System: The fabulous
Barracuda Series. Valiant Duster 340. And the
imperturbable Plymouth GTX.
Or you could be Dodge material. Find out

with a run in the cars with the bumblebee stripe:
The Challenger. Charger 500. Dart Swinger 340.
Coronet Super Bee.
The loaded lineup. Performance on wheels,
waiting for the moment you take over.
And while you're thinking about it-relax,
sit back and enjoy the game.

CHRYSLER
CORPORATION

Plymouth · Dodge· Chrysler· Imperial • Dodge Trucks· Simca ·Sunbeam

�1969 Buffalo Football Roster
Pas.
No.
Player
OB
*Perry, Edward
11
DHB
*Grubbs, Gary
12
OB
14 **Murtha, Mark
DHB
tBarton, Kirk
15
P-DHB
tHart, Lawrence
16
p
17 **Jack, Paul
OB
tPhilp, Douglas
18
HB
20 **Patterson, Patrick
HB
*Woodward, Barnard
21
K
tLayo, Robert
22
DHB
Francis, Ronald
23
DHB
*Zalar, Karl
24
DHB
*Jacobs, Joel
26
DHB
Wells, Kevin
27
HB
tPiawiuk, Russell
28
HB
Stiscak, Robert
29
FB
Hernquist, Eugene
30
tMadden, Lawrence
LB
32
LB
tSmith, Philip
33
LB
*Luzny, Michael
34
FB
*Zelmanski, Joseph
35
FB
Scott, Joseph
36
LB
McCullough, Steven
37
LB
*Chapp, Gary
38
FB
tKozel, Douglas
39
*Elliott, Thomas
s
40
K
Constantino, Michael
41
DHB
*Nixon, Leonard
42
LB
Griffiths, Robert
43
HB
45
Herlan, Scott
s
Hogan, Kevin
46
DHB
MacVittie, Mark
47
s
t
Jones,
Clifton
48
HB
Faller, John
49
LB
50 **Mosher, James
LB
Graver, Charles
51
LB
tFortino, James
52
LB
tMajcher, David
53
LB
Conaway, Daniel
54
LB
tSiedlekci, Stanley
55
LB
56 ** Clark, Scott (CC)
c
Albaneze, Dennis
57
c
*Donnor, Charles
58
LB
*Kerhsaw, Edward
59
G
Carney, Patrick
60
G
Elwell, Jerry
61
G
tBauch,John
62
G
Bork, Kenneth
63
LB
Ziegler, Joseph
64
c
Chernega, David
65
DT
*Jones, Rove II
66
DT
Forness, Charles
67
G
*Hayden, William
68
G
tKehr, Paul
69
DT
70 **Walgate, Daniel
T
tWinnett, William
71
T
Milarski, Thomas
72
T
*Centofanti, Thomas
73
T
*Rio, John
74
G
Murphy, William
75
DT
Reid, Frank
76
T
77 **Wolf, Chris
T
tEIIenbogen, William
78
DT
Atkinson, Barry
79
SE
Moresco, Joseph
80
TE
tDorich, Paul
81
TE
82 **Endress, Terrence
SE
83 **Horn, Richard
SE
tWaggoner, Dennis
84
TE
85 ** Lang, Paul (CC)
SE
87
Fraser, Bruce
SE
Sharrow, Michael
89
DE
90
* Henley, Prentis
DE
92
Hudson, Joseph
DE
93
Etherington, Robert
TE
James, Michael
95
DE
*Vigneau, Thomas
96
DT
Pescrillo, David
99
*Varsity Letter (28, including four from 1967
tFreshman numerals
MANAGERS: Allen Wright '72 (Mt. Vernon,

Cl.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
- Grubbs,

Major
P.E.
P.E.
Bus.
Med.
L.A.
Chern.
Engr.
L.A.
P.E.
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
L.A.
His.
L.A.
L.A.
Bus.
L.A.
L.A.
Geo.
P.E.
L.A.
Soc.
P.E.
L.A.
Bus.
Phar.
P.E.
L.A.
P.E.
His.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
His.
L.A.
Bus.
Bus.
L.A.
P.E.
Soc.
L.A.
P.E.
L.A.
Soc.
Ant.
His.
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
Psych.
L.A.
His.
L.A.
P.E.
Engr.
His.
P.E.
L.A.
Bus.
Bus.
Soc.
L.A.
P.E .
Bus.
His.
Bus.
Eng.
L.A.
His.
His.
P.E.
P.E.
Phil.
P.E.
P.S.
P.E.
L.A.
R. Jones,

Wt.
Ht.
Age
203
6·3
20
173
5·9
21
5·11
176
22
181
6·2
18
191
6·0
19
175
6·0
19
6-2
200
18
189
5-11
21
189
5-9
20
181
6-0
18
5-11
195
20
180
6-0
20
176
5-10
20
180
6-1
20
190
5-10
20
185
5-11
20
197
5-9
20
197
6-0
19
193
5-11
21
5-9
209
22
200
6-1
20
180
5-11
19
195
5-10
21
200
5-8
21
5-11
189
19
183
5-11
20
5-11
185
19
182
5-11
20
205
5-11
19
6-2
198
21
178
6-0
21
177
5-10
19
176
6-0
19
196
5-11
20
212
6-1
22
190
5-9
21
204
5-11
18
6-1
208
18
6-2
189
21
175
6-2
18
210
6-0
22
215
6-3
20
204
6-1
20
198
6-2
20
192
6-0
21
200
6-0
21
212
6-0
19
205
6-0
20
215
5-10
20
187
5-11
22
6-1
222
20
254
6-0
20
5-10
200
22
204
6-0
19
6-2
272
21
235
6-2
19
215
6-0
20
6-0
210
20
6-0
242
20
6-4
223
20
6-3
23
229
6-3
21
213
6-3
221
18
6-4
20
252
6-2
20
176
6-3
19
200
21
6-0
200
22
6-1
179
6-1
19
188
22
6-0
210
6-1
18
185
20
6-2
171
6-1
22
226
6-1
21
222
6-2
20
197
20
6-7
228
20
6-0
219
20
6-3
235
Murtha and Luzny)

School
Beth lehem Central
Coshocton HS
Union-Endicott HS
Union-Endicott HS
Mansfield-Madison
Springdale HS
Humberside Col.
Ambridge HS
Peru HS
Portage Area HS
Notre Dame HS
Calvert HS
East Rockaway HS
Lafayette HS
Ancaster HS
Aliquippa HS
Olean HS
Catholic Central
Ridgway C.B.
St. Joseph's HS
St. Clement HS
Cathedral Prep
Coshocton HS
St. Clement HS
Catholic HS
Canandaigua HS
Jamestown HS
St. Joseph's HS
Johnson City HS
Grand Island HS
West HS
Williamsville HS
Emerson Voc.
Greece-Arcadia HS
Central Islip HS
Depew HS
Ticonderoga HS
Bishop McCort HS
Kenmore East HS
Carthage Central
Coshocton HS
Stuyvesant HS
East Aurora HS
Elyria HS
N . Kensington HS
Cardinal Mooney HS
Tallmadge HS
Cheektowaga HS
Cardinal O'Hara HS
Union-Endicott HS
Buchetel HS
Riverside HS
Cathedral-Latin HS
Lancaster HS
Grand Island HS
Jackson HS
North Hill HS
Bishop Duffy HS
St. Mary's HS
Bishop Duffy HS
Fisher Park HS
Solon HS
New Rochelle HS
E. Dear-Frazer HS
Ithaca HS
McDowell HS
St. Vincent's HS
Dover HS
Notre Dame HS
Ithaca HS
Wheatfield HS
Moriah Central HS
South Park HS
Cheshire Academy
Parkside HS
Penn Hills HS
St. Clement HS
LaSalle HS

Hometown
Delmar, N . Y .
Coshocton, Ohio
Endicott, N . Y .
Endicott, N . Y.
Mansfield, Ohio
Springdale, Pa.
Toronto, Ont.
Baden, Pa.
Peru, N.Y .
Portage, Pa.
Batavia, N . Y .
Tiffin, Ohio
East Rockaway, N . Y .
Buffalo, N . Y.
Ancaster, Ont.
Aliquippa, Pa.
Olean, N . Y.
Dearborn, M ich .
Ridgway , Ont.
South Bend, Ind.
Center Line, Mich.
Hamilton, Ont.
Coch octon, Ohio
Center Line, Mich.
Johnson City, N . Y.
Canandaigua, N . Y .
Jamestown, N. Y .
Cleveland, Ohio
Johnson City, N . Y.
Grand Island, N . Y .
Auburn, N . Y .
Williamsville, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Rochester, N . Y .
Central Islip, N . Y.
Depew, N.Y.
Ticonderoga, N. Y .
Johnstown, Pa.
Tonawanda, N . Y .
Carthage, N . Y .
Coshocton, Ohio
Elmhurst, N . Y .
East Aurora, N . Y .
Elyria, Ohio
New Kensington, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y .
Tallmadge, Ohio
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Tonawanda, N . Y .
Endicott, N.Y.
Akron, Ohio
Buffalo, N. Y .
Cleveland, Ohio
Lancaster, N . Y.
Grand Island, N . Y .
North Canton, Ohio
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N . Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N . Y .
Ottawa, Ont.
Solon, Ohio
New Rochelle, N.Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Erie, Pa.
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Dover, Ohio
Attica, N . Y.
Ithaca, N . Y .
Niagara Falls, N . Y.
Witherbee, N . Y .
Buffalo, N . Y.
New City, N . Y .
Burlington, Ont.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Center Line, Mich.
Niagara Falls, N . Y .

N . Y .) - Lawrence Goldfarb '72 (Brooklyn, N.Y.)

twenty-five

�The Buffalo Coaching Staff

RICHARD A. LANTZ
Defensive Backfield

WERNER J. KLEEMANN
Defensive Line

J()E N. ('}RIFFITH
Head Freshman Coach

RICHARD L. WELLS
Graduate Assistant

ROBERT C. DEMING
Head Coach
Bob Deming officially assumed the fortunes of Buffalo
football last February 15 as the University's 15th head
coach, following the resignation of Richard W. (Doc)
Urich, now head coach at Northern Illinois University.
Deming is no stranger on the crowded U / B campus. He
has been on the football scene since 1959 and has served
ten years as a varsity assistant under Urich and Dick
Offenhamer.
A 1957 graduate of Colgate, where he earned a B.A.
in natural sciences, Bob played three seasons at fullback
with the Red Raiders. He played at Colgate under Offenharner. Upon graduation he went with Coach Hal Lahar
to Houston as freshman coach and varsity backfield assistant. He remained with the Cougars through 1958 until he
went into the Air Force Reserve.
Rejoining the Houston staff in January, 1959, he completed spring practice at the University before accepting
an April assignment under Offenhamer at Buffalo, who
had taken over in 1955. Bob's first season at U / B was
rewarding as the Bulls finished 8-1-0 and just missed their
second successive Lambert Cup. Deming tutored both
offensive and defensive backs in 1959 and 1960.
From 1961-65 Bob stayed with the defensive backs and
held the same assignment under Urich, plus handling game
plan formulation. With Urich he served as liaison between
the football office and various campus organizations. He
recruited New York and Pennsylvania.
Deming is not a superstitious mentor. He was born on
Friday the 13th of September, 1935 at Ilion, N. Y. His
coaching debut with the Bulls was on his birthday at
Ball St.
An accomplished outdoorsman, hunter and fisherman,
Bob enjoys serious antique refinishing with wife Jean, a
native of Rochester, N. Y. Jean (University of Rochester)
was formerly a hostess with American Airlines. The
Demings, Laura 3 and Leslie Ann 1, reside in suburban
Eggertsville.
Deming is an assistant professor in the Department of
Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics.

t wenty-six

TERRANCE J.
RANSBURY
Offensive Backfield

WILLIAM R. DANDO
Linebackers

JOHN P. DOHERTY
Graduate Assistant

JAMES C. McNALLyOffensive Line

MICHAEL E. MASER
Graduate Assistant

�1969 COLLEGE FOOTBALL RULES CHANGES
By Elwood A. Geiges
Assistant to Commissioner, Eastern College Athletic Conference
The effort expended by the NCAA Football
Rules Committee last year to make eligible forward pass receivers discernible to the defense had
marked success during the 1968 season. Therefore,
no change has been made this year in the mandatory numbering of interior linemen (50 through
79), since they are always ineligible regardless of
their position during a scrimmage down.
The following changes in the 1969 college
football rules will interest spectators and are important to players and coaches:
1. The "limit lines" have been moved from
5 feet to 6 feet outside the sidelines and endlines
around the field. This will restrict further the encroachment on the playing field by those not
participating in the game.
2. In order to protect the kicker on scrimmage kicks, the pertinent rule has been amended
to read, "He remains the kicker until he has had
a reasonable time to regain his balance."
3. An addition has been made to the list of
Non-Contact Fouls. During 1969 after a score, the
player in possession of the ball must return it to
an official immediately. This is designed to prohibit kicking or throwing the ball following a score,
or otherwise delaying the orderly progress of the
game.

4. The location of the penalty enforcement
spot for a foul committed prior to the incompletion of a legal forward pass (when no enforcement
spot is designated in the penalty for such a foul)
has been altered. All penalties affected by this
change will now be enforced from the spot of the
foul, except that if the passer is fouled the enforcement shall be from the previous spot.
5. Although the rules provide that a pass in
flight may be batted in any direction by a player
eligible to touch the ball, a restriction has been
added which prohibits a player of the passing team
from batting a lateral pass forward and out of
bounds in an attempt to gain yardage.
6. The Rules Committee has liberalized the
sideline conference allowed during a requested free
time-out. In 1969 one player at a time will be permitted to confer with the coaching staff at the
team area. Previously the rules had restricted the
conference to one player during the time-out
period.
7. Other changes and alterations include
modification of specifications for face masks and
shoe cleats; determination of direction of forward
and backward passes by the point where the ball
strikes the ground or a player, and a revised interpretation of "Spearing" and "Butt Blocking."

GOOD LUCK TO THE BULLS . . .

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.

M &amp; Ci CONVOY INC.
I

HEATING- AIR CONDITIONING
"Forwarders of Motorized Equipment"

Power Plants -

Process Piping -

Fire Protection

Judson M. Quimby, Controller

•

Phone: 823-6300
T L 4-8435 590 ELK STREET

120 W. TUPPER

BUFFALO, N. Y.

For the Finest in Food and Beverage

AFTER THE GAME . . .

THE CLUB SHERIDAN
3500 SHERIDAN DRIVE

BUFFALO, N. Y.

836-7736

twent y-seven

�An ambitious building program got underway in the early
fifties and since that time the University has dedicated a science
center, Logan Hall; a classroom building, Karl J. Alter Hall; three
new dormitories, Brockman Hall, Husman Hall, and Kuhlman
Hall; a new chapel, Williams Memorial St. Robert Bellarmine
Chapel; A Montessouri Educational Center (Joseph Hall) ; the
University Center; a new library (McDonald Memorial) ; and
presently under construction is a new Jesuit Residence Hall.

(Continued from page 16)
of 15 yards and the down. Partly
because of this, the pass was used
sparingly, if at all for some years.
In time, restrictions were removed.
In 1907, the 15-yard penalty for
an incompletion was eliminated. By
1910 the pass no longer had to cross
the line five yards out, and the defense was forbidden to interfere with
the receiver. That year the pass could
not be thrown more than 20 yards
beyond the line, but this limitation
was removed in 1912, when, in addition, a fourth down was added in
which to make ten yards, encouraging the use of the pass. Also in 1912,
the length of the field was reduced
from 110 to 100 yards, and end zones
ten yards in depth beyond the goal
lines were created in which passes
could be completed, and the kick-off
was made from the kicking team's 40.
Incidentally, these changes in addition to the touchdown being raised
in value from 5 to 6 points (it was
raised from 2 to 4 in 1884 and to 5
in 1897, on a parity with the field
goal) marked the last fundamental
changes in the game's structure,
which had included the lowering of
the value of the field goal from 4 (to
which it dropped in 1904) to 3 in
1909, and, in 1910, the requirement
of seven men of the offense on the
line of scrimmage, the abolition of
interlocking interference, pushing,
pulling and crawling, the division of
the game into four 15-minute quarters, and permission for the quarterback to run anywhere into the line.
The nearest thing to basic changes
in the game since 1912 have been
permitting the conversion after
touchdown to be made by a run or
pass or drop kick, as well as by
placement kick, in 1922; the removal
of the goal posts from the goal line
to the rear line of the end zone, in
1927; and, in 1958, the change in
value of the conversion by a run or
pass from one to two points, with the
ball being put in play on the 3-yard
line instead of the 2 for all conversions.
The game took on a new look with
the 1941 change in the substitution
rule that permitted wholesale replacements, Michigan starting the use
of offensive and defensive line platoons in 1945 and entire team platoons in 1947. This practice stopped
with the 1953 change in the substitution rule, but was renewed when
virtually free
substitution
was
brought back by the 1964 and 1965
provisions. A final injunction against
momentum plays came in the imposition of a full stop on shifts by
stages in 1922, 1924, 1927 and 1930,
putting the brakes on the Notre
Dame shift.

All of this is to better serve the school's 6,000 plus enrollment, largest in the University's history.

(This is the second of a four-part series.)

Xavier University

JAMES J. McCAFFERTY
Director of Athletics

VERY REVEREND
PAUL L. O'CONNOR, S.J.
President

Xavier University has a long and rich history as a vital part
of the Queen City of the West, Cincinnati, but the 138 year old
Jesuit institution is not standing pat ... in fact the University
is still growing after all these years.
Xavier University was founded in 1831 as a literary institute
for young men by Cincinnati's first bishop, Edward Dominic
Fenwick, O.P. Bishop Fenwick called his school the Athenaeum
and built it on Sycamore Street in downtown Cincinnati, where
St. Xavier Church now stands.
In 1840 his successor, Bishop John Purcell invited Jesuits
from St. Louis University to operate the school. They changed
the name to St. Xavier College soon after their arrival. In 1930
the name became Xavier University.
Xavier University has grown from a one-building "campus"
in downtown Cincinnati to a 65-acre tract with 27 buildings.
The present Avondale-Evanston campus, in the geographical
center of Cincinnati, was once the golf course of the Avondale
Athletic Club. The land was purchased in 1911. The clubhouse
ultimately became the Union Building, housing the cafeteria and
the Elet Hall Lounge.
The University now encompasses a College of Arts and
Sciences, a College of Business Administration, a Graduate
School, an Evening College and the College of Arts and Sciences
at Milford, Ohio, for Jesuit seminaries of the Chicago Province.
Xavier this fall becomes co-education throughout all colleges.

twenty-eight

�XAVIER
~~Musketeers "

JERRY MOUCH
Linebacker

TIM RENARD
Tackle

MIKE HERR
Tackle

JIM BROPHY
Fullback

STEVE BAZZOLI
Center

..........

DALE MUTRYN
Fullback

IVY WILLIAMS
Halfback

twenty-nine

�FIRST TIME EVER!!
Every significant statistical fact of college football's first century 1s now recorded 1n
one publication . . . COLLEGE FOOTBALL'S All-TIME RECORD BOOK.
A goldmine of information and history that no other publication can offer, this brand
new 176-page almanac features more than 25,000 facts about some 5,500 college
football players and teams. For example, did you know:
Jim Thorpe outrushed 0 . J. Simpson?
Michigan scored 644 points in 610 minutes of play in 1902?
The last change in the size of the football occurred in 1934?
Bear Bryant leads all active coaches with 187 victories?
Glenn Davis averaged 10. 1 yards every time he handled the ball in his career?
Yale has won more football games (627) than any other college?
Knute Rockne and Frank Leahy lead all coaches in winning percentage?
Skipper Butler of UTexas Arlington needs four field goals for an all-time career high?
Cincinnati 's Greg Cook set a 100-year mark of 554 yards passing in one game in 1968?
The answers, and thou~ands more, are all in the book that was 100 years in the
making ... COllEGE FOOTBAll'S All-TIME RECORD BOOK.
Included are 32 pages of game, season and career records for both major-college
and college -division teams and players and- for the first time anywhere- game-bygame statistical charts on such early -day greats as Willie Heston, Jim Thorpe,
George Gipp, Red Grange and the Four Horsemen. You'll find, too, year-by -year highlights of the first 100 years, pictures of many top players and coaches and illustrated
stories on 19 career and season record-holders of the modern era.
Enjoy the Centennial season even more by following the leaders and comparing them
with the all -time greats . You can do it for only $4 .95.

1969- COLLEGE FOOTBALL/S CENTENNIAL YEAR
I
I

MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY!

I
I

I
I

I

National Collegiate Sports Services, 420 lexington Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10017

Enclosed is $4.95 in check or money order for the College Football
All-Time Record Book.

I

I
I
I

I
I

I
thirty

Name .. ..... ......... .... .. . ... .. ..... .. .. .. . . ... . ..... .. . . .. .
Address

...... .. ... . . . .... .. ... . ........ ... . . .. . . ... .. .... ... . .

City ......... .. ..... . . .. ........ State . . . ........ . . . Zip .. . .. . . .

�XAVIER
Musketeers

II

GENE OTTING
Defensive Halfback

VIC NOLTING
Defensive Halfback

JERRY PILCA VAGE
Guard

II

JERRY BUCKMASTER
Quarterback

RAY BAUR
Tailback

KEN BLACKWELL
Guard

DAVE MYERS
Quarterback-Halfback

thirty-one

�The Bulls Salute ... AI Aversano
Alexander P. Aversano '36- AI Aversano
has been a man behind the football scene since
his graduation from the University. AI services
the press box with complete game statistics. He
also travels on the road with the Bulls through
the season. A retired president of the Alumni
Association, AI has served his alma mater for 30
years in various capacities. A varsity quarterback
under Jim Peelle in 1935 and 1936, Aversano combined athletic accomplishment and scholarship. He
was an honor student in chemistry as an undergraduate.
AI joined Westwood Pharmaceuticals of Buffalo in 1942. He is a vice-president with the firm.
A busy business career is complemented with an
active avocation schedule. He is a fisherman of
the highest order and serves as president of the
board of directors of St. Mark's Church. Recently,
he started Little League Baseball at Buffalo's
Shoshone Park.

1969 U/8 Fall Scoreboard
Date
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.

Date
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

3
17
25
31
14

FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
Coach: Joe N. Griffith
Opp.
U/B OPP
MANLIUS
3:00
at Syracuse
2:00
at Navy
2:00
at Army
3:30
KENT STATE
2:30

VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY
Coach: Emery J. Fisher '51
Opp.
U/B OPP
23
at Cleveland State with
2:00
Baldwin-Wallace
27
SYRACUSE with
2:00
NIAGARA
at Fredonia State with
4:00
Geneseo State
4
LeMoyne Invite
1:30
10
BROCKPORT STATE
4:00
17
at LeMoyne with
4:00
Rochester Tech
22
at Eisenhower with
4:00
Geneseo State
25
Canisius Invite
1:00
29
at Niagara with
4:00
Canisius
Gannon
Buffalo State
NYS Championship at Harpur
1
4
NIAGARA COMMUNITY C. 4:00
ST. BONAVENTURE with 4:00
6
HARPUR
25
NCAA Championships

thirty-two

Date
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.

Date
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

FRESHMAN CROSS-COUNTRY
Coach: Emery J. Fisher '51
Opp.
U/B OPP
23
at Cleveland State
2:00
27
SYRACUSE
2:00
4
LeMoyne Invite
1:30
10
BROCKPORT STATE
4:00
1·7
at LeMoyne with
4:00
Rochester Tech
22
at Eisenhower with
4:00
Geneseo State
1
NYS Championship at Harpur
6 ST. BONAVENTURE with 4:00
HARPUR
VARSITY GOLF
Coach: Dr. Leonard T. Serfustini
Opp.
U/B OPP
16
at St. Bonaventure
1:00
18
at Buffalo State
1:00
19
NIAGARA
1:30
22
ROCHESTER TECH
1:00
24
CANISIUS
1:00
26
at Niagara
1:30
29
BUFFALO STATE
1:00
1 ST. BONAVENTURE
1:00
2
Brook Lea Invite
4
ECAC at Bucknell
6
GENESEO STATE
1:00
11
ECAC at Colgate
13
at Canisius
1:00
16
NIAGARA
1:30
18
ECAC at Farmingdale
21
NIAGARA
1:30
24
at Rochester Tech
1:00

�YOUR HOMETOWN SUPERMARKETS ARE PROUD
TO SUPPORT THE HOMETOWN UNIVERSITY
OF BUFFALO "BULLS" FOOTBALL TEAM!

thirty-three

�To Games; on Ski Weekends; on Tours;
Everybody Goes First Class in the
Area's Largest Charter Bus Fleet
ASK U S ABOUT

CLASS, CLUB or
GROUP CHARTERS
F o r Tr-ip :-- to An y wh e r e
\\" ith All C'onv&lt;&gt;ni e n ceR

BUFFALO 852-4900

BLUE BIRD COACH LiNES, INC.

FOR MAXIMUM PROTECTION AND SERVICE
Corner of
N. LONG and MAIN
WILLIAMSVILLE, N. Y.

in Buying and Selling Homes
-

Deal with a Realtor Board of Realtors -

Member of Greater Buffalo

Western N.Y.'s Most
Complete Ski Shop
For the Entire Family

Exclusive M/ L Service.

Shops at Glenwood Acres &amp; Holiday Valley

Leo Sauer
FUNERAL HOME
INC.
•

1933 KENSINGTON AVENUE
833-1695
•

TX 2-7183

1050 M1ht..ry Ro.d
Buff•lo. New YOI'k 1..217

AFTER THE
GAME STOP
AT ...

GOOD LUCK BULLS

Mr. &amp; Mrs. A. V. Bellanca

thirty-four

823 GENESEE STREET

�Van, Stan &amp; Rife Have It All Figured Out!
FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WBEN-Radio
VAN
STAN
DICK
MILLER BARRON RIFENBURG
WBEN Radio/930
The Sports Voice of Buffalo

�SPECIAL PATRONS
We Acknowledge With Thanks the Generous
Contributions of the Following:
Rich Products Corp.

Kevin Brinkworth

John M. Galvin

T . Gregory Jacobs

Charles G. Salisbury

Carl E. DeSantis

Robert D. Fernbach

PATRONS
Robert B. Adam
Harold A. Adel
James J. Ailinger
William C. Baird
Charles Banas
Donald R. Barber
Robert B. Barrett
John M. Bissell
Stanley B. Blach
Walter Brock
Milton M. Bron
Dennis J. Brinkworth, Jr.
Edmond S. Brown, Jr.
Max Burstein
Abraham Carrel
Ross M. Cellino
James P. Cole
Robert J . Collins
Kenneth L. Cooper
Joseph M. Crotty
John L. Curtis
Charles H. Diefendorf
Charles Diebold Ill
Arnold Dilaura
Edward J. Doran
George E. Easterbrook
Thornton G. Edwards
George W. Ferrick
Aaron I. Feuerstein
Paul A. Foley
John A. Krull
Harold Frantzen
Irving Fudeman
Anthony J. Renaldo
Gates Electric Co.
Allan V. Gibbons
A. Donald Gilden
Chester P. Glor, Jr.
George L. Grobe, Jr.
Norman Haber
Murray J. Hall
Nicholas Haragos
Joseph J . Ricotta
Irwin Klein

thirty·six

F. Vincent Harrington
Harold M. Harris
L. Richard Hart
Waldron S. Hayes, Jr.
William H. Hildebrand, Jr.
Palace Theatre
Sheldon Hurwitz
Rudolph V. Johnson
Edwin F. Jaeckle
Grover R. James, J r.
W. Hinson Jones
Henry W. Killeen
Kevin Kennedy
Russell Kidder, Jr.
Edward W. Kinney
Stephen F. Kissel
A. O'Neill Kline
Seymour Knox
Gerald S. Lippes
Anchor Concrete Products
Saul Lerner
Joseph J. Lyons
Charles J. McDonough
J. Eugene McMahon
Samuel D. Magavern
Harold F. Meese
Robert J. Metzen
Leo M. Michalek
Robert F. Milks
Edward F. Mimmack
Raymond A. Monin
Arthur F. Movalli
David J . Mahoney, Jr.
Roland Lord O'Brian
Thomas E. O'Brien
Charles W. Pankow, Jr.
Pearce &amp; Pearce Co., Inc.
Howard A. Potter, Inc.
William E. Potter
Hugh McM. Russ, Sr.
Eugene M. Ruszaj
Edward A. Rath, Jr.
George H. Selkirk

William W. Rathke
Herbert R. Reitz
Frank T. Riforgiato
William R. Root
Leo J. Rosen
Eugene W. Salisbury
Harvey D. Sprowl
Thomas E. Sand
Michael Swados
Vincent Scamurra
Houdaille Industries, Inc.
Roy Seibel
George N. Seifert
Shanor Electric Co.
E. Perry Spink
James R. Sullivan
Leonard Swagler
Gertrude Swarthout
Harlan Swift
Irwin L. Terry
University Manor Motel
Charles J. Verbanic
George W. Watkins
Reinhardt W. Wende
Charles E. Weston, Jr.
Massachusetts Mutual
Life Ins. Co.
Frederick B. Wilkes
William G. Willis
RobertS. Wolfson
Manuel S. Wortzman
0. W. Shelgren
Pfohl, Roberts &amp; Biggie
Joseph Scaffidi
Turley, Stievater, Walker,
Mauri &amp; Associates
Webber, DiDonato &amp;
Renaldo
Dick O'Connor
Optical Co.
McKee, Phelps &amp;
Bowman
Samuel Shatkin

Richard J. Attea
William Blanchard
Smolka, DiBartolo
&amp; Gibson
Albert W. Doyle
Falk, Twelvetrees,
Johnston &amp; Siemer
James P. Donnelly
Irvin V. Iversen
Townsend &amp; Lipp
Lippes &amp; Kaminsky
Richard F. Miller
James C. Kenrick
Paul H. Will
William R. Trautman
&amp; Associates
Deleuw Cather &amp;
Associates
Herbert S i mon
Gary Solomon
Arnold Stern
Edward Wasielewski
Luther Lee
James Guttuso
Joel H ittleman
Francis R. Moliterno
Lynch &amp; Nusbaum
Gary D. Schuller
Charles H. Addington
George W. Fugitt
Anthony M. Aquilina
C. S. Armenia
Julian J. Ascher
Charles W. Bankert
Ulrich Bauer
Daniel R. Botsford
Melvin M. Brothman
Jacob Burstein
Vincent S. Celestino
Stewart and Benson
Albert V. Cutter
Maurice R. Dewey
John W. Vance

Joseph K. Sheedy
Kenneth Eckhert
George Egri
Edward G. Eschner
Sattar Farzan
Carl A. Contino
Armand DiFrancesco
Daniel C. Fisher
RichardS. Fletcher
John J. Giardino
Stuart A. Good
Pasquale A. Greco
Benjamin G. Green
Edmond Gicewicz
lsmet Hallac
Barry T. Malin
Hans F. Kipping
Morton P. Klein
Eugene C. Hyzy
Eugene V. Leslie
Barry J. Herman
George H. Marcy
James B. McDaniel, Jr.
Sanford H. Meyers
Marvin H. Milch
Elmer Milch
Donald W. Hall
William H. Merrilees
Eisenberg &amp; Donius
Irwin Ellentuck
John Biniszkiewicz
William G. Braun
Paul S. Chojnacki
Robert H. Evans
B. D. Garliner
Clifford G. Glaser
Lyle N. Morgan
Robert J. Patterson
Eustace G. Phillies
Ramon Y. Perez
Charles Riggio
Allen L. Lesswing
Duane Lyman
&amp; Associates

�BUFFALO
BULLS"

II

BARRY ATKINSON
79
Junior
DT
Major: Physical Education

15

THOMAS CENTOFANTI
GARY CHAPP
73
Junior
T
38
Senior
LB
Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education

56

THOMAS ELLIOTT
40
Junior
DHB
Major: Business

JERRY ELWELL
61
Junior
G
Major: Anthropology

KIRK BARTON
Sophomore
QB
Major: Pre-Medical

62

JOHN BAUCH
Sophomore
Major: History

G

PATRICK CARNEY
60
Senior
G
Major: Sociology

MICHAEL CONSTANTINO CHARLES DONNOR
SCOTT CLARK
41
Senior
KSP
Senior Co-Capt. LB
58
Junior
C
Major: Pharmacy
Major: Sociology
Major: Physical Education

TERRENCE ENDRESS
82
Senior
TE
Major: Business

JOHN FALLER
49
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education

87

BRUCE FRASER
Sophomore
SE
Major: History

�Our take-home pack for real beer lovers.
THE STROH BR£W£RY(X)MPANY. O£TROIT ,_.ICH(;AN 481:l6

thirty-eight

�BUFFALO
IIBULLS"

-

LAWRENCE HART
LAWRENCE · GOLDFARB
16
Sophomore P-DHB
Sophomore Manager
Major: Liberal Arts
Major: Business

WILLIAM HAYDEN
68
Senior
G
Major: History

RICHARD HORN
Senior
SE
Major: English

92

JOSEPH HUDSON
Junior
DE
Major: Philosophy

17

PAUL JACK
Senior
P
Major: Chemistry

EDWARD KERSHAW
59
Junior
LB
Major: Liberal Arts

39

DOUGLAS KOZEL
Sophomore
FB
Major: Liberal Arts

85

PAUL LANG
Senior-Co-Capt. TE
Ma-jor: History

83

PR.~&lt;;NTlS HENELY
SCOTT HERLAN
90
Senior
DE
45
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education

JOEL JACOBS
26
Junior
DHB
Major: Liberal Arts

34

MICHAEL LUZNY
Senior
LB
Major: Geography

66

ROVELL JONES
Junior
DT
Major: Psychology

MARK MacVITTlE
47
Sophomore DHB
Major: Physical Education

thirty-nine

�1969 BUFFALO VARSITY FOOTBALL SQUAD
(left to right) Rows
First: Co-captain Paul Lang, Coach Jim McNally, Coach Werner Kleemann, Coach Rick Lantz, Head Coach Bob Deming, Coach Terry Ransbury, Coach
Bill Dando, Coach Joe Griffith and Co-captain Scott Clark.
Second : Mike Luzny, Jim Mosher, Bill Hayden, Mick Murtha, Pat Patterson, Gary Chapp, Terry Endress, Dick Horn, Paul Jack and Chris WoiL
Third: Dan Walgate, Barry Atkinson, Barney Woodward, Frank Reid, Joe Hudson, Ed Perry, Steve McCullough, Pat Carney, Jerry Elwell, Dave Chernega
and Gary Grubbs.
Fourth: Scott Herlan, Mike Constantino, *Rick Loundsbury, Ed Kershaw, Joe Moresco, Denny Albaneze, Karl Zalar, Gene Hernquist, Tom Centofanti, Russ
Plawiuk, Joel Jacobs and Joe Zelmanski.
Fifth: Rovell Jones, Prentis Henley, Chuck Graver, *Greg Walters, *Bob Carnevale, Dave Pescrillo, Chuck Donnor, Tom Milarski, John Rio, Len Nixon, Ken
Bork, Bruce Fraser and Paul Kehr.
Sixth: Bill Winnett, Cliff Jones, Kevin Wells, Mark MacVittie, Scott Savickas, Doug Kozel, Bob .Griffiths, Kirk Barton, Phil Smith, Bill Murphy, Charlie
Forness, *Steve Lipman and Bob Etherington.
Seventh : Doug Philp, Pat Bauch, Barry Vandenbergh, Bill Ellenbogen, Jim Fortino, Mike Sharrow, Joe Ziegler, Denny Waggoner, Bob Layo, Paul Dorich,
Dave Majcher, Kevin Hogan and Joe Scott.
Eighth: Larry Madden, Larry Hart, Ron Francis, John Faller, Tom Vigneau, Mike James, Stan Siedlecki, Tom Elliott, *Dan Yacobush and Bob Stiscak.
Ninth: Manager Dan Earl, Manager Allen Wright, Trainer Ken Shields, Trainer Fran Welk, Head Trainer Jim Simon, Coach John Doherty, Coach Mike Maser
and Coach Rick Wells.
*No longer member of squad

forty

�BUFFALO
IIBULLS"
I

LAWRENCE MADDEN
32
Sophomore
LB
Major: Liberal Arts

JOSEPH MORESCO
Junior
SE
80
Major: Business

LEONARD NIXON
42
Junior
DHB
Major: Physical Education

PATRICK PATTERSON
20
Senior
HB
Major: Liberal Arts

DANIEL WALGATE
70
Senior
DT
Major: Physical Education

77

CHRIS WOLF
Senior
Major: Sociology

T

WILLIAM MURPHY
75
Sophomore
T
Major: Business

EDWARD PERRY
11
Junior
QB
Major: Physical Education

74

JOHN RIO
Junior
T
Major: Liberal Arts

14

MARK MURTHA
Senior
QB
Major: Business

THOMAS VIGNEAU
96
Junior
DE
Major: Physical Education

BARNEY WOODWARD
ALLEN WRIGHT
JOSEPH ZELMANSKI
21
Junior
HB
Sophomore Manager
35
Junior
FB
Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education Major: Physical Education

forty-one

�-·
•

GOOD LUCK U. B. BULLS
Rudy Bersani -

U. B. 1967

THREE COINS RESTA VRANT
and LOVNGE

lunch, dimzer or late supper,- eat like a
Roman Emperor on centurion's pay
In the North Wing of the MAPLE. LEAF MOTOR LODGE

~

1620 N iagara Falls Blvd

1 M ile N orth
·
of Sheridan Dr.
Ample Parking for You r Chariot

83 5-2610

BENTON ANNOUNCEMENTS

CHALLENGER R/T

A Large Selection of Gifts for
Showers - Weddings - Birthdays

KENTON DODGE INC.
-HOME OF THE MIGHTY MOPARS-

3445 DELAWARE AVE . AT SHERIDAN DR.

PLANNING TO BE MARRIED?

Benton Selection of Wedd ing Invitations
Is the Largest
3006 Bailey Ave . ... Near Kensington

China-Silverwar-Stainless Tableware-Stemware-1/'ases-Ceramics

* Greeting Cords

876-6900

KENMORE, N.Y.

* Stationery

* Party Goods

* Candles and * Flora l Pieces
Open Tllur11. and Fri. Evenlngll till 9 PM -

105th ANNIVERSARY

Sat. till 5

a

1969 marks our 105th year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.

. . 836-4100

ailing and cory

Est. 1864

REAL ESTATE •nd INSURANCE
APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
17-21 S. Division Street
TL4-5700

BUFFALO'S PAPER DISTRIBUT ION CENTER

Ellicott Square

DON'S
Mobil Service Centers
Bailey Cor. Winspear
Kensington Cor. Century Rd.

Every kind of Sportsman
knows
DICK FISCHER'S the greatest!
DICK FISCHER

TIRE and BATTERY SERVICE
BRAKES - MUFFlERS
TUNE-UP - MINOR REPAIRS
GENERATORS and STARTERS

forty-two

8FoWBtS
699 Main St .

Thruway Plaza- 44 Main St. Ilona . I

�PARK EDGE SELECT MOUNTAIN PINK

FULL QUART

69~

forty-three

�CODE OF OFFICIALS ' SlGNALS
~

15

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OPEN EVERY EVENING EXCEPT WEDNESDAY

FRED RONEKER'S
UNIVERSITY SHOP
5548 MAIN ST., WILLIAMSVILLE
632-7833

C9

Edward Dzielski, Inc.
883-4667
INTERIOR DESIGN &amp; PLANNING

Men's and Boy's Wear of Distinction
853-7266
''THE OFFICIAL EQUIPMENT
RECONDITIONERS FOR THE BUFFALO BULLS"

FRANK O'CONNOR
ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT

MARBA INC.
Reconditioners of Athletic Equipment
1200 Niagara Street

•

Buffalo, N.Y. 14213

882-9330

forty-four

School and Team Outfitters

•
499 Washington Street
Buffalo, New York 14203

�... where you don't work hard for your

•1n

GS
• The New SENECA MALL
• BOULEVARD MALL
• 998 BROADWAY (and 1021 Broadway)
• THRUWAY PLAZA
• SATTLER'S HOME FURNISHINGS CITY, U.S.A.
(Elmwood at Hertel Ave.)

�~
M/)u( Of UCEUOICE

Big cars cost big money...
ThatS the way it was.

OnTheMove.

0. J. Simp on with his big, reasonably priced 1970 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe.

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>The College Game</text>
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                <text> September 20, 1969</text>
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                <text> official program 50¢</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1969-09-20</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>OHicial Program - Fifty Cents

HI
NIU
DADS I
I

AI.

1\

GR ... O·ll 6

~, NORTHERN ............

UNIVERSITY

VS.

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
NOVEMBER 9, 1968 •

NORTHERN STADIUM •

1:30 P.M.

�Johnson scores Printing Press·lioe
Since 1922 R &amp; S Johnson Printing Corp-

with sophisticated, up-to- date machinery in

oration has been serving Northern Illinois

a modern setting entirely heated, air-con-

with printing of the very finest quality.

d it ioned , humidity controlled (both sum-

Staffed by experienced , skilled craftsmen,

mer and winter) and electronical l y air

you can expect and receive the

cleaned to produce the constant

best professional advice and ser-

unvarying atmosphere necessary to

vice to achieve the printing that

quality printing.

will meet your needs.

printed by R &amp; S Johnson Printing

Johnson 's

complete printing facilities set and letterpress -

This program .

off-

Corporation , is an example of the

are equipped

qua I ity that goes into every job.

JOHNSON PRINTING CORPORATION
LETTERPRESS
2205 SYCAMORE ROAD, DE KALB , ILLINOIS 60115

AND
e

OFFSET
AREA CODE 815 - PHONE 756-4651

To achieve the printing that meers your need.

The composing room is equipped w ith mod -

Johnson' s offset department boasts complete

Pr inting. numbering_ perforating, scoring and

Johnson 's sk1lled craftsmen w ill take your

ern typesetting and casting m•chines plus an

preparatory facilities and four presses with

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ide11s 11nd transpose them to the printed page.

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Johnson 's

�OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

Official

Northern Illinois University

*******
LONGINES

Football Program

CONTENTS
SQUAD LISTS
Northern Illinois University Alphabetical Roster ................ 22
Northern Illinois University Numerical Roster .................... 25

THE WORLD'S
MOST HONORED
WATCH®
10 world's fair grand prizes
28 gold medals

Univers ity of Buffalo Alphabetica l Roster ................ .......... 27
Un ivers ity of Buffalo Numerica l Roster .............................. 25
PICTURES
Administration .. ......................... ......................................... 4
Physica l Education , Ath letic Department Administration ..

longines watches are recognized
as OFFICIAL for timing world
championships and Olympic sports
in all fields throughout the world.

6

Huskies' Football Board of Strategy .................................. 12
Huskie Players .. ... ........... ......... ............................. 16, 18, 20
University of Buffalo Administration ......................... ......... 3 1
University of Buffa lo Players ................. ............ ........ ... 33 , 35
Porn Pon Girls ..... ............................................................. 4 4
Equipment Managers, Trainers .......................................... 45
The Staff ................................... ......................................... 4 7
DEPARTMENTS
The President's Page ....................... .................................

2

Business College Unites Two Worlds .............................. 8 , 9
Football Treat for Dad's Day ...................................... ...... 10
Meet the Huskies .............................................................. 14
Buffalo Adapts to Urban Needs ............ ................... ........... 29
Dad's Day Welcome ................ ..... .............. ........... ............ 37
Cheers and Cheerleaders .................................................. 43
Northern Illinois University Alumni .................................... 46

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OTHER SPORTS
Cross Country .................................................................... 38
Soccer ................................................................................ 39
Basketba II ..... ..................................................................... 41
Winter Sports Schedules ........... ................. ........................ 46

OFFICIAL PROGRAM - Published by Huskie Gridiron News,
Northern illinois University. Edited by Owen W. (Bud) Nangle,
Sports Information Director. Local advel'tising by Owen W.
(Bud) Nangle. Represented for national advertising by Spencer
Advertising Company, 271 Madison Avenue, New York, New
York, 10016.

The ultimate personal chronometer,
guaranteed accurate to a minute a montha mean average of 2 seconds per day.
Ultra-Chron tells the date, hour, minute,
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LONGINES-WITI'NAUER WATCH CO.
NEW YORK
MONTREAL •
GENEVA
Maker of Watches Of The Hichest Character
For Over A Century

�Bacial Justice, Master Plan
First Targets

President SIDith sets Goals,
Moves to Achieve Thean
PRESIDENT RHOTEN A. SMITH

Implementation of a program for racial justice at Northern
Illinois University and formulation of a master plan for future
development are top priority items as President Rhoten A.
Smith begins his second year as NIU's chief executive.
In a recent interview, President Smith, who took office
September 1, 1967, and who was inaugurated May 24, 1968
said the racial justice program would involve the systematic
recruitment of disadvantaged students from inner-city areas.
Establishment of special programs for counseling, studyhelp, and financial assistance are also part of the program
which, as President Smith pointed out, is designed to help
youths "who because of circumstances would otherwise be
lost as productive members of society.'·

Survey of needs for Higher Education. the Political Education Program of the Maurice and
Laura Falk Foundation, and the Ford Foundation's Executive Development Programs for
Public Service.
A graduate of the University of Kansas at
Lawrence with both A.B. and M.A. degrees,
President Smith received his Ph.D. degree in
political science from the University of California at Berkeley in 1954.

Plans begun in early April culminated in the issuance of
a statement by President Smith at the May meeting of the
DeKalb Human Relations Commission condemning all forms
of racial prejudice and the appointment of a bi-racial task
force to tackle the problem.
Key figures in the new program will be three new appointees: a special assistant to the president to develop and coordinate programs for disadvantaged students; an administrative assistant to the vice president for student affairs for special projects who will recruit and counsel black students from
the inner-city areas; and a counselor for black students.
Initial step leading to a plan for academic development
that will chart the future course of the University was taken
last fall with the appointment by the University Council of a
12-member Academic Planning Committee. President Smith
has charged the committee with the task or helping to fashion
a distinct mission for NIU that will define its role in the larger
university community.
Before accepting the post as head of the state's third largest university, President Smith served six years as dean of the
College of Liberal Arts at Temple University, where he played
an important role in furthering its remarkable growth.
Prior to that he was professor of politics at New York University for three years and directed the Citizenship Clearing
House , a national organization designed to interest college
men and women in active political participation.
He also has served as research consultant with the Kansas
Legislative Council. and as consultant for the Kansas Constitutional Revision Committee, the Kansas Legislative Council's

2

President Smith is all smiles as he dons robe
for his inauguration.

�Everybody -Is Sold On

ROYCE THOMPSONI
•
•
•

HOMES
• FARMS
APARTMENTS
• MANAGEMENT
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES

151 WEST LINCOLN HIGHWAY

DE KALB. ILLINOIS 60115
3

�DR. FRANCIS R. GEIGLE

Executive Vice President
and Provost

DR. ERNEST E. HANSON
Vice President for
Student Personnel
Services

4

DR. RICHARD J. SMITH
Vice President for
Business
Affairs

DR. JOHN B.
GARDNER
Assistant to
the President

DR. WILLIAM H.
BROOKS
Special AssisttJnt
to the President

DR. CHARLES W.
BRIM
Director of
University Research

DR. WILLIAM P.
FRO OM
Director of
University Relations

McKINLEY
DAVIS
Administrative
Assistant to the
Vice President for
Student Personnel
Services

DR. JAMES R.
O'CONNOR
Associate
Provost

DR. WAYNE J.
MciLRATH
Dean, Graduate
School

DR. RICHARD C.
BOWERS
DetJn, College of
Liberal Arts and
Sciences

DR. WILLIAM E.
WHYBREW
Dean, College of
Fine and Applied
Arts

DR. ROBERT F.
TOPP
Dean, College of
Education

DR. ROBERT L.
TH ISTLETHWAITE
Dean, College of
Business

DR. VIRGIL W.
ALEXANDER
Dean. College of
Continuing
Education

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NOW
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Old-Fashioned Shakes
Crisp Golden French Fries
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Delightful Root Beer
Coffee As You Like It
Full-Flavored Orange Drink
Refreshing Cold Milk

0 00 Oo 000000 0000 000 00 oooooo 000000 0000

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oooooooooooooooooooooooooo.-oooooooo

oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

ooooooooooooooooooo•oooooooo

oooooooooooooooooooooooooooo·o-••o··

49¢
39¢
30¢
20¢
25¢
25¢
18¢
10¢
10¢
10¢
10¢
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Phone 756-5202
West of DeKalb on Altemate Route 30
at 805 West Lincoln Highway

tasty food ... thrifty_prices

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WE'RE ALL PULLING FOR YOU HUSKIES!

B~ PRINTING, INC.
128 South Second Street
DE KALB

-:·

ILLINOIS

5

�DR. ROBERT J. BRIGHAM
Director, Department of
Physical Education and
Athletics for men

DR. NYE L LaBAW
Chairman of Intercollegiate
Athletics

6

DR. FRANCIS E. STROUP
Chairman of Physical
Education

DR. ROBERT W. KAHLER

DR. MARK E. DEAN

KENNETH L PRENTICE

OWEN W. (BUDJ NANGLE

Coordinator of Physical
Facilities &amp; Schedules

Coordinator of Student
Athletic Affairs

Business Manager for
Athletics

Sports Information
Director

�WELCOME
LANES

DeKalb Appliance
Company
1816 Sycamore Road
DE KALB
ILLINOIS
Phone 758-8808
ROUTE 31 - DUNDEE. ILLINOIS
PHONE HAzEL 6-4801
ONE MILE NORTH OF NORTHWEST TOLLWAY

DE KALB FORGE
COMPANY

BUD KENYON
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THE HOME OF
FAMILY RECREATION
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•
SEE THE DEAL BOYS •••

Bowling at its best

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DeKalb, Illinois

•
WHERE THE DEALS ARE
Price is what you pay . . •
Value is what you get.
We sell value to people who
know the difference.

Tappan ••• Hotpaint ••• Kelvinator
East Pleasant Street
DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115
Phone 815/756-63'47

Sylvania ••• Motorola ••• Admiral
••• and More

HALVERSON

EVERYBODY LIKES A
WINNER!

SERVICE
-o-

That's Why

TOWING ... GAS FOR LESS

More people have purchased

-o-

PONTIACS

West Lincoln Hwy. &amp; Glidden Rd.
DE KALB, ILLINOIS

Than any other cars in our price

Phone 756-2243

range for the last 8 years

Wm. H. Minnihan Agency

BOB SKOGLUND

Real Estate
DeVal Shopping Center
Sycamore Road
DE KALB
IUINOIS
Phone 756-9515

MASONRY CONTRACTOR

•

Complete Masonry Service

RIGHTWAY PONTIAC INC.
160 West Lincoln Highway
DE KALB, ILLINOIS
Phone 756-9588

Residence:
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Phone 758-3621
DE KALB, ILLINOIS

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DE KALB, ILLINOIS

7

�Jlcadeznic, Industrial Barznony Souglal

NIU College Of Business Seeks
By IRVAN J. KUMMERFELDT
Manager, NIU News Bureau

T

HE story of Northern Illinois University's College of Business might be
presented in the form of a balance
sheet familiar to its students of accountancy. The college might be explained in
terms of organization charts studied in the
preparation of its management students.
Either method would present facts and
figures about the departments of business
which began in a barracks classroom in
1951. But both methods would miss the
real story of the college.
To understand NIU 's College of Business. the story must be told in terms of
its students and faculty . It must be presented to show that the college contributes, in its particular field, to Northern's
goals of excellence in teaching , research,
and service.

organizations.
Several of the student
groups now hold first-place rankings in the
nation for leadership, achievement, and
membership.
Bringing industry and the campus together also involves meeting all three of
Northern 's goals. Excellence in teaching
involves the college in building an outstanding faculty in its five departments accountancy, business education, finance .
management, and marketing. Northern's
business faculty totals 11 B positions.-, 04
of which are filled for the current year.
Included among the faculty members are
51 holding doctoral degrees granted by 24
universities from coast to coast. The faculty also includes five lawyers, seven certified public accountants. and one certified
financial analyst.

Dr. Robert L. Thistlethwaite, dean of the
college , described the goals of the fivedepartment program this way: "The college has one foot solidly planted in the
academic world. but the other is as firmly
in the industrial world. Our job is to
bring the two worlds together."

On campus , these faculty members
taught 2 ,687 undergraduate business majors and 599 graduate students last year
a total of 3,286. These statistics will
increase to 3,500 undergraduates and
1,000 graduate students by 1971 . This
represents only students majoring in business. Total class enrollment in the college
is expected to rise from 11 ,025 in 1967
to 17,500 students in business courses
by 1971 .

Part of the challenge of bringing the academic and industrial worlds together is
accomplished through the college's ten
active professional and honorary student

Unlike some campuses where undergraduates charge that they never see a
senior professor, Northern ' College of
Business is committed to excellence in

teaching undergraduates, as well as graduate students. Some department heads
teach introductory courses in their specialties and most of the college's doctoral degree faculty instruct undergraduate classes.
Thistlethwaite pointed out that the college is a professional school. Students
major in a specific area . but also must
gain a broader, interdisciplinary exposure
to business by taking 27 hours in courses
from other departments of the college.
Northern's business students are the
college's "product." That "product" is a
person with a broad background developed
through academic courses within the college itself and liberal arts classes throughout the university. In terms of the business
world , the NIU business graduate is "marketable." Most of the major United States
corporations recruit Northern business
graduates. This past year, graduates of
the college took positions with companies
such as Standard Oil. Texaco. First National Bank of Chicago, Westinghouse, Bethlehem Steel. and almost every major public
accounting firm. Scores of NIU business
graduates also enter college and university
teaching throughout the nation.
The other two goals of the college research and service are attained by a
faculty dedicated to working with industry
and the northern Illinois area. The NIU
college serves industry through its extensive program of evening and extension
courses , with some of the off-campus instruction held right in industrial plants.
Service also takes other forms. from faculty serving as consultants to research in
answer to requests from industry.
Northern's business research is expanding and currently includes, among many
projects. a study of available manpower
in northern Illinois, bank and savings and
loan association resources in the area . and
financing of international trade .
Future of the college will include
changes and expansion . Physical facilities
are under study with some plans being
considered for expansion, according to
Thistlethwaite. The college now occupies
all of McMurry Hall, about two-thirds of
Wirtz Hall . plus faculty office and class
space in four other buildings . Graduate
programs are expanding . Number of graduate majors may be more than doubled
from 441 in 1965 to approximately 1.000
by 1971. In addition to two types of
undergraduate degrees, NIU now offers
three masters d egrees in business and the
doctor of education d egree in business education . A doctor of philosophy degree in
business administration is in the planning
stage .

WIRTZ HALL . . . Shaded by a pine tree. the main entrance to Wirtz Hall which is the
newest facility occupied by Northern' s College of Business. The college' s classrooms
and offices use approximately two-thirds of this building. Business classes and offices
also use all of McMurry Hall which can be seen at the far r ight, plus space in four other
buildings on c ampus.

8

Thistlethwaite summed up the college 's
future this way, " We 're seeking more topflight students, more topflight t eachers and
the f acilit ies to do the job that the northern Illinois area n eeds done."

�To Unite Two W'orlds

• • • • •

TELEWRITER TEACHING . . . Using a new system of visual and audio transmission by telephone lines. a group of students at Savanna's U. S. Army Ordnance Depot participates in an extension course taught by Northern's College of Business management department. The Telewriter system permitted NIU business faculty to remain on campus and present course lectures and transmit visual
aids to the class approximately 75 miles away.

1312 W. LINCOLN HWY., DE KALB, ILLINOIS
9

�Huskies Pace Bullalo Bull Busllezs

Football Treat For Dad's Day
By GENE MUSTAIN
Northern 's Dads will get an early
Thanksgiving treat today as one of the fine
independent powers in the East, the University of Buffalo Bulls, will display their
impressive talents for NIU 's annual Dad's
Day crowd.
And just like last year, when West
Texas State achieved a hard-earned 17- 10
Dad's Day win over NIU , this year's battle
promises to be another well-fought contest.
Buffalo, which features an explosive,
well-balanced attack, carries a 5-3 record
into DeKalb, the last victory coming in a
rous ing 50-40 victory over Temple University last week in Philadelphia.
The Huskies, on the other hand , are
presently saddled with a six-game losing
streak. But Northern enters today's contest with two weeks ' rest, a blessing that
has healed many of the Huskie wounds.
Buffalo has defeated Kent State
(21 -13 ). Massachusetts (23-0). Delaware
( 29-17). and Holy Cross ( 10-9) in addition to Temple . Buffalo defeats have been
administered by Iowa State (28-10). Boston
College (31 -12). and Villanova (28-7 ).
Head coach Richard W . " Doc" Urich
is in his third year at Buffalo, and is well
on his way to bui lding a football tradition .
In just three short years Urich, another

coach who learned his trade at Miami (0.).
has set all kinds of offensive records with
his teams.
Last year, against a troublesome schedule, Urich led the Bulls to a 6-4 record ,
the school 's best mark since 1958.

cess (1.474 yards to 1 ,072 ). Last week
Temple put the ball in the air 62 times,
completing 35 for 440 yards against the
Buffalo secondary.

Two talented running backs, an accurate passer, and a f ine corps of pass receivers pace the Buffalo offense.

Northern coach Howard Fletcher indicated Don Johnson might get the call at
quarterback for the Huskies today. Regular signal-caller Bob Carpenter has been
plagued with 11 interceptions thus far.

Ken Rutkowski leads the Bull rushing
game. The 5-9. 180-pound senior tailback
has picked up 553 yards in 131 carries
for a 4.2 average. Built along the lines of
NIU fullback John Lalonde, Rutkowski is
a break-away runner. He has scored four
TDs this year.

Horace Miller, who is now the Huskies'
second-leading rusher with 272 yards in
76 carries, will probably start at running
back for NIU , although Bruce Bray, who
led Huskie rushers earlier in the year, appears to be recovered from a painful
Achilles tendon wound .

The other Buffalo ground threat is fullback Joe Zelmanski. who has scored seven
TDs this season in addition to gaining 392
yards on 105 carries .

Greg York will move into the tackle
spot on defense for Northern. now that
sophomores Chris Richter and Jerry Weydert have proven themselves at defensive
end .

Denny Mason, a veteran scrambler,
directs the Buffalo attack. He has gained
890 yards through the air on 73 completions. Dick Ashley, 6-1 , 200-pound sen ior, is the chief Buffalo rece iver (30 receptions for 306 yards ). but tight-end Paul
Lang and flanker Chuck Drankoski are
equally adept.
Buffalo has outrushed opponents so
far ( 1 .380 yards to 1 ,208 ), but enemy
passing attacks have met w ith better sue-

1968 Results and Schedule
UNIVERSITY OF
BUFFALO
SEPT.
14-Jowa State 28, Buffalo 1 0
21-Buffalo 21, Kent State 13
27-Buffalo 23, Massac:husetts 0
OCT.
5-Boston CollecJe 31, Buffalo 12
12-Buffalo 29, Delaware 17
19-Villanova 28, Buffalo 7
26-Buffalo 10, Holy Cross 9
NOV.
2-Buffalo 50, Temple 40
9-at Northern Illinois
23-at Boston University

1968 Results and Schedule
NORTHERN ILLINOIS
UNIVERSITY
SEPT.
14-NIU 40, Ball State 20
21-San DiecJo State 40, NIU 21
28-North Dakota State 31, NIU 13
OCT.
5-lndiana State 19, NIU 7
12-Northern Arizona 43, NIU 14
19-Xavier 24, NIU 20
26-New Mexic:o State 27, NIU 13
NOV.

Northern's shifty running back, Horace Miller (40 ), slips past a pile of blockers and
would-be tacklers.

10

9-UNIVERSJTY OF BUFFALO
16-BOWLJNG GREEN STATE
23-at Ohio University

�DeKALB SAVINGS
Third &amp; Locust Streets •

AND LOAN ASSOCIAnOtl

DeKalb, Illinois •

Go Huskies! Sock it to

Phone 756-6314

em with Fury!

UNIVERSITY MOTORS
Jerry Smith, President

1055 West Lincoln Highway

Telephone: 756-6378
DE KALB, ILUNOIS
11

�HOWARD W. FLETCHER
Head Football Coach

JOHN M. WRENN
Line Coach

WILLIAM B. PECK
End and Clltching Coach

12

CHARLES A. NICKOSON
Assistant Line Coach

ROBERT W. HEIMERDINGER
Freshman Coach

OTIS R. WAGNER
Defensive Backfield Coach

PHILIP C. HOLM
Assistant Freshman Coach

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with taste
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who likes
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that Kendall Built
4 miles East of Sycamore on Rt.64
For reservations, phone 895-5466

WuRLllzER

coMPLIMENTs oF

Compliments of . . .

CHUM-HALSTED AGENCY,
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CLOSED ON MONDAYS

FIRST STATE BANK OF
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Maple Park

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FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP •

111 East Elm Street
SYCAMORE. ILLINOIS

895-2111

""A little bank in a good little town""

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•
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•
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Complete Window Treatments
Custom Draperies
Bedspreads
Window Shades
Venetian Blinds
Decorator Drapery Rods
Carpeting
(~agee , Roxbury, Sequoyah)

1303 Pleasant St.

Phone 815/756-6833
DE KALB. ILLINOIS 60115

159 West lincoln Highway

DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115
PHONE 815/ 756-2223

13

�MEET THE
HUSKIES

** *
1. WAYNE FIEDLER, 5-11, 185-pound
junior halfback. An outstanding allaround athlete from Monona Village,
Wis. Excellent pair of hands which he
used to average 19.8 yards per catch
last year. Can run and pass with the
football in addition to catching it. Presently the Huskies' placekicker.
Has
converted 14 of 17 extra-point kicks.
Figures highly in NIU's outlook next
year. Voted "Wisconsin's Outstanding
Athlete" in 1966.

2. MICHAEL BATINA, 6-2, 209-pound
sophomore center. Though not impressive size-wise, Batina is one of the most
hard-nosed Huskies. Has quick reflexes
which enable him to move out quickly.
Grabbed the first-string post this fall
and has no intentions of relinquishing
the job for the next two years. Played
at St. Leo in Chicago where he earned
second-team All-Catholic league honors
in 1967.

3. ROBERT OWENS, 6-4. 232-pound
senior tackle. Owens has filled in well
at tackle for the Huskies when injuries
hit the NIU lineup earlier in the year.
He is the oldest member on the team,
having already served a three-year hitch
with the U . S. Army. He played on
NIU's 1963 National College Division
and Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference championship team.

4. JOHN LaLONDE, 5-10. 197-pound
sophomore fullback.
Leading ground
gainer for the Huskies this season with
a five-yards-per-rushing average. An excellent, tough runner who could eclipse
season and career rushing marks at NIU
before he's through. Lalonde brought
speed and balance with him when he
transferred to NIU last year from the
University of Wisconsin. Several times
this year he has displayed the determination and skill which will probably make
him one of NIU's best ever.

5.
DENNIS ZUMBAHLEN , 6-0, 215pound junior linebacker. Zumbahlen is
one of the most versatile Huskies. with
the ability to play end and middle guard
in addition to linebacker. He's a rough
tackler and extremely aggressive. Earned all -state honorable mention and
Southeast Suburban Conference all -star
mention as a senior at Rich Central in
Olympia Fields .

0
14

***

�Bradt.- Milner Travel Service
1fl~

II

Sewtee

~ ';Vz4t

Go Get 'Em Huskies! ,,

Charlie .. Jane .. Betty .. Beverly .. Marcia .. Sue
24 7 North Second Street
DE KALB. ILLINOIS
TELEPHONES:
CHICAGO AC/312 782-7569

DE KALB AC/815 758-8173

Hey, Amigos!

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223 North Fourth St.

Phone 815/756-6325

DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115

PHONE 758-3100

15

�16

MICHAEL BATINA
Chicago (St. Leo)

LARRY BEASLEY
Decatur

WILLIAM BLACK
DeKalb

WILLIAM BOSTON
Park Forest (Rich Twp. East)

BRUCE BRAY
LaSalle-Peru

ROBERT CARPENTER
Villa Park (Lombard)

RICHARD CIESLA
Waukegan

WILLIAM COOGAN
Blue Island (Eisenhower)

JAMES CZOCHER
Chicago (St. Philip)

DAN DeVITO
Wheeling (Forest View)

RUSSELL DUDLEY
Downers Grove North

JAMES FAGGml
Bloomington

WAYNE FIEDLER
Monona Grove, Wis.

THOMAS FRYE
East Moline (United Twp.)

DOUGLAS GALLOIS
Kankakee (Bishop McNamara)

HAROLD HAMMERICH
LaSaile-Peru

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NAMES IN FRACiRANCES AND COSMETICS
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with low prices for the student budget
263 EAST LINCOLN HIGHWAY

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DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60 I 15

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756-2622

758-3785

Cht

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Number 1 Huskie Booster
Since 1909
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DE KALB, ILLINOIS

DE KALB, ILLINOIS

17

�THOMAS HARVEY
El Paso

ROBERT HASTINGS
Cary (Cary-Grove)

DON HOWER
Freeport

DON JOHNSON
Sycamore

THOMAS KARAC
Oak Lawn (St. Laurence)

WALTER KOTYAN
ChictJgo (Prosser Vocational)

JAMES KUFFEL
Chicago (St. Patrick)

JOHN LALONDE
Downers Grove North

KENNETH LAURENCE
McHenry

MATTHEW LOFTON
Downers Grove North

ROBERT MELVILLE
Waukegan

HORACE MILLER
Chicago (Farragut)

WILLIAM MURPHY
LaS aile-Peru

GALEN NAUMANN
ChictJgo Hts. (Bloom Twp.)

GLEN OSBOURNE
Burlington. Ia.

ROBERT OWENS
West Chicago

18

�MASON'S
DEEP ROCK
1120 West Lincoln Highway
DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115
Telephone 758-8040

WELCOMES BACK

NIU STUDENTS
ROYAL CROWN COLA
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DOUBLE PLAID
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with each gas purchase

Mon d ay ••• W ed nesd ay ••• Fr1·day

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Dash into the football season with Deep Rock!
19

�STEVEN PARKER
Oswego

JAMES PAnERSON
Leaf River

CHRIS RICHTER
Carpentersville (Crown)

TOM ROSE
Chicago (St. Patrick)

ROLAND ROTH
Orland Park (Carl Sandburg)

JOHN SANBORN
Naperville

JOHN SPILlS
Dolton (Thornridge)

ROBERT SUYADA
Chicago (Holy Cross)

PHIL SZUKIS
DeKalb

PAT YISCI
East Cleveland, 0. (Shaw)

LEANDREW WADE
Chicago (Harlan)

DAVID WEISENDANGER
Freeport

PAUL YORK
East Moline (United Twp.)

DENNIS ZUMBAHLEN
Olympia Fields
(Rich Twp. Central)

GILBERT GULBRANDSON
Cary (Cary-Grove)

J.
JEROME WEYDERT
DeKalb

20

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21

�NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY
1968 FOOTBALL ROSTER
No.

Name

Pos.

80
50
43
14
23
20
15

Bastable, Thomas
LE
Batina, Michael
LB
Beasley, larry
HB
Black William *
Fl.
Boston, William *
HB
Bray, Bruce *
Fl.
QB
Carpenter, Robert *
72
Ciesla, Richard
RT
32
Coogan, William **
FB
55
Czocher, James *
47
DeVito, Dan
HB
67
Dial, Wlliam
LT
22
Dudley, Russell **
Fl.
51
Faggetti, James **
LB
24
Fiedler, Wayne*
LHB
90
Finley, Richard
RE
73
Frye, Thomas
RT
78
Gall, David
RT
81
Gallois, Doug
LE
42
Gulbrandson, Gilbert * HB
79
Hammerich, Harold *
LT
44
Harvey, Thomas*
HB
71
Hastings, Robert
LT
77
Hower, Don **
RT
16
Johnson, Don
QB
70
Karac, Thomas *
RT
76
Kotvan, Walter*
LT
45
Kuffel, James *
HB
26
Kyler, Ron
RB
33
Lalonde, John
LHB
88
Laurence, Kenneth
RE
65
Lofton, Matthew*
RG
64
Massier, Horst
RG
35
Melville, Robert
FB
40
Miller, Horace *
LHB
41
Moushon, James
HB
66
Murphy, William **
MG
52
Muszynski, Kenneth *
63
Naumann, Galen *
LG
46
Osbourne, Glen *
G
68
Owens, Robert *
LT
10
Parker, Steve *
QB
60
Patterson, James*
LB
31
Richter, Chris
RE
21
Rose, Tom
HB
86
Roth, Roland *
RE
25
Sanborn, John **
HB
83
Schumaker, Donald
LE
87
Spilis, John**
LE
62
Stritzel, James
MG
61
Suvada, Robert
LG
89
Szukis, Phil
LE
56
Tsutsumi, Wayne
LB
17
Visci, Pat
QB
30
Wade, Leandrew **
HB
75
Weisendanger, David
LT
91
Weydert, Jerome
DE
74
Williams, John
RT
85
York, Paul**
RE
69
Zumbahlen, Dennis *
LB
* Indicates letters won.

c

c

22

=-

Yr.
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
2
4
3
2
3
4
4
3
3
3
2
4
3
3
3
2
4
2
4
4
4
2
2
3
4
2
2
4
2
4
3
3
4
4
3
3
2
2
4
4
3
4
3
2
2
2
3
4
2
2
2
4
3

HiCJh School &amp; Coach

ACJe

Wt.

Ht.

Hometown

19
18
20
20
20
20
20
18
21
20
18
20
21
21
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
21
22
21
21
21
18
20
21
21
19
20
22
18
21
21
20
22
22
20
20
19
20
21
21
20
21
20
19
19
19
21
21
19
20
19
22
20

174
209
190
155
177
198
177
230
212
205
180
235
173
204
185
216
245
212
175
176
225
187
248
243
215
219
224
183
195
197
232
217
210
210
190
176
217
224
208
184
232
179
206
193
186
227
183
195
217
208
205
232
218
160
206
223
190
227
228
215

6-0
6-2
6-2
5-9
5- II
6-1
6-1
6-3
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-2
5- II
6-0
5- II
6-5
6-1
6-3
5- II
5-11
6-2
6-0
6-7
6-2
6-4
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-1
5-10
6-6
6-0
6-1
6-0
5- II
6-1
6-0
6-3
5-10
5-11
6-4
5-10
5-10
6-0
5-10
6-1
5- II
6-0
6-4
6-2
6-0
6-3
5-10
5-7
6-1
6-3
6-5
6-4
6-4
6-0

Arlington Hts., Ed Bryant
Arlington Hts.
leo, Robert Hanlon
Chicago
Decatur, Jim Tate
Decatur
DeKalb Sr., Robert Heimerdinger
DeKalb
Rich East, George Egofske
Park Forest
Utica
laSalle-Peru, Gene Cherney
lombard
Willowbrook, Victor Lesch
Waukegan
Waukegan, Walter Rucks
Chicago
Eisenhower, AI lokanc
St. Philip, Joe Petrozzi
Glen Ellyn
Wheeling
Forest View, Bill Dalesky
laSalle-Peru, Joe Skibinski
LaSalle
Downers Gr.
Downers Gr. N., Rich. Carstens
Bloomington, Bloice Bess
Bloomington
Monona Gr., Art Runcle
Monona Gr., Wis.
Dwight, William Gilkey
Dwight
East Moline
United Twp., AI Zimmerman
Thornridge, Jack Robinson
Dolton
Manteno
Bishop McNamara, Carl Magsmen
Fox River Gr.
Cary-Grove, William Mack
LaSalle
laSalle-Peru, Gene Cherney
El Paso
El Paso Community, Rob+. Johnson
Cary
Cary-Grove, William Mack
Freeport
Freeport, Nate Johnson
Sycamore
Sycamore, Pete Johnson
Chicago
St. Laurence, Frank Minik
Chicago
Prosser Voc., Ernie Wickstrom
Chicago
St. Patrick, Fred Dempsey
DeKalb
DeKalb Sr., Robert Heimerdinger
Downers Gr.
Downers Gr. N., Rich. Carstens
Roselle
McHenry Community, Dean Hargis
Downers Gr.
Downers Gr. N., Rich. Carstens
Crystal Lake
Crystal Lake, Charles Fatchett
Waukegan
Waukegan, Wally Rucks
Chicago
Farragut, Guido Marchetti
Lockport
Walnut, Del Dufrain
LaSalle
LaSalle-Peru, Gene Cherney
Chicago
Chicago Voc., Bernie O'Brien
Chicago Hts .
Bloom Twp., Nick Colbrese
Burlington, Ia.
Central, Harold Tackleson
West Chicago
West Chicago, Dick Kerner
Aurora
Oswego Com., Ken Pickerill
German Valley
Leaf River, Grover Stevens
Algonquin
Crown, Robert Seamans
Chicago
St. Patrick, Fred Dempsey
Orland Park
Carl Sandburg, Joe Devine
Naperville
Naperville Com., Wes Spencer
Barrington
Barrington Cons., Wm. Graham
South Holland
Thornridge, Jack Robinson
Springfield
Griffin, Bob Teater
Chicago
Holy Cross, Frank Mariani
DeKalb
DeKalb Sr., Robert Heimerdinger
Chicago
Lane Tech., AI Manasin
E. Cleveland, 0.
Shaw, Don Drekas
Chicago
Harlan, Sherman Howard
Freeport
Freeport, Nate Johnson
DeKalb
DeKalb Sr. , Robert Heimerdinger
Hammond, lnd,. D. E. Gavit Jr.-Sr., Geo. Smith
East Moline
United Twp., AI Zimmerman
Matteson
Rich Twp. Central, Ron Stark

"OFFICIAL WATCH FOR THIS GAME- LONGINES -THE WORLD 'S MOST HONORED WATCH"

-=

�/

•

Olds Delta 88 Royale:The bold and the beautiful.
Meet our new top-of-the-line 88. Big-car room and
ride on a longer 124-inch wheelbase. Vinyl roof, pinstriping, fender louvers, big Rocket 455 V-8 and
much more, standard. All for little more than you'd
pay for an ordinary car! Escape from the ordinary.

��DEFENSE
31
89
85
91
51
66
60
44
21
45
25

CHRIS RICHTER __________________ LE
PHIL SZUKIS ________________________ LT
PAUL YORK -----·-------------- __ RT
JERRY WEYDERT ________________ RE
JIM FAGGEnl _______________ ___ LLB
BILL MURPHY ____________ ____ __MLB
JIM PATTERSON ______________ RLB
TOM HARVEY ___ ______________ LCB
TOM ROSE ______________________ RCB
JIM KUFFEL __ __________________ SS
RICK SANBORN __________________ FS

87
77
64
52
68
73
85
19
21
35
44

Bulls

Huskies
OFFENSE
87
75
63
50
70
77
88
16
40
22
33

JOHN SPILlS __ ____________________ SE
DAVID WEISENDANGER ____ LT
GALEN NAUMANN __ ________ LG
MIKE BATINA ______ ________________ C
THOMAS KARAC ______________ RG
DON HOWER ______________________ RT
ROLAND ROTH __________________ TE
DON JOHNSON __________ __ QB
HORACE MILLER __ ______ HB
RUSS DUDLEY ____________________ TB
JOHN LaLONDE ____ ______________ FB

NORTHERN ILLINOIS SQUAD
I 0 Parker, QB
14 Black, FL

15 Carpenter, QB
16 Johnson, QB
17 Visci, QB
20 Bray, HB
21 Rose, LCB
22 Dudley, FL
23 Boston, FS
24 Fiedler, FL
25 Sanborn, RCB
26 Kyler, HB
30 Wade, LCB
31 Richter, RLB
32 Coogan, FB
33 Lalonde, BF
35 Melville, T
40 Miller, HB
41 Moushon, HB
42 Gulbrandson, HB
43 Beasley, SS
44 Harvey, SS
45 Kuffel, SS
46 Osbourne, PK
47 DeVito, LCB
50 Batina, C
51 Faggetti, LLB
52 Muszynski, C

55 Czocher, C
56 Tsutsumi, T
60 Patterson, RLB
61 Suvada, G

62
63
65
66
67
68
69
70
72
73

75
76
77

78
79
80
81
83
85
86
87
89
90
91

Stritzel, G
Naumann, LG
Lofton, RG
Murphy, MG
Dial, T
Owens, LE
Zumbahlen, LB
Karac, RT
Ciesla, T
Frye, T
Weisendanger, LT
Kotvan, LT
Hower, RT
Gall, RT
Hammerich, LT
Bastable, LE
Gallois, LE
Schumaker, LE
York, RE
Roth, TE
Spilis, SE
Szukis, LE
Finley, RE
Weydert, RE

OFFENSE
DICK ASHLEY ____________ _ ___ __SE
CHRIS WOLF ____________________ LT
MIKE MASER ____________________ LG
JOHN WESOLOWSKI ________ C
BILL HAYDEN ________________ _RG
TOM CENTOFANI ______________ RT
PAUL LANG _________________ _______ TE
DENNY MASON ___ ___________ QB
KEN RUTKOWSKI ________________ TB
JOE ZELMANSKI ________________ FB
CHUCK DRANKOSKI _____ FLK

81
70
69
65
75
90
50
23
29
42
32

DEFENSE
TOM MURPHY ____________________ LE
DAN WALGATE _________________ LT
DON SABO __ __ ____________ ILB
SCOn CLARK ________________ _IRB
JOE RICCELLI ____________________ RT
PRENTIS HENLEY _____________ RE
JIM MOSHER _______ __________ OLB
NICK KISH ___ ____ ____ _____ LHB
DICK HORN ________ _________________ S
LEN NIXON ____________________ RHB
DAVE RICHNER ______________ ORB
BUFFALO SQUAD

II Perry, QB
15 Martin, DHB
16 Embow, KSP
17 Jack, KSP-QB
19 Mason, QB
20 Patterson, TB
2 I Rutkowski, TB
23 Kish, DHB
24 Zalar, DHB
25 Bell, LB
26 Jacobs, S
29 Horn, DHB
3 2 Richner, LB
33 Zeek, FB
34 Luzny, LB
35 Zelmanski, FB
36 Woodward, FLK
38 Chapp, FB
40 Elliot, S
42 Nixon, DHB
44 Drankoski, FLK
50 Mosher, LB
52 Wesolowski, C
56 Chernega, LB
57 Albaneze, DT
58 Donnor, C

59 Kershaw, LB
61 Elwell, G

62
63
64
65
66
68
69
70
73

74
75
76
77
78
79
80
82
84
85
86
87
89
90

Kowalewski, G
Walters, G
Maser, G
Clark, LB
Lupienski, LB
Hayden, G
Sabo, LB
Walgate, DT
Centofanti, T
Rio, T
Riccell, DT
Reid, T
Wolf, T
Beck, DT
Atkinson, DT
Murphy, DE
Endress, TE
Przybycien, DE
Lang, TE
Vigneau, DE
Ashley, SE
Sharrow, SE
Henley, DE

- Officials Referee .......................... ...... ... . Gene Calhoun
Umpire .... .. ........ .. ................ .. .... Ted Deutsch
Headlinesman ................. .. ....... .. Ed Maracich
Field Judge ............. .. ................... John Olson
Back Judge .......... .................. .. Tom Thomson

�( ... '3E ThE CENTER
Ol= ATTE~TION
''- \N A N~W CAR
OM 0\RYSLER

CORPORAllON/
L,__ \_____

"-----

CHR:y SLE.R.
CORPORATION)
LDNG ON

STYLING ,

LONG ON
FEATURES
A ND ON
&amp;JGLNE.SRING

Plymouth. Dodge. Chrysler·lmperial· Dodge Trucks· Simca ·Sunbeam
SEE THE AFL IN ACTIO

~~ CHRYSLER
CORPORATION
~

EACH WEEK ON NBC- TV.

�UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
1968 FOOTBALL ROSTER
No.

57
87
79
78
25
60
73
38
56
65
58
44
40
61
16
82
49
45
68
90
30
48
46
29
17
26
88
59
23
83
62
85
66
34
15
64
19
37
72
51
10
50
81
42
20
II

84
76
75
32
74
21
69
89
80
12
86
70
63
52
77
36
24
33
35

Name
Albaneze, Dennis
Ashley, Richard
Atkinson, Barry
Beck, Russell
Bell, Harry
Carney, Patrick
Centofanti, Thomas
Chapp, Gary
Chernega, David
Clark, Scott
Donnor, Charles
Drankoski, Charles
Elliott, Thomas
Elwell, Jerry
Embow, Robert
Endress, Terrence
Faller, John
Grubbs, Gar~
Hayden, Wil iam
Henley, Prentis
Hernquist, Eugene
Hlavenka, Joseph
Hogan, Kevin
Horn, Richard
Jack, Paul
Jacobs, Joel
James, Michael
Kershaw, Edward
Kish, Nicholas
Kovey, Robert
Kowalewski, Thomas
Lang, Paul
Lupienski, John
Luzny, Michael
Martin, Daniel
Maser, Michael
Mason, Dennis (CCI
McCullough, Steven
Milarski, Thomas
Moler, Robert
Moresco, Joseph
Mosher, James
Murphy, Thomas
Nixon, Leonard
Patterson, Patrick
Perry, Edward
Przybycien, John
Reid, Frank
Riccelli, Joseph
Richner, David
Rio, John
Rutkowski, Kenneth
Sabo, Donald ICC)
Sharrow, Michael
Shine, John
Stisca k, Robert
Vigneau, Thomas
Walgate, Daniel
Walters, Greg
Wesolowski, John
Wolf, Chris
Woodward, Barnard
Zalar, Karl
Zeek, John
Zelmanski, Joseph

=-

Yr.
2
4
2
3
3
3
2
3
3
3
c
2
FL
4
s
2
G
2
KSP
4
TE
3
TB
2
DHB
3
G
4
DE
3
LB
2
SE
2
HB
3
DHB
3
QB-KSP 3
s
2
TE
2
LB
2
DHB
4
DE
3
G
4
TE
3
LB
4
LB
3
DHB
4
G
4
QB
4
LB
3
DT
2
c
3
QB
2
LB
4
DE
4
DHB
2
TB
3
QB
2
DE
4
T
3
DT
4
4
LB
T
2
4
TB
4
LB
SE
3
2
SE
DHB
2
2
DE
3
DT
3
G
4
c
T
3
FL
2
DHB
2
FB
2
FB
2
Pos.
DT
SE
DT
DT
LB
G
T
FB
LB
LB

Age

19
21
19
19
22
20
19
20
21
21
19
21
19
20
20
20
19
20
21
21
19
19
20
21
20
19
19
19
21
20
21
21
21
21
21
21
21
20
19
21
19
21
22
19
20
19
20
22
21
21
19
20
21
22
19
19
19
20
19
22
20
19
19
19
19

"OFFICIAL WATCH FOR THIS GAME -

Ht.
6-3
6-1
6-4
6-3
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-8
5-11
6-0
6-1
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-11
5-9
5-10
6-1
5-9
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-0
5-10
6-7
6-2
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-0
5-10
5-9
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-3
6-1
6-3
6-2
5-11
6-0
5-9
5-10
6-3
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-0
5- II
6-3
5-9
6-0
5-11
6-1

Wt.

205
201
240
232
180
200
210
200
187
212
195
183
175
208
210
202
178
175
213
205
190
185
180
188
178
179
210
195
198
202
210
210
210
209
187
214
188
201
250
226
175
212
192
180
191
205
200
217
242
197
232
180
210
215
180
185
204
255
212
214
220
190
180
190
193

High School and Hometown
Elmhurst, N.Y.
Stuyvesant
Massena, N. Y.
Massena
Tarentum, Pa.
E. Dear-Frazer
Ind ianapolis, Ind.
Cathedral
Potsdam, N. Y.
Potsdam
New Kensington, Pa.
New Kensington
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Bisho~ Duffy
Centerline, Mich.
St. Cement
Endicott, N. Y.
Union-Endicott
Coshocton, 0.
Coshocton
East Aurora, N. Y.
East Aurora
Endwell, N. Y.
Maine-Endwell
Canandaigua, N. Y.
Canandaigua
Rochester, N. Y.
Cardinal Mooney
Hamburg, N. Y.
Hamburg
Cuyahoga Falls, 0.
St. Vincent's
Rochester, N. Y.
Greece-Arcadia
Coshocton, 0 .
Coshocton
Cleveland, 0.
Cathedral Latin
Buffalo, N. Y.
South Park
Olean
Olean, N.Y.
Niagara Falls
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
West
St. Louis, Mo.
Dover
Dover, 0.
Springdale
Springdale, Pa.
East Rockaway
East Rockaway, N. Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Penn Hills
Elyria, 0.
Elyria
Buffalo, N. Y.
Amherst Central
Youngstown, 0.
Cardinal Mooney
Detroit, Mich.
DeLaSalle
Ithaca, N. Y.
Ithaca
Springdale
Springdale, Pa.
St. Joseph's
South Bend, Ind.
Huntington
Huntington, N. Y.
Clayton
Clayton, N. Y.
Bishop Fallon
Buffalo, N. Y.
Coshocton
Coshocton, 0.
North Hill
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Orchard Park
Orchard Park, N. Y.
Ithaca
Ithaca, N. Y.
Central Islip
Central Islip, N. Y.
Westmont
Johnstown, Pa.
St. Joseph's
Cleveland, 0.
Ambridge
Ambridge, Pa.
Bethlehem Central
Delmar, N. Y.
Univ. Detroit
Detroit, Mich.
Fisher Park
Ottawa, Ont. (Canada)
Heninger
Syracus·e, N. Y.
Bemus Point
Greenhurst, N. Y.
St. Mary's
Byrnedale, Pa.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Kenmore East
Johnstown, Pa.
Bishop McCort
Witherbee, N. Y.
Moriah Central
Olean, N.Y.
Bishop Walsh
Aliquippa, Pa.
Aliquippa
Centerline, Mich.
St. Clement
Grand Island, N. Y.
Grand Island
Kenmore, N. Y.
Ke nmore East
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Cleveland Hill
Solon, 0.
Solon
Peru,N.Y.
Peru
Tiffin, 0.
Clavert
Berwick, Pa.
Berwick
Centerline, Mich.
St. Clement

LONGINES - THE WORLD' S MOST HONORED WATCH"

•

27

�Holiday Inn "Calls The Signals"

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11 CRAWliNG, HElPING RUNNER
OR INTERLOCKED INTERFERENCE

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15 INEliGIOlE RECEIVER 16 BAll IllEGAllY TOUCHED,
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PENAlTY DECliNED, NO PlAY
OR NO SCORE

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23 FIIII:ST DOWN

FOR YOUR PLEASURE:
•

114 Modern Rooms

•

Dining Room, Coffee Shop
and Cocktail Lounge

•

Free Swimming Pool

•

And 21 Other Free Services
At Your Disposal

HOLIDAY INN OF DE KALB
1212 West Lincoln Highway
(815) 758-8661

28

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14 FORWARD PASS OR
KICK CATCHING INTERFERENCE
13 IllEGAllY PASSING OR

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�Devoted To Public Sezvice

Buffalo Adapts To Urban Needs
State University of New York at Buffalo,
founded in 1846 as the University of Buffalo, is today the largest snigle unit and
most comprehensive undergraduate and
graduate center of State University, enrolling 21 ,000 students (13 ,000 full-time) .
One of the first independent instituions of
higher learning to be established in the
United States, the university was a pioneer
in adapting educational service to the specific needs of a developing urban complex.
Today, the university is headed by a noted
scholar of urban affairs, Martin Meyerson ,
who is the tenth chief executive officer of
the university.
First chancellor of the university was
Millard Fillmore , 13th president of the
United States.
Building upon more than a century of
public service tradition , the university has
developed rapidly as a state institution
since it became part of the SUNY system
in 1962.
While the total enrollment has increased
only 37 per cent since 1962. the number
of full-time undergraduates has grown by
49 per cent and the full-time graduate and
professional student population by 167 per
cent. The number of degrees awarded has
grown more dramatically, ranging from an
increase of 200 per cent for bachelor's
degrees to almost 500 per cent for Ph.D.'s.
In 1968, the university conferred 2 ,200
bachelor 's degrees, 902 master's degrees,
138 academic doctorates and 237 doctorates in the professions.
The character of the student body has
changed as profoundly as its size. In the
fall of 1959, 30.5 per cent of entering students ranked in the top one-fifth of their
respective high school classes . Of those
entering in the fall of 1967, 86.7 per cent
ranked in the top quintile. Similar improvements have taken place in the quality of
graduate students.
Resources and facilities have also been
improved and enlarged. The number of
volumes in the university libraries. for example, has tripled since 1962 and has recently passed the one million mark. To
provide room for continued expansion of
operations pending completion of a new
campus , the university is occupying a number of off-campus locations, including an
" interim" facility of several buildings on
Ridge Lea Road in the town of Amherst,
three miles north of the present campus.

professional and academic, beyond the
baccalaureate level. A third university division, Millard Fillmore College, administers evening credit programs and continuing education for adults. To provide yearround operation, the summer sessions coordinate academic offerings in three overlapping terms, June through August.
Dramatic as the recent growth and innovation has been, the most significant period
of development in the university's history
is just beginning.
The seven broadly interdisciplinary faculties will incorporate and build upon traditional disciplines while identifying and
implementing both new combinations of
standard disciplines and new fields of
study and research. A series of nondegree
granting " colleges" to be established in
the next several years will provide for students centers of identification and a diversity of opportunity for intellectual exchange
and will serve as a vehicle for fostering
personal relationships within a large university. A program of vigorous recruitment
based upon competitive salary levels and
bolstered by a climate of encouragement
for creative academic pursuits and enriched
body of faculty scholars. The level of
achievement of the student body can be
expected to keep pace with these over-all
qualitative developments as enrollment increases to approximately 40,000 by 1975.
with particular growth at the graduate level.
Constant attention will also remain focused
on building a distinguished undergraduate
program as the foundation for an excellent
graduate center.
Germane to all these intellectual prospects is the vista of an entirely new university campus , designed especially to
facilitate implementation of educational objectives. This complex will be developed
on a 1 ,300-acre tract in the town of Amherst, three miles north of the present
campus. The project which will provide
14 million square feet of educational space
is expected to begin taking shape in the
early 1970's. Upon its completion , the
present 178-acre Main Street campus at
the northeastern edge of Buffalo will be
devoted to expanded research activities
and will serve also as the site of one of
the largest centers of continuing education
activities in the nation .

The stately tower rising above Hayes Hall
is a focal point of Buffalo's main campus.

***

Understandably, the costs of operating
the univers ity have also increased since
1962. An annual budget of $18 .5 million
in the last year before the merger has now
grown to over $60 million. Meanwhile,
funds for sponsored research-from sources entirely outside of the state treasuryhave increased by over 250 per cent.
The university has recently implemented
a bold new academic play, reorganizing its
schools and coll eges within seven interdisciplinary facilities arts and letters,
educational studies , engineering and applied sciences, health sciences, law and
jurisprudence, natural sciences and mathematics, and social sciences and administration . All undergraduate instruction is offered through one division, the university col lege, while the school of graduate studies
is expected to become the central coordinating body for all higher degree programs,

Aerial view of Buffalo's main campus with downtown Buffalo in background. Nearly
40,000 students are expected to enroll at Buffalo by 1975, with particular growth at the
graduate level.

29

�THE IN-WEAR
FOR MEN

at

TBE BULL PEH
IN UNIVERSITY CITY

•
9:00 til 9:00 Mon. thru Fri.
Sat. til 5:30

HAGEN'S
BARBER
SHOP
Otto Hagen

About Your Next Trip To
Europe •••

You Might Be Surprised
What You Can Find
at Terwilligers

SEE US FIRST!

SHWYER .lffiPOIITS
F"IF"TH &amp; LINCOLN

OEKALB, ILL.

ATHLETIC SUPPLIES FOR
ATHLETES OF ALL AGES
From little Leaguers to Joggers

We'll show you how to save money
and make your trip more relaxing
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--o-Custom Lettering on
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European Delivery
Specialists

Jackets

MERCEDES-BENZ
VOLVO ••• MG

TERWILLIGERS

EXPERT I MPORTED CAR SERVICE

NIASCO
1021 North First St.
DE KALB, ILLINOIS
Phone 756-9391

THE MIL-NOB
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124 South Fourth Street
DE KALB, ILLINOIS

Fifth and Lincoln Highway
DE KALB, ILLINOIS

Phone 815/758-5451

Floor Covering
Wallpaper

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UNIVERSITY CITY, DE KALB, ILL

DELANO'S

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DRAPES - CARPETS - RUGS
PICTURE FRAMING
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FLOOR &amp; WALL TILE

PHONE 756-9910

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125 S. Fourth St. Phone 756-2951
DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115

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Also ..
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GEORGE and
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DeKalb
Free- Parking
Next to Store.

Loafers &amp; Wing Tips
Jackets -

Many Styles

FRATERNITIES- SORORITIES
TEAMS and CLUBS

TROPHIES &amp; PLAQUES
30

�President

Athletic Director

RICHARD W. "DOC" URICH
Head Coach

WILLIAM R. DANDO
Assistant Coach

ROBERT C. DEMING
Assistant Coach

ROBERT E. GEIGER
Assistant Coach

JERRY A. IPPOLITI
Assistant Coach

SAM L. SANDERS
Assistant Coach

31

�-

-~---~~--

DEKALB HYBRIDS SALUTE THE HUSKIES

New DeKa/b home office and international headquarters
on Route 23 North of DeKalb.

DEKALB AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATION, INC~
America's Leading Commercial Producer of Hybrids for Agriculture

CORN .. SORGHUM .. SUDAX .. CHIX .. WHEAT

Mrs. John Spilis
is Part of
~~,j Important
''T'' Formation
&gt;:&lt;

First National's TRUST

Department -

another

specialized financial service
available to you at First
National Bank in DeKalb.
The bank that knows
your money matters.

BAN K
IN

32

D E KALB

�196K

RUSS BECK
Indianapolis, Ind.

TOM CENTOFANTI
Niagara Falls, N. Y.

GARY CHAPP
Centerline, Mich.

CLARK
Coshocton, 0.

CHUCK DRANKOSKI
Endwell, N. Y.

BOB EMBOW
Hamburg, N. Y.

TERRY ENDRESS
Cuyahoga Falls, 0.

GARY GRUBBS
Coshocton, 0.

BILL HAYDEN
Cleveland, 0.

DICK HORN
Dover, 0.

PAUL JACK
Springdale, Pa.

RICHARD ASHLEY
Massena, N. Y.

scon

TOM KOWALEWSKI
Detroit, Mich.

BOB KOYEY
Youngstown, 0.

DENNY MASON
Buffalo, N. Y.

33

�e

e

m
Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
You can shave it with a razor blade like your father does.
And each time you do your beard will grow back a little more
difficult. Until one day shaving's no longer a
chore. It's an agony.
Look no further than your fathee s face
for proof.
But fortunately, you're catching your
beard at an early age. You can break it in to be
just as shaveable 10 and 20 years from
now as it is today.
With a REMINGTO~ shavet:
And if you think the kind of shave we're selling won't be
close enough for you, you're wrong.
Our new blades are sharper than anything that's been in an
electric shaver before. And there's a dial that
lets you adjust them for your skin and beard.
What's more, you can dial a REMINGTON
electric shaver into a sideburn trimmet:
Admittedly, it costs more to buy our
electric shaver than a razor and some blades.
But it's a good investment.
These next few years will determine how
you and your beard will get along for the rest '-RE-M-IN_G_I_O_NrJ
of your lives.
&lt;LtcfROC$H.,UOOVOSOOH, I"OC"0Rf,C0HN(CfOCUT.

34

�MIKE LUZNY
South Bend, Ind.

JOHN LUPIENSKI
Springdale, Pa.

PAUL LANG
Ithaca, N. Y.

JIM MOSHER
Central Islip, N. Y.

TOM MURPHY
Johnstown, Pa.

LEN NIXON
Cleveland, 0.

PAT PATTERSON
Ambridge, Pa.

JOHN PRZYBYCIEN
Detroit, Mich.

FRANK REID
Ottawa, Ont.
(Canada)

JOE RICCELLI
Syracuse, N. Y.

DAVE RICHNER
Greenhurst, N. Y.

KEN RUTKOWSI{I
Tonawanda, N. Y.

DON SABO
Johnstown, Pa.

JOHN WESOLOWSKI
Cheektowaga, N. Y.

CHRIS WOLF
Solon, 0.

35

�JOLLY'S

GREENACRE CLEANERS

in

1334 East Lincoln Highway

DOWNTOWN DE KALB

PHONE 758-3471

•

-o-

Finest in Dry Cleaning
For Complete Men's Wear
Tuxedo Sales and
Rentals

- and Shirt Laundering

•

•

Campus Pick-up • • •

JOLLY'S
127 East Lincoln HiCJhway

Phone 758-3331

THE BULL PEN -

UNIVERSITY CITY

Congratulations Huskies ...
-from-

SECOR'S BOOK STORE
Knock Gently, Friend
What e'er Betide
the Kettle's on
so come Inside

•
Serving Northern Illinois University
Students for 55 years.

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

COMPLETE LINE OF SUPPLEMENTAL BOOKS
AND COLLEGE SUPPLIES

Except Legal Holidays

•
121 NORTH 2nd ST.

DE KALB, ILLINOIS

149 East Lincoln HiCJhway
DE KALB, ILLINOIS

36

Phone 756-7576

�Welcome to Dads' Day
DR. RHOTEN A. SMITH

DR. GORDON BIRD

President of N/U

D irector of Bands

DEAN RUTH HADDOCK
A WS Faculty Adviser
DIANE BALLWANZ

Pre - Game Ceremonies

JOHN BOYD
Asst. Director of Bands

SALUTE TO DADS

ROD THOMAS

by NIU Marching Huskies

A WS President

MARGARET SHALES
A WS Vice President

Drum Major

CROWNING OF 1968 DAD
AS A WS KING OF
THE CAMPUS

JOY BOWGREN
Head Twirler

by Dr. Francis R. Geigle,
Executive Vice. President and
Provost, acting on behalf of
President Smith and
A WS President and Vice President

AWS EXECUTIVE BOARD

-

1968-

Back row, I. to r. - Mary Iodice, Social
Chairman; Gayle Eisler, Membership;
Nancy Koteski, Social Chairman.
Front row Diane Bal/wanz, President·
Margaret Shales, Vice President· Mary
Fisher, Secretary,· Terri Demko, /A WS
Coordinator, and Joanne Kluga, Treasurer (not pictured).

Today Every Dad is a King
Today the A sociated '\Vomen tudents join the tudent ,
faculty and staff of Northen Illinois University in a tribute to
all dads.
sponsored by

\Ve hope you will enjoy the game, and invite you to the
open houses on campus. The open hou es are part of the traditional celebration to honor the visiting fathers.

Associated

We want every Dad to feel extra-special today because
each is a king to his own family.

Women

During the pre-game ceremonies, Dr. Francis R. Geigle,
Executive Vice President and Provost acting on behalf of
Presi?ent R~~oten Sn~ith, will crown on~ of the visiting Dads
to reign as AW Kmg of the Campus" for the day.

Students

37

�Dedication Key To
Cross Country Success
Though they live in the shadows of
the heroes of the gridiron, cross country
runners at Northern are some of the most
dedicated athletes ever to don Huskie uniforms.
They have to be dedicated. Every practice day they push their bodies t o the
limit, enduring the pain that a 1 0-mile
practice run causes. A nd nobod y d oes
that just f or kicks.
In a typical week of practice, they'll
canvass NIU's campus for hours, totaling
up to 50-100 miles a w eek.
A gain this year Northern has a talented
handful of dedicated runners and their
coach Joe Hartley calls them "my toughest squad in three years."
The squad w ill have t o be tough, too,
since the Huskie Harriers w ill face eight
major-college squads on a schedule that
includes five dual meets, two triangulars,
and a Central Co llegiate Conference meet.
Hartley calls the lineup the "toughest
schedule w e've had yet."

Meet

Heading the trio of senior lettermen
is Jim Reeves ( Palos Park-Carl Sandburg).
a three-year letterman, w ho, like m ost of
his teammates. d oub les as a trackman in
the Spring.

Friends
at-

147 North Third Street
DE KALB. ILLINOIS

~

The other t w o senior veterans are
George Sladek (Rolling Meadows-Forest
View ) and Joe Votava (Berwyn-Morton
East). Sladek, w ho used to do his running
f or Bradley University, w as usually the
Huskies' No. 2 man last year.
The two sophomore standouts c oa ch
Hartley is counting upon to deliver clutch
performances f or the Huskies this f all are
Ed Zeman (Worth-Carl Sandburg) and Ed
Meyers (Berkeley-Proviso West).
Both labored w ell for the Huskie freshmen last year. Meyers recorded an excellent career at Proviso West, long a
cross country strongho ld in Illinois. Zeman,
a tireless runner, may well be the "find"
of the year for the Huskies. A ccording to
Hartley, he might challenge the senior veterans for club leadership.
Hartley is also banking on Richard
Gaylord (Milan). a transfer from Blackhawk Junior College. Gaylord turned in
several top-notch times last year in middledistance events and Hartley labels him as
an "outstanding runner."

Your

38

To tackle the challenge, Hartley has
assembled a ten-man squad, which includes a little bit of everything : three
senior lettermen, t wo outsanding sophomores, and a highly-regarded transfer student.

JOE VOTAVA

1968 CROSS COUNTRY
ROSTER
Age

Hgt.

22

6-1

170

Richard Gaylord

23

5-10

150

Simon Martinez

20

5-6

127

Edward Meyers

19

5-8

140

David Nelson

20

6-3

170

21

6-3

160

19

6-0

140

Doug Abbott

* Goerge

Sladek

James Raymond
* James Reeves

21

6-0

140

* Joseph

Votava

21

5-11

147

Edward Zeman

19

5-11

152

* Returning

Other members of the cross country
team include seniors Dave Nelson, Doug
Abbott, and Jim Raymond, and sophomore
Simon Martinez.

Lettermen.

1968 CROSS COUNTRY
SCHEDULE

Included on the Huskie card this year
are such top-quality teams as Loyola,
W estern Michigan, DePaul. Purdue, Marquette, and Wisconsin.

SEPT.

The Harriers recently completed a successful two-week period during which they
picked up two dual-meet victories plus a
respectable fifth-place finish in the Illinois
Collegiate Cross-Country Meet. The dual
victories came over Marquette ( 17-4 0)
and Bradley ( 18-37). Votava , Reeves, and
Zeman continued to be the top Huskie
point-makers.

28-Westem Michigan 16, NIU 42

In the state meet, w hich included runners from 15 Illinois schools, Zeman was
15th, the highest Huskie finish . V otava
(26th) and Reeves (29th) w ere close
enough behind the sophomore to giv e N IU
enough points for fifth place, although none
of the Huskie runners finished among the
top ten. The Huskies w ill take a 5-6 dualmeet record to Chicago next w eek to finish
the season in the Central Collegiate Conference meet.

Wgt.

14-NIU 21, WSU-Whitewater 35
21-Loyola 42, NIU 15

OCT.
5- DePaul 23, NIU 32
Eastern Michigan 19, NIU 40
12-NIU 27, Illinois State 28
19-Taylor 19, NIU 36;
Ball State 25, NIU 31 ;
Purdue 21, NIU 38
26-NIU 17, Marquette 40
29-NIU 18, Bradley 37
NOV.
2-lllinois State Meet (15 schools)
NIU fifth
16-Central Collegiate Conference Chicago

�NIU ''Arrives" On Soccer Scene
After a six-year wait. Northern Illinois
University "arrived" last year on the majorcollege soccer scene . stitching together an
excellent record and sporting one of the
nation's top individual players in the process .
The record was 5-1-1 and the individual most responsible for it was Eric Roy.
who. only in his sophomore year. broke all
Huskie soccer scoring marks.
But Roy, who learned to play in Europe,
is only one reason why head coach William
Healey is optimistic about the season's
prospects.
Healey also has the other two top performers from last year returning plus a
talented bunch of additional lettermen. In
fact. only three of last year's regulars depart. leaving Healey with a skilled . experienced squad.
Healey and his 18-man squad will challenge nine opponents-this_fall. _t'JI(O more
than last season.
Highlighting the card will be re-matches with the University of Wisconsin. Mar-

queue. Purdue. Ball State . and the University of Illinois. Those foes fell to Northern's might last year.
Northwestern. which dealt NIU its only
loss. and the University of Chicago, which
tied Northern , have been dropped from the
lineup. Indiana State , Bradley. Western
Illinois . and Notre Dame have been added
to the card.
The Huskie Kickers play their first three
contests on the road before returning home
for their Oct. 5 DeKalb opener.
Roy, whose brother. Willy . was the
"Rookie of the Year" two years ago in the
National Professional Soccer League . has
excellent footwork and speed. He is a
junior.
Two other key returnees are Arno
Zoske. a native of Germany, and Jerry
Terhune (Evanston). Zoske is the "quarterback" of the squad. directing the offensive and defensive strategies. He was
named team captain last year while Roy
was voted "Most Valuable Player."
Terhune. who was the team's second-

leading scorer, is the right-w ing on the
team's forward line and works well with
Roy. who holds down the center-forward
spot .
Other key members of the Huskie soc cer contingent are Roger Dorio (Evanston).
James Pagliai (Arlington Heights) . Mario
Rubin (Sullivan), and goalie Henry Wind
(Joliet West) .
The powerful kickers continued to
breeze through their schedule during the
past two weeks . notching an easy 8 -2 vic tory over Ball State and a well -earne d 3-1
win over Notre Dame 's soccer club. The
twin victories gave the Huskie booters
their fifth and sixth consecutive wins and
upped their season mark to 7-1 .
Several members of the NIU soccer
contingent must enjoy the fun of scoring
lately, but Eric Roy still remains as the
top goal-getter. The amazing Roy boosted
his season total to 16, getting the "hat
trick" against BSU and a pair against the
Fighting Irish . The kickers have outscored
the ir opponents this year. 36 -10.

1968 SOCCER SCHEDULE

***

SEPT.
14-NIU 4, Indiana State 1
21-Wisconsin Soccer Club 4, NIU 2
28-NIU 3, Marquette 0
OCT.
5-NIU
12-NIU
23-NIU
26-NIU
31-NIU

1,
7,
8,
8,
3,

Purdue 0
Bradley University 2
Western Illinois 0
Ball State 2
Notre Dame Soccer Club 1

NOV.
11-University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, Ill., 10 a.m.

CCSTI

1968 SOCCER ROSTER
Name

* Roger

Dorio
Axel Eder
Peter Glon
Peter Gross
*Karl Gruns
George Jablonski
* Dennis Kozelsky
*George Mendez
*James Niebuhr
David Niemeyer
* James Pagliai
*Eric Roy
* Mario Rubin
*Jerome Terhune
John Wells
*Henry Wind
Allen Zelechowski
* Arno Zoske

RAMBLING ROY ... Eric Roy, top N/U soccer performer, chases
ball with speed that helped him break all N/U scoring marks in
his sophomore year.

* Denotes

Pos.

Age

Hgt.

Wgt.

Yr.

IR
F
F
LW
LH
F
IL
RH
LH
FB
RH
CF
LW
RW
F
G
IL
CH

22
18
19
19
20
20
20
22
22
18
20
22
20
21

5-10
5-11
5-10
5-9
6-1
5-10
5-7
5-9
5-11
5-7
5-11
6-0
5-7
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-9
5-10

170
166
148
140
175
175
150
140
155
145
155
195
179
150
175
180
180
155

4
2
2
2
3
2
3
4
4
2
4
3
3
4
2
3
2
4

19
21
23
29

Lettermen.

39

�UNIVERSITY PLAZA

"The Place to Reside at Northern"
Approved University Residence Hall .. .
Casual Living .. .
Academic Atmosphere ...

DEKALB LIQUOR MART
1704 Sycamore Road

•

Phone 756-5252

FREE DELIVERY on $5.00 or More
Open 9:00- 12:00 Monday thru Thursday
9:00 a.m.- 1:00 a.m. Friday and Saturday

40

•

DeKalb. Illinois

�Optianisan Surrounds

Huskie Basketball Chances
Usually there wouldn't be much excitement about a basketball team's chances
with only two starters returning from a
team which posted a 11-14 record , with
one of the victories coming against an
AAU team , Athletes In Action.

The return of Nate Mason. a clever
6-1 guard, is partly responsible for this
year's optimism. Mason, injured at the
start of last year, has recovered nicely
from the knee injury that tabled him for
all of last season .
Other bright spots in the Huskie future
include sophomores Dave Naves, Art Rohl man, and Rick Lanning, all ready for varsity action after leading the NIU yearlings
to their best record ever.
All three are candidates for wide-open
forward positions on the starting five.
Naves, an extremely versatile and agile
performer, led the NIU frosh in scoring.
Other Huskie candidates include sophs
John Benson, Phil Trager, and Bruce
Janus, junior Tony Amelianovich, and
transfer Paul Dumke.
Twelve home contests highlight a 23game schedule , studded with highly-regarded clubs from several corners of the
nation .

TOM JORGENSEN
But anyone who followed Huskie basketball last year (and there were thousands
of them) is highly optimistic about head
coach Tom Jorgensen ' s team's chances
this winter though the Huskie cagers
will embark on their toughest campaign
ever.

***

Under the artful tutelege of Jorgensen ,
who learned his trade from former Michigan coach Dave Strack, the Huskies played
a fast, never-say-die brand of ball. And
the script should read the same this year,
only Jorgensen has more supporting help
for this showing.

NOV.
30-Bowling Green -

Home

DEC.
2-Michigan- Away
4-Northeast Missouri - Home
7-Ball State - Away
12-Wisconsin State University-LaCrosse
-Home
14-University of Wisconsin - Away
16-lowa State- Home
18-California Polytechnic - Home
21-East Tennessee - Home
27 &amp; 28-CITRUS CLASSIC at Edinburg,
Texas- Pan American College,
Morehead State, Western Michigan, Northern
30-Kent State- Home
JAN.
4-DePaul - Away
11-Coast Guard Academy - Home
13-Marshall- Home
24-San Diego State - Away
25-Northern Arizona - Away
27-Creighton - Away
FEB.
3-St. Joseph's - Home
8-New Mexico - Away
1 0-lndiana State - Home
15-Western Michigan - Away
18-BuHalo - Home
24-0hio University - Away

Jorgensen, though his squad was
plagued with early-season injuries, proved
last year that Northern basketball is on
the verge of cracking the big-time clique.
The Huskies barely missed (one point)
upsetting Big Ten toughie , Indiana , and
also gave Western Michigan , San Diego,
Iowa State , and DePaul rough times before submitting by narrow marg ins.

1968-69 BASKETBALL
SCHEDULE

MAR.
1-Washington University- Away

JIM SMITH

DON RUSSELL

***
The Huskies open at home Nov. 30
against Bowling Green , which lost to Marquette in the NCAA regional championships last year. Another NCAA championship contender, East Tennessee State, visits DeKalb Dec. 21.

Heading the cast is big Jim Smith
(6-7 , 225 pounds). who led the team in
scoring and rebounding last year from his
center position.
Smith averaged 19.1
points per game, most coming on short
stuff where he used his brawn to outmuscle
opponents.

Other notables appearing at Northern
include Iowa State, Marshall, St. Joseph's,
and Indiana State, NIT competitor the last
two seasons .

Don RusselL brother of the former AllAmerican and now professional star, Cazzie Russell , is the other returning starter.
RusselL who plays guard, improved greatly toward the end of last year and should
be outstanding this season.

Also appearing at Northern, Jorgensen
and his team hopes, will be the multitude
of boisterous fans. They often helped out
last year and with the schedule Jorgensen
has strung together, they 'll be appreciated
once more .

TENTATIVE 1968-69
BASKETBALL ROSTER
Name
Anthony Amelianovich
John Benson
Eddie Brumfield
Paul Dumke
Doug Englebaugh
Bruce Janus
Dan Johnson
Ron Johnson
Pete Kontos
Rick Lanning
Nathaniel Mason
David Naves
James O'Brien
Gary Olen
Arthur Rohlman
Don Russell
James Smith
Phillip Trager

Pas.
F-C
G
F
F

c
F

c
F-G
G
F
G
F
F
G
G
G

c

G

Hgt. Wgt.
6-6 - 210
5-11 165
6-3
170
6-4
190
6-4
195
6-4
218
6-7
195
6-5
190
6-1
180
6-5
193
5-11 175
6-6
183
6-4
193
160
5-9
6-2
180
6-2
195
6-7
225
6-2
185

41

�•

DE KALB RECREATION LANES

PORTRAITS
• COMMERCIAL
•

INDUSTRIAL
• AERIAL

The House of Bowling Scores
Ebonite Balls

Franchised A.M.F. Dealer

FULL LINE OF BOWLING BALLS, BAGS, SHOES , ACCESSORIES

DE KALB, ILLINOIS

215 North Fourth St.

Phone 756-5231

• FORMAL or
GENE KYLEN, Owner

CANDID WEDDINGS

li@?'J~Atet' ~·

Marshall E. McCabe
and Associates

MUSIC CENTER
132 EAST LINCOLN HIGHWAY

REALTORS

DE KALB, ILLINOIS 60115

Marshall E. McCabe
Edris S. Cobb
R. Wildenradt
William Johnson

-0-

" Northern Illinois'
Complete Music Store"

-aPhone: 758-3633

REAL ESTATE

JIM SCHULTZ

"SINCE 1938"
Complete lnsur;mce Service
Appraisals

Complete Color Lab
right on our own premises

-o-

BUICK &amp; OPEL

Property Management

- IN -

•

DE KALB

Office - First and Hillcrest
DE KALB, ILLINOIS
Phones: 756-6641 • 756-6924

PHONE 756-6822

134 NORTH THIRD STREET
DE KALB, ILLINOIS
Phone 756-5711

producer of most

NIU
athletic photos
in this
program

HUSKIE FANS •••
Before and After the Game
SNACKS FOR DINNERS
CELEBRATION COCKTAILS
(II :30 a.m.- I :00 a.m.)

Kishwaukee Country Club
Sycamore Road. DeKalb. Ill.

42

I

�Huskie Songs and Cheers
N-0-R

N-OR-TH-ER-N,
N-OR-TH-ER-N ,
N-OR-TH-ER-N,
NORTHERN!

***
NIU FIGHT FIGHT !

N-1-U Fight Fight !
(Can be repeated)

***
NIU FIGHT SONG

Huskies fight on you Huskies, and
make a score or two,
Huskies you Northern Huskies, the
team to pull us through,
Forward together forward, There's
victory in view.
Come on you Huskies, Fight on
you Huskies,
And win for NIU!

***
LOYALTY SONG

NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY'S 1968 cheerleading squad consists
of (left to right, front row) Janie Hughes, Louise Feltman, Doray Leheny,
Sandy Wolff, and Linda Nelson. In the back row, left to right, are John
Constantine, Ed Schuster, Tom Anderson, and Bill Haras.

***
GO YOU NIU

Go you NIU, Go you NIU,
Go you NIU

GO HUSKIES

Go Huskies -

***

***

NORTHERN

Give us an N -

R- R

T - T
H-H

Two big fights

FIGHT, FIGHT

Three big fights
- FIGHT, FIGHT, FIGHT
Yea team
FIGHT, FIGHT, FIGHT,
FIGHT, FIGHT !

N

0-0

Let's have one big fight
-FIGHT
-

(Snap-Clap)

Go Huskies Go, Beat - - - - -

GO YOU NORTHERN !

ONE BIG FIGHT

We're loyal! Oh yes, we're loyal
We're true for aye to you.
We'll pledge you our full allegiance
We'll give you all you're due.
We know that there is no other
Where loyalty is due.
That can surpass you, Nor can
outclass you
Like our own N.I.U.

E -

E

R

R

N-N
What does it spell -

NORTHERN

Louder

NORTHERN

Once more

NORTHERN!

Janie Hughes uses her head ... and
feet ... to lead NIU cheers.

43

�Six Of NIU's
Loveliest

Poan Pon
Girls

SMILING PRETTY are six of Northern Illinois University's gorgeous Pom Pon girls who help make a football
afternoon complete with their stirring halftime performances. From the left, front row, are Pat Rieber, Candie
Carroll, and 1968 Pom Pon Captain Karen Praisa. From the left, back row, are Cheri Mass, Lorraine Zanarini,
and Chris Fahrner.

Fourth Street Motor Sales Inc.
Authorized
CHEVROLET ... OLDSMOBILE ... CADILLAC •.. CHEVROLET TRUCKS

COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE CENTER
~

Body Shop
~ Motor Overhaul
~ Glass Replacement
~ Brake Work
~ Lubrication
~ Electrical Repair
~ Wheel Balancing
~ "Visualiner" Front End
~ Minor Tune-up
Alignment

Putting You First Keeps Us First
204 North Fourth Street
Direct Dial for Quick Service

756-6355
44

Sales 756-6351

�They Keep NIU's Athletes In Action

The department of Intercollegiate Athletics is anxious to render the maximum
service to the patrons of Northern Illinois
University Stadium . Our patrons will f ind
most of their questions answered below.
TICKETS • . .
Please read the directions on your t icket
as to the location of your seat. If you are
unable to f ind it, an usher will help you do
so. In fact, he'll probably ask you to let
him see it, and your cooperation will be
appreciated . Please take your ticket stub
whenever you leave your seat.
PUBLIC TELEPHONES . . .
Public pay-station telephones are avail able under the West Stadium at gates 4,
5 , 7 , and 8.
LOST AND FOUND . • .
Should you lose an article while attend ing the game , call at the Ticket Office located under the West Stadium. After each
game, employees of the field gather articles
left by the spectators and turn them over to
the Ticket Office . We also request that
spectators finding articles deliver them to
the Ticket Office.
FIRST AID . . .
First aid services are set up for spectator use under the West Stadium . This area
can be reached through gates 4, 5 , 7 , 8 ,
10, 11, 13, or 14. A physician will be on
duty at this station during the entire game.
Spectators should report any illness or injury in the stadium to the nearest usher.
SERVICE FOR PHYSICIANS . . •
Physicians anticipating calls during the
game are requested to register at the Will
Call Window ad j acent to the Press Box
elevator, leav ing their exact seat location.
Calls w ill be delivered without delay.
PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM •••
No spec ial announcements are made
over the publ ic address system except in
cases of grave emergency . The public is
asked not to request this service .

ASSISTANT TRAINER GEORGE CAMP completes wrapping an ankle under
the watchful eye of head trainer AI Kranz, right, while student assistants,
from left, Jerry Kennedy, John Gerron, Mike Stutley, and Bill Tessendorf
absorb a few pointers.

***

***

NIU Equipment Is Always In Good Shape

REST ROOMS . • .
Rest rooms are located at both sides of
the center area under the West Stadium at
gates 4 , 5 , 7, 8 , 10, 11 , 13, and 14.
REFRESHMENTS . • .
Refreshment stands are located under
the West Stadium at both the North and
South ends and at gates 4 , 5 , 7, 8 , 10, 11 ,
13, and 14.

157 East Lincoln Highway

758-8652

NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY athletes wear only the finest in equipment when they enter combat with the enemy. The accessories are kept
in A-1 condition by George Belk, head equipment manager, and two student assistants, Larry Anderson, center, and Larry Lane, right.

45

�1968-69 Winter
Sports Schedules

Provides Big Boost

Parents' Association Helps
N.J. U. Bridge Dollar Gap

GYMNASTICS
Nov . 29-30-Midwest Open at Chicago.
Dec.

7-lllinois State at Normal, 2 p.m .

Dec . 14-lowa Invitational at Ames, Ia .
Dec . 19-Wisconsin at DeKalb, 8 p .m.

By JOHN M. SAYRE
Director of Development and Alumni Relations

Jan . I !-Northern Iowa at DeKalb, 2 p .m.
Jan . 31-Weslern Michigan at Kalamazoo, 7 : 30 p.m .
Feb .

7-Miami at Oxford, 0 ., 7 : 30 p .m.

Feb .

8-Ball Stale at Muncie, Ind ., 2 p .m.

Interest and support of Northern Illinois University is being shown in many
ways . The dads, moms, alumni, students and friends of Northern who are in
the stadium today to root the Huskies on to victory are good examples of this
spirit.

Feb . 14-Mankato Stale at DeKalb, 7 :30 p .m.
Mar .

!-Indiana Stale at DeKalb , 2 p .m.

A relatively young N .I.U. organization represents this cooperative effort even
more graphically . . . the Parents ' Association . This Association was chartered
by the University in November of 1965 for a group of parents who wanted to
work together "to make Northern a greater University for our sons and daughters
and for future N.I.U. students-"

SWIMMING
Dec.

7-lowa at DeKalb, 2 p .m.

Dec . I 4-Wisconsin Stale at Platteville, 2 p.m .
Jan . 4-Easlern Michigan at Yps ilanti , 2 p .m.

Over three hundred parent households became charter members. Now in
its fourth year, the Association has a rapidly growing membership of over 600
parent households . The most tangible evidence of the Association program has
been through financ ial assistance to the University. Funds are provided in areas
for which state funds are not available .

Jan . I 0-Norlhern Iowa at DeKalb, 4 p .m.
Jan. I !-Wisconsin I Milwaukee) at Milwaukee ,
2 p .m.
Jan . 13-Western Michigan at Kalamazoo,
3:30 p .m.

In the first three years , this organization has raised over $14,000 to furnish
freshmen grants-in-aid, lectureships, athletic academic grants, graduate fellowship support, and emergency funds for the use of the President of the University. Freshmen grants have been awarded to 13 students in these first three
years .

Jan . 25-Wisconsin Stale !Whitewater ) and Northern Michigan at Whitewater, 2 p .m.
(Double Dua l Meet )
Feb .

)-Loyola at DeKalb, 2 p .m.

Feb . 8-Ball Slate and Notre Dame at Muncie,
Ind ., 2 p.m. (Double Dual Meet )

In the 1968-69 Association Program , Faculty Research has been added to
the areas of financial assistance which will be given to the University. Over
$5 ,200 have been raised in the first two months of this year 's Program .

Feb. 12-Bradley at DeKalb , 4 p .m.
Feb . 14-Mankalo Stale and Gustavus Adolphus at
DeKalb, 4 p .m. !Triangular )
Feb . 20-lllino is Stale at DeKa lb , 4 p .m.
Feb . 21-Northwestern at Evanston , Il l., 7 : 30 p .m.
Feb . 22-Weslern Illinois , Missouri at Macomb, Ill.,
I :30 p .m. (Triangular)
Mar.

NORTHERN ALUMNI AND FRIENDS
TRAVEL IN 1969

!-Northern Illinois Univers ity Invitational at
DeKalb, 2 p.m .

Alumni and friends of Northern will have three opportunities to
travel next year.

WRESTLING
Dec. 6-7-U . S. Coast Guard Tournament at New

ACAPULCO· FIESTA: One week in Mexico, March 2·9. Designed
for that much-needed winter break. Includes eight days at famed
Caleta Hotel, full breakfasts and dinners, parties, and professional tour. Only $419.00 from Chicago.

London, Conn . , II a .m.

Dec . 14-Toledo at Toledo, 0 . , 2 p .m .
Dec . 20-Nebraska (Omaha) at Omaha, 7 :30 p.m .
(Tent .)
Dec. 27-28--Midlands Tournament in Chicago
Jan . 10-Wisconsin Stale !Whitewater) at DeKalb,
7 p .m.

EUROPEAN TOUR: Three weeks next summer in Ireland, England,
Norway, Sweden, and Denmark. Leaves Chicago July 7, returns
July 28. Complete tour, $995.00 round-trip from Chicago.

Jan. 25-Weslern Michigan at DeKalb , 2 p .m.
Jan . 3 !-Indiana at DeKalb, 7 p .m.
Feb .

1-lllinois Stale , Mankato State, South Dakota
State at Normal, Ill., 2 p.m .
!Quadrangular)

Feb .

4-Whealon at Wheaton, Ill., 7:30 p .m.

GROUP FLIGHT TO EUROPE: Leaves June 12 and returns August
21. Transportation only, but at a group low-cost, $315.00. Write
Dr. Orville Baken, Coordinator of Foreign Study Programs, Low·
den Hall 103.

Feb . 7-Marquette at DeKalb , 7 p .m.
Feb . 14-lndiana Slate at Terre Haute, Ind.,
7 :30 p .m. (Tent.)

Persons eligible include alumni, faculty, parents, and friends of
Northern Illinois University. Group flight also includes students.

Feb . 22-Wisconsin , Northern Iowa, Wisconsin State
(Oshkosh) at Mad ison, Wis . , 3 :30 p.m .
!Quadrangular)
Mar. 7-8-M iami Invitational at Miami, 0 .

INDOOR TRACK
Jan . 25-lllinois Intercollegiate Championships at
Champaign, Ill.
Feb . 15-Purdue and Murray (Ky . ) State at
Lafayette, Ind . (Triangular )
Mar.

!-University of Chicago Open at Chicago

Mar.

8-lllinois Slate Invitational at Normal, Ill .

Mar. 14-15-Nalional Collegiate Athletic Association Indoor Championships at Detroit,
Mich .
Mar. I 5-Universily of Chicago Relays at Chicago
Mar. 22-Western Michigan Relays at Kalamazoo,
Mich .

46

1-

The Association is guided by an Executive Council comprised of 17 parent
households appointed by the President of the University from the geographic
areas of the state. They represent the current student enrollment. The University's coordinator for the Association is a staff member of the Office for Development and Alumni Relations.
The officers for the Executive Council are : Mr. Theodore Coroneos of Wau kegan , chairman; Mr. Joe Suter of Gibson City, Vice Chairman , and Mrs. Suter,
secretary. Mr . Myron Madison of DeKalb serves as Senior Council Executive.
The N.I.U. Parents' Association joins with the N.I.U . Alumni Association, the
N.I.U. Foundation , Incorporated, and the N.I.U. Athletic Boosters in providing
opportunity and excellence at this University.

�Depart~nent

of Physical Education and
Athletics for Men

THOMAS A.
JORGENSEN
Head
Basketball Coach

CLIFTON D.
FULTON
Assistant
Basketball Coach

DR. J. HUBERT
DUNN
Gymnastics
Coach

WILLIAM G.
SPALETTO
Assistant
Gymnastics Coach

H. THOMAS
LUDWIG
Freshman
Basketball Coach

DR. WILLIAM A.
HEALEY
Soccer Coach

DAVID E.
BUCHER
Assistant
Soccer Coach

JOSEPH W.
HARTLEY
Cross Country
Coach

DONALD L.
FLAVIN
Wrestling Coach

DAVID D.
HALLBERG
Swimming Coach

ORVILLE A.
KERSTEN
Assistant
Swimming Coach

THOMAS A.
MEYER
Baseball Coach

..&amp;.

DAVID C.
MASON
Freshman
Baseball Coach

HAROLD H.
MORRIS
Track Coach

JAMES R.
FISCHER
Freshman
Track Coach

THOMAS 0.
MEINHARDT
Tennis Coach

JACK W.
PHEANIS
Golf Coach

ALFRED C.
KRANZ
Trainer

GEORGE A.
CAMP
Trainer

DR. HAROLD P.
WELLS
lntramurals

JOHN F.
HAYES
Physical Education
Instructor

FRED L.
PETERSON
Physical Education
Instructor

JERALD D.
FLOYD
Physical Education
Instructor

DAVID W.
BEAMER
Physical Education
Instructor

EDMUND
FLEXMAN, M.D.
Team
Physician

47

�Covering Football
and all sports
Two sparkling sports pages daily
and all the news.

THE DE KALB DAILY CHRONICLE
48

�NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY

PHEASANT ROOM

GRAND BALLROOM

11teet fPU" ~ at de
UNIVERSITY CEN'I'ER

Building Hours: Sunday thru Thursday 7 A.M. to II :30 P.M. Friday and Saturday 7 A.M. to 12:30 P.M.
FOR INFORMATION GUEST ROOMS

PHONE 753·1747
RECREATION ROOM

�Cbe~ro\et

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(2-sea\)

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Impala cus\om couP•
Impala spo&lt;\ coupe
1111 pala spo&lt;\ Sedan
1111 pala con~e&lt;\ible

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N\alibu con~e&lt;\ible
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300 oeluxe spo&lt;l coupe
300 oeluXB coupe
300 oelux• 4-000' sedan

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Cbe~ro\et Wagons
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coupe
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�</text>
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&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1968-11-09 Northern Illinois University vs. University of Buffalo</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496017">
                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496018">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
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                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
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                <text>The College Game</text>
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                <text> Dad's Day</text>
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                <text> Official program - fifity cents</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496026">
                <text> November 9, 1968 - Northern Stadium</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496028">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="45">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1496029">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1968-11-09</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1496031">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>"An American Tradition for 100 Years"

�I

' ...

~(··

f&gt; -

~ \~

Symbolic of BC's SPIRIT OF 76: the
Undefeated 1940 Team, Sugar Bowl
Champions.
Seated (I to r) : Goodreau It, Yauckoes,
Kerr, Gladchuk, J. Zabilski, Levanitis,
Lukachik.
Standing (I to r): Maznicki, Toczlowski,
Holovak, O'Rourke.

Saluting the Eagles' Spirit of '76
Boston College has its SPIRIT OF 76 ... 76 years of rich football
tradition have contributed a basic fibre to the collegiate sport
which is celebrating its 100th anniversary.
BC's SPIRIT OF 76 has been a colorful and endless parade of
nearly 2,000 young men who have worn the Maroon and Gold
on the gridiron with dedication, pride and honor.
. . . Cavanaugh, Darling, Weston, McKenney, Dobie, Leahy,
O'Rourke, Holovak, Kerr, Maznicki , Stautner, Donovan, Spinney,
Johnson, Graham, Concannon, Whalen , McCarthy, Bennett . ..
All these names and a legion more are carved upon that
extraordinary history.
BC's SPIRIT OF 76 has also embodied hundreds of thousands
of others . .. like you .. . who have contributed to it with
unique support.

METROPOliTAN PETROLEUM COMPANY
OF MASSACHUSETTS
500 Neponset Avenue, Boston, Mass .. AV 8-1100

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8, 1969

From
the Desk
of the
Editor
EDDIE MILLER

We'd like to welcome again this football season, for
the 8th consecutive year, several hundred Sisters of the
many orders of the Archdiocese of Boston who are with
us as guests of His Eminence Richard Cardinal Cushing and the Very Reverend W. Seavey Joyce, S.J.,
President of Boston College.
Veteran Eagle hockey coach, John "Snooks" Kelley,
and new basketball coach, Chuck Daly, have had their
boys working hard in pre-season practice for over three
weeks now. The winter season begins 3 weeks from
Tuesday when the basketball team meets Boston University at BU and the following evening the hockey team
travels to Rhode Island to square off with Providence
College.
Next week, here at Alumni Stadium, BC plays host
to Virginia Military and two weeks from today take on
a Massachusetts team which has been most impressive
this season. That game seems to be shaping up as a
big one.
The ticket office advises that good tickets are available
for the VMI and UMass games, plus a limited number
for the season finish at Syracuse on November 29.
The Annual Harvest Festival Dinner-Dance, a very
popular part of the Holy Cross weekend over the years,
will be held as scheduled incidentally on Friday evening,
November 28 at McElroy Commons.
We'd also like to remind Boston College men that the
Holy Cross Club of Boston will hold its annual O'Melia
Award Banquet this year. All former O'Melia Trophy
Winners from both Holy Cross and Boston College have
been invited to return for the 25th anniversary dinner.
We will be selling tickets ($10 each) at Roberts Center
and think it would be great to have an excellent Boston
College turnout to show our beleaguered sister college
how solidly we stand behind its program. The date of
the dinner is Thursday evening, December 11 at the
Sheraton Plaza Hotel.
Finally, how about that Freshman football team?
Their final game of the '69 season will be here at Alumni
Stadium next Friday (Nov. 14) at 2 :30 against much
talked about Dartmouth Frosh. Try to make it!

3
Boston College Athletic Association ........
Buffalo Athletic Association
.. ------------- 5
Boston College Players
6, 7, 9, 10
Boston College Squad Picture _____ _
13
Boston College on the Silver Screen
by John Larner ____________ ___ _______________
14, 15
Boston College Roster
__________ ------------------- _ __
_ .. ________ ----------------Buffalo Roster . _
Closing In On A Record
By Ed Gillooly _ .. _
- - ----- ------. ________ __
Buffalo Statistics
Boston College Statistics . . __
-- ------- - -Defense Can Be Just As Much Fun
By Joe Concannon
... -- -- .
Boston College Coaching Staff
Buffalo Players
----- --- --- 29, 31,
Eagle Hunters . ___ _
... ............. -------------

18
19
21
22
23
25

27
33
35

Published by the Boston College Athletic Association
All Rights Reserved
EDWARD D. MILLER, Editor
REID P. OSliN and THOMAS M. BURKE, Assistant Editors
JOHN J. LARNER, Contributing Editor
Editorial Contributors: John larner, Joe Concannon, Ed Gillooly,
Reid Oslin, Tom J. Burke.
Photos by: Fasch Studios, Jet Commercial Photographers, Dick Raphael.
(Sketch at top of this page by Jack Frost)
H.O. Zimman, Advertising Representatives
475 Fifth Ave., N.Y.- 56 Broad St., Lynn

1969 SCHEDULE
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.

27 Navy
21 -14
4 Tulane
28-24
18 Villanova
6-24
25 Army Away
7-38
1 Penn St. Away 16-38

Nov. 8 Buffalo
Nov. 15 Virginia Military
Nov. 22 Massachusetts
Nov. 29 Syracuse Away

1969 FRESHMEN SCHEDULE
Oct. 17 Harvard Away 29-13
Oct. 26 Holy Cross
14-0
Oct. 31 U Mass Away 22-7

Nov. 7 Dartmouth JV's Away
Nov. 14 Dartmouth

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�BOSTON
COLLEGE
Very Rev. W. Seavey Joyce, S.J.
President

William J. Flynn
Diredor of Athletics

Rev. David F. Carroll, S.J.
Faculty Moderator of
Athletics

Edward B. Carroll
Asst. Athletic Director

3

�ASK FOR UNCOLA AT THE
REFRESHMENT STANDS

"SEVEN-UP" AND

"7UP" ARE REGIST(R[O TfitAQEMA,RKS IDENTIFYING THE PRODUCT OF THE SEVEN · UP COMPANY

�STATE UNIVERSITY
OF

NEW YORK
AT

BUFFALO
Dr. Peter F. Regan
Acting President

Dr. Lawrence A. Cappiello
Acting Director of Athletics

5

�6

JIM McCOOL, Captain

TED ANDERSON

RALPH ANGEL

BILL BALMAT

JOHN BONISTALLI

TOM BOUGUS

BOB BOULEY

JOHN BRENNAN

�GREG BROSKIE

JIM CATONE

KEVIN CLEMENTE

GENE COMELLA

SKIP COPPOLA

MIKE CORRIGAN

WALT CULLEN

GARY DANCEWICZ

JIM DARCY

MONDEU DAVIS

MIKE DENNIS

Al DHEMBE

GREGG DZIAMA

MIKE FALLON

JOHN FITZGERALD

GEOtiGE GILL

7

�JOE YUKICA'S
Greater Boston Football Day Camp
AUGUST 10 THROUGH AUGUST 14, 1970
•
Located on the Boston College Campus
•
For Boys From Grades 9 - 12
•
2 Sessions Daily
•
$35.00 Total Fee Includes Lunch
•
Instructors Include Coach Yukica and His B.C. Assistants
•
Limited Enrollment
REGISTRATION BlANK
Nome

COACH JOE YUKICA

OBJECTIVES
1. To teach specifically the skills and techniques re·
rated to individual football positions (both begin·
ning and advanced).
2. To teach the methods utilized in increasing co·
ordination, balance, quickness and general control
of the body neces5ary in football .
3. To initiate a general conditioning program that
wi II carry over into the football season.
4. To teach the specialty skills of punting and place
kicking.
5. To emphasize the traits and characteristics of
fair play, leadership and athletic discipline.

~ ~~ ·~

Address
Phone

Age

~

Parents Name

State

City
School --~--~~---

~·

Special Phose of Game (Please check): Kicking
Defensive Bock ~ ~ End Play
Linebocking
Offense ... Defense

~

Coach
-~

QB

Centering

Offensive Bock
Line Ploy

Please Mail Registration Blank and Deposit Fee To:
Joe Yukica, Head Football Coach
Boston College
Roberts Center
Chestnut Hill, Moss. 02167
For additional information or more applications, write to the above address or call
332-3200 Extension 395 or 385.
•

$15.00 Deposit must accompany application. Balance due by June 15, 1970.

More dogs will be
covered this football
season with
french's Mustard
than all the
other brands
combined!

THE R, T. FRENCH COMPANY, 1 MUSTARD STREET (OF COURSE), ROCHESTER, NEW YORK

•

8

�GARY GUENTHER

FRANK HAR1US

MIKE JOHNSON

STEVE KIRCHNEtt

STEVE KIVES

JOHN KLINE

RICK KUROWSKI

MIKE LARDNER

PETE LUPOLI

ED McDONALD

JOE McDONALD

PETE McHUGH

JIM MILLHAM

MIKE MUCCI

JOHN O'HAGEN

BILL O'NEILL

9

�JIM O'SHEA

BILL PERRY

BILL RABADAN

ED RANSFORD

ED RIDEOUT

RAY RIPPMAN

LUCIEN SILVA

DICK TATARONIS

BILL THOMAS

CHARLIE TOClYLOWSKI

DON TONZI

MIKE WHITNEY

\\osTON t: ...;;.,

(# ....

f.RED WILLIS

FRITZ MASSMANN, Trainer

10

NORM CAVALLARO
Senior Manager

FRANK PERKINS
Equipment Manager

�•

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o e c a en es
ou to com are:
1970 LINE OF DODGES
Featuring the car of the year
the ''CHALLENGER''
PRICE
PROVEN SERVICE
40 YEARS EXPERIENCE
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1970 DODGE
CHALLENGER

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North

WHOLESALE
INSTITUTIONS
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DRUG STORES

FRANCHISED STORES
Ice Cream and Sandwich Shoppes
JIM O'DONNELL '51 , Vice President
PETER McLAUGHLIN '59, Treasurer
BURKE LEONARD '59, Controller
JACK LEONARD '56, Director Marketing

617-479-2700
Quincy, Moss.

The Merrimok Volley--once synonymous with textilesnow means electronics, industry, research and develop ~

men!. Which is why Wellman North, one of the lost
sizeable chunks of land available for industry in the
Greater lowell area, is offered as a site for firms intent
on strategic locations near Route 495 and other key
arteries. John T. Fallon, e xecutive vice-president, R. M.
Bradley &amp; Co., Inc., heads the leasing and selling program of Wellman North Industrial Pork in North
Chelmsford. Architect Eleanor Preier, architect with the
pork' s engineering firm , Lockwood Greene Co., Inc.,
explains the pork 's 4:1 land to building ratio to Mr.
Fallon .
Write us lor a Wellman North brochure

0

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542 Boston Post Rd., Weston 899-6454

FRANCIS P. BRENNAN , President
Class of '39

Our Prudential leasing office: 4352 Prudential Tower

12

�1969 EAGLES

left to right; Row 1: Ed McDonald, Joe McDonald, Jim Darcy, Frank Harris, Bob Bouley, Captain Jim McCool, John Fitzgerald, Dick Tataronis, Mike
Johnson, Dick Gill, Walt Cullen, Steve Kives. Row 2: Sr. Mgr. Norm Cavallaro, Pete McHugh, Fred Willis, Ed Rideout, Bill Rabadan, Gary Dance·
wicz, lucien Silva, Mike Fallon, Ray Rippman, John Bonistalli, George Gill, AI Dhembe, Bill Thomas, Mendell Davis, Jr. Mgr. Steve Sperandio. Row
3: Ted Anderson, Charlie Blank, Mike Whitney, Bill Neacy, Greg Broskie, Tom Sokol, Bruce Walker, Jack Craigen, Mike Corrigan, Jim O'Shea, Jim
Dunn, Bob Erwin, Steve Cipot. Row 4: Gene Ferris, Mike Mucci, Mike Dennis, Ralph Angel, Dan Reardon, Tom Eberman, John Fitzgerald, Tom Szocik,
Bob Hill, Jim Lozier, Paul Traverse, John Kline. Row 5: Gary Guenther, Joe Hamilton, John Brennan, Steve Rossetti, Tom Bougus, Kevin Clemente,
Rich Kurowski, Ron Cooper, Gordon Asack, Joe Scott, Ed Ransford, Tom He degus, Dave McKay. Row 6 : Joe Waters, Gregg Dziama, Chris Baker,
Bill Perry, Bill Balmat, John Michaels, Kent Andiorio, Jim Stewart, Ed Prisco, Steve Kirchner, Steve Rheaume, J im Gillis, John O'Hagan, Bill O ' Neill .
Row 7: Frank Perkins (Equip.), Bill Medea, Don Tonzi, Mike Lardner, John Prchlik, Steve Hajjar, Mike Vernezze, Jim Millham, Gene Comella, Glenn
Motto, Tom Stoodley, Charlie Toczylowski, Fritz Massmann (Trainer). Row B: Dave O ' Conner, Asst. Freshman Coach; Buck O 'Connor, Asst. Freshman
Coach; Barry Gallup, Asst. Freshman Coach; Jack Bicknell; Head Coach Joe Yukica; Bill Bowes; John Petercuskie; Bill Campbell; Joe Daniels; Pete
Carmichael.

STEVE GIARDINA, PRES.

LANDSCAPE CONTRACTORS
•

SEEDING
• SODDING
• GRADING

*Alumni Stadium resodded, September J969.
180 WESTON STREET, WALTHAM, MASS.- TEL. 893-7895

13

�Boston College on the Silver Screen
By JOHN LARNER

B ETWEEN preparation and presentation of the new
living color Boston College film "Toward Greater
Heights" and its monochrome hitchhike-that's Hollywood for a black and white addition - was a cast of
thousands.

servation to a student about what freshman English is
supposed to be all about.

Produced for the alumni, friends , and future students
of Boston College, "Toward Greater Heights" is an 18minute exciting film of an exciting campus. The cast is
the students and faculty.

Commentaries on all stages of campus and intellectual
life pepper the cinematic story of The Heights with
flavorable reflections. Dr. Mary Griffin of the School
of Education is heard but not seen as are Richard
Bruno (remember him from the "College Bowl" glories)
and William Flynn, Athletic Director, who says athletics
brings the B.C. family together.

Added to the film for the benefit of the hundreds of
alumni volunteers who will be participating in the Telethon phase of the Annual Fund is a training film to help
make giving to Alma Mater as easy as possible.

For the graduate who had the honor of being a student of Rev. John McCarthy, S.J ., in Philosophy or
Rev. Arthur MacGillivray, S.J., in English, you can
revisit your old class when you see the film.

Not since 1954 has the university produced a new
film which will be utilized in informing high school students and their parents about the benefits of a Boston
College education. At Alumni meetings around the
country for men and women of Boston College who
have not been to the campus lately, the film gives a
pictorial and graphically voiced commentary on the
current campus. Likewise, the film will be screened for
prospective donors of capital gifts and for the annual
fund campaign.

There are faces to be recognized in the ribbon of
film as it races through the projector ... Justin Cronin
of the School of Management and Rev. John J. Murphy, S.J. , the economist.
The old campus debater Rev. Charles F. Donovan,
S.J ., Senior Vice President and Dean of Faculties, comments in voice-over on the arts and cultural excitement
of the campus. Another vice president Rev. Francis X.
Shea, S.J ., is pictured in the middle of a sermon. A
community meeting with Prof. Murray Horwitz and the
New Urban League gives the sense of Boston CollegeCommunity cooperation.

Boston College came up with an interesting technique
in the production of the film. As such, it has no scenario,
no script. It has excerpts of a Father Joyce presidential
speech, the candid comments of students and teachers
and researchers and a community caucus. Voices, too,
of administrators and voices raised in song by the University Chorale, a Coffee House duo, students at a
Folk Mass.

Luther scholar Heinz 'Bluhm is surrounded by filing
cabinets and manuscripts in the setting for his capsule
comments on the study of Luther's literary achievements.

So, the cast in the film literally ran into the thousands
who are imaged on the film.

Alison Macomber, Artist-in-Residence, and C . Alexander Peloquin, Composer-in-Residence, show their
dimensions of life at Boston College. Dormitory life,
snack-bar repartee, intramurals, Prof. Albert Folkard
talking about "Modern Man" in the Honors Program,
scenes from the School of Nursing, and scenes of the
splendor of the seasons as they affect the campus- all
are in the new film.

But most of the film is intimate vignettes of Boston
College people doing their thing- studying, teaching,
researching, praying, listening, playing.

There is much more, and the audience reaction by
those who have already seen "Toward Greater Heights"
give it their own good reviews.

Some of the pithy excerpts of Father Joyce's inaugural
address are preserved in the presentation. Richard
Hughes in his office decorated with Modern Art quizzes
a student on his interest in an independent research
project while P. Albert Duhamel comes in with an ob-

Since this is a multi-purpose filin for various audiences it hardly tells the full story of Boston College. It
is not the length of "Gone With The Wind."

Cameramen wedged their way into classrooms and
laboratories, the cockpit of a low-flying single wing
plane, into roomier space at Alumni Field, McHugh
Forum and Roberts Center.

Special use of the film will be for the Development
Program and especially the volunteer alumni working

14

�on the Annual Fund phase. And for this aspect the
black and white training film has inspirational and instructional messages from alumni, student, and administration leaders.

is the cooperation that was extended by so many people.
Dr. Fred John Pula of Audio-Visual services who
expedited many of the details in both films had the
cooperation and talents of Jack Foley of the A-V Department providing a helping hand. But then there were
students involved in campus film -making who were part
of the picture. Anita Lord, a candidate for her Master's
degree in Elementary Education, and some brand new
freshmen , Mike Masters, Mike Manzi and Tom Lally
gave great assistance - and more, their own enthusiasm
-in the rehearsals and production of the training film .

Richard Horan, Class of I 953 , who is the national
chairman of the Annual Fund, comes on the screen with
his message about the Annual Fund serving as the pipeline through which alumni can make donations to help
the operations of the university. These gifts are for the
unrestricted use by the university to meet current educational expenses.
Dick's predecessor in this Annual Fund chairmanship
is John J . Griffin, Class of 1935, without whom no
alumni or fund raising endeavor would be complete.
And John raises his voice and, really bares his heart,
about his concern for the growth of Boston College.

Many professionals were key figures in the filming of
both sequences. TR Productions of Boston produced
the color film and Ken Gaskill and Alan Root of that
organization spent enough time on campus to earn degrees.

Ray Sullivan, Class of 1953, and Joe Valentine, Class
of 1963 from the Graduate School of Social Work, and
Phil Callan, Class of 1925 , contribute their time and
talents in the making of the film . And there are two
presidents in the film: Father Joyce, who is a pro before the camera, expresses his appreciation to alumni
workers, and the Undergraduate Student Government
president Joseph Fitzpatrick tells how students are an
essential part of the "estates" of the Boston College
family.

Through the good offices of Monsignor Walter Flaherty of the Boston Catholic Television Center, the
training film was made and Tom Sawyer and Tom
Whitehouse at the Granby Street studios were of great
assistance.
When you see "Toward Greater Heights" we think
you will like it. When you see the instructional film for
the Annual Fund, we know you'll be there to help Alma
Mater. Joe Sgro, Director of the Annual Fund, who is
in this film , more than likely will be at the screening
to give Boston College's best wishes to you personally.

During the production of both films it was evident
that one of the remarkable things about Boston College

15

�CODE OF OFFICIALS' SIGNALS

7

su-stltutlon
lnfrlctlons

.R 1\

f(

l

Delay of Game

lc.IJ.ll

9

~ ,~ ~~

1

19~

-"

Rouplnl the Klcllor

cn,lnl

~2
!
'

10

~

c:;

1

13.

Time out; hferee's

~:~c;e~~~n:~to':e~~~~;:

Intentional

liiroundinr

~4
'
,_25~ --~·i ' 26.~
.....:::··. ~
._,

~·

\
llle1ally Passlnf
or "t,"~=~d 111

...

First Down

tappinr hands on cf'lest.

'

1111111 use of

23

.

..

''

Safety

Field , .. 1

r~ - t

22

Non-ctntact Feuls

I

Hands and Arms

Toudldown or

er lnterlocll:ed
Interference

"'

\

.1) %i

Help inc the Runner ,

Personal hut

::.:·

:

T

/./
Fltward Piss w

//

~~~~:::::1

~

--\..j Start ttle Clod!;

Lon of Dnn

Player Dlsquallflllf

DIAGRAM FURNISHED BY EASTERN COLLEGE ATHLETIC CONFERENCE. COPYRIGHT, COLLEGIATE COMMISSIONERS ASSOCIATION .

1969 -1970

1969 -1970

Boston College Hockey Schedule

Boston College Basketball Schedule

Dec.
Dec .
Dec .
Dec .
Dec.
Dec .
Dec .

3 • Providence College

Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec .
Dec.

5

Princeton
9 Brown
12 "' Northea stern
17 Harvard
20 Notre Dame
22 • ECAC, New York
23 * ECAC, New York
Dec. 26 • Denver
27 t Denver
Dec . 29 * Notre Dame
Jan .
3 U. N. H.
7 •Yale
Jan.
Jan.
9 Dartmouth
Jan . 24 Colgate
Jan . 27 *Boston University
2 * Bean pot
Feb.
6 R. P. I.
Feb .
Feb .
9 * Bean pot Finals
Feb . 14 * Cornell
Feb . 18 Providence
Feb . 20 • Clarkson
Feb . 21 *St. Lawrence
Feb . 25 Boston University
Feb . 28 *Army
• Away Games

2 ., Boston University
6 Fairfield
10 Canisius
13 *U . Conn.

16
19
20
27
29
30
Jan.
6
Jan. 10
Jan. 21
Jan. 24
Jan . 28
Jan. 31
Feb .
3
Feb.
7
Feb.
Feb .
Feb .
Feb.
Feb .
Mar.

16

Penn State
•Cornell
* LeMoyne
• ECAC, New York

* Providence
St . Joseph' s
* Villanova
'' Detroit
• Northeastern
Holy Cross
U. Mass
''' Fordham
11 Rhode Island
14 Seton Hall
17 Georgetown
22 * Duquesne
28 ·· Holy Cross
3 St. John's

�J

\
I

II

r

1

[

. • . WHETHER YOU'RE AN
ALL-PRO OR A SPORTS NOVICE WE lHINK WE CAN HELP
YOU AND WE WELCOME THE OPPORTUNITY
. . • WE CALL TO YOUR ATTENTION THE
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149- 15 1 PEARL ST., BOSTON, MASS. 02110 HA 6-2187, 88, 89

17

�1969 BOSTON COLLEGE ROSTER
No.

Name

15
16
17
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
39

Rippman, Ray
Scott, Joe
Harris, Frank
Fallon, Mike
Dancewicz, Gary
Gill, George
Coppola, Skip
Kirchner, Steve
Rabadan, Bill
Catone, Jim
Silva, lucien
Thomas, Bill
Rideout, Ed
Balmat, Bill
Johnson, Mike
Fitzgerald, John M.
Willis, Fred
O'Neill, Bill
Bougus, Tom
Michaels, John
Ransford, Ed
Toczylowski, Charlie
Hamilton, Joe
McDonald, Joe
Comella, Gene
McCool, Jim
Traverse, Paul
Lardner, Mike
Kurowski, Rich
McHugh, Pete
Dhembe, AI
Andiorio, Kent
O'Hagen, John
Clemente, Kevin
Davis, Mandell
Darcy, Jim
Tataronis, Dick
Angel, Ralph
Cullen, Walt
Corrigan, Mike
Bouley, Bob
Millham, Jim
Brennan, John
Perry, Bill
Cipot, Steve
Stewart, Jim
Fitzgerald, John R.
Guenther, Gary
McDonald, Ed
Bonistalli, John
Kline, John
O'Shea, Jim
Mucci, Mike
Kives, Steve
lupoli, Pete
Broskie, Gregg
Reardon, Dan
Dziama, Gregg

40

42
43
50
51
52
53
54

55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
66
70
71
72
73
74

75
76
77
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Position Class
QB
QB
QB
DB
DB
OE
DB
DB
- . DB
HB
LB
HB
DB
DB
HB
. LB
HB
LB
HB
_LB
DB
K
FB
FB
FB
LB

c
c
c
LB
LB

c
LB-K
LB
. LB
OG
OG
OG
OG
OG
OT
DT
OT
DT
DT
OT
DT
OT
DE
OE
.. DE-K
.OE
DE
OE
OE
DE
OE
-- __ DE

'72
'71
'71
'70
'71
'71
'70
'72
'70
'70
'72
'72
'72
'71
'70
'71
'71
'72
'72
'71
'71
'70
'72
'70
'70
'70
'72
'71
'71
'71
'72
'72
'72
'72
'70
'70
'70
'72
'70
'71
'70
'71
'71
'72
'72
'72
'70
'71
'71
'71
'72
'71
'72
'70
'70
'72
'72
'72

Height

Weight

6-1
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-2
5-10
5-ll
6-l
5-ll
5-ll
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-9
6-0
6-0
6-4
5- ll
6-0
6-0
5-8
6-1
5-ll
5-ll
6-0
6-4
6-3
6-2
5-10
5-11
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-l
6-3
6-l
6-1
6-3
6-4
6-4
6-3
6-l
6-3
6-5
6-3
6-3
6-l
6-3
6-3
6-2
6-l
6-0
6-3
6-4
6-2

185
182
180
185
190
170
185
170
170
188
185
218
185
180
160
194
200
190
196
180
185
185
205
200
210
217
185
215
221
202
220
215
210
213
200
212
208
230
228
215
249
230
248
220
228
215
255
228
222
195
200
223
200
185
202
200
185
205
18

Hometown
Wayland, Mass.
Woodridge, N.Y.
Malden, Mass.
Niantic, Conn.
lynn, Mass.
Arlington, Mass.
Roosevelt, N.Y.
lancaster, Pa.
Teaneck, N.J.
Rochester, N.Y.
Fall River, Mass.
Peekskill, N.Y.
Medford, Mass.
Euclid, Ohio
El Paso, Tex.
Dorchester, Mass.
Natick, Mass.
Hopkinton, Mass.
Camillus, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Fredonia, N.Y.
Arlington, Mass.
Taunton, Mass.
Quincy, Mass.
Lyons, N.Y.
Boston, Mass.
Arlington, Mass.
Great Neck, N.Y.
Norristown, Pa.
Orange, Conn.
Sturbridge, Mass.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Briarcliff, N.Y.
loudonville, N.Y.
Stamford, Conn.
Milton, Mass.
lawrence, Mass.
Verona, Pa.
Peabody, Mass.
Cleveland, Ohio
Weymouth, Mass.
Glen Burnie, Md.
Charlestown, Mass.
Stamford, Conn.
Orleans, N.Y.
New Cumberland, Pa .
Southbridge, Mass.
Newtonville, N.Y.
Brighton, Mass.
Floral Park, N.Y.
Downington, Pa .
lynn, Mass.
Revere, Mass.
Cleveland, Ohio
East Haven, Conn.
Middletown, R.I.
Brockton, Mass.
Natick, Mass.

High/Prep
Manlius Prep
Queen of Peace
Brewster Aced.
Bishop Gibbons
lynn English
Arlington, Mass.
Roosevelt HS
lancaster Cath.
Bergen Catholic
Manlius Prep
Durfee HS
Peekskill HS
Medford HS
St. Ignatius
Austin High
BC High
Kimball-Union
Hopkinton HS
West Genesee
St. Ignatius
Card. Mindszenty
Arlington HS
Taunton HS
Abp. Williams
Bordentown Mil.
English High
Arlington HS
Cheshire Aced .
LaSalle High
Amity High
Tantasqua HS
No. Catholic
Briarcliff HS
Christian Bros.
Stamford Cath .
BC High
Central Catholic
Penn Hills
Bishop Fenwick
St. Ignatius
BC High
Lakemont Aced.
Chris. Columbus
Stamford HS
Bordentown Mil.
Cedar Cliff HS
Southbridge HS
Shaker HS
Boston latin
Holy Cross HS
Downington HS
lakemont Aced.
Revere HS
St. Ignatius
East Haven HS
DelaSalle Aced.
Brockton HS
Natick HS

IJ

�CHANGE
IS IN THE
WIND Shaped in o :vvind tunnel. ..

Refined by the w1nd
at Daytona, Riverside, and Darlington.
Wind-shaped. Aerodynamic. Mode to move.

1970 Torino Brougham 2-Door

1970
FORD
TORINO
The most completely changed new cars of the
year-Torino. New size . Longer. Lower. Wider.
Quick and quiet. New shape . Shaped in a wind
tunnel for a new. low-drag silhouette .
Torino Brougham . Here's the one that has it
all . Distinctive new grille with Hideaway Head-

More luxurious than ony other
car in its class. On e of the
13 new 1970 Torino modelsthe most completely changed
new cars of the year.

lamps New interiors to surround you with luxury.
More luxurious than any other car in its class .
Top performance from a choice of five new V-8 's,
including the super efficient 351-cu. in . 4V. Top
it all off with a glamorous vinyl-covered roof.
Torino Brougham-sweeping its class .

TORINO

�Things
go better
with Coke.
TRADE·MARK

®

�BUFFALO vs. BOSTON COLLEGE
NOVEMBER 8, 1969
DEPTH CHART

NO.

85

BUFFALO

BOSTON COLLEGE

PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP
OFFENSE

PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP
OFFENSE

NAME

POS.

61
58
68
73
80
14
49
45
35

PAUL LANG __________________________________TE
CHRIS WOLF _______________________________ LT
JERRY ELWELL ____________________________LG
CHUCK DONNOR __________________________ C
BILL HAYDEN ______________________________ RG
TOM CENTOFANTI _____________________RT
JOE MORESCO _____________________ ____ SE
MARK MURTHA
_____________________ QB
JOHN FALLER _____________________________ LH
SCOTT HERLAN ____________________________ RH
JOE ZELMANSKI __________________________ FB

90
70
66
96
56
32

DEFENSE
PRENTIS HENLEY _________________________ LE
DAN WALGATE ____________________________ LT
ROVELL JONES ____ ____ ___________ . ____ RT
TOM VIGNEAU ___________________________ RE
SCOTT CLARK ______________________________OL
LARRY MADDEN ________________________ _IL

34
59
42

MIKE LUZNY ----------------------------- . JR
ED KERSHAW ____________________________OR
LEN NIXON ___ ____________________________ LH

16
40

LARRY HART ------------------------ ____ RH
TOM ELLIOTT __________________________________S

77

NO.

83

NAME

POS.

63
52
60
70
21
17
33
25
42

JIM O'SHEA ________________________________ LE
GARY GUENTHER ________________________ LT
WALT CULLEN ________ __________________ LG
MIKE LARDNER ___________________________ C
JIM DARCY ---------------------- _________ RG
BOB BOULEY _ ----------------- _________ RT
GEORGE GILL ________________________ .. RE
FRANK HARRIS __________________________ QB
FRED WILLIS __ ------------ ______________ LH
JIM CATONE __________________________ RH
JOE McDONALD ____ ______ ___________ FB

84
76
71
80
37
50
58
26
20
22
23

DEFENSE
MIKE MUCCI ____ .._________________________ LE
JOHN FITZGERALD
___________________ LT
JIM MILLHAM ________________________ RT
ED McDONALD ------------------ ______ RE
ED RANSFORD _____________________________ R
JIM McCOOL ______________________________ LB
KEVIN CLEMENTE _ ______________ _____ LB
LUCIEN SILVA ______ __________ __ ________ R
GARY DANCEWICZ
___________ HB
SKIP COPPOLA ______ _ ____________ HB
STEVE KIRCHNER ________ _____________ S

77

SQUAD

SQUAD

11 Perry, qb
12 Grubbs, dhb
14 Murtha, qb
15 Barton, dhb
16 Hart, p-dhb
17 Jack, p
18 Philp, qb
20 Patterson, hb
21 Woodward, hb
24 Zalar, dhb
26 Jacobs, dhb
29 Stiscak, hb
30 Hernquist, fb
32 Madden, lb
33 Smith, lb
34 Luzny, lb
35 Zelmanski, fb
37 McCullough, lb
39 Kozel, fb
40 Elliott, s
41 Constantino, k
42 Nixon, dhb

Edward G. Myer
(Temple)
Referee

43 Griffiths, lb
45 Herlan, hb
47 MacVittie, dhb
48 Jones, s
49 Faller, hb
52 Fortino, lb
53 Majcher, lb
54 Conaway, lb
55 Siedlecki, lb
56 Clark, lb
57 Albaneze, c
58 Donnor, c
59 Kershaw, lb
60 Carney, g
61 Elwell, g
62 Bauch, g
63 Bork, g
64 Ziegler, lb
66 Jones, dt
68 Hayden, g
69 Kehr, g

70 Walgate, dt
71 Winnett, t
72 Milarski, t
73 Centofanti; t
75 Murphy, g
76 Rei~1 dt
77 Wolf, t
78 Ellenbogen, t
79 Atkinson, dt
80 Moresco, se
81 Dorich, te
82 Endress, te
83 Horn, se
84 Waggoner, se
85 Lang, te
87 Fraser, se
89 Sharrow, se
90 Henley, de
92 Hudson, de
93 Etherington, de
95 James, te
96 Vigneau, de

Donald W. Hogan
(Broome Tech)
Umpire

15 Rippman, qb
16 Scott, qb
17 Harris, qb
19 Fallon, db
20 Dancewicz, db
21 Gill, oe
22 Coppola, db
23 Kirchner, db
24 Rabadan, db
25 Catone, hb
26 Silva, lb
27 Thomas, hb
28 Rideout, db
30 Balmat, db
31 Johnson, hb
32 Fitzgerald, lb
33 Willis, hb
34 O' Neill, lb
35 Baugus, hb

John A. Warner, Jr.
(Notre Dame)

Linesman
John J. Murphy
(Independent)
Clock Operator

26
37
39
40
42
41
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62

Michaels, lb
Ransford, db
Toczylowski, k
Hamilton, fb
McDonald, fb
Comella, fb
McCool, lb
Traverse, c
Lardner, c
Kurowski, c
McHugh, lb
Dhembe, lb
Andiorio, c
O' Hagen, lb-k
Clemente, lb
Davis, lb
Darcy, og
Tataronis, og
Angel, og

Wm. J. Stewart, Jr.
(Notre Dame)
Field Judge

63 Cullen, og
66 Corrigan, og
70 Bouley, ot
71 Millham, dt
72 Brennan, ot
73 Perry, dt
74 Cipot, dt
7S•Stewart, ot
76 Fitzgerald, dt
77 Guenther, ot
80 McDonald, de
81 Bonistalli, oe
82 Kline, de-k
83 O'Shea, oe
84 Mucci, de
85 Kives, oe
86 Lupoli, oe
87 Broskie, de
88 Reardon, oe
89 Dziama, de

G. Francis Keough, Jr.
(Mass.)
Back Judge

"COCA-COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE-MARKS OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY

�Chrysler weather has arrived. Falling leaves
with a run in the cars with the bumblebee stripe:
The Challenger. Charger 500. Dart Swinger 340.
take off on the wind-and our 1970 Chrysler
Corporation lineup takes the field.
Coronet Super Bee.
The loaded lineup. Performance on wheels,
For a starter, Plymouth 1970 makes it with
the Rapid Transit System: The fabulous
waiting for the moment you take over.
Barracuda Series. Valiant Duster 340. And the
And while you're thinking about it-relax,
imperturbable Plymouth GTX.
sit back and enjoy the game.
Or you could be Dodge material. Find outA~

'4

CHRYSLER
CORPORATION

Plymouth • Dodge· Chrysler· Imperial • Dodge Trucks • Simca ·Sunbeam

�1969 BUFFALO ROSTER
No.

11
12
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
24
26
29
30
32
33
34
35
37
39
40
41
42
43
45
47
48
49
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
66
68
69
70
71
72
73
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
87
89
90
92
93
95
96

Name
Pos.
____ QB
Perry, Edward _____ ·-·
Grubbs, Gary --·-------------- __ . DHB
Murtha, Mark _______ -- - --- ·-----Q B
Barton, Kirk -- ----------- ___ DHB-QB
Hart, lawrence _________________ P-DHB
Jack, Paul ---- - ------- ---------- P-QB
Philp, Douglas ______________ - ._QB
_HB
Patterson, Patrick --------HB
YVoodward, Barnard
Zalar, Karl - - ---- - - ----- __ DHB
Jacobs, Joel - ------ --DHB
_HB
Stiscak, Robert - -------------_ FB
Hernquist, Eugene
_ lB
Madden, lawrence
_ lB
Smith, Philip
_ lB
luzny, Michael -------Zelmanski, Joseph _
FB
McCullough, Steven
lB
Kozel, Douglas
HB
Elliott, Thomas
s
Constantino, Michael
K
Nixon, leonard ____
DHB
_lB
Griffiths, Robert
Herlan, Scott
HB
MacVittie, Mark
DHB
Jones, Clifton
s
HB
Faller, John
Fortino, James
lB
lB
Majcher, David
lB
Conaway, Daniel
lB
Siedlecki, Stanley
lB
Clark, Scott
c
Albaneze, Dennis
c
Don nor, Charles
. lB
Kershaw, Edward
G
Carney, Patrick
G
Elwell, Jerry
G
Bauch, John
G
Bork, Kenneth
lB
Ziegler, Joseph
Jones, Rove II
DT
G
Hayden, YVilliam
_G
Kehr, Paul
DT
YValgate, Daniel
T
YVinnett, YVilliam
T
Milarski, Thomas
T
Centofanti, Thomas
_G-T
Murphy, YVilliam
__ DT
Reid, Frank
- ----T
YVolf, Chris ___ ------ .. T
Ellenbogen, YVilljam
_DT
Atkinson, Barry __
SE
Moresco, Joseph
__TE
Dorich, Paul
____TE
Endress, Terrence
DHB
Horn, Richard _
SE
YVaggoner, Dennis
__TE
lang, Paul
SE
Fraser, Bruce
SE
Sharrow, Michael
- -- -----____ DE
Henley, Pre ntis
_ __________ DE
Hudson, Joseph ____
DE
Etherington, Robert
TE
James, Michael
. DE
Vigneau, Thomas
-

-

Class

Age

Height

Weight

'71
'70
'70
'72
'72
'70
'72
'70
'71
'71
'71
'71
'71
'72
'72
'70
'71
'70
'72
'71
'70
'71
'72
'71
'72
'72
'71
'72
'72
'72
'72
'70
'71
'71
'71
'70
'71
'72
'71
'72
'71
'70
'72
'70
'72
'71
'71
'72
'70
'70
'72
'71
'71
'72
'70
'70
'72
'70
'72
'70
'70
'71
'72
'71
'71

20
21
22
18
19
19
18
21
20
20

6-3
5-9
5-11
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-9
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-9
6-0
5-11
5-9
6-1
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-2
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-1
5-10
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-4
6-3
6-3
6-3
6-4
6-2
6-3
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-1
6-2
6-7
6-0

203
173
176
181
191
175
200
189
189
180
176
185
197
197
193
209
200
195
189
183
185
182
205
198
177
176
196
204
208
189
175
210
215
204
198
192
200
212
205
215
222
200
204
272
235
215
210
223
229
213
221
252
176
200
200
179
188
210
185
171
226
222
197
228
209

~0

20
20
19
21
22
20
21
19
20
19
20
19
21
19
19
20
18
18
21
18
22
20
20
20
21
21
19
20
20
20
22
19
21
19
20
20
20
23
21
18
20
20
19
21
22
19
22
18
20
22
21
20
20
20

19

Hometown
Delmar, N.Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Endicott, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Mansfield, Ohio
Springdale, Po.
Toronto, Ont.
Baden, Po.
Peru, N.Y.
Tiffin, Ohio
East Rockaway, N.Y.
Aliquippa, Po.
Olean, N.Y.
Dearborn, Mich.
Ridgway, Ont.
South Bend, Ind.
Centerline, Mich.
Coshocton, Ohio
Johnson City, N.Y.
Canandaigue, N.Y.
Jamestown, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Johnson City, N.Y.
Grand Island, N.Y.
YVilliamsville, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Ticonderoga, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Carthage, N.Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Elmhurst, N.Y.
East Aurora, N.Y.
Elyria, Ohio
New Kensington, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y.
Tallmadge, Ohio
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Akron, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
lancaster, N.Y.
Grand Island, N.Y.
North Canton, Ohio
Pittsburgh, Po.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Niagara Fall!;, N.Y.
Ottawa, Ont.
Solon, Ohio
New Rochelle, N.Y .
Tarentum, Po.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Erie, Po.
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Dover, Ohio
Attica, N.Y.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
YVitherbee, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
New City, N.Y.
Burlington, Ont.
Pittsburgh, Po.
Centerline, Mich.

..

�Quality... Experience... Service... Economy... Good Design

JOHN C. CiiLL, INC.
JOHN C. GILL, '31 -

DANIEL J. COTTER, '32

2201
COMMONWEALTH
AVENUE
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02153
Telephone: 782-197 4 (Area code 617)

FURNITURE- CARPET- DRAPERIES- INTERIOR DESIGN FOR WHOLESALE ACCOUNTS
America ' s best schools and colleges look for the best furn iture, carpet, draperies a nd other furn ish ings - consistent wi th good taste
a nd budg et ary limitation s from th e sta ndpoin t of a ttractiven ess, qual ity materia ls and con struct ion, min imal ma intenance and
durability. Tha t' s why so many of th e m - a s well a s a rch itects wi th world wide re pu tations - turn to JOHN C. GILL, Inc., the firm
which specializes in and serve s only such w ho lesal e a ccounts a s Schools, Colleges, Hotels, Hospitals, Church e s, Offices, Rectories,
Convents, and th e like. In o word , if you us e furnitur e, ca r pet, e tc . i n y o ur bus iness or profession , your need s con all b e well met with
one stop at 2201 Commonwealth Av e. , and at a savings, too .
INTERIOR DECORATING and DESIGN by our professionally tra i ned and e x p erie nce d s taff available to our cl ients wi thout cost to a ssist
w ith layo u ts , color sel ection , coordination , e tc .

AMONG THOSE WE'VE RECENTLY SERVED
Abbot Academy, Andover
Don Bosco Technical H. S., Boston
Mt. Alvernia Academy, Chestnut Hill
St. Joseph's College, North Windham, Me.
Academy of Aeronautics, Jackson Heights, l.l., N.Y. Eaglebrook School, Deerfield
Mt. Anthony Union H. S., Bennington, Vt.
St. Mark's School, Southboro
Emerson College, Boston
Academy of the Holy Name, lexington
Mt. St. Joseph College, Wakefield, R.I
St. Mary's School, Shrewsbury
Academy of Notre Dame, Tyngsboro
Endicott Junior College, Beverly
Mt. St. Joseph's Academy, Brighton
St. Peter's School, Dorchester
Academy of Our lady of Grace, Colebrook, N.H.
Fairfield University, Fairfield, Conn.
Mt. St. Mary College, Hooksett, N.H.
St. Pierre School, Waltham
Amherst College, Amherst
The Fay School, Southboro
Nasson College, Springvale, Me.
St. Pius Priory, Chicago, 111.
Anna Marie College, Paxton
The Fessenden School, West Newton
New Churc'1 Theological School, Cambridge
St. Rose Priory, Springfield, Ky.
Foxhollow School for Girls, lenox
New Hampton School, New Hampton, N.H.
Assumption College, Worcester
St. Sebastian's Country Day School, Newton
Assumption Preparatory School, Worcester
Franklin Pierce College, Rindge, N.H
Newton College of the Sacred Heart, Newton
St. Thomas AQuinas School, Jamaica Plain
Fryeburg Academy, Fryeburg, Me.
Nichols College of Business Administration, Dudley
Babson Institute, Wellesley
St. William's School, Dorchester
Garland Junior College, Boston
Bay Path Junior College, Longmeadow
North Florida Junior College, Madison, Fla.
Salve Regina College, Newport, R.I.
Gordon College, Wenham
Northeastern University, Boston
Bement School, Deerfield
School of St. Philip Neri, Boston
Northfield and Mt. Hermon Schools, Northfield
Bentley College of Accounting and Finance, Waltham Gorham State College, Gorham, Me.
Sea Pine School for Girls, East Brewster
Governor Dummer Academy, South Byfield
North Yarmouth Academy, North Yarmouth, Maine Shenandoah College, Winchester, Va.
Berkshire Country Day School, lenox
Groton School, Groton
Notre Dame College, Manchester, N.H.
Boston College, Boston
Simmons College, Boston
Boston University, Boston
Simons Rock, Great Barrington
Harlem Preparatory School, New York, N.Y.
Phillips Academy, Andover
Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me.
South Kent School, South Ke nt, Conn.
Harvard University, Cambridge
The Pingree School, South Hamilton
Bradford Junior College, Bradford
Stoneleigh-Prospect Hill School, Greenfield
Haystack Mt. School of Crafts, Deer Island, Me. Pine Manor Junior College, Brookline
Brandeis University, Waltham
Stoneleigh- Burnham School, Greenfield
Hebron Academy, Me.
Plymouth State College, Plymouth, N.H.
Brattleboro Union H. S., Brattleboro, Vt.
Sudbury Junior H. S., Sudbury
Holy Cross Fathers Seminary, North Easton
Portsmouth Priory, Portsmouth, R.I.
Brewster Free Academy, Wolfeboro, N.H.
Swain School of Design, New Bedford
Holy Cross Greek Orth. Theo. School, Brookline
Providence College, Providence, R.I.
Bri dgton Academy, Bridgton, Me.
Immaculata College, Washington, D.C.
Randolph-Macon Academy, Front Royal, Va.
Thompson Academy, Thompson's Island, Boston
Mary A. Burnham School, Northhampton
University of Maine, Orono, Me.
Keene State College, Keene, N.H.
Regis College, Weston
Kents Hill School, Kents Hill, Me.
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N.Y.
Cam bridge School of Weston, Weston
University of Maine, Portland, Me.
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Cardinal Cushing College, Brookline
Kingsley Manor School, Holliston
Rhodes School, New York, N.Y.
Cardigan Mountain School, Canaan, N.H.
Kirkland College, Clinton, N.Y.
Ricker College, Houlton, Me.
University of Massachusetts, Boston
University of New Hampshire, Durham, N.H.
Cedar Crest College, Allentown, Pa.
lancaster School of the Bible, lancaster, Penn .
Rivier College, Nashua, N.H.
Vermont College, Montpelier, Vt.
Laurel College, Meride n, Conn.
Chapel Hill School, Waltham
Rogers Hall School, Lowell
Webster Academy, Webster
Clarke School for the Deaf, Northhampton
leicester Junior College, leicester
Sacred Heart H. S., Lawrence
Wentworth Institute, Boston
lenox School, Lenox
Clark University, Worcester
St. Anselm's College, Manchester, N.H.
Westerly School, Westerly, R.I.
Clarkson College of Technology, Potsdam, N.Y.
lincoln School, Providence, R.I.
St. Anthony's H. S., Kennebunkport, Me.
Weston College, Weston
Lowell State College, Lowell
St. Charles School, Woburn
Colby College, Waterville, Me.
Weston Priory, Weston, Vt.
MacDuffie School for Girls, Springfield
College of the Holy Cross, Worcester
St. Colletta's School, Hanover
Wheaton College, Norton
Country Day School of the Holy Union, Groton, Conn Marycliff Academy, Winchester
St. Gregory's language School, Falmouth
Williams
College, Williamstown
Mass. Institute of Technology, Cambridge
Croydon Hall Academy, Atlantic Hi ghlands, N.J.
St. Gregory's School, Dorchester
Williston Academy, Easthampton
Mercyhurst College, Erie, Penn.
Crozer Theological Seminary, Chester, Penn .
St. James School, Arli ngton
Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester
Middleboro Public Schools, Middleboro
Cushing Academy, Ashburnham
St. John's School, Cambridge
Dean Junior College, Franklin
Milton Academy, Milton
St. John's Seminary, Boston
P.S. Space precludes detailing, but you may have noticed some of the buildings listed above featured
in such publications as Architectural Forum, Architectural Record, P rogressive Architecture , etc.

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

•

HARVEST VICTORY FESTIVAL

• SYRACUSE GAME RECEPTION

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28 IN McELROY COM-

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29 AT THE DRUMLINS

MONS. HORS D'OEUVRES AT SEVEN, CHAM-

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20

�STEVE KIVES

Closing In
On A Record
by Eo GILLOOLY
Record American-Sunday Advertiser
It's been a disheartening season so far for Steve Kives
but the 21-year-old senior is still a cinch to finish his
varsity career as Boston College's fourth-ranked all-time
pass receiver.
The handsome dark-haired split end needs only three
receptions to boost his career total to 50 and place him
immediately behind Barry Gallup, Jim Whalen and Art
Graham in the Eagles' record books.
Not bad for a youngster who didn't play varsity football in high school (St. Ignatius High, Cleveland, Ohio)
until his senior year.
As a sophomore, Steve started the Eagles final four
games and finished the season with 14 receptions for
206 yards and a touchdown. Last year he snared 30
passes for 454 yards, including nine against Army.
"I was looking forward to a big season," the finance
major exclaimed. "I reported for practice at 200 pounds,
15 more than last year and thought the extra weight
would help me."
"But I'm really disheartened and puzzled now," said
Kives who's been a reserve end since the opening clash
with Navy, after starting 14 straight games.
"I don't think I'm doing anything different although
I have been pressing lately trying to get back into the
starting lineup," Kives explained.
Coach Joe Yukica says Kives isn't running the pass
patterns like he did last season.
"But you've got to admire Steve," said Yukica. "He
hasn't given up on himself and is working real hard
every day to regain the touch that made him a top-flight
receiver a year ago," the coach added.
His confidence might have been shaken a little during
the first half of the season but Steve hasn't lost any of
his desire and spirit and it seems just a matter of time
before he breaks loose.
"I'll be ready when the coach needs me," said Kives
who rates the Holy Cross game in his sophomore year
as the most thrilling of his collegiate career.
"We didn't have a good season that year ( 4-6) but
we defeated tr\e Crusaders 13-6 and I caught two passes
on the drive to the winning touchdown," Kives recalled.
Steve, the only child of Stephen and Dolores Kives,
says he has no regrets over his decision which brought
him to the Heights.
"Boston College has been the perfect school for me.
It's not a real big school but it has filled all my needs social, education and athletic," the popular youngster
remarked.
"I only had five or six offers after graduating from
high school but I wanted to attend a Jesuit school after
four years at St. Ignatius which is also run by the
Jesuits," he added.
Kives said former Eagles Gary Andrachik and Jim
Grace, also St. Ignatius grads, influenced his decision
to attend Boston College.

"Gary and Jim were a year ahead of me. They played
on the same St. Ignatius team with Yale's Brian
Dowling. I was on the JV squad," he said .
The gentlemanly Kives revealed he would relish an
opportu~ity to _rlay professional football but says right
now ~e IS leamng towards a career with the FBI, after
teachmg for a year or two.
Steve and his roommat~ Bill Rabadan are prefects in
the freshman dorm - a_ JOb he calls "very rewarding."
About _Boston ,. the ,~nm 6-1 end says he's really impressed with the City. It has a lot to offer in atmosphere
for young people."
A basketball and hoc~ey fan, Steve attends many of
the contests at the Heights but hasn't participated in
any other sports himself because "football takes up most
of my time."
Regarding Boston College football , Kives feels the
Eagles have the potential to go big time. " You can't
play mediocre teams and expect national recognition."
Kives blames the Eagles so-so season on the lack of
offensive consistency. "Last year we didn't even think
about it. Everything worked well for us ."
"After defeating Navy and Tulane, we thought we
were ready to move and then we came up with the bad
game against Villanova," he added.
"It's hard to explain this season. Maybe we had too
much pre-season publicity," said Kives who is one of
four St. Ignatius grads on the team.
The others are juniors Mike Corrigan, John Michaels,
and Bill Balmat.
~teve ~redits his father with keeping up his spirits
dunng his slump this season. "He's really been tremendous offering me encouragement all the time."
If determination is the answer, Steve will conclude
his collegiate career in stunning style. That's the type
of athlete he is.

21

�DISTRIBUTED BY

CAMBRIDGE. MASS.

AUGUST A . BUSCH &amp; CO. OF MASS .. INC.

UN -4 -5150

BUFFALO STATISTICS
WON 4
9 / 13
9 / 20

9/ 27
10/ 4
10/ 11
10/ 18
10/ 25
11 / 1
11 / 8
11 / 15
11 / 22

LOST 3

Penalty / Yards
Fumble / Lost

(a )
(h)
(a )
(h)
(h)
(a )
(h)
(h)
(a )

BUFFALO 7
Ball St. 10
BUFFALO 17
Xavier 0
BUFFALO 16
UMass 6
BUFFALO 8
Kent St. 17
BUFFALO 27
Dayton 0
Holy Cross cancelled
BUFFALO 7
VPI 21
BUFFALO 33
Temple 0
Boston College
Open Date
(a ) Villanova

TEAM SUMMARY
First Downs
Rushing
Passing
Penalty
Total Plays
Rushing
Passing
Total Offense
Rushing
Passing
Passes Attempted
Had Inte rcepted
Scoring Passes
Completions
Punts/Yards
Punt Average
Had Blocked
Punt Ret./Yards
KO Ret./ Yards

U/B
115
61

44
10

492
334
158
2051
1199
852
158

9
4
66
50-1990
38 .0
0

40-288
16-283

Scormg:
Touchdowns
PAT / Kick
Run / Pass Con
Field Goals
Safety

OPP.
81
50
27

4
450
337
113

1454
821
633
113
2
2

49
62-2450
39.5
1
18-104
18-275

RUSHING
Ze lmanski, fb
Faller, hb
Patterson, hb
Woodward, hb
Herlan , hb
Barton, qb
Murtha , qb
SCORING:
Zelmanski, fb
lang, te
Constantino , k
Murtha , qb
Woodward, hb
Faller, hb
Herlan, hb
Endress, te
Barton, qb
MacVittie, dhb
Moresco, se

Elliott, dhb

34-298
13-4

32-308
10.7

16
11 -10
5 -2
5-1
1

7
7-6
0-0
3-2
0

INDIVIDUAL:
Net
Att.
82
330
61
293
198
49
34
155
29
66
29
66
41
55
TO
2

2
0
2
2
2

PAT
1P
1P
11 -10K
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

PASSING
Murtha, qb
Barton, qb
Perry, qb
Herlan, hb
Woodward, hb

Att. Comp.
109 49
34 12
12
5
2
0
1
0

RECEIVING :
lang, te
Zelmanski, fb
Patterson, hb

NO .
21
7
7
6
6
6

YDS .
358
123
50
76
67

5
4

62

Faller, hb
Sharrow, se

3

Fraser, se

Avg.

4.0
4.1

4.0
4.6
2.3
2.3
1.3
FG
0
0
4-1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

TD
2
2
0
2
1
1
2
PTS
14
14
13
12
12
12
6
6
6
6
6
6

Int. Yds. TD PAT
5 628 3 3-1
3 172 1 2-1
1
52 0 0-0
0
0 0 0-0
0
0 0 0-0

Herlan, hb
Woodward, hb
Moresco, se

34
25
47

Endress, te

10

KICKOFF RETURNS :
Patterson,hb
Faller, hb
Woodward, hb
PUNTING :
Hart, dhb
Jack, qb
Herlan, hb
PUNT RETURNS :
Elliott, dhb
Nixon, dhb
Hart, dhb / p
Horn, dhb
MacVittie, dhb

TD
2
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0

NO .

5
4
4
NO .

40
9
NO .
19

YDS .
129

74
37

TD
0
0
0

YDS.
1637

AVE.

299
54

33.2

40.9
54.0

YDS.
152

9

59

3
8
1

36
33
8

TO
1
0
0
0
1

�BOSTON COLLEGE STATISTICS
WON 2
9/ 27
10/ 4
10/ 18
10/ 25
11 / 1

(h)
(h)
(h)
(a)
(a)

TEAM

LOST 3

NAVY
TULANE
VILLANOVA
ARMY
PENN STATE

BC 21
2B

Opp 14
24

6

24

7
16

38
38

Score by Periods:
BOSTON COLLEGE
OPPONENT

14
20

27
21

9
52

28 = 78
45 = 138

TEAM
BC
35
28

First Downs Rushing
First Downs Passing
First Downs Penalty
TOTAL FIRST DOWNS

6
69

711

Yardage Rushing
Yardage Passing
TOTAL OFFENSE

649
1360

Average per game
Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
Passes Intercepted by
Interception Returns/Yards
PUNTING:

NO.

O' Hagan

34

YDS
1217

OPP.
70
30
1
101

1388
763
2051

57

410
120
53

8

6

66

11

272
120

AVG .
35.9

BLKD
0

RECEIVING
BC

OPP.
23
930

34

Number of Punts
Yardage Punting
PUNTING AVERAGE

1217
35.9

40.5

13
Number Punts Returned
98
Yo rds Punts Returned
26
Number Kickoffs Returned
476
Yards Kickoffs Returned
20
Penalties
152
Penalty Yardage
16/ 12
Fumbles/ Lost

13
89
15
235
20
170
14/9

INDIVIDUAL
RUSHING:

TC

YG

YL

NY

AVG

TO

WILLIS
CATONE
THOMAS
McDONALD
HARRIS
RIPPMAN

59
54

302

9

291

277

254

38
29
21

148
84
62

141
77
-1

3.7
2.7
0.0

5

4

23
7
7
63
28

4.9
4.7

-24

-4.9

3
2
0
0
0
0

A

c

YG

PCT

INT

117
3

56

642
7

47.9

5

6

33.3

0

0

PASSING:
Harris

Rippman

PUNT RETURNS :

NO.

YDS

Rideout
Whitney

11
7

83
15

AVG
7.6
15.0

BEST
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to
JOE YUKICA
AND THE B.C. TEAM
from

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BILL ABELY '49 GENERAL MANAGER

LINCOLN CONTINENTAL * COUGAR
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23

Catone
O'Shea
Bonistalli
Willis
Thomas
Gill
Kives
McDonald

NO.
14
11
9
8
8

YDS

AVG

TO

117
108
175
81

8.4
9.8
19.5
10.1
5.8
23.2
10.5
8.0

3
0
2
0
1
0
0
0

46

4

93
21
8

2

INTERCEPTIONS:

Dancewicz
Dhembe
Clemente
Whitney

NO.

YDS.

TO

55
6
5

0
0
0
0

5
1
1
1

KICKOFF RETURNS:

NO.

Rideout
Gill
Thomas
Willis
Kives
Bouley

15

5
3
2

0

YDS

AVG

TO

299
128
29
16

19.9
25.6

4

4.0

0

0.0

0
0
0
0
0
0

EP

FG

9.6
8.0

TO

TO
0
0

SCORING:
Catone
Willis
Bonistalli
Toczylowski
Thomas

TO

5
3
2
11/9

PTS
30
18
12
12

6

�r
HAVE FUN KEEPING YOUR OWN SCORE ' ' '
S{;ORE
1

e;)

2

4

3

TOTAL

~

BOSTON COLLEGE
VISITORS

BOSTON COLLEGE

NO. 1st DOWNS
YARDS RUSHING
YARDS PASSING
PASSES ATTEMPTED
PASSES COMPLETED
PASSES INTERCEPTED BY
FUMBLES LOST

TOTAL

VISITOR

TOTAL

f--------+--t------+-----1

FUMBLES RECOVERED
NO. PENALTIES
PENALTY YARDAGE
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- Lower Level 24

�:lJe/enjeCan Be
Just As Much Fun
by JOE CONCANNON
Boston Globe Sportswriter
It was the second day of practice and the Boston
College football team was still in sweat clothes. Drills
were strictly no-contact and the work was mostly
academic. Skip Coppola went out on a little one-on-one
passing exercise and that's when it happened.
"I was a little off balance," he said, "and I lunged
at it. I went down on my shoulder and the defender
fell on me. That was it. I had two pins in it for about
six weeks. It was disheartening. I had worked hard
all Summer and was in good shape."
So the 1968 football season was over, two days after
it began, for Skip Coppola. He suffered a severe shoulder separation and watched the games sitting in the
stands. He watched the other halfbacks, Dave Bennett
and Jim Catone and Fred Willis, and applauded with
the rest.
"I came back in the Spring," Coppola said, "and
the coaches asked me if I'd mind switching to defense.
I knew Willie and Catone were the top halfbacks. They
said, 'You may be the third back. But why be third
when you might be starting on defense?' "

at B.C.'s future schedules and at Colgate's future
schedules and when I compared them I decided to
come to B.C."

The idea had merit. Coppola had been mainly an
offensive halfback since he played on two undefeated
teams at Long Island's Roosevelt High School. But
sitting on the bench didn't appeal. A season in the
stands had him itching to go. He went willingly.

At Roosevelt High, on Long Island's South Shore,
he was one halfback. AI Pearman was the other. Pearman went to Colgate where he has had an in-and-out
career. The quarterback was Gil Schwab and he led
Virginia Tech into the Liberty Bowl last year.

"I wish I had played it all along," said Coppola. "It's
different. On offense, people are coming on to hit you.
Running backs have time to build up a head of steam.
Now, he's hitting you. It's the reverse. At Penn State,
I went to hit Franco Harris and he ran right over me."

At B.C., Coppola was an offensive halfback until he
went out on that pass pattern last September. He
played a little defense as a freshman. As a sophomore,
he was a back-up halfback. He figured to be back-up
to Bennett last year.

That was an exception, a rare mistake. Coppola has
made the adjustment with relative . ease .. He's been
having a good year on a young defenstve umt. As coach
Joe Yukica says, "he's given us very, very steady foot'ball. He's been as consistent as anyone we have on
defense."
Yukica actually first heard about Coppola when he
was the head coach at New Hampshire. After all, good
halfbacks on undefeated teams generally attract attention. At the time, though, Cop!)9la was pretty much
set on going to Colgate.

Coppola, who is majoring in quantative management, may attend law school after graduation. Or he
may go into business. There's even a possibility he may
be around for another football season. He has a year of
eligibility left if he wants to stay around another
semester.
The B.C. season has been disappointing, to a degree,
and Coppola thinks it's about time to turn it around.
"Frankly," he says, "I'm looking for a 6 and 3 season.
I think the Penn State game will give our offense a lot
of confidence."

"I wasn't considering B.C. until late in my senior
year " he said. "Then I met Coach (Emerson) Dramgold: He was here with Coach (Jim) Miller at the time
and told me they were looking for offensive backs. I
came up for a week-end visit.

"Our problem is depth. And we always seem to be
making that one little mistake. I think it's just a matter
of better discipline. We have the potential. We have to
work on the discipline."

"Bob Hyland escorted me around and I liked everything I saw. I compared football programs. I looked

Spoken like a true defensive back.

25

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26

�BOSTON COLLEGE COACHING STAFF-Kneeling left to right: John Petercuskie (Defensive Line Coach-Overall Defense); Joe Yukica (Head
Coach); Bill Bowes (Offensive Line Coach - Overall Offensive Line). Standing left to right: Pete Carmichael (Defensive Secondary Coach); Buck
O'Connor (Assistant Freshman Coach-Scouting Team); Jack Bicknell (Offensive Backfield Coach); Barry Gallup (Assistant Freshman Coach); Dave
O'Connor (Assistant Freshman Coach); Bill Campbell (Defensive Ends and Linebackers); Joe Daniels (Head Freshman Coach) .

1969 VARSITY FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF - Kneeling-Head Coach Bob Deming (Colgate '57). Left to right front: Werner Kleemann, defensive
line; Rick Lantz, defensive backs; Jim McNally, offensive line; and !erry Ransbury, offensive backs. Back: graduate assistant Mike Maser; Bill
Dando, linebackers; Joe Griffith, head freshman coach; graduate assostant John Doherty; and graduate assistant Rick Wells.

27

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29

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Eddie Pellagrini Real Estate Co., Inc.

•
Operators of

All Types of
MERCHANDISE
VENDING
MACHINES

94 WASHINGTON STREET
WEYMOUTH 88. MASS.
EO 5·9000

•
EXPORT 6-3300

CONCRETE
BOSTON
291 NO. HARVARD ST.
ALLSTON

COMMERCIAL

782-3350
PHOTOGRAPHERS

BRIGHTON

INC.
35 LEON STREET,
BOSTON 15, MASS.

H. P. HOOD
&amp;SONS

COpley 7-5230

•
WALTHAM

Dan Pitts

537 SOUTH ST.
WALTHAM

Herb Clarke

Keep Active
Support
PHYSICAL FITNESS

893-7562

IIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllll[llllllllllllltllllllllllllltlllllll

34

�EAGLE HUNTERS
FIVE YEAR RECORD

SEPT. 2.7

w

NAVY
HOME

1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

OCT. 4

2
5
4

4
3

w

TULANE
HOME

1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

OCT. 18

HOME

1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

OCT. 2.5

ARMY
AWAY

NOV. 1

PENN STATE
AWAY

1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

vs.
B.C.
15.49
No Game
77- 7
No Game
No Game
vs.
B.C.
28-14
No Game
No Game
No Game
No Game

5

7
4

2
3

7

L
4
6
3
8
2

T
0
0
0
0
0

vs.
B.C.
15-28
24. 27
19- 0
0-28
7- 8

L
3
2
2

T
0
0
0
1
0

vs.
B.C.
58-25
:1 -10
No Game
10- 0
19- 13

T
0
1
0
0
0

vs.
B.C.
29- 0
50-28
30-21
17- 0
No Game

T
0
0
0
2
1

B.C.
12-31
26-14
21 -22
6-18
No Game

T
0
0
0
0
0

vs.
B.C.
13-45
26-13
0-14
12-41
Na Game

2
3

6
4

6
1

6

w
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

6
4
6

T
0
1
0
2
1

T
0
0
1
0
0

w

VILLANOVA

L
8
4

SCHEDULE AND RECORD TO DATE

7
8
8
4
4

L
8

8

5
6

w

L

11

0
2

8

5
5
6

5

w

L
3

5
4

WON 1
Sept. 20
Sept. 27
Oct. 4
Oct. 11
Oct. 18

22
14
17
19
6

WON 1
Sept. 20
Sept. 27
Oct. 4
Oct. 11
Oct. 18

0 at Georgia 35
17 West Virginia 39
~4 at B.C. 28
17 at Florida 18
26 at Pittsburgh 22
WON 5

Sept. 13
Sept. 20
Sept. 27
Oct. 4
Oct. 18

41
18
36
~7
24

BUFFALO
HOME

1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

NOV. 15

VMI
HOME.

1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

NOV. 2.2.

7
6

5
5

5

4

4

w

L
9
4
8

1
6
2
3
1

MASSACHUSETTS
HOME
NOV. 2.9

SYRACUSE
AWAY

1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

3

7

9

6
7

3
2

T
0
0
0
0

8

2

0

vs.
B.C.
6-21
0-25
7-14
No Game
No Game

w

L
4
2
3
3
3

T
0
0
0
0
0

vs.
B.C.
No Game
32.20
30- 0
21 - 13
14 - 21

w
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964

4

2
7

6
8
8
7
8

L
8
2

35

West Chester 14
at Toledo 45
at Delaware 33
Santa Clara 8
at B. C. 6
WON 3

Sept. 20
Sept. 27
Oct. 4
Oct. 11
Oct. 18

31
16
13
0
7

New Mexico 14
at Vanderbilt 6
Texas A&amp;M 20
Nc Ire Dame 45
Utah State 23
WON 7

Sept. 20
S• pt. 27
Oct. 4
Oct. 11
Oct. 18

45
27
17
20
15

at Navy 22
Colorado 3
at Kansas State 14
West Virginia 0
at Syracuse 19
WON 4

YS.

NOV. 8

Penn State 45
at B. C. 21
at Texas 56
at Pittsburgh 46
at Rutger&gt; 20

Sept. 13
Sept. 20
Sept. 27
Oct. 4
Oct. 11

7
17
16
8
27

at Ball State 10
Xavier 0
at Massa chusetts 6
Kent State 17
Dayton 0
WON 0

0 at Rice 55
0 Richmond 20
Oct. 4 0 at West Virginia 32
Oct. 11 10 at Virginia 28 ·
Oct. 18 2 Citadel 28

Sept. 20

s' P'· 27

WON 5
Sept. 20
27
Oct. 4
Oct. 11
Oct. 18
Sep ~.

49
6
21
14
21

at Maine 7
Buffa!o 16
Delaware 33
at Boston Univ . 9
Rhode Island 9

WON 3
Sept. 20
Sept. 27
Oct. 4
Oct. 11
Oct. 18

14
0
43
20
14

Iowa State 13
at Kansas 13
at Wisconsin 7
at Maryland 9
Penn State 15

LOST 6
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov .

25 10 Virginia 0
1 0 at Notre Dame 41
at Miami
7
15
Syracuse
at Army
29

LOST 6
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

25 0 Notre Dame 37
1 23 Vanderbilt 26
Georgia Tech
8
Virginia
15
at LSU
22

LOST 1
Oct.
Nov .
Nov .
Nov.
Nov.

25 35 at Xavier 7
1
Open
Dayton
8
William &amp; Mary
15
Buffalo
22

LOST 4
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

25 38 Boston College 7
1 6 Air Force 13
at Oregon
B
Pittsburgh
15
29
&lt;:"'Navy

LOST 0
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

25 42 Ohio 3
1 38 Boston College 16
15
Maryland
22
at Pittsburgh
29
at No . Carolina

LOST 3
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

18
Open
24 7 at Virginia Tech 21
1 33 Temple 0
at B. C.
8
22
at Villanova

LOST 7
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

25 17 at William&amp;Mary 25
1 6 at Davidson 59
at No. Carolina
8
at B. C.
15
at Virginia Tech
27

LOST 2
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov .

25 28
148
8
15
22

at Connecticut 7
Vermont 7
Open
at New Hampshire
at Boston College

LOST 3
Nov .
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

1 20 at Pittsburgh 21
Arizona
8
at Navy
15
West Virginia
22
Boston College
29

�Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
You can shave it with a razor blade like your father does.
And each time you do your beard will grow back a little more
difficult. Until one day shaving's no longer a
chore. It's an agony.
Look no further than your father's face
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RAI\0 ® LEKTRO

BLAOE' TRAOEMARKOF SPERRY RANO CORP. @1969 S. R.

£lECTAIC SHAYUI OIVISION,BIIIIDGEPOitt,CONNECTICUT.

�Hear Ye Here All SorLs of SporLs:
~
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ISTEN AND
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90 minutes of Talk About
Sports. Tuesda;y through
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.......... .__.

WBZ

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Boston College Football Play-By-Play sponsored by Jos. P. Schlitz Brewing Company,
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GROUP

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�MA.l K Of UCf.UENCE

~
OnTheMove.
'70 Chevelle SS.
We made our tough one even tougher.
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�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
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 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                    <text>�Win
with
Winchell!
Wise Owls know Winchell represents the epitome in fine printing and creative skill. Gold medals attest to that. And for Service-would you believe
a Winchell Man is on campus every day. Call Walt Richards at LO 8-1770
and he'll be there before you can emit a long "R-a-a-y W-I-N-C-H-E-L-L."

THE
13 15

WINCHELL
C H ERR Y

COMPANY

STREET

•

•

CREATIVE

PH I LADE L PH I A

7,

PRINTERS

PENNSYLVANIA

HYGIENIC SANITATION COMPANY
EXTERMINATORS AND DISINFECTORS
REST ROOM EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES
TERMITE CONTROL

WEST TRENTON , N. J .
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PITTSBURGH, PA.
JOHNSTOWN, PA.
HARRISBURG, PA.
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AMERICAN and WINGOHOCKING STREETS
PHILADELPHIA 19140
DA 9-1570

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NORRISTOWN, PA.
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JAMES F. DUFFY-Temple '29
Secretary

JOHN B. BREADY-Temple '25
Treasurer

Trained Staffs for Industrial Fumigation and Sanitation
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Prompt Service Through All Branches
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Work Guaranteed

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�THE 1968 TEMPLE UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF
Kneeling left to right: Jerry Preschutti , head coach George Makris and Earl Cleghorn.

Standing left to right: John Rogers, John McAneney, Bob Marshall , Tom Urbanik and John Konstantinos.

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
vs

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
NOVEMBER

2,

1968,

8.00

P.M.

•

TEMPLE

STADIUM

Prices: $3.50-$2.50-$1.25. Prices include tax.
Temple University Ticket Office, 1705 N. Broad Street
787-7451

VARSITY FOOTBALL
Head Coach • GEORGE MAKRIS

Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

21-Rhode Island-Temple Stadium
28-Wayne State-Detroit, Mich.
5-Boston U.-Boston, Mass.
12-Buckneii-Temple Stadium
19---Hofstra, Hempstead, N. Y.

8:00p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
8:15p.m.

Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

26-Delaware-Temple Stadium
2-Buffalo-Temple Stadium
9---Gettysburg-Gettysburg, Pa.
16-Northeastern-Temple Stadium
23-Dayton-Temple Stadium .

1:30 p.m.
8:00p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m

"THE TEMPLE ILLUSTRATED"
Official Football Publication of Temple University
of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education
A. R. CARLISLE and ALLEN SHRIER, Editors

ERNEST C. CASALE, Director af Atltletlcs

"THE TEMPLE ILLUSTRATED" is published by the Department of Athletics, Temple University, for each football game played at Temple University
Stadium. For advertising rates or other information please call or write Director of Athletics, 1705 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 19122
Phone : 787-7445. Price per issue- SOc.
Represented for Nati onal Advertising by SPENCER ADVERTISING COMPANY , INC ., 271 Madi son Ave ., New Yo rk Ci ty

�The Temple Illustrated

Page 2

We ROOT for the 0 WLS

PINKERTON S INC.
7

(Founded 1850 by Allan Pinkerton)

INVESTIGATIONS • PROTECTION SERVICE
Uniformed Guards and Patrolmen
supplied to police p remises, d ire ct traffic and
maintain order. We su pervise or take complete charge of ticket sales and admissions.

Main Office: 100 Church St., New York
Philadelphia Office: Lafayette Building

For many years we have been privileged to be the advertising agency
for Temple University. Our greatest reward has been to see the
Temple story translated into the
phenomenal growth of this great
educational institution.

ECOFF &amp; JAMES, INC.

I1.A ~a:{/azh~

'tii!J

121 S. BROAD STREET
P H ILADELPHIA, P A. 19107

Temple Stadium
Catered By

The Howard P. Foley Co.

Nilon Bros. Inc.
HOME OFFICE

3rd &amp; Caldwell Streets
Chester, Pa.
TR 4-3480
"Caterers To The Nation's Great"

PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19128

�Page 3

The Temple Illustra ted

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
PRESIDENT

DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS

DR . PAUL R. ANDERSON

ERNEST C. CASALE

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
PRESIDENT

DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS

MARTIN MEYERSON

JAMES E. PEELLE

�The Temple Illustrated

Page 4

STATE UNIVERSITY
OF NEW YORK
AT BUFFALO
State University of New York at Buffalo,
founded in 1846 as the University of Buffalo,
is today the largest single unit and most comprehensive undergraduate and graduate center
of State University, enrolling 21,000 students
(13 000 full-time). One of the first independent 'institutions of higher learning to be established in the United States, the University was
a pioneer in adapting educational service to the
specific needs of a developing urban complex.
Today, the University is headed by a noted
scholar of urban affairs, Martin Meyerson, who
is the tenth chief executive officer of the University.
First chancellor of the University was Millard Fillmore, 13th president of the United
States.
Building upon more than a century of public service tradition, the University has developed rapidly as a State institution since it
became part of the SUNY system in 1962.
While the total enrollment has increased
only 37 per cent since 1962, the number of fulltime undergraduates has grown by 49 per cent
and the full-time graduate and professional
student population by 167 per cent. The number of degrees awarded has grown more dramatically, ranging from an increase of 200 per
cent for bachelor's degrees to almost 500 per
cent for Ph.D.'s. In 1968, the University conferred 2,200 bachelor degrees, 902 master's

degrees, 138 academic doctorates and 237 doctorates in the professions.
The character of the student body has
changed as profoundly as its size. In the Fall of
1959, 30.5 per cent of entering students ranked
in the top one-fifth of their respective high
school classes. Of those entering in the Fall of
1967, 86.7 per cent ranked in the top quintile.
Similar improvements have taken place in the
quality of graduate students.
Resources and facilities have also been improved and enlarged. The number of volumes
in the University Libraries, for example, has
tripled since 1962 and has recently passed the
one million mark. To provide room for continued expansion of operations pending completion of a new campus, the University is
occupying a number of off-campus locations,
including an "interim" facility of several buildings on Ridge Lea Road in the Town of Amherst, three miles north of the present campus.
Understandably, the costs of operating the
University have also increased since 1962. An
annual budget of $18.5 million in the last year
before the merger has now grown to over $60
million. Meanwhile, funds for sponsored research-from sources entirely outside the State
treasury-have increased by over 250 per cent.
The University has recently implemented a
bold new academic plan, reorganizing its

�Page 5

The Temple Illustrated

schools and colleges within seven interdisciplinary faculties-arts and letters, educational
studies, engineering and applied sciences,
health sciences, law and jurisprudence, natural
sciences and mathematics, and social sciences
and administration. All undergraduate instruction is offered through one division, the University College, while the School of Graduate
Studies is expected to become the central coordinating body for all higher degree programs,
professional and academic, beyond the baccalaureate level. A third University division,
Millard Fillmore College, administers evening
credit programs and continuing education for
adults. To provide year-round operation, the
Summer Sessions coordinate academic offerings in three overlapping terms, June through
August.
Dramatic as the recent growth and innovation have been, the most significant period of
development in the University's history is just
beginning.
The seven broadly interdisciplinary faculties
will incorporate and build upon traditional disciplines while identifying and implementing
both new combinations of standard disciplines
and new fields of study and research. A series
of non-degree granting "colleges" to be established in the next several years will provide for
students centers of identification and a diversity of opportunity for intellectual exchange

and will serve as a vehicle for fostering personal
relationships within a large university. A program of vigorous recruitment based upon competitive salary levels and bolstered by a climate
of encouragement for creative academic pursuits will result in the development of an enlarged and enriched body of faculty scholars.
The level of achievement of the student body
can be expected to keep pace with these overall
qualitative developments as enrollment increases to approximately 40,000 by 1975, with
particular growth at the graduate level. Constant attention will also remain focused on
building a distinguished undergraduate program as the foundation for an excellent graduate center.
Germane to all these intellectual prospects
is the vista of an entirely new University campus, designed especially to facilitate implementation of educational objectives. This complex
will be developed on a 1,300-acre tract in the
Town of Amhert, three miles north of the present campus. The project which will provide
14,000,000 square feet of educational space is
expected to begin taking shape in the early
1970's. Upon its completion, the present 178acre Main Street campus at the Northeastern
edge of Buffalo will be devoted to expanded
research activities and will serve also as the
site of one of the largest centers of continuing
education activities in the nation.

�JIM CALLAHAN

JOHN WALLER

DENNIS SERINA

BOB PERESTA

NICK GOVELOVICH

DAVE AHLES

RUSTY MAUGEL

BILL HOLLAR

Make TALLY-HO Inn and Hotel
Your

Meetin~

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Before and After the Bi~ Game .!
Excellent food in a delightful setting
Luxurious overnight accommodations
Official pre-season training headquarters of the Temple Owls

Route 202 and 3 63 overlooking Valley Forge

•

Phone: Niagara 4-7000

�Page 7

The Temple Illustrated

TU 7-3106

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Ll 8-5554-5

ALFRED P. HINCKLE, Owner

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Craftsmen, specializing Period Furniture and Draperies also remodeling of Furniture, restoring of
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BUILDING CONSTRUCTION

E. CLIFFORD DURELL, JR.
President

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING
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3101 MT. CARMa AVENUE
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7733 Castor Avenue
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R. SMITH
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headquarters for

OFFICIAL SCHOOL RINGS
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COOPER'S SPORTSCENTER
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BANQUET HALL FOR 400
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SWIMMING POOL- RECREATION ROOM
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�The Temple Illustrated

Page 8

Aerial view of the Music Festival Tent showing the boxoffice and part of the large parking area at the upper right.

Temple
University
Music Festival
and Institute
... in Retrospect
by
The wide open spaces of Temple University's Ambler
Campus are just the place for a little rehearsal by
flutist Carol Lewis, from Camden, N. J., and tuba
player Sam Allen, from Valdosta, Georgia.

Temple president Dr. Paul Anderson looks over scale
model of the proposed permanent structure that will
house the Temple University Music Festival concerts.

DR. DAVID

L . STONE, Dean, College of Music

On Sunday, August 4, 1968, the first Temple
University Music Festival and Institute came
to a close at the University's Ambler Campus.
That evening all of the Institute and Festival
music forces, chorus, orchestra and soloists
collaborated in a gala program. And heard from
all sides that evening was the exclamation "a
magnificent end for the festival!"
One thinks in retrospect of the piano artistry
of Van Cliburn, Mme. Guiomar N ovaes and
Eugene Istomin; the impeccable Lenox String
Quartet: an excTng dance performance by Jose
Greco; the thrilling Leider singing of Mme.
Elisabeth Schwarzkopf; the spirited guitar oi
Carlos Montoya; dazzling string artistry of
violinist Tossy Spivakovsky and cellist Leonard Rose; the great tenor voice of Richard
Tucker and the graceful Pennsylvania Ballet.

�Page 9

The Temple Illustrated

Joseph Fuchs, one of the world's greatest violin virtuosos, demonstrates his techniques to three masters class
students at Temple University's Music Festival and
Institute. Fuchs was one of eminent musical artists who
was on the faculty of the six week Institute.

But this was not all! There were brilliant
recitals by the distinguished family including
Eleanor Steber, Alexander Fiorillo, Harvey
Wedeen, Natalie Hinderas, Joseph Fuchs,
Helen Kwalwasser, Willem Stokking, Stuart
Canin, Donal Nold, William Murphy, Ann
Hobson, Sarah Morris and William Yeats.
There were the brilliant evenings of operatic
scenes directed by Adelaide Bishop and James
Lucas' outstanding fully staged production of
Cimarosa's "Secret Marriage." Student orchestra concerts conducted by Leo Mueller and a
weekly series of student recitals also were presented by the Institute.
In a different vein were the sell-out performances by Ella Fitzgerald and Duke Ellington.
Folk and Jazz idioms of musical expression are
now viewed as quite legitimate areas of musical
research and study and constitute a part of our
American culture. Such modes of expression
have influenced many serious composers and
have artistic legitimacy in their own right.
Today's avant-garde music is frustrating to
many, understood by few, and yet is constantly
acclaimed by critics. It is the music of our time!
The art of an Ella Fitzgerald or a Duke Ellington is also of our time. Perhaps there is something to be said for devoting an entire week to
jazz performances with a symposium to provide for study and analysis of this music.

It must be said that both the Music Festival
and Institute were great artistic successes!
Growing pains of a "first," unexpected setbacks and problems were overcome to bring
about an opening performance on schedule.
Only the slavish dedication of general manager David Kanter and his assistant, Anne
Bohlen, produced this miracle.
We were indeed fortunate to have a setting
where musical tone can be heard to advantage
from all points of the theater. New York Times
critic Raymond Ericson said that "the amphitheater turned out to be acoustically excellent."
Think what it was to the 200 college and 50
high school students who studied in this total
musical environment at Ambler! Our brilliant
director, Robert E. Page, produced a student
body virtually out of thin air, despite a late
start and competition from other established
institutes. Students came from Spain, South
America, Holland, France, Japan, Korea and
all over the United States. Our faculty acclaimed the unbelievably high calibre of talent
of these young people which was demonstrated
in choral, orchestral, chamber music, operatic
and solo performances.
A special word of thanks to those donors
whose generosity made it possible for us to
proceed with the planning for the festival. It
was wonderful to hear their expressions of enthusiasm. The 1968 festival was a wonderful
step for Temple, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia, and especially for
our neighbors in Upper Dublin Township and
nearby Ambler.
Such a vast undertaking as the Music Festival and Institute could only have been realized by many, many people whose unselfish
work brought about its success. Temple thanks
all who contributed in any way.
The imagination and vision of Temple president Dr. Paul R. Anderson helped move this
project forward and did great credit to the
University. It was a source of great pride of
many faculty members and acclaimed throughout the country.
The financial result of our first season was
encouraging and we expect to do even better
next year. Those who were pleased should support the festival with gift contributions. The
security needed to insure the future of the
Festival will require contributions on a continuing basis.
Be a true "friend of the festival" today!

�The Temple Illustrated

Page 10

"Taste the difference quality makes"

THE C. B. DOLGE COMPANY
Chemicals for Maintenance
WESTPORT, CONNECTICUT

FRANKFURTERS
" Enjoy Them At The Game"

Representative: James J. Mulhern
MEDFORD'S INC.

CHESTER, PA.

LO 3-5822

A. H. KROEKEL &amp; BRO., INC.

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JJr. JJernard

J. Simmom

PRACTICE LIMITED TO EYE

Printers and Engravers

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Contact Lens Specialist

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GEORGE CONTI

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HIRSCH!) ARKIN9 PINEHERST9 INC.
MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

236 KRAMS AVE., PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19127
IV 3-6000

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DENNIS WOOMER

ED BIALOUS

PAT BARNES

MIKE PAONE

MIKE BUSCH

STEVE CAPORICCIO

FRANK DeBERARDINIS

A. Raymond Raff Company
Contractors &amp; Builders

1631-33-35 Thompson Street
Philadelphia, Po.

�MARTEEN JONES

JOHN DiYENNO

DICK EASTWICK

JIM FATIGATE

CHRIS FLETCHER

STAN GEMSKI

HUGH GLASSEY

FRED HELLER

IS YOUR GROUP PLANNING A BUS TRIP???
GRAY LINE operates the finest fleet of 41, 45 and 49 passenger buses
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GRAY LINE can arrange for class trips, athletic events and theater
parties to any point in the United States, as well as sightseeing in the
Philadelphia area. For your next trip, keep your gang together and let
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�The Temple Illustrated

Page 14

Temple University 1968 Alphabetical Football Roster
Head Coach, George Makris

NO .

43
34
85

71
63
13
25
83

70
53
29
27
37
60
57
24
42
84
72
62
73
48
28
46
51
11
66
10
38

52
49
69
68
9
31
74
77
50
81
26

59
47
88
75

35
39
58

33
80
56
87
82
61
14
89
17
79
65
64
94
21
91
36
23
12
44
78
76
41

PLAYER

CL.

*Ahles, Dave ....•..•.......•...... Sr .
*Barnes, Pot ..• ....•..•..•.......• Jr.
Bialous , Ed .............. - .•...... Jr.
*Boscoe, Jim ........•....•......... Sr.
Brambley, Irwin ........•.•........ So .
Burns, Bill •....... •. .............. So.
*Busch , Mike ........... , ........... Jr.
*Callahan, Jim ...........•......... Sr.
*Coporiccio, Steve .................. Jr.
Ciecka, Vincent ...........•....... So .
Colligan, Pat •.........•..•........ Jr.
*Conti, George •..••.........•.•.... Sr.
DeBerardinis, frank
............ Jr.
DeNiro, Thomas ....... .•..•....... So .
*DiYenno, John ....•..•............. Jr .
*Eostwick, Bob ....... ..•....•.... .. Sr .
*Eastwick, Dick ...•.....•....•. ..... Sr.
*Edwards, lawrence . . . . . . . • . . . . ... Sr.
Famille, Joseph ......•..•.•. .•... . So .
*Fatigate, J im ••...... • ..•.......... Jr.
Finta , Stephen .•...•......••.•....• Jr.
*fletcher, Chris ..........•.......... Jr.
Gemski , Stan ...... ..•.......•..... Jr.
*Glassey, Hugh ..........•.... - ..... Jr.
*Govelovich, Nick ....• .. •........... Sr.
Gross, Carl ..........•....•....... So .
Hall, Mike ....•..... . ....... - .... So .
Heller, Fred ............•......... So .
*Hollar, Bill •...... ··-············· Jr.
Horwitz, William ..........•....... So .
Joonnides, Greg .................. So .
*Jones, Marleen ...........•......•. Jr.
*Kern, Chad .•........... - .......... Jr.
Kindregon, Jack ....•..•.•......... So .
King , George ......•....•......... So .
Krug , Edward .............. - ...... So .
letino, Frank ...... ...•.. ... .... .. So .
leonard , Godfrey ..........•....... Jr.
loviglio, Gerald .. ... .. •.•..•.... .. So .
lyons, William •................... So .
Mackowsky, Dan ...•.•.•.••.....•. So.
*Mancine, Joe . .••................•. Sr.
*Manithiello, Rich .... _ ...........•• Sr.
*Maugel , Rusty .......•.......•..... Sr .
Mazer, Bernie .....•..•............ Jr.
Mesko, Joe ........•....•.•....... So.
Metcho, Ronald . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . ... So.
Moxley, Paul ...........•........• So.
Mullen , James .....•.........•.... So .
*Nemergut, Bob . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sr.
. . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . . . So .
Padla , Douglas
*Paone, Mike
...•.......•....... Jr.
*Peresta, Bob ........•..•....•..... Sr.
*Pidcock, Jim ......•..........•.... Jr.
*Poostay, Ed .......•....•........•• Sr .
*Puchalski, Dave .................... Jr.
Ro setti, Samuel ..... • ..•.••. , . .. ... So.
Russo, louis •............•........ So .
*Serino, Dennis ........... ... ....... Sr.
Sendzik, Stephen .................. So .
Small , John •.......•..•..•..•..... So .
Smith , Allan ............. - ......•. So .
*Wallace , Alvin ....•....•..•......• Sr.
Wallace, larry . . . . . ••.•.......... Sr.
*Waller, John ......•..........•.... Sr.
*Watson, Jim .........•..•.......•. Jr.
*White, Spencer .......•.... •..... .. Sr.
*Woomer, Dennis ...•............... Sr.
Zanghi, Mike ...............• ... .. So .
*Denotes lettermen

POS .

AGE

HT.

WT .

HIGH SCHOOL AND HOMETOWN

LB
DB
TE

21
20
20
21
22
20
21
22
20
19
20
20
20
19
19
21
21
21
19
19
20
19
19
20
21
19
19
19
22
19
20
19
20
19
19
19
19
20

5 .11
5 .11
6 .0
6 .2
5 .11
6 .0
6 .0
6 .1
6 .1
5 .10
5 .10
6 .0

206

Princess Anne, Virg inia Beach, Va .
Hollidaysburg, Holl idaysburg , Pa .
Roman Cathol ic, Philo. , Pa .
Plymouth-Whitemarsh, Plymouth Meeting, Pa .
Woodrow Wilson, Bristol , Po .
Brandyw ine, Wilmington, Del .

or
OG

QB
HB
SE

or
c
FL
DB
FB
LB
OG
HB

FL
DT

or
OG
DT
DB
FB
DB

c
QB
LB
DB
FB
MG

FL
DT
OG

QB
LB

or
DT
LB
SE
HB

c
DB
TE

19
19
20
22

or

21
21

DB
LB

20
19

c

19

FB
DE
MG
TE
TE
LB

21
20

QB
TE
DB

or
OG
DE
TE
DB
DE
DB
DB

21
20
20
22
20

21
19
19
19
22

19
19
19
22

QB

21
21

FL

20

or

21

DT
FL

20

19

5.9
6 .0

5.9
5 .11
5 .11
6 .3
6 .3
5 .11
6 .3
5 .10
5 .10
6 .0
6 .0
5 .11
5 . 11
6.0
6 .1
5 .9
5.11
6 .3
5 .10
6.0
5 .11
6 .0
6 .2
5 .10
6 .0
5 .11
6 .0
5.9
5 .11
6 .0
6 .1
5 .11
6 .0
6.0
6 .1
6 .0
6 .2
6 .3
6 .0
5 .11
6 .2
6 .0
6.1
6 .0
6 .3
6 .3
6 .2
6 .2
5 .11
6 .0
5 .9
5 .11
6 .0
6 .1
5 .11

189
186
228

183
177
198

185
245
199
180
185
202
214
225

183
178
235
239
229
226
186

182
210
220
168
185
170
222
232
192
237
190
194
206
234

213
187
184
183
199
170
192
220
174
193
186

218
200
230
206
200

181
175
220
180
239
224
229
210
202
229
172
172
175
169
224
233
167

St. Mary' s, Severna Park, Md .
Ca rdinal Dougherty, Phila ., Pa .
Bishop Neuman , Philo . , Po.
Pennsauken, Pennsauken, N. J .
Mt. St. Michael , Bronx , N. Y.
St. Bened ict' s, Middletown, N. J .
Pennsauken , Pennsauken , N. J .
Roncalli , Pueblo, Colo .
Canon·McMillan, Canonsburg , Po .
Memor ial , Haddonfleld , N. J .
Memorial , Haddonfield , N. J.
Spring Hope , Spring Hope, N. C.
Triton, Runnemede , N. J .
Mt . St. Michael , Bronx, N. Y.
Bangor, Bangor, Pa .
East Orange, East Orange, N. J .
Plains Memorial , Plains, Po .
Mt. St. Michael , Bronx, N. Y.
Steelton· Highsp ire , Steelton , Po .
Kingston , Kingston , Po .
Kingston, Kingston , Po .
East Islip, Great River, N. Y.
Immaculate Conception , Belleville , N. J .
Teaneck, Teaneck, N. J .
Glassboro, Glassboro , N. J.
St. Thomas More, Philo ., Po .
Plymouth-Whitemarsh , Norristown, Po .
lansdale , North Wales , Po .
Atlantic City, Margate, N. J .
Berwick Area, Berwick, Po .
Hammonton , Hammonton , N. J .
Central , Philo ., Po .
East Islip, East Isl ip , N. Y.
Berwick, Berwick, Po .
Old Forge, Old Forge, Pa .
Cherry Hill , Cherry Hill , N. J .
Old Forge , Old Forge, Pa .
Plymouth-Whitemarsh , lafayette Hill , Po .
Hilliard , Columbus , Ohio
Scranton Central , Dunmore , Po .
Old Forge, Old Forge , Pa .
Bishop Eagan , Ogden , Utah
George C. Marshall , Vienna, Va .
Bunnell , Stratford , Conn .
Ridgefield Memorial , Ridgefield , N. J .
Archibald , Archibald , Po .
Pennsbury, levittown , Po .
Council Rock , Newtown , Po .
Swoyersville, Swoyersville, Po .
Dunmore , Dunmore , Po .
Pennsauken , Pennsauken , N. J.
Holy Cross, Maple Shade , N. J .
St. James, Boothwyn , Po .
Brick Twp ., Brick Town , N. J.
West Catholic, Philo ., Po .
Council Rock, Newtown, Po .
lenope Regional , Moorestown , N. J .
New Bern , New Bern, N. C.
Ridley Twp ., Ridley Park, Pa.
Hempfleld , Wendel , Pa .
Bertie , Colerain , N. C.
Pennsbury, Fairless Hill s, Pc
Technical High , Scranton , Po

�BEFORE "iOU
BU'{, SEE YOUR
C~RYSLER..­

PLYMOUTI-\
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~~ CHRYSLER
CORPORATION
~

SEE THE AFL IN ACTION EACH WEEK ON NBC-TV.

��83
75
78
51
62
71
82
12
24
44
38

OFFENSE
Jim Callahan
oLE
Rusty Maugel
oLT
Spencer White
LG
Nick Govelovich
C
Jim Fatigate
o o oRG
Jim Boscoe
o o . RT
Mike Paone .
RE
John Waller ......... QB
Bob Eastwick
LHB
Jim Watson ..
RHB
Bill Hollar ... . ....... FB
0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

••

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

••••

••••••

0

0

••••

81
70
69
65

75
90
50
23
40
42
32

TEMPLE
64
84
39
69
31
91
43
48
27
21
36
9
10
11
12
13
14
17
21
23
24
25
26
27
28
30
31
34
35
36
37
38
39
41
42
43
44
46
47
48
49
50
51

TEMPLE
Kindregan, QB
Heller, DB
Gross, QB
*Waller, QB
Burns, QB
• Pidcock, QB
*Puchalski, DB
Small, DB
Wallace, DB
• Eastwick, HB
• Busch, HB
lyons, HB
*Conti, DB
Gemski, HB
*Manichiello, FB
King, lB
*Barnes, DB
Mazer, DB
*Wallace, DB
DeBerardinis, FB
*Hollar, FB
Mesko, DB
Zanghi, Fl
* Eastwick, Fl
• Ahles, lB
*Watson, Fl
*Glassey, DB
*Mancine, DB
*Fletcher, DB
Joannides, Fl
leonard, lB
*Govelovich, C

• Denotes lettermen

0

••••

0

•••••

0

•••

0

••••••

0

0

0

0.

0

0

0

0

•••

•

0

•••

0

0

0

•

0

0

0

0

0

•

0

0

••••

0

•••

••

••

•••••

•

•••

0.

0

•

0

0

••

0

•••

0

0

0

BUFFALO

DEFENSE
Dennis Serina ........ LE
Lawrence Edwards .... LT
Joe Mesko .......... LLB
Marteen Jones .
MG
George King .
RLB
Allan Smith ...
RT
Dave Ahles ...
RE
Chris Fletcher .....
LS
George Conti ........ LIS
John Small ...
RIS
AI Wallace
RS
0

DEFENSE
Tom Murphy ..
LE
Dan Walgate ..
LT
Don Sabo ......
ILB
Scott Clark ..
IRB
Joe Riccelli .......... RT
Prentis Henley ... . ... RE
Jim Mosher ....
QLB
Nick Kish
LHB
Tom Elliott ...
S
Len Nixon •....
. RHB
Dave Richner
ORB

0

••

•••

••••••

85
77
64
52
68
73
87
19
44
35
21

OFFENSE
Paul Lang ........... TE
Chris Wolf ..
LT
Mike Maser ..
LG
John Wesolowski ...... C
Bill Hayden
RG
Tom Centofanti .
RT
Dick Ashley ...
SE
Denny Mason
QB
Chuck Drankoski .... FLK
Joe Zefmanski ....... FB
Ken Rutkowski ....... TB
0

••••••••

0

0

•••••••

••••••••

0

0

0

•••••

••

•

0

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••

0

•

----------------------•••••••••

SQUAD
52 Horwitz, MG
53 Ciecka, C
56 *Nemergut, MG
57 *DiYenno, OG
58 Metcho, C
59 Mackowsky, C
60 DeNiro, lB
61 *Peresta, lB
62 * Fatigate, OG
63 Brambley, OG
64 • Serino, DE
65 Russo, OG
68 *Kern, OG
69 *Jones, DT
70 *Caporiccio, OT
71 *Boscoe, OT
72 Famille, OT
73 Finta, DT
74 Krug, OT
75 *Maugel, OT
76 *Woomer, DT
77 letino, DT
78 *White, OT
79 Rosetti, OT
80 Mullen, DE
81 loviglio, SE
82 *Paone, TE
83 *Callahan, SE
84 *Edwards, DT
85 Bialous, TE
87 Podia, TE
91 Smith, DE

BUFFALO SQUAD
1 0 Moresco, QB
57 Albaneze, DT
11 Perry, QB
58 Donnor, C
1 2 Sliscak, DHB
59 Kershaw, lB
15 Martin, DHB
60 Carney, G
16 Embow, KSP
61 Elwell, G
17 Jack, KSP-QB
62 Kowalewski, G
19 Mason, QB
63 Walters, G
20 Patterson, TB
64 Maser, G
21 Rutkowski, TB
65 Clark, lB
66 lupienski, lB
23 Kish, DHB
24 Zalar, DHB
68 Hayden, G
25 Bell, lB
69 Sabo, lB
26 Jacobs, S
70 Walgate, DT
29 Horn, DHB
72 Milarski, DT
30 Hernquist, lB
73 Centofanti, T
32 Richner, lB
74 Rio, T
33 Zeek, FB
75 Riccelli, DT
34 luzny, lB
76 Reid, T
35 Zelmanski, FB
77 Wolf, T
36 Woodward, FlK 78 Beck, DT
37 McCullough, lB 79 Atkinson, DT
38 Chapp, FB
80 Shine, SE
40 Elliott, S
81 Murphy, DE
42 Nixon, DHB
82 Endress, TE
44 Drankoski, FlK
83 Kovey, DE
45 Grubbs, DHB
84 Przybycien, DE
46 Hogan, TB
85 lang, TE
48 Hlavenka, SE
86 Vigneau, DE
49 Faller, TB
87 Ashley, SE
50 Mosher, lB
88 James, TE
51 Moler, C
89 Sharrow, SE
52 Wesolowski, C
90 Henley, DE
56 Chernega, lB

OFF ICIALS
Referee: . . . . .
• ...... Maurice J. Quinlan, C.C.N .Y.
Field Judge: ......... Wi lliam J. Stewart, Notre Dame
Umpire: . . . . . . . . • . . . Cl ifford 0. Calvert, Jr., Ursinus
Bock Judge : . . . .
. ..... Edward J. Miersch, lafayette
Linesman: . . .
. . Walter J. Wa lsh, W ilson
Clock Operator:
............
. .George F. Erb

�Olds Delta 88 Royale:The bold and the beautiful.
Meet our new top-of-the-line 88. Big-car room and
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pay for an ordinary car! Escape from the ordinary.

�Page 19

The Temple Illustrated

University of Buffalo 1968 Alphabetical Roster
NO .
57
87
79
78
25
60
73
38

56
65
58
44
40
61
16
82
49
45
68
90
30
48
46
29
17
26
88
59
23
83
62
85
66
34
15
64
19
37
72
51
10
50
81
42
20
11
84
76
75
32
74
21
69
89
80
12
86
70

63
52
77

36
24
33
35

PLAYER
CL .
Dennis Albaneze
.. So .
*Richard Ashley . . .
. . Sr.
Barry Atkinson .
. .... So.
Russell Bock
.. Jr.
Harry Bell . . . . . . . . .
. .. Jr.
Patrick Corney
.. Jr.
Thomas Centofanti
... So .
Gary Chapp
.. Jr.
David Cherne go
..... .. Jr.
*Scott Clark
... Jr.
Charles Donnor . . . .
. ....... So .
*Charles Drankoski
. .. Sr.
Thomas Elliott . .
. . So .
Jerry Elwell . . . . . .
. . So .
*Robert Embow . . . .
. ... Sr.
*Terrence Endress . .
. .. Jr.
John Faller
... So.
*Gary Grubbs . . . . .
. . Jr.
William Hayden . . . . . . . . . . • . .
. . Sr.
Prentis Henley
........ Jr.
Eugene Hernquist . .
. . So .
Joseph Hlovenka
... So .
. . . Jr.
Kevin Hogan . . . . .
. . Jr.
*R ichard Horn . . . . .
*Paul Jock
.. Jr.
Joel Jacobs
.. So .
Michael James
. . So.
Edward Kershaw . .
. . So .
Nicholas Kish . . . . .
. .. Sr.
*Robert Kovey
.. Jr.
*Thomas Kowalewski
.. Sr.
*Paul lang . . . . . . . .
. . Jr.
*John lupienski . . .
. . Sr.
*Michael luzny . . . .
. . Jr .
Daniel Martin . . . .
. .... Sr.
*Michael Maser . . .
. Sr.
*Dennis Mason ICC)
.. Sr.
Steven McCullough
.. Jr.
Thomas Milorski . . .
. .. So .
Robert Moler
... Jr.
Joseph Moresco . .
. . So .
*James Mosher
... Sr.
*Thomas Murphy . .
. . Sr.
leonard Nixon . . .
. . So.
.Jr.
*Patrick Patter son
Edward Perry ....
.. . ....•.. ..... So.
*John Przybycien ..
. . Sr .
... Jr.
Frank Reid
Joseph Riccelli
.. Sr.
*David Richner ..
.. Sr .
John Rio
.. So .
*Kenneth Rutkowski
.. Sr.
*Donald Sabo !CCI
... Sr.
Michael Sharrow
.. Jr.
. . So .
John Shine ...... .
Robert Stiscak
.. . So .
Thomas Vigneau
..... So .
*Daniel Walgate ...
... Jr.
Greg Wolters
... .. Jr.
*John Wesolowski ... .
.. Sr.
*Chris Wolf ......... .
....... Jr.
Barnard Woodward ..
. . . So .
Karl Zalar ........ .
.... So .
John Zeek
... So .
Joseph Zelmanski
.... So .
*lettermen

WT.
AGE
HT .
205
19
6 .3
201
6.1
21
240
DT
19
6.4
232
DT
19
6.3
LB
180
22
5 .10
200
G
20
6.0
T
210
19
6 .0
200
5 .8
20
FB
187
21
5 .11
LB
212
6 .0
LB
21
195
6 .1
19
c
183
6.1
Fl
21
17S
5 .11
19
s
208
G
20
6 .0
210
KSP
6 .0
20
TE
202
20
6 .0
178
TB
19
5 .11
DHB
5 .9
175
20
213
G
21
5 .10
DE
21
6 .1
205
LB
19
5 .9
190
SE
19
6.0
185
180
HB
20
6 .0
DHB
21
6 .1
188
QB- KSP
20
178
6 .0
179
s
19
5 .10
TE
19
6.7
210
LB
19
6 .2
195
21
198
5 .11
DHB
DE
20
5 .11
202
21
210
G
5 .11
21
210
TE
6 .0
LB
21
5 .10
210
21
5.9
209
LB
21
187
DHB
5 .11
5 .11
214
21
G
QB
5 .11
188
21
201
20
5 .10
LB
19
6 .1
250
DT
226
21
6 .2
c
175
QB
19
6 .2
212
21
6 .1
LB
6 .0
192
22
DE
19
5 .11
180
DHB
5 .11
191
20
TB
20S
QB
19
6 .3
6 .1
200
20
DE
217
22
6 .3
T
6 .2
242
21
DT
197
5 .11
21
LB
232
19
6 .0
T
180
5 .9
20
TB
210
21
5 .10
LB
215
6 3
22
SE
6
.
1
180
19
SE
5.11
185
19
DHB
204
19
6 .0
DE
6 .2
255
20
DT
212
19
6 .0
G
214
5.11
22
c
220
20
6 .3
T
190
19
5.9
Fl
180
DHB
6 .0
19
5 .11
190
19
FB
193
19
6.1
FB
Head Coach : Richard W . Urich
POS .

CHAMPION
SPORTSWEAR
"T" Shirts

Sweat Shirts
Fall Jackets

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•
Full Line available at the

Temple University

HIGH SCHOOL/HOMETOWN
Stuyvesant, Elmhurst, N. Y.
Massena, Massena, N. Y.
E. Dear-Frazer, Tarentum, Po.
Cathedral, Indianapolis, Ind .
Potsdam, Potsdam, N. Y.
New Kensington, New Kensington , Po.
Bishop Duffy, Niagara Falls, N . Y.
St. Clement, Centerline, Mich .
Union-Endicott, Endicott, N . Y.
Coshocton , Coshocton , Ohio
East Aurora , East Aurora, N . Y.
Maine-Endwell, Endwell, N. Y.
Canandaigua, Canandaigua, N. Y.
Cardinal Mooney, Rochester, N. Y.
Homburg , Hamburg, N. Y.
St. Vincent's, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Greece-Arcadia, Rochester, N. Y.
Coshocton , Coshocton , Ohio
Cathedral Latin , Cleveland, Ohio
South Park, Buffalo , N. Y.
Olean , Olean, N. Y.
Niagara Falls, Niagara Falls, N. Y.
West, St. louis, Mo .
Dover, Dover, Ohio
Springdale , Springdale, Po.
East Rockaway, East Rockaway, N. Y.
Penn Hills, Pittsburgh, Po .
Elyria, Elyria , Ohio
Amherst Central, Buffalo, N . Y.
Cardinal Mooney, Youngstown , Ohio
DelaSalle , Detroit, Mich .
Ithaca, Ithaca, N. Y.
Springdale, Springdale, Po .
St . Joseph 's, South Bend , Ind .
Huntington , Huntington, N . Y.
Clayton, Clayton, N . Y.
Bishop Fallon, Buffalo, N. Y.
Coshocton , Coshocton , Ohio
North Hill, Pittsburgh, Pa .
Orchard Park, Orchard Park, N . Y.
Ithaca, Ithaca, N . Y.
Central Islip, Central Islip , N . Y.
Westmont, Johnstown , Po .
St. Joseph 's, Cleveland, Ohio
Ambridge, Ambridge, Po .
Bethlehem Central, Delmar, N . Y.
Univ. Detroit, Detroit, Mich .
Fisher Park , Ottawa , Ont. (Canada)
Heninger, Syracuse, N. Y.
Bemus Point, Greenhurst, N. Y.
St . Mary's, Byrnedale , Po .
Kenmore East, Tonawanda , N. Y.
Bishop McCort, Johnstown, Po.
Moriah Central , Witherbee, N . Y.
Bishop Walsh, Olean, N . Y.
Aliquippa, Aliquippa, Po .
St. Clement, Centerline , Mich .
Grand Island , Grand Island , N . Y.
Kenmore East, Kenmore, N . Y.
Cleveland Hill , Cheektowaga , N . Y.
Solon , Solon , Ohio
Peru , Peru, N . Y.
Clovert , Tiffin , Ohio
Berwick, Berwick , Po .
St. Clement , Centerline, Mich .

DT

SE

WELCOME TO

THE SHACK
RESTAURANT &amp; TAVERN
Wonderful Food Served in
a Relaxing Atmosphere
Super Cocktails and Drinks
Banquet Facilities

7170 OGONTZ AVE.

•

PHILADELPHIA

7133 ROOSEVELT BLVD. • PHILADELPHIA
7101 MARSHALL RD.

•

UPPER DARBY

Student Store

ENTERTAINMENT NITELY

Carnell Hall Basement

Where Dining is an Event But Not an Extravagance
))) ))) ))) ))) ))) ))) ))) ))) )))(((CCC ((( £«-~~!*

�LARRY WALLACE

DAVE PUCHALSKI

JIM WATSON

HARRY KERN

GODFREY LEONARD

JIM PIDCOCK

JOE FAMILLE

JACK KINDREGAN

Comfortable, modern

BUSES FOR CHARTER

Compliments of

for trips around the city or around
the Country- even to Canada

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
MEDICAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

Call DAvenport 9-4000

PHILADELPHIA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY
and Trenton-Philadelphia Coach Co.,
our subsidiary for out-of-state trips

Joseph M. Garfunkel, M.D., '48
President

�FRANK LETINO

GEORGE KING

BILL LYONS

DAN MACKOWSKY

JOE MESKO

JIM MULLEN

DOUG PAOLA

STEVE FINTA

ALU~lNI

SOCIE'l'Y
TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY
Donor of "The Old Shoe" trophy to be

THE GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCI AliON

competed for annually by the football teams
of Temple and Bucknell Universities.

solicits the support of students
alumni. parents and friends

'•

Address all communications
with reference to Dental Alumni to:
TEMPLE DENTAL
ALUMNI SOCIETY
3223 No. Broad Street
Philadelphia, Pa. 19140

for the Annual Fund for Temple University

Dr. Dalibor W . Kralovec
President

�THE 1968 TEMPLE UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL TEAM

'-4
l::r
()

Front Row, left to right: Head Coach George Makris, Pat Barnes, Greg Joannides, Chris Fletcher, Fred Heller, Mike Zanghi,

TEMPLE
SQUAD

Spencer White, Joe Mancine, John DiYenno, Frank DeBerardinis, Jim Fatigate, Godfrey Leonard, Jim Watson, John Waller,
Vince Ciecka and assistant coach John Rogers.
Second Row, left to right: Assistant Coach Jerry Preschutti, Donn Kurzinski, Dick Eastwick, Nick Govelovich, Bob Eastwick,
Bernie Mazer, Carl Gross, Joe Mesko, Bill Lyons, George Conti, Alvin Wallace, Bill Horwitz, Bill Burns, Larry Wallace, Chad
Kern and assistant coach Bob Marshall.
Third Row, left to right: Assistant Coach John Konstantinos, Allan Smith, Dave Puchalski, Bob Nemergut, Sam Rosetti,
Steve Caporiccio, Ed Bialous, Bob Peresta, Dave Ahles, Jack Kindregan, lrv Brambley, Tom DeNiro, Jim Pidcock, Jerry
Loviglio and assistant coach Earl Cleghorn.
Fourth Row, left to right: Assistant Coach John McAneney, Steve Finta, Dennis Woomer, Craig Parsons, Hugh Glassey,
Ed Krug, Ron Metcho, Dennis Serina, Dan Mackowsky, Doug Padla, George King, Bill Hollar, Jim Callahan, Rich Manichiello and trainer Jim Rogers.
Fifth Row, left to right: Assistant Coach Tom Urbanik, trainer John Logan, Marteen Jones, Mike Busch, Mike Paone, Jim
Boscoe, Lawrence Edwards, Ed Poostay, Jim Mullen , lou Russo, John Small, Joe Famille, Rusty Maugel, Frank Letino and
head trainer Ted Quedenfeld.

-4

()

3

"ii"

c

."'...
Q

it

a.

.,
Q

(Q
()
~

~

�Page 23

The Temple Illustrated

Why buy? RENT!
... Coats
... Linens
... Towels
... Dresses
... Uniforms
. .. Walk-Off Mats
. . . Washroom Services
)/(-Our 48th Year

KLiNE
LINEN &amp; UNIFORM SERVICE

You can rely on the Bellevue as the
perfect Host when you meet friends for
an enjoyable Luncheon or dinner in the
STRATFORD GARDEN
Superb cuisine, gracious service
Enjoy Cocktails mixed to your taste
by skilled experts .
NEW HUNT ROOM
Now a Quaint English Tavern
Open for Luncheon, Dinner,
After Theatre Drinks and Snacks
SUNDAY-Enjoy your Favorite Cocktail
from 1 to 10 PM

9-5300

THE BELLEVUE STRATFORD
Broad Street at Walnut
Philadelphia

The Temple University

KULZER ROOFING, INC.

Student Store

"Roofing and Sheet Metal Contractors"

Says Hello to Old GradsAnd Welcomes the Class of '72

IN THE BUSINESS SINCE 1898

cu

SERVING T.U. STUDENTS
AND ALUMNI FOR 39 YEARS
Basement of Carnell Hall

ceglia / schlein associates, Inc.
consulting

engineers

250 south broad street
philadelphia, pa . 19102

3334-40 NO. TENTH ST.
PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19140
BALDWIN 3-7200

�The Temple Illustrated

Temple Stadium Game
and Team Records
GREATEST MARGIN OF VICTORY
Temple 110, Blue Ridge 0, 1927.
HIGHEST POINT TOTAL, ONE TEAM
Temple 110 points, vs. Blue Ridge, 1927.
HIGHEST SCORING GAME
(Both teams scoring) Temple 82, Bucknell 28, 1966.
GREATEST MARGIN OF VICTORY, VISITING TEAM
Texas 54, Temple 0, 1949.
MOST POINTS, VISITING TEAM
Texas, 54, 1949.
LOWEST SCORING GAME
(Both teams scoring) Georgetown 3, Temple 2, 1939.
MOST TOUCHDOWNS, GAME
Temple, 17, vs. Blue Ridge, 1927
MOST TOUCHDOWNS, GAME, VISITING TEAM
Texas, 8, 1949.
MOST EXTRA POINTS, GAME
Temple, 10, vs. Bucknell, 1966.
MOST EXTRA POINTS, GAME, VISITING TEAM
Drake, 7, vs. Temple, 1930.
MOST POINTS, ONE PERIOD
Temple, 51, (2nd) vs. Blue Ridge, 1927.

Page 24

Temple Stadium Individual Records
LONGEST RUN
Jimmy Powers, 105 yards (kickoff) vs. Michigan Stale, 1940.
LONGEST RUN FROM SCRIMMAGE
Thomas (Swede) Hansen, Temple, 92 yards vs. Albright,
1930.
LONGEST FIELD GOAL
Ed Pyne, Temple, 48 yards (placement) vs. Bawling Green ,
1966.
LONGEST SCORING FORWARD PASS IVISITORSI
Tom Gastall to Ken Hagerslrom, both of Boston U. 96 yard s,
vs. Temple, 1954.
LONGEST SCORING FORWARD PASS ITEMPLEJ
John Waller Ia Jim Callahan, 86 yards, vs. Bucknell, 1966.
LONGEST SCORING RETURN OF PUNT
John Fonash, Temple, 96 yards vs. Rhode Island, 1965.
HIGH SCORER, GAME
Jim Callahan, Temple, 30 points (5 Td's) vs. Bucknell, 1966.
MOST TOUCHDOWNS, GAME
Jim Callahan, Temple, 5, vs. Bucknell, 1966.
LONGEST SCORING RUN, RETURN OF INTERCEPTED PASS
Joe Buffalo, Drexel, 95 yards, vs. Temple, 1960.
MOST TOUCHDOWN PASSES, ONE GAME
John Waller, Temple, 6, vs. Bucknell, 1966.
LONGEST PUNT
Jim Hobin, Holy Crass, 97 yards (including roll) vs. Temple ,
1934.
MOST EXTRA POINTS, MADE, ONE GAME
Ed Pyne, Temple, 10 vs. Bucknell, 1966.

MOST POINTS, ONE HALF
Temple 78 (1st) vs. Blue Ridge, 1927.
MOST POINTS, ONE PERIOD, VISITING TEAM
Delaware, 26 (3rd) vs. Temple, 1968.
MOST POINTS, ONE HALF, VISITING TEAM
Texas, 34 (1st) vs. Temple, 1949.

FOR THAT TOUCH OF ELEGANCE, INSIST ON

r/d~-a-~e
FOLD FINISHING

@

MANHEIM
DRAPERY CLEANERS
Division of Manheim Laundry Co. Est. 1900

DRAPERY SERVICE CENTER
5344 GERMANTOWN AVE., PHILA., PA. 19144
PHONE, GE 8-4116

STUDENTS
LINEN SERVICE
Division of
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LINEN SUPPLY. CO.
11th &amp; Oxford Streets-Philadelphia, 19122
(215) POplar 3-2500

"Emma, this Is one place you might at least admit I know what I'm
talking oboutl"

�BILL HORWITZ

ED KRUG

GREG JOANNIDES

LOU RUSSO

JOHN SMALL

ALLAN SMITH

TOM DeNIRO

MIKE ZANGHI

Compliments of

WIN AGAIN OWLS!

MERIN STUDIOS INC.
official Photographer

of the Templar

Middle Atlantic Conference
University Division Champions
for 1967

1010 CHESTNUT STREET
PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19107

The staff of the Temple University

WA 3-0146, 0147, 0148

food services is cheering for your
continued

success.

For

pre-game

luncheons and after game celebration and dinners, contact your Dining

DEWEY'S
COFFEE SHOPS

Service Director.

SLATER SCHOOL AND COLLEGE SERVICES

"NO BETTER FOOD
AT ANY PRICE"

Lombard at 25th Street

•

Philadelphia, Pa. 19146

�The Temple Illustrated

Page 26

ROSS ELECTRIC CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.
Electrical Construction
106 FAIRMOUNT AVENUE
PHILADELPHIA ,

PENNSYLVANIA

19123

Temple Songs

1968 Fall Schedules

ALMA MATER

FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
Head Coach-TOM URBANIK
Oct.
3--Gettysburg
. .... Away
Oct. 11-Hofstra ..
... Home
Oct. 18--Drexel .. . .
. . . Away
Oct. 25---Delaware . .
. . . Home
Nov. 7-Penn . .... . .. .
. . . Away
Nov. 15---Villanova ........ .
... . .. Home

Onward with Temple, banners all unfurled ,
Wide flung our standards, Ia the winds they're hurled .
Fallowing our Founder to immortal fame,
Making true his vision of a deathless name.
Haill Alma Mater, honor, praise to thee;
We pledge our Jives, our hearts in loyalty.
Wisdom, truth and virtue built our Temple great;
Perseverance conquers, higher to create.

LET'S CHEER AGAIN
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

Let's cheer again for Temple,
For Temple plays to win;
With a smash we 'll go right through now
All our foes will have to bow.
Through thick ond lhin we'll cheer for
The Cherry and the White,
So let's sing again that old refrain,
Let's cheer, cheer again far Temple.

FIGHT! TEMPLE ! FIGHT!
Fightl Temple fight on.
Fightl with all your might.
Fight! for the Cherry and White,
Keep the colors bright.
Hold the ball and hit that line,
All the Temple stars will shine,
Skill and courage win the game,
Fight onl Temple, Fight!

Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

ALL HAIL!

Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

All Hail, All Hail to Temple.
Let us stand as our flag goes by.
Our hearts are ever loyal,
As we raise our praise on high .
We're in the game for Temple
and no matter what the score may be,
We will fight 'til each mighty endeavor
Brings forever a victory.

SOCCER
Head Coach-PETE LEANESS
28--Penn . . . . . . .
. .. . Home
5---Rider . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . Home
9-Phila. Textile . . .
. ........... Home
12-Pittsburgh . . . . .
. . .. Home
16--Long Island U .
. ........... Away
26-N.Y.U. . . . . . .
. .... Home
2-Delaware . . .
.........
. .. Home
9-Penn State . . .
. .. Home
. .. Away
13---St. Joseph's . .
16--American U .
..
. ..... . Home
23---LaSalle ..... . .... . . . ..... . ..... . . A way
CROSS-COUNTRY
H ead Coach-JACK ST. CLAIR, JR.
28--Penn and Lehigh . . ............. at P enn
5---Albright &amp; Gettysburg ....... ... .. Home
8--St. Joseph's and Rider . . ... at St. Joseph's
12-Penn State and West Virginia
at Penn State
16--Delaware . . .
. . . ... Home
22-Manhattan
............... A way
26--LaSalle ........ . . . . . ............. Home
2-Phila. M etropolitans ..... . .... Phila., Pa.
9-Seton Hall &amp; St. John's . .. ......... Home
14--American U . .. . . . ................ Away
18-IC4A Championships .. . ... . at New York
22-MAC Championships .......... at Drexel
25-NCAA Championships .... . . at New York

THE OLDEST AND LARGEST IN DEPE NDEN T
BUS OPERATOR IN PH ILADELPH IA

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of Colum bia

Mei'Z HiqhwaqTou~ lne.
DIVISION OF A UCH INTER- BOROUGH TRANSIT CO.

3210-20 SPRING GARDEN STREET

...._._•HAring

2•620

�•

OWl
evron!

And not just on the track! Anywhere you drive, your Chevron Dealer is there
to make it a pleasure. You get top power, mileage and performance from either
Chevron Supreme or Chevron Regular. You get top protection and efficiency from RPM
Motor Oils . You get maps and complete travel guides, free. You even get credit
from your Chevron Dealer and from many other places like Hertz and Ramada Inns
with a Chevron Credit Card. Get up and go with Chevron!
PRODUCTS OF CHEVRON OIL COMPANY

�THE 1968 BUFFALO UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL TEAM

First Row, left to right: Head Coach Doc Urich, Tom Murphy, Chuck Drankoski, Denny Mason, Dick Ashley, Joe Riccelli, Nick

BUFFALO
SQUAD

Kish, Bill Hayden, Ken Rutkowski and Linebacker Coach Bill Dando.
Second Row, left to right: Backfield Coach Jerry lppoliti, John Przybycien, Mike Maser, Tom Kowalewski, Dan Martin, Don
Sabo, Jim Mosher, Jack Wesolowski, Dave Richner, John Lupienski and Backfield Coach Bob Deming.
Third Row, left to right: Line Coach Bob Geiger, Mike Luzny, Pat Patterson, Mick Murtha, Ed Perry, Denny Albaneze, Gary
Chapp, Dave Chernega, Don Maricle, Terry Endress, Frank Reid and Assistant Coach Gerry Gergley.
Fourth Row, left to right: Head Freshman Coach Jim McNally, Joe Moresco, Chris Wolf, Paul Lang, Harry Bell, Tony Ryan,
Bob Moler, Ed Hershey, Steve McCullogh, Jerry Elwell, Pat Carney, Scott Clark and Line Coach Sam Sanders.
Fifth Row, left to right: Assistant Coach Rus MacKellar, Joe Zelmanski, Barry Atkinson, Mike Sharrow, Joe Hlavenka, Jon
Spencer, Bob Kovey, Paul Jack, Russ Beck, John Zeek, Bernie Minch, Tom Centofanti, Gary Grubbs and Assistant Coach
Frank Doherty.
Sixth Row, left to right: Remo Gritz, Prentis Henley, John Connors, Charlie Forness, John Shine, Gene Hernquist, Ron
Francis, Bob Stiscak, Dave Goecke!, Bill Murphy, Dan Walgate, Joe Hudson, Mike James and Dave Seining.
Seventh Row, left to right: Dick Horn, Tom Vigneau, Tom Elliott, Barney Woodward, Len Nixon, John Rio, Karl Zalar, Tom
Milarski, Chuck Donnor, Joel Jacobs and Kevin Hogan.
Eighth Row, left to right: Assistant Manager AI Wright, Head Manager Fran Welk, Assistant Trainer Ken Schields and
Head Trainer Jim Simon. Missing from photo-Bob Embow.

;!
CD

~
3

1J

iD

-2"

"'....
0
CD

a.

"tt

0

10
CD

.....,
co

�Page 29

The Temple Illustrated

Best wishes for a successful season •••

SHELLY ELECTRIC
COMPANY, Inc.
Electrical Contractors

MA 7-0400

Philadelphia, Pa.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~x:g

~

~
~

~
n
~

~

~

PO 3-9707

MURATONE COMPANY, INC.

~
~

... PAINTING CONTRACTORS...

~

1825 North Sixth Street

~

Philadelphia 19122

~

~

~x====&gt;r~~~~»&lt;===X»&lt;===X~»&lt;===X»&lt;===X»&lt;===X»&lt;===X~

�The Temple Illustrated

Page 30

1968 FOOTBA LL SEASON BOX HOLDERS
SOUTH STANDS
Charles M. Johnson
Dr. F. A. Harold Sanders
Irving Kutcher
Charles Freiberg Insurance
Carlton W. Rowand
A. B. Cimino
Paul J. Vogoni
Edward Zipoy, Jr.
Zipoy Pontiac-Buick, Inc.
leonard Cantor
Morton Tobos
Dr. lewis B. Udis
Sid Uhr
Uhr Electrical Supply Co.
J. Myron Honigmon
Dr. Warren Bieler
Bernard Flitter
Alex Bonnie
Dr. l. W . Krumpermon
Moe Katz
Myer M. Kotzin
Samuel M. Keck
I. Budd Rockower
Joe Nejmon
Camp Anglewood
David Altman
Altman Bros., Inc.

Jock B. Gonsky
Israel Forman
Formost and Co.
Ruben Rosen
Progress Manufacturing Co.
George Koopermon
S. W. Koopermon, Inc.
Dr. Harry Hoffman
John Durkin
Durkin World Travels
Albert Pearson
Pearson Sporting Goods
Morris Feldboum
Triple M Pocking Co.
louis S. Hankin
Richard M. Litman
Nick Corterino
Syd Freedman
U. S. Mobile Homes, Inc.
Harry Shulman
Droke Motor lines
Dr. Jerome S. Rocklin
Dole Reese
Begley, Harting and Reese, Inc.
Paul Ginsburg
Thomas F. Wilson

Ecoff and James
Mrs. Catharine Moroites
Aromingo Diner
Joseph Doon
Doon Calhoun
Fred B. Goble
Dr. Michael Ferringo
Reuben Katz
Wolter Richards
The Winchell Co.
Louis Mogul
Bernard Seidman
David Getz
David Getz Buick, Inc.
Robert Nilon
Nilon Brothers
Jock Mcloughlin
George Keister
Joel Browndorf
Dr. James D. Morrison
Gus Kroekel
A. H. Kroekel &amp; Bro.

Eric Pfefferkorn
Chevron Oil Co.
Fronk Keane
Warehouse local 169
E. Archie Mishkin
Bayuk Cigars, Inc.
Dr. Raymond Goldstein
E. J. Hesketh
Jacob Reed's Sons
Boardman-Hamilton Co. Insurance
Allen M. Metzger
W. Howard Green
€;eorge McKinley
Irvin Saltzman
Gregory P. Alexander
Klovsky, Kuby and Harris
Morris A. Feldstein
Edward M. Snyder
S. A . Barnett-Bud Cohen
Dr. Theodore S. Kollelis
M. Thomas Sharpe
Morris Gordon

Dr. Harry levin
Dr. Edward Cherkas
Jock Schwartz-Real Estate
Isadore Kirschner
Kirschner Bros. Oil Co.
Samuel Seidman
Pork Distributing Co.
Herbert Fronk
Fronk 's Beverages
Stuart W . Kline
Kline 's, Inc.
M. Mark Mendel
John J. Ahrin
East-West Products Co.
Jerry Stein
Camp Green lone
Arthur S. Rifkin
Artie 's, Inc.
Gabriel Berk
Moximillion J . Klinger
James Hutton
ARA-Sioter
Phillip M. Wernick
Alex Garrison
Reuben E. Cohen
S. E. Axenfeld and Associates, Inc.

NO RTH STANDS
Philip J. Kohn
Gordon-Davis linen Supply Co.
William H. Yarrington
Yarrington Mills Corp.
Note Shoemon
Royal Ford Co.
Stanley Angelo
Angelo Bros. Co.
George Engel
Music, Inc.
Ernest C. Casale
Director of Athletics
Art and Roy McGonigle
Joy loux
Sinclair Refining Co.
Alvin Wolf
A. Freedmon-M. Zorge
Chuck Pionko
Glenside Gloss Co.

EXTERIOR RESTORATION SERVICE

--·--

LANE COMPANY, INC.
6631 WYNCOTE AVENUE
PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19138
HA 4-1700

�Page 3 1

The Temple Illustrated

TEMPLE

FODTB

THE

CORPORATION

Electrical

Exclusive

• Maintenance •
Mechanical

Contractors

Rhode Island
September 21,8:00 pm

Bucknell
October 12, 1:30pm

Delaware
October 26, 1:30 pm

1313 SELLERS STREET

Buffalo
November 2, 11:00 pm

Gettysburg
November 9, 1:30pm

Northeastern
November 16, 1:30pm

Dayton
November 23, 11:00 pm

AI Meltzer/Ernie Casale pla~~~flay

PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19124

�The Temple Illustrated

Page 32

~si-Cola cold

beatS any cola cold!
Drink Pepsi cold-the colder the better.Pepsi-Cola's taste
was created for the cold.That special Pepsi taste comes
alive in the cold. Drenching, quenching taste that never
gives out before your thirst gives in. Pepsi pours it on!

Taste that
beats the
others cold ...
Pepsi
pours it on!

Bottled by Pepsi-Cola Metropolitan Bottling Co., Inc., 3929 "G" Street, Phila., Pa. 19124 under Appointment from Pepsico, Inc., N. Y., N. Y.

�The Doors of
TEMPLE UNIVERSITY

Temple University is determined to provide educational opportunity
without regard to race, creed, or station in life. Its doors are open
(within the limitations of its facilities) to all whose backgrounds and
abilities qualify them for higher education. It seeks to keep tuition
as low as resources and the demands of quality education permit. It
fosters the maximum intellectual and moral development of the individual. Your opportunities are unlimited through education.

TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education

PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19122

�keeps us first.
Special offer from the Chevrolet Sports Art Collection:

18" x 24" prints of four Arthur Friberg paintings
portraying the 100 years of college football:
(1) The First Game; (2) Knute Rockne-The Coach;

(3)Howell toHutson-The Passing Game;(4)0.J. Runs for Daylight.
Send $3.00 in cash, check or money order to L. G. Balfour
Company, P.O. Box 11608. Salt Lake City, Utah 84111.

�</text>
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 &#13;
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This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL PROGRAM

•

FIFTY CENTS

Salute to the U.S. Olympic Team
OCTOBER 12, 1968

•

ROTARY FIELD

BUFFALO
LAW ARE

�Cavern Spring Water- Clean Water,
Naturally Perfect Brewing Water,
gives Simon Pure Beer its perfect
blend of flavor and refreshment.
Tho William Simon lrtwtry, Buffalo, New Yorlc

�[

a welcome
from the
President

W arme t greetings to our 61 t year of
intercollegiate football. We haYe eYery reason
to look forward to a winning season for our
team in the games ahead.
Intercollegiate athletic , long recognized
as an integral part of uniYersity experience for
participants and spectators alike, is funded
primarily from student support. Student fees
at our Uni\'Cr~ity arc lower, in relation to the
number of acti\·ities they support, than com;',1A.RTIN MEYERSON
parable fees on most other campuses around
President
the country. I hope that our students will
elect to maintain the excellence in athletics
enjoyed on our campus by the twenty-two
intercollegiate teams of which only football and to a limited degree, ba ketball- produce any income of their own.
So con\'inced are we that intercollegiate athletics are a vital part of university life, the new Amher t campus
plan calls for a 20,000 eat stadium and 12,000 seat field house as well as facilities for other athletic event .
Groundbreaking for the new Amherst campus wil be this fall with tudent occupying some of the Colleges
by the academic year 1970-71. The new campus, se\'en times larger than our pre ent Main Street campus, will
accommodate about 40,000 tudents by 1975. Coupled with a faculty of unequalled excellence, a developing intercollegiate sports program and outstanding physical facilities, the State University of New York at Buffalo will
rank among the great uni\·er ities of our country. Student , alumni, and friends can well be proud of their
university.
We cordially invite you to enjoy our many facilities and events both now and in the future.
Martin Meyerson

one

�,.

~~cONVENIENCE"

IS THE WORD FOR
BUTLER VOLKSWAGENTHE HOUSE THAT
SERVICE BUILT
IN DOWNTOWN
BUFFALO

BUTLER VOLKSWAGEN, INC.

~

1200 MAIN STREET, DOWNTOWN BUFFALO • PHONE 885-9300

two

�r

U/ B Co-Captains: Mason and Sabo

�THE

U. B. BOOSTERS
INVITE ALL

ALUMNI and FRIENDS
TO

WHOOP IT UP
AT THE

POST GAME TUNK
Immediately Following Each Home Game
Beer - Pop - Chips - Pretzels - Peanuts
Featuring Ell KONIKOFF &amp; HIS YANKEE SIX
DONATION: $1.50 Per Person

Faculty Club
f our

Dress - As You Are

.....

�Stadium Information
YOUR OOOPERATION PLEASE - As guests of the University today, your cooperation is required in
maintaining the dignity and reputation of the University. It is requested that you observe the rules and regulations of the institution.
WE WELCOME YOU to this University of Buffalo athletic contest and invite you to relax and enJOY
exciting intercollegiate competition with our respected opponent.
On behalf of the athletic department, its staff and the players we welcome you.
James E. Peelle
Director of Athletics

REST ROOM FACILIT IES: Ladies' rest rooms
are situated at the north ends under the
Bailey Avenue and main stands. Gentlemen's
rest rooms are situated at the south ends
under the Bailey Avenue and main stands.
TICKET INFORMATION: The ticket office
in Clark Gymnasium is open each weekday
of the football season from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
On game days the main ticket window is
open from 9 a.m. to the kickoff. Tickets may
also be reserved on Friday night before a
home game from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.

Buffalo's Rotary Field
--I

;.J~s-L.,:·....LI__,_,__.....,

LOST AND FOUND: All lost and found items
should be reported to the U/ B Campus Police.
The Campus Police main office is in the Service Building on Winspear Avenue.

l

....

CARL L. ANDERSON, INC.
INTERIOR DESIG"''ERS

iuu~

Sl'UOBIU

oofMTS

. .
I
I

I

I

TOU.LSUTS

U.lll

I

REFRESHMENT BOOTHS : There are three
refreshment areas in the stadium. The locations are - practice field entrance (Gate 1),
Bailey Avenue entrance (Gate 3) and at the
north end of the Bailey Avenue stands.

-

...

t

I
I

· -~

LUMS RESTAURANTS
ROAST BEEF
Heaped High

...- .
~

DRAFT BEER

Office Furniture -

2222 ELMWOOD AVE.

Draperies -

International

Carpeting

875-2830

&amp; American

3488 Sheridan Drive

490 Delaware Avenue

five

�your an-star
financial center
~:!*

~ERVICE~~
~BANK~

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Member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

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Savings accounts
Checking a c counts
Auto loans
Home improvement loans
Mortgage loans
Commercial loans
Vacation loans

BANK oF BUFFALO
• BANK OF BUFFALO-- 17 Court at Pearl • EAST
SIDE Office-- 694 Ftllmore at Broadway • SOUTH SIDE
Office -- 2157 Seneca near Cazenovia • TOWN OF
TONAWANDA Office-- 4248 Delaware at Dreyer
• TOWN OF AMHERST Office-- 4954 Harlem at
Sheridan • TOWN OF CHEEKTOWAGA Office-- 3817
Union at George Urban • TOWN OF WEST SENECA
Office -- 4184 Seneca at Mill Road • STUYVESANT
PLAZA Office-- 274 Elmwood at Summer • KENMORE
Office - - 2858 Delaware at Mang.

New Dominick &amp; Dominick Conference includes
Amherst-the home f inancial team is pract icing at

98 YEAR OLD D&amp;D
MAKES TOUCH- DOWN IN
150 YEAR OLD AMHERST

15 Rock Street (one block east of Cayuga) , Williamsville,
New York 14221. The quarterback there is H. Bernard
Hammill , Manager. You'll get world-wide service and
financial knowledge. There are more than 1000 D &amp; D
people all suited up, waiting on the side lines to help
tackle your financial problems.

11

Get In Touch.

~~~~~~~o~~~'~"~?MINICK
1122 Marine Trust Bldg., Buffalo 14203, 856-7471
In Amherst: 15 Rock Street, Williamsville, 634-1515

Members Neu · York and other major Stock Exchanges

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

-

HI()

..!.)oosts

BUSINESSMEN'S ASSOCIATION

·-"1

ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSON CO.
AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Cards
LEES DRUGS
GUSTAV A. FRISCH - Jeweler
M and T TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
six

STYLE CREST MEN'S SHOP
T E COBBLER SHOP
ULBRICH'S - Stationery
FEDERAL MEATS
THE PLAID SHOP
DEALS JEWELERS
YOUR MATERNITY SHOP
ALEXANDER KATZ and
LOU KROP - Optometrists

EVANS - Gifts and Cards
W. T. GRANT CO.
FANNY FARMER
AMHERST Clothes Tree, Inc.
JOHNSON'S - Amherst Bootery
KEN PAUL BAKERY
MILKY WAY RESTAURANT
BLU GALAXIE RESTAURANT

�BARTLETT BUICK
TF 6-1000

3080 MAIN STREET

...

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an
OPEL KADETT BULL CAR OR WAGON

Opel prices as low as $1,838
The Souncl System for toclay's game
is pro vi clecl by • •

LARKIN SOUND SERVICE
PUBLIC ADDRESS - INTERCOM

cand PHONE SYSTEMS

977 Niagara Street

Buffalo, New York

COMPLETE LOCAL STOCKS •••
structurols - bars - plates - sheets

FULL FACILITIES •••
sheorin~ -

picklin~ -

875

oiling

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when you need it - as you ordered it
- ready for use

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FLAY'S STEAK PUB

SIEGFRIED

1 LB. PORTERHOUSE STEAK

$1.75

CONSTRUCTION

Entertainment Wednesday, Friday, Saturday &amp; Sunday

CO., INC.

.....,

2457 DELEWARE AVE.

877-9048

•
6 N. PEARL STREET
BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

C9

Edward Dzielski, Inc.
886-2300

883-4667

INTERIOR DESIGN &amp; PLANNING

seven

�STATE UNIVERSITY OF

Stretching almost a mile from end to end is the dramatic new Amherst Campus proposal of the State Uni·
versity of New York at Buffalo. Photo shows space allotment, not actual building design.

Steeped in tradition, distinguished by innovation,
optimistic by calculation, the 122 year old State Uni·
versity at Buffalo stands on the threshhold of the most
exciting era in its development. Since UB became a part
of the State University of New York in 1962, its growth
has been meteoric while its prospects are even more
dynamic and exciting.
Since that year, the number of full-time under·
graduates has swelled by some 49 per cent, while the
full-time graduate and professional student rolls have
expanded by 167 per cent. This five-year period has
also seen a 500 per cent increase in the number of doc·
torates awarded. A parallel change in the character of
the student population has become evident in the fact
that in 1959, 30.5 per cent of students entering the
University ranked in the top one-fifth of their high
school classes, while in the fall of I 967, R6. 7 per cent
graduated from high school in the top twenty per cent.
The graduate divisions are experiencing corresponding
rises.
eight

Bold New Plan
While vitality may serve as a mark of a great uni·
versity, direction is even more prominent in the char·
acter of an institution. Last fall, President Martin
Meyerson implemented a bold new organizational plan
which encourages and facilitates interdisciplinary coop·
eration in study and research. Seven broadly-based
Faculties are headed by distinguished provosts in each
respective area. A vivid example of interfaculty co·
operation is the recently announced School of Archi·
tecture and Environmental Design, which has been
founded in three faculties, those of natural science and
mathematics, social sciences and administration and arts
and letters.
The research function of the University becomes in·
creasingly visible with more than $I 2 million being spent
on over 500 diversified research projects currently under·
way. Sponsored research, i.e., that research financed by
sources outside the State treasury, has jumped 2 50 per
cent since 1962.

....

�NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
New Campus -

Seven Times Larger

The enthusiasm for academic development at Buffalo has been matched only by the breathtaking plans
for a new 1,200 acre Amherst campus. The site study
recently unveiled shows imagination, daring and sensitivity emanating from a union of the thoughts of outstanding academicians and expert planners. A quick
glance at the plans for the new campus, which will be
seven times the size of the present Main St. facility, reveals a close coordination between academic development
and physical design. Contiguity between the structures
housing applied sciences and mathematics and engineering and applied sciences, for example, hints at the desired relationship between these allied faculties. A
center for the arts will be physically proximate to the
faculty of arts and letters.
The athletic program at the State University at Buffalo will get a much deserved boost on the new campus
with plans for a modern 20,000 seat stadium and a field
house which will seat 12,000 spectators.
In and around the campus will be 30 individual, now
degree granting colleges accommodating one thousand
students each. Each of these living-learning centers will
provide classrooms, residences and recreational facilities
and will, most importantly, enable the student to identify
easily with his own small division, overcoming one of the
difficulties of the modern megaversity. A cross-fertilization of ideas and information between the colleges will
be encouraged.
Dramatic Directions in Higher Learning
In all, some 40,000 students will occupy the new
facilities consisting of 14 million square feet of educational space. The present Main 8t. campus is not doomed
to abandonment, however, as plans proceed to devote it
to expanded research and continuing education, for
which it will be one of the largest centers in the country.
While it is true that the enrollment growth of the
University will be most dramatic on the graduate level,
attention will still be focused on building a distinguished
undergraduate program as the foundation for an excellent
graduate center.

The symbol of excellence) Hayes Hall tower) on the
present Main Street campus.

nine

�15 minutes
from the
stadium!

J ·~

I~L

S~:,.-~-~_ _ ___:.K.:.:E:.:.N:.:.M:.:.:O:::.;R:..:.E::...:::A:.!V.!:Ec:...--~ ui
~~
~

~

Just far enough away to be
near-by.
70
rooms,
air-conditioned, TV in every room,
restaurant, lounge, - the works!
(We're strong for campus week-

~

end s).

ui

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~

~

'A

o

S HE R IDAN DRI VE (324 )

I

Confilfelffaf /Hit

][PJAYS

motorist hotel
3456 DELAWARE AVE. NEAR SHERIDAN

reservations -

phone 877-7171

FOR MAXIMUM PROTECTION AND SERVICE

..c.-.=..J

"America's Fun

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70 Deluxe Guest Rooms
Free Advance Reservations
Olympic Outdoor Pool
48 Bowling Lanes
Indoor Ice Skating Rink

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Two Dining Room &amp;
Coclctail Lounges
Free Airport
Transportation
Golfing Privileges

Free Parking
Room Phones &amp; TV
S. 5220 Camp Road
Thruway Exit 57 N. Y. S. Thruway

in Buying and Selling Homes

Hamburg , New York 14075
Deal 'with a Realtor Board of Realtors -

Member of Greater Buffalo

Phone 716-649-81 00

Exclusive M / L Service.

M &amp; G CONVOY INC.
I

" Forwarders of Motorize d Equipm e nt"
Judson M . Quimby, Controller

Phone : 823-6300

590 ELK STREET

ten

BUFFALO, N. Y.

..

•••••••••• ············~·

GOOD LUCK TO THE BULLS . . .

·

Come Meet
With the Experts!

~AI

~~

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Dokdob,un'' oompetent ,..
•tnff oan givo you tho b"t

""

..... advice concerning your
sporting equipment needs for every sport ... top quality
selection at Dekdebrun's, the Sportsman's Choice!

~

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Northtown Plaza
Southgate Plaza
Tra nsitown Plaza

834-3338
674-4880
632·5626

Open 'til 9 Nightly!

�From Peanuts to Pascal . . .

YOU'LL SCORE BIG!

SCORE BICi

finding the largest selection of quality paperback and hard cover books in Western New York.

SCORE BICi

for any occasion with our complete selection
of sweatshirts, ceramics, studio cards, stuffed animals and
campus necessities.

�...

Support the Bulls
· BOULEVARD CAR WASH
NIAGARA FALLS BOULEVARD

at MAPLE ROAD

Open 7:30 a.m. - 9:30 p.m.

twelve

�OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

*******
LONGINES

Buffalo Football News
BUFFALO

THE WORLD'S
MOST HONORED
WATCH®

DELAWARE
October 12, 1968

Editor: Dick Baldwin, Director of Sports Information
local Adve rtising: Ansel Press, Inc.
National Advertising:

10 world's fair grand prizes
28 gold medals

vs.

Rotary Fie ld, 1:30 p.m.

Spe ncer Advertising, New York

Contributors: U/ B De partment of Information Services, Chuck Dick, ECAC Service Bureau, National
Collegiate Athletic Association, Dick J oh nston, Bob Powell, Dan Daniels, Claudia l ey, Caro ly n Anderso n,
C. Robert Pa ul, Jr., John Morris and the De laware DSI Office.

Longines watches are recog nized
as OFFICIAL for timing world
championsh ips and Olympic sports
in all fields throughout the world.

Photogra phy:

Don Glena, Rick Swe nson, De law are DSI O ffice and U/ B Information Services.

contents
DEPARTMENTS
Page
Stadium Information ...
Today's Officials

· · · · · · · · · · o o · · o o · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • o o o o • • oo · · · · · · · o o · · · · · o o · · · • oo o o • · · o o o o o o o oo • • oo • • • oo oo•

U/ B Athletic Foundation
Delaware Coaching Staff
Delaware Roster
Starting Line-ups

00 0000 00 00 0000 0 0 . 0 0 00 00 00 00 00 .0000 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0000 . . . 00 . . 00 00 00 0000 00 00 0 0 .

OOOOOO OOOO OOoOOOOO O OOOO O . . . . . . . . . . oo oo oo . o oo . . . oo . . . . oo oooo oooooooooo ooo oooooooooo

· · · · · · · · · · · · · · o o · · · · · · · o o · · · · · · · · • • • • • • • • • • • • · · · · · · o o · · · · · · · oo · · · · · · · - - · o o · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · o o · · · .

0000000000 . o o • • • • oo . . . · o o oo oo . . oOooOO . oooo oo oooo oooo o o o o . 000000 . . . . 0 0 . 0000000 oo ·

Buffalo Roster .... .... ...

U/ B Fall Scoreboard

OO oO OOOOOOOOoooooooooooo . . . . . . . ooooooooooooooo oo oooooooooo oo oooooooooo oo . o o o o o o oooooooooo •

Buffalo Players

LONGINES ULTRA-CHRON®

1968 Footba ll Program Patrons

The ultimate personal chronometer,
g uaranteed accurate to a minute a montha mean average of 2 seconds per day.
Ultra-Chron tells the date, hour, minute,
second. Never needs batteries. Winds
automatically while you wear it. A ll Proof®
construction defeats water, dust,
shock, magnetism. At Longines-Wittnauer
Franchised Jewelers, coast-to-coast.
*Your l o ngines-Wittnoue r Franchised Jeweler will ad just
your Ullra-C hro n to this accuracy, if necessa ry.
Guarantee is for one year.

LONGINES-WITI'NAUER WATCH CO.
NEW YO RK

MONTR EAL

GENEVA

Maker of Watches Of The Hichest Character
For Over A Century

00 . o o . o o o o o o ooo ooooooooooooooooooooo oo 00 . . 00 00 0000 00000000 0000 00 00 00 0000000000 . . 00000000 . .

U/ B Athletic Administration ..

19
20

25

26

32
32

37 &amp; 39

ooo oo oo o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o . o o o o o o o o o . o o o o o o o o o o o o o o oo oo . . . oooooooo oo oo oooo •

oo. oo ooooooooooooooooooo .ooo . . . . . . oooo oooooo oooo oo oooo . . . . . . . . . . . . . oooo oo oo •

College Football Officials' Signals

16

29 &amp; 31

000000 00 0 oo . . . . . . oo 0 00000 • • oOoooo 000 00 0000000 · o o · . · o o o o o o o o o o . . . oo OO oo oooo OO oo oooo OO ooOO

the fabulous, new
Guaranteed Accurate To A Minute A Month*

· · · · · · · · · · · · · · oo · · · · oo · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · o o • • o o · · · · o o o o . . . . . . . . . .

00 00 . . . . . . . oo . 0000 oo . . . . oo • • • oo . . oo oo . . . . . oo . . . . . . . ooooooo oo oo . . . . . OOOOoOooooooo· . . o o .

The Athletic Directors
lonaines Ultra-Chron =8205, automatic with calendar, $175.
Other Ultra-Chron Models, $115 to $595.

14

Center Spread

oo • • • • • · oo · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · o o · · · · · · · · · · · · · o o · · · · · · · oo •oo · · · · · " · · o o · · . . • • • •

Buffalo Coaching Staff .. ... ....... ... ..... ..
Delaware Players

5

oo oo o o • · o o · · · · · · o o · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • • • • oo · · · · · o o · · · · oo • o o o o • • · · · · oo · · · · · · o o · · · · · o o

00 . . . . oo o o o o o o o o . 000000000 00 0000 00 000000 00 . . oo oo ooooooooooo0000000 00

40
42
44

FEATURES
Salute to the United States O lympic Team
In The Bullpen w ith Johnston &amp; Powell
Post-Game Party Gets Top Rating

000000 . . •oooooo . . OO oo oo oo oo oooooooooooooooooooo . . oo oo o o ·

OOoooooo o oooooo . . . . oo- · oooooooooooooooooo oo OOOOOO ooOO OOOOOOO

00 . . . . •oo oo oo o o o o o o . o o o o o o o o o o o o o 0 000000 0 00 00 . , 00 00000 0000 00 0000 • o o o o •

15
17
18

U/ B Four-Game Statistics ·· ·········· ··· ······ ····· ········· ···· ··· ····· ············· ·········· ············ 27
Delaware Captain Novotny ·········································· ·· ········· ························· 28
Special Report - University of Delaware

oo oooo OOo oo oo oooooooooooooooo oooooo oooo oo oo oooooo oo oo 00000

30

thirteen

�REFEREE
JAMES H. ALEXANDERAn electrica I engineer
employed by IBM. Re·
sides in Vestal, N. Y.
Graduate of Northwestern University. Currently
engaged as a staff engineer with the federal
system division of IBM
specializing in guidance
systems for the Gemini Saturn space vehicles.

UMPIRE

~

We're proud •••
that pHisoHex® has been selected as the antibacterial wash
to be used by the U.S. Team for the 1968 Olympic Games!

LOUIS F. McKENNA Resident of Syracuse,
N. Y. Employed as district sales manager BossLinea Lines, Inc., one of
the
largest
trucking
firms in upstate New
York. Graduate of Boston College High and
Manhattan College. Lettered in football and baseball at Manhattan.
Coached at C. B. A. in Syracuse. Played w ith
Winston-Salem in Piedmont League (Dodger
Farm). Past president of N. Y. S. Football Officials Association (Syracuse Chapter).

LINESMAN
WILLIAM T. RICHARDSPresident of the Richards Ad justment Service,
Inc., of Elmira, N. Y.
Capta ined
both
the
freshman and varsity
boxing teams at Penn
Stale. Later coached boxing at Bucknell.
At
State he also played
football and baseball. An insurance adjuster
for 17 years, he formed his own company in
1956. Hobby is raising Hereford cattle and
Morgan horses on a 250-acre ranch. Resides
in Pine City, N. Y.

FIELD JUDGE

A winning athlete takes special care
of his skin. Above all, he protects it
against bacteria that can cause infections and lead to missed practice sessions and games.
If you've ever tried to play with an
infected blister on your heel or an
abscess on your finger, then you know
the role of healthy skin in sports. And
that's why pHisoHex is an important
part of an athlete's daily health routine.
pHisoHex is America's leading liquid
antibacterial skin cleanser in homes
and in hospitals. Used regularly in
place of soap, pHisoHex produces a
superclean skin and builds up an invisible antibacterial film of hexa-

chlorophene to protect your skin
against germs between washings.
And if you have problem skin,
pHisoHex is often valuable. The antibacterial film it leaves on your face
will ward off blemish-infecting bacteria. pHisoHex also helps to soften
and wash away blackheads.
Use pHisoHex, the skin cleanser of
winning athletes.
Made by Winthrop Laboratories, 90
Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016.
Available in drugstores in 5 oz. and
16 oz. plastic squeeze bottles.

[!Wmrn.miJ
Winthrop Laboratories. New York. N.Y.1 0016
(1230C)

fourteen

THOMAS W. GIBBONSResides in West Carthage, N. Y., where he
serves as chairman of
the social studies depart·
ment of Carthage Cen·
tra I School.
Coaches
baseball
at
Carthage
and
teaches
history.
Graduate of leMoyne
College with graduate study at Syracuse, St.
lawrence and Oswego St. Won baseball letters (2) at leMoyne. Active basketball official,

BACK JUDGE
WALLACE A. SCRIVENER
Employed by Bethlehem Steel Corporation
as a sa les representative. He is a V. P. T.
graduate w ith prior enrollment at RandolphMacon College, where
he won letters in baseball, basketball, football and track. Army Air Corps veteran.
CLO CK OPERATOR: Edward T. Kubiak
PA ANNOUNCER: Dr. l eonard T. Se rfustini

�Salute to the

~

United States Olympic Team

111111

By C. Robert Paul, Jr.
Publications Editor, U. S. Olympic Committee
Forward: The Games of the XIX Olympiad are now
underway in Mexico City. More than 7500 athletes
from over 90 nations will participate from October 12
through October 27. The following report on our
United States Team, with particular reference to college
athletes is our salute to our team as they engage in the
field of international competition. In the spirit of the
Olympic symbol, Citius, Altius, Fortius "swifter,
higher, stronger".
For the Games of the XIX Olympiad in Mexico City 101
colleges are represented by 250 athletes on the U.S. Olympic
team of about 400 athletes. This is the largest number of col·
leges ever to be represented on the U.S. Olympic team in the
quadrennial gathering of the world's outstanding amateur athletes.
The heavy turnover of athletes is apparent when the United
States Olympic team has only 80 men and women returning from
the 1964 Olympic team, 47 of whom are identified with colleges.
Among the gold medalists returning are AI Oerter, University
of Kansas, three·time winner of the discus throw; Don Schol·
lander, Yale '69, who earned four gold medals in swimming at
Tokyo; Lesley Bush, Indiana '69, women's platform diving
champion in 1964; Pokey Watson, UCLA '72, member of the
winning USA freestyle relay team four years ago, and shooters
Gary L. Anderson, Hastings College and Major Lones Wigger.
USA, Montana State.
It is interesting to note that there are 89 sophomores, Jun·
iors and seniors on the 1968 U. S. team, who~e schooling is being
delayed, along with 30 who were graduated this year and about
nine who plan to enter college after the Olympic Games. Among
those planning to enter college after the Olympic Games is Mark
Spitz entered in six swimming events (including three relays).
He will matriculate at California State at Long Beach. One of
the world's finest women swimmers, Claudia Kolb, tops in the
two individual medley events, plans to enter Santa Clara Uni·
versity.
The Athetic Assoication of Western Univer ities (Pacific
Eight) is represented by all eight colleges, contributing a record
number of 60 athletes.
Six of the Ivy League oclleges have 38 on the team and
seven members of the Big Ten are repre~ented by 30 participants.
Among the individual colleges, Harvard University and
UCLA each have 14, 12 of the Cantabridgians are oarsmen.
Stanford is third in the number of athletes on the team with 13,
followed by the University of Southern California, 10; Indiana
and Michigan, 9 each: the University of Pennsylvania and San
Jose State, 8 each, and California State at Long Beach, 7.
It can be estimated that there were at least 10,000 athete~
seeking places on the United States Olympic team when the
Olympic Trials started early this year. The United States will
be represented in 17 of the 19 sports on the calendar for the
Games of the XIX Olympiad. The soccer team was eliminated in
the first round of qualifying play last year and the field hockey
team failed to qualify for the tournament in Mexico.
Although the United States may have its "deepest" men's
track and field team in history, it will be difficult for them to
equal the 12 gold medals won at Tokyo. Stanford coach Payton
Jordan, head mentor of the Olympic track field team, was grati·
fied with the results of the Olympic Trials conducted at South
Lake Tahoe, Calif. Four world records were broken in these
trials.
Never has any country been represented by a stronger team
in any sport than the United States women's swimming team,

planning to win 12 or 13 of the 16 events on the program. The
men's swimming team, according to George Haines, head coach,
is laden with talent in every event. Haines half jokingly safd
after the team had been selected following trials in the Belmont
Plaza Pool in Long Beach, Cal., "If I were coach of the Soviet
team I'd start shaking in my boots."
The biggest question mark of all is basketball, a sport in
which the United States has never lost a game. The success of
the team may depend on three key players: pivotman Spencer
Haywood, Detroit '71; Bill Hosket, Ohio State '68; and Joseph
(Jojo) White, Kansas '69. Oklahoma State coach Henry Iba is
the first man named to handle the USA basketball team in sue·
cessive Olympic Games.
At Tokyo the United States won 36 Olympic gold medals.
Because of the strength of the men's and women's swimming
teams and the men's track and field team, along with outstanding
athletes in rowing, shooting asd yachting it is possible for the
United States to equal the 1964 performance.
There's no doubt that the gold flow will be to the United
States in wimming. In the men's events top favorites include
Zachary Zorn, UCLA, 100 meters freestyle: Don Schollander,
Yale, 200 meters freestyle: Mike Burton, UCLA, 1500 meters
freestyle; Charley Hickox, Indiana, individual medley, and
Spitz, butterfly.
Claudia Kolb, Santa Clara,
medals in the individual medley,
backstroke, and Lesley Bush will
form dive against Ann Peterson,

is counted on for two gold
Pokey Watson, UCLA, in the
defend her laurels in the plat·
Arizona State.

Again the USA is strong in the sprints in track and field.
Wyomia Tyus, Tennessee State, could score a double. Charlie
Greene, Nebraska and Jim Hines, Texas Southern. are co·
favorites in the 100 with Tommie Smith and John Carlos, both
San Jose State, battling over the 200·meter route.
Lee Evans. San Jose State, '69 and Villanova's Larry James,
'70 are capable of winning the 400 meters in world record time.
Bob Seagren. '69 NCAA champion from Southern California,
currently holds the world record in the pole vault and will vie
with Bliznetsov of the Soviet Union and Greece's Papanikalous;
hurdler Ron Whitney, Occidental and University of Colorado,
is outstanding in the intermediate hurdles, while there is little
to choose between AI Oerter, Kansas, and Utah State's L. Jay
Silvester, in the discus throw.
The big hope of the
the first time in 60 years
question is whether Ryun
climate in Mexico is more

USA winning the 1,500 meters for
is Jim Ryun, Kansas, '69. The big
believes in his own mind that the
a question of attitude than altitude.

Gary Anderson, Hastings College, and Major Lones Wigger
of Montana State should do well in the shooting events and
Princeton's Gardner Cox has a "real shot" at the gold medal in
the 5.5 ·meter yachting class.
Rowing competition, always one of the favorite sports of the
United States, could result in another winner, but the best chance
for a coveted gold medal rests with Larry Hough, Stanford. and
Syracuse's Tony Johnson handling the assignment in the pair
oars without coxswain event. The splendid Harvard varsity
eight will get another crack at the strong European crews they
met m the 1967 European Championships at Vichy.
The athletes have been impressed with the spirit of the
Olymptc Games. When founded by the late Baron de Coubertin
of France, he envisioned a quadrennial sports gala in which ath·
letes vted. for personal glory, without regard to competion be·
tween natwns. That's the real spirit of the Olympic Games.

f if teen

�Thank You

I
•

Special appreciation is expressed to all those who are contributing to the campaign for the
support of Intercollegiate Athletics at the State University of New York at Buffalo.
F

Joseph E. Genewlch
Clyde W. George
'VIIIInm H. 1\1. Georgi
S. R. Gerber Sausage Co., Inc.
Stun J. Gerone
Albert J. Gerrltz
Sidney Gerstman
Co., Inc.
Gary F. Geese
Louis G. Farris
Edmond J. Glcewlez
Franklin C. Farrow
George Giotis
1\laxwell D. Farrow
Hobert A. G Iasser
Joseph V. Farugla
Glickstein Jewelers &amp;
Douglas H. Fay
Optldnns, Ine.
Chester T. Fell Corp.
Ethel Glidewell
Thouu:ts W. Fenno
Be,·erly Ann K. Glor
Ferguson Electric Const. Co. Chester P. Glor, Jr.
Punt A. Fernbnch
Hl&lt;•hnrd L. Glor
Snntnel A. Ferrara
John J. G1nerek
Helen Ren Feuerstein
'llarhm B. Gnalzda
Edwnr&lt;l H. Flck
Stephen 1\1. Godfrey
Paul D. Flckenscher
George F. Goebel, Jr.
Rnymon&lt;l G. Fll~lnger
Goetznutnn-Stet&gt;hen Agency
Joyce E. Fink (lUiss)
Louis Goldstein
Arthur E. Finn
Charles P. Gollber
Peter J. Fiorella, Jr.
Goodrlcb &amp; Heed Co., Inc.
Dick Fischer Athletic
Bernhardt S. Gottlieb
Goods, Inc.
A . ..\.rthur Grnb:tu
Wlllnrd G. Fischer
.A nthony T. Grnnu
Stu:1rt L. Flsclunan
Grandyle Enteri&gt;rises, Inc.
Scott Lewis Fisher
L:n"·rence . .\.. Grunt
'VIIII:nn C. Fisher
Norrnnn F. Gr:.tser
Rlchar&lt;l A. Fiske
Thontas J. GrnYinn
Wlllhun John Fitzhenry, Jr.
P:.us•ltr:tle A. Greco
Harriet Pnrtrhlge l&lt;'lagg
lrYing U. Green
Theodore C. Flemming
A,·ront Jl. Greenberg
Richard S. Fletcher
Jacob H. Greenberg
Rolf E. Flygare
George
Greene, Jr.
Paul E. Foersch
Dn•·hl 'lf. Greenholz
Charles 1\1. Fogel
H. E. Greenwoo&lt;l
Paul A. Foley
Guy A. Griswold
William G. For&lt;l
Di:tne li::nntl:lS GronwnH
Wlllhun G. Forrest
Paul S. Grzybek
)flirter J. Forster
Edwar&lt;l F. Gu&lt;lgel
Ly&lt;lln Fry Fountain
Anthony .f. Gugino
Fox and Fox, Inc.
Antbony S. Gugino
Hnr,•ey J. Fox
Carl F. Gugino
A.nron S. Freethnnn
ll:unsdell Gurney
A~ency, Inc.
1\lnynnrd ,V. Gurnsey, Jr.
Freezer Queen Foods, Inc.
J:unes Guttuso
James V. Fregelette
Gary K. Frels
H
Robert L. Friant, Jr.
Jtose Fridtnnn
Hans E. Hnnge
Ylolet 'Velker Frldmnn
John F. Haas Jr.
E~nr Z. Friedenberg
Nornut L. Hans
Shlney D. Friedman
Nornunt 1-l:tber
1\lorrls 1\I. Friendly
'VIlma Helfman Hngler
Frito-Lay, Inc.
Robert II. Hale
Wllllrun 1\f. Frltton
S:unuel N. Hule
Jr"·lng Fudemnn
F. L:unbert Haley
Charles J. Funk
Richar&lt;l C. Hall
Cllffor&lt;l C. Furnas
1\turrny .J. Hnll
SJ&gt;arkle 1\1. Furnas
Syh·ester 1\l. Haller
Norwoml 1\1. Hammersmith
G
Robert R. Hnmslk
Rollo L. Hnn&lt;ly
Sahnan Gallant
'VIlllam H. Hnrder
Ralph .J. Galanti
Hobert P. Hnrrlngton
Ralph J. Galanti, Jr.
Gor&lt;lon 1\1. Hnrrls
Philip A. Galeota
Harold lU. Harris
John F. Gallivan
Fenton F. Hnrrlson
Harry Gamier
.John W. Hartman
Arnold B. Gardner
Hnzel Hull Hnrvey
Robert C. Gurtler
Hobert G. Hnn•ey
General Alumni
Leon P. Hauek
Assoclntlon SUNYAB
Frank J,. Ha•·eron Co., Ine.
Generul Baking Contt•nny
Ellen 1\1. Haw•·er (1\llss)
Albert G. Fadell
Daniel J. Fahey
'VIIIIDJn R. Falrgrleve
Dominic Falsettl
Famous Linen Supply

,V.

Carl A. Heck
NorJUnn Heilbrun
Edwar&lt;l A. Heintz
Hnr,rey It. Helf•nan
Edward C. Heller
:Uarle H. Heller
Edwnrd J. Hemt&gt;llng
Hendrich Construction, Inc.
Hendricks SaJes Co., Inc.
oa,·ltl P. Henning
Hens &amp; Kelly
.llarylu J. Herb
John ~\.. Heron
Charles G. Heyd
lliclonnn, Co""'nrd &amp; Wutties
Halt&gt;ll L. Higley
'Valter E. Hill
Eugene Hiller
'l' hont:lS n. Hinckley
'l ' honuts ::u. Hines
Frunk C. Ho:tk
H01lge Florist Inc.
llern:trtl B. HoffJnnn
Lenore Be:ttty Hoftnuut
Edwin P. Hollander
Hubert J. Holler
Joset&gt;h E. Holly
Andrew W. Holt
Herbert ,V. Holtz
llonte Budget Co., Inc.
E'\·erett C. Horlein &amp; Son, Inc.
Len• 1-forscbel, Concessionaire
Hobert E. Hunt
Florent·e B. llunter
Tho~nas J. Hupt&gt;
Huron U-DriYe-lt Corp.
Sheldon Hurn•itz
Huss•n:tn Refrig·erution Co.
Hygrade Pnper Contpuny

Daniel G. Knmprath
Leo A. Ii:ane
Th:uldens 'V. Ii:npslak
li:nufntnn's Dnkery, Inc,
Victor H. H:aunltz
Ernest J. Kay
Elsie Ullman Kaye
Hnrold A. Ji:nyser
Lorne W. Keating
'Villhun F. Keenan
John J. Reller, Jr •
He,·. Franklin 1\l. Kelllber
Daniel T. Kenclk
t:;"rancfs E. Ji:enny
'VIIII:tm W. Rent
Bern:trtl J. li:erwin
Hussell S. Ji:ldder, Jr.
D:n·l•l 1{. Ii:inunel
'\Villi:.tnt. ,V. Khnrnfns, Jr.
Eth,•urtl
li:inney
John C. Ii:lnzly
Stei&gt;hen F. Kissel
llussell G. Ji:lass Cori&gt;·
Edrnund li.lein
Xiels RleD&lt;lsboj
l(linck Dros., Inc.
Fr:11H·L~ .J. Ji:locke
Colett:o Ii:lug
Lester S. li:nnpp
Stc'\·e l{neze,·ich
P:oul C. li:nibloe
'Veils E. Ji:nlbloe
B:trry D. li:nox
Seyrnour H. ){nox
Gt•orJ&gt;:e F. Ji:oepf
Fre&lt;lerlck J. Kogut
Jfun·nr(l H. Kohler
Lillinn E. l{oltler
Robert J. li:ohnke
Leo E. li:oJ&gt;ec
I
lU. Uobert Koren
.Julie 1\T. li:oslkowskl
Anthony C. ll:ordo
Doris S. l{ostrlnsky
Irish 'Velding Sup(&gt;ly Corp.
,\&lt;lrienne S. Rotlo•·e
C. J. lrn·in Co., Inc.
'l' he Isles of Sho:als Fishernunt l{otok-Q,ueen City Senfood
Cor(&gt;.
Ah•""-nnder J. li:oYnch Sr
J
Cnttt. D:ntiel C. Koz.;rn ·
li:rnft Foo&lt;ls Co.
Lnurence .Joel J:tcobson
Josetth li.rasner
Edwin F. Jaeekle
Jl:1rvin I&lt;.rnsner
LeRoy .J ••Jaeekle
Charles C. Ii:rawezyk
Ellner A. Jnhn
Hi&lt;•h:or&lt;l D. Rrieger
Gro"·er n. J:unes, Jr.
Albert P. li:rueger
J:tn- 'V:arrcn Corporutlon
John .\. l{rull
Peg·g;,· Drunt Jo,·nno,·ski
_\ le,nnder li:rynytzky
Jeanette :u. Jeselln
Ilonal&lt;l Kublsty
Judith Jloefert Johannsen
Geor~;·
e F. l{uhn
Nancy Hnywoml Johnston
~ ' lex:uuler Kuslaner
Glenn E. Jones
nertr:nn G. Ku· nsnt:ID
H. CliO'ord Jones
.Jones-n ich ContJHtny
Robert E. Jones
Thontns L. Jones
L
Robert E. Jordon
SteJ&gt;hen S. Joy
H:1rry G. LnForge
ThonJ::ts J. Joyce
Robert J. Lane
J,en:o l{onkle Jubb
X orwood A. L:mgdon
Emil P. Jnng, Jr.
.James H. Langtry
Robert
J. Lansdowne
I{
Albert F. LaPetlna
ll1uton H. Lapp
Nieholns P. J{afnsls
Sidney N. li:nhn
J 1orren E. Lnrn·ood
Reuben n. li::tLiiiier
S. n. LnTona
Thonuts F. J{niser
S:nnuel LuTona
Eileen 'Ungce li::nnlnskl
S:1h·:1tore R. LaTona
Susan Lee Flulkoff Rnmt&gt;f
l~ytlor Lnsser

,V.

Additional contributors will be listed in subsequent home football programs.
THIS IS A CONTINUING CAMPAIGN . . . CONTRIBUTIONS CAN BE SENT TO:
DR. A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
Vice President for University Relations
186 Hayes Hall
State University of New York at Buffalo
3435 Main Street
Buffalo, New York 14214
Please! make checks payable to the University of Buffalo Foundation, Inc. Contributions are deductible.

sixteen

�•

the BULLPEN with

Bob Powell, Buffalo Courier Express

This afternoon's football game between the University of Delaware and the University of Buffalo is the
last of a contract calling for six games on a home-andhome basis.
Despite the feeling that the Buffalo Bulls have
played themselves out of the Delaware class, it sure
didn't look like it on a sunny afternoon early in the
1961 season.
The Bulls traveled to the Blue Hens' picturesque
campus in Newark, Del., on that particular afternoon
to discover that the Hens really were a bunch of aggressive hawks.
Buffalo had to lick the wounds of a 36-12 shellacking in 1961 and succeeded the following season to eke
out a 20-19 last-minute victory at Rotary Field.
The 1963 campaign saw the Hens run through
eight opponents without a setback and the Bulls took a
34-6 battering that fall .
Since then Buffalo has managed to handle Delaware, but seldom with complete ease. Dick Offenhamer's
UB eleven beat the Hens, 37-0, in 1964 and, 22-0, in
1965". Doc Urich's first UB squad won the 1966 renewal, 36-6, and repeated the triumph, 38-19, last fall.
After two years under the direction and rebuilding
program of Coach Tubby Raymond, Delaware appears
to be on the comeback trail. The Blue Hens launched
the current season with a 3 5-0 decision over Hofstra.
Villanova took the measure of Raymond's Raiders,
16-0, two weeks ago, but they got back on the winning
side a week ago by upsetting the University of Massachusetts, 28-23.
Going into the UMass game, Raymond had voiced
concern with what he called an inconsistent offense.
The outcome would indicate the Hens' attack has made
impressive strides.
Fullback Chuck Hall is one of Delaware's leading
ball carriers, averaging well over 5-yards a carry. Jim
L;uarski and Dick Kelley share the ground game duties
with Hall.
Tom DiMuzio, .t he Hens' quarterback, is the only
veteran in the backfield, but he was a halfback last
season. Raymond has expressed satisfaction with DiMuzio's progress at the key position, however.
,
Inexperience was rampant on the Delaware squad
prior to the opening game. That's a thing of the past and
the Her:s, alway~ hustling and always spirited, obviously
would hke nothmg better than to terminate their series
with Buffalo on a winning note.

Dick Johnston, Buffalo Evening News

"What's that little guy playing football for, anyway?" some one asked two years ago, when Ken Rutkowski was working out with the UB squad for the first
time.
Rutkowski, who had starred in both football and
baseball at Kenmore East High School, started college
at Hobart, then switched to UB, where he played a season of varsity baseball before reporting to Doc Urich
for grid action.
Ken, who by that time was UB's top baseball
pitcher, wasn't really as small as he appeared when
walking next to a big tackle. Five feet 9, he was a solid
175 pounds.
That first season, however, nearly all of Ken's
action was confined to the special teams, receiving kickoffs, and to the Monday scrimmages for the athletes who
didn't play much in the previous Saturday's game.
Ken broke away for some pretty ruris in these
scrimmages and last fall, Urich and Co. redesigned their
offense to take advantage of their speedy halfback's
elusiveness.
The move paid off almost immediately. Rutkowski
broke open the season inaugural against Kent State with
a 56-yard touchdown run. He contributed many more
spectacular jaunts, even though he was hampered by
injuries during much of the latter part of the season.
This gave Pat Patterson, Ken's alternate at tailback, more opportunity to play and Pat responded by
setting a UB single-season rushing record of 666 yards.
During spring practice, Rutkowski again was starring in baseball while Pat handled the first-string tailback position himself. There was some question whether
Ken would play football this fall.
When preseason practice rolled around, however,
there was Ken, now a strong 180 pounds. He and Pat
again are alternating at the workhorse tailback spot. And
Rutkowski is one of the East's leading backfield performers.
He leads the Bulls in rushing with 229 yards on 62
carries, in pass receiving with 15 catches for 103 yards,
in punt returns with six for 30 yards, is second in scoring with 18 points and in kickoff returns with 58 yards
on three.
The little guy - who actually is far from little is playing football because he loves to play the game.
And does so very well.
seventeen

�Past-liame Partv liets Tap Rating
- - - - - - - by CAROLYN ANDERSEN

chopped parsley and heat through.
Turn off heat and leave covered until
ready to heat at party time. Serve
over noodles. Recipe makes six to
eight servings.
Another fun idea is a Knife and
Fork sandwich. The convenience of
pre-cooked frozen foods keeps you
from spending hours in the kitchen
when the crowd gathers.
Slice one large loaf unsliced French
bread lengthwise and spread bottom
half with butter and prepared mustard. Heat in 350-degree oven for 10
or 15 minutes. Heat two packages
frozen chili according to package directions. Spoon over buttered bread.
Cut three slices processed cheese into
several strips and place on top of
chili. Top with strips of bacon and
fresh onion rings. Cut into six or
eight knife and fork sandwiches.

W

HEN the referee throws both
arms high into the air signaling
"touchdown" for your favorite collegiate team, he also signals a time
for celebration. And what better way
to climax a big gridiron victory than
by hosting a post-game party?
In order that the hostess may enjoy the excitement of the event to its
fullest, the party should be a simple
one. Plenty of good food can be prepared ahead of time so that only last
minute warm-ups will be necessary
when you get back from the stadium.
On g-ame day, prepare one of the
sug-g-ested main dishes, your own favorite g-elatine salad, and have plenty
of rolls, a simple dessert and the beverage of your choice on hand. Then,
with your party fixin's ready, you'll
still be on time for the opening kickoff and will be able to stay until the
final g-un.
First, try this idea for a chicken
dish that is accented with crumbles
of blue cheese and succulent mushrooms. The zesty concoction is served
on top of crunchy chow mein noodles,
or in pattie shells.
Melt one-quarter cup butter and
stir in one-quarter cup flour. Gradu-

eighteen

Photo : The Popcorn Institute

If you would like to plan something
clever in the way of decorations for
your "pigskin party," why not take a
signal from the game ball itself and
create a popcorn touchdown centerpiece?

ally add one and three-quarters cups
milk and one-half cup chicken broth
(canned). Cook over medium heat,
stirring constantly, until thickened.
Add one-half teaspoon salt, pinch of
sugar, one four-ounce can drained
mushrooms, dash of monosodium glutamate, pepper, one teaspoon prepared horseradish, one and one-half
cups blue cheese and two cups diced,
cooked chicken. Cook over low heat,
stirring constantly, until just heated
through. Turn off heat and cover until time to reheat before serving your
guests.
If you prefer a little more gourmet style ·main dish, try this recipe
for Veal Elegante.

To begin, mold a football out of
five quarts popped popcorn and lace
it with candy licorice strings. The
popcorn can be molded the day before your party. A simple syrup coating can be made by combining two
cups sugar, one and one-half cups
water, one-half cup light corn syrup
and one teaspoon vinegar, then cook
to hard ball stage (250 degrees). Add
one teaspoon vanilla and pour over
popcorn. It will add delicious flavor
and will help you shape your oval
football.
Once the centerpiece has been
molded place the licorice "string-s" in
lacing- fashion and then wrap the
popcorn in foil or saran until time to
decorate the table. This way, it will
keep fresh and crisp for eating-.

In large skillet, melt one-quarter
cup butter or margarine and lightly
brown two pounds veal cutlets, cut
into one-inch pieces. Add one can
(eight ounces) drained mushroom
stems and pieces, and one clove
minc·e d garlic. Remove from skillet.
Into drippings in skillet, stir two tablespoons flour, then one envelope
onion soup mix; gradually add two
cups water and one-quarter cup dry
red wine. Cover and simmer 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add meat,
mushrooms, and two tablespoons

Come party time, insert chocolatecoated bananas on skewers into the
popcorn football. They're a frozen
confection that everyone will enjoy.
The bananas are cut in half, dipped
in one package (six-ounce) melted
semi-sweet chocolate chips and one
tablespoon vegetable shortening and
frozen until serving time. Easy to eat
off the skewers, the bananas make an
unusual and tasty sweet.
Whether your team scores a victory
or not, your party is bound to be a
winner.

�The DELAWARE Coaching Staff

HAROLD R. (TUBBY) RAYMOND
Harold R. (Tubby) Raymond was named head football
coach of the Delaware Blue Hens in the spring of 1966. His
team finished with a 6·3 record and won the Middle Atlantic
Conference championship in his first year as head coach. The
Blue Hens were 2·7 last year.
Raymond joioed the Delaware athletic staff in 19S"4 as
backfield coach under Dave Nelson. He assumed duties as
head baseball coach in 1956 and compiled a remarkable record
before stepping down in 1965.
A native of Flint, Mich., Raymond was graduated from the
University of Michigan, where he was a guard and quarterback
on the Wolverine eleven and captained the 1949 baseball team.
He played two years of professional baseball in the Yankees'
organiz;ation and was head football coach at Ann Arbor High
School. He ws line coach and head baseball coach at the Uni·
versity of Maine for three years.
As backfield coach, Raymond played a major role in de·
veloping the powerhouse 1959, 1962 and 1963 Delaware foot·
ball teams which won the Midde Atlantic Conference champion·
ship and the Lambert Cup . The 1963 squad also won United
Press International recognition as the top small college team in
the country.
Raymond 's great knowledge of backfield techniques was a
vital cog in the Nelson coaching machine. He produced two
first·team Little All·American backs in quarterback Don Miller
and halfback Mike Brown. Tackle-linebacker Herb Slattery
was a first team Little All ·American in Raymond's first year as
head coach.
Under Raymond, the Delaware baseball team compiled a
sparkling 114·56 record in nine years. He led the Hens to a
14·2 record and the District II NCAA playoffs in his first year
and the Hens qualified again in 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961 and
1964.
Raymond coached many future professional baseball players
at Delaware- including AI Neiger, Dallas Green, Lee Elia, Fred
Waters and John Shew.
One of the most respected coaches in collegiate ranks, he
is a fine competitor himself, excellent at paddleball. He is also
a gifted artist. He and his wffe Sue have three children and
reside in Windy Hills, a Newark suburb.

IRWIN WISNIEWSKI
Offensive Line Coach

JAMES FLYNN
Offensive Backfield Coach

MICHAEL HEINECKEN
Defensive Backfield Coach

EDWARD MALEY
Defensive Line Coach

DONALD HARNUM
Defensive End Coach

THEODORE KEMPSKI
Offensive End Coach

PAUL BILLY
Head Freshman Coach

nineteen

�1968 Delaware Football Roster
No.
88
75
62
42

58
17
44
12
74
50
78
79
19
33
37
43
64
52

85
32
84
65
67
82
90
11
36
22
41
66
61
48
26
10
87
29
30
47
16
60
70
68
89
56

77
80
72
28
46
83
69
35
15
45
24
25
54
51
63
86
14
81

Player
Albertson, Jim
Avery, Charles
Barbieri, Mike
Baumann, John
Beck, Reagan
Blair, Mark
*Brickley, Sam
Buckley, Bob
*Camp, Paul
Cipriano, John
*Cornelius, Pete
DeRubeis, Carmine
*DiMuzio, Tom
Donofrio, Nick
*Emmons, lee
Fad, Bruce
*Favero, John
Geisler, Jon
Gregory, Ted
Hall, Chuck
Hanley, Bruce
Hayman, Conway
Holcomb, Ray
Holle, Eric
Hotaling, Gerry
Infante, Carmen
*Keller, Dick
Kelley, Dick
Klein, Ron
Kwiatkowski, Mike
*laughlin, Bill
*Lazarski, Jim
leonard, Tom
*lippincott, Jeff
Lipson, Mark
Masin, Bob
*McCallion, Chuck
McGee, Dan
Merkel, Sonny
*Novotny, Bob
Phillips, Yancy
Puken, Tony
*Purzycki, Joe
Rolfes, larry
Ruch, Jack
*Scelba, Jim
Shetzler, Joe
Shiflett, Earl
Smith, Dave
Smith, Dick
Smith, Jeff
Sohonchak, John
Spicer, Chris
Sundheim, Pete
Suplee, Bill
*Tracey, Jack
*Vaccarino, Chip
Vaughan, Bob
*Vollendorf, Hank
Walker, Pat
Williams, Tom
*Withelder, Ron

* 1967 letterman (18)

tw enty

Pos.

Cl.

Ht.

Wt.

High School

E
T

Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.

6-0
6-3
6-2
5-9
6-0
6-0

205
220
213
175
206
190
175
175
210
230
204
206
200
180
198
195
215
200
210
198
200
240
210
240
190

Kinnelon
Toms River (NJ)
Bishop Neumann
Kimball
lower Merion
Windber Area
lock Haven
Penn Charter
Alexis I. duPont
Delsea Regional
Notre Dame
Memorial
Bishop Neumann
Mt. Pleasant
Palmyra
Upper Dublin

LB
HB
LB

E
HB

QB
T
LB

T
T
QB
HB
K
HB
LB

c

E
FB

E
G
LB
E
E

QB
HB
HB
HB
G

K
HB
E-HB
K
E

HB
HB
HB

QB
LB

T
E
E-HB

c
T
E
T

HB
HB

E
G
LB

QB
HB
FB
HB

c
T

G
E

QB
E

5-8
5-10
5-10
6-3
6-0
5-11
6-1
5-9
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-3
5-10
6-0
6-3
6-Q
6-4
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-3
5-7
5-10
6-1
6-1
5-10
6-0
6-2
5-11
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-2
5-10
5-9
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-2
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-5
6-0
5-10

177
184
175
170
195
195
163
180
175
205
189
175
187
170
195
220
203
185
212
206
215
215
155
161
190
195
195
192
190
190
180
225
220
195
205
185
178

Paramus

lenape Reg.
DelaWarr
Springfield
Toms River
Newark
Wayne Valley
Bordentown Mil.
Card. Dougherty
Chichester
Columbiana
Newark
Clifford Scott
Clifton Hts.
Central Catholic
Coughlin
William Penn
Manasquan
Central
Columbia
DelaWarr
St. Joseph's
Middletown
Columbia
Carlisle (Pa.)
Florence Township
Our lady of the Valley
DeMatha Cath.
Pottsville Area
Southern Reg.
William Penn
Poly
Conrad
Wilson
Henderson
Collingswood
Haddonfie ld
Sparta Cheshire Acad.
Mainland Reg.
Beaver Falls
lafayette
Wilson
Uppe r Dublin
Newark
lackawanna Trail
Ridley Twp.

Hometown
Kinnelon, N. J.
Sonoma, Calif.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Roy a I Oak, Mich.
Wynnewood, Pa.
w ·indber, Pa.
lock Haven, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Newark, Del.
Vineland, N. J.
Trenton, N. J.
E. Paterson, N. J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Wilmington, Del.
Cinnaminson, N. J.
Ft. Washington, Pa .
Paramus, N. J.
Moorestown, N. J.
New Castle, Del.
Springfield, Pa.
Beachwood, N. J.
Newark, Del.
Wayne, N. J.
Cincinnati, 0.
Philadelphia, Pa.
linwood, Pa.
Columbiana, Ohio
Newark, Del.
E. Orange, N. J.
Clifton Hts., Pa.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
New Castle, Del.
Belmar, N. J .
Philadelphia, Pa.
S. Orange, N. J.
New Castle, Del.
Cinnaminson, N. J.
Middletown, Del.
Maplewood, N. J.
Ft. Benning, Ga .
Roebling, N. J.
Newark, N. J.
Beltsville, Md .
Pottsville, Pa.
Beach Haven, N. J.
New Castle, Del.
Baltimore, Md.
Newport, Del.
Reading, Pa.
West Chester, Pa .
Oaklyn, N. J.
Haddonfield, N. J.
Sparta, N. J.
linwood, N. J.
Beaver Falls, Pa.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
West lawn, Pa.
Maple Glen, Pa .
Newark, Del.
Dalton, Pa .
Folsom, Pa.

�Olds Delta 88 Royale: The bold and the beautiful.
Meet our new top-of-the-line 88. Big-car room and
ride on a longer 124-inch wheelbase. Vinyl roof, pinstriping, fender louvers, big Rocket 455 V-8 and
much more, standard. All for little more than you'd
pay for an ordinary car! Escape from the ordinary.

�-

,.

-' - ~ _- ..., ·-~
-,

/

....

�80
75
78
84
67
64
60
16
29
36
41

OFFENSE
85 PAUL LANG ..... ...... TE
77 CHRIS WOLF ....... . ... LT
64 MIKE MASER ......... LG
52 JACK WESOLOWSKI ..... C
68 BILL HAYDEN .......... RG
73 TOM CENTOFANTI ...... RT
87 DICK ASHLEY .......... SE
19 DENNY MASON (CC) ... QB
21 KEN RUTKOWSKI ....... TB
44 CHUCK DRANKOSKI ..... FL
35 JOE ZELMANSKI ........ FB

DEFENSE
JIM SCELBA .......... . LE
CHUCK AVERY ......... LT
PETE CORNELIUS ...... RT
BRUCE HANLEY ........ LE
RAY HOLCOMB ........ LLB
JOHN FAVERO ....... MLB
BOB NOVOTNY (C) .... RLB
SONNY MERKEL ....... LCB
BOB MASIN ........... LS
DICK KELLER .......... RS
RON KLEIN ... . ...... RCB

Buffalo

Delaware
86
72
63
54
65
70
81
19
22
48
32

10
ll
12
14
15
16
17
19
22
24
25
26
28
29
30
32
33
35
36
37
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
50
51
52

OFFENSE
PAT WALKER .......... TE
JOE SHETZLER . . . ...... LT
HANK VOLLENDORF .... LG
CHIP VACCARINO ...... . C
CONWAY HAYMAN . . . RG
YANCY PHILLIPS ....... RT
RON WIT HELDER ....... SE
TOM DiMUZIO ........ QB
DICK KELLEY ........... LH
JIM LAZARSKI . . . . .... RH
CHUCK HALL .......... FB

DELAWARE
Lippincott, KSP 54
Infante, QB
56
Buckley, QB
58
Williams, QB
60
Spicer, QB
61
Merkel, QB
62
Blair, E
63
64
DiMuzio, QB
Kelley, HB
65
Suplee, FB
66
67
Tracey, HB
Leonard, E
68
69
Shiflett, HB
Masin, HB
70
McCallion, HB 72
74
Hall, FB
75
Donofrio, HB
Sohonchak, LB 77
Keller, HB
78
Emmons, KSP
79
Klein, HB
80
Baumann, HB
81
Fad, HB
82
Brickley, HB
83
Sundheim, HB 84
Da. Smith
85
McGee, HB
86
Lazarski, HB
87
Cipriano, LB
88
Vaughan, T
89
Geisler, C
90

SQUAD
Vaccarino, C
Rolfes, C
Beck, LB
Novotny, LB
Laughlin, KSP
Barbieri, LB
Vollendorf, G
Favero, LB
Hayman, G
Kwiatowski, G
Holcomb, LB
Puken, T
J. Smith, G
Phillips, T
Shetzler, T
Camp, T
Avery, T
Ruch, T
Cornelius, T
DeRubeis, T
Scelba, E
Withelder, E
Holle, E
Di. Smith, E
Hanley, E
Gregory, E
Walker, E
Lipson, E
Albertson, E
Purzycki, E
Hotaling, E

81
70
75
90
50
69
65
32
23
40
29

l0
ll
12
15
16
17
19
20
21
23
24
25
26
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
40
42
44
45
46
48
. 49
50
51
52
56

DEFENSE
TOM MURPHY ......... LE
DAN WALGATE ........ LT
JOE RICCELLI .......... RT
PRENTIS HENLEY ....... RE
JIM MOSHER ......... OLB
DON SABO (CC) ...... . ILB
SCOTT CLARK ......... ILB
DAVE RICHNER ....... OLB
NICK KISH ............ HB
TOM ELLIOTT ........... S
DICK HORN ........... HB

BUFFALO SQUAD
Moresco, QB
57 Albaneze, DT
Perry, QB
58 Donner, C
Stiscak, DHB
59 Kershaw, LB
Martin, DHB
60 Carney, G
61 Elwell, G
Embow, KSP
62 Kowalewski, G
Jack, QB-KSP
63 Walters, G
Mason, QB
Patterson, TB
64 Maser, G
Rutkowski, TB 65 Clark, LB
Kish, DHB
66 Lupienski, LB
Zalar, DHB
68 Hayden, G
Bell, LB
69 Sabo, LB
Jacobs, S
70 Walgate, DT
Horn, DHB
72 Milarski, DT
Hernquist, LB
73 Centofanti, T
7 4 Rio, T
Richner, LB
Zeek, FB
75 Riccelli, DT
Yuzny, LB
76 Reid, T
Zelmanski, FB 77 Wolf, T
Woodward, FL 78 Beck, DT
McCullough, LB 79 Atkinson, DT
Chapp, FB
80 Shine, SE
Elliott,S
81 Murphy,DE
Nixon, DHB
82 Endress, TE
Drankoski, FL
83 Kovey, DE
Grubbs, DHB
84 Przybycien, DE
Hogan, DHB
85 Lang, TE
Hlavenka, SE
86 Vigneau, DE
Faller, TB
87 Ashley, SE
Mosher, LB
88 James, TE
Moler, C
89 Sharrow, SE
Wesolowski, C 90 Henley, DE
Chernega, LB

�BEfORE 'IOU
BU'f, SEE YOUR.
C~RYSLER ­

PLYMOUTH
OR DODGE
DEALER

( ... SETh~ CENTER
Ol= A.TTEJ.JTION
. _,_ \N A N~W CAR

r:

ROM OtRYSLE"R

CORPORATiON/
~ \____

'--

CHR.y'SLE.R.
Q:JRPORAnONJ
LDNGON

STYt...ING ,

LONG ON
FEATURES
AND ON

&amp;JGlNE.ERJNG

Plymouth· Dodge • Chrysler•lmperial· Dodge Trucks ·Simca • Sunbeam

~~ CHRYSLER
CORPORATION
~

SEE THE AFL IN ACTION EACH WEEK ON NBC-TV.

�1968 Buffalo Footba 11 Roster
No.
57
87
79
78
25
60
73
38
56
65
58
44
40
61
16
82
49
45
68
90
30
48
46
29
17
26
88
59
23
83
62
85
66
34
15
64
19
37
72
51
10
50
81
42
20
11
84
76
75
32
74
21
69
89
80
12
86
70
63
52
77
36
24
33
35

Player
Albaneze, Dennis
** Ashley, Richard
Atkinson, Barry
Beck , Russell
Bell, Harry
Carney, Patrick
Centofanti, Thomas
Chapp, Gary
Chernega , David
*Clark, Scott
Donnor, Charles
** Drankoski , Charles
Elliott, Thomas
Elwell, Jerry
** Em bow, Robert
*Endress, Terrence
Faller, John
*Gru bbs, Ga ry
Ha yden, William
Henley, Prentis
Hernquist, Eugene
Hlave nka , Joseph
Hogan, Kevin
* Horn, Richard
*Jack, Paul
Jacobs, Joel
James, Michael
Kershaw, Edward
Kish, Nicholas
*Kovey, Robert
**Kowalewski, Thomas
*Lang, Paul
** Lup ienski, John
*Luzny, Michael
Martin, Daniel
**Maser, Michael
*Mason, Denn is (CC)
McCullough, Steven
Milarski, Thomas
Moler, Robert
Moresco, Joseph
**Mosher, James
*Murphy, Thomas
N ixo n, Leonard
*Patterson , Patrick
Perry, Edward
** Przybycie n, John
Re id , Frank
Ricce ll i, Joseph
** Richner, David
Rio, John
*Rutkowski, Kenneth
*Sabo, Donald (CC)
Sharrow, Michael
Shine, John
Stiscak, Robert
Vigneau, Thomas
*Walgate, Daniel
Walters, Greg
**Wesolowski, John
*Wolf, Chris
Woodward, Barnard
Zalar, Karl
Zeek, John
Zelmanski, Joseph

Pos.
DT
SE
DT
DT
LB
G
T
FB
LB
LB

c
FL

s

G
KSP
TE
TB
DHB
G
DE
LB
SE
HB

s

QB-KSP

s
TE
LB
DHB
DE
G
TE
LB
LB
DHB
G
QB
LB
DT

c

QB
LB
DE
DHB
TB
QB
DE
T
DT
LB
T
TB
LB
SE
SE
DHB
DE
DT
G

c

T
FL
DHB
FB
FB

Cl.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr .
So .
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr .
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr .
So.
So .
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr .
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So .
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
J r.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So .
So.
So.
So.

Major
L.A.
P.E.
P.E.
Soc.
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
L.A.
P.E.
P.E.
Bus.
L.A .
His.
Bus.
P.E.
P.E.
His.
P.E .
l..A, .
L.A.
His .
Eng.
Chem .
L.A.
L.A .
L.A .
His.
L.A.
Bus.
L.A.
Math.
His .
His.
P.E.
His.
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
Bus.
His.
His.
P.E .
L.A.
P.E.
Bus.
L.A .
P.E.
His.
Bus.
Bus.
His.
His.
L.A.
L.A .
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
His.
L.A.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.

Age
19
21
19
19
22
20
19
20
21
21
19
21
19
20
20
20
19
20
21
21
19
19
20
21
20
19
19
19
21
20
21
21
21
21
21
21
21
20
19
21
19
21
22
19
20
19
20
22
21
21
19
20
21
22
19
19
19
20
19
22
20
19
19
19
19

Ht.
6-3
6-1
6-4
6-3
5-10
6-0
6-Q
5-8
5-11
6-0
6-1
6-1
5-11
6-Q
6-Q
6-0
5-11
5-9
5-10
6-1
5-9
6-0
6-Q
6-1
6-0
5-10
6-7
6-2
5-11
5-11
5-1 1
6-0
5-10
5-9
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-3
6-1
6-3
6-2
5-11
6-0
5-9
5-10
6-3
6-1
5-11
6.0
6-2
6-0
5-11
6-3
5-9
6-0
5-11
6-1

Wt.
205
201
240
232
180
200
210
200
187
212
195
183
175
208
210
202
178
175
213
205
190
185
180
188
178
179
210
195
198
202
210
210
210
209
187
214
188
201
250
226
175
212
192
180
191
205
200
217
242
197
232
180
210
215
180
185
204
255
212
214
220
190
180
190
185

School
Stuyvesant HS
Massena HS
East Dear-Frazer HS
Cathedral HS
Potsdam HS
New Kensington HS
Bishop Duffy HS
St. Clement HS
Union-End icott HS
Coshocton HS
East Aurora HS
Maine-Endwell HS
Canandaigua HS
Card in al Mooney HS
Hamburg HS
St. Vincen.t' s HS
Greece-Arcadia HS
Coshocton HS
Cathedral Latin HS
South Park HS
Olean HS
Niagara Falls HS
West HS
Dover HS
Spr ingdale HS
East Rockaway HS
Penn Hills HS
Elyria HS
Amherst Central HS
Cardinal Mooney HS
De LaSalle HS
Ithaca HS
Springdale HS
St. Joseph' s HS
Huntington HS
Clayton HS
Bishop Fallon HS
Coshocton HS
North Hill HS
Orchard Park HS
Ithaca HS
Central Islip HS
Westmont HS
St. Joseph's HS
Ambr idge HS
Bethlehem Central
Univ. Detroit HS
Fisher Park HS
Hen inger HS
Bemus Point HS
St. Mary' s HS
Kenmore East HS
Bishop McCort HS
Moriah Central HS
Bishop Walsh HS
Aliquippa HS
St. Clement HS
Grand Island HS
Kenmore East HS
Cleveland Hill HS
Solon HS
Peru HS
Calvert HS
Berwick HS
St. Clement HS

Hometown
Elmhurst, N. Y.
Massena, N. Y.
larentum, Pa.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Potsdam, N. Y.
New Kensington, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Endicott, N. Y.
Coshocton, N. Y.
East Aurora , N. Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Canandaigua, N. Y.
Rochester, N. Y.
Hamburg, N. Y.
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Rochester, N. Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Buffalo, N. Y.
Olean, N. Y.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
St. Louis, Mo.
Dover, Oh io
Springdale, Pa.
East Rockaway, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Elyria, Ohio
Buffalo, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Detroit, Mich.
Ithaca , N. Y.
Spr ingdale, Pa.
South Bend, Ind .
Huntington, N. Y.
Clayton, N. Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Pittsburgh, Pa .
Orchard Park, N. Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Central Islip, N. Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Cleveland, Ohio
Ambridge, Pa .
Delmar, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich .
Ottawa, Ont. (Canada)
Syracuse, N. y_
Greenhurst, N. Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Witherbee, N. Y.
Olean, N.Y.
Al iquippa, Pa.
Centerline, Mich.
Grand Island, N. Y.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Solon, Ohio
Peru, N. Y.
Tiffin, Ohio
Berwick, Pa.
Centerline, Mich.

*Varsity Letters (1967-27)

twenty-five

�The BUFFALO Coaching Staff

WILLIAM R. D1\NDO
Line hackers

ROBERT E . GEIGER
Offens1ve Lme

ROBERT C DEMI\:G
Dcfcn-1\·c Backfield

JERRY A lPPOL!Tl
O!fciH\'e Backticld

RICHARD W . (Doc) URICH
Head Coach
Richard W. (Doc) Unch (pronounced Yur ·1ck) became
head coach at the University of Buffalo in 1966. In h1• first
season the team won five and lost five , e&gt;tahhshed seven new
U / B offensive records and diSplayed to 'A-'estern New Yo rk fan'
the most exciting college football ever seen 111 the area. In '67
his revamped Bulls were 6 ·4·0.

S,-\M L SA0.'DERS
Dcf cn "'·c L1n e

Urich came to Buffalo from
otre Dame. where he wa'
Ara Parseghian 's top off ens1vc a1de. Prenou sly Do.: -encd w1th
Paraseghian at
orthwcstern and M1am1 (0 . ). h~&gt; alma mater.
Urich , 40, is a nat1ve of Wapakoneta. Ohw . He attended
Wapakoneta High School where he captamed both the football
and basketball squads as a senwr.
At Mtami (0 .) Urich was a standout 111 college fo o tball
He played four years and in lu; fre,hman and sen1or ;ea&gt;on&lt; h"
team s made appearances 111 the Sun Bowl and the Salad Bowl.
Miamt defeated Texas Tech at El Paso on January 1. 1948 .•tnd
downed Arizona State at Phoemx on January 1. 19'i 1. Doc
was captain of the Miami team 111 h" senior year. In h1s JUnior
and senior seasons he won All -Ohw hon o r' and 111 h" la;t three
years he was selected All ·M1d · Amencan Conference at end

JAMES C. Mcl' .'\LL Y
Head Freshman Coach

GERALD R GERGLEY
Fr c-h man A""tant

RUSSELL G . MacKELLAR
Graduate Ass.stant

RICHARD L WELLS
Graduate As&lt;istant

After graduatwn from M1ann 111 February. 1951. he as·
sumed teaching and coachmg chore s at Ma ss illon (0 . ) High
Scho ol for the remainder of the school term before JOintng the
staff of Coach Paraseghtan at Miam1 that fall.
Unch and hts wtfe. the former PatnCia Stre1ght. also of
Wapakoneta, have two children. C ynth1a (ho rn in 19'i~) and
Danny (b o rn in !955) . The Urich family res1des 111 nearby
Williamsvtllc .
Urich's nickname is derived from the fact that he used to
carry a little black bag w1th h1m when playing as a youth. The
neighborhood friends called him "Doc" and the tag remained
with him through his playmg and coaching career.
In 1968 Urich was appointed Associate Director of Ath ·
letics at the University.

twenty-six

�(OME ALONG
TAKE ALONG

1968 VARSITY FOOTBALL STATISTICS (4 games)
TEAM SUMMARY:
U/B

OPP

First Downs
Rushing
Passing
Penalty

73
32
39
2

71
28
37
6

Total Plays
Rushing
Pa-ssing

294
203
91

286
181
105

Total Offense
Rushing
Passing

1222
613
609

1289
599
690

91
56
5
2

105
38
8
2

Passes Attempted
Completions
Intercepted By
Scoring Passes

Punts/Yards
Punt Average
Had Blocked
Punt Ret./Y ards
KO Ret./Yards
Penalty/Yards
Fumbles/Lost

U/B

OPP

26-916
35.2
0
10-33
18-277
14-1 59
15-6

28-950
33.9
1
14-69
13 -222
19-184
6-4

9
8-6
1-0
3-2
66

9
8-6
1-0
5-4
72

Scoring
Touchdowns
PAT Kick
Run/ Pass Conv.
Field Goals
Total Points

INDIVIDUAL SUMMARY:
Rushing

Att.

Rutkowski, tb
Zelmanski, fb
Patterson, tb
Mason, qb
Drankoski, flk
Chapp, fb
Woodward, flk
Faller, tb

Net

Avg.

m

62
46
44
41
5
2
1
2

229
173
142
40
27
6
3
-7

Totals

203

613

Punting

No.

Yds.

Avg.

Jack

26

916

35 .2

3.7
3.8
3.0
5.4
3.0
3.0

1
4
1
0
0
0
0
0

Passing

Att.

Mason, qb

91

Receiving
Ashley, se
Lang, te
Rutkowski, tb
Drankoski, flk
Z elmanski, fb
T otals

3.2

No.

Elliott, s
Lupienski, lb
Jacobs, s
M artin, lb
Kish, dhb
Totals

5

Yds.

TO

17
8
4
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

29

0

Patterson,
Rutkowski,
Zelmanski,
Drankoski,
Ashley, se

m

Zelmanski, fb
Rutkowski, tb
Embow, ksp
Patterson, tb
Henley, de
Constantino, ksp

4
3
0

Totals
*Run -Pass Conv .

9

1
0

•:•PAT

FG

tb
tb
fb
flk

Totals
Punt Returns
Rutkowski, tb
H orn, dhb
Elliott, s
Kish, dhb
T otals

Scoring

56

8

Yds.

TO

609

2

Pet.
.62

No.
22
16
15
2
1

Yds.
248
237
103
11
10

TO
0
0

56

609

2

No.

Yds.

m

6
3
3
1

112
58
51
50
6

0
0
0
0
0

18

277

0

No.
6
1
2
1

Yds.
30

TO
0
0
0
0

10

33

2

0
0

6
Kickoff Returns

Interceptions

Comp. Int.

5

2

1
0

0

TOT

0
0
7-5
0
0
1-1

0
0
3-2
0
0
0

24
18
11
6
6

8-6
1-0

3-2

66

BUFFALO SCHEDULE (Won 2, Lost 2)
Iowa State 28, Buffalo 10
Buffalo 21, Kent State 13
Buffalo 23 , Massachusetts 0
Boston College 31, Buffalo 12
Oct. 12 - Delaware at Buffalo
O ct. 19 - Villanova at Buffalo
Oct. 26 - H oly Cross at Buffalo
Nov. 2 - Buffalo at Temple
Nov. 9 - Buffalo at Northern Illinois
ov. 23 - Buffalo at Boston University

,
Live the
Genesee Moment
twenty-seven

�Delaware Captain

How you can
"join"
America's
Olympic Team
You can be there at the Mexico
City Olympic Games as a we lcome contributor to the Olympic Fund. An d be proud of it!

Training, transportation, housing
and equ ipping America's top competitors in the Olympic Games is a
major financial task. Because the
United States Team is maintained almost entirely by public subscription ,
without government subsidy of any
sort, the interest and support of
every American is needed to reach
the $3 ,500,000 goal.
If you haven 't already done so,
"join " in the Olymp ic movement now.
Fil l out the attached coupon , with
your check for $5.00 or more and
ma il - today. In acknowledgment, the
United States Olymp ic Committee will
send you the handsome men's tie bar
(by Dante) illustrated below. Or, if
you prefer, you may select a women's
bar pin with safety catch of the same
design . For a $10.00 contribution, you
will receive two gifts of your choice.

BOB NOVOTNY

Bob
ovotny, a 200-pound gua rd and linebacker, is the
captain of the 1968 Delaware football team.

make checks payable to:

U.S. OLYMPIC COMM ITTEE
All Contributions are Tax Deductible

"We feel that the team has made an outstanding choice for
captain," Blue Hen coach Tubby Raymond says. "He has the
same qualities as all the good captains we have ever had. He is
a husthng, aggressive leader."
Novotny, a former All-Essex County and All-Orange Con·
fercnce selection at Columbia High School in Maplewood, N ..J.,
has won two letters at Delaware. He started several games as a
sophomore when the Blue Hens won the Middle Atlantic Con·
ference title in 1966 and he was a regular offensive guard last
season. He was sw1tched to linebacker th1s spring as part of
an overall effort to bolster the defense.

Actual Size

"Bob made a fine adjustment to defense this spring," Ray·
mond says. "He is one of the few players capable of playing
both ways in this era of specialization."
Line coach Ed Maley says that
throughout his career at Delaware.

ovotny has been a leader

"Bob is a good hustler and he leads by example. H e did
an excellent job of helpmg to organize team conditioning last
winter before he was elected captain and the other players seem
to respond to his leadership."

w
w

~

,....

==

0

==
0
0

U')
U')

~

a:

0

0

a:

&gt;-

ovotny, who lists "sports in general" as his hobbies,
counts inexperience as the major stumbling block to a successful
season.

==
&gt;
...J

w
z

Novotny, a business majo r, is th e son of Mr. an d Mrs.
Robert Novotny of 134 Oakview Avenue, Maplewood, N. }.

!;(

0

~

C/)

w

Q)

E
res

&lt;::
twenty-eight

�DELAWARE

JAMES ALBERTSON
88
Junior
E
Major: Accounting

CHARLES AVERY
75
Sophomore
T
Major: Physical Education

SAMUEL BRICKLEY
44
Junior
HB
Major: Physical Education

PETER CORNELIUS
78
Junior
T
Major: History

THOMAS DiMUZIO
19
Junior
QB
Major: History

64

BRUCE HANLEY
84
Junior
E
Major: Food Business

CO WAY HAYMAN
65
Sophomore
G
Major: Arts &amp; Science

JOHN FAVERO
Junior
LB
Major: Business

RAYMOND HOLCOMB
67
Sophomore
LB
Major: Business

ROBERT BUCKLEY
12
Sophomore
QB
Major: Business Admin.

85

TED GREGORY
Sophomore
E
Major: Education

RICHARD KELLER
36
Junior
HB
Major: Business

JOHN CIPRIA 0
Sophomore
LB
Major: Arts &amp; Science

50

32

CHARLES HALL
Sophomore
FB
Major: Business

RICHARD KELLEY
HB
22
Sophomore
Major: Physical Education

twenty-nine

�DELAWARE
.;1
In 1738, when George II was on the throne of England,
the members of the Presbytery of Lewes, Delaware, expressed
in old-fashioned words a very modern thought. They felt that
there was need for the academtc training of divinity students.
whose talents "for want of being improved are marred of thetr
usefulness with a formidable train of sad consequences."
Accordingly, the Presbyterian Synod at Philadelphia was sent
a petition asking that candidates for the ministry be examined by
an appropriate committee before being licensed to preach. The
petition was favorably received, and m 1743 it was agreed to
establish a school. The scholarly Reverend Francis Alison had
just opened a private school in his manse at New London, Penn·
sylvania, and this school was taken over by the Church. In the
course of the next two hundred years thts small chool developed
into the University of Delaware.
In 1765, the school came to
ewark, and in 1769 it was
chartered by Thomas and Rtchard Penn, and known from then
on as ewark Academy. Instruction was interrupted dunng the
Revoluti onary War when the Academy building was converted
to a shoe factory to supply the Continenal Army.

PRESIDENT E. ARTHUR TRABA T

During the early years of the ineteenth Century sentiment
in favor of esablishing an institutiOn of higher Jearmng in Dela·
ware had been growing. An act of the Legislature on February
5. 1833, created Newark College. a degree-granting institutiOn,
with which Newark Academy was merged in 1834. the year
that the buildtng now known as Old College was erected. The
Academy continued as the College's preparatory department
until 1870, when work below the collegiate grade was dropped.

By charter, control of the University is vested in a Board of
Trustees of twenty•etght members chosen from the three counties
of the State. The Prestdent of the Univer~ity, the Governor of
the State, The Master of the State Grange, and the President of
the State Board of Education arc ex·offtcio members of the
Board of Trustee~.

Meanwhile, in 1862 President Lincoln signed the Morrill
Land-Grant Act of Congress that created colleges in the various
. in the
state "to promote liberal and practtcal education .
several pursuits and professions of life." An act of the Delaware
General Assembly. March 14, 1857, brought Delawar.! College
into the family of the Land-Grant colleges.

The major administrative units of the University include the
College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Agnculture. the
College of Education, the College of Engineering, the College
of Home Economtcs, the College of Graduate Studies. the Dt·
vision of Physical Education and Athlettcs, U ntversity Extension
Service.

In 1913, the Women's College. afft!tated with Delaware
College was established. and it opened in 1914. In 1921. Dela·
ware College and the Women's College were combined under
the name of the University of Delaware. Separte classe for men
and women were held September, 1944, when the two institutions
were completely merged into the present univer ity structure.

The University of Delaware is fully accredtted hy the Middle
State Assoetation of Colleges and Secondary Schools. the ac·
crediting agency for this regiOn. Professional programs are
given surveillance by appropriate assoctatwns such as the En·
gineers Counctl for Profe,ional Development and the American
Chemical Society.

thirty

�DELAWARE

RO ALD KLEIN
41
Sophomore
HB
Major: Physical Education

16

SO NY MERKEL
Sophomore
QB
Major: Engineering

JOSEPH SHETZLER
72
Sophomore
T
Major: Physical Education

JEFFREY LIPPE COTT
10
Senior
KSP
Major: Political Science

ROBERT NOVOTNY
60
Senior
LB
Major: Business

JOH

25

TRACY
Junior
HB
Major: Engineering

MARK LIPSON
87
Junior
FB
Major: Commercial Science

70

YANCY PHILLIPS
Sophomore
T
Major: Engineenng

CHIP V ACCARINO
54
Junior
C
Major: Physical Education

29

ROBERT MASIN
Junior
HB
Major: Business

47

DA IEL McGEE
Sophomore
HB
Major: Mathematics

JOSEPH PURZYCKI
89
Junior
E
Major: Physical Education

JAMES SCELBA
80
Senior
E
Major: Physical Education

HENRY VOLLE DORF
63
Senior
G
Major: General Science

RONALD WITHELDER
81
Junior
E
Major: Accounting

thirty-one

�Meet the Athletic Directors

•

•

'

.I

..

DAVID M. NELSO , Delaware

JAMES E. PEELLE, Buffalo

1968 U.B. Fall Scoreboard
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL

VARSITY GOLF
Coach: Dr. Leonard T. Serfustini '49
Captain:
Date
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

16
23
25
2
3
8
12
14
16
19
21
25
30

Opposent
U/B OPP
at Buffalo State
13
0
ST. BONAVENTURE
13
5
CANISIUS
9
9
at St. Bonaventure
7Y2 lOY:!
at Geneseo State
14!1:! 13!1:!
BUFFALO STATE
2:00
ECAC Fall Tournament
1:00
at Canisius
NIAGARA
1:30
ECAC Fall Tournament
at Niagara C. C.
1:30
at Niagara
1:30
NIAGARA C. C.
1:30

FRESHMAN CR,OSS-COUNTRY
Coach. Emery ]. Fisher '51
Captain.
Date _
Opponent
U/B OPP
Sept. 21 at Syracuse
35
21
Oct. 12 at Brockport State
2:00
Oct. 16 GUELPH &amp; NIAGARA
4:00
Oct. 26 Canisius Invitational
2.30
Oct. 30 GANNON,
BUFFALO STATE,
CANISIUS &amp;
NIAGARA
2:00
Nov. 2 NYS Championships
10:30
(Oswego State Host)
thirty-two

Coach: James C. McNally '66
Captain:
Opponent

Date

Sept. 20 at Army
Sept. 28 at Manlius
Oct. 26 at Navy
Nov. 2 SYRACUSE
Nov. 8 at Kent State

U / B OPP
14
8

12
7
10:00
2:00
3:00

VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY
Coach. Emery ]. Fisher '51
Captain:
Date
Sept. 21
Sept. 28
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

5
12
16
19
22

Oct. 26
Oct. 30

Nov.

2

Nov.

9

Opponent
V f B OPP
at Syracuse
40
21
CLEVELAND STATE 37
24
at Niagara C. C.
34
22
LeMoyne Invitational l Oth of 17
at Brockport State
2:00
GUELPH &amp; NIAGARA
4:00
at LeMoyne
1:00
GENESEO STATE &amp;
FREDONIA STATE
4:30
Canisius Invitational
1:00
GANNON,
BUFFALO STATE,
CANISIUS &amp;
NIAGARA
4:00
NYS Championships
11 :00
(Oswego State Host)
at St. Bonaventure
2:00

..
I.

�..

EVERY DAY
OF THE WEEK

FINEST

OUALIT~

SUPER.IIIIARKETS

Your hometown supermarkets are proud
to support the hometown University of
Buffalo nBulls'' football team!
thirty-three

�GRANVILLE MOTORS INC.
VOLKSWAGEN

The John W.
Cowper Co.

I

INCORPORATED

AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE CENTER
Engineers - Contractors

• STATION WAGONS
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• SEDANS
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1600 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD•

•
873-4200

JUST NORTH OF THE BOULEVARD
MALL OPPOSITE TWIN FAIR

OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE836-4600

Post Office Box 1068

AUlHORtllD

O&amp;AI.U

1945 Sheridan Drive
Buffalo, New York 14240

• All bte Model VW's •nd Domestic Used Cus W•rr•nted

Everything for the Athlete and Sportsman

PLA-MOR
SPORTING GOODS
iC
•

SKIS AND CLOTHING
•

ICE SKATES
•

BOWLING EQUIPMENT
•

FOOTBALL AND BASKETBALL

'.

EQUIPMENT

Sweaters and Jackets for Fraternities and Sororities

.

.

Score big
at

627 MAIN STREET

BUFFALO, NEW YORK
TL 2-3456

.

.

• Uncle •
John.,s

3300 SHERIDAN DRIVE
3637 UNION ROAD

thirty-four

. .. .

.

\

�OFFICE SUPPLIES
GOOD LUCK U. B. BULLS
Rudy Bersani -

BUSINESS FORMS

OFFICE FURNITURE

PRINTING

FILING EQUIPMENT

DUPLICATOR PAPERS

U. B. 1967

Eaton Office Supply Co., Inc.
"For Office Needs - Eaton Leads"
lunch, dimzer or late supper; eat like a
Roman Emperor o,z centurion's pay
In the North Wing of the MAPLE. LEAF MOTOR LODGE
1620 Niagara Falls Blvd.

835· 261 0

1 Mole. North
of Sherodan Dr.
Ample Parking for Your Chariot

1155 NIAGARA FALLS BOULEVARD
BUFFALO, N. Y. 14226
SINCE 1915

Phone: 837·6800

'

WE BUY &amp; SELL

USED TEXTBOOKS

For the Finest in Food and Beverage

FOR ALL UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO COURSES

Paperbacks -

Supplies -

AFTER THE GAME . . .

Gifts

$1.00 OFF ON SWEATSHIRTS

THE CLUB SHERIDAN

FROM OUR REGULAR LINE - LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER
YOU MUST BRING THIS AD WITH YOU

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
STORES, INC.

3610 MAIN
Across from UB's
Clement Hall
Buffalo, N. Y.

Free Parking Next Door -

3500 SHERIDAN DRIVE
836-7736

Univ. Manor Motel

To Games; on Ski Weekends; on Tours;
Everybody Goes First Class in the
Area's Largest Charter Bus Fleet

Corner of
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ASK US ABOUT

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For 'r1·ip:-:

to

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Shops at Glenwood Acres &amp; Holiday Valley

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Plumber

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INC.

•
•

1933 KENSINGTON AVENUE

259 DELAWARE AVENUE

TL 2-7080

833-1695
•

823 GENESEE STREET

TX 2-7183
thirty-six

BUFFALO, N. Y.

�BUFFALO

RICHARD ASHLEY
87
SeniOr
SE
Major: Phys1cal EducatiOn

78

RUSSELL BECK
Junior
DT
Major: Socwlogy

THOMAS CENTOFANTI
73
Sophomore
T
Major: Physical Education

65

SCOTT CLARK
Junior
LB
Major: Liberal Arts

CHARLES DRANKOSK
44
Senior
F"
Major: Physical EducatiOn

THOMAS ELLIOTT
40
Sophomore
S
Major: Business Admin.

TERRENCE ENDRESS
82
Junior
TE
Major: Business Admin.

PRENTIS HE LEY
Junior
DE
90
Major: Physical Education

29

RICHARD HORN
Junior
Major: English

S

23

THOMAS KOWALEWSKI
62
Senior
G
Major: Business Admin.

85

MICHAEL MASER
64
Senior
G
Major: Physical Education

19

PAUL LA G
Junior
TE
Major: Liberal Arts

34

MICHAEL LUZ Y
Junior
LB
Major: History

NICHOLAS KISH
Senior
DH
Major: History

thirty-seven

�e

10
Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
You can shave it with a razor blade like your father does.
And each time you do your beard will grow backa little more
difficult. Until one day shaving's no longer a
chore. It's an agony.
Look no further than your father's face
for proof.
But fortunately, you're catching your
beard at an early age. You can break it in to be
just as shaveable 10 and 20 years from
now as it is today.
With a REMINGTO~ shaver
And if you think the kind of shave we're selling won't be
close enough for you, you're wrong.
Our new blades are sharper than anything that's been in an
electric shaver before. And there's a dial that
lets you adjust them for your skin and beard.
What's more, you can dial a REMINGTON
REMINGTON
electric shaver into a sideburn trimmer
Admittedly, it costs more to buy our
electric shaver than a razor and some blades.
But it's a good investment.
These next few years will determine how
you and your beard will get along for the rest REMINGTON
of your lives. ~SPE~FIAI\0'"
0 ..... .......... .... .

thirty-eight

(I.(CfiiiiC SH .., v(lt OlviSIO &lt;j ,BitiOCE POitr,COfllf\j[CTICUT.

�BUFFALO

50

JAMES MOSHER
Senior
LB
Major: History

JOSEPH RICCELLI
75
Senwr
DT
Major: Phy,ical Education

81

THOMAS MURPHY
Senior
DE
Major: History

PATRICK PATTERSON
20
Junior
TB
Major: Liberal Arts

EDWARD PERRY
11
Sophomore
QB
Major: Physical Education

JOHN PRZYBYCIEN
84
Senior
DE
Major: Business Admin.

D.A..VID RICH'\"ER
Senior
LB
Major: HI&gt;tory

JOH
74
Sophomore
T
Major: Business Admin.

KE NETH RUTKOWSKI
21
Senior
TB
Major. Business Admin.

69

32

DONALD SABO
Senior
LB
Major: History

THOMAS VIG EAU
86
Sophomore
DE
Major: Physical Educatwn

DANIEL WALGATE
70
Junior
DT
Major: Physical Education

JOH
52

WESOLOWSKI
Senior
C
Major: History

77

CHRIS WOLF
Junior
T
Major: Liberal Arts

JOSEPH ZELMA SKI
35
Sophomore
FB
Major: Physical Education

thirty-nine

�•

•

PATRONS

George E. Easterbrook Kevin Kennedy
Harold F. Meese
Edward A. Rath, Jr.
Mr. Gates
Arthur Mogerman
Mr. Fred White
William R. Root
Harlan Swift
Leo J. Rosen
Charles Diebold Ill
Gerald C. Saltarelli
Harold M. Harris
Irving Friedman
J. Richard Hart
Hessren J. Cohen
Charles J. McDonough Anthony J. Renaldo
Mr. John R. Shanor
John Markarian
Samuel D. Magavern
Mr. Vinal
Grover R. James, Jr. Stephen F. Kissel
Rudolph V. Johnson
Leonard Swagler
George L. Grobe, Jr.
William G. Willis
Robert D. Fernbach
Walter Brock
Edwin F. Jaeckle
Charles R. Diebold
Michael
G. Foster
Joseph A. LaNasa
George
W.
Ferrick
Ross M. Cellino
Joseph
H. Chirlin
Mr.
Ronald G. Korn
James R. Sullivan
Roy Seibel
Irvin L. Terry
Mr. Lee
A Friend
William H. Georgi
Thornton G. Edwards Mr. Gerald S. Lippes
Roland Lord O'Brian
Frank T. Riforgiato
Thomas E. O'Brien
Joseph M. Crotty
Paul C. Stillman
James P. Cole
William C. Murty
Reinhardt L. Wende
Mr. Kuehlewind
Eugene W. Salisbury
Sheldon Hurwitz
Leo M. Michalek
Leo H. Less
Robert J. Metzen
Gertrude Swarthout
Edmond J. Brown, Jr.
Aaron I. Feuerstein
Murray J. Hall
Russell Kidder, Jr.
Vincent F. Harrington
James C. McGarvey Norbert C. Hoffmeyer
Robert L. Defranco
Gregory T. Jacobs
Paul W. Oakmar
Robert F. Milks
Chester P. Glor, Jr.
W. Hinson Jones
Milton M. Bron
Raymond A. Monin
Arnold Dilaura
Paul J. Mraz, Jr.
William E. Potter
Irwin H. Cheskin
Nicholas Haragos
A. Donald Gilden
Waldron S. Hayes, Jr.
Frank J. Cain
Brunner's Tavern
James P. Hefflernan
John M. Bissell
David P. Feldman
Henry W. Killeen
Allan V. Gibbons
Horace A. Battaglia
Edward W. Kinney
Lewis J. Greenky
O'Neill A. Kline
Saul Lerner
Donald R. Barber
William W. Rathke
Joseph J. Lyons
John
F. Macauley
A Friend
Paul B. Hoolihan, Co.
Harold Frantzen

forty

•

Arthur F. Movalli
Fred Roneker
Mr. G. Goldfarb
Charles G. Salisbury Robert R. Barrett
B. R. Hoffman
M. Robert Koren
Buffalo Uniform Shop Irvin L. Terry
Howard H. Baker, Co. James R. Sullivan
Seymour Knox
Edwin F. Jaeckle
George N. Seifert
George N. Seifert
William Hildebrand, Jr.Ronald W. Plewniak Robert D. Fernbach
Ronald W. Plewniak
Charles H. Diefendorf George L. Grobe, Jr.
John H. Dittman
Robert J. Metzen
Rudolph U. Johnson
Emil J. Celmer
John H. Dittman
Stephen F. Kissel
Harold A. Adel
Emil J. Celmer
Samuel D. Magavern
Claude F. Shuchter
Harold A. Adel
Anthony J. Renaldo
Robert B. Adam
Claude F. Shuchter
Harlan Swift
Max Burstein
Mr. Fred White
Robert B. Adam
Stanley B. Black
Edward A. Rath, Jr.
Max Burstein
Abraham Carrel
Irving Fudeman
Stanley B. Blach
Charles Banas
Grover R. James, Jr.
William W. Rathke
Michael Swados
J. Edwin Alford
Lewis J. Greenky
James J. Ailinger
Allan V. Gibbons
William C. Baird
Charles W. Pankow, Jr. B
, T
Charles Banas
runners avern
David J. Mahoney, Jr.
Abraham Carrel
J. Eugene McMahon E. Perry Spink
Robert J. Collins
John A. Krull
Vincent Scamurra
Edward F. Mimmack
Robert E. Rich, Sr.
Paul A. Foley
Herbert R. Reitz
Robert S. Wolfson
Frederick B. Wilkes
Phillip V. Vullo
Leo J. Rosen
Hugh McM. Russ
Windelberg
Merrill
William R. Root
Arthur F. Movalli
Manuel S. Wortzman
Arthur Mogerman
M. Robert Koren
Charles W. Pankow, Jr.
Frank
Meyers
Seymour Knox
Albert Green
Harold F. Meese
John M. Galvin
Sheldon
Hurwitz
James
J. Ailinger
Charles W. Millard, Jr.
George
E.
Easterbrook
Michael
Swados
Robert J. Collins
Frank T. Riforgiato
Genesee Radio and
William C. Baird
William
H.
Georgi
Parts Co., Inc.
Edward F. Mimmack
Roy
Seibel
Metro
Dinner Theatre
Charles H. Diefendorf
M.
Cellino
Invitation
Club
Ross
Manuel S. Wortzman
R.
Diebold
Samual
R.
Miserendino
Charles
J. Edwin Alford
Pearce &amp; Pearce
Walter Brock
Herbert R. Reitz
Co., Inc.
William G. Willis
Robert S. Wolfson
William Hildebrand, Jr.
Leonard Swagler
Edward Andrews
Mr. and Mrs. John L.
Mr. Keiff
Vincent Scamurra
Curtis
Charles
J.
McDonaugh
E. Perry Spink
Mr.
and Mrs. Norman
Howard A. Potter, Inc. Victor Peterson
Haber
Reinhardt W. Wende
Charles G. Salisbury
Charles S. Matthews David J. Mahoney, Jr. Houdaille Industries
J. Eugene McMahon
Inc.
Russell Kidder, Jr.
John
A.
Krull
James
C. McGarvey
Frank A. Sedita Jr.
Paul A. Foley
Don Barnett
Samuel R. Miserendino
R. C. Dewey, Inc.
Charles W. Millard Jr.
Chester P. Glor, Jr.
Frederick B. Wilkes
Arnold Di Laura
Hugh Me M. Russ
A. Donald Gilden

�BEST WISHES TO
THE U.B. BULLS

TAKE
UTIME OUT"

FOR ANOTHER
SUCCESSFUL
SEASON

to open a
dividend-earning
savings account
at

Before or After the Game- or Anytime!

RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE

BUFFALO

Next to Lord Amherst Motor Hotel

SAVINGS BANK

,Wain Street at the Thruway

Biggest and Oldest Savings Bank in Buffalo

LAUBE'S AMHERST

Main Office :
Main, Huron, Genesee and Washington Sts.

Plenty of Parking Space

Other Offices:
Bailey-Amherst

Seneca-Cazenovia
Delaware-Sheridan
Thruway Plaza
Town of Amherst
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

WALLEN RESTAURANT &amp; LOUNGE
ELLICOTT SQUARE BLDG.

BENTON ANNOUNCEMENTS
A Large Selection of Gifts for
Showers - Weddings - Birthdays

289 Main Street, Corner Swan
·
in all Pancakes, Waffles, Omelettes
Specialixmg
Featuring
Entrees: Steak, Roast Beef, Ch icken, Meatloaf
Plus 22 Varieties of Sandw iches
Cockta ils

PLANNING TO B'E MARRIED?
Benton Selection of Wedding Invitations
Is the Largest
3006 Bailey Ave . ... Near Kensington . . . 836-4100
China-Silverwar-Stainless Tablewa.-Stemwa.-Vases-Ceramics

* Greeting Cards

*
852-1932

* Stationery * Party Goods
Candles and * Floral Pieces

Open Thurs. and Fri. Evenings till 9 PM -

Sat. till G

104th ANNIVERSARY
1968 marks our 104th year of continuous business
serving the Buflalo area.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.
Est. 1864
REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
17-21 S. Division Street
Ellicott Square
Tl4-5700

Everything
for the

Amateur or Professional

a~;::w~,~·

Student and Faculty Discounts

FILMART

637 MAIN ST. FREE PARKING
5hea' sA~g~:al1oro;hoatro

Rear of Store
TL 3-2052

Open Mon . Thurs. T&gt;ll 9 PM

forty-one

�JONES-RICH
"~
DAIRY PRODUCTS
JONES-RICH MILK CORPORATION

•

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14209

1968 UB Athletic Administration

JAME S E. SIMON
Trnlner - Thernpl11t

DR. EDltlOND J. G I CEWI C Z
Athletic Phylllclan

DR. LEONARD T. SERFl:STIN I
Conch of Golf

E~ERY J. FISHER
Con&lt;"h of Cross- Country

SUNYAB-ers . . .
THINKING VACATION?

you be during :
THANKSGIVING RECESS

Nov. 26- Dec . 1

WINTER RECESS

Jan.

SPRING RECESS

Mar. 29- Apr. 6

15- Jan. 22

Whether it's a trip to Ft. lauderdale, California, the
Caribbean, Hawa ii: Europe, or anywhere . . . Stewart
&amp; Benson Travel Service will take care of your plane
reservations, hotel accomodations, everything to make
your vacation one fun-filled day after another! Instant confirmation on all reservations by phoning
853-6262.

Stewart &amp; Benson Travel Service
BUFFALO, N. Y.

853-6262

To serve you better, the Buffalo Statler Hilton has
gone all out in an extensive modern ization program .
Completely remodeled guest rooms, newly decorated
meeting rooms and the exciting Beef Barron Room for
hearty dming and superb cocktails will meet with your
full approval.

The Statler Hilton Hotel
BUFFALO, N. Y.

856-1000
forty-two

�PARK EDGE SELECT
NIAGARA
PINK NIAGARA

s

49
e

GAL.

forty-three

�1968 College Football Officials' Signals

=Vr=-+ " ~

~ ~ ~
2. llle~l Proc«lure,
Position, or SubstitutJon

3. lDep.l Motion

of scrim.Jnage or

4. lUegal Shift

5. Ilka:al Return

8. Delay of Came

I. Offside (Infraction

10. UruportsmanhLe
Conduct

free ldck formation)

II Illeaal use of
Hands and Arms

12. lntenf:iooa1
Croundine

19. BaD Dead;
U Hand b Moved from
Side to Side: Touchback

21. Safety

7. Personal Foul

8. Oippl.ns

22. Tlme out; Referee's

14. J~~t~~: or

J~ii,:LE::U

Forwaid

Interference

F1dd on Pass

17. Incomplete
Forward Pass,
Penalty Declined.
No Play, or No Score

18. Helping the Runna,
or Interlocked
Interference

2.4. Ball Ready for"Flay

25. Start the Clock

Locksmiths-Safe Experts
GOOD

LUCK

BULLS

23. First Down

~:=
tappina' b.uch on chest.

130rlll~~~~~na

9. Roughing the Kicker

20. Touchdown or
Field Cool

28. Loa of Down

TL 2-2769

.••

The Safe, Lock &amp; Key Corp.
Erie County Republican Committee

" Call us to discuss any lock problem"
204 PEARL STREET, BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

AL BELLANCA,

SALES -

Chairman

INSTALLATION - REPAIR

Safes, Locks, t&lt;eys, Door Closers
Distributors - Consultants

STEREO AND ELECTRONIC HEADQUARTERS

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.
HEATING- AIR CONDITIONING
Power Plants -

Process Piping -

Fire Protection

•
120 W. TUPPER

Buffalo-147 Genesee St.-856·1415

TL 4-8435

Buffa(o-Amherst-3240 Sheridan Dr. Cr. Bailey-835·2250-0pen Eves.
Niagara Falls- 1720 Pierce Ave.-285·9366

forty-four

�It's A Happening!
Fabulous selections of the great
campus looks that's as now and
WOW as you can get.
It's A Blow-Out!
Floor-to-floor, door-to-door bursting with values on what's in and
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Let the Kicks Happen for YOU
at Sattler's Boulevard Mall Store!
(or, if more convenient, Sattler's
998 Braodway)
Yes, You Can Charge it At All
Sattler's Stores!
• 998 Braodway
•

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•

Thruway Plaza

• Home Furnishings City, U.S. A.
Elmwood at Hertel
And, coming up fast • . • West
Seneca Mall

. .•.
•
•
,•
I

I

I

I

I

I

.
I

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I

I

I

'I

I

I

G

�Cbe~ro\et
Ca~nte Cou~e

Cap&lt;lte Sedan
lm~ala custom cou~e
lm~ala spo&lt;t cou~e
lm~ala s~o&lt;\ Sedan
lm~ala conve&lt;tlble
lm~ala ~-ooo&lt; sedan
Bel P..l&lt; ~-ooo&lt; sedan
Bel p..11 2-ooo&lt; Sedan
B.stayne ~-ooo&lt; sedan
B.stayne 2-0oo&lt; Sedan

t.\ahbU s~o&lt;t cou~e
f,\a\lbU S~Oit Sedan
f,\a\lbU Conve&lt;tlble
f,\ahbU 4-0oo&lt; Sedan
300 oeluxe spo&lt;t cou~e
300 oeluxe cou~e
300 Oeluxe 4-000' Sedan

"townsman StatiOn Vlaion
(2· &amp; 3-seat)
B&lt;ool&lt;wood Sta\lon Vlaion
(2-seat)
no• Vlneelbase
ContOUIS (state VjaiOn
(2· &amp; 3-seat)
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(2- &amp; 3-seat)
G&lt;eenbne&lt; Station Vlaion
(2· &amp; 3-seat)
Nomad statiOn VI non
(2-seat)

camaro
spo&lt;t cou~e
Conve&lt;tlble

cou~e

Sedan

cor~a\r
f,\onra spo&lt;t coupe
f,\onti conve&lt;tlble
Co&lt;Val&lt; 500 spo&lt;t cou~e

\\9" Vlneelbase
l(.miswood (state Vlaion
(2· &amp; 3-seat)
l(.miswood StatiOn Vlaion
(2· &amp; 3-seat)

co~ette
coupe
conve&lt;tlble

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1968-10-12 Buffalo - Delaware</text>
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                <text> Official Program - fifity cents</text>
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                <text> October 12, 1968 - Rotary Field</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495939">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1968-10-12</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;. If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1717620">
                    <text>Boston College
vs. Buffalo

�More than 30 million gallons of quality
fuel in constant reserve. That's one
more reason why Metropolitan
Petroleum is the largest independent
fuel oil distributor in New England.
Our "bench" keeps our present customers
warm ... and is always ready to serve
new members of our expanding team.

METROPOLITAN PETROLEUM COMPANY OF MASS.
500 NEPONSET AVENUE, BOSTON • TEL. 288-1100

I

�.

'

in.ntnu Q1nllrgr
1J1nnthall

Vol. 37, No. 1

October 5, 1968

FOOTBALL PROGRAM

BUFFALO

BOSTON

UNIVE

COLLEGE

FEATURES-

DEPARTMENTS-

14 Disruption In P rague

13

Notes on Boston College Athletics
By Eddie Miller '57
20 Ruffa lo Head Coach Richard "Doc" Urich
10 Buffalo Roster
13 Today's Officials
B T~e Probable Starting Lineups and Squads
11 Boston College Head Co~ch joe Yukica
25 Boston Colleg:: Roster
I R Buffalo Statistics
19 Boston College Statistics
44 EJgle Hunters--Our Opponents

In mid-August, Father James W. Skehan, S.J., the chairman
of B.C.'s Department of Geology and Geophysics was in
Czechoslovakia on a combination Geological Congre s meeting and field trip through eastern Slovakian mining districts.
Ron Nief of our Public Relations staff reports on a summer
Father Skehan will never forget.

17

27

33

SITY

A Guy Named Joe
Ernie Roberts, Spo rts Editor of the Evening Globe and an
old friend of Joe Yukica, gives us some int~resting background on our new head football coach. Ernie wa; the spor ts
publicist at Dartmouth while Joe was a member of the "Big
Green" coaching staff and he knows Joe more in•imately
perhaps than any other sports writer in Boston.

PHOTOS3

Boston College Admrnistration
Buffalo Administration
Boston College P layers
Buffalo P layers
T,.am P hoto

Captain Gary Andrachik
D . Leo Monahan, veteran Record-American columnist,
talked at length with injured captain Ga ry Andrach ik and
has written an interesting account of the role that Gary will
play dur ing the '68 season even though the outstanding
linebacker has been ruled out of competition for the entire
season due to a reoccu ring neck injury.

COVER-

Modern Use of the T
One of a series by Arthur Sampson, one of the most ,,·ell
know n and respected football \\'riters in the country and a
long time loyal fri end of Boston College.

~e\\' head coach joe Yukica and captain Gary Andrachik caught
by ac•! photographer Dick Raphael on the la\\'n of Bapst Library
with the Towers on the H eights in the background.

5
6
28
3~

1968 SCHEDULE

Published by the Boston College Athletic Association
All Rights Reserved
EDWARD D. MILLER , Editor
JAMES G . BLAKE and KEVIN P. KELLEY, Ass istant Ed itors
JOHN J. LARNER, Con t ributing Ed itor
Representat ives for Advert ising :
ARTHUR G . SAMPSON , local
HAROLD 0 . ZIMMAN , Notiona l
Editorial Contributors: John Lerner, Tom Monaha n, Nat Hosen f us ,
Ernie Roberts, Kev in Kelley, J im Bloke, Ron Neif, D. leo Mon a han,
Arthur Sampson
Photos by : Fosch Stud ios, Jet Commerc ial Photographers, Richard
Raphael , Ed Amenta , Fronk Fern in o, U. of B. Aud io-Visu al Ce nt ec.
(Sketch at top of this page by Jock Frc &lt;t)

Sept. 28 Na vy at Anr.opoli s 49- 15

Nov . 9 at Arm y

O ct. 4 Buffa 1o

Nov . 16 Virg inia Military

O ct. 12 Vill anova

Nov . 23 Mos s. a t Am he rs t

Oct. 19 a t Tulo no

Nov. 30 Holy Cro ss

O .:t. 26 Penn St&lt;•te

1968 FRESHMEN SCHEDULE
Oct. 18 Harva rd

Nov . 8 Da rtmouth JV's

Oct . 27 at Ho ly Cro ss

N'&gt;v. 15 at Do rtm.:&gt;u th

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' 53

�BOSTON
COLLEGE
Very Rev. W. Seavey Joyce, S.J.
President

William J. Flynn
Director of Athletics

Rev. David F. Carroll, S.J .
Faculty Moderator of
Athletics

Edward B. Carroll
Asst. Athletic Director

3

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Dr. Martin Meyerson
President

James E. Peelle
Director of Athletics

Richard W. (Doc) Urich
Head Coach

5

�GARY ANDRACHIK

DAVE BENNEn

GENE COMELLA

JOHN COOKSON

LARRY DANIELS

JOHN FITZGERALD

MONDELL DAVIS

JEFF FLEMING

�JOHN BONISTALLI

BOB BOULEY

MIKE CORRIGAN

WALT CULLEN

JOE CUNNINGHAM

GARY DANCEWICZ

PAUL DELLAVILLA

MIKE DENNIS

JOHN EGAN

MIKE FALLON

BERNIE GALICKAS

BOB GALLIVAN

BARRY GALLUP

GEORGE GILL

JIM CATONE

PAUL CAVANAGH

�1968

NEW ENGLAND

S. S. PIERCE

FOOTBALL CAMP

S. S. PIERCE has become America's pacesetter for first quality food products and convenient service. At S. S. Pierce stores, you
will find adventure and excitement and a wide
selection of unique foods and delicacies.

JOHN ANDERSON

JOE YUKICA, HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, BOSTON COLLEGE
TOM CAHILL, HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, U.S. MILITARY ACADEMY
JIM ROOT, HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, U. OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
JOHN TONER, HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, U. OF CONN.
BOB BLACKMAN, HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, DARTMOUTH COL.
WARREN SCHMAKEL, HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, BOSTON UNIV.
JACK MUSICK, HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, CORNELL UNIVERSITY
LEN JARDINE, HEAD FOOTBALL COACH, BROWN UNIVERSITY
JIM DUNN, OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR, U. OF TENN.
JAKE CROUTHAMEL, DEFENSIVE BACKFIELD COACH,
DARTMOUTH COLLEGE
BILL BOWES, OFFENSIVE LINE COACH, BOSTON COLLEGE
RON CARBONE, DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR, SOUTH CONN . U.
JOHN ANDERSON, DEFENSIVE LINE COACH, BOSTON COLLEGE
AND MANY OUTSTANDING HIGH SCHOOL COACHES
JAKE CROUTHAMEL AND JOHN ANDERSON, CO-DIRECTORS

S. S. PIERCE'S unequalled variety includes:
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION WRITE TO
JOHN ANDERSON
BOSTON COLLEGE, CHESTNUT HILL 02167

Don't forget to visit our Chestnut Hill store
where you will find New England's most modern
meat and produce section and a new cozy coffee
shop, "On the Green" where you may relax
while shopping.

IT'S NOT TOO EARLY
TO MAKE PLANS FOR

1st SESSION: JUNE 2.2.- 2.8, 1969
2.nd SESSION: JUNE 2.9-JULY 5,1969

JOE YUKICA'S
Greater Boston Football Day Camp
AUGUST 11 THROUGH AUGUST 15, 1969

e

For Boys From Grades 9 - 12

e

2 Sessions Daily

e
e

$35.00 Fee Includes Lunch
Instructors Include Coach
Yukica and his B.C. assistants
plus other top names in college coaching
REGISTRATION BlANK

COACH JOE YUKICA

Name _

------ ______ Age .

Address
OBJECTIVES
1. To teach specifically the skills and techniques re·
lated to individual football positions (both begin ning and advanced&gt;.
2. To teach the methods utilized in increasing coordination, balance, quickness and general control
of the body necessary in football.
3. To initiate a general conditioning program that
will carry over into the football season.
4. To teach the specialty skills of punting and place
kicking .
5. To emphasize the traits and characteristics of
fair play, leadership and athletic discipline.
6. To introduce weight training through the use of
the exergeni.

School __

Phone

Parents Name .

City
__ . ____ _

Special Phase of Game (Please check): Kicking _
Defensive Back
End Play .
Linebacking
Offense
.. Defense
Please Mail Registration

State

Coach
QB ...... Offensive Back .
line Play ___
Centering

Blank and Fee To:
Joe Yukica, Head Football Coach
Boston College
Roberts Center
Chestnut Hill, Mass. 02167

For additional information or more applications, write to the above address or call
332-3200 Extension 395 or 385.

8

�DICK GILL

JIM GRACE

GARY GUENTHER

FRANK "RED" HARRIS

KERRY HORMAN

MIKE JOHNSON

JIM KING

STEVE KIVES

DICK KRONER

RICH KUROWSKI

MIKE LARDNER

GEORGE LAVOIE

PETE LUPOLI

JOSEPH MARZETTI

JIM McCOOL

�ED McDONALD

JOE McDONALD

PETE McHUGH

JIM MILLHAM

JIM O'SHEA

BILL RABADAN

JERRY RAGOSA

MIKE ROBERTSON

JOHN SALMON

DICK TATARONIS

DAVE THOMAS

TOM UZDAVINIS

FRED WILLIS

DAN ZAILSKAS

JIM O'REILLY, Senior Monoger

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11

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Reviewing plans are, from left, E . F . Carleton,
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12

�By

EDDIE MILLER

'57

Director of Sports Information

T
HA:'\KS to Joe Yukica, his excellent young staff, &lt;1
"new breed" of young football players with the "old"

We're delighted to have our entire Boston College
football schedule broadcast by vVBZ radio, :\'ew England's number one station. WBZ's 50,000 watts and
1mazing signal carries throughout :'\ew England and in
fact into a total of 31 states. So, when you can't get out
to see the Eagles in the flesh, tune in to 10.1 on your dial
and hear the tremendous team of Bob Starr and our old
friend Dom Valentino, bring you all the action and color
right through the finale with Holy Cross on ·owmber
30.

Boston College spirit, and a tremendous amount of hard
work, all of us who love the maroon and gold, are as
proud as proud can be after the astonishing start BC
football is off to this year. Certainly that great win over
Navy last Saturday will go down in Eagle historv as one
of the biggest victories ever recorded.
It is doubtful if there was ever a Boston College team
more completely prepared mentally, physically and
psychologically than Joe Yukica's first edition at Annapolis. ::\Tow, if we can all be determined to back Joe
and the boys 100% in every remaining game no matter
what, 1968 will prove to be one of the most satisfyin~
and memorable in our years of glorious gridiron tradition come 4 p.m. Saturday, :'\ovember 30.

An interesting note in the fact that a quarterback
named l\farzetti \Vas at the helm in each of BC's two
greatest football victories over the last 25 years or so.
It \\·as Larrv who ran the team and thre\\· the TD
·'bomb" to c·aptain Bill Cronin in the \\·aning seconds
of the great BC 21 - 14 win over 6th ranked Syracuse
on September 19, 1964. Four years later. almost to the
Saturday, it was kid brother, Joe, who masterfully
directed the Eagle attack which scuttled the :'\avy.

Speaking of tradition, this 1968 season marks our
Diamond Jubilee of Football. We'll tr&lt;1ce some of thf'
highliohts of the long maroon and gold line over those
75 years from 189 to the present in our Penn State
program, October 26, right in the middle of the season.

Before each home game at Boston College, alumni
and their friends are invited to stop for lunch at .\lumni
Hall. Frankfurters, sandwiches and light dessert will be
available as well as refreshments and all memhers of the
family are welcome.

An old and respected Catholic college rival, \ ' illanova
University from Philadelphia's :\lain Line, will be our
opponent here at the stadium next Saturday afternoon.
Ticket sales have perked up markedly for almost every
remaining game on our schedule and Villanova is no
exception. So, plan to pick up your tickets for next
Saturday and any remaining game early this week. \\'e
will have our ticket office in Robert's Center open every
week night until 8 o'clock for your convenience.

After the game, the traditional open-house will be
held at .\lumni Hall. In addition, this year something
new has been added. A hearty buffet of hot and cold
hors d'oeuvres \Yill be available in Philoma theia Hall.
adjacent to Alumni Hall. This will be offered at a very
nominal cost of $2 per person.

13

�DISRUPTION
By

RON NIEF

F

In many of the towns visited by the Jesuit geologist
he went looking for the rectory to find the priests. In
most cases the rectory was vacant or nonexistent.

OR Rev. James W. Skehan, S.]., it was a summer
he will never forget.

The chairman of the Boston College Department of
Geology and Geophysics spent a good part of his summer in Czechoslovakia until he was evicted from the
country.

CHURCH-STATE MEETING

J

UST the day before the occupation of Czechoslovakia
by Warsaw Pact troops, an historic meeting took
place between six Czechoslovakian bishops and the
country's president, Ludvik Svoboda. At this meeting
the first since the Communist takeover in 1948, the
prelates agreed to aid in the development of the country.

He was not alone, for he was with some 3,000 international scientists attending the world-wide Geological
Congress meetings in Prague.
In mid-August, Fr. Skehan was in the eastern region
of Slovakia on geological field trips through the mining
tiistrict of Banska Stavnika. This predominantly Catholic region gave some insight into the liberalizing of attitudes in the country in the last nine months.

Many of the reforms were just taking effect when the
Russians started to thwart the liberalization processes
of the Svoboda-Dubcek-Cernik government. Most of
the reforms are now uncertain.

In the cities of this eastern European country one
could see the changes just by looking in shop windows
and at the number of cars in the street.

On August 19, Fr. Skehan left Kosice in Slovakia and
flew to Prague where, two days later he witnessed the
invasion of the \Varsaw Pact troops. In his words:

In the rural areas, however, the changes were deeper.
They were in the form of religious freedom.

"I was staying at the International Hotel, a former
Russian Army barracks. The first day of the International Geological Congress included the customary welcoming addresses from the Lord Mayor of Prague and
Mr. Cernik, the premier. On August 20 we got down
to work.

The Czechs have lived in fear of following their religion for 20 years. They have followed a church in
exile. Catholics were unable to attend the same church
two weeks in a row for fear they would be spotted and
reported by secret police. Those who refused to become
members of the Communist Party because of its ideological conflict with Catholicism have suffered in their
work and sacrificed promotions.

"The night of the 20th I spent a sleepless night due
to the rumbling of heavy trucks in the street below. It
was only the following morning at 6:30 a.m. when I
went to the lobby that I learned the country had been
invaded.

Prior to January of this year the seminaries were
tightly restricted. Most were closed down. Those that
remained open allowed no more than one or two students a year to start studies. ~obody knows how many
priests have been ordained in recent years.
Fr. Skehan said. "Despite the
faced Catholics who wished to
every town had its church and
its grotto or shrine."

"Hotel guests soon assembled in the lobby to watch
the activity on television. Within a few hours the television stations were off the air. Soon after that Radio
Free :Bratislava reported that the doors to the studio
were being broken down and they would have to leave
the air. The final selection on the program was a
funeral dirge.

Since January more than 100 seminarians have been
allowed to start studies, priests have had charges dropped that were placed against them, and six bishops
have been reinstated .

"The people remained calm. The key to the resistance
was communication. Everybody had a transistor radio
and Radio Free Prague continued to broadcast from a
number of locations. Every hour or so there would be

"I was astonished"
many problems which
practice their religion,
almost every crossroad

14

�IN PRAGUE

MAP-READER-It could be a study by Rev. James W. Skehan, S.J., on how to get out of Prague this
summer, or it could be a study of the geological formations of mountains in Europe. In either case, the
chairman of the Geology and Geophysics Department had a great interest in both.

a report of another factory where the workers had voted
continued support for the Svoboda-Dubcek-Cernik
government.

gested liquidation for some 40,000 Czech intellectuals.
There was no choice but to leave.
"I know some very fine Russian scientists" Fr. Ske~
han said, "but the Russian politicians are animals."

"I was not afraid at any time. What I felt was a
tingling sensation as I walked past tanks and soldiers
carrying submachine guns."

The Boston College professor left the occupied
country with the highest praise for the Czechs. "They
are the most hospitable people I have met- they have
warm personalities, they are highly organized and they
have a desire to do everything right."

The XXIII International Geological Congress was
disrupted and when word came that the building being
used for meetings would be occupied that afternoon, the
congress came to an end.

As the foreign scientists boarded the trains to leave,
the Czechs called after them- "tell all that you have
seen here."

Embassies advised foreign v1s1tors to leave the
country as soon as possible. Russia's Pravda had sug-

15

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16

�A Guy Named
Joe ...
By ERNIE RoBERTS
Sports Editor, Boston Evening Globe
the top minds in football and he was intelligent and
dedicated enough to learn as much as possible from all
of them.
His tutor at Penn State was the old master, Rip
Engle, who helped instill toughness and football psychology into the young end. Then after Joe had learned
how to build a winning program in high school football
at Central Dauphin High in Harrisburg, he absorbed
more knowledge from the great Glenn Killinger in one
undefeated year as assistant at Westchester State.
In 1961, his master's degree in education behind him
and with Engle's endorsement, Yukica joined Bob
Blackman at Dartmouth. Even on that eminently qualified staff Joe quickly demonstrated the potential of a
future great coach.
One of his key assignments at Hanover annually wa-s
was to scout Harvard. I was doing public relations at
Dartmouth then and I can well remember the exquisitely documented reports that Yukica would deliver on
the Sunday night prior to the Harvard game. The scene
would be the upstairs conference room in Davis Field
House, crowded with 60 hushed, intent Dartmouth football players. When he had finished his scout report, you
were convinced that Dartmouth knew more about Harvard than the Crimson staff itself and the Big Green
players would break into spontaneous, rare applause.
There is the stamp of Blackman on much of what
Yukica now is doing at B.C.-His clean cut young staff
which can represent Boston College so well on the road
during the off season as well as on the field, the mailing bulletins to the entire squad during the summer,
the written queries to some 5,000 high school coaches
around the nation, the detailed, high speed practices
with their monotony-breaking pass games and unusual
agility drills.
Yukica, of course, needed one final ingredient before
accepting the challenge at B.C. He needed the experience of being a head college coach, of revitalizing a
weak football situation, of testing his recruiting style
and initiating his own coaching techniques.
This he got in the past two years at New Hampshire
with the encouragement and solid backing of Andy
Mooradian. He brought the previously winless Wildcats
back to life in their first game under him in 1966 and
last season won ew England Coach of the Year honors
by giving ortheastern its only defeat of the year and
losing only three games by a total of eight points.
B.C. and Joe Yukica still have a long path to climb
to return the Eagles to their desired perch in Eastern
football. But you can believe that his first B.C. squad
will be well conditioned, respectable in its performance
on the field and, most important, getting some fun out
of the game.
And it's going to be fun again for all of us to come
out to the Heights to watch a football game.

Joseph Michael Yukica had signed a three year contract to coach Boston College football and now he was
surrounded by the press and television people and a
scattering of B.C. brass. Came a lull in the questioning
and this new Man of The Heights noticed B.C. athletic
director Bill Flynn nearby.
"Say, Bill," called Yukica with a wink at a friend.
"now that I've signed the contract and before we go up
to see the Father Rector, I think I should tell you I'm
really not Catholic."
Boston's mediamen gasped, then chuckled as they
welcomed a delightful new humor to the scene.
Yukica, a 37-year-old Pennsylvanian of Croatian descent, has, of course, brought more than laughs to the
Eagle lair. He and his young six-man staff have plied
their first B.C. squad with enthusiasm and hard work,
detail and desire. "We really hit out there," said linebacker Jim McCool, "but there's something new all the
time and we never stand around. There's no drudgery
to it. The practice time seems to fly by."
One Bald Eagle watched the squad work out last
Spring, told his friends, "That's the best football practice I've seen here since 1940."
Another, the dad of a current B.C. player, says, "My
son used to come home last Fall and would hardly open
his mouth about football. ~ow he comes home and he
never shuts up. He's bubbling over with enthusiasm."
During the two-a-day practice sessions last month I
phoned Yukica one Wednesday morning and was surprised to catch him in his office. "Don't tell me you gave
the boys this morning off?" I asked.
"Well, yes," he admitted. "Y'see, we scrimmaged
Monday afternoon, Tuesday morning and again in the
afternoon. The boys were a bit tired last night.
"Of course," he added quickly, "we will work a little
longer than usual this afternoon."
Rarely have the man and the situation been so well
fitted to each other as were Joe Yukica and Boston College when the bell tolled for Jim Miller last December.
B.C. from its administration to its alumni wanted a
healthy representative football program. It has the tradition, the campus, the academic quality to attract the
necessary players. But the college needed a salesman,
an organizer, an original thinker, a dedicated, hardskinned football man to compete with the Penn States,
Syracuses, otre Dames of today.
It almost seemed that Joe Yukica (pronounced YooKEE-ka) had been preparing for this specific opportunity since his Midland (Pa.) High days as an end
and star receiver. "I first began to think of being a football coach at that time. I had a coach named Jim Myers,
an inspiration to me, and my first ambition was to become his assistant some day. He was killed in an auto
accident before I could realize that hope," says Yukica.
Joe was fortunate to play and coach under some of

17

�DISTRIBUTED BY

AUGUST A. BUSCH &amp; CO. OF MASS.. INC.

CAMBRIDGE. MASS.

UN-4-5150

BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFF

OPP

10
21
23

28

9/14 (A) Iowa State
9/21 (H) Kent State
9/28 (H) U. Mass
WON 2, LOST 1

13
0

SCORE BY PERIODS: (1 game only)
Buffalo
0
9 7
Opp.
0
0
0

7 - 23
0- 0

PASS INTERCEPTIONS:
Tom ELLIOTT
John lUPIENSKI
Tom JACOPS
Dan MARTIN
Nick KISH

YDS
17

NO

8
4
0
0

INDIVIDUALS
RUSHING:

TEAM TOTALS:

BUFF

OPP

52

so

Yardage Rushing

509

325

Yardage Passing

358

546

TOTAl YARDAGE GAINED

867

871

First Downs

Passes Attempted

56

83

Paues Completed

37

29

Poues Intercepted by
Punting Ave.
Kick Return Yardage

5
35.8

TC
Ken RUTKOWSKI
45
Joe ZELMANSKI
35
Pat PATERSON
38
Chuck DRANKOSKI
4
Denny MASON
33
Gary CHAPP
2

YG
198
143
116
24
26

6

c

PASSING:
Denny MASON

37

YL
0
0
0
0
0
0

A

56

NY Avg TD
198 4.4 1
143 4.3 2
116 3.1 1
24 6.0 0
26
.7 0
6 3.0 0

Yds INT TO
358 3 2

PUNTING:
Paul JACK

PUNT RETURNS:
Ken RUTKOWSKI

NO
22

YDS
786

NO

5

AVG
35.8

YDS
30
0

0
0

NO

YDS

TO

5

so

4

63

0
0

Nick KISH

KICKOFF RETURNS:
Chuck DRANKOSKI
Pat PATERSO

TO

3
34.5

165

187

Fumbles/ lost

11/5

3/2

Penalties/ Yardage

9/94

14/152

RECEIVING:
Ken RUTKOWSKI
Dick ASHLEY
Paul LANG

NO
13
12

9

18

YDS

84
119
134

TO
2
0
0

SCORING:
Ken RUTKOWSKI
Joe ZALMANSKI
Pat PATERSON
Bob EMBOW

TO
EP
FG
3
0
0
2
0
0
1
0
0
0 S/ 6 2/3

PTS
18
12

6
11

�~~~--~--

BOSTON COLLEGE STATISTICS
BC
49

9 / 28 (A) Navy
WON 1, LOST 0

TEAM TOTAlS :
First Downs
Yardage Rushing
Yardage Passing
TOTAl YARDAGE GAINED:

Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
Passes Intercepted By
Punting Average
Kick Return Yardage
Fumbles / lost
Penalties / Yardage

BC

OPP

22
307
170
477

16
203
119
322

13
10
3
42
24
1/ 1
8/ 72

RUSHING :
Dave BENNETT
Jim CATONE
Fred WILLIS
Joe McDONAlD
Mike JOHNSON
Peter McHUGH
Joe MARZETTI

TC YG
17 156
16 105
5 20
5 19
4
9
9
1
7 13

YL NY Avg TO
0 156 9.2
0 105 6.5
0 20 4.0
0 19 3.8
1
B 2.0
0
9 9.0
23 -10 -1.43

PUNT RETURNS:
John SALMON
George Gill
John COOKSON

NO

YDS
14
11
7

TO
0
0
0

KICKOFF RETURNS:
Fred WILLIS
Walt BRENNAN

NO

YDS
22
2

TO
0
0

FG
0

PTS

5/ 6
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

18
6
6
6

c

PASSING:
Joe MARZETTI
Frank HARRIS

23

A
10

8
2

3

RECEIVING :
Barry GAllUP
Jim CATONE
Dave BENNETT
George Gill

5 / 69

NO
3
2
2

20
7

8
0

0
0
0
0
1

Yds INT TO
132
3B

0

3

YDS
84
15
17

NO

YDS
10

Gary DANCEWICZ
Jim KING
Mandell DAVIS

0 21-49
8 - 15
0

TO

35

PASS INTERCEPTIONS:
SCORE BY PERIODS:
Boston College
Opponent

3

6
35.7
150
0/ 0

5
11

WISHES
to
JOE YUKICA

AND THE B.C. TEAM
from

FORE RIVER MOTORS, INC.
Bill ABEl Y '49 GENERAl MANAGER

LINCOLN CONTINENTAL * COUGAR
MERCURY * MONTEGO * COMET
418 QUINCY AVENUE,
JUNCTION OF SOUTHERN ARTERY
QUINCY,
MASSACHUSETTS

19

AVG
42

YDS
168

NO
4

PUNTING:
Mike ROBERTSON

INDIVIDUALS

OPP
15

SCORING:
Bob GALLIVAN

TO
0

Dave BENNETT
Jim CATONE
Barry GAllUP
Joe MARZETTI

3

EP

5

�1968

BUFFALO
ROSTER
No.

Name

Pos. Class Age Ht.

10 Joseph Moresco
QB
11 Edward Perry
QB
12 Robert Stiscak
DHB
15 Daniel Martin
DI:!B
16 ••Robert Embow
KSP
17 "Paul Jack
QB-KSP
19 "Dennis Mason (CC)
QB
20 "Patrick Patterson
TB
21 "Kenneth Rutkowski
TB
23 Nicholas Kish
DHB
24 Karl Zalar
DHB
25 Harry Bell
lB
26 Joel Jacobs
S
29 "Richard Horn
S
30 Eugene Hernquist
lB
32 ••David Richner
lB
33 John Zeek
FB
34 "Michael luzny
lB
35 Joseph Zelmanski
FB
36 Barnard Woodward
Fl
37 Steven McCullough
lB
38 Gary Chapp
FB
40 Thomas Elliott
S
42 leonard Nixon
DHB
44 ••charles Drankoski
Fl
45 •cary Grubbs
DHB
46 Kevin Hogan
HB
48 Joseph Hlavenka
SE
49 John Faller
TB
50 ••James Mosher
lB
51 Robert Moler
C
52 ••John Wesolowski
C
56 David Chernega
lB
57 Dennis Albaneze
DT
58 Charles Donnor
C
59 Edward Kershaw
lB
60 Patrick Carney
G
61 Jerry Elwell
G
62 **Thomas Kowalewski
G
63 Greg Walters
G
64 ••Michael Maser
G
65 •scott Clark
lB
66 ••John lupienski
lB
67 Bernard Minch
DT
68 William Hayden
G
69 *Donald Sabo &lt;CCl
lB
70 *Daniel Walgate
DT
71 Joseph Hudson
T
72 Thomas Milarski
DT
73 Thomas Centofanti
T
74 John Rio
T
75 ••Joseph Riccelli
DT
76 Frank Reid
T
77 *Chris Wolf
T
78 Russell Beck
DT
79 Barry Atkinson
DT
80 John Shine
SE
81 *Thomas Murphy
DE
82 *Terrence Endress
TE
83 *Robert Kovey
DE
84 ••John Przybycien
DE
85 *Paul lang
TE
86 Thomas Vigneau
DE
87 **Richard Ashley
SE
88 Michael James
TE
89 Michael Sharrow
SE
90 Prentis Henley
DE

'71
' 71
' 71
'69
'69
' 70
' 69
'70
'69
'69
' 71
' 70
'71
' 70
'71
'69
'71
'70
'71
'71
'70
' 70
'71
'71
'69
'70
'70
' 71
'71
' 69
' 70
'69
'70
'71
'71
' 71
'70
' 71
'69
'70
'69
'70
' 69
'70
' 69
' 69
'70
'71
'71
' 71
'71
'69
'70
' 70
'70
' 71
' 71
'69
'70
'70
'69
'70
'71
'69
'71
' 70
'70

19
19
19
21
20
20
21
20
20
21
19
22
19
21
19
21
19
21
19
19
20
20
19
19
21
20
20
19
19
21
21
22
21
19
19
19
20
20
21
19
21
21
21
20
21
21
20
19
19
19
19
21
22
20
19
19
19
22
20
20
20
21
19
21
19
22
21

6-2
6-3
5-11
5-11
6-0
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-9
5-11
6-0
5-10
5-10
6-1
5-9
5-11
5-11
5-9
6-1
5-9
5-10
5-8
5-11
5-11
6-1
5-9
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-2
5-11
5-11
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-0
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-1
5-10
5-10
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-3
6-4
6-1
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-7
6-3
6-1

Wt. Hometown
175
205
185
187
210
178
188
191
180
198
180
180
179
188
190
197
190
209
185
190
201
200
175
180
183
175
180
185
178
212
226
214
187
205
195
195
200
208
210
212
214
212
210
220
213
210
255
240
250
210
232
242
217
220
232
240
180
192
202
202
200
210
204
201
210
215
205

Ithaca, N.Y.
Delmar, N.Y.
Aliquippa, Pa.
Huntington, N.Y.
Hamburg, N.Y.
Springdale, Pa.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Ambridge, Pa.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Tiffin, Ohio
Potsdam, N.Y.
E. Rockaway, N.Y.
Dover, Ohio
Olean, N.Y.
Greenhurst, N.Y.
Brewick, Pa.
South Bend, Ind.
Centerline, Mich.
Peru, N.Y.
Coshoctcn, Ohio
Centerline, Mich.
Canandaigua, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Endwell, N.Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
St. louis, Mo.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Central Islip, N.Y.
Orchard Park, N.Y.
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Elmhurst, N.Y.
East Aurora, N.Y.
Elyria, Ohio
New Kensington, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Clayton, N.Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Springdale, Pa.
Elmira, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Johnstown, Pa.
Grand Island, N.Y.
New City, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Ottawa, Ont. (Can.&gt;
Solon, Ohio
Indianapolis, Ind.
Tarentum, Pa.
Olean, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Youngstown, Ohio
Detroit, Mich.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Massena, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Witherbee, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.

1968 U/B FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF
(Left to right)-Front: Head Coach Richard W. (Doc) Urich, Miami (0.)
' 51 ; Offensive Backfield Coach Jerry A. lppoliti, Miami (0 .) '58; Defensive Backfield Coach Robert C. Deming, Colgate '57; Head Freshman Coach James C. McNally, Buffalo '66; and Freshman Assistant
Gerald R. Gergley, Buffalo '61.
Back: Defensive Line Coach Sam L Sanders, Buffalo '60; linebacker
Coach William R. Dando, Detroit '59; Offensive Line Coach Robert E.
Geiger, Western Michigan '58; Freshman Assistant John l. Doherty,
Buffalo '69; and Graduate Assistant Russell G. MacKellar, Buffalo '67.
Missing from photo-Graduate Assistant Richard L. Wells, Buffalo '68.

DOC URICH - Head Coach
R ichard W. "D oc" Urich-a modern football coach,
schooled in a victorious tradition; associated with the
major names and teams in the college game; an organizer determined to build Buffalo football to a level of
national respect; educated in athletic administration; a
honored athlete himself; personable with his players,
staff, the fourth estate, the University and its Alumni;
a family man; and an excellent example of the progress
associated with U/B.
Coach Urich begins his third season as head coach of
the Bulls this fall . H is football philosophy is not complicated. H e despises "ties" and "goes for two." His interest and concern is equally divided between offense
and defense.
A "tower coach" with b ull horn and strong vocal
cords, Urich remains close to all aspects of his team.
The communicative distance between coach and player
is minimal. Much of his success is reflected in his ability
to stay close to situations.
In his fi rst season with U/B (1966) Urich split a tengame schedule, but along the way established seven
Bull offensive records. The area was very favorably
introduced to Buffalo's new look on the gridiron. His
summary last fall was 6-4 against fast company.
D oc joined the Buffalo staff from Notre D ame, where
he was the top offensive aide to Coach Ara P arseghian.
U rich had previously worked under Parseghian at
Northwestern and Miami (0 .), his alma mater.
A native of W apakoneta, Ohio, Urich started a glossy
athletic career at Wapakoneta High School, where he
was a senior captain in football and basketball.
I n addition to his coaching assignment Urich was appointed associate director of athletics at the University
in 1968. He holds both a B.Sc. (physical education ) and
M .Ed. from Miami.
U rich's nickname originated when he was a young
athlete in his hometown. H e was tagged " Doc" by
neighborhood com panions and the name has stayed
with him throughout his career.

•varsity letters (1967-27)

20

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��BUFFALO vs. BOSTON COLLEGE
OCTOBER 5# 1968
DEPTH CHART

NO.

BUFFALO

BOSTON COLLEGE

PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP
OFFENSE

PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP
OFFENSE

NAME

POS .

NO.

POS.

64
52
62
73
44
35
19
21
87

56
52
62
70
85
16
27
25
42

BARRY GALLUP
LE
GARY GUENTHER
____ LT
BERNIE GALECKAS
LG
JOHN EGAN __ _
_____ C
MIKE LARDNER
__ RG
BOB BOULEY _
__ __ ______ ____ RT
STEVE KIVES -· _____ _ ____ ________ RE
JOE MARZETTI _ _ _ _ __ _______ QB
DAVE BENNETT
___ LH
JIM CATONE _ _ ___ ____ _ _ _ _ ___ RH
JOE McDONALD __ _ ____ ____
FB

81
70
78
83
50
69
65
32
23
40
29

DEFENSE
TOM MURPHY ____ --· __ --------------- LE
DAN WALGATE _______ ----------------- LT
RUSS BECK _____ ------------------------- RT
BOB KOVEY ________ __ -------------- RE
JIM MOSHER
LOLB
DON SABO _____ -· _____________ LILB
SCOTT CLARK ____ _ __________ RILB
DAVE RICHNER ____ _ _________ ROLB
NICK KISH ____________________________ LH
TOM ELLIOTT ____ ___ ------------------ S
DICK HORN ____________________________ RH

84
76
58
55
50
72
83
34
20
15
23

DEFENSE
PAUL CAVANAGH ____
______ LE
JOHN FITZGERALD _________________ LT
JIM KING ___ ____ __
________________ LLB
DICK KRONER _______________________ MG
JIM McCOOL __ _
_____ RLB
JERRY RAGOSA __
___ RT
JIM O'SHEA
__ ----------------- RE
JIM GRACE _____________ ______ ______ LH
GARY DANCEWICZ
____ _ ___ RH
DAVE THOMAS _
-·------ _ ROV
JOHN SALMON _____________________ SAF

77

87

NAME

PAUL LANG _ _____
---------·----- TE
CHRIS WOLF _________________________ LT
MIKE MASER ________________________ LG
JOHN WESOLOWSKI _______________ C
TOM KOWALEWSKI _
______ RG
TOM CENTOFANTI __ _ . _ __________ TT
CHUCK DRANKOSKI _________ ______ FB
JOE ZELMANSKI ___________________ FB
DENNY MASON __
____________ QB
KEN RUTKOWSKI _ . ___ _ _ _______ TB
DICK ASHLEY
______________________ SE

85

77

SQUAD

SQUAD

11
15
16
17
19
20
21

23

24
26
29
32
35
36
37
38

Perry, qb
Martin, lb
Embow, k
Jack, k
Mason, qb
Patterson, tb
Rutkowski, tb
Kish, lhb
Zalar, lhb
Jacobs, s
Horn, rhb
Richner, lb
Ze lmanski, fb
Woodward, fb
McCullough, lb
Chapp, fb

Maurice D. Qu inlan
&lt;CCNY)
Refe ree

39
40
42
43
44
50
52

58

61
62
64
65
66
68
69
70

Kershaw, lb
Elliott, s
Nixon, rhb
Sharrow, se
Drankoski, fb
Mosher, lb
Wesolowski, c
Donnor, c
Elwell, rg
Kowalewski, rg
Maser, lg
Clark, lb
Lupienski, lb
Hayden, lg
Sabo, lb
Walgate, It

73
74
75
76
77
78
79
81
82
83
84
85
87
90

John J. Henrion
(Carnegie)
Umpire

Centofanti, tt
Rio, tt
Riccelli, rt
Reid, It
Wolf, It
Beck, rt
Atkinson, It
Murphy, le
Endress, te
Kovey, re
Przybycien, re
Lang, te
Ash ley, se
Hen ley, le

15 Thomas, db
16 Marzetti, qb
17 Harris, qb
19 Fallon, qb
20 Dancewicz, db
21 Gill hb
22 Della Villa, hb
Z3 Salmon, db
24 Rabadan, db
25 Catone, hb
26 Scott, qb
27 Bennett, hb
30 Gall ivan, k
31 Johnson, hb
?3 Willis , hb
34 Grace, db
35 Cookson, db
36 Robertson, k

Albert L. Benson, Jr .
(Wesleyan)
Linesman
Leroy J. Kelley
(Dartmouth)
Clock Operator

37
39
40
42
43
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
58
59
60
61
62

McHugh, fb
Ferreira, k
Zailskas, db
McDonald, fb
Comella, fb
McCool, lb
Lavoie, c
Egan, c
Kurowski, c
Ferris, lb
Kroner, mg
Galeckas, og
King, lb
Davis, lb
Corrigan, mg
Tataronis, og
Lardner, og

Lawrence J . Drew
&lt;Providence)
Field Judge

63 Cullen, og
70 Bouley, ot
71 Millham, dt
72 Ragosa, dt
74 Brennan, ot
75 Horman, dt
76 Fitzgerald, dt
n Guenther, ot
78 Uzdavinis, ot
to McDonald, oe
81 Bonistalli, oe
82 Gill, de
83 O'Shea, de
84 Cavanagh, de
85 Kives , oe
87 Ga ll up, oe
88 Dennis, de

Fred T. Ghirardini
(None)
Back Judge

�ALL the Staff

cNewfon-\Volthom Bank
ond

of

~rust Componlf
MEMBER F. D.l. C.

tf!rNUT HILL TRAVEL, INC.
Serving

NATICK

NEWTON

WALTHAM
wish

WAYLAND

WESTON
and

BOSTON COLLEGE
A WINNING SEASON

MARLBORO

GILES E. MOSHER JR. -

Class of l955

Rose M. Gilford, President
1200 Boylston St.
Chestnut Hill 67, Mass.
REgent 4-0600

BAKER &amp; COMPANY, Inc.
REPOINTING LEAKING MASONRY
WALLS ABOVE GROUND

CONCRETE RESTORATION

General Contractors
3475 WASHINGTON ST.

MASONRY RESTORATION

BOSTON 30, MASS.

BUILDING CLEANING
BIRDPROOFING

W

ESTERN
ATERPROOFING CO., INC.

MANUFACTURERS &amp; PAVERS
of Bituminous Concrete Pavements
Special Purpose Pavements
and Colored Pavements

BOSTON 18, NEW YORK 17, ALBANY 2

our Specialty

�1968

BOSTON COLLEGE
ROSTER
No.
15
16
17
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
2!i
27
30
31
33
34
35
36
37
39
40
42
43
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
58
59
60

61
62
63
70
71
72
74
75
76
77
78
80
81
82
83
84
85
87
88

Name
*Dave Thomas
•Joe Marzetti
Frank Harris
*Mike Fallon
Gary Dancewicz
George Gill
Paul Della Villa
•John Salmon
*Bill Rabadan
•Jim Catone
Joe Scott
*Dave Bennett
•sob Gallivan
•Mike Johnson
Fred Willis
•Jim Grace
John Cookson
•Mike Robertson
Pete McHugh
Larry Ferreira
•Dan Zailskas
Joe McDonald
Gene Comella
•Jim McCool
*George Lavoie
•John Egan
Rich Kurowski
Gene Ferris
• Dick Kroner
Bernie Galeckas
Jim King
*Mandell Davis
Mike Corrigan
Dick Tataronis
Mike Lardner
Walt Cullen
•sob Bouley
Jim Millham
•Jerry Ragosa
John Brennan
•Kerry Horman
•John Fitzgerald
Gary Guenther
Tom Uzdavinis
*Ed McDonald
John Bonistalli
Dick Gill
Jim O'Shea
Paul Cavanagh
•steve Kives
*Barry Gallup
Mike Dennis

Pos. Class Ht.
DB
QB
QB
QB
DB
HB
HB
DB

DB
HB

QB
HB

K
HB
HB

DB
DB

K

FB
)(
DB

FB
FB

LB

c
c
c
LB

MG
OG
LB

LB
MG
OG
OG
OG
OT
DT

DT
OT
DT

DT
OT
OT
OE
OE
DE

DE
DE

OE
OE
DE

'69
' 69
'71
'70
'71
'71
'69
'69
'70
'70
'71
'69
'69
'70
'71
'69
'69
'69
'71
'71
'69
'70
'70
'70
'69
'69
'71
'71
'69
'69
'69
'70
'71
'70
'71
'70
'70
'71
'69
'71
'69
'70
'71
'69
'70
'71
'70
'71
'69
'70
'69
'71

6-2
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-2
5-10
5-9
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-0
5-9
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-11
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-0
6-3
6-4
6-2
6-4
6-1
6-0
6-4
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-3
6-0
6-3
6-3
6-3
6-4
6-1
6-5
6-3
6-7
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-3
6-4
6-1
6-3
6-3

Wt.

Hometown

205
182
180
185
190
172
180
185
172
187
187
186
175
165
198
190

Stamford, Conn.
Washington, D.C.
Malden, Mass .
Niantic, Conn.
Lynn, Mass.
Arlington, Mass.
Schenectady, N.Y.
Malden, Mass.
Teaneck, N.J .
Rochester, N.Y.
Woodridge, N.J.
Andover, Mass.
Hartford, Conn.
El Paso, Tex.
Natick, Mass.
Cleveland, Ohio
Biddeford, Me.
St. Paul, Minn.
Orange, Conn.
Falmouth, Mass.
Waterbury, Conn.
Quincy, Mass.
Lyons, N.Y.
Boston, Mass.
Fall River, Mass.
New Milford, N.J.
Norristown, Pa.
Mattapan, Mass.
Milwaukee, Wise.
Worcester, Mass.
Worcester, Mass.
Stamford, Conn.
Cleveland, Ohio
Lawrence, Mass.
Great Neck, N.Y.
Peabody, Mass.
Weymouth, Mass.
Glen Burnie, Md.
Norwalk, Conn.
Charlestown, Mass.
N. Attleboro, Mass.
Southbridge, Mass.
Newtonville, N.Y.
Haverhill, Mass.
Brighton, Mass.
Floral Park, N.Y.
Miami, Fla.
Lynn, Mass.
Lynn, Mass.
Cleveland, Ohio
Swamp$COtt, Mass.
Waltham, Mass.

172

185
201
175
190
200
212
217
226
227
215
216
225
225
210
200
205
208
230
222
240
221
232
275
250
265
228
245
222
195
203
218
217
190
215
216

196B BOSTON COLLEGE FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF
Kneeling : Head Coach Joe Yukica. Standing (left to right}: Jack Bicknell,
Offensive Backfield; Bill Bowes, Offensive Line; John Anderson, Defensive Line; Bill Campbell, Defensive Ends and Linebackers; Pete
Carmichael, Defensive Secondary, Joe Daniels, Freshman Coach.

JOE YUKICA-Head Coach

Joseph ;.. richael Yukica \Yas appointed the 27th head
coach of football at Boston College on Dec. 21, 1967.
He succeeds Jim :'d iller, who resigned on December
6 after serving 6 years as the Eagles mentor. The goodlooking, personable, young (36 years old) ~Iidland .
Pennsylvania native was head coach at .:\e,,· Hampshire
the past two seasons. Joe was selected as .:\ew England
Coach of the Year this past season after reversing the
W ildcats 2-6 record of 1966 to an excellent 5-3 record
in 1967.
Yukica \\·as considered one of the top young assistants
in the nation ,,·hile serving five years as end coach for
one of college football's ,,·inningest head coaches, Bob
Blackman. During his five years at Dartmouth, the Big
Green rolled up a 37- record, t\\'0 perfect 9-0 seasons
in 1962 and 1965, a 15-game streak over three-years.
3 Ivy League titles and the Lambert Trophy in 1965.
Joe played his college football at Penn State for the
legendary R ip Engle. He was one of the top receivers
in the East on Engle's 1950, '5 1 and '52 .:\ittany Lion
elevens .. \ leg injury against .:\ebraska ended his college
career with five games remaining in his senior year.
Drafted by the Chicago Cardinals despite his injury.
Yukica elected instead to remain at Penn State as
1ssistant freshman coach. ,,·hile he studied for a ;.. raster's
D egree.
I n 195-t he became head coach at State College High
School, (Pa.) moved on to Central Dauphin High in
Harrisburg, P a.
Facing a major schedule with a ne\Y program. Joe
began to build, suffering through the first three seasons
with a 10-1 6-3 record. By 1958, however, the building
job was paying dividends and his Central Dauphin
surged to a 10-0 record. Joe received ''Coach of the
Year" honors for the state of Pennsylvania, and was
selected as end coach for the annual "Bi&lt;&gt; 33" game, a
contest which pitted the top 33 high school players in
the state against the .:\ ational High School All-.\ merica
team .
The new Eagle coach, who also finds time to direct
a football cam p at nearby St. Sebastian's Country D ay
school. each August, is married to the former Betty
Rine of Harrisburg, P a., and they have 3 young sons,
J oe, J r. 8, Jim 5, and Jack 3. The Y ukicas moved into
their new home in the town of Sudbury last June.

•Returning Lettermen

25

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Frankfurter

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Hardly bigger than a shoe bax, this
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Come in and turn one on. And step
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We think you' ll look around for hidden
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But there's nothing deceitful about the
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�Captain
Gary Andrachik

Sttll an Inspiration/
By D. LEo M oNAHAN
Sports Columnist
Boston Record American

Boston College has many avid
football fans, but the most fervid of
'em all this season will be Gary Andrachik, the 200-pound linebacker
who was elected captain of Coach
Joe Yukica's first team at the
Heights.
Gary, you see, has played his last
football game. He sustained a neck
injury in the Cincinnati last season
and aggravated it in Spring practice.
The medics advised him to call it a
career.
"At Cincinnati," he recalled, "I
hit a guy with my head and I felt
something pop back here- " tapping
the back of his neck-"but it didn't
bother me too much at first. I stayed
in the game, but the pain started to
get worse."
"We'll miss G ary," said Coach
Yukica, "H e's quite a boy. We'll
have him on the bench at all our
games and he'll make the road trips
with us. He's helping us by serving
as an assistant to Joe Daniels, our
freshman coach."
Andrachik, 21, came to Boston
College with impressive credentials
from St. Ignatius high school in
Cleveland. Seven players from that
school have matriculated to University Heights and an eighth, quarterback Brian Dowling, is at Yale
where he is recognized as one of the
top performers in the Ivy League.
Defensive back Jim Grace, end
Steve K ives and sophomores Bill
Balmat, Mike Corrigan, John Michaels and John O'Donnell all are
St. Ignatius products.

"High school football," said Gary,
"is very popular in Cleveland. When
I played there, we lost just one game
in three seasons. That was to Benedictine in the city championship. We
played before a crowd of 40,000 in
Municipal Stadium."
Andrachik was wooed by more
than 30 colleges. He rattled off the
names of Michigan, Michigan State,
Ohio State and a dozen other schools
before he gave his reasons for coming to BC.
" I wanted to come East to school,"
he said, "and I liked the Jesuits as
teachers. I was very much impressed
with Boston College from the outset.
I found the people to be pleasant
and helpful and the campus, well I
liked it very much.
"When I first visited here, some
of the varsity players--one of them
was center Bob Ryland-showed me
around. What really sold me, however, was the emphasis that was put
on studies. When I went other
places, I was shown fancy handball
courts and other facilities, but there
was no great stress put on the scholastic end of things. Oh, they'd mention it, but almost in passing.
"I've been very happy here. The
people in the area are nice. It's a
beautiful community. Boston isn't
that far away and it has much to
offer. In fact, so has the entire New
England area. I hope to enter law
school and I've given quite a bit of
thought of applying to BC Law."
Gary has three brothers and two
sisters. His father, who migrated

27

from Austria, didn't play football.
He's a soccer buff, as are most
Europeans.
"My youngest brother Roger is
in the seventh grade and he's going
to be quite a football player. He
has a knack for it. He weighs 13 5
pounds, which is pretty big for his
age and he's a quarterback in a
CYO League. I'm already working
on him to come to Boston College.
I think he's going to be a good one,"
said Gary.
Andrachik's two varsity seasons
were outstanding. He established
himself as one of the best college
linebackers in the area. Although he
missed a few games via injury last
season, he still ranked second on the
squad in defensive "points" with 57
tackles, 14 assists, two intercepted
passes and a fumble recovery.
Gary coaches the linebackers and
defensive ends on the frosh squad.
"It's quite interesting," he confessed. "At one time I had aspirations of being a teacher-coach."
Thus Andrachik continues to play
an important role in BC football. He
anticipates the varsity will have a
successful season.
"Coach Yukica really has impressed the squad," he said. "The
fellows have worked hard. We play
a difficult schedule, but that's the
way we want it. I think we'll surprise a few people this season."
In his own way, Gary Andrachik
has made notable contributions towards the team's esprit de corps.

�RICHARD ASHLEY

Buffalo Campus

WILLIAM HAYDEN

PRENTIS HENLEY

PAUL LANG

JOHN LUPIENSKI

CHARLES DRANKOSKI

RICHARD HORN

MICHAEL LUZNY

28

PAUL JACK

MICHAEL MASER

�RUSSELL BECK

THOMAS CENTOFANTI

GARY CHAPP

THOMAS ELLIOTT

ROBERT EMBOW

TERRY ENDRESS

NICHOLAS KISH

ROBERT KOVEY

THOMAS KOWALEWSKI

JAMES MOSHER

THOMAS MURPHY

DENNIS MASON

29

SCOTT CLARK

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30

�PATRICK PATTERSON

JOSEPH RICCELLI

FRANK REID

JOHN PRIYBYCIEN

JOHN RIO

DONALD SABO

THOMAS VIGNEAU

JOHN WESOLOWSKI

CHRIS WOLF

JOSEPH ZELMANSKI

31

�1968 EAGLES

Front row (left to right): Asst. Coach Bill Bowes, Jerry Rogoso, Barry Gallup, Bob Gallivan, Kerry Horman, John Egan, Mike Robertson, Copt. Gory
Androchik, Dick Kroner, Paul Cavanagh, Dove Bennett, Jim Groce, Dove Thomas, Head Coach Joe Yukico. Row 2: Asst. Coach Joe Daniels, Tom
Uzdovinis, Don Zoilskos, Paul Della Villa, Joe Morzetti, Jim King, Fronk Graziano, Joe Cunningham, Jeff Fleming, George Lavoie, lorry Daniels,
John Salmon, Assistant Coach John Anderson. Row 3 : Asst. Coach Jack Bicknell, Dick Totoranis, Bernie Goleckos, Chris Boker, Maurice Aubuchon,
Gory Guenther, Ed McDonald, John Fitzgerald, Bob Bouley, Glenn Townsend , Mike Vernezze, Jim O'Shea, Gory Doncewicz, Asst. Coach Bill Camp·
bell. Row 4: Asst. Mgr. Steve Sperondio, Joe Popowski, Gene Ferris, Jim Dunn, Ted Anderson, Mike Corrigan, John Michaels, Peter McHugh, Rich
Kurowski, Mike Dennis, Fronk Harris, Mike Johnson, Asst. Coach Pete Carmichael. Row 5 : Asst. Mgr. Mark LaBrecque, Don McKinnon, Jock O ' Don·
nell, Ed Ransford, Joe Scott, Ron Cooper ,George Newman, Charles Blank, Steve Rossetti, B:&gt;b Racioppi, George Gill, Orrie Scorminoch, Head
Trainer Fritz Massmann. Row 6 : Joe McDonald, Walt Cullen, Jim McCool, Bill Medea, John M. Fitzgerald, John Bonistolli, Bill Robodon, Mendell
Davis, Dove McKoy, Tom Stoodley, Pete lupoli, Sr. Manager Jim O ' Reilly. Row 7 : lorry Ferreira, Jim Lozier, Jock Dunphy, Jim Catone, Steve Kives,
Skip Coppola, Gene Comella, Mike Fallon, John O 'Connell, Dick Gill, John Brennan. Row 8: Jim Darcy, Gory Kouffold, Mike Whitney, John Cook·
son, Jock Wolters, Bill Bolmot, Mike Lardner, Fred Willis, Jim Millhom, Don Tonzi, Jock Croigen.

HAVE FUN KEEPING YOUR OWN SCORE '
SCORE
1

B

2

3

4

.I .I

TOTAL

~

BOSTON COLLEGE
VISITORS

BOSTON COLLEGE

TOTAL

VISITOR

TOTAL

NO. 1st DOWNS
YARDS RUSHING
YARDS PASSING
PASSES ATTEMPTED
PASSES COMPLETED
PASSES INTERCEPTED BY
FUMBLES LOST
FUMBLES RECOVERED
NO. PENALTIES
PENALTY YARDAGE

With Compliments of

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WITH FINE JEWELS
SINCE 1913

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PRECISION BEARINGS I&lt; JEWEL ASSEMBLIES

32

RANDALL P. CAMERON,
President
Class of 1949 C.B.A.

�SINGLE WING FEATURES CAN BE
DETECTED IN THE
MODERN USE OF THE T
By ARTHUR SAMPSON

While it is true that Princeton is the only major
college football team in the East using the single wingback formation which was popular many years ago, it
is obvious, when one analyzes the plays of some of the
modern users of the T formation, that some features of
the old single wing are still being used.
The single wing that Princeton now uses is a far cry
from the one Pop Warner originated many years ago.
It provides the possibilities of a more open attack due
to its split ends and wide flanker.
The Tigers still retain the direct pass from center,
however, and this fact classifies them as a single wing
team. This method of putting the ball in play is now
practically obsolete. The use of a quarterback under
center, who handles the ball on every run and pass, is
practically universal.
That nearly every team uses the T nowadays doesn't
mean that all tactics of the old single wing have been
completely eliminated.
Actually there has been a gradual return to some
features of the single wing by users of the T in recent
years. The idea of retaining certain techniques of the
single wing, when he first installed the T, was made by
Red Blaik when he returned to West Point after using
the single wing during his successful years at Dartmouth.
While at Dartmouth, Blaik discovered that it was
difficult to find a player who relished the thankless job
of knocking down ends and tackles on every play while
never getting the thrill of handling the ball.
In other words, by shifting to the T formation he
eliminated the blocking back in the single wing. He
refused to incorporate many of the T formation plays.
however. He retained the double-team, shoulder blocking tactics of the single wing. And many of the running
plays that had been popularized from the single wing
were incorporated in his version of the T.
During the years that have passed since then, countless coaches have gradually installed similar features
into the T formation. Without returning to the direct
pass from center, they have inserted some of the old
single wing plays with slight variations as to blocking
assignment.
Quite a few college teams now use sweeps with linemen pulling out to lead the interference. The T formation quarterback on some teams does his share of blocking on these wide plays.
Actually the T formation now used by many college
teams isn't much like the T formation that became
almost universally copied many years ago. Nor is the

single wing now used by a few teams similar to the
formation that was originally designed by Pop Warner.
The attack now employed by many college teams
includes some of the best plays of the old single wing
and some of the quick openers of the old style T.
A few years ago a team using the T would show the
dive tackle play, a pitch out to get outside, a counter
and quite a few passes. ow some T teams show sweeps
and off tackle plays with plenty of interference and
display both inside and outside reverses of the type
formerly a part of the basic single wing attack.
During the years when the late Gil Dobie was a
leading advocate of the single wing while coaching at
Cornell, I asked him to name what he considered to
be the best play in football.
I naturally expected him to name the off-tackle play
from the single wing formation since he was accustomed
to use it more often than any play.
"The best formation in football is the T formation
and the best play from that formation is the dive tackle
play," declared Dobie. "It hits quickly. It moves the
ball forward. You know, a straight line is the shortest
distance between two points.
"I _used the T when I was coach at University of
Washmgton and had great success with it. I don't use
it now because I don't have the type of players at
Cornell that one needs to make it effective."
Since no college teams of any account were using the
T at that time, it was surprising to hear Dobie rate it
so highly. The T had been discarded because it had no
real outside strength the way it was used at first. It
became popular again when the Chicago Bears split
ends and employed a wide flanker. As the professionals
use it, the T is better adapted for a passing game than
a running attack. It is possible to develop some strong
running plays from it, however, when some single wing
features are inserted.
The Green Bay Packers have proved this as you will
discover when you next see the Green Bay sweep in
action with the running guards leading the ball carrier
and some double blocking on key defensive players.
The reason old time football players enjoy watching
Green Bay more than any of the other professional
teams is because the Packers have incorporated quite
a bit of single wing technique into their attack.
A number of college teams are doing the same thing.
Contrary to the general impression that the single wing
is almost completely outmoded it is a fact that some
of its main features of that st~le of play are still in
existence.

33

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34

off the Expressway)

02110

�STATE UNIVERSITY
of

NEW YORK
at

BUFFALO
The l"niversity has recently implemented a bold ne\\.
academic play, reorganizing its schools and college,;
within seven interdisciplinary facilities-arts and letters.
educational studies, engineering and applied sciences.
health sciences. law and jurisprudence, natural sciences
and mathematics. and social sciences and administration.
All undergraduate instruction is offered through one
division, the Cniversity College, while the School of
Graduate Studies is expected to become the central
coordinating body for all higher degree programs, professional and academic. beyond the baccalaureate level.
A third Cniversity division, :.Jillard Fillmore College.
administers evening credit programs and continuing education for adults. To provide year-round operation, the
Summer Sessions coordinate academic offerings in three
overlapping terms, ] une through August.
·
Dramatic as the recent growth and innovation have
been, the most significant period of development in the
University's history is just beginning.
The seven broadly interdisciplinary faculties will incorporate and build upon traditional disciplines while
identifying and implementing both ne'A· combinations of
standard disciplines, new fields of study and research.
A series of non-degree granting "colleges" to be established in the next several years \\·ill provide for students
cent_ers of identification and a ~iversity of opportunity
for Intellectual exchange and will serve as a vehicle for
fostering personal relationships \Yithin a large university .. ~ program of vigorous recruitment based upon
competitiVe salary levels and bolstered by a climate of
encouragement for creative academic pursuits and enriched body of faculty scholars. The level of achievement of the student body can be expected to keep pace
with these overall qualitative developments as enrollment increases to approximately 40,000 by 1975. "·ith
particular growth at the graduate level. Constant attention will also remain focused on building a distinguished
undergraduate program as the foundation for an excellent graduate center.
Germane to all these intellectual prospects is the vista
of an entirely new l" niversity campus. designcJ especially to facilitate implementation of educational objectives. This complex will be developed on a 1.300-acrc
tract in the Town of .\mherst, three miles north of the
present campus. The project which will provide
14,000,000 square feet of educational space is expected
to begin taking shape in the early 1970's. l 1pon its completion, the present 178-acre :.1ain Streec campus at the
:'\ortheastern edge of Buffalo \Yill be devoted to expanded research activities and will serve also as the
site of one of the largest centers of continuing education
activities in the nation.

State University of New York at Buffalo, founded in
46 as the l"niversity of Buffalo, is today the largest
single unit and most comprehensive undergraduate and
graduate center of State "Cniversity, enrolling 21,000
students (13,000 full-time). One of the first independent
institutions of higher learning to be established in the
lTnited States, the Fniversity was a pioneer in adaptint!
educational service to the specific needs of a developing
urban complex. Today, the University is headed by a
noted scholar of urban affairs, :.1artin :.reverson. \\·ho
is the tenth chief executive officer of the l·n~versity.
First Chancellor of the UniversitY was :.1illard Fillmore. 13th president of the "Cnited States.
Building upon more than a century of public ervice
tradition. the University has developed rapidly as a
State institution since it became part of the S1 T);Y
system in 1962.
While the total enrollment has increased only 37 per
cent since 1962, the number of full-time undergraduates
has grown by 49 per cent and the full-time graduate and
professional student population by 167 per cent. The
number of degrees awarded has grown more dramatically, ranging from an increase of 200 per cent for bachelor's degrees to almost 500 per cent for Ph.D.'s. In
1968, the l" niversity conferred 2.200 bachelor's degrees .
902 master's degrees, 138 academic doctorates and 237
doctorates in the professions.
The character of the student body has changed a:;
profoundly as its size. In the Fall of 1959. 30.5 per
cent of entering students ranked in the top one-fifth of
their respective high school classes. Of those entering
in the Fall of 1967, 86.7 per cent ranked in the top
quintile. Similar improvements have taken place in the
quality of graduate students.
Resources and facilities have also been improved and
enlarged. The number of volumes in the University
Libraries . for example, has tripled since 1962 and has
recently passed the one million mark. To provide room
for continued expansion of operations pending completion of a new campus, the University is occupying a
number of off-campus locations, including an "interim"
facility of several buildings on Ridge Lea Road in the
Town of Amherst, three miles north of the present
campus.
Understandably, the costs of operating the University
have also increased since 1962. An annual budget of
$18.5 million in the last year before the merger has now
grown to over $60 million. Meanwhile, funds for sponsored research-from sources entirely outside of the
State treasury-have increased by over 250 per cent.
35

�Bob Cousy's
BASKETBALL CAMP AND
CLINIC

Manganaro Brothers

CAMP:
Boys 8-14- July and August
Half Session $400-Full Session $750

Industrial and

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Boys 1 4-over-8 days
late August-$150

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Spend the summer with Bob at the only camp of
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OTHER ACTIVITIES

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Registration is limited to 125 boys so write
immediately for information concerning
Bob Cousy's Basketball Camp and Clinic to:
BOB COUSY
Roberts Center-Boston College
Chestnut Hill 02167

MALDEN, MASSACHUSETTS 02148
322-7040

36

�Next Opponent -

VILLANOVA
October 12

Alumni Stadium
JACK GREGORY

The Wildcats have weaknesses on defense, however.
as the linebacking corps is lacking on depth. But a pair
of mamouth defensive tackles have taken up some of
the slack. Rich "Mountain" Moore, 6-7, 290. and Tohn
Treacy, 6-3, 247, are just dynamite.
·

T
HE memory of last season's opener remains vivid.
The date was September 23, and the score late in the
fourth quarter ,,·as 24-24. With the final seconds ticking
away, the Eagles' talented kicker Bob Gallivan strode
into the ball and split the uprights from 25 yards out to
give Boston College a 27-24 victory over the Wil dcats
of Villanova.

The defensive backfield, although small in size is
large in stature with a "Super Gnat" of its own in Dina
Fellino leading the way. He weighs a mere 149 pounds.
. Despite its lack of exp~rience at several key positions,
V!llanova has been playmg a hustling style of ball and
according to its coach, possesses "an exceptional attitude
toward the game". The Eagles had better be readv for
this one.
·

Although the site will be changed for next Saturday's
encounter, the game promises to be just as thrillin~ in
the thirty-third renewal of the rivalry between these two
Catholic schools. B. C. leads the Series . 20-11-1.
Like the Eagles, Coach Jack Gregory's team is seeking to rebound from a 4-6 season in 1967 and restore its
football tradition. But the task looks like a mighty one
as graduation took a toll of 23 players including last
season's rushing leader, Brendan l\'lurray, and passing
leader, Bill Andrejko. When Gregory labels this a "rebuilding year" he means it for only 14 lettermen return
from last year.
But the Wildcats have surprised thus far, posting a
1- 1 record with a 45-21 loss to always tough Toledo,
and a 16-0 conquest over Delaware last Saturday.
The surprise has been in the person of quarterback
John Sodaski, a converted linebacker, who is playing
that key position for the first time since high school.
Against Toledo, he set a Villanova total offense record
of 284 yards while completing 16 of 33 passes for 198
yards and two touchdowns and rushing for 86 yards and
another score. The 33 passing attempts is also a school
record.
But he hasn't stopped there. In the Delaware game,
he picked up 98 yards in 29 carries, another school
record, scoring one touchdown and passing for the other.
Sodaski is well complemented by all-East end Tom
Boyd who caught a record 12 passes against Toledo and
by halfback Frank Boa! who almost wrecked the Eagles
last year and is currently dazzling the opposition with
his speed. Billy Walik, a good pass receiver as well a~
a runner complements Boa! in the backfield.

Bo~

Gallivan, outstanding Eagle Placement Kicker, split the uprights
tw1ce last year against Villanova with big 3 point field goals, one of
which was the margin of victory in B.C.'s thrilling 27-24 victory .

37

�e

10
Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
You can shave it with a razor blade like your father does.
And each time you do your beard will grow back a little more
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Look no further than your father's face
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But fortunately, you're catching your
beard at an early age. You can break it in to be
just as shaveable 10 and 20 years from
now as it is today.
With a REMINGTO~ shaver
And if you think the kind of shave we're selling won't be
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Our new blades are sharper than anything that's been in an
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Admittedly, it costs more to buy our
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893-7562

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PHYSICAL FITNESS

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40

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for the opportunity of printing the
Boston College Basketball, Football and Hockey Programs
• • •

We also print programs for:
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1---------- ALL

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Walter T. Sullivan, B.S., '61

41

�1968- 1969 Boston College Basketball Schedule
Day

Opponent

Place

Time

Thurs.
Sat.
Tues.
Fri.
Wed.
Sat.
Thurs.

Roberts Center
Roberts Center
Roberts Center
Roberts Center
New Haven, Ct.
Jamaica, N.Y.

8:15
8:15
8:15
8:15
8:00
8:00

Jacksonville, Fla.

7:15}

Jan. 5 Sun.
Jan. 7 Tues.
Jan. 10 Fri.
Jan. 22 Wed.
Jan. 25 Sat.
Jan. 29 Wed.
Feb. 1 Sat.
Feb. 5 Wed.
Feb. 11 Tues.
Feb. 15 Sat.

LeMoyne
Connecticut
Harvard
Villanova
Fairfield
St. John's
Gator Bowl
Tournament
(Northwestern,
Georg ia,Fiorida
St. Joseph's
Univ. Cal-Irvine
Providence
Seton Hall
Canis ius
Northeastern
Holy Cross
Massachusetts
Rhode Island
Penn State

Feb. 18 Tues.
Feb. 23 Sun.
Feb.
Mar. 1 Sat.
Mar. 5 Wed.

Georgetown
Detroit
Boston University
Holy Cross
Duquesne

Date

Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

5
7
10
13
18
21
26

27 Fri.

Philadelphia
Roberts Center
Roberts Center
E. Orange, N.J.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Roberts Center
Roberts Center
Amherst
Kingston, R.I.
University Park,
Pa.
Washington, D.C.
Roberts Center
Roberts Center
Worcester
Roberts Center

9:15}
2:30
8:15
8:15
8:15
8:00
8:15
2:00
8:00
8:00
2:00
8:00
3:30
8:15
8:00
8:15

All home games played at Roberts Center on Campus.
(Capacity: 3,912}

LOOKING AHEAD TO 1968-1969
Bob Cousy will be starting his 6th year coaching
Boston College when the '68-' 69 college basketball
season gets under way. The incomparable "Cooz"
earned the title of "Mr. Basketball" after a brilliant
career as an All-America at Holy Cross, followed by
13 legendary seasons with the Boston Celtics leading
them to championship after storybook championship.
Over the past five seasons Bob has transfered his
magic from playing the game to coaching it. He has
to be included with the games greatest young mentors
after directing B.C. from basketball obscurity to the
t op of the coll ege totem pole in a few short years.
Bob Cousy's record has surged from 10-11 his first
season in 1963-64 to 22-7, 21-5, 23-3 and 17-8 for
a total of 93 wins against 34 losses &lt;.732) and 4
consecutive post-season tournaments (2 NIT and 2
f~CAA&gt;.

Seven seniors graduated this past June leaving Bob
with a rugged re-building job for th~ season ahead.
Included in the seven are four regulars, Steve Adelman 6'6 and the second highest scorer in B.C. history;
Jack Kvancz, the indestructable field qeneral who
averaged double figures for 3 years; Captain Jim Kissane 6'8 a strong rebounder Clnd scorer; and Steve
Kelleher a solid backcourt replacement for Billy Evans
(who missed much of the season with "mono") . Also
gone is Tom Pacynzki a Goo j 6'10 reserve and Ed
Rooney and Ted Carter.
On the plus side "Cooz" has . captain-elect Terry
Driscoll at 6'7 a great rebounder, scorer and all-

around ball player; and a healthy Bill Evans at 6'0
and one of the best playmakers in college ball, as his
leading returnees. Both are bona fide All-America
candidates. Bob Dukiet a 6'4 cornerman who averaged
14 ppg in a tremendous sophomore season; Tom Verroneau 6'6; Ray LaGace 6'5; and Pete Sollene 6'3, all
of whom turned in solid sophomore seasons, are also
blue-chip returnees. Senior Jim King, and juniors Mike
Marks and Dennis Doble w i II be in there fighting to
make the traveling squad over a group of talented
sophomores .
Leading candidates from a freshman team which
posted an excellent 17-2 record are Jim 0' Brien, a
6'0 playmaker who "can't miss" and teamed with
Evans wi II give Cousy one of the strongest back courts
in the country; Frank Fitzgerald, a 6'7 cornerman
who averagej 20 ppg; Vin Costello at 6'4 and 14 ppg;
Greg Sees, 6'5 and 14 ppg; and Don Cr osby, a 6'0
backcourtman who missed half the season with a knee
injury, but who can shoot w:th the best of them when
he's healthy and he should be 100% this year.
In a nutshell, '68-'69 5hould be rated as a rebu i lding year for Bob Cousy and Boston College. He
has lost several outstanding scorers and a lot of
height. He has good talent returning but will lack
experienced depth and cou,ld use more height. The
schedule is also a bit more runged. So label it a rebuilding year for B.C., but don't be too surprised if
Bob Cousv turns it into a year to remember !

�1968 · 69 BOSTON COLLEGE HOCKEY SCHEDULE
Date
Dec. 4
Dec. 7
Dec. 11
Dec. 14
Dec. 17
Dec. 20
21

Day
Wed.
Sat.
Wed.
Sat.
Tues.
Fri.
Sat.

Dec. 27 Fri.
Dec. 30 Mon.
Jan. 2 Thurs.
3 Fri.
4 Sat.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

8
11
24
28
31
3
7
10
14
17
19
22
26
28

Wed.
Sat.
Fri.
Tues.
Fri.
Mon.
Fri.
Mon.
Fri.
Mon.
Wed.
Sat.
Wed.
Fri.

Opponent
Yale
Princeton
Brown
Clarkson
Harvard
Boston Garden Tour.
&lt;Princeton, Cornell,
New Hampshire)
McGill
Colorado
Montreal Tournament
(Mich. Tech, Toronto,
Loyola, McGill)
(Montreal, Sr. George,
William, Prague)
Dartmouth
Boston University
Colgate
Cornell
Northeastern
Beanport (BU)
St. Lawrence
Beanport Finals
New Hampshire
Providence

R.P.I.

Army
Boston University
Providence

Place
McHugh
Princeton, N.J.
Providence
McHugh
Cambirdge

Time
8:15
2:00

McHugh
McHugh

8:15
8:15

Hanover, N.H.
McHugh
Hamilton, N.Y.
McHugh
McHugh
Boston Garden
McHugh
Boston Garden
Durham, N.H.
Providence
Troy, N.Y.
McHugh
Boston Arena
McHugh

7:30
8:15
7:00
8:15
8:15

8:15
8:00

8:15

8:00
8:10
8:15
8:30
8:15

All home games played at McHugh Forum on Campus. &lt;Cap. 3,816)

LOOKING AHEAD TO 1968-1969
The incomparable dean of American College hockey coaches, John "Snooks" Kelley
will be starting his 32nd season as head
coach of Boston College when the 1968-1969
season begins. "Snooks" hiked his phenominal
and almost unreachable record to 441 wins
against 193 losses and 15 ties after another
excellent season which included 19 wins, 11
losses and one tie, and another trip to the
finals of the NCAA tournament. Coach Kelley
has now recorded 30 winning seasons, 9 New
England titles, seven Eastern Championships,
and nine invitations to the National Championships, winning it once, twice playing off
in the final game.
For the 1968-69 season "Snooks" and B.C.
must be considered a solid threat once again.
He lost 4 lettermen through graduation, 2
forwards Gordie Clarke and Whitey Allen,
one defenseman, Captain Steve Dowling, and

alternate goalie Jeff Cohen. There will be 15
lettermen returning headed by hustling captain Mike Flynn and including such outstanding names as Tim Sheehy, Kevin Ahern, John
Snyder, Charlie Toczylowski, Paul Schilling
and George McPhee. Also returning will be
Paul Hurley who played for the U.S. Olympics team last season and who should be
better than ever.
The sophomores will have a tough time
cracking the varsity roster but those with the
best chance are football star fred Willis and
Joe Keaveney.
Another rugged schedule and the fact that
old opponents like Cornell, Harvard, Boston
University, Clarkson and St. Lawrence should
have very strong teams, caution against unwise predictions, but look for the Eagles to
be in there fighting for top honors again next
season.

�EAGL E HUNTERS
SCHEDULE AND RECORD TO DATE

FIVE YEAR RECORD

SEPT. 28

w

NAVY
Away

1967
1966
1965
1964
1963

O CT. 4

5
4
4
3
9

w

BUFFALO
Home

1967
1966
1965
1964
1963

6
5
5
4
5

vs.
B.C.

L
4
6
4
6
1

T
1
0
2
1
0

No Game
27. 7
No Game
No Game
No Game

L
4
5
3
4
3

T
0
0
2
I
I

B.C.
26-14
21.22
6-18
No Game
0. 15

L
6
3
8
2
4

T
0
0
0
0
0

B.C.
24. 27
19. 0
0. 28
7. 8
0-34

L
7

T
0
I
0
0
I

B.C.
Game
Garr.e
Game
Game
Game

Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

21 6
28 15
5
12
19

at Penn State
31
BOSTON COL. 49
at Michigan
Air Force {Chic.}
Pittsburgh

Oct. 26
Nov. 2
Nov. 9
Nov. 16
Nov. 30

Virginia
Notre Dame (Phil.)
at Georgia Tech
at Syracuse
Army (Philo.)

Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.

14 10
21 21
27 23
5
12

at Iowa State
at Kent Stole
Massachusetts
at BOS. COL.
Delaware

28
13

Oct. 19
Oct. 26
Nov. 2
Nov. 9
Nov. 23

Villanova
Holy Cross
at Temple
at No. Illinois
at Boston Univ.

Sept.
Se pt.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

21 21
28 16
5
12
19

Toledo
Delowore
a t V.M.I.
at BOS. CO L.
at Buffalo

45
0

Oct. 26
Nov. 2
Nov. 9
Nov. 16
Nov. 23

Xavier
at William &amp; Mary
Quantico Marines
at W. Virginia
West Chester

Se pt.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Ocl.

14 7
29 35
5
12
19

ai Houston
Texas A&amp; M
Tampa
at Florida
BOS. COL.

54
3

Oct. 26
Nov. 2
Nov. 9
Nov. 16
Nov. 23

at Georgia Tech
at Vanderbilt
Tulsa
at Virginia
L. S. U.

Sept.
Se pt.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

21 31
28 25
5
12
26

Navy
Kan sas State
at W. Virg iri a
at UCLA
at BOS COL.

Sept.
Se pt.
Oct.
Oct
Oct.

21 34
28 13
5
12
19

The Citadel
Vanderbilt
at Missouri
California
at Rutgers

vs.

0

-·

vs.

OCT. 12

VI

VILLANOVA
Home

1967
1966
1965
1964
1963

OCT. 19

6
I

6
5

w

TULANE
Away

1967
1966
1965
1964
1963

O CT. 26

3
5
2
3
I

w

PENN STATE
Home

1967
1966
1965
1964
1963

NOV. 9

8
5
5
6
7

w

ARMY
Awa}

1967
1966
1965
1964
1963

NOV. 16

8

8
4
4
7

w

VIRGINIA MILITARY
Home
-

4

1967
1966
1965
1964
1963

6
2
3
1
3

vs.
4
8
7
8

No
No
No
No
No

vs
L
2

T

5
5
4
3

I
0
0
0
0

B.C.
50-28
30.21
17. 0
No Game
No Game

L
2
2
5
6
3

T
0
0
1
0
0

vs.
B.C.
21. 10
No Game
10- 0
19. 13
l~o Game

L
4
8
7
9

T
0

6
9

14
17

Nov. 2 Army
Nov. 9 Miami (Fla.)
Nov. 16 at Maryland
Nov. 23 at Pittsburgh
Dec. 7 Syracuse

Oct. 26 Duke
Nov. 2 at Penn State
Nov. 9 BOSTON COLLEGE
Nov. 16 at Pittsburgh
Nov. 30 Navy (Phi;a.)

vs.

5

c
0
0
2

S.C.
26. 13
0-14
12-41
No Game
No Game

s ~ pt. 21 12
Se pt. 2e 0
Oct.
5
Oct. 11
O ct. 19

at Vanderbilt
25
at Vi ,ginia
47
Villanova
West Virginia
at The Citadel

Oct. 26
Nov. 2
Nov. 9
Nov. 16
Nov. 28

William &amp; Mary
at Richmond
at Davidson
a t BOSTON COLLEGE
at Vo. Tech.

Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
O ct

21 21

Moine
3
at Buffa!o
23
at Delaware
Boston Univ.
at Rhod" l•land

Oct. 26
Nov. 2
Nov. 9
Nov. 16
Nov. 23

Connecticut
at Vermont
at Holy Cross
New Hampshire
BOSTON COLLEGE

Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

28 20
5
12
19
26

- --

NOV. 23

w

MASSACHUSETTS
Away

1967
1966
1965
1964
1963

7
6
7
8
8

vs.
L
2
3
2
2
0

T
0
0

L
5
3
7
5
6

T
0
1
1
0

0

0
1

~.c.

0. 25
7-14
No Game
No Game
No Gems

28

0

5
12
19

-

NOV. 30

w

HOLY CROSS
Home

1967
1966
1965
1964
1963

5
6
2
5
2

vs.

1

B.C.
6-13
32-26
0. 35
8.10
9- ()

at Harvard
Dartmouth
at Colgate
at Bc sto•l Univ.

at !luffalo

-

44

27

Nov. 2 Syracuse
Nov. 9 Massachusetts
Nov. 16 at Rutgers
Nov. 23 Connecticut
Nov. 30 at BOSTON COLLEGE

I

�Hear Ye!

COMMON

SENSE

PROCLAMATION

~------------------------------------~---~---

AddreJ/ed to the inhabitants o.fBojlon on the
FOLLOWING SUBJECTS OF INTEREST
I. Of the Origin and Dejign o.f a Revolutionary
New Radio Programme.
II. Thoughts on the Prefent State o.f
Contemporary Mufic in the Colonies.
III. Mifcellaneous Reflections on Perfonalities,
News, Sports, Weather &amp; Helicopter Reports.
•~m~~~-~~~m~~~~m~~~~oom~~~~~~mam••
•

(I) Have it known, that from this day forward, Revolutionary Radio will sweep the colonies to the tune of T he 1'\ew Spirit

~~

iii

m

of l 03. Our hair is neither long nor short, but rather.

•

~

personalities. (Ill) This in concert with WBZ's

,

rlynamic Weather forecasting, anrl exciting Helicop

'

~

itt

to the sound of today's music ... intelligently played

neatlv-cropped with modest side-burn.

?

·. .
.I

~

(II) Harken

at the proper speed by the colonies' most esteemecl
responsive 1'\ews reporting, complete Sports coverage.
tering-shall herewith be known as: The

~ew Spirit

of I 03. To this enrl, we at WBZ Radio do h umbly dedicate our fort une, our trust . .. and most assuredly, our transmitter.

•

Ji
fJi
•

---~~~~~~~-~~----~--~~~-~~~~-~~

wozrc:r•ow

GROUP

WESTINGHOUSE BROADCASTING COMPANY, INC.

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Caprice coupe
Caprice Sedan
Impala cu•\om coupe
Impala spor\ couP•
Impala Spor\ Sedan
Impala Convertible
Impala 4-0oOI sedan
Bel "if 4-000I Sedan
Sel "ir 2-0ool S•dan

\\6" -Hneelba••
ConcOUI' f5\a\e 'H a!!,On
(2· &amp; ,.,ea\)
concour• sta\1cn 'Ha!!.on
(2· &amp; 3-•ea\)
Greenboel S\a\IOn 'Ha!!.on
(2· &amp; , .,eat)
t~omad sta\IOn 'H a!!.on
(2·•ea\)

Si'"a1ne 4-0oor Sedan
s"ca1ne 2-0oOI sedan

fj\a\ibU sport coupe
fjla\ibU Spo!\ Sedan
fj\alibU conve1\1ble
fj\a\lbU 4-0oor Sedan
300 oeluxe spor\ coupe
300 oeluxe coupe
300 oeluxe 4-0oOI Sedan

camaro
spor\ coupe
conve1\1ble

cor-vair
fj\onta spor\ coupe
fj\onta convertible
corvair SOO spor\ coupe

Cbe-vro\et Wagons
\\9" 'Hneelb"e
¥-in!!.'wood £•\a\e -Hagon
(2· &amp; , .,eal)
¥-m!!.'wood S\a\IOn 'Ha!!.on
(2· &amp; 3-sea\)

cor-vette
coupe
conver\lble

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                    <text>WELCOME BOY SCOUTS !
OFFICIAL PROGRAM • FIFTY CENTS

Buffalo vs.
Massachusetts
SEPTEMI&amp; 27, 1968 • WAR MEMORIAL

1968 SCHEDULE
IOWA ST. 28
U/B 21

U/B 10
KENT ST. 13

* SEPT. 27 ... MASSACHUSETTS
OCT. 5 .... BOSTON COLLEGE
* OCT. 12 .. .. .... . DELAWARE
* OCT. 19 . ... VILLANOVA (HC)
* OCT. 26 ....... HOLY CROSS
NOV. 2 ... . ........ TEMPLE
NOV. 9 .. NORTHERN ILLINOIS
NOV. 23 ........ BOSTON U.
::: HOME GAMES

�Cavern Spring Water-Clean Water,
Naturally Perfect Brewing Water,
gives Simon Pure Beer its perfect
blend of flavor and refreshment.
The William Simon Brewery, Buffalo, New York

�a welcome
from the
President

Warmest greetings to our 61st year of
intercollegiate football. We have every reason
to look forward to a winning season for our
team in the games ahead.
Intercollegiate athletics, long recognized
as an integral part of university experience for
participants and spectators alike, is funded
primarily from student support. Student fee
at our Uni,·crsity arc lower, in relation to the
number of activities they support, than comPresident
parable fees on most other campuses around
the country. I hope that our students will
elect to maintain the excellence in athletics
en joyed on our campus by the twenty-two
intercollegiate teams of which only football and to a limited degree, basketball- produce any income of their own.
So convinced are we that intercollegiate athletics are a vital part of university life, the new Amherst campus
plan calls for a 20,000 seat stadium and 12,000 seat field house as well as facilities for other athletic events.
Groundbreaking for the new Amherst campus wil be this fall with students occupying some of the Colleges
by the academic year 1970-71. The new campus, seven times larger than our present Main Street campus, will
accommodate about 40,000 students by 1975. Coupled with a faculty of unequalled excellence, a developing intercollegiate sports program and outstanding physical facilities, the State University of New York at Buffalo will
rank among the great universities of our country. Students, alumni, and friends can well be proud of their
university.
We cordially invite you to enjoy our many facilities and events both now and in the future.
Martin Meyerson

one

�~~cONVENIENCE"

IS THE WORD FOR
BUTLER VOLKSWAGENTHE HOUSE THAT
SERVICE BUILT
IN DOWNTOWN
BUFFALO

BUTLER VOLKSWAGEN, INC.

~

1200 MAIN STREET, DOWNTOWN BUFFALO • PHONE 885-9300

two

�U/B Co-Captaias: Mason _. SaiJo

�THE

U. B. BOOSTERS
INVITE ALL

ALUMNI and FRIENDS
TO

WHOOP IT UP
AT THE

POST GAME TUN K
Immediately Following Each Home Game
Beer - Pop - Chips - Pretzels - Peanuts
Featuring Ell KONIKOFF &amp; HIS YANKEE SIX
DONATION: $1.50 Per Person

Faculty Club
four

Dress - As You Are

�Stadium Information
YOUR OOOPERATION PLEASE- As guests of the University today, your cooperation is required in
maintaining the dignity and reputation of the University. It is requested that you observe the rules and regulations of the institution.
WE WELCOME YOU to this University of Buffalo athletic contest and invite you to relax and enjoy
exciting intercollegiate competition with our respected opponent.
On behalf of the athletic department, its staff and the players we welcome you.
James E. Peelle
Director of Athletics

REST ROOM FACILITIES: Ladies' rest rooms
are situated at the north ends under the
Bailey Avenue and main stands. Gentl emen's
rest rooms are situated at the south ends
under the Bailey Avenue and main stands.
TICKET INFORMATION: The ticket office
in Clark Gymnasium is open each weekday
of the football season from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
On game days the main ticket window is
open from 9 a.m. to the kickoff. Tickets may
also be reserved on Friday night before a
home game from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.

Buffalo's Rotary Field
--r

1

1

~H U
",.
#4~

stl

SICTIOOOSII

m

""

1110

STUODIH

IS

LOST AND FOUND : All lost and found items
should be reported to the U / B Campus Police.
The Campus Police main office is in the Service Building on Winspear Avenue .

TOlALSUTS

I

REFRESHMENT BOOTHS: There are three
refreshment areas in the stadium. The locations are - practice field entrance (Gate 1),
Bailey A venue entrance (Gate 3) and at the
north end of the Bailey Avenue stands.

LUMS RESTAURANTS

DESIG"'ERS

ROAST BEEF

.

Heaped High

-=Office Furniture -

2222 ELMWOOD AVE.

Draperies -

'

I

CARL L. ANDERSON, INC.
INTERIOR

I!.Ut

International
&amp; American

Carpet ing

875-2830

DRAFT BEER

3488 Sheridan Drive

490 Delaware Avenue

five

�vour an-star
financial center
~!*

~ERVICE~~
P\BANK ~

*¥®

Member : Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

**
**
*
*
*

Savings accounts
Checking accounts
Auto loans
Home improvement loans
Mortgage loans
Commercial loans
Vacation loans

BANK oF BUFFALO
• BANK OF BUFFALO-- 17 Court at Pearl • EAST
SIDE Office- - 694 Fillmore at Broadway • SOUTH SIDE
Office-- 2157 Seneca near Cazenovia· • TOWN OF
TONAWANDA Office-- 4248 Delaware at Dreyer
• TOWN OF AMHERST Office-- 4954 Harlem at
Sheridan • TOWN OF CHEEKTOWAGA Office-· 3817
Union at George Urban • TOWN OF WEST SENECA
Office-- 4184 Seneca at Mill Road • STUYVESANT
PLAZA Office-- 274 Elmwood at Summer • KENMORE
Office-- 2858 Delaware at Mang.

New Dominick &amp; Dominick Conference includes
Amherst-the home financial team is practicing at

98 YEAR OLD D&amp;D
MAKES TOUCH- DOWN IN
150 YEAR OLD AMHERST

15 Rock Street (one block east of Cayuga), Williamsville,
New York 14221. The quarterback there is H. Bernard
Hammill, Manager. You'll get world-wide service and
financial knowledge. There are more than 1000 D &amp; D
people all suited up, waiting on the side lines to help
tackle your financial problems.

11

Get In Touch.

~g~~T~~o~~~'~"~.?MINICK
1122 Marine Trust Bldg., Buffalo 14203,856-7471
In Amherst: 15 Rock Street, Williamsville, 634-1515

Members New York and other major Stock Exchanges

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

"I:}

voosts

BUSINESSMEN'S ASSOCIATION

ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSON CO.
AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Cards
LEES DRUGS
GUSTAV A. FRISCH - Jeweler
M and T TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
six

STYLE CREST MEN'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP
ULBRICH'S - Stationery
FEDERAL MEATS
THE PLAID SHOP
DEALS JEWELERS
YOUR MATERNITY SHOP
ALEXANDER KATZ and
LOU KROP - Optometrists

EVANS - Gifts and Cards
W. T. GRANT CO.
FANNY FARMER
AMHERST Clothes Tree, Jnc.
JOHNSON'S - Amherst Bootery
KEN PAUL BAKERY
MILKY WAY RESTAURANT
BLU GALAXIE RESTAURANT

�BARTLETT BUICK
TF 6-1000

3080 MAIN STREET

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an
OPEL KADETT BULL CAR OR WAGON
Opel prices as low as $1,838
The Sound System for today's game
is provided by . .

LARKIN SOUND SERVICE
PUBLIC ADDRESS - INTERCOM
cand PHONE SYSTEMS

977 Niagara Street

Buffalo, New York

FLAY'S STEAK PUB

SIEGFRIED

1 LB. PORTERHOUSE STEAK

$1.75

CONSTRUCTION
CO., INC.

Enterta inment Wednesday, Fr iday, Saturday &amp; Sunday

877-9048

2457 DELEWARE AVE .

•
6 N. PEARL STREET
BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

C9

Edward Dzielski, Inc.
886-2300

883-4667

INTERIOR DESIGN &amp; PLANNING

seven

�STATE UNIVERSITY OF

Stretching almost a mile from end to end is the dramatic new Amherst Campus proposal of the State Uni.
versity of New York at Buffalo. Photo shows space allotment, not actual building design.

Steeped in tradition, distinguished by innovation,
optimistic by calculation, the 122 year old State University at Buffalo stands on the threshhold of the most
exciting era in its development. Since UB became a part
of the State University of New York in 1962, its growth
has been meteoric while its prospects are even more
dynamic and exciting.
Since that year, the number of full-time under·
graduates has swelled by some 49 per cent, while the
full-time graduate and professional student rolls have
expanded by 167 per cent. This five-year period has
also seen a 500 per cent increase in the number of doc·
torates awarded. A parallel change in the character of
the student population has become evident in the fact
that in 1959, 30.5 per cent of students entering the
University ranked in the top one-fifth of their high
school classes, while in the fall of 1967, 86.7 .per cent
graduated from high school in the top twenty per cent.
The graduate divisions are experiencing corresponding
rises.
eight

Bold New Plan
While vitality may serve as a mark of a great university, direction is even more prominent. in the char·
acter of an institution. Last fall, Prestdent Martin
Meyerson implemented a bold new organizational plan
which encourages and facilitates interdisciplinary coop·
eration in study and research. Seven broadly-based
Faculties are headed by distinguished provosts in each
respective area. A vivid example of interfaculty co·
operation is the recently announced School of Archi·
tecture and Environmental Design, which has been
founded in three faculties, those of natural science and
mathematics, social sciences and administration and arts
and letters.
The research function of the University becomes in·
creasingly visible with more than $12 million being spent
on over 500 diversified research projects currently under·
way. Sponsored research, i.e., that research financed by
sources outside the State treasury, has jumped 2 50 per
cent since 1962.

�NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
New Campus - Seven Times Larger

The enthusiasm for academic development at Buffalo has been matched only by the breathtaking plans
for a new 1,200 acre Amherst campus. The site study
recently unveiled shows imagination, daring and sensitivity emanating from a union of the thoughts of outstanding academicians and expert planners. A quick
glance at the plans for the new campus, which will be
seven times the siz.e of the present Main St. facility, reveals a close coordination between academic development
and physical design. Contiguity between the structures
housing applied sciences and mathematics and engineering and applied sciences, for example, hints at the desired relationship between these allied faculties. A
center for the arts will be physically proximate to the
faculty of arts and letters.
The athletic program at the State University at Buffalo will get a much deserved boost on the new campus
with plans for a modern 20,000 seat stadium and a field
house which will seat 12,000 spectators.
In and around the campus will be 30 individual, nondegree granting colleges accommodating one thousand
students each. Each of these living-learning centers will
provide classrooms, residences and recreational facilities
and will, most importantly, enable the student to identify
easily with his own small division, overcoming one of the
difficulties of the modern megaversity. A cross-fertiliz.ation of ideas and information between the colleges will
be encouraged.
Dramatic Directions in Higher Learning

In all, some 40,000 students will occupy the new
facilities consisting of 14 million square feet of educational space. The present Main 8t. campus is not doomed
to abandonment, however, as plans proceed to devote it
to expanded research and continuing education, for
which it will be one of the largest centers in the country.
While it is true that the enrollment growth of the
University will be most dramatic on the graduate level,
attention will still be focused on building a distinguished
undergraduate program as the foundation for an excellent
graduate center.

The symbol of excellence, Hayes Hall tower, on the
present Main Street campus.

nine

�15 minutes
from the
stadium!

J~--;;-=~-:-;;--__JI~L
~~~
u.i

~
&gt;~

~

.,,

u.i

KENMORE AVE.

~

Just far enough away to be
near-by. 70
rooms,
air-conditioned, TV in every room ,
restaurant, lounge, - the works!
(We're strong for campus weekends).

w

a:

&lt;{

~
uj
o

l.-l-ic

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SHERIDAN DRIVE (324)

I

eol1fii1CI1fal ]1111
motorist hotel
3456 DELAWARE AVE. NEAR SHERIDAN

reservations -

phone 877-7171

* 70 Deluxe Guest Rooms * Two Dining Room &amp;

*
*

Free Advance Reservations
Olympic Outdoor Pool

* 48 Bowling Lanes
* Indoor Ice Skating

FOR MAXIMUM PROTECTION AND SERVICE
in Buying and Selling Homes

*

Rink

*
*
*

Cocktail Lounges
Free Airport
Transportation
Golfing Privileges

Free Parking
Room Phones &amp; TV
S. 5220 Camp Road
Thruway Exit 57 N. Y. S. Thruway
Hamburg, New York 14075

Deal with a Realtor - Member of Greater Buffalo
Board of Realtors -

Phone 716-649-81 00

Exclusive M/L Service.

GOOD LUCK TO THE BULLS

M &amp; G CONVOY INC.
I

"Forwarders of Motorized Equipment"
Judson M . Qu imby, Contro ller

Phone: 823-6300

590 ELK STREET

BUFFALO, N. Y.

**

Northtown Plaza
Southgate Plaza
i( Transitown Plaza

834-3338
674-4880
632·5626

Open 'til 9 Nightly!
ten

�From Peanuts to Pascal . . .

YOU'LL SCORE BIG!

SCORE BIG

finding the largest selection of quality paperback and hard cover books in Western New York.

SCORE BIG

for any occasion with our complete selection
of sweatshirts, ceramics, studio cards, stuffed animals and
campus necessities.

�Support the Bulls
BOULEVARD CAR WASH
NIAGARA FALLS BOULEVARD
al MAPLE ROAD

Open 7:30 a.m. - 9:30 p.m.

~

�OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

*******
LONGINES

Buffalo Football News
BUFFALO

THE WORLD'S
MOST HONORED
WATCH®
10 world 's fair grand prizes
28 gold medal s

MASSACHUSETTS

War Memorial Stadium, 8:15 p.m.

September 27, 1968

Editor: Dick Baldwin, Director of Sports Information
local Advertising: Ansel Press, Inc.
National Advertising:

.&lt;';~

\l:,_

VS.

Spencer Advertising, New York

Contributors: Department of Information Services, Charles Dick, ECAC Service Bureau, National Col·
legiate Athletic Association, Dick Johnston, Bob Powell, Dan Daniels, Claudia ley and Dick Page with
Dick Bresciani of Massachusetts DSI Office.

Longines watches are recognized
as OFFICIAL for timing world
championships and Olymp ic sports
in all fields throughout the world.

Photography:

Don Glena, Rick Swenson, Massachusetts DSI Office and U/ B Information Services

contents
DEPARTMENTS
Page
Stadium Information . .. .. ... ...... .... ..... ..... . .... ................... . ......... ..... ...... .. ........... .... 5
Today's Officials ............ .............................................. .. ......... ... ....... .... ........... .. 14
U/B Athletic Foundation ...................... ....................... .... .......... .. ...... .. ............ .. . 16
Massachusetts Coaching Staff ................ .. ........ .. .. ......... ......... ........ .................... 19
Massachusetts Roster ············· ····················· ························ ································ 20
Starting Line-ups .. .......................... .. ............... .. ... ...... ........ .. .. .. .... .. .... Center Spread
Buffalo Roster . ... .. ... .. ... . .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. ... .. ... . ... . .. .. .. .. . .. ... . ... 25
Buffalo Coaching Staff ·············· ············· ············ ········ ······ ··········· ·········· ······ ······ 26
Massachusetts Players ····························· ························ ··························· 29 &amp; 31

longines Ultra -Chron =8205, automat ic wi th calendar, $175.
Other Ultra -Chron Models, $115 to $595.

the fabulous,new

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Guaranteed Accurate To A Minute A Month"
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guaranteed accurate to a minute a montha mean average of 2 seconds per day.
Ultra-Chron tells the date , hour, minute,
second . Never needs batteries. Winds
automatically wh i le you wear it. All Proof®
construction defeats water, dust,
shock , magnetism . At Longines-Wittnauer
Franchised Jewelers, coast-to-coast.
•Your l ongines-Witrnoue r Franchised Jeweler will a djus t
your Ultro -Chron to th is a ccur a cy, if necessary.
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NEW YORK

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Maker of Watches Of The Hichest Character
For Over A Century

The Athletic Directors ·················································· ·········· ·············· ········ ···· ·· 32
U/B Fall Scoreboard ····· ·············································· ···························· ········· ·· 32
Buffalo Players ...... ................................... .... ................. .... ........ .... ........ .. .. 37 &amp; 39
1968 Football Program Patrons ················ ···················· ·· ·· ··························· ··· ·· 40
U/B Athletic Administration ..................... .. ................. .. ..... ........ ... ...... ........ ...... 42
College Football Officials' Signals ....... .. .. .. ...... .. .... ...... .......... ... ...... .... .. .... .... .. .. 44

FEATURES
Football The Raw Force ...... .. ............. ........... .... ......... .. ... ... .. .. .... .. ....... ..... .... ... .. 15
In The Bullpen with Johnston &amp; Powell .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .... .. .. . .. .. ..... . 17
First Team to Fly ............. ... .... .. .. .. .... .. ..... .... ..... .... ... .. ..... ..... .............. .. ....... ..... .. . 18
Football Play on Words . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .... .. ... ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. . .. .. ... .... .. . .. . .. .. . 27
Massachusetts Co-Captains .. .. ........ .... ....... .... ... ..... .. ... ..... ......... .. ....... .... .. ..... ...... 28
Saturday's Humor

······························································································

28

Special Report on Massachusetts ··· ·· ······· ·· ·································· ························ 30
thirteen

�TODA~··s

· OFFICIALS
SELECTED
BVTHE
U.S. OLYMPIC
COMMITTEE

REFEREE
I

k~

WM. R. PARKINSON
A Pittsburgh alumnus
and currently Dean of
Boys
and
Guidance
Counselor at Wilkinsburg High School. At
Pitt he was co-captain
of basketball and won
three letters each in
basketball and baseball.
From the second generation of Parkinsons officiating.

~

UMPIRE

~

We're proud •••
that pHisoHex® has been selected as the antibacterial wash
to be used by the U.S. Team for the 1968 Olympic Games!

MITCH. J . OLENSKJ Graduate of Alabama,
he
was
All-Southern
Conference at tackle.
Played in Cotton and
Orange Bowls with the
Crimson Tide.
Served
in Army Quartermaster
Corps.
Also
played
football
with
Miami
Seahawks and Detroit Lions. Proprietor and
owner of restaurant in Vestal, N. Y.

LINESMAN
EARL J. BIRDY, JR.
Assistant Professor of
Physical
Education at
Carnegie
Mellon
in
Pittsburgh. Graduate of
Slippery
Rock
with
graduate study at Pittsburgh.
Served
with
Marines in Asiatic-Pacific Islands. Started officiating football in service. Secretary of Pittsburgh Chapter, EAIFO.

FIELD JUDGE

A winning athlete takes special care
of his skin. Above all, he protects it
against bacteria that can cause infections and lead to missed practice sessions and games.
If you've ever tried to play with an
infected blister on your heel or an
abscess on your finger, then you know
the role of healthy skin in sports. And
that's why pHisoHex is an important
part of an athlete's daily health routine.
pHisoHex is America's leading liquid
antibacterial skin cleanser in homes
and in hospitals. Used regularly in
place of soap, pHisoHex produces a
superclean skin and builds up an invisible antibacterial film of hexafourteen

chlorophane to protect your skin
against germs between washings.
And if you have problem skin,
pHisoHex is often valuable. The antibacterial film it leaves on your face
will ward off blemish-infecting bacteria. pHisoHex also helps to soften
and wash away blackheads.
Use pHisoHex, the skin cleanser of
winning athletes.
Made by Winthrop Laboratories, 90
Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016.
Available in drugstores in 5 oz. and
16 oz. plastic squeeze bottles.

rw~n7EJ

MICHAEL J. BOJACK An Alfred alumnus
from Johnson City, N. Y.
Played
football
and
basketball for the Purple Saxons as an undergraduate.
Restaurant
owner.

BACK JUDGE
JAMES R. SHEEHAN
Associated with Eastman Kodak Company in
Rochester. Serves as a
subcontractor representative . Graduate of Clarkson Tech.
Basketball
letterman for the Golde n
Knights. Served in Army
from 1956-57.
CLOCK OPERATOR:
PA ANNOUNCER:

Winthrop Laboratories. New York, N.Y.1 0016
(1230C)

Harry J. Kelly, Jr.

Dr. leonard T. Serfustini

�FOOTBALL: The Raw Far1e
- - - - - - - - by GEORGE STADE

T HERE ARE many ways in which
football is unique among sports, and
as many others in which it is the fullest expression of what is at the heart
of all sports. There is no other maior
sport so dependent upon raw force,
nor any so dependent on a complex
and oelicate strategy; none so wide
in the range of specialized functions
demanded from its players; none so
dependent upon the undifferentiated
athletic sine qua non, a quick-witted
body; none so primitive; none so futuristic; none so American.
Football is first of all a form of
play, something one engages in instinctively and only for the sake of
performing the activity in question.
Among forms of play, football is a
game, which means that it is built on
communal needs, rather than on private evasions, like mountain climbing. Among games it is a sport; it requires athletic ability, unlike checkers. And among sports, it is one whose
mode is violence and whose violence
is its special glory.
In some sports-basketball, baseball, soccer - violence is occasional
(and usually illegal); in others, like
hockey, it is incidental; in others
still, car racing, for example, it is accidental. Definitive violence football
shares alone with boxing and bullfighting, among major sports. But in
bullfighting a man is pitted not
against another man, but against an
animal, and boxing is a competition
between individuals, not teams, and
that makes a great difference.
If shame is the proper and usual
penalty for failures in sporting competitions between individuals, guilt
is the consequence of failing not only
oneself and one's fans, but also one's
teammates. Failure in football, moreover, seems more related to a failure
of courage, seems more unmanning

than in any other sport outside of
bullfighting . In other sports one loses
a knack, is outsmarted, or is merely
inferior in ability, but in football, on
top oi these, a player fails because he
" lacks desire," or "can't take it anymore," or "hears footsteps," as his
teammates will put it.
These physical and mental risks, the
fact that pain and injury are not only
commonplace but inevitable, dignify
the game, give the playing of it gravity and the watching of it zest. For in
sports, as in gambling, and as in most
of the activities that we think of as
peculiarly masculine, the greater the
risk, the more serious the play, the
keener the fun. The football player
risks the violation of his being, and
risks it in public. Every forty-five
seconds or so he must endure the intimacy of a violent collision with another man; he must pit his skill,
courage, and strength, the qualities
that define him, against another's,
and then consult his flesh and emotions to see whether he has been diminished or inc·reased in the process.
Many sports, especially those in
which there is a goal to be defended,
seem enactments of the games animals play under the stimulus of what
ethnologists, students of animal behavior call territory-"the drive to
gain, :naintain, and defend the exclusive right to a piece of property,"
as Robert Ardrey puts it. The most
striking symptom of this drive is aggressiveness, but among social animals, such as primates, it leads to
" amity for the social partner, hostility for the territorial neighbor."
The territorial basis of certain kinds
of sports is closest to the surface in
football, whose plays are all attempts
to gain and defend property through
aggression . Does this not make football par excellence the game of in-

stinctual satisfactions, especially for
Americans, who are notorious as violent patriots and instinctive defenders of private property? And what is
it that corresponds in football to the
various feathers, furs, fins, gorgeous
colors by means of which animals
puff themselves into exaggerated
gestures of masculine potency? The
football player's equipment, of course.
His cleats raise him an inch off the
ground. Knee and thigh pads thrust
the force lines of his legs forward.
His pants are tight against his rump
and the back of his thighs, portions of
his body which the requirements of
the game stuff with muscle. Even the
tubby guard looks- slim of waist by
comparison with his shoulders, extended half a foot on each side by
padding. Finally the helmet, which
from the esthetic point of view most
clearly expresses the genius of the
sport. Not only does the helmet make
the player inches taller and give his
head a size proportionate to the rest
of him; it makes him anonymous, inscrutable, more serviceable as a symbol. The football player in uniform
strikE:s the eye in a succession of gestalt shifts: first a hooded phantom out
of the paleolithic past of the species;
then a premonition of a future of
spacemen.
In sum, and I am almost serious
about this, football players are to
America what tragic actors were to
ancient Athens and gladiators to
Rome: models of perennially heroic,
aggressive, violent humanity, but
adapted to the social realities of the
times and places that formed them.
For only American money, only the
American educational system, only
the American life-style could have
produced football or created an audience capable of responding to its
unique beauty. Who else but a people
now grown sedentary on profits from
the violence that continues to be
their national habit are likely to feel
the psychosocial relevance of football with any sort of poignancy or
see in football the testing of their national aspirations? Only Ame!:'icans
could. And that is why, every year
from September through January,
American men neglect their wives
and daydream at their jobs.
Football is at once the expression
of what has made us Americans and
our l.uman response to what has
made us Americans. It is the product
of a perfect fusion of our human nature with our national character.
So there is no use asking whether
football is immoral or brutal or costly. No use asking whether it is a sign
of health or disease in our civilization . It is a part of things as here and
now they necessarily are. And it is
one of the few things of that sort that
can make you feel good.

fifteen

�Thank You

I•

Special appreciation is expressed to all those who are contributing to the campaign for the
support of Intercollegiate Athletics at the State University of New York at Buffalo .
.\

ll. lleunett Co., In~.
Hubert S. u.,nnett
\\", ll. Ucnuctt
. \dant, Jleltlrunt, .\ntler~on
lJerthuitl .\, !Jenning
t'o., Inc.·.
Hobt·rt li, llt•JIH~hlng
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Hul1t"rt 1-', llerner
Chn:-;e, Juc.•,
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llt•ttt•r \\ lrt" I•rodut·tH, Inc.
S&lt;' ll!-( .\dlt•r
Hulwrt L. Ucyer
.\d' t•rllne l'o. ('l'hc)
IJh•kfurd Pnatt.•r Co., Inc,
.J:uue... s J . . \llln~er
Hubt•rt G. llit'dcnkopt
. \ irn :1' N Lt•lsurelaud Inn
.John Ult·nt·n~tcwk
\lhcrt"!'li Curtain Stort•s , lot·.
Ht•uht·u U. Ulllon·ltz
.J. t&lt;..; rn· in .\lford
t.:owrt'tu•c g, Uiltt•kotr
1\ot•nru• th .\ 1 • .\I ford
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.Just•t•h .\ nt hrusko
IJJsun ~lt.·t• trlt.•nl ('o., Inc,
.\nu•rlt':tu 1-tunu.• Foods
Blsun Fuud!ol ( ' unltUtny
\ uu•rlt·an Prt•t•lsiun JnduHtrleH Blsun LltJUUr ('uniJUtny, lnt•,
Lillian ( ' , .\rul:lloro
ISisun Jlruclu••t!ol ( ' n ,, Inc.
\\"illhuu S , .\ntlnluru
St:tnlt·, B. IJinc·h
\ hu•t•nt (i, .\ntlrunlt·o
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l.n \ t•rn._. II. Urtu•kt"r
Eol~-:· ar ( '. llt••· k
ltlt•hnrd .\, llrnttt"n
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llt•:t trlc•t• ( ':trnt•' lh•hrenN
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lh·nm:tn ( ' urnr•:tn;\·
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llutt'nlo ~n,· lnJ.:'"' IJnnk
Ulch:ord
Sheldon

C . .\:oron
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Uutl"alo Slag Company, Jnc.
Uuft'uJo 'l'enni~S Center, Inc.
Uutf:olo w.,a,·tng· &amp; lJdtlng &lt;.:o.
HU¥Ht"ll .\. llufl'onutnte
Uullder" \\' ood Product.., Inc •
John G. lJukaty
'l'honuuJ ~. Uuntbnlo
l,nul .\. DurgenHon
~ch,· nrtl J. llurkt", Jr.
\\"llll:om G. Uurrcll
\In:\. \V , UurNteln
Uushtt's!ol .\dtnlnhHrutlon
.\.luntnl .\HNot•,
.\rthur U. lJutl.,r
l.l'u lJylrnok
(;

John \V. Cowper Com1tnny
~ ornuut L. Crtlllll~
l'r~dltor!S lutercJuuage, Inc •
\\' llllam '1'. l'rocoll
li.t"nneth 0. (..'roue
ll. 0. l'rul"e
Culliton Ice Co., Inc.
Daniel B. Curtin
t'urtbt Scren· CoJupuny, Inc.
\\"llllam H. Cuthill

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\\"llllaon Uahier
~dn· nrcl Unlton Co •
Uh. llt':od Juhn~on &amp; (.' o .
l'hliiJ• u. U' .\ng·eio
Jut·l 1.. Uanicl~
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J:uu~s I&lt;;, Ut•t•kt•r, Jr.
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.l:,nu•!S It, l)t·(~runt
Ut•nt:al St·h~•'l \ lurnnl .\!S!SOC.
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:\'t"n· York. Inc•.
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..; .. " nrd n. ( ' ook
f'&lt;'t&lt;'r II. Cook
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llt•rton Ertl'il
Uuruth , . u · t"hh EstJf"rst"n
\nthon,.· 1" . ( ' orrnl
:\c~lsun .J. Cotton
Xurtnnn L. Ett"llJ,:f"r. Inc•,
ll"'hnrd 1), ('oul&lt;'ht&gt;r
(;,.nr!-(t' F. Elln~ot
" "lllh• (; , ( ' &lt;l\.-nrd
nuttt•rt H. E,·nns, Jr.

THIS IS A CONTINUING CAMPAIGN . . . CONTRIBUTIONS CAN BE SENT TO:
DR. A. WESTLEY ROWLAND
Vice President for University Relations
186 Hayes Hall
State University of New York at Buffalo
3435 Main Street
Buffalo, New York 14214
Please make checks payable to the University of Buffalo Foundation, Inc. Contributions are deductible.
Additional contributors will be listed in subsequent home football programs.

sixteen

�•

1n

the BULLPEN with

Bob Powell, Buffala Courier Express

The University of Massachusetts comes to town for
tonight's football game against the University of Buffalo
with a man Coach Vic Fusia thinks is the fourth in a
line of fine quarterbacks.
In the seven years he has been at UMass, Fusia has
had three quarterbacks who went on to play pro football.
Greg Landry, directed the Redmen last season, now is
with the Detroit Lions. Before Landry, Fusia had Jerry
Whelchel and John McCormick.
Now he has Tim Adams, a 6-foot junior from
Wellesley, Mass., who understudied Landry last season.
He didn't see much action; eight minutes of varsity play,
in fact. But Fusia said at the start of preseason practice
that he felt Adams could step right in and take over. Tim
apparently has done this.
In the Red men's opening victory over Main, he
completed 15 of 32 passes for 164 yards and two touchdowns. He also ran for one touchdown.
From these figures it can be seen that the Redmen
pass almost as often as they run . In split end Nick
Warnock they have an outstanding receiver, fast and
with good moves. Warnock also does the punting.
Wingback Jerry Grasso, tight end AI Becker and
the alternating fullbacks, Bruce Cochrane and Ed Sarno,
are also frequent receivers of Adams' throws.
Both fullbacks are hard runners and the tailback,
Craig Lovell, is a quick-moving six-footer who can go
all the way.
On defense, UMass uses the monster. The monster
is a roving back who moves to where he thinks the play
is going. The Redmen have a mobile, aggressive defensive team, according to reports, a!1d they like to hit.
Top defensive performers tonight are expected to
be the monster, Don Dotson ; Randy Robinson, a defen sive end; Larry Fortunoff, a linebacker, and Marty
Scheralis, a 230 -pound tackle.
Last time Massachusetts played UB, th e Bulls
traveled to Amherst, Mass., and upset the favored Redmen, 18-6. That was in 1965, when Landry was a
sophomore. The Bulls chased the touted quarterback
all over the field as he had one of his poorest days in
UMass uniform. The Redmen are out to atone for
that defeat. In the only other meeting between the
teams, UMass won, 24 -22, in a thriller on Rotary Field
in 1964.

D ick J ohnston, Buf}alo Evening News

The Monday following the Bull's disappointing
opening game loss in Ames, Iowa, Dick Ashley made a
big decision. Richard decided it was time to bear down .
The talented senior from Massena never had been
known as a hard worker in practice. Like many athletes
of his caliber, the 6-1 split end preferred to have his
best for Saturday, or as in this case, Friday night.
The decision was an unselfish one, although he obviously is determined to make his final varsity season the
best in a record-accumulating UB career.
Ashley's newly adopted attitude that Mondey and
the days that ensued, was evident to almost everyone.
He was running out pass patterns when he wasn't the
target. Instead of brushing defensive backs on running
plays, he was knocking them down.
Why, he was asked, was he an established star,
practicing like an aspiring sophomore?
"Well, I figured if some of the others, particularly
the younger players see an old man like me working
a little harder, it might become infectious," he said.
. Dick has been .labeled the "old man" of the squad,
mamly because he rs in his fifth year at UB. Knee damage before last year's first game put him in the wings
for the 1967 season, but his eligibility was extended in
accordance with NCAA rules.
Surgery by Dr. Edmond Gicewicz, whose records
Ashley is gobbling up with each catch, corrected the
knee problem. A good spring practice assured Ashley
and the coaching staff that the knee was as strong as ever.
As the Bulls go into the season's third game tonight
at War Memorial Stadium, Ashley has caught four
passes for 43 years. That put his career catches at 51
and his career yardage at 803.
He owns UB marks for career TDs ( 11) , season
TDs (7) and game Tds {3). He also held school standards in two other departments until his replacement in
1967, Chuck Drankoski, wiped them off the books.
Almost every professional football scout watching
the Bulls shows an interest in Ashley and have been
doing so since his fine junior season in 1966.
The kind of pre-judgement that said John Stofa and
Gerry Philbin would never make it, falls on Ashley. He
lacks speed, several scouts have said. After seeing him
in action, they are quick enough to agree that he does
have a built-in knack of getting into the open - and
that's something some of the speedier receiver candidates
find impossible to master.
seventeen

�-

---- ------

FIRST TEAm TO FLY
by ARCH NAPIER

I T WAS BACK in 1929 that a football coach first decided to fly his
team to a game.
"Fly?" everyone asked. "Golly,
where's he going to get all the planes?
It would take the Graf Zeppelin to
fly a whole football squad. And why
fly'? No sensible coach wants to field
a team that's airsick'"
No, but you didn't build an athletic
program in a little cow college by being too sensible, either. When Coach
Roy Johnson came to the University
of New Mexico in 1920, the enrollment was 227, and the football field
didn't have any grass. The first day
of practice each September was devoted to removing tumbleweeds, cacti and some of the larger rocks. By
t927, Coach Johnson got tired of this;
so he borrowed a plow and a team.
a~d planted grass. He watered it
himself every morning. In his spare
time, he taught Phys. Ed., coached
boxing, baseball, track, golf, basketball, and- when there was water in
the fire department pond- swimming. The pond lacked a diving
board, but the students jumped out
of a tree.
The football team played nearby
schools like Montezuma Seminary
and occasionally got as far west as
Arizona. Then came the big invitation from Occidental College to play
in the huge new bowl in Pasadena!
Oxy was evidently reaching far for
an opponent. Stanford and UCLA had
the Rose Bowl booked for the afternoon of October 12. so Occidcntpl
had to settle for Friday night. Few
coaches wanted to play under t;lC
lights, which were a novelty at the
time. (Newsmen were still writing
columns with titles like: "Night Baseball and the Mosquito.")
rew Mexico had never played at

eighteen

night, but Coach Johnson agreed to
try. He felt that a t1·ip to Californiathe first one in the school's history
- would be very educational for his
ranch kids . . and it might help recruiting, too.
His decision came just at the time
that Albuquerque was delirious with
"airline fever." In the summer of
1929. Charles A. Lindbergh helped
organize Transcontinental Air Transport (T. A. T.), the first line with a
coast-to-coast schedule. The passengers travelled by train at night and
by plane in the daytime. and the segment from Clovis, N. M .. to Albuquerque and on to Los Angeles was
entirely by air. The line had four or
five huge Ford Tri-Motors that carried 12 passengers each.
Caught up in the fever. Coach Johnson decided that the team should f1y
to the big game, but as a wily strategist. he prepared public opinion by
calling several press conferences to
say that f1ying was out of the question. That started the citizens talking,
and soon they were all begging him
to reconsider. Slowly he gave in, and
he finally agreed that every boy who
brought a note from his parents-and
promised to study on the trip- would
have an airplane ride.
Yet T . A. T. didn't have enough
space. Even by adding its one spare
plane. it could provide only about 18
seats. You see, it did have a few other
paying pa~scngers.
'·Eighteen seats will be fine,'' said
the coach. "Because of the risk of
air-sickness. we'll send our best eleven boys to Los Angeles by train. and
the subs will go in the two planes.
Then for the rl'turn trip. they will
switch, and everyone will get a plane
ride.''
The train group left town quietly

that Thursday at 3:45 a.m., and the
subs assembled at the Albuquerque
Airport before a cheering crowd the
same morning at 10. One-fifth of the
town's adult population was on hand
to see history in the making. The
first plane left on schedule, but the
second one was delayed by a mysterious weight problem in its tail. A
search revealed two student stowaways in the baggage compartment.
When they were ejected, the second
plane soared away, too.
The pilots took them across AriLona, buzzing herds of antelope and
detouring over the Grand Canyon for
fun, and the boys reached Los Angeles in time to motor out to Pasadena for a little practice under the
lights. But where was the first team ?
Still on the train! They did not encounter the lights (hencefo rth described in school annals as "those
glaring lights") until the night of the
game itself.
Coach Johnson's precautions against
air-sickness led to the great strategic
error of the trip. The New Mexico
starters had difficulty adjusting to
the lights. Not once did they manage
to catch and hold a punt.
The Oxy team was notably stronger, too, and the New Mexico boys
were awed by the size of the Rose
Bowl and the huge crowd of 17,000.
The Pacific night fog rolled into Pasadena until Coach Johnson thought
he was back in the Albuquerque Little Theatre playing the preacher in
''Rain." The New Mexico Lobos
slipped and slithered on cleats that
were designed for sand, not wet
grass.
Most troublesome was the fact that
the ball was white and the Occidental
jerseys were white. too. When Oxy
carried the ball. it was well-nigh invisible. (Coach Johnson later persuaded his old coach, Fielding Yost
of Michigan. to get the rules changed
so that the ball makes a contrast.)
The game ended with a 26 to 0 loss
for New Mexico, but everyone enjoyed the trip and the University
was proud to have the first aerial
team in history.
Th(; air trip did help recruiting. In
fact. the football teams became so
successfu l that the regents felt they
needed a coach from otre Dame. So
Coach Johnson was elevated to athletic director. and he didn't have to
water the grass anymore.
The business manager on that flight.
Tom Popejoy. later became president
of the University and served with
distinction until his retirement in
June, 1968. T. A. T. eventually became Trans World Airlines, and now
has much bigger planes. The trip
across the West is much faster, but
the pilots don't buzz antelope anymore.

�The MASSACHUSETTS Coaching Staff

JACK DELANEY
Otfcnsl\'e Backfield

VICTOR H. FUSIA, HEAD COACH

WILLIAM FESPERMAN
Defensive Coordinator

ROBERT GRAHAM
Defensive Line

Dedication, organiz.ation and efficiency are the ingredients
that have produced success during V1c Fusia's tenure as th e 20th
head football coach at the University of Massachusetts. Se\'en
years of molding and building the Redmen into a highly re ·
spectable team have resulted in Ma ssachu!'Ctts reaching Its alltime prestige peak. Fusia's record of 47 "''"'·'· 15 losses and 1
tie Is the best, percentage wise. of all Ma&gt;'achu!'Ctts football
coaches.
Last year, the Redmen won their fourth Yankee Conference
crown in the past fi"e years and concluded the season with 7
wins and 2 losses. Under Fusia. Massachusetts has compiled a
Yankee Conference record of 31 wms and 3 losses for a .912
percentage. the hest ever compiled by a Conference football
coach. Unfortunately. the three losses, all hy field goals. cost
the Redmen the Conference title each year. In I 964. Fusia was
selected the New England Coach of the Y car while his team
was voted the top major team in the area.

GEORGE KARRAS
Offensive Line

A native of Pittsburgh, Coach Fusia attended Wilkinsburg
(Pa.) HS and Mt. St. Michael's Academy (Bronx, N. Y.). He
graduated from Manhattan College in 1938 with a Bachelor
of Science degree and as an undergraduate was an outstanding
tailback for the Jaspers. Following graduation Vic taught one
yeu at Bernard School for Boys in New York before entering
the Navy. He served two years in the P&lt; cific with the 7th
Fleet Force and was discharged in I 946 with the Rank of
Lieutenant Junior Grade.
Fusia coached at Rankin (Pa.) HS in 1946·47 where he
lost only two league games in two years. He then moved to
Indiana (Pa.) HS and climaxed three successful seasons with
an undefeated team in 1950. In 1951 he began a four-year stay
at Brown University where he served as hackficld coach. In
1955 Vic moved to the University of Pittsburgh to serve as
backfield coach and first assistant. During his six years at
Pitt, the Panthers were rated as one of the top independent
college teams in the nation with Fusia being accorded much of
the credit for the team's success.

DAVID KELLEY
Freshman Coach

MIL TON PIEPUL
Defcnsi\'e Backfield

Vic and his wife Joan reside in Amherst with their three
children Carol, Victor Michael, and Mark Joseph.

nineteen

�1968 Massachusetts Football Roster
No.

14
5

75
81
53

63
64

30
17
10
71
65

79
41
12
70
33
42

52
18
54

43
66
55
24
62
22

56
60

32
6

15
74

90
89
87
82
40
61
67

11
25
80
78
7
35

21
85
45

34

19
31
94
20
51
72

8
9

50
58
16
77

23
44

91
83
86
84

88

Player
Adams, Tim
Anderson, George
Baranowsky, Charles
*Becker, Alan
Byron, Bill
Callaghan, Thomas
Caso, Eugene
*Cochrane, Bruce
*Colosi, Joe
Collin, Ronn
*Cooney, Michael
Crane, George
Cummins, Glenn
*Decembrele, John
Devitt, Mark
Donlin, Richard
*Dotson, Don
*Driscoll, Tim
Dubzinsky, John
Dyer, Dick
Farrelly, John
Flaherty, Pat
Flaim, Edward
*Fortunoff, Larry
*Frye, William
*Fulton, Bruce
*Grasso, Jerry
*Gray, Dennis
*Guarino, Andrew
Heavey, Richard
Hering, Neil
Hughes, Ken
Hupprich, Frederick
lnterlande, Vincent
Kelliher, James
Lang, Joseph
Long, James
*Lovell, Craig
Maclean, John
Marchando, Pierre
Marchev, Michael
*McArdle, Mike (CC)
McGarry, Nick
*Nangle, Jim
Nathanson, Michael
Nieves, Angel
*Parnell, Stephen
*Robinson, Randy
*Rogers, Steve
Russell, Mark
Sapienza, Ed
*Sarno, Edward
Sarowsky, Michael
Scavone, Patrick
*Schablik, Noel
*Scheralis, Martin
Semino, Thomas
Shea, Donald
Sheehan, Robert
Sroka, Bill
Tavalacci, Frank
Toner, Mark
Tudryn, Frank
Tumminelli, Charles
Walsh, David
*Warnock, Nick (CC)
Wood, Russell
*York, Thomas
Young, Donald

*Letterman (24)

twenty

Pos.

Cl.

QB
QB

Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.

DT
TE

c

MG
MG
FB
DB

QB
OT
OG
DT
TB

QB
OT
LB
TB

c
HB
LB
TB
OG
LB
DB
OG
WB
LB
MG
FB
WB

QB
DT
DE
TE
DE
SE
TB
OG
OG

QB
DB
TE
OT
TB
HB

s

DE

s
HB
DB
FB
OT
WB

c

DT
WB
HB

c
LB
DB
DT
WB

s

DE
SE
DE
DE
SE

So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.

Major
H. M.
Soc.
P.E.
H.M.
Bus.
Eng.
P.E.
His.
Me d.
Mark.
H.M.
His.
P.E.
Gov.
P.E.
Bio.
Vet.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
H.M.
H.M.
L.A.

Bus.
P.E.
C.E.
Me d.
Arch.
His.
His.
P.E.
H.M.
H.M.
P.E.
Bus.
Bus.
Bot.
Gov.
Zoo.
H.M.
Eng.
His.
H.M.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
M.T.
P.E.
H.M.
P.E.
P.E.
H.M.
P.E.
Bus.
Gov.
P.E.
Eng.
H.M.
Bus.
His.
H.M.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
Sc.
H.M.
P.E.
Psych.
Mark.

Age

20
20
19
22
19
22
20
21
22
21
21
21
22
20
21
20
20
21
20
19

Ht.
6.{)

5·10
6·3
6-4
6·3
6-3

5·9
6.{)

5·9
5-11
6·0
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-6

6-0

20

6.{)
6-1
6-1
6-Q

20
19

5-10
5-10

20

6-1

21
19
21
21
20
19
19
20

5-9
5-11
6-0

186

6-2

6-0

185
215
189

5-8

165

6-0

170
235
205
190
193
180
194
205
225
180
190
210
205

5-11

24

6-2

19
20
19
20
20
25
19
19
21

6-2

20
20

20
21
20

20
21
20

20

6-1

6-1
6-0
6-0

5-10
6·1
6-0
6-0
6-5
6-3

5-8
6·1
6-1

160
178
178

6-0
6-2
5-11

200
190
175

20

6-0
6-0

21
19

5-10

20

20

6-2

6-2
6-4

20

5-10
5·11

21
18

6-6
6-2

21
21
21

6-1

20

20

19
23
19

Wt.
175
175
210
200
218
215
185
205
175
175
225
210
225
205
180
260
190
185
190
198
210
185
195
205
185
200

6-2

5-9
5-10

182

230
220
178
200
230
170
185
250
205
190
225
175
155

6-1

205

6-2

200
195

22

6-2
6-1

25

6-0

200

200

School
Wellesley HS
Weymouth HS
Hudson HS
East Rutherford HS
Franklin HS
Williston Academy
Dedham HS
Brookline HS
Bishop Duffy HS
Haverhill HS
Msgr. Bonner HS
Belmont HS
North Bergen HS
Canton HS
Dartmouth HS
New Britain HS
Bedford HS
Brgt-Raynham
Gardner HS
Nashua HS
Mt. St. Michael HS
South Boston HS
Bergen Catholic
Far Rockaway HS
Turtle Creek HS
Canton HS
Everett HS
Bishop Fenwick HS
Everett HS
Brookline HS
Pascack Valley HS
Morris Knolls HS
Wakefield HS
Greenfield HS
Abington HS
Xaverian Bros. HS
Washington Twp. HS
Wellesley HS
Williamstown HS
Cambridge Latin HS
Millburn HS
Millbury HS
D. J. O'Connell HS
Peabody HS
Newton South HS
Clinton HS
Newton South
Far Rockaway HS
Bethlehem Cen. HS
Nashua HS
Chershire Academy
Waltham HS
Peabody HS
St. Peter's CCHS
East Rutherford HS
South Boston HS
Worcester Academy
Hingham HS
Catholic Memorial
Central HS
Mt. St. Michael's HS
St. Mary's HS
Northamton HS
Lodi HS
Fordham Prep.
Episcopa I Academy
G. Livingston HS
Bordentown Military
Cushing Academy

Hometown

Wellesley, Mass.
Weymouth, Mass.
Hudson, Mass.
East Rutherford, N. J.
Franklin, Mass.
Florence, Mass.
Dedham, Mass.
Brookline, Mass
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Haverhill, Mass.
Havertown, Pa.
Belmont, Mass.
North Bergen, N. J.
Canton, Mass.
Dartmouth, Mass.
New Britain, Conn.
Bedford, Mass.
Bridgewater, Mass.
Gardner, Mass.
Nashua, Mass.
Bronx, N. Y.
Boston, Mass.
Fort Lee, N. J.
Belle Harbor, N. Y.
Turtle Creek, Pa.
Canton, Mass.
Everett, Mass.
Salem, Mass.
Everett, Mass.
Chestnut Hill, Mass.
Hillsdale, N. J.
Denville, N. J.
Wakefield, Mass.
Greenfield, Mass.
Abington, Mass.
Norwood, Mass.
Apollo, Pa.
Wellesley, Mass.
Williamstown, Mass.
Cambridge, Mass.
Short Hills, N. J.
Millbury, Mass.
Arlington, Va.
Peabody, Mass.
Newton Center, Mass.
Clinton, Mass.
Newton, Mass.
Belle Harbor, N. Y.
Springfield, Vt.
Nashua, N. H.
Everett, Mass.
Waltham, Mass.
Peabody, Mass.
Worcester, Mass.
Carlstadt, N .J.
South Boston, Mass.
Braintree, Mass.
Hingham, Mass.
West Roxbury, Mass.
Auburn, N. Y.
Yonkers, N. Y.
Swampscott, Mass.
Northampton, Mass.
Lodi, N. J.
Yonkers, N. Y.
Berwyn, Pa.
Berkeley Heights, N. J.
Bedminister, N. J.
Holyoke, Mass.

�\lME

OUT!

BEroRE'YOU
BU'f I SEE YOUR.
C"RYSL£R.PLYMOUTI-\

OR. DODGE
DEALER

CHR.y'SLE.R.
Q:IR.PORAnoN1
LONG ON

STYLir-.16 ,
loNG ON
FEATURES
AND ON
ENGLNE.ER.ING

Plymouth • Dodge· Chrysler•lmperial· Dodge Trucks ·Simca ·Sunbeam

~~ CHRYSLER
CORPORATION
~

SEE THE AFL IN ACTION EACH WEEK ON NBC-TV.

��81
72
61
74
85
56
55
33
25
24
45

OFFENSE
85 PAUL LANG ... . ..... .. TE
77 CHRIS WOLF . ....... .. . LT
64 MIKE MASER .... . . . .. LG
52 JACK WESOLOWSKI ..... C
62 TOM KOWALEWSKI .. .. RG
73 TOM CENTOFANTI ...... RT
87 DICK ASHLEY ....... . .. SE
19 DENNY MASON (CC) . .. QB
21 KEN RUTKOWSKI . ...... TB
44 CHUCK DRANKOSKI . .... FL
35 JOE ZELMANSKI ... . .... FB

Defense
TOM YORK ....... . ... LE
MARTIN SCHERALIS . . .. LT
JOHN MacLEAN . . . . . . . MG
FRED HUPPRICH . .. . . . . RT
RANDY ROBINSON . . . . RE
DENNIS GRAY . . ...... LB
LARRY FORTUNOFF .... LB
DON DOTSON ... . .. CHIEF
MIKE McARDLE (CC) ... CB
BILL FRYE ............ CB
STEVE ROGERS .. . . ... . . S

Massachusetts
81
78
62

SO
67
71
83
14
22
30
42

5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
14
15
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
30
31
32
33
34
35
40
41
42
43
44
45
50
51
52

Buffalo

Offense
AL BECKER ............ TE
JIM NANGLE .......... LT
BRUCE FULTON .... . ... LG
BILL SHEEHAN .. .. ...... C
PIERRE MARCHANDO ... RG
MIKE COONEY .. . ..... RT
NICK WARNOCK (CC) ... SE
TIM ADAMS . .. ....... QB
JERRY GRASSO .... . .. WB
BRUCE COCHRANE . . . . FB
TIM DRISCOLL ......... TB

UMASS
Anderson, QB
Hering, WB
Nathanson, TB
Semino, WB
Shea, HB
Coltin, QB
Marchev, QB
Devitt, QB
Adams, QB
Hughes, QB
Colosi, DB
Dyer, HB
Sapienza, DB
Scavone, WB
Parnell, S
Grasso, WB
Tudryn, WB
Frye, DB
McArdle, DB
Cochrane, FB
Sarno, FB
Heavey, FB
Dotson, LB
Russell, HB
Nieves, HB
Lovell, TB
Decembrele, TB
Driscoll, TB
Flaherty, TB
Tumminelli, S
Rogers, S
Sheehan, C
Schablik, C
Dubzinski, C

SQUAD
53 Byron, C
54 Farrelly, LB
55 Fortunoff, LB
56 Gray, LB
58 Sroka, LB
60 Guarino, N.G
61 Maclean, OG
62 Fulton, OG
63 Callaghan, MG
64 Coso, MG
65 Crane, OG
66 Flaim, OG
67 Marchando, OG
70 Donlin, OT
71 Cooney, OT
72 Scheralis, DT
74 Hupprich, DT
75 Beranowsky, DT
77 Toner, DT
78 Nangle, OT
79 Cummins, DT
80 McGarry, TE
81 Becker, TE
82 Long, SE
83 Warnock, SE
84 York, DE
85 Robinson, DE
86 Wood, DE
87 Lang, DE
88 Young, SE
89 Kelliher, TE
90 lnterlande, DE
91 Walsh, DE
94 Sarowsky, OT

81
70
75
83

SO
69
65
32
23
40
29

10
11
12
15
16
17
19
20
21
23
24
25
26
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
40
42
44
45
46
48
49
50
51
52
56
57

DEFENSE
TOM MURPHY ......... LE
DAN WALGATE ........ LT
JOE RICCELLI .......... RT
BOB KOVEY ........... RE
JIM MOSHER ......... OLB
DON SABO (CC) ....... ILB
SCOTT CLARK ........ ILB
WAVE RICHNER ..... . OLB
NICK KISH ........ . . . . HB
TOM ELLIOTT ........... S
DICK HORN ............ H

BUFFALO SQUAD
Moresco, QB
58 Don nor, C
Perry, QB
59 Kershaw, LB
Stiscak, DHB
60 Carney, G
Martin, DHB
61 Elwell, G
Embow, KSP
62 Kowalewski G
63 Walters G '
Jack, QB-KSP
Mason, QB
64 Maser,
Patterson, TB
65 Clark, LB
Rutkowski, TB 66 Lupienski, LB
Kish, DHB
67 Minch, DT
Zalar, DHB
68 Hayden, G
Bell, LB
69 Sabo, LB
Jacobs, S
70 Walgate, DT
Horn, DHB
71 Hudson, T
Hernquist, LB
72 Milarski, DT
Richner, LB
73 Centofanti, T
Zeek, FB
74 Rio, T
Yuzny, LB
75 Riccelli, DT
Zelmanski, FB
76 Reid, T
Woodward, FL 77 Wolf, T
McCullough, LB 78 Beck, DT
Chapp, FB
79 Atkinson, DT
Elliott, S
80 Shine, SE
Nixon, DHB
81 Murphy, DE
Drankoski, FL
82 Endress, TE
Grubbs, DHB
83 Kovey, DE
Hogan, DHB
84 Przybycien, DE
Hlavenka, SE
85 Lang, TE
Faller, TB
86 Vigneau, DE
Mosher, LB
87 Ashley, SE
Moler, C
88 James, TE
Wesolowski, C 89 Sharrow, SE
Chernega, LB
90 Henley, DE
Albaneze, DT

G

�Olds Delta 88 Royale: The bold and the beautiful.
Meet our new top-of-the-line 88. Big-car room and
ride on a longer 124-inch wheelbase. Vinyl roof, pinstriping, fender louvers, big Rocket 455 V-8 and
much more, standard. All for little more than you'd
pay for an ordinary car! Escape from the ordinary.

�1968 Buffalo Football Roster
(Revised Sept. 4)

No.
Player
57
Albaneze, Dennis
87 **Ashley, Richard
79
Atkinson, Barry
78
Beck, Russell
25
Bell, Harry
60
Carney, Patrick
Centofanti, Thomas
73
38
Chapp, Gary
56
Chernega, David
65
*Clark, Scott
58
Donnor, Charles
44 **Drankoski, Charles
40
Elliott, Thomas
61
Elwell, Jerry
16 **Embow, Robert
82
*Endress, Terrence
49
Faller, John
45
*Grubbs, Gary
68
Hayden, William
90
Henley, Prentis
30
Hernquist, Eugene
48
Hlavenka, Joseph
46
Hogan, Kevin
29
*Horn, Richard
71
Hudson , Joseph
17
*Jack, Paul
Jacobs, Joel
26
88
James, Michael
59
Kershaw, Edward
23
Kish, Nicholas
83
*Kovey, Robert
62 **Kowalewski, Thomas
85
*Lang, Paul
66 **Lupienski, John
34
*Luzny, Michael
15
Martin , Daniel
64 ** Maser, Michael
19
*Mason, Dennis (CC)
37
McCullough, Steven
67
Minch, Bernard
72
Milarski , Thomas
51
Moler, Robert
10
Moresco, Joseph
50 ** Mosher, James
81
*Murphy , Thomas
42
Nixon, Leonard
20
*Patterson, Patrick
11
Perry, Edward
84 **Przybycien, John
76
Reid, Frank
75
Riccelli, Joseph
32 **Richner, David
Rio, John
74
21
*Rutkowski, Kenneth
69
*Sabo, Donald (CC)
89
Sharrow, Michael
80
Shine, John
12
Stiscak, Robert
86
Vigneau, Thomas
70
*Walgate, Daniel
63
Walters, Greg
52 • *Wesolowski, John
77
*Wolf, Chris
36
Woodward, Barnard
24
Zalar, Karl
33
Zeek, John
35
Zelmanski, Joseph

Pos.
DT
SE
DT
DT
lB
G
T
FB
lB
lB

c
Fl

s
G
KSP
TE
TB
DHB
G
DE
LB
SE
HB

s
T
QB-KSP

s
TE
LB
DHB
DE
G
TE
LB
LB
DHB
G
QB
LB
DT
DT

c

QB
lB
DE
DHB
TB
QB
DE
T
DT
LB
T
TB
LB
SE
SE
DHB
DE
DT
G

c

T

FL
DHB
FB
FB

Cl.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr .
Jr .
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr .
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr .
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr .
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr .
Sr.
Jr .
So.
So.
So.
So.

Major
L.A.
P.E.
P.E.
Soc.
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
L.A.
P.E.
P.E.
Bus.
L.A.
His .
Bus.
P.E.
P.E.
His.
P.E.

L.A.
L.A.
His.
Eng .
His.
Chem.
L.A.
L.A .
L.A .
His .
L.A.
Bus.
L.A.
Math.
His .
His.
P.E.
His.
L.A .
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
Bus.
His.
His.
P.E.
L.A.
P.E.
Bus.
L.A .
P.E.
His.
Bus.
Bus.
His.
His .
L.A .
L.A .
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
His.
L.A.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.

A ge

Ht.

Wt.

19
21
19
19
22
20
19
20
21
21
19
21
19
20
20
20
19
20
21
21
19
19
20
21
19
20
19
19
19
21
20
21
21
21
21
21
21
21
20
20
19
21
19
21
22
19
20
19
20
22
21
21
19
20
21
22
19
19
19
20
19
22
20
19
19
19
19

6-3
6·1
6·4
6-3
5-10
6-0

205
201
240
232
180
200
210
200
187
212
195
183
175
208
210
202
178
175
213
205
190
185
180
188
240
178
179
210
195
198
202
210
210
210
209
187
214
188
201
220
250
226
175
212
192
180
191
205
200
217
242
197
232
180
210
215
180
185
204
255
212
214
220
190
180
190
185

6-Q

5·8
5·11
6-0
6·1
6-1
5-11
6.()

6·0
6·0
5-11
5-9
5-10
6-1
5-9
6-0
6-0

6-1
6-0
6-Q

5-10
6-7
6-2
5·11
5-11
5-11
6.()

5·10
5-9
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
6·1
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-1
6·0
5-11
5-11
6·3
6·1
6-3
6·2
5-11
6-0
5-9
5-10
6-3
6-1
5-11
6-0

6-2
6-0
5-11
6·3
5,9
6-0
5-11
6-1

Sc hool
Stuyvesant HS
Massena HS
~ast Dear-Frazer HS
Cathedral HS
Potsdam HS
New Kensington HS
Bishop Duffy HS
St. Clement HS
Union-Endicott HS
Coshocton HS
East Aurora HS
Maine-Endwell HS
Canandaigua HS
Cardinal Mooney HS
Hamburg HS
St. Vincent's HS
Greece-Arcadia HS
Coshocton HS
Cathedral Latin HS
South Park HS
Olean HS
Niagara Falls HS
West HS
Dover HS
Chershire Academy
Springdale HS
East Rockaway HS
Penn Hills HS
Elyria HS
Amherst Central HS
Cardinal Mooney HS
DelaSalle HS
Ithaca HS
Springdale HS
St. Joseph's HS
Huntington HS
Clayton HS
Bishop Fallon HS
Coshocton HS
Notre Dame HS
North Hill HS
Orchard Park HS
Ithaca HS
Central Islip HS
Westmont HS
St. Joseph's HS
Ambridge HS
Bethlehem Central
Univ. Detroit HS
Fisher Park HS
Heninger HS
Bemus Point HS
St. Mary's HS
Kenmore East HS
Bishop McCort HS
Moriah Central HS
Bishop Walsh HS
Aliquippa HS
St. Clement HS
Grand Island HS
Kenmore East HS
Cleveland Hill HS
Solon HS
Peru HS
Calvert HS
Berwick HS
St. Clement HS

Hometown

Elmhurst, N. Y.
Massena, N. Y.
Tarentum, Pa.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Potsdam, N. Y.
New Kensington, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Cenferline, Mich.
Endicott, N. Y.
Coshocton, N. Y.
East Aurora, N. Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Canandaigua, N. Y.
Rochester, N. Y.
Hamburg, N. Y.
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Rochester, N. Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Buffalo, N. Y.
Olean, N. Y.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
St. louis, Mo.
Dover, Ohio
New City, N. Y.
Springdale, Pa.
East Rockaway, N. Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Elyria, Ohio
Buffalo, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Detroit, Mich.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Springdale, Pa.
South Bend, Ind.
Huntington, N. Y.
Clayton, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
Elmira, N. Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Orchard Park, N. Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Central Islip, N. Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Cleveland, Ohio
Ambridge, Pa.
Delmar, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich .
Ottawa, Ont. (Canada)
Syracuse, N. Y.
Greenhurst, N. Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Witherbee, N. Y.
Olean, N. Y.
Aliquippa, Pa.
Centerline, Mich.
Grand Island, N. Y.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Solon, Ohio
Peru, N. Y.
Tiffin, Ohio
Berwick, Pa.
Centerline, Mich.

*Varsity letters (1967-27)
Squad Composition:
12 ends, 12 tackles, 6 guards, 10 linebackers, 3 centers, 11 offensive backs, 10 defensive backs,

2 kickers

Total- 67

twenty-five

�The BUFFALO Coaching Staff

WILLIAM R . DANDO
Linebackers

ROBERT E . GEIGER
Offens1ve Line

ROBERT C. DEMI1\"G
Dcfen,l\·e Backfield

JERRY A JPPOLITI
Otfen&gt;l\"e Backfield

RICHARD W. (Doc) URICH
Head Coach
Richard W. (Doc) Urich (pron ounced Yur·Ick) became
head coach at the University of Buffa lo in 1966. In hi&gt; first
season the team won five and lmt five, e&gt;tahli~hed seven new
U / B offensive records and di~played to Western New York fan&gt;
the most exciting college football ever seen 111 the area. In "67
his revamped Bulls were 6·4·0.

S,-\M L. SANDERS
Dcfcnsl\·c Lin e

Urich came to Buffalo from Notre Dame. where he ""'"
Ara Parseg hian" s top otfensl\·e a ide. Prevwu&gt;ly Due 'er..-cd With
Paraseghian at Northwe&gt;tern and Miami (0.). hi&gt; alma mater.
Urich, 40 , is a native of Wapakoneta. Ohw . H e attended
Wapakoneta High School where he captained huth the fuuthall
and basketball squa ds as a senior.
At Miami ( 0.) Urich was a standout In college fuothall .
He played four years and in his fre,hman and senior &gt;ea&gt;ons hi&gt;
teams made appearances in the Sun Bowl and the Salad Bowl.
Miami defeated Texas Tech at El Paso on Ja nuary I. 1948. and
downed Arizona State at Phoenix on January I. 19'i I. Doc
was captain of the Miami team 111 hiS senior year. In hi~ JUniOr
and senior seasons he won All-Ohio honor' and in hi' last three
years he was selected All·Mid·Amencan Conference at end.

j 1\MES C. Mc1\":\LL Y
Head Freshman Coach

GERALD R CERGLEY
Fresh man .'\"!Stant

RUSSELL G . MacKELLAR
Graduate A»i&lt;tant

RICHARD L. WELLS
Graduate A&lt;sistant

After graduation from Miami in February. 19) I. he as·
6llmed teaching and coachmg chores at Ma"Illon (0.) High
School for the remainder of the school term before joining the
staff of Coach Paraseghian at Miami that fall.
Urich and his wife. the former PatncJa Streight. al'o of
Wapakoneta , have two children. Cynthia (horn in 195 ~) and
Danny (born in 195l) . The Urich family reside~ in nearhy
Williamsville .
Urich "s nickname is derived from the fact that he used to
carry a little black bag with him when playing as a youth. Th e
neighborhood friends called him '"Doc'" and rhe tag remained
with him through his playmg and coaching career.
In 1968 Urich was appointed Associate Director of Ath ·
letics at the University.

twenty-six

�FOOTBALL PLAY DD WORDS _ _ _ _ _ __
Catch the clues and dash your answers down
the field of football terms.

1. Type of pin

G

2. Deodorant

5

3. Eligible bachelor

10

4. Change for a dollar

15

5. Irritated male deer

20

6. Frankenstein

25

7 . Dater's indiscretion

30

8. Mother-in-law's visit

35

9. Pop top tab

40

10. Inebriated receiver

45

11. An uncalled play

50

12. Digital command by co-ed

45

13. Beer joint

40
35

14. Love triangle

15. Lying on your back or stomach 30

16. Area for falsies

25

17. Ulysses S. to the rescue

20

18. Quarterback with two dates

15

19. Barbershop tactics

10

20. Chip off the old

5

21. To feel a duck

G

COME ALONG
TAKE ALONG

~----.r.
A
----

R

T

0 _ _ ------~-

u

c

_ _ _!i _ _ _ _

s
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..!:_ __

_.!:!_ _ _ _ _ .f_ _ _ _ R

- - - - -T
M

H

D
--L

0

N

_j__I_

_ _ _ _ B._ _ _ _ ..!.
_l__~

z --G - - - - - t!.-A. __
y
0
T
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_..!:_ _ _ _

_ _ _ _ J::!.. __

w_

·u...optpnol ' LZ !poul

·oz

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!a A! Q 'tl !JJQ puoH 'll :a1qwn~ ' Ll :pu3 tlj6!l 'Ol !Jauado 'P!nO '6 :.(uouad ·s :nod 'i.
!Ja1suow ·9 ! ~Jng noJ)
!llloqJapo no !)' !l(l! D) J!D~ ·c !pJon!) ll(6!~ ·z; :.&lt;taJDS · L :ua...suy

·s-

Live the
Genesee Moment
twenty-seven

�Massachusetts Captains
UMASS CO-CAPTAINS McARDLE and WARNOCK
Captain Mike McArdle is a 6-0, 190-pound senior
from Millbury, Mass., who was a Yankee Conference
First Team selection in 1967. He was sidelined the last
two games of the season, but still led the Redmen in
interceptions with four. He recovered one fumble. A
history major, he has mended from a broken leg.
Captain Nick Warnock, 6-2, 200, from"Berwyn, Pa.,
has been Massachusetts' leading punter and pass receiver
for the past two seasons. He was All-Yankee Conference
in 1967 and averaged 17 yards per reception. Excellent
speed and fine moves make him an especially talented
professional prospect. He is majoring in hotel and
restaurant management. Warnock is fifth in all-time
receiving yardage at UMass, among many outstanding
ends. Last year he caught 29 for 424 yards and two TD's.
Watch cornerback McArdle and split end W arnock.

sATURDAY'S HUMOR
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -''CANUNART''

twenty-eight

�MASSACHUSETTS

TIMOTHY ADAMS
Junior
QB
Major: Hotel Management
14

ALAN BECKER
Senior
TE
Major: Hotel Management

Senior
Major: History

81

BRUCE FULTON
Junior
OG
Major: Chemical Engr:

22

CRAIG LOVELL
Junior
TB
Major: Government

25

WILLIAM FRYE
LAWRENCE FORTUNOFF
Senior
DB
55
Junior
LB 24
Major: Physical Education
Major: Business

62

FREDERICK HUPPRICH
74
Sophomore
DT
Major: Hotel Management

40

ANDREW GUARI
60
Junior
Major: History

MICHAEL COONEY
71
Junior
OT
Major: Hotel Management

JERRY GRASSO
Junior
WB
Major: Pre-Medical

MICHAEL McARDLE
Senior
DB
Major: History

DONALD DOTSON
Junior
LB
Major: Animal Science

33

56

DENNIS GRAY
LB
Junior
Major: Land Arch.

NICK McGARRY
80
Sophomore
TE
Major: Hotel Management

twen ty-n ine

�MASSACHUSETTS
University of Massachusetts Continues to Expand;
Enrollment Largest in New England
Th.e University of Massachusetts began its 1968-69 academic
year with an expected enrollment of approximately 19 865
students at its Amherst and Boston campuses.
'
At Amherst, the University expects to enroll 12,665 undergraduates - including a freshman class of 31 50-3200 graduate
students, and 600 two-year Stockbridge School students for a
total of approximately 16,465. The expected enrollment at
UMass Boston is 3400.
The 1968-69 year at Amherst will be marked by a number
of new academic and research programs, important faculty additions and major changes in the face of the Amherst campus
through construction.
New on the UMass-Amherst academic hQri2;on this fall
is the CCENS - the Committee for the Collegiate Education
of Negro Students, directed by a Negro faculty group to help
Negroes and others who because of educational and economic
deprivation may need financial and academic assistance to enter
the University and to maintain good grades after entry.
New in the UMass Residential College programs is Project
10, a new student community for a group of 262 volunteer freshmen who will take two required -courses and up to five elective
courses together. They will live and govern themselves as a
unit and work closely with a faculty-grad student counseling and
tutoring staff. Project lO's aim is a better learning climate
through shared social and intellectual experience.
The final four bui:dings of the $36 million Southwest
Residence Area open for use this fall. The complex, begun in
1964 and financed at no cost to the taxpayer through student
rents and fees, will house and provide meals for 5 500 students
in 1-9 buildings - five 22-story towers, 11 low-rise buildings
and three dining commons. The final four buildings are a
dining commons and three low-rise residences - Alexander E.
Cance House for 318 students, Mildred Pierpont House for
304 and Frank C. Moore House with 218.
Also completed and being occupied is the new John F.
Thompson Hall, 10-story adjunct to Machmer Hall named for
the late speaker of the State House of Representatives from
Ludlow. Completion is scheduled in the middle of the academic year for another classroom and office building, the sevenstory Christian A. Herter Hall. A construction start is scheduled
this fall on a third classroom building, Maurice J. Tobin Hall.
The $3 .6 million structure will be ready in mid-1970.
Work will continue through the academic year on two
major additions to the Amherst campus - the ten story Murray
D. Lincoln Center, a $13.6 million conference center and student facilities building; and the $18 million Graduate Research
Center, physical sciences laboratory and computer center build-

PRESIDENT JOHN W. LEDERLE

ing. The Lincoln Center will include an underground parking
garage and IS scheduled for completion in September of 1969;
the Graduate Center is scheduled for completion a year later.
The University's new library, a 28-story tower in the middle
of campus designed by noted architect Edward Durell Stone. is
scheduled to go to bid in the fall. A construction start on the
$14.8 million, 2 million-volume building is planned this winter.
Off campus, construction is scheduled to start this year on the
first houses of Fraternity Park, a unique private development
on a 55 -acre site northeast of campus that will eventually be
the site of 23 UMass fraternities and sororities. Road. utility
and landscape work in the site is scheduled for November
completion.
Among the graduate-level programs that will be available
for the first time this fall are a Ph.D. program in anthropology.
one of the few master's degree programs in regional planning
to be offered in the east, and master's and Ph.D. programs in
both comparative literature and environmental engineering.
For undergraduates, honor versions of 14 courses will be offered
for the first time to provide special opportunities for superior
students. A special 1 5-week bar review course in Worcester
for the December bar examinations is new this year. A center
for the Study of Educational Innovation will make its debut
this fall at the UMass School of Education.

�MASSACHUSETTS

PIERRE MARCHANDO
67
Sophomore
OG
Major: Hotel Management

MICHAEL MARCHEV
11
Sophomore
QB
Major: English

JAMES NANGLE
78
Junior
OT
Major: Physical Education

STEPHEN PARNELL
21
Junior
S
Major: Medical Technology

RANDY ROBINSON
85
Senior
DE
Major: Physical Education

STEPHEN ROGERS
45
Junior
S
Major: Hotel Management

EDWARD SARNO
31
Junior
FB
Major: Hotel Management

PATRICK SCAVONE
20
Sophomore
WB
Major: Business

51

NOEL SCHABLIK
Senior
C
Major: Government

MAR TIN SCHERALIS
72
Junior
DT
Major: Physical Education

ROBERT SHEEHAN
Senior
C
Major: Business

MARK TONER
77
Junior
DT
Major: Physical Education

91

50

DAVID WALSH
Sophomore
DE
Major: Science

WILLIAM WARNOCK
83
Senior
SE
Major: Hotel Management

84

THOMAS YORK
Junior
DE
Major: Psychology

thirty-one

�Meet the Athletic Directors

JAMES E. PEELLE, Buffalo

•

•

•

WARREN P. McGUICK, Massachusetts

1968 U.B. Fall Scoreboard
VARSITY GOLF
Coach : Dr. Leonard T. Serfustini '49
Captain:
Date
Opp .
U/ B OPP
Sept. 16 at Buffalo State
Sept. 23 ST. BONAVENTIJRE
1:00
Sept. 25 CANISIUS
1:00
Oct. 2 at St. Bonaventure
2:00
Oct.
3 at Geneseo State
1:00
Oct. 8 BUFFALO STATE
2:00
Oct. 12 ECAC Fall Tournament
Oct. 14 at Canisius
1:00
Oct. 16 NIAGARA
1 :30
Oct. 19 ECAC Fall Tournament
Oct. 21 at Niagara C. C.
1:30
Oct. 25 at Niagara
1:30
Oct. 30 NIAGARA C. C.
1:30
FRESHMAN CR,OSS-COUNTRY
Coach. Emery ]. Fisher '51
Captain.
Date
Opponent
U / B OPP
Sept. 21 at Syracuse
10 :30
Sept. 28 CLEVELAND STATE
11 :00
Oct. 5 LeMoyne Invitational
Oct. 12 at Brockport State
2:00
Oct. 16 GUELPH &amp; NIAGARA
4:00
Oct. 26 Canisius Invitational
2.30
Oct. 30 GANNON,
BUFFALO STATE,
CANISIUS &amp;
NIAGARA
2:00
Nov. 2 NYS Championships
10:30
(Oswego State Host)

thirty-two

FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
Coach : James C. McNally '66
Captain :
Date

Opponent

U / B OPP

Sept. 20 at Army
Sept. 28 at Manlius
Oct. 26 at Navy
N ov. 2 SYRACUSE
Nov. 8 at Kent State

2:00
10:00
2:00
3:00

VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY
Coach. Emery]. Fisher ' 51
Captain :
Date
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

Opponent
21
28
5
12
16
19
22

Oct. 26
Oct. 30

Nov.

2

Nov.

5

U / B OPP

at Syracuse
CLEVELAND STATE
LeMoyne Invitational
at Brockport State
GUELPH &amp; NIAGARA
at LeMoyne
GENESEO STATE &amp;
FREDONIA STATE
Canisius Invitational
GANNON,
BUFFALO STATE,
CANISIUS &amp;
NIAGARA
NYS Championships
(Oswego State H ost)
at Niagara C. C.

11 :00
11 :00
1:00
2:00
4:00
1:00
4:30
1:00

4:00
11 :00
4.00

�EVERY DAY
OF THE WEEK

F•NEST OUAL.TY

SUPERIIIII~RKETS

Your hometown supermarkets are proud
to support the hometown University of
Buffalo nBulls'' football teaml
thirty-three

�GRANVILLE MOTORS IIC.
The John W.
Cowper Co.

VOLKSWAGEN

INCORPORATED

AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE CENTER
Engineers - Contractors

·.. • SEDANS
• SUNROOFS

• STATION WAGONS
• KARMAN GHIAS

1500 NIAGARA FAU.S BLVD•

•
873-4200
Post Office Box 1068

JUST NORTH OF THE BOULEVARD
MALL OPPOSITE TWIN FAIR

OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE836-4600

1945 Sheridan Drive
Buffalo, New York 14240

• All L•te Model VW's •nd Domestic Used C•rs W•rr•nted

Everything for the Athlete and Sportsman

PLA-MOR
SPORTING GOODS
iC
•

SKIS AND CLOTIDNG

•

ICE SKATES
BO~GEQUWMENT

•
•

FOOTBALL AND BASKETBALL
EQUWMENT

Don't fumble when it comes to eatingSweaters and Jackets for Fraternities and Sororities

Score big

at
627 MAIN STREET

BUFFALO, NEW YORK
TL 2-3456

3300 SHERIDAN DRIVE
3637 UNION ROAD

thirty-four

• Uncle •
Jchn. s

�FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WBEN-Radio
VAN
STAN
DICK
MILLER BARRON RIFENBURG
keep you
in the

CENTER
OF THE

ACTION
of all games
at home
or away

930/Radio

th irty-fi ve

�8

OFFICE SUPPLIES
GOOD LUCK U. B. BULLS

PRINTING

FILING EQUIPMENT

•

Rud y Bersani -

DUPLICATOR PAPERS

U. B. 1967

Eaton Office Supply Co., Inc.

THREE COINS RESTA VRANT
and LOVNGE
lunch, dinner or late supper,- eat like a
Roman Emperor on centurion's pay
In the North Wing of the MAPLE.LEAF MOTOR LODGE
1620 Niagara Falls Blvd .
1 M ile. North
f-nl
of Sherodan Dr.

·•

BUSINESS FORMS

OFFICE FURNITURE

83 5-2610

"For Office Needs - Eaton leads"

1155 NIAGARA FALLS BOULEVARD
BUFFALO, N. Y. 14226
SINCE 1915

Phone : 837-6800

Ample Parking for Your Chariot

WE BUY &amp; SELL

USED TEXTBOOKS

For the Finest in Food and Beverage

FOR ALL UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO COURSES

AFTER THE GAME . . .

Paperbacks- Supplies - Gifts
$1.00 OFF ON SWEATSHIRTS

THE CLUB SHERIDAN

FROM OUR REGULAR LINE - LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER
YOU MUST BRING THIS AD WITH YOU

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK
STORES, INC.

3610 MAIN
Across from UB's
Clement Hall
Buffalo, N. Y.

Free Parking Next Door -

3500 SHERIDAN DRIVE
836-7736

Univ. Manor Motel

To Games; on Ski Weekends; on Tours;
Everybody Goes First Class in the
Area's largest Charter Bus Fleet

Corner of
N. LONG and MAIN
WILLIAMSVILLE, N. Y.

ASK US ADOUT

CLASS, CLUB or
GROUP CHARTERS

Western N.Y.'s Most
Complete Ski Shop
For the Entire Fam ily

For Tt·ips to Anywhere
\\'ith All ConvE'niences
Phone

BUFFALO 852-4900

BLUE BIRD COACH LINES, INC.
Hunu•

Offit•t~.

Olt•:•n.

~ . V.

Shops at Glenwood Acres &amp; Holiday Valley

CARL C. GRIMM, INC.

Leo Sauer

Plumber

FUNERAL HOME

INC .

•

•

1933 KENSINGTON AVENUE

259 DELAWARE AVENUE
TL 2 • 7080

833-1695
•

823 GENESEE STREET
TX 2-7183

thirty-six

BUFFALO, N. Y.

�BUFFALO

RICHARD ASHLEY
87
Senior
SE
Major: Physical Education

78

RUSSELL BECK
Junior
DT
Major: Socwlogy

THOMAS CENTOFANTI
73
Sophomore
T
Major: Physical Education

65

SCOTT CLARK
Junior
LB
Major: Liberal Arts

CHARLES DRANKOSKI
44
Senior
FT.
Major: Physical Education

THOMAS ELLIOTT
40
Sophomore
S
Major: Business Admin.

TERRENCE ENDRESS
82
Junior
TE
Major: Business Admin.

PRENTIS HE LEY
90
Junior
DE
Major: Physical Education

29

RICHARD HORN
Junior
Major: English

S

23

NICHOLAS KISH
Senior
DHB
Major: History

THOMAS KOWALEWSKI
62
Senior
G
Major: Business Admin.

85

MICHAEL MASER
64
Senior
G
Major: Physical Education

19

DENNIS MASON
Senior
QB
Major: History

PAUL LANG
Junior
TE
Major: Liberal Arts

34

MICHAEL LUZNY
Junior
LB
Major: History

thirty-seven

�e

10
Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
You can shave it with a razor blade like your father does.
And each time you do your beard will grow back a little more
difficult. Until one day shaving's no longer a
chore. It's an agony.
Look no further than your father's face
for proof.
But fortunately, you're catching your
beard at an early age. You can break it in to be
just as shaveable 10 and 20 years from
now as it is today.
With a REMINGTO~ shaver
And if you think the kind of shave we're selling won't be
close enough for you, you're wrong.
Our new blades are sharper than anything that's been in an
electric shaver before. And there's a dial that
lets you adjust them for your skin and beard.
What's more, you can dial a REMINGTON
electric shaver into a sideburn trimmer
Admittedly, it costs more to buy our
electric shaver than a razor and some blades.
But it's a good investment.
These next few years will determine how
you and your beard will get along for the rest
of your lives. '¢-SPE~RAN:l'" o ...•.•m•v•••• ••••·
~"~!,~.§.!,. 9.~

'------...6

thirty-eight

�BUFFALO

THOMAS MURPHY
Senior
DE
Major: History

PATRICK PATTERSON
20
Junior
TB
Major: Liberal Arts

EDWARD PERRY
11
Sophomore
QB
Major: Physical Education

JOHN PRZYBYCIEN
84
Senior
DE
Major: Business Admin.

DAVID RICHNER
Senior
LB
Major: History

JOHN RIO
74
Sophomore
T
Major: Business Admin.

KE NETH RUTKOWSKI
21
Senior
TB
Major. Business Admin.

69

DANIEL WALGATE
70
Junior
DT
Major: Physical Education

JOHN WESOLOWSKI
52
Senior
C
Major: History

77

JAMES MOSHER
Senior
LB
Major: History

81

JOSEPH RICCELLI
75
Senior
DT
Major: Physical Education

32

THOMAS VIGNEAU
86
Sophomore
DE
Major: Physical Education

50

CHRIS WOLF
Junior
T
Major: Liberal Arts

DONALD SABO
Senior
LB
Major: History

JOSEPH ZELMANSKI
35
Sophomore
FB
Major: Physical Education

th irty-nine

�•

•

PATRONS

George E. Easterbrook Kevin Kennedy
Harold F. Meese
Edward A. Rath, Jr.
Arthur Mogerman
Mr. Gates
William R. Root
Mr. Fred White
Leo J. Rosen
Harlan Swift
Gerald C. Saltarelli
Charles Diebold Ill
Irving Friedman
Harold M. Harris
J. Richard Hart
Hessren J. Cohen
Charles J. McDonough Anthony J. Renaldo
John Markarian
Mr. John R. Shanor
Mr. Vinal
Samuel D. Magavern
Grover R. James, Jr. Stephen F. Kissel
Leonard Swagler
Rudolph V. Johnson
William G. Willis
George L. Grobe, Jr.
Walter Brock
Robert D. Fernbach
Charles R. Diebold
Edwin F. Jaeckle
Joseph A. LaNasa
Michael G. Foster
Ross M. Cellino
George W. Ferrick
Ronald G. Korn
Mr. Joseph H. Chirlin
Roy Seibel
James R. Sullivan
Mr. Lee
Irvin L. Terry
William H. Georgi
A Friend
Thornton G. Edwards Mr. Gerald S. Lippes
Frank T. Riforgiato
Roland Lord O'Brian
Joseph M. Crotty
Thomas E. O'Brien
James P. Cole
Paul C. Stillman
Reinhardt L. Wende
William C. Murty
Mr. Kuehlewind
Eugene W. Salisbury
Sheldon Hurwitz
Leo M. Michalek
Leo H. Less
Robert J. Metzen
Gertrude Swarthout
Edmond J. Brown, Jr.
Aaron I. Feuerstein
Murray J. Hall
Russell Kidder, Jr.
Vincent F. Harrington
James C. McGarvey Norbert C. Hoffmeyer
Robert L. Defranco
Gregory T. Jacobs
Paul W. Oakmar
Robert F. Milks
Chester P. Glor, Jr.
W. Hinson Jones
Milton M. Bron
Raymond A. Monin
Arnold Dilaura
Paul J. Mraz, Jr.
Irwin H. Cheskin
William E. Potter
A. Donald Gilden
Nicholas Haragos
Frank J. Cain
Waldron S. Hayes, Jr.
Brunner's Tavern
James P. Hefflernan
John M. Bissell
David P. Feldman
Henry W. Killeen
Allan V. Gibbons
Horace A. Battaglia
Edward W. Kinney
Lewis J. Greenky
O'Neill A. Kline
Donald R. Barber
Saul Lerner
William W. Rathke
Joseph J. Lyons
A Friend
John F. Macauley
Harold Frantzen
Paul B. Hoolihan, Co.

forty

Mr. G. Goldfarb
Fred Roneker
Arthur F. Movalli
B. R. Hoffman
Charles G. Salisbury Robert R. Barrett
Buffalo Uniform Shop Irvin L. Terry
M. Robert Koren
Howard H. Baker, Co. James R. Sullivan
Seymour Knox
George N. Seifert
George N. Seifert
Edwin F. Jaeckle
William Hildebrand, Jr.Ronald W. Plewniak Robert D. Fernbach
Ronald W. Plewniak
Charles H. Diefendorf George L. Grobe, Jr.
John H. Dittman
Robert J. Metzen
Rudolph U. Johnson
Emil J. Celmer
John H. Dittman
Stephen F. Kissel
Harold A. Adel
Emil J. Celmer
Samuel D. Magavern
Claude F. Shuchter
Haro ld A. Ad e 1
Anthony J. Renaldo
Robert B. Adam
Claude F. Shuchter
Harlan Swift
Max Burstein
Robert B. Adam
Mr. Fred White
Stanley B. Black
Max Burstein
Edward A. Rath, Jr.
Abraham Carrel
Stanley B. Blach
Irving Fudeman
Charles Banas
William W. Rathke
Grover R. James, Jr.
Michael Swados
J. Edwin Alford
Lewis J. Greenky
James J. Ailinger
Allan V. Gibbons
William C. Baird
Charles W. Pankow, Jr.B
, T
runners avern
Charles Banas
David J. Mahoney, Jr.
J. Eugene McMahon E. Perry Spink
Abraham Carrel
John A. Krull
Vincent Scamurra
Robert J. Collins
Robert E. Rich, Sr.
Edward F. Mimmack
Paul A. Foley
Herbert R. Reitz
Robert S. Wolfson
Frederick B. Wilkes
Leo
J.
Rosen
Phillip V. Vullo
Hugh McM. Russ
William
R.
Root
Merrill
Windelberg
Arthur F. Movalli
Manuel
S. Wortzman
Arthur
Mogerman
M. Robert Koren
Charles
W.
Pankow, Jr.
Frank
Meyers
Seymour Knox
Albert
Green
F.
Meese
Harold
John M. Galvin
James J. Ailinger
Charles W. Millard, Jr. Sheldon Hurwitz
George E. Easterbrook Michael Swados
Robert J. Collins
Frank T. Riforgiato
Genesee Radio and
William C. Baird
William
H.
Georgi
Parts Co., Inc.
Edward F. Mimmack
Roy
Seibel
Metro
Dinner Theatre
Charles H. Diefendorf
M.
Cellino
Invitation
Club
Ross
Manuel S. Wortzman
Samual R. Miserendino
Charles R. Diebold
J. Edwin Alford
Pearce &amp; Pearce
Walter Brock
Herbert R. Reitz
Co., Inc.
William G. Willis
Robert S. Wolfson
William Hildebrand, Jr.
Leonard Swagler
Edward Andrews
Mr. and Mrs. John L.
Mr. Keiff
Vincent Scamurra
Charles J. McDonaugh
Curtis
E. Perry Spink
Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Howard A. Potter, Inc. Victor Peterson
Reinhardt W. Wende
Haber
Charles G. Salisbury
Charles S. Matthews David J. Mahoney, Jr. Houdaille Industries
J. Eugene McMahon
Inc.
Russell Kidder, Jr.
John
A.
Krull
James
C. McGarvey
Frank A. Sedita Jr.
Paul A. Foley
Don Barnett
Samuel R. Miserendino
R. C. Dewey, Inc.
Charles W. Millard Jr.
Chester P. Glor, Jr.
Frederick B. Wilkes
Arnold Di Laura
Hugh Me M. Russ
A. Donald Gilden

�BEST WISHES TO
THE U.B. BULlS

TAKE
"TIME OUT"

fOR ANOTHER
SUCCESSFUL

to open a
dividend-earning
savings account
at

SEASON
.

I

Before or A ft er the Game- or AnytJme ·

LAUBE'S AMHERST
RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE
Next to Lord Amherst Motor Hotel

BUFFALO
SAVINGS BANK
Biggest and Oldest Savings Bank in Buffalo

M ain Street at the Thruway

Main Office:
Main , Huron , Genesee and Wash ington Sts.

Plenty of Parking Space
Bailey-Amherst

Other Offices:
Seneca-Cazenovia
Delaware-Sheridan
Thruway Plaza
Town of Amherst

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

WALLEN RESTAURANT &amp; LOUNGE
ELLICOTT SQUARE BLDG.

BENTON ANNOUNCEMENTS
A Large Selection of Gifts for
Showers - Weddings - Birthdays

289 Main Street, Corner Swan

PLANNING TO BE MARRIED?

all Pancakes, Waffles, Omelettes
l
Specia Iizing ·n

Benton Selection of Wedding Invitations
Is the Largest

Entrees:

Featuring
Steak, Roast Beef, Ch icken, Meatloaf

3006 Bailey Ave. _. _Near Kensington __ . 836-4100

Plu s 22 Varieties of Sandwiches

China-Silverwar-Stainless Tableware-Stemware-'Vases-Ceramics

Cockta ils

* Greeting Cards * Stationery * Party Goods
* Candles and * Floral Pieces

852-1932

104th ANNIVERSARY

Open Thura. and Fri. Evenlnge till 9 PM -

CAMERA

FOR •••

SPECIALS

1968 marks our 104th year of continuous business
serving the Buflalo area.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.
Est. 1864
REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Ellicott Square
17-21 S. Division Street

Sat. tlll G

• CAMERAS • PROJECTORS
• ENLARGERS
• DARK ROOM SUPPLIES
Everything
for the

Amateur or Professional

at the price
you want
to pay!

Student and Faculty Discounts

FILMART

637 A~~~!! ST.

FR~e~r~~~t~r~NG

Shea's Bolf&amp;lo Theatre

TL 3-2052

Open Mon. Thurs. Till 9 PM

TL4-5700
forty-one

�JONES-RICH
"~
DAIRY PRODUCTS
.JONES-RICH MILK CORPORATION

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14209

1968 UB Athletic Administration

DR. EDMOND J . GICEWICZ
Athletic Ph)'8lclan

JAMES E. SIMON
Trnlner - Therapl•t

DR. LEONARD T. SERFCSTINI
Conch of Golf

EMERY J. FISHER
Coneh of Cro8s-Countr)'

you be during:
THANKSGIVING RECESS
WINTER RECESS
SPRING RECESS

Nov. 26 - Dec. 1
Jan. 15- Jan. 22
Mar. 29- Apr. 6

Whether it's a trip to Ft. Lauderdale, California, the
Caribbean, Hawaii: Europe, or anywhere . . . Stewart
&amp; Benson Travel Service will take care of ·;our plane
reservations, hotel accomodations, everything to make
your vacation one fun-filled day after another! Instant confirmation on all reservations by phoning
853-6262.

Stewart &amp; Benson Travel Service
BUFFALO, N. Y.

853-6262

To serve you better, the Buffalo Statler Hilton has
gone all out in an extensive modernization program.
Completely remodeled guest rooms, newly decorated
meeting rooms and the exciting Beef Barron Room for
hearty dining and superb cocktails will meet with your
full approval.

The Statler Hilton Hotel
BUFFALO, N. Y.

856-1000
forty-two

�PARK EDGE SELECT
NIAGARA
PINK NIAGARA

s

49
e

GAL.

forty-three

�1968 College Football Officials' Signals·

~ ~ ~ -+="*~

1. Offside ( lnfnction
of scrimmage or

2. IUe~al Procedure,
Position, or Substitution

10 Umportsmanhke
· Conduct

3. IUegal Motion

11. Illegal use of
Hands and Atms

12. Intentional
Grounding

free kick formation)

·
.
·
t '
19. BaD Dead;
H Hand is Moved from
Side to Side: Toucht.dc:

~

·;

20. Touchdown or
Field Cool

.

I

~

4. Illegal Shift

7. Personal Foul

5. Illea:al Return

8. CUpping

6. Delay of Came

t3~rl~~~l~:&amp;:r'

l4.J~~~~:or

J!cit.:'e~ug::o

Forward

Interference

Field on Pass

17. Incomplete
Forward Pass,
Penalty Declined,
No Play, or No Soore

18. Helping the Runner,
or Interlocked
Interference

9. Roughing the Kicker

24. Ball Ready for -play

26. Loss of Down

25. Start the Cock

TL 2-2769

Locksmiths-Safe Experts
GOOD

LUCK

BULLS

•••

The Safe, Lock &amp; Key Corp.
Erie County Republican Committee

"Call us to discuss any lock problem"
204 PEARL STREET, BUFFALO, N. Y.

AL BELLANCA,

SALES -

Chairman

14202

INSTALLATION - REPAIR

Safes, Locks, t&lt;eys, Door Closers
Distributors - Consultants

STEREO AND ELECTRONIC HEADQUARTERS

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.
HEATING- AIR CONDITIONING
Power Plants -

Process Piping -

Fire Protection

•
120 W. TUPPER

Buffalo-147 Genesee St.-856·1415

TL 4-8435

Buffalo-Amherst-3240 Sheridan Dr. Cr. Bailey-835-2250-0pen Eves.
Niagara Falls-1720 Pierce Ave .-285·9366

forty-four

�.....
• .,.
It's A Happening!
Fabulous selections of the great
campus looks that's as now and
WOW as you can get.

.• •.
•..
'
I

It's A Blow-Out!
Floor-to-floor, door-to-door bursting with values on what's in and
what's what.
Let the Kicks Happen for YOU
at Sattler's Boulevard Mall Store!
(or, if more convenient, Sattler's
998 Braodway)
Yes, You Can Charge it At All
Sattler's Stores!
• 998 B raodway
•

1021 Broadway

•

Boulevard Mall

•

Thruway Plaza

• Home Furnishings City, U. S. A.
Elmwood at Hertel
And, coming up fast • • • West
Seneca Mall

'•
'•
I

''
'
•'
I

'

(6
. .

�tbe~ro\et

'To.,osman Station 'jjay,on
(l- &amp; 3-sea\)
Stool&lt;.,ood station 'Ha&amp;on
(1-sea\)

captite coupe
captite Sedan
Impala custom coupe
Impala Spot\ CoUP'
ImP''' spot\ sedan
Impala Con~et\ible
Impala 4-0oOt Sedan
sel "'it 4-0oot sedan
sel ,.;t 1-ooot sedan
Sista1ne 4-000t sedan
Sista1ne 1-000t Sedan

\\6' 'HMelbase
ContOUtS [state 'jjap,on
(2- &amp; 3-sea\)
concouts Station 'Ha&amp;on
(1- &amp; 3-seat)
Gteenbtiet Station 'Ha&amp;O~
(2- &amp; 3-seat)
Nomad Station 'Hay,on
(2-sea\)

Cal1\aro
spot\ coupe
con~et\ible

ft\alibU spot\ coupe
ft\alibU spot\ Sedan
ft\alibU Con~et\ible
ft\alibU 4-0oot sedan
300 oelu~e spot\ coupe
300 oelu~e coupe
300 oelu~e 4-0oot sedan

\\9" 'HMelbase
tc.in&amp;s.,ood lsta\e 'Ha&amp;on
(1- &amp; 3-sea\)
tc.in&amp;s.,ood Station 'Ha&amp;on
(1- &amp; 3-seat)

co~a\r
Nlonza spot\ coupe
Nlonti con~et\ible

Cot~ait !&gt;110 spot\ coupe

coupe

con~ettibl•

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL PROGRAM

750
CLYDE WILLIAMS FIE

�By Mike Dieter Photography, Des Moines

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Cover lithography contributed by the Iowa State Alumni of Associated Lithographers, Inc., Des Moines. Cover separations by A.L.I.

�e

10
Right now your beard is in the formative stage.
You can shave it with a razor blade like your father does.
And each time you do your beard will grow backa little more
difficult. Until one day shaving's no longer a
chore. It's an agony.
Look no further than your father's face
for proof.
But fortunately, you're catching your
beard at an early age. You can break it in to be
just as shaveable 10 and 20 years from
now as it is today.
With a REMINGTO~ shaver.
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What's more, you can dial a REMINGTON
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Admittedly, it costs more to buy our
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But it's a good investment.
These next few years will determine how
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I!S"A.-T M

•

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€LLCTIIU C SHA¥[1111

• •uoT •••• ••••·

�Dr. W. Robert Parks
President Iowa State University

Maurice Soults
I.S.U. Faculty Representative to the Big Eight Conference

Clay Stapleton
Director of Athletics

Iowa State University

�Cardiac
Conditions
Eased by New
Football Rules
Ever think your favorite team
was put at a d isadvantage by a socalled "sucker" shift?
Have you wondered if the wool
was be ing slyly pulled over the eyes
of your team on defense when that
nasty offense established a formation which sneakily left the tackle
eligible to catch a pass?
How many times have you lost
your cool , hurling a " hurry-up,"
among other epithets, at the game
officials late in the going when a
desperation march is under way, a
long play has eaten a large hunk of
real estate, and those darned guys
in the strired shirts are nonchalantly bringin~ up the chains while the
clock ticks off precious second s just
as nonchalantly?
Let your blood pressure arise in
excitement at other times this fall.
The rules makers have acted in your
behalf, cutting off these three cardiac-creating situations.
Under the new rules, once an interior lineman- one of the five between the ends- places his hand or
hands on the ground (or even below
his knee), he cannot move hi s hands
until the ball is snapped. This will
eliminate the Rip Van Winkle
stretch, more commonly known as
the "flex shift"- you know, that occurred when interior linemen used
to rear up like a hibernating bear
stretching his muscles after his long
winter's nap.
Observant fans will also quickly
note that these interior linemen now
fall under the new "mandatory
numbering" code. No player wearing any number in the 50's, 60's,
and 70's can ever go downfield and

catch a pass. This eliminates the old
" tackle eligible" play, where, to
the consternation of the fans (and
usually the defense, too), a 250pound tackle lumbered out of nowhere to catch a critica I first-down
pass.
Very noticeable to the fans during those waning moments of final
frustration (or success) wi l l be the
frantic waving of the referee as he
calls time-out when the offensive
team makes a first down. Th is will
be done on each offensive firstdown, but noticed more readily
when the time pinch is being felt .
Actually, the clock will be stopped
only while the first-and-ten chains
are being reset and the box placed
into position. The referee will start
the clock when all is in readiness .
Thus, if a team is quick, a play can
be called and the formation set during this interval at virtually no loss
of time.
The most talked-about rule since
the substitution flurry, last year's
punt rule, is out this year . No longer will linemen be forced to stay on
the line of scrimmage unti l the ball
is k icked .
However, there has been one
change, for safety. If a player (any
player) on the receiving team signals for a fair catch and does not
touch the ball, he cannot block on
the play. No longer can that punt
returner cajole his opponent into
think ing he is going to catch the
ball, get the opponent to slow down
and relax, and then separate the unsuspecting opponent's rib-cage from
his back bone by cutting him down
with a block.
While, as usual, there are a number of other rules changes, most of
them concern players and officials
only and will not be d iscern ible to
fans.
However, it is only fair to warn
the ladies that the length of a timeout has been shortened from two
minutes to a minute and a half.
This, of course, will force a realignment of female strategy. Those
time-out comments concerning size,
age, and dress of former college
mates, etc., must either be cut short
or reserved for halftime, where the
break will again be 20 minutes.
These are the latest in the long
line of revisions which have evolved
in the 100 years of collegiate football. The changes come from incidents that have actually occurred in
football games-they are not just
the imagination of a stodgy group
of rules makers who lock themselves
into a smoke-filled room a couple of
times each year.

There is definite method to what
some might call their madness. As
John Waldorf, Big Eight supervisor
of officials and the incoming chairman of the NCAA's football rules
committee, puts it, he feels five
factors must be met to determine
the effectiveness of a proposed rule
change.
Those five guidelines are: Is it
safe for the players . Will it be able
to be implemented by all teams,
from small colleges to major institutions (basically an economic factor). Is the rule coachable and can
it be administered by the officials .
Will the rule maintain offensive and
defensive balance. And, will the
change keep the game entertaining
for fans.
Waldorf also points out that three
major rules changes have come as
the direct result of play situations
experienced in Big Eight games.
For example, back in the 1965
Oklahoma-Nebraska game, a successful field-goal attempt, which
had passed over and beyond the
cross bar by 10 yards, was almost
blown back over the cross bar by a
strong wind . After examination, the
rules committee decided if such a
kick were blown back, it would not
be a legal field goal.
Then, in the 1966 Colorado-Oklahoma game, Colorado intercepted a
pass, but on the play, both team 3
were guilty of a foul. The ball w as
given, by rule, back to Oklahomathe fouls were offsetting- and the
down replayed. Now, under the
offsetting foul rule, if the same
thing happened, Colorado could
keep possession of the ball by accepting the penalty for the fou I it
committed after it had intercepted.
Last year, too, had a situation creating a new interpretation . In the
Nebraska-Colorado contest, Nebraska was awarded one more play in
a quarter following a Colorado foul
on what would have been the la st
play of the period . Nebraska wanted to substitute players (a field-goal
try at the end of the half wa s imminent.) But, Nebraska w as afraid
it would be ca lied for c'elay of the
game and lose the play if it sent a
kicker and holder into the game.
Under this year's ruling of the committee, the rule specifically states
that Nebraska could still run its play
after a five-yard penalty for delay
since the ball had not been snapped
and, in effect, no new play started
since the Colorado foul.
So, you see, like all other progressive steps, the football rules are the
product of evolution, and that timeproven method of trial and error.

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�BAND
DAY

OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

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There will be a lot more than 76
trombones in the Iowa State University stadium today as the traditional Band Day is observed.
Forty-five Iowa high school bands
are on hand for the event w ith band
sizes rang ing from 25 to 150 members . Add to that tw irlers and color
guards . In all , there are 2,963 musicians, 324 twirlers and 132 color
guard members . That makes a total
of 3,419 students part icipating in
the event.
Today also marks the first appearance of the year for the Iowa
State University Marching Band under the direction of Acton Ostling
who is new director of bands at
Iowa State . The Iowa State band
numbers 140 and will be presenting routines at every home game
this year.
High school bands appearing at
Band Day today include Norwalk
High School, Sergeant Bluff-Luton
of Sergeant Bluff, Ballard High
School of Huxley, Meservy-Thornton
of Thornton , Urbandale High School,
Wellsburg High School, Madrid
Community High School, Tri-County
Community High School of Thornburg, Corwith-Wesley High School
of Corwith, Bayard Community High
School, Dexfield Community High
School of Redfield, Woodbine Community High School, Interstate 35

Community High School of Truro,
B.G.M. High School of Brooklyn,
Dunlap Commun ity High School,
Alden Community High School, Bondurant-Farrar High School of Bondurant, East Greene Community
High School of Grand Junction.
Greenfield High School, North
Mahaska Community High School
of New Sharon, Pocahontas Community High School, West Monona
of Onawa, Ar-We-Va Community
High School of Westside, Exira Community High School, Lake City Community High School, New Market
Commun ity High School, Colo Community High School, Manson Community High School, Sentral Community High School of Fenton, Manning Commun ity High School, Eagle
Grove Community High School.
Glidden-Ra lston of Glidden, Perry
Community High School, Ankeny
High School, Griswold Commun ity
High School, Deep River High
School of M illersburg, Northeast
Ham ilton High School of Bla irsburg,
Prairie High Schoo l of Wellman,
Wayne Commun ity High School of
Corydon, Grundy Center Community High School, Rockwell City
Commun ity High School, Harlan
High School, Jefferson Community
High School, Hampton Community
High School and Valley High School
of West Des Moines.

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�Orientation Series
for Freshmen
Women at ISU
A unique orientation series for
freshmen women at Iowa State University has been planned with the
first of the meetings held in Great
Hall of Memorial Union on Sept. 11,
when Dr. Emily Taylor, dean of
women at the University of Kansas,
spoke on "Becoming a Woman."
The series was originated to help
the new woman student to gain an
insight into herself and her new
surroundings, to meet student leaders and faculty, to discuss opportunities and responsibilities of women on campus and to become acquainted with ideas and concepts
of other people. Further, the series
will provide a vehicle for early exploration of college life in an atmosphere of unrestricted discussion
and will encourage the woman student to explore ideas and concepts
independently.
The series of orientation sessions
will continue through Oct. 30. The
second general meeting will be held
Oct. 2 with Dr. J. R. Doran, Ames,
speaking on "The Role of Woman as
a Sexual Being." This meeting will
be held at 7:30 p .m. in Memorial
Union.
Smaller group meetings will be
held on three different occasions in
lounges of the dormitories. The
first will be Sept. 18 with the general topic " Women on Campus-Opportunities and Responsibilities ."
The second meeting will be held
Oct. 16 with "The Future of Women" as the topic and the final group
meeting will be Oct. 30 with the
general topic "Men and WomenTheir Problems and Similarities." All
of the group meetings will be held
at 7:30 p .m . in dormitory lounges.
Sixteen student leaders attended
a Sept. 4 workshop in preparation
for the orientation series. A total
of 12 staff members will participate
in the series. The orientation program was initiated by Tom Goodale,
assistant dean of students; Mrs.
Marlene Strathe, Bill Applegate and
Carla Dee of the Dean of Students
Office.

Coach Majors

Seeks Speed
Coach John Majors is hoping that
quickness, desire and good conditioning will offset one missing ingredient, experience, as his first
Iowa State football team primes for
its season opener against the University of Buffalo.
Majors, who makes his debut as
a head coach this fall after serving
as an assistant at Mississippi State
and Arkansas, is doing his best to
field a team that will be agile, aggressive and successful.
Before drills started last spring

AH 'M GONNA
MA KE A

CYCLONE'
OUTA You_/

the Cyclone staff launched a weightreducing program that melted 800
pounds off the hopefuls who turned
out. The coach was seeking quickness and agility.
Through last July and August the
staff designed a conditioning program which, if followed closely by
the squad members, brought them

back for fall drills in top physical
condition. Weekly workout cards
were sent to all squad members in
the two months prior to start of practice Aug . 26. Good conditioning reduces injuries and permits full utilization of all practice time.
Of the 67 who showed up in
August, only seven were starters last
year, three on offense and four on
defense. This means that this year's
team will be young and short on experience.
Fundamentals, execution and conditioning were the order of business
for th :! spirited squad reporting for
photos Aug. 24. After three days
of non-contact drills the heavy work
started .
The Cyclones this year will feature an !-formation offense and a
so-called "monster" defense. For
the last five years Iowa State teams
have worked from a T-formation offense or variations of the T.
Much of the early work this fall
has been on offense. At the close of
spring drills Majors felt that the defense was ahead of the offense.
Majors has been a man on the go
since moving to Iowa State. He has
been drumming up interest in ISU
football and talking to prospective
grid candidates. Almost 40 young
men have signed football tenders
to enroll here as freshmen or as
transfers from junior colleges .
The former Tennessee All-American has visited in more than 25
Iowa cities and towns, some more
than once, and has personally
spread the gospel of Iowa State
football in Tennessee, Texas, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Nebraska, and
Minnesota.

�Marching Band
to feature
New Routines This Season

Football fans will be treated to a
varied and spectacular series of new
shows before and during the Cyclone gridiron games this fall.
Acton E. Ostling, the new director
of bands, said the Iowa State Marching Band will begin practices Sept.
2 to ready its programs for the season.
The ISU band will stage a pregame show prior to today's grid
opener with Buffalo, while the halftime entertainment will be provided
by the annual high school massed
bands concert. High school bands
around the state have been invited
to the campus today to participate
in the traditional "Band Day" festivities.
"Salute to Cole Porter" will be the
theme of the half-time entertainment
by the Iowa State Marching Band at
the Sept. 21 game with Arizona.
The Parent's Day program will be
based on a "Phonograph Show" depicting in music the history and
music heard on
phonographs
through the years.
The musical "Carnival of the Animals" will feature the half-time entertainment for the annual Homecoming contest with Kansas; and the
final home game of the season, Nov.
2 with Nebraska, will center on a
patriotic theme featuring the music
of John Phillip Sousa.

�WATCH
FOR

SELECTED
BVTHE
~
U.S. OLYMPIC k .
COMMITTEE ';!

We're prQud ...
that pHisoHex®has been selected as the antibacterial wash
to be used by the U.S. Team for the 1968 Olympic Games!

CAMPOS
CHEST
1968
COMING

SOON

A winning athlete takes special care
of his skin. Above all, he protects it
against bacteria that can cause infections and lead to missed practice sessions and games.
If you've ever tried to play with an
infected blister on your heel or an
abscess on your finger, then you know
the role of healthy skin in sports. And
that's why pHisoHex is an important
part of an athlete's daily health routine.
pHisoHex is America's leading liquid
antibacterial skin cleanser in homes
and in hospitals. Used regularly in
place of soap; pHisoHex produces a
superclean skin and builds up an invisible antibacterial film of hexa-

chlorophene to protect your skin
against germs between washings.
A nd if you have problem skin,
pHisoHex is often valuable. The antibacterial film it leaves on your face
will ward off blemish-infecting bacteria. pHisoHex also helps to soften
and wash away blackheads.
Use pHisoHex, the skin cleanser of
winning athletes.
Made by Winthrop Laboratories, 90
Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016.
Available in drugstores in 5 oz. and
16 oz. plastic squeeze bottles.

[l¥mnn7i]
Winthrop laboratories, New York, N.Y.10016
huoc)

�IOWA STATE
UNIVERSITY
FOOTBALL COACHING
STAFF
Coach John Majors has assembled a young and enthusiastic coaching staff at Iowa State University
in his first year as head coach at
the Cyclone school. The new members bring with them a wealth of
football knowledge from leading
educationa I institutions.
Pictured here from left to right
are Jack Blazek, Jack Sherill, Ollie
Keller, Joe Madden, Head Coach
John Majors, Larry Lacewell, Jim
Johnson, King Block and Gordon
Smith.

Following are the duties of the
new staff members and the institut ions from which they came :
King Block, formerly at Washington State University, in charge of
offense plus offensive line .
.Jack Blazek, Marshalltown high
school coach the last three years,
freshman coach.
James W. Johnson, formerly at
Wichita State University, interior
linemen.
Ollie Keller, Memphis, Tenn .,
Catholic high coach, offensive backfield coach.
Larry W . Lacewell, formerly at
Wichita State University, head defens ive coach, plus ends and linebackers.
Joe Madden, formerly at Wake
Forest Un iversity, defensive backs .
Jackie Sherrill, formerly University of Arkansas, offensive backs.
Gordon C. Smith, formerly University of Arkansas, receivers .
Arch Steele, a member of the
Iowa State staff since 1954, academic counselor and scout squad.

�New Everything

~J/~~
)I

Everything is new today when it
comes to the football game.
New coach Johnny Majors, new
offense, new defense, new opponent, new ball game.
Things may be new but Johnny
Majors warns not to expect all the
newness to produce a miracle here
this afternoon; not this season.
"We have a long way to go to
build up to the rest of the Big Eight
and the tough non-conference
schedule we face," says Majors. "It
is going to take a lot of hard work
and patience on the part of the
players, the coaches, the fans. We
feel that we can build good teams
at Iowa State but it is going to take
time and lots of solid backing from
everyone with any connection with
Iowa State."
Majors has installed the I formation and monster defense as he
helped coach them at Arkansas. He
points out that it is the players and
not the formations that make the
difference.
"One thing I know, though, is
that these young men playing for
Iowa State today will all be giving
100 per cent efforts to help bring
about a victory," Majors points out.
"The spirit and desire of this group
of young men is almost unbelievable."
Majors brings a great football

(1

'-

for

Today's Game

tradition to Iowa State. He was one
of the greatest high school players
in Tennessee history and then went
on to become an All-American tailback at Tennessee. He has coached
at Tennessee, Mississippi State, and
Arkansas.
He has assembled a fine staff, a
hard-working group that know what
has to be done to win at Iowa State
and is steadily plugging away to do
what it takes . The staff includes the
veteran Arch Steel, King Block, Larry Lacewell, Joe Madden, Gordon
Smith, Jim Johnson, Jackie Sherrill,
Ollie Keller, and Jack Blazek.
That new opponent is a formidable one. Doc Urich, who coached
with Ara Parseghian at Northwestern and Notre Dame, has been
building the University of Buffalo
into a stronger and stronger team
each year. Now starting his third
season as the head man of the Bull
herd , Urich feels that this is the best
team in years to play for Buffalo.
Indeed some of the Eastern experts liken the present squad to the
powerful 1958 team which won the
Lambert trophy, emblematic of Eastern college supremacy.
Urich's team will list only two
non-lettered offensive starters and
just three more on defense. What
about Iowa State? The figures are
two and two for the Cyclones!

Co-captain Dennis Mason is the
key to the Bull success. He has
shown good passing and runs the
ball well. In addition he runs the
club in top shape. His big help
must come from Ken Rutkowski,
tailback. Tom Centofani, one of
two offensive sophomores, is the
top pass catcher although Chuck
Drankoski will argue that point.
Co-captain Don Sabo is the leader of the defense from his inside left
linebacker spot.
The fine crowd on hand today
will be looking at the greatest
group of high school band members ever to assemble at Clyde Williams field. More than 5 ,000 band
members are figured to be in the
stands this afternoon as guests of
Acton Osling and the music department.
The 23,000 fans in the stands today represents the largest crowd
ever to watch an Iowa State home
opener.
Next week it is Arizona, a team
that figures to be the best Wildcat
unit in more than a decade. Better
not wait too long for t ickets. This
ought to be one of the most exciting renewals of a series that began
back in 1958. It will be the first
time an Arizona team has played
in Ames.

�Picture Not Available
For First Program

21 - JEFF ALLEN
Chicago, Ill.
Coach Carl Bonner
Physical Education

78 - JERRY BERNA
Chicago, Ill.
Coach Bernard O'Brien,
Henry Saltizesky
Physical Education

Picture Not Available
For First Program

79 - TOM BARNES
Antigo, Wis.
Coach Dale Peterson, Jim Laham
Veterinary Medicine

50 -WAYNE BESKE
Minneapolis, Minn.
Coach Paul Benepe
Industrial Administration

37 - BRUCE BEERMAN
Demarest, N.J.
Coach Dom Sgro
History

63 - MIKE BLISS
Ames, Iowa
Coach Cecil Spatcher
Science

�74 - CRAIG BOLLER
Belmond, Iowa
Coach Chuck Stalker,
Dick Koolbeck
Physical Education

56 - JERRY BOWINGTON
Clarion, Iowa

Coach Wayne Bergstrom
Farm Operation

88 - SAM CAMPBELL
River Rouge, Mich.
Coach Charles Uzetics
Applied Art-Physical Education

35 - RAY COFFEY
Humeston, Iowa
Coach Max Franklin
Agricultural Education

76 - JIM CROW
St. Louis, Mo.
Coach Don LaPlante
Industrial Administration

23 - SAMMY DAVIS
Chicago, Ill.
Coach Larry Scannell
Physical Education

40 - BOB BROUILLETTE
Sioux C1ty, Iowa
Coach Don Fleming
Industrial Administration

32 - RANDY CALM
Evanston, Ill.
Coach Murney Lazier
Applied Art

CYCLONES
25- RAY COLEMAN
Waukegan, Wis.
Coach Walter Rucks
Sociology

53 - TIM CONNOR
Morris, Ill.
Coach Larry Kane
Veterinary Medicine

Picture Not Available
For First Program

�75 · GEORGE DIMITRI
Chicago, ill.
Coach Ray Jacobsen
Industrial

87 ·GREG DUKSTEIN

Allen Park, Mich.
Coach Carl Swicki
Physical Education

Administration

CYCLONES
92 • ERIC GHIANNI

Deerfield, Ill.
Coach Doug Kay
Applied Art

72 ·JOHN GRIGLIONE
Des Moines, Iowa
Jim Williams
Physical Education

64 · BILL EASTER
Moline, Ill.
Coach Ken Funk
Physical Education

45 · JERRY FIAT
Oak Lawn, Ill.
Dave Walery
Physical Education

33 · ROGER GUGE
Estherville, Iowa
Coach Chuck Uknes
Physical Education

29 · TOM ELLIOTT

Swea C1ty, Iowa
Coach Wayne Baker
Industrial

Administration

60 - LARRY GAFFIN
Columbus, Ohio
Coach J1m Harper
Bio-Chemistry

18 ·MIKE GUINN
Omaha, Nebraska
Civil Engineering

Picture Not Available
For First Program

�65 - TED HALL
Cincinnati, Ohio
Coach Gerry Faust
Industrial Administration

93 - RAY HARM
Closter, N.J.
Coach Dom Sgro
Mathematics

28 - TOM HILDEN
Glencoe, Ill.
Coach Ed Heikenen
Industrial Administration

77 -TIM JEFFRIES
Marshalltown, Iowa
Coach Jack Blazek

44 - JOCK J O HNSON
Des Moines, Iowa
Coach Bob Savage
History

48 -WILLI E HARRIS
Muskegon, Mich.
Coach Ed Chiaverni
Physical Education

94 - LARRY HERRMANN
St. Louis Park, Minn.
Coach Bob Roy
Physical Education

CYCLONES

Science

66 - FRED JONES
Minneapolis, Minn.
Coach Bernie Nerdahl
Industrial Administration

49 - STEVE KARBER
Grand Junction, Iowa
Coach Lee Arrowsmith
Zoology

86 - JOHN KELLY
Des Moines, Iowa

Coach Bob Savage
Aero-Space Engineering

�20 - BEN KING
Central Islip, N.Y.
Coach Fred Goldstein
Physical Education

B2 - MIKE KIRAR
Peru, Ill.
Codch Gene Cherney
Industrial Administration

84 - JOHN KONINGSWOOD
Hawthorne, N.J.
Coach AI Rotella
Civil Engineering

42 - MARSHALL LANGHOR
Evanston, Ill.
Coach Murney Lazier
Biology

PiCtUre Not Avelleble
Fot Flnt Program

CYCLONES
73 -JOE MARCONI
Chicago Heights, Ill.
Coach Rod Mack
Distributive Studies

61 - DAN McAVOY
Skokie, Ill.
Coach Mike Basrak
Phys ical Education

59 - MIKE LORBER
Independence, Iowa
Coach Lyle Leinbaugh
Architecture

80 - TOM LORENZ
Reinbeck, Iowa
Coach John Hartung
Industrial Administration

46 - HUB NELSON
Golden Valley, Minn.
Coach Phil Benepe
Ag Bus iness

67 - MIKE O'NEILL
Chicago, Ill.
Coach Jim Lamkin
Industrial Administration

�51 - DENNIS PELISEK
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Coach Wally Sheets
Physical Education

90 - TOM POTTER
Sheldon , Iowa
Coach Dave Bentz
Ag Business

89 - TED REIMER
Rhinelander, Wis.
Coach Dave Lechnir
Industrial Administration

54 - STEVE RICHARDS
Park Ridge, Ill.
Coach Marv Nyren
Industrial Administration

70- DAN ROBINSON
Cleveland, Ohio
Coach Sam Ruvolo
Physical Education

68 - TOM SALERNO
Berwyn, Ill.
Coach Jim Regan
Restaurant Management

16 - BILL REDING
Algona, Iowa
Coach Beanie Cooper
Journalism

26 - STEVE POWERS
Rockford, Ill.
Coach Bob Pellant
Physical Education

CYCLONES
57- KEITH SCHROEDER
Davenport, Iowa
Coach Bob Liddy
Physical Education

17 - JEFF SIMONDS
Rockford, Ill.
Coach Brodie Westen
Industrial Administration

�IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL ROSTER
No.
12

Name and Positio n
Brad Steckmesser, d-s
13
Tony Washington, d-s
Obert Tisdale, o-qb
14
15
*John Warder, o-qb
16
Bill Reding, o-qb
17 **Jeff Simonds, d-rh
18
Mike Guinn, o-qb
20 **Ben King, o-fb
21
Jeff Allen, o-wb
23
Sammy Davis, o-wb, d-lh
25
Ray Coleman, o-wb
26
Steve Powers, d-rib (k)
27
Bob Thomas, o-tb
28
Tom Hildem, d-rh
29
Tom Elliott, d-lh
31
Bob Williams, d-m
32
Randy Calm, d-m
33
Roger
, o-fb
34
Mike errizi'i, o-we
35
Rav offey, o-fb
37
~ruce Beerman, o-wb
38
Skripsky, k
39
AI Staid!, d-llb
40
Bob Brouillette, o-we (k)
41
John Usmial, d-lh
42
Marshall Langhor, o-se
44
Jock Johnson, o-tb
45
*Jerry Fiat, d-m
46
Hub Nelson, d-lh
48
Willie Harris, o-tb t
49
Steve Karber, d-s
50
Wayne Beske, o-c
51
Dennis Pelisek, o-sg
53
Tim Connor, d-ng
54
Steve Richards, o-c
55
Mark Withrow, d-llb
56
Jerry Boyington, d-rib
57
Keith Schroeder, d-rib
59
Mike Lorber, d-llb
60
Larry Gaffin, o-sg
61
Dan McAvoy, o-sg
62
*Terry Voy, d-ng
63
Mike Bliss, o-wg
64
Bill Easter, o-wg
65
*Ted Hall, o-wg
66
*Fred Jones, d-ng
67
Mike O'Neill, o-c
68
Tom Salerno, d-rh
70
*Dan Robinson, o-wt
72
John Griglione, d-ng
73
Joe Marconi, o-st
74
*Craig Boller, d-lt
75 **George Dimitri, d-lt
76
Jim Crow, o-wt
77
Tim Jeffries, o-st
78
Jerry Berna, o-st
79
Tom Barnes, o-wt
80
Tom Lorenz, o-we
81
Chuck Wilkinson, d-Ie
82
*Mike Kirar, d-Ie
83
Ray Snell, d-m
84
John Koningswood, d-re
85
Otto Stowe, o-se
86
John Kelly, d-re
87
*Greg Dukstein, o-se
88 **Sam Campbell, o-we
89
*Ted Reimer, d-re
90
Tom Potter, d-Ie
91
Andy Waller, d-rt
92
Eric Ghianni, d-lt
93
Ray Harm, d-rib
94
Larry Herrman, d-rt
* Lettermen.
T Harris wears #22 on the road.

w.erJf

Hgt.
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-3
6-1
5-9
5-10
6-0
5-9
6-2
6-1
5-8
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-3
5-10
5-10
6-3
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-3
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-3
5-11

6-2
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-1
6-4
6-1
6-4
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-5
6-4
6-4
6-2
6-0
6-3
6-3

Wgt.
189
168
187

183
191
180
165
190
188
160
196

193
166
178
169
171

183
196
205
175
181
197
202

193
172
186
199
178
169
192
175

218
189
189
182
190
194
205
189
186
197
209
198
194
185
198
202
182
242
209
220
213
228
204
225
208
218
202
190
196
190
196
172
191
168
217
199
202
212
209
194
205

Age

18
19
19

21
19

21
19

22
19
20
20
19

21
19
19
19
20

19
19
20

19
19
20
20
20

19
19
19
20
20

18
21
18
19
20

19
19
19
19
21
19
21
20

19
21

Class
So ph
So ph
So ph
Senior
So ph
Senior
So ph
Senior
So ph
Soph
So ph
So ph
Junior
So ph
So ph
So ph
Junior
So ph
So ph
Junior
So ph
Junior
Senior
Junior
So ph
Junior
So ph
Junior
Junior
So ph
So ph
Junior
So ph
So ph
Junior
So ph
So ph
So ph
So ph
Senior
Soph
Senior
Junior
So ph
Senior

20

Junior

19
21

So ph
Junior
Junior
So ph
So ph
Junior
Senior
So ph
So ph
So ph
So ph
So ph
Soph
Junior
So ph
Soph
So ph
So ph
Junior
Senior
Senior
So ph
So ph
So ph
So ph
So ph

20
20

18
20
20

18
19
19
20

19
19
19
19
19
19
19
21

21
21
19
19
18
19
20

Home Town
Manitowoc, Wis.
Dearborn, Mich.
Waterloo, Iowa
Hoffman Estates, Ill.
Algona, Iowa
Rockford, Ill.
Omaha, Nebr.
Central Islip, N.Y.
Chicago, Ill.
Chicago, Ill.
Waukegan, Ill.
Rockford, Ill.
Lake Geneva, Wis.
Glencoe, Ill.
Swea City, Iowa
Omaha, Nebr.
Evanston, Ill.
Estherville, Iowa
Hawthorne, N.J.
Humeston, Iowa
Demarest, N.J.
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Lisle, Ill.
Sioux City, Iowa
Muskegon, Mich.
Evanston, Ill.
Des Moines, Iowa
Oak lawn, Ill.
Golden Valley, Minn.
Muskegon, Mich.
Grand Junction, Iowa
Minneapolis, Minn.
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Morris, Ill.
Park Ridge, Ill.
Edina, Minn.
Clarion, Iowa
Davenport, Iowa
Independence, Iowa
Columbus, Ohio
Skokie, Ill.
Ackley, Iowa
Ames, Iowa
Moline, Ill.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Minneapolis, Minn.
Chicago, Ill.
Berwyn, Ill.
Cleveland, Ohio
Des Moines, Iowa
Chicago Heights, Ill.
Belmond, Iowa
Chicago, Ill.
St. louis, Mo.
Marshalltown, Iowa
Chicago, Ill.
Antigo, Wis.
Reinbeck, Iowa
Chicago, Ill.
Peru,. Ill.
Canton, Ohio
Hawthorne, N.J.
Springfield, Ill.
Des Moines, Iowa
Allen Park, Mich.
River Rouge, Mich.
Rhinelander, Wis.
Sheldon, Iowa
Poynette, Wis.
Deerfield, Ill.
Muskegon, Mich.
St. Louis Park, Minn.

�BEFORE 'IOU
BU'f I SEE '/OUR.
C~RYS' L£R..­

PLYMOUTH
OR DODGE

DEALER.

;~

(

--~'
.. BETh~ C~NTE~
Ol= #\TTEf.JTI ON
\~A N~W CAR
ROM 0\RYSLE"R.

CORPORAllON.f
L._~

CI-!R.y'SLE.R

o;JR.PORAnON1
l..DNGOr-1

STYLING ,
lor-JGON
FEATURES
AND ON
Et-JGlNE.5RING

Plymouth· Dodge• Chrysler·lmperial• Dodge Trucks·Simca ·Sunbeam

~~ CHRYSLER
CORPORATION
~

SEE THE AFL IN ACTION EACH WEEK O N NBC-TV.

��OFFENSE
80
79
63
50
61

77
85
15
21
20
44

DEFENSE

TOM LORENZ __________________ WE
TOM BARNES __________________WT
MIKE BLISS ______________________ WG
WAYNE BESKE ____________________ C
DAN McAVOY __________________ SG
TIM JEFFRIES ____________________ ST
OTTO STOWE ____________________ SE
JOHN WARDER ________________ QB
JEFF ALLEN ______________________ WB
BEN KING __________________________ FB
JOCK JOHNSON ______________ TB

85 PAUL lANG ______________________ TE
77 CHRIS WOLF ______________________ LT
64 MIKE MASER ____________________ LG
52 JOHN WESOLOWSKI __________ C
62 TOM KOWALEWSKI __________ RG
73 TOM CENTOFANTI ____________ TT
87 DICK ASHLEY ____________________ SE
19 DENNY MASON ______________ QB
44 CHUCK DRANKOSKI ________ FLB
35 JOE ZELMANSKI ________________ FB
21 KEN RUTKOWSKI ______________ TB

IOWA STATE

BUFFALO

DEFENSE
82
75
72
91
89

55
~6

29
17
31
13

OFFENSE

MIKE KIRAR ______________________ LE
GEORGE DIMITRI ______________ LT
JOHN GRIGLIONE __________ NG
ANDY WALLER ________________ RT
TED REIMER ______________________ RE
MARK WITHROW ____________ LLB
STEVE POWERS ________________ RLB
TOM ELLIOTT ____________________ LH
JEFF SIMONDS ________________ RH
BOB WILLIAMS __________________ M
TONY WASHINGTON ________ S

81
70
78
83
50
69
65
32
23
29
40

BUFFALO SQUAD

IOWA STATE SQUAD
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
23
25
26
27
28
29
31
32
33
34
35
37
38
39
40
41
42
44
45
46
48
49
50
51
53
54
55

Steckmesser, d-s
Washington, d-s
Tisdale, o-qb
Warder, o-qb
Reding, o-qb
Simonds, d-rh
Guinn, o-qb
King, o-fb
Allen, o-wb
Davis, o-wb
Coleman, o-wb
Powers, d-rib (k)
Thomas, o-tb
Hildem, d-rh
Elliott, d-lh
Williams, d-m
Calm, d-m
Guge, o-fb
Terrizzi, o-we
Coffey, o-fb
Beerman, o-wb
Skripsky, k
Staid!, d-llb
Brouillette, o-we
Usmial, d-lh
langhor, o-se
Johnson, o-tb
Fiat, d-m
Nelson, d-lh
Harris, o-tb
Karber, d-s
Beske, o-c
Pelisek, o-sg
Connor, d-ng
Richards, o-c
Withrow, d-llb

56
57
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
70
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94

Boyington, d-rib
Schroeder, d-rib
Lorber, d-llb
Gaffin, o-sg
McAvoy, o-sg
Voy, d-ng
Bliss, o-wg
Easter, o-wg
Hall, o-wg
Jones, d-ng
O'Neill, o-c
Sa lerna, d-rh
Robinson, o-wt
Griglione, d-ng
Marconi, o-st
Boiler, d-lt
Dimitri, d-lt
Crow, o-wt
Jeffries, o-st
Berna, o-st
Barnes, o-wt
lorenz, o-we
Wilkinson, d-Ie
Kirar, d-Ie
Snell, d-m
Koningswood, d-re
Stowe, o-se
Kelly, d-re
Dukstein, o-se
Campbell, o-we
Reimer, d-re
Potter, d-Ie
Waller, d-rt
Ghianni, d-lt
Harm, d-rib
Herrmann, d-rt

TOM MURPHY __________________ LE
DAN WALGATE ________________ LT
RUSS BECK ________________________ RT
BOB KOVEY ______________________ RE
JIM MOSHER ____________________ OL
DON SABO _______________________ JL
SCOTT CLARK ___________________ _IR
DAVE RICHNER ________________ OR
NICK KISH ________________________ LH
DICK HORN ______________________ RH
TOM ELLIOTT ______________________ S

10
11
12
16
17
19
20
21
23
24
25
26
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
40
42
44
45
46
48
49
50
51
52
56

5l

Moresco, qb
Perry, qb
Stiscak, dhb
Embow, K
Jack, qb-k
Mason, qb (c-c)
Patterson, tb
Rutkowski, tb
Kish, dhb
Zalar, dhb
Bell, lb
Jacobs, s
Horn, s
Hernquist, lb
Richner, lb
Zeek, fb
luzny, lb
Zelmanski, fb
Woodward, fl
McCullough, lb
Chapp, fb
Elliott, s
Nixon, dhb
Drankoski, fl
Grubbs, dhb
Hogan, hb
Hlavenka, se
Faller, hb
Mosher, lb
Moler, c
Wesolowski, c
Chernega, lb
Albaneze, dt

58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

Donnor, c
Kersaw, lb
Carney, g
Elwell, g
Kowalewski, g
Walters, g
Maser, g
Clark, lb
lupienski, lb
Minch, dt
Hayden, g
Saba, g (c-c)
Walgate, dt
Hudson, t
Milarski, dt
Centofanti, t
Rio, t
Riccello, dt
Reid, t
Wolf, t
Beck, dt
Atkinson, dt
Shine, se
Murphy, de
Endress, te
Kovey, de
Przybycien, de
lang, te
Vigneeu, de
Ashley, se
James, te
Sharrow, se
Henley, de

�Olds Vl'3ta-Cruiser:
Kind of like owning
your own stadium.
We didn't start out to
build a stadium on wheels.
Vista-Cruiser just sort of
grew into one. It's bigger
this year. Handles like a
bigger car. Built on a longer
121-inch wheelbase. Inside,
there's more room to stretch
out, up and sideways. The

forward-facing third seat
lets you see where you're
going . .. not where you've
been. And there's more
room to carry all the stuff
you carry . . . on and under
the big rear deck. Plus
room for even more when

you order the sturdy chrome
luggage rack topside.
All this, plus a 50-yard-line
view of the world outside
through the cool, tinted
Vista-Roof. Take the whole
family along for a test
drive in a Vista-Cruiser
at your Olds Dealer's. That
way you'll have your own
cheering section, too.

1968 Vista -C ruiser, in 2- a nd 3-seat version s,
both with all the new G M safety features.

Drive a youngmobile from Oldsmobile

IGM I
MAPUI; Of EXCEllENCE

�THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO FOOTBALL ROSTER
No.

Name and Position

10
11
12
15
16
17
19
20
21
23
24
25
26
29
30
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
40
42

Joe Moresco, qb
Ed Perry, qb
Bob Stiscak, dhb
Dan Martin, dhb
*Bob Embow, k
*Paul Jack, qb (k)
*Dennis Mason, qb (c-c)
*Pat Patterson, tb
*Ken Rutkowski, tb
Nick Kish, dhb
Karl Zalar, dhb
Harry Bell, lb
Joel Jacobs, s
*Dick Horn, s
Gene Hernquist, lb

*Dave Richner, lb
John Zeek, fb
*Mike Luzny, lb
Joe Zelmanski, fb
Barney Woodward, fl
Steve McCullough, lb
Gary Chapp, fb
Tom Elliott, s
Leonard Nixon, dhb
*Charles Drankoski, fl
*Gary Grubbs, dhb
Kevin Hogan, hb
Joe Hlavenka, se
John Faller, tb
*Jim Mosher, lb
Bob Moler, c
*John Wesolowski, c
Dave Chernega, lb
Dennis Albaneze, dt
Charles Donnor, c
Ed Kershaw, lb
Pat Carney, g
Jerry Elwell, g
*Tom Kowalewski, g
Greg Walters, g
*Mike Maser, g
*Scott Clark, lb
*John Lupienski, lb
Bernard Minch, dt
Bill Ha yden, g
*Don Sabo, lb (c-c)
*Dan Walgate, dt
Joe Hudson, t
Tom Milarski, dt
Tom Centofanti, t
John Rio, t
*Joe Riccelli, dt
Frank Reid, t
*Chris Wolf, t
Russ Beck, dt
Barry Atkinson, dt
John Shine, se
*Tom Murphy, de
*Terry Endress, te
*Bob Kovery, de
*John Przybycien , de
*Paul Lang, te
Tom Vignea u, de
*Dick Ashley, se
Mike James, te
Mike Sharrow, se
Prentis Henley, de

44
45
46
48
49
50
51
52
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
B4
85
86
87
88
89
90
• Lettermen

Hgt.

6-2
6-3
5-11
5-11
6-0
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-9
5-11
6-0
5-10
5-10
6-1
5-9
5-11
5-11
5-9
6-1
5-9
5-10
5-8
5-11
5-11
6-1
5-9
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-2
5-11
5-11
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-0
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-1
5-10
5-10
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-3
6-4
6-1
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-7
6-3
6-1

Wgt.

Age

Class

Home Town

175
205
185
187
210
178
188
191
180
198
180
180
179
188
190
197
190
209
185
190
201
200
175
180
183
175
180
185
178
212
226
214
187
205
195
195
200
208
210
212
214
212
210
220
213
210
255
240
250
210
232
242
217
220
232
240
180
192
202
202
200
210
204
201
210
215
205

19
19
19
21
20
20
21
20
21
21
19

So ph
So ph
So ph

Ithaca, N.Y.
Delmar, N.Y.
Aliquippa, Pa.
Huntington, N.Y.
Hamburg, N.Y.
Springdale, Pa.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Ambridge, Pa.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Tiffin, Ohio
Potsdam, N.Y.
East Rockaway, N.Y.
Dover, Ohio
Olean, N.Y.
Grennhurst, N.Y.
Brewick, Pa.
South Bend, Ind.
Centerline, Mich.
Peru, N.Y.

Senior
Senior
Junior
Senior

Junior
Senior
Senior

So ph

22

Junior

19
21
19
21
19
21
19
19
20
20
19
19
21
20
20
19
19
21
21
22
21
19
19
19
20
20
21
19
21
21
21
20
21
21
20
19
19
19
19
21
22
20
19
19
19
22
20
20
20
21
19
21
19
22
21

So ph
Junior

So ph
Senior

So ph
Junior

So ph
So ph
Junior
Junior

So ph
So ph
Senior
Junior
Junior

So ph
So ph
Senior
Junior
Senior
Junior

So ph
So ph
So ph
Junior

So ph
Senior
Junior
Senior
Junior
Senior
Junior

Senior
Senior
Junior

So ph
So ph
So ph
So ph
Senior
Junior
Junior
Junior

So ph
So ph
Senior
Junior
Junior
Senior
Junior

So ph
Senior

So ph
Junior
Junior

Co•hocton, Ohio
Centerline, Mich.
Canadaigua, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Endwell, N.Y.
Coshocton, Ohio
St. Louis, Mo.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Central Islip, N.Y.
Orchard Park, N.Y.
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Elmhurst, N.Y.
East Aurora, N.Y.
Elyria, Ohio
New Kensington, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Clayton, N.Y.
Coshocton, N.Y.
Springdale, Pa.
Elmira, N.Y.
Cleveland, Ohio
Johnstown, Pa.
Grand Island, N.Y.
New York City, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Ottawa, Ont.
Solon, Ohio
Indianapolis, Ind.
Tarentum, Pa .
Olean, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa .
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Youngstown, Ohio
Detroit, Mich.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Massena, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa .
Witherbee, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.

�38 -VERN SKRIPSKY
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Bud Rainbow
Electrical Engineering

83 - RAY SNELL
Canton, Ohio
Coach Ron Chismar
History

39 - AL STAIDL
Lisle , Ill.
Coach Dick Carstens
Industrial Administration

12 - BRADD STECKMESSER
Manitowoc, Wis.
Coach Bill Twichell
Industrial Engineering

CYCLONES
27 - BOB THOMAS
Lake Geneva, Wis.
Coach Doug Gerber
History and Government

14 - OBERT TISDALE
Waterloo, Iowa
Coach Howard Vernon
Industrial Administration

41 -JOHN USMIAL
Muskegon, Mich.
Coach Roger Chiverini
Physical Education

62 - TERRY VOY
Ackley, Iowa
Coach Pat Raysack
Physical Education

�Picture Not Available
For First Program

91 · ANDY WALLER
Poynette, Wis.
Coach Walter Schoenherr
Civil Engineering

15 · JOHN WARDER
Hoffman Estates , Ill.
Coach John Ellis
Zoology

13 ·TONY WASHINGTON
Dearborn, Mich.
Coach Hal Muldowney
Physical Education

81 · CHUCK WILKINSON
Chicago, Ill.
Coach Jim Guzzo
Industrial Administration

CYCLONES
85 · OTTO STOWE
Spr ingfield, Ill.
Coach John McCoy
Phys ical Education

34 · MIKE TERRIZZI
Hawthorne, N.J.
Coach AI Rotella
Physical Education

Picture Not Available
For First Program

31 · BOB WILLIAMS
Omaha, Neb.
Coach Jack Blazek, Bill Hoyt
History and Government

55 · MARK WITHROW
Edina, Minn.
Coach Stav Canakes
Arch itecture

��ABOUT
THE
UNIVERSITY OF
BUFFALO
State University of New York at
Buffalo, founded in 1846 as the
University of Buffalo, is today the
largest single unit and most comprehensive undergraduate and graduate center of State University, enrolling 21,000 students (13,000 fulltime). One of the first independent
institutions of higher learning to be
established in the United States, the
University was a pioneer in adapting educational service to the specific needs of a developing urban
complex. Today, the University is
headed by a noted scholar of urban
affairs, Martin Meyerson, who is the
tenth chief executive officer of the
University.
First chancellor of the University
was Millard Fillmore, 13th president of the United States.
Building upon more than a century of public service tradition, the
University has developed rapidly
as a State institution since it became
part of the SUNY system in 1962.
While the total enrollment has increased only 37 per cent since 1962,
the number of full-time undergraduates has grown by 49 per cent and
the full-time graduate and professional student population by 167
per cent. The number of degrees
awarded has grown more dramatically, ranging from an increase of
200 per cent for bachelor's degree!&gt;
to almost 500 per cent for Ph .D.'s.
In 1968, the University conferred
2,200 bachelor's degrees, 902 master's degrees, 138 academic doctorates and 237 doctorates in the professions.
The character of the student body
has changed as profoundly as its
size. In the Fall of 1959, 30.5 per
cent of entering students ranked in
the top one-fifth of their respective

high school classes. Of those entering in the Fall of 1967, 86.7 per
cent ranked in the top quintile. Similar improvements have taken place
in the quality of graduate students.
Resources and facilities have also
been improved and enlarged. The
number of volumes in the University
Libraries, for example, has tripled
since 1962 and has recently passe J
the one million mark. To provide
room for continued expansion of
operations pending completion of
a new campus, the University is occupying a number of off-campus locations, including an "interim" facility of several buildings on Ridge
Lea Road in the Town of Amherst,
three miles north of the present
campus.
The University has recently implemented a bold new academic
play, reorganizing its schools and
.colleges within seven interdisciplinary facilities-arts and letters,
applied sciences, health sciences,
educational studies, engineering and
law and jurisprudence, natural sciences and mathematics, and social
sciences and administration. All undergraduate instruction is offered
through one division, the University
College, while the School of Graduate Studies is expected to become
the central coordinating body for all
higher degree programs, professional and academic, beyond the
baccalaureate level. A third University division, Millard Fillmore
College, administers evening credit
programs and continuing education
for adults. To provide year-round

while identifying and implementing
both new combinations of standard
disciplines and new fields of study
and research. A series of non-degree granting "colleges" to be established in the next several years
will provide for students centers of
identification and a diversity of opportunity for intellectual exchange
and will serve as a vehicle for fostering personal relationships within
a large university. A program of
vigorous recruitment based upon
competitive salary levels and bolstered by a climate of encouragement for creative academic pursuits
and enriched body of faculty scholars. The level of achievement of
the student body can be expected
to keep pace with these overall
qualitative developments as enrollment increases to approximately
40,000 by 1975, with particular
growth at the graduate level. Constant attention will also remain focused on building a distinguished
undergraduate program as the
foundation for an excellent graduate center.
Germane to all these intellectual
prospects is the vista of an entirely
new University campus, designed
especially to facilitate implementation of educatrona I objectives. This
complex will be developed on a
1,300-acre tract in the Town of Amherst, three miles north of the present campus. The project which will
provide 14,000,000 square feet of
educational space is expected to begin taking shape in the early 1970's.
Upon its completion, the present

operation, the Summer Sessions coordinate academic offerings in three
overlapping terms, June through
August.
The seven broadly interdisciplinary faculties will Incorporate and
build upon traditional disciplines

178-acre Main Street campus at the
Northeastern edge of Buffalo will
be devoted to expanded research
activities and will serve also as the
site of one of the largest centers of
continuing education activities in
the nation.

�FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF

RICHLAND W. (Doc) URICH
Head Coach

JAMES C. McNALLY
Head Freshman

ROBERT E. GEIGER
Offensive Line

JERRY A . IPPOLITI
Offensive Backfield

WILLIAM R. DANDO
Linebackers

ROBERT C. DEMING
Defensive Backfield

SAM L. SANDERS
Defensive Line

GERALD R. GERGLEY
Freshman Assistant

�87 - DICK ASHLEY

78 - RUSS BECK

73 - TOM CENTOFANI

38 - GARY CHAPP

BuiA
66 - JOHN LUPIENSKI

44 - CHARLES DRANKOSKI

16 - BOB

EM80W

45 - GARY GRUBBS

29 - DICK HORN

�17 - PAUL JACK

62- TOM KOWALEWSKI

85 - PAUL LANG

19 - DENNIS MASON

Buli4
77 - CHRIS WOLF

34 -MIKE LUZNY

64 - MIKE MASER

81

- TOM MURPHY

20 - PAT PATTERSON

�75 - JOE RICCELLI

32 - DAVE RICHNER

Check 'em.
0 Great opportunity. You earn a commission
while you earn your college degree. Graduate
-you start at the top. Fulfill your military
obligation as an Army officer. With officer's
pay. Officer's privileges.

0 Great advantages. Employers prefer a
college graduate with service as an officer.
Pay more to get him. Because he's a trained,
experienced leader. Can handle h1!av1er
responsibilities.
0

Great success. From the 5% of college
men who had ROTC training have come 24%
of our state governors, 28% of executives
earning $100,000 b $325,000 per year, 10% of
Congress, 15% of our ambassadors.
21 - KEN RUTKOWSKI

70 - DAN WALGATE

69- DON SABO

52 - JOHN WESOLOWSKI

0 Great guys. ROTC men are campus leaders
-in ROTC, athletics, extracurricular activities.
And they do better scholastically than nonROTC students.
0 Great extras. $50 per month in junior and
senior years. Scholarships for outstanding
students. Free flight training at over 125
colleges. Extra social activities-military balls,
honor societies, bands, rifle teams.
Any way you look at it, there's a lot more
going for you when you're in ROTC.
Your future, your decision ...
choose Army ROTC.

r------------------,
Army ROTC
P.O. Box 12703
Philadelphia, Pa. 19134

CP 69

I want to know more about Army ROTC.
Send me your free brochure.
Na,tm!.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Age-Address'------------City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Stat

ZiP---

L------------------~

�Iowa State Courtesy Car Program
Twelve automobile dealers 1n
Iowa are helping the Iowa State
athletic program through the loan
of courtesy cars. Like other programs
which are a part of the Cyclone
Club, this project enables Iowa
State to make greater use of its
funds. These sports-minded dealers
around the state have earned a great
debt of gratitude from the Iowa
State University Department of Intercollegiate Athletics. They are a
most important part of the "team",
a team that includes players, coaches, administration, faculty, staff,
students, alumni, and the men behind the courtesy car program.

�NORM DUNLAP
Dodge
Ames

ART SKEIE
Pontiac
Ames

Chevrolet-Buick
Ames

JACK NYSTROM
Chrysler-Plymouth
Boone

TOM KELLY
Ford-Lincoln-Mercury
Fort Dodge

BOB MICKEY
Ford-Lincoln-Mercury
Humboldt

MERT COOVER
Chevrolet-Oldsmobile
Nevada

"RED" REES
Pontiac &amp; Oldsmobile
Boone

JIM CORDES
Jim Cordes Ford
Waterloo

�CYCLONE "ALL-AMERICANS"

" Pol ly" Wallace

Ed Bock

Jim Doran

1920

1938

1950

Dw ight Nichols

Tom Watk ins

Dave Hoppman

1959

1960

1961-1962

Tom Vaughn

John Van Sicklen

Eppie Barney

1963

1964

1966

�taste that beats the
others cold!

Pepsi pours it on-pours on the taste that _,. ~.. n
actually gets better as it gets colder.
It's a cold fact: Pepsi-Cola is bottled as cold
as we can make it so you can drink it as cold as
you like it! And cold is the way to really drench a thirst.
Prove it for yourself-put it to the taste.

�CROSS THE LINE WITH CY!

Join the Cyclone Club NOW!
All it takes is $25 or more to help Cy score ... join with us now to help
--7'-1

hit our goal of athletic excellence. Mail your contribution to the Cyclone
Club ... 202 State Gym ... Ames, Iowa 50010.

�Now that we have your attention . . . this is a special invitation for
you to participate in the third annual Christmas "Living Letter'' project.
Free of charge, you can send a personal tape recorded message to a
For more information call 294-5000 Monday

serviceman overseas.
through Friday.

SIH~

NMOO ON:I
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�looking for A Bank ... look to the FIRST in Ames
A FULL SERVICE BANK

TWO LOCATIONS

•

University Office- Campustown- 2520 Lincoln Way
Across the lake from the Memorial Union

TWO DRIVE-UP TELLER WINDOWS
SAFE DEPOSIT VAULT
FOUR LOBBY TELLER WINDOWS
NIGHT DEPOSITORY
CUSTOMER PARKING

•

Main Bank- Downtown- 5th and Kellogg
Across from the City Hall

MEMBER

Ames Daily

OF

FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

Tribune

1867. 1968

now in the second century
of service.

Tune to

·W OI
640
Follow the

CYCLONES

�Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

1968 Schedule
and Results

Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

• • •

14
21
28

5
12
19
26
2
9
16

Iowa State vs. Buffalo
Iowa State vs. Arizona
Iowa State vs. Brigham Young
Iowa State vs. Colorado
Iowa State vs. Kansas State
Iowa State vs. Oklahoma
Iowa State vs. Kansas
Iowa State vs. Nebraska
Iowa State vs. Missouri
Iowa State vs. Oklahoma State

1969 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Syracuse
27 Brigham Young
4 Illinois
1 1 Colorado
18 Kansas State
25 Kansas U.
1 Oklahoma
8 Nebraska
15 Missouri
22 Oklahoma State

20

00--oo-000000000000000

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000000000000000 . . .

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00000000 . . . . . . . . . . . .

oo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . oo . .

OOOOOOOOOoOOOOO . . . . . . .

000000 . . . .

Away
Home
Away
Home
Away
Home
Away
Away
Home
Home

Home
Home
Away
Home
Away
Away
Home
Home
Away
Away

Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

Iowa State 28-10
Iowa State 12-21
Iowa State 28-20
Iowa State _ _
Iowa State _ _
Iowa State _ _
Iowa State _ _
Iowa State _ _
Iowa State _ _
Iowa State _ _

Buffalo
Arizona
Brigham Young
Colorado
Kansas State
Oklahoma
Kansas
Nebraska
Missouri
Oklahoma State

1970 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
19 New Mexico
26 Colorado St.
3 Utah ..
10 Colorado ............
17 Kansas St .....................
24 Kansas ....
31
Oklahoma ...........
7 Nebraska ..
14 Missouri ...
21 Oklahoma St.
000o0000 . . . . . . 00

oo . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

oo . . . . oo . . . . . . oo . . oooo . . . .

00 . . . . . . . .

0000 . . . . . . . . 00 . . . . . .

00 . . . . . . .

00................

00 . . . 00 . . . . . . . . . . . .

oooo . . oo . . oooo . .

Away
Home
Away
Away
Home
Away
Home
Home
Away
Away

furthermore, those dollars
can take you farther
Whether it's a w eekend in Washington or a month in Monaco . . . it's

our responsibility as traver consultants to help you get the most for
your travel dollar. That is our policy. And it's one of the reasons we
say our service costs you nothing. Our pay comes from the carrier
and/ or hotel in commissions earned as agents.
Next time, come travel with us.

TRANS-TRAVEL
5th and Clark

Copyright 1968, TRANS-TRAVEL

Ames 232-3131

�GO

c

y
CL

D
N
E

s

AMES
CYCLONE
BOOSTERS

ESCHBACH MUSIC HOUSE
CAPN'S GALLEY
JOY &amp; JOHNSON AUCTION COMPANY
MIDWEST TRANSPORTATION, INC.
CARTER PRESS, INC .
PAUL LORENZ CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
TROW MILK AND VENDING
TRANS-TRAVEL
CONARD FREIGHT LINES
FRED WINKLER &amp; SONS
PHIL WHEELOCK CONOCO
S. HANSON LUMBER COMPANY
PAMMEL FUEL OIL COMPANY
IOWA ELECTRIC LIGHT &amp; POWER COMPANY
DYNA-KLEEN SERVICES
PRONTO FOOD KITCHENS, INC .
NORTHSIDE FRUIT &amp; GROCERY
EVERTS FLOWER, GIFT, &amp; CANDIES SHOP
RICHARDS RESTAURANT
HALLETT CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
IOWA ROAD BUILDERS COMPANY
WOODWORTH D-X
WORLD WIDE TRAVEL CENTER, INC .
BEATY REAL ESTATE &amp; INSURANCE
BLEEKERS FINE FURNITURE &amp; CARPET
MOTOR SALES AND SERVICE, INC .
SCHOENEMAN LUMBER COMPANY
JIM'S STANDARD
RAY COOK CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC .
AMES DAILY TRIBUNE TIMES
BUCK CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC .
HEATON'S FLOOR COVERINGS
NOAH'S ARK RESTAURANT
SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR &amp; YE PUBLIC HOUSE
OLSON'S "66"
AMES TUNE UP SERVICE
RED RAM
CAMPUS DRUG
CROUSE TRANSFER &amp; STORAGE/
ALLIED VAN LINES
ENGELDINGER'S
HILL STUDIO
PIZZA HUT
JAMES THOMPSON &amp; SONS
LANDSBERG PHARMACY
HUNZIKER &amp; FURMAN REALTY
NISSEN &amp; SON
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND COMPANY
EAGLE IRON WORKS
McDOWELL AGENCY, INC .
EL RANCHO MOTEL
FASTCO DRUG
HOME FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCES
CHEF'S INN
MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; COMPANY
BROWN'S SHOE FIT COMPANY
DURLAM &amp; DURLAM
BYERS OFFICE EQUIPMENT
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE, INC.
BERCK CLOTHING COMPANY
AMES STATIONERS
COE'S HOUSE OF FLOWERS
AMES BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
CHARCO'S DRIVE-IN
FRANGOS CAFE

�RAHf RAHf

CYCLONfS
We're all rooting for
Johnny and the team

GO GET 'EM!!
MFG. CO.

WELCOME TO THE TOWN PUMP AND
TOWN HOUSE RESTAURANT
In The Hotel Sheldon-Munn
YOUR CYCLONE CLUB HEADQUARTERS
AFTER ALL HOME FOOTBALL GAMES.

--

AMES, IOWA
(where Cy was hatched)

�Out to win All America again.
In trucks, you don't make
No. 1 for thirty years in a
row without a tough bunch
of fleet-footed pickups in
your lineup.

horn has new length for
camping . There's new power
in Chevy's engine line. And
the interiors are more carlike than ever.

sion and deep coil springs
give Chevies a special kind
of smoothness all their own.

Why not get in and quarterback one for yourself at your
And Chevy's got 'em again Chevy's time-proven double- Chevrolet dealer' s soon?
wall construction is the most Why not Monday morning?
in '69.
rugged on the road. And
Fleetsides and Stepsides when it comes to comfort, Chevrolet Division of Genhave new styling. The Long- Independent Front Suspen- eral Motors, Detroit, Mich.

More trucks are Chevrolets
because Chevrolet 1s more truck 1

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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              <text>Programs</text>
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                <text>1968-09-04 Iowa State vs Buffalo</text>
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                <text> Official Program 75¢</text>
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                <text> Clyde Williams Field - Ames, Iowa</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495851">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1968-09-04</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>COLGAT

I&amp;J"r

Official Program -

Fifty Cents

�IT'S

Your hometown
supermarkets
support the hometown University
of Buffalo "Bulls"
football team!

�Our warmest welcome. "Ve begin our
60th season of intercollegiate football with
high hopes for our team in the games
ahead.
As you probably know, I have always
favored a balanced program of intercollegiate and intramural athletics. These activities are an invaluable part of the life of
American universities.
Our campus fields a total of twentytwo intercollegiate teams. This represents
MARTIN MEYERSON
one of the most diversified athletic proPresident
grams of its type in the United States. Of
these sports, only football - and to a very
limited extent, basketball - produce any income of their own. Thus a substantial budget is necessary to support such a varied program.
Athletic Director Jim Peelle has already pointed out that athletics must be financed at our University largely
through student fees.
The student fees here are actually somewhat lower, in relation to the number of actiVIties they support,
than comparable fees on most other campuses around the country. I hope very much that the vast majority of
our students will show their continued support of our athletic program by electing to pay the fee.
I am sure our alumni are also aware that a healthy sports program depends upon their support, and that
they and other friends of athletics will respond even more generously than they have in the past.

From the time of the Greeks, athletics have been a part of the education and cultivation of man. Our students who represent the University on the playing field will, I know, give their best, to achieve an excellence
which will be worthy of a great University.

MARTIN MEYERSON

�ALUMNI and FRIENDS
THE

"FRIENDS OF THE BULLS"
- PROUDLY PRESENT -

THEIR THIRD SEASON
OF

POST-GAME

TUNKS
Immediately Following Each Home Game
Beer- Pop -Chips- Pretzels- Peanuts
ENTERTAINMENT- 99c per person

Faculty Club

Dress - As You Are

2

�BUFFALO
A GROWING UNIVERSITY

Although numerous scholars, philosophers and
academicians have proferred myriad definitions of a
university, the State University of New York at Buffalo is now in the unique and challenging position of
not only being able to write its ow definition but to
hring that defiinition to reality.
There is a fascination among faculty, administration and students in being a part of the most challenging opportunity for educational innovation ever offered, not only in the building of the multimillion
dollar Amherst campus but in formulating a dynamically novel philosophy of higher education.
The framework for the latter has been established
by President i\fartin Meyerson and the University
faculty in their academic reorganization of the University which became effective September 1. Seven
faculties, each headed by a provost, have replaced the
more rigid departmental organization with a fluid
structure designed to facilitate a truly interdisciplinary
collaboration in both study and research.
W'ith the academic reorganization only a harbinger of the new ideas yet to come, the University is
attracting top scholars from throughout the nation
who are eager to become a part of its mushrooming
development.
The University was recently awarded a $100,000
grant by the New York State Board of Regents for
the establishment of an Albert Einstein Chair in
science, the last of five Einstein chairs authorized by
the State Legislature in 1964. Additional testimony
to the University's growing prestige is its recentlyannounced participation in the Northeast Radio Observatory Corporation which includes such schools as
Harvard, Yale, M.I.T. and Dartmouth.
The physical embodiment of the educational philosophy represented by the academic reorganization is
the largest architectural undertaking in America's
history. Dr. Robert Ketter, vice-president for facilities planning says the new campus will be a blend of
exciting architecture and carefully planned utility.
At present, the University is preparing for the
"big!' move with the occupation of a serieS of smaller
facilities located throughout the Buffalo area, of which
the largest is the ten-building "Ridge Lea Campus"
of 225,000 square feet near the Amherst site.
Although these space limitations have of necessity
meant that current student enrollment be kept relatively stationary, projections for the mid-1970's call
for 30,000 undergraduate and graduate students compared with the recently released figure of approximately 15,000 for the 1967-68 academic year.
To this dynamic vision of tomorrow's campus, the
University at Buffalo brings a 121-year history rich
with tradition, academic excellence and public service.
The educational capital of Western ew York since
its founding as a medical school in 1846, the University
has enjoyed outstanding administrative leadership.
Millard Fillmore, thirteenth President of the United
States served as its first chancellor, followed by such
educational leaders as Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, nationally known scientist and educator, and President Meyerson, noted scholar of urban affairs who was formerly
Dean of the College of Environmental Design and
acting chancellor at the University of California at
Berkeley.

3

�Back Row: Mike Stock, Freshman Coach; Bob Deming, Backfield Coach; Jerry Ippoliti, Backfield Coach.
Front Row: Bill Dando, Line Coach; Richard "Doc" Urich, Head Coach , and Bob Ceiger, Line Coach.

**
**
*
**

your all-star
financial center

~1»-

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Auto loans
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Commercial loans
Vacation loans

BANK oF BUFFALO
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Office-- 2157 Seneca near Cazenovia • TOWN OF
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• TOWN OF AMHERST Office-- 4954 Harlem at
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Office-- 4184 Seneca at Mill Road • STUYVESANT
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....A§ERVICE~

~BANK~

*~®

Member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

4

�JAMES E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at UB than genial Jim.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the
North Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue University, a career
which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War II
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gave up football coaching to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the university began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball
team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in
NCAA Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of
anecdotes make him a much sought-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerous civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy, and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.
Richard "Doc" Urich (pronounced Yur-ick) became head coach at the University of Buffalo in 1966.
In his first season the team won five and lost five,
established seven new U.B. offensive records and displayed to Western New York fans the most exciting
college football ever seen in the area.
Urich came to Buffalo from Totre Dame, where
he was Ara Parseghian's top offensive aide. Prior to
then "Doc" served with Parseghian at Northwestern
and Miami (0.), his alma mater.
"Doc" Urich was born on September I 0, 1928, in
Wapakoneta, Ohio. He attended 'Vapakoneta High
School where he captained both the football and
basketball squads as a senior.
At Miami (0.) Urich was a standout in college
football. He played four years and in his freshman
and senior seasons his teams made appearances in the
Sun Bowl and the Salad Bowl. Miami defeated Texas
Tech at El Paso on January I, 1948, and downed Arizona State at Phoenix on January I, 1951. "Doc" was
captain of the Miami team in his senior year. In his
junior and senior seasons he won All-Ohio honors,
and in his last three years he was selected all-Conference (Mid-America) end.
After graduation from Miami in February, 1951,
·"Doc" assumed teaching and coaching chores at Massillon (0.) High School for the remainder of the school
term before joining the staff of Head Coach Ara
Parseghian at Miami that fall.
"Doc" and his wife, the former Patricia Streight,
also of Wapakoneta, have two children, Cynthia (born
in 1952) and Danny (born in 1955). The Urich family
now lives in Williamsville, New York.

RICHARD "DOC" URICH
Head Football Coach

5

�RICK WELLS

KEN RUTKOWSKI

LEE JONES

MICK MURTHA

CHUCK DRANKOSKI

MIKE RISSELL

JIM FINOCHIO

JACK WESOLOWSKI

TOM KOWALEWSKI

CHRIS WOLF

JIM REMILLARD

DENNIS MASON

BEN WASHINGTON

TOM BRENNAN

PAUL JACK

�DENNIS BRISKY

ROVELL JONES

TED GIBBONS

JOHN PRZYBYCIEN

IRV WRIGHT

DON SABO

MIKE LUZNY

ROD RISHEL

GARY GRUBBS

TOM HOKE

TOM HURD

JOE RICCELLI

BOB EMBOW

JOHN LUPIENSKI

JIM MOSHER

....

�BUFFALO BULLS -

1967

Front Row, Left to Right: Brisky, Brennan, Remillard, Jones, L., Ashley, Rissell, Finochio, Hoke, Hansen, Rutkowski,
Wright, Wells, Gibbons, Co-Capt.
Second Row, Left to Right: Murtha, Powrie, Jack, Drankoski, Kovey, Wolf, Wesolowski, Reid, Chapp, Doherty, Luzny,
Washington, Bell
Third Row, Left to Right: Maricle, Hayden, Maser, Sabo, Murphy, Riccelli, Lupienski, Mosher, DeMarco, Chernega, Alimanti, Horn, Mason
Fourth Row, Left to Right: Bellomo, Jones, R., Buchak, Beck, Ruggerio, Biersbach, DiRosa, Moler, Spencer, Troglauer,
Richner, Martin, Grubbs
Fifth Row, Left to Right: Henley, Carney, Clark, McCullough, Endress, Orzechowski, Przybycien, Kowalewski, Embow,
Lowe, Walgate, Quinn, Patterson, Lang
Sixth Row, Left to Right: Warzel, Equipment Mgr.; Welk,. Mgr., Simon, :rrainer; McNally, Ass't. Coach; Stock, Freshman
Coach; Ippoliti, Off. Backfield Coach; D~ndo, Def. Lme Coach; Unch, Head Coach; Deming, Def. Backfield Coach;
Geiger, Off. Line Coach; MacKellar, Asst. Freshman Coach; Gergley, Ass't. Freshman Coach

NINE DECADES AGO

the launching of
11 advice in
depth''

W

HEN ships with sails scudded Buffalo's seascape over 90 years ago, when Buffalo and
the whole nation began co feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution . .. Dominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning to make its mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp;D's services for the investing public sustained
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our Buffalo office, giving you opportunity for investment advia in depth. Let us advise yo u about your
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Mtmbm Ntw Yorl, .Amtrican, MidwtJI, and Toronlo SJD&lt;l ExchangtJ

Co-Captains

8

�AERIAL VIEW OF BUFFALO CAMPUS

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&amp; Seafood House

COMPLETE LOCAL STOCKS .••
structurals - bars - plates - sheets

FULL FACILITIES •••
875

shearin~ - picklin~ - oiling

-

burntng - sawmg

TIMETABLE DELIVERY • • •

3630 MAIN STREET AT BAILEY

when you need it - as you ordered it
- ready far use

lh Mile South of Rotary Field

~

!~9, 2 0 .
~

~

Serving Quality Foods at Moderate Prices

~

~ ~~=~ftE ~J~~~~

Since 1928
Beer and Liquor Served

N.

v.

''Western New York's First and Largest

PERKINS PANCAKE HOUSE

VOLKSWAGEN DEALER"
JIM

Kelly's

PARTS AND SERVICE

•

INC.

ELLICOTT SQUARE BLDG.
Specializing in all Pancakes, Waffles, Omelettes

NEW AND USED
Featuring

Home of "KELLY CARED FOR CARS"

Entrees: Steak, Roast Beef, Chicken, Meatloaf

3325 GENESEE STREET AT THRUWAY OVERPASS
BUFFALO, N. Y.

Plus 22 Varieties of Sandwiches

NF 3-8000

9

�To Games; on Ski Weekends; on Tours;
Everybody Goes First Class in the
Area's Largest Charter Bus Fleet
ASK US ABOUT

CLASS, CLUB or
GROUP CHARTERS
For Trip~ to Anywhere
\\'ith All Conveniences

Your money earns

BUFFA LO 852-4900

"THE TOP
SAVINGS
ACCOUNT
RATE" from

BLUE BIRD COACH LINES, INC.
~.V.

Hunu• Offh·e. Olt•nn.

date of deposit
compounded and

Suburban Tailor &amp; Men's Shop

paid 4 times a year.

837 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

At Western your money 1s sale,

Buffalo, New York

Phone: 837-4828

THE

WESTERN SAVINGS BANK

OF BUFFALO

MAIN OFFICE: Main and Court. 856·2222
CLEYE·Hill OFFICE: Cleve·Hill Plaza, Kensington at Eggert Rd .. 837 ·5333
DELAWARE PARK OFFICE: Delaware Park Shopping Centre. Delaware ftve.,
North of Amherst, 877·1820
WEST SENECA OFFICE : Seneca at Union, 674·9333
MEM BE R FEDERAL DE POSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

the
new

THREE COINS RESTA VRANT
andLOVNGE

The John W.
Cowper Co.

a unique new setting for
breakfast, lunch, dinner and /ate supper,
where you.eat like a Roman emperor
on centurion's pay.

INCORPORATED

T

In the North Wing of the MAPLE...LLEAF MOTOR LODGE
1120 Ni•r•r• hila Boulenrd

~ ml. So., Youngmann Exwy.

Engineers- Contractors

1 Mile

Mort~ of Uerlq• Dr.

AMPLI PARKING FOR YOUR CHARIOT

•
Phone:

TF 5 • 2610

873-4200

ENTERTAINMENT

Post Office Box 1068
1945 Sheridan Drive
Buffalo, New York 14240

10

NIGHTLY

1

�B

u
F
F
A
L
0

�On

Phone
BS1-2444

Campus''

BE A WINNER
USE YOUR UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE ••• OFTEN!
We have the largest selection of quality paperbacks and hard cover books in Western
New York ... in addition to top selections of ceramics, glassware, stuffed animals, studio
----

cards and periodicals.

For both big sizzlers and small fry, we have

sweat shirts, sweaters, blazers, as well as jackets, pennants and banners.

MAKE US YOUR GIFT HEADQUARTERS ••• BOOK HEADQUARTERS •••
YOUR CAMPUS CAUSEWAY TO THE NEWEST AND BEST.
Our hours are from 8:30 in the morning to 8:30
in the evening; Saturdays, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

,_.---- •..., .

--··x--•· ·· -........
"

12

�~

tl.e BULLPEN

By Dick Johnston, Evening News

By Bob Powell, Cou rier Express

When Doc Urich took the head football coaching job at the University of Buffalo a year ago last
spring, he said his ambition was to begin a winning
tradition with the Bulls.
He also promised an interesting brand of football.
The outcome of today's
1967 finale against Colgate
will determine whether the
coach has his first winning
season in two tries, but he
long ago fulfilled his promise.

Today's game against Colgate concl.udes the l!niversity of Buffalo's 60th season of mtercollegt~te
football, one in which the Bulls have had some thnlling ups and some disappointing downs.
What's the outlook for season o. 61?
Encouraging, o n t h e
basis of returning veterans.
Fullback looks like the
problem p o s i t i o n. Lee
Jones, the homegrown pulverizer, who has scored 27
touchdowns the last two
seasons and who is a
blocker par excellence, will
be gone and so will be his
backup man, Tom Brennan.

The 1966 team finished
with a 5-5 record, but it
never put anyone to sleep
while compiling the nonwinning, non-losing season.
This year's club goes up
against Colgate with a 5-4
record, and, if anything, it
has been a more exciting, explosive team that Urich's
first product.
In his two years at UB, Urich's athletes have
rewritten 14 records and tied two more against an
ever-improving list of opponents.
The wide-open offense has eaten up the bulk
of the record performances, a number of which dated
back to the pre-World War II days. There are anumber of other records that could fall in today's concluder.
Such efforts just don't happen. It takes long,
hard work by the coach and the players to accomplish such impressive results.
The best example is in the case of Dick Ashley.
The Bulls' standout split end last year smashed
three UB receiving records and was expected to not
only improve on them, but break a few more this
year.
A week before the opener against Kent State last
September, Ashley suffered a knee in jury and was lost
for the year.
With Ashley out of the lineup, the opponents
knew things would be easier and Chuck Drankoski's
chore would be tougher.
Nevertheless, Drankoski has broken three receiving marks this fall, two of them set a year ago by
Ashley. It didn't just happen. It took a big effort
on everyone's part.
Contributing to this big effort were 13 athletes
who'll be making their final appearance in varsity
gear agai~st Colgate .tod~y. Urich will miss this gang
and so w1ll the Bulls faithful: Tom Brennan, Dennis
Brisky, Jim Finochio, Ted Gibbons, Tom Hoke, Tom
Hurd, Brian Hansen, Lee Jones, Rod Rishel, Mike
Rissell, Ken Rutkowski, Irv Wright and Rick Wells.

Rick Wells, co-captain
and flanker, a steady player and a good leader, also
will be gone from the backfield as will be Ken
Rutkowski, the breakaway threat. Pat Patterson, who
actually played more at tailback than Rutkowski, returns, however, and so do such flanker prospects as
Harry Bell and Ben Washington. The freshman
squad has a couple of speedy halfback prospects, too.
In the starting line on offense, only Mike Rissell,
at tackle, and .Jim Finochio, at guard, are seniors.
Chris Wolf, who plays behind Rissell, and Jon Spencer, Finochio's reserve, both are sophomores.
In the defensive line the big loss will be Ted
Gibbons. They just don't make many like this 232pound block of steel from Newport, R.I. Ted will
be missed for more than just his ability-and that's
considerable-to stop opposing runners. He's a guy
the Bulls alway looked to for leadership on defense.
End Dennis Brisky and linebacker Irv Wright
and Rod Rishel also will be among the missing when
the squad assembles next fall. Tom Murphy is back
at Brisky's position. Jim Mosher and Dave Richner
at the outside linebacker spot that \Vright occupies.
Two members of UB's three-deep backfield will
graduate, Tom Hurd and Tom Hoke. Dick Horn,
who has been starting at safety, returns along with
Gary Grubbs, who has been the alternate at defensive halfback. Paul Jack, the Bulls' punter, also is a
defensive back who returns.
Thus, we see, most of the line on both offense
and defense will be back. Chuck Drankoski and Paul
Lang, ends; Scott Clark and Frank Reid, tackles;
Mike Maser and Tom Kowalewski, guards; Jack
Wesolowski and Speed Powrie, centers, all of whom
have seen considerable action, are back in the line on
offense.
13

�?fe41

Join Liberty National Bank's

FOOTBALL TOUR TO FLORIDA
for the Buffalo Bills-Miami Dolphins Game Nov. 26

1

12

Including breakfast and dinner

S

Tw in (each)

13

'209 89 14

YOUR CHOICE OF 4 PLANS AT A PRICE TO SUIT EVERYONE!
5 nights_ at Ame'ri~an~ Hotel_ .
7 nights at Carillon Hotel
8 nights at Cadillac Hotel

3 nights at Cadillac Hotel

includes ttckets to Un1vers1ty of M•am•·
Notre Dame Game

170•39

,

Tw in (oachl

198 39

.
Tw1n Ceach )

•

•

Breakfast, dinner, tickets to Un iversity
of Miami-Notre Dome

Gamo

Twin (oachl

$

241-89

Your tour Includes round trip jet air coach, reserved seats to Bulfolo Bllls-Mioml Dolphins Game
and transportation to games.

For more information call 854-6462 or 854-4520

ill

TRAVEL DEPARTMENT • 307 LIBERTY BANK BUILDING

LIBERTY NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
Francis J . Kraft, Manager

*Tr•d• M• rk of th• liberty National S ank •nd Trust Comp•ny

BUFFALO LINE-UP

~nse/

Offense

Defense

T.E.

R.O.B.

82 ENDRESS

50 MOSHER
58 RISHEL

85 LANG

Press

R.H.
45 GRUBBS
48 HURD

R.E.

•

tnc.

R.T•

FLANKER

61 RISSELL

49 WELLS

77 WOLF

22 WASHINGTON

84 PRZYBYCIEN
88 REM ILLARD

R.I.B.
69 SABO

"Buffalo's
leading

I

exponent

R.G.

R.T.

65 FINOCHIO

70 WALGATE
73 JONES

63 SPENCER

s.

of quality
printing"

48 HURD

c.

28 HORN

Q.B.

53 POWRIE

L.I.B.

14 MURTHA

52 WESOLOWSKI

34 LUZNY

19 MASON

66 LUPIENSKI

Printers

&amp;
Lithographers

L.T.
F.B.

64 MASER
62 KOWALEWSKI

75 RICCELLI

36 JONES
30 BRENNAN
L.O.B.
32 RICHNER

LT.
72 CLARK
76 REID

126 5. ELMWOOD
Buffalo, N.Y. 14202

67 GIBBONS

L.G.

51 WRIGHT
T.B.

L.H.

20 PATTERSON

L.E.

42 HOKE

21 RUTKOWSKI

83 KOVEY

48 HURD

S.E.

80 BRISKY

44 DRANKOSKI
18 LOWE

TL 3-3005

SPECIALISTS:

. . . . .@

PUNTERS: 17 JACK, 32 RICHNER, 27 HANSEN
KICKOFFS and PAT: 16 EMBOW, 48 HURD, 27 HANSEN

14

�BARTLETT BUICK
3080 MAIN STREET

TF 6-1000

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

OPEL KADETT BULL WAGON
Opel prices as low as $1,746

UNIVERSITY

COLGATE UNIVERISITY LINE-UP

Offense

R.e.
49 LYDIC
45 HENNIGAR

Defense

R.E.
f .B.

24 HUBBARD

83 SCHAUTZ
BO GEYER

22 PRINCIPE

R.H.

20 MOORADIAN

18 FOX
16 SCOTT

R.T.
76 KAISER
73 HANSON

R.T.

R.L.B.

79 GLENN

65 SCHRUMPF

77 SCHAEFER

82 ANDERSON

H.B.
R.G.

44 PEARMAN

60 GRENDA

25 COUPE

63 G IFFUNE
R.G.
72 POWERS
61 8 1SCIGLIA

c.

Q .B.

53 KUSHNER

10 BURTON

12 KLUMPP

51 BASER

12 KLUMPP

41 HALE

s.

L.G.
71 TRIPP
L.G.

61 81SCIGLIA
L.L.B.

62 LA CHOWICZ
63 GIFFUNE

67 RINALDI
34 REILLY

L.T.
50 BURBULIS

PLAZA

W.8.

l.T.

47 SHOFF

75 HAGGMAN

44 PEARMAN

74 CORRINET

73 HA NSON

L.H.
23 BEEKMAN
15 BONNEY

T.E.

L.E.

84 TAYLOR

35 DETWILER

88 PERLMUTTER

80 GEYER

15

ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSON CO.
AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Cards
LEES DRUGS
GUSTAV A. FRISCH - Jeweler
M and T TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
STYLE CREST MEN'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP
ULBRICH'S - Stationery
FEDERAL MEATS
THE PLAID SHOP
DEALS JEWELERS
YOUR MATERNITY SHOP
ALEXANDER KATZ and
LOU KROP - Optometrists
EVANS - Gifts and Cards
W. T. GRANT CO.
FANNY FARMER
AMHERST Clothes Tree, Inc.
JOHNSON'S • Amherst Bootery
KEN PAUL BAKERY
MILKY WAY RESTAURANT

�1967 VARSITY SCHEDULE

Sept. 16

Kent State

Sept. 23

N. Ca ro lina St. away

Sept. 30

Virg inia U.

away

Oct.

Temple U.

home

7

home

Oct.

14

home

Boston U.

Nov.

4

Delaware

away

Oct. 2 1

Boston Co ll ege away

Nov. 11

Vill anova

away

Oct. 28

Holy Cross

away

Nov. 18

Co lgate

home

BUFFALO BULLS 1967 ROSTER

JONESRICH
Jt/j.l~Q~'

DAIRY
PRODUCTS

70 EAST FERRY
BUFFALO,N. Y. 14209
883-4080

No.
•14
15
•16
17
18
19
20
•21
22
25
26
27
29
•30
32
34
•36
38
•42
•44
45
•48
•49
50
•51
•52
53
54
55
56
•5s
59
60
•61
•62
63
•64
•65
•66
•67
68
69
70
7l
72
73
74
•75
76
77
78
79
•so
81
82
83
•s4
85
86
•87
88
89
95

Name
Murtha, Mark
Martin; Daniel
Embow, Robert
Jack, Paul
Lowe, Edwin
Mason, Dennis
Patterson, Patrick
Rutkowski, Kenneth
Washington, Bennie
Bell, Harry
DeMarco, Douglas
Hansen, Brian
Horn, Richard
Brennan, Thomas
Richner, David
Luzny, Michael
Jones, Leeland
Alimonti, ino
Hoke, Thomas
Drankoski, Charles
Grubbs, Gary
Hurd, Thomas
Wells, Richard
Mosher, James
Wright, Irvin
Wesolowski, John
Powrie, Charles
Chapp, Gary
McCullough, Steven
Chernega, David
Rishel, Rodney
Mihale, Dennis
Carney, Patrick
Rissell, Michael
Kowalewski, Thomas
Spencer, E. Jon
Maser, Michael
Finochio, James
Lupienski, John
Gibbons, Theodore
Hayden, William
Sabo, Donald
Walgate, Daniel
Maricle, Donald
Clark, Scott
Jones, D. Rovell
Beck, R ussell
Riccelli, Joseph
Reid, Frank
Wolf, Chris
Troglauer, John
Moler, Robert
Brisky, Dennis
Murphy, Thomas
Endress, Terrence
Kovey, Robert
Przybycien, John
Lang, Paul
Buchak, Michael
Ashley, R ichard
Remillard, James
Doherty, John
Henley, Prentis

• Returning Lettermen

16

Pos.
QB
DHB
K
QB
E
QB
HB
HB
HB
DHB
DHB
K
DHB
FB
LB
LB
FB
FB
DHB
E
DHB
DHB
HB
LB
LB

c
c

LB
LB
LB
LB
LB
G
T
G
G
G
G
LB
DT
G
LB
DT
T
T
DT
DT
DT
T
T
DT
DT
DE
DE
E
DE
DE
E
E
E
DE
E
DE

Class
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.

Age

Ht.

Wt.

20
20
19
19
19
19
19
20
20
21
20
21
20
20
20
20
21
20
21
20
19
21
20
20
21
21
21
19
19
20
21
21
19
21
20
20
20
21
20
21
20
20
19
20
20
19
18
20
21
19
21
20
20
21
19
19
19
20
20
20
20
20
20

5-11
5-11
6·0
6·0
5-10
5-11
5·11
5-9
5-10
5-10
5-9
5-11
6-1
5-10
5-11
5-9
5-11
6-0
5-8
6·1
5-9
6-1
6-0
6-1
5-11
5-11
6-0
5·8
5-10
5-11
5-11
6-0
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-10
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-1
6-2
6·2
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-0
6-0
6·1
6-0
6-0
6-1

176
187
210
178
185
188
191
180
198
180
168
166
188
205
197
209
208
204
189
183
175
197
198
212
203
214
195
200
201
187
194
214
200
233
210
213
214
219
210
232
213
210
255
224
212
228
232
242
217
220
270
226
209
192
202
202
200
210
203
201
198
209
205

Hometown
Endicott, N. Y.
Huntington, L. I .
Hamburg, N. Y.
Springdale, Pa.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Ambridge, Pa.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Woonsocket, R . I.
Potsdam, N. Y.
Dolgeville, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Dover, 0.
Rochester, N. Y.
Greenhurst, N. Y.
South Bend, Ind.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Endicott, N. Y.
Marcy, N. Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Coshocton, · 0.
Elmira, N. Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Central Islip, L. I.
Norristown, Pa.
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Cuyahoga Falls, 0
Centerline, Mich.
Coshocton, 0 .
Endicott, N. Y.
East Smethport, Pa.
ew York City, N. Y.
New Kensington, Pa.
Coatesville, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.
Clayton, N . Y.
E. Syracuse, N. Y.
Springdale, P;~.
Newport, R. I.
Cleveland, 0.
Johnstown, Pa.
Grand Island, N. Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Coshocton, 0 .
Akron, 0.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Ottawa, Ont.
Solon, Ohio
Williamsville, N. Y.
Orchard Park, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Johnstown, Pa.
Cuyahoga Falls, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Detroit, Mich.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Endicott, N. Y.
Massena, N. Y.
New Bedford, Mass.
New Bedford, Mass.
Buffalo, N. Y.

l

�LIVE THE GENESEE MOMENT
COLGATE UNIVERSITY SQUAD
No.
82
64
51
•23
•61
15
50
•10
66
74
25
•85
•35
86
18
80
63
79
30
•60
75
•41
73
•81
45
•24
69
•76
17
12
53
62
49
57
33
37
31
•20
21
52
•68
89
•70
44
88

•n

(

l

•22
34
•67
77
•83
•65
32
16
•47
26
•84
•71
48

Name

Pos.

Anderson, Eric
Banhazl, Gregory
Baser, Frederick
Beekman, Theodore
Bisciglia, Robert
Bonney, Bruce
Burbulis, Peter
Burton, Ronald
Copestick, Allan
Corrinet, Philip
Coupe, Arch
Davis, William
Detwiler, Gene
DiBagno, Corri
Fox, Charles
Geyer, Timothy
Giffune, Kenneth
Glenn, William
Goecke!, Robert
Grenda, John
Haggman, Eric
Hale, Douglas
Hanson, John
Haskins, Morice
Hennigar, Grant
Hubbard, Marvin
Hughes, Frederick
Kaiser, Richard
Kelaghan, Robert
Klumpp. Alan
Kushner, Terrence
Lachowicz, Zbigniew
Lydic, James
:\fasi, Anthony
Mays, William
Miller, Edward
Moncrief, Robert
Mooradian, Donald
Murchison, Malcolm
Nabozny, Joseph
Nagle, Peter
Oleksiak, Richard
Pagano, Carmen
Pearman, Alvin
Perlmutter, Eric
Powers, Peter
Principe, Anthony
Reilly, Dewey
Rinaldi, Joseph
Schaefer, Richard
Schantz, Kenneth
Schrumpf, Richard
Schuessler, Robert
Scott, Robert
Shoff, Harry
Strawbridge, Richard
Taylor, Dean
Tripp, Martin
Victor, Mark

E
E

c

HB
G
QB
T
QB
G
T
HB
E
FB
E
QB
E
G
T
FB
G
T
HB
T
E
E
HB
T
T

s

QB

c
s
c

G

E
HB
HB
FB
HB
T
T
E
T
HB
E
G
HB
FB
G
T
E
G
FB
HB
HB
QB
E
G
E

Class

Ht.

Wt.

Home Town

So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
.Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.

6-3
6-2
6-0
5-10
6-l
6-2
6-4
5-ll
6-0
6-3
6-3
6-0
6-0
6-3
5-9
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-2
5-ll
6-5
6-2
5-9
6·2
6-1
6-4
5-10
6-1
5-10
5-10
6-1
5-9
6-2
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-5
6-1
5-11
6-2
6-3
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-5
6-2
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-2
5-ll
6-l
6-3
5-8

195
205
195
170
211
185
221
167
200
228
222
187
195
205
170
195
225
233
198
216
195
175
220
205
160
220
225
220
170
195
185
198
180
195
200
171
186
197
200
230
230
230
205
175
210
215
180
175
195
200
200
210
198
185
190
180
205
228
160

Moorestown, N. J.
East Meadow, N. Y.
Scotch Plains, N. J.
Ocean Grove, N. J.
Austintown, Ohio
Norristown, Pa.
Evanston, Ill.
Montclair, N. J .
East Liverpool, Ohio
Oradell, .J.
Loudonville, N. Y.
Birchrunville, Pa.
Califon, N. J.
Jeannette, Pa.
Bound Brook, .J.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Whitesboro, N. Y.
Sharpsville, Pa.
Baldwinsville, N. Y.
~fasontown, Pa.
:\lilwaukee, Wis.
Madison, N. J.
Mentor, Ohio
New Brunswick, , . J.
Grand Island, ::--&lt;. Y.
Salamanca, . Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Nutley, ~. J.
East Providence, R. I.
Windsor, N. Y.
Clairton, Pa.
Carnegie, Pa.
Ebensburg, Pa.
Staten Island, N. Y.
Orlando, Fla.
Old Tappan, N. J.
Fairhaven, Conn.
Revere , Mass.
Glen Cove, N. Y.
Amsterdam, N. Y.
Wilmington, Del.
Williamsville, N. Y.
Arnold, Pa.
Roosevelt , N. Y.
Maplewood, N. J.
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Providence, R . I.
Kenosha, Wis.
Hartsdale,
Y.
'Vestbury, N. Y.
Bloomfield , l .J.
Union City, N. J.
Hempstead, N. Y.
Dumont, '· J.
Newville, Pa.
Canandaigua, . Y.
Montclair, .J.
Hempstead, N. Y.
Highland Park, Ill.

So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.

• Returning Lettermen

COME ALONG

17

TAKE ALONG

�THE 1967 COLGATE UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL TEAM

RO\\' I -

Bruce Bonney. Corri DeBagno, Boh Kelaghan, Eric Perlmutter, Alan Klumpp. Dewey Reilly, Mark Victor, Richard
Strawbridge. Tony Massi, Fred H ughes, l\fal i\f urchi;on, Fred Baser.
ROW 2 - Robert Scott AI Pearman, Boh Schuessler, Ken Schautz, R ichard Kaiser, William Davis, Don i\Iooradian, Marv Hubbard,
H arry Shoff, Carmen Pagano, Peter Powers, Martin Tripp.
ROW 3 - .\ Jan Copestick, R ichard Schaefer, Dean Taylor, Terry Kushner, John Grenda, Tony Principe, Ron Burton, Ted Beekma n , Ed Mi ller, Richard Schrumpf, Gene Detwiler Zhigniew LachvwiC£, Robert Bisciglia.
ROW 4 - Pete Burhulis, Grant Hennigar, Jim Lydic, Joe Rinaldi, .\reb Coupe, Rohert Goecke!, John Hansen, Phil Corrinet,
i\fo Haski ns, Tim Geyer. William Mays, Doug Hale.
ROW 5 - Head Coach H arold Lahar, Coach Chet O'Neill, Ken Gi!Iunc, William Glen, Greg Banhazl, Eric Anderson, Eric Haggman, Peter Nagle, Joe :\'ahomy, Chuck Fox.
ROW 6 - Coach Neil \Vheelwright, i\fgr. ,\ Ian Dedrick, Mgr. Alan Scuterud, i\Igr. Harry Haldt, Coach Les Plumb, Trainer Lew
\\'illiams, Coach Tom Parnell.

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18

DONALD MOORADIAN
Colgate Captain

�The History of Colgate University

~olg:te U~iver~it~ was founded in 1819 by the
Baptist Educatwn SoCiety of the State of New York
~o prepare young I~en for the Baptist ministry. Durmg the 1_48 year~ smce, the university has undergone
changes m physical appearance and in name but it
still holds. closely to the provision of its original
charter ~hich states "that if the said Society ... shall
a~ any ttme pa_ss any law or regulation affecting the
nghts of consCience . . . said corporation shall cease
and be void."

_In _1826 the Hamilton Literary and Theological
Instttutwn, as the school was then known, acquired
the nucleus of the present campus and the first permanent college building, now called 'Vest Hall, was
erected the following year. The State of New York
~Tal~ted_ a charter on March 26, 1846, empowering the
mst1tut10n to grant degrees under the name of Madison University. In 1890, the name was finally changed
to Colgate University in recognition of the generous
service and devotion of members of the Colgate family for nearly seventy years.
The present site of Colgate University was determined by the purchase in 1826 of one hundred
twenty acres of land from Samuel and Betsy Payne.
Various additions have been made until now the university grounds include one thousand acres of which
the original one hundred twenty comprise the campus
proper.

DR. VINCENT M. BAR NETT
President

Whitnall Field, covering 27 acres on one level, is
in a beautiful natural setting which provides a colorful arena for intercollegiate and intramural sports.
The Fiel&lt;:l includes the Andy Kerr Stadium with accommodations for more than 15,000; varsity baseball
diamond, enclosed within the general area; varsity
practice field, freshman football field, soccer and lacrosse areas and five auxiliary fields. The William A.
Reid Athletic Center contains team rooms, indoor
practice space, the Starr Hockey Rink, the Cotterell
Basketball Court, coaches' offices, and eight bowling
lanes among its features.

Since it fielded its first football team in 1890,
Colg·ate has maintained a tradition of independence
in sports. Although not a member of a conference,
the University has long been associated with and is
active in the National Collegiate Athletic Association,
the Eastern College Athletic Conference and the Eastern Intercollegiate Football Association .

Other facilities incorporated in the outdoor program include nine tennis courts and the eighteen hole
Seven Oaks Golf Course. Special provision has ~een
made both outdoors and in Huntington Gymnasmm
for adequate space for the extensive intramural program which, with the "carry over" sports program,
makes possible a sports-for-all emphasis.

. As traditional as its independence is the spirit
whtch has been a trade mark of the Red Raider teams
and of the student body. With an enrollment that
numbers slightly more than 1,800 men, Colgate has
taken the field against schools many times larger and
can point with pardonable pride to a record which
few schools its size can equal.

19

�COLGATE UNIVERSITY COACHING STAFF

left to right, bottom row - Chet O'Neill; Thomas Parnell; les Plumb.
Top row - Howard Hartman; Head Coach Harold lahar; Neil Wheelwright.

Good Luck in '67
Corner of
N. LONG and MAIN
WILLIAMSVILLE, N.Y.

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20

t

�Harold W. Lahar was appointed director of physical education and athletics at Colgate University in June of 1967. He is
the first person named to the post who is not a Colgate alumnus.
His predecessors inclu~e Eve_rett _D. B_arnes, whom he succeeded
as the fourth director m Umvers1ty history, Dr. Ellery C. Huntington and William A. Reid.
Lahar has served as head coach of football since 1952, with
the exception of the period from _1957_ through 1961 when he
held a similar position at the Un~vers1ty of .Houston. He was
named assistant director of athletiCS a·nd ass1stant professor of
physical education at Colgate in 1965.
In 1966, his Red Raider football team completed its best
season in 34 years, compiling: an 8-1-1 r«:cord, and _e arning mention in 11 of the 26 categones covered m the national football
statistical report.
Lahar, 48 is a native of Durant, Oklahoma, and is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, Class of 1941. While with
the Sooners, he pla)ed in the 1938 Orange Bowl Classic as an
interior lineman and captained the 1940 squad. He was also a
member of the golf team for three years.
He joined the Chicago Bears after being graduated, and
was a member of the 1941 national championship team. He
spent the war years as a naval officer in the South Pacific, returning to pro football in 1946 as captain of the Buffalo Bills
in the old All-America Conference.
Lahar began his coaching career in 1949 as an aide at Arkansas. He moved to West Virginia as an assistant in 1950 and
was enroute to Pittsburgh when Colgate offered him the head
coaching position in 1952.
Poised and given to an easy smile that punctuates his
drawl, Lahar is an informative speaker, an excellent golfer and
an enthusiastic audience. He is married to the former Dorothy
Carter of Bartlesville, Oklahoma. The Lahar's have two children, a son Gary and a daughter Karla.

HAROLD W. LAHAR
Head Fo otball Coach
Director of Physical Education

Neil S. Wheelwright, chief assistant, is in his sixth season at
Colgate as a defensive specialist, and beginning his first campaign as Hal Lahar's second in command. A 1954 Springfield
graduate,. he backed up the line for the Indians and helped
coach during his senior year. Wheelwright served as a Marine
Corps officer from 1954 to 1957 and joined the Hofstra staff as
an end coach after his discharge. He became defensive coach
two years later and joined the Red Raider staff in 1962 as an
assistant coach and instructor in physical education.

t

Thomas Parn ell, assistant coach, combines the talents he
displayed as an undergraduate of St. Cloud State, class of 1955,
where he played guard and was a member of the golf team.
Since his arrival in 1960 he has served as a football assistant
during the season , as well as pro at the University's Seven Oaks
Course and coach of the varsity golf team. His background includes positions as teacher-coach at the Menaghia, Minnesota
high school, and varsity football aide at Sheboygan, Wisconsin
high. He holds the faculty rank of instructor in physical
education.

Howard N. Hartman, assistant coach, joined the Colgate
staff in 1947 as an end coach. Coach of freshman football and
lacrosse, he was a 12 Jetter man in football , basketball and
baseball at West Virginia Wesleyan where he earned his degree
in 1930. During the following 16 years he coached in the
Youngstown, Ohio school system. Hartman coached the Red
Raider line in 1950-51 and 1959 and served as head coach of
basketball from 1949 to 1962. He holds the facnlty rank of in·
structor in physical education.

Leslie Plumb, assistant coach, begins his first season with
the Red Raiders. The former Springfield College Little AllAmerican quarterback will handle offensive backfield chores
and coach freshman baseball. He holds both a bachelor and
master of science degrees in physical education from Springfield. He comes to Colgate from Central Connecticut State
College where he served as an assistant from 1964 through this
spring. His previous positions include high school coaching
assignments in Amsterdam , Roslyn and Bellmore, N . Y. and
Springfield, Mass. He holds a faculty appointment as instructor
in physical education.

Chester N. O'Neill, assistant coach, is a 1960 Hofstra graduate starting his fourth year with the Red Raider defense. As
an undergraduate he played guard and co-captained . the undefeated '59 eleven. O'Neill joined the Hofstra coach1?g staff
immediately following graduation, reporting to Colgate m 1964.
In addition to football , he is varsity coach of lacrosse, and
holds the rank of instructor in physical education.

21

�COLGATE

DONALD MOORADIAN

JOHN GRENDA

GENE DETWILER

WILLIAM DAVIS

RONALD BURTON

ALAN KLUMPP

DOUG HALE

PHILIP CORRINET

. PETER POWERS

22

JOHN KAISER

ROBERT BISCIGLIA

MARTIN TRIPP

�UNIVERSITY

PETER NAGLE

JAMES LYDIC

ZBIGNIEW LACHOWICZ

HARRY SHOFF

ERIC HAGGMAN

DEAN TAYLOR

MORICE HASKINS

CARMEN PAGANO

RICHARD SCHRUMPF

23

MARVIN HUBBARD

ALVIN PEARMAN

TERRANCE KUSHNER

�c

0

L

G
A
T
E

24

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TAKE
"TIME OUT"
to open a
dividend-earning
savings account
at

BUFFALO
SAVINGS BANK
Biggest and Oldest Savings Bank in Buffalo
Main Office:
Main, Huron, Genesee and Washington Sts.
Other Offices:.
Seneca-Cazenovia
Bailey-Amherst
Thruway Plaza
Delaware-Sheridan
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

JIM SIMON, Trainer

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.
BEST WISHES TO
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Process Piping -

THE U.B. BULLS

Fire Protection

FOR ANOTHER

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Before or After the Game- or Anytime !

Your most successful social events
of the season

LAUBE'S AMHERST

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Next to Lord Amherst Motor Hotel

The Buffalo Statler Hilton

Main Street at the Thruway

All arrangements made by Statler Hilton's expert staff.

Plenty of Parking Space

Phone Frank Becht at 856-1000 Ext. 220
25

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS- 1967 SEASON

(All Buffalo football statics are recorded and filed by Mr. Alex Aversano, ·vice-President of Foster-Milbum Co., and former
Buffalo quarterback who received degrees in '35 and '36. He has served as volunteer, official statistician since 1946.)
BUFFALO (5-4)
30 Kent Sta te
6 orth Carolina State
12 Univ. of Virgin ia
44 Temple
6 Boston Univ.
26 Boston College
25 Holy Cross
38 Delaware
23 Villanova
210

107 ,822
191
RUSHING
Net
Att.
564
131
455
86
397
124
173
40
40
36
9
45
8
2
4
I
4
4
3
2

Patterson
Rutkow ki
Jones
Wells
Mason
:\(urtha
Bell
Washington
Brennan
Alimonti

1656
472
PASSING
4tt. Comp. Int.
14
71
167
5
46
25
0
2

TOTALS

Murtha
Mason
R utkowski
TOTALS
PUNTING
No.
54
1872
Jack

2Ei

RECEIVING
No.
37
19
13

Attendance
11,019 at Buffalo, N.Y.
20,200 at R aleigh, N.C.
16,600 at Charlottesville, Va.
9,275 at Buffalo, 1 . Y.
8,572 at Buffalo, N. Y.
15,000 at Chestnut Hill, :\fass.
12,021 at Worcester, :\lass.
6 ,573 at , ewark, Del.
8,562 at Villanova, Pa.

6
24
35
14
0
14
38
19
41

Atrg.
4.3
5.3
3.2
4.3
1.1
0.2
4.0
4.0
1.0
0.7

TD
5
3

3.5

20

Net
914
272
0

Yds.
TD
439
3
Drankoski
257
2
\\'ells
124
1
Patterson
175
1
Lang
II
97
0
Rutkowski
8
93
1
Endress
7
l
0
\\'ashington
I
1186
8
TOTALS
96
KICKOFF RETUR1\ 'S
P UNT RETURNS
II
275
Hurd
16
101
\\'ells
II
256
Drankoski
10
87
Patterson
8
136
Lumy
1
8
Rutkowski
2
59
Hom
I
3
Bell
I
15
Hurd
I
10
Lang
I
0
~fosher
SCORING
TDS
PAT
F.G.
Tot.
II
0
0
66
Jones
Patterson
6
2 (p)
0
40
0
10
Em bow
5
25
Rutkowski
3
0
0
18
Drankoski
0
3
I (p)
20
\\'ells
18
2
3 (p)
0
~rurtha
I
0
6
0
Endress
I
0
0
6
Lang
I
0
6
0
Lowe
0
1 (p)
0
2
Buchak
0
0
I
1
Team one 2-point safety
BUFFALO
TEAM TOTALS
OPPONENTS
163
First Downs
129
1656 - 472 carries
Rushing
1024 - 361 carries
3.5 per play
2.8 per play
96/ 215 (44.6°{,) 1186 yds.
Passing
105; 221 (47.9% ) 1636
2842 yds. - 687 plays
Total Offense
2660 yds. - 582 plays
21 far 186 yds.
Penalties
46 to 422 yds.
54 for 34.7
Punts
57 for 31.4
18 lost 13
Fumbles
25 lost 19

II

0
0
I

0
0
0
0

TD
4
4
0

96

21
1186
8
INTERCEPTIONS
Yds.
No.
3
Hurd
4
I
28
Lumy
I
Horn
23
Wright
1
5
TOTALS
5!1
7

Avg.
34.7

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BUFFALO, NEW YORK
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Tonawanda, New York
837-5900

BUFFALO, NEW YORK
TL 2-3456

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26

�The

U.B. FOOTBALL RECORDS

Williamsville

Rushing
One play: 87 yards (TD), Bob Edwards, vs. Boston U., 1962
One game: 205 yards, Ray Weser, vs. Rhode Island, 1949
One season: 620 yards, Willie Evans, 1959
Career: 1,559 yards, Willie Evans, 1957-1959

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Welcomes You

Passing
Yardage, one play: 86 yards (TD), Ordean Shanabrook to Andy
Podlucky, vs. Bucknell, 1951
Yardage, one season: 1,241 yards, Mick Murtha, 1966
Yardage, career: 2,133 yards, John Stofa, 1961-63
TD passes, one game: 5, Joe Kubisty, vs. Bucknell, 1956
TD passes, one season: 9, Gordon Bukaty, 1958
Attempts, one season: 210, Mick Murtha, 1966
Completions, one season: 84, Mick Murtha, 1966

Colony Dining Room-Rebel Lounge
Banquet Rooms - Guest Rooms
Major Credit Cards Honored

STEREO AND ELECTRONIC HEADQUARTERS

Pass Receiving
One game: 7, Ed Gicewicz, vs. Bucknell, 1951;
Dan Stanley, vs. Cortland State, 1955;
Bob Baker, vs. V.M.l., 1961
One season: 30, Dick Ashley, 1966
Career: 49, Ed Gicewicz, 1949-51
TD passes, one game: 3, Dick Ashley, vs. Colgate, 1965
TD passes, one season: 7, Dick Ashley, 1965
TD passes, career: II, Dick Ashley, 1965-66
Yardage, one game: 144 yards, Ed Gicewicz, vs. Bucknell, 1951
Yardage, one sea on: 4II yards, Dick Ashley, 1966
Yardage, career: 789 yards, Ed Gicewicz, 1949-51

Buffalo-147 Genesee St.-856-1415
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Total Offense
One game: 291 yards, Ordean Shanabrook, vs. Bucknell, 1951
One season: 1,337 yards, Don Gilbert, 1964
Career: 2,730 yards, John Stofa, 1961-63

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Field Goals
Most in one season: 2, Joe Oscsodal, 1965
Most in career: 3, Joe Oscsodal, 1964-65
Longest: 44 yards, Joe Oscsodal, vs. Cornell, 1964

~~

Longest kickoff return
100 yards (TD), Chuck Daniels, vs. Cortland State, I 956

~~
-y

Go! Go! BULLS!
To All Out Friends
We, at E rie Federal, are very

D

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proud to offer the following services:

Longest punt return
80 yards (TD), Lou Corriere, vs. Johns Hopkins, 1946

* STUDENT LOANS
Longest interception return
90 yards (TD), Gerry LaFountain, vs. Delaware, 1965

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* TRAVELi:RS' CHECKS

Pass Interceptions
One game: 4, Peter Rao, vs. Cortland State, 1953
One season: 6, Gordon Bukaty, 1959; 6, Torn Hurd, 1966
Career: II, Gordon Bukaty. 1958-60

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Across from The Campus

Punting
Longest punt: 81 yards, Bill Brogan, vs. Cortaland State, 1959
Best average, one season: 40.6-yards, Bill Brogan, 1959

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Points Scored
One game: 36, Lou Corriere, vs. Hobart, 1942
One season: 96, Leeland Jones, 1966
Career: 162, Lou Corriere, 1942 and 1946-47
-~

Largest crowd at Rotary Field
11,466, vs. Boston U ., 1963

~

Largest crowd ever to see U.B. play
26,126, vs. Colgate, at Civic Stadium, Buffalo, 1951

0£rie :JeJeraf .[rie :JeJeraf .[rie :Jedera/
27

~PWA

~

~
...
~

D

�BUFFALO BULLS

BRIAN HANSEN

MIKE MASER

NINO ALIMONTI

CHUCK POWR IE

SCOTT CLARK

PAT PATTERSON

DAVE RICHNER

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Next to Twin Fair
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in Buffalo's theatre District
Call 852.0001
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11

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On the Exciting

1968
PONTIAC

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"BUFFALO'S N

Buffalo, New York

OPEN EVEJ\"INGS

28

lUBER 1 PONTIAC DEALER"

2795-2845 BAILEY

PHONE TF 4-3000

�THE PRIDE OF THE EAST- THE U.B. BAND

Leo Sauer

The Safe, Lock &amp; Key Corp.

FUNERAL HOME
INC.

"Call us to discuss any lock problem"
204 PEARL STREET, BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

• 1933 KENSINGTON AVENUE

SALES- INSTALLATION - REPAIR

TF 3-1695

Safes, Locks, Keys, Door Closers

• 823 GENESEE STREET

Distributors - Consultants

TX 2-7183

BENTON GIFT DEPARTMENT

103rd ANNIVERSARY

A LARGE SELECTION OF 'JIFTS FOR

Showers - Weddings - Birthdays

1967 marks our 103rd year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area.

PLANNING TO BE MARRIED?
Benton Selection of Wedding Invitations
Is the Largest

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Est. 1864

3006 Bailey Ave • . .. Near Kensington ... 836-4100

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APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
17-21 S. Division Street

TL 2-2769

Locksmiths-Safe Experts

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* Greeting Cards * Stationery * Party Goods
* Candles and * Floral Pieces

Ellicott Square

Open Thure. and Fri. Evenlnge till 9 PM -

TL4-5700

29

Sat. till fi

�PATRONS
Roy Seibel
Ross M. Cellino
Charles R. Diebold
Walter Brock
William G. Willis
Leonard Swagler
University Manor Motel
Charles J. Me Donough
Victor Peterson
Pearce &amp; Pearce Co., Inc.
Reinhardt W. Wende
David J. Mahoney, Jr.
J. Eugene McMahon
John A. Krull
Paul A. Foley
Samuel R. Miserendino
James C. McGarvey
Frederick B. Wilkes
Hugh Me M. Russ
Arthur F. Movalli
Robert R. Barrett
M. Robert Koren
Seymour Knox
Edwin F. Jaeckle
Robert D. Fernbach
George L. Grobe, Jr.
Rudolph U. Johnson
Stephen F. Kissel
Samuel D. Magavern
Anthony J. Renaldo
Irving Fudeman
Harlan Swift
Frank T. Riforgiato
Edward A. Rath, Jr.
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L. Richard Hart
J. Edwin Alford
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Shanor Electric Company
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Compliments of a Friend
Charles S. Matthews
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Leo M. Michalek
Gertrude Swarthout
John M. Galvin
Charles W. Millard, Jr.
Chester P. Glor, Jr.
Arnold Di Laura
A. Donald Gilden
Roneker's University Shop
Howard A. Potter, Inc., Real Estate
Charles G. Salisbury
Irvin L. Terry
James R. Sullivan
George N. Seifert
William Hildebrand, Jr.
Ronald W. Plewniak
Charles H. Diefendorf
Robert J. Metzen
John H. Dittman
Emil J. Celmer
Harold A. Adel
Claude F. Shuchter
Robert B. Adam
Max Burstein
Stanley B. Blach
William W. Rathke
Lewis J. Greenky
Allan V. Gibbons
Brunner's Tavern
E. Perry Spink
Vincent Scamurra
Rich Products Corp.
Robert S. Wolfson
Houdaille Industries, Inc.
Leo J. Rosen
William R. Root
Arthur Mogerman
Frank Meyers
Sheldon Hurwitz
Harold F. Meese
George E. Easterbrook
Charles W. Pankow, Jr.
James J. Ailinger

Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.

30

�FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WBEN-Radio
VAN
MILLER
keeps you
in the

CENTER
OF THE

ACTION
of all games

at home
or away

AT THE CENTER OF THE DIAL 930

�1967- 1968
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
FRESHMAN FOOTB.\LL
SEPTEMBER
22-at Army Plebes
30-;\fanlius
OCTOBER
6-at Colgate
13-Ithaca
27-at Navy
NOVEMBER
3- at Syracuse
11-Kent
CROSS COU, TRY VARSITY
SEPTE;\lBER
20-at Buffalo State
23-Syracuse
28-Canisius
30-at Cleveland State
OCTOBER
4-. iagara Community
7-at Le;\foyne Invit.
10-at St. Bonnie
14-, iagara
17-Brockpon
20-at Le;\foyne
24-at Fredonia
28-at Canisius Invit.
NOVDfBER
1- at Gannon
4-Lei\loyne State Meet
ll-at R . I. T.
VAR ITY GOLF
SEPTDfBER
18-Canisius
20-at Buffalo State
25- at St. Bonnies
29- Niagara
OCTOBER
3-at Canisius
6-Buffalo State
9-at iagara
12-St. Bonnies
14-E. C. A. C.
17-at R. I.T.
19- iagara C. C.
21- E. C. A. C.
VAR ITY BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
!-Toronto
2-Gannon (Aud)
8-Albany State
9-at Syracuse
13-San Francisco State
IS-Belmont Abbey
22-23-at . S. avy (Tournament)
JANUARY
2- Macl\furray
23-Quantico Marines
27-at St. Michael's
30-at Brockport State
FEBRUARY
2-at . of Rochester
3-Hofstra (Aud)
9-at Wayne State
10-at Windsor
12-U. of Baltimore
17- Buffalo tate (Aud)
21-at iagara U.
24-Colgate (Aud)
27-at I thaca College
29-Philadelphia Textiles

;\f.-\RCH
2-Northern Illinois (Aud)
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
1--Canisius
5-at Niagara Community
8-Niagara
niversity
9-at Syracu e
13- t. Bonnies
16-at Buffalo State
IS-Bryant Stratton
JA , U.\RY
2-Niagara Community
23-Gannon
30-at Brockport State
FEBR .\RY
2-at Rochester
10-at St. Bonnies
12-Canisius
21-at , iagara University
24-Colgate
27-at Ithaca College
29-Buffalo State

FRE HMA, W R ESTLING
DECEI\fBER
8-at Buffalo State
15-at R. I. T.
18-at E. C. T. I.
].\NUARY
24-Buffalo State
27-at Ithaca
30-E. C. T. I.
FEBR ARY
2-at Colgate
3-at Oswego
I O-at Cortland
21-Brockport
24-Rochester
MARCH
1-St. Bonaventure
VARSITY FE. CL G
DECE;\fBER
2-R. I. T.
9-at Syracuse
].\~U . \RY

27-Hobart
VAR ITY SWnfi\!l~G
DECDfBER
2-NY Relays
9-at Syracuse
15-at Buffalo State
JA ' UARY
15- ' iagara
20-Colgate
FEBRUARY
2- at Brockport State
6-Geneseo
17-at Rochester
20-Cortland
24-at St. Bonaventure
27-at Niagara
FRE HMAN SWit\fi\fl G
DECEMBER
2- Y Relays
9-at Syracuse
15- at Buffalo State
]A
ARY
15-Niagara
20-Colgate
FEBRUARY
2-at Brockport State
6-Geneseo
17-at Rochester
~0-Cortland

24-at St. Bonaventure
27- at iagara
VARSITY WRESTLING
DECEMBER
8-at Buffalo State
15-at R.I. T .
]A VARY

24-Buffalo State
27- at Ithaca
I' EBRUAR Y
2-at Colgate
3-at Oswego
10-at Cortland
17-0ntario Aggies
21-Brockport
24-R ochester

32

FEBRUARY
3-at R . I. T .
10-Penn State
23-at Cleveland State
24-at Cleveland State
;\1.\RCH
2- yracuse &amp; Notre Dame
6-at Hobart
FRESHMA,
DECEMBER
2- R.I. T.
9-at Syracuse

FENCING

JANUARY
27-Hobart
FEBRUARY
3-at R.I. T.
;\fARCH
2- Syracuse
6-at Hobart
HOCKEY CLUB
NOVEMBER
12- ichols Alumni
IS-Oswego
19-Brockport State
DECEMBER
2-Syracuse
3-R.I. T.
9-Canton A &amp; T
10-Utica
16-Ithaca
JA, UARY
27-at Brockport
29-at R.I. T.
FEBRUARY
3-at Ithaca
4-at Cornell Jr. V.
!!- Nichols
16-at Canton A &amp;: T
17-at Oswego
24-at Utica
MARCH
3-Hobart

�SATTLER'S .. . for the Most Complete and Diversified
Lines of Sporting Goods West of New York and East
of Chicago!
Just a Sampling of Sattler's Famous-Brand Selection
At the Lowest Prices In Buffalo!

•

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•
•
•

Wilson
Spalding
Rawlings
McGregor
Garcia-Mitchell

•
•
•
•
•
•

South Bend
Pflueger

•
•

•
•
•

Browning
Remington
Winchester

Marlin
Mossberg
Shakespeare
La Dolomite

Blue Ribbon

Savage

OPENING

SOON!

Sattler's Fabulous

"SKI SHOPS/I
at "998" and Mall
with a complete selection of
Skis, Clothing and Skates!

EVERYTHING for the BOWLER
e

Famous American-Mode Ace BOWLING BALLS
The Original Manufacturer of Bowling Balls in America!

e

Notionally advertised "Brunswick" BOWLING BALLS

e

" Brunswick" Castle and "Leeds" BOWLING BAGS

PLUS MANY, MANY MORE ACCESSORY ITEMS!

Sattler's Sporting Goods Dept., 998 Broadway and Boulevard Mall

�Sta rt ing Now,
Our Name,
Simon Pure
Takes on a
New Meaning.

Because now Simon Pure Beer and Ale is brewed with our own perfect brewing water. After
a two-and-one-half year search, we found a sparkling clean brewing water, deep underground in Onondaga Limestone Caverns.
Each day we bring our own brewing water to the brewery in stainless steel tank trucks. Now
we can be sure each glass of Simon Pure Beer and Ale you drink has the same consistent
quality and soft, smooth taste.
The world's truly great beers can attribute much of their fame to the fine natural brewing
waters from which they are brewed. The water from our own private source is equal in quality
and taste to these few naturally perfect brewing waters found in the world's famous
brewing centers.
For pure d rin king pleasu re ask for Simon Pure Beer . . . now brewed with naturally perfect
brewing water.

THE WILLIAM SIMON BREWERY •

BUFFALO, NEW YORK

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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              <text>Programs</text>
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495810">
                <text>1967-11-18 Bulls vs. Colgate</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495813">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495814">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495815">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495816">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Archival resources.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495817">
                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495818">
                <text>Official Program - Fifty cents</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495819">
                <text>University of Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495820">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495821">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495822">
                <text>1967-11-18</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495823">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495825">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495826">
                <text>en</text>
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                <text>LIB-UA049_B01-F16-002</text>
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                <text>New York (State) -- Buffalo -- University at Buffalo</text>
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                <text>36 p.</text>
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                    <text>�MEET THE FOOTBALL BULLS
BUFFALO FOOTBALL '68
Directory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . .
Schedules &amp; Ticket Information

2

3

THE COACHING STAFF
Coach Urich . . . . . .
Assistants &amp; Staff .

4-5
6-9

1968 FORECAST
Team Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Pre-Season Report by Bob Powell . . . . . .
. .... .
Pre-Season Report by Dick Johnston . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
THE OPPONENTS
Scouting the Opposition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Composite Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . .

11
12
13

14-23
Inside Back Cover

THE PLAYERS
24-28
Best Bulls for '68 . . . . . . . . .
Sophomores to Watch . . . . . .
. 29-30
Alphabetica I Roster . . . . . . . . .
. .
. . . .
31
By Position Roster . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Center Spread
Depth Chart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . Center Spread
Numerical Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
34
Geographical Distribution • . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . 35
Pronunciation Guide . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . 35
Freshman Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . • .
. . . . . . . 37
1967 IN REVIEW
The Varsity Season . . . . . . . . .
Varsity Game By Game . . . . • .
Final Varsity Statistics . . . .

. . . . . . . 39
40-41
42-43

BUFFALO FOOTBALL SINCE 1894
Team Records . . . . . . . . .
Individual Records . . . . . .
Coach &amp; Season Summaries •....
Series Records . . . . . . . . . .
Year-By-Year Scores ...... .

45
44
46
47
. . 48-52

STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO
The University . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
President Meyerson . . . . . . . . . . .
Athletic Director Peelle . . . . . . . .
Athletic Administration . . . . . . .

. . . 52-53
55
56
57

RESERVED FOR THE FOURTH ESTATE
Specia I Information for the Press . . . . . . .
Other Fall Schedules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
U/B OFFICE OF SPORTS INFORMATION

Richard E. Baldwin
Office 716-831-2924
Home 716-632-7227

ClarkGym
Williamsville

58-61
62-63

�BUFFALO FOOTBALL

1968
PRESIDE T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Martin Meyerson
UNIVERSITY FOUNDED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1846
NEW YORK STATE AFFILIATIO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . September 1, 1962
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATIO FOUN DED...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1884
UNDERGRADUATE ENROLLMENT {5,607 men; 4,140 women) . .. . .• ... .. 9,747
GRADUATE E ROLLME T (4,824 PROFESSIONAL: 1,128 EVE I G) . . . . . . . . 6,035
TOTAL ENROLLME T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21,734
COLORS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Royal Blue &amp; White
TEAM ICK AME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bulls
FOOTBALL STADIUM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rotary Field (1930) 13,420
MAJOR ATH LETIC AFFILIATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NCAA; ECAC

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14214
-1-

�1968 DIRECTORY OF BUFFALO FOOTBALL
DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS- Mr. James E. Peelle, Purdue '3 4
BUSINESS MANAGER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Howard L. Daniels
TICKET ASSISTANT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Howard R. Flaster, Buffalo '64
DIRECTOR OF SPORTS INFORMATION . . . Richard E. Baldwin, St. Lawrence '54
ATHLETIC PHYSICIAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dr. Edmond J. Gicewicz, Buffalo '52
TRAINER &amp; PHYSICAL THERAPIST . . . . . . . . . . . . . . James E. Simon, Buffalo ' 50
FACULTY COMMITTEE ON ATHLETICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dr. Alexander C. Brownie
ALUMNI ATHLETIC ADVISORY BOARD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dr. James J. Ailinger
STATISTICIAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alexander P. Aversano, Buffalo '36
EQUIPMENT MANAGER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Joseph P. Staebell

FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF
HEAD COACH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Richard W. (Doc) Urich, Miami (0.)
OFFENSIVE BACKFIELD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . Jerry A. lppoliti, Miami (0.)
DEFENSIVE BACKFIELD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert C. Deming, Colgate
OFFENSIVE LINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert E. Geiger, Western Michigan
LINEBACKERS . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . William R. Dando, Detroit
DEFENSIVE LINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sam L. Sanders, Buffalo
HEAD FRESHMAN COACH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . James C. McNally, Buffalo
FRESHMAN ASSISTA T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gerald R. Gergley, Buffalo
GRADUATE ASSISTA T
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Russell G. MacKellar, Buffalo
GRADUATE ASSISTANT . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . Richard L. Wells, Buffalo

-2-

'51
'58
' 57
'58
'59
' 60
'66
'61
' 67
' 68

�1968 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
-VARSITYTicket
Res.
55.15

Prices
Gen.
53.00

0

53.50
54.00
53.00
54.00
54.00
53.00
54.00
53.00
54.00
53.00
52.50
53 .00

0

54.00

Buffalo
W L T

Date
Sept.

14 (Sat.)

Opponent
at IOWA STATE

Sept.
Sept.

21 (Sat.)
27 (Fri.)

atKE TSTATE
MASSACHUSETTS

1:30 EDT
8:00 EDT

Oct.
Oct.

5 (Sat.)
12 (Sat.)

at BOSTON COLLEGE
DELAWARE

1:30 EDT
1:30 EDT

5

2

0
0

Oct.

19 (Sat.)

VILLANOVA (HC)

1:30 EDT

3

3

0

Oct.

26(Sat.)

HOLY CROSS

1:30 EDT

6

1

ov.

2 (Sat.)
9 (Sat.)

8:05 EST

7 0

0

1:30 CST

0

0

1:30 EST

5

3

Nov.

16 (Sat.)

at TEMPLE
at ORTHER
OPEN DATE

OV.

23 (Sat.)

at BOSTO

OV.

Time
2:00 COT

ILLINOIS
UNIVERSITY

0

0

3

0
0
0

1 3

52 .00
52.00
52.00
52.00
52.00
51.25
51.50
52.00

-FRESHMAN1967 Score
OPP
20
34
22
0

U/ 8

Sept . 20 (Fri.)

at ARMY

Sept. 28 (Sat.)

at MANLIUS
at AVY
SYRACUSE
at KENT STATE

Oct.
Nov.
Nov.

26(Sat.)
2 (Sat.)
8 (Fri.)

2:00 EDT
2:00 EDT
10:00 EDT
2:00 EST
3:00 EST

0
0
12

9
35
7

TICKET INFORMATION
Season tickets are available for U/ B football at the Clark Gymnasium Ticket Office. Reserved seats for the four home games are priced
at 54.00, 53.00 and 52.50. For further information call:
831 -2924

831 -2926

- 3-

��DOC URICH
Head Coach

Richard W. " Doc " Urich - a modern football coach, schooled in a victorious
tradition; associated with the major names and teams in the college game; an organizer determined to build Buffalo football to a level of national respect; educated
in athletic administration; a honored athlete himself; personable with his players,
staff, the fourth estate, the University and its Alumni; a family man; and an excellent
example of the progress associated with U/ B.
Coach Urich begins his third season as head coach of the Bulls this fall. His
football philosophy is not complicated . He despises "ties" and "goes for two. " His
interest and concern is equalty divided between offense and defense.
A " tower coach " with bull horn and strong vocal cords, Urich remains close
to all aspects of his team. The communicative distance between coach and player
is minimal. Much of his success is reflected in his ability to stay close to situations.
Urich ' s squad rules of conduct are rigid. His teams are well aware of his "law
of the land " and determination to creditably represent the University.
In his first season with U/ B (1966} Urich split a ten-game schedule, but along
the way established seven Bull offensive records. The area was very favorably introduced to Buffalo' s new look on the gridiron. His summary last fall was 6-4 against
fast company .
Doc joined the Buffalo staff from Notre Dame, where he was the top offensive
aide to Coach Ara Parseghian . Urich had previously worked under Parseghian at Northwestern and Miami (0 .}, his alma mater.
A native of Wapakoneta, Ohio, Urich started a glossy athletic career at Wapakoneta High School, where he was a senior captain in football and basketball.
At Miami, Urich had an excellent collegiate playing career for four seasons. He
played in the 1948 Sun Bowl (Miami defeated Texas Tech} and the 1951 Salad Bowl
(Miami defeated Arizona St.}. Doc was captain of the Redskins as a senior. As a
junior and senior, he was All-Ohio and for three seasons was All-Mid-America Conference at end.
Following his graduation from Miami in 1951, he briefly served as a teachercoach at famous Massillon (0.} High School before joining Parseghian's staff at Miami.
The Urich's, wife Pat (also from Wapakoneta}, Cynthia 16 and Danny 13, are
new homeowners in Williamsville, a short distance from the main campus . Handy
around the house, Doc takes his golf seriously and actively competes in his staff's
king of the hill handball championships.
The Urichs raise Bassett hounds and after a hard day on the practice field,
when play execution has not been up to par, Doc packs his playbooks and says he's
going (home} to the dogs.
In addition to his coaching assignment Urich was appointed associate director
of athletics at the University in 1968. He holds both a B.Sc. (physical education}
and M.Ed. from Miami.
Urich's nickname originated when he was a young athlete in his hometown. He
was tagged " Doc" by neighborhood companions and the name has stayed with him
throughout his career.

- 5-

�VARSITY ASSIST ANTS
WILLIAM R. DANDO, Detroit '59 - Linebacker Coach

Bill Dando joined the U/ B staff in 1966 from Southern
Methodist. At SMU he was in charge of defensive ends and
linebackers. The Mustangs led the Southwest Conference in
overall defense in 1965.
Prior to his SMU assignment, Dando was at john Carroll for
five seasons. He was an assistant for four years under John
Ray and was head coach of the Blue Streaks in 1964.
A native of Gordan, Pa., Bill established his athletic career
in high school at Ashland, Pa., where he lettered in four sports
and was all-state in football and baseball. His college career
started in 1950 at the University of San Francisco under Joe
Kuharich, but in 1952 he enlisted in the Marine Corps . He
played service football with the Memphis Naval Air Station and the Quantico Marines.
In 1955 after service discharge Dando entered the University of Detroit. He was
a starting halfback with the Titans from 1956-58. He made Catholic All-America. At
Detroit he was a baseball outfielder and in 1959 was captain of that school ' s first
team to play in the CAA tournament.
After receiving his B.S. in education at Detroit Dando coached football, basketball
and baseball at Detroit's St. Cecilia High School. Following this excellent scholastic
success he went to John Carroll.
The Dandos, wife Willie (Detroit '56), have five children - Marie 8, Ann Louise 6
Molly 5, Billy 4 and Martha 2.
'
Bill is an avid golfer and plays a solid game of handball. Family headquarters is
in Williamsville.

ROBERT E. GEIGER, Western M ichigan '58 -Offensive Line Coach

Bob Geiger is in his third season with the Bulls after a head
coaching tour at Earlham College. His 1965 Quakers were 7-2.
His football background covers a number of coaching assignments, all contributing to his excellent knowledge of the game.
After high school in Flushing, Mich ., he enrolled at Western
Michigan and lettered three seasons as an end . He was captain
of the Broncos as a senior.
His coaching career started at Ohio University in 195B where
he worked with both the freshman and varsity programs. He
spent two seasons (1960-61 ) as an assistant coach at Mansfield
(0.) High School. He moved to Ashland College in 1962 and
served as line coach and offensive coordinator during a period
when Eagles won three consecutive Mid-Ohio Conference Championships.
Geiger holds a B.S. (English-Physical Ed.) from Western Michigan and a M.S. (Physical Education) from Ohio University.
Geiger's coaching experience also includes head assignments at Ashland in track
and wrestling, where his teams won three conference championships in both sports.
At Earlham he also was coach of wrestling.
The Geigers, wife Lois graduated from Ohio U. in 1961 , have a son Robert (16
mos.) and live in Williamsville. Coach Bob enjoys the outdoors and has a special hitch
for hunting and fishing when time permits.

-6-

�ROBERT C. DEMING, Colgate ' 57 - Defensive Backfield Coach

Bob Deming has been at U/ B since 1959 as a defensive specialist. He is the only staff member under Coach Urich who
served previously in the Bull football program. Before com ing
to Buffalo he was on Hal Lahar 's staff at Houston .
Deming played his college football at Colgate where he was
a fullback for the Red Raiders . A native of Ilion , N.Y., he has
a B.A. from Colgate and the M .Ed . from Houston .
A versatile profectionist, he's a jack of many trades, Bob's
interests outside of football include hunting, fishing, woodcraft,
investments and general efficiency.
His defensive success at Buffalo has been rewarding and he
has on many occasions had team and individual defensive accomplishments in national statistical listings.
Bob is married to the former Jean Siebert (U . of Rochester), a former hostess with
American Airlines. The Demings, Laura 1'12, reside in nearby Eggertsville .
JERRY A. IPPOLITI, M iami (0.) '58 -Offensive Backfield Coach

Jerry joined Doc Urich in 1966 from Coshocton (0.) High
School where he was a-successful head coach. In 1964, his first
season at Coshocton, his club was 8-2, best at that school
in 20 years.
At Miami, lppoliti was an outstanding Redskin halfback and
led his team in rushing and punt returns as a senior. He played
on two Miami squads that won Mid-American Conference
Championships, one with an undefeated-untied record .
After receiving his B.S. in 1958 his first coaching position
was at Goshen High School in Sebring, 0 ., as backfield mentor.
That season he produced an all-state back. Jerry coached the
backs for Ohio in the 1960 Ohio-West Virginia High School
All-Star Game. In that same year he switched to Findlay (0.) High School and in four
seasons turned out nine all-conference backs.
His success at Coshocton, three all-state player selections and a raft of individual
and school scoring records, was his major stepping stone into college football.
A serious golfer, Jerry is married to the former Rosalie Cesare (Miami '58). The
lppoliti family, son David and daughter Dana, live in Williamsville .
lppoliti is the humorous author of the staff. He carries a sharp needle. Last summer,
Jerry completed requirements for his M.S. in physical education at West Virginia.
SAM L. SANDERS, Buffalo '60 - Defensive Line Coach

Sam Sanders, a former Little All-America lineman with the
Bulls from 1957-59, is a new member of the Urich staff this
fall . Sanders, a guard and tackle during his playing career, was
one of U/ B's most honored college division performers before
the Bulls joined the University Division of the NCAA.
Sanders, a two-way tackle from nearby Kenmore, was part of
two festive seasons for the Bulls, 1958 and 1959. U/ B won the
Lambert Cup in '58 with an 8-1-0 record. Although college division on paper, the Bulls made some hay in the Ivy League with
a 6-3 win over Harvard and a 34-14 triumph over Columbia .
Sander's senior year, when he was a co-captain, was also an
8-1-0 year.
Sam, a record-holder in the shotput as an undergraduate, was
the first "local " player to receive serious consideration from the professional Bills .
A knee injury hampered his pro career and after a stint on the Bills' taxi squad he
entered coaching at Silver Creek High School.
His first college coaching assignment was at Lehigh under former U/ B assistant
Fred Dunlap. He spent four years with the Engineers as line coach .
The Sanders, wife Midge (Buffalo St. '60), have two children, Sammy 6 and Matt
3'12. They are new homeowners in Snyder. Sam is camp director at William C. Baird 's
Summer Camp at Point Abino, On!., in the off season .

-7-

�FRESHMAN STAFF
JAMES C. M cNALLY, Buffalo '66 - Head Freshman Coach

jim became an official staff member at Buffalo last summer,
but he is no stranger to U/ B football. His new position encompasses complete coordination of the freshman program. He takes
over the Frosh from Mike Stock, now an assistant at Navy.
A native of the area , Kenmore, he has a B.S. in business
administration and a Master's (1968) in education. He played
varsity football for three seasons as an offensive and defensive
guard and appeared in the 1964 Gem Bowl.
At Kenmore West High School, Me ally lettered three seasons in football, made all-league teams twice as a center and
guard and was a senior captain. He was also named All-Western
NYS and made the high school All-America chart. In baseball
he lettered as a catcher.
McNally has been associated with Buffalo football since 1965 as a graduate assistant. He has been a field coach, varsity scout and involved in recruiting.
A full-time instructor in physical education, jim comes from a heralded athletic
family. His Dad, Carl j., was a three-sport star in football, basketball and baseball
at Canisius (1928). He has an older brother who also played at Canisius.
McNally is now the third coach from Kenmore West on the current U/ B staff. Gerry
Gergley and Sam Sanders are also former students of Coach Jules Yakapovich of the
Blue Devils.

GERALD R. GERGLEY, Buffalo '61 -

Freshm an Assistant

Gerry Gergley, one of Buffalo's outstanding athletes of recent
years, is the University's head coach of wrestling. He joined U/ B's
department of intercollegiate athletics in 1966.
Gergley returned to his alma mater from Grand Island (N.Y.)
High School. His final mat squad there won 12 of 14 matches.
He had four sectional champions with one grappler advancing
to the state championships. Prior to coaching at Grand Island,
he was at Lindenhurst (N.Y.) High School where he had an
undefeated wrestling team in 1964.
As an undergraduate at Buffalo, Gerry won nine varsity
letters in football, baseball and wrestling. He received the
Gene Hiller Award as U/ B's most outstanding matman during
the 1958-59 season.
He holds two degrees from the University - an Ed.B. and a Master' s in educa tion (1963).
·
The Gergley family, wife Jackie (Cornell) and three children, ]erilyin 5, jodie 2'/,
and Jeffrey 9 mos., live in Grand Island. Gerry is an avid golfer.
Gergley's wrestlers were 8-3 in 196 7-68 and he is instrumental in returning interest
in the sport to the campus.

GRADUATE ASSISTANTS
RUSSELL G. MacKELLAR, Buffalo '67
RICHARD L. WELLS, Buffalo '68

-8-

�MEDICAL STAFF
DR. EDMOND j. GICEWICZ, Buffalo '5 2 -Athletic Team Ph ys ician
Dr. Gicewicz, a sportsman of the highest order, is starting
his third year as Buffalo 's team physician. A native of the area ,
Black Rock, he has been closely associated with sports at U/ B
since the late 1940's.
A honored athlete at Buffalo Tech in football (back), basketball (center) and baseball (pitcher-first baseman), he continued
his active playing career in the military service in the same
three sports in japan . Following his Army tour, he entered the
University.
Athletics had always been an important part of his life and
he intended to major in physical education in college and make
coaching his career, however, he switched to a pre-medical
course, graduated from U/ B in 1952 and from medical school
in 1956.
Accumulated statistics in football for Buffalo were glossy for Ed Gicewicz as an
end . He formerly held all of the major pass receiving records at the University until
modern assults on his accomplishments. Gicewicz was Little All-America for the Bulls .
Sports is his real hobby and he spots for the radio broadcasts of the Bills' games .
Wife Connie, a former nurse is in charge at home. Dr. Gicewicz is the father of
five - Suzanne 13, julie 9, Alicia 4, Richard 2 and Gregory 1.

jAMES E. SIMON, Buffalo '50 - Trainer and Physical Therapist
jim Simon joined the U/ B athletic staff in 1948 after an
early career in physical therapy, teaching and coaching. Prior
to returning to his alma mater, he was a teacher-coach at nearby Riverside High School. He headed the basketball and baseball programs at that school and was also a football assistant.
Simon has worked in physical therapy at Charity Hospital
in New Orleans and at the Canandaigua VA Hospital. He has
also served as a physical therapist in Little Rock, Ark.
A Buffalo area native, Jim graduated from Bennett High
School before enrolling at U/ B. A halfback, he lettered with
the Bulls as an undergraduate.
The Simons, wife Virginia is also a native of the region ,
have two children, Mark 9 and Chris 6. Residing in Tonawanda ,
the Simons are an active sports family.

jOSEPH E. STAEBELL- Equipment Manager
joe Staebell is Buffalo's new chief of equipment. He joined
the athletic department last july after serving the University in
various capacities for 15 years.
A former athlete in Alden, N.Y., he played football, basketball and baseball in high school. Since retired from the more
vigorous sports, he is now a contented hunter and fisherman
of note.
He is married and the father of four daughters- Barbara 19,
jean 18, Diane 16 and june 13.

-9-

��1968 UB FOOTBALL FORECAST
LETTERMEN
Returning
Graduated

OFFENSE
13
5

DEFENSE
12
7

KICKERS
2
0

TOTAL
27
12

OFFENSIVE ENDS - There is outstanding talent in the receiving corps for '68. Personnel is adaptable and there could be shuffling at the pass-catching positions. Senior
Chuck Drankoski, subbing last fall for Dick Ashley at split end, set a U/ B reception
record (37). Senior Ashley returns this season after a knee operation and will be
working for his former receiving record. Drankoski moves to flanker this season.
juniors Paul Lang and Terry Endress both lettered at tight end as outstanding sophs.
Rating- Excellent.
OFFENSIVE LINE- Lack of experience in the interior line leaves room for sophomores
to crack into the starting line-up. junior Frank Reid will battle classmate Chris Wolf,
a letterman, at left tackle. A bright soph, Tom Centofanti, is the early choice at right
tackle, but john Rio, another soph, was also impressive last spring. Guards Mike
Maser and Tom Kowalewski, both seniors, are returning starters. Senior Bill Hayden
and junior jon Spencer are the backups. Dave Beining is a solid soph. Senior john
Wesolowski has lettered twice at center. Sophs Chuck Donnor and joe Hudson will
press for the assignment as backup. Rating- fair.
QUARTERBACK - Senior Mark Murtha's playing status rests with a last-minute medical report. Over the past two seasons he has been hampered with a shoulder problem, and his return to full power remains questionable. Murtha holds the majority
of the season passing records, and if healthy, has an opportunity to overtake the
career totals of John Stofa. Murtha is in line for his third successive season of first
call duty. Senior Denny Mason, improving steadily throughout this career, is in the
wings and fully qualified to run the Urich offense. Soph Ed Perry is the first understudy. Rating- Good to excellent.
RUNNING BACKS - Oneoftherichestsuppliesof talent on the team is in the running
game. Senior Ken Rutkowski and junior Pat Patterson at tailback are excellent. Patterson was a record-breaking rusher as a soph. Junior Gary Chapp and soph joe Zelmanski are listed 1-2 at fullback on the early chart, but there is not the explosive
potential of graduated Lee jones (72 points) plus his superb blocking . Drankoski at
the flankerback spot is an important weapon . junior Harry Bell is his reserve. Sophs
)ohnZeek and Barney Woodward are fullback possibilities. Rating- Very Good.
DEFENSIVE LINE - Senior Tom Murphy and junior Bob Kovey lettered last year and
senior John Przybycien owns two letters at the position. junior Prentis Henley is behind Murphy on the left side. junior Dan Walgate and senior joe Riccelli return at
tackle, but Riccelli was listed behind junior Russ Beck in spring season. Wa lgate is an
All-East candidate and moves well at 255 . Rating- Good.
LINEBACKING - Junior Scott Clark, who lettered at offensive tackle last year, takes
over in '68 at outside left. Senior jim Mosher has two letters at the position. Inside
left will highlight senior Don Sabo, a '67 starter, with fine backup from soph Ed
Kershaw. AII-ECAC Mike Luzny, as a sophomore, will anchor the defense, if his
summer knee operation mends on schedule. Luzny could climb into national headlines, as U/ B's greatest backer in history. Senior john Lupienski has lettered twice
at the position. At outside right senior Dave Richner is a two-year veteran. junior
Denny Mihale is the reserve. Rating - Excellent.
DEFENSIVE BACKS - Senior Nick Kish, a transfer from Syracuse, will.work the left
side, soph Karl Zalar in reserve. junior safety Dick Horn returns with soph Tom
Elliott as backup. The right halfback belongs to junior Gary Grubbs, a ' 67 starter, on
the pre-season chart with soph Len Nixon at No. 2. Rating - Fair.
KICKING GAME - Senior Bob Embow returns for kickoffs, extra-points and field goal
duty, following two letter-winning seasons and record performances. He holds season
field goal (6) and career (7) records. junior Paul jack will again handle the punting
with Richner also available. Rating- Excellent.
THE URICH CAPSULE - Coach Doc Urich's summation of his prospects run from hot
to chilly. He is particularly pleased with the running of Ken Rutkowski and Pat Patterson, and labels his receivers as his best group since overhauling the U/ B program.
Inexperience in key secondary spots is of major concern along with lack of playing
time at offensive tackle and a questionable talent supply at fullback. Solid experience
in the defensive line should be rewarding. His medical report will be most importantMark Murtha's shoulder.and Mike Luzny's knee. Heading into his third season with
the Bulls, Urich regards his overall talent and depth as his best.
-11-

�The 1968 Bulls Offensively

By BOB POWELL
Buffalo Courier-Express

If " Honest Harry" of Courier-Express fame were to glance at the offensive " form "
sheet at the University of Buffalo this fall, he might study it thusly:
HALFBACKS- good speed ... can go the distance.
RECEIVERS- plenty of talent ... command morning-line respect.
INTERIOR LINEMEN-Where speed is lacking, endurance prevails.
FULLBACKS- Stakes caliber.
QUARTERBACKS- Capable 1·2 punch if The Mick can go.
" Harry" just might figure Coach Doc Urich has the horses this t ime out.
The quarterbacking situation is the most critical as Urich prepares his third U/ B
Football team for 10 busy Saturdays.
Mick Murtha directed Doc's first two U/ B teams, but the pain in his r ight shoulder
when he throws the ball is an aggrevation for the entire squad.
Dennis Mason has been Mick's back-up for two campaigns. A whiz-bang in two
spring games, the former Bishop Fallon High star just hasn' t gotten the time to show
his wares in autumn.
Dennis may lack Mick's flair, but he is no less a team leader and play executioner.
Whoever gets to call the pass plays, he' ll have one of th~ best receiver groups
in the East. Split end Dick Ashley and flanker Chuck Drankosk1 both have a number
of U/ B receiving marks to their credit. Paul Lang, the veteran tight end, and his
second number, Terry Endress, also are sure-fingered performers of experience.
The tailback situation never looked better. Workhorse Pat Patterson is a durable
youngster with a fine sophomore season behind him. Patterson not onl y is a powerful
rusher, but he possesses deceptive speed and moves when he gets in the clear.
Ken Rutkowski 's decision to forego professiona I baseball was a good break for
the Bulls. The skittery runner gives UB a fine break-away threat: Looking over their
shoulders is soph John Faller, who could help there also.
Gary Chapp will have to overcome two headaches in his bid for the fullback job.
First, he is inexperienced. Second, Gary will constantly be confronted with comparisons to Lee Jones, the Bulls' great but graduated fullback.
Chapp has the tools, however, and should adequately handle the work.
The interior line offers something new for Urich.lf has both depth and experience.
It doesn' t figure to become over-confident, however, with a fine crop reporting from
last year's frosh.
Urich' s first offense at U/ B produced 2 ,857 yards in 10 games. Last year the Bulls
rolled for 3,155 in as many outings.
There' s every indication this year's club will improve on the 1967 figure- along
with a bettering of the 6. 4 record.

-12-

�The 1968 Bulls Defensively

By DICK JOHNSTON
Buffalo Evening News

Build a good defense, they say, and you ' ll wind up with a good footba ll record.
That being the case, Coach Doc Urich's forces should do well in 1968.
Two of U/ B' s finest defensive performers of recent years, linebacker Ted Gibbons
and halfback Tom Hurd, have departed but Doc's defensive tutors· - Bob Deming,
Bill Dando and Sam Sanders-have a veteran array to work with. There's a ).e tterman
available for practically every position .
There are, however, a couple of ifs to consider.
If two key players return to top shape after summertime knee operations and if
backfield newcomers with apparent potential pick up the tricks of their trade quickly,
the defense should do more than its part.
With the toughest opposition at the start of the season, the defense must develop
quickly. The coaches are hoping that Mike Luzny, All-East linebacker and All-America
mention, is back in shape to take charge. Mike, unquestionably the leader on defense, suffered a severe knee injury in the spring game and underwent surgery.
Gary Grubbs, a regular defensive halfback last year as a sophomore, m issed most
of the spring drills and also had knee surgery.
Grubbs and Dick Horn are the two lettermen returning for the ' 'three deep" backfield alignment, but Deming has some promising newcomers in sophs Len Nixon and
Tom Elliott and senior ick Kish, a regular offensive halfback for Syracuse University
before transferring to U/ B.
Experienced talent is deep for the front four. Tom Murphy, Bob Kovey and John
Przybycien, all lettermen, return at end. Dan Walgate, a 255-pounder who came along
fast in the latter half of last season, and 242-po und Joe Riccelli, are back at tackle
with Russ Beck, a reserve last fall, pushing them for a starting job .
If Luzny is OK, the linebacking corps a Iso is strong and deep. Don Sabo, a starter
on the inside with Luzny, returns as does letterman John Lupienski. Veteran outside
linebackers Dave Richner and jim Mosher are reinforced by Scott Clark, sh ifted from
offensive tackle.
The defensive backfield, which proved vulnerable to the forward pass in U/ B's
four losses of 196 7, must shape up early. Iowa State, Kent State, Massachusetts and
Boston College, the first four opponents, are sure to keep it under fire.
Horn and Grubbs now have the experience that should keep them from getting
"burned" as they sometimes were last year. Nixon and Elliott give the Bulls more
speed than they have had on defense and Kish is a heady, hardhitting defender. But
can the newcomers handle U/ B's intricate defensive maneuvers properly in the early
season? This is the No. 1 question .
Other sophomores the coaches hope will help on defense include Barry Atkinson,
6-foot 4-inch, 245-pound tackle; linebacker Ed Kershaw and halfback Joel jacobs.

-13-

�IOWA STATE
at Ames, Iowa
2:00 COT, September 14
Harry Burrell - Sports Information (515) 294-3372

Ames, Iowa (50010)
17,000 (13,000 M , 4,000 W)
Clyde Wi lliams Field (1921 )
35,000
Cardinal &amp; Gold
Big Eight

Campus:
En roll men t:
Stadium :
Capacity:
Colors:
Conference:

Head Coach:
Season:
Last Game:
Captain :
AD:

johnny Maj ors
Tennessee '58
First Year at Iowa State
New Series
To be elected
Clay Stapleton

LETTERMEN RETURNING: 17, including QB john Warder; TB Ben King; DLE M ike Kirar;
DLT George Dimitri; DRT Willie Muldrew; M jerry Fiat.
LETTERMEN LOST: 17
SOPHOMORES TO WATCH: FB Roger Guge; RT john Griglione; QB Obert Tisdale.
SERIES RECORD: First Meeting
TEAM STRENGTH: Experienced defensive line
TEAM WEAKNESS: Green, lack of depth
OFFENSE: I Formation

I

!I
John Wa rder

Coach Majors

1967 SUMMARY

1968 SCHEDULE
Sept.

Oct.

I
Nov.

I

14
21
28
5
12
19
26
2
9
16

IS
3
0
17
0
17
7
14
0
14
14
86

Buffalo
Arizona
at Brigham Young
Colorado
at Kansas St.
at Oklahoma
Kansas
Nebraska
at Missouri
at Oklahoma St.

-14-

South Carolina
Texas Tech
New Mexico
Colorado
Kansas St.
Missouri
Kansas
Nebraska
Oklahoma
Oklahoma St.
(2-8-0)

OPP
34
52
12
34
0
23
28
12
52
28
275

�KENT STATE
at Kent, Ohio
1:30 EDT, September 21
Paul Schlemmer- Sports Information (216) 672-2110
Campus:
Enrollment:
Stadium:
Capacity:
ickname:
Colors:
Conference:

Kent, Ohio (44240)
18,450(8,736 M , 9,714W)
Memorial (1950)
20,001
Golden Flashes
Kent Blue &amp; Antique Gold
Mid-American

Head Coach:
Season :
1967 Record :
Last Game:
Captain:
AD:

Dave Puddington
Ohio Wesleyan '50
First Year at Kent
6 yrs. W-36, L-16, T-3
Won 5, Lost 5, Tied 0
U/ B 30- 6, 1967
None
Dr. Carl E. Erickson

LETTERMEN RETURNING: 24, including HB Garland Wilson; FB Joe Pledger; T Earl
Price; C Brei Hart; DT Jim Corrigall; DE Paul Jordan; DHB Vern King.
LETTERMEN LOST: 13
SOPHOMORES TO WATCH : FB Don Nottingham ; LB Greg
SERIES RECORD: Four Games- Buffalo leads 3 - 1
TEAM STRENGTH: Defense
TEAM WEAKNESS: Depth
OFFENSE: I Formation

Coach Puddington

Jim Corrigall

1968 SCHEDULE
Sept.

Oct.

Nov .

14
21
28
5
12
19
26
2
9
16

eff; OG George Greb.

1967 SUMMARY
KENT
6 Buffalo
35 Northern Illinois
21
Ohio U. (forfeit)
7 Miami
7 Western Michigan
6 Bowling Green
13 Toledo
28 Louisville
41 Marshall
31 Xavier
195
(5-5-0)

at Dayton
Buffalo
Ohio University
at Miami
Western Michigan
at Bowling Green
Toledo
at Louisville
at Marsha II
Xavier

- 15-

OPP
30
0
14
21
16
7
14
21
2
19
144

�MASSACHUSETTS
at Buffalo, .Y. (War Memorial Stadium)
8:00 EDT- September 27
Dick Page- Sports Information {413) 545-2439

Campus:
Enrollment:
Stadiu'!':
Capacity:
Nickname:
Colors:
Conference:

Amherst, Mass. (01 002)
16,600 (10,033 M , 6,567 W)
Alumni Stadium
22 ,000
Red men
Maroon &amp; White
Yankee

Head Coach:
Season:
1967 Record:
Last Game:
Captains:
AD:

Victor H . Fusia
Manhatta n '3 8
7yrs. W-47, L-16, T-1
Won 7, Lost 2, Tied 0
U/ 8 36- 6
Mike McArdle
ick Warnoc k
Warren P. McGuick

LETTERMEN RETURNING: 25, including SE Nick Warnock; H8 Jerry Grasso; HB Craig
Lovell; DT Marty Scheralis; DHB Mike McArdle; DE Tom York.

LETTERMEN LOST: 16
SOPHOMORES TO WATCH: E David Walsh; LB Bill Byron; FB Pierre Marchando;
HB Pat Scavone; QB Mark Devitt.

SERIES RECORD: 2 games- 1 - 1
TEAM STRENGTH: Depth at many positions
TEAM WEAKNESS: Quarterbacking
OFFENSE: T- Multiple Variation

II

~

Nick Warnock

Coach Fusia

1967 SUMMARY
MASS
30 Maine
10 Dartmouth
35 Connecticut
28 Rhode Island
24 Boston U.
21 Vermont
30 Rutgers
14 New Hampshire
0 Boston College
(7-2 -0)
192

1968 SCHEDULE
Sept.
Oct.

Nov.

21
28
5
12
19
26
2
9
16
23

Maine
at Buffalo
at Delaware
Boston U.
at Rhode Island
Connecticut
at Vermont
at Holy Cross
New Hampshire
Boston College
-16-

OPP
9
28
14
24
0
0
7
13
25
120

�BOSTON COLLEGE
at Chestnut Hill, Mass.
1 :30 EDT, October 5
Eddie Miller - Sports Information (617) 332-3200- Ex. 387
Chestnut Hill, Mass. (02167)
6,500 (5,000 M, 1,500 W)
B.C. Alumni Stadium
26,000
Eagles
Maroon &amp; Gold
one

Campus:
Enrollment:
Stadium:
Capacity:
ickname:
Colors:
Conference:

Head Coach:
Season:
196 7 Record:
Last Game:
Captain:
AD:

Joe Yukica
Penn St. '53
First season
(2 yrs. at UNH, 7 - 9 - 0)
Won 4, Lost 6, Tied 0
U/ B 26- 14, 1967
Gary Andrachik
WilliamJ. Flynn

LETTERMEN RETURNING: 27, including QB Mike Fallon; EBarry Gallup; C John Eagan;
DLB Dick Kroner; DT John Fitzgerald.
LETTERMEN LOST: 20
SOPHOMORES TO WATCH: HB Fred Willis; QB Frank Harris; T Gary Guenther.
SERIES RECORD: Four Games- Boston College leads 3 - 1
TEAM STRENGTH: Defensive Back - Receivers
TEAM WEAKNESS: Offensive Line- General Depth
OFFENSE: Multiple

Barry Gallup

Coach Yukica
1968 SCHEDULE
Sept.
Oct.

Nov.

28
5
12
19
26
9
16
23
30

1967 SUMMARY
BC
27
10
28
14
56
21
13
20
25
13
227

at Navy
Buffalo
Villanova
at Tulane
Penn State
at Army
Virginia Military
at Massachusetts
Holy Cross

-17-

Villanova
Army
Penn State
Buffalo
Maine
Cincinnati
Virginia Military
Syracuse
Massachusetts
Holy Cross
(4-6-0)

OPP
24
21
50
26
0
27
26
32
0
6
212

�DELAWARE

/r

•?/

.J'~

-------

~~

~ ...

I J: -

""'~ "-&lt;-./ ~ -£

-

'1&amp;.; .::------~
.

at Buffalo, ew York
1 :30 EDT, October 12

.

-- ~~~··)
e:r h.

~
~

Campus:
Enrollment:
Stadium:
Capacity:
Nickname:
Colors:
Conference:

John Morris - Sports Information (302) 738-2341

--

ewark, Delaware (19711)
6,800
Delaware Stadium
35,000
Fightin' Blue Hens
Blue and Gold
Middle Atlantic

Head Coach:
Season:
1967 Record:
Last Game:
Captain:
AD :

Harold Raymond
Michigan ·so
Second
Won 2, Lost 7, Tied 0
U/ B 38- 19, 1967
Bob Novotny
David M . Nelson

LETIERMEN RETURNING: 20, including QB Tom DiMuzio; G Hank Vollen dorf; E Ron
Withelder; DLB John Favero; DE Ted Gregory; DLB Bob Novotny.
LETTERMEN LOST: 15
SOPHOMORES TO WATCH: DE Ted Gregory; G Conway Hayman; SAF Son ny Merkel;
SAF Ron Klein .

SERIES RECORD: Seven Games- U/ B leads 5- 2
TEAM STRENGTH: Linebackers
TEAM WEAKNESS: Defensive backfield
OFFENSE: Winged-T

Bob Novotny

Coac·h Raymond

1967 SUMMARY

196 8 SCHEDULE
Sept.
Oct.

Nov.

21
28
5
12
19
26
2
9
16
23

DEL
17
13
31
21
21
17
19
33
6
178

Hofstra
at Villanova
Massachusetts
at Buffalo
West Chester
at Temple
at Rutgers
at Lehigh
Boston U.
Bucknell
-18-

Rhode Island
Villanova
Hofstra
Rutgers
Lafayette
Temple
Buffalo
Lehigh
Bucknell
(2-7-0)

OPP
28
21
33
29
2
26
38
10
35
222

�VILLANOVA
at Buffalo, New York
1 :30 EDT, October 19
Murray - Sports Information {215) 525 -4600 ext. 231
Campus:
Enrollment:
Stadium:
Capacity:
Nickname:
Colors:
Conference:

Villanova, Pa. (19085}
4,620 (4,300 M, 320 W)
Villanova (1930)
13,800
Wildcats
Blue &amp; White
Independent

Head Coach:
Season:
1967 Record:
Last Game:
Captains:
AD:

Jack Gregory
E. Stroudsburg '52
Second
8yrs. W-53, L-17,T-2
Won 4, Lost 6, Tied 0
Villanova 41-23, 1967
John Sodaski
Frank Boal
Arthur L. Mahan

LETTERMEN RETURNING : 14, including HB Frank Boal; HB Billy Walik; QB john Sodaski, SE Tom Boyd; T Frank Bogle; DT Rich Moore; DT John Tracy.
LETTERMEN LOST: 23
SOPHOMORES TO WATCH : FB Mark Kirkland; C Herb Braselman; E joe Cervini;
DB Jim Suarvicz.

SERIES RECORD : Six Games- 3 - 3
TEAM STRENGTH: Halfbacks, Split End &amp; Defensive Tackles
TEAM WEAKNESS: Defensive End, Linebacker
OFFENSE: Split-T

Coach Gregory

John Sodaski

1 9 68 SCHEDULE
Sept.
Oct.

Nov.

21
28
5
12
19
26
2
9
16
23

1967 SUMMARY
VILL
0
9
24
21
0
41
0
23
41
6
165

Toledo
Delaware
at V.M.I.
at Boston College
at Buffalo
Xavier
at William &amp; Mary
Quantico Marines
at West Virginia
West Chester

-19-

West Virginia
West Chester
Boston College
Delaware
Virginia Tech
Quantico
Xavier
Holy Cross
Buffalo
Toledo
(4-6-0)

OPP
40
14
27
13
3
16
3
14
23
52
205

�HOLY CROSS
at Buffalo, New York
1 :30 EDT, October 26
Richie Lewis- Sports Information {617) 793-2571
Campus:
Enrollment:
Stadium:
Capacity:
ickname:
Colors:
Conference:

Head Coach:

Worcester, Mass. (01610)
2,300 M
Fitton Field (1924)

Season:

25,000

1967 Record:

Crusaders
Royal Purple
Independent

Last Game:
Captains:
AD:

Thomas C. Boisture
Miss. St. '55
Second
Won 5, Lost 5, Tied 0
HolyCross 38-25, 1967
Robert A. Neary
Robert). Kurcz
Vincent G. Dougherty

LETTERMEN RETURNING : 21, T Bill Moncevicz; QB Phil 0' eil; E Bob Neary; DHB
Web Knight; DHB Bob Kurcz.

LETTERMEN LOST: 15
SOPHOMORES TO WATCH: E jim McCiowry; G Doug Kane; QB Mark Mowatt
SERIES RECORD : Eight games- Holy Cross leads 6-1-1
TEAM STRENGTH: Strong ground game and good air attack.
TEAM WEAKNESS: Help in offensive interior line, inexperience in defensive line.
OFFENSE: !-Formation with Variations

Coach Boisture
1968 SUMMARY

1968 SCHEDULE

OPP

HC
Sept.
Oct.

Nov.

28
5
12
19
26
2
9
16
23
30

26
8
17
21
38
14
7
21
0
6
158

at Harvard
Dartmouth
at Colgate
at Boston University
at Buffalo
Syracuse
Massachusetts
at Rutgers
Connecticut
at Boston College

-20-

Yale
Dartmouth
Colgate
Boston U.
Buffalo
Villanova
Syracuse
Rutgers
Connecticut
Boston College

(5-5-0)

14
24
0
17
25
23
41
10
3
13
170

�TEMPLE
at Philadelphia, Pa.
8:05 EST, November 2
AI Shrier- Sports Information (215) 787-7445
Campus:
Enrollment:
Stadium:
Capacity:
Nickname:
Colors:
Conference:

Philadelphia, Pa. (19122)
13,698(7,432 M , 5,266W)
Temple Stadium
20,547
Owls
Cherry &amp; White
Middle Atlantic

Head Coach:
Season:
1967 Record:
Last Game:
Captain:
AD:

George Makris
Wisconsin '43
8 yrs. W-37, L-33, T-3
Won 7, Lost 2, Tied 0
U/ B 44- 14, 1967
by games
Ernest C. Casale

LETTERMEN RETURNING: 36, including QB john Waller; SE jim Callahan; LHB Mike
Busch; FB Bill Hollar; T Steve Caporiccio; DT Marleen jones; DE Lawrence Edwards;
DB Dave Puchalski.
LETTERMEN LOST: 22
SOPHOMORES TO WATCH: QB john Kindregan; DE Allan Smith; DE Kevin Larkin;
LB Tom DeNiro; DB john Small; DB joe Mesko; DHB Bill Lyons

SERIES RECORD : Seven games- U/ B leads 7-0-0
TEAM STRENGTH: Offensive backfield and line
TEAM WEAKNESS: Defensive backfield
OFFENSE: Pro-Type

~-r.MJ:&gt;.

Coach Makris

John Waller

1968 SCHEDULE
Sept.
Oct.

Nov.

21
28
5
12
19
26
2
9
16
23

1967 SUMMARY
T
18
22
14
35
6
26
13
45
22
201

Rhode Island
at Wayne State
at Boston U.
Bucknell
at Hofstra
Delaware
Buffalo
at Gettysburg
Northeastern
Dayton
- 21 -

Kings Point
Boston U.
Buffalo
Hofstra
Dayton
Delaware
Bucknell
Gettysburg
Akron
(7-2-0)

OPP
12
16
44
23
56
17
8
27
21
224

�NORTHERN ILLINOIS
at DeKalb, Illinois
1 :30 CST, November 9
Bud Nangle- Sports Information (815) 753 -1706
Cam pus:
Enrollment:
Stadium:
Capacity:
Nickname:
Colors:
Conference:

DeKalb, Illinois (60115)
18,580 (10,000 M, 8,580 W)
IU West Stadium
22,500
Huskies
Card ina I &amp; Black
one

Season:

Howard W. Fletcher
NIU ' 40
12 yrs. W-72 , L-40, T-1

1967 Record:
Last Game:
Captain:
AD:

Won 5, Lost 5, Tied 0
First Game
to be elected
Dr. Robert J. Brigham

Head Coach:

LETTERMEN RETURNING: 33, including HB Bruce Bray; G William Murphy; LB Jim
Patterson; LB Jim Faggetti; SE John Spilis.

LETTERMEN LOST: 14
SOPHOMORES TO WATCH: C Michael Batina; S Larry Beasley; T Robert Hastings;
FB Robert Melville; E Chris Richter.

SERIES RECORD: First Meeting
TEAM STRENGTH: Offensive line and defensive linebacker
TEAM WEAKNESS: Defensive line
OFFENSE: Pro and Slot Sets

John Spilis

Coach Fletcher

1967 SUMMARY

1968 SCHEDULE
Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

14
21
28
5
12
19
26
9
16
23

at Ball State
at San Diego St. College
N. Dakota State
at Indiana State
Northern Arizona
Xavier
ew Mexico State
Buffalo
Bowling Green
at Ohio U.

-22-

IU
24
0
34
28
29
6
24
10
0
7
162

Butler U.
Kent
Indiana State
Ball State
Bradley
San Diego State
H illsdale
W. Texas State
Toledo
Bowling Green
(5-5-0)

OPP
7
35
0
14
12
47
14
17
35
17
198

�BOSTON UNIVERSITY
at Boston, Massachusetts
1:30 EST, November 23
Art Dunphy- Sports Information (617) 353-2740
Campus:
Enrollment:
Stadium:
Capacity:
Nickname:
Colors:
Conference:

Boston, Mass. (02115)
15,000
Nickerson Field
15,000
Terriers
Scarlet &amp; White
Independent

Head Coach:

Warren Schmakel

C. Michigan ' 43
Season:
1967 Record:
Last Game:
Captain:
AD:

4 yrs. W-21, L-25, T-1
Won 3, Lost 6, Tied 0
U/ B 6-0, 1967
Jay Donabedian
Dr. Robert Peck

LETTERMEN RETURNING : 26, including WB Gerry Smith; HB Bob Calascibella; FB john
Rafalko; G Bob Marcus; G john Delucca; DCB jay Donabedian; S Fred Barry; LB Pat
Hughes; CB Fred McNeilly; DG John Dorriss.
LETIERMEN LOST: 16
SOPHOMORES TO WATCH: Jim orris; Caywood South; Darryl Hill; Peter Yellen
SERIES RECORD : Eight games- U / B leads 5-3-0
TEAM STRENGTH: Running backs &amp; defensive secondary
TEAM WEAKNESS: Inexperience in offensive &amp; defensive lines.
OFFENSE: Multiple Offenses

Coach Schmakel

Jay Donabedian

1968 SCHEDULE
Sept.
Oct.

ov.

21
28
5
12
19
2
9
16
23

1967 SUMMARY
BU
20
20
16
14
0
17
0
6
21
114

Colgate
at Maine
Temple
at Massachusells
Holy Cross
at Connecticut
at Rhode Island
at Delaware
Buffalo

-23-

Bucknell
Colgate
Temple
Harvard
Buffalo
Holy Cross
Massachusells
Rhode Island
Connecticut
(6-3-0)

OPP
16
14
22
29
6
21
24
7
12
151

�BEST BULLS FOR 1968
RICHARD ASHLEY, Split End
Senior,21, 6-1, 201, M assena, N.Y.
Injured early last year and out for the entire season, Dick
hopes to make up for lost time in '68. Chuck Drankoski, who
filled in for him last season, turned in a record-breaking performance. The hing that was most uncomfortable for Ashley
was that the records broken were his own . His knee completely
healed, Dick should shine this senior season. He holds the career
TD pass record at 11 and put a new high out of reach. He has
760 yds. for two years of receiving, just 29 short of the career
record. Ashley is a strong competitor with all of the equipment.
He can play either split or tight end. After a great schoolboy
career in northern New York at Massena High, Dick hit a high
stride immediately with the Bulls and could be regionally honored this fall. He set receving records as a sophomore. His
exceptional blocking ability makes him even more valuable. Also owns TD passes in
agame(3)andseason (7).Hasscored74 points over two seasons. Would like a career
in coaching. Major- Physical Education .
Buffalo Varsity Record: 1965 -Caught 17 for 349 yds., 7 TO 's
1966- Caught 30 for 411 yds., 4 TO's

SCOTT CLARK, Linebacker
Junior, 21, 6-0, 212, Coshocton, Ohio
Scott started his varsity career out of position at offensive
tackle as a sophomore, but is now assigned to a more normal
spot on defense. Clark, a heavy-hitter, is equally effect ive against
the pass as he is against the run. He is a consistent player who
can be counted upon every Saturday afternoon . H.e is a dedicated football player. Clark can truely be termed an outstanding
lineman. He comes off an extremely fine spring session. At
Coshocton High Scott played under Bull Coach jerry lppoliti .
Major- Libera I Arts.

CHARLES DRANKOSKI, Wingback
Senior, 21 , 6-1 , 183, Endwell, N.Y.
Chuck played the split end position for the injured Ashley
in '67 and had a time of it smashing three records - most receptions in a season (3 7) and most yards in a season (439).
Against BC he caught nine passes, a game record, for 103 yards.
The wingback or flankerback is a favorite target in the Urich
attack and Drankoski should be busy this fall. Chuck is used on
punt returns and returned 12 for 105 yds.last year. He has good
speed and hands. A graduate of Maine-Endwel l High where
he was a quarterback, he was at first a halfback at U/ B before
the change to the specialist role. Success could rest with his
fine touch and ability to motor after he receives the ball. MajorPhysical Education.
Buffalo Varsity Record: 1966- Caught 5 for 84 yds., 2 TD 's
1967- Caught 37 for 439 yds., 3 TO's

-24-

�ROBERT EMBOW, Specialist
Senior,20, 6-0,210, Hamburg, N.Y.
For two seasons the U/ B kicking game has been capably handled
by Bob. Embow is not a long-range kicker, but his work at the
closer distances is on the dime. As a soph he had a perfect
PAT record and was fifth in scoring. In 1967 he converted 14
times and set a season field goal record at six . He has a career
FG mark of seven and could stretch this specialty out for reach
this year. Bob graduated from Hamburg High where he played
end. A shoulder injury limited his play and he turned to the
specialist role. Third in scoring last season, Embow was six for
nine in the field goal department to help his 32-point total.
Major- History.
Buffalo Varsity Record: 1966 - 17 lor 17 PAT's, 1 for 2 FG' s, 20 pts.
1967- 14 for 18 PAT's, 6 for 9 FG's, 32 pts.
GARY GRUBBS, Defensive Halfback
Junior, 20, 5-9, 175, Coshocton, Ohio
Gary sustained a knee injury last season and a summer operation was slated to end the problem. One of his first major
assignments will be to hold off challenging soph Len Nixon.
Grubbs went to Coshocton High with Clark and came to the
Bulls under Coach lppoliti. Reads plays well and a hard-hitter.
Major- Physical Education.

PRENTIS HENLEY, Defensive End
Junior,21, 6-1,205, Buffalo, N.Y.
Prentis, a hard worker with excellent speed and mobility,
could grab a starting assignment early. His greatest asset is his
agility and strength in playing off blockers. A graduate of South
Park High, he was all-&lt;:ity in football. The coaching staff is very
impressed with his development on defense. Major -Physical
Education .

RICHARD HORN, Defensive Back
Junior,21, 6-1,188, Dover, Ohio
Dick was marked as the No. 1 safety on the pre-season depth
chart. The defensive secondary was hit hard on occasions last
year and the staff will be anxious to test sophomores in lieu of
more game experienced upperclassmen, and Horn must hustle
to fill the bill. His fine speed is his best trademark. Major E-ng I ish.

PAUL JACK, Specialist
Junior, 20, 6-0, 178, Springdale, Pa.
Paul was the Bull punter last season and is slated to fill the
same assignment in '68. Jack boots a "high" ball in lieu of
distance and the opposition was able to return just 26 of 57
punts for an average of 10.9 yards. None of his kicks were
returned for scores. Paul played his high school football at
Springdale High. Capable replacement at defensive halfback and
also plays quarterback. Major- Chemistry.
Buffalo Varsity Record: 1967- Punt 57 for 1972 yds., 34.6 avg.

-25-

�THOMAS KOWALEWSKI, Guard
Senior,21, 5-11,21 0, Det roit, M ich.
Tom was a linebacker as a sophomore and then sw itched to
his guard position as a jun ior and has lettered at bot h spots. He
went to DeLaSalle High in Detroit before enrol ling at U/ B
where he starred in two sports and was defensive captain. He
was all-central d ivision, A ll-East Side and all-state honorable
mention . Like other upperclassmen, Kowalewsk i wi ll have to
utilize his experience to stave off sopho more challengers for
starting roles. Good-natu red with a large store of humor. Excellent student. Major- Business Administration .

PAUL LANG, Tight End
Junior, 21 , 6-0, 210, It haca, N.Y.
Pound-for-pound Pau l is regarded by the coaching staff as
the best all-round footba ll player on the Bull roste r for ' 68. Lang
lettered last season as a sophomore and is counted on to continue his development as a skilled pass-catcher. He is an outstanding blocker. Good speed. He started his at hlet ic career at
ltbaca High and won regional honors as a schoo lboy standout.
The passing game is an important part of the Urich attack and
Lang could be a major part of its success this season . Classmate
Terry Endress is slated to back him up at the positio n. Endress
also lettered in ' 67 . Lang placed 2nd in the 4-1 wrest li ng invitational at 191 and helped U/ B to a fine 8-3 dual match record .
Pitched on the varsi ty baseball team last spring and lettered.
Major- Liberal Arts.
Buffalo Varsity Record : 1967- Caught 11 , 175 yards, 1 TD.

MICHAEL LUZNY, Linebacker
Junior, 21 , 5-9, 209, South Bend, Ind.
Mike immediately showed his wares as a sophomore and was
named to the AII-ECAC Team. He was a guard on the ECAC
selections and was second team AP All-East at linebacker. Luzny
was nominated for AP Lineman of the Week after his brilliant
game against BC. He made the weekly ECAC charts five times,
and was an AP All-America honorable ment ion . His personal
awards file should grow considerably this fall. He hits like a
250 pounder and moves like a halfback. A knee inj ury in the
spring game required an operation, but he shou ld be ready to
go full tilt by the time of the September 14 opener at Iowa
State. Luzny started his gridin5n· career at St. · Joseph's High
and was a much sought after schoolboy performer. An AllAmerica possibility. Headups and smart all the way. Calls defensive signals. Major- History.

MICHAEL MASER, Guard
Senior,21, 5 ·11 , 214, Clayton, N.Y.
One of the consistent players on the Bull Squad, Mike has
lettered twice in the U/ B line and was a ' 67 starter. Good
speed. He has excellent physical attributes and is slated for a
fine senior season . Starting his gridiron career at Clayton High,
he has definite plans for a future in coaching. Junior E. Jon Spencer is his backup in the pre-season two-deep. Maser is one of
the proven talents in the interior line, which could feature a
number of new faces this year. Sophomores will be battling for
slots that carry little experience, but Mike's determination will
be hard to overcome. Major- Physical Education.
-26-

�DENNIS MASON, Quarterback
Senior,21, 5·11, 188, Buffalo, N.Y.
Denny has worked in reserve of Mark Murtha for two years,
but may claim the No. 1 chair in ' 68 should Mick's health
remain in doubt. Mason has the ability to move the club on
the ground and through the air, however, he has not had a
consistent time schedule in which to operate. A local product
from Bishop Fallon High, he saw limited service as a soph, but
became more involved as a junior completing better than 50%
of his passes. His leadership and competitive attitude will be
valuable to the Bulls this fall. A good scrambler, he has fair
speed. Ripped off 74-yard TD run in the mud against Colgate
in '67 -longest run from scrimmage during the season. Major Philosophy.
Buffalo Varsity Record: 1966 ·Passed 3 for 5 for B2 yards, 1 TD
1967 ·Passed 25 for 46 for 272 yards, 4 TD 's
THOMAS MURPHY, Defensive End
Senior, 22, 6-0, 192, johnstown, Pa.
Tom started in ' 67 and his fierce competitiveness will serve
him well again in ' 6B. He played his high school football at
Westmont High and started to get his Irish up early in his
career. The coaching staff likes his eagerness which spreads
through the ranks. He has lettered mates Bob Kovey and John
Przybycien to work with . junior Prentis Henley has to be reckon·
ed with on the left side. Buffalo's defense against rushing was
solid last season, much of the heavy load carried by Murphy.
He plays the game with gusto. Major- History.
MARK MURTHA, Quarterback
Senior, 21 , 5-11, 176, Endicott, N.Y.
Buffalo's o. 1 QB has been associated with a certain degree
of mystery since the conclusion of the 1967 season. Mark, a
baseball shortstop, did not play last spring due to an arm in·
j ury. His football career is questionable until it can be establish·
ed whether he has fully mended. U/ B's offensive success hangs
in the balance. A former two-sport star at Union-Endicott High
where he was all-conference and led his team to a Southern
Tier Championship, Murtha holds the career yardage record
with 2169 yards and still a season to up the ante. He also holds
U/ B' s highs for attempts (210) and completions (84) for a sea·
son. He has 11 career TD tosses. Excellent range and crisp and
accurate for the short routes. Fastest back on the squad. MajorBusiness Administration .
Buffalo Varsity Record: 1966 ·Passed 84 for 210, 1241 yds., 7 TD 's
1967 ·Passed 72 for 171 , 927 yds., 4 TD 's
PATRICK PAHERSON, Tailback
junior,20, 5·11, 191, Ambridge, Pa.
Pat could be on his way to a U/ B career rushing record.
Last fall he set a season mark of 666. Following his sensational
soph year, Patterson is a key to make the offense click. He
blocks well, is tough and has great balance. Honored as a
schoolboy star at Ambridge High, he joined the U/B program
with a bang. Patterson has all the qualities required for his
position . He and Rutkowski shared the assignment in '67. Pat
with eight TD's was second in scoring. He is a good receiver
and returns kickoffs - 11 for 256 yds. He scored the only TD
in a 6-0 win over BU last year. One of his best games came
against Delaware when he rushed 22 for 122 yards and scored
twice. Against Colgate he went 13 times for 102 yds. in the
mud and tallied twice. Major- Liberal Arts.
ButfaloVarsity Record: 1967 ·Rush 144,666 yds., 4.7 avg., 7 TD's
Caught 13, 124 yds., 1 TD

-27-

�KENNETH RUTKOWSKI, Tailb ack
Senior, 20, 5·9, 18 0, Ton awa nd a, N.Y.
Ken, a transfer from Hobart, made a classy debut on the
varsi ty as a junior. Rutkowski has combined an outstanding
football-baseball reputation with the Bulls. A break-away runner
and a threat to bust a game wide open, he is also an adept
receiver. Ken can make the Urich offense go. He had the third
best rusher summary for ' 67, and is also available for returning
kickoffs. As a junior he returned nine for 216 yards. Ken can
throw the ball and may do so this season . A crafty little pitcher,
Rutkowski posted a 0.53 ERA in varsity baseball last spring, third
best mark in the nation ( CSS College Division). He had a 6-2
record , striking out 52 in 51 innings. Ken was active on the
mound last summer, hurling for the local Town Boys' Club nine,
and pitched his team to a regional championship. A Dean's
List student, Rutkowski would like to enter the business field .
Major- Liberal Arts.
Buffalo Varsity Record : 1966- f\ush 8, 44 yds., 5 .5 avg.
Caught 1, 34 yds.
1967 - Rush 88, 458 yds., 5.1 avg.
Caught 9, 110 yds.

DONALD SABO, Linebacker
Senior,21, 5-10, 210, Johnstown, Pa.
Don is one of four lettered backers returning for ' 68. He and
Luzny will open the year at the inside positions. Short for a
backer, he covers ground well. Very quick. Good hitter. A
graduate of Bishop McCort High, he will be pressed for a
starting call again from crack soph Ed Kershaw. Sabo is from
the same high school as former record-holder John Stofa, now
with the Bengals. Major - History.

DANIEL WALGATE, Defensive Tackle
Junior, 20, 6-2 , 255, Grand Island, N.Y.
Dan is a bulky tackle with pro potential and has already at·
tracted notable attention. Especially quick, his play is consistent
and steady and he turned in an excellent spring. Despite his
size he is one of the quickest defenders on the club. Came
back from a broken ankle as a freshman in the 1967 spring
session. Another local athlete with a reputable high school background, Walgate could continue to develop as one of the great
modern lineman in U/ B history. He graduated from Grand
Island High before joining the Bulls. He wrestles in the varsity
mat program and while in high school finished second in the
state heavyweight division . Before the season is very old Dan
should be in the thick of the regional race for lineman honors.
Major- Physical Education .

JOHN WESOLOWSKI, Center
Senior, 22, 5-11 , 214, Cheektowaga, N.Y.
John has started at center for the Bulls for two seasons and
is well-schooled at the position with potential to better his
skills even more as a senior. At Cleveland Hill High locally he
played three sports and was all-conference and All-Western
ew York at center and was a team captain two years. He will
be pressed by Joe Hudson and Chuck Donnor, fine-looki ng
soph prospects. Wesolowski is especially consistent with his
snapbacks. He was the 1965 Freshman MVP Lineman. Major History.

-28-

�SOPHOMORES TO WATCH
THOMAS CENTOFANTI, Ta ckl e
19,6-0, 21 0, Niagara Falls, N.Y.
A local product with skilled athletic background under Coach
Richard Condino, Tom is fast, strong, powerful and has advanced
technique for a sophomore lineman. He will be pushing upperclassmen for a two-deep assignment and following the spring
workouts was listed No. 1 at right tackle. At Bishop Duffy High
he lettered in football , basketball and track. On the gridiron he
was a guard and linebacker and received regional recognition
for his play . He has a good sporting cast, too, a brother and
three sisters. Fine varsity potential. Career- Physical Education.
CHARLES DONNOR, Cente r, 19,6-1, 195, East Aurora , N.Y.
Chuck played fullback at East Aurora High, was stationed at end in the Bull freshman program and moves to center this year. Smart, coachable and determined to learn
his new position he should adjust quickly . As a scholastic athlete he lettered in
football , basketball and baseball. He was all-division on the gridiron and also played
linebacker and some quarterback . Not exactly a darkhorsecandidate, he will be a keen
competitor tor a starting call. Career- Physical Education .
JERRY ELWELL, Guard, 2 0, 6-0, 208, Rochester, N.Y.
jerry played guard for the 1966 Frosh team, but due to InJUry was not available
for his varsity debut last season . He is ready now and brings ample qualifications to
the offensive line . He is extremely quick and strong. Played his high school ball at
Cardinal Mooney. Elwell will be particularly difficult to keep out of the line-up.
Career- Undecided .
JOHN FALLER, Tailback, 19,5 -11, 178, Rochester, N.Y.
Back with fine potential off a good freshmen season, John has good - excellent
speed and ability . Balance is one of his key assets . His blocking needs refining and
with development he could establish an outstanding career. At Greece-Arcadia High
he competed in three sports - football , basketba II, and track . He was all-county two
seasons on the gridiron as a back and linebacker and defensive halfback. He was
also all-county in track . As a senior Faller carried 165 times for 1164 yards, a 7.1
average. He has two younger sisters and two younger brothers. Career - Business.
JOSEPH HUDSON, Center
19, 6-1 , 240, New City, N.Y.
Joe has all of the qualifications to develop into one of the
Bulls' best, modern linemen. A consistent performer, he played
fullback and center during the spring session . He has the biggest
physical qualifications at the position . Hudson ' s prep career at
Cheshire Academ y was rewarding . On offense he played halfback and guard . At the outset a fullback in the U/ B program
he switched to center. Ability to adapt to a number of positions
on both offense and defense. Has excellent mobility and speed .
Won five letters in two sports at Cheshire and was All-New
England Prep, All-Rockland County in football. Career- Business.

LEONARD NIXON, Defensive Halfba ck
19,5 -11, 180, Cleveland, Oh io
Another rare sophomore listed in the pre-season two-deep
depth, Len is a student of the game and loves the contact
football offers. His enthusiasm for football spreads to his teammates. He is quick and likes to batter. Nixon was a honored
athlete at St. Joseph's High and won many awards as a crack
schoolboy athlete. Devoted in all he challenges, Len attended
first term summer school and spent the remainder of the summer recess in Cleveland . Career- Undecided .

-29-

�EDWARD PERRY, Quarterback, 19, 6-3, 205, Delmar, N.Y.
Ed handled the major share of the signal-calling for the '67 freshmen and he has
the qualifications to continue a glossy career on the varsity level. Perry has a strong
arm and fires on the mark. He is rugged, a leader, competitive and possesses good
dropback talent. At Bethlehem Central he played quarterback and defensive end and
linebacker. He played three seasons of high school football , two years of basketball,
three years of baseball and one season of lacrosse. His awards were numero us - allstate football honorable mention twice, all-district basketball twice, al l-state baseball
honorable mention and was named Area Athlete of the Year. He threw 67 for 108
for 13 TD's as a senior. Scored nine TD's rushing. Career- Physical Education.

KARL ZALAR, Defensive Halfback
19,6-0, 180, Tiffin, Ohio
An active scholastic athlete, Karl was quick to ga in attention
in the U/B football program. He is a rare soph listed in the preseason two-deep depth chart of Coach Urich. Zalar earned nine
letters, football (2), basketball (3) and Baseball (4) at Calvert
High. In football offensively he played quarterback, halfback and
fullback. On defense he split time between cornerback and
safety. Karl has an opportunity to step up the Bul l secondary
in an area that lacks overall experience. Career- Education.

JOSEPH ZELMAN SKI, Fullback, 19, 6-1, 185, Centerline, Michigan
A back with excellent ability, Joe had the best hands on the freshman team in
'67. Originally a split end in the program, he was moved to fullback last spring and
is the pre-season o. 2 fullback. He could develop into one of the University's real
big names in the game. Still growing, he has good speed and excellent potential. At
St. Clement High Zelmanski played end, fullback and halfback on offense and was a
linebacker on defense. He won ten letters in footba ll, basketball and baseball. His
scholastic football summary includes all-league, All-Parochial, all-county and all-state
honorable mention. In basketball he was all-league, all-county and all-state honorable
mention. As a senior he carried 90 times for 900 yards. He also punted and placekicked in high school. The Zelmanski family includes five boys and f ive girls. Career- Physical Education.

FRANCIS WELK, Head Varsity Manager
Junior, Clarence, N.Y.
Fran returns for his third season of managerial duties this
fall. He joined the football program as a freshman and has been
a valuable part of the Bulls' recent success on the gridiron.
Like many of the athletes at the University, Welk is a local
native. He graduated from St. Joseph's Collegiate Instit ute where
he managed four sports- football, basketball, cross-country and
track. He is interested in the care and prevention of athletic
injuries and would like to enter the medica l profession. His
chief assistant will be sophomore Allen Wright, MI. Vernon,
.Y. A history major, Wright managed the ' 67 U/ B freshman
team. Major- Physical Therapy.

-30-

�ALPHABETICAL ROSTER
NO.

NAME

57
87
79
78
53
25
60
73

ALBANEZE, Dennis
ASHLEY, Richard
ATKINSON, Barry
BECK, Russell
BEINING, David
BELL, Harry
CARNEY, Patrick
CENTOFANTI, Thomas

POS.

c..
SE
T
DT
G

T
FB

72

EVERETT, William

49

FALLER, john

TB

FORNESS, Charles

DT

31
46
45
68
90
30
48
29
54
17
26
88
39
23
83
62
85
66
34

DONNOR, Charles
DRANKOSKI, Charles

LB
LB

c
WB

ELLIOTT, Thomas

s

ELWELL, Jerry

G

EM BOW, Robert

K

ENDRESS, Terrence

TE
T

FRANCIS, Ronald

LB

GOECKEL, David

DE

GRUBBS, Gary
HAYDEN, William

DHB
G

HENLEY, Prentis

DE

HERNQUIST, Gene
HLAVENKA, joseph

LB

HORN, Richard
HUDSON, joseph
JACK, Paul
JACOBS, joel

37
59

MCCULLOUGH, Steven

G

CHAPP, Gary
CLARK, Scott

MARICLE, Donald

WB

38
56
65
58
44
40
61
16
82

CHERNEGA, David

71
15
64
19

SE

s
c
p
DHB

JAMES, Michael

TE

KERSHAW, Edward

LB

KISH, Nicholas

DHB

KOVEY, Robert

DE

51
10
50
81
67
14
42
89
20
11
84
76
75
32
74
21
41
69
80
47
63
12
86
70
55
52
77
36

T

MARTIN, Daniel

DHB

MASER, M1chael

G

MASON, Dennis

QB
LB

MIHALE, Dennis

LB

MINCH, Bernard

DT

MILARSKI, Thomas

DT

MOLER, Robert

DT

MORESCO, Joseph

QB

MOSHER, James

LB

MURPHY, Thomas

DE

MURPHY, William

T

MURTHA, Mark
NIXON, Leonard

QB
DHB

O'LAUGHLIN, Mark

TE

PAHERSON, Patrick

TB

PERRY, Edward

QB

PRZYBYCIEN, john

DE

REID, Frank

T

RICCELLI, Joseph

DT

RICHNER, David

LB

RIO, john
RUTKOWSKI, Kenneth
RYAN, Anthony

T
TB
DHB

SABO, Donald

LB

SHARROW, Michael

SE

SHINE, john

SE

SPENCER, E. jon

G

STISCAK, Robert

DHB

VIGNEAU, Thomas

DE

WALGATE, Daniel

DT

WALTERS, Greg

G

WESOLOWSKI, john

c

WOLF, Chris
WOODWARD, Barney
YAKAPOVICH, Paul

T
FB
G

KOWALEWSKI, Thomas

G

LANG, Paul

TE

24

ZALAR, Karl

LUPIENSKI, john

LB

FB

LB

33
35

ZEEK, john

LUZNY, Michael

ZELMANSKI, joseph

FB

-31-

DHB

�1968 BUFFALO f(
No.

Player

ENDS
HENLEY, Prentis
90
89
#O'LAUGHLIN, Mark
#JAMES, Michael
88
87
• • ASHLEY, Richard

Pos.

Class

Major

DE
TE
TE
SE

Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.

P.E.
Eng.
L.A.
P.E.

TENTATIVE BUFFA
FOR

Offensive T
I

~I

Tight End
85 *Paul Lang (Jr.)
82 •Terry Endress (Jr.)

Left Tackle
77 *Chris Wolf (Jr.)
76 Frank Reid (Jr.)

Left Guard
64 • • Mike Maser (Sr.)
63 Jon Spencer (Jr.)

52
54

I

Flankerback
44* *Chuck Drankoski (Sr.)
25 Harry Bell (Jr.)

Fullback
38 Gary Chapp (Jr.)
35 #Joe Zelmanski (So.)

Qu,
14 ·Mi
19 *Den

Defensive 1
Left End
81 *Tom Murphy (Sr.)
90 Prentis Henley (Jr.)

Left Tackle
70 • Dan Walgate (Jr.)
79 #Barry Atkinson (So.)

Outside Left
65 •scott Clark (Jr.)
so• •Jim Mosher (Sr.)

Inside Left
69 *DonSabo(Sr.)
39 #Ed Kershaw (So.)

Left Halfback
23 Nick Kish (Sr.)
24 #Karl Zalar (So.)

Safe
29 *Dick
40 Tom

Speciali,
16**Bob Em
17 *PauiJac

i

j

•varsity Letters (12 offense)
( 13 defense)

�OOTBALL ROSTER
Age

},;
19
21

Ht.

Wt.

School

Hometown

6·1
6-2
6-7
6-1

205
210
210
201

South Park H. S.
Univ. of Detroit H.S.
Penn Hills H.S.
Massena H.S.

Buffalo, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Massena, N.Y.

..

LO DEPTH CHART

1968
Team (Pro I)
Center
2 • • John Wesolowski (Sr.)
4 #joe Hudson (So.)

puarterback
~ick Murtha (Sr.)
enny Mason (Sr.)

Right Guard
62* •Tom Kowalewski (Sr.)
68 Bill Hayden (Sr.)

Tailback
21 *Ken Rutkowski (Sr.)
20 • Pat Patterson (Jr.)

Right Tackle
73 #Tom Centofanti (So.)
74 #john Rio (So.)

Split End
87**Dick Ashley (Sr.)
47 #John Shine (So.)

Team (4-4-3)
Right Tackle
78 Russ Beck (Jr.)
75* • joe Riccelli (Sr.)

Inside Right
34 • Mike Luzny (Jr.)
66* • john Lupienski (Sr.)

ety
k Horn (Jr.)
m Elliott (So.)

Right End
83 *Bob Kovey (Jr.)
84** john Przybycien (Sr.)

Outside Right
32 • • Dave Richner (Sr.)
59 Denny Mihale (Jr.)

Right Halfback
45 *Gary Grubbs (Jr.)
42 #Len Nixon (So.)

a lists
mbow (Sr.) kicker
ack (Jr.) punter

#Freshman Numerals (5 offense)
(4 defense)

�1968 BUFFALO FOOTBALL ROSTER
Ht.

WI.

School

Hometown

19
21
19
21
20
20
20
22
19
19
19
19

6-1
6-2
6-7
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-4

205
210
210
201
204
210
200
202
202
192
190
185
180
195

South Park H. S.
Univ. of Detroit H.S.
Penn Hills H.S.
Massena H.S.
St. Clement H.S.
Ithaca H.S.
Univ. of Detroit H.S.
Cardinal Mooney H.S.
St. Vincent's H.S.
Westmont H.S.
Moriah Central H.S.
Niagara Falls H.S.
Bishop Walsh H.S.
Baldwinsville Acad.

Buffalo, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Massena, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Youngstown, Ohio
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Johnstown, Pa.
Witherbee, N·.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Olean, N.Y.
Baldwinsville, N.Y.

P.E.
L.A.
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
Bus.
P.E.
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
Bus.
P.E.
L.A.
L.A.
L.A.

19
19
20
22
21
19
19
19
21
20
19
21
19
19
20

6-4
6-3
6-3
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-3
6-0
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-1

240
232
220
217
242
232
210
205
224
255
230
226
280
250
220

East Dear-Frazer H.S.
Cathedral H.S.
Solon H.S.
Fisher Park H.S.
Henmger H.S.
St. Mary's H.S.
B1shop Duffy H.S.
Rippowam H.S.
Ithaca H.S.
Grand Island H.S.
Bishop Duffy H.S.
Orchard Park H.S.
R1verside H.S.
North Hill H.S.
Notre Dame H.S.

Tarentum, Pa.
Indianapolis, lnd
Solon, Ohio
Ottawa, Ont.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Byrnedale, Pa.
Niagara Fa lis, N.Y.
Stamford, Conn.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Grand Island, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Orchard Park, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Elmira, N.Y.

Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
So ph.
Jr.

His.
P.E.
L.A.
Bus.
L.A.
L.A.
P.E.
P.E.
L.A.

21
21
21
21
20
20
19
19
20

5-10
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-1
5-10

213
214
213
210
208
200
212
205
207

Cathedral Latin H.S.
Clayton H.S.
Scollard H.S.
DeLaSalle H.S.
Cardinal Mooney H.S.
New Kensington H.S.
Kenmore East H.S.
St. Mary's H.S.
Kenmore West H.S.

Cleveland, Ohio
Clayton, N.Y.
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.
Detroit, Mich.
Rochester, N.Y.
New Kensington, Pa.
Kenmore, N.Y.
St. Mary's, Ohio
Kenmore, N.Y.

LB
LB
LB
LB
LB
LB
LB
LB
LB
LB
LB
LB

Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
So ph.

His.
Math.
L.A.
Eng.
P.E.
His.
L.A.
L.A.
His.
His.
Bus.
L.A.

21
21
21
22
21
21
19
20
21
21
19
19

5-10
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-2
5-10
5-9
5-11
5-11
5-9

210
210
212
214
187
212
195
201
209
197
185
190

Bishop McCort H.S.
Springdale H.S.
Coshocton H.S.
Stuyvesant H.S.
Union-Endicott H.S.
Central Islip H.S.
Elyria H.S.
Coshocton H.S.
St. joseph's H.S.
Bemus Point H.S.
Notre Dame H.S.
Olean H.S.

Johnstown, Pa.
Springdale, Pa.
Coshocton, Ohio
New York City
Endicott, N.Y.
Central Islip, N.Y.
Elyria, Ohio
Coshocton, Ohio
South Bend, Ind.
Greenhurst, N.Y.
Batavia, N.Y.
Olean, N.Y.

58
57
54
52

CENTERS
#DONNOR, Charles
#ALBANEZE, Dennis
#HUDSON, Joseph
• *WESOLOWSKI, John

c
c
c
c

Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.

P.E.
L.A.
His.
His.

19
19
19
22

6-1
6-3
6-0
5-11

195
205
240
214

East Aurora H.S.
Stuyvesant H.S.
Cheshire Acad.
Cleveland Hill H.S.

East Aurora, N.Y.
Elmhurst, N.Y.
New City, N.Y.
Cheektowaga, N.Y.

OFFENSIVE BACKS
#FALLER, John
• *DRANKOSKI, Charles
CHAPP, Gary
#WOODWARD, Barney
#ZELMANSKI, Joseph
#ZEEK. John
BELL, Harry
• RUTKOWSKI, Kenneth
• PATTERSON, Patrick
*MASON, Dennis
**MURTHA, Mark
#PERRY, Edward
#MORESCO, Joseph

TB
WB
FB
FB
FB
FB
WB
TB
TB
QB
QB
QB
QB

Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So ph.
Sop h.

P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
P.E.
L.A.
Bus.
L.A.
Phil.
Bus.
P.E.
Bus.

19
21
20
19
19
19
22
20
20
21
21
19
19

5-11
6-1
S-8
5-9
6-1
5-11
5-10
5-9
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-3
6-2

178
183
200
190
185
190
180
180
191
188
176
205
175

Greece-Arcadia H.S.
Maine-Endwell H.S.
St. Clement H.S.
Peru H.S.
St. Clement H.S.
Berwick H.S.
Potsdam H.S.
Kenmore East H.S.
Ambridge H.S.
Bishop Fallon H.S.
Union-Endicott H.S.
Bethlehem Centra I
Ithaca H.S.

Rochester, N.Y.
Endwell, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Peru, N.Y.
Centerline, Mich.
Berwick. Pa.
Potsdam, N.Y.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Ambridge, Pa.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Endicott, N.Y.
Delmar, N.Y.
Ithaca, N.Y.

HB
HB
HB

P.E.
P.E
L.A.
Bus.
Eng.
L.A.
P.E.
His.
His.
L.A.

20
19
20
19
21
19
19
21
21
19

5-9
5-11
5-9
5-11
6-1
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-11

175
180
182
175
188
179
180
198
187
185

Coshocton H.S.
St. Joseph's H.S.
LaSalle Institute
Canandaigua H.S.
Dover H.S.
East Rockaway H.S.
Clavert H.S.
Amherst H.S.
Huntington H.S.
Aliquippa H.S.

Coshocton, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Troy, N.Y.
Canandaigua, N.Y.
Dover, Ohio
East Rockaway, N.Y.
T1ffin, Ohio
Buffalo, N.Y.
Huntington, N.Y.
Aliquippa, Pa.

Chem.
His.

20
20

6-0
6-0

178
210

Springdale H.S.
Hamburg H.S.

Springdale, Pa.
Hamburg, N.Y.

Player

Pos.

Class

Major

HENLEY, Prentis
#O'LAUGHLIN, Mark
#JAMES, Michael
**ASHLEY, Richard
#VIGNEAU, Thomas
*LANG, Paul
• • PRZYBYCIEN, John
• KOVEY, Robert
• ENDRESS, Terrence
*MURPHY, Thomas
SHARROW, Michael
HLAVENKA, JOSEPH
#SHINE, John
#GOECKEL, David

DE
TE
TE
SE
DE
TE
DE
DE
TE
DE
SE
SE
SE
DE

Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.

P.E.
Eng.
L.A.
P.E.
P.E.
L.A.
Bus.
L.A.
Bus.
His.
P.E.
LA
L.A.
L.A.

T
DT
T
T
DT
T
T
T
T
DT
T
DT
DT
DT
DT

Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
So ph.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.

HAYDEN, William
**MASER. Michael
SPENCER, E. Jon
• *KOWALEWSKI, Thomas
ELWELL, Jerry
CARNEY, Patrick
WALTERS, Greg
#SEINING, David
YAKAPOVICH, Paul

G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G

LINEBACKERS
*SABO, Donald
69
• • LUPIENSKI, John
66
*CLARK, Scott
65
MIHALE, Dennis
59
CHERNEGA, David
56
**MOSHER, James
#KERSHAW, Edward
39
McCULLOUGH, Steven
37
*LUZNY, Michael
34
• • RICHNER, David
32
31
#FRANCIS, Ronald
#HERNQUIST, Eugene
30

No.
ENDS

90
89
88
87
86
85
84
83
82
81
80
48
47
46

TACKLES
#ATKINSON, Barry
79
BECK, Russell
78
*WOLF, Chris
77
REID, Frank
76
• • RICCELLI, Joseph
75
#RIO, John
74
#CENTOFANTI, Thomas
73
#EVERETT, William
72
MARICLE, Donald
71
*WALGATE, Daniel
70
#MURPHY, William
67
MOLER, Robert
51
FORNESS, Charles
#MILARSKI, Thomas
MINCH, Bernard

Age

1;

GUARDS

68
64
63
62
61
60
55
53

so

49
44
38
36
35
33
25
21
20
19
14
11
10
45
42
41
40
29
26
24
23
15
12

DEFENSIVE BACKS
GRUBBS, Gary
#NIXON, Leonard
RYAN, Anthony
ELLIOTT, Thomas
• HORN, Richard
JACOBS, joel
#ZALAR, Karl
KISH, Nicholas
MARTIN, Daniel
#STISCAK, Robert

HB
HB
HB
HB
HB

Jr.
So ph.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
So ph.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
So ph.

SPECIALISTS
17
*JACK, Paul
16
• • EMBOW, Robert

p
K

Jr.
Sr.

•varsity Letter (27)

s
s

#Freshman Numerals (27)

�NUMERICAL ROSTER

I
I
I

I

I
I

NO.

NAME

10
11
12
14
15
16
17
19
20
21
23
24
25
26
29
30
31
32

MORESCO, Joseph

33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54

PERRY, Edward
STISCAK, Robert

POS.
QB
QB
DHB

MURTHA, Mark

QB

MARTIN, Daniel

DHB

EMBOW, Robert

K
p

JACK, Paul
MASON, Dennis

QB

PAHERSON, Patrick

TB

RUTKOWSKI, Kenneth

TB

KISH, Nicholas

DHB

ZALAR, Karl

DHB

BELL, Harry

WB

JACOBS, Joel
HORN, Richard

DHB

s

HERNQUIST, Eugene

LB

FRANCIS, Ronald

LB

RICHNER, David

LB

ZEEK, john

FB

LUZNY, Michael

LB

ZELMANSKI, Joseph

FB

WOODWARD, Barney

FB

MCCULLOUGH, Steven

LB

CHAPP, Gary

FB

KERSHAW, Edward

LB

ELLIOTT, Thomas

s

RYAN, Anthony

DHB

NIXON, Leonard

DHB

DRANKOSKI, Charles
GRUBBS, Gary
GOECKEL, David

WB
DHB
DE

SHINE, John

SE

HLAVENKA, Joseph

SE

FALLER, john

TB

MOSHER, James

LB

MOLER, Robert

55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

WALTERS, Greg

G

CHERNEGA, David

LB

ALBANEZE, Dennis

c
c

DONNOR, Charles
MIHALE, Dennis

LB

CARNEY, Patrick

G

ELWELL, jerry

G

KOWALEWSKI, Thomas

G

SPENCER, E. Jon

G

MASER, Michael

G

CLARK, Scott

LB

LUPIENSKI, John

LB

MURPHY, William

T

HAYDEN, William

G

SABO, Donald

LB

WALGATE, David

DT

MARICLE, Donald

T

EVERETT, William

T

CENTOFANTI, Thomas

T

RIO, John

T

RICCELLI, joseph

DT

REID, Frank

T

WOLF, Chris

T

BECK, Russell
ATKINSON, Barry

DT
T

SHARROW, Michael

SE

MURPHY, Thomas

DE

ENDRESS, Terrence

TE

KOVEY, Robert

DE

PRZYBYCIEN, John

DE

LANG, Paul

TE

VIGNEAU, Thomas

DE

ASHLEY, Richard

SE

JAMES, Michael

TE

O'LAUGHLIN, Mark

TE

HENLEY, Prentis

DE
DT

DT

FORNESS, Charles

WESOLOWSKI, John

c

MILARSKI, Thomas

DT

SEINING, David

G

MINCH, Bernard

DT

HUDSON, joseph

c

YAKAPOVICH, Paul

-34-

G

�------

----

GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF
SQUAD BY STATES
iagara Falls- William Murphy
joseph Hlavenka
Thomas Centafonti
Olean- Gene Hernquist
John Shine
Orchard Park- Robert Moler
Peru- Barney Woodward
Potsdam- Harry Bell
Rochester- jerry Elwell
John Faller
Stoney Point -joseph Hudson
Syracuse- joseph Ricce ll i
Tonawanda- Kenneth Rutkowski
Troy- Anthony Ryan
Witherbee- Michael Sha rrow

CONNECTICUT (1)
Stamford- William Everett
INDIANA (2 )
Indianapolis- Russell Beck
South Bend -Michael Luzny
MICHIGAN (6)
Centerline- joseph Zelmanski
Thomas Vigneau
Gary Chapp
Detroi t- Mark O ' Laughlin
john Przybycien
Thomas Kowalewski
NEW YORK (44 )
Baldwinsville- David Goeckel
Batavia- Ronald Francis
Buffalo- Prentis Henley
Charles Forness
Dennis Mason
icholas Kish
Canandaigua- Thomas Elliott
Central Islip- James Mosher
Cheektowaga- John Wesolowski
Clayton- Michael Maser
Delmar- Edward Perry
East Aurora- Charles Don nor
East Rockaway- joel jacobs
Elmhurst- Dennis Albaneze
Elmira- Bernard Minch
Endicott- Mark Murtha
David Chernega
Endwell- Chuck Drankoski
Hamburg- Robert Embow
Huntington- Daniel Martin
Ithaca- Paul Lang
Donald Maricle
joseph Moresco
Grand Island- Daniel Walgate
Greenhurst- David Richner
Kenmore- Greg Walters
Paul Yakapovich
Massena- Richard Ashley
New York City- Dennis Mihale

I

OHI0 (12)
Cleveland- William Hayden
Leonard ixon
Gary Grubbs
Coshocton- Scott Cla rk
Steven McCullo ugh
Cuyahoga Falls- Terrence Endress
Dover- Richard Horn
Elyria- Edward Kershaw
Solon- Chris Wolf
St. Mary' s- David Sein ing
Tiff in- Karl Zalar
Youngstown- Robert Kovey
ONTARIO - CANADA (2)
Ottawa- Frank Reid
Sault Ste. Marie- E. Jon Spencer
PENNSYLVANIA (12)
Aliquippa- Robert Stiscak
Ambridge- Patrick Patterson
Berwick- John Zeek
Byrnedale- John Rio
Johnstown- Thomas Murphy
DonaldSabo
New Kensington- Patric k Carney
Pittsburgh- Mic hael james
Thomas M i larsk i
Springdale- John Lupienski
Paul Jack
Tarentum- Barry Atkinson

1968 PRONOUNCIATION GUIDE
Lupienski (Loo-PIN-skee)
Luzny (LUZZ-nee)
Moresco (Mor-RES-co)
Peelle (PEEL)
Przybycien (PREE-Biss-in)
Riccelli (Riss-EL-ee)
Rutkowski (Rut-COW-skee)
Stiscak (STIS-ack)
Urich (YUR-ick)
Vigneau (VIG-new)
Yakapovich (Ya-ka-PO-vich)
Zalar (ZAL-Iar)

Albaneze (AL-ba-neeze)
Seining (BYE-ning)
Centofanti (CEN-ta-fon-ti)
CHERN EGA (Cher-NAY-ga)
Deming (DEMM-ing)
Drankoski (Dran-COW-skee)
Em bow (EMM-bo)
Geiger (GUY-ger)
Goecke I (GEK-el)
Hlavenka (Ha 1-VANG-ka)
lppoliti (Eye-POL-it-ee)
Kowalewski (Ko-vai-EV-skee)

-35-

��1968 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL ROSTER
NAME
BARTON, Kirk
BAUCH, John
BAUMGARTNER, Brian
BOSARD, Greg
BRANCATO, Joseph
DAVIS, Douglas
DORICH, Paul
DRABINSKI, Walter
FLAM, James
FORTINO, James
FRASER, Bruce
GARZ, Michael
GIACOBELLO, Joseph
GLASS, Arnold
GLOVER, Otis
GRIFFITH, Robert
HAYWARD, Ronald
HART, Lawrence
HU TER, John
HUGHES, Michael
JONES, Clifford
KASSELMAN, Lawrence
KEHR, Paul
KENST, Kenneth
KOZEL, Douglas
KURI , Richard
LA YO, Robert
LEONEITI, Ernest
LIEBMANN, Richard
L1 OSTROM, John
Ll EK, Henry
MACVIITIE, Mark
MADDEN, Lawrence
MAIER, James
MAJCHER, David
MOUZON, Robert
MONTONDO, Richard
PESCRILLO, David
PHILP, Douglas
'PLAWIUK, Russell
POWELL, William
PRYBYLO, Thomas
ROSENAU, Gary
SAVICKAS, Scott
SHERRER, Kenneth
SIEDLECKI, Stanley
SMITH, Philip
SUFFOLEITO, Peter
STAYER, Steven
VANDENBERG, Barry
WAGGONER, Dennis
WAIT, Joseph
WILBURN, Michael
WINNEIT, William
ZELASKO, Gerrald

POS.
QB I DHB
C, TI LB
SEI DE
HBI DHB
QBI DHB
FBI LB
E, TI DE
GI LB
CI LB
FB I LB
SEI DHB

TI DT
GI LB
HBI DHB
HBI DHB
GI LB

TI OT
QBI DHB
GI LB

TI DT
HBI DHB
FB I LB
GI LB
HBI DHB
FBI LB
EI LB
HBI DHB
GI LB
EI DE
GI LB
EI LB
HBI DHB
GI LB
FB I LB
GI LB
HBI DHB
EI DE
C/DT
QBI LB
HBI DHB
HBI DHB
E/DHB
HBI DHB
HBI DHB
FBI LB
EI LB
GI LB
GI LB
EI DE

TI DT
QB I DHB

TI DT
GI LB

TI DT
QBI DHB

HT.

WT.

HOMETOWN

6-2
6·0
6-3
5-9
5-11
6-0
6-3
5-11
6-0
5-11
6-2
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-1
5-10
6-6
6-0
5-10
6-2
5-11
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-8
6-0
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-0
5-9
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-9
5-9
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
6-2
5-10
5-8
6-2
6-4
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-0

188
220
205
175
160
200
193
210
218
202
185
208
205
155
182
202
220
190
188
207
172
175
195
184
188
180
168
230
190
217
195
165
190
182
199
180
200
210
200
180
165
190
195
180
190
180
200
190
192
238
174
260
230
240
174

Endicott, N.Y.
Tallmadge, Ohio
Kenmore, N.Y.
Clarence, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Frewsberg, N.Y.
Erie, Pa.
Lackawanna, N.Y.
Trenton, N.J .
Ticonderoga, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
North Woodmore, N.Y.
Mt. Union, Pa .
Forrest Hills, N.Y.
Buffalo, .Y.
Johnson Ci ty, N.Y.
Niagara Falls, Ont.
Mansfield, Ohio
Newburgh, N.Y.
Orchard Park, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Ellingwood, Kan.
Lancaster, .Y.
Salem, Oh io
Johnson City, N.Y.
Whitestone, N.Y.
Portage, Pa .
West Seneca, N.Y.
Whitestone, N.Y.
Munster, Ind.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Williamsville, N.Y.
Dearborne, Mich .
Massillon, Ohio
johnstown, Pa.
Alden, .Y.
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
iagara Falls, N.Y.
Toronto, Ont.
Ancaster, Ont.
Kenmore, N .Y.
Salamanca, .Y.
North Tonawanda, .Y.
Cleveland, Oh io
Buffalo, N.Y.
Carthage, N.Y.
Ridgeway, Ont.
Lackawanna, N.Y.
Alleganey, N.Y.
Albany, N.Y.
Attica, N.Y.
Orillia, Ont.
Meadeville, Pa .
N. Canton, Ohio
Buffalo, N.Y.

-37-

��1967 IN REVIEW
The Bulls in ' 67 continued their climb for national recognition with gusto. Coach
Urich ' s second club at U/ B had favorable team and individual statistics, plus a 6-4-0
record against a solid schedule of regional opponents.
Urich 's best results came against orth Carolina St., Boston College and Kent St.
There were other victories and other defeats, but games against the Wolfpack, Eagles
and Golden Flashes were most rewarding.
Buffalo' s 30-6 win over Kent at Rotary Field was an excellent introduction to the
1967 season. It was the Bulls' best overall performance from a technical standpoint.
Against CS the Bulls lost 24-6, but piled up a one-sided statistical advantage,
26-11 in first downs and 213 - 70 yards rushing. Inability to score deep in Wolfpack
territory was the story of the contest.
The Bulls ' 26-14 victory at BC was the first for U/ B over the Eagles. U / B had the
best figures rushing and passing as Lee Jones scored three times. Bob Embow had a
good day from the kicking tee, converting three for three and booting a 34-yard
field goal.
Buffalo's biggest scoring explosion came against Temple - 44-14. Six players
scored TO ' s as U/ B contained the Owls on the ground and matched air strikes with
them.
The squeaker of the season was a 6-0 win over BU. Pat Patterson scored in the
first quarter and those were the only points posted all afternoon.
In the rain, hail and snow at Rotary the Bulls capped the campaign with a 31-0
victory over Colgate, Patterson scoring twice. Despite the dampness of the occasion,
Buffalo ran the ball for 300 yards. Embow had another perfect day with four of four
PAT's and a field goal.
The Bulls were disciplined in ' 67. The team was penalized only 25 times for a total
of 216 yards, one of the best records in the nation. The opposition was hit with
twice as much yardage .
Buffalo mixed good offense and defense last season.ln seven of the ten games the
Bulls held the opposition under 100 yards rushing. On the ground the Blue averaged
nearly 200 yards per game.
Rusing and passing records on offense were broken, as well as career marks.
FB jones added 72 points {11th in the country) to his overall total and ended his
career with at174. The former record of 162 was held by Lou Carriere. jones in '66
set a season scoring high of 96 {3rd in the country).
jones also set a career rushing record of 1570 yards. His 495 yards in '67 moved
him over Willie Evans ' 1159 set from 1957-59.
TB Patterson rushed for 666 yards in 144 carries for a single season high. The old
mark at 620 {1959) was held by Evans.
SE Chuck Drankoski broke the single-game reception record with nine catches
against BC. The previous high of seven was held by three players, including team
physician Ed Gicewicz. Drankoski ' s season reception summary of 37 and 439 yards
were records. Dick Ashley, injured last season, held the former highs at 30 and 411.
Ashley is back as a senior to add to his career 47, just two short of the record, held
by Dr. Gicewicz. Gicewicz had 789 career yards. Ashley is but 29 away.
Embow wrote two records when he kicked six field goals. His career total of
seven is a record, also.
Tom Hurd with four interceptions tied the career total of 12. Dan Sella also collected that number from 1964-66.
Individually, sophomore linebacker Mike Luzny was the headliner. He was AIIECAC as a guard, and AP All-East as a linebacker. He was the only player in the East
to be picked on two teams at different positions. Tackle Ted Gibbons was AP honorable mention and played in the North-South Game. Jones was an AP honorable mention.
QB Mick Murtha added 927 yards to his passing totals and took over the career
yardage record with a season to go at 2169. John Stofa from 1961-63 had 2133.
-39-

�1967 VARSITY GAME-BY-GAME
Scoring By Quarters
1st

2nd

3rd

4th

Final

BUFFALO

7

7

0

16

30

KENT STATE

0

0

0

0

7

Game/ Date
Sep tember 16 at Rotary

B, jones run 1 (Embow kick); B, Rutkowski run 56 (Embow kick); B, Murtha run 38
(Embow kick); B, Wells 3 pass from Mason (kick failed); B, Embow field goal 18;
KS, Richburg Kickoff return 97 (pass failed). Attendance -

11,019 .

September 23 at Raleigh

BUFFALO
NORTH CAROLINA ST.

0

0

0

6

6

10

7

7

0

24

SC, Martell 47 pass from Donnan (Warren Kick);
Barchuk run 6 (Warren kick);

CS, Warren field goal 25;

CS,

CS, Hall run 28 (Warren kick); 8, Drankoski 18 pass

from Mason (kick failed). Attendance - 20,200.

September 30 at Charlottesville

BUFFALO

0

0

6

6

12

VIRGINIA

7

21

0

7

35

V, Arnette run 21 (Hill kick); V, Arnette run 15 (Hill kick); V, Arnette run 3 (Hill
kick); V, Serino 17 pass from Arnette (Hill kick); B, jones run 2 (pass failed); B, Jones
run2 (run failed); V, Arnette run 46 (Hill kick). Attendance -

16,000.

October 7 at Rotary

BUFFALO
TEMPLE

7

6

17

14

44

0

0

0

14

14

B, Ru tkowski run 47 (Embow kick); B, Drankoski 56 pass from Murtha (kick failed);
B, Embow field goal 32; B, Patterson run 1 (Wells pass from Murtha); B, jones run 2
(kick failed); T, Callahan 54passfromWaller(pass failed); T, Poostay 1 pass from Wal ler); B, Endress 12 pass from Mason (Embow kick). Attendance -

9,275 .

October 14 at Rotary

BUFFALO
BOSTON UNIVERSITY

6

0

0

0

B, Patterson run 15 (kick failed). Attendance - 8,573
- 40-

0

0

6

0

0

0

�1967 VARSITY GAME-BY-GAME
Game/Date

1st

2nd

Scoring By Quarters
3rd
4th
Final

October 21 at Chestnut Hill

7
12
26
0
7
0
6
14
0
8
B, jones run 1 (Embow kick); B, jones run 1 (Embow kick); BC, Kavanagh 38 pass
from DiVito (pass failed); B, Safety- punt blocked by Luzny; B, Embow field goal 34;
B, jones run 2 (Embow kick); BC, Bennett run 3 (Fallon rush). Attendance - 15,000.
BUFFALO
BOSTON COLLEGE

October 28 at Worcester
25
6
8
10
0
38
HC, eary 15 pass from O'Neil (Kaminski kick); B, Embow field goal 24; HC, Lilore
run 1 (Kaminski kick); B, Jones run 1 (Wells pass from Murtha); HC, Vrionis 4 pass
from O'Neil (Kaminski kick); HC, O'Neil run 1 (Kaminski kick); B, Rutkowski run 3
(pass failed); HC, Kaminski field goal 28; HC, Vrionis 15 pass from 0' eil (Kaminski
kick ); B, Jones run 1 (Drankoski pass from Mason). Attendance - 12,021.
BUFFALO
HOLYCROSS

November 4 at

3
7

8
21

3

20

0

6

ewark

BUFFALO
DELAWARE

0
15
38
7
6
19
B, Embow field goal 42; B, Patterson run 13 (pass failed); B, jones run 3 (Patterson
run); D, Linzenbold run 1 (pass failed); B, Drankoski 10 pass from Murtha (pass failed);
D, Brickley run 7 (Lippincott kick); B, Patterson run 5 (Embow kick); D, Tracey 29
pass from Linzenbold (pass failed); B, Jones run 2 (Wells pass from Mason). Attendance- 6,200.

ovember 11 at Villanova
BUFFALO
VILLANOVA

7
8
23
8
14
0
7
41
V, Boyd 13 pass from Andrejko (Lignelli kick); V, Bendish 13 pass from Andrejko
(Lignelli kick); V, Walik 58 pass from Andrejko (pass failed); B, Wells 1 pass from
Murtha (Embow kick); V, Bendish 23 pass from Andrejko (Lignelli kick); B, Patterson
20 pass from Murtha (Patterson run); V, Schunke 11 pass from Andrejko (Lignelli
kick); V, Boyd 6 pass from Andrejko (Lignelli kick); B, Patterson run 1 (Lowe pass
from Mason). Attendance- 8,352.
0
20

November 18 at Rotary
31
14
0
10
0
0
0
0
B, Patterson run 55 (E mbow kick); B, Embow field goal 25; B, Patterson run 5 (Embow kick); B, Jones run 1 (Em bow kick); B, Mason run 64 (Em bow kick ). Attendance 6,646.
BUFFALO
COLGATE

7
0

- 41 -

�1967 Final Varsity Football Summary
(Won 6, lost 4, Tied 0)
TEAM SUMMARY
U/ 8
OPP
175
134
98
57
63
71
14
6
750
633
407
531
219
226
3155 2739
1956 1097
1199 1642
219
226
97
107
21
7
8
9

First Downs
Rushing
Passing
Penalty
Total Plays
Rusing
Passing
Total Offense
Rushing
Passing
Passes Attempted
Completions
Own Intercepted
Scoring Passes

.I

Punts / Yards
Average
Had Blocked
Punt Rets / Yds
K.O. Rets / Yds
Penalties / Yds
Fumbles / Lost
Scoring
Touchdowns
P.A.T. Kick
Conv R/ P
Field Goals
Total Points

U/ 8
58-1999
34.4
0
36-263
36-756
25-216
20-15

OPP
67-2095
30.9
3
26-283
41-615
47-427
31-21

32
20-17
11-6
9-6
241

27
19-19
8-3
3-2
191

Yds.
1972
27
1999

INDIVIDUAL SUMMARY
Avg.
Passing
All . Comp. Int . Net TO
TD
7
Murtha
171 72
15 927 4
4.7
3.2
12
Mason
46 25
5 272 4
5.1
Rutkowski
2
1
3
0
0 0
4.1
21 1199 8
0
Totals
219 97
2.6
1
0.2
1
Receiving
No.
TO's.
Yds.
37•
1.5
0
Drankoski
439*
3
4.0
0
Wells
19
257
2
1.4
0
Patterson
13
124
1
4.0
Lang
11
175
1
0
Rutkowski
110
3.6
24
9
0
Endress
7
1
93
Washington
Avg .
1
1
0
34.6
Totals
1199
8
97
27.0
34.4

Interceptions
Hurd
Luzny
Horn
Wright
Totals

No.
4
1
1
1
7

Yds.
3
28
23
5
59

Scoring
TO 's
jones
12
Patterson
8
Em bow
0
Rutkowski
3
Drankoski
3
Wells
2
Murtha
1
Endress
1
Lang
1
Mason
1
Lowe
0
Buchak
0
Team Safety
Totals
32

Pat.
0
2(p)
14(k)
0
1(p)
3(p)
0
0
0
0
1(p)
1(k)

F.G.
0
0
6
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

7 / 17

6

Rushing
All.
Patterson 144
jones
153
Rutkowski 88
47
Wells
Mason
40
Murtha
45
Brennan
6
Bell
2
Alimonti
5
Washington 1
Totals
531
Punting
Jack
Hansen
Totals

No.
57
1
58

Net
666*
495
458
194
106
9
9
8
7
4
1956

Total
72
52
32
18
20
18
6
6
6
6
2
1
2
241
-42-

Kickoff Returns
Wells
Patterson
Rutkowski
Bell
Hurd
Lang
Drankoski
Mosher
Totals

No.
11
11
8
2
1
1
1
1
36

Yds.
275
256
136
59
15
10
5
0
756

Punt Returns
Hurd
Drankoski
Luzny
Horn
Totals

No.
22
12
1
1
36

Yds.
147
105
8
3
263

• Individual Season Records

�1967 Varsity Game-By-Game Statistics
BUFFALO 30, KENT ST. 6
U/ B
First Downs
Rushing (Net)
Passing ( et)
Passes (C &amp; A)
Had Intercepted
Return Yardage
Punts (Avg.)
Fumbles/ Lost
Penalty Yds.

15
251
98
10-16
1
43
6-34
0-0
25

N.C. ST. 24 , BUFFALO 6
U/ B
First Downs
Rushing ( et)
Passing ( et)
Passes (C &amp; A)
Had Intercepted
Return Yardage
Punts (Avg.)
Fumbles/ Lost
PenaltyYds.

26
224
15S
14-2S
4
122
6-36
4-2

so

BUFFALO 26, BOSTON COLLEGE 14
U/ B
OPP
15
First Downs
14
161
Rushing (Net)
82
146
Passing ( et)
108
11-23
Passes (C &amp; A)
9-19
1
Had Intercepted
1
108
Return Yardage
168
8-31
Punts (Avg.)
6-35
3-3
Fumbles/ Lost
0-0
15
Penalty Yds.
30
HOLY CROSS 38, BUFFALO 25
OPP
First Downs
11
Rushing ( et)
70
Passing ( et)
1S7
Passes (C &amp; A)
10-17
Had Intercepted
0
Return Yardage
154
Punts (Avg.)
8-37
Fumbles/ Lost
0-0
Penalty Yds.
60

VIRGINIA 35, BUFFALO 12
First Downs
Rushing( et)
Passing (Net)
Passes (C &amp; A)
Had Intercepted
Return Yardage
Punts (Avg.)
Fumbles/ Lost
PenaltyYds.

U/ B

OPP

13
117
126
12-34
4
137
7-37
2-1
10

21
402
81
5-10
0
63
3-38
6-6
2S

BUFFALO 44, TEMPLE 14
U/ B
First Downs
Rushing ( et)
Passing (Net)
Passes (C &amp; A)
Had Intercepted
Return Yardage
Punts (Avg.)
Fumbles/ Lost
PenaltyYds.

19
197
233
10-21
1
110
5-3S
1-0
5

BUFFALO 6, BOSTON UNIV. 0
U/B
13
First Downs
13S
Rushing ( et)
36
Passing (Net)
S-18
Passes (C &amp; A)
3
Had Intercepted
3
Return Yardage
5-S6
Punts (Avg.)
2-1
Fumbles/ Lost
10
Penalty Yds.

OPP

9
31
78
7-22
1
72
8-32
3-1

so
-43-

14
111
187
13-34
1
155
7-31
4-4
63

U/ B

OPP

23
180
210
1S-29
3
11S
2-38
2-2
1S

16
111
236
12-26
0
193
3-28
3-2
17

BUFFALO 38, DELAWARE 19
U/ B
21
First Downs
2SO
Rushing ( et)
90
Passing ( et)
8-18
Passes (C &amp; A)
1
Had Intercepted
109
Return Yardage
S-3S
Punts (Avg.)
2-2
Fumbles/ Lost
21
Penalty Yds.

VILLANOVA 4 1, BUFFALO 23
OPP
First Downs
15
Rushing (Net)
24
Passing (Net)
262
Passes (C &amp; A)
16-29
Had Intercepted
2
Return Yardage
131
Punts (Avg.)
7-27
Fumbles/ Lost
3-2
Penalty Yds.
92

OPP

OPP

17
92
26S
17-42
2
91
6-32
4-2
9

U/ B

OPP

17
152
92
11-31
4
222
10-37
2-2
3S

12
101
263
16-22
0
127
9-29
2-2
76

BUFFALO 31, COLGATE 0
U/ B
13
First Downs
300
Rushing ( et)
13
Passing (Net)
1-4
Passes (C &amp; A)
1
Had Intercepted
69
Return Yardage
4-32
Punts (Avg.)
2-2
Fumbles/ Lost
30
Penalty Yds.

OPP

s

73
6
2-5
0
81
10-29
6-2

s

�MODERN BUFFALO
INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
TOTAL OFFENSE
Career:
Season :
Game:

John Stofa , 1961 , 1962, 1963 . . . . .. .
Don Gilbert, 1964 ... . . . . . . . . . .
Ordean Shanabrook vs. Bucknell , 1951

YARDS GAINED RUSHING
Career:
Season :
Game:

Lee Jones, 1965, 1966, 1967 . . ...•
Pat Patterson, 196 7 .. . . . . . . . . . . .
Ray Weser vs. Rhode Island, 1949 .. . .

2,730
1,337
291
1,570
666
205

ATTEMPTS RUSHING
Career:
Season:
Game:

Lee Jones, 1965, 1966, 1967 .. . . .
Lee Jones, 1967 . .......... .
Lee Jones vs. Colgate, 1967 ... .

414
153
29

YARDS GAINED PASSING
Career:
Season :
Game:

Mick Murtha, 1966, 1967 . .. . .
Mick Murtha, 1966 .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .
Ordean Shanabrook vs. Bucknell , 1951 ... .

2,168
1,241
296

PASSES ATTEMPTED
Career:
Season :
Game:

Mick Murtha, 1966, 196 7 ..... .
Mick Murtha, 1966 . . .. . ... .. .
Mick Murtha vs. Bosto n College, 1966 ....

381
210
30

PASSES COMPLETED
Career:
Season:
Game:

Mick Murtha , 1966, 1967 . ..... .. .. . . .
Mick Murtha, 1966 ... ·...•. . . . . . . . . . . .
Mick Murtha vs . Boston &lt;::allege, 1966 .....

156
84
12

TO PASSES COMPLETED
Career:
Season :
Game:

Gordon Bukaty, 195B, 1959, 1960 .. ... .. .. .
Go rdon Bukaty, 1958 . ..... . . . . . . .
Joe Kubist y vs. Bucknell , 1956 ... . ... . . . . . . .

25

9
5

PASSES RECEIVED
Career:
Season :
Game:

Ed Gicewicz, 1949, 1950, 1951 .. . . . . . . . . . . .
(Dick Ashley has 47 going into this season)
Chuck Drankoski, 1967 ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .
Chuck Drankoski vs . Boston College, 1967 .. .

49
37

9

YARDS GAINED PASSES RECEIVED
Career:
Season:
Game:

Ed Gicewicz, 1949, 1950, 1951 . . . . . . . . .
(Dick Ashley has 760 going into this season )
Dick Ashley, 1966 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
Ed Gicewicz vs. Bucknell, 1951 . ..... .. .. . . . . . . . • . . ..

789
411
144

TO PASSES RECEIVED
Career:
Season:
Game:

Dick Ashley, 1965, 1966 .....
Dick Ashley, 1965 .
Dick Ashley vs . Colgate, 1965

11
7

3

OPPONENTS PASSES INTERCEPTED
Career:
Season :
Game:

Tom Hurd, 1965, 1966, 1967
Dan Sella , 1964, 1965, 1966
Tom Hurd , 1966 . . . . . . . . . .
Gordon Bukat y, 1965 . . . . . . .
Peter Rao vs. Cortland St. , 1953

12
12
6
6
4

TOUCHDOWNS
Career:
Season:
Game:

Lee Jones, 1965, 1966, 1967 . .
. . . ... .
Lee Jones, 1966 . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . .
.
Lou Carriere vs. Hobart, 1942 .. . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . .

29
16

6

POINTS BY KICKING
Career:
Season :
Game:

Bob Embow, 1966, 1967 (31 PAT's, 7 FG 's) . . . .
Bob Embow, 1967 (14 PAT's, 6 FG' s) . . . . . . .
Bob Embow vs. Colgate, 1967 (4 PAT's, 1 FG).

-44-

52
32
7

�MODERN BUFFALO TEAM RECORDS
GAME RECORD

OFFENSE
(Most by Buffalo)

DEFENSE
(least by Opponents)

RUSHING
Attempts
70vs. Holy Cross, 1966
Net Yards
311 vs. Rhode Island, 1949
PASSING
Attempts
39 vs. Bucknell , 1951
Completions
22 vs. Bucknell, 1951
Intercepted
4 vs. various opponents
% Completed
.65 vs. R.P.I. , 1951
et Yards
433 vs. Bucknell, 1951
TO Passes
5 vs. Bucknell, 1951
TOTAl OFFENSE
Rush &amp; Pass
85 vs . Delaware, 196 7
etGain
475 vs. Bucknell, 1951
PUNTING
Most Punts
10 vs . Bucknell , 1952
Average
56 .0 vs. Boston Univ., 1967
PUNT RETURNS
Returned
10vs. Colgate, 1967
Yards
93 vs. iaga ra , 1949
KICKOFF RETURNS
Most Returns
8 vs. Colgate, 1951
Yards
153 vs. V.M .I. , 1961
INTERCEPTIONS
Yards
100 vs. Cortland St., 1959
FIRST DOWNS
Total
27 vs. Ohio orthern, 1956
FUMBLES
Total
9 vs. Gettysburg, 1961
FUMBLES lOST
Total
7 vs . Hobart, 1955

19 by McMaster, 1955
-19 by McMaster, 1955
6
0
0
.00
0
0

by
by
by
by
by
by

Brockport St. , 1955
Brockport St., 1955
various opponents
various opponents
various opponents
various opponents

2 6 by McMaster, 1955
-19 by McMaster, 1955
0 by various opponents
20.4 by McMaster, 1955
0 by various opponents
0 by various opponents
0 by various opponents
0 by various opponents
0 by various opponents
1 by McMaster, 1955
0 by various opponents
0 by various opponents

lONGEST PlAYS FOR U/ B
Run From Scrimmage: 87 yards (TO) Bob Edward vs . Boston University, 1962
Pass Completion:
86 yards (TO ) Ordean Shanabrook to Andy Pod lucky vs.
Bucknell , 1951
100 yards (TO ) Chuck Daniels vs. Cortland St., 1956
Kickoff Return:
Punt Return :
80 yards Lou Corriere vs. Johns Hopkins, 1946
90 yards (TO) Gerry LaFountain vs. Delaware, 1965
Interception Return:
81 yards Bill Brogan vs . Cortland St., 1959
longest Punt:
Field Goal:
44 yards Joe Oscsodal vs. Cornell, 1964

ATTENDANCE RECORDS
largest Crowd at Rotary Field:
11,466vs. Boston University, 1963
largest Crowd at U/ B Football:
26,126 vs. Colgate at Civic Stadium, Buffalo, 1951

- 45 -

�BUFFALO'S COACHES AND RECORDS
(60 Seasons - 15 Official Coaches)

Year

W l

1894

0

1895

0

T

Year

W l

T

Head Coach

Volunteer Coach

1935

2

6

0

George VanBibber

Volunteer Coach

1936

6

3

0

James E. Peelle

4

4

0

]ames E. Peelle

Head Coach

1896

0

0

2

Volun leer Coach

1937

1897

7

0

0

Volun teer Coach

1938

2

6

0

James E. Peelle

Volun teer Coach

1939

0

7

0

]ames E. Peelle

Volunteer Coach

1940

3

5

0

]ames E. Peelle

3

4

6

2

1898

4

1899

6

0

1900

3

2

2

Volunteer Coach

1941

1901

4

2

0

Volunteer Coach

1942

Volunteer Coach

1943-45 - World War II

Volun teer Coach

1946

7

1947

8
6
6

1902
1903

4
4

4

0

1904- 14- o Varsities
191 5

3

4

0

Frank M. Pleasant

1948

1916

3

5

2

Arthur M. Powell

1949

1917

4

1918

6

1919

0

1920
1921

2

1922
1923

2

0

]ames E. Peelle

0

]ames E. Peelle
Frank Clair

3

0

Frank Clair
James Wilson

0

Arth ur M. Powell

1950

5

3

0

ArthurM. Powell

1951

4

4

0

]ames Wilson

0

Fritz Febel

Arthur M. Powell

1952

7

4

Arthur M. Powell

1953

5

3

2

Arthur M. Powell

1954

2

7

James Batterson

1955

4

4

James Bond

1956

5

3

0

R. W. Offenhamer

Russell Garrick

1957

5

4

0

R. W. Offenhamer

Russe ll Garrick

1958

8

0

R. W. Offenhamer

0

R. W. Offenhamer

0

5
0

4

1926

0

8

1927

0

6

1928

James E. Peelle

0

7
3

0

0

5

5

1924
1925

4

2

]ames E. Peelle

0

Russell Garrick

1959

8

Russell Garrick

1960

4

Fritz Febel

0

Fritz Febel
R. W. Offenhamer

6

0

R. W. Offenhamer
R. W. Offenhamer
R. W. Offenhamer

6

0

Russe ll Garrick

1961

4

5

0

Biffy Lee

1962

6

3

0

1929

5

2

0

1930

3

5

0

Biffy Lee

1963

5

3

R. W. Offenhamer

6

0

William Pritchard

1964

4

4

R. W. Offenhamer

]ames Wilson

1965

5

3

2

R. W. Offenhamer

James Wilson

1966

5

5

0

Richard W. Urich

GeorgeVan Bibber

1967

6

4

0

Richard W. Urich

1931

2

1932

5

1933

2

3

2

1934

2

4

1

TOTALS- Won 206

- 46-

lost 224

Tied 28

�Buffalo's Football Series Record
Series
Opponent
Started
Adrian
1933
Alfred
1902
Allegany
1903
Army
1960
Baldwin-Wallace
1958
Bethany
1921
Boston College
1963
Boston University 1960
Brandeis
1954
Brockport St.
1954
Brooklyn
1950
Bucknell
1898
Canisius
1920
Carnegie Tech
1930
1898
Case Tech
CCNY
1938
Clarkson
1922
Colgate
1898
Columbia
1900
Connecticut
1939
1898
Cornell
Cortland St.
1950
Curtis Plant
1918
Dartmouth
1931
Davis-Elkins
1924
Dayton
1965
Defiance
1935
Delaware
1961
Detroit
1916
Drexel Tech
1940
Duquesne C. &amp; A.C. 1899
Edinboro
1928
Elmira A.C.
1900
Erie A.A.
1899
Findlay
1953
Fordham
1930
1915
Geneva
3eorge Washington 1924
Gettysburg
1959
Grove City
1915
Hamilton
1897
Hartwick
1942
Harvard
1932
Hiram
1929
1894
Hobart
Holy Cross
1923
John Hopkins
1942
KentS!.
1937
Lafayette
1954
Lehigh
1901

(97 Opponents Since 1894)
U/ B
Series
U/ B
Started Games Won lost Tied
Opponent
Games Won lost Tied
2 0 0
1928
2
Long Island
1
1 0 0
1 1 0
2
1948
Louisville
15 17 3
35
1 0 0
1
1955
McMaster
5
2 3 0
0 1 0
1938
1
Manchester
0 1 0
1
1 0 0
1
Mansfield
1917
2
1 1 0
1 2 0
3
1959
Marshall
3
2 1 0
1 1 0
1964
2
Massachusetts
4
1 3 0
1 0 0
1
Masten Park H.S. 1903
8
5 3 0
1 2 0
3
Mechanics Institute 1922
2
0 2 0
0 1 0
1
1901
Michigan
2
1 1 0
0 1 0
1
1951
Miami(O.)
1
1 0 0
2 0 0
2
1946
Moravian
7 9 0
16
2 0 0
2
1918
Naval Officers
1
1 0 0
6 6 1
1897 13
Niagara
6
3 3 0
0 1 0
1
North Carolina St. 1967
4
3 0 1
0 1 0
1
1931
Notre
Dame
B
4
2
0
2
0 1 0
1
1903
Oakdales
13
2 10 1
1 0 0
1
1901
Oberlin
11
5 6 0
2 3 0
1949
5
Ohio University
4
2 2 0
2 0 0
2
1954
Ohio Northern
6
3 3 0
0 1 0
1
1951
Ohio Wesleyan
0 4
5
1 0 0
1900
1
Penn
St.
4 1
10
12 2 1
1898 15
R.P.I.
1
0 0
3 0 0
1949
3
Rhode Island
1
0 1 0
2 0 0
2
1964
Richmond
0 2 0
2
6 14 4
1894 24
Rochester
2
0 1 1
0 0
1
Roc h. Optometry 1923
3
2 1 0
1 2 1
4
1915
St. Bonaventure
7
5 2 0
8 5 0
1919 13
St. Lawrence
3
0 2 1
1 0 0
1
1921
St. Stephen's
2
1 1 0
2 2 0
4
1939
Susquehana
1
0 1 0
3 1 1
5
1896
Syracuse
1
0 1 0
0 1 1
2
1965
Tampa
1
0 1 0
7
7 0 0
1957
Temple
2
2 0 0
2 3 1
1916
6
Thiel
1
0 1 0
1934
4
2 2 0
Toledo
1
0 1 0
1900
1
1 0 0
Tonawanda A.C.
0 2 0
2
1 0 0
Union
1897
1
0 2 0
2
2 1 0
Upsala
1929
3
5 0 0
5
Villanova
1961
6
3 3 0
2
0 1 1
0 1 0
Virginia
1967
1
9
3 5 1
1 2 0
1960
3
V.M.I.
1
1 0 0
4
2 2 0
Wash. &amp; Jefferson 1941
2
1 1 0
2 8 0
1935 10
Wayne St.
2
2 0 0
6 11 1
1897 18
Western Reserve
40
15 21 4
8
2 6 0
1903
Westmister
1 6 1
8
1940
1
0 1 0
Williams
2
2 0 0
1959
3
3 0 0
Youngstown
4
3 1 0
2
0 2 0
206 224 28
458
Totals
7
2 4
-47-

�Sixty Seasons of UB Football

1894-1967
1894 {0-1-1 )

...
. . ......

6
0

Hobart
Rochester

4
6

Rochester
Rochester

6
6

Hobart
Syracuse

12
0

1895 (0-1 -1 )
.

...

.

6
6

10
17
0
14
10
0

..

...
28 Hobart.
16 Syracuse
..
10 Syracuse
..
16 Western Reserve
. . ...
iagara
32
16 Hamilton
..
26 Union
1898 {4-1-0)
...
29 Case.
. . ....
12 R.P.I.
..
36 Bucknell . .
.....
23 Colgate .
0 Cornell .......
1899 (6-1-1 )
. .
51 Hobart
0 Rochester
16 Syracuse .
5 Western Reserve
....
18 Case.
..
30 Bucknell
5 Duquesne C. &amp; A.C.
....
46 Erie A.A.
1900 {3 -2-2 )
..
0 Western Reserve
0 Case .. ..
...
12 Erie A.A.
......
0 Columbia
....
10 Penn State
6 Tonawanda A. c. ..
..
0 Elmira A.C.
1901 (4 -2-0)
. .
6 Western Reserve
..
6 Case.
. . ....
5 Columbia
. .
5 Oberlin
16 Lehigh
....
0 Michigan
1902 {14-1 )
0 Hobart
6 Rochester
0 Western Reserve
..
0 Bucknell
0 Columbia
...
0 Alfred
1903 (4-4-0)
0 Hobart
0 Rochester

..

...

NO VARSITIES

6
6

1897{7-0-0)
0
0
0
6
0
6
0
0
5
5
0
27
0
0
0
0
0
0
52
0
0
0
0
17
0
0
15
17
0
0
0
0
128
0
0
22
29
5
12
12
47
- 48-

8
6
23
0
0
33

1904-1914

1 896 (0-0-2 )
..

.....
iagara
.....
iagara
..
Allegany . . .
...
Westminster .
. . ..
Masten Park H.S.
Oakdales
1915 {3 4-0)

20
3
20
0
0
29
10

6
7
6
6
6
0
7

Hobart
Rochester
..
Syracuse .
. ..
Alfred
St. Bonaven I ure
....
Geneva
.. . .
Grove City

6
2
0
0
7
0
9
0
0
0

Hobart
Rochester
. ...
Hamilton
Allegany ...
. ...
Westminster:
St. Bonaventure
Thiel
. ..
Geneva
....
Grove City
. .
Detroit

45
28
0
0
6
27
7
12

. . . .
Hobart
... ..
Rochester
Hamilton .. .....
. ..
Westminster
St. Bonaventure
Thiel
. . . ..
..
Detroit
Mansfield

81
19
41
0
6
40
47

. .
Hobart
. .... .
Rochester
..
Niagara
...
Cornell
...
Curtis Plant
....
aval Officers
....
a val Officers

6
0
0
6
0
0

..
Hobart
Rochester .
.. ..
Westminster
St. Bonaventure
...
Detroit
St. Lawrence . . ....

1 916 (3-5 -2 )
0
14
19
29
0
12
7
7
0
0

1 917{4-4-0)

.

......

0
0
6
7
13
7
20
6

191 8 (6-1-0)

0
6
0
28
0
0
6

1919 (0-5-1 )
21
33
6
6
25
23

1920 (1-4-0)
2
3
0
0
12

..
Hobart
. ...
Alfred
Thiel
St. Lawrence
Canisius .

20
7
13
20
0

�0
0
14
13
0
0
53
13
0
0
3
12
0
0
6
7
6
0
7
40
0
6
7
0
7
7
0
0
0
0
0
6
0
10
0
0
2
13
0
0
0
0
2
6
4
0
0
0
0
0
7
0
0
0
0

1921 (2-3-2)
. .
Hobart
R.P.I.
... . .
Alfred
Allegany
.. Thiel
Bethany .
. . ..
St. Stephens
1922 (1-5-0)
...
Hobart.
. .... .
Rochester
. ... .
Alfred
Thiel
Mechanics Institute
...
Clarkson
1923 (2-5-1)
. .
Hobart
Rochester
...
Hamilton
....
Alfred
.... ..
Thiel
...
Clarkson
Rochester Optometry
...
Holy Cross
1924 (1-7 -0)
..
Hobart
Rochester
.....
Alfred
. . ..
Westminster
St. Lawrence
...
Clarkson
Davis-Elkins
George Washington
1925 (3-4-1)
Hobart
Rochester
.....
Alfred
....
Westminster .
...
Clarkson
..
Davis-Elkins
George Washington
Toledo
1926 (0-8-0)
..
Hobart
Rochester
•.
.....
Niagara
...
Alfred .
....
Westminster
...
Clarkson
Toledo
..
Alumni
1927 (0-6-1)
Hobart
Rochester
Niagara
. . ...
Alfred
....
Westminster
St. Lawrence
..
Clarkson
1928 (1-6-0)
Hobart
. . . . ..
Rochester
.....
iagara

0
6
12
0

35
0
3
26
0
42
0

..

13
0
19
12
13
7
27

28
19
6
15
0
18
7
13
6
16
29
7
0
37

...

..

13
21
16
16
0
26
48
6
13
0
0
8
2
40
59
0
42
60
60
6
38
20
33
6
49
47
34
0
43
20
19
38
36
38

20
7
6
0
6
39
2
0
29
7
2
20
0
0
0
6
6
7
0
0
6
0
0
0
7
0
0
12
0
19

13
0
0
0
14
0
8
7
13
0
0
0
6
0
0

-49-

St. Lawrence
...
Clarkson
..
Long Island
....
Edinboro .
1929 (5-2-0)
Hobart
Rochester
. ...
Alfred
...
Clarkson
..
Long Island
..
Upsala
.....
Hiram
1930(3-5-0)
..
Hobart
Rochester
.....
Hamilton
. . ...
Alfred
Clarkson
.. ..
Upsala
Carnegie Tech .. . ...
...
Fordham
1931 (2-6-0)
..
Hobart
Rochester
...
Hamilton
.....
Alfred
..
Clarkson
Carnegie Tech
.....
Dartmouth
..
Notre Dame B
1932 (1-5-1)
..
Hobart .
Rochester
Western Reserve
....
Cornell
.....
Alfred
...
Clarkson
.....
Harvard
1933 (2-3-2)
Hobart . . . . ...
Western Reserve . . . . . . .
.....
iagara
.....
Hamilton
....
Alfred
...
Clarkson
Adrian
1934 (2-4-1)
Hobart
Western Reserve
.... .
Niagara
. ....
Hamilton
.....
Alfred
...
Clarkson
..
Toledo
1935 (2-6-0)
. ....
Alfred
Hobart
. . . ..
Western Reserve . . . . ...
Hamilton . .......
Mechanics Institute . . . . . ..
....
Toledo
Wayne. . . ....
Defiance .
0

••••••

12
19
0
35
7
20
12
9
0
14
12
6
24
0
20
14
0
75
71
6
14
6
13
13
25
61
33
0
12
11
72
6
41
66
0
6
28
15
12
20
14
19
33
27
0
0
27
0
0
12
61
20
32
19
55
14

�27
2
29
12

0
19

6
26
19

7
12
12
13
13

6
12
13
0
26
0
47
0
0
2
6

0
0
0
0
0
7
0
7

0
0
7
6
7
0
20
12

6
0
0
6
19

6
6
66
13
20
14
19
7

50
26

1936 (6-3-0)
Alfred
Hobart .
Rochester . . . ... .
Rennsselaer .
Mechanics Institute ..... . .
Upsala ... ... .
Wayne . . ..• . .
Defiance
...
Hiram
.. . ..
1937 (4-4-0)
Hobart .
..
Rochester
Rensselaer .
...
Alfred .. . .... .
Allegany.
. ..
Wayne.
. .....
Defiance .
. ..
Kent
. ....
1938(2-6-0)
Hobart .
Rensselaer .
...
Alfred
. . ...
Allegany.
. ..
Wayne . . .... .
Kent . ... ... .
City College of N .Y... .. .
Manchester . ...... .
1939(0-7-0)
Hobart
..
Lehigh .
Alfred
. ....
Wayne .
City College of .Y..... .
Connecticut
...
..
Susquehanna
1940 (3-5-0)
Hobart.
..
Alfred
.... .
Wayne .
City College of .Y. ..••.
Susquehanna
..
Connecticut
...
Williams . ..... .
Drexel Institute
. .. .
1941 (3-4-1)
Hobart ...... . .
Rensselaer .
. ..
Lehigh .
Alfred . . . .. . .. .
City College of N.Y .. .. . .
..
Susquehanna
Drexel .. . .. .
...
Wash. &amp; Jefferson
1942 (6-2-0)
Hobart
..
Rensselaer .
. ..
St. Lawrence
Carnegie Tech
Susquehanna
..
.••
Wash . &amp; Jefferson
Hartwick .
. . ..
johns Hopkins

0
52
2

0

20

28
0

41
12
14

20
32

6

20

12

28
36

40
12
7
13
25

7

54
27
14
14

7
0

40
40
50

19

20
13

23

7
7
0

39
13

35

39

54

47

15

0
8

21
20
22
14
20
19
25

41
48
26
26
7

0

6

32

19
19

26

7
39

6
6

20

20

6

13
34

27
13

13
19

33
7
21

0

14
13
52

14

0
0
19
14

0
0
0

33
32
13
13
20
26

0
7

27

0

13

13

0
0
7

6
6

-50-

WORLD WAR II (Teams)
1946 (7-2-0)
Hobart
..
Rensselaer .
...
Bucknell
..
Alfred
.....
Bethan y . . . . . . . .
Carnegie Tech . . . . . .
Wayne . . . . . . . .
johns Hopkins . . . . . .
Moravian
.....
194 7 (8-1-0)
Hobart
..
Niagara
.....
Rensselaer .
...
Bucknell
..
Alfred
.....
St. Lawrence . . . . • .
Bethany . . . . . . .

R.P.I. .

......

St. Lawrence . . . . . .
1948 (6-1-1)
Hobart
..
Niagara
.....
Rensselaer .
...
Bucknell
..
Colgate .
.....
Alfred
Wash . &amp; Jefferson
...
Louisville .
.....
1949 (6-3-0)
Niagara
.....
Rensselaer .
...
Bucknell.
..
Colgate .
.....
Alfred
.....
St. Lawrence . . . . . . . . .
Wash . &amp; jefferson . . . . . .
Rhode Island . . . . . . .
Ohio. . . . . . .
1950 (5-3-0)
iagara
.....
Rensselaer .
...
Alfred
.....
Louisville .
.....
Rhode Island . . . . . . .
Ohio . . . . . . .
Cortland
...
Brooklyn
...
1951 (4-4-0)
Rensselaer .
...
Bucknell
..
Colgate .
.....
Alfred
.....
Connecticut
...
Cortland
...
Ohio Wesleyan
...
Miami of Ohio
...
1952 (1-7-0)
Western Reserve
..
Bucknell .
..
Colgate .
.....
Lehigh .

7
13
21
12
6
0
25
0
7
0
14
7
6
7
7
6
19
6
0
13
21
13
25
0
14
19
7
0
21
32
6
13
2
7
7
27
14
0
48
12
22
0
6
20
62
47
6
6
0
21
27
35
22
13
26

�.- -~

7
12
7
13
6
6
0
0
12
0
20
0
6
20
6
0
0
20

13
7
7
26
29
0

13
14
30
13
45
13
26
13
41
19
31
72
12
14
6
6
14
15
33
0
7
13
6
7
19
0
34
54
44
34
3B

.....
Alfred
St. Lawrence
...
Connecticut .
...
Cortland
1953 (1-5-1)
. .
Western Reserve
..
Bucknell
Lehigh
.. . . .
Alfred
...
Cortland
...
Findlay
...
Ohio orthern
1954(2-7-0)
.. ...
Alfred
.....
Brockport
..
Brandeis .
...
Cortland
..
Hobart.
....
Lafayette
R.P.I.. . . . . . .
St. Lawrence . . . . . .
Western Reserve .......
1955 (4-4-1)
. ..
Cortland
Brockport
McMaster
. .
Hobart.
..
Western Reserve
.....
Alfred
St. Lawrence
..
Brandeis .
R.P.I..
1956 (5-3-0)
Carnegie Tech . . . . . .
Cortland . . . . . . . .
Western Reserve . . . . . . .
St. Lawrence . . . . . .
.....
Alfred
..
Bucknell .
. ..
Ohio orthern
..
Hobart.
1957 (5-4-0)
Carnegie Tech
....
Lafayette
..
Western Reserve
St. Lawrence
.....
Alfred
Wayne. .... ..
...
Cortland
Lehigh
....
Temple.
1958 (8-1-0)
Harvard . ......
Cortland ........
Western Reserve .......
Baldwin-Wallace .......
Columbia
.. . .
Temple.
Wayne. . . . . . .
......
Lehigh
..
Bucknell

19
6
47
33
26
35
27
47
12
34
0
25
19
52
20
45
26
19
6
35
2B

0
0
0
32
26
12
20
0
6
12
20
12
26
13
0
33
9
13
13
6

0

2B
6B
21
27
22
16
41
19
37
0
14
21
0
40
44
20
24
36
14
14
24
12
B
6
30
30
6
6
27
6
6
20
16
6
2B
44
6
34
7
6
14
B

7
20
27
6

22

3
6
6
26
14
6
14
26
0

34
9
22
12
14
14
37
2B
6

6
0
23

-51-

1959(8-1-0)
....
Temple.
. ..
Cortland
. .
Bucknell
Baldwin-Wallace .
Western Reserve
....
Youngstown
..
Rhode Island
....
Gettysburg .
Marshall . ......
1960 (4-6-0)
..
Army.
... .
V.M.I.
....
Temple.
..
Bucknell .
....
Youngstown
Western Reserve
.....
Colgate.
...
Connecticut .
. ...
Gettysburg .
Boston U. . . . . . . .
1961 (4-5-0)
....
Gettysburg .
Boston U. . . . . . . .
.....
Delaware.
.....
Holy Cross
.....
Villanova.
....
Temple.
...
Connecticut
Bucknell . . . . . . . .
....
V.M.I.
1962 (6-3-0)
..
Boston u.
.....
Holy Cross
.....
Villanova
.....
Delaware.
....
Temple.
Ohio U. ......
..
Bucknell
....
Gettysburg .
.....
Colgate.
1963 (5-3-1)
....
Gettysburg
Ohio U. . .. ...
.....
Holy Cross
.....
Villanova
Marshall U. . . . . . . .
Boston U. . ......
Delaware. . . . . . . . .
Boston College .......
. ....
Colgate.
1964 (4-4-1)
Boston U.
Cornell ........
Massachusetts ........
Marshall . ......
V.M.I. ........
HolyCross .......
.....
Delaware.
Richmond .......
.....
Colgate.

.

..

..

..

14
2
26
1B
2
7
6
6
12
37
2B
12
41
13
0
2B
31
6
42
6
12
36
20
2B
3
7
12
39
23
16
36
19
13
41
0
0
0
0
0
6
7
10
13
34
15
0
0
9
24
14
10
20
0
13
7

�1965 (5-3-2 )
6
13
18
7
24
0
7
22
28
20

Boston College .......
Tampa
. .
Massachusetts
.. . .
..
Boston u.
Richmond
.Dayton
...
Holy Cross
Delaware.
.....
Colgate.
.....
Villanova
.....

27
21
28
16
3
21
35

...
Kent State
Cornell
.
.. ...
Villanova
..
Boston U.
Dayton
.Boston College
.....
Holy Cross

.....

1966 (5-5-0)

...

.. .

18
13
6
14
0
0
20
0
0
7
23
28
8
26
13
22
3

36
8
25
30
6
12
44
6
26
25
38
23
31

....

Delaware
Tampa
Youngstown

6

..

27

16

....

1967 (6-4-0)
. ..
Kent State

6
24
35
14
0
14
38
19
41
0

....
orth Carolina St.
..
Virginia
. . ..
Temple.
Boston University
. ..
Boston College
. ...
Holy Cross
.....
Delaware
.....
Villanova
...
Colgate.
TOTALS

Wins .
Losses .
Ties .

....
. ...
. .

. 206
. 224
28

Chancellor Samuel B. Gould of the University of ew York announced June 28,
that the Executive Committee of the State University Board of Trustees, acting
in behalf of the full Board, had approved the proposed site development plan
of the Amherst campus of the State University at Buffalo.
The Chancellor pointed out that the Executive Committee reviewed the site development plan prepared by the architectural firm of Skidmore, Owings, and
Merrill before taking the affirmative action.
Chancellor Gould said that initial construction at the Amherst site will be a
cl uster of six buildings providing student housing and related academic space.
Site preparation for these facilities, which will be located along Skinnersville
Road and the shore of Ellicott Creek, will get underway in the fall. It is anticipated actual construction will commence next spring.

- 52-

�STATE UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO IS
... one of America's most rapidly-developing institutions of higher learning. The
largest single unit and most comprehensive center of the dynamic State University
of New York, the University today offers graduate, undergraduate and professional
programs to more than 21,000 students (13,000 full-time). Its faculty numbers 3,500
(1 ,200 full-time), a figure expected to triple by 1975 .
. . . organized according to a plan which is unique in higher education. All instruction
is offered by seven interdisciplinary faculties: arts and letters, educational studies,
engineering and applied sciences, health sciences, law and jurisprudence, natural
sciences and mathematics, and social sciences and administration. Bachelor's degrees
are earned in the University College - the school of undergraduate and general
studies. Extensive post-baccalaureate programs are coordinated by the School of Graduate Studies, and Millard Fillmore College offers both evening credit courses and an
expanding program of continuing education .
. . . the former privately-supported University of Buffalo, which was founded as a
School of Medicine in 1846 with Millard Fillmore, thirteenth President of the United
States, as its first chancellor. It merged with State University of New York in September, 1962 .
. . . one of the principal educational resources of New York State. Each year the University awards more than 100 academic doctorates and 250 professional degrees
in the fields of law, medicine and dentistry. More than 2,000 bachelor's and master's
degrees are granted annually .
. . . committed to a large-scale program of sponsored research with a current volume
in excess of $10 million annually. By 1974, this total- already representing the
largest and most inclusive research program within State University - is expected to
exceed $20 million annually .
. . . the home of the Western New York
uclear Research Center, Inc., the third
largest university reactor in the nation and the most powerful "pulse-type" research
reactor on any campus. Fourteen other specialized centers, institutes, and laboratories
are wholly or partly concerned with research .
. . . developing an increasingly important collection of scholarly and cultural resources:
the Lockwood Memorial Library, world-renowned for its collection of poetry, James
Joyce materials and contemporary manuscripts; the Budapest String Quartet in residence; the Visiting Slee Composers program; and the Center of the Creative and
Performing Arts, a joint project with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra .
. . . planning a large-scale physical development to accommodate future academic
growth. By the mid 1970's, a 1,000-acre site in northern metropolitan Buffalo will
provide facilities for all academic programs within a physical setting which has been
described as the "University of the 21st Century." The new campus will incorporate
such innovations as non-degree granting colleges which will serve as centers of identification for the 37,000 students. Each college will be headed by a master and will
enroll no more than 1,000 students, graduate and undergraduate, resident and nonresident.
- 53 -

��MARTIN MEYERSON
President, State University of New York at Buffalo

Martin Meyerson became the President of the State University of New York at
Buffalo on September 1, 1·966 . He came to Buffalo from the University of California
at Berkeley where he was Dean of the Co llege of Environmental Design and where
he also served as Acting Chancellor.
President Meyerson has had an outstanding career in teaching, scholarship, educational administration and urban planning . He received his A.B. in 1942 from Columbia , and in 1949 he received his M.C.P. (Professional degree, doctoral equivalent)
from Harvard where he was a Wheelwright Fellow.
He has been a member of the faculties of the University of Chicago, the University of Pennsylvania, Yale, Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
and also has been a consultant to and an active member of the boards of various
mun icipalities, private foundations , the Federal Government and the United Nations .
An author of note, President Meyerson has written and edited books and articles
on urban planning and development, a field in which he is recognized as one of the
nation ' s foremost authorities.
President Meyerson, 45 -years old , is married and has three children.
- 55 -

�DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
JAMES E. PEELLE

AD Jim Peelle and U/ B athletics are synonymous, and this has been the case for
34 years. The personable director of the athletic program at Buffalo, expanding
continuously and with impressionable rapidity, is one of the most popular figures
on the campus.
Respected as Genial Jim by students, staff, alumni and friends of the University,
Mr. Peelle has devoted his life to sports, its peoples and its progress. His deep regard
for athletics is a well-disciplined combination of academics and competition. Born of
the old school when you played the game until the bone broke through the skin, he
is successfully mixing time-tested athletic philosophy with modern intercollegiate
programming.
A native of Staunton, Ill., where his Dad was a railroad man, Jim developed the
ingredients of a hard day's work and he hasn' t stopped yet. He set a fast pace as
a star quarterback at Purdue, tasted the rewards of a Big Ten Championship with
the Boilermakers and he continues to retain a brisk attack in his daily assignments.
After his Purdue graduation in 1934 he immediately joined the athletic department at U/ B as an assistant football coach. He became head coach and athletic director in 1936. He led the Bulls as head coach for nine seasons from 1936-47, excluding the war years 1943-45. His first club was 6-3-0. His final team in 1947 was
one of his best with an 8-1-0 summary. Overall, he won 39, lost 34 and tied one
against strong small college scheduling.
An active professor in health, recreation and physical education, he has a Master's
in the field, Peelle retired as head coach of baseball in 1968. His 1963 and 1964
teams played in CAA regional tournaments.
The Peelles, wife Jane (Buffalo St. '31), are proud and respected community residents of suburban Snyder. The Peelles have three children, James W. (Bradley '62),
David (Miami U. '64), now in the military in Germany in Armed Forces Radio and
a daughter, Penny. Mr. Peelle, Jim and Dave were all members of Lambda Chi Alpha
fraternity as undergraduates.
A successful gardener, Jim has his own greenhouse and a blue ribbon tract of
cultivated J·a nd on his property. His wide variety of fruits and vegetables are the
choicest in the region.
Retired from a strenuous speaking tour, Buffalo's AD is the dean of athletic personalities in the area. His constant devotion and affection for the University has help
to ignite the Bulls to the edge of national acclaim.

-56-

�Director of Sports Information
RICHARD E. BALDWIN, St. lawrence ' 54

Buffalo's new DSI is a former chief of facts and figures at
Dartmouth {1966-68) and St. Lawrence {1960-66). A native of
Burlington, Vt., he crossed Lake Champlain and earned his B.A.
at St. Lawrence in 1954. He also holds a M.S. in television from
Syracuse {1958). Prior to joining the college public relations
field, he worked in radio and television.
Baldwin has been associated with WCAX-TV, WCAX Radio
and WJOY, all in Burlington. As a high school sports reporter
he served on the staff of the Burlington Daily ews.
During a two-year service tour in the Army, (1955-57) Dick
managed Armed Forces Radio Station KTAH in Honolulu and was
sports editor of a military newspaper in Hawaii. His early military included graduation from the Army Information School at Ft. Slocum, .Y.
Baldwin is a past president of the Association of Sports Information Directors of
the ECAC. He has also been on the ECAC Publ ic Relations Committee. At SLU he
served as secretary of the Tri-State Hockey League and headed publicity for the new
Independent College Athletic Conference.
A director of hockey clinics at St. Lawrence with Coach George Menard, Baldwin
remains active in broadcasting and at Dartmouth did football interview shows over
W HV Radio.
The Baldwins, wife Carolyn (B.S. Mary Washington '57 and M .Ed . St. Lawrence ' 64),
have one hockey line- left wing Tom 6, center Bob 8 and right wing Jim 3.

Business Manager
HOWARD l. DANIELS

Dan Daniels was appointed business manager and promotional ·director for athletics last July. He has had extensive experience in the field of promotion and public relat ions during
a busy military career. Daniels retired from the Air Force last
summer.
A native of Union City, Pa., Dan is a veteran of 20 years
service in the U.S.A.F . A much-decorated non-comm issioned
officer, 12 different citations, he has been stationed in or
travelled thro ugh 43 count ri es.
Some of his military tours of duty have been at Headquarters
Far East Air Forces, Tokyo; Pacific Area Command A ir Forces,
Hickam Air Force Base, Honolulu; Hill Air Force Base, Utah; and
the Fourth Allied Tactical Air Forces, orth Atlantic Treaty Organization, Ramstien
Air Force Base, Germany.
Daniels has had outstanding administrative training and experience and has been
schooled in three of the top Air Force educational programs. He has been closely
associated with athletics and promotions.
An active outdoorsman, Dan is married and the father of a son, Michael 1'12. His
wife, Yuette, a native of Montreal, P.Q., is a former school teacher and taught abroad .

-57-

�RESERVED FOR

.•·

-.... (. . ..

THE FOURTH ESTATE
The University of Buffalo Football Press Guides are published annually by the
Office of Sports Information, Department of Inter-Collegiate Athletics. The guides are
distributed nationally to all members of the fourth estate to better inform writers and
broadcasters with U/ B Football, past and present.
Applications for working press reservations, radio and photography rights should
be completed at least two weeks in advance of a playing date with the Office of
Sports Information.
Requests for additional information on current Buffalo teams are fulfilled by the
DSI Office, Room 104, Clark Gym, 716-831-2924.

Other U/B Sportsmen You Should Know
Vice-President, University Relations
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Charles Dick
Chief, U/ B ews Bureau . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . James R. DeSantis
Director, Alumni Relations . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . David M. Krajewski
OS/ Secretary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . Mrs. Claudia Ley
Athletic Office Secretary . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . Mrs. Peg Reilly
Football Secretaries . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... Mrs. Virgini\J Spicer
Mrs. Mildred Locher
Football Photography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Don Glena
The Boosters Club . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President Alex Aversano
Vice-President Victor Pellicanno, M.D.
Treasurer Robert Lipp
Secretary Michael Guercio
Captain, Varsity Cheerleaders .
. Judy Powell '69
Director of Marching Band .....
. . . . . . . . • . . . Frank J. Cipolla

ATHLETIC TELEPHONE DIRECTORY

Athletic Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Football Office . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . .
Rotary Field Press Box . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Bus iness Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . .
Ticket Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
WESTERN U ION (Rand Building) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
(Buffalo Area Code 716)

-58-

831 -2934
831-2938
831 -4626
8 31-2926
831·2926
856-5760

�WBEN Radio - Broadcasting The Bulls
VAN MILLER, Play-by-Play
Buffalo's favorite sports personality on the air, Van Miller,
will be broadcasting U/B games home and away for the third
straight season. His busy play-by-play and reporting schedule
includes college and professional (Bills) events - footba ll, baseball and basketball. Miller's foremost assignment in Radio-TV
has been in the o. 1 chair as the Voice of the Bills, but he
is sincerely interested and informed about college ath letics.
An athlete himself at Dunkirk (N.Y.) High School, Van moved
from the playing field to behind a microphone at an early
age. His baseball and basketball career served him well later
at the mike and he made his play-by-play debut in his hometown with instant success.
He attended Syracuse, taking advantage of that institution's fine radio-TV program,
and later graduated from Fredonia State '51.
The Millers, wife Gloria, have a daughter, Cathy 13, and a son, Van 8 . Sports in
general is an important conversation piece in the Miller household. When time
permits Van likes golf, skiing, bowling and fishing.
A popular after-dinner speaker, he is on the banquet circuit the year around.
Van's broadcasting sidekick fer U/ B football is Stan Barron.

ABOUT BUSTER
The bull shown here first appeared in the March 11 , 1963 issue
of Sports Illustrated. The athletic
department is grateful to artist Robert Riger and the publishers of
Sports Illustrated for their permission to reproduce it and use it as
the official symbol of all University
of Buffalo athletic teams.
The actual Buffalo mascot seen
at the football games is Buster V,
a combination of Black Angus and
Scottish Dexter. He is a direct lineal
descendent of Buster I who was a
gift to the University of Buffalo from
Elizabeth Taylor and the late Mike
Todd when they visited the campus
in 1958.
As far as can be determined, Buffalo is the only collegiate team
with a bull for a mascot.
- 59-

�Former Bulls In The "Pros"

JOHN STOFA

GERRY PHILBIN

Gerry Philbin '64 represents the highest degree of professional success in football
of any modern U / B graduate. Philbin attained national status as an undergraduate
on the gridiron for the Bulls and is now in his fifth season with the ew York Jets
at defensive end.
Philbin 's stature in football has grown. From a hard-working 6-2, 207-pound
sophomore he has expanded to a 248-pound agile professional. He played at defensive tackle for the Bulls and came to the campus after an All-Rhode Island scholastic
career at Tolman High in Pawtucket.
Philbin, associated with a brokerage firm in the off season, ran the circuit from
coast to coast on All-America and regional charts and was named to the Academic
All-America team as an undergraduate. He capped his college career by playing in
the North-South Game and the Coaches All-America Game.

Quarterback John Stofa '64 signed a new contract with the Cincinnati Bengals
early in 1968. At 6-3, 210, Stofa went to the Bengals from the Miami Dolphins in
December, 1967. He was the first player the new AFL club obtained.
Stofa was the starting QB for the Dolphins until breaking his right leg in the first
game of the season. His leg is completely healed and he was on the Dolphin active
list for the final three games of ' 67.
As a collegian Stofa lettered in three sports - football, basketball and baseball.
He joined the Bulls following a glossy high school career at Bishop McCort, Johnstown , Pa.
A cool college performer, Stofa appears on the edge of a brilliant pro reputation.

ADDITIONAL U/ B PRO LINE-UP

DON GILBERT '65, halfback. . . . . . . . . . .
. Winn ipeg Blue Bomb ers
E. GREENARD POLES ' 66, linebacker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Edmonton Eskimos
TED GIBBO 5 ' 68, defensive tackle .. : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Toronto Argonaut s
LARRY GERGLEY ' 64, linebacker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . Orlando Panthers
RO PUGH ' 6 7, defensive end . . . . . . .
. Orlando Panthers
TOM HURD '68, defensive halfback . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Orl ando Panth ers
- 60-

�U/B AREA SPORTS DIRECTORY
DAILY NEWSPAPERS

RADIO

BUFFALO COURIER-EXPRESS (AM)
785 Main Street
Buffalo, ew York 14240
Mike Kana ley, Sports Editor
Bob Powell, College Writer
Charley Bailey, Columnist
Phone 853-8700

WBEN (93 0)
2077 Elmwood Avenue
Buffalo, ew York 14207
Van Miller
Stan Barron
Phone: 876-0930

BUFFALO EVENING NEWS (PM)
218 Main Street
Buffalo, New York 14240
Charley Young, Sports Editor
Dick Johnston, College Writer
SteveWeller, Columnist
Phone: 856-4444

23 North Street
Buffalo, ew York 14202
Charley Bailey
Phone: 886-0970

WEBR (970)

Niagara Falls, ew York 14302
Mike Quinlan, Sports Editor

WGR (550)
184 Barton Street
Buffalo, New York 14213
Ernie Warlick
Frank Benny
Phone: 886-0035

TONAWANDA NEWS (PM)
North Tonawanda, ew York 14120
Lou Simon, Sports Editor

WJJL (1440)
Niagara Falls, New York
jimmy Thompson

LOCKPORT UNION-SUN &amp; JOURNAL (PM)
Lockport, ew York 14094
John Hoy, Sports Editor

TELEVISION

NIAGARA FALLS GAZETTE (PM)

WIRE SERVICES
ASSOCIATED PRESS
218 Main Street
Buffalo, ew York 14240
Marvin Pike
Phone: 852-1051

WBEN-TV (Channel 4)
2077 Elmwood Avenue
Buffalo, ew York 14207
Van Miller
Stan Barron
Phone: 876-0930
WGR-TV (Channel 2)
184 Barton Street
Buffalo, ew York 14213
Ernie Warlick
Frank Benny
Phone: 881-2222

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
218 Main Street
Buffalo, ew York 14240
Allan Bruce
Phone: 852-2085

WKBW-TV (Channel 7)
1430 Main Street
Buffalo, ew York 14209
Rick Azar
Phone: 884-5107

WESTERN UNION
Rand Building, Buffalo, N.Y.
Vince jackson, Sales Manager
Phone: 856-5 760
-61-

�COACH OF CROSS-COUNTRY

Em ery). Fis her, Buffal o '51
Coach Fisher has been associated with the Buffalo athletic
department since his graduation from U/ B in 1951. He joined
the staff immediately after his undergraduate career as an
instructor in physical education . He handles both varsity and
freshman cross-country and track teams .
Emery is married and the father of two daughters, Corinne
13 and adine 9. His wife, Eleanor, went to Bryant Stratton
before setting up bookkeeping at home.
A sprinter and hurdler for the Bulls as an undergraduate,
Fisher served in special services in the Army during World War
II . In the summer months he is a supervisor in the Department of Parks, Division of
Recreation for the City of Buffalo .
His favorite avocation is attending track and field meets. He is president of the
Western
ew York Track and Field Officials Association and Long Distance Running
Chairman of the iagara District AAU .

COACH OF VARSITY GOLF

Dr. Leona rd T. Serfust ini, Buffal o '50
Len Serfustini has been in the sports headlines in the Buffalo
area since his early days at P.S. 76 and Technical High School.
He was a schoolboy star in baseball and basketball and set a
fast pace for a busy athletic career to follow.
Dr. Serfustini is Buffalo's head coach of basketball as well
as golf and is an assistant professor of education in the professional program of Health, Physical Education and Recreation
in the School of Education .
Following three years in the Navy during World War II, Len
enrolled at U/ B in 1946 and started a heralded collegiate career. In 1950 and 1951 he was a teaching fellow and head coach of freshman
basketball. He then went to Troy State Teachers College (Ala.) as an assistant professor and coach of basketball and tennis. He also was a football assistant.
Serf returned to his alma mater in 1956 and has been one of the most active
members of the athletic staff on a year-round schedule . In 12 seasons his basketball teams have won 181 and lost 84 . His overall hoop record, including five years
at Troy St. (70-30) is 251 and 114.
Dr. and Mrs. Serfustini reside in suburban Tonawanda . Their son Anthony is a
graduate of the U/ B Medical School.

-62-

�VARSITY CROSS -COUNTRY
Date
Sept. 21 (Sat.)
Sept. 28 (Sat.)
Oct. 5 (Sat.)
Oct. 12 (Sat.)
Oct. 16 (Wed.)

Oct. 19 (Sat.)
Oct. 22 (Tues.)
Oct. 26 (Sat.)
Oct. 30 (Wed.)

Nov. 2 (Sat.)
Nov. 5 (Tues.)

Opponent
Syracuse
Cleveland State
leMoyne lnvit.
Brockport State
Guelph
Niagara
leMoyne
Geneseo State
Fredonia State
Canisius lnvit.
Gannon
Buffalo State
Canisius
Niagara
NYS Champion.
Niagara C.C.

Time
11:00 EDT
11:00 EDT
1:00 EDT
2:00 EDT
4:00 EDT

Site
Syracuse, NY
Buffalo
Syracuse, NY
Brockport, NY
Buffalo

1:00 EDT
4:30 EDT

Syracuse, NY
Buffalo

1:00 EDT
4:00 EDT

Canisius
Buffalo

11:00 EST
4:00 EST

Oswego, NY
Niagara

FRESHMAN CROSS-COUNTRY
Date
Sept. 21 (Sat.)
Sept. 28 (Sat.)
Oct. 5 (Sat.)
Oct. 12 (Sat.)
Oct. 16 (Wed.)

Nov. 2 (Sat.)

Opponent
Syracuse
Cleveland State
lemoyne lnvit.
Brockport State
Guelph
Niagara
Canisius lnvit.
Gannon
Buffalo State
Canisius
Niagara
NYS Champion.

Date
Sept.16 (Mon.)
Sept. 23 (Mon.)
Sept. 25 (Wed.)
Oct. 2 (Wed.)
Oct. 3 (Thu.)
Oct. 8(Tues.)
Oct. 12 (Sat.)
Oct. 14 (Mon.)
Oct. 16 (Wed.)
Oct. 19 (Sat.)
Oct. 21 (Mon.)
Oct. 25 (Fri.)
Oct. 30 (Wed.)

Opponent
Buffalo State
St. Bonaventure
Canisius
St. Bonaventure
Geneseo State
Buffalo State
ECAC Fall Tourn.
Canisius
Niagara
ECAC Fall Tourn.
Niagara C.C.
Niagara
Niagara C.C.

Oct. 26 (Sat.)
Oct. 30 (Wed.)

Time
10:30 EDT
11:00 EDT
12:30 EDT
2:00 EDT
4:00 EDT

2:30 EDT
2:00 EDT

10:30 EST

Site
Syracuse, NY
Buffalo
Syracuse, NY
Brockport, NY
Buffalo

Canisius
Buffalo

Oswego, NY

VARSITY GOLF

-63-

Time
1:00 EDT
1:00 EDT
1:00 EDT
2:00 EDT
1:00 EDT
2:00 EDT
(Regional)
1:00 EDT
1:30 EDT
(Finals)
1:30 EDT
1:30 EDT
1:30 EDT

Site
Buffalo (A)
Buffalo
Buffalo
St. Bona.
Geneseo, NY
Buffalo (H)

Canisius
Buffalo
Niagara
Niagara
Buffalo

�W ESTERN
SAVINGS BANK
salutes

The
Buffalo Bulls
and extends best wishes for an exciting and rewarding
1968 season

THE

WESTERN
SAVINGS
OF

BANK

BUFFALO

Where Your Money Is Safe, Insured and Always Available
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�1968 BUFFALO COMPOSITE SCHEDULE
Sept 14

Sept. 21

Sept 28

Oct.S

Oct. l2

Oct 19

Oct26

Nov. 2

tOW A STATE

BUFFALO
at

ARIZONA
at

B.Y.U.
at

COLORADO
at

KANSAS ST
at

OKLAHOMA
at

KANSAS
at

NEBRASKA
at

Ames

Ames

Provo

Ames

Monllotton

Norman

Ames

KENT STATE

DAYTON
at

BUFFALO
at

OHIOUNIV
at

MIAMI(O.}
at

WESTERN MICH
at

BOWLING GRN .
at

TOLEDO
at

Kent

Kent

Miami

Kent

Bowling Green

Kent

MAINE
at

"BUFFALO
at
Buffalo

DELAWARE
at
Newark

BOSTON UN IV
at

RHODE ISLAND
at

Amherst

Kingston

NAVY
at
Annapolis

BUFFALO
at
Chestnut Hill

HOFSTRA
at

VILLANOVA
at

MASSACHUSETTS
at

Newark

Villanova

TOLEDO
at
Villanova

Dayton

MASSACHUSETTS

Amherst

9

Nov . 16

Nov . 23

MISSOURI
at

OKLAHOMAST
at

Ames

Columbia

Stillwater

LOUISVILLE
at

MARSHALL
at

XAVIER
at

louisville

Marshall

Kent

CONNECTICUT
at

VERMONT
at

HOLY CROSS
at

NEW HAMPSHIRE
at

BOSTON COLL
at

Amherst

Burlington

Worcester

Amherst

Amherst

~ASSACHUSETTS

VILLANOVA
at
Buffalo

TULANE
at

PENN STATE
at

ARMY
at

V .M.I

at

at

Tulane

Chestnut Hill

West Point

Chestnut Hill

Amher~t

BUFFALO
at
Buffalo

WEST CHESTER
at

Newort.

Newark

TEMPLE
at
Phtlodelphto

RUTGERS
at
New Brunswick

LEHIGH
at
Bethlehem

BOSTONU
at
Newark

DELAWARE
at

V.MI
at

BOSTON COLL.
at

WM . &amp; MARY
at

QUANTICO
at

W, VIRGINIA
at

WEST CHESTER
at

lexington

Chestnut Hit\

BUFFALO
at
Buffalo

XAVIER
at

Villano Yo

Villanova

Williamsburg

Villanova

Morgantown

Villanova

HARVARD
at
Cambridge

DARTMOUTH
at

COLGATE
at

BOSTONUNIV
at

BUFFALO
at

SYRACUSE
at

MASSACHUSETTS
at

RUTGERS
at

CONNECTICUT
at

Worcester

Hamilton

Buffalo

Worcester

Worcester

New Brunswick

Worcester

RHODE ISLAND
at

WAYNE ST.
at

BOSTON UN IV
at

BUCKNELL
at

HOFSTRA
at

DELAWARE
at

BUFFALO
at

GETTYSBURG
at

NORTHEASTERN
at

DAYTON
at

Pkilodelphio

Detroit

Boston

Philadelphia

Hempstead

Philadelphia

Pkiladelpkia

Gellysburg

Pkiladelphia

Pkilodelphio

BAll STATE
at

SAN DIEGO ST
at

N.DAKOTA
at

INDIANA ST.
at

NEW MEXICO ST.
at

BUFFALO
at

BOWLING GRN .
at

OHIOUNtV
at

San Diego

DeKalb

Terre Houle

N. ARIZONA
at
DoKalb

XAVIER
at

Muncie

DeKalb

DeKalb

DeKalb

DeKalb

Aikens

BOSTON COLLEGE

DELAWARE

VILLANOVA

HOLY CROSS

TEMPLE

NORTHERN IlliNOIS

Nov.

Boston

BUCKNEll
at
Newark

BUFFALO vs. THE 1968 SCHEDULE - WON 24, LOST 21, TIED
BUFFALO
at

BOSTON UNIV

Boston

Nov . 30- Holv Cron vs Boston College at Chestnut Hill

·Sept. 27 at War Memorial

�STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
Clark Gym, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL PROGRAM

•

VILLANOVA STADIUM

,•
I

vs

•

NOVEMBER 11, 1967

�Don't Be Left Out·
C'MON UNDER!

Let us show you the way
to complete insurance protection

HUGGLER INSURANCE
AGENCY, INC.
120 W. Lancaster Avenue
Paoli, Pennsylvania 19301
Phone: 644-7070

Official Hosts for Villanova Football and Track Dinners

and

HOMECOMING COCKTAIL PARTY
LUNCH AND DINNER SERVED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAy

Dancing Saturday Evenings

Banquet Facilities

LANCASTER AVENUE AND OLD EAGLE SCHOOL LANE
STRAFFORD, PENNSYLVANIA
For reservations call MUrray 8-1169

�THE VILLANOVA

OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

*******
LONGINES
THE WORLD'S
MOST HONORED
WATCH®
10 world's fair grand prizes
28 gold medals

Longines watches are recognized
as OFFICIAL for timing world
championships and Olympic sports
in all fields throughout the world.

VILLANOVA
vs.

BUFFALO

Loncines Ultra-Chron #8205, automatic with calendar, $175.
Other Ultra-Chron Models, $150 to $595.

the fab ulous new

LONGINES ULTRA-CHRON
November 11, 1967

•

Guaranteed Accurate To A Minute A Month

Villanova Stadium

W ritte n a nd Edite d by J IM MURRAY
Sports Infor matio n Directo r, Villa nova University

Represented for Notional Advertising by

The ultimate personal chronometer,
guaranteed accurate to a minute a montha mean average of 2 seconds per day.
Ultra-Chron tells the date, hour, m.inute,
second. Never needs batteries. Winds
automatically while you wear it All-Proof®
construction defeats water, dust,
shock, magnetism. At Longines-Wittnauer
Franchised Jewelers, coast-to-coast

SPENCER ADVERTISING COMPANY, INC.
271 Madison Ave., New York City
Distributed by JOSEPH FRIEDLANDER ASSOCIATES

LONGINES-WIITNAUER WATCH CO.
MONTREAL

NEW YORK
GENEVA
Maker of Watches Of The Hi1hest Character
For Over A Centurr

CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

�VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY
VARSITY &amp; FRESHMAN SWIMMING TEAMS
SCHEDULE
Date

Opponent

Site

Team

Time

Dec. 1, 1967

Yale

Home

Varsity

8:00PM

Dec. 6, 1967

Maryland

Home

Varsity

3:30PM

Dec. 8, 1967

Catholic Univ.

Home

Varsity

2:00PM

Dec.9, 1967

Princeton

Home

Frosh
Varsity

2:30PM
4:30PM

Jan. 20, 1968

West Chester

Home

Frosh
Varsity

2:30PM
4:30PM

Jan.24, 1968

Hill

Home

Frosh

3:00PM

Jan. 26, 1968

Army

Home

Plebe
Varsity

2:30PM
4:30PM

Jan.27, 1968

Episcopal Academy

Away

Frosh

12:00 Noon

Jan. 31 , 1968

Rutgers

Home

Frosh
Varsity

2:00PM
4:00PM

Feb. 3, 1968

LaSalle

Home

Frosh
Varsity

1:00PM
3:30PM

Feb. 7 , 1968

Navy

Away

Plebe
Varsity

3:30PM

Feb. 10, 1968

Pennsylvania

Away

Frosh
Varsity

1:00PM
2:30PM

Feb. 12, 1968

Malvern

Home

Frosh

4:00PM

Feb. 14, 1968

Monmouth

Away

Varsity

7:00PM

Feb. 21, 1968

Penn State

Home

Varsity

3:00PM

Feb. 22 , 1968

St. Bonaventure

Home

Varsity

4:00PM

Feb. 24, 1968

Temple

Away

Frosh
Varsity

1:00PM
2:30PM

Feb. 28, 1968

N.Y.U.

Away

Varsity

5:00PM

Thur., Fri. , Sat., March 7- 8 - 9, Eastern Seaboard Championships, Princeton University
Thur., Fri ., Sat., March 28 - 29 - 30, N.C.A.A. Championships, Dartmouth College
Thur. , Fri. , Sat., April 11 - 12 - 13, National A.A.U . Championships , East Carolina College
Sat. , Feb. 17, 1968
Villanova University
Presents 34th Annual
National Catholic Interscholastic
Diving and Swimming Championships
Diving 9:00 AM
Heats 1:00 PM

Finals 8:00 PM

2
CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

�VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY VARSITY SWIMMING TEAM
1st row, seated (1. to r.)-Jack Brangan, John Fitzgerald, Paul Hornsleth, Paul Campbell, Joe Reidy, Jeff Farrell,
Rich McAteer, co·capt. Mike Fitzmaurice
2nd row, kneeling-Ted Melnychuk, Peter Ancona, Frank Musico, Peter Montero, Bob Hartye, Bill McDonough,
Rich Lamb
3rd row, standing-Diving coach Nick Callazzo, senior mgr. Bill Hooper, mgr. J. C. Pedersen, Kevin Brennan, Bob
Goldschmidt, co·capt. Ed Ritti, Frank Hartye, Charles Stone, Ed McClatchy, asst. coach Jack Lumsden,
coach Ed Geisz

VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY FRESHMAN SWIMMING TEAM
1st row, kneeling (I. to r.)-Don Colombo, Bob Corno, Bill Schultz, AI Martinez·Fonts, Ed Long, Jim Nolly, Bob
Bennewitz
2nd row, standing-Diving coach Nick Callazzo, mgr. Mark Lubbers, Olaf von Schilling, Bill Kenwell, David
McDonough, Matt McNamara, Tom Battle, Jon Schrider, Warren Caldwell, asst. coach Jack Lumsden,
coach Ed Geisz

3

�•
reservations
steamship

DOYLE &amp; HEMCHER, INC.

airlines
tours &amp; cruises

Plastering Contractors

829 CONESTOGA ROAD

resort hotel

I

The
Suburban
Travel Agency, Inc.

ROSEMONT, PA.

•

SUBURBAN SQUARE, ARDMORE, PA .
Opposite Penna. Railroad Station

Midway 9-4700

Doyle and McDonnell, Inc.
Nursery and General Contracting
Landscapers for Villanova University

MAIN OFFICE

BERWYN, PENNA.

4

Niagara 4-0270

�Villanova's President
~ev . Robert J. Welsh, O.S.A., was appointed
President of Villanova University in August of
1967. He succeeded the Rev. J oseph A. Flaherty,
O.S.A., and becomes the University's 25th P resident.
A native of Philadelphia, Father Welsh is a
graduate of West Catholic High School and earned
the degree of Bachelor of Arts at Villanova in
1943. He was ordained to the P riesthood in 1947.
~ather Welsh later attended Gregorian University
m Rome, where he received his Doctorate in
Sacred Theology.
He was named to the Villanova Faculty in
1956. He served as Secretary to the P rovincial of
the Augustinian P rovince of Villanova, from 1956
to 1959. Father Welsh was appointed Dean of the
9ollege of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Villanova
m 1~ 6.1, where he proved to be an outstanding
admimstrator. He was serving in that post when
he was named P resident.
A youthful-looking scholar, Father Welsh is
46 years o~d. Two sisters, Miss Mary Welsh and
Mrs. Martm Holahan reside in the P hiladelphia
area.

Rev. Robert J. Welsh , O.S.A.

Buffalo's President
Martin Meyerson became the President of the
State University of New York at Buffalo on September 1, 1966. He came to Buffalo from the University of California at Berkeley where he was
Dean of the College of Environmental Design and
where he also served as Acting Chancellor.
President Meyerson has had an outstanding
career in teaching, scholarship, educational administration and urban planning. He received his
A.B. in 1942 from Columbia, and in 1949 he
received his M.C.P. (Professional degree, doctoral
equivalent) from Harvard where he was a Wheelwright Fellow.
He has been a member of the faculties of the
University of Chicago, the University of Pennsylvania, Yale, Harvard and the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and also has been a consultant to and an active member of the boards of
various municipalities, private foundations, the
Federal Government and the United Nations.
An author of note, President Meyerson has
written and edited books and articles on urban
planning and development, a field in which he is
recognized as one of the nation's foremost authorities.
P resident Meyerson, 44-years old, is married
and has three children.
Martin Meyerson

5
CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

�ATHLETIC DIRECTORS
Arthur L. Mahan has been athletic director
at Villanova for seven years, and in that time has
helped the University make great strides in the
field of athletics and, of even greater importance,
that of making new friends for Villanova and its
programs-be they academic or athletic. He has
been head baseball coach for 18 years.
A graduate of the Villanova class of 1936,
Mahan has already made a fine impression on his
fellow college administrators with his willingness
to listen and learn and his desire to cooperate with
them on such important athletic matters as scheduling and rule making.
A former major league first baseman, Mahan
spent six years in professional baseball and also
served as a minor league manager for one season.
Art played with the Philadelphia Phillies during
the 1940 campaign.
Upon graduation from Villanova after a fine
athletic career, Mahan was signed by the Boston
Red Sox. After an excellent season with Little
Rock in 1941, Mahan entered the Navy as an
Ensign and served in Tom Hamilton's V-5 athletic
program with the Navy Air Corps during World
War II.
Mahan is married to the former Helen Malin,
a Philadelphian and a graduate of Chestnut Hill
College. The Mahans have ten children, the eldest
being Art Jr., who graduated from Villanova in
1965.
Villanova's Arthur L. Mahan

Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years;
nobody has done more for sports at UB than genial
Jim.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on
the North Main Street campus in 1934, following a
career as a star quarterback for Purdue University.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football
coach. He became head coach and athletic director in
1936 and has held the latter job ever since. His
greatest teams at Buffalo were developed in the postWorld War II years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and
8-1 in 1947. He then gave up football coaching to
devote his time more fully to being athletic director
as the university began its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB
baseball team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in NCAA Regional Tournament s.
Jim is one of the top performer s on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply
of anecdotes make him a much sought-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children while still finding time to participate in numerous civic activities throughout the Buffalo area.

(

James E. Peelle

6

�HEAD COACHES
From 1959 to 1965 Gregory, 39, directed
the highly-successful football program at East
Stroudsburg State College in Pennsylvania. Over
the seven year span his teams won 48, lost 10 and
tied 2.
Gregory's 1965 team was undefeated in 10
outings and won both the Eastern Pennsylvania
State College Conference title and the Pennsylvania State College Championship. In recognition
of his team's accomplishment, Gregory was named
N.C.A.A. Small College "Coach of the Yea('
for District II (Pennsylvania, New Jersey, OhiO,
Delaware and West Virginia).
A 1952 graduate of East Stroudsburg's Health
and Physical Education curriculum, Gregory also
holds a Masters degree in Education from Temple University. He began his coaching career at
duPont High School in Wilmington, Delaware,
shortly after graduation. Gregory gained an outstanding reputation at duPont and was one of the
coaches for the first statewide high school All-Star
game ever played in Delaware.
At East Stroudsburg, Gregory's Warrior
teams have consistently been ranked among the
offensive and defensive leaders in the small college statistics of both the N.A.I.A. and the
N.C.A.A.
Jack and his wife, Margaret, have two sons,
John (11), and Bruce ( 4), and presently live in
Malvern, Pa.
Villanova's Jack Gregory

Richard "Doc" Urich became head coach at
the University of Buffalo in 1966. In his first season the team won five and lost five, established
seven new U.B. offensive records and displayed to
Western New York fans the most exciting college
football ever seen in the area.
Urich came to Buffalo from Notre Dame,
where he was Ara Parseghian's top offensive aide.
Prior to then "Doc" served with Parseghian at
Northwestern and Miami (0.), his alma mater.
"Doc" Urich was born on September 10, 1928,
in Wapakoneta, Ohio. He attended Wapakoneta
High School where he captained both the football
and basketball squads as a senior.
At Miami (0.) Urich was a standout in college football. He played four years and in his
freshman and senior seasons his teams made
appearances in the Sun Bowl and the Salad Bowl.
"Doc" was captain of the Miami team in his senior
year. In his junior and senior seasons he won
All-Ohio honors, and in his last three years he
was selected All-Conference (Mid-America) end.
"Doc" and his wife, the former Patricia
Streight, also of Wapakoneta, have two children,
Cynthia (born in 1952) and Danny (born in
1955). The Urich family now lives in Williamsville, New York.

Richard "Doc" Urich

7
CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

�co

THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN

Villanova's Coaching Staff (from left) - Head coach Jack Gregory, assistant head coach
Sterling Brown, assistant coaches Lou Ferry, John Brunner (seated), Walt Posadowski
(seated), Tom Urbanik and Dan Laughlin.

�BUFFALO COACHING STAFF

Front row (I to r.)-Bill Dando, head coach Doc Urich, Bob Geiger
Back row-Mike Stock, Bob Deming, Jerry Jppoliti

9
CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

�AT THE HALF
Phone MUrray 8-5800 for
reservations- eight
banquet rooms for 10-500
persons available for
private parties.

AFTER THE GAME
Relax, warm-up with a
TREADWAY TOUCHDOWN
COCKTAIL in the 'ORDINARY'
lounge . . .. Have Dinner
in the 'PUILICK' Dining
Room and savour tasty famed
Treadway dishes....
Reservations advisable.

*

TREADWAY INN
St. Davids, Pennsylvania

"ONE MILE WEST OF
Villanova University"
RoBERT

C.

BENNETT

I 11 n.keeper

MUrray 8-5800

Wayne Sporting
Goods Co.
FRANK X. PURCELL

•

Painting Contractor

Outfitter of the
Villanova Wildcats
School Jackets and Sweaters
- also featuring White Stag Speedo
Bathing Suits

•
25 Master Painters

•

MUrray 8-8680

124 E. Lancaster Ave.
MO 4-0327

10

NARBERTH, PA.

Wayne, Pa.

�UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
Although numerous scholars, philosophers
and academicians have proferred myriad definitions of a university, the State University of New
York at Buffalo is now in the unique and challenging position of not only being able to write its
own definition but to bring that definition to
reality.
There is a fascination among faculty, administration and students in being a part of the most
challenging opportunity for educational innovation ever offered, not only in the building of t~e
multimillion dollar Amherst campus but m
formulating a dynamically novel philosophy of
higher education.
The framework for the latter has been
established by President Martin Meyerson and
the University faculty in their academic reorganization of the University which became
effective September 1. Seven faculties, each
headed by a provost, have replaced the more rigid
departmental organization with a fluid structure
designed to facilitate a truly interdisciplinary collaboration in both study and research.
With the academic reorganization only a harbinger of the new ideas yet to come, the University is attracting top scholars from throughout
the nation who are eager to become a part of its
mushrooming development.
The University was recently awarded a $100,000 grant by the New York State Board of
Regents for the establishment of an Albert Einstein Chair in science, the last of five Einstein
chairs authorized by the State Legislature in
1964. Additional testimony to the University's
growing prestige is its recently-announced participation in the Northeast Radio Observatory

Corporation which includes such schools as Harvard, Yale, M.I.T. and Dartmouth.
The physical embodiment of the educational
philosophy represented by the academic reorganization is the largest architectural undertaking in
America's history. Dr. Robert Ketter, vice-president for facilities planning says the new campus
will be a blend of exciting architecture and carefully planned utility.
At present, the University is preparing for
the "big" move with the occupation of a series of
smaller facilities located throughout the Buffalo
area, of which the largest is the ten-building
"Ridge Lea Campus" of 225,000 square feet near
the Amherst site.
Although these space limitations have of
necessity meant that current student enrollment
be kept relatively stationary, projections for the
mid-1970's call for 30,000 undergraduate and
graduate students compared with the recently
released figure of approximately 15,000 for the
1967-68 academic year.
To this dynamic VISion of tomorrow's
campus, the University at Buffalo brings a 121year history rich with tradition, academic excellence and public service. The educational capital
of Western New York since its founding as a
medical school in 1846, the University has enjoyed
outstanding administrative leadership. Millard
Fillmore, thirteenth President of the United
States served as its first chancellor, followed by
such educational leaders as Dr. Clifford C. Furnas,
nationally known scientist and educator, and
President Meyerson, noted scholar of urban
affairs who was formerly Dean of the College of
Environmental Design and acting chancellor at
the University of California at Berkeley.

11
CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

�Villanova Roster

VILLANOVA
1967 SCHEDULE

*

September 9
West Virginia 40
VILLANOVA 0

*

September 16
West Chester 14
VILLANOVA 9

*

September 23
Boston College 27
VILLANOVA 24

*

September 30
VILLANOVA 21
Delaware 13

*

October 7
Virginia Tech 3
VILLANOVA 0

*

October 14
VILLANOVA 41
Quantico 16

*

October 28
Xavier 3
VILLANOVA 0

*

November 4
VILLANOVA 23
Holy Cross 14

*

November 11
BUFFALO
at
Villanova

*

November 23
TOLEDO
at
Toledo, Ohio

NO.

10
11
12
14
21
22
23
24
25
26
33
34
35
40
44
46
48
50
53
54
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
80
81
83
84
85
86
88
89

HT.

WT.

CLASS

POS.

AGE

QB
QB
QB
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
G

E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

19
22
21
20
19
19
20
18
20
19
19
20
21
20
21
19
20
21
21
20
20
21
19
19
20
20
22
21
19
20
19
21
19
20
22
20
19
20
21
19
21
19
22
19
21
21

6-2
5-11
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
5-8
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-9
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-1
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-0
5-11
6-6
6-2
6-4
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-2
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-1
6-1

195
170
185
185
175
178
175
151
183
172
175
183
190
165
170
180
188
195
205
201
217
212
202
205
190
193
192
210
202
275
225
230
231
223
210
240
207
235
185
185
188
181
210
197
185
200

Jr.
Phoenixville, Pa.
Sr.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Sr.
Boyertown, Pa.
So.
W. Orange, N.J.
Jr.
Yeagertown, Pa.
So.
Cleveland, Ohio
So. W. New York, N.J.
So.
Reading, Pa.
Sr.
Westminster, Md.
So.
Orange, Conn.
So.
Long Island, N. Y.
Jr.
Woodlyn, Pa.
Sr.
Philadelphia , Pa.
Jr.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Sr.
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
So.
Norristown, Pa.
Jr. Richmond Hill, N. Y.
Sr.
Chicago, Ill.
Sr.
Woodside, N. J.
Jr.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Jr.
Media, Pa.
Sr.
Baltimore, Md.
So.
Cleveland, Ohio
Jr.
Pennsauken , N. J.
Sr.
Hamden, Conn.
Jr.
College Park, Md.
Sr.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Sr.
Philadelphia, Pa.
So.
Oak Park, Ill.
Jr.
Wycliffe, Ohio
So. W. New York, N. J.
Sr.
Millville, N. J.
So. Conshohocken, Pa.
Sr.
Newtown, Pa.
Sr.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Jr.
Philadelphia, Pa.
So.
Malvern , Pa.
So.
Brooklyn , N. Y.
Sr.
Plainview, N. Y.
So. W. New York, N. J.
Sr.
Morrisville, Pa.
So.
Upper Darby, Pa.
Sr.
Media, Pa.
So.
Pottstown , Pa.
Sr. E. McKeesport, Pa.
Sr.
Phillipsburg, N.J.

D'Agostini , Charles FB
Galien , Kevin
E
Jeisen , Roman
T
Kessler, Joe
HB
Mahoney, Bill
HB
Nagle, Ed
T
O'Neill , Dennis
E
Schiller, Mark
T
Schunke, John
E
Shugrue , Tom
LB
Stella , Paul
HB

19
21
19
19
20
19
20
19
22
20
20

6-1
5-11
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-2
6-1
5-11
5-11

210
175
220
175
180
200
185
220
200
185
185

So.
Newark, N. J.
Sr.
Havertown , Pa.
So.
Rochester, N.Y.
So. McSherrystown , Pa .
Jr.
Whitestone, N.Y.
So.
Wat chung, N.J.
Jr.
Villanova , Pa.
So.
Rochester, N.Y.
Sr.
River Edge, N.J.
Jr.
Atlanta , Georgia
Jr.
Beacon , N.Y.

NAME

Sodaski, John
Andrejko, Bill
Lignelli, Jack
Cunningham , T.
Kelly, Dennis
Mihalic, Mike
Arthur, Gene
Stopper, John
Bollinger, Ed
Wal ik, Bill
Ellis, Gerald
Bosacco, Ken
Murray, Brendan
Boal, Frank
Greco, Joe
Humay, Gene
Zizzo, Mike
Poehner, Mike
Valenza, John
Braun , Tom
Wiggins, Wayne
Levinsky, Fred
Dailey, Bill
McDonald, Mike
Geary, Steve
Mester, Clark
McDonnell , Brian
Colistra, Joe
Sather, Billy
Moore, Rich
Chmielewski , Tom
McCormack, Bill
Treacy, John
Nolan , Joe
Grossman , Barry
Bogie, Frank
Auch , Fran
Danaher, Mike
Bendish , Bruce
Elwood , Marty
Rossi, Leo
Boyd , Tom
Webb, Dallas
Brezski , Rick
Owen , Paul
Ditze, Denis

c
c

G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T

T

12
CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

HOME TOWN

�e -~
''
.
''
youngmo 1es•
rom
smo--le
are ere.

s

I GM I

Cutlass Hot.day Coupe
at your nearest Oldsmobile Dealers.

MARK Or [XC[U[NC[

��BUFFALO

VILLANOVA
Probable Offensive Lineup

Probable Offensive Lineup

84 TOM BOYD ........... SE

44 CHUCK DRANKOSKI .... SE

74 JOE NOLAN ........... LT

61 MIKE RISSELL .......... LT

67 JOE COLISTRA ......... LG

64 MIKE MASER .......... LG

53 JOHN VALENZA ........ C

52 JOHN WESOLOWSKI .... C

66 BRIAN McDONNELL

.... RG

65 JIM FINOCHIO ........ RG

76 FRANK BOGLE ......... RT

72 SCOTT CLARK .......... RT

8C9 DENIS DITZE ........... TE

85 PAUL LANG ........... TE

11 BILL ANDREJKO ........ QB

14 MICK MURTHA

40 FRANK BOAL .......... LH

21 KEN RUTKOWSKI ....... TB

26 BILL W AUK ........... RH

49 RICK WELLS ........... FL

35 BRENDAN MURRAY ..... FB

36 LEE JONES ............ FB

....... QB

OFFICIALS
Referee Walter A. Schall (Carnell); Umpire George J. Becker (Georgetown); linesman Earl J. Birdy, Jr.
(Slippery Rack); Field Judge Walter W. Sibsan, Jr. (Temple); Back Judge Edward J. Miersch (Lafoyette); Clock Thomas J. Brady.

BULLS SQUAD

WILDCATS SQUAD
10 Sodaski, QB
11 Andrejko, QB
12 Lignelli, QB
14 Cunn'gham, QB

63 McDonald, G
64 Geary, G
65 Mester, G
66 McDonnell, G

21 Kelly, HB
22 Mihalic, HB

67 Colistra, G
68 Sather, G
70 Moore, T
71 Chmielewski, T

23 Arthur, HB
24 Stopper, HB
25 Bollinger, HB
26 Walik, HB
33 Ellis, HB
34 Bosacco, FB
35 Murray, FB
40 Boal, HB
44 Greco, HB
46 Humay, HB
48 Zizzo, HB
50 Poehner, G
53 Valenza, C
54 Braun, C
60 Wiggins, G
61 Levinsky, G
62 Dailey, G

72
73
74
75
76
77
78
80
81
83
84
85
86
88
89

McCormack, T
Treacy, T
Nolan, T
Grossman, T
Bogie, T
Auch, T
Danaher, T
Bendish, E
Elwood, E
Rossi, E
Boyd, E
Webb, E
Brezski, E
Owen, E
Ditze, E

14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
25
29
30
32
34
36
42
44
45
48
49
50
51
52
53

Murtha, QB
58
Martin, DB
61
62
Embow,K
Jack, QB
63
64
Lowe, E
Mason, QB
65
Patterson, HB 66
Rutkowski, HB 67
Washington, HB68
Bell, DB
69
Horn, DB
70
Brennan, FB
72
Richner, LB
73
Luzny, LB
74
L. Jones, FB
75
76
Hoke, DB
Drankoski, E
77
Grubbs, DB
80
81
Hurd, DB
82
Wells, DB
Mosher, LB
83
Wright, LB
84
Wesolowski, C 85
Powrie, C
88

Rishel, LB
Rissell, T
Kowalewski, G
Spencer, G
Maser, G
Finochio, G
Lupienski, LB
Gibbons, DT
Hayden, G
Sabo, LB
Walgate, DT
Clark, T
D. Jones, DT
Beck, DT
Riccelli, DT
Reid, T
Wolf, T
Brisky, DE
Murphy, DE
Endress, E
Kovey, DE
Przybycien, DE
Lang, E
Remillard, DE

�1. ( ) they want to
help the colleges
You were right if you checked No.2.
American corporations want to make
sure there will be enough college-trained
leaders to fill the management jobs open
today and in the future.
This is good insurance for business.
And the need, we must remember, isn't
getting smaller.
World trade is developing fast; business
is getting more competitive, more complex; science is introducing new products and processes rapidly.
College-trained men and women are
needed, in increasing numbers, to plan
and direct the activities of business.
COUNCil. FOR
A !' INANCIAL
(._)
AIDTO

-a"
EDUCATION

Published as a public service in cooperation with The Advertising
Council and the Council for Financial Aid to Education

2. ( ) they need the
leaders colleges train
But the colleges can't do the training job
alone. They need classrooms, laboratories and facilities, yes. But even more,
they need backing to maintain a staff of
top-notch teachers.
This is the human equation that makes
the difference in reaching the margin of
excellence needed in the U.S.
This is everybody's job, but especially
industry's.
Of course American business wants to
help the colleges, so you were also right
if you checked No. 1. College, after all,
is business' best friend.

GIVE TO THE COLLEGE
OF YOUR CHOICE
SPECIAL TO MANAGEMENT -A new booklet
of particular interest if your company has
not yet established an aid-to·education
program. Write for :
"The Rationale of Corporate Giving",
Box 36, Times Square Station
New York, N.Y. 10036

·-- . ...._ .,

�BUFFALO
1967 SCHEDULE

*

September 16
BUFFALO 30
Kent State 6

*

September 23
N. Carolina St. 24
BUFFALO 6

*

September 30
Virginia U. 35
BUFFALO 12

*

October 7
BUFFALO 44
Temple 14

*

October 14
BUFFALO 6
Boston U. 0

*

October 21
BUFFALO 26
Boston Coil. 14

*

October 28
Holy Cross 38
BUFFALO 25

*

November 4
BUFFALO 38
Delaware 19

*

November 11
VILLANOVA
at
Villanova, Pa.

*

November 18
COLGATE
at
Buffalo, N.Y.

Buffalo Roster
NO.

14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
25
29
30
32
34
36
42
44
45
48
49
50
51
52
53
58
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
72
73
74
75
76

POS.

AGE

Murtha, Mick
Martin, Dan
Embow, Bob
Jack, Paul
Lowe, Edwin
Mason, Dennis
Patterson, Pat
Rutkowski, Ken
Washington, Ben
Bell , Harry
Horn, Richard

QB
DB
K
QB
E
QB
HB
HB
HB
DB
DB

Brennan, Tom
Richner, Dave
Luzny, Mike
Jones, Leeland
Hoke, Tom
Drankoski, Ghuck
Grubbs, Gary
Hurd, Tom
Wells, Rick

FB
LB
LB
FB

20
20
19
19
19
19
19
20
20
21
20
20
20
20
21
21
20
19
21
20
20
21
21
21
21
21
20
20
20
21
20
21
20
20
19
20
19
18
20
21
19
20
21
19
19
19
20
20

NAME

Mosher, Jim
Wright, Irvin
Wesolowski, Jack
Powrie, Charles
Rishel, Rod

DB
E
DB
DB
HB
LB
LB

c
c

77

Rissell, Mike
Kowalewski, Tom
Spencer, E. Jon
Maser, Mike
Finochio, Jim
Lupienski, John
Gibbons, Ted
Hayden, Bill
Sabo, Don
Walgate, Dan
Clark, Scott
Jones, D. Rovell
Beck, Russell
Riccelli , Joe
Reid, Frank
Wolf, Chris

LB
T
G
G
G
G
LB
DT
G
LB
DT
T
DT
DT
DT
T
T

80
81
82
83
84
85
88

Brisky, Dennis
Murphy, Tom
Endress, Terry
Kovey, Bob
Przybycien, John
Lang, Paul
Remillard, Jim

DE
DE
E
DE
DE
E
DE

HT.

5-11
5-11
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-9
5-10
5-10
6-1
5-10
5-11
5-9
5-11
5-8
6-1
5-9
6-1
6-0
6-1
5-11
5-11
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-10
6-2
6-0
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-0
6-0

WT.

CLASS

HOME TOWN

Endicott, N. Y.
176 Jr.
Huntington , N. Y.
187 Jr.
Hamburg, N. Y.
210 Jr.
Springdale, Pa.
So.
178
Buffalo, N. Y.
185 So.
N. Y.
Buffalo,
188 Jr.
Ambridge, Pa.
191 So.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
180 Sr.
Woonsocket, R. I.
198 Jr.
Potsdam, N. Y.
180 So.
Dover, Ohio
188 So.
Rochester, N. Y.
205 Sr.
Greenhurst, N.Y.
197 Jr.
209 So.
South Bend, Ind.
208 Sr.
Buffalo, N. Y.
189 Sr.
Marcy, N. Y.
183 Jr.
Endwell, N. Y.
175 So.
Coshocton, Ohio
197 Sr.
Elmira, N.Y.
198 Sr.
Ithaca, N. Y.
212 Jr. Central Islip, N. Y.
203 Sr.
Norristown, Pa.
214 Jr. Cheektowaga, N. Y.
195 So. Cuyahoga Falls, 0.
194 Sr. East Smethport, Pa.
Coatesville, Pa.
233 Sr.
Detroit, Mich.
210 Jr.
213 So. Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.
Clayton , N. Y.
214 Jr.
219 Sr. E. Syracuse, N. Y.
Springdale, Pa.
210 Jr.
Newport, R. I.
232 Sr.
213 Jr.
Cleveland, Ohio
210 Jr.
Johnstown, Pa.
255 So. Grand Island, N. Y.
212 So.
Coshocton, Ohio
228 So.
Akron, Ohio
232 So.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Syracuse, N. Y.
242 Jr.
217 So.
Ottawa , Ont.
220 So.
Solon, Ohio
Detroit, Mich.
209 Sr.
Johnstown, Pa.
192 Jr.
202 So. Cuyahoga Falls, 0.
202 So. Youngstown, Ohio
Detroit, Mich.
200 Jr.
Ithaca, N. Y.
210 So.
198 Jr. New Bedford, Mass.

17
CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

�RICHIE MOORE, T

JOHN VALENZA, C

JOE COLISTRA, G

FRANK BOAt, HB

JOE NOLAN, T

FRED LEVINSKY, G

18

�ED BOLLINGER, HB

PAUL OWEN, E

JOHN TREACY, T

JO HN SCHUNKE, E
TOM BOYD, E

DENIS DITZE, E

FRANK BOGLE, T
GENE ARTHUR, HB
LEO ROSSI, E
DENNIS KELLY, HB

19
CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

�MICKEY KERINS, FB
BILLY WALIK, HB

JOHN STOPPER, HB

FRAN AUCH, T
TOM BRAUN, C

BARRY GROSSMAN, T

WAYNE WIGGINS, G

BRUCE BENDISH, E
CLARK MESTER, G
MIKE ZIZZO, HB

20

�WILLIAM H. WALTERS &amp; SONS
Incorporated
MECHANICAL

CONTRACTORS

HEATING • PLUMBING • AIR CONDITIONING • POWER PIPING

1306-16 North Carlisle Street
PO 3-8500

Philadelphia 21 , Pa.

Mahoney's
1030
RESTAURANT- COCKTAILS

1030 LANCASTER AVE .
AT CHETWYND APTS.
ROSEMONT, PA.

" WHERE V/LLANOVANS GET TOGETHER "

RESERVATIONS- LA 5-1030

BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCH- DINNER

21

�TOM HOKE, DB
MIKE MASER, G
TED GIBBONS, DT

BUFFALO

CHUCK DRANKOSKI, E
BOB EMBOW, K

JOHN PRZYBYCIEN, DE

RICK WELLS, HB

22

DON SABO, LB

�ROD RISHEL, LB
TOM HURD, DB
LEELAND JONES, FB

PLAYERS

JIM MOSHER, LB
JIM FINOCHIO, G

DENNIS MASON, QB
IRVIN WRIGHT, LB

KEN RUTKOWSKI, HB

MICK MURTHA, QB

MIKE RISSELL, T

23
CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

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VILLANOVA VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM
First row (I. to r.)---co-captains Fred Levinsky and Brendan Murray
Second row-John Schunke, Mike Poehner, Dallas Webb, Barry Grossman, Joe Colistra, Leo Rossi, Billy Andrejiko, Jack Lignelli, Ed Bollinger
Third row-Paul Owen, John Valenza, Bruce Bendish, Steve Geary, Bill McCormack, Joe Greco, Brian McDonnell, Kevin Gallen, Joe Nolan, Denis Ditze
Fourth row-Rich Moore, Tom Chmielewski, Tom Braun, Clark Mester, Bill Walik, Tom Shugrue, Frank Bogle, Frank Boal, Ken Bosacco, Wayne Wiggins,
Dennis Kelly, John Sodaski
Fifth row-Marty Elwood, Rich Brezski, Mike Mahalic, Bill Sather, Mike McDonald, Mike Zizzo, Roman Jeisen, Joe Keffer, Gene Humay, Terry Cunningham, Tom Boyd, Chuck D'Agostini
Sixth row-Wally Abrams, mgr., Charley Buechel, mgr., Paul Stella, Fran Auch, Mark Schiller, Pete Grana, Gerry Ellis, Denny O'Neill, Mike Danaher, John
Treacey, Gene Arthur, Bill Dailey, Hugh Ortman, mgr.
Last row-coaches Dan Laughlin, John Brunner, Lou Ferry, head coach Jack Gregory, Walt Posadowski, ass't head coach Sterling Brown, Tom Urbanik

�Senior Members of 1967 Wildcat Squad

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VI

First row (I. to r.)-Brian McDonnell, John Lignelli, William Andrejko, Joseph Greco, Brendan Murray, Joseph Colistra, Michael Poehner, Fred Levinsky,
Bruce Bendish, Paul Owen
Second row-Joseph Nolan, Denis Ditze, John Schunke, John Valenza, Barry Grossman, Kevin G:llfen, Ed Bollinger, Stephen Geary, William McCormack,
Dallas Webb, leo Rossi

�MARl-NAY DINER
ROSEMONT

ADVERTISING
Compliments of
Albert F. Dagit
Daniel C. Dagit, '51
Albert F. Dagit, Jr., '47

292 Montgomery Avenue

Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.
MOhawk 4-9886

26

�FOLLO~

VILLANOVA BASKETBALL

DON1 T BE
SHUT OUT
AT THE

FIELD HOUSE
THIS YEAR
Assistant Coach
DAN DOUGHERTY

Head Coach
JACK KRAFT

1967-68 WILDCAT SCHEDULE
Sat.,
Tues.,
Fri.,
Sat.,
Wed.,
Sat.,
Mon.,
Sat.,
Wed.,
Sat.,
Tues.,
Sat.,
Wed.,
Sat.,
Tues.,
Sat.,
Thurs.,
Sat.,
Wed .,
Sat.,
Tues.,
Sat.,
Tues.,

Dec. 2
Dec. 5
Dec. 8
Dec. 16
Dec. 20
Dec.
26-30
Jan. 6
Jan. 8
Jan. 13
Jan. 17
Jan. 20
Jan. 23
Jan . 27
Jan. 31
Feb. 3
Feb. 6
Feb. 10
Feb. 15
Feb. 17
Feb. 21
Feb. 24
Feb. 27
Mar. 2
Mar. 5

Providence .... .... ...... ....... Away
Princeton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Away
Southern California . . . . . . . . . . . . . Palestra
Fairfield . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Palestra
Marquette ..................... Away
E.C.A.C. Quaker City Tourney .... Spectrum
Canisius . .. ..... ........ . .. .... Away
Niagara ....................... Away
Xavier .... .. . .. ............. .. Away
Penn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Palestra
Virginia Tech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Palestra
Philo. Textile . . . . . . . Villanova Field House
St. John .. .......... ..... .. .... Away
St. Bonaventure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Palestra
Temple . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Palestra
Detroit ..... .. . ... ....... ..... . Away
De Paul ........... . .. ........ . Away
Niagara . . . . . . . . . . Villanova Field House
St. Joseph . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Palestra
Duquesne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Palestra
la Salle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Palestra
Toledo ..... . ...... Villanova Field House
Providence . . . . . . . . . Villanova Field House
Seton Hall
. . . . . . . Villanova Field House

·--------------------------------------------------------------------------------SEASON TICKET APPLICATION
For All Home Games at Villanova Field House
Name ------------------------------------------------Street -------------------------------------------------City - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - State· _ _ _ _ _ _ ZIP ____

MAKE REMITTANCE PAYABLE TO VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY
______ Season Tickets @ $12.50 each . . . . . .
Postage and Handling

$ ______
.35

Total

$•----

27
CALL LA 5-7736 FOR THE LATEST WILDCAT SPORTS

�BUFFALO CO-CAPTAINS TED GIBBONS AND RICK WELLS

46th ANNUAL
FOOTBALL BANQUET
sponsored by the
Villanova Club of Philadelphia
Guest Speaker TOM BROOKSHIER
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1967
OLD COVERED WAGON INN

Tickets ......... $7.50 each
FOR RESERVATIONS CALL
Cha irman Fred Springer '63- LA 5-5444
Fenton Fitzpatrick '53- MO 4-3620

28

Bill Barton '57- MO 4-7988

�Livingston
Publishing Company
Wynnewood, Pa.
MOhawk 4-5800

Serving the growing field of Education
with creative design and printing

�Foreground, Chevelle SS 396. Cornaro SS, lop right. Corvette Sting Ray, lop left.

MARK OF EXCELLENCE

Our Sports Department
A look of bold innovation and the
feel of competitive excitement
set Chevrolet sport models apart
from the pack for '68.
Revolutionary styling.

Looking like a dream car come to
life, the '68 Corvette Sting Ray
is an astonishingly beautiful new
sports car. It's nearly seven
inches longer and two inches
lower. Startling new features
include Hide-A-Way windshield
wipers concealed beneath a
power-operated cowl panel, rear
deck spoiler, high-backed bucket
seats and push-type door
opening buttons.
Great performers, too.

Quieter and smoother riding this
year, Chevelle and Camara,

"The Hugger," offer new sports
car-type performance- better
handling, big engines. Camara SS
has a bulging striped hood that
covers your choice of either a
350- or 396-cubic-inch VB.
Chevelle SS 396 for '68 has
completely new styling, a wider
tread, shorter wheelbase: and
a twin-domed hood.
·
More engine efficiency.

Standard on many models with
automatic transmission is an
ingenious carburetor heater that
gives you increased efficiency in
cold weather. Standard, also, is
a new GM exhaust emission
control.
New ventilation system.

Astro Ventilation, a brand-new
system of bringing in outside air,
comes on Corvette, Camara and
the Caprice Coupe, and is available on many other models.

Proved safety features.

All Chevrolet safety features are
continued and you get many new
ones such as energy-absorbing
front seat backs and side
marker lights for '68. Be
smart. Be sure. Buy now at your
Chevrolet dealer's.
Free!
Get Chevrolet's 60-page
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Chevrolet's College Football
Handbook contains a com·
plete rundown on a lithe top
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�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1967-11-11 Villanova vs Buffalo</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text>Official Program - Villanova Stadium - November 11, 1967</text>
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                <text>Villanova University</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1967-11-11</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495769">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;. If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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                    <text>�DELAWARE'S LARGEST SELECTION OF COLOR TV

1968 RCA Victor
See the new 1968 models NOW at Colonial
TV and Appliance Co. Once again, Mr. Color
TV offers you the very latest and finest that
color television has to offer. Usual low, low
prices because of our big, big volume.

1.

IIECTAIIGULAII

' C&lt;t&gt;LOR

Corner of Lancaster Ave. &amp; ScoH St.
1709 LANCASTER AVE.

PHONE 652-3511
Open Daily 'til 9; Sat. 'til 6
CLOSED SUNDAY

•

VISIT OUR
CARPET
DEPT.
Quality Carpet at
Colonial Savings

Free Parking

Phone 652-3671

�THE BLUE HEN GRIDDER
'JFFICIAL PROGRAM FOR UNIVERSITY OF .DELAWARE
HOME FOOTBALL GAMES
Published by The Athletic Council, University of Delaware

FAIL, 1967

VOL. XXVII

STAFF
JOHN M. MORRIS ------------------------------------------ Editor
RAYMOND B. DUNCAN ______ __ Advertising Manager
RICHARD D. STEWART ------------------------ Photography
Represented for National Advertising by
SPENCER ADVERTISING COMPANY, INC.
271 Madison Avenue, New York 16, N.Y.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Stadium Information -----------------------·---------------·---- 2
Winter Sports Sclhedules -------------------------------·------ 3
University History -------·---------------------------------------· 5
Acting President John W. Shirley ------------------------ 7
Athletic Director David M. Nelson ------------------------ 9
Delaware Coach Tubby Raymond ------------------------ 10
Delaware Coaching Staff ------------------------------------ 11
To Any Athlete ---------------------------------------------------- 17
A Building Boom on Campus ------------------------------·- 20
Today's Officials -----------------------·----------------------·· 23
Delaware Action Pictures -------------------------------------- 24
A View From the Booth -·-------------------·------------------ 26
Delaware Roster ---------·---------------------·--·---------·--·-- 28
Starting Lineups ------------------------------·---·---------------- 30
Delaware Team Picture --------------------------------. 33
Buffalo Roster --··--··--··--·--·-·------··----------·-·--·------·--- 35
Buffalo Team Picture ---------------------------·--··-·-·-------· 36
Meet the Opponents ·---·------·--·----------·---------------·-- 37
Delaware Marching Band ----------·------------------------- 40
Behind the Scenes ------------------·-----·---·------------·------ 41
Delaware Cheerleaders ---------------·---------·-------------- 43
Team Captain Art Smith -----------------·---·----·----------- 45
The 1967 Blue Hens -----------·-----------·---------------·--·· 48
1967 Delaware Statistics -·-----·----------··---·------------ 60
Advertising Index ------------------------ inside back cover

No.4

7~'6

t'jame

By JOHN M. MORRIS
Delaware football coach Tubby Raymond has this
recurring nightmare: The Blue Hens have the lead in the
second half, but somehow the opponent comes up with
the big play while the Hens falter and lose the game.
Raymond's bad dream has been all rtoo real this season. He has watched his team lead or be tied with each
of its six opponents in the second half. In five of the
six games, the opponent has come from behind to win.
For some reason Delaware has been unable to score and
unable to prevent its opponents from scoring in the
second half. The Blue Hens, although outscored by a
total of only 19 points in six games, have been outpointed 84-23 in the second half. 'f.he· Hens were shut
out in the second half of losses to Rhode Island Villanova and Temple.
'
On the other hand, it is difficult to blame the year's
frustration on an offense which has produced an average
of 20 points per game. The defense has allowed over
2 3 points per contest.
T-hinking about today's opponent hasn't helped Raymond's sleep. Buffalo has beaten the Blue Hens three
years in a row by a combined score of 95-6 and has
rolled to a 4-3 record this year against major college
competiti~n. The two have played only one mutual op·
ponent this season. Delaware dropped a 26-17 decision
to Temple last week and Buffalo trounced the Owls by
a 44-14 count earlier in the season.
~his yea~·s Buff~lo team is similar to past Bull elevens m that It has SIZe and speed. The similarity ends
there. Former Notre Dame assistant Richard "Doc"
Urich in his second year as head coach at Buffalo has
given the Bulls an exciting offense to go with their usual
tough defense.
Buffalo boasts the 1966 national leader in touchdo_wns in fullback Lee Jones, a versatile quarterback in
M1ck Murtha and a fine group of receivers. The Bulls
also have a.pair of talented tailbacks in Ken Rutkowski
and Pat ·Patterson.
Delaware will counter wi~h the passing of quarterback Frank Linzenbold and the running of fullback John
Spangler and halfback Brian Wright. Linzenbold already
holds several Delaware records and is moving in on
several _more. Spangler seems ready for a big day after
recovenng from an early-season back injury. Wright, a
mononucleosis victim before the season started ran well
for the first time last week.
'
The Hens will need top performances from Linzen~ld, Spa~gler and Wright. Team scoring leader Tom
D1Muzw IS probably out for the rest of the season with
a hip i~jury. His left ·halfback job will be taken by Jim
Lazarski.
(Complete team records and individual statistics appear on page 60.)
Page One

�Delaware Stadium Information
WEST

STANDS

SECTION

A

SECTION

c

8

I Z34,178tlt0fllt23

I I

SECTION

SECTION

·SECTION

D

E

F

G

-

I

I

I

BOX SEATS
0

10

20

30

40

50

40

30

20

10

0

SEATING NUMBERS BEGIN ON LEFT
AISLE OF EACH SECTION AS SEEN
FROM THE FIELD.

BOX SEATS

EAST
STANDS

-

74

n

S!CTION

M

L

11 1 69_16¥,7

611101" ~· '

5

,1150

~~l&lt;!fl

Uc;TION

SECTION

K

J

I

.--H

DELAWARE STADIUM, erected in 1952, was enlarged and improved for the 1964 season. Total
seating capacity is now 13,500. There are 8,354
seats in the West Stand. Prior to the 1967 season,
the Blue Hens have played 65 games in the stadium,
losing only 17 and tying one.

ADVANCE SALES-Ticket prices for all
home games are $3.50 for reserved seats
for box seats. Tickets for future home
games may be purchased at the athletic
quiries may be made at the ticket window
ing 738-2257.

LOST AND FOUND-losses should be reported to the
attendant at the door of the press box. Articles found
should be turned in to the same attendant ·or given
to an usher. Inquiries during the week following the
game may be made at the Athletic Office ( 368-0611,
ext·. 384).

SERVICE FOR PHYSICIANS-Doctors anticipating calls
during the game are requested to register at the Reserve Window of the Main Ticket Booth, leaving their
exact seat location. The management will see that
all calls aredelivered without delay.

FIRST AID-A physician is available at all times. In
an emergency, notify an usher or the attendant at the
press box and a ohysician will be summoned immediately over the public address system.

DRINKING-The University proposes to protect its
patrons from offensive conduct. Your cooperation is
requested in observing the regulation prohibiting
the use of alcoholic beverages in the stadium.

PUBLIC TELEPHONE-Two pay telephones are located
beneath the West Stand. These are the only telephones available to spectators.
SEATING-Persons leaving their seats during the
game or between the halves are required to show
their ticket stubs to the usher before they are readmitted to their sections.
PARKING-The parking plan is designed so that cars
arriving from the north and west (through Newark)
are guided to the west parking lot, while cars arriving
from the opposite direction are parked in the southeast lot. Spectators are requested to leave by the
same route by which they came.

Page Two

Delaware
and $4.50
and away
office. Inor by call-

REST ROOMS-These are located in the rear of the ·
Facilities Building at the north end of the playing
fleld. Additional rest rooms are available beneath
the West Stand.
RADIOS AND MOVIE CAMERAS--As a courtesy to
neighboring ticket-holders, spectators are requested
not to bring radios or movie cameras into the stands.
REFRESHMENTS Delaware spectators may select
from a wide variety of refreshments at concession
stands located at both ends of the East and West
Stands.

�OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

*******
LONGINES
THE WORLD'S
MOST HONORED
WATCH®

Winter Sports
Schedule
BASKETBALL
Opponent

Date
Dec.

2

6
9
12
14
16
28-30

10
13

A
H
A
A

3
7
10
14
17
19
22
24
26
28

Drexel
Gettysburg
Bucknell
Temple
Rutgers
Glassboro
Franklin &amp; Marshall
Gettysburg
Susquehanna
Albright

H
H
A
A
H
A
H
A
A
H

3

6

Feb.

Longines watches are recognized
as OFFICIAL for timing world
championships and Olympic sports
in all fields throughout the world.

Time
Frosh
Vars.

A
8:15
6:30
H
8:15
H
6 :30
8:15
H
6:30
8:15
H
6:30
8:15
8:00
A
6:15
East Stroudsburg, Po.

Drexel
Lafayette
Lehigh
Hofstra

Jan.

10 world's fair grand prizes
28 gold medals

Lafayette
Bucknell
Lehigh
Penn
PMC
Rutgers
Pocono Classic

Place

Mar. 1-2 M.A.C. Playoffs

6:30
6:15
6:30
6:30
6:00
6:30
6:30
6:30
6:45
6:30

8:30
8:15
8:00
8:00
8:15
8:15
8:15
8:00
8:15
8:15
8:15
8:30
8:00
8:15

Philadelphia, Po.

SWIMMING
Date

Opponent
2

F&amp; M

9

10
13
16

Philadelphia Textile
St. Joseph's (V &amp; F)
Bucknell (V &amp; F)
Lehigh (V &amp; F)
Temple (V &amp; f)
Lafayette (V F)
Johns Hopkins (V &amp; F)

9
13
17
24

Drexel (V &amp; f)
Gettysburg (V &amp; f)
Swarthmore
Monmouth

Dec.

12
16

6

Jan.

Feb.

Mar. 1-2 M.A.C. Championships

Place

Time

H
A
H
A

2:00
5:00
7:00
2:00
2:00
6:00
2:30
7:00

A
A

A
H

H
H
A

A

7:00
7:00
2:00
2:00

Lewisburg, Po.

WRESTLING
Date

Opponent

5

Dec.

9

Longines Ultra-Chron =8205, automatic with calendar, $175.
Other Ultra-Chron Models, $150 to $595.

13
16
27-28

13
16

the fabulous new

LONGINES ULTRA-CHRON
Guaranteed Accurate To A Minute A Month
The ultimate personal chronometer,
gu.tranteed accurate to a minute a month" mu dn average of 2 seconds per day.
Ultra-Chron tells the date , hour, minute ,
second. Never needs batte ries. Winds
automati·ca l ly wh i le you wear it. All-Proof®
constructi on defeats water, dust,
shock, magnetism . At Longines -Wittnauer
Franchised J e welers , coast-to-coast .

LONGINES-WIITNAUER WATCH CO.
MONTREAL

NEW YORK

6
9

Jan.

GENEVA

Maker of Watches Of The Hichest Charocter
For Over A Century

Feb. 10
14
17
21
24

Monmouth
Lycoming
Glassboro
Bucknell (V &amp; F)
Wilkes Tournament
Ursin us
Swarthmore (V &amp; F)
Temple (V &amp; F)
Johns Hopkins (V &amp; F)
Albright
Drexel (V &amp; F)
Gettysburg (V &amp; F)
Lafayette (V &amp; F)
PMC (V &amp; F)

Mar. 1·2 M.A.C. Championships

Place

Time

H

7:00
2:00
7:00
1:30

A
H
H
A

A
H
H
A

A
H
A
H

3:00
7:00
1:30
7:00
2:00
7:00
1:30
7:00
6:30

Annville, Po.

INDOOR TRACK
Date

Opponent

Pla ce

Time

H

7:30

Dec. 15

MI. St. Mary's

Jan. 12
27
31

Lehigh (V &amp; F)
H
7:30
Univ. of Pitt. Invitational
Pittsburgh, Po.
Inquirer AAU Meet
Philadelphia, Po.

Feb.

Inquirer Games
Philadelphia, Po.
Albright, PMC, Ursin us
H
1 :30
Penn (V &amp; F)
H
7:30
Delaware lnvilalional
H
Lafayette (V &amp; F)
H
1:30
IC4A Championships
New York, N.Y.

3
10
16
23-24

Mar.

2

9

MAKE
EVERY YARD
COUNl••
DOUBLE!
Double because you'll be
earning a commission while you
earn your college degree.
All it takes is a few hours a
week -and a six-week summer
camp. It's that easy in Army
ROTC.
Whether you plan a civilian
or a military career, Army ROTC
gives you the kind of training
and experience you need to
motivate, organize and lead
men. You'll learn them ·all in
Army ROTC.
Get the details from your Professor of Military Science at
any ROTC college.
Your future, your decision ...
choose Army ROTC.

�NEAR SMYRNA

Save Time for Fun ... good gunning
is only one of the many outdoor sports enjoyed
right here at home by Delawareans. And to save
time for entertainment ... time for fun ... more
and more busy people are taking advantage of the
many different ways they can use their Personal
Checking Account.
Of course, most folks know they save lots of time
paying bills by mail with checks, but do you realize
how much more time--and effort-you can save, if
you're a Wilmington Trust "total customer"?

As a "total customer" your Checking Account can
do many other things for you, free. For instance,
you can automatically have your Wilmington Trust
Personal Checking Account: pay your mortgage on
time, build your savings regularly, make various
loan payments and, almost automatically, make
family budgeting simple with the complete records
you'll have each month. Yes, our young moderns
take a big step on the way up when they become a
"total customer" and start saving time for fun with a

PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT.

You'll be in good company when you bonk at Wilmington Trust
MEMBER F.D.I.C .

-r:a:us-r

DELAVVARE

Wilmington: Tenth and Market-Tenth and Shipley-2120 Market-3605 Market • Claymont • Delaware City • Greenville
New Castle • Newark • Newport • Louviers Building • Dover • Camden • Georgetown • Milford • Seaford • Townsend

�The University of Delaware

OLD COLLEGE

In 1738, when George II was on the throne of
England, the members of the Presbytery of Lewes,
Delaware, expressed in old-fashioned words a very
modern thought. They felt that there was need for the
academic training of divinity students, whose talents
" for want of being improved are marred of their usefuln ess with a formidable train of sad consequences."
Accordingly, the Presbyterian Synod at Philadelphia
was sent a petition asking that candidat~s for the mini~try
be examined by an appropriate comm1ttee before bemg
licensed to preach. The petition was favorably received,
and in 1743 it was agreed to establish a school. The
scholarly Reverend Francis Alison had just opened a
private school in his manse at New London, Pennsylvania, and this school was taken over by the Church.
In the course of the next two hundred y&lt;'ar&lt;; this small
school developed into the University of Delaware.
In 1765, the school came to Newark, and in 1769 it
was chartered by Thomas and Richard Penn, and known
from then on as Newark Academy. Instruction was
interrupted during the Revolutionary War when the
Academy building was converted to a shoe factory to
supply the Continental Army.
During the early years of the Nineteenth Century
sentiment in favor of establishing an institution of higher
learning in Delaware had been growing. An act of the
Legislature on February 5, 1833, created Newark College, a degree-granting institution, with which Newark
Academy was merged in 1834, the year that the building
now known as Old College was erected. The Academy
continued as the College's preparatory department until
1870, when work below the collegiate grade was
dropped.
Meanwhile, in 1862 President Lincoln signed the

Morrill Land-Grant Act of Congress that created colleges in the various states " to promote li?eral and practical education . . . in the several purswts and professions of life." An act of the Delaware General Assembly,
March 14, 1857, brought Delaware College into the
family of the Land -Grant colleges.
In 1913, the Women's College, affiliated with Delaware College was established, and it opened in 1914.
In 1921, Delaware College and the Women's College
were combined under the name of the University of
Delaware. s ~parate classes for men and women were
held until September, 1944, when the two institutions
were completely merged into the present university
structure.
By charter, control of the University is vested in a
Board of Trustees of twenty-eight members chosen from
the three counties of the State. The President of the
University, the Governor of the State, the Master of the
State Grange, and the President of the State Board of
Education are ex-officio members of the Board of
Trustees.
The major administrative units of the University
include the College of Arts and Science, the College of
Agriculture, the College of Education, the_ College of
Engineering, the College of Home Econom1cs, the Col lege of Graduate Studies, the Division ?f Physi~al Education and Athletics, University ExtensiOn Serv1ce.
The University of Delaware is fully accredited by the
Middle States Association of Colleges and Secondary
Schools, the · accrediting agency for this region. Professional programs are given surveillance by appropriate
associations such as the Engineers Council for Profession~~ Dev: lopment and the American Chemical Society.

Page Five

�Newark, Delaware's

HOWARD JOHNSON'S
Motor Lodge and Restaurant
1119 SOUTH COLLEGE AVENUE

1f2 MILE SOUTH OF
THE STADIUM ON ROUTE 896

HOWARD JOHNSON'S MOTOR LODGE
Better meetings come to order in our Motor Lodge . Com-

a Howard Johnson's Restaurant next door to the Motor

fort, privacy, delightful atmosphere and we can accom-

Lodge for your dining convenience.

modate groups up to 150.

We honor Texaco Credit Cards of registered guests for

Are you overflowing with guests this weekend? We are

lodging and related services.

set to take care of all you can not handle. There's even

Johnson's sensible prices.

Banquet, Business Meeting Facilities

All

PHONE 302-368-8521

fiOWARDjOfiDJODJ
.. Host of the Highways"

of this at Howard

�DR. JOHN W. SHIRLEY
Dr. John W. Shirley, Provost and Vice Presidem
for Academic Affairs, has been named Acting President of the University. He will serve while a trustee
committee seeks a successor to Dr. John A. Perkins,
who res·i gned to become president of Dun and
Bradstreet.
Dr. Shirley has held his present position smce
1962, after having previously spent 13 years at North
Carolina State College as dean of rthe school of
general studies and dean of the faculty.
He ,is nationally recognized for his educational
leadership as chairman of the board of trustees of the
College Entrance Examination Board, an association
of colleges, universities, schools and associations.
Its activities include a program of admissions testing,
guidance services, f,ilms, research and publications.
A cum laude graduate of the University of Iowa
where he also received his doctorate, Dr. Shirley held
a Guggenheim Fellowship during two years of post-

aminations of the College Entrance Examination

doctoral study 'i n England. From 1935 to 1937 he

Board and a consultant to the National Science

was a teaching fellow at the University of Iowa.

Foundation.

Later he taught in the English and physics departments at Michigan State University and was a visiting
lecturer at California Institute of Technology. While
in California, he took further post-doctoral work at
the Henry E. Huntington Library.

Dr. Shirley

IS

the author of two books and a

number of professional articles and rev·iews. He is
listed in "Who's Who in the Midwest" (1948),
"Directory of American Scholars" (1949). "Who's
Who in America" (since 1951), and "Who's Who in

Dr. Shirley's professional service includes the

the South and Southwest" (1949).

chairmanship of the Humanistic-Social Divison of the
American Society for Engineering Education in 195152. He was representative for liberal arts on the
National Council of the ASEE from 1952 to 1954 and
was a member of the national committee of the
Humanistic-Social Research Project sponsored by the

His honorary and professional affiliations include
the Modern Language Association, the History of
&amp;ience Society, the American Association for the
Advancement of Science, Phi Kappa Phi, Blue Key,
Sigma Pi Sigma, and Omicron Delta Kappa.

Carnegie Corporation, 1954-55. From 1953 to 1956

Dr. Shirley and his wife, the former Geraldine E.

he was an elected representative of the Liberal Arts

Lewis, live at 31 Bridle Brook Lane, Covered Bridge

Division to the senate of the National Association of

Farms, Newark. They have two married daughters,

State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges. He also

Mrs. John Frohlicher of Washington, D.C.. and

has been vice chairman of the Committee on Ex-

Mrs. Durwood Neuse of Tampa. Fla.
Page Seven

�Here's a
boost
for all
full-time
students
of the
UNIVERSITY of
DELAWARE

... your personal "BLUE

HEN" CHECKING ACCOUNT

o No Charge for Checks

o No Minimum Balance

A Farmers Bank "Blue Hen" checking account makes it easier for you to take care of
expenses while in.school, at no carrying cost! It's limited to full-time students only.
You get 25 checks free each three-month period of the regular school year. Checks are
personalized , and included in a beautifulleatherette folder complete with "Blue Hen"
insignia. Additional ch ecks, when needed, are available at ten cents each.
"Blue Hen" no cost service is handy for parents too. "Banking by Mail" is a convenient
way for them to deposit money in your account.
You don't even have to leave the campus to bank with Farmers. Our branch in the
Student Center Building is open for business 9:00A.M. to 3:00P.M., Monday through
Friday. Why not take advantage of this service?

FARMERS BANK
STATE OF DELAWARE
------ of the-----Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

THE FIRST BANK IN THE FIRST STA TE

�DAVID M. NELSON
Athletic Director
One of the most respected men in collegiate athletic
circles, David M. Nelson has been athletic director
at Delaware since 1951.
The most successful football coach in the University's grid history, he had a 84-42-2 record at Delaware
and an overall collegiate log of 105-48-6 in his 19
years as a head coach. He resigned his coaching post
in 1966 to devote full time to his job as athletic
director.
He was elected District II representative to the Rules
Committee of the National Collegiate Athletic Association in 1956 and presently serves as secretary and editor
of the Rules Committee. In 1964 he was elected to the
NCAA's College-Professional Relations Committee and
now serves as its chairman. He was president of the
Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference in 1960. He is a
trustee of the American Football Coaches Association.
Three of Nelson's teams won the Middle Atlantic
Conference championship and the Lambert Cup. symbolic of eastern small college football supremacy
His undefeated, untied 1963 team was voted number
one in the nation by United Press International's
Board of Coaches.
Nelson was a standout as a player at Michigan during the coaching reign of Fritz Crisler. He Jed the
Wolverines in rushing his senior year with an average
of 6.3 yeards per carry.
The Detroit native, who won three battle stars as
a Navy lieutenant in the Pacific Theatre, served as
head football coach and athletic director at Hillsdale
(Mich.) College, backfield coach at Harvard University and head coach at the University of Maine before
coming to Delaware.
He coached the North team in the North-South
Shrine Game in Miami in 1959, and has handled the
Small College All-Stars for the All-American Bowl in
Tucson, Ariz.
Under Nelson's guidance as athletic director, the
University's entire athletic program has been
strengthened and new athletic facilities constructed,
giving Delaware one of the best physical education
and athletic plants in the East.
Nelson built his Delaware gridiron success on the
now-famous Winged-T system. Forest Evashevski, a
teammate of Nelson's at Michigan, borrowed the
Winged-T and led his University of Iowa squads to
1957 and 1959 Rose Bowl triumphs. Nelson and

Evashevski later collaborated on a book, "Scori ng
Power with the Winged-T." He wrote and narrated
four NCAA football films.
Nelson's fame as a brilliant tact1c1an, administrator
and author of grid textbooks has spread around the
country.
Articles by and about the Delaware "Admiral"
have appeared in countless national magazines. He
was chosen to represent the small college viewpoint
in a Spcrt magazine feature on the comparative merits
of "Big-Time" and "Small-Time" football.
Nelson's achievements are not limited to athletics,
however. He earned the Big Ten Conierence award
for proficiency in scholarship and athletics at Michigan, was elected for membership in Phi Kappa Phi
and was chosen by the University of Michigan's
School of Education as a William H. Payne scholar
in recognition of "unusual academic proficiency and
the maintenance of high professional ideals." He
received his bachelor's degree from Michigan in 1942
and later earned the Master of Science degree there.
Dave and his wife, Shirley. have three children.
Chess is one of his favorite hobbies and he excels at
paddleball in his few leisure moments. The Nelsons
reside at 114 Briar Lane in Newark.
Page Nine

�Harold R. (Tubby) Raymond
HEAD FOOTBALL COACH
Harold R. (Tubby) Raymond is in his second
season as head football coach at the University of
Delaware.
Raymond, who served as Dave Nelson's backfield coach for 12 years, became the head coach in
the spring of 1966 when Nelson resigned to devote
full-time to his duties as athletic director. The new
Hen mentor took up where his illustrious pred~cessor
left off-directing the 1966 Blue Hens to a 6-3
record and the Middle Atlantic Conference championship.
Long recognized as a brilliant football tactician
and strategist, Raymond served as both a line coach
and a backfield coach during his career as an assistant. He was the line coach at the University of
Maine before joining the Delaware staff in 1954.
A native of Flint, Mich ., and a 1950 graduate
of the University of Michigan, Raymond was a guard
and quarterback on the Wolverine eleven and captained the 1949 baseball team. He played two
years in the New York Yankees' organization and
was head football coach at University High School
in Ann Arbor, Mich., before going to Maine.
Tubby served as Blue Hen baseball coach for nine
years and compiled the best coaching record in the
history of the sport at Delaware with a record of 141
wins and 56 losses . He left the baseball post before
the 1965 season to become a full-time football assistant. Six of Raymond 's nine teams qualified for the
NCAA District II playoffs.
As Nelson's backfield coach at Delaware, Raymond played a major role in developing the powerhouse 1959, 1962 and 1963 Blue Hen teams which
won the M.A.C. title and the Lambert Cup, symbolic
of eastern small college supremacy. The 1963 squad
also won United Press International recognition as
the top small college team in the country.
Raymond helped develop two first team little
All-American players in quarterback Don Miller and
halfback Mike Brown . Tackle-linebacker Herb Slattery was a first team Little All-American last year in
Raymond's first season as head coach.

HEAD COACH RAYMOND AND CAPTAIN ART SMITH

Page T en

The Blue Hen coach is a skilled bridge enthusiast
and a very fine artist. He and his wife Sue have three
children and reside in Windy Hills, a Newark suburb.

�Th e

st a f f •

• •
RAYMOND ISCOTTYI DUNCAN
Assistant Director of Athletics

former freshmen coach Scotty Duncan relinquished his frosh coaching post after the 1961 campaign
to devote more time to his duties as assistant drector of athletics . He assisted at the varsity level until
this year.
Duncan coaches the Delaware golf team and has compiled a four-year record of 42-19 against
some of the b~st competition in the Ea~t . His 1966 team set Delaware records for victories in one
season ( 14) and consecutive victories ( 12) .
A Delaware graduate, he served for five years as football backfield coach and head coach of the
basketball and track teams at Dover High School. Later he came to Newark High as head football
coach , and was elected as first president of the Delaware Interscholast ic football Caach!!S Association .
A graduate of Cheshire Academy in Connecticut, Duncan spent o year ot Washington College
before coming to Delaware as a phys ical training instructor in the Army Specia l Training reserve
program . He remained as a student and was a four-sport man for the Hens , participating in football,
basketball, track and baseball.
He is married to the former Jessie Chatto of Wyomng, Del.

EDWARD !MALl MALEY
line Coach
Ed Maley, an outstanding tackle on the 1954, 1955 and 1956 Delaware teams, took over the
line coach ing duties of the Blue Hens after the 1961 season.
Hard-charging line play and stubborn rushing defense have been trademarks of the Delaware
teams under Maley 's tutelage .
Upon graduation from Delaware in 1957, he accepted a commission in the Army and served
most of his tour near his home in Pittsburgh, Po .
He served as lacrosse coach of the Blue Hens in 1960 and 1961 and coached the freshman
basketball team to a 13-2 record in the 1960-61 season. He was a football assistant for two years
before taking over the line coaching duties when Mike Lude resigned to accept the head coaching
job at Colorado State University .
Mal is married to the former Patricia Lyons, a 1957 Delaware graduate and cheerleader
captain. The Maleys have three children .

IRVIN IWHIZI WISNIEWSKI
End Coach
A former University of Michigan star in football and basketball , Whiz is the end coach arid
chief scout for the Delaware football coaching staff.
A native of Toledo, Ohio, Whiz was graduated from Michigan in 1950 after starring as a
defensive end on three Western Conference Championship football teams, including the 1948 Rose
Bowl squad . He lettered for four years in basketball, playing on the 1948 Western Conference title
team in the NCAA tournament in Madison Square Garden .
Wisniewski coached the Delaware basketball team for 1 2 years before resigning to devote full-time
to his football coaching duties. His best teams were the 1961-62 aggregation ( 17-4) and the
1962-63 squad ( 14-8) . He conducted basketball clinics in Poland the last two summers on behalf
of the United Stale• State Department and the Polish Olympic Commttee.
Whiz was head football and basketball coach at Hillsdale (Mich.) College before coming to
Delaware in 1952 . He still returns to Michigan every summer to conduct his own 'Varsity Day
Camp" for c~ildren near Ann Arbor.
An Air force officer during World War II, Whiz i• married to the former Martha McCann .
They have seven childre'l.

JAMES (JIMMY) FLYNN
Backfield Coach
Jimmy Flynn, a sensational Delaware halfback in the ea_rly Fifties, is starting hi s second season
a• a varsity backfield coach .
Flynn, who coached the Delaware freshmen for four years, was one of the "Jame• Boys " with
Jim Zaiser as an undergraduate . He led the 1954 teem in rushing with 705 yards and in scoring
with 60 points . His career rushing total of 1,387 yards puts him fourth on the Hens' oil-time record list.
Graduated from Delaware in 1956, Flynn was head fooH•oll and track coach ol Central Catholic
High School in Pittsburgh , Po. , before joining the Blue Hen staff.
The stocky Irishman is well known as the coach of the Delaware track team . The Blue Hens won
40 meet. in a row under Flynn and he has a six-year record of 48-4 . His 1963 squad won the
Middle Atlantic Conference championship and the Hens finished second in 1962 , 1964 and 1965.
An Army artillery officer for two years, he '• married to the former frances Bennett, who is also
a Delaware graduate. They have three •an•.

Page Eleven

�MICHAEL (MICKEY) HEINECKEN

Backfield Coach
Mickey Heinecken, capta in Ond outstanding player of the 1960 Delaware football
now defensive backfield coach and II!Jcrosse coach at his alma mater.

team, is

As an undergraduate, Mickey won the Alumni Association Award to the Outstanding Senior
Athlete, the Wilmington Touchdown Club Award to the Outstanding Delaware Player, an award for
leadership in Scholarship and Football, and the Taylor Memorial Trophy to the player who contributes
the most to team morale. He lettered in football, baseball and lacrosse .
After
basketball
1963 and
years. He
is 28-16 .

graduation in 1961, Heinecken stayed at Delaware and coached lacrosse, freshman
and served as a graduate assistant in football . He entered the Army as a lieutenant in
was the line coach far the inter-service champion Ft. Benning (Ga.) Doughboys far two
returned to the Delaware coaching staff in 1965 . His four-year record as lacrosse coach

He is married to the former Carol Kelk, who was captain of the Delaware cheerleaders.

They

have a son, Kevin.

DON HARNUM

End Coach
Don Harnum has served the Delaware athletic staff as an assistant in both the football and
basketball programs and an instructor in physical education.
A native of Brewer, Maine, Harnum received his bachelor of science degree from the University
of Maine in 1962 and his masters in education from Delaware in 1 964. He served as a graduate
assistant in basketball and football while working toward his masters degree.
For two years Harnum was stationed at Ft. Benning, Ga., as a lieutenant in the Army . He was
the end coach for the Ft. Benning Doughboys inter-service championship football team and a member
of the Ft. Benning All-Star basketball team .
Don is married to the former Virginia Hurm of Newark . They have two sons and a daughter.

PAUL BILLY

Freshman Coach
Paul Billy, an eight-letter man at Muhlenberg College in the 1950s and a titleholder in Middle
Atlantic wrestling competition, is the freshman football coach .
Billy, who assisted Jimmy Flynn with the freshman football program for three years, also
coaches the Delaware wrestling team . His Blue Hen wrestling teams have compiled a four-year
record of 3 3- 1 0- 1.
As an operations officer with the Navy for three years , Billy also did enough operating as 0
guard and tackle for the Pensacola Naval Air Station to be named to the All-Navy first team .
He coached two years at his alma mater, then a year at Lafayette before joining the Delaware
staff in 1963 .
Paul and his wife Sandy have two children.

DR. C. ROY RYLANDER

Head Trainer
Those familiar with the work of Roy Rylander regard him as one of the finest collegiate trainers
in the United States.
A native of Brooklyn, N.Y ., Roy earned his bachelor's degree in education at Southern Illinois
University, his master's and Ph.D . degrees at New York University.
He joined the Delaware faculty in 1946 and has since served in many positions. His duties have
included instructing in service and professional programs, elementary and advanced gymnastics, first
aid in athletic injuries, kinesiology, measurement and evaluation . He has served as director of the

intramural sports program, varsity gymnastics coach and assistant track coac!-1 . As tennis coach, he
has guided the Blue Hens to a 15-year record af 92 -58.
Rylander has had two periods of military service. He was a unit training officer and a combat
unit leader during World War II and was recalled during the Korean conflict to serve as unit training
officer in the United States and Okinawa.
He and his wife Renee have two children .

DICK LEACH

Assistant Trainer
Dick Leach is starting his second season as Delaware's assistant trainer.
in physical education.

He s also on instructor

A native of Wilmington and a Delaware graduate, Leach also attended Temple University end
the University of Florida . He received his bachelor of science degree from the University in 1966.
He is a member of the Delaware Associat ion for Health, Physical Education and Recreation and
the American Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation.
He and his wife Nancy have a daughter.

Page Twelve

�VISIT THE CAMPUS
of the

NEW

University Motors
SEE OUR FINE SELECTION OF QUALITY USED CARS

Inspect Our Service Department, Our Paint and Body Shop
DELAWARE'S LEADING CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER
"A Friendly Dealer in a Friendly Town"

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Newark Del.
PHONE 368-8501
Inquire About Our Shop at Home Service

Hugh F. Gallagher, Jr.
INCORPORATED

REAL TOR
REST AU RANT AND
DINING ROOM
Intersection Routes 40 and 896
at Glasgow

Excellent Food, Cocktails
SERVING 11 :30 A .M . TO 9 :45 P.M.

368-4729
CLOSED SUNDAYS

7 4 E. Main St., Newark
PHONE 368-1621

Page Tbirteen

�OF AMERICA
THE MOST MODERN ACCOMODATIONS
REASONABLE RATES
Just 4 Miles East of University of Delaware Stadium
Route 273 at Interstate 95
R.D. # 3
NEWARK, ()ELAWARE

A Delightful Place To Stay

THE HORSELESS CARRIAGE
RESTAURANT
FOR THAT MOST UNUSUAL AND SPECIAL
OCCASION
• Town Car Dining Room
•

Fam ily Car Coffee Shop

•

Pierce Arrow Room

• Stanley Steamer Room

BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON, DINNER

•

Sports Car Cocktail lounge

Banquets or Meetings up to 200
Adjoining the HOLIDAY INN OF AMERICA
Route 273 and Interstate 95

Page Fourteen

�NEWARK LUMBER
COMPANY
PHONE 737-5502
Everything to Build Anything

Fuel Oil
Hardware

Lumber
Paints

See Us Before You Build
Free Estimates
Millwork

Ample Parking

221 E. Main Street

Deluxe Candy Shop, Inc.

Free Delivery
Mason Supplies

BREAKFAST - LUNCH
Air-Conditioned

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Newark
41 E. MAIN STREET, NEWARK

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Compliments of

GEORGE MILLER

FORD-MERCURY

303 CLEVELAND AVENUE, NEWARK

368-8516

Page Fifteen

�NEWARK REAL ESTATE AND
INSURANCE COMPANY

RITTENHOUSE MOTOR CO.

"See DON ARMSTRONG First"

SALES - SERVICE - PARTS

10 ACADEMY STREET
Newark - Delaware

368-9107

DODGE and DODGE . TRUCKS

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Phone Newark-368-8797 or 656-3161
250 Elkton Road

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for the ultimate in showering pleasure and luxury

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WILMINGTON

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•

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KENNETT SQUARE

S. Salisbury Blvd.

•

SALISBURY

Complete Play-By-Play

DELAWARE FOOTBALL
Home and Away with
BOB KELLEY
Sept. 23
RHODE ISLAND
1:45 p.m.

Sept. 30
VILLANOVA
1:45 p.m.

Oct. 7
HOFSTRA
1:15 p.m.

Oct. 14
RUTGERS
1:15 p.m.

Nov. 11
LEHIGH
1:15 p.m.

Nov. 18
BUCKNELL
1:15 p.m.

Page Stxteen

Oct. 21
LAFAYffiE
1:45 P.M.

Oct. 28
TEMPLE
1:15 p.m.

ALSO BROADCAST OVER
WDOV Dover-141 0 KC
WJWL Georgetown-900 KC

Nov. 4
BUFFALO
1:15 p.m.

�To Any Athlete
There are little eyes upon you,
And they're watching night and day.
There are little ears that quickly
Take in every word you say;
There are little hands all eager
To do anything you do;
And a little boy who's dreaming
Of the day he'll be like you.
You're the little fellow's idol;
You're the wisest of the wise,
In his little mind about you,
No suspicions ever rise;

He believes in you devoutly,
Holds that all you say and do,
He will say and do, in your way
When he's a grown-up like you.
There's a wide-eyed little fellow,
\Vho believes you're always right,
And his ears are always open,
And he watches day and night;
You are setting an example
Every day in all you do,
For the little boy who's waiting
To grow up to be like you.

�RMR Corporation
manufacturers of

ELECTRICAL FRACTIONAL HORSEPOWER MOTORS
Elkton, Maryland

TRAVEL DEPARTMENT
of

BANK OF DELAWARE

W HAT'S your winter vacation pleasure?
Skiing? Cr uising? Basking in Florida or
Caribbean sun? Part of the pleasure is in
the planning, and the Travel Department
of Bank of Delaware completely plans any
vacation with you, as well as for you. Come
in now to talk about your winter vacation.
As a matter of fact, now is the time to begin planning your spr ing or summer trip.
It's not too early to start, because it's never
too early for fun . So phone, write, or visit
Bank of Delaware-the only bank in the
state with a Travel Department, at your
service, whether or not you're a customer
of the bank.
W ILMINGTON

where vacation
fun begins

9th &amp; M a rket Streets
OL 6-9911

368-0661

DOVER

SEAFO RD

3-15 The Plaza
674-2211
Member:

Page Eighteen

N EWARK
Newark Shopping Center

300 High Street
629- 9113
F.O.I.C.

Federal Reserve System

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Industrial Piping

Air Conditioning
REFRIGERATION
SERVICE and ENGINEERING

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3207 Miller Road

Wilmington, Delaware

ALTON F. NEAL, INC.

764-6068 &amp; 764-6069

MASON CONTRACTORS
1605 Ayre St. (Newport)

Wilmington, Delaware
998-3325

Andrew l. Mitchell

Andrew E. Mitchell

Vice President

President

CROPPER AND THOMAS, INC.
Excavating, Paving and Demolition

Newport, Delaware

(302) WYman 8-1148

Page Nineteerr

�A Building Boom on Campus

With occupancy scheduled this fall, the finishing

This modern headuarters for the Chemicul Engineer-

touches are being put on this $2.8 million College of

ing Department, rated among the nation's finest, will

Education Building, which will also house the College
of Nursing . More than 2,500 future teachers and
nurses will be getting the bulk of their education here

be put into service some time after the first of the
year. Costing almost $3 million, the building includes
a classroom wing, left foreground, with offices and

by 1975.

laboratories in the three-story section.

Page Twenty

�NEWARK, DELAWARE

Manufacturers of

Papers for Fine Printing

Petrillo Bros., Inc.
• Certified Central Mix Concrete
•

• Sand and Gravel

Bituminous Concrete

• Crushed Stone

Edgemoor and Minquadale Plants
MAIN OFFICE

Philadelphia Pike &amp; Edgemoor Road
Wilmingtmt, Delaware

PO 4-3550

Page Twenty-one

�On Being A

Rhodes Scholar
Every Delaware student soon learns
the old refrain, "Meet you at Rhodes!"
They eat there, argue there and get
most

everything

except

their

grades

there .
For 100 yea~, Rhodes has been a
just-off-campus student center and community landmark. Even after they graduate, our Rhodes scholars come back to
renew old times.

KENDALL INSURANCE AGENCY
121 0 Kirkwood Highway

RHODES

Elsmere

DRUG STORE

998-2236

C. EMERSON JOHNSON , Prop.

Insurance at its Best for Less

Certified Concrete, Inc. of Delaware
200 S. MARKET STREET
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE

656-8521

Certified Ready Mix Concrete
Sand and Gravel
Building Materials

Page Twenty-two

�TODAY'S

Henry Munder

REFEREE

Angelo J. Fortunato

UMPIRE

Walter K. Peters

louis V. Koerber

Robert E. Owings

LINESMAN

FIELD JUDGE

CLOCK OPERATOR

~I
'
~.;, ~--

il

~\L~__)

2 ILLEGAL PROCEDURE
3 ILLEGAL
POSITION OR
SUBSTITUTION
MOTION

4 ILLEGAL SHIFT

"I5

ILLEGAL

I./

7

--~

P~RSONAL

1\

1

,

FOUL

,.

t(

..!

~

1{

,.

KICKER

/

•

~

CONDUCT

~;

\1-', ~·-

!A

15 INELIGIBLE RECEIVER

/

-

'Ir

9 ROUGHING THE/'

W ~.)
8 CLIPPING

~~

10 UNSPORTSMANLIKE

DOWNFIELD ON PASS

k_

14 FORWARD PASS OR

KICK CATCHING INTERFERENCE
13 ILLEGALLY PASSING OR

6 DELAY OF
GAME

•.

RETURN

~i!~~~('!'-i;&gt;?i~&gt;J~
l

' •;

~
f~·
~~\\ ~~
~~ •· ~~~i~ -c'~ ~·~'-._ «.-.!'·~~/

t::~

(. ~

&amp;

11 ILLEGAL USE OF

~~.~.·!.~~~g

HAND~S
AND ARMS

t;!

('~~:·~'"'\_

·:E:IONAL

~

~

--

l I

ROUNDING

16 BALL ILLEGALLY TOUCHED,

t,

KICKED OR BATTED

17 INCOMPLETE FORWARD PASS,
PENALTY DECLINED, NO PLAY
OR NO SCORE

(~

~{

(l t: I I

.. ~:~-:. \ ~·) ~:
10 TOUCHDOWN OR
18 CRAWLING, HELPING RUNNER
OR INTERLOCKED INTEiifERENCE

FIELD GOAL

,. :~:'-:!~"

/~~;

""iE'- .---,..-, -,~'

'-...

"'

·/-:o
25 START THE CLOCK

__, - - \ I
22 TIME-OUT

IS FIRST DOWN

Page Twenty-three

�DELAWARE IN ACTION
Photos by John Peterson, Wilmington News-Journal

DELAWARE HALFBACK Jim Lazarski uses a stiff arm Ia avoid a

Puchalski.
the Owls.

tackle by Temple safetyman Dave
Lazarski, used as a replacement for the injured Tom DiMuzio, picked up 33 yards against

BLUE HEN QUARTERBACK Frank Linzenbald puts his shoulder down for coll ision with Temple defens ive

back George Conti. Owl end Wayne Colman has a good view of the run, which resulted in a four-yard
gain for Linzenbold.

Page Twenty-four

�TEMPLE DERAILS DELAWARE

BRIAN WRIGHT breaks away from a tackle and starts on a brilliant 48-yard run that gave the Blue
Hens a 16-0 lead in the second period. Jeff Lippincott's extra point made it 17-0, but Temple rebounded . for a 26-17 victory that eliminated Delaware from the Middle Atlantic Conference title chase.

IT'S A BIRD! A fallen Blue Hen. Quarterback Frank Linzenbold was trapped far behind the line of
scrimmage but gets back for a four-yard gain before being knocked out of bounds by Temple middle
guard Gerry Twardowski (79). Owls stalled Delaware offense in second half while coming up with
26 points of their own.

�A View From The Booth
By BOB KELLEY

Seventeen years of memories.
T-hat's what I have after play-by-playing my way
through 145 Saturdays. Eight were with Bill Murray,
119 with Dave Nelson and, when this season is done,
18 will have been with Harold Raymond.
My first autumn as a Delawarean also was my first
as a Delaware U. microphone-ist. It was Bill Murray's
last; coincidentally, I trust.
Candidly, my memories of 1950 aren't fond. I liked
Murray and his staffers--Fred Emmerson, Shack Martin,
Joe Brunansky- but, otherwise, it was awful. From the
opening at Lehigh, where hornets bossed the press box
and the Engineers ·bossed the ball game, through the
bleak finale with Bucknell, the best I can say for the season of 1950 is vhat it was unforgettable. That isn't a
synonym for memorable. Not in my lexicon, anyway.
But better days, more exciting days, were coming.
A man from Michigan, via Maine, brought them.
Dave Nelson must have known he was following a
tough act in yielding to the wooing of John Deluca and
Bob Carpenter. Bill Murray was an institution. His
successes, 1950 notwithstanding, were legend. Aside
from the brothers du. Pont, he was the best known of
all Delaware citizens.
I'll never forget public reaction to the news that Bill
was leaving the university, returning to Duke, his alma
mater. Everyone wished him well but no one really accepted the fact of his going.
But he went. And Dave Nelson came.
He came to fill two jobs, head football coach and
director of athletics. To the layman, only 'his perform'
ance as a coach was of concern, immediate or future. To
Nelson, who insisted on the dual role, neither took precedence over the other. Their importance, if not their
publicity value, was equal.
If anything- 41nd rhis is personal speculation- ! believe Dave Nelson takes greater pride in his accomplishments as an athletic architect than in his well-documented achievements as a football strategist.
Assuming I "read" him correctly, this is as it should
be. After all, success in football, whether as player or
as coach, is a transitory thing.
There's nothing transitory, nothing impermanent,
about Nelson's accomplishments as an archi.tect. Generations of students to whom Winged-T, criss-cross, counter
and Refrigerator Bowl will mean nothing will benefit
from his determination to equip this campus with a
beautiful, functional athletic plant.
To say that Dave Nelson has followed through on

Page Twenty-six

his determination is to accentuate the obvious. Just
look around you! And, if you're old enough, remember
vhe scene as it was in 1951.
What I remember most about that year, Nelson's
first, is a montage-Don Miller's sleight-of-hand, Paul
Mueller's two-way heroics and Joe Scaccia's short-yardage
plunge for •t he Wilmington Park touchdown that beat
Lehigh, 7-0. The win was a semi-surprise, even to
Nelson who hadn't blackboarded the blocked kick t-hat
made it possible, but it enabled the new man to open
on an upbeat. He maintained the tempo for the next
15 years.
What memories those years provide!
The brilliance of Don Miller; the wars with West
Chester; the performances of Jimmy Flynn and Johnny
Meccariello and a dozen others in rhe startling 13-0 conquest of a great 1952 Bucknell team in this park; the
comeback victory over Kent State under· Siberian conditions in the 1954 Refrigerator Bowl.
And then there was ' 55 when only Lehigh, under
Bill Leckonby' s direction, prevented Delaware from going 9-0. Nelson and " the kids" were to come dose
again in '59, when Bowling Green intervened, before
finally winning 'em all- and the national championship
- in '63. Remember the wild one wivh Temple (32-23)
and the 14-3 decisioning of Rutgers and, perhaps most
memorable, Chuck Zolak's confident (!) field-generalship in the 29-12 throttling of Ohio U. ?
And how about- - ? But that'll have to wait.
I have a game to call and Dave Nelson has a house
to count. We'11 reminisce another day.
Bob Kelley, sports voice of the University . of Delaware
since 1950, also is the public relations director of Delaware Park, the state's major thoroughbred race track, located in nearby Stanton. Kelley began his broadcasting
career more than 20 years ago in Munich~ Germany, where
he served as sports and special events director of the Ameri -

can Forces Network of the Armed Forces Radio Service. An
alumnus of Fordham University, Kelley also is an experienced newspaperman.

He was a

staff writer with

Stars

and Stripes in Germany prior to joining the sports department of the old New York Sun . From 1950 through 1962,
Kelley was sports columnist of the Wilmington Morning
News while doubling os sports director of Radio Station
WllM in Wilmington; a post he still holds.

He is a six-

time winner of the state's Outstanding Sports Broadcaster
award in voting conducted by the National Sportscasters
and Sportswriters Association. He will be heard this winter,
over WllM, os ploy-by- play broadcaster of the University ' s
home-and-away basketball games.

�APPETIZERS~

so~

'

llUEPOINT OYSTtRS . . . .. .. . . 1.25
CH£RRYSTONE CLAMS .. . . . . . . 1.25
SHRIMP COCKTAIL ..... ... .. . 1.51
IACKFIN CRAIMEAT . . . . . . . . . . 1.50
STEAM EO LITTLE NECKS . . . . JS
HERRING IN CREAM . . . .. .. .. • 1.81
FRESH FRUIT SUPREME . .. . .5I
TOMATO JUICE . .•. .•... .. . . .• ••

SNAPPER
FRENCH ONION
du JOUR

.40 .75
.40 .75
.30 .50

ala carte
WILD RICE .75 MUSHROOMS .75
GARLIC OR CHEESE ROW
.5I
ONION RINGS .50 SOUR CREAM .25

-~SEAFOOD~..:.STUFFED FLOUNDER ...... 4.00 SCALLOPS ORLEANS ......... 3.75
CRAB MEAT - LOBSTER SAUCE
SOUR CREAM SAUCE - WILD RICE
ICELANDIC LOBSTER TAILS 4.25 BROILED SCALLOPS ......... 3.00
SMALL . TENDER -BROILED
TARTAR SAUCE
ROCK LOBSTER TAILS
4.75 SHRIMP SCAMPI ............... 4.00
SOUTH AFRICAN · LARGE
IN GARLIC BUTTER
LOBSTER NEWBURG
4.25 FANTAILLARGE
SHRIMP
3.25
-DEEP FRIED
RICH SHERRY WINE SAUCE
CRAB IMPERIAL
4.25 SWORDFISH
STEAK
3.00
CREAM . WINE SAUCE
BONELESS -CALORIE SAVER
FRESH FISH PLANKED
3.50 SWORDFISH ROSE TREE 3.50
WAITRESS WILL SPECIFY SELECTION~ SOUR CREAM · SHRIMP SAUCE
------- -- - - - "-~...0 - ~

Talce The Glau Home
as a SOUVENIR
Enjoyable Before or
After Dinner
Served "On the Roclcs"
in a beautiful 10 os. glau,
listing the winners of
racing'• Triple Crown.

3.50
Served With Lama••, Mayonnaise
Or Coc~tail Souce.

...

O¢C

5.00 VEAL PALATINA

4.25

SIRLOIN STEAK, JR.
NEW YORK CUT

4.50 VEAL PARMEGIANA

3.50

PRIME RIB of BEEF
FRESH DAILY

4.50 VEAL CUTLET

3.00

DOUBLE CUT of BEEF
MAN SIZE

5.25

3.75

COMBINATION
BROILED
ROCK LOBSTER TAIL
SHRIMP - SCALLOPS
FLOUNDER
4.50

DINNER SERVED: DAILY 4:30 TO MIDNIGHT; SUNDAY 3 TO 8 P.M.

OiOPPED BEEF -

MONTEREY CHEESE -PROSCUffiO
PROVOLONE CHEESE SAUCE

CENTER CUT -DEEP FRIED
CALVES LIVER
CRISP BACON -FRIED ONIONS

SERVED WITH MINT JELLY ..... ·········· ·

~

SOUTH
AFRICAN
LOBST!~D TAIL
FILET MIGNON

4.25

:nrlxed
grill

I POUi:fRV]
'-

ENTREES INCLUDE
Rell•h Tray
Salad Bowl
Two Vegetable•
Coffee or Tea

VISIT THE
KENTUCKY
DERBY BAR

3.25

BRANDY

~.C.oe".~«"-~.c__~

4.75

/

ROSE TREE INN

SIRLOIN STEAK
NEW YORK CUT

ec==="tc====M

SEAFOOD

JUMBO SHRIMP
ROCK LOBSTER
BACKFIN CRABMEAT

5.25 BRANDY SIRLOIN

DOUBLE LAMB CHOPS

~~--

~ill[ffi[ID~ •

FILET MIGNON
THI()( PRIME STEER MEAT

HALF CHICKEN
BROILED OR FRIED

3.00

SIRLOIN BROCHETTE
LAMB CHOP
CALVES LIVER
4.7S

~

3. 75 l ROCKING HORSE
CHICKEN HAWIIAN
HAM -PINEAPPLE -WILD RICE
CHOPPED SIRLOIN
CHICKEN CREOLE
3.75
BONELESS BREAST -TANGY SAUCE
CHICKEN EUGENIE
4.25
HAM -MUSHROOMS -SAUCE

MEDIA, PENNSYLVANIA
I Route 252 , First Exit Off Media By-Pass I

VEAL CUTLET
FRIED CHICKEN
FRESH FLOUNDER

1.75
11 YEARS OR UNDER

JACK MESSICK
Former Delaware Captain and
Little All-American Is Your Ho st

�DELAWARE ROSTER
No.

65
66

58
42
44
26
74
73
50
78
83
79
19
37
43
64
47
53
21
67
33
41
82
76
11
36
62
57
54
61
48
84
15
10
87
17
29
30
24
32
60
88
89
28
75
80
16
86
45
90
68
34
12
14
25
70
63
56
81
46

Name

Jim Albertson
AI Avignone
Fronk Bach
*John Baumann
Sam Brickley
Dan Brumbach
Paul Camp
• Scott Campbell
Ernie Casper
Pete Cornelius
• Jim Crabb
Carmine DeRubeis
Tom DiMuzio
lee Emmons
Bruce Fad
John Favero
John Fulop
Steve Grotzinger
Mickey Guerriero
*lee Hackney
Bruce Hanley
George Helker
Jon Hoey
Phil Huffman
Carmen Infante
Dick Keller
Dave Klinger
Mike Kwiatkowski
• Jim loser
• Bill laughlin
Jim Lazarski
Bob lieberwirth
• Frank linzenbold
• Jeff lippincott
Mark Lipson
Ed Marin ick
Bob Masin
*Chuck McCallion
Tom Milburn
• John Miller
• Bob Novotny
Tony Puken
Joe Purzycki
John Redden
John Ruch
• Jim Scelba
*George Shirmer
Steve Sloan
*Art Smith (Capt. )
Frank Smith
Jeff Smith
• John Spangler
Chris Spicer
Joe Stopyra
Jack Tracey
Chip Vaccarino
• Hank Vollendorf
Mike Wickham
Ron Withelder
• Brian Wright

• 1966 Lettermen ( 17)

Page Twenty-eight

Pos.

Class

Ht.

Wt.

G-LB
T

So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.

6-0
6-0
6-0

210
210
204
172
180
160
210
260
185
200
185
195
198
190
190
208
178
190
175
205
200
198
175
200
185
180
195
195
218
195
160
208
184
175
195
180
187
175
190
195
190
195
185
190
210
205
190
185
167
186
190
192
185
183
175
225
195
218
170
160

c

HB
HB
HB
C-T
T

c
T
E
T

QB
FB-K
HB
G-LB
HB
G
FB
G-LB
FB
FB
E
T

QB
FB
G-LB
G

c

G-LB
HB
E

QB
K
E

QB
HB
FB
E
E
G-LB
E
E-HB
E
T
E

QB
E
HB
E

G - LB
FB

QB
FB
HB
T
G

c

E
HB

5-8
5·8
5-9
5-10
6-6
5-11
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-1
5-10
6 -0
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-11
6·0
6-1
6-1

5·9
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-0
5-10
6-3
6-0
6 -0
6-3
6·0
5-7
5-10
6-2
5-11
5-10
6-2
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-2
5-11
5-11

5-9
6-0
6-2
5 - 10
6-2
5-11
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-0

5-9
5 -9

High School/Hometown
Kinnelon / Kinnelon, N. J.
Our Lady of the Valley/Orange, N.J.
MI. Carmel Catholic/ MI. Carmel, Po.
Royal Oak/ Kimball, Mich.
Lock Haven/ Lock Haven, Po.
Gloucester Catholic/ Gloucester, N. J .
A. I. DuPont/ Newark, Del.
Haverford School/ Haverford, Po.
Wilmington/ Wilmington, Del.
Notre Dame/ Trenton, N. J.
Charleroi/North Charleroi, Po.
East Paterson Mem./East Paterson, N. J.
Bishop Neumann/ Philadelphia, Po.
Palmyra/ Cinnaminson, N.J.
Upper Dublin/Ft. Washington, Po.
Paramus/Paramus, N. J.
South River/South River, N. J.
Saint Marys Area/ Saint Marys, Po.
Delbarton/ Chatham, N. J .
Newark/ Newark, Del.
Toms River/Beachwood, N.J.
Caesar Rodney/ Dover, Del.
Overbrook/ Lindenwold, N. J.
Brandywine/ Wilmington, Del.
Chichester/Linwood, Po.
Columbiana/Columbiana, Ohio
Woodbury/Woodbury Heights, N.J.
Clifton Heights/ Clifton Heights, Po.
Emmaus/ Emmaus, Po.
Central Catholic/ Pittsburgh, Po.
Coughlin/ Wilkes-Barre, Po.
Succasunna/Roxbury, N. J.
Florence Township/Roebling, N. J.
Manasquan/Belmar, N. J.
Central/Philadelphia, Po.
West Hazleton/West Hazleton, Po.
Columbia/ South Orange, N. J.
DeLaWarr/ New Castle, Del.
Bishop Egan/ Levittown, Po.
Haddonfield/ Westmont, N. J.
Columbia/ Maplewood, N.J .
Florence Township/ Roebling, N. J.
Our Lady of the Valley/ Newark, N.J.
Nether Providence/ Media, Po.
Pottsville Area/ Pottsville, Po.
Southern/ Manahawkin, N.J.
Collingswood/ Collingswood, N. J .
West Deptford/ Pitman, N. J .
Delsea Reg ./Vineland, N. J.
Salesianum / Wilmington, Del.
Henderson Jt./West Chester, Po.
Poly/ Baltimore, Md.
Haddonfield Me m./Haddonfoeld, N. J .
Newark/ Newark, Del.
Beaver Falls/ Beaver Falls, Po.
lafayette/ Brooklyn, N. Y.
Upper Dublin / Maple Glen, Po.
Horseheads/ Millpo;t, N. Y.
Ridley Township/ Folsom, Po.
Richard Montgomery/ Rockville, Md.

�Ernest DiSabatino &amp; Sons, Inc.

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

2601 West 4th Street
Wilmington, Delaware

654-5331

Page TUJenty-nine

�THE BLUE HENS

DELAWARE
PROBABLE OFFENSIVE LINEUP

No .

84
73
63
54
60
70
81
15
44
46
34

Name

Position

BOB LIEBERWIRTH ........TE
SCOTT CAMPBELL ........ LT
HANK VOLLENDORF .... LG
JIM LASER ...................... C
BOB NOVOTNY ............ RG
CHIP VACCARINO ........ RT
RON WITHELDER .......... SE
FRANK LINZENBOLD .... QB
SAM BRICKLEY ............ LHB
BRIAN WRIGHT .......... RHB
JOHN SPANGLER .......... FB

10
11
12
15
16
17
19
21
24
25
26
28
29
30
32

lippincott, K
Infante, QB
Spicer, QB
linzenbold, QB
Shirmer, QB
Martnick, QB-Saf
DiMuzio, QB-HB
Guerriero, FB
Milburn, DE
Tracey, HB
Brumbach, HB
Redden, DE
Masin, HB
McCallion, DHB
Miller, DE

33 Hanley, DHB

34 Spangler, FB
36
37

42
44
45
46
47
48
50
53
54
56

57

59 Stopyra, G

60
Keller, Saf
61
Emmons, DHB-K 62
Baumann, Saf
63
Brickley, HB
64
A . Smith, HB-Saf 65
Wright, HB
66
Fulop, HB
67
Lazarski, HB
68
Casper, C
69
Grotzinger, G-LB 70
laser, C
73
Wickham, C
74
Kwiatkowski, G

Novotny, G
laughlin, LB
Klinger, LB
Vollendorf, G
Favero, LB
Albertson, LB
Avignone, T
Hackney, LB
J. Smith, G-LB
Helker, G
Vaccarino, OT
Campbell, T
Camp, C-DT

75 Ruch, T
76
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
86
87
88
89
90

Huffman, T
Cornelius, T
DeRubeis, T
Scelba, DE
Withelder, E
Hoey, E
Crabb, E
lieberwirth, E
Sloan, DE
Lipson, E
Puken, E
Purzycki, DHB-E
F. Smith, E

BOTILED BY PEPSI -COLA BOTILING COMPANY OF WILM
UNDER APPOINTMENT FROM PepsiCo, INC., NEW YORK, N.Y.

Taste that beat

�BUFFALO

THE BULLS

PROBABLE OFFENSIVE LINEUP
No.

Name

Position

44 CHUCK DRANKOSKI ______ SE
61 MIKE RISSELL ________________ RT
64 MIKE MASER --·----·--------RG
53 CHUCK POWRIE _____________ ,C
65 JIM FINOCHIO ______________ LG
72 SCOTT CLARK ________________ LT
85 PAUL LANG ____________________ TE
14 MICK MURTHA ____ __________ QB

49 RICK WELLS --·--·------·-------FI
21 KEN RUTKOWSKI __________ TB

{

14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22

25
26
27
28
29
30
32
34

Murtha, QB
Martin, DHB
Embow, K
Jack, QB
lowe, E
Mason, QB
Patterson, HB
Rutkowski, HB
Washington, HB
Bell, DHB
DeMarco, DHB
Hansen, K

Biersbach, DHB
Horn, DHB
Brennan, FB

Richner, LB
luzny, LB

36
38
40
42
44
45
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
58
59

Janes, FB
Alimanli, FB
DeRosa, HB
Hoke, DHB
Drankoski, E
Grubbs, DHB
Hurd, DHB
Wells, HB
Mosher, LB
Wright,oi.B
Wesolowski, C
Powrie, C
Chapp, LB
McCullough, LB
Chernega, LB
Rishel, LB
Mihale, LB

36 LEE JONES ____________________ FB

I

ts the others cold!

60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72

73
74
75
76

Carney, G
Rissell, T
Kowalewski, G
Spencer, G
Maser, G
Finocnio, G
lupienski, LB
Gibbons, DT
Hayden, G
Saba, LB
Walgale, DT
Maricle, T
Clark, T
Jones, DT
Beck, DT
Riccelli, DT
Reid, T

77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
95

Wolf, T
Troglauer, DT
Moler, DT
Brisky, DE
Murphy, DE
Endress, E
Kovey, DE
Przybycien, DE
lang, E
Buchak, E
Ashley, E
Remillard, DE
Doherty, E
Henley, DE

�JoHN

E.

HEALY

&amp; SoN, INc.

General Contractors
"Quality Builders for Three Quarters of a Century "

•
Builders of the South Campus Athletic Area Around Delaware Stadium
and the North Campus Pool and Athletic Facilities.

•
707 TA TN ALL STREET
658-7294
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE
658-7295

�1967 DELAWARE FOOTBALL TEAM

FRONT ROW (left to right) : John Miller, Steve Sloan, Mike Wickham, Jon Hoey, John Spangler, George Shirmer, lee Hackney , head coach Tubby Raymond, captain Art Smith, Frank
Linzenbold, Mickey Guerriero, Frank Smith, Jim Laser, Brian Wright.

?
~

~·

...~

""""

SECOND ROW: Scott Campbell, Chip Vaccarino, AI Avignone, Bob Novotny, Jeff Smith, J im Albertson , Jack Ruch , Carmine DeRubeis, Jack Holloway, Dave Dyer, Jim Hackney, Steve Grotz·
inger, Phil Huffman.
THIRD ROW : Mickey Kwiatkowski, Ward Spisso, Frank Bach, Pete Cornelius, Bill Laughlin , Hank Vollendorf, John Baumann, Ernie Casper, John Favero, Dave Klinger, Paul Camp, Steve
Schambach, John Redden, Jim Scelba .
FOURTH ROW : Ed Martnick, Bruce Hanley, John Sylvanus , Carmen Infante, Jeff Lippincott , Joe Pu rzyck i, Ron Withelder, Jim Crabb , Tom Milburn , Bob Lieberwirth , Mark Lipson, Tony Puke n,
Greg Matyger .
FIFTH ROW: George Helker, Lee Emmons, Joe Stopyra, Dan Brumbach, Bob Mas in, John Fulop, Jim Lazarski, Chuck McCallion, Sam Brickley, Tom DiMuzio, Dick Keller, Chris Spicer, Jack
Tracey .
SIXTH ROW : manager Tom Runnels, backfield coach Jimmy Flynn, freshman coach Paul Billy, line coach Ed Maley, end coach lrv Wisniewski, backfield coach Mickey Heinecken, end
coach Don Harnum, graduate assistant Buddy Luby, trainer Roy Rylander, assistant trainer Dick Leach , manager Richard "Here" Pierce .

�NOTICE THE NEW

ICEBERG ON CAMPUS?

THIS IS THE CAP
which is the only visible part of a massive central
chilled water system for air-conditioning campus
buildings.

INSIDE
is a complex of electro-mechanical components whose sole function is to
produce tons upon tons upon tons of that invigorating conditioned air.

UNDERNEATH
cap and campus is a five-mile network of rugged insulated pipe that distributes
arctic waters to the various buildings. Thus proving once more that an iceberg is
is not all that meets the eye.

Where a construction project is more than meets the eye

DiSABATINO &amp; RANIERE, INC.
Page Thirty-four

•

2000 Rodman Road

•

Wilmington, Delaware

�Bu FFA L0
No.

Name

Nino Alimonti
• Richard Ashley
Russell Beck
Harry Bell
Ronald Biersbach
*Thomas Brennan
*Dennis Brisky
Michael Buchak
Patrick Carney
Gary Chapp
David Chern ega
Scott Clark
Douglas DeMarco
Paul DiRosa
John Doherty
*Charles Drankoski
• Robert Em bow
Terrence Endress
65 • James Finochio
67 *Theodore Gibbons
Gary Grubbs
45
Brian Hansen
27
William Hayden
68
Prentis Henley
95
42 •Thomas Hoke
Richard Horn
29
48 *Thomas Hurd
Paul Jack
17
D. Rovell Jones
73
36 *leeland Jones
Robert Kovey
83
62 *Thomas Kowalewski
Paul lang
85
Edwin lowe
18
66 • John lupienski
34
Michael luzny
Donald Maricle
71
Daniel Martin
15
64 • Michael Moser
19
Dennis Mason
Steven McCullough
55
Dennis Mihaie
59
Robert Moler
79
James Mosher
50
Thomas Murphy
81
14 •Mark Murtha
91
Chesler Napierkowski
20
Patrick Patterson
Charles Powrie
53
84 • John Przybycien
76
Frank Reid
88
James Remillard
75 • Joseph Riccelli
David Richner
32
58 • Rodney- Rishel
• Michael Risse II
61
•Kenneth Rutkowski
21
Donald Saba
69
Robert Smith
35
E. Jon Spencer
63
Paul J. Steck meyer
97
92
John Troglauer
Daniel Walgate
70
Bennie Washington
22
49 • Richard Wells
52 • John Weslolowski
Chris Wolf
77
*Irvin Wright
51

38
87
74
25
28
30
80
86
60
54
56
72
26
40
89
44
16
82

Pos.

Class

FB
E
DT
DHB
DHB
FB
DE
E
G
LB
LB
T
DHB
HB
E
E
K
E
G
DT
DHB
K
G
DE
DHB
DHB
DHB
QB
DT
FB
DE
G
E
E
LB
LB
T
DHB
G
QB
LB
LB
DT
LB
DE
QB
DE
HB

Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.

c

DE
T
DE
DT
LB
LB
T
HB
LB
LB
G
LB
DT
DT
HB
HB

c

T
LB

R0

Ht.

Wt.

6-0
6-1
6-3
5-10
6-0
5-10
6-2
6-0
6 -0
5-8
5-11
6-0
5-9
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-10
5-9
5-11
5-10
6-1
5 -8
6-1
6 -1
6 -0
6 -2
5-11
5 - 11
5-11
6-0
5-10
5-10

204
201
232
180
189
205
209
203
200
200
187
212
168
193
209
183
210
202
219
232
175
166
213
205
189
188
197
178
228
208
202
210
210
185
210
209
224
187
214
188
201
214
226
212
192
176
221
191
195
200
217
198
242
197
194
233
180
210
213
213
230
220

5-9
6 -0
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-0
6-2
6 -1
6-0
5 - 11
6-3
5 - 11
6 -0
6-1
6-3
6-0
6-2
5 - 11
5 - 11
5- 11
5-9
5 - 10
6 -0
5-11
6-0
6-1
6-2
5-10
6 -0
5 - 11
6 -3
5 - 11

255
198
198
214
220
203

s T ER
High School/Hometown

Union-Endicott/ Endicott, N. Y.
Massenai Masseno, N. Y.
Cathedral/Indianapolis, Ind.
Potsdam/ Potsdam, N.Y.
Frontier Central/ Hamburg, N. Y.
McQuaid Jesuit/ Rochester, N. Y.
St. David's/ Detroit, Mich .
Union-Endicott/ Endicott, N.Y.
New Kensington / New Kensington, p..,,
St. Clement/ Centerline, Mich.
Union-Endicott/ Endicott, N. Y.
Coshocton/ Coshocton, Ohio
Dolgeville Central/ Dolgeville, N. Y.
Canisius/ Buffalo, N. Y.
Bishop Strang/ New Bedford, Mass.
Maine-Endwell/ Endwell, N.Y.
Hamburg/ Hamburg, N. Y.
St. Vincent's/Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Christ. Bros. Acad .I E. Syracuse, N.Y.
Rogers/ Newport, R. I.
Coshocton/Coshocton, Ohio
East/ Detroit, Mich.
Cathedral latin/ Cleveland, Ohio
South Park/Buffalo, N. Y.
Whitesboro Cent./ Marcy, N. Y.
Dover/ Dover, Ohio
Southside/Elmira, N. Y.
Springdale/ Springdale, Pa.
Buchtel/Akron, Ohio
Hutchinson Tech./Buffalo, N. Y.
Cardinal Mooney/ Youngstown, Ohio
DelaSalle College/Detroit, Mich .
Ithaca/ Ithaca, N. Y.
Hutchinson Tech./Buffalo, N. Y.
Springdale/ Springdale, Pa.
St. Joseph's/ South Bend, Ind.
Ithaca/ Ithaca, N. Y.
Huntington/ Huntington, l. I.
Clayton/ Clayton, N. Y.
Bishop Fallon/Buffalo, N. Y.
Coshocton/ Coshocton, Ohio
Stuyvesant/ New York, N. Y.
Orchard Park/Orchard Park, N. Y.
Central Islip/ Central Islip, l. I.
Westmont-Hilltop/ Johnstown, Po.
Union-Endicott/ Endicott, N.Y.
Arnold/ Arnold, Po .
Ambridge Area/ Ambridge, Pa .
Cuyahoga Falls/Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Detroit Univ. High/ Detroit, Mich.
Fisher Park/ Ottawa, On!.
N. Bedford/New Bedford, Mass.
Henninger/ Syracuse, N.Y.
Bemus Point Central/Greenhurst, N. Y.
Sme thport/ East Smethport, Po.
Scott/ Coatesville, Po .
Kenmore East/Tonawanda, N. Y.
Bishop McCort/Johnstown, Po.
Depew/ Depew, N. Y.
Scollard Hall/Sault Ste. Marie, On!.
East Aurora/ East Aurora, N. Y.
Williamsville/Williamsville, N.Y.
Grand Island/ Grand Island, N.Y .
Woonsocket/ Woonsocket, R. I.
Ithaca/ Ithaca, N. Y.
Cleveland Hill/Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Solon/ Solon, 0 .
Eisenhower/ Norristown, Po.

•Lettermen (22).

Page

Thirly·fit~e

�?
:;!

~·

)&lt;•

1967 BUFFALO FOOTBALL TEAM

FRONT ROW (left to right): Brisky, Brennan, Remillard, L. Jones, Ashley, Rissell, Finochio, Hoke, Hansen, Rutkowski, Wright, Wells, Gibbons, Co-Capt.
SECOND ROW: Murtha, Powrie, Jack, Drankoski, Kovey , Wolf, Wesolowski, Reid, Chapp, Doherty, Luzny, Washington, Bell.
THIRD ROW: Maricle, Hayden, Maser, Sabo, Murphy, Riccelli, Lupienski, Mosher, DeMarco, Chernega, Alimonti, Horn, Mason.
FOURTH ROW: Bellomo, R. Jones, Buchak, Beck, Ruggerio, Biersbach, DiRosa, Moler, Spencer, Troglauer, Richner, Marlin, Grubbs.
FIFTH ROW: Henley, Carney, Clark, McCullough, Endress, Orzechowski , Przybycien, Kowalewski, Embow, Lowe, Walgate, Quinn, Patterson, Lang.
SIXTH ROW: Worzel, Equipment Mgr. ; Welk, Mgr.; Simon , Trainer; McNally, Ass'!. Coach; Stock, Freshman Coach; lppoliti, Off. Backfield Coach; Dando, Def. Line Coach; Urich, Head
Coach; Deming, Del. Backfield Coach; Geiger, Off. Line Coach; MacKellar, Ass '!. Freshman Coach; Gergley, Ass'!. Freshman Coach.

�Meet the Opponents . . .
State University of New York at Buffalo

Martin Meyerson

President

Page T hirty-Jeven

�BUFFALO

James E. Peelle
Athletic Director

GOODYEAR HALL

Page Thirty-eight

�UNIVERSITY

Richard "Doc" Urich
Head Football Coach

Page Thirty-nine

�THE DELAWARE MARCHING BAND
DIRECTORS: J. ROBERT KING and DAVID BLACKINTON

The

~agnificent

Seven

• •

The University of Delaware Marching Band today honors each of the seven
under-graduate colleges with an extended pageant show depicting ideas that relate to
the academic divisions.
J. ROBERT KING

Directors J. Robert King and David Blackinton have developed a fast-moving .
and imaginative performance. A rising hem ·line will represent the College of H ome
Economics, for instance, while the band plays a special medley arranged by John
Anderson.

Other formations will include a tractor (Agriculture), ·d ollar sign

(Business and Economics), and steam shovel (Engineering) . The directors say the
audience will have to wait to see the formations for the Colleges of A rts and
Science, Education, and Nursing.

DAVID BLACKINTON

Page Forty

�Behind the
Scenes

LUN THOMPSON
Laundry &amp; Equipment Manager

C. PHILLIP SELWAY
Supervisor, Supporting Services

BILL COOPER
Assistant Equipment Manager

WAYNE KLINE
Athletic Field Manager

Eckerd Drugs
"Conveniently Located To Serve You Better"
"THE DOWNTOWNER"
9th and Orange Streets
WILMINGTON MANOR
DuPont Highway
MIDWAY SHOPPING CENTER
Kirkwood Hwy. &amp; Limestone Rd.

•
•
•

MERCHANDISE MART
Governor Printz Boulevard
FAIRFAX
2003 Concord Pike
NEW! CLAYMONT STORE
Philadelphia Pike &amp; Harvey Road

COMPLETE DRUG STORES TO SERVE YOUR EVERY NEED

Page Forty-one

�~
7

MULLIN'S
Clothiers Since 1862

~

6th &amp; Market and Merchandise Mart
Wilmington

Delaware

STOCKS BONDS COMMODITIES
Our Facilities Are Available
for Transactions Large or Small
MEMBERS
New York Stock Exchange
New York Cotton Exchange
American Stock Exchange
New York Produce Exchange
New York Mercantile Exchange
Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Chicago Board of Trade
Commodity Exchange, Inc.
National Stock Exchange
New York Coffee &amp; Sugar Exchange
Philadelphia-Baltimore-Washington Stock Exchange

LAIRD, BISSELL &amp; MEEDS, I NC.
MARKET STREET ENTRANCE, DUPONT BLDG.
P H 0 N E

OL

8 - 4 2 4 1

OPEN WEDNESDAY EVENINGS 7:00 to 9:00
307 S. State St. - Dover, Del.

Page Forty-two

51 E. Main St. - N-an:, Del.

�YOUR 1967 CHEERLEADERS

ANITA MARCIAL
Co-Capt.

LOLA MITCHELL
Co-Capt.

LINDA NERTNEY

MARALYN SCHREIBER

SHARON TOLLET

JANELLE SLOAN

PAM CHELLY

GINGER BUTTERS

The Cheers
Yea Gold

Yea Gold (Clap, clap)
Yea Blue (Clap, clap)
Yea Delaware (Clap, clap)
Right through (Clap, clap)
Yea Gold, Yea Blue,
Yea Delaware, right through!

15 Rahs

Rah, rah, -- Rah, rah, rah
Rah, rah, -- Rah, rah, rah
Rah, rah, -- Rah, rah, rah
Team, Team, Team!
(Who?) Team! (Who?) Team!
(Who?' Team! Team! Team!

Big Blue Fight

Fight Yell

Go, go, go, go!
Fight, fight, fight, fight!
Win, win, win, win!
Fight, Team, Fight!

Fight
Fight
Come
Fight!

Delaware Fight!
Delaware Fight!
on Blue Hens,
Fight! Fight!

Let's Go

Locomotive

Let's Go! Let's Go!
Fight Team Fight
Delaware Blue Hens
Fight! Fight! Fight!

D-~-L-i\-W-1\-R-~
D-~-L-1\-W-i\-R-~

D-~-L-i\-W-1\~R-~

Team Fight

Fight, Fight, Fight, Fight!
Grab that ball and fight!
(Repeat twice)
Team Fight!

Victory
Vic- To- Ry
(Clap clap)
Del- 1\- Ware
(Clap clap)
Victory Delaware
Fight Team Fight!

Delaware Chant
D-~-L-i\-W-1\-R-~

Del- 1\- Ware
Fight

(pause)
Delaware, fight, Team, fight.
Page Forty-three

�Beverages

-

Deer Park Hotel -

Good Food

tel. 368-8592

NEW CABS! NEW NUMBER! NEW LOCATION!

NEWARK CAB COMPANY
368-8511

MAIN AND CHAPEL STREETS
AIR CONDITIONED CABS

1 - - - - - --

- - - - - - -- --

- - - - - - - - - - - - - -1

T. T. WELDIN &amp; SONS CO.
Plumbing, Heating and

Allied Kid
Company

Air Conditioning
CONTRACTORS
Established 1907

•
WILMINGTON , DELAWARE

3101 MARKET STREET
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE
Phone PO 4-8011
P.O. BOX 270

Page Forty-iour

�THE DELAWARE CAPTAIN

Art Smith
Art Smith, a talented halfback from Vineland,
New Jersey, is the captain of the 1967 Delaware
football team.
Smith, one of the most versatile players on the
Blue Hen squad, plays both offensive and defensive
halfback for coach Tubby Raymond's team. The top
offensive halfback ·o n the 1964 freshman team, Smith
was hampered by injuries and gained only 81 yards
m 12 carries as a sophomore.
He came into his own during the 1966 season,
earning a spot in the regular defensive backfield. In
the second game of the season Smith made the weekly
All-ECAC team when he intercepted a pass and recovered a fumble in the Hens' 3-0 victory over Gettys-

burg. Smitty led the team in interceptions with four,
returned seven punts 23 yards and three kickoffs 49
yards. He also gained 40 yards rushing in 16 carries
and caught two passes for 38 yards in his brief offensive appearances. He played a major role as the
Blue Hens rolled to a 6-3 record and the Middle
Atlantic Conference championship.
"Art gives us strong leadership," Raymond notes.
"He has an unselfish attitude and is a real team
player. His teammates have great confidence in Art
and so do we."
Smith, the first back to captain a Delaware football team since fullback Dan Ford in 1954, was an
outstanding high school player under former Delaware star Johnny Oberg at Delsea Regional High
School.
''I'm honored to be the captain of this team,"
Smith says. "We have a fine group of leaders on the
squ ad and I'm proud they singled me out for this
honor."

Page Forty-five

�-

THE 1967 BLUE HENS

-

Jim Albertson '70

AI Avignooe '70

John Baumann '69

Tackle-Arts &amp; Science

Tackle-Business

Halfback-Pre -Med

Sam Brickley '70

Dan Brumbach '70

Paul Camp '69

Halfback-Arts &amp; Science

Halfback-Accounting

Tackle-Education

ScoH Campbell '69

Ernie Casper '70

Pete Cornelius '70

Tackle-Business

Center-Business

Tackle-History

Page Forty-six

�IIIC.
COMMERCIAL AND SOCIAL
STATIONERS
415

MARKET STREET

CoNCORD AvE. AND WASHINGTON ST.

NEWARK ESSO SERVICENTER

BUSINESS FURNITURE

ALEX BOTLUK, Prop.

AND

LUBRICATION - WASHING
TIRES - TUBES - BATTERIES - ACCESSORIES
MINOR REPAIR WORK

DESIGN SERVICE
2010 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE

Wilmington, Delaware

WHEEL ALIGNMENT

Telephone: OLympia 8-7545
209 E. MAIN ST., NEWARK

•

PHONE 737-9919

Men . . . Look

RED MILL NURSERY
COMPLETE LINE OF NURSERY STOCK
GARDEN SUPPLIES

THE UNIVERSITY STORE
At The University Door

FRESH FLOWERS
CAPITOL TRAIL

-

GIFTS

NEWARK, DELAWARE

We Specialize in
• Campus Sportswear

Custom
Picture Framing

• Ivy League Clothing
• Fine Shoes
• Rent or Sell Formal Wear

FEATURING ALL FAMOUS BRANDS

42 E. Main Street

Newark, Del.

WALL PAPER - DUTCH BOY PAINTS
ARTIST SUPPLIES
75 Main Street
NEWARK, DEL.
(Opp. Wilm. Trust Co.)

Phone
368-0507

Page Forty-seven

�-

THE 1967 BLUE HENS

-

Jim Crabb '69

Carmine DeRubeis '69

Tom DiMuzio '70

End-International Rei.

Tackle-Math

Halfback-Sociology

Lee Emmons '70

John Favero '70

John Fulop '70

Punter-Arts &amp; Science

Linebacker-Business

Halfback-Accaunting

Steve Grotzinger '70

Mickey Guerriero '68

Lee Hackney '68

Linebacker-Math

Fullback-History

Linebacker-Educatian

Page Forty-eight

�Over 100 Years of Insurance Service

Laird C, Company
CORPORATION

Members

DuPont Building-1Oth &amp; Orange Sts.
WilMINGTON, DEL

658-6471
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

'If It's Insurable, We Can Insure It"

AND
OTHER PRINCIPAl EXCHANGES

HOLLINGSWORTH SUPPLY
COMPANY

Wilmington Trust Bldg.

Buy rrcash and Carry" and Save!
FUEL

OIL

LUMBER

INSULATION

Wilmington, Delaware

MILLWORK
HARDWARE

PAINTS

Delaware Trust Building

COAL

New York

Boston

65 N. COLLEGE AVENUE
Newark, Del.

Phone 368-8507

~

/?

DEPARTMENT

(/7W

SAVERY and COOKE, Inc.
Architectural &amp; Ornamental Metal Work

NEWARK SHOPPING CENTER
•

705 N. Lincoln Street

ARROW SHIRTS
•

Wilmington, Delaware

McGREGOR SPORTSWEAR
•

STETSON HATS
•

658-1523

FLORSHEIM SHOES
•

BOTANY " 500" CLOTHING

William G. Murray, Jr.
Carl L. Jester

Murvin H. Reese, Jr.
H. Gibbons Young

G. YOUNG ASSOCIATES
Real Estate and Insurance
Team of Full-time Professional Realtors
lARGE ENOUGH TO SERVE
SMAll ENOUGH TO PERSONAliZE
368-8538

OlD ENOUGH FOR EXPERIENCE
YOUNG ENOUGH FOR ACTION

"Think Young"

95 EAST MAIN STREET
NEWARK, DELAWARE

Page Forty-nine

�-

THE 1967 BLUE HENS

-

Bruce Hanley '70

George Helker '70

Jon Hoey '68

Cornerback-Agriculture

Fullback-Phys Ed

End-H istory

Phil Huffman '70

Carmen Infante '70

Dick Keller '70

Tackle -History

Quarte rback-Education

Safetyman-Business

Dave Klinger '70
linebacker-

Page Fifty

Agriculture

Mike Kwiatkowski '70

Jim Laser '68

Tackle-Arts &amp; Science

Center-Eng Adm

�~

•
Compliments of

BROWN &amp; SCOTT
PACKING CO.

Hotel d.u Pont
Eleventh Street at Market
Wilmington, Delavvare

"FRANKFURTERS"
WILMINGTON

DELAWARE

JOHN'S BODY SHOP
OL 8-5133

RICHARDS DAIRY

Wilmington, Delaware

Newark's Only Home-Owned Dairy

TAKE OUT SANDWICH ORDERS
ICE CREAM

SUNDAES

McHUGH ELECTRIC COMPANY

Monday through Friday
7 :30 a.m. to 11:00 p.m.

ELECTRICAl CONTRACTOR'S

Saturday
7:30 a.m . to 5:30 p.m.

ELECTRIC POWER EQUIPMENT

57 Elkton Road
Newark, Del.

Phone 368-8771

ELECTRIC MOTOR REPAIRS

Wilmington, Delaware

654-5221

Page Fifty-one

�-

THE 1967 BLUE HENS

-

Bill Laughlin '69

Jim Lazarski '69

Bob Lieberwirth '70

linebacker-Agriculture

Halfback-History

End-Civil Engineering

Frank Linzenbold '68

Jeff Lippincott '69

Mark Lipson '70

Quarterback-Arts &amp; Science

Kicker-Political Science

End-Computer Science

Ed Martnick '70

Bob Masin '70

Chuck McCallion '69

Quarterback-Education

Halfback-Accounting

Cornerback-Pre-Med

Page Fifty-two

�Jll/UIIRD F. DJIOIS
EIGHT THIRTY ONE MARKET STREET
EIGHT TWENTY EIGHT SHIPLEY STREET

WILMINGTON, DELAWARE

John G. Merkel &amp; Sons Inc.

" Established 1879 "

CHINA
JEWELERS

•
•

807 N. UNION STREET

GLASS
Sll VERSMITHS

Wilmington, Del.

654-8818
PHYSICIANS- HOSPITAL -INVALID

&amp; LABORATORY SUPPLIES
COMPLIMENTS OF
Medical Rentals &amp; Sales

JOHN JULIAN
CONSTRUCTION CO.

MEDICARE ASSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED

JOSEPH RIZZO &amp; SONS
CONSTRUCTION CO.
MASON CONTRACTORS
Cement

Concrete

Swimming Pools

Reinforced Concrete
Bricklayers

Stone Work

Patios

Fireplaces

Residential - Commercial - Industrial

13 RIZZO AVE.
ROSE HILL, DEL.

COMPLIMENTS OF A FAN
ED FURJANIC
Manager, Seaboard Finance Co.

OL 6-8116

Newark
368-2577

Page Fifty-three

�-

THE 1967 BLUE HENS

-

Tom Milburn '70

John Miller '68

Bob Novotny '69

End-Business

Defensive End-Math

Guard-Business

Tony Puken '70

Joe Purzycki '70

John Redden '70

End-Biology

Cornerback-Phys Ed

End-Business

Jack Ruch '70

Jim Scelba '69

George Shirmer '68

Tackle-History

Defensive End-Phys Ed

Quarterback-Economics

Page Fifty- four

�UNIVERSITY

ESSO

ROAD SERVICE -:- PICK UP -:- DEliVERY
Mechanical Work

•

Cor. of Elkton &amp; Beverly Rds.

737-9811

Proprietor: BILL WHITMAN

You meet the nicest
people on a Honda
Maybe it's the incredibly low price. Or the
fantastic mileage. It could be the precision
engineering. Or the safety and convenience features. But most likely it's the fun.
Evidently nothing catches on like the fun
of owning a Honda. Join in. The first step
is a demonstration ride. Why not today?

Call and Deliver

368-2249

M &amp; M DRIVE-IN CLEANERS
FOUR HOUR SERVICE

HOND.A

Shirt Finishing - Fur Storage

world'alliawt Idler I

- 3 lOCATIONS--

Sales &amp; Service
TAYLOR AUTO SUPPLY CO., INC.

Newark, Delaware

11 N. Chapel Street

1201 FRENCH STREET

Newark Shopping Center

WILMINGTON, DEL.

Limestone Road &amp; Kirkwood Highway

Delaware's largest Honda Dealer

Compliments of

WM. D. SHELLADY, INC.

Newark Country Club

MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

PRO STAFF

112 "A" STREET
DIAl 652-3106

JOE

ANEDA,

Pro

WES BARROWS, Asst.
JUDY ANEDA, Asst.

INSTAllERS OF
PlUMBING, HEATING, VENTilATING AND
AIR CONDITIONING

CHAPPELL JEWELERS
Registered Jeweler - American Gem Society

SPECIALISTS IN ALL PHASES

"Gifts of Distinction"

OF
MECHANICAL CONSTRUCTION

Wilmington Trust Building
1Oth &amp; Shipley Streets
Wilmington

Page Fifty-five

�-

THE 1967 BLUE HENS

-

Steve Sloan '69

Frank Smith '68

Jeff Smith ·'70

End---Chem Engineering

End-General Science

Guard-Eng Adm

John Spangler '68

Chris Spicer '70

Joe Stopyra '70

Fullback-Economics

Quarterback-Biology

Linebacker-Biology

Jack Tracey '70

Chip Vaccarino '70

Hank Vollendorf '69

Halfback---Civil Engineering

Tockle-Phys Ed

Guard-Education

Page Fifty-six

�CAKES

ROLLS

BREAD

PASTRII;S

COOKIES

BINGS Bakery - Gourmet Shop
253 East Main Street, Newark, Delaware
Phone 737-5310

THE BAYNARD
OPTICAL COMPANY
HUBER BAKING CO.
bakers of
PRESCRIPTION
OPTICIANS

SUNBEAM BREAD
Accuracy. Style, Courtesy, First Always

Baynard Building
Medical Center
Market at Fifth St.
1003 Delaware Ave.
Wilmington, Del. 19899
Olympia 5-6559

Olympia 5-6695

WIN WITH WilliAMS

HARLAN C.

;JJiamsa
-

REALTORS

102 E. MAIN ST., NEWARK, DELAWARE
LICENSED IN DELAWARE, MARYLAND. PENNSYLVANIA

NEWARK CLEANERS &amp; DYERS, INC.
"Same Day Cleaning"

Newark's Oldest Established Cleaner
Page Fifty-seven

�-

THE 1967 BLUE HENS

-

Mike Wickham '68

Ron Withelder '70

Brian Wright '68

Center-Business

End-Accounting

Halfback-Moth

Richard Pierce '68
Manager-Education

Page Fifty-eight

�PLASTICS . . . for demanding

THE CARD CENTER

engineering applications':

55 E. MAIN STREET

Laminated Thermosets

NEWARK, DEL.

Electronic Circuit Boards

Greeting Cards - Gifts - Party Goods

Vulcanized Fibre
Mica Products
Molded Plastics
Insulating Tapes

WE OFFER ONE OF THE LARGEST SELECTIONS
OF FINE PIPES AND TOBACCOS

A •

~"

f'

COMPANY

..

·
~· ..·:~~.-.&amp;:
; ECOEMPLETE

PIPE REPAIR SERVICE

H Iv E

-

II
I..J,,,,,,

THE#..J

CUSTOM BLENDING
and

POL YCHEM DIVISION

~

co., INC.
T o b acconists. Since 1907
DU PONT BUILDING
WI LMINGTON, DEL.

39 E. MAIN ST.
NEWARK, DEL.

The Budd Co., Polychem Div., Newark, Del.

658 -9744

366 -8725

Nowhere ...
will you save so much money
and still get the finest service

We Sell More Because ...
We Give More

STILTZ, Inc.
Charter Bus Service

ED FINE OLDSMOBILE
NEW LONDON AVE.

NEWARK

NEWARK 368-8555

DIAL 368-9166

SCOTT'S
NEWARK, DELAWARE

TV &amp; APPLIANCE STORE
In the Newark Shopping Center
WESTINGHOUSE
RCA WHIRLPOOL
Phone 737-3746

RCA VICTOR

�Statistical Leaders
DELAWARE

BUFFALO

1967 SEASON RESULTS

1967 SEASON RESULTS

Six Games ll-5)

Seven Games (4-3)

Rhode Isl and 28
Vill anova

21

Hofstra

33

Rutgers
De lawnre
Temp le

Delaware 17
~

------------------------------- Delaware 13
Delaware 31

------------------------------29 --------------------------------

Delaware 21

21 -- ----------------- ------- ------ lafayette 2
26 -------------------------------- Delaware 17

Buffalo

30 -------------- ------ Kent State
Car. State 24 -------------------- Buffalo
Virginia
35 -------------------- Buffalo
Buffalo
44 ---------- ---------- Temple

N.

Buffalo
Buffalo
Holy Cross

6
6
12
14
6 -------------------- Boston University 0
26 -------------------- Boston College
14
38 -------------------- Buffalo
25

RUSHING
Att.

Yards

Avg.

John Mill er -------------------------------- 57

275

4.8

Tom DiMuzio ------ ----------------------- -- - 81

290

3.1

Brian Wrigh t ---------- ----------------- --- 82

220

2.7

Att.

193

John Spang ler ---------------------------- 51

3.8

Had
Comp. Int.

Frank linzenbo ld -------- 154
Tom DiMuzio --------------

9

Yards

Avg.

Ken Rutkowski ---------------------------- 76
Pat Patterson ----------- ------------ ------- 91

388

5.1

375

4.1

lee Jones ------------------------------------ 96

288

3.0

PASSING

PASSING
Att.

RUSHING

Yds.

TO

Att.

Comp.

Had
Int.

Yds.

78

10

962

3

Mick Murtha ---------------- 132

58

13

783

3

0

65

0

Denn is Mason --------------

32

19

3

221

TO

4

PASS RECEIVING

PASS RECEIVING

No.

Yds.

TO

Chuck Drankoski -------------------------- 28

360

2

240

Rick Wells ---------------------------------- 14

229

Jim Crabb ----------- ----------------- ------ 15

263

Pat Patterson ------------------------------ 10

Tom DiMuzio -------------------------- ---- 14

221

No.

Yds.

TO

Bob lieberwirth ------------------ -------- 18

132

0

Ron Withe lder ---- --------------- --------- 17

0

PUNTING

0

9

PUNTING
No.

Yds.

Avg.

lee Emmons ---------- --------- --- ------ 30

1123

37.4

SCORING
TO PAT Kick

No.

Yds.

Paul Jack ·------------------------------- 39

Avg .

Blocked

1327

34 .0

SCORING
PAT Play

Tom DiMuzio --------- ----- 6

0

Jeff lippincott ---------- -- 0

13-14

0

Brian Wright ------------ -- 3

0

0

Page Sixty

Paul lang ------------------------------------

88
136

FG

Pts.

0

38

lee Jones -------------------- 9

0

3-9 22

Bob Em bow ---------------- 0

18

Ken Rutkowski -------- ---- 3

0

TO

PAT Kick

PAT Play

FG

Pts.

0

0

54

8

0

4

20

0

0

0

18

�PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS
These are the firms who have helped make this program possible by purchasing advertisements.
Page
Allied Kid Co. ....................................................................

44

Alton F. Neal, Inc. ..............................................................
Andrew E. Mitchell &amp; Sons, Inc ............................................ .

Page
John E. Healy Construction ···-·······--------------········-·-······-··-------

32

19

John Julian Construction -·······-···----------------------------···---····------

53

19

John G. Merkel &amp; Sons ......................... :.. ·-------------- -- ----- ------

53

Bank of Delaware ............................................................... .

18

Joseph Rizzo &amp; Sons ---········-················-··------------------ -----------

53

Baynard Optical Co. ····························--·--·-···-----··-··--·····---- ·

57

Kendall Insurance ----·-- ---------·······-------------------------------------------

22

Bee Hive Co. --·-----·--·--·-···-·····-·-·······--·----·····-······-··---------·-----

59

laird &amp; Co. ------------------------··-·--------·------------------·-··-·····--·-·····

49

Bing's Bakery ·------------·-········-··----·-········--------------------------------

57

laird, Bissell &amp; Meeds -······------·-·····-········-···----- ---····-··-··-------

42

Brown &amp; Scott ------------------------------------------- -------- ------------·------

51

longines-Wittnauer ···············-··-·····-··········-------------------- ---- ---

3

59

M &amp; M Cleaners ------············-·····-·····-·····------ --------------------------

55

------------·------------------------------ ----·-··-----------·----------------- 47
Card Center --------·----····---------··----------·-·------················--- 59

McHugh Electric Co. ----·-··-··-·······-------------------------- ·-···----------

51

Budd

Company

------------------------------------------------------------------

Butler's

Millard F. Davis ---------------------------------------------------------------·····

53

Certified Concrete ·--------------------········-------------------------------------

22

Mullin's

42

Chappell Jewelers ---------------------------------------- ------·------- -------- --

55

Newark Cab Co. --···-·--···--·-·····----- ---······-·---------·-·········-·--·····

44

Charles Printing Co. --------------------------------------------·------------- --

53

Newark C.C. Pro Staff -----·······----------·-······-----------·-··-·····-·······-

55

Chevrolet Motor Division ----------------------------------·····--·-- back cover

Newark Cleaners &amp; Dyers ·-·····-···············---------··-····-·------------·

57

Colonial TV &amp; Appliance Co. ---------------------------- inside front cover

Newark Dept. Store --------···--·······-········------·-·····--·-·--·-··-··-··--·

49

The

Cropper &amp; Thomas ---------·--·------·--------------------·---··--·---·--------···

19

Newark Esso Servicenter -····-········-·······-··-·-·····-----------------·-·-·-

47

Curtis Paper Co. ·--···------------···-·- -··--------···--------·-·-··············---·

21

Newark lumber Co . ·-··-······--·-····-···-··-··-·--··-···-·····----- ---·-·-··-

15

Deer Park Hotel ----··---········-·-·······-·-··-·-········-··-·············----··-·

44

Newark Real Estate &amp; Ins . -·····-··-·········-···------·-····-·---- -----·-----

16

Deluxe Candy Shop, Inc. -·-·····--····-···--- ---·····-·--·-··-···--···-····· .

15

Pepsi -Cola --····--·-··-···-·-···-··-····-····························-·--·-·····-··· 30-31

DiSabatino &amp; Raniere ··---------------·--···----····-·-- -- ---·-····-··-----------

34

Petrillo Bros. ···-······-··-·-·······--············--------···-·····-··············-·-

21

Don Greggor -----------------------------------··------- ---·------------ ------------

47

Red Mill Nursery ···--····-·-··········-··················-·--·············-······-

47

Eckerd Drug Stores ---- ----- ------------ ·-------------·--------------------------

41

Rhodes Drug Store ·---·-·-····--·-··-··········--------············-·-···········-

22

Ed Fine Oldsmobile --------·------------------------------------------ ---------

59

Richards Dairy ·---------···············------·····-··············-··················

51

Ed Furjanic ---···------------------------------·--------------------- ------------------

53

Rittenhouse Motor Co . ········-·····-··-·····--·······--·-···-··············--·-

16

Ernest DiSabatino &amp; Sons --------------------·----------····----------·····----

29

RMR Corporation --------·-············-········-·-------------·-········-·········

18

Farmers Bank -----------··-------·-------------------------------- -----------------

8

Rose Tree Inn --------·-···-··············-·······-··-·--·-···-······----------·----

27

George Miller Ford-Mercury --------- -------------------- ----·-·-----------·

15

ROTC Program ----·-·················----········-·····------------·-··--··-------

3

Glasgow Arms ---------- -----·---------------------------------------------·-- --- ·--

13

Savery &amp; Cooke , Inc. ··········-·······-········-···········--··-·······-········

49

Harlan C. Williams Realtors -----------·--------------------------------------

57

S heofler' s ..... ------ ---------·-··-· .............................................. ------

47

H. G. Young Associates ------------····-----·---------------------·----------·-

49

Scott 's TV &amp; Appliance ···-·······--········-·-···········-···········-···-·· ··

59

Holiday Inn of America·--------------------------------------·····-··· ·-··-----·

14

Speakman

16

Hollingsworth Supply Co. -------------------------------------------- ---·----

49

Stiltz, Inc.

59

The Horseless Carriage -------------------- ------------ ·---------- ------ ----·- --·

14

T. T. Weldin --------·······------············--·····-····--------- ------·--- ---· __

44

Hotel DuPont-Green Room -------------------··----------------------------·

51

Taylor Auto Supply --·-·······-·······················-··---···· ···················

55

Howard Johnson 's ----·-----------------------------------------------------------

6

University Esso ................................................................... .

55

Huber Baking Co. ------·----------------------------- --------------------·---------

57

University Motors .............................................................. .

13

Hugh F. Gallagher -------------------------- ------·---------····------------------

13

Wm . D. Shellady Inc ............................................................ .

55

J. A. Montgomery ···--·················-····-·····---------·-···--------------···

49

WflM Radio ....................................................................... .

16

John's Body Shop ··-·-·-···--··-··-·-··-··-----------·-····-··-··------------------

51

Wilmington Trust Co .

CHARLES PRINTING COMPANY- 305-307 TORBERT STREET- WILMINGTON, DELAWARE

4

�Our Sports Department
A look of bold innovation and the
feel of competitive excitement
set Chevrolet sport models apart
from the pack for '68.
Revolutionary styling.

Looking like a dream car come to
life, the '68 Corvette Sting Ray
is an astonishingly beautiful new
sports car. It's nearly seven
inches longer and two inches
lower. Startling new features
include Hide-A-Way windshield
wipers concealed beneath a
power-operated cowl panel, rear
deck spoiler, high-backed bucket
seats and push-type door
opening buttons.
Great performers, too.

Quieter and smoother riding this
year, Chevelle and Camara,

"The Hugger," offer new sports
car-type performance- better
handling, big engines. Camara SS
has a bulging striped hood that
covers your choice of either a
350- or 396-cubic-inch V8.
Chevelle SS 396 for '68 has
completely new styling, a wider
tread, shorter wheelbase, and
a twin-domed hood.
More engine efficiency.

Standard on many models with
automatic transmission is an
ingenious carburetor heater that
gives you increased efficiency in
cold weather. Standard, also, is
a new GM exhaust emission
control.
New ventilation system.

Astra Ventilation, a brand-new
system of bringing in outside air,
comes on Corvette, Camara and
the Caprice Coupe, and is available on many other models.

Proved safety features.

All Chevrolet safety features are
continued and you get many new
ones such as energy-absorbing
front seat backs and side
marker lights for '68. Be
smart. Be sure. Buy now at your
Chevrolet dealer's.
Free!
Get Chevrolet's 60-page
College Football
Handbook
Chevrolet's College Football
Handbook contains o com·
plete rundown on all the top
teams, plus action photographs ond inside looks by
famous sports commentators.
You"// also find the schedules
and line-ups of o/133 NCAA
games to be televised this
fall. It's yours for the asking
at your Chevrolet dealer"s.

'68 Chevrolets ~

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1495753">
              <text>Programs</text>
            </elementText>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495725">
                <text>1967-11-04 Delaware - Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495726">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495727">
                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495728">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495729">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495730">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495731">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Archival resources.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495732">
                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495733">
                <text>Delaware Stadium</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495734">
                <text> November 4, 1967</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495735">
                <text> Official Program 50¢</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495736">
                <text> A view from the booth by Bob Kelley</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495737">
                <text>University of Delaware</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495738">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495739">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495740">
                <text>1967-11-04</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495741">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495743">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495744">
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                <text>LIB-UA049_B01-F15-005</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>New York (State) -- Buffalo -- University at Buffalo</text>
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            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
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                    <text>Buffalo Architecture at the Time of the
Pan-American Exposition
Jack Quinan
The genius of Buffalo's architecture began with the plan that Joseph Ellicott created in 1804 [Fig. 1] for the Holland
Land Company, a radial configuration that began at Niagara Square and fanned out eastward in a perfect metaphor
for the city's eventual identity as a center for the trans-shipment and processing of goods-especially grain, lumber,
beef, and ore- from the western United States to eastern markets.

Aided by the completion of the Erie Canal in 1825 and subsequently by
dense railroad lines, Buffalo quickly grew from a village into a city of
nearly 400,000 inhabitants. As new businesses swelled the population,
industry expanded south and eastward, often following waterways like
the Buffalo and Niagara rivers, while neighborhoods moved largely
northward. In 1868 William Dorsheimer, a Buffalo-based Lieutenant
Governor of New York, persuaded community leaders to bring
Frederick Law Olmsted to create a park system for the city. Broadly
conceived, Olmsted's parks [Fig. 2] describe an arc that perfectly
accommodated the new radial trolley systems and the Belt-Line
railroad that would bring the population to and beyond the outer
edges of the city. This was the framework into which the architecture
of Buffalo would be accommodated.

What was Buffalo like in the years immediately preceding the Pan
American Exposition? Vintage photographs [Fig. 3] remind us that
downtown was dense and bustling, the center of everything in the

Fig. 1. "Ellicott's Plan for Buffalo, 1804"
Source: Francis Kowsky. The Best Planned City
The Olmsted Legacy in Buffalo. Buffalo, N.Y.,
1992, Fig. 2.

days before the automobile. Among the hundreds of buildings
comprising Buffalo's downtown circa 1900, those forming Shelton Square [Fig. 4a, Shelton Square] were especially
distinguished. St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral (1849-51, 1870-71) by Richard Upjohn, Americas's prominent Gothic
Revivalist, stands immediately across Pearl Street from Louis Sullivan's Guaranty Building (1895-1896) [Fig. 4b] a
masterpiece of Chicago School rationalism, while George Post's Erie Savings Bank (1893-5), a clever variation on H.
H. Richardson's Romanesque, occupied the site subsequently given over to the unfortunate Main Place Mall and
tower. With the demolition of Post's bank an outstanding Nineteenth century enclave was lost. Less than 200 feet

�east of St. Paul's, just across Main Street, stands Daniel Burnham's
Ellicott Square Building (1895-6) [Fig. 5], then famous as the world's
largest office building and still noteworthy for its interior light court
and busy Mannerist surfaces. Three blocks north on Main street
stood Leopold Eidlitz's Buffalo Public Library [Fig. 6] whose angular
medieval design defeated a competing design by the renowned H.
H. Richardson. That all of these architects were from Boston, New
York, and Chicago is a testament to the vision of Buffalo's
Nineteenth century patrons.

Fig. 2. "Frederick Law Olmsted's Park System

for Buffalo" Image Source: Francis Kowsky.
The Best Planned City The Olmsted Legacy in
Buffalo, (Buffalo, N.Y., 1992, Fig.7.

Fig. 4. Shelton Square: (above left to right) St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral, Sullivan's Guaranty Building and Post's Erie Savings
Bank. Louis Sullivan's Guaranty Building (right).

�"Daniel Burnham, Ellicott Square Building, 1895-6" Image source: Views of Buffalo [no pagination]

Fig. 6. "Leopold Eidlitz, Buffalo Public Library" Image source: Quinan post card, "Buffalo Public Library, Buffalo, N.Y."

�Fig. 8. Green &amp; Wicks, Buffalo (Erie) Savings Bank

Figure 15. Albright Art Museum, designed by E. B. Green.

�Downtown Buffalo was ultimately
the creation of scores of architects
but among them, Edward B. Green
and his partner, William Wicks,
dominated local practice for more
than fifty years and had a decisive
impact upon the character of the
city. At the time of the Pan
American Exposition they had
completed the Merchant's
Exchange (c1887), the Granger
Block (c1887), the D. S. Morgan
Building (1894), the O'Day and
Rockefeller Building (1890), the
Hollister and Evans Block (189091), the J. N. Adams Dry Goods
Store (1891), the Dun Building
(1894-5) [Fig. 7], the Market Arcade
(1892), the Bank of C Commerce
(1894-5), the Buffalo Real Estate
Exchange Building (1895-6) and the
Buffalo Savings Bank (1900-1) [Fig.
8]. Most of these were sturdy,
confident Classical buildings often
rendered in warm Roman brick
with richly articulated terra cotta
details, though Green was equally
adept in Gothic, Tudor, and
eventually Art Deco design modes.

Fig. 7. (left) Dun Building, one of several buildings by Wicks &amp; Green.

�The industrial Buffalo extolled by Reyner Banham in A Concrete
Atlantis (Cambridge, Mass., 1986) is a city of monolithic concrete
grain elevators and reinforced concrete-framed "daylight factories"
that post-date the Pan American Exposition. In contrast to the
smooth curves of the concrete grain silos of the Twentieth century,
their predecessors [Fig. 9] were dark, angular and ungainly in
proportion, and somewhat frail owing to their metal frames and
highmaintenance
brick
construction.
The lone
survivor of the
Fig. 10. "Max Toltz with D. A. Robinson, Pillsbury
or Great Northern Grain Elevator, 1898" Source:
Quinan post card

type is the
Pillsbury or
"Great Northern"

elevator [Fig. 10] of 1898. In the days before reinforced
concrete industrial construction in Buffalo was dominated by
the R. J. Reidpath company, architectural engineers whose

Fig. 9. Nineteenth Century grain elevators in Buffalo

segmentally arched windows, bull-nosed brick detailing, economical wall construction and overall fine sense of
proportion is still visible in the Larkin industrial buildings on Seneca Street. Sadly, the artifacts of Industrial
Buffalo are disappearing at an astonishing rate and must be ferreted out in isolated pockets such as Chandler
Street where the Buffalo Weaving and Belting Company still operates.

Residential Buffalo developed in a series of rings determined by the
advances in transportation systems across the Nineteenth century.
Joseph Ellicott's city was modest in size and was negotiated on foot,
horseback, or horse-drawn carriage. By mid-century, however, horse
drawn trolleys expanded the perimeter of the city by about two miles
and promoted the
development of the
neighborhoods north
and east of
"H. H. Richardson, William Dorsheimer House,
1869-71" Source: Quinan slide

Allentown and in
South Buffalo. In the
1880s the

development of the Belt-Line Railroad and the electrification of
trolleys in the 1890s spurred new suburban neighborhoods four
and five miles from the city center. Throughout the century
Delaware Avenue, one of Ellicott's original streets, remained a

Fig. 12. "McKim, Mead &amp; White, Pratt Mansion,
1895-6" Source: Quinan slide

�street of imposing mansions, some designed by such distinguished practitioners as Boston-based H. H. Richardson
(the Dorsheimer [Fig. 11] and Gratwick houses), New York City's McKim, Mead and White (the Butler, Pratt [Fig. 12],
Root and Metcalfe houses), and Joseph Lyman Silsbee of Chicago (the J.M. Bemis House [Fig. 13] and numerous
other houses on Linwood and Delaware Avenues) while most fell to such distinguished local architects as Green and
Wicks, Edward Kent, George Cary, C.W. Swan, and C.R. Percival.

Richardson's William H. Gratwick Mansion,
demolished in 1919, was a stunning essay in
monumental stonework wherein medieval forms
are disciplined by functional considerations.
McKim, Mead and White's work is representative of
their embrace of Beaux-Arts Classicism tempered
by a loyalty to the American Colonial style. Silsbee
was a passionate devotee of the Queen Anne
revival in which complex but sensibly organized
forms were arrayed in a rich surface of cut
shingles, carved accents, and decorative glazing.
Frank Lloyd Wright said of Silsbee, his first
employer, that "he drew like a dream."

"Jospeh Lyman Silsbee, J. M. Bemis Mansion, 1883" Image source:
Quinan slide

Buffalo has a wealth of Victorian domestic architecture but the greatest
portion of the fabric of the city consists of a standard plan two story,
two-family wood frame and gable roofed structure [Fig. 14] inserted into
the new, trolley-serviced neighborhoods, especially north of the
downtown area, by developers. The Parkside neighborhood is hardly
typical as it was designed by Olmsted with curving streets to wrap the
northeast segment of Delaware Park, but while Jewett Avenue was
treated as a gateway from Main street to the Park and features many
substantial houses, the lesser streets, such as Russell, are populated
with the standard developers' housing.

Fig. 14. Standard plan, 2 family wood
frame home

�The Pan American Exposition stimulated the
development of the Olmsted boulevards that
led from E. B. Green's First Presbyterian Church
at Symphony Circle along Richmond Avenue to
Bidwell and Lincoln Parkways and into the park
itself. Here a second wave of ealthy patrons
built pretentious homes to the designs of local
architects, a sign, perhaps, that fortunes were
leveling and visions were dimming.
Nevertheless, as George Cary and E. B. Green
designed the New York State Building (now the
Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society) and
Fig. 16. "Richardson, Buffalo State Hospital, 1870-96" Image source:
Quinan slide

the Albright Art Museum [Fig. 15], respectively,
in concert with the Fair, the city's cultural

institutions were clearly leaving the old downtown and moving to the Olmsted-defined fringe, a region in which
the far-sighted William Dorsheimer had assisted H. H. Richardson in obtaining the commission for the State Mental
Hospital 16b], with landscape by Olmsted, in 1870.
Ellicott's Buffalo, Industrial Buffalo, Victorian Buffalo, Classical Buffalo, Olmsted's Buffalo, ethnic Buffalo,
Downtown Buffalo; the city is the usual synthesis of the ideas and visions and creativity of many minds over time,
but its uniqueness lies in the quality of the work up to 1900 and its exceptional rate of survival.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS


Fig. 1. Ellicott's Plan for Buffalo, 1804 (image from Francis Kowsky The Best Planned City The Olmsted Legacy in
Buffalo, (Buffalo, N.Y., 1992, Fig. 2)



Fig. 2. Frederick Law Olmsted's Park System for Buffalo (Kowsky, Fig. 7.)



Fig. 3. Vintage Photograph of Downtown in the 1890s (source?)



Fig. 4a. Shelton Square (Richard Upjohn, St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral, 1849-51; Louis Sullivan, Prudential
(Guaranty) Building, 1895-6; George Post, Erie County Savings Bank, c1890 (from Prudential and Erie Savings Bank
in Post Card views)



Fig. 4b. Louis Sullivan, Prudential (Guaranty) Building, 1895-6 (from Prudential post card view)



Fig. 5. Daniel Burnham, Ellicott Square Building, 1895-6 (from Views of Buffalo)



Fig. 6. Leopold Eidlitz, Buffalo Public Library (from Quinan post card)



Fig. 7. E. B. Green and William Wicks, Dun Building, 1894-5 (Quinan slide)



Fig. 8. Green &amp; Wicks, Buffalo Savings Bank, 1900-1 (Quinan slide)



Fig. 9. Nineteenth Century Grain elevators in Buffalo (Photo courtesy of the Buffalo and Erie County Historical
Society)

�

Fig. 10. Max Toltz with D. A. Robinson, Pillsbury or Great Northern Grain Elevator, 1898 (J. Q. Post Card)



Fig. 11. H. H. Richardson, William Dorsheimer House, 1869-71 (Quinan slide)



Fig. 12. McKim, Mead &amp; White, Pratt Mansion, 1895-6 (Quinan slide)



Fig. 13. Jospeh Lyman Silsbee, J. M. Bemis Mansion, 1883 (Quinan slide)



Fig. 14. Common two-family wood frame house (Quinan slide)



Fig. 15. Green &amp; Wicks, Albright Art Gallery, 1900-5 (Quinan slide)



Fig. 16, Richardson, Buffalo State Hospital, 1870-96 (Quinan slide)

© 2001 - Jack Quinan
Jack Quinan, Ph.D., is Curator of the Frank Lloyd Wright designed Darwin D. Martin House on Jewett Parkway in Buffalo
and is adjunct professor of architecture at the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture, Taliesin West, Scottsdale,
Arizona. His 1987 book, Frank Lloyd Wright's Larkin Building: Myth and Fact, (Cambridge, Mass.: AHF/MIT Press,) is
considered by Wright scholars to be a classic.

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                    <text>....

UFFAlO
_,.

(
I

rJ

I

OFFICIAl PROGRAM

FIFTY CENTS

FITTON FIELO

OCTOBER 28, 1967

�DINING

ELEGANCE
Internationally Famous

Dining Rooms Open Daily From 6 P.M. Sunday From I P.M. (closed Monday)
Pub and Spike Room open daily for Luncheon
Dinner Dancing Friday, Saturday, Sunday Evenings Music by Bob Wilbur
Site of
I 968 LPGA Championship June 20-23
I 968 World Open August 22-25

PLEASANT VALLEY MOTOR LODGE
Luxurious Accomodations
Adjacen t to Country Club
Reservation s Tel. (617) Club 865-4441 Lodge 865 ·5222
Ten Minut es from Holy Cross
Route 146
Worcest er • Providence Turnpike
Sutton, Mass.

282 MAl N STREET
WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS

SAVINGS CERTIFICATES
110 NOTICE REQUIRED FOR WITHDRAWAL

$1000 or mo re held six months o r
longer.
Savings insu red up to $15,000 by a
U.S. Gov't Ag ency.
Interest Not Su bject to State Income
Tax.

HOME FEDERAL

SAv I NGS~~~ . ~?~~.~~.s~~!~!~~.~
T E. L !:PHON~

7 57- 634 1

Edward C. Maher, President
Cla ss of '40
Willia m A. De an, Jr., Vice Pres ide nt
Cla ss of '36
Leo W. Ma lboeuf, Director
Class of '32
Robert J. Cousy, Director
Class of '50

�BEST WISHES FROM

Worcester Federal Savings
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
RAYMOND P. HAROLD, President

Dedicated to Thrift and Home Ownership Since 1877

I

WORCESTER
FEDERAL SAVINGS

0
0
0

0

and'~

0

ASSOCIATION

o=========

0

0

22 Pearl-Elm St. , Worcester, Mass.
Main &amp; Sanford Sts. , Springfield , Mass.

Resources over
THREE HUNDRED TWENTY-FIVE MILLION DOLLARS

1

�score with FDSTEn·s meats

-

FOSTER'S OF MANCHESTER
Manchester, N.H.

Choice Quality • U.S. Govt. Inspected

FITTON FIELD INFORMATION

REFRESHMENTS
Soft

drinks,

candies,

sandwiches ,

In order that there be no con f usion among those who leave th e ir se a ts

peanuts, cigars, cigarettes are offered
for sole at stands operated for the

during the halves, patrons are re quested to retain the stubs of their tick e t s

convenience

that designates their section and seat number.

of

the

re, hment stands ore

spectators.

located

Re-

under
Rest Rooms

Section 2, 13, 16.

Frankfurters
Coffee

Tonic

15¢
10¢
15¢
40¢
15¢

Coca Cola

15¢

Candy
Cigars
Cigarettes

CJ

25¢

ladies-Men

D~

North Press Bo x

II

18 ~-®-=7
I (2o) I (ts) I ~....-_®.:;:_
1

__J

0

"'

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~0

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u

TELEPHONES
c

~ 0

Public Telephones ore located be·
hind

-~

13 adjacent to ex-

Section

~

"'

change booth.

0

Rest Rooms ore located undernea th
stands.

l a d ies' rest r oo ms o re

South Press B o ~t

under Sections 11- 12 and 20. Men's

15-16 and 20.

Men
Public Telephone s a re loca te d be hind
Section 13 ad ja cent to e xchange booth .

rest rooms ore unde r Sectio ns 8· 9;

2

0
0

"'~

REST ROOMS

the

""
"'c
"

Your Cooperation, please As guest of the College today, your cooperation is solicited in maintaining
the dignity and reputa t ion of the institut ion. The rules and traditions of
this College, as well as state and local laws governing the transportation
and consumption of alcoholic beverages of any k1nd on the campus, are
to be observed.

�OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

HOLYCROSS
FOOTBALL
October 28, 1967

Fitton Field

The Buffalo Game
Features
4 JACK LENTZ-From a College Quarterback to a Pro Safety
A story on last year's H.C. quarterback who has made a successful switch to a starting
job with the Denver Broncos.

*******
LONGINES
THE WORLD'S
MOST HONORED
WATCH®
10 world's fair grand prizes
28 gold medals

Longines watches are recognized
as OFFICIAL for timing world
championships and Olympic sports
in all fields throughout the world.

8 The Crusader Cubs-Outstanding students, outstanding athletes
This year's Holy Cross Freshmen football players excel both in classroom and on the
field. Read about them on page 8.

10 The Crusaders in Action
Senior Brian Heller once again has supplied us with some interesting photos of H.C. in
action. Interesting pictures of last week' s Boston University game are on pages 10 &amp; 11.

12 Buffalo--A Growing University
The Buffalo News Bureau has supplied us with a story on its growing university.

Departments

..

2
6
7
14
15-16 -17
20
22 -23
25
26-29
28
29

Fitton Field Information
The Presidents
H.C. &amp; Buffalo Officials
Holy Cross Captain
Holy Cross Players
Holy Cross Roster
Probable lineups
Buffalo Roster
Holy Cross Coaches
Brief Glance at Opponents
Buffalo Coaches

31
32
33-34-35
37
39
42
43

44

Officials' Signals
Buffalo Co-Captains
Buffalo Players
H.C. Records, Coaches,
Captains
Series History
1967 College Rule Changes
1967 H.C. Fall Schedules
&amp; 1968 Varsity Football
Schedule
Editor's Notes &amp; Statistics

longines Ultra-Chron:: 8205, automatic with calendar, $175.
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Guaranteed Accurate To A Minute A Month

THE HOLY CROSS ATHLETIC ASSOCIATI ON
Director of Athletics, Vincent G. Dougherty '37
Business Manager of Athletics, Joseph W. McDonough '48
Director of Sports Information, Richard R. Lewis
Athletic Chaplain, Rev. John F. Devlin, S.J.
This program published by the Washington Press of Worcester, Inc.
Richard R. Lewis, Editor

The ultimate personal chronometer,
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Joseph W. McDonough, Advertising Manage r

Contributors: John Power '69; Jack Sharpe; Donna Anderson; Buffalo News Bureau
Pictures by: Brian Heller '68; Marvin Richmond Studios; Buffalo Sports Information
Office
Next Home Game: Nov. 4, Villanova

LONGINES-WITI'NAUER WATCH CO.
MONTREAL

NEW YORK

GENEVA

Maker of Watches Df The Hirhest Character
For Over A CenturJ

3

�Jack Lentz:
From a College
Quarterback to a
Pro Safety
R

emember Jack Lentz? Who doesn't?
Well, if there are some fans in the
tands today who have never heard of
Jack Lentz, they're in a minority. Lentz
was the Mr. Everything on Ia t year's
6-3-1 Holy Cross team, one of the total
offense leaders in the country and one
of the best do-everything quarterbacks
to be found .
Jack Lentz is now the starting right
safety for the Denver Broncos of the
American Football League. Quite a
switch from college quarterback to defensive safety in the pros.
"Jack is an outstanding athlete and a
tough competitor," says his current
coach, Lou Saban. " ot many other
athletes could have made the switch
Jack did and be starting in the pros today. But Jack doesn't know when to
quit. He gives you more than 100 per
cent both on the practice field and in
the games."
Jerry ason, executive sports editor
of the Boston Globe, says the switch
Lentz made "was the biggest and toughest in professional football this year."
Lentz admits things are different. He
enjoyed running with the ball and
throwing when he had to while leading
ow
Holy Cross to many triumphs.
he's on the other ide of the ball, but
just as happy.
"Sure it's different, but it's still football," he says. "You still have to work
hard and still have to give 100 per cent
at all times."
Jack says he has never been happier
and called Saban "an outstanding coach,
a fair coach who demands perfection.
If you do your job," Lentz added, "he'll
never bother you."
Jack admits there are several good
and bad things about professional football and ays "the threat of being let
go anytime" concerns most everyone.
It ap~ears , though, that Lentz has
found a home. He battled hard through
pre-sea on practice and impressed the
Denver coaching staff with his determination and all-around ability. He worked
hard in the exhibition games and whether or not he was to stay boiled down
to the Broncos' last exhibition.

4

"It was between Bob Richardson of
UCLA and myself," said Jack. "He
played the first half and I played the
second. I guess I just did the better job.
I was sorry to see Bob go because we
were pretty good friends."
Jack had made the club, but still
wasn't really satisfied. He was No. 2
on the depth charts behind Gene Sykes,
one of the team's co-captains.
In the third game, though, Jack got
his big chance and Jack has been a
starter since. Jack explains the situation
this way:
"We were playing New York and
Gene had a bad first half. He started the
second half and let a long pass play be

completed. Coach Saban sent me in and
I've been there since. The next day
Sykes was cut. But that's pro football,
you have to be ready for everything."
Lentz admits he is up early on Sunday mornings to get the papers and see
how Holy Cross made out the day before. "I still have a lot of friends at
H.C. and I haven't forgotten about
them. I hope the team has an outstanding season."
The Holy Cross players are pulling
for Lentz, too. They all want him to
succeed. But Jack Lentz was born a
winner. He'll be a winner for Denver
like he was a winner for Holy Cross.
Jack Lentz never quits.

�Be Sure to Visit the New

COLLEGE BOOKSTORE
IN

HOGAN STUDENT CENTER
Before and after the game
Order now to insure Christmas delivery

THE CHAMPION LINE
AT
THE BOOKSTORE
For The Finest
in
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• Scenicruiser Service
• All Weather Air Conditioning
• Magic-Aire Suspension Ride
• Fully Equipped Rest Room
• Restful Background Music
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"With HOLY CROSS designs for
the Young and Younger"

Sweat Shirts
T-Shirts
Wool Jackets
Leather Sleeve Jackets
Parka Poplin Jackets
Champion Products
11 5 College Ave.
Rochester, N.Y.

5

�VERY REV. RAYMOND J. SWORDS, S.J.
President, College of the Holy Cross

The Presidents

MR. MARTIN MEYERSON
President, University of Buffalo

6

�VINCENT G. DOUGHERTY
Director of Athletics
Holy Cross College

JAMES E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
University of Buffalo

REV. JOHN F. DEVLIN, S.J.
Holy Cross Athletic Chaplain

JOSEPH W. McDONOUGH
Business Manager of Athletics
Holy Cross College

RICHARD R. LEWIS
Director of Sports Information
Holy Cross College

7

�The Crusader Cubs
Outstanding Students,
Outstanding Athletes
BY RICHARD R . LEWIS

Director of Sports Information
COLLEGE OF THE HOLY CROSS

Cities like Detroit, Houston, Dearborn, Mich. , Birmingham, Mich., New
York and Crystal Lake Ill. , aren't very
near Holy Cross College. But these faraway places may have produced the
next football star at Holy Cross. Several
Massachusetts cities could also be mentioned, too.
For years, there has been talk about
the freshmen footballers at Holy Cross
and ht&gt;w much they'll contribute to the

8

varsity in the three years that lie ahead
of them. For years, alumni , fans and
coaches say "boy, do the freshmen at
Holy Cross look good this year." And
for years, there have been several players who have more than helped the Crusaders on the gridiron.
Things aren't much different this year,
except that varsity coach Tom Boisture
has perhaps been a bit more boastful in
talking about the Crusader Cubs. Bois-

ture's main concern is helping the varsity win, but it isn't hard to get him
talking about the frosh.
Boisture, as an assistant coach here
a year ago, helped get many of the boys
from the far-away places mentioned
above and frankly admits there may be
some great ones sprinkled in among the
39 boys currently working out under
the watchful eyes of coaches Denny
Golden and Fran Donaher.

�Linebacker Tommy Kelly
stops a Dartmouth ball
carrier with a jarring tackle
while Ed McGilvery (75)
moves in to assist.

''I'm really not familiar with the
freshmen teams Holy Cross has had in
the past, except last year, of course,"
said Boisture. "But I know for a fact
that the boys we have this year are as
good or better than H .C. has ever had.
I'm not trying to compare our freshmen
this year with any Holy Cross has had
in the past, just trying to point out that
we have some outstanding studentathletes."
Boisture will also be the first to point
out that it is often difficult to get excited
about freshmen . But the coach will say,
"I believe all of them will stay in school
because they are fine students."
Of the 39 players, seven have expressed a desire to enter law profe sion
after graduation; five others are interested in medicine and four others in accounting.
It appears that several of the boys
playing for Golden and Donaher will
be of considerable help to the varsity
next year. There i speed-breakaway
speed-in the backfield and the linemen
have both size and mobility.
When asked to comment about his
team, Golden says, "First of all, coach
Donaher deserves a great deal of credit.
He has done an outstanding job with
our young men.
"What impresses me the most about
this freshman team is that the boys are
students first and athletes second," adds
Golden. "But as athletes, the boys don't
have to take a back seat to anyone.
They are all hard-nosed football players and like to be where the action is.
They like to hit people and all have
great attitudes. It's been a pleasure
working with these youngsters. It is
tough being a football player and carry
a full academic load at the same time.
But these boys work harder because of
it."
Perhaps the most heralded of the
freshmen is a young man named Mark
Mowatt. He's a quarterback and as

Boisture says, "a real blue chipper."
Mark made every "All" team possible
while at the University of Detroit High
School. He had his choice of many
schools, but Holy Cross was uppermost
in his mind. Boisture feels that Mark
has the potential to develop into "an
outstanding quarterback."
It may be that Holy Cross will have
an M &amp; M combination that will be
tough to stop in the future. Mark's
favorite receiver has been Jim McClowry, a 6-3, 215-pound tight end
from Dearborn. Jim pulled in five passes
for 179 yards and three touchdowns in
H.C.'s 28-14 win over the Dartmouth
Frosh two weeks ago. In addition, he
booted four extra points and is as outstanding at placekicking as he is blocking and catching the ball.
Jim's dad sat in the stands during the
game and talked more about the other
players on the team than his son. (But
he took down all of Jim's statistics during the game so he could tell his wife
what a great day Jim Jr., had). "You
know," Mr. McClowry said, "Mowatt
could have went just about anywhere
in the country. Ara Parsegian of Notre
Dame spent several nights in his living
room. Coaches from several other
schools did, too. But Mark came to
Holy Cross for the same reason Jim
did; to get a quality education and play
good football."
Other boys from Michigan have outstanding potential, too. Greg Pilette of
Birmingham has outstanding speed and
so does John Walker of Detroit. Both
could be great break-away runners before hanging up their cleats at H.C.
Wally Quigg of South Boston, another
halfback, came highly recommended
and was a highly sought-after schoolboy.
Bill Stachowski of Buffalo has been
pushing Mowatt at quarterback while
Mike DeWane (6-0, 200) of Crystal
Lake and Sam Polichino (6-1, 190) of
Houston have been impressive at fullback.
There are several outstanding line
prospects, including what Boisture terms
"great ends." Besides McClowry, Golden has Mike Jordan (6-2, 195) from
Quincy, Mass.; Bob Sutton (6-2, 210)
of Braintree, Mass.; and Brian Powers
(6-1,200) of Massapequa, N .Y. Powers,
nicknamed Crazy by his teammates, enjoys hitting people and making tackles.
He is annoyed with himself when he
doesn't make the tackle on kickoffs.
At tackles are Ed McGilvery (6-3 ,

240) of Quincy; Charlie Boytano (6-0,
230) of New York City; Vin Doyle
(6-4, 235) of Houston; Jim Lynch (6-4,
220) of Wantagh, N.Y.; and Mike Sullivan (6-2, 215) of Houston.
There are several other outstanding
linemen, including Doug Kane, a high
school All-America out of St. John's
Prep in Danvers. Kane; a 6-0, 220pound end in high school, is now playing guard.
The list goes on and on. Everyone
seems to be excited about these Cubs.
"Our biggest job is to get them ready
for varsity competition next year," says
Golden. "We scrimmage against the
varsity during the week occasionaily
and these freshmen don't back away.
They enjoy hitting the varsity. They
especially look forward to the games we
play, but also to each Thursday when
they go again the varsity second teams.
It's called the battle of the hill."
The future looks bright for Holy
Cross football. Boisture summed it up
best when he said, "If we can continue
to get outstanding student-athletes like
the group we have this year, we're in
business."
Halfback Wally Quigg (20) gets set to
intercept a poor Dartmouth pass.

�B.U.'s Tommy Thornton never got this pass off. Nailing him are Glenn Grieco
and Dick Krzyzek (85).

The Crusaders in Action
Phil O'Neil ready to take the snap from center Dick
Grise.

Caught last Saturday against
Boston University by H. C.
senior Brian Heller.

Dick Krzyzek, left, and Paul Scopetski; ready to hit someone.

Capt. Grieco fights off two B.U. linemen.

10

�Dick Giardi flies through the air with the greatest
of ease on a kickoff return.

Pat Bourque (21) and Dick Krzyzek (85) smother
B.U.'s Dan Lucca short of the goal line.

11

�BuffaloA Growing University
Although numerous cholars, philosopher and academicians have proferred
myriad definitions of a university, the
State University of ew York at Buffalo is now in the unique and challenging position of not only being able to
write it own definition but to bring
that definition to reality.
There is a fascination among faculty,
administration and students in being a
part of the most challenging opportunity
for educational innovation ever offered,
not only in the building of the multimillion dollar Amherst campus but in formulating a dynamically novel philosophy of higher education.
The framework for the latter has been
established by President Martin Meyerson and the University faculty in their
academic reorganization of the University which became effective September 1. Seven faculties, each headed by
a provost, have replaced the more rigid
departmental organization with a fluid
structure designed to facilitate a truly
interdisciplinary collaboration in both
study and research.
With the academic reorganization
only a harbinger of the new ideas yet to
come, the University is attracting top
cholars from throughout the nation
who are eager to become a part of its
mushrooming development. Among the
new provost are distingui hed writer
and editor Eric Larrabee, M.I.T. administrator Warren G. Bennis, F. Karl
Willenbrock, formerly associate dean of
engineering and applied physics at Harvard, and such outstanding members of
the Univer ity at Buffalo faculty-administration as Drs. Douglas M. Surgenor, Rollo L. Handy, William D.
Hawkland and James F. Danielli . Sir
John Eccles, 1963 obel Prize winner
in physiology and medicine, and Dr.
Edgar Z. Friedenberg, nationally known
ociologist, are among the recent addi-

12

tion to the University faculty.
The University was recently awarded
ew York
a $1 00,000 grant by the
State Board of Regents for the establishment of an Albert Ein tein Chair in science, the last of five Einstein chairs
authorized by the State Legislature in
1964. Additional testimony to the University' growing pre tige is it recentlyannounced participation in the ortheast Radio Observatory Corporation
which numbers among its members such
schools as Harvard, Yale, M.I.T. and
Dartmouth.
The physical embodiment of the educational philosophy represented by the
academic reorganization is the largest
architectural undertaking in America's
history. Dr. Robert Ketter, vice-president for facilities planning says the new
campus will be a blend of excitingly
expressive architecture and carefully
planned utility.
At present, the University is preparing for the "big" move with the occupation of a series of smaller facilities
located throughout the Buffalo area, of
which the largest is the ten-building
"Ridge Lea Campus" of 225,000 square
feet near the Amherst site. Additiona.I
space has been provided by the acquisition of buildings previously occupied by
Bell Aerosy terns and the American
Standard Corporation.
Although these space limitations have
of necessity meant that current student
enrollment be kept relatively stationary,
projections for the mid-1970's call for
30,000 undergraduate and graduate students compared with the recently released figure of approximately 15,000
for the 1967-68 academic year. During
the same period, the number of faculty
is expected to increase from the current
3,266 to a total of 5,000.
Although it has sometimes been the
case that members of the academic com-

munity tend to lose a sense of individuality in the midst of such large numbers, the seven faculties in addition to
insuring the give and take which will
make the University a unified whole,
are also determined to provide their affiliated students and faculty with a nucleus for personal identity.
To this dynamic vision of tomorrow's
campus, the University at Buffalo brings
a 121-year history rich with tradition,
academic excellence and public service.
The educational capital of Western New
York since its founding as a medical
school in 1846, the University has enjoyed outstanding administrative leadership. Millard Fillmore, thirteenth President of the United States served as its
first chancellor, followed by such educational leaders as Dr. Samuel P. Capen,
a director of the American Council on
Education, Dr. T. Raymond McConnell,
now director of the University of California at Berkeley's Center for Research
and Development in Higher Education,
and Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, nationally
known scientist and educator. President
Martin Meyerson, tenth chief executive,
is a noted scholar of urban affairs who
was formerly Dean of the College of
Environmental Design and acting chancellor at the University of California at
Berkeley.
One of the first independent institutions of higher learning to be established
in the United States, the University
joined the State University of New York
system in 1962 and is now the largest
single unit and most comprehensive
graduate center of that system.
Although the University is rapidly
acquiring both national and international recognition as an educational
leader, it continues its fine tradition of
service to the Niagara Frontier and the
State of ew York.

�Granger Contracting Co., Inc.
General Contractors
306 Main Street
Worcester, Mass.

13

�H
0
L
y

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R
0

s
s
14

�ROBERT W. ABBATTE
Senior G
New York, New York

ROBERT R. DUNNE
Senior DT
Cranston, R.I.

RICHARD H. GIARDI
Senior FB
E. Hartford, Conn.

RICHARD L. GRISE
Senior C
Manchester, N.H.

TOM HEILMANN
Senior G
Upper Saddle River, N.J.

MIKE KAMINSKI
Senior Ksp.
Hyattsville, Md.

RICHARD A. KRZYZEK
Senior DE
Seekonk, Mass.

ROBERT J. LAWSON, JR.
Senior DB
New City, N.Y.

JAMES M. LEE
Senior DB
Somerville, Mass.

RALPH Ll LORE
Senior FB
Belleville, N.J.

ROBERT W. MAHONEY
Senior T
Arlington, Va.

ROGER J. PELLETIER
Senior DE
Wiscasset, Maine

ROBERT PENNY
Junior LB
Worcester, Mass.

MICHAEL P. QUINN
Senior DE
Charlestown, Mass.

THOMAS S. TYLER
Senior QB
Thompsonville, Conn.

MICHAEL J. O'NEIL
Senior Mgr.
Akron, Ohio

15

�ROBERT J. KURCZ
Junior DB
Berwyn, Ill.

WEBSTER T. KNIGHT
Junior DB
Washington . D.C.

JOHN M. O'SULLIVAN
Sophomore DH B
Washington , D.C.

STEPHEN P. JUTRAS
Sophomore H B
Cranston, R.I.

SEAN T. HIGGINS
Sophomore G
East Williston, N.Y.

TIMOTHY J. HAWKES
Junior HB
Jersey City, N.J.

JOHN D. GARVIN
Junior LB
Portland, Maine

DENNIS M. FINNERTY
Senior DT
Springfield, Mass.

PAUL M. STAGLIANO
Senior UB
Medford, Mass.

DAVID FARINELLA
Junior T
Mansfield, Mass.

MARK J. DOHERTY
Sophomore QB
No. Dighton, Mass.

JOHN W. DELANEY
Junior C
Chicago, Ill.

GARY S. BRACKETT
Sophomore E
Watertown, Mass.

PATRICK D. BOURQUE
Junior DE
Shrewsbury, Mass.

ANTHONY G. D'AGATA
Junior HB
Methuen, Mass.

16

MICHAEL T. CRIMMIMS
Junior DT
Norwood, Mass .

�H
0
JOHN F. LEONARD, Ill
Sophomore H B
Horseheads, N.Y.

VICTOR A. LEWANDOWSKY
Sophomore T
West Haverstraw, N.Y.

STEPHEN P. JUTRAS
Sophomore DHB
Cranston , R.I.

L

y
WILLIAM D. MONCEVICZ
Sophomore T
Brockton, Mass.

ROBERT A. NEARY
Junior E
Yonkers, N.Y.

PHILIP J. O'NEIL
Jun ior QB
Worcester, Mass.

c
R

DANIEL O'ROURKE
Junior HB
Wilmette, Ill.

DANIEL G. RAYMOND!
Junior LB
Quincy, Mass.

PAUL F. SCOPETSKI
Junior LB
Worcester, Mass.

0

s
s
PETER H. STRATTON
Sophomore E
E. Providence, R.I.

JOHN J. VRIONIS
Senior E
Larchmont, N.Y.

RALPH B. WILLIAMS
Junior DT
Mattapan , Mass.

17

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18

At the junction of U.S. Routes 202 and 5

�The pro makes

it look 8G5Y

And with RCA Victor's new color portable
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carry from room to room because it weighs just 42 pounds. It's easy
to see in daylight because its RCA Super Bright Hi-Lite Color Tube
gives you 38% brighter highlights. And, it has a 21,500-volt New
Vista® Color chassis. Pick a pro. Have your RCA Victor dealer show
you The Headliner, a new level of performance in portable color TV.

O'CO INS
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239 MILL STREET
WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS

•

The Most Trusted Name
in Electron ics ~
mk( t )fll

.,. _ ,..,_,

19

�1967 FOOTBALL ROSTER
Name

H
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20

* Abbate, Bob
Beert, Mark
Bourque, Pat
Brackett, Gary
Carmignani, Rich.
* Crimmins, Mike
* D'Agata, Tony
Delaney, Jack
DeSaulniers, Bob
Doherty, Mark
Dorsey, John
* Dunne, Bob
* Farinella, Dave
Farrell, Charlie
* Finnerty, Dennis
* Garvin, Jack
·' Giardi, Dick
''Grieco, Glenn
Grine, Alan
''Grise, Dick
'' Hawkes, Tim
'' Heilmann, Tom
Higgins, Sean
Himmelberg, John
lacoi, Larry
Jutras, Steve
* Kaminski, Mike
Kitteredge, Fran .
* Knight, Webster
* Krzyzek, Dick
''' Kurcz, Bob
Lacoste, Roger
Lamb, Tom
Lavery, Tom
''' Lawson, Bob
* Lee, Jim
Leonard, Jack
Lewandowsky, Vic
'' Lilore, Ralph
Lynch, Charlie
Mahon, Jim
* Mahoney, Bob
Marcucci, Tom
Maroney, Kevin
Mastracchio, Joe
Maslowski, Bob
McDonald, Fred
Mecca, Bill
Moncevicz, Bill
Murphy, Ed
Neary, Bob
* O'Neil, Phil
* O'Rourke, Dan
O'Sullivan, John
* Pelletier, Roger
Penny, Bob
Piepul, Bob
Pittochelli, Bob
''Quinn, Mike
'' Raymondi, Dan
Ready, Ed.
Ring, Rich
Robinson, George
Rosseel, Jim
* Scopetski, Paul
Shimkus, Pete
Stag liano, Paul
Stier, Bob
Stratton, Pete
Tebben, John
Torpey, Bill
Tripp, Bill
Tyler, Tom
Vaccariello, Tom
·~ vrion i s, John
Walmsley, Tom
* Williams, Ralph
* Lettermen ( 28)

Pos.

OG

s

LB
TE
SE
DT
OHB

c
c

QB
KSP
DT
QT
QB
DT
LB
LB
MG
OHB
G
OHB
OG
OG
LB
OT
OHB
KSP
LB
DHB
DE
DHB
LB
FB
LB

s
s

OHB-K
OT
FB
OHB
DE
OT
DT
LB
OG
OT
DE
FB
OT
DHB
SE
QB
FB
DHB
DE
OHB
DE
QB
DE
LB
MG
DHB
DE
DT
LB
OHB
OHB
DHB
TE
LB
TE
QB
QB
OHB
TE
MG
DT

Class

Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sopl:t.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.

Age

Height

21
19
20
20
20
20
20
19
19
19
21
20
19
21
20
20
21
21
18
22
20
21
18
21
18
18
20
19
20
20
20
20
18
21
21
20
19
18
20
19
19
21
19
19
20
20
19
19
18
19
19
19
20
18
20
21
22
19
20
19
18
21
20
18
19
21
21
20
18
18
19
20
20
19
21
18
19

5' 10"
6'0"
6'1"
6'4"
6'2"
6' 2"
5'9"
6 '0"
6'1"
6'0"
6'4"
6'0"
6'1"
6'1"
6'2"
5'10"
5'9"
6 '0"
6'0"
6'2"
5'10"
5'10"
6'0"
5 ' 11"
6'1"
5,10"
6'0"
5'11"
6'0"
6'2"
6'0"
5'11"
6'1"
6'0"
6'2"
6'0"
6'0"
6'4"
5'4"
6'1"
6'2"
5'11"
6'2"
6'0"
5'8"
6'0"
6'3"
5'10"
6'3"
6'1"
6'2"
6'0"
6'1"
5'11"
6'1"
5'10"
6'2"
6'3 "
6'2"
5'10"
5'10"
6'1"
6'4"
6'0"
6'2"
6'2"
5'9"
6'0"
6'4"
6'0"
6'3"
6'0"
6'3"
6'0"
6'3 "
6'1"
6'6"

Weight

225
175
215
226
180
210
185
210
225
180
240
225
225
195
210
195
195
225
180
225
185
210
200
180
230
210
190
200
190
230
190
200
210
180
210
195
185
235
190
195
190
220
230
185
215
210
200
185
235
185
200
195
200
170
215
195
205
215
2 15
205
220
180
205
205
210
195
185
180
200
200
190
190
205
200
2 10
225
245

Major

Ec.
Math.
Ec.
His.
Ec.
Ec.
Ec.
P. S.
His.
P. Med.
His.
Psy.
P. S.
P. Med.
His.
Ec.
P. Med .
Math.
Ec.-Ac.
His.
Cia.
His.
Ec.
Ec.
P. S.
His.
P. Med .
His.
Math.
Bio.
Ec.-Ac.
P. Med.
Ec.
His.
Eng.
Eng.
Che.
His.
His.
P. S.
His.
His.
P. S.
Eng.
P. S.
Psy.
His.
His.
His.
His.
Ec.
Soc.
Ec.
Math.
Math.
Psy.
Math.
Ec.
Ec.-Ac.
His.
His.
Eng.
Eng.
Math.
Math.
His.
Psy.
Psy.
P. S.
Psy.
P. S.
P. S.
Soc.
Math.
Ec.
P. Med.
Ec.-Ac.

Hometown

New York, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Shrewsbury, Mass.
Watertown, Mass.
Chicago, Ill.
Norwood, Mass.
Methuen, Mass.
Chicago, Ill.
Southbridge, Mass.
No. Dighton, Mass.
Worcester, Mass.
Cranston, R. I.
Mansfield, Mass.
New London, Conn.
Wilbraham, Mass.
Portland, Maine
E. Hartford, Conn.
Bayonne, N. J.
Union, N. J.
Manchester, N. H.
Jersey City, N. J.
Upper Saddle River, N. J.
E. Williston, N. Y.
Washington, D. C.
Westerly, R. I.
Cranston, R. I.
College Park, Md.
Worcester, Mass.
Washi ngton, D. C.
Seekonk, Mass.
Berwyn, Ill.
New Bedford, Mass.
Cheshire, Mass.
Closter, N. J.
New City, N. J .
Somerset, Mas::;.
Horseheads, N. y .
W. Haverstraw, N. Y.
Belleville, N. J.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Bronx, N. Y.
Arlington, Va.
E. Haven, Conn .
Silver Spring, Md.
Newark, N.J.
Weirton, W. Va.
Billerica, Mass.
Eastchester, N.Y.
Brockton, Mass.
Dracut, Mass.
Yonkers, N. Y.
Worcester, Mass.
Wilmette, Ill.
Washington, D. C.
Wiscasset, Maine
Worcester, Mass.
Boylston, Mass.
Haverhill, Mass.
Charlestown, Mass.
Quincy, Mass.
So. Easton, Mass.
Mattapan, Mass.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Spencer, Mass.
Worcester, Mass.
Southboro, Mass.
Medford, Mass.
Detroit, Mich.
Rumford, R. I.
Lima, Ohio
Jersey City, N. J.
Taunton, Mass.
Thompsonville, Conn.
Albany, N. Y.
Larchmont, N. Y.
Dorchester, Mass.
Mattapan, Mass.

�e

-~

.
''
youngmo 1es•
rom
smo--le
are ere.
''

Drive one

Monday morning.

I GM I

Cullass 5 Holiday Coupe
at your nearest Oldsmobile Dealers.

MARl( Of EKC(ll[NC(

��BUFFALO
Probable Starting Lineups
44

61
64

53
65
72
82
14

49
21
36
14
15
16
17
18
19
20

21
22
24
25
26
27
29
30
32

OFFENSE
Chuck Drankoski
Mike Rissell
Mike Maser .
Charles Powrie
Jim Finochio .
Scott Clark
Terry Endress
Mick Murtha
Rick Wells
Ken Rutkowski
Lee Jones

Murtha, QB
Martin, QB
Embow, DHB
Jack, QB
Lowe, E
Mason, QB
Patterson, HB
Rutkowski, HB
Washington, HB
Quinn, DH B
Bell, DHB
DeMarco, DHB
Hanson, K
Horn, DHB
Brennan, FB
Richner, LB

DEFENSE
83 Bob Kovey . . .
.. . LE
67 Ted Gibbons .
..... LT
70 Dan Walgate
. ..... RT
84 John Przybycien ..... .. RE
69 Don Sabo .
.. RIB
34 Mike Luzny .
...... LIB
50 Jim Mosher
...... ROB
51 lrv Wright
. LOB
48 Tom Hurd
CH
45 Gary Grubbs
........ RH
28 Rich Horn
.S

SE
LT
LG
.C
. ..... RG
. RT
.. TE
. QB
... FL
TB
....... FB

BUFFALO SQUAD
34 Luzny, LB
59 Mihale, LB
35 Chapp, FB
60 Carney, G
36 Jones, FB
61 Rissell, G
38 Alimonti, FB
62 Kowalewski, G
42 Hoke, HB
63 Spencer, G
44 Drankoski, E
64 Maser, G
45 Grubbs, DHB
65 Finochio, G
48 Hurd, HB
66 Lupienski, LB
49 Wells, HB
67 Gibbons, DT
50 Mosher, LB
68 Hayden, G
51 Wright, G-LB
69 Sabo, LB
52 Wesolowski, C
70 Walgate, DT
53 Powrie, C
71 Maricle, T
55 McCullough, LB
72 Clark, T
56 Charnega, LB
73 Jones, DT
58 Rishel, LB
74 Beck, DT

75
76
77
78
79
80

81
82
83
84
85
86
88
89
95

Riccelli, DT
Reid, T
Wolf, T
Troglauer, DT
Moler, DT
Brisky, DE
Murphy, DE
Endress, E
Kovey, DE
Przybycien, DE
Lang, E
Buchak, E
Remillard, DE
Doherty, E
Henley, DE

HOLYCROSS
Probable Starting Lineups

DEFENSE

OFFENSE
21
75
64
78
85
23
59

82 John Vrionis . . . . . ..
TE
71 Dave Farinella .........
LT
69 Bob Abbate . . . . . . .. . . . . .
LG
52 Dick Grise
C
79 Bob Mahoney . . . .. . . . . . . . . RG
70 Bill Moncevicz .............. RT
89 Bob Neary . . . . ............ SE
18 Phil O'Neil ................ QB
44 Tim Hawkes ............... HB
12 Ed Murphy .
HB
40 Ralph Lilore
FB
11
12
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
27

Tebben. LB
Murphy, UB
Farrell, QB
Doherty, QB
Lawson, S
O' Neil, QB
Lee, S
Leonard, HB
Bourque, DE
Beert, DH B
Giardi, FB
Garvin, LB
Jutras, HB

33
35
38
39
40

41
44
45
46
52
54
59

61

61
87
17
39

Pat Bourque
......... LE
Bob Dunne ........... ...... . LT
Glenn Grieco ..... ........ ... MG
Mike Crimmins .... .. .... RT
Dick Krzyzek . . . . . . . . . . . . . RE
Dick Giardi
Crusader
Dan Raymondi
.... LB
Paul Scopetski ............ LB
John O'Sullivan
HB
Bob Lawson
.. S
Bob Kurcz
HB

HOLY CROSS SQUAD
62 Higgins, G
63 Lacoste, LB
64 Grieco, MG
65 Ready, MG
67 Heilmann, G
68 Kittredge, LB
69 Abbate, G
70 Moncevicz, T
71 Farinella, T
72 Walmsley, MG
73 Lewandowsky, T
74 Finnerty, T
75 Dunne, T

D'Agata, UB
Lamb, FB
O' Rourke, UB
Kurcz, DHB
Lilore, FB
Penny, LB
Hawkes, HB
Kaminski. K Sp.
O'Sullivan. DHB
Grise, C
Delaney, C
Raymondi, LB
Scopetski, LB

76
77
78
79
80

81
82
83
84
85
87
88
89

DeSaulniers, LB
Williams, T
Crimmins, T
Mahoney, G
Himmelberg, LB
Stratton, E
Vrionis, E
Pelletier, DE
McDonald, DE
Krzyze k, DE
O"Sullivan, DHB
Brackett, E
Neary, E

OFFICIALS
eferee
;,ties

1:..

fhreacJgold ( Boston College )

Jmptre
ar1es P. Flowers (F. &amp; M.)
(U111versity of Connecticut)

Field Judge
John W. Andreoli (Hartford University)
Back Judge
Edgar B. Stowell (Springfield College)
E ectric Clock Operator
~~urray Lewis

�Here he
comes • • •
ready
or not!

The world beckons and he's on
his way-proud and independent.
He will need all the education
he can get-college, even
graduate school.
But there's a problem. Because
enrollments are increasing every
year, colleges must meet the
expanding costs of providing
more teachers and additional
facilities.
You can help now.
Give to the college of your choice
now to help assure his future
... to help make sure that
college is ready when he is.

•

~--·· Cb

&lt;'Ot,nl t-on

0
1

1-T\.\.'CI.\1
\1() 10

-uP
College is
America's Best Friend
Published as a public service in cooperation
with The Advertising Council and the Council
for Financial Aid to Education.

�1967 FOOTBALL ROSTER
Name

Alimonti, Nino
Beck, Russell
Bell, Harry
Brennan, Thomas
Brisky, Dennis
Buchak, Michael
Carney, Patrick
Chapp, Gary
Chernega, David
Clark, Scott
DeMarco, Douglas
Doherty, John
Drankoski, Charels
Embow, Robert
Endress, Terrence
Finochio, James
Gibbons, Theodore
Grubbs, Gary
Hansen, Brian
Hayden, William
Henley, Prentis
Hoke, Thomas
Horn, Richard
Hurd, Thomas
Jack, Paul
Jones, D. Rovell
Jones, Leeland
Kovey, Robert
Kowalewski, Thomas
Lang, Paul
Lowe, Edwin
Lupienski, John
Luzny, Michael
Maricle, Donald
Martin, Daniel
Maser, Michael
Mason, Dennis
McCullough, Steven
Mihale, Dennis
Moler, Robert
Mosher, James
Murphy, Thomas
Murtha, Mark
Napierkowski, Chester
Paterson, Patrick
Powrie, Charles
Przybycien, John
Reid, Frank
Remillard, James
Riccelli, Joseph
Richner, David
Rishel, Rodney
Rissell, Michael
Rutkowski, Kenneth
Sabo, Donald
Smith, Robert
Spencer, E. Jon
Stackmeyer, Paul
Troglauer, John
Walgate, Daniel
Washington, Bennie
Wells, Richard
Weslolow&lt;;ki, John
v. 'olf, Chris
Wri~~ht, Irvin

Pos.

Class

Age

Height

FB
DT
HB
FB
E
E
G
FB
LB
T
HB
E
E
K
E
G
T
HB
K
G
E
HB
HB
HB
QB
T
FB
E
G
E
E
LB
LB
T
HB
G
QB
LB
LB
T
LB
E
QB
E
HB

Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
So ph.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Soph.
Sr.
Sr.
So ph.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Soph.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.

20
18
21
20
20
20
19
19
20
20
20
20
20
19
19
21
21
19
21
20
20
21
20
21
19
19
21
19
20
20
19
20
20
20
20
20
19
19
21
20
20
21
20
20
19
21
19
21
20
20
20
21
21
20
20
20
20
22
21
19
20
20
21
19
21

6'0"
6'3"
5'10"
5'10"
6'2"
6'0"
6'0"
5'8"
5'11"
6'0"
5'9"
6'0"
6'1"
6'0"
6'0"
5'10"
5'10"
5'9"
5'11"
5'10"
6'1"
5'8"
6'1"
6'1"
6'0"
6'2"
5'11"
5'11"
5'11"
6'0"
5'10"
5'10"
5'9"
6'0"
5'11"
5'11"
5'11"
5'10"
6'0"
6'2"
6'1"
6'0"
5'11"
6'3"
5'11"
6'0"
6'1"
6'3"
6'0"
6'2"
5'11"
5'11"
5'11"
5'9"
5'10"
6'0"
5'11"
6'0"
6'1"
6'2"
5'10"
6'0"
5'11"
6'3"
5'11"

c

E
T
E
T
LB
LB
T
HB
LB
LB
G
LB
T
T
HB
HB

c

T
LB

Weight

204
232
180
205
209
203
200
200
187
212
168
209
183
210
202
219
232
175
166
213
205
189
188
197
178
228
208
202
210
210
185
210
209
224
187
214
188
201
214
226
212
192
176
221
191
195
200
217
198
242
197
194
233
180
210
213
213
230
220
255
198
198
214
220
203

Hometown

Endicott, N.Y.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Potdsdam, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Endicott, N.Y.
New Kensington, Pa.
Centerline, Mich .
Endicott, N.Y.
Coshocton, 0.
Dolgeville, N.Y.
New Bedford, Mass.
Endwell, N.Y.
Hamburg, N.Y.
Cuyahoga Falls, 0.
E. Syracuse, N.Y.
Newport, R.I.
Coshocton, 0.
Detroit, Mich.
Cleveland, 0.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Marcy, N.Y.
Dover, 0.
Elmira, N.Y.
Springdale, Pa
Akron, 0 .
Buffalo, N.Y.
Youngstown, 0.
Detroit, Mich .
Ithaca, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Springdale, Pa.
South Bend, Ind.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Huntington, L.l.
Clayton, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Coshocton, 0.
New York City
Orchard Park, N.Y.
Central Islip, L.l.
Johnstown, Pa .
Endicott, N.Y.
Arnold, Pa .
Ambridge, Pa.
Cuyahoga Falls, 0.
Detroit, Mich.
Ottawa, Ont.
New Bedford, Mass.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Greenhurst, N.Y.
East Smethport, Pa.
Coatesville, Pa.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa .
Depew, N.Y.
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.
East Aurora, N.Y.
Williamsville, N.Y.
Grand Island, N.Y.
Woonsocket, R.I.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Solon, 0.
Norristown, Pa.

B

u
F
F
A
L
0

25

�The 1967 Holy Cross coaching staff. Seated, left to right: Fran Danaher, Bob Burns and
Carlin Lynch. Standing, left to right, Denny Golden, Milt Piepul and Roger Donnahoo.
Standing at right is head coach Tom Boisture.

HOLY CROSS STAFF
Head Coach Thomas C. Boisture
Tom Boisture, 36, begins his first year as head football
coach at Holy Cro s this fall after serving a year as defen ive backfield coach and defensive coordinator of the
Crusaders.
Boisture, who made many friends and displayed a great
deal of football knowledge in just a year at Worcester, took
an inexperienced defensive team last fall and molded it
into one of the best defensive units in ew England. The
defense-and Boisture-was one of the main reasons why
Holy Cross was 6-3-1 Ia t fall and was voted the most improved team in New England.
Tom succeeded Mel Massucco as head coach on March
11. He hopes to present what promises to be one of Holy
Cross' best-ever freshman teams this fall.
Tom steps into the head coaching position with outstanding credentials, both as a coach and a a player.
A native of Detroit where he was a two-time All-City
selection in both football and basketball at Holy Redeemer
High School, Tom is a 1955 graduate of Mississippi State.
While at Mississippi State, Tom was a two-way guard and

26

played under both Darrell Royal and Murray Warmath,
two of the most outstanding coaches in the country today.
Following graduation, Tom became head football and
baseball coach at Austin Catholic High School in Detroit.
While at Au tin for only a year, Boisture produced a Detroit Catholic City champion hip in baseball and his top
pitcher was Dave DeBusschere, a former pitcher with the
Chicago White Sox, who now plays pro basketball with the
Detroit Pistons.
Boisture then moved to St. Ambrose High School in
Detroit where his six-year record in football was 39-6-2,
including four divisional championship and two state
titles.
From St. Ambrose, Tom went to the University of
Houston and served as offensive backfield coach for four
years under Bill Yeoman. A former assistant with Tom
at Houston, Charlie Fairbanks, is now the head coach at
Oklahoma. Tom's older brother, Dan, is head football
coach at Eastern Michigan University.
Tom is married to the former Dolores Kenney, a native
of Springfield, Mass. and the couple resides in Worcester
with their five children; Susan, 12; Debbie, 9; David, 8:
ancy, 5; and Mike, 2.

�The Assistants

MILTON J. PIEPUL, Offensive Coordinator

CARLIN F. LYNCH , Defensive Coordinator

One of the first things Tom Boisture did when he was
named head coach was to make Milt Piepul the Offensive
coordinator and his administrative assistant. Milt will
coach the offensive backs and also handle all administrative duties for the coaching staff. Milt coached for 11
years at Dartmouth as an assistant and 11 more at Brown
before coming to Holy Cross a year and a half ago. A
native of Springfield, Mass., Milt entered Notre Dame in
1937 as an outstanding fullback and linebacker. He served
as captain of the Fighting Irish in his senior year, 1940. He
also played a year with the Detroit Lions. He is married to
the former Lucille Somerset of Lawrence, Mass. and the
couple makes their home in Boylston with their four children. Milt has a son, Bob, playing with the Holy Cross
varsity.

Carlin Lynch moves up to defensive coordinator this fall
after serving two years as freshman coach at Holy Cross.
He will be in charge of the defense and coach the defensive
line. Carlin is a 1956 graduate of Holy Cross and played
three years with the varsity. He was the eighth leading pass
receiver in the country (fifth in the East) his senior year.
He started his coaching career as an assistant at Catholic
High in Pueblo, Colo. and helped mold a state championship team in his first year. He later coached at Somerset
(Mass.) High and Bishop Stang High in North Dartmouth,
Mass. His lifetime high school coaching record is a glossy
44-4-4 which includes two state championship teams. He
has a masters degree from Bridgewater State College. He
is married to the former Frances Savasta of Worcester and
is the father of six children.

ROBERT C. BURNS , Offensive Line Coach

ROGER J. DONNAHOO, Defensive Backfield Coach

Bob will start his first year of full-time college coaching
at Holy Cross this fall after serving as an assistant at
Michigan State for a year while he worked on a masters
degree. Bob played three years of varsity football as a twoway end at California (Pa.) State, graduating in 1963. He
was an assistant at Norwin (Pa.) High School for four
years before moving to Michigan State. Bob also played
a year professionally with the Wheeling Ironmen in the
Continental Football League. Bob is married to the former
Sandra Canda of Irwin, Pa., and the couple lives in Auburn
with their two daughters, Jill and Jackie.

Roger (Rocky) Donnahoo takes over as defensive backfield coach this fall after serving a year as defensive coordinator at
orthwest Missouri State College. Rocky
is a native of Greenville, S.C., but played as a schoolboy
at St. Mary's of Redford High School in Detroit and for
Tom Boisture's older brother, Dan. Donnahoo then went
to Michigan State and played for Dan Boisture and Duffy
Daugherty there as a halfback for three years. Rocky
played with the old New York Titans in the AFL for three
years and was an All-AFL selection as a free safety in 1961
and 1962. He was an assistant coach at Melvindale High
School in Detroit for four years and during those four
years assisted Daugherty at Michigan State in the Spring.
He has a masters degree from Eastern Michigan and is
working towards his doctorate.

DENNIS C. GOLDEN , Freshman Coach
Denny Golden, co-captain of the 1963 Holy Cross football team with Tommy Hennessey, who is now a starter
with the Boston Patriots, was named head freshman coach
this past spring. He is also the assistant to the dean of men
at Holy Cross. Denny was an All-New York City choice
while at Holy Cross High School in Flushing, N.Y. and
then played three years of varsity football as a tackle at
Holy Cross College. While here, Denny gained All-America
honorable mention and twice was an All- ew England
first team selection at tackle. He was drafted by the Dallas
Cowboys, but passed up a tryout to enter the Marines.
He was a captain in the Marines and played service ball
at Quantico, Va. He was with the Boston Patriots until the
final cut last year. He is working on his Masters degree at
Assumption College. Denny is married to the former
Monica Lennon of Flushing, .Y. and the couple resides
in Worcester with their son, Patrick.

FRANCIS P. DONAHER, Assistant Freshman Coach
Fran Donaher starts his third year as assistant freshman
coach this fall and will again handle special scouting assignments. One of Worcester's most popular coaches, Donaher was head football coach at Trade High School for 23
years before moving to Holy Cross. He coached 10 city
championship teams and helped develop many collegiate
stars. He is still baseball coach at Trade. He also was head
football coach at St. Peter's High for five years. He is a
graduate of Classical High School in Worcester, where he
was a three-sport standout. He also played three years of
varsity football at Catholic University, graduating from
there in 1933. Franny, who is also an oustanding golfer,
is single.

27

�A Brief Glance
At The Opponents

ROY 0. LEONARD, INC.
Industrial Maintenance Painting
543 UNION AVENUE
FRAMINGHAM, MASSACHU SETTS

Schedule and Record to Date

Sept. 30
YALE
Away

14 • Holy Cross
14 •connecticut
35 Brown
21 Columbia
0 . 28 • cornell

Oct. 7
DA RTMOUTH
A wa y

28 Massachusetts 14
24 •Holy Cross
8
24 • Pennsylvania
0
Brown
41
6
0. 28 Harvard

26
6
0
7

14 •Boston U.
14 Columbia
7 •cornell
0 Holy Cross
Princeton
0

28

Oct. 21
BOSTON
U N IVERSITY
H ome

20 •Bucknell
20 Colgate
16 Temple
14 Harvard
0 Buffalo

16
14
22
29
6

Oct. 28
B U FFA L O
H o me

6
30 • Kent State
6 No . Carol i na St. 24
35
12 Virginia
14
44 •Temple
6 • Boston Univ.
0

Oct. 14
COLGATE
Home

Nov . 4
V I LLANOVA
Home

Nov . 11
SY RACUSE
Away

20
17
23
17

N. 4 Yale
N . 11 Columbia
N. 18 • cornell
N. 25 Princeton

0.
N.
N.
N.
N.

28 Brown
4 Lehigh
11 •Bucknell
18 Buffalo
25 Rutgers

17 Holy Cross 21
0 . 28 • Massachusetts
N. 4 • Rhode Island
N. 11 •connecticut

" Everything in Travel"

McEVOY TRAVEL BUREAU
Worcester 9, Massachusetts
Te l: P leasa nt

41 •Quantico
16
0. 28 Xavier
N. 4 Holy Cross
N. 11 • Buffalo
N . 23 •Toledo

7 • Baylor
23 •west Virginia
7 M a ryland
14 Navy
20 •c alifornia

0.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Nov . 18
RUTGERS
Away

Nov . 25
C ONNECTICUT
Away

17 Vermont
6
6
Yale
14
14 • M assachusetts 35
2 1 Maine
0
0 . 28 •Davidson

Dec . 2
BOSTON
COLLEGE
Home

27
10
28
14
0 . 28

Villanova
•Army
•Penn State
•Buffalo
• Maine

.

Home Games

22
7
21
14

24
21
50
26

•

36 Elm

28 • Penn State
4 Pittsburgh
11 • Holy Cross
18 Boston College
25 UCLA

CLOTHES FOR STYLEWISE MEN
Everything in Formal Dress Clothes

TO RENT
WORCESTER I , MASS.

N. 4 Lafayette
N. 11 Massachusetts
N. 18 • Holy Cross
N. 25 • colgate

N . 4 •New Hamps hire
N. 11 Bo ston Univ.
N . 18 Rhode Island
N. 25 • Holy Cross

N . 4 Cincinnati
N. 11 • v .M.L
N . 18 •syracuse
N . 25 • Massa chusetts
D. 2 Holy Cross

DARLING'S DELICIOUS
FINE MEAT PRODUCTS
AND

IDLEWILD FARMS
ROCK CORNISH HENS
Division of Chicago Dressed Beef
Worcester, Mass.

28

Street

BONARDI ' S

16 PLEASANT STREET
21
Princeton
14 •Lehigh
?.9 •Delaware
3
Army
0. 28 Columbia

6-4691

26
Boston College 14
0 . 28 Holy Cross
N. 4 Delawa re
N . 11 Vill a nova
N . 18 •colgate

West Virginia 40
0
9 •west Chester 14
24 • Boston College 27
21
Del aware
13
0
Virginia Tech
3
0
6
3
27
14

873-7975

N. 4 • Dartmouth
N. 11 • Pennsylvania
N. 18 at Princeton
N . 25 • Harvard

�Buffalo Coaching Staff

WILLIAM R. DANDO

Defensive Line Coach

ROBERT DEMING

Defensive Backfield Coach

BOB GIEGER

Offensive Line Coach

JERRY A. IPPOLITI

Offensive Backfield Coach

MICHAEL J. STOCK

Freshman Coach

RICHARD "DOC" URICH

Head Coach
Richard "Doc" Urich (pronounced Yur-ick) became head coach at the
University of Buffalo in 1966. In his first season the team won five and
lost five, established seven new UB offensive records and displayed to Western New York fans the most exciting college football ever seen in the area.
Urich came to Buffalo from Notre Dame, where he was Ara Parseghian's
top offensive aide. Prior to then "Doc" served with Parseghian at orthwe tern and Miami (0.), his alma mater.
"D oc" Urich was born on September I 0, 1928, in Wapakoneta, Ohio.
He attended Wapakoneta High School where he captained both the football
and basketball squads as a senior.
At Miami (0.) Urich was a standout in college football. He played four
years and in his freshman and senior seasons his teams made appearances
in the Sun Bowl and the Salad Bowl. Miami defeated Texas Tech at El
Paso on January 1, 1948, and downed Arizona State at Phoenix on January
1, 1951. "Doc" was captain of the Miami team in his senior year. In his
junior and senior seasons he won All-Ohio honors, and in his last three
years he was selected All-Conference (Mid-America) end.
After graduation from Miami in February, 1951, "Doc" assumed
teaching and coaching chores at Massillon (0.) High School for the remainder of the school term before joining the staff of Head Coach Ara
Parseghian at Miami that fall.
Urich holds a B.Sc. and M.Ed. from Miami, majoring in Physical Education.
"Doc" and his wife, the former Patricia Streight, also of Wapakoneta,
have two children, Cynthia (born in 1952) and Danny (born in 1955). The
Urich family now lives in Williamsville, N.Y.
Urich's nickname, "Doc," is derived from the fact that he used to carry
a little black bag with him when playing some childhood games. The other
kids called him "Doc" and the tag seems destined to stay with him the rest
of his life.

�Thr-re

~~

t

~

ft"lt&gt;irt·hmt"nt

\\lth.naturt&gt;

'-ltahtvdnnk

If It's Lee's It Has To Please!
W. H. Lee Milk Company
55 Harlow St.
Worcester,Mass.01605
Phone 752-2029

�Signals

0

0

0

..

.

0

~ ~~o~ ;;g~., ~~~::::.:;::;;;, :::o: : . ~·~
2

Illegal o•acedure ,

~~

c;;.

1 OHs ide

1110 901
3 mo
1to n

1 3 Illegally
pout forward
nO or
tlandtng boll

0~

4

Illegal

((fJ))
S lllegal •elum

6 0 ,

.:.::a

1

a o .••.•• {;

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0 :::~;:::
.. ;:•:;,:•
. :;•:;•:,!~&lt;&lt;•N. "'"" 0
15

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0

17

Incomplete forward pass,

11

~

1 8 Helping runner or

'""''"""' '""'''"'"

!t Jj

n~;:;:;
. (n 1.::~~. _gu \1 {i'UgfJ:::::,. 9.
~
.

onledmnco

kockod a• batted

}/

ftolJ a:oln

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12
Intentional
grounding

~

°'

21 Sofoty

CUSTOM ROASTED QUALITY COFFEE
for Hotels , Restouronts &amp; Institutions
Comp le te Service

390 Main Street

QCunntngbam QCoffee QCo., 3Jnc.
Established 1921
40 Canterbury St.

HASTINGS DRUG CO.
Slater Building
2nd Floor

Tel. PL 6-2624

"The House Prescriptions Built"

Walter J. Cunningham-'40

Worcester's
Finest
Restaurant
Since 1858

PUTNAM &amp;THURSTON~ RESTAURANT
19-27 Mechanic Street • Phone 753-5427

THE NEW YORKER
Route 12-20

Auburn, Moss.
TE 2-3547

Specializing in:
Lobster, Stuffed Jumbo Shrimp, Steaks
Dining Room Facilities
Full Cocktail Privileges

31

�B

u
F

F
A
L
0

Buffalo Co-Captains
Ted Gibbons, Rich Wells
32

�MIKE RISSELL O.T.
Senior T
Coatesville, Pa.

ROD RISHEL
Senior LB
East Smithport, Pa.

KEN RUTKOWSKI
Senior HB
Tonawanda, N.Y.

DON SABO
Junior LB
Johnstown, Pa.

RICHARD WELLS
Senior HB
Ithaca, N.Y.

JACK WESOLOWSKI
Junior C
Cheektowaga, N.Y.

IRV WRIGHT
Senior LB
Norristown, Pa.

CHRIS WOLF
Sophomore T
Solon, Ohio

BEN WASHINGTON
Junior HB
Woonsocket, R.I.

TOM MURPHY
Junior DE
Johnstown, Pa .

JOHN LUPIENSKI
Junior LB
Springdale, Pa.

DAVID RICHNER
Junior LB
Greenhurst, N.Y.

DICK HORN
Sophomore DB
Dover, Ohio

SCOTT CLARK
Sophomore T
Coshocton, Ohio

BILL HAYDEN
Junior G
Cleveland, Ohio

GARY CHAPP
Sophomore LB
Centerline, Mich.

33

�DENNIS BRISKY
Senior DE
Detroit, Mich.

FRANK REID
Sophomore T
Ottawa, Ont.

THOMAS BRENNAN
Senior FB
Rochester, N.Y.

TED GIBBONS
Senior T
NP.woort. R.I.

TOM HOKE
Senior DB
Marcy, N.Y.

LEE JONES
Senior FB
Buffalo, N.Y.

34

CHUCK DRANKOWSKI
Junior E
Endwell, N.Y.

MIKE MASER O.G.
Junior G
Clayton, N.Y.

BOB EMBOW
Junior Ksp
Hamburg, N.Y.

TERRY ENDRESS
Sophomore E
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio

TOM HURD
Senior QB
Elmira, N.Y.

DENNIS MASON
Junior QB
Buffalo, N.Y.

JIM MOSHER
Junior LB
Central Islip, N.Y.

JIM FINOCHIO
Senior G
E. Syracuse, N.Y.

MIKE LUZNY
Sophomore CB
South Bend, Ind.

MICK MURTHA
Junior QB
Endicott, N.Y.

�JOE RICCELLI
Junior T
Syracuse, N.Y.

JIM REMILLARD
Junior DE
New Bedford , Mass.

JOHN PRZYBYCIEN
Junior DE
Detroit, Mich.

PAT PATTERSON
Sophomore HB
Ambridge, Pa.

PAUL JACK
Sophomore QB
Springdale, Pa.

JON SPENCER
Sophomore G
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.

WASHINGTON

PRESS

OF

CHUCK POWRIE
Sophomore C
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio

WORCESTER,

PAUL LANG
Sophomore E
Ithaca, N.Y.

INC.

110 West Boylston Drive • Worcester 6, Massachusetts

35

�JAMES P. BROWN CO. INC.
3 10 FRANKLIN ST.
WORCESTER

FLOUR - FEED - FERTILIZERS

'II'
ON SALE

THE MARLEY -HALL COMPANY

IN THE
Rhode Island

Providence

STADIUM
Makers of Holy Cross College special keys
and college jewelry.

PLEAS E PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

Wholesale Distributor
Electrical Supplies
Lighting Equipment

ESTABLISHED 1909

A. C. BOWLER CO.
69 GREEN ST.

WORCESTER, MASS.

DeFalco Concrete Corp.
WORCESTER • MILLBURY • BERLIN
MASSACHUSETTS

Ready Mixed Concrete

SAND

•

GRAVEL

and

FROZEN FOODS
distributed by
Worcester, Mass.
NEW ENGLAND GROCER SUPPLY CO.

36

George F. DeFalco '39

President

�HOLY CROSS COACHES, CAPTAIN$, AND SEASON RECORDS

1896-1966
Year
1896
1897
1898
1899
1900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932

Coach
Dr. A. C. N. Peterson
John J. Corbett (1 game)
Maurice Connor

.

Maj. Frank Cavanaugh

George W. King
Timothy F. larkin

Harry von Kersberg
luke l. Kelly

.

Bart F. Sullivan
Cleo A. O'Donnell

Cleo A. O'Donnell

..

Capt. John J. McEwan

Captain
John J. Finn
E. F. Shanahan

Won
2
4

lost
2
3

Tied
2
1

5
5
5

4
5
3
1
2
2
5
3
3

I

M. J. McDonough
John Kenney
W. C. T. O'Sullivan
Michael J. Lawlor
William Baldwin
Tom Slankard
Timothy larkin
Geo. S. l. Connor
Geo. S. l. Connor
Cleo A. O'Donnell
Daniel J. Triggs
Edward F. Sweeney
John C. Lawlor
William P. Joy
Fred Ostergren
Wilfred Metivier
Walter Mullen
Edward Brawley
R"aymond lynch
Raymond lynch
No Captain
John J. Mitchell
Walter J. Conway
Dennis A. Gildea
William D. Healey
Albert D. Riopel
Hilary F. Mahaney
John Crowley
William Wise
Robert O'Connell
Richard Phelan
Stuart J. Clancy
Francis Garrity
Philip O'Connell
James J. Ryan

7
6
8
2
6
4
1
4
2
3
4
4
3
2
3
4
3
2
5
5
5

7
8

7
8

7
6
5
6
8

7
6
0

Arthur Corcoran (3 games)

7
4
4
3
5
3
6
5
3
5
4
0
3
3
3
2
2
1
2
1
3
3
4
2
2
1
1

0
1
1
1
0
2
0
1
2
0
2
2
0
1
0
1
2
0
0
0
0

0
0
1
0
1
0
2
0
2
0
0
1
0
2

Year
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939

Captain
Coach
Edward N. Anderson M. D. Charles Reiss
Charles Harvey
Nicholas Morris
Robert Curley
Robert Mautner
William T. Osmanski
Joseph l. Sheeketski
Ronnie Cahill
Jim Turner
1940
Jack Kellar
1941
appointed each game
1942 Anthony J. Scanlan
Edmund Murphy
1943
George Titus
1944
Thomas Kenny
1945 John "Ox" DaGrosa
Stan Koslowski
1946
appointed each game
1947
Bob Sullivan
Ray Ball
1948 Dr. William T. Osmanski
Jim Reilly
1949
Jim Deffley
Tom Kelleher
1950 Edward N. Anderson M. D. Tom Donnalley
Mel Massucco
1951
1952
Joe Gleason
Henry Lemire
1953
lou Hettinger
1954
Jim Buonopane
1955
Dick Arcand
1956
Dick Surrette
1957
Jim Healy
1958
Charlie Pacunas
1959
Jim Rhodes
1960
Dick Skinner
Jack Fellin
1961
Jack Whalen
Tom Hennessey
1962
Dennis Golden
Jon Morr is
1963

1964
1965

Melvin G. Massucco

1966

John Dugan
Joe lilly
Earl Kirmser
Pete Kimener
Totals

Won

7
8
9

7

Lost
2
2

Tied

0

1
1
2
0
0

0
0

7

2
0
1
2

4

5

4
5
6
5
8
5
4

4
4

4

1
2
1
0
2
0
0
2

5
1

5
9

0
0

4
8
8
5
3
6

5
2
2

1
0

8
8

5
5

2
2
2
4

5
7
4
3
3
3

0
0
0

0

6
6
6

4

1
1
0
0
0

7

3

0

6

4

2

6

358
5

220

45

5

0

2
6
371

7

4

3
235

I

47

SULLIVAN, GARRITY
and DONNELLY
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
Successor to Arthur K. King

GENERAL INSURANCE

•
21 ELM STREET

WORCESTER 8, MASS.

TEL. PLeasant 4-1768

37

�Remember:
We are never too busy to accommodate you in an emergency.

SULLIVAN BROS., PRINTERS
Main office and Plant
95 Bridge St., Tel. 458-6333, Lowell

Auxiliary plants: Boston -

Camden, N. J. -

Pawtucket, R. I. -

Miami -

Oceanport, N. J.

Philadelphia

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

SULLIVAN TRAVEL
SERVICE INC.

Domestic and Industrial

FUEL OILS

5 Pleasant Street
Worcester, Mass.
PL 2-2845

CLAFLIN-DONOHUE

Peter F. Sullivan, Jr., Class of '34

COMPLETE HEATING SERVICE

Life Insurance

14 Putnam Lane

Safeguarding
Tomorrow

Tel. 754-5331

GERALD R. ANDERSON

Chartered Life Underwriter
NoRTHWESTERN MuTUAL LI FE

332 Main St.

38

I NsURANCE Co.

Worce ste r, Mass.

PL 2-2859

�Hard Wearing Campus Clothes
For Thrift Minded Students
THE HOLY CROSS

JOBBERS OUTLET, INC.
WTAG Radio Sponsor for Holy Cross Football Games

BUFFALO

139-145 FRONT ST.
SERIES

JoE CASDIN, Owner

Holy Cross has won 5, lost 1, tied 1

1923 ·································· Holy Cross 37,

Buffalo

0

1961 .................................. Holy Cross 20,

Buffalo

8

1962 ·································· Holy Cross 16,

Buffalo

6

6,

Buffalo

6

1963 .................................. Holy Cross

1964 .................................. Holy Cross 20,

Buffalo 14

1965 .................................. Holy Cross 20,

Buffalo

1966 .................................. Holy Cross

3,

7

GILMAN BROTHERS INC.
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS

The Service House of New England
BOSTO

•

WHITMAl\'

•

WORCESTER

Buffalo 35

All the Holy Cross Football
Games, at home and away are
broadcast over Radio Station
WTAG .

MESSIER'S DINER INC.
Play by play Action by
Bob Gamere '62
Color by
Bob Clark

SHELL ROOM
The Best in Seafoods

&amp; Steaks

Full License Privileges
Lobsters Our Specialty

AL VUONA'S

Plenty of Parking Room

MENS SHOP

and
FORMAL WEAR FOR HIRE

49 Millbury St.

PL 7-1188

Tuxedos. Full Dress Cut Aways and Summer Formals

540 Y!a in Street
sw

J.J749

39

�JOSEPH P. MANNING CO.
ESTABLISHED 1859
1 98 FRONT STREET

•

WORCESTER, MASS .

•
TOBACCO

CIGARETTES

CIGARS- CANDY- PIPES- SUNDRIES
Exclusive Distributors of World Famous

La Corona -

Antonio y Cleopatra and

Bock y ca -

Cigars

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

GOOD LUCK "CRUSADERS"

COYLE-PALAZZI
LINCOLN PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER
WORCESTER, MASS.

Don Coyle

40

Togo Palazzi, '54

�Photography
by

CHARLES CHEVROLET INC.
239-255 Park Ave.

MARVIN RICHMOND

Worcester, Mass. 01609

and staff
Sales

Parts

Service

Leasing

10 Harvard St., Worcester, Mass.

Now in our eighth year, you can enjoy
the full picture on
NEW ENGLAND

BASKETBALL

with New England CAGE WORLD
Complete weekly coverage of all ma_Jor New England
high schools with statistics, player rat1ngs and Feature
stories.

Best of Luck Crusaders
MR.

&amp;

MRS. WILLIAM CHRISTO

&amp; F AMILY

Also complete college and pro coverage, includ ing
box scores, gossup, statistics.
Get 20 weekly editions of 50 page magazine for $10.
Send for Free sample or save 20 % by ma1 lmg $8.00
to: CAGE WORLD, Box 576, Torrington, Ct. 06790.

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

Best Wishes From

RUDNICK &amp; MEAGHER, INC.

Anderson-Little Co.~ Inc.

Successors

GENERY STEVENS CO.
Wholesale D1stnbu tors
A GREAT NAME in the
MANUFACTURING of FINE CLOTHING

MEADOW GOLD A ND HOLLAND BUTTER
58-64 BRIDGE STREET

WORCESTER, MASS.

Tom Daley-Manager

Tel. 756-2434

Gold Star Blvd.

COLD STORAGE W A REHOUSE

Worcester, Mass .

E~erybody

En joys

TOW'N~

&lt;1 TALK

Complim ents
of a

Friend

41

�1967 Football Rules Changes
by

Ellwood A. Geiges, Asst. to Commissioner
Eastern College Athletic Conference
The changes in the college football rules for 1967
that will probably be most evident to spectators
are:
l. The prohibition again&gt;t sideline coaching is no
longer in eHect. During a free time out one
player from each team may converse with a
coach at the sideline.
2. On kicks from scrimmage only players in an
end position on their scrimmage line and those
players who are legally in their backfield may
advance beyond the neutral zone before the
ball is kicked. This should provide greater
safety for the kick receiver, reduce the number of fair catch situations, and provide greater
opportunity for kick returns.
There are several changes important to coaches
and players that affect the strategy of the game:
1. The rule governing eligibility of pa~s receivers
has been an1ended to make eligible pass receivers
more easily discernible. A player who is ordinarily
an interior lineman (wearing a number 50 through
79) while on offense is eligible when, at the snap,
he is in an end position on his scrimmage line and
is not outflanked by any part of a teammate's body.
2. In 1967 the game clock will not start after
the ball changes possession (kick, fumble, interception) until the ball is snapped at the beginning of
the next down. (Also includes recovery of a legal
kick by the kicking team ) . This change can add
vital seconds to the game and be of great effect in
the closing seconds of any period.
3. The return kick has been eliminated. This
should not be of great significance since this privilege has seldom been used in modern football.
4. An important change affecting the strategy
of the game is the exception that can occur this
year when both teams commit a foul on the same
play and a change of possession occurs. Previously
this down would have been replayed without exception. This year's rules allow a team which has
gained possession of the ball to decline a foul
by their opponents (under certain conditions) and
accept the penalty for their foul and retain possession of the ball.
5. On a kickoff (or free kick after safety) a
foul by either team before the ball is legally
touched is re-kicked, with the penalty added at
the spot where the ball is re-kicked.
Other changes deal with modification of penalty
spots for non-contact fouls, minor revision of protective equipment specifications, prohibition of
electronic replay or monitor equipment for coaching purposes, reduction of the penalty for assisting
the runner from 15 to 5 yards, and an increased
emphasis on the prohibition of "spearing."

LOSS OF A DOWN
Illegally handing ball forward (also loss of 5 yards).
Illegal forward pass by offensive team (also loss of 5 yards) .
Int~ntionally grounding pass (also loss of 5 yards).
Offensive pass interference (also loss of 15 yards).
Forward pass illegally touched (also loss of 5 yards).
LOSS OF 5 YARD S
Excess time-out illegally used or requested.
Illegal delay of the game.
Infraction of substitution rule.
Putting ball in play before declared ready for play.
-Infraction of free kick formation.
Player out of bounds when ball free kicked.
Free kick out of bounds.
Illegal kick.
Taking more than two steps after fair catch.
Illegal snap.
Infraction of scrimmage formation.
Interference with opponents or the ball.
Player out of bounds when ball is snapped.
Offensive player illegally in motion at the snap.
False start or simulating start of a play.
Player on line receiving snap.
Illegally handing ball forward (also loss of down if by offensive team) .
Failure to pause full second in shift play.
Illegal forward pass (also loss of down if by offensive team).
Intentionally grounding pass (also loss of a down).
Forward pass illegally touched (also loss of a down).
Crawling.
LOSS OF 15 YARD S
Team not ready to play at start of either half.
Interference with opportunity to catch a kick.
Invalid signal for fair catch.
Tackling or blocking fair catcher.
Offensive pass interference (also loss of a down) .
Ineligible receiver down field.
Forward pass illegally touched (also loss of a down).
Striking, kicking, kneeing, elbowing, etc.
Meeting with knee, striking with open hand, etc.
Grasping face mask of opponent.
Roughing the kicker or holder.
Unsportsmanlike conduct.
Infraction of rules during intermission.
Side line coaching.
Persons illegally on the field.
Illegal return of disqualified player.
Piling on.
Hurdling.
Tripping, tackling out-of-bounds.
Running into opponent obviously out of play.
Clipping.
Interlocked interference or helping runner.
Illegal use of hand or arm by offense.
Illegal use of hand or arm by defense.
Illegally kicking ball.
Illegal equipment.

CENTRAL SUPPLY COMPANY

NARCUS BROS.
Office Supplies- 24 Pleasant St.

39 Waldo St.

156 Commercial St.
Worcester, Moss.
EVERYTHI NG IN

Office Furniture-810 Main St.

Plumbing, Heating and Water Supplies
Branch at Marlboro, Mass.

42

�FALL SCHEDULES
HOLY CROSS COLLEGE

GIBNEY

Reconditioners of Athletic Equipment

796 Main Street

Worcester 3, Mass.

Varsity Soccer
27
M.I.T.
29
Nasson College
4
at Boston University
7
Springfield
10
at Boston College
12
Rhode Island
14
Hartford
18
at Brandeis
21
at Norwich
24
Stonehill
26
at Assumption
28
at Nichols
31
Lowell Tech
2
at Clark
4
at Worcester Tech

Wed .
Fri.
Wed.
Sat.
Tues.
Thurs.
Sat.
Wed.
Sat.
Tues.
Thurs.
Sat.
Tues.
Thurs.
Sat.

SefJt.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.

Sat.
Wed.
Fri.
Wed.
Sat.
Wed.

Varsity &amp; Frosh
Sept.
29
Oct.
11
Oct.
13
18
Oct.
Oct.
28
Nov.
1

Mon.

Nov.

13

Mon.

Nov.

20

Phone PL 6-0324

Cross Schedule
Connecticut
at Springfield
Boston College
at Northeastern
Massachusetts
Providence &amp; Boston
Univ. at Providence
New Englands
at Franklin Park, Bos.
IC4A Meet at Van
Cortlandt Park,
Bronx, N.Y..

Freshman Football
Thursday, Oct. 12, Dartmouth
Friday, Oct. 20 at Harvard
Sunday, Oct. 29, at Boston College
Friday, Nov. 3, at Brown

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

ONE SO U RCE
f or all

P A PER
requirements

PRINTING AND INDUSTRIAL PAPERS

CARTER RICE STORRS &amp; BEMENT INC.
WORCESTER
Allentown
Boston
New Haven
Augusta
Hartford
New York
Baltimore
Newark
Providence
Springfield
Worcester

HOLY CROSS FOOTBALL
1968 VARSITY SCHEDULE
Sept. 28
Oct. 5
Oct. 12
Oct. 19
Oct. 26
Nov. 2
Nov. 9
Nov. 16
Nov. 23
Nov. 30

at Harvard
Dartmouth
at Colgate
at Boston University
at Buffalo
Syracuse
Massachusetts
Rutgers
Connecticut
at Boston College

43

�The Editor has the final Word
Let's hope that this weekend Holy
Cross has another football sweep.
Last weekend, the Crusader Cubs
whipped the Harvard Frosh, 27-6, for
their second straight victory. Then the
next day the varsity came through in the
final period for a come-from-behind 2117 victory over Boston University.
Today, the varsity gets the first
chance against a strong Buffalo team.
Tomorrow, Denny Golden's Cub go
after win No. 3 at Boston College in
Alumni Stadium.
Like Italian wine, Glenn Grieco gets
better every day. The Holy Cross captain and great middle guard is going to
go broke buying frames for his weekly
All-East certificates. Glenn, whom Tom
Boisture calls "the best nose man in the
East," made the ECAC All-East team
for the third straight week after another
great game this past Saturday. So, Glenn
has now made the weekly team three
straight weeks. Add these three citations to the four Glenn earned last season, plus another for the final All-East
team, and he probably doesn't have
enough room to hang the eight certificates.

44

Holy Cross brings a two-game streak
into today's game; Buffalo a three game
streak. The Crusaders, by the way,
have won seven of their last eight
games. Today's encounter could develop
into a passing battle between H.C.'s Phil
0' eil and Buffalo's Mick Murtha.
0' eil has connected on 41 of 84
attempts for 548 yards and four touchdowns. But the most impressive of
O'Neil's statistics is the fact that he has
been intercepted only twice in four
games.

Classmate Bob Neary and senior
John Vrionis have been the key men on
the reeciving end of Phil's passes. Bob
has pulled in 18 for 314 yards and two
touchdowns. John has caught 10 for 123
yards and also two touchdowns. Both
Neary and Vrionis have come up with
several spectacular, clutch receptions.
Murtha is also a good passer, but has
been intercepted 10 times. The Buffalo
junior has hit on 47 of 107 attempts for
614 yards and one touchdown. His
favorite receiver is Chuck Drankoski
who has pulled in 27 passes for 348
yards and two TDs. Against Boston
College last Saturday Chuck caught
nine passes for a Buffalo record.

Buffalo's Lee Jones is one of the top
fullbacks in the East. Last year Lee
scored 16 touchdowns-four against
H.C.-and was the top touchdown
scorer in the country. His 96 points
placed him third nationally in scoring.

Holy Cross fans will get to see the
Crusaders in action only two more times
here this year. Today's game is the third
of four in a row at home. Next week
Villanova hits Worcester and then H.C.
hits the road for Syracuse, Rutgers and
Connecticut before coming back to meet
Boston College on Dec. 2.
Perhaps the happiest person after last
week's thrilling 21-17 victory over Boston University was H.C. linebacker Jack
Garvin. Jack had an outstanding afternoon and came up with the big play of
the game-an interception with only 25
seconds to play that assured the Crusaders of victory. The pass was thrown
by B.U.'s Tommy Thornton, one of
Garvin's closest friends. Both were teammates at Cheverus High in Portland
Maine. "I'll always have the final word
whenever I see Tommy now," says Jack.
"He'll never be able to say a thing to
me."

BUFFALO STATISTICS

HOLY CROSS STAT ISTICS

Rushing-Pat Patterson, 306 yards in 73
carries, 4.2 average and two touchdowns·
Ken Rutkowski, 298 yards in 61 carries:
4.9 average and two touchdowns.
Passi ng-Mick Murtha, 47 completions
in 107 attempts (10 intercepted) for 614
yards and one touchdown.
Pass Recei vi ng-Chuck Drankoski
27
receptions for 348 yards and two t~uch·
downs; Rick Wells, nine receptions for
155 yards and one touchdown.
Pu nti ng-Paul Jack, 33 punts for 1,252
yards and a 33.9 average.
Sco ri ng-Lee Jones, seven touchdowns
for 42 points; Bob Embow, eight extra
poonts and three foeld goals for 17 points.

Rushi ng-Tim Hawkes, 198 yards in 40
carries, 4.9 average; Dick Giardi, 195
yards rushing in 49 carries, 4.2 average
and 5 touchdowns.
Passi ng-Phil O'Neil, 41 completions in
84 attempts (2 intercepted) for 548 yards
and four touchdowns.
Pass Receiving-Bob Neary, 18 receptions
for 314 yards and two touchdowns; John
Vrionis, 10 receptions for 123 yards and
two touchdowns.
Pu nti ng-Jack Leonard, 18 punts for 558
yards and a 32.6 average.
Sc ori ng-Dick Giardi, five touchdowns for
30 points; Bob Neary, two touchdowns
and a conversion pass for 14 points;
John Vrionis, two touchdowns, 12 points.

�1\ussell's on JLincoln
RESTAURANT AND LOUNGE

265 Lincoln St.
Worcester, Mass.
Telephone: 753-5449

North End of Worcester Expressway
adjacent to Hahnemann Hospital

Join the gang here after the game and play and sing at our organ and piano.
Terrific
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Jumbo Drinks

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phone SILL DEEDY

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John C. Paige &amp; Company

~ttguhattce
40 Broad Street

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Boston, Massachusetts 02101

28-30 FRANKLIN STREET

Telephone 482·5231

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�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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              <text>Programs</text>
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                <text>1967-10-28 Buffalo - Holy Cross</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text>Fitton Field</text>
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                <text> Official Program - Fifty cents</text>
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                <text> Includes run-down of each quarter's play</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>SOc

1967 VIRGINIA SCHEDULE
SEPT. 23
AFl~
*SEPT. 30
BUFFALO
OCT. 7
WAKE FOREST
*OCT. 14
DUKE
OCT. 21
S.C.
'OCT. 28
V.M.I.
'NOV. 4
N. C. STATE
NO\'. 11
. . . .. N.C.
l'oi0\'.18
TULANE
NO". 25
MARYLAND
*Home Games

SEPTEMBER 30, 1967
SCOTT STADIUM

�Dash of spice:

because Gant .. .

neve r s hou ld . . .

bel ieves a sh irt . . .

be b land

A shirt is more than something to hang your tie on. It's a stimulant to make you feel good, look good
throughout the day. This is why Gant puts spice into this King Striped Oxford button-down. Added
ingredients: Gant tailoring, casual roll of collar, trim Hugger body. In a potpourri of spice colors. About
$8 at discerning stores. For one nearest you, write Gant Shirtmakers, New Haven, Connecticut.

�OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA

*******
LONGINES

BUFFALO

THE WORLD'S
MOST HONORED
WATCH®

September 30 , 1967

10 world 's fa ir grand pri zes
28 gold medals

CONTENTS
PAGE
Officials Sign als ·················-····· ............................................................................................. 11, 47
The President's Page ·················-·····································-·····································-·················

4

Longines watches are recognized
as OFFICIAL for timing world
championshi ps and Olympic sports
in all fi elds throughout the world.

Virginia's Captain ························································································-····························· 7
The Virginia A thletic Staff ................................................................................................ 12
Meet the Virginia F ootball Coaching Staff ................................................... 13
The Virginia S tudent Aid F oundation ............................................................... 15
1967 Preview-Virginia ········-····························-····-··························································· 22
Univ ersity of Buffalo .................................................................................................................. 19
Team Notes, Schedules &amp; Records .................................................................. 20, 29
Virginia Roster ..................................................................................................................... 30, 40
Buffalo Roster ........................................................................................................................... 39, 40
The Line-Ups ....................................................................................................................................... 25
Virginia Freshman R oster ··················································-··············································· 41
Virginia Play ers ··························-················-·······························-····-·······-················· 9, 10, 45

I

Buffalo Players ·····················································-········································-·-····························· 28
Stadium Information ····················-·······-··································-················-····-······················· 48

Longines Ultra-Chron =8205, automatic wi th cal endar, $175.
Other Ultra-Chron Models, $150 to $595.

the fabulous new

LONGINES ULTRA-CHRON
Guaranteed Accu rate To A Minute A Month

Published by the UNIVERSI TY OF VIRG I NIA with the cooperation of the Sports Information
Office.
Editors-Ted Da\enport and Gilly Sullivan
Printing Coodinator-Bill Tra' is
National Advertising Representatives:

The ulti mate pe rsonal chronometer,
guaranteed accurate to a minute a month - ·
a mean average of 2 seconds per day.
Ultra-Chron te ll s the date, hour, minu te,
second . Never needs batteries. Winds
automatica ll y wh ile you wear it. All-Proof®
construction defeats water, dust,
shock , magnetism . At Longi nes-Wittnauer
Franchised Jewe lers, coast-to-coast.

Spencer Advertising Co.
271 Madison Ave., New York, City.

LONGINES-WIITNAUER WATCHCO.
MONTREAL

NEW YORK

GENEVA

Maker of Watch es Of Th e Highest Character
For Over A Century

Page On e

�The University
Ring
In making our University of
Virginia ring, we have taken the
characteristics of the University
and symbolized them on the ring;
which is die struck 10kt gold, and
is 14 pennyweight.
Cabell Hall is shown with the
statue of Homer in the foreground, oppo_J;ite this will be
found The Rotunda, note the trees
on the sides of the buildings as
you would view The Lawn from
the North or South.
On top of the ring is the wording "University of Virginia 1819"
(foundation date).
This ring may be had with any
stone, plain or initials, or as shown
with fraternity seal.
As you will note you can have
your degree and year on the
shank of the ring, just below Cabell Hall and The Rotunda, or
the year alone may be shown.
Garnet - •sapphire - Ruby Onyx - Tourmaline - Amethyst
- Signet -Sardonyx - Bloodstone - • Aquamarine - Fraternity Crest-Applied - Naval Insignia - Caduceus Emblem Applied - Caduceus - Encrusted
Encrust Greek letters - Backs
filled - Miniature Ring.
•synthetic

Keller &amp; George
Jewelers and Opticians
• Barracks Road Shopping
Center
• Park Lane Medical Building
(Optical Only)
• 214 East Main Street
Page Two

Monticello

Your Football Weekend
WHERE TO STAY ... WHERE TO DINE
BOAR'S HEAD INN-On U.S. 250 West 1 mile west of 250 Bypass. Old
Mill Room open for all meals, in actual old grist mill dating from 1834.
Antiques of English oak and guest-room fireplaces are among unusual
features that have won national recognition. Beautifully situated beside
two lakes and green hills of new short golf course.
MONTICELLO HOTEL-Facing historic Court Square and within sight
of Jefferson's Monticello three miles away. Dining in its air conditioned
dining room is always a pleasure. Private parking facilities. Convenient
to Chesapeake &amp; Ohio station and Trailways bus terminal.
UNIVERSITY CAFETERIA-Largest dining center in the university
community, serving students, townfolks and touring visitors. Wide range
of excellent food at most reasonable prices. At The Corner, with parking
privileges in the rear.
THE BLAIR HOUSE-One of Charottesville's newest and finest restaurants on Route 29 north at the Route 250 by-pass. Serving visitors and
the community with consistent excellence of service and menus. Continuous food service to 9:30 P.M.
INTERNATIONAL RESTAURANT AND DELIKATESSEN-The International Delikatessen is a popular dining center in the North Wing row
of the Barracks Road Shopping Center. Hours 11 A.M. to 10 P.M.
HOLIDAY INN-Member of a large family, the Holiday Inn is Charlottesville's largest with 205 units. Its location is alongside Route 29
North at the 250 Bypass. Phone 293-9111 for reservations.
WHITE HOUSE MOTEL - One of Charlottesville's best. On the near
side of Pantops, 250 East. Convenient to the University. View of city
and Blue Ridge. Restaurant and swimming pool.

�Live to earn
your sheepskin
"

DRIVE SAFELY

8

THE UNIVERSITY
LIFE PLAN!' INC.
Air At11cy of

FIDELITY BANKERS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
HOME OFFICE, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA

Page Three

�EDGAR

F.

SHA NON, JR.

President of the Univenity of Virginia

Thomas Jefferson's plans for the University of Virginia were well advanced when the General
Assembly of Virginia authorized its e tabli hment in 1819. Influenced by the works of Andrea
Palladio, the Italian architect of the sixteenth century, Jefferson prepared the architectural drawings for the original rectangular group of buildings and supervised most of the con truction.
Jefferson's adaptation of classic structures of ancient Rome to form what he called his "academical village" has been de cribed by experts as the most beautiful group of college buildings in
America. The door of the new university were opened in March of 1825 with a first ession enrollment of about 125 tudents and a faculty selected mostly from English universities.
Jefferson served as the first rector, or chairman, of the governing Board of Visitors and was
ucceeded by James Madison when the Sage of Monticello died on July 4 , 1 826, at the age of
eighty-three. James Monroe was appointed to fill the vacancy on the board.
The major divisions of the univer ity are the College of Arts and Sciences, School of Graduate Studies, School of Architecture, Mcintire School of Commerce Graduate School of Business
Admini tration, School of Education, School of Engineering and A~plied Science, School of Law,
and School of Medicine.
The pre ident of the University is Edgar Finley Shannon, Jr., Washington &amp; Lee University,
'39; Duke University, '41; Harvard University, '47; Oxford Univer ity, '49. The enrollment is approximately 8,000.
Page Four

�PHARMACY-part of your health team

pharmacist .,

I

I
I

I
I
I.

j

''\
\
\

I.

I physician
It is not by chance that your pharmacist
has the proper drug ready for you when
your physician prescribes it. The American
people today enjoy a level of health far
higher than ever before, and a large part
of it may be attributed to the dramatic
advances made by the "health team" :
pharmacist, physician and prescription
drug manufacturer.

We call the complex process by which a
drug moves from manufacturer to patient
"the miracle of drug distribution." The
teamwork of prescription drug manufacturer, drug wholesaler and pharmacist assures that you will receive the medicine
you need. This miracle of drug distribution
- the fact that the medicine you need is
in your community pharmacy when you
need it- is just one reason why prescriptions are today's best bargains.

,.._ -

~

prescn pt-10n drug
f manufacturer
'
I

I'

)
t

!

f

!

X
_
_
~
..

l\fEADOWBROOK
PHARMACY, INC.
Barracks Road
Phone 296-4135

Page Five

�NOW SERVING YOU FROM
3 LOCATIONS

Barracks Rd. Shopping Center.

Norman Hilton Clothes
Gordon-Ford Clothes
Arthur Freeberg of Boston
Haspel Clothes
Linett Clothes, Ltd.
Gant Shirtmakers
Creighton Shirts
Lady Edward Sportswear
Bass "Weejuns" and "Monograms"
Cox-Moore Sweaters
Alan Paine Sweaters
Jaeger weaters
London Fog Rainwear for Ladies and Gentlemen
Burberrys
Austin Hill
Reis-Rivitz-Berkley &amp; Charvet Neckwear
After-Six Formalwear
Corbin Trousers
French Shriner and Urner Shoes
Invertere English Outerwear
Zero King Outerwear
Fine Custom Tailoring To Measure

UNIVERSITY AVE.

113 E. MAIN
BARRACKS ROAD

113 E. MAIN

SHOPPING CENTER

295-9724

296-3675
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA.

Page Six

1601 UNIVERSITY AVE.

293-9511

�MAL 1\facGREGOR
1967 CAPTAIN
This Page Presented By

THE BARRACKS ROAD SHOPPING CENTER
Charlottesville, Virginia

�All of us ... individuals, cities, counties, industry

as sewage pumping stations, treatment plants and

... must join in the battle to check pollution of

chlorination equipment.

our streams. If we continue to foul our supply of
water, all of us will suffer.

•
Our technical staff is ready to help with all phases

Realizing this great need, Pomona Pipe Products

of sanitation planning. We welcome an opportunity

has broadened its services in the sanitation field.

to be of assistance on any problem which you may

In addition to the sanitary sewer pipe which we

have regarding waste disposal. Call Anti-Pollution

have been selling for generations, we now carry a

Headquarters: Pomona Pipe Products, Greensboro,

complete line of other sanitation equipment, such

North Carolina. Phone (919) 299-3131.

Page Eight

�VIRGINIA PLAYERS

CHARLES HAMMER

JEFF ANDERSON

MIKE JARVIS

PAUL LOCKWOOD

BOYD PAGE

FRANK QUAYLE

BRAXTON HILL

BOB BUCHANAN

STAN KEMP

RICK BRAND

BOB SERINO

DAVE WYNCOOP

TOM PATTON

BOB RANNIGAN

DANNY FASSIO

BILL MATTHES

�VIRGINIA PLAYERS

PETE GRAY

STEVE SCHILKE

BOB PACZKOSKI

DENNIS BORCHERS

AL SINESKY

PAUL KLINGENSMITH

PETE SCHMIDT

JOE HOPPE

GENE ARNETTE

RICK CONSTANTINE

PAUL REEVE

GREG SHELLY

PAUL YEWISIAK

DAVE McWILLIAMS

PAUL ROGERS

SCOTT

10NTGOMERY

�Courtesy of the Banks of Charlottesville

Virginia National Bank

Citizens Bank &amp; Trust Company

National Bank &amp;Trust Company

Officials' Signals

.ir t e,. .1r 11
11

16

21

17

22

~

2

a

23

9

24

25

I

Illegal Procedure,
Position or
Substitution

2 Ineligible Receiver
Downfield on Pass

6 Ball Illegally
Touched, Kicked
or Batted
7

3 Ball Ready to Play

Incomplete Forward
Pass, Penalty
Declined, No Play
or No Score

16 Illegally Passing or
11 Offside (Infraction
of Scrimmage or
Handing Ball
Free Kick Formation)
Forward
12 Illegal Shift

17 Illegal Motion

13 Safety

II Time-Out: Referee' s
Discretionary or
Excess Time-Out
Follow with Tapping
Hands on Chest

4

Intentional
Grounding

a

Touchdown
or Field Goal

14 Forward Pass or
Kick Catching
Interference

5

Unsportsmanlike
Conduct

9 Illegal Return

15 Helping Runner,

10 Start the Clock

or Interlocked
Interference

21 Illegal Use of
Hands and Arms
22 Delay of Game
23 Ball Dead; If Hand
Is Moved From Side
To Side: Touchback
24 Personal Foul
25 Roughing the Kicker

19 First Down
20 Clipping

P age Eleven

�U IVERSITY OF VIRGI IA COACHING STAFF- 1967
Left to right:
Dick Kupec, Don Lawrence, Coach George Blackburn, ed fcDonald, Ken Campbell and Ben 'Wilson.
tanding: Jim Alderman and Maury Bibent.

THE
VIRGINIA
STAFF
Evan J. Male
Assistant,
Athletic Director

Dr. Starling Reid
Chairman, Faculty
Athletic Council
STEVE SEBO
Director of Athletics

Dr. Frank McCue
Team Physician

Joe Gieck
Head Trainer

�... MEET THE VIRGINIA COACHES
GEORGE BLACKBURN, alumnus of Findlay College of Ohio, class of '37, is in his third year as head coach
of football at the University of Virginia. Formerly head coach at Miami University of Ohio and the University
of Cincinnati, he came out of retirement from football in 1964 to join the Virginia staff as backfield coach and
chief assistant.
Tow recognized as one of the outstanding offensive coaches in college football, George Blackburn went into
high school coaching in Ohio immediately after graduation from Findlay. He was at Miami as an assistant for
the three years of 1945-46-47 and as head coach in '48. Next came five years as offensive backfield coach at
Cincinnati, one at the U. . Military Academy under Colonel Earl Blaik, then back to Cincinnati to begin a
six-year tenure as head coach.
DON LA\VRE CE, otre Dame '58, is serving his first year at Virginia, and will be responsible for the defense
and is designated as defense coordinator. After playing for three and a half years with the NFL Redskins, Don
returned to Notre Dame in 1963 as tackle coach. For two seasons, he was with Kansas State and spent last fall
at the University of Cincinnati as defensive coach.
1\fAURY BIBE IT, Florida State '65, is a new member of the Virginia staff for 1967. He was a member of the
'65 Gator Bowl Champions that beat Oklahoma 36-19. Last year, Maury was an assistant coach at U. of
Michigan working with the fre hman team. He i charged with coaching the defensive backfield.
RICHARD KUPEC, University of Connecticut '64, is in his second year as a full-time member of the Virginia
football staff. He is now serving as offensive line coach. As a graduate student working on his master's degree,
he was line coach for the '65 first year team. In 1966 he served as head freshman coach. Dick was captain of
the 1964 Connecticut football team and was an outstanding guard.
NED 1cDONALD, University of Texas '40, was line coach and head coach at Virginia for 11 year . As line
coach for Art Guepe for the sea ons 1946-52, he had notable success and produced two All-Americans. He is
designated as defensive line coach and work with the tackles and ends. He returned to full-time coaching in
1964 as offensive line coach. He moved to the defense in 1966. "Coach Mac" was captain of the Texas Longhorns in 1939.
BEN \VILS01 , Heidelberg College '49, is starting his third year as a member of the varsity staff at Virginia. A
veteran of fourteen years of coaching in the tough Ohio High School league, he was twice named "Coach of the
Year" in his league. His all-time high school record was 94-33-5. Ben is charged with the offensive backs and ends
and work closely with Coach Blackburn on the Virginia offensive planning as offensive coordinator.
KE • CAMPBELL, \Vest Chester College '64, wa one of the finest ends in small college football, he played
part of a eason with the Tew York Titans of the AFL. His first coaching assignment was at Hershey H. S.
(Pa.) where his teams won 12 of 18 games. He served for several seasons as assistant football and head wrestling
coach at Lafayette College. He joined the Virginia staff in 1965 as head freshman coach. He moved up as the
offensive line coach last season.
JIM ALDER fAN, U. of T.C. '64, where he as a guard on the Gator Bowl Champions that beat the Air Force
35-0 in 1963. He played for Harrisburg in the Atlantic Coast Professional football league and for Philadelphia
in the Continental football league. Coached football and track at Devervex School in Pa., was an assistant
freshman football coach at U. of .C. Jim has been assigned Freshman Football Coach.
ANTHONY "ZEKE" FA TTINO, Emory &amp; Henry '57, became Virginia's first full time recruiter last season.
He works with all sports, his close ties with football as former head freshman coach and chief scout, make him
a valuable asset to the staff. This is his seventh year on the athletic staff at Virginia. A native of Vandergrift, Pa.,
he was a halfback in college.

Bruce Wallinger
Team Manager

Bob Goodman
Equipment Manager
Page Thirteen

�CIRCLE OF SPORTS
presents

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA BASKETBALL
AT HOME AND AWAY
WI A A f- 1070 KC.

CBS Radio

etwork

WI A-F.M 95.3 l\fG

CHARLOTTESVILLE AUTO AND TRUCK DEALERS
Coggins Motor Co., Inc

MacGregor Motors, Inc.

330 Preston A venue
Rambler - Triumph Mercedes-Benz
American - Ambassador - Javelin

416 West Main Street
Lincoln Continental - Mercury Comet - Cougar

Dominick Chevrolet Corp.

Brady-Bu hey Ford, Inc.

Rt. 250 East, Pantops Mountain
Chevrolet - Chevelle - Chevy II Corvair - Corvette - Toyota

856 West Main Street
Ford - Fairlane - Mustang Falcon - Thunderbird - Ford
Trucks

R. M. Davis Motor , Inc.

Pollard Auto &amp; GMC
Service
1021 Linden Street
G. M. C. Trucks

S-K Motors LTD.
Route 29 North
Imported Auto Specialist
Sales &amp; Service

Route 29 North
Plymouth - Valiant - Chrysler Imperial - Simca

Russell Mooney Olds
Sale and Service

Jim Williams Buick, Inc.

H. M. Gleason and Co., Inc.

315 West Main Street
Oldsmobile - Oldsmobile F85

900 Preston A venue
Buick - Oyel - Kadett

Peyton Pontiac-Cadillac,
Inc.

Wilhoit Motors

858 West Main Street
Pontiac - Pontiac Tempest Cadillac

404 East Market Street
Dodge Cars and Trucks
Dart - Coronet - Polara
Custom 880

First and Garrett Streets
International Trucks and Farman
Equipment

Harper :M:otor , Inc.
918 Preston A venue
Volkswagen - Porsche

Page Fourteen

�STUDENT AID FOUNDATION
P. 0 . BOX 1892. UNIVERSITY STATION

CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA 22903
AREA CODE 703
293-3966

OFFI CER S
J AMES L. CAMP, III, M.D ., President
ROBER T V. H ATCH ER , JR., Vice President
THOMAS E. DAVENPORT, Secretary-Treasurer

FALL, 1967

WILLIAM MASSIE SMIT H , Counsel
BOARD OF TRUSTEES

1968
\\' . Edward Armstrong , D.D ..
J a mes L. Camp, III, ~f.D .
0 . C. Gregory, J r.
Fred N. H arrison, J r.
H . Preston H arrison
T. . P. J ohnson
C. Corbette King, J r.
G. Benton Patterson
Daniel H. P ayne
J ohn C. R isher, M.D .
Frank Talbott, III
R . Gerard Willse, J r .

1969
William M. Cam p, Jr.

J. R obert Corish

H ovey S. Dabn ey
Kenneth R eutlinger
P ierre C. W anvick
R . R eid Young, Jr.

1970
R obert V. Hatcher, J r.
H erbert 'W. ierck
J ohn D . Varner, M.D.
Pa ul P. ' Visman
EX-P R ESIDENTS CO:\IMITTEF.
Lou is W. Ballou
H unter Faulconer
G. S. Fitz-Hugh , M.D.
Fred N . H arr ison , Jr.
W . W right H arr ison
R obert V. H atcher
H oward A. Holland
Walkley E. Johnson
Lawrence Lewis, Jr.
Nelson T. Offutt
G. Ben ton Patterson
Pierre C. Warwick
R obert C. Watts
H arvey L . W illiams
ich olas G. Wilson, Jr.
•coleman \ Vortham, Jr.
• Deceased

To Alumni and Friends of the University of Virginia:
The University of Virginia has thousands of alumni and
friends throughout the nation who are vitally interested in the
University's athletic program. The program of the Virginia
Student Aid Foundation was especially designed to satisfy
their interests.
The Foundation is a corporate entity, separate and distinct
from any other organization, and friends of the University, as
well as alumni, are eligible for membership. The Foundation
is governed by a Board of Trustees and is a non-profit organization. Except for a small administrative expense, all contributions
are applied to grants-in-aid for students at the University.
The Foundation operates with the approval of the administration of the University and adheres to the regulations of the
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Atlantic
Coast Conference (ACC). All grants from the Foundation must
be approved by the University's Committee on Sch olars hips,
Loans, and Employment, the committee which administers all
scholarships and grants awarded by the University of Virginia.
Grant recipients are considered the same as any other student
in reference to gaining admission, curriculum standards to be
maintained, and general obligations as a student in the
University Community.
Members of the VSAF enjoy certain privileges and opportunities
including priority on ticket sales, an official membership card,
and special athletic newsletters. Contributors of $100 or more
are automatically members of the VSAF' s Golden C Club and are
eligible for special parking privileges at Sc ott Stadium and
University Hall.
Thank you for your continuing support of our program.
REMEMBER YOUR GIFT IS TAX DEDUCTIBLE.
Page Fifteen

�Bowl Duck Pins
PREDDYTEAGUE

TERRACE BOWL

Funeral Homej909 West Main St./Charlottesville, Va.

JOSEPH W. PREDDY / JOSEPH W. TEAGUE

OldlvyRoad

Special Prices For
University Students

Gilmore, Hamm &amp;
Snyder

Claude W. Cotten,
Inc.

COLTER
CORPORATION

Incorporated

•
"Fine Furniture and
Carpet for Your Home".

•

"Fine Homes of Distinction"
Life Insurance-Mortgage Loans
Phone 293-5134

Contractor - Builder
204 W oodbrook Drive
Charlottesville~

Va .
The Pear Tree House

Phone 973-5321
Charlottesville, Va.

Page Sixteen

Old Ivy Road

�Compliments of
Follow the Cavaliers with Rob!

Hill and Irving

R. H. Harris &amp; Co.
201 - 7th. Street, S.

Funeral Home

w.

Charlottesville, Virginia

•

Plastering Contractor - Plain

&amp; Ornamental Plastering
Stucco &amp; Cement Work _

Ambulance Service

We Specialize In Repair Work

•

Phone 293-3677 or 293-6424
(Nights Call 293-2637)

Phone 296-6148
E. R. "BUTCH" SLAUGHTER
Golf Coach

Knox Hats-Arrow Shirts

Hanckel..Citizens
Insurance Corp.

•
The Young Men's
Shop

FRED L. WATSON
President

JULIAN C. SOUDER
Vice President

Home of Southwick

F. L. WATSON, JR.

Clothes

Vice-President

WILLIAM CURRIER

•

CARL M. VAN FOSSEN

Phone 295-7191
Nunn-Bush Shoes
Corner of Third and Jefferson
Streets

LOU ONESTY
Tr ack Coach

McGregor Sport Wear
Down Town

Page S eventeen

�ANDERSON BROmERS
BOOK STORE, INC.
e
e
e

Text-Books-

e

Office Supplies-

Athletic Equipment- (Wilson and Spalding)
Student Supplies

e

Office Furniture

"The most complete College Store in Virginia, serving the Univer ity of Virginia and its
students since 1876."

v
Flowers by Wire
Everywhere

REALTORS
1521 NORTH EMMETT STREET

Valley View
Florist
296-6141

CHARLOTIESVILLE, VIRGINIA
'ights

TELEPHONE 295-4117

Page Eighteen

undays &amp; Holidays Call 296-4710

418 EAST MAl

CHARLOTTE VILLE, VA.

�UNIVERSIT1

OF
BUFFALO
Dr. Martin Meyerson, President

James E. P eelle
Director of Athletics

Richard "Doc" Urich
Head Football Coach

THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
The University of Buffalo has been the educational and cultural center
of 'Vestern New York since 1846. At that time the City of Buffalo was
14-years old and was the home of 28,000 people.
The " University" was the School of Medicine until 1886 when the School
of Pharmacy was added. The school's first chancellor was Millard Fillmore,
a leading citizen of the community who continued his B leadership during
his term as 13th President of the United States.
The 14 Uni\·ersity Divisions are: School of Medicine (1846); School of
Pharmacy (1886) ; School of Law (1886) ; School of Dentistry (1892) ; College
of Arts and ciences (1913); Summer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College, E\·ening Division (1923); chool of Business Administration (1927);
School of Education (1931); School of Social Work (1936); Graduate School
of Arts and Sciences (1939); School of 1 ursing (1940); School of Engineering
(1946); and University College, including associate degrees (1958).
B's total enrollment is more than 20,000, of which almost half are
full-time undergraduate students.
Few institutions can equal the pace of construction which has taken
place on the orth lain Street campus in recent years. More than 30 new
buildings and additions to existing buildings have been undertaken, including the 'Vestern New York Nuclear Research Cemer, the 11-lloor Tower
Residence Hall for Men, the 11-lloor Goodyear Residence Hall for "'omen,
the 4.5-million Norton Hall (student union) the Schools of Iedicine and
Dentistry (Capen Hall), and the Acheson Hall of chemistry.
But this is only a beginning. In 1962 UB abandoned its private operation
to become the major campus segment of the State ni\·ersity of New York.
The official name of the college, created by State University officials, is:
State niversity of New York at Bu!Ialo. However, popular usage, particularly in the realm of intercollegiate sports, retains the familiar name of University of Bu!Ialo, or just UB. The State University at the present time is
making arrangements for mo\·ing to a tract of land in excess of 1,500 acres
in the Town of Amherst, about 3 miles from the site of the present campus.

�There's only as much in a name as there is the time and the pride of
quality that has gone into establishing it as a leader in its field. Aberan
has been scientifically breeding superior Angus of uniform quality type
to produce quality beef as well as show character. If you are looking
for quality herd sires and brood cows, see Aberan. 'Ve extend a most
hearty welcome to everyone to visit Edgehill at any time and see the
many fine bulls and cows we are continuously offering.
RAY

A.

GRAHAM, }R., AND RAY

A.

GRAHAM,

III Founders

PAUL

M.

GRINDE,

Aianager

UVA 3--Year Football Schedule
THE FOLLOWING DATES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE

1967
SEPTEMBER
23 ARMY
30 BUFFALO

WAKE FOREST
DUKE
S. C.
V.M.I.

(T)

(H)

(T)

(H)
(T)

(H)

(T)

(H)

5
12
19
26

DAVIDSON
DUKE
N. C. STATE
NAVY

(H)
(H)
(T)
(T)

2
9
16
23

S.C.
N.C.
TULANE
MARYLAND

20 CLEMSON
27 DUKE

(H)
(H)

OCTOBER

(H)
(T)
(T)
(T)

NOVEMBER

*PLACE TO BE DETERMINED
Page Twenty

21 PURDUE
28 V.M.I.
OCTOBER

NOVEMBER
4. N. C. STATE
11 N.C.
18 TULANE
25 MARYLAND

SEPTEMBER

SEPTEMBER

OCTOBER
7
14
21
28

1969

1968

4
11
18
25

W. &amp; M.
V.M.I.
N. C. STATE
NAVY

(*)
(T)

(H)
(T)

NOVEMBER

(H)
(T)

(H)
(H)

1
8
15
22

N.C.
WAKE FOREST
TULANE
MARYLAND

(H)
(H)
(T)

(T)

�You don't have to be a man to enjoy it.

•

We can see how it would appeal to

light, too. Only 8 ounces to the can.

women, too. Country Club is light on

Makes a smooth and welcome

carbonation, so it sits light. Drinks

change of pace you'll like.

(Duntry Club
Charlottesville Distributing Co.
106 South St.

I

MALT
LAGER®
•

PHONE 296 _5332
Page Twenty-One

�The Cavaliers' Corner
By Chris Cramer

Daily Pmgress and WCHV Sports Editor

The University of Buffalo and the niversity of Virginia, rivals in the 1967 football inaugural at cott
tadium, are total stranger athletically speaking, but the oppo ing head coaches are old friends.
It will be tudent against teacher this afternoon when Richard (Doc) Urich, in hi econd season as
head coad1 of the Bull , matches wits with Virginia's George Blackburn. Old memorie will be stirred for
the second aturday in a row.
Last week the Cavaliers visited \Vest Point whereBlackburn served as an assistant in 1954 under Colonel
Earl (Red) Blaik. Today cott Stadium will revive orne memories for both Blackburn and Urich.
Nineteen years ago the two men were on the same sideline in this tadium when l\Iiami of Ohio tangled
with Virginia and held the favored Cavaliers to a 14-14 tie. Blackburn wa then in his fir t year as head coach
of the Redskins and rich, a high school fullback, was a sophomore end on Blackburn's team. Miami, after
tying Virginia in the sea on' opener of 1948, went onto win the Mid-America Conference championship with
a 7-1-1 record. The Cavaliers finished that eason with a 5-3-1 record.
Urich played four years of varsity football for Miami and appeared in two po t- eason bowl games. He
was a fre hman in 1947 when Iiami earned a trip to the un Bowl in El Paso and whipped Texas Tech. id
Gillman was Miami's head coach then and Blackburn wa an assistant.
In his enior year Urich played with fiami in the alad Bowl at Phoenix where the Red kins downed
rizona State. \Voody Haye , now head coach at Ohio tate, was then fiami's head coach. Blackburn had left
Miami to rejoin Gillman a an assistant at the University of Cincinnati.
While the two Ohioans will be trying to outmaneuver each other this afternoon, they are good friends off
the field.
\'\Then
rich graduated from Miami in February of 1951 he went into the coaching profe sion. His first
a ignment was at fa silon (Ohio) High chool where he fini hed the school year. But in the fall of 1951 he
returned to Miami to erve a an a istant coach under Ara Parseghian.
If the Buffalo team ha a otre Dame look this afternoon as far as strategy is concerned it isn't just a
coincidence because Urich served a number of years with Parseghian, now head coach at 1 otre Dame.
Before assuming the head coaching duties at Buffalo, a school that is growing steadily in size and athletic
tature, rich was the number one offensive aide to Paseghian at otre Dame. Prior to that he had served with
Parseghian, not only at 1iami, but al o at Torthwestern University.
Buffalo got its fir t ta te of football ACC-style last week when the Bulls met North Carolina tate in Raleigh.
While they are a virtual unknown as far a Virginia fan are concerned, they are not a team to be taken
lightly.
There are plenty of Virginia fan around who can still recall the opening game in 1948. o one around
here knew anything about 1iami of Ohio then except Blackburn and Urich, but as things turned out the
Cavaliers were hard pres ed to gain a tie. Iiami made another visit the next eason and Virginia wa fortunate
to escape with a 21-18 victory.
In rich's fir t year the Bull posted 5-5 record with victories over Kent tate, Villanova, Holy Cross,
Delaware and Youngstown. Their attack is spearheaded by Lee Jone, a fullback some call the best in the
East. Last season Jones cored 16 touchdowns. That was enough to make him the nation's leading touchdownmaker among major college players. He finished third in the national scoring derby.
The Bulls, ambitious to gain a more prominent place in the football limelight, undoubtedly look upon
Virginia a a major target toward this goal. The Cavalier will have to be at their best.
To one is more aware of this than Blackburn who is well aware of the fact that his former end at Miami,
Urich, has learned his football les on well and will be eager to try and beat his erstwhile tutor.
Page Twenty-Two

�e ~~
''
. ''
youngmo 1es•
rom
smo~1e
are ere.
Drive one

Monday morning.

I GM I

Cullass s Holiday Coupe
at your nearest Oldsmobile Dealers.

hURl( Of EXCElUHCE

��UNIVERSITY OF VffiGINIA
PROBABLE OFFENSIVE
LINEUP
83 Joe Hoppe ..................................LE
74 Greg Shelly ................................LT
62 Bob Buchanan .......................LG
52 Dave McWilliams ..................C
66 Mike Jarvis .............................. .RG
70 Paul Rogers ..............................RT
86 Dan Fassio .................................RE
15 Gene Arnette .....•....................QB
24 Frank Quayle ....................LHB
32 Jeff Anderson ...........................FB
44 Bob Rannigan ..................RHB

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
PROBABLE OFFENSIVE
LINEUP
82 Terry Endress .......................LE
77 Chris Wolf .......................•..........LT
64 Mike Maser .............................LG
52 John Wesolowski .....•..............C
65 Jim Finochio .....•....................RG
61 Mike Rissell .............................RT
44 Chuck Drankoski ...............RE
14 Mick Murtha .....•....................QB
21 Ken Rutkowski .....................TB
49 Rick Wells .............................FLK
36 Lee Jones .......................................FB

PROBABLE DEFENSIVE
LINEUP
88 Tom Patton.................................LB
71 Rick Brand .............................LE
54 Rick Constantine ..............LT
79 John Naponick ........................RT
81 AI Sinesky .................................RE
65 Mal MacGregor ..................LB
33 Bob Paczkoski ........................LB
30 Peter Schmidt ........................LH
27 Paul Reeve ..................•....... .RH
23 Dennis Borchers ..................... S
34 Paul Klingensmith .............. S

PROBABLE DEFENSIVE
LINEUP
80 Dennis Briskey .......................LE
67 Ted Gibbons ..............................LT
73 Rovell Jones ..............................RT
88 Jim Remillard ........................RE
55 Irv Wright ............................LOB
34 Mike Luzny ..............................Lm
69 Don Sabo ....................................Rm
58 Rod Rishel .............................ROB
42 Tom Hoke ..............................LHB
45 Gary Grubbs ........................RHB
48 Tom Hurd ...................................... S

BUFFALO SQUAD

VIRGINIA SQUAD
14
15
16
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
36
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
46
50
52
53
54

Kemp, QB
55
Arnette, QB
56
Webb, QB
60
Hill, DB (K)
61
Moschel, TB
62
Brochers, DB
63
Quayle, HB
64
Gray, DB
65
Kelly, DB
66
Reeve, DS
68
Ferrara, DB
70
Lockwood, B. OE 71
Schmidt, DB
72
Thomas, FB
73
Anderson, FB
74
Paczkoski, LB
75
Klingensmith, DB 76
Page, LB
77
Whitcomb, HB
78
Wyncoop, FB
79
Serino, HB
80
Calamos, FB
81
Krebs, DE
82
Schilke, DB
83
Rannigan, HB
84
Turner, DB
85
Ralston, MG
86
McWilliams, C
87
Blackburn, John C88
Constantine, MG 89

Willits, MG
Stone, C
Reid, LB
Shannon, G
Buchanan, G
Shaw, DE
Hammer, G
MacGregor, LB
Jarvis, G
Bryan, LB
Rogers, OT
Brand, DT
Cascella, DT
Lockwood, P. OT
Shelly, OT
Kotulak, ST
Saft, OT
Zellers, DT
Christhilf, DT
Naponick, DT
Yewisiak, DE
Sinesky, DE
Croft, DE
Hoppe, OE
Ferens, OE
Matthes, DE
Fassio, OE
Montgomery, TE
Patton, DE
Sturgeon, OE

14
15
16
17
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
32
34
35
36
40
42
44
45
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59

Murtha, QB
Martin, DHB
Embow, K
Jack, QB
Mason, QB
Patterson, HB
Rutkowski, HB
Washington, HB
York, E
Svec, HB
Bell, DHB
DeMarco, DHB
Hansen, K
Biersbach, DHB
Horn, DHB
Brennan, FB
Richner, LB
Luzny, LB
Smith, LB
Jones, FB
DiRosa, HB
Hoke, DHB
Drankoski, E
Grubbs, DHB
Hurd, DHB
Wells, HB
Mosher, LB
Wright, LB
Wesolowski, C
Powrie, C
Chapp, LB
McCullough, LB
Chernega, LB
Ruggerio, C
Rishel, LB
Mihale, LB

60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
94
97
98

Jerry Elwell, G
Mike Rissell, T
Kowalewski, G
Spencer, G
Maser, G
Finochio, G
Lupienski, LB
Gibbons, DT
Hayden, G
Sabo, LB
Cavanaugh, DT
Don Maricle, T
Clark, T
Jones, DT
Beck, DT
Riccelli, DT
Reid, T
Wolf, T
Carney, G
Moler, DT
Napierkowski, DE
Murphy, DE
Endress, E
Kovey, DE
Przybycien, DE
Lang, E
Brisky, DE
Ashley, E
Remillard, DE
Doherty, E
Walgate, DT
Henley, DE
Pirozzolo, T
McGarry, DE
Steckmeyer, LB

�One day you'll say, "He's his own
man now." And you'll know the
way was not easily found.
Of one thing you can be sure. He'll
need all the education he can get
-college, certainly, possibly even
graduate school.
But there's a problem. Colleges
11re crowded and enrollments are
growing. More classrooms, laboratories, libraries, good teachers will
be needed.
These take money. So, give to the
college of your choice now and
help make certain college will be
ready when he is.
Enrich his future-and America's.

�DOWNTOWN

E m met St. &amp; A rlington Blvd.

ATHLETIC STORE
407 E. MAIN STREET
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA.

The Tire Center , Inc.
Kelly Springfield Tires

Cloneqi

Home of the Big Boy Hamburger

N ationwide Guarantee
P ickup &amp; Delivery Service
Courtesy Car Available

I
Complete
Recapping Service
Including

Meadowbrook Pastry

Compacts-Tractors-Trucks

Shop
Call on us for all your party
needs - and decorated cakes
for all occasions - wedding receptions.

Phone 296-7262

Buses-Trailers
PHONE 295-4196

296-4161
Complete Carry Out Ser vice

Anttqurs

Did you know that the

Bernard M. Caperton

most modern W ashette

1125 E. Market

Yellow Cab

in Charlottesville is now
OPEN??

and

Chandeliers and Modern
Furniture

Transit Co. Inc.

l\fAURY AVENUE
WASHETTE

I l l 5th St. S.E.

119 Maury Avenue

Charlottesville, Va.

Charlottesville, Va.
Route 250 West

Page Twenty -Seven

�BUFFALO PLAYERS

Rovell Jones

Don Sabo

Rod Rishel

Joe Riccelli

John Przybycien

Jim Mosher

Tom Hurd

Tom Hoke

Ted Gibbons

Dennis Brisky

Mick Murtha

Chris Wolf

Jack Wesolowski

Rick Wells

Mike Rissell

Ken Rutkowski

Dennis Mason

Mike Maser

Leeland Jones

Jim Finochio

Chuck Drankoski

Dick Ashley

Bob Embow

Tom Kowalewski

Page Twenty-Eight

�Charlottesville
Savings
and Loan Associatio11
308 E.

fARKET TREET
293-5104

for Insured Savings

&amp;
Mortgage Loans

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
"Doc" Urich, who was Ara Par eghian's top offensive aide at 1 otre Dame in 1965, enters his second
year as the head footall coach at Buffalo after a 5-5
season in 1966. His 1966 team established seven new
B offensive records.
The strong point of this year's team is a plentiful
supply of backs and ends. A lively offensive attack
features an experienced, record-breaking quarterback,
Mick l\Iurtha, and Lee Jones may prove to be the
best fullback in the East. Jone is an explosive runner
with exceptional blocking talents.
The problems lie with a shortage of interior linesmen, especially on offense. Buffalo's sound attack may
buckle unless olid performances are received from
a number of untested new varsity performers.
The defense appears strong with good linebackers
and possibly the best tackle UB foe will face this
year in enior Ted Gibbons.
1 ew players on the "ready" list for UB who merit
watching thi season include junior Dennis Mason at
quarterback, junior Bennie \1\Tashington, a lettennen
in 1965 who did not play last year, at a flanker position, ophomore tailback Pat Patterson, soph linebacker Mike Luzny, offensive guard Jon Spencer,
Scott Clark and Chris \ Vol£ at offensive tackle, Speed
Powrie at center, Rovell Jones at defensive tackle,
and Gary Grubbs at defensive halfback.

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
1967 SCHEDULE
Sept. 16-Kent State at Buffalo
Sept. 23-North Carolina State at Raleigh
Sept. 30-University of Virginia at Ch'ville
Oct.

7-Temple at Buffalo

Oct.

14-Boston University at Buffalo _

Oct.

21-Boston College at Boston

Oct.

28-Holy Cross at Buffalo

Nov.

4-Delaware at Newark

Nov. 11-Villanova at Villanova
Nov. 18-Colgate at Buffalo

Page Twenty-Nine

�The Athletic Department maintenance crew spent the summer preparing cott Stadium for the 1967 football
sea on. ew turf for the playing field, new eats for the stadium, and ma onry work on the stadium wall were
included in the summer's work.

Page Thirty

�LET THE WATCHDOG
KEEP YOU WARM
ALL WINTER

We watch your supply of Esso Heating Oil ... keep track of how fast
you're using it. .. make extra allowances for extra cold weather. And
as soon as you need oil, we're there--automatically.
You don't have to phone. Or worry. The Esso "Watchdog" is on the
job with fuel and burner service 24 hours a day.
Ask about our Budget P lan. To put the "Watchdog" to work, just
give us a whistle. We give S &amp; H Green Stamps, too!

W. C. BASCOM,

Agent

Humble Oil &amp; Refining Co.
Charlottesville, Va.

293-6157
Page Thirty-One

�A. WINNING
5-STA.R
HOSPIT A. LITY
LINE-UP
* New challenging golf
course, tennis courts, pool,
sauna, private club
* Historic Old Mill Room for
distinguished dining
*Deluxe rooms, suites for
lodging
*Old Ordinary R oom for
libations
*Versatile facilities for
private parties, meetings
Reservations:
Call 296-2181

~

THE

BOAR'S HEAD
INN

HARDWARE
HARDWARE
HARDWARE
HARDWARE
HARDWARE
HARDWARE

Charlottesville
Lumber
Company
Virginia's Most

All Kinds

Charlottesville
Hardware
Company

Cmnplete Home Center
310 Avon Street
Charlottesville, Virginia

CHARLOTTESVI LLE, V IRGIN IA

1966

1935

City Laundry

COLLEGE
SERVICE
STATION

Dry Cleaners
Grady Ave. &amp; lOth St. N.W.

Joel M. Cochran

Gulf Oil Products
"That Good Gulf"

REALTOR

Corner

CITY LAUNDRY

Town &amp; Country Property
Appraisals--Insurance

FAST SERVICE
Offices
601 Cherry Ave.
Charlottesville, Va.

Page Thirty-Two

Routes 29 &amp; 250
Serving North, East , S outh
and West

414 East Jefferson St.

•

Telephones 295-5107-293-3024

Charlottesville Oil Corp.

Charlottesville, Virginia

Farmington
Distributors of Gulf Products

�ROY WHEELER REALTY COMPANY
VIRGINIA REAL ESTATE

" Wheeler Building • • • Court Square"

40J EAST HIGH STREET··· PHONE 296-4171

Zip Code 22901-Area Code 703
ROY WHEELER

Write for free Catalogue and Brochures of
City-Suburban and Country Properties in
all Types-Sizes and P rice Ranges For Sale.

ALEXANDER RIVES

ER 'EST WHEELER
LOUIS GLEA ON

HARRY WHEELER
i\f. E. WHITE

SA fUEL WELLS
RICHARD CALLIGA

ELMORE MAY
H. C. SCHOENEMA

D.\VID CALLIGA
BETSY WHEELER

"Service Is Our Most Important Product"

Corner routes

250 &amp; 29
At The University
200 Yards from Alumni Hall
Phone 296-8111

Complete Facilities
Bruce Wilder
Manager

Page Thirty-Three

�The Thos. Jefferson Inn
Dining Room

COMPLIMENTS

Route 29 North

The Blair House

OF

Route 29 North and 250 By-Pass

FILTAIRE, INC.
At the Corner
Ample Free Parking

REAL ESTATE

Clarke Uo.
R ealtors
Town and Country Property
Commercial Property
Virginia Farms and
Farmlands

Charlottesville, Va.

-AgentsG. William Bolton
Gabrielle Hall
P. Hunter Faulconer
Ruby M. Hunt
J . Campbell Clarke, Jr.

Printers For
•

Alumni Association
•

1928 Arlington Blvd.

Alumni Fund

Suite 300
Conveniently located adjacent
to Barracks Road
Shopping Center
for information call

293-9197
Page T hirty- Four

•

Virginia Student Aid Fmmdation

New Phone- 296-5644

�M. C. THOMAS

Hotvard ]ohnsons

FURNITURE
Company

Motor Lodge

ONE OF CHARLOTTESVILLE'S
OLDEST and FINEST.
SHOWING ONE OF THE
LARGEST SELECTIONS OF
FINE FURNITURE IN CENTRAL
VIRGINIA

and
Restaurant

Two Locations To Serve You
420 E. MAIN and 205 W. MAIN

FREE DELIVERY
UP TO 150 MILES

13th and

lain Street

Liberal Terms

296-6154

RALPH LAW

420 E MAIN ST. CH-VILLE, VA.

Sports Information Director
and Swimming Coach

AMERICAN BRAND
HOME HEATING OIL
With

Seven Day Jr.
Stores

FAST AND IMMEDIATE
SERVICE

4 Convenient Locations

COMPLIMENTS

at

AMOCO SUPER PREMIUMS
AMERICAN OIL CO.

296-8 121 Phone

Maury A venue
M·c lntire Plaza

Area Marketer

Rio Road

W. K. Haddow

Angus Road

OF'

932 Harris Street
Charlottesville, Va.
293-2214

There will be a "5th"

OVENAIRE, INC.

soon!!!
You expect more
from AMERICAN
. ,
... an d you get lt.

Store Hours
7 a.m. -

11 p.m.

Page Thirty-Five

�If you Live on this Earth

- Own A Slice Of It! !

Cropp Brothers

Over 3000 Items To Serve You

Allied Foods, Inc.
Wholesale Distributor
Frozen Foods - Meats - Poultry Cheese - Can Products
1020 Harris Street
Charlottesville, Virginia

Area Code 703
Office Phone 296-6171

MAKE
EVERY YARD
COUNl•.
DOUBLE!
Double because you'll be
earning a commission while you
earn your college degree.
All it takes is a few hours a
week and a six-week summer
camp. It's that easy in Army

Home, Fann and
Commercial
Loans
Authorized Solicitor For The
Prudential Insurance
Company of America

BENTON PATTERSON
MORTGAGE LOANS
105 East High Street
Charlottesville, Virginia
Telephone - 293-5109

BRUNTON &amp; HICKS,
INC.
Plumbing, Heating,
Air Conditioning
Coal, Fuel Oil
520 Dale Avenue
Charlottesville, Virginia
Telephone 293-9127
Complete Servicing

UNIVERSITY DRUG
STORE, Inc.

Plumbing &amp; Heating

UNIVERSITY SHOPPING
CENTER

Contractor

250 West, On Ivy Road
(Across From St. Anne's)
Charlottesville, Va.
PHONE 295-4555
Free Delivery
Whitman's Chocolates
Kodak Film &amp; Supplies

Earl H. Vaughan, Inc.

Charlottesville, Virginia

MARTIN HARDWARE

Compliments Of

633 Rose Hill Drive
Phone 295-5177

ROTC.
Whether you plan a civilian
or a military career, Army ROTC
gives you the kind of training
and experience you need to
motivate, organize and lead
men. You'll learn them all in
Army ROTC.
Get the details from your Professor of Military Science at
any ROTC college.
Your future, your decision ...
choose Army ROTC.

Page Thi rty-Six

COMPANY, INC.
Virginia Land Company
Best of Luck "Cavaliers"
Martin Hardware Co., Inc.

Route 29 North

941 Preston Avenue
Phone 293-8171

Charlottesville, Va.

�J.M. Turner
AND

Co., Inc.

General
Contractors
For

Alderman Road

Charlottesville's
Largest

Dormitories
ROBERT H. ''Bud" WINN
Stadium Supervisor

AND

•
Steam Tunnel For

Finest

Chemistry
Building

•

•
205 UNITS

Nuclear Physics
Building

•

•
For Reservations
The Downtowner
Phone 293-9111
Motel

•
SALEM, VA.
Barney F. Smith,

LAURENCE A. BRUNTON
Supervisor of Ushers

Innkeeper

Page Thirty-Seven

�HOLDEN
SCHOOL OF FINE

Murphy Travel

AND APPLIED
(Murphy Insurance &amp;

ART

Travel, Inc.)

215 EAST HIGH STREET
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA.

Ask The Man
From Equitable
About
EQUITABLE'S

Charlottesville, Virginia 22902

CAREER COURSES
e
•
•
•

FINE ART
APPLIED ART
GRAPHIC ARTS
INTERIOR DESIGN

"Better let us serve you than
wish you had"

Mail Coupon Below
HOLDEN SCHOOL OF ART,
Charlottesville, Va.

LOW-COST

Dial 295-4157

Same fine service as our
Insurance.

Protection Plan!

Landon Birckhead
1932 Arlington Boulevard,
Room 215
P . 0 . Box 5264
Charlottesville, Va. 22903

Name .............................................................................
Address ................................. Tel. ........................
Art Interest....................•.............. Age ............

WELK has more listeners . . . more men listeners . . . more
women listeners . . . all day long . .. than Charlottesville's
other two radio stations combined!!

*

l 0 l 0 Radio in Charlottesville, Virginia.
The "Happy WELK-om Sound" in Central Virginia
(*PULSE, Inc. August-September 1966)

P age Thirty-Eight

�VIRGINIA CAVALIERS

BUFFALO
Hometown
Class
No.
Name
Pos.
Age
Ht.
Wt.
Sr.
Massena, N.Y.
87 *Ashey, Richard .................- ...................E
20
6-1
201
So
ph.
Indianapolis,
Ind.
74 Beck, Russell -·--·-·-·-·-........DT
18
6-3
232
Soph.
Potsdam, N.Y.
25
Bell, Harry - .............-·-·--·-·DHB
21
5-10
180
Soph,
Hamburg, N.Y.
28 Biersbach, Ronald - ...___ DHB
19
6-0
189
Sr.
Rochester, N.Y.
30 *Brennan, Thomas -·-----·FB
20
5-10
205
Sr.
Detroit, Mich.
86 *Brisky, Dennis -·-·--......- -DE
20
6-2
209
78
Carney, Patrick ___,........_ ._ .... G
19
6-0
200
Soph.
New Kensington, N.Y.
Soph.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Cavanaugh, James ...- ........- ...- DT
20
5-9
222
70
Centerline, Mich.
Soph.
Chapp, Gary ............- .......- ..............LB
19
5-8
200
54
Soph.
Endicott, N.Y.
56
Chernega, David -·--·--·....- .....LB
20
5-11
187
Soph.
Coshocton, 0.
Clark, Scott ...............- -..--.............T
20
6-0
212
72
Soph.
Dolgeville, N.Y.
DeMarcot.... Douglas ,_.,..._ ..DHB
20
5-9
168
26
Soph.
Buffalo, N.Y.
40
DiRosa, .t"aul - · - -.........................HB
19
5-10
193
Jr.
New Bedford, Mass
20
6-0
209
89 Doherty, John -·--..·-·--.....- E
Endwell, N.Y.
44 *Drankoskl, Charles __........- ........E
20
6-0
183
Jr.
Soph.
Rochester, N.Y.
60
Jerry Elwell ......- .......- .............--...- ... G
19
6-0
210
16 *Embow, Robert ..._ ...._.....................K
19
6-0
210
Jr.
Hamburg, N.Y.
Soph.
Cuyahoga Falls, 0.
82
Endress, Terrence --·--...........E
19
6-0
202
E. Syracuse, N.Y.
65 *Finochio, James ....................................G
21
5-10
219
Sr.
21
5-10
232
Newport, R.I.
67 *Gibbons, Theodore __..............DT
Sr.
Soph.
Coshocton, 0.
Grubbs, Gary ...- .......--......- ...DHB
19
5-9
175
45
27
Hansen, Brian .......................................... K
21
5-11
166
Sr.
Detroit, Mich.
68 Hayden, William ....................._......... G
20
5-10
213
Jr.
Cleveland, 0.
Henley, Prentls _..............................DE
20
6-1
205
91
Soph.
Buffalo, N.Y.
42 *Hoke, Thomas __.....................DHB
21
5-8
189
Sr.
Marcy, N.Y.
Soph.
Horn, Richard - ..- ..............._...DHB
20
6-1
188
Dover, 0.
29
Sr.
Elmira, N.Y.
21
6-1
197
48 *Hurd, Thomas ----...- .....__DHB
Soph.
Springdale, Pa.
Jack, Paul ........................- .....- ....- .... QB
19
6-0
178
17
73
Jones, D. Rovell _,....___............DT
19
6-2
228
Soph.
Akron, 0.
36 *Jones, Leeland .................................... FB
21
5-11
208
Sr.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Soph.
83
Kovey, Robert - .................................DE
19
5-11
202
Youngstown, 0.
Jr.
62 *Kowalewski, Thomas .........- ......... G
20
5-11
210
Detroit, Mich.
Soph.
85 Lang, Paul .................- ..............................E
20
6-0
210
Ithaca, N.Y.
Jr.
Springdale, Pa.
66 *Lupienski, John ..- ......--....- .....LB
20
5-10
210
Soph.
34 Luzny, Michael ......- ........................LB
20
5-9
209
South Bend, Ind.
Soph.
71
Maricle, Donald .........- ....................T
20
6-0
224
Ithaca, N.Y.
15 Martin, Daniel ..............................DHB
20
5-11
187
Jr.
Huntington, L.l.
64 *Maser, Michael _.................................... G
Jr.
20
5-11
214
Clayton, N.Y.
Jr.
19 Mason, Dennis .................................... QB
19
5-11
188
Buffalo, N.Y.
55
McCullough, Steven ..................LB
19
5-10
201
Soph.
Coshocton, 0.
97
McGarry, Dennis ...........................DE
20
5-11
215
Soph.
Lancaster, N.Y.
Soph.
Mihale, Dennis .................................LB
21
6-0
214
New York City, N.Y.
59
79
Moler, Robert .......................................DT
20
6-2
226
Orchard Park, N.Y.
Soph.
50
Mosher, James .................................LB
20
6-1
212
Jr.
Central Islip, L.I.
Murphy, Thomas
......... DE
21
6-0
192
81
Jr.
Johnstown, Pa.
20
5-11
176
Jr.
14 *Murtha, Mark .................................... QB
Endicott, N.Y.
Soph.
80
Napierkowski, Chester ............DE
20
6-3
221
Arnold, Pa.
20
Patterson, Patrick _.....................HB
19
5-11
191
Soph.
Ambridge, Pa.
21
6-2
232
Sr.
94 Pirozzolo, Richard ............- ............T
Elmira, N.Y.
Powrie, Charles ....................._ ........... C
21
6-0
195
53
Soph.
Cuyahoga Falls, 0.
84 *Przybycien, John .............._..........DE
19
6-1
200
Jr.
Detroit, Mich.
76
Reid, Frank .................._ ............_ ............ T
21
6-3
217
Soph.
Ottawa, Ont.
88 Remillard, James ................- ........DE
20
6-0
198
Jr.
New Bedford, Ma&lt;s.
75 *Riccelll, Joseph ......................- ........DT
20
6-2
242
Jr.
Syracuse, N.Y.
32 Richner, David .....- ............................LB
20
5-11
197
Jr.
Greenhurst, N.Y.
58 *Rishel, Rodney _.............- ................LB
21
5-11
194
Sr.
East Smethport, Pa.
61 *Rissell, Michael .......................................T
Sr.
21
5-11
233
Coatesville, Pa.
Ruggerio, Alfonse _........................... C
20
6-1
205
57
Sr.
Buffalo, N.Y.
21 *Rutkowski, Kenneth ..................HB
20
5-9
180
Sr.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
69
Sabo, Donald ............- ........................LB
20
5-10
210
Jr.
Johnstown, Pa.
35
Smith, Robert ....................._...............LB
20
6-0
213
Jr.
Depew, N.Y.
Spencer, E. Jon .................................... G
20
5-11
213
Soph.
63
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.
Steckmeyer, Paul J. ..................LB
22
6-0
230
98
Sr.
East Aurora, N.Y.
24 *Svec, Steven ..........................................HB
20
6-0
201
Jr.
Endicott, N.Y.
Walgate, Daniel ..............................DT
19
6-2
255
Soph.
90
Grand Island, N.Y.
Washington, Bennie ...........- ....HB
20
5-10
198
Jr.
22
Woonsocket, R.I.
49 *Wells, Richard ....................................HB
20
6-0
198
Sr.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Jr.
52 *Wesolowski, John - ........................... c
21
5-11
214
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Soph.
77
Wolf, Chris ........................................- ........T
19
6-3
220
Solon, 0.
Sr.
51 *Wright, Irvin ....................- ...................LB
21
5-11
203
Norristown, Pa.
Sr.
23
York, Brian ...................................................E
22
5-9
169
Rochester, N.Y.
*-1966 Lettermen (23)
Student Manager-FRANCIS WELK, Clarence, N.Y.

F

L
I
p

c
A
R

No.
14
15
16
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
36
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
46
50
52
53
54
55
56
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
68
70

D

71

72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Name
Position Age
Stan Kemp .......................................... QB
22
22
Gene Arnette ..........................._QB
19
Gene Webb ....................................... QB
21
Braxton Hill ..............................DHB
19
Fred Moschel ........................_......HB
21
Dennis Borchers .................._...DB
Frank Quayle ..............................HB
20
Pete Gray .........................................DB
21
19
Bob Kelly ..........................................DB
Paul Reeve .......................................DB
20
AI Ferrara ...... .............................LB
18
Bill Lockwood ........................... OE
20
Peter Schmidt ..............................DB
19
Tom Thomas ......- ...........................FB
18
Jeff Anderson .................................FB
20
Bob Paczkoski .......................... LB
20
Paul Klingensmith ..................DB
21
18
Boyd Page ...- ....................................LB
Steve Whitcomb ........................HB
19
Dave Wyncoop .............................FB
21
Bob Serino ......................................HB
20
Jeff Calamos ................................... HB
21
Van Krebs .........................................DE
21
Steve Schilke .................................DB
20
Bob Rannlgan ..............................HB
19
18
Dave Turner ...............................LB
Jim Ralston .................................LB
21
Dave McWilliams ....................... C
21
John Blackburn .......................... c
19
Rick Constantine .................DT
20
Jim Willets ............................... .DT
18
Bill Stone ............................................ C
20
Paul Reid ............................ - ............LB
19
Jim Shannon .................................... G
18
21
Bob Buchanan .................................... G
19
Phil Shaw ...................................DE
Chuck Hammer .............................. G
20
Mal MacGregor ...........................LB
22
21
Mike Jarvis ..........................................G
Steve Bryan ...................................LB
21
21
Paul Rogers .................................... OT
Rick Brand ...................................... DT
20
Bob Cascella ....................................DT
21
Paul Lockwood ........................... OT
23
21
Greg Shelly .................................. OT
Rick Kotulak .......................................T
19
Gary Saft ............................................. OT
18
Tom Zellers .... ........ ......................DT
20
Mark Christhilf ...........................DT
18
John Naponick ............................DT
21
Paul Yewisiak .............................. DE
21
AI Sinesky ........................................DE
19
Laurie Croft ....................................DE
21
Joe Hoppe ......................................... OE
21
Joe Fer ens ........................................ OE
19
Bill Matthes ..................................DE
20
Danny Fassio .................................... OE
20
Scott Montgomery
..........TE
21
Tom Patton ... ...... ......
.......LB
19
Greg Sturgeon ................................... 0
21

Wt.
180
181
187
175
181
168

190

170
160
168
192
186
176
190
212
202
182
195
160
190
168
175
175
193
173
194
200
219
185
206
200
193
190
195
218
202
205
201
210
200
230
229
237
223
232
224
203
217
212
255
199
212
212
200
204
224
185
198
205
190

CLEARVIEW CLEANERS
BARRACKS ROAD SHOPPING CENTER
1 Hour Dry Cleaning
With
Service To Your Car
J?hone 293-5415

Ht.
6-0Yi
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-1
5-10
5-10
5-11
5-11
6-1
6-1
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-0
5-11
5-8
5-9
5-6
5-10
6-1
6-3
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-1
13-0
6-1
5-10
5-11
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-3
6-4
6-4
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-3
6-9
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-3
6-4
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-1\ll!

School
Hometown
Year
Charleroi HS
Charleroi, Pa.
Sr.
Lane HS
Charlottesville, Va.
Jr.
Andrew Lewis HS
Salem, Va.
So.
Granby HS
Norfolk, Va.
Sr.
Bethel Park HS
Bethel Park, P a.
so.
Elder HS
Cincinnati, Ohio
Sr.
Garden City HS Garden City, N.Y.
Jr.
Episcopal HS
Richmond, Va.
Sr.
St. Johns
H yattsville, Md.
So.
Kecoughton HS
Hampton, Va.
Jr.
Charleroi HS
Charleroi, Pa.
So.
Jr.
Cox HS
Santa Ana, Calif.
S. Country HS
Savannah, Ga.
So.
Huguenot
Richmond, Va.
So.
Mariemont
HS
Cincinnati,
Ohio
Jr.
Jr.
Coal Township HS Shamokin, Pa.
Sr.
Scottsdale HS
Scottsdale, Pa.
So.
Dobyns-Bennett Kingsport, Tenn.
So.
Granby HS
Norfolk, Va.
So.
Bordentown MA
Clarion, Pa.
Sr.
Messick HS
Memphis, Tenn.
Jr.
James Monroe Fredericksburg, Va.
Jr.
Castle Hts. MA
Birmingham, Ala.
Jr.
St. Clair HS
Bridgeville, Pa.
So.
St. Ignatius
Cleveland, Ohio
So.
Lane HS
Charlottesville, Va.
Sr.
Xavier HS
Cincinnati, Ohio
Jr.
Westinghouse MHS Wilmerding, Pa.
So.
Albemarle HS Charlottesville, Va.
Jr.
Uniontown HS
Uniontown, Pa.
So.
Deer P ark
Cincinnati, Ohio
So.
Aliquippa HS
Aliquippa, Pa.
So.
N. Plainfield HS No. Plainfield, N .J.
So.
Petersburg HS
Petersburg, Va.
Sr.
Penn Hills
Pittsburgh, Pa.
So.
Seabreeze HS
Dayton Beach, Fla.
Jr.
Central Catholic
Pittsb urgh, Pa.
Sr.
Glen Ridge HS
Glen Ridge, N.J.
Sr.
Collegiate
Richmond, Va.
Jr.
McLean HS
McLean, Va.
Jr.
Westminster
Atlanta, Ga.
Jr.
Indian Hill HS
Cincinnati, Ohio
Jr.
Pittsburgh Catholic Pittsburgh , P a.
Sr.
Staunton MS
Morristown, N.J.
Jr.
Soudertown HS
Soudertown, Pa.
So.
Gateway
Monroeville, Pa.
So.
Pennsbury
Levittown, Pa.
Sr.
Ramsay HS
Mt. Pleasant, Pa.
So.
L oyola liS
Annapolis, Md.
Sr.
Norwin HS
Irwin, Pa.
Sr.
Charleroi HS
Cha rleroi, Pa.
So.
Bethel Park HS
Bethel Park, Pa.
Sr.
W estminster School
Atlanta, Ga.
Jr.
Petersburg HS
Petersburg, Va.
So.
Connellsville HS Connellsville, Pa.
Jr.
Staples HS
Westport, Conn.
So.
Klski HS
Vandergrift, Pa.
Jr.
Watertown HS
Wate r town, N.Y.
So.
New Castle HS
New Castle, Pa.
Jr.
Grove City HS
Grove City, Pa.

�BULLS
RIGHT GUARD
65 Jim Finochio
63 Jon Spencer

RIGHT TACKLE
61 Mike Kissell
76 Frank Reid

LEFT END
82 Terry Endress
85 Paul Lang

LEFT TACKLE
77 Chris Wolf
72 Scott Clark

LEFT GUARD
64 Mike Maser
62 Tom Kowalewski

CENTER
52 John Wesolowski
53 Charles Powrie

RIGHT END
44 Chuck Drankoski
18 Ed Lowe

QUARTERBACK
14 Mick Murtha
19 Dennis Mason

TAILBACK
21 Ken Rutkowski
20 Pat Patterson

FLANKER
49 Rick Wells
22 Ben Washington

LEFT TACKLE
67 Ted Gibbons
74 Russ Beck

LEFT END
80 Dennis Briskey
81 Tom Murphy

LEFT LINEBACKERS
34 Mike Luzny
55 lrv Wright
66 John Lupienski
32 Dave Richner

CAVALIERS
LEFT END
83 Joe Hoppe
87 Scott Montgomery

LEFT TACKLE
74 Greg Shelly
73 Paul Lockwood

LEFT LINEBACKER
88 Tom Patton
80 Paul Yewisiak

RIGHT TACKLE
73 Rovell Jones
75 Joe Riccelli

RIGHT END
88 Jim Remillard
84 John Przybycien

RIGHT LINEBACKERS
69 Don Sabo
58 Rod Rishel
54 Gary Chapp
50 Jim Mosher

RIGHT GUARD
66 Mike Jarvis
64 Chuck Hammer

RIGHT TACKLE
70 Paul Rogers
75 Rick Kotulak

BUFFALO SPECIALISTS

RIGHT TACKLE
79 John Naponick
55 Jim Willets

Clearview Cleaners
BARRACKS ROAD SHOPPING CENTER
I HOUR DRY CLEANING
SHIRTS LAUNDERED TO PERFECTION
SERVICE TO YOUR CAR

oo•oooooooooo . .

oooo . .

000000...

000000000

oo. .

000000000

PHONE 293-5415

OFFICIALS FOR THE VI RGINIABUFFALO GAME

toj

~

0

&gt;'!j

RIGHT END
86 Danny Fassio
41 Jell' Calamos

HALFBACK
23 Dennis Borchers
46 Dave Turner

z~

00
toj

0

toj

~

z

RIGHT END
81 AI Sinesky
82 Laurie Croft

00
toj

VIRGINIA'S SPECIALISTS
PUNTERS: 21 Braxton Hill, 27 Paul Reeve
KICKOFFS: 21 Braxton Hill, 30 Peter Schmidt
PLACE-KICKERS: 21 Braxton Hill, 30 Peter Schmidt
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
RUSHING No.
Arnette ... 12
Wyncoop
4
Quayle
Anderson
8

Yds.
64
16
32
18

Ave.
5.3
4.0
2.4
2.1

KICKOFF RETURNS
No. Yds. Ave.
Quayle
3
78
26.0
Serino
3
50
16.7

PASSING
Att. Comp. Int. Yds. Td.
Arnette 25 14 3 164 0
Kemp .... 2
0 1
0 0

PUNT RETURNS
No. Yds. Ave.
Klingensmith 1
10
10.0

Oooooo

oo ••

I:'

toj

CENTER
52 Dave McWilliams
56 Bill Stone

LEFT TACKLE
54 Rick Constantine
50 Jim Ralston

toj

z

LEFT GUARD
62 Bob Buchanan
61 Jim Shannon

MIDDLE LINEBACKER
OUTSIDE LINEBACKER
HALFBACK
33 Bob Paczkoski
30 Peter Schmidt
27 Paul Reeve
68 Steve Bryan
43 Steve Schilke
25 Pete Gray

~

z

00

00

RIGHT HALFBACK
44 Bob Hannigan
22 Rick Moschel

LEFT END
71 Rick Brand
72 Bob Cascella

RIGHT HALFBACK
45 Gary Grubbs
17 Paul Jack

SAFETY
48 Tom Hurd
29 Rich Hom

FULLBACK
32 Jeff Anderson
39 Dave Wyncoop

PUNTERS: 17 Paul Jack, 32 Dave Richner, 27 Brian
Hansen
KICKOFFS: 16 Bob Embow, 48 Tom Hurd, 27 Brian
Hansen
PLACE-KICKERS: 16 Bob Embow
RUSHING No. Yds. Ave. PUNT RETURNS
Rutkowski 25
189
7.4
No Yds. Ave.
Jones ............ 20
64
3.2
(NCS only)
Patterson 19
86
4.5
.
9.0
Wells .........11
57
5.1
Drankosk1 ... 1
9
3.7
PASSING
Hurd .............. 4 15
Att. Comp. Int. Yds. Td.
Murtha 29 16 4 154 0 PASS INTERCEPTIONS
Mason ......11
8 0
99 1
NONE
RECEIVING No. Yds. Tds.
Drankoski •..• 7
71
0 SCORING
Patterson ..... 4
30
0
Tds. Pat. Fg. Pts.
Wells ....
6
39
1
0
3
1
6
Buchak
1
18
1 Embow
1
0
0
6
PUNTING
No.
Ave. Wells
1
0
0
6
Jack .................•...•12
35 Jones
Rutkoski
1
0
0
6
KICKOFF RETURNS
Murtha
1
0
0
6
(for NCS only)
No. Yds. Ave. Buchak
1
0
0
6
Rutkoski .. 2
34
17.0
Patterson
1
46
46.0
Wells
1
18
18.0
00000. . . . . 00 . . .

LEFT HALFBACK
42 Tom Hoke
24 Mike Quinn

LEFT HALFBACK
24 Frank Quayle
4.0 Bob Serino

SAFETY
34 Paul Klingensmith
21 Braxton Hill

oooooo . . .

FULLBACK
36 L ee Jones
30 Tom Brennan

QUARTERBACK
15 Gene Arnette
14 Stan Kemp

RIGHT LINEBACKER
65 Mal MacGregor
36 Boyd Page

00 . . . . . . . . . . .

0

0 00 00 000. 1 4

000 000

Oooooo

00

Referee-Art Hodges-University of Wichita
Umpire-Louis F. McKenna-Syracuse) N. Y.
Linesman-Hugh Currin-Wake Forest
Field fudge-Marlin B. Brandt-Norristown) Pa.
Back Judge-Bob Shoaf-Guilford College
Clock Operator-Milton Hines-Guilford College

RECEIVING No. Yds. Tds.
Quayle
5
69
0
Hoppe
7
69
0
Anderson
1
12
0
Fassio
1
14
0

PASS INTERCEPTIONS
None

000000000000

00000-00000

0 00 000

00000 . . . . . . . . . . . . .

SCORING
Td. Pat. Fg. Pts.
Quayle
1
0
0
6
Hill ............ 0
1
0
1
000

PUNTING
No.
Hill ..............................6

Ave.
30.0

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------·

�WCHV and WCCV..FM
The twin sports voices of Central Virginia

Listen to
Monday-

Coach's Corner-George Blackburn
Monday QuarterbackChris Cramer
Humble Editorial
Diagram-U. Va. Football

Tuesday-

John Pincavage
Rock Hill-Coach Stuart Adams
Scholastic Player of the Week
Coach of the Week

Wednesday- Cavalier Player of the Week
Scouting Report-U. Va.
Lane HighCoach Tommy Theodose
Thursday-

Friday-

A Look At The Pros
Football Forecast
Across The FieldU. Va. Opposing Coach
High School Warm-Up
Albemarle or Rock Hill
Football Game

Saturday-

U. Va. Football Game
After The Game Show
Scholastic Scoreboard
Skull Session

Sunday-

Sunday Scoreboard
Washington Redskin Football

Albemarle-Coach Ralph Harrison
Diagram-Albemarle High Show
Pigskin Picks

Don't forget to listen to the complete schedule of Lane High School Basketball this fall and
winter with Chris Cramer doing the play-by-play on WCHV and WCCV-FM-your twin
sports voices of Central Virginia.

FIRST YEAR FOOTBALL SQUAD

Freshman Schedule:
Sept. 29
VPI

Charlottesville, Va. 2:00 p.m.

Oct. 6
U. of N .C.

Charlottesville, Va. 2:00 p.m.

Oct. 13
VMI

Charlottesville, Va. 2:00 p.m.

Oct. 27

u.

of Md.

College Park, Md. 3:00 p.m.

NAME
HT.
Tom Aug .....
...........................................6-1
Jack Autorino ...........................................6-1
Terry Bell ........................................................6-0
Bob Bischoff ........................................._ ..6-3
Charlie Blandford ..............................5-1116
Pete Bradford ............................................6-2
Ken Bradley ..................................................6-2
Neill Brady .....................................................6-2
Bob Bressan .............................................6-0
Jim Carrington ........
.......................'S-1
Bob Ekas ............................................................6-0
Brian Gruber ...........................................6-1
Dave Gruber ................................................6-2
Clinch Heyward .................................. 5-11
Jeff Hollister ................................................6-1
Brad Jordan ...................................................5-916
Bill Kettunen ·············-·-·······-·-··-·······6-1
Ed Kihm ..............................................................6-0
Randy Lestyk ............................................6-2
Steve Miller ..................................................6-2
Andy Minton ................................................5-10
Chuck Mooser -·--··-·----·-···-·····-···5-11
Sam Rhodes ...................................................6-2
Hunter Richards ....................................5-11
Dan Ryczek -···-·······-······················--··-··6-3
Abby Sallenger ····-···········-·--·····--···6-5
Paul Schrecker ..........................................G-1
Andy Selfridge ·········-·-·-···-·-··-·--6-3
Bill Shamel -·-·······-·······-······--·-·····-·····6-1
"Bub" Shreaves ···--··-·--··----6-1
Dave Smith ...................................................6-2
Richard Sterba -··-·····-··-······················6-1
Mike Sutt -··-·-·····-···········--····-··--·-.5-1016
Austin White ................................................6-3
Charlie Blackmon -········---.6-1
Steve Brickman -·-··-·-··----5-10
Randy Covington ..................- .......6-1
Bob Englander -·········-·--··--··-·6-0
George Peterson ·-·····-··---·-···---"-3
John Porterfield --····-···---···-··-6-0
Hugh Williams -·--·-·················--··--··6-2

WT.
186
220
187
181
187
225
185
197
219
164
190
184
197
174
186
171
168
199
216
230
190
181
209
181
203
218
184
196
171
202
170
182
163
194
160
165
200
175
220
180
220

POS.
FB
DE
HB
HB
LB
OT
DE
OE
DT
HB
HB
OE
DT
HB
QB
HB
QB
LB
DE
OG
HB
HB
OG
HB

c

OT
OT
FB
HB
LB
HB
QB
HB
OE
OE
HB
HB
HB
DE
HB
DE

HOMETOWN
Cincinnati, Ohio
Montclair, N.J.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Richmond, Va.
Louisville, Ky.
Leesburg, Va.
Onley, Va.
Vandergrift, Pa.
Levittown, Pa.
Alexandria, Va.
Chicora, Pa.
Woodbridge, Va.
Woodbridge, Va.
Columbia, S.C.
Marietta, Ohio
Atlanta, Ga.
Eastlake, Ohio
Westlake, Ohio
Butler, Pa.
Lansdale, Pa.
Charlottesville, Va.
Louisville, Ky.
Virginia Beach, Va.
Decatur, Ga.
Mentor, Ohio
Norfolk, Va.
Leechburg, Pa.
Cleveland Hts, Ohio
Marietta, Ohio
Nassawadox, Va.
Hampton, Va.
Baltimore, Md.
Shamokin, Pa.
washington, D.C.
Eufaula, Alabama
Charleston, S.C.
Weston, Mass.
Charlottesville, Va.
Arlington, Va.
Bronxville, N.Y.
Grosse Point, Mich.

Page Forty-One

�TV-AIR CONDITIONED

AREA CODE 703

TELEPHONE 296-7106

White House

Virginia

Motel

Telephone &amp;

U.S. ROUTE 250
1

MILE EAST OF

Telegraph Co.

CHARLOTTESVILLE
VIRGINIA

J IM WEST
Baseball Coach

RUDY'S

Best Wishes

Cleaning &amp; Dye
Works, Inc.

For A

Charlottesville, V a.

CRENSHAW'S
MOBILE
HOMES
Sales &amp; Service
MODERN PARK

Successful Season
Robert P. Englander
E. K. O'Meara

*AMERICANNA
*MAGNOLIA
*ARMOR

705 Preston Avenue
Willis E. Williams, Jr.
Laurence H. Gardner, II

Quality Used Trailers
Low Bank Rate Financing

Phones 296-7166

Southwestern Life
Also on The Corner -

Beside

Free Delivery
973-3404

Insurance Company
University Book Store

Page Forty-Two

Route 29, North
Charlottesville, Virginia

�Offers A Complete Dairy Service
A VARIETY OF

1\'Iilks and' Ice Creams
FTom the "Richest" to the "Slimingest"

and

Famous "Monticello" Butter
Phone 29-55-123
Grady Avenue at lOth Street

"Home Delivery"

BUSIIIESS SYSTEMS

and
fiLIIIG EQUIPMEIIT

[¥)~~©0~0@~

~l1JJ~O~~~~ (?@~~~

RICHMOND . VIRGINIA 23234

Trailways and new Inters-tate
highways bring you Faster,
Smoother and Safer travel.
NATIONWIDE THRU SERVICE
TOURS - CHARTERS
PACKAGE EXPRESS SHIPPING

TRAILWAYS
310 W. Main

295-5131

Page Forty-Three

�&lt;-&lt;-Food Fun /o1· Everyone''

'
Phone 295-9153 and Your Order Will Be Delivered in Minutes
THE PLACE THAT MAKES IT'S OWN PIZZA CRUST, SAUCES AND BREAD---THE ONLY THING WE USE
FROZEN IS ICE CUBES

"At the Corner"

Across from Fieldhouse

Under the Virginian
Emmet Street

1521 West Main Street

BOOI(S

Wyllie &amp; Thornhill, Inc.
Underwriters Distributors
Dealers

USED &amp; NEW

Corporate and Municipal
Securities

Fer All Departments

Active Markets in Virginia
Securities

Everything for the College
Man Exams -

Except answers to

Private Wire to Hayden Stone &amp;
Co., New York City

LP Records all

Musical Categories.

204 E. Market St.,
Charlottesville, V a.

University Book
Store
Middle of the Corner

Page Forty-Four

Telephone-296-7118
Teletype-703 296-5486
BILL GIBSON
Basketball Coach

Branches-Lynchburg and
Winchester, Va.

�.
----

VIRGINIA
VARSITY
SQUAD

FRONT .R OW (left to right) John Naponick, David McWilliams, Bob Serino, Pete Gray, Den~is Borchers, Braxton Hill, Rick
Constantme, Chuck Hammer, Frank Quayle, Bob Cascella, Boyd Page, Jim Willets, Bob Paczkosk1.
SECON D ROW-Paul Lockwood, Scott Montgomery, Paul Rogers, Bob Buchanan, Paul Klingensmith, Mike !~rvis, Van Krebs, Mal
MacGregor, Stan Kemp, Greg Shelly, Joe Hoppe, Steve Schilke, Greg Sturgeon, Gene Arnette and Paul Yew1s1ak.
THIJRD ROW-Rick Kotulak, Bill Lockwood Gary Saft Jeff Calamos Bob Kelly, Pete Schmidt, Gene Webb, Tom Thomas, Paul
Reeve, Bill Stone, Dave Wyncoop, Steve Bry~n, Al Ferr~ra, Tom Zelle~s, Larry Ronk, Dan Fassio, Coach George Blackburn.
F OURTH ~OW-Coach Ben Wilson, Jeff Anderson, Jim Ralston, Phil Shaw, Steve Whitcomb, Rick Brand, Bi.ll Matthes, Joe Ferens,
Bob Ranmgan, Dav~ Turner, Paul Reid, Jim Shannon, Mark Cristhilf, Tom Patton, Fred Moschel, and Al Smesky.

�Follow the Cavaliers
in the Sports Pages of The
DAILY PROGRESS!
All games reported in depth . . . plus
informative sidelights and highlights.
Pre-game and post game interviews
also provide interestinf:) insights to the
games.

rrRooted In History ..• In Step With The Future"

&lt;!tonrplinnmts uf

J]cdrJ! &lt;Craig &lt;Cnnsfrudinn Qtmnpatt!!
&lt;llirnrgrfohln Jtoab
296--8654

®lb j)lorgr

J~oab

~turhribgr

Dlqtfstnnt
&lt;Cannon
- 1J.1.essian 1J.1ills -

PagP Forty-Six

�A cou rtesy of the following banks of Charlottesville
for your en joyment o f the gam e-

PENALTIES
LOSS OF FIVE YARD S
1. Taking more than five times
out during either half (except for
replacement of injured player).
2. Illegal delay of game
3. Failure to complete substitution before play starts.
4. Violation of kickoff formation.
5. Player out of bounds when
scrimmage begins.
6. Putting ball in play before

16. Team not ready to play at
scheduled time
17. Violation of rules during intermission.
18. Illegal return of suspended
player.
19. Interference by member of
offensive team with defensive
player making pass interception.

29. Striking an opponent with
fist forearm, elbow or locked
han:ds, kicking or kneeing-Mandatory disqualification of offending player plus loss of fifteen
yards.
30. Foul within the one yard
line--half the distance to the goal.

Referee signals "Ready-for-play."
7. Failure to maintain proper
alignment of offensive team when
ball is snapped. Also, backfield
man illegally in motion.
8. Offside by either team or encroachment on neutral zone.
9. Attempt to draw opponents
offside.
10. Crawling by runner.
11. Illegal forward pass, (in-

L OSS OF FnTEEN YARD S
(Also loss of down.)
20. Interference with opportunity of player of receiving team
to catch a kick.
21. Illegal use of hands or arms
by offensive player,
22. Tackling or blocking defensive player who has made Fair
Catch.

OTHER PENALTIES
31. Interference by defensive
team on forward pass-passing
team's ball at spot of foul.
32. Forward pass being touched
by ineligible receiver beyond the
line of scrimmage--loss of fifteen
yards from spot preceding down
and loss of a down.

eludes intentional grounding of
forward pass). Also loss of down.
12. Taking more than two steps
after Fair Catch is made.
13. Player on line receiving
snap.
14. Any violation of the scrimmage formation.
15. Failure to stop one full second following shift.

23. Roughing the kicker.
24. Piling up, hurdling, clipping.
25. T a c k l i n g player out of
bounds, or running into player
obviously out of play.
26. Coaching from sidelines.
27. Defensive holding.
28. Invalid Signal for Fair Catch.

33. Flagrantly rough play or unsportsmanlike conduct - Mandatory disqualification plus loss of'
fifteen yards.
34. Eligible pass receiver who
goes out of bounds and later
touches a forward pass-loss of
down.

NATIONAL BANK &amp; TRUST COMPANY
CITIZENS BANK &amp; TRUST COMPANY
VIRGINIA NATIONAL BANK
Members Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Page Forty-Seven

�I Lineup

Of Advertisers

Aberan Herd of Edgehill ..................... 20
Acme Visible Records .............................. 43
Allied Foods, Inc. .......................................... 36
American Oil Company ........................ 35
Anderson Bros. Book Store ............. .18
Banks of Charlottesville .....•.....11, 47
Barracks Rd. Merchants Assoc ....... 7
Bascom Oil Company .............................31
Landon D. Birckhead ............................ 38
Boar's Head Inn ............................................32
Bradham &amp; Co. (Pomona Pipe) ... 8
Brunton &amp; Hicks ............................................36
Bernard M. Caperton-Antiques ... 27
Ch'ville Auto &amp; Truck Dealers ... 14
Ch'ville Distributing Company ... 21
Ch'ville Hardware ....................................... 32
Ch'ville Lumber Company .................. 32
Ch'ville Savings &amp; Loan Assoc . ... 29
Chevrolet .................................... Back Cover
City Laundry ...................................................... 32
Clarke Realty Company ....................... 34
Clearview Cleaners .....•..... Flip Card
Coca-Cola .......................... Center Spread
Joel Cochran .........................................................32
College Service Station ........................... 32
Colter Corporation ...................................... 16
Cooley-Webber Company .....•.............. 34
Claude W. Cotton Company ............ 16
Daley Craig Inc .............................................. ..46
Crenshaw's Mobile Homes .................. 42
Cropp Bros. ............................................................ 36
The Daily Progress ....................................... 46
Downtowner Motor Inn ........................ 33
Filtaire, Inc. ......................................................... 34
Gant Shirtmakers .. .Inside-Fr. Cover
Gilmore, Hamm &amp; Snyder .................. 16
Hanckel-Citizens Ins. Co. .................. 17
Robert H. Harris .............................................17
Hill &amp; Irving, Inc. ....................................... 17
Holden School of Art ................................. 38
Holiday Inn .........................................................37
Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge 35
Keller &amp; George ............................................. 2
Longines ..................................................................... 1
Lupo's .......................................................................... 44
Martin Hardware .........................................36
Maury Avenue Washette ..................... 27
Meadowbrook Pastry Shoppe ............ 27
Meadowbrook Pharmacy ........................ 5
Ed Michtom's, Inc. ....................................... 6
Montague, Miller &amp; Company ..... .18
Monticello Dairy .................•.............•...........43
Murphy Travel ................................................ 38
Olds ............................................................................... 23
Ovenaire, Inc. ...................................................... 35
G . Benton Patterson .................................36
Pepsi-Cola ............................................................... 33
Preddy-Teague Funeral Home ...... 16
The Reynolds Company ........................30
Rudy's Cleaning &amp; Dye Works ... 42
Seven Day Jr .................................................... 35
J. W. Sieg Co ................ln.-Back Cover
Southwestern Life Ins. Co ................... 42
Terrace Bowl ...................................................... 16
M. C. Thomas Furniture Co ............. 35
Trailways ..................................................................43
J. M. Turner ...................................................... 37
US Army ROTC ............................................. 36
University Book Store ........................... 44
University Drug Store ........................... 36
University Life Plan ................................. 3
Valley View Florist .................................... 18
Earl H . Vaughan, Inc ...............................36
Virginia Land Company .....................36
Virginia Telephone &amp; Telegraph 44
W C H V ..............................................................41
W E L K ............................................................... 38
W I N A ................................................................... 14
The Wayside Press ....................................... 34
Roy Wheeler Realty Company ......33
White House Motel .................................... 42
C. H. Williams Company ..............•.....48
Wyllie &amp; Thornhill ................................... 44
Yellow Cab &amp; Transit Co . .................. 27
The Young Men's Shop ........................... 17
Page Forty-Eight

C. H. WILLIAMS, Inc.
CHARLOTTESVILLE'S LEADING DEPT. STORE
SERVING CENTRAL &amp; NORTHERN VIRGINIA

212 East Main Street

Charlottesville, Va.

SCOTI STADIUM INFORMATION
FIRST AID ROOMS
First aid rooms are located by the fence on both the east
and west sides, in back of sections 4, 9, 17, and 21.
LOST AND FOUND ARTICLES
Inquire about lost and found articles at the ticket booth
by the main gate on the West side or consult an usher. On
Monday, all lost items are brought to the Athletic office at
University Hall.
PUBLIC PAY TELEPHONE STATIONS
Public pay phones are available on both sides of the
stadium, directly behind the Press box on the west side and
the President's box on the east side.
PUBLIC ADDRESS ANNOUNCEMENTS
Please do not ask to have announcements made or persons paged over the P A except in extreme emergencies. In
such a case, consult the head usher located above the Press
Box.
THE STADIUM
Scott Stadium, dedicated in 1931, was the gift of Frederic W.
Scott, of Richmond, as a memorial to his parents. Mr. Scott,
an alumnus of Princeton, was a member of the University's
Board of Visitors for many years.
The permanent seating capacity of 23,848 can be increased
to more than 30,000. In 1952, Virginia and Duke drew in excess
of 34,000 spectators.
THE CAVALIERS
Virginia athletic teams came to be known as Cavaliers
after the appearance of "The Cavalier Song" in 1924, words by
Lawrence Lee, Jr., '24, and original music by Fulton Lewis, Jr.,
'24.
THE COLORS
Orange and blue were adopted as Virginia's official athletic colors at a student mass meeting in the early spring of
1889. They were proposed by the late Allen Potts, '89, who
happened to be wearing an orange and blue scraf which he
brought home from a visit to Oxford University.

�KING

OF

BEERS

~/y~JfllldJ~~~mv~

~$flJ.flffiNKfPfiiJI411(~
THE LARGEST-SELLING BEER IN THE WORLD
ST. LOUIS
TAMPA

Distributed By:

-$wk.Jm

NEWARK

J. W. Sieg &amp;

LOS ANGELES
HOUSTON

Co. Inc., Charlottesville

�New Chevrolet lmpolo, foreground. Chevelle Concours, top right. Cornaro, "The Hugger," top left.

Dramatic!
Distinctive!
Daringly new!
Expect a lot of never-befores and nice-to-haves from
Chevrolet for 1968. You can count on nothing being
newer. Formal and fastback roof lines. Elegant new
interiors with exciting colors, fabrics, and easy-toreach instruments. Concealed headlights, Hide-AWay windshield wipers, and refreshing Astra Ventilation, available on many models.
NEW SILENT RIDE.
More effective body and engine mounts, quieter exhaust systems, and further improved shock absorbers. The result? Every new Chevrolet rides incredibly smoot~ and silent.
NEW MODELS, TOO.
Like the elegant Impala Custom Coupe and rugged
new Chevelle Nomad Station Wagons. For the
serious sports fan, there's the completely re-styled
Corvette Sting Ray, and the Chevelle SS 396 with
long-hood short-deck styling and a wider wheel

G..M
M•"' 0, " cm&lt;•C&lt;

stance to make it cling to the road better. Camara,
"The Hugger," features Astra Ventilation, and special hood on all SS models. What's more, there's a
larger 307-cubic-inch VB standard on Chevrolet,
Chevelle and Chevy II models for '68. And on
automatic transmission models, there's even a builtin heater that warms air en route to the carburetor
and increases engine efficiency during cold weather.
The new GM exhaust emission control is standard.
PROVED SAFETY FEATURES.
The famous proved GM-developed energy absorbing
steering column and many other popular safety items
are back again. Plus new features like energy absorbing front seat backs, safety armrests that shield
door handles, padded windshield
pillars, and seat belts for all passenger positions. Be smart. Be sure.
Buy now at your Chevrolet dealer's.

Free! Get Chevrolet's 60-page College Football Handbook
Chevrolet's College Football Handbook contains a complete run-down on all the
top teams, plus action photographs and inside stories by famous sports commentators. You'll also find the schedules and line-ups of all 33 NCAA games
to be televised this fall. It's yours for the asking at your Chevrolet dealer's.

- - _ •

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                    <text>_ Wallpack News

N. C. STATE ~- BUFFALO
Military Day
Raleigh, North Carolina

September 23, 1967

Price $1.00

�.'

International 175B Loader owned by T. A. Loving &amp; Company. This Loader
is working at the Crown Zeiierback building site in Raleigh.

pRODUClNG
GOOD WORK

AND
pROfiTS

Wherever the job ... whatever the condition, you
can be assured of good work and profits with
International Crawler Tractors, Loaders, Pay.
scrapers, Payhaulers and Hough Payloaders.
With this equipment and our Complete Parts and
Service Facilities, you'll get better performance,
production and profits on every job.
Let us assist you in selecting the right equipment for your job. We have been serving contractors in North Carol ina for 36 years.

INTERNATIONAr
HOUGHe
•

AND

e

\!)

CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT

North Carolina Equipment Company
RALEIGH • GREENVILLE • WILMINGTON • GREENSBORO • WINSTON -SALEM

�score with Jesse Jones franks!

�A Great Moment in Sport Revisited.
Two years ago, Ogronski of Southern embarked on a
classic run for paydirt that could have snatched victory
from the Jaws of defeat-only to be interrupted by a .
commercial message. In response to overwhelming pubhc
indignation, NCNB is pleased to provide the results of
Ogronski's run. Ogronski failed to score, the game ended,
13-8.
Southern

~orth Carolina ~a tiona! Bank

BANKAMERICARD
MICHAEL OGRONSKI
~ - = I== • : .:. :

3lf 2 12 3 lf 5b l8CJ

Today, Michael Ogronski lives in relative obscurity in a North
CaroIIna
. commumty
. he prefers not to name. W hen asked
ed.tabout
h. .
Jete
Cr
l
IS VIews on NCNB BankAmericard, The Comp
s) said
. h.
'
Card, Mr. Ogronski (after conferring wtth
. IS attorney
veling
"Th e 1·deaI credtt
· card- we use 1t
· tors
•
hoppmg, tra
without my
and entertaining. Why, I wouldn't go anywhere
NCNB BankAmericard."

�TDDA!'S IAMB
The University of Buffalo, with
more than 20,000 students, is a newcomer to the North Carolina State
University football schedule, with the
Bulls also going against their first
Atlantic Coast Conference opponent.
The Bulls, however, will be playing
Virginia next Saturday at Charlottesville.
"While the average football fan in
our area might not know much about
Buffalo's football program, our coaching staff is aware of the fine program
that Doc Urich has installed since taking over as head coach two years ago,"
says Wolfpack coach Earle Edwards.
"Doc has been an associate of Ara
Parseghian's since 1951. He left Parseghian at Notre Dame to take over
at Buffalo."
The Bulls had a surprisingly easy
time in beating Kent State last week,
30-6. And Wolfpack scout Claude Gibson warned the State players that the
Bulls will throw more than North
Carolina did in bowing to the Wolfpack, 13-7.
"Mick Murtha is a more poised and
experienced passer and option-runner
than Carolina's Gayle Bomar. We had
trouble with Bomar, so I'm certain
Murtha will give us fits," says Gibson.
Murtha, in a standout sophomore
year, gained 1,241 yards passing in
1966, while fullback Lee Jones led all
major-college players in the number of
touchdowns scored with 16 a year ago.
These two head the high-scoring Bull
'T' and "I-T" offense.
On defense, halfback Tom Hurd is
regarded as a fine pro prospect. He led
the Bull secondary with six interceptions last year, while also returning
punts. Senior Ted Gibbons is considered the Bulls best interior lineman
and his number 67 will be a stickout
in Buffalo's 4-4 otre Dame style defense. Buffalo will blitz and crash their
ends a lot to upset the Wolfpack's offensive continuity. This was very e!fec-

tive in their win over Kent State.
Murtha passed for one touchdown
and ran an option play 38-yards for
another score against Kent State, while
Jones scored once.
Dick Johnston, sportswriter for the
Buffalo Evening News, gives us an incite on the Bulls for 1967:
Anyone who has been close to the
University of Buffalo football scene has
to look forward to this, Doc Urich's
second season as coach.
The Bulls have assimilated Doc's
system and there are lettermen for
nearly every position on offense and
defense. Some of the athletes Doc and
his aides recruited themselves are ready
to play.
Which would make everything look
rosy-until you check the schedule. UB
never has played a tougher one.
UB had an exciting offense last season, however, and nearly every game
was a good one. Win or lose, the same
should be true of 1967, only more so.
Quarterback Mickey Murtha, recordsetting passer as a sophomore, has a
few receivers who can hang onto the
ball when it comes their way, in the
open or in thick traffic.
Lee ]ones, the nation's top touchdown-maker in ma;or-college football,
and the versatile Rick Wells, give the
Bulls running strength. With a slight
change made in the offense, the small
but elusive Ken Rutkowski should be
utilized more fully this year and there
are some sophomores who should be
able to cause excitement.
The defense seems in good hands,
particularly the all-important linebacking corps. The defensive backfield is
tu;o-thirds veteran. Ted Gibbons is
probably as good a defensive tackle as
UB foes will see all year.
But the offensive line is the problem.
It probably will be manned by lettermen playing new positions and by
sophomores. Tackle, especially, is a
problem. So is depth. The offensive line

must develop fast for Murtha and his
aerial circus to get off the ground and
for the runners to get a start.
The Wolfpack had to come from
behind to whip its old rival, North
Carolina, 13-7. And when State and
Carolina play, the players on both
sides are keyed-up to a fever pitch.
Now Edwards and his staff have to
hope that the Wolfpack doesn't have
a letdown in this game. They cannot
afford it against a team as strong offensively or as aggressive defensively as
is Buffalo.
Edwards plans no lineup changes
from the one that opened against the
Tar Heels (See Center-spread of program).
When Jim Donnan and Harry Martell hooked up on that 55-yard scoring
pass, it was the longest TD pass by the
Wolfpack since Jim Rossi hit Mike
Clark with a 70-yarder against Virginia
in 1962. Donnan was the Pack's total
offense leader with 142-yards, hitting
on eight of 16 passes for 140 yards in
the air.
Halfback Tony Barchuk led the rushing attack with 53 yards net, while
Bobby Hall and Martell each caught
three passes. Gerald Warren gave a
indication that he'll ably fill the shoes
of kicking specialist Harold Deters
when he kicked two field goals of 44
and 33 yards. Another important aspect
of Warren's kicking was his kickoffs,
all four of which went into or beyond
the end zone with no UNC returns. It
has been many, many games since the
Wolfpack has had that kind of kickoffs.
orth Carolina State University
is happy to honor all the servicemen
and their families here today as
part of Military Day on campus.
The Army and Air Force ROTC
Units and the athletics department
are co-hosts and welcome these men
from our military services.

3

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FOR THIS GAME

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North Carolina State University
University of Buffalo
N. c. State freshman

. 50

......... 51
86

Wolfpack Football
Roy Clogston
Captains
Players ..... ·
1967 Varsity
The W olfpack

6
. . . .44
..... 45

61
67

Buffalo Football
Coach Urich
Buffalo Administration
Players

52
.53
54

Features
Today's Game . · ·
Campus Building
Claude Gibson
Bonus . ... . · · · · · · · ·
N. C. State Outlook
College Days . . .
Alumni Association
Publications
1967 Freshman Team
N.C. S. U. Band ...
10, 9, s•... 0 space research
Ph.D's "and football ....... .
Foundations are for Building
Continuing Knowledge
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GENEVA
MJker of WJtches Of The Hipest Chracter
For Ower A Centui'J

3
10

12

.. . 14

32
24
38

. . . 41

48

.56
62
. .82
90
92

N. C. State Coaching Staff
Earl Edwards
Carey Brewbaker
Claude Gibson ...
Ernie Driscoll
AI Michaels
Bill Smaltz
H. B. McCullough
AI Proctor

16
.. 26
. ......... 29

.... 30
......... 33
.34
36
... 43

Departments
Administration ....... .
N. C. State Alma Mater
N. C. State Schedule .
Player Speed Chart
Ace Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
N. C. State Athletic Staff &amp; Coaches
ACC football champions &amp; statistics
N. C. State football honor roll
Index of advertisers
1966 final statistics .
Stadium information

8

21
22

.31

. 59

76
. 81

85
.. 88

98
.100

. .
Published by North Carolina Slate Wolf
Wolfpack News is the official program of North Carolina Slate Unov~:"!~tment, N. C. State and Ed1tor. Program P;ck. Club.
PrePJred and edited by Jim Rasor. State photos by VISual A•d\ 5.,':,p
eSign by
Communicatives. Printed by North Carolina State University Pnn
·

�The Technical Man and Color
When talking color, the TECHNICAL MAN at work speaks
knowingly of Tristimulus, Metamerism, Reflectance and Wavelength, but- on reflection he knows too, that color is a natural,
basic element of all that is beautiful.

For example, try reading this ...

What is pink? a rose is pink
By a fountain's brink.
What is red? a poppy's red
In its barley bed.
What is blue? the sky is blue
Where the clouds float thro'.
What is white? a swan is white
Sailing in the light.
What is yellow? pears are yellow,
Rich and ripe and mellow.
What is green? the grass is green,
With small flowers between.
·w hat is violet? clouds are violet
In the summer twilight.
What is orange? why, an orange,
Just an orange!

Christina Georgina Rossetti
1873

... on a spectrophotometer.

Atlantic
CHEMICAL CORPORATION
Nutley, New Jersey

Where Faith in the Future Continues to Provide a Stimulating Environment
-and an Occasional Dreamer is Allowed to Flourish.

5

�1\nn~~~
ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY

MEN'S WORLD
Score those
extra points
at P enneys!
EVERYTHING
FROM SOCKS TO
SUITS FOR THE
STUDENT AND
EXECUTIVE. · · ·
QUALITY YOU'RE
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PRICED FOR THE
MODERN BUDGET!

ROY B. CLDBSTDN

Roy Clogston has spent the past 19
years as athletics director at. North
Carolina State University, WI.th the
Wolfpack's intercollegiate ~thlehcs pr~­
gram and facilities a tnbute to hls
guidance.
Roy is one of the senior member~,
in terms of service, among the Atlantic
Coast Conference's athletics directors.
He serves the ACC as chairman of the
public relations committee and as a
member of the basketball committee.
Besides his duties as athletics director, the 62-year-old Clogston is also
manager of the Reynolds Coliseum,
where a variety of events, including
Ice Capades, is scheduled each year.

This label ... stands
for good looks
plus durability!

Roy succeeded J. L. Von Glahn on
August 1, 1948, after serving as coach
and athletics director at St. Lawrence
University from 1929 to 1948.
Clogston has worked at improving
the Wolfpack's athletic physical plant
and he keeps a close tab on the 12
intercollegiate varsity and 10 freshman
teams that compete under the Wolfpack's Red and White colors.
Under Clogston's administration the

6

William. Nea.l Reyno~ds was opened. A
new sw1mmmg stad1um, a new baseball field, and one of the fastest running tracks in the nation are all
_
campus facilities available to Wolf 0~
teams. With the opening of c~:t~r
Stadium last year, a long-time project
of Clogston's, North Carolina State now
has the finest in athletics structures.

Roy was graduated with a B.A. degree in physical education from Springfield College in 1928, where he was a
five-sports letterman. That year the
Ballston Lake, N. Y., native joined the
athletics staff at Middlebury College
for one year. He then moved to St.
Lawrence and remained there until
1948.
He holds an M.A. degree in educa. f rom ew York University.
t lOll
· h ClogN
a Commander m t e avy
sto~ w~ rld War II and saw duty on
dunng Ho is still active in the Raleigh
Guam. eserve umt.
· H e 1s
·
an av1·d
Nava1 Re
golfer.
.
ton
marned
the former Ruby
1
C.~~~ of Raleigh in 1951. They re~an a t 2503 Glenwood Ave.
s1de

�•

EUCLID 72-41

EUCLID 72-31 •

•

EUCLID 72-51

EUCLID 72-21 •

WHAT A COINCIDENCE ... to have so much in common
EXTRA REACH • REMARKABLE CAPACITY • POWER TO SPARE • SURPRISING MANEUVERABILITY

... and think of the life expectancy! Small wonder ... when you're built like an elephant.

MITCHELL DISTRIBUTING COMPANY

IE u c Ll D ~·~·~·c:~srRuc:.:::: :ous:::.:Q~I:MENTu"~ ' '
7

�ADMINISTRATION

Fall Flowers From

FALLON'S FLORIST
"We Grow The Flowers
We Sell"
Phone TE 2-8347
205 FayeHeville St.

Town and Country
Tire Service, Inc.

CHANCELLOR AND STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICERS-Miss Jo
Lincolnton, secretory; Chancellor John T. Coldwell; and Wesley McCiu neen Smith of
S. C., president. Standing: Linwood Harris of Raleigh, treasurer; and Rreb of Pendleton,
0 ert Shipley of
Watauga County, vice president.

George Thompson, President '52

Service Is Our Business
Quality Is Our Trade-Mark

Let us insure your safety with
the finest in MOHAWK TIRES
or recapping

218 S. Dawson St.

8

Raleigh, N . C.

Dr. Rolph E. Fodum
Chairman af Faculty Athletic
CommiHee

John W. Duffield
Chairman Faculty Senate

Harry C. Kelly
Provost

�LITTLE All-AMERICANS

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lONG

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FARMI
Call for Home Delivery
9

�1 can buy
eight times
as much electricity
as you could!

BOW??
Along with other dynamic universities across the nation, North Carolina
State University has faced pressing demands for additional buildings since
the end of World War II.
Cognizant of the fact that these demands would not likely lessen in the
foreseeable future, University officials
in 1962 developed a long-range master
plan for the development of the institution's physical facilities.
The -immediate objective of the planning experts was to formulate a plan
to accommodate an eventual enrollment
of 15,000 or more students and the related r.ese~rc~ and extension programs
of an mshtutwn of such magnitude .

NORTH STATE
PYROPHYLLITE CO., INC.
GREENSBORO, N. C. 27407

Qtdi•J
®

Major emphasis in N. c. State's plan
is o~ high-rise building so as to gain
maximum use from the available space
~round th~ campus. The high-rise idea
1s already m effect as evidenced by the
recently erected Lee and Sullivan Halls
and the nine-story cl~emistry building
now under constructwn. Construction
also is underway on three new dormitories of nine, 10, and 12 stories.
NCSU has a multi-million dollar
building program underway, either in
planning or construction stages.
Construction is well underway or
nearing completion on the following
projects:

REFRACTORY FURNACE
-The Food Science Building, scheduled to open in the near future.

LININGS INSTALLED

BOILERS, INCINERATORS, KILNS, ANNEALING
FURNACES, CUPOLAS, ALL INDUSTRIAL
HIGH TEMPERATURE APPLICATIONS

Box 7247

JO

-A nine-story chemistry building,
costing $2.3 million.

-The Phytotron building, a $2.5
f I used for enmi 1011 1·esearch facility
· mental
control o p ant growth.
VJrOll
'
'1]'

Phone (919} 299-1441
Manufacturers

-Three dormitories, to cost $3.3 million which will house a total of 1,100
students.

Installers

-The Dearstyne Avian Health Cendisease research center,
te1,. 'a poultry 00
costing $465,0 .

�-Agricultural research facilities,
costing $500,000 and being developed
on the recently acquired 800-acre Finley "Farm property for swine, poultry
and dairy research.
-Development of a court area in the
academic center of the campus to make
for a more efficient use of space and to
add a more pleasing atmosphere to the
heart of the campus.

"New Dormitories"

Approved and in the advanced planning stages are these major projects:
-A complex of greenhouses, to cost
$535,000, will be erected at the westem edge of the campus.
-Fifty new units, costing $750,000
for the married student apartment
complex.
-School of Forestry building, to
house research and teaching facilities,
at a cost of $1.25 million.
-A nuclear science and engineering
research center, to cost $1.9 million.
SCHOOL O'F

-A greatly enlarged student center
housing all student activities and music
organizations at a cost of $3 million.

l'ORESTRY,NORTH

C"'RO LI NA

ST .... TE

"New Forestry Building"

-A School of Education building,
costing $4.5 million, to house all departments in the school.
-A $3.7 million addition to the
D. H. Hill Library. This building will
be connected to present facilities now
occupied by the Student Union and
the present library.
-A $500,000 animal research center
to be developed in the research area
west of the Food Science Building.
Also approved for construction, provided non-state financing is available,
is a $5.5 million structure to house the
expanding programs in continuing education.
The sounds of the hammer and the
rivet gun will be heard for many years
to ~orne at N. C. State University.

"Academic Court Area"

11

�"Beefeaters 'Haven"

the~GUSltd.
RALEIGH-DURHAM HIGHWAY

PHONE 787·3505
FEEDING TIME
SUNDAY

5 . 30 PM· 11 30 PM

5 30 PM · 10 00 PM

SATURDAYS (During Football Season}
4:30 to 11 :30

~

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THAD EURE, JR.
Barnmasters

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Tractor Parts and Service
5413 Hillsboro St.

61 S Mitchell St.

Raleigh, N. C.

Richmond, Va.

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12

Johnny Clements, the 42-year-old
freshman football coach of N. C. State,
has become one of the greatest leaders
of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes
in this state.
Neither time or circumstance has
stopped him in his quest to become as
fine a Christian as possible-and help
others along that same path.
Although Clements stays busy teac~­
ing-he is associate professor of physrcal education at State-he has somehow found time, despite his football
coaching, to attend the Southeastern
Theological Seminary at the town of
Wake Forest. There he has taken
courses in New Testament, Church
History and Christian Ethics.
An elder at the White Memorial
Presbyterian Church in Raleigh, he
speaks whenever possible for the FCA,
which is having its second week of
conference here at the Blue Ridge Assembly this week. He recently addressed the Associate Reform Presbyterian
Church in Burlington.
"This is something I've felt called
to do," says Clements, who played
wingback during the "Charlie Justice
Era" at Carolina.

Jack Wilson Supplied Impetus
What started it?
"It wasn't one thing, but a series of
things," says Clements. "I began teaching eighth graders in Sunday School.
And my wife, the former Mary Lou
Rice of Ashland, has helped in my
Christian development.
"Then we heard about the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and began
a chapter at State. The chapters at
Carolina and Duke aided us a great
deal. An individual who did a lot for
our chapter was Jack Wilson, a Raleigh

boy who played halfback at Duke. He's
now chaplain at the Naval Academy."
Clements, a native of Crewe, Va.,
pinpoints 1963 as the time he really
started taking a stand for Christ. "I
attended an FCA conference at Association Island in New York, and it had
a great impact on me.
"~our or fiv~ months ago I almost
decrded to go mto full-time Christian
work, but was advised not to I
. was
I
to d my work with the FCA and with
the young people would be more of
an active ministry that if I tacked Reverend on my name."

'Nothing Like Being Here'
The father of three children-Sue
14, Chuck, 12, and Jan 9-Clement~
believes this FCA confer:nce can make
a tremendous difference to a yo g
"Th
.
un
man.
. ere _rs nothing like being here
and shanng m this."
He noted a young man shakin
hands and talking with Bill Wad!
quarterback for the Chicago Bears and
a Christian athlete. "Nothing takes the
place of something like that," Clements
said.
''This has grown tremendously in the
last four years," he noted. "It has
grown from one conference in '63 to
nine different conferences throughout
the country this year. Three years ago
we had about 15 FCA chapters in
North Carolina. Now there are over
100 and possibly as many as 150."
Clements brought 32 young men
with him here.
And that's not all. He is soon planning to open a Christian day camp for
boys and girls 11 miles north of
Raleigh.
Here is a man who is determined
to take an active stand for his beliefs.
He is letting nothing stand in his path.

�Open Doily and SundayCatering-Toke-Out Service
Barbecue
Chicken
Child's Plates
Barbecued Beef
Hot Dogs
Hamburgers
Brunswick
Stew

CHICKEN BOXES TO GO

UNCLE DON'S

INC.

of Hargett St.
The Quality Store For Men
Oxxford
Kuppenheimer
Kingsridge
Varsity Town
Southwick
Churchill Hats
Resistol Hats
Hathaway Shirts
Arrow Shirts
Sulka Ties
Knothe Pajamas

Your Downtown ticket office for the "Big Four"
sport events.

13

�A SELLOUT-lndicat~ve of the. overw~elming success enjoyed by the NCSU Friends of
the Colleg~ concerts. IS th1s. typ1cal Fr~ends audience, who come from far and near to
hear the f1nest class1cal artists available.

MAKE
EVERY YARD
COUNl•.
DOUBLE!
Double because you'll be
earning a commission while you
earn your college degree.
All it takes is a few hours a
week and a six-week summer
camp. It's that easy in Army
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Whether you plan a civilian
or a military career, Army ROTC
gives you the kind of training
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motivate, organize and lead
men. You'll learn them all in
Army ROTC.
Get the details from your Professor of Military Science at
any ROTC college.
Your future, your decision ...
choose Army ROTC.

BONUS

North ~arolina State University pres~nts a Wide range of cultural activities for students, faculty and public.
Included are concerts of both classical and popular music, a theatre and
a musician-in-residence.
Headlining the 1967-68 cultural season is the acclaimed Friends of the
College Series. Now in its ninth year,
the Series has a membership of 18,500
from more than 60 communities in
North Carolina and other states.
The first program of the season will
be presented on September 28 and 29
at William Neal Reynolds Coliseum by
the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.
Other artists who will appear in the
Friends of the College Series this year
include the famed pianist Claudio
Arrau, the inimitable Brigit Nilsson
with tenor Sandor Konya, the Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, the
Canadian Ballet, the French National
Dance Company and the popular
Regimental Band of the Welsh Guards.
Another facet of the entertainment

14

offered by NCSU, the New Arts concerts, bring the best in popular music
to the campus.
The concerts will open on October 7
with the popular song stylings of
Glenn Yarbrough. Other artists booked
to appear this year include singer
Dionne Warwick, the Lee Evans Trio,
the Lettermen and the New Orleans
jazz Preservation Hall Band.
The Frank Thompson Theatre, organized in 1964, will present both
classical and modem plays which exemplify new concepts in drama.
Theatre Director Ira Allen also takes
the plays into the dormitories during
the academic year.
A special chair was established at
N. C. State during the 1965-66 academic year to give students the opportunity to hear and learn from master
musicians.
This year the chair will be occupied
by Bunyan Webb, a master of the
classical guitar.
Taught by the wor.ld's ~oremost artists including Segovia, his command
of the difficult techniques of the classical guitar have been acclaimed by the
greatest critics.

�SODVECO®

World's Leading Manufacturer of
SULFUR DYES

for Textiles
SODYESUL®Iiquids for faster shades at less cost
SODYEVAT®Iiquids for versatility and economy

DYKOLITE thiocondensate dyes for new, brighter colors

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA

&lt;sO DYECO)

PANY

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Division of M~'ARI~E7TAW

15

�CUSTOM
BRICI(

EARLE EDWARDS

co.
Over 200 Textures, Colors &amp; Sizes
of Brick

Also Glazed Brick, Tile &amp;
Handmade Brick

Your Call Starts Delivery

Dia I 834-2586
Engineers Bldg. , Corner Glenwood &amp;
Jones Sts.

Raleigh, N. C.

Come on in the Opportunity is Fine .

Fee paid positions
are available at

AMERICAN
PERSONNEL
For qualified candidGtes
Weekly interviews by top
National firms in our office.
Write or Call

AMERICAN PERSONNEL
1001 B B &amp; T Bldg.
Role1gh, N . C.
828-0716

304 F~rst Un1on Bk. Bldg
Durham, N . C
688-8051

Open: Mon .-Fn . 9-5 , Sot

9-1 ,

Evemngs by Appointment

North Carolina State University football under Earle Edwards could be
described as a low pressure program
with high pressure results as the respected coach enters his 14th year with
the Wolfpack in 1967.
Edwards does not desire a large
coaching staff or large football squads,
stressing quality in his recruiting program instead of quantity. The attrition on his seven-man staff and his
football squad is the smallest in the
Atlantic Coast Conference. But the results have been productive with the
\Volfpack winning ACC football titles
in 1957 and 1964, and sharing crowns
in 1963 and 1965, while finishing second in 1960 and 1966.
Many knowledgeable football people
credit the sound footing that the Wolfpack football program has to the continuity of Edwards' coaching staff,
which has had only three changes in
14 years and still has three members
of the original staff which came with
Edwards to State in 1954. All three replacements have been made with
former State players who played under
their coach. Edwards has been at
orth Carolina State longer than any
of the other 24 men who have directed

Wolfpack football fortunes since the
sport was first played here in 1892. He
ranks second in seniority among the
ACC head coaches.
The popular Edwards, now in his
32nd season of intercollegiate coaching, was named ACC "Coach of the
Year" in 1957, 1963, and 1965, and
NCAA District Three "Coach of the
Year" honors were added in 1965.
Fred Russell, Sports Editor of the
Nashville (Tenn.) BANNER and
former President of the Football Writers Association of America, noted. "All
factors considered, what college football coach has done the best job over
the past five or six years? I think my
vote would go to Earle Edwards of
rorth Carolina State University . . .
What impresses me most about Edwards' work, year after year, is that
his material can't compare with that
of Duke, North Carolma, Clemson and
Maryland. Each September he brings
in fewer freshmen than his main rivals
. . . There should be some kind of
national recognition for coaches such
as Edwards, who make the most with
what they have."
State's 56-69-6 record under Edwards is misleading, since 65 percent

�NOW THAT WE'VE GOT
YOUR ATTENTION ...
In your plans to expand or relocate, be sure to investigate
the facilities, service and assistance we have to offer at Peden.
When your decision relates to:
Structural Steel, Building Fabrication, Building Erection,
Engineering Back-up, Competitive Prices, Service
Center Items
... send for our brochure or pick up the phone and call
919/832-2081. All inquiries confidential.

~~~

§§ ~'~§

~
P(;O(;N
~ ~ST(;(;L

Steel for Community Strength

PEDEN STEEL COMPANY
P. 0. BOX 9514

RALEIGH, N. C.

�SERVING THE COLLEGE
FOR 20 YEARS

RALEIGH'S NEWEST

ACME

Glam-0-Rama

AND FINEST

CLEANERS

Laundry &amp; Cleaners
1 HOUR

CLEANING

1 HOUR

CLEANING

3 HOUR

SHIRT SERVICE

3 HOUR

SHIRT SERVICE

RALEIGH &amp; CARY

New Bern Ave.

P. 0. Box 1954

Phone 722-5275

W. R. WEIR AUCTION COMPANY
We Sell Both Real and Personal Property
212 North Liberty Street
General Brokeage

Appraisals

WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.

Compliments of . . .

NORFOLK
SOUTHERN
RAILWAY
COMPANY
RALEIGH, N. C.

of the games have been played on the
road. Sixty of the 131 games have
been decided by a touchdown ~r less,
with State winning 26 and losmg 34
of them. The advantages of playing in
new Carter Stadium will help in this
area.
For his outstanding service to State,
the North Carolina State Alumni Association, Inc., in 1963 presented Edwards its Award of Merit made annually to a non-alumnus. '
A re~ord of which Edwards is justly
proud 1s that of the 196 letter-winners
in football, all but 14 have graduated
or are presently completing requirements for their degrees.
Upon graduation from Penn State
in 1931, he entered the field of industrial engineering, his college major. But
after two years he turned to football
coaching at Princeton (N.J.) Prep i~
1~33 and moving to Ebensburg (Pa.)
H1gh a year later. He remained at
Ebensburg until 1936 when Bob Higgins, the Penn State coach for whom
Edwards had played end, selected him
to coach the Nittany Lion ends. He
~~s. at P:nn. State for 13 years, before
JOmmg B1gg1e Munn at Michigan State
in 1949. While he was end coach nd
chief scout for the Spartans, Michi;an
State was twice undefeated and won
the Rose Bowl game in 1954.

~he 59-year-old Greensburg, Pa.,
~1at11vedholds. a Mfaster's Degree in physICa e ucahon rom Penn State. Edwards has twice directed the successful Coach of the Year football clinics
for NCAA District Three. He is currently a member of the Board of
Trustees of the American Football
Coaches Association (AFCA).
Edwards and the former Mary Rodgers of Greensburg, Pa., were married
in 1931, and currently reside at 613
Dixie Trail. They have three children
and seven grandchildren.

�19

�Cedarapids Super G60CA-E Asphalt Plant owned by Thompson-Arthur Paving Company, Greensboro, N. C.

Producing Asphalt
For Carolina Highways
CEDARAPIDS Quality Equipment ... the best
way to produce Asphalt and Aggregate. When
you buy CEDARAPIDS Asphalt Mixing Plants,
Rock Crushing and Paving Equipment, you' II
be assured of getting the unit you need to
meet your specification requirements, tonnage
demands and operating condition. You' II also
be assured of knowing that we are nearby with
modern maintenance, repair foci I ities and
prompt field service when you need it.
Let our Engineering Department help you select CEDARAPIDS equipment with time proven
performance on every job.

Asphalt Mixing Plants
Asphalt Pavers
Crushing &amp; Screening Plonts

Construction, 8nJustrial~rJvlaterial DianJling equipment

A. E. Finley &amp; Associates, Inc.
.
RALEIGH
\
20

Finley Bldg.-Cameron Village
Phone 834-8411

CHARLOTTE

COLUMBIA

3637 H. Graham Street
Phone 333-0786

Sumter Highway
Phone 782-3983

I

�What's behind
the feather?
Why don "t you Join the Independents?
Let First Federal show you the way today!

If State will throw everything

else at their opponents, we'll
be glad to donate the kitchen

The Alma Mater

Where the winds of Dixie softly
blow o'er the fields of Caroline,
There stands ever cherished, N.C.
State, as thy honored shrine.
So lift your voices! Loudly sing
from hill to oceanside!
Our hearts ever hold you, N. C.
State, in the folds of our love

The feather quill pen was used
in signing the Declaration of Independence; so First Federal's
making the feather the symbol of
financial independence through
a planned program of retirement
savings.

/A. FEDERAL

sink.

WADSWORTH
WRECKING CO., INC.

W~AVJ~~~

and pride.
111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1

Words by
Alvin M. Fountain, '23
Music by
Bonnie F. Norris, Jr., '23

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RANCH MOTEL
&amp; RESTAURANT
The Red and White from State

.NOll/eLL's
CLAN CAMERON SHOP AND
VILLAGE SQUIRE. CAMERON VILLAGE
ANO NORTH HILLS. RALEieH

85 Modern Rooms with TV,
Dioi-A-Motic Phones, Swimming Pool

We're the Red and White from
State
And w e know we are the best.
A hand behind our back, we can
Take on all the rest.
Come over the Hill, Caroline.
Devils and Deacs stand in line.
The Red and the White from
N. C. State (Yell) Go State! !

Convenient to Colleges
Near A i rport, Dorton Arena ,
State Fair Ground s &amp; Corter Stadium

1 Mile from City Limits on Hwy. 70 W.
3829 Raleigh-Durham Hwy.

787-3131

"First
in Fashion for
Young Men and Women
in the
Carolinas".

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THREE FINE
STORES IN RALEIGH

Words and music by
J. Perry Watson, Director of Music

21

�3 YEAR FOOTBALL
RALEIGH'S FINEST FURNITURE STORE

SCHEDULE

1968
Sept. 14 at Wake Forest
Sept. 21 at N. Carolina
Sept. 28 at Oklahoma
Oct.

5 at S. Methodist

Oct.

12

S. CAROLINA

Eastern Carolina's largest displays of
fine furniture by

Oct.

19

VIRGINIA

Oct.

26

MARYLAND

Heritage, Drexel, Henredan, Biggs

Nov.

2

Nov.

9 at Duke

and many other fine brands

Nov. 16

0

y6!LII ~tlme
to enjOIJ it more ...
11= ITS FRC)ZEN

Buy

Dulanq
Finest N a.me in
Frozen Foods

CLEMSON
FLA. STATE

MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY
TILL 9 P.M.
WED. TILL 1 P.M.

828-2557

1969

1 Y2 Miles Beyond Meredith College
Raleigh

Hillsboro St. Ext.

Sept. 20
Oct.

e _:e ·. e ·:_
•

•

'.

I'

UNC

Sept. 27 at Maryland
3 at Miami

Oct.

11 at S. Carolina

Oct.

18 at Virginia

Oct.

25

Serving Eastern N. C.
and Southern Va.

DUKE

Nov.

1

W. FOREST

Nov.

8

PENN ST.

Nov. 15

HOUSTON

Nov. 22 at Florida State

•

PERSONNEL CONSULTANTS
1970
Sept. 19 at N. Carolina

·- _·:- ·· ·:_
;

0

•

•

•

I'

••

TEXTURE-SHAPE-COLOR

Sept. 26
Oct.

S. CAROLINA

3 at Florida

Oct.

10

Oct.

17 at Duke

Oct.

24

Oct.

31 at Kentucky

E. CAROLINA
MARYLAND

KEY INGREDIENTS OF
ATTRACTIVE BORDEN BRICK
PLUS A

LOT OF AOOEO SERVICE

:. &lt;
••'
.

•

,·

l

'

.'

.

•

,

Nov.

7

VIRGINIA

Nov. 14 at W. Forest
Nov. 21 at Tulane

... . .

:'

Games to be played in Carter Stadium
are in capital letters.
GOLDSBORO DURHAM SANFORD

22

&amp;.
rORT SNELLING

PARTIME DIVISION
615 OBERLIN RD.
832-0591

12th FLOOR
CAPITAL CLUB BLDG•
RALEIGH, N. C.

834-3692

�WATSON ELECTRICAl.
CONSTRUCTION CO.
Burlington, Durham, Fayetteville, Greenville, Raleigh,
Rocky Mount and Wilson, North Carolina
"Poleline"

"Underground"

"Lighting"

"Electric Heat"

To Any Athlete
There are little eyes upon you,
And they're watching night and day.
There are little ears that quickly
Take in every word you say;
There are little hands all eager
To do anything you do;
And a little boy who's dreaming
Of the day he'll be like you.
You're the little fellow's idol;
You're the wisest of the wise,
In his little mind about you,
o suspicions ever rise;
He believes in you devoutly,
Holds that all you say and do,
He will say and do, in your way
When he's a grown-up like you.
There's a wide-eyed little fellow,
Who believes you're always right,
And his ears are always open,
And he watches day and night;
You are setting an example
Every day in all you do,
For the little boy who's waiting
To grow up to be like you.

Electrical work at Velvet Cloak Inn
was done by Watson Electrical Construction Co.

RESIDENTIAL

INDUSTRIAL

COMMERCIAL

INSTITUTIONAL

WHEN YOU BUILD OR
REMODEL BE SURE TO

�CAROLINA MAINTENANCE CO., INC.
Ronnie Shavlik, Pres.
Steve Webb, Vice-Pres.
Bob Goss, Sales Mgr.
Harry Dickson, Mgr.
Specialized Cleaning
Division
Ronnie Shovlik
All Americon

1955-56

SOUTHEASTERN 8ALE8 CORP.
Complete Line of Janitorial
Supplies &amp; Equipment
Chuck O'Briant
Sales Mgr.

Commercial Refuse Disposal
featuring
Dempster Dumpmaster System
Charlie Russel
Manager

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Offices &amp; Warehouse Facilities
Located
2828 Industrial Drive
Raleigh, N. C.

COLLIDE
DAYS
The founding of N. C. State was
one of the greatest things ever to
happen for the economic development
of North Carolina, Walter J. Mathews
often observed.
Three weeks ago, Mathews, the first
student to enroll at N. C. State, passe:l
away at 97.
Loyal alumnus to the last, Mathews
spoke from vivid impressions of his
boyhood and the changes on the
campus and across the State during
the three-quarters of a century after
he enrolled.
"A &amp; M (State College) helped the
farmer to a better way of life and
produced engineers and textile men
who created new industries," he said.
Mathews' observation had a central
truth, even if it was oriented bv his
love of N. C. State.
Twenty-four young men-radicals of
their time-who fought to establish
N. C. State in the 1880's foresaw the
same benefits of the new college.
These young men-all under 30formed the Watauga Club in Raleigh
and joined with farmers in aj!itating
for an agricultural and industrial
college.
Their names are still polished bright
orth Carolina:
in the history of
Josephus Daniels (editor of the N ews
and Observer), Augustus Leazar (coauthor of the legislative bill that
established the institution) , William
J. Peele (philosonher and intellectual )
Leonidas Polk (founder of the Progressive Farmer) , Walter Hines Page
(famed author and later ambassador
to Great Britain), and many others.
The movement to establish the
land-grant college has been described
as an inevitable product of history, the
fruition of "democracy in education,"
the creation of educational opportunity
for many of North Carolina's sons and
daughters.
The Wataugans aimed first at the
General Assembly and 1885, and
failed ; but by 1887, the public had
been aroused and the bill for the
North Carolina College of Agriculture

�Today's North Carolina State University campus reflects more than three quarters of a
century growth.

and Mechanic Arts was enacted into
law on March 3, 1887.
The legislature provided that the
new college should be the land-grant
college of orth Carolina, one in a
national system provided under the
federal Morrill Act of 1862.
An offer of land for the new college
campus was accepted. Stanhope Pullen,
who donated the first land for the
campus, had a egro boy lead a mule
while he held the plow that marked
the boundaries of the new campus52 "rocky acres of dusty red clay."

Two years later, in early October,
1889, construction of the first building
on the new campus (with 1,500,000
bricks supplied by the State Prison)
was completed.
The building included a dormitory,
cafeteria, classroom and administrative
offices. Thousands now know it as
Holladay Hall-hallowed Holladaynamed after the first president, Alexander Q. Holladay.
Development came fast. When the
first "noble 19" alumni were graduate
in 1893, two graduate progra~s were
beginning operation-one in agncultur:
and the other in mechanic arts ( engineering).
In the meantime, the Agricultural
Experiment Station, founded under
the federal Hatch Act of 1887 which
created a national system, had been

transferred to college administration.
Shortly-in about 1900-a textiles
department was established. Then extension came, with the appointment of
an extension professor in 1909, five
years before the federal Smith-Lever
Act created the national system of
Agricultural Extension Services.
The basis framework of the landgrant college was complete: resident
instruction; a formal research organization and an organized extension
branch.
The first of a succion of name
changes came in 1917 when "A &amp; M"
became " orth Carolina State College
of Agriculture and Engineering."
In 1931, with consolidation, "State
College" earned honors with one of
the longest names of any institution:
"North Carolina State College of Agriculture and Engineering of the University of orth Carolina."
The name-change debate in this
decade has taken its place in history.
The General Assembly of 1965 shortened it to " orth Carolina State University at Raleigh."
But the name had little to do with
the development of . C. State.
Mathews said a year ago he was
sorry the name was changed to University. "It was doing a good job as
'A &amp; M,' " he said.

HEATER
WELL

co.
WELLS
ELEVATOR SHA"S
Pumps

JOHNSTON
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McDONALD
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SWIMMING POOLS
"If Ita For
Water -We Have It"
CARY, N. C.
919-467-2912
COLUMBIA, S. C.
803-754-2862

25

�1
STOP

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The Thrifty •

INSURANCE SERVICE

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VIC FISHER
INSURANCE AGENCY
833-1673
819 Ins. Bldg.
Raleigh, N. C.

Came ron Vill age, Ra le ig h

CAREY BREWBAKER

Open Monday thru Saturday
9 :30 'til 9

DEFENSIVE LINE COACH
~\.\1 1 11 1 11 1 111 1 1 11 U II III I IIIII I I III II II I I III II I I II I IIII II I II tlllll ll lll l lllll

'!

A trademark of North Carolina State
football teams has been a tough defensive line. Architect of this Wolfpack strong-point has been Carey
Brewbaker for the past 13 years.
He was equally as successful as
Durham High coach, guiding the Bulldogs to either outright or shared state
football titles in 1938, 1939, 1948,
1949, 1950 and 1953. Carey also coordinates the Wolfpack's recruiting
program.

COMPLE T E OFFICE
OUTFITTE RS
FURNITURE-MACHINESSUPPLIES

Alfred Williams
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706 Hillsboro St.
Ra leigh, N. C.

26

Twice his 17-year Durham coaching
tenure was interrupted by Navy Service during World War II and the
Korean Conflict. While stationed at
Notre Dame in 1944 and 1945, he
coached the Irish tackles.
The 52-year-old, down-to-earth, Buchanan, Va., native was a standout
tackle and captai.n of Roanoke College's
1936 team, which won the Virginia
state championship. He earned his B.S.
degree in political science in 1937 at
Roanoke and later added an M.S. degree in education from the University
of North Carolina.

St. Mary's at Johnson St.

833-8678

Brewbaker is married to the former
Betty Holem of Osceola, Ind., and they
have two sons and a daughter.
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Raleigh, N. C.

JOHNNY CLEMENTS
HEAD FRESHMAN COACH

Johnny Clements has been a member of the North Carolina State University staff since 1957 and head freshman coach for the past nine years . His
1960 team went undefeated.
He is also a full-time member of
N. C. State's physical education staff
and is advisor to the Fellowship of
Christian Athletes chapter at State.
The 43-year-old Crewe, Va., native
was a star wingback on the 1946-49
North Carolina teams of Cam Snavely.
He holds both B.A. (1950) and M.A.
( 1951) degrees in education from
U C. He coached at Whiteville High
for a year and was on the coaching
staff at William and Mary in 1952.
Johnny served in the Navy from
1944-46. He and his wife, the former
Mary Louise Rice of Ashland, Ky.,
have three children.

FORCE-FEED
LOADER

29

�lumber &amp;building supply center
U.S. 1 NORTH - PHONE 833-6636

RALEIGH
DURHAM ST.- PHONE 552-2291

FUQUAY-VARINA

eatte9e 1~e~e

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ERNIE DRISCOLL
OFFENSIVE BACKFIELD COACH

Western Boulevard- Adjacent ToN. C. State University
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Triangle Motel, Raleigh/Durham Airport

30

Ernie Driscoll begins his sixth season on the North Carolina State coaching staff and third season as offensive
backfield coach in 1967, after working
with the Wolfpack's ends and linebackers for three years. The 35-year-old
Pittsburgh, Pa., native quarterbacked
State's 1957 Atlantic Coast Conference
championship team, and then assisted
the State staff in the fall of 1958 after
becoming declared ineligible to compete. He was the backfield coach at
Waycross (Ga.) High School for three
years before returning to State in 1962.
Waycross had a 34-4 record and won
Georgia State titles in 1960 and 1961
while Driscoll was there. He also
coached the Georgia All-star team in
1961.
He was graduated from N. C. State
in 1959 with a B.S. degree in recreation administration, after lettering in
football, baseball and basketball at
Pittsburgh's North Catholic High. He
and his wife, the former Joan Card of
Raleigh, have three children.

�Speed Chart
Below are STOP-WATCH TIMES
of the Wolfpack varsity players over
a 40-yard distance in FULL FOOTBALL EQUIPMENT. These times
were recorded during spring practice
by Coach Earle Edwards and his staff.
We have broken them down by backs,
linemen, and ends, with their times
recorded.

Compliments:

STAN'S RESTAURANTS OF

BACKS
Combs

4 .8

lisk

5.0

Idol

4.8

Moody

5.0

Reid

4 .8

Williams

5.0

Bowers

4.9

Alford

5.1

Klebe

4 .9

Barchuk

5. 1

Mason

4 .9

Hardin

5. 1

McMahon

4 .9

Schirippa

5 .1

Morrow

4.9

Yount

5.1

Whitley

4 .9

Donnan

5 .1

Dockery

5.0

Waleski

5 .2

Hall

5.0

Watkins

5.2

ENDS

RALEIGH, INC.

Before and after the game plan a visit
to one of our establishments.

THE RED ROOSTER

Martell

4 .8

Lemmons

5. 1

Capuano

4 .9

Follweiler

5 .2

Donaldson

5 .0

Lewis

5.2

Janes

5 .1

Tope

5 .2

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PLAYBOY LOUNGE

LINEMEN
Amato

5.0

Evans

5 .3

Jordan

5.0

Hudson

5 .3

Nicholas

5.1

Solonoski

5 .3

Campbell

5.2

Tharp

5.3

Carpenter

5 .2

Warren, S.

5.4

Diacont

5 .2

Holland

5 .5

Hilke

5 .2

McDuffie

5 .5

Metts

5 .2

Brookshire

5.6

Bailey

5 .3

Perotti

5.6

Byrd

5.3

Biega

5.7

Cates

5.3

South

5.7

Chapman

5 .3

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REDWOOD TAVERN
-1622 GLENWOOD AVE .

GOOD FOOD - COLD BEER
FINE ENTERTAINMENT

Players not listed above did not participate in spring practice and were
not timed.

31

�THE 1967

OUTLOOK

Enjoy

the

Game

- with the peace
of mind that comes
from knowing Durham Life is helping
you protect your family's financial future. With the many Special
Purpose Policies Durham Life offers today there is no reason for you to
worry about retirement funds, future insurability, mortgage protection
or college for your kids. Your local Durham Life agent can tell you how
these policies will benefit you. Durham Life wants you to enjoy the
game. Call them soon.

DURHAM LIFE
1§fCompany

Insurance

Since 1908
HOME OP'P'ICIE , INSURANCE •UILDINQ
IIALI:IGH. NOttTH CAROLINA 27M»Z

In race track parlance, North Carolina State was left at the post in 1965
and 1966, but put on good stretch runs
to finish with 6-4 and 5-5 records,
respectively.
After 1-4 records at mid-season, the
Wolfpack won nine of the ten games
in closing rushes. Now in 1967, coach
Earle Edwards would like to get a
more consistent run in the Atlantic
Coast Conference race out of his football team.
And it appears likely that State will
have the horses, defensively, to make
another creditable showing. Offensively, the Wolfpack has some non-starters
that have enough potential to again
put its red and white colors into the
winner's circle.
In the Wolfpack's off-season training last March, the defense, headed by
all-America returnee Dennis Byrd at
tackle and a seasoned secondary led
by Art McMahon, was ahead of the
offense which must replace eight starters who helped set the Wolfpack's alltime total offense record in 1966.
"It was' a natural think for the offense to be behind," says Edwards.
"We had more problems and had far~her to go. Wi_th so many new people
It takes a while to get organized on
offe~se. I would ~ave been disappointed If we weren t ahead defensively
since we have nine regulars back."

Four all-ACC players (tackle Bill
Gentry, guard John Stec, halfback Don
DeArment, and wingback Gary Rowe)
and kicking specialist Harold Deters,
who set five ACC field goal records,
are offensive losses that will be difficult
to replace; while all-conference linebacker Dave Everett and safety Bill
James are missing on defense.

Favorites
for
Flavor
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Raleigh

State returns 22 lettermen, split even
with 11 on offense and 11 on defense.
Fifteen lettermen are missing with ten
of them off the offensive unit. Entering the fall drills sophomore Mike
Hilka at linebacker and junior Settle
Dockery at fullback were the only two
non-lettermen on the first units. But
John McDuffie at center and Benny
Lemmons at defensive end represent
the sum total of experience reserve
strength.
Injuries played a prominent part in
~he 1966 se~son with four regulars lost

m the opemng game against Michigan
(Continued on page 35)

32

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COUNT ON
CLAUDE GIBSON
DEFENSIVE SECONDARY COACH

Claude Gibson, an all-Atlantic Coast
Conference halfback for the Wolfpack
in 1960, joins the North Carolina
State football staff after spending the
past seven years as player, scout, and
recruiter in pro football. Claude will
coach the Wolfpack's secondary, be
chief scout, and recruit extensively.
He played for five years with the
San Diego Chargers and Oakland
Raiders of the AFL as a defensive
back, after playing in the Senior Bowl
and the College All-Star Game as a
senior. He obtained his B.S. degree in
education from N. C. State in 1961.
Gibson was second in the AFL in
pass interceptions with eight in 1962
at San Diego, and then led the league
in punt returns in 1964 at Oakland.
The Asheville native is married to the
former Ethelee Fox of Asheville and
they have two daughters.

Compliments

COLONIAL .. .

of
LAND'S JEWELERS
Raleigh, North Carolina

Fine diamonds
watches and
jewelry

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CHARGE ACCOU NTS WELCOM E

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33

�1967
KADETT
AL SMITH BUICK

BILL SMALTZ

OFFENSIVE LINE COACH

Bill Smaltz, former head coach at
Juniata College, is in his 14th year on
the North Carolina State coaching staff.
This will be Bill's eighth season as offensive line coach, following six years
as freshman coach here.
The 49-year-old Aliquippa, Pa., native was at Juniata from 1947 to 1953,
with his 1953 team going undefeated.
Smaltz was a prize fullback and
passer at Penn State from 1939 to 1941
and played in the East-West Shrine
Bowl game in 1941. Edwards and AI
Michaels coached him at Penn State.
Following four years of Army duty,
Smaltz completed work for his B.S.
degree in physical education from Penn
State in 1947. Bill and his wife, the
former Bette Rank of Robertsdale, Pa.,
have a teenage daughter and son. They
reside at 2121 Buckingham Road.
Bette, a Penn State graduate, is an
instructor in the woman's physical education program at N. C. State.

34

�(Continued from page 32)
State, including defensive end Pete
Sokalsky and offensive tackle Lloyd
Spangler for the season. And with so
many new players counted on for
depth, the Wolfpack could not afford
such a happening again and expect to
have a strong squad. Sokalsky, an allACC player as a sophomore in 1965,
and Spangler, a scheduled starter in
1966, both had knee operations and did
not participate in the spring drills.
Their playing status will have a lot to
say about the final results of the Wolfpack's 1967 season.
OFFENSE-The Wolfpack will have
more size and speed in the offensive
backfield, despite the experienced
losses, and has heady Jim Donnan, the
total offense leader in 1966, back to
quarterback the I and winged-T attack. Donnan made his first start in
the final 1966 game against Clemson
and is the only backfield candidate ever
to have started a game. The Pack's interior line lacks experience and could
be a trouble-spot, while offensive end
and center should be strong points.
DEFENSE-Nine regulars return
from the defensive unit which led the
ACC in total defense in 1966. Strong
tackle and end play should highlight
the front-line defense, while the Pack
could field its fastest and best secondary under Edwards. Injuries and inexperience could cause concern at linebacking.
KICKING-Harold Deters may be
the most difficult man to replace, as
the strong-footed specialist provided
the winning margin in seven games
during his career. Gerald Warren is expected to kick in his place. "Once
Warren gets the first field goal, he'll do
an adequate job for us," says Edwards.
But all areas of the kicking game left
Edwards dismayed in the spring, including coverage, protection, and punting. The quarterbacks will again handle the punting duties. A punt and
kickoff return man is being sought to
replace Rowe.
EDWARDS' COMMENTS- "We
have a chance to be better than good
up front and in our secondary on defense, but we must contain elusive
quarterbacks, avoid letting receivers
get behind us, and prevent quick
scores. These areas plagued us in 1966.
Offensively, we must cash in more
often, once we get into scoring territory. All phases of our kicking gan:e
still are a source of concern. We have
no way of knowing how well we can
replace our offensive losses, particularly
in the line, but we have some ~apable
new men."

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RALEIGH ,NORTH CAROLINA

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for

INDUSTRY-BUSINESS-FAMILY
Fire * Casualty * Life

Account Executives
HUGH H. MURRAY-President

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TELEPHONE 833-2861

35

�LEAN BACK
AND REST
IF YOU

BELIEVE A MAN'S

HOME IS HIS CASI'LE,
HOW COME YOUDON'T

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RALEIGH, N. C.

HAVE A MA'rl'IOOS BY

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Don't Wait
See Your
Dealer NO W
H. B. McCULLOUGH
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
IN FOOTBALL

FASTENING SERVICE
Serving as administrative assistant in
the athletics department is H. B. McCullough.

&amp; SUPPLY
SUPPER CLUB

Mac is the academic coordinator,
supervising the tutoring system and the
study hall provided for the athletes. He
also assists in recruiting and arranges
visits for prospective students.

MOTOR LODGE
MODERN APTS.
RESTAURANT &amp; TAP ROOM

610 N. West St reet

"Major Mac" served as an assistant
professor of Air Science in the ROTC
program here for four years. He retired
with the rank of Lt. Colonel in 1960,
after spending 21 years in the Air
Force. He received three Presidential
Citations while serving in nine military campaigns.

Raleigh, N . C.
833-0829

TEL. TE3-1901
1625 NORTH BLVD.
RALEIGH, N. C.

Speciality Anchoring -

Building Supplies
Fastening -

Drilling

Masonry, Concrete, Steel

36

The 53-year-old Madison, Fla., native holds an A.B. degree ( 1936) in
physical education from Oglethorpe
University, where he was a three-sport
letterman. He and his wife, the former
Noni M. Bracken of Plano, Ill., have
three children. Mac is considered one
of the South's top barbequers.

�A name
that
wears
well

for men
.......~~ in motion
®
underwear/sleepwear/sportswear
Red Label socks

Hanes Corporation, Knitwear Division, Winston-Salem, North Carolina

37

�NORTH CAROLINA~
New Home

THOMPSON CADILLAC-OLDS INC.
2600 Wake Forest Rd.
Raleigh, N. C.

Cadillac "The Standard of the World"
Oldsmobile "With an Accent on Youth"

38

Your NCSU Alumni Association officers and directors welcome you to
Carter Stadium and to today's game!
It's imperative that your Alma
Mater have the individual and collective support of you the alumni. No
other voice is more effective nor more
helpful to our University than that of
its alumni. Its continued growth and
development are dependent upon many
factors. Most important among these is
the collective support of NCSU former
students.
"School spirit" and "Loyalty to our
Alma Mater" are catalysts which cause
great things to happen among our
alumni and dedicated friends. Many of
the activities sponsored by your Association are designed to foster a closer
tie between the alumnus and the
school. On an occasion such as this, it's
only natural that our hearts swell with
pride and our pulses quicken as we
renew old friendships and cultivate new
ones.
While "service" is our major objective, fun, fellowship and football are
also important. Coffee hours are
planned following many of our football games. Listen for the announcement during th~ game.
Let's cheer the Wolfpack on to victory!

�~STATE

UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

crassels

WELCOME
NCSU
ALUMNI

Jor

CJigers

The bold new look in
masculine fashion .••
Tassels by French
Shriner! Very handsome, very comfortable,
very smart. And m~ny
styles to choose from.

Huneycutt, Inc.
1918 Hillsboro St.
Outfitters to College Men
Since 1925

39

�Big company
strength,
small company
opportunity
Get the best of
two worlds at
Dan River

In 1956, Dan River,
then in its 74th year,
had four plants in Danville,
Virginia, sales of slightly more
than 122 million and assets
totaling 131 million. Ten years
later it had 29 plants in five states, sales
of over 280 million and assets in excess of
265 million.
As a direct result of this growth, Dan River
can now offer the best of two worlds to the
college student- the diversity and strength of
a big company operation and the recognition of
individual talent and initiative, the hallmark of a small
company operation. Its management training program, the
first of its kind in the textile industry, stresses individuality
in preparing the college trainee for responsible positions
without years of waiting.
Opportunities in the textile industry are wide and varied and include
manufacturing, merchandising and sales, finance, chemical research and
application, fabric design, and textile, plant or industrial engineering.
If these two worlds appeal to you, why not give serious thought to a career
in textiles and, in particular, to a career with Dan River Mills, one of its recognized leaders.
Arrange now to interview a Dan River representative the next time he visits your campus.

Dan Rle"' rer
.Y

40

1

~nc.

Dan River Mills,
Danville, Va .
An Equal Opportun~ty Employer

�LINEN
SERVICE
""S elling

nothing" but ser-

vice through the rental of
linens, towels, and all washable wearing apparel economically designed to meet
each individual need.

OFFICES AND PLANTS

PUBLICATIONS

LOCATED IN
RALEIGH
3301 Hillsboro Street
Raleigh Linen Servic:

DURHAM
When an CSU student has something to say, he has many outlets!
-A student
Technician.

newspaper . . . the

-A literary magazine ... the Windhover.
-A radio voice ... WKNC-FM.
-A documentary yearbook . . . the
Agromeck.
-And, depending on his particular
career interest, school magazines . . .
the Agri-Life, Pinetum, Southern Engineer, St!ldent Publication of the School
of Design and Textile Forum.
These channels of expression offer
the CSU student opportunities for a

wide variety of creative activity in
editing, writing, speaking and photography.

11 00 Hollaway Street,
Durham Linen Service

The student magazines within the
schools give students a medium for reporting and publishing original ideas
in professional areas-whether it's
science, engineering or the liberal arts.

717 Summit Street,
Local Linen Service

KINSTON

A Board of Student Publications,
composed of students and faculty,
meets periodically to review publications, establish budgets and recommend
policies and procedures.
A coordinating office is located in
the basement of King Religious Center.
Through any of these outlets, an
NCSU student can go on record.

41

�If Stevens tells you the yarn you ordered is being
delivered between noon and one, break your lunch date.
Or rest assured you'll be headed
home for dinner on time, not
frantically calling suppliers about
their "promise.d" delivery dates.
That's because you buy from one
of the world's largest suppliers of

42

yarn wnen you buy from Stevens.
Stevens has the resources to back
up its commitments. Reliability's
not the only thing you get from
Stevens. You get the highest and
most consistent quality, too!

J. P. Steveno &amp; Co., Inc.,
Yarn Sales Dept.,

P. 0 . Box A-2,
Greensboro. N. C.
Sales Offices:
206 West Cuyler Street, Dalton. Ga 30720
1460 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10036
99 Chauncy Street. Boston, Mass. 02111
12 South 12th Street, Phi Ia .• Pa. 19107

�PIEDMONT
CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES INC.

P. 0 . Box 790 • Telephone 882-4159

HIGH POINT • NORTH CAROLINA

AL PROCTOR

HEAD ATHLETIC TRAINER

SERVING THE NATION

WITH THE FINEST OF CHEMICALS

AND INTERMEDIATES

FOR THE TEXTILE INDUSTRY

AI Proctor, one of the South's top
young trainers, is in his sixth season as
head trainer at North Carolina State.
The Shelby native's training background includes four years at Greensboro Senior High and as trainer for the
Greensboro Yankees pro baseball team
in 1960 and 1961. In the spring of
1960 he worked in the New York
Yankee training camp. For the past
four summers he has conducted a clinic
for high school student-trainers at the
East-West All-Star Games.
He is married to the fm·mer Brenda
Lowe of Greensboro, and they currently serve as dorm counselors on
campus.
He is a Wake Forest College graduate (1958) and was a student assistant
trainer there. After graduating from
Shelby High in 1954, AI attended
Gar?ner Webb Jr. College in Boiling
Spnngs. He has taught in the Greensboro School System.

43

�CAPTAINS
44

Art McMahon and Steve Warren co-captain the 1967 ~orth Carolina
State University football team.
McMahon, a 192-pounder from Carteret, ~- J., leads the defense
from his safety position, while Warren, a 225-pounder from Lincolnton,
~. C., captains the offensive unit.
Warren, an excellent blocker, should be one of the best offensive
linemen in the ACC in 1967. He is married and is a student in the
School of Textiles.
McMahon, able to play anwhere in the secondary, is a good tackler
with good speed and judgment. He is an industrial management major.

���47

�1887 FRBSBMAN TBAM
Front Row (Left-Right): Glenn Overman, Mike latarola, Mike Gukich, Pete Burgess, Paul Sharp, Lynn McElroy, Dennis Britt.
2nd Row: Mike Holveck, Neil Sequine, Gary Moser, John Bradsher, Mike Malian, Larry Clark, Bill Baker, Bob Guillaume.
3rd Row: Dan Sarik, John Wilson, John Norris, John Elliott, Andy Barker, Tom Litchfield, Art Bethel, Don Bradley.
4th Row: George Smith, Bill Phillips, Stuart Deibel, Mike Nicklas, Butch Powers, David Whitehead, Gary Zickefoose, Ken Gasper.
Sth Row: Mike Cloy, Richard Dellinger, John Ivancic, Harold Messenger, Don Kelly, Van Blake, Nick Wehrmann, Dave Adamczyk.
6th Row: Pat Kubes, Richard Lanoy, Bruce Purvis, Phil Marquis, John Shepherd, Dave Phillips, Bill Vlachos, Danny Medlin,
Jacques Descent.
Back Row: Student Trainer Rodney Poindexter, Trainer Chester Grant, Coach Freddie Bivens, Coach Joe White, Head Coach
Johnny Clements•

.

48

.~: ·..

. '·. ~ . .. .: . . .. . '

•..

~

-

_... . . .

~

·. . ..

. \ . .MI"" .. : .. * . . ..... ..
~

.'1_::: :: . :·
..

~

.

~-

: •-. . .....; :
.

llll

•.

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�SANDERS FORD
329 SOUTH BLOUNT
RALEIGH, N. C.

NORTH CAROLINAS ONLY COMPLETE FORD
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FORD
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Conscientious and expert service is one
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One of the largest parts inventories on the
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SANDERS FORD
TELEPHONES:
New cars: 834-7304
Used cars: 834-7307

834-7308

Truck dept.: 834-7309

�No.

~
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'(f).

~

~

&gt;
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z~
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~

&lt;
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'(f).

&lt;
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~

~

0

~

&lt;
~

=
~
0

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roster
50

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14
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31
32
33
34
35
36
40
41
42
43
45
46
50
51
52
53
54
55
60
61
62
63
66
67
68
70
72
73

74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
88
89

Name

Pos. Hgt. Wgt.

QB
Dick Schirippa
QB
*Jim Donnan
-:+Greg Williams
s
QB
Jack Klebe
QB
Darrell Moody
QB
Art Waleski
HB
Jim Hardin
WB
Jimmy Lisk
CB
Dickie Idol
DB
Paul Reid
Jack Whitley
s
HB
Leon Mason
~+ Art McMahon
DB
Charlie Bowers WB
LB
Pete Bailey
FB
Ron Watkins
-::- charles Amato
LB
~fBobby Hall
FB
HB
"'Tony Bar ~ huk
FB
Settle Dockery
WB
Mike Alford
CB
*Bill Morrow
+:·Fred Combs
CB
LB
Andy Solonoski
K
Gerald Warren
DB
Gary Yount
'fJohn McDuffie
c
LB
Jerry Loftin
LB
Steve Diacont
Lou Biega
c
-x-carey Metts
c
Mike Hilka
LB
Brian South
MG
MG
John Perotti
-~ Terry Brookshire MG
*Flake Campbell
G
*Norman Cates
G
G
Robby Evans
G
Don Jordan
DT
Ron Carpenter
T
Ed Nicholas
T
Marvin Tharp
DT
Art Hudson
DT
-:fTrent Holland
T
~f LJoyd Spangler
DT
-•-Dennis Byrd
T
*Steve Warren
T
Dick Chapman
DE
Bob Follweiler
*Benny Lemmons DE
DE
"·Mark Capuano
E
Kelly Jones
E
*Harry Martell
E
Wayne Lewis
'"-Don Donaldson
E
" Pete Sokalsky
DE
Charles Tope
E

* Denotes Lettermen

6-1
6-1
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-2
5-10
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-1
5-10
6-1
5-10
6-2
6-0
5-9
5-9
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-1
6-0
5-11
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-11
5-10
6-1
6-0
6-6
6-4
6-0
6-4
6-2
6-0
6-4
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-5
6-2
6-1
6-2

195
195
193
185
165
207
176
185
180
176
199
175
187
200
192
201
216
204
209
209
179
177
185
200
167
184
213
183
210
209
220
202
232
212
214
210
220
199
230
257
219
217
247
219
225
260
224
230
200
229
200
205
207
205
213
211
216

Age Class

20
22
21
20
19
21
19
21
20
22
20
20
21
19
20
21
21
20
21
21
20
22
21
19
20
20
21
19
20
19
21
20
20
20
22
21
21
20
19
19
19
20
20
22
22
21
21
20
20
20
21
20
22
20
22
22
20

So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.

Hometown
N. Plainfield, N.J.
Burlington
Danville, Pa.
Cornwell Heights, Pa.
Asheboro
Bassett, Va.
East Point, Ga.
Norwood
Kernersville
A von-by-the-Sea, N.J.
Greensboro
Washington
Carteret, N. J.
Thomasville
Milledgeville, Ga.
Black Mountain
Easton, Pa.
Plymouth
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Rockingham
East Point, Ga.
S. Williams port, Pa.
Hertford
Hazelton, Pa.
Elizabeth City
Newton
East Point, Ga.
East Point, Ga.
Easton, Pa.
Aliquippa, Pa.
Greensboro
McKees Rock, Pa.
Columbia, S. C.
Scottdale, Pa.
Enka
Charlotte
Morehead City
Raleigh
Tu cker, Ga.
Thomasville
Warren, N. J.
Vineland, N. J.
Camden, S. C.
Clinton
Richmond, Va.
Lincolnton
Lincolnton
Sanford
Allentown, Pa.
Gaffney, S. C.
Neville Island, Pa.
Albemarle
Penns Grove, N. J.
Aberdeen
Saxton, Pa.
Allentown, Pa.
Aiken, S. C.

�e ~ ---~

.
''
youngmo 1es
•
rom
smo·-le
are ere.
''

Drive one

Monday morning.

I GM I

Cutlass S Hor.day Coupe
at your nearest Oldsmobile Dealers.

MARl( Of UC£LL(NCE

��N.C. STATE
14
15

16
19
20
21
22
23
25
26
30
31
32
33

34
35
36
41
43
44
45

so
52
53
54

Donnan-QB
Williams-$
Klebe-QB
Waleski-QB
Hardin-HB
Lisk-WB
ldoi--CB
Reid-DB
Mason-HB
McMahon-DB
Bowers-WB
Bailey-LB
Watkins-FB
Amato--LB
Haii-FB
Barchuk-HB
Dockery-FB
Morrow-CB
Solonoski-LB
Yount-DB
Warren-Kicker
McDuffie-C
Diacont-LB
Biega-C
Metts-C

55 Hilka-LB
62 Brookshire-MG
63 Campbeii--G
66 Cates-G
67 Evans-G
68 Jordan-G
70 Carpenter-DT
72 Nicholas-G-T
73 Tharp--T
74 Hudson-DT
75 Holland-DT
76 Spangler-T
77

Byrd-DT

78 Warren-T
79 Chapman-T
80 Follweiler-DE
81 Lemmons-DE
82 Capuano--DE
83 Jones-E
84 Martell-E
85 Lewis-E
86 Donaldson-E
88 Sokalsky-DE
89 Tope-E

OFFENSE
86
76
66
54
63
78
84
14
35
34
36

Don Donaldson ....... ............... ....TE
Lloyd Spangler .... ... ... ................ LT
No rman Cotes ................ .......... LG
Corey Metts .................. .... .......... C
Fla ke Campbell .......... ...... ........ RG
Steve Warren .... ........ .......... .... RT
Harry Mortell .... ........ .... ........ .. RE
Jim Donnan ...... .... ... ................. QB
Tony Bo rchuk .......... .. ... ....... .... HB
Bobby Hall ...... ........................ WB
Settle Doc kery ........ .... .............. FB

DEFENSE
88

71
62
75
82
3~

55
41
42
15
26

Pet e Soko lsky .............. .. ...... .... LE
De nn is Byrd ..... .......... ............... LT
Terry Brookshire ...... ......... ....... MG
Tre n t Holland ....... .. ....... ... ....... RT
Mark Capuano ........... .. ........ ... RE
Chuck Amato ..................... ... LLB
M ike H ilke ............................ RLB
Bi ll Morrow .......... ........ ......... . LCB
Fred Com bs ....... ..... ........ ..... ... RCB
Greg W illiams ..... .................... ... LS
Art McMahon ......... ................. RS

BUFFALO
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
24
25
26
27
29
30
32
34
36
38
42
44
45
48
49

so
51
52
53
54
55
56
58

Murtha-QB
Martin-QB
Embow-DHB
Jack-QB
Lowe-E
Mason-QB
Patterson-HB
Rutkowski-HB
Washington-HB
Quinn-DHB
Beii-DHB
DeMarco--DHB
Hansen-K
Horn-DHB
Brennan-FB
Richner-LB
Luzny- LB
Jones-FB
Alimonti-FB
Hoke-HB
Drankoski--E
Grubbs-DHB
Hurd-HB
Wells-HB
Mosher-LB
Wright-G-LB
Wesolowski--C
Powrie-C
Chapp--LB
McCullough-LB
Charnega-LB
Ri shai-LB

59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
88
89
95

Mihale-LB
Carney-G
Risseli-G
Kowalewski-G
Spencer-G
Maser-G
Finochio--G
Lupienski--LB
Gibbons-DT
Hayden-G
Sabo--LB
Walgate-DT
Maricle-T
Clark-T
Jones-DT
Beck-DT
Riccelli--DT
Reid-T
Wolf-T
Troglauer-DT
Moler-DT
Brisky-DE
Murphy-DE
Endress-E
Kovey-DE
Przybycien-DE
Lang- E
Buchak-E
Remillard-DE
Doherty-E
Henley-DE

OFFENSE
64
53
65
61
44
14
49
21
36

Te rry Endress ............................TE
Chris W olf ... ..... ... ................... LT
M ike Moser ...... .. ...................... LG
Charles Powri e ... ......... ......... ..... C
J im Finochio .................... ........ RG
M ike Risse II ... .. ............ ... ... ..... RT
Chuck Dron kosk i ............. ...... ... SE
M ick Murtha ......... ................ ... QB
Ric k W ells ... ..... ...... ................ FLK
Ken Rutkowsi ... .... .... .... .. ......... TB
Lee Jo nes .......... .... .. .................. FB

80
67
7S
88
51
34
69
58
42
45
48

De nn is Brisky ........ ....... .... ......... LE
Ted Gibbons ................ ............ LT
D. Rove II Jones ... ............ ... ...... RT
Jim Remillard .......................... RE
lrv W right ..... .... ................. .. LOB
M ike Luzny ...................... .. .... LI B
Don So bo ....... ......................... RI B
Rod Rishel ........................... . ROB
Tom Hoke ................................ LH
Go ry Grubbs ............................ RH
Tom Hu rd .................................. S

82
77

DEFENSE

�1. ( ) they want to
help the colleges
You were right if you checked No.2.
American corporations want to make
sure there will be enough college-trained
leaders to fill the management jobs open
today and in the future.
This is good insurance for business.
And the need, we must remember, isn't
getting smaller.
World trade is developing fast; business
is getting more competitive, more complex; science is introducing new products and processes rapidly.
College-trained men and women are
needed, in increasing numbers, to plan
and direct the activities of business.
COUNCil. FOR
N 'INANCIAL
\)
AIDTO

-a c:
EDUCATION

.
in cooperation
with
The
Published
as a pu bl"rc cervice
.
.
d Advertising
t"
Council and the Council for Financral Aod to E uca oon

2. ( ) they need the
leaders colleges train
But the colleges can't do the training job
alone. They need classrooms, laboratories and facilities, yes. But even more,
they need backing to maintain a staff of
top-notch teachers.
This is the human equation that makes
the difference in reaching the margin of
excellence needed in the U.S.
This is everybody's job, but especially
industry's.
Of course American business wants to
help the colleges, so you were also right
if you checked No. 1. College, after all,
is business' best friend.

GIVE TO THE COLLEGE
OF YOUR CHOICE
SPECIAL TO MANAGEMENT -A new booklet
of particular interest if your company has
not yet established an a1d-to-educat1on
program. Write for:

"The Rationale of Corporate Giving",
Box 36, Times Square Station
New York, N.Y. 10036

�No.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
25
26
27
28
29
30
32
34
36
38
40
42
44
45
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
95

Name

Pos.

*Mark Murtha
QB
Daniel Martin
DHB
·""Robert Embow
K
Paul Jack
QB
Edwin Lowe
E
QB
Dennis Mason
Patrick Patterson
HB
*Kenneth Rutkowski HB
Bennie Washington HB
Harry Bell
DHB
Douglas DeMarco DHB
K
Brian Hansen
Ronald Biersbach DHB
DHB
Richard Horn
FB
*Thomas Brennan
LB
David Richner
LB
Michael Luzny
FB
*Lee land Jones
FB
Nino Alimonti
HB
Paul DeRosa
DHB
;!·Thomas Hoke
*Charles Drankoski . E
DHB
Gary Grubbs
DHB
*Thomas Hurd
HB
*Richard Wells
LB
James Mosher
LB
*Irvin Wright
*John Wesolowski
c
Charles Powrie
c
Gary Chapp
LB
Steven McCullough LB
LB
David Chernega
Alfonse Ruggerio
c
LB
*Rodney Rishel
LB
Dennis Mihale
G
Patrick Carney
T
*Michael Rissell
*Thomas Kowalewski G
G
E. Jon Spencer
G
*Michael Maser
G
*James Finochio
LB
*John Lupienski
DT
*Theodore Gibbons
G
William Hayden
LB
Donald Sabo
DT
Daniel Walgate
T
Donald Maricle
T
Scott Clark
DT
D. Rovell Jones
DT
Russell Beck
DT
*Joseph Riccelli
T
Frank Reid
T
Chris Wolf
DT
John Troglauer
DT
Robert Moler
DE
*Dennis Brisky
DE
Thomas Murphy
E
Terrence Endress
DE
Robert Kovey
DE
*John Przybycien
E
Paul Lang
E
Michael Buchak
E
*Richard Ashley
DE
James Remillard
E
John Doherty
DE
Prentis Henley

Hgt. Wgt
5-11
5-11
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-9
5-10
5-10
5-9
5-11
6-0
6-1
5-10
5-11
5-9
5-11
6-0
5-10
5-8
6-1
5-9
6-1
6-0
6-1
5-11
5-11
6-0
5-8
5-10
5-11
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-10
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-1

176
187
210
178
185
188
191
180
198
180
168
166
189
188
205
197
209
208
204
193
189
183
175
197
198
212
203
214
195
200
201
187
205
194
214
200
233
210
213
214
219
210
232
213
210
255
224
212
228
232
242
217
220
270
226
209
192
202
202
200
210
203
201
198
209
205

Age Class
20
20
1!}
19
19
19
19
20
20
21
20
21
19
20
20
20
20
21
20
19
21
20
19
21
20
20
21
21
21
19
19
20
20
21
21
19
21
20
20
20
21
20
21
20
20
19
20
20
19
18
20
21
19
21
20
20
21
19
19
19
20
20
20
20
20
20

Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.

Hometown
Endicott, N. Y.
Huntington, L. I.
Hamburg, N.Y.
Springdale, Pa.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Ambridge, Pa.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Woonsocket, R. I.
Potsdam, N. Y.
Dolgeville, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Hamburg, N. Y.
Dover, 0.
Rochester, N. Y.
Greenhurst, N. Y.
South Bend, Ind.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Endicott, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Marcy, N. Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Coshocton, 0.
Elmira, N. Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Central Islip, L. I.
Norris town, Pa.
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Cuyahoga Falls, 0.
Centerline, Mich.
Coshocton, 0.
Endicott, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
East Smethport, Pa.
New York City, N.Y.
New Kensington, Pa.
Coatesville, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.
Clayton, N. Y.
E. Syracuse, N. Y.
Springdale, Pa.
Newport, R. I.
Cleveland, 0.
Johnstown, Pa.
Grand Island, N. Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Coshocton, 0.
Akron, 0.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Syracuse, New York
Ottawa, Ont.
Solon, Ohio
Williamsville, N. Y.
Orchard Park, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Johnstown, Pa.
Cuyahoga Falls, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Detroit, Mich.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Endicott, N. Y.
Massena, N. Y.
New Bedford, Mass.
New Bedford, Mass.
Buffalo, N. Y.

0

~

~
~

~

~
~

0

~
~
~

if).

~
~

~

~

~
~

roster
51

�Caacb

UIICB
Richard "Doc" Urich (pronounced Yur-ick)
became head coach at the University of Buffalo in 1966. In his first season the team won
five and lost five, established seven new UB
offensive records and displayed to Western
New York fans the most exciting college football ever seen in the area.
Urich came to Buffalo from Notre Dame,
where he was Ara Parseghian's top offensive
aide. Prior to then "Doc" served with Parseghian at Northwestern and Miami ( 0.), his
alma mater.
At Miami ( 0.) Urich was a standout in
college football. He played four years and in
his freshman and senior seasons his teams
made appearances in the Sun Bowl and the
Salad Bowl.
"Doc" and his wife, the former Patricia
Streight, also of Wapakoneta, have two children, Cynthia (born in 1952) and Danny
(born in 1955). The Urich family now lives
in Williamsville, N. Y.

Lee Jones Breaks Loose Behind Ahley's Block

�AERIAL VIEW OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO CAMPUS

JAMES E. PEELLE
DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS

JOHN R. SHARPE

NEW YORK NUCLEAR RESEARCH CENTER

EDMUND HAYES HALL

�Dick Ashley-E

54

Chuck Drankoski-E

Bob Embow-K

�Jim Finochio--G

Ted Gibbons--DT

Gorry Grubbs--DHB

Tom Hoke-DHB

Tom Hurd-DHB

Leeland Jones--FB

Rovell Jones--DT

John Lupienski-LB

Mike Luzny-LB

Mike Maser-G

Dennis Mason-QB

Mike Mosher-LB

Mike Murtha-QB

Pat Patterson-HB

Chuck Powrie-C

John Przybycien-DE

Joe Riccelli-DT

Rod Rishei-LB

Mike Risse II-T

Ken Rutkowski-HB

Don Sabo-LB

��ncsu
BIND

Crowder Construction Co.
Charlotte, N. C.

Building Highways
For
The Future

�'68 CHEVROLET PICKUP:
Look at all you get that you can't get anywhere else!
Like the truck-tough cab and body with double
strong construction-with full-height double sidewall box.
You get a road-balanced ride with rugged coil
springs all around (Series ClO, C20). And extra workpower
with job tailored engines. Plus the biggest dealer
network for service when you need it. Match all this
to styling with a purpose that sets the pace for the
industry and you've got the '68 Chevrolet
Job Tamer trucks. Only Chevrolet for '68 gives you
all this truck value for your money!
While you're at your Chevy dealer's,
pick up your free copy of the '67
Chevrolet College Football Handbook.
Available from September 20.

~

'68 JOB TAMER TRUCKS

�1967 Atlantic Coast Conference Football Schedule
SATURDAY

....

c.

WAKE FOWl

MICHIGAN

H. CAlOLINA

Alt.IY

Away

S. CAROLINA
Away (H)

IUFFALO

H..,.

Hom•

Home (H)

Away

A••r

TULANE
H.,..

A.A. STATE

DUKE

IUFFALO
H.,..

HOUSTON
Away (S.pt. 29-N)

WAKE FOlEST
Away (N)

Hom.(H)

S. CAROLINA

Ho-

A••r

AIWY

YANDEUILT ·

Away

Away

!YlACUSE
H.,..

AUIUIH

YIIGINIA

H. C. STAlE

All FOICE

MAITLAND

Away

Away

HorM(HC)

CLEMSON

H. CAIOLINA

Away

Horne (HC)

Away

OCT. 14

....

21

AlAIAMA
.Hom.

OCT. 21

II

H. CAROliNA
Aw•Y

NOJ, 11

NOY. 21

OKLAHOMA

FlA.. STATE

MAITLAND

WAKE FOREST
Hom• (H )

VJIGINIA
H.,.. (H) (HC)

S. CAIOLIHA

Home(HC)

DUlCE
Home (HC)

WAIYLAHD
Home (H)

V.M.I.
Hom•

N. CAlOUHA

WAICE FOlEST
Away (H)

H. C. STATE
Ho-

S. CAIOLINA
H.,..(N)(HC)

H. CAROLINA
H.-

TULSA

WAICE FOREST
H.,..

VlllaiHIA
Aw•Y

HAYY

CUMSOH
Away

VIllaiN lA
Away

PENN STATE

AtHOffolk, Ya.
N.CAIOUNA
H-

WAKE FOREST
Away(Hcw. 17-N)

DUKE
Aw•Y

CLEMSON

I

Away

VIRG INIA
Ho-

VII.QIHIA

.....,

.....

CLEW SOH
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H. C. STATE UNIVERSITY 1967 FOOTBALL TICKET APPLICATION

NAME ----------------------------------------------------------

-

AOOR~ -------------------------------------------------------

-

TJ ....

Game

"SEPT. 16

NORTH CAROLINA

"SEPT. 16

DUKE vs . WAKE

SEPT. 23

BUFFALO

Sept.

30

Fla . State

Oct.

7

Oct.

1~

Maryland

OCT.

21

WAKE FOREST

""OCT.

28

Nov.

~.

Nov.

Nov.

11
18

DUKE
V irginia
Penn State
Clemson

l'ric•
5.25

2 :00

RALEIGH

7 :30

RALEIGH

1:30

RALEIGH

7 :30

Tallahosoee

5 .00

Houston

5 .00

7:30

Houston

Sltw

-

Ho.
Tickets

Amount Sec.

5 .25

·-~-

5.25

1:30

College Park

7 :30

RALEIGH

5 .00
5 .25

1:30

RALEIGH

5 .25
5 .00

1:30

Charlottesville

1:30

Univ. Pork

5 .00

2:00

Clemson

5.00

-- f----·

• Big Four Day

•• Homecoming
o Stodium Contributor

S..t

l

-

~-=~=-

5- t-- 1--·
•

~
...l;

137 S. Wilmington St.
Phone 832-4728

.25

Postage &amp; Handling

o Wolfpack Club

Row

Total
0 Lower

$

0 Upper

Make all checks payable to CoUMum Box Office
Wotfpock Club Members Send Orden to P. 0 . lox S6S7 For Priority

59

�60

�1967 NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL TEAM
Front Row (Left-Right): Norman Cotes, Billy Morrow, Harry Martell, Co-Captain Steve Warren, Co-Captain Art McMahon, Chuck Amato,
Pete Sokalsky, Fred Combs.
Second Row: Don Donaldson, Jim Donnan, Lloyd Spangler, Trent H.olland, Terry Brookshire, Dennis Byrd, Tony Barchuk, Greg Williams.
Third Row: Carey Metts, Jimmy Lisk, Gerald Warren, Ron Watkrns, Mark Capuano, John McDuffie, Bobby Hall, Leon Mason, Flake
Campbell.
Fourth Row: Settle Dockery, Benny Lemmons, Jack Klebe, Dick Schirippa, Art Waleski, Wayne Lewis, Mike Alford, Steve Diacont, Dick
Idol, Bill Craig.
Fifth Row: Marvin Tharp, Paul Reid, Pete Bailey, Charles Tope, Gary Yount, Rocky Russell, Mike Hilka, Louis Biega, Dick Chapman,
Kelly Jones.
Sixth Row: Brian South, Charlie Bowers, Jack Whitley, Jerry Miller, Bob Follweiler, Leroy Hamilton, Robby Evans, Don Jordan, Don
Bullington.
Seventh Row: Steve Rummage, Darrell Moody, James Smith, Jim Hardin, Jerry Loftin, John Tranchese, Butch Altman, Dave Rodgers,
Ron Harris, Marcus Martin.
Eighth Row: Rich Starodub, Art Hudson, Ron Carpenter, Andy Solonoski, Mike Joyce, Dick Vincich, George Botsko, Ed Nicholas, Pete
Sowirka, Carlton Harrell.
Ninth Row: Coach Ernie Driscoll, Coach AI Michaels, Coach Bill Smaltz, Bill Williams, Jim Coman, Don Bumgarner, John Perrotti,
Reserve Zack Arthur, Reserve Bill Hart.
Back Row: David Vaughan, Trainer AI Proctor, Coach Carey Brewbaker, Chancellor John T. Caldwell, Coach Claude Gibson, Coach
Eugene Taylor, Warren Carroll, Equipment Manager Dorsey Poole, Head Coach Earle Edwards.

61

�10,1,8,

I

I
4

NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVEA.
ENJOYS SPACE AGE ACTIVITIES

Available in Wake County through Alfred Williams Co.

MANUFACTURING
COMPANY
LIBERTY, NORTH CAROLINA

M~

of u~ cuzJ Wood (J~ e~uuM

GOOD LUCK WOLFPACKJim Gregson, Class '60

Compliments of

MODERN OIL COMPANY,
E. P. SHAVENDER

62

''Lost in the outback in Australia."
That was the report last spring from
the bio-satellite-called "Noah's Ark I"
-that carried wasps and brine shrimp,
prepared in North Carolina State University labs, into space.
Orbiting the bio-satellite with terrestial life to study effects of space on
heredith is but one of several ways
N. C. State is involved in the Space
Age.
Noah's Ark I, incidentally, has never
been found. Another "Noah's Ark" is
scheduled to be launched this month.
NCSU definitely has a Space Age
posture- reaching for the stars.
One of its major departments, the
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, offers degree programs in aerospace.
Astronauts in the Gemini series
washed and dried their hands and
faces with cloths and towels produced
in the NCSU School of Textiles. A
large U. S. company with the contract
came to NCSU to get the job done.
At Cape Kennedy the gargantuan
rocket units and their capsules travel
from a 42-story assembly building on
a giant crawler to their launching pads
over crawlways which Dean of Engineering Ralph Fadum, a consultant
for Cape Kennedy, helped to shape.
Dr. A. C. "Buck" Menius, dean of
the School of Physical Sciences and
Applied Mathematics, is a frequent
consultant at NASA facilities.
In the NCSU classrooms, scores of
graduate students study under NASA
fellowships to increase the nation's
Space Age capability.
In the laboratories NCSU scientists
and engineers search for particles of
information to add to the vast knowledge required to conquer the great
voids of the universe.
At the Manned Space Flight Center
in Houston, at Cape Kennedy, and at
Huntsville, NCSU alumni play important roles in America's reach for
the moon and the stars beyond.
Back on the campus, Dr. Fred
Smetana, aerospace engineer, is con-

�I

D

RSity

during a series of studies through
the NCSU Space Chamber Laboratory,
where conditions 2,000 miles "up and
out" can be simulated.
Dr. Fred Tischer, electrical engineer, studies means of overcoming
communications "black-outs" with sophisticated millimeter wave transmission antennas.
In mechanical engineering, Dr.
Franklin D. Hart seeks answers to
noise and structural vibration problems
associated with the powerful vehicle
launches powered by millions of
pounds of thrust.
Electrical engineers puzzle over
solid state electronic devices that
might be used in solar cell energy
systems. Prof. E. G. Manning is one
of the principal investigators on the
project.
Down the street, Physicist Edward
R. Manring concentrates on the upper
atmosphere and its characteristics, conducting sodium vapor cloud probes of
the rarefied gases there.
The re-entry of capsules into the
earth's atmosphere is studied by Dr.
Williard Bennett in physics, who also
seeks to unravel the mysteries of
plasma gases-sometimes called the
"fourth state of matter." They are
the streams of ionized particles that
lash through space from the sun, that
dazzle as the Northern Lights, or confound communications when capsules
heat air white-hot on re-entry.
Dr. Robert W. Truitt, head of the
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, helps advise NASA
through his membership on the Advisory Board of Aircraft Aerodynamics.
And Dr. Hassan Ahmed Hassan,
named last year as one of NCSU's top
young scientists, ponders plasma space
engines and rockets through mathematical formulae that are in reality performance "models."
The people that make up North
Carolina State University do indeed
sail as Magellans in the world's adventure with space.

CAMERON VILLAGE
RALEIGH
PARKWOOD
WILSON
EUTAW
FAYETTEVILLE
NEW RIVER
JACKSONVILLE

;ltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltllllltflltlllftlllllllll.

YIJ.J.lll

STill
B8USI
OPEN EVENINGS 5:30-11:30 DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS

Specializing In Prime Beef And Live Maine Lobster
Vintage and Imported Beverages, A Warm Gracious Atmosphere
Under the Management of Arthur Palmer, Food Manager of the Velvet Cloak Inn
Carner of Daniels St. and Clarke Ave. in Raleigh's Cameron Village
Telephone 833-2458

63

�.•

Dr PepR~!
...

. $
•

e

·- ~ ·
§)

~

goes to all the best parties!

·-.tlr.

~

'CHEVY
1820 North Blvd.

TOWN'
Phone 834-6441

Distinctively Different ... _g
pick a pack of regular or king size today!

Home of the
Deal
ONE CARTON WON'T DO. BETTER GET TWO!

You meet the
Friendliest People

TRANSIT MIXED

at Triangle Chevy-Town

CONCRETE
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
ASPHALT PAVING
1820 NORTH BLVD.

F. D. LEWIS &amp; SON
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA

64

PHONE 834-6441

�"SEALTEST ... makes the difference"

Ice Cream - Milk
65

�~~where

Better Living Begins''

A colorful event-The Cary Band Day Parade.

The Cary Chamber of Comm

and the following business firms
welcome you to Cary:

GEORGE H. JORDAN
ASHWORTH REXALL DRUGS
CLINT WILLIAMS
JEFF SUGG
HOBBY'S SUPPLY
CARY BRANCH BANK OF
FUQUAY
CARY BUILDERS INC.

There is reason behind Cary's being one of
North Carolina's fastest growing communities
and as a town that has the highest per capita
income of any town or city in the state.
Four new schools, continually expanding
housing subdivisions, the proximity to Raleigh,
Durham Chapel Hill, and the Research Triangle ~nd the convenience of all modern
mean~ of transportation make Cary a pros-

66

perous residential town.
The major colleges and universities of North
Carolina are located nearby, providing Cary
residents with innumerable opportunities to
further their academic and cultural interests.
The fine city government is of the councilmanager form, with a five-man council supervising the administrative activities of the town
manager.

�LEON MASON
Hometown: Washington

Class: Jr.

Leon saw sparse action in 1966 (57 yards
in 14 carries), playing behind all-ACC
Don DeArment, but
once he gets the feel
of regular play,
should be a standout
11.
. . . possesses
great
'
speed and balance ...
has breakaway ability, something lacking in Wolfpack offense -past couple of
years . . . injured foot hurt -performance in spring . . . member of Wolfpack's record-setting 440-yard relay
team in track last spring ... led 1965
freshman team in rushing (256 yards
5.1) and pass receiving, after twice
all-East and all-state honors at Washington High . . . member of both
Shrine and East-West all-star squads
. . . was senior class president at
Washington . . . wood technology major.

~ nl.- 8
~:~.;
~~~4.$

DENNIS BYRD
Hometown: lincolnton

Class: Sr.

Dennis returns for
what should be a
standout senior year,
following all-America
honors in 1966
named to Football
Writers of America,
LOOK Magazine, and
NEA first teams and
second team Associated Press all-America s_quads · . · ·
twice all-ACC and led votmg for lmeman on 1966 conference team
Florida players named _him best ~p­
posing lineman faced m 1?66. ';';Ith
Gator captain Bill Carr notmg_. By
the end of the game everyone m our
line was calling him Mr. Byrd." ·. · ·
has all assets of great lineman:. s~ze,
agility strength and desire for hittmg
... ad~pt pass rusher with tremendous
forearm . . . all-State. Shrine Bowl
and East-West g-ame honors ~arned
after three standout years at Lmcolnton ... education major.

}'{eb CRrpet Jnn
615 E. MOREHEAD ST. I CHARLOTTE. N. C. 28202

Home of the Wolfpack in Charlotte

CAROLINA BUILDERS CORP.
C. L. Benson, President
T. G. Boykin, Vice President

J. Y. Hornbuckle, Secretary
C. L. Benson, Jr., Ass't. Secretary

MARK CAPUANO
Hometown: Neville Island, Po.

Building Materials -

Class: Jr.

Mark was forced il?'to
early starting actiOn
in 1966 when Pete
Sokalsky was ~nj?red
again s t Michig~~;n
State ... made r?okie
mistakes, but fimshed
the season as a polished defensive. performer . · · th_Is ~x­
perience will prove inv~luable m ?7
as starter again . . . qmck, verY: ag_Jle
and has unusual strength for his size
. . . "Mark will be as good as Pete
(Sokalsky) eventually," saY:s Edwards
. . . made big tackle, causmg fumble
and State recovery, to preserve Maryland win . . . won all-WPIAL honors
as junior and senior at Neville Island
High where he was MVP in footba~l
and basketball, and twice cl_ass pr~sl­
dent ... mathematics educatiOn maJor.

R. K. Ingram, Treasurer

Lumber -

Millwork

Builders Hardware

SERVICE DIVISIONS
Kitchen
Creation
of Raleigh

Carolina
Builders
Insulation Div.

Carolina Builders
Roofing and Siding
Division

Carolina Builders
Fence Dept ..

Phone 828-7 471

3000 Yonkers Road
Raleigh, N. C.
On Bypass Between Hwy. 1 &amp; 64

67

�RICHARD CHAPMAN
Hometown: Sanford

DOLLAR

SUPER
~REWIDE

BETHEL ( B-31-67)
-

LAGRANGE

RALEIGH:

-

VISr.!()(JIIT PRIOES-£VERYDAY

-DUNN- EDENTON ( 8-31-67)

LEXINGTON

-

MOREHEAD CITY

-HERTFORD

-

PEMBROKE -

WILMINGTON STREET, Fo"REST HILLS SHOPPING CEN-

TER, PERSON STREET PLAZA ( 9-7-67)

- ROXBORO - SCOTLAND

NECK -SMITHFIELD- WADESBORO- WARSAW- WILLIAMSTONWILMINGTON

-

WINDSOR (B-24-67)-

TERRACE ( 11-15-67)

ZEBULON:

WEDGWOOD

-DILLON, SOUTH CAROLINA.

MANY MORE COMING

Class: Jr:

Dick
saw
reserve
duty behind Gentry
at offensive tackle
last year, just missing a letter . . . is
counted on for top
reserve role again,
relieving Spangler at
left tackle . . . has
physical ability and
good agility, but needs improvement
on blocking ... named to all-Big Four
freshman team, after all-East, allState and East-West Game honors at
Sanford, where he was Eastern champion and state runnerup as heavyweight wrestler . . . twice Science
Fair award winner . . . FCA member
. .. lettered as weight man in track at
State last spring . . . textiles major.

LLOYD SPANGLER
Hometown: Richmond, Va.

Class: Sr.

Lloyd was injured in
opening game last
season and out for
the year with knee
injury . . . entering
1967 as he did in 1966
-at first string left
offensive tackle . . .
if he picks up where
left off a year ago,
and knee doesn't bother him, it could
solve a lot of the Pack's interior line
problems . . . not involved in contact
drills in spring ... fires out well and
does good job of adjusting on blocking
assignments . . . lettered in 1965 . . .
was twice all-city and all-district in
football at John Marshall High . . .
education major.

JACK KLEBE
Hol}letown: Cornwell Heights, Pa.
Class: Jr.

Jack should have a
good year in 1967, directing the Pack's
speedy second unit
. . . scrambling-type
QB who is excellent
runner with quick
hands and feet . . .
left-hander . . . gets
rid of the ball quickly and is a good short passer who picks
out second man well . . . with experience he'll be a good performer . . .
could do a lot of punting in 1967 . . .
involved in 32 offensive plays and four
punts as he just missed monogram
last year . . . weight man on Pack
track squad in spring . . . won nine
letters in three sports at Bensalem
Township High, gaining district honors
as QB ... recreation-education major

68

�FLAKE CAMPBELL
Hometown : Charlotte

Closs: Sr.

Flake has been a competent, steady player
as swing man and
sometimes starter at
both offensive g uard
positions the past two
letter-winning seasons
. . . earned top spot
at right guard in
.... spring drills a n d
could be big help to Pack with strongperformance in 1967 .... has physical
equioment to handle JOb ... good pass
blocker who makes assignment adjustments well . . . named top athlete as
senior at Myers Park High, after
twice winning state discus titles . . .
academic all-ACC in 1965 and is fine
student in metallurgical engineering.

RALEIGH CABANA
-MOTELNice-With
Reasonable Rates

NEW RESTAURANT AND
TAVERN NOW OPEN
AMPLE GUEST FREE PARKING

PAUL REID
Hometown : Avon-by-the-Seo, N. J.
Closs: Jr.

SHENANDOAH LIFE
Insurance Company

Paul will play a top
reserve role at cornerback this year,
after seeing some action in 1966 . . . between Reid and Idol
for third man at corner . .. hardest tackler in secondary and
has real good speed
. moves to end on punt returns and
is safety on kickoff team . . . sat out
1965 season after transferring from
Albright College where he played as
freshman . . . l!'ained all-star honors
at Neptune (N.J.) Hil?h and Phillips
Exeter Academy as halfback . . . history major.

You're j ust five walking
from the downtown area
a short drive from the
when you stay at the
Cabana!

minutes
and just
stadium
Raleigh

Offices in

GREENSBORO
REIDSVILLE
LEXINGTON
MT. AIRY

HARRY MARTELL
Hometown : Penns Grove, N. J. Closs: Sr.

RALEIGH
HICKORY
MORGANTON
MARION

Fred I. Joseph
Agency Monoger
500 W. Goston St.
Greensboro, N. C.

Harry has started
twenty
st r a ight
games entering the
1967 season as twotime letterman . . .
will be strong contender for all-ACC
honors as all-round
offensive player . . .
as good an offensive
end as State has had, say Wolfpack
coaches . . . has caul!'ht 23 passes for
244 yards and two TDs . . . extremely
and deceptively fast . . . strong and
effective blocker, making big plays in
direction that Pack does most of its
running . . . was all-South Jersey end
at Penns Grove Hil?h, which won conference football title all three years
he was on varsity . . . education
major.

Raleigh, North Carolina
S 14 South Salisbury Street
Phone 828-0311

69

�JAMES LISK
Hometown : Norwood

STAHL

RIDER Inc.
specialist in

installation and service for
buildings of every size and shape
New construction or reconversion . . . hotel, motel, apartment, office building, shopping center or industrial plant
... we con do the job right. Our equipment? Carrier, the
finest ond widest air conditioning line on the market. Our
personnel? Experts factory-trained in installation ond service. In short, we're specialists. Call us-let us show you
what we can do for you!

Jimmy was overshadowed by two seniors
(Rowe &amp; Coleman)
last year at wingback, carrying the
ball only once . . .
should make a good
showing in 1967 . . .
..
has all the physical
assets, but n e e d s
more determination to reach full potential . . . fine open-field runner . . .
came to State with as outstanding a
prep athletic background as any player in recent years ... setting voluminous school records :ip football (tailback) and baseball (pitcher) at South
Stanly High . . . played in East-West
baseball all-star game ... textiles major.

GREG WILLIAMS
Hometown: Danville, Po .

1 02 Harrison Ave.

Phone 834-0326

Raleigh, N. C.

Closs: Jr.

Class: Sr.

Greg, in his first full
season last year, did
an A-1 job at safety
and continued that
with a great spring
effort ... intercepted
three passes for 89
yards, i n c I u d i n g
touchdown returns of
24 yards against Virgtma and 45 yards against Maryland
in 1966 . . . has good hands, is strong
and quick, and tackles well as he covers
lot of territory . . . just missed letter
at cornerback as sophomore . . . won
10 letters and all-conference honors in
basketball, baseball and football at
Danville High, where he was named
school's outstanding athlete in 1964 ...
industrial recreation major.

All Types of

PICKER APRONS &amp; BEATER LAGS
'ROUND THE CLOCK APRON SERVICE

Call: 864-8705

70

JOHN McDUFFIE
Hometown: East Point, Ga.

Class: Jr.

John gives excellent
back-up support at
center as a standout
relief man . . . won
letter in 1966 . . .
has solved a problem
State has had for
years in being able to
make the long snap
to the kickers
d_oes well in all areas of play, but ia~k~
stze of Metts ... captained 1964 State
freshman team, after gaining all-state
center-linebacking honors at Headland
High und'er coach Bill Thorn . . . was
named outstanding senior at Headland
where he was senior class and FCA
president . . . education major.

�THE WOLFPACK
CONTINUES TO WEAR

''~he dJ.tned Jn ~he

dJ.teJJ ''

ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT

BY
RAWLINGS

Ideal Christmas
Gifts
Order Yours
Today!

Special Boy's Football Uniforms
Styled by RAWLINGS
Makers of the
Wolfpack Varsity Uniforms

Sized for Boys
Small Medium Large
Price $9.95 complete
Please Include
3% N. C. Sales Tax
and .SO for Mailing

Real Protective Equipment

JOHNSON -LAMBE, CO.
322 S. Salisbury St.

Raleigh, N. C.

Phone TE 2-8848

Dependable for 30 Years

Free Drive-in-Parking -

Friendly Service

71

�THE
WOLFPACK
CLUB

FULL F:'ASHIONEO

NafhanEbb
.
.,.~

'-' '-"' •

FULL FASHIONED SWEATERS &amp; SHIRTS
for

MEN- BOYS- LADIES

CASHMERE
LAMBSWOOL
SHETLAND

ITS PURPOSE
To raise funds, through contributions
from the alumni, friends and students,
for athletic scholarships. The intercollegiate athletics program is the
major source of unity and wholesome
entertainment for the alumni, student
body, faculty and friends. It instills a
feeling of loyalty and school spirit that
no other extra-curricular program can
provide.
A young man with athletic ability
can get scholarship assistance from
practically any college or university
today. To qualify for scholarship aid
here at North Carolina State University, each young man is carefully
screened for his scholastic background
and character, in addition to his athletic
ability, and he must be approved by the
coach, athletic director, director of admissions and faculty scholarship committee.
We all want our school to excel in
every phase of endeavor. This is one
program that you can have a part in
determining its excellence.
ITS OPERATION
Accurate records are kept and
audited annually. Funds are placed in
a savings account until needed. The
Wolfpack Club receives a statement,
semi-annually, from the business office
for all scholarship expenses incurred
and the school is paid direct. No funds
are given to the individual athlete.
YOUR PARTICIPATION

BONLEIGH KNITTING MILLS, INC.
P. 0 . Box 926
Thomasville, N. C., 27360

A contribution to the NCSU Student
Aid Association constitutes membership
in the Wolfpack Club.
From a personal standpoint, great
satisfaction is derived by sharing with
other alumni and friends the task of
maintaining North Carolina State University's prestige in intercollegiate
sports, and at the same time, helping a
young man gain an education.
Contributions from a large number of
individuals will accomplish the desired
results without great sacrifice on the
part of anyone, and will provide the
continuity so essential to the success of
the program. Success lies in numbers.
Basic membership is $25 annually.
However, there is no maximum or
minimum on what an individual may
give in support of the program.
Wolfpack Club membership entitles
you to t he following.
$25 to $50
Membership card, car decal, athletic
events schedules, bulletins from the
coaches and a #6 priority on the purchase of four season tickets (football
and basketball.

72

�$50 to $100

All of the above with a #5 priority on
the purchase of four season tickets
(football and basketball).
$100 to $200
AU of the above with a #4 priority on
the purchase of four season tickets
(football and basketball), plus comPlimentary brochures on all sports
~nd a parking permit for Carter StadlUrn with the purchase of season
tickets.
$2oo to $500

All of the above with a #3 priority on
the purchase of four season tickets
(football and basketball), plus a
Parking permit for basketball events
at Reynolds Coliseum.
$5oo to $1,000

AU of the above with a #2 priority
on the purchase of four season tickets
(football and basketball), plus an
0 Ption to purchase four Atlantic
Coast Conference Tournament tickets.
$l,ooo and over

AI! of the above with a #1 priority on
the purchase of four season tickets
(f?otball and basketball), plus appr?Pnate recognition as scholarsh1p
8 Ponsor.

Our Regional Managers, Ed Hicklin and Harry Stewart, are
proud of their area operations in North Carolina.
They supervise qualified managers and agents who
provide security and service throughout the State.
Our managers and their staffs arc specialists
- men who offer modern insurance pro-

tection plus the sen ice to back it up.
Our specialists can

explain Occidental ' s
Salary Continuation
(disability income ) and Executiw Planning Programs.
For details, call an Occidental agent in your
town. lf we haven't a man in your town, call Ed or
Harry. Ed's territory is the West. Harry's the East.

W olfpack Club
N. C. State University
P. 0. Box 5657
Raleigh, N. C.
Membership Application
Plea.se Print
.o\ddres8

Phone

City

County
State
l
oltrn a supporter of the Wolfpack as an
tnember

new member

which is

Contributing $ ..

enclosed, Pledge
payable date .. · · · · ·
l&gt;lea
Studse rnake remittance payable to NC SU
ent Aid Association, Inc.
Solicited by

...

Date

Go Wolfpack Go

OCCIDENTAL
Life Insurance Company of North Carolina

73

�Ft•eshness
Flavor

MORE

,,

II

of what
Yon Buy

Milk For!

Nnrt41!itlln ~ttak ljnunt
OPEN 5 P.M.-11:30 P.M.-MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAYS

FEATURING

CHARCOAL STEAKS
We
Appreciate
Your
Business!

buy coble!
74

TOTAL SEATING CAPACITY FOR 475
BANQUET FACILITIES UP TO 200
PRIVATE DINING ROOMS 8 TO 50
TAP ROOM
ADJOINING
II A.M. 'TIL II P.M.
787-9966
ON THE GARDEN

JOHNNY VASSILLION, Owner

NORTH HILLS SHOPPING CENTER

�CENTRAL TRUCK SALES
P. 0. Box 2915
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA

27602
Parts &amp; Service -

Telephone 919-787-3203

Highway 70 West

''THE TRUCK PEOPLE"

THE TRUCK PEOPLE WISH YOU
A SUCCESSFUL SEASON

75

�The Athletics Staff

HANOVER
FROZEN FOODS, INC.
1801 Ivy Avenue

Telephone 723-161 5

Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Wholesale and Institutional Dist ributor

Faculty Chairman-Dr. Ralph E. Fadum (Illinois '35)
Director of Athletics-Roy B. Clogston,
(Springfield '28)
Ass't. to Athletics Director-Willis
Casey (UNC '46)
Ass't. to Athletics Director-Vic Sorrell (Wake Forest '27)
Information Director-Frank Weedon
(Maryland '55)
Wolffack Club Director-Warren Carrol (N. C. State '51)
Box Office Manager-Dick Farrell
(Hardbarger '48)
Team Physicians-Dr. A. E. Harer
(Buffalo '42); Dr. P. G. Fox (Med.
College of Va. '22); Dr. J. J. Combs
(Columbia '26)
Head Trainer-A! Proctor (Wake Forest '58)
Basketball Trainer-Harold Keating
(Springfield '42)
Ass't. Trainer-Chester Grant
Equipment Manager-Dorsey Poole
(West. Carolina '51)
Admin. Ass't.-H. B. McCullough
(Oglethorpe '36)
Accountant-Charles Ward
Concessions Manager-Wiley Gouge
(N. C. State '62)

Coaches

ancl Loan A•socia'l"ion
"RALEIGH'S OLDEST FINANCIAL INSTITUT I ON"

76

Baseball-Sam Esposito (Indiana '64)
Ass't. Baseball-Jim Edwards (N. C.
State '48)
Basketball-Norman Sloan (N. C. State
'57)
Ass't. Basketball-K. M. "Charlie" Bryant (Wofford '54)
Cross-Country-Mike Shea (N. C. State
'57)
Fencing-Ron Weaver (Ohio State '60)
Golf-Albert P. Michaels (Penn State
'35)
RiHe- Sgt. Allen Vestal, U. S. Army
Soccer-Max Rhodes (West. Carolina
'55)
Swimming-Willis Casey (UNC '46)
Tennis-To be named
Track- Paul Derr (Illinois '28)
Ass't. Track- Jim Westcott (Plymouth
St. '65)
Wrestling-A! Crawford (Appalachian
'42)
Ass't. Wrestling-Jerry Daniels (Appalachian '58)

�State Capital
Life Insurance Company

HOME OFFICE
Raleigh, North Carolina
77

�Compliments of

WORTH
Chemical Corporation

CHARLES B. DOUGLAS
SINCE
1930

REALTOR

Serving the Carolinas and
Virginia

Charles B. Douglas
&amp; Co., Inc.

• TEXTILE CHEMICALS
• HEAVY CHEMICALS

COMMERCIAL -

• CHEMICAL FORMULATORS

712-15 LAWYERS BUILDING

Join the

INN CROWD
At the Downtowner Restaurant after the game for your
favorite snack or the very ultimate in fine cuisine.

ADAMS

INDUSTRIAL

CONCRETE PRODUCTS
eompa'"f

IN ... CONTAINERS- TRUCKLOADS
RALEIGH, N . C. 27602

CARLOADS -

AREA 919-832-0715

TANK CARS

832-5641
GREENSBORO
CHARLOTTE

WESTEll
MANDl\
202 LUXURY APARTMENTS--Furnished or unfurnished . Studio, 1, 2, 3,
bedroom, up to 2 V2 baths; air conditioned with or without wall-to-wall
carpet: dishwasher avai lable-Launderette available . Swimming Pool.
2300 Avent AVENT FERRY RD.
Off Western Blvd . at N. C . State U.

RESIDENT
MANAGER

RALEIGH, N. C.
PHONE TE 3-3666

78

834-5911

WILMINGTON
NORTH CAROLINA

Raleigh Telephone VA 8-2070
Durham Telephone 549-8196

TRIANGLE
BRICK CO.

TRIANGLE PARK AREA,
ROUTE THREE,
DURHAM,

P. 0 . BOX 2016

TANK TRUCKS

NORTH

CAROLINA

Wake County's Only
Brick Company

�Rike W reeking
Company, Inc.
Demolition Contractors
Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Compliments

NATURAL GAS
IS

of
WHO WE SERVE

GROWING

PROVES
HOW WE SERVE

Associate Member
OFFICES

. 725-8789

Winston-Salem

FINCOLOR
PHOTO
FINISHERS

772-2466

Raleigh

442-0344

Rocky Mount

. 527-4028

Kinston

f

h'

"We have winning teams ord •re
perienced
quarterbacks an
coach."

°

With

RALEIGH
Our modern new office building on
Hillsboro Street at Woodland Road will
soon be completed and ready to meet
the growing demands for NATURAL
GAS created by the dynamic progress
of the Raleigh area,

with ex-

helluva

PUBLIC SERVICE CO.
of North Carolina, Inc.

PAR
GOLF
JIMBO'S

Driving Range, Inc.

JUMBOS,
INC.

Buffet
and

Peanuts and Peanut Products

Confederate House Restaurant

Edenton, North Carolina

e

18 HOLE MINIATURE COURSE

e

30 TEE DRIVING RANGE

e

9 HOLE LIGHTED PITCH &amp; PUTT
COURSE

PRO LINE GOLF
EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
(All makes &amp; price)
Hwy. 401 South

Phone TE 3-0192

In Raleigh's Cameron Village
In Durham's Northgate Shopping Center

Open Year Round

HARRY DUPREE, PRO
Lessons by Appointment

79

�"THE EDUCATION-CENTERED STORE''

For Students, Faculty, Alumni,
And "Friends of the University"

Books of all Publishers

Engineering, Art and Design Supplies

N.C. State Souvenirs

OPEN: Weekdays 8:30 to 5:00
Saturdays 8:30 to 1:00

TELEPHONE: 755-2161

STUDENTS SUPPLY STORES
on the campus
NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY

80

�ATLANTIC COAST
CONFERENCE
FOOTBALL
CHAMPIONS

Big Boy
Family Restaurants
..c - ......
RALEIGH - Downtown Boulevard

DURHAM - I 85 at Bypass

Conference

All
Games

W L T

W L T
7 2 1
10 1 0

Year

Team

1953

Duke
Maryland

4 0 0
3 0 0

1954

Duke

4 0 0

8 2 0

1955

Maryland
Duke

4 0 0
4 0 0

10 1 0
7 2 1

1956

Clemson

4 0 1

7 2 2

1957

N. C. State

5 0 1

7 1 2

1958

Clemson

5 1 0

8 3 0

1959

Clemson

6 1 0

9 2 0

1960

Duke

5 1 0

8 3 0

1961

Duke

5 1 0

7 3 0

1962

Duke

6 0 0

8 2 0

1963

N. C. State
North Carol ina

6 1 0
6 1 0

8 3 0
9 2 0

1964

N. C. State

5 2 0

5 5 0

11 .. , _

1965* N. C. State
Clemson

4 3 0* * 6 4 0
4 3 0* * 5 5 0

1966

6 1 0

Clemson

6 4 0

* N. C. State and Clemson named cochampions when South Carol ina, by
ACC games.
* * Records do not include forfeited games.

lltlltam 1Krrtslrr

Nral
GENERAL
CONTRACTOR

ATLANTIC COAST
CONFERENCE
1966 Final Standings
Conference
Games
Won

INDUSTRIAL
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

Phones: JE 7-2717 JE 7-2332

901 W. Third St.
Roanoke Rapids, N. C.

Lost Won

Clemson .... ... ....... 6
N. C. State ... ....... 5

All
Games

6

Lost
4

2

5

5

3

3

4

6

Maryland ........... . 3

3

4

6

Virginia

..............

Duke ............. ..... 2

3

5

5

Woke Forest ······ 2
South Carolina .... 1

4

3

7

North Carolina .. ..

4

2

8

3

9

81

�PH.D.'S
&amp;
FOOTBALL
Gone is the image of the football
hero who barely slid through college.
Today he might even be a Ph.D.
Following the nationwide trend
toward graduate studies, many ortb
Carolina State University athletes are
now working toward graduate degrees.

Albemarle Plumbing
&amp; Heating Co., Inc.
Since 1908
N. C. LICENSE 1309
CONTRACTORS FOR
PLUMBING
HEATING
AIR CONDITIONING
VENTILATION
PROCESS PIPING
BOILER PLANTS
ALBEMARLE, N. C.

539 West Main St.
Phone 704 982-2154
RALEIGH, N . C.

610 Maywood Ave.
Phone 919 833-4658

82

Soon to receive his Ph.D. is Thomas
C. Dellinger, an aerospace engineer
who played on the 1960-62 Wolfpack
teams with Roman Gabriel.

�(ALSO IN GREENSBORO &amp; WINSTON-SALEM)

Leaders in contemporary hospitality
.Among the many who displayed
:ishletic prowess with the pigskin, and
o attained masters' degrees are:
~~elby Mansfield ( 1963-65), Alonzo
" ick" Barnes (1961-63) and Hazel
II. B." Matthews (1961-63).
Bob Kennel, an honor graduate who
played with the Wolfpack in the late
flfhes, also obtained a master's degree
~t Ncsu. He is now responsible for
evelopment and testing of reentry
Vehicles in our country's Nike defense
Program.

11

:l
h
e

h The Graduate School at NCSU,
headed by Dean Walter J. Peterson,
flas doubled its enrollment in the last
hVe Years. Over the past 10 years, it
as averaged an 18 percent increase
annually.

r

k

RALEIGH
Phone: 828-0811-Voyoger
834-8215-Chod-Mont

1707 Hillsborough St.

Wilson - Emerson Construction Co. Inc.
GENERAL CONTRACTORS

Specializing in Public Utilities
467-4822

CARY, N. C.

This fall more than 2 , 000 students,
ne-flfth of the total student body, are
enrolled in the Graduate School.
0

b Graduate degree programs have
s

and- a distinctive name for
fine food and service

teen expanded, including several in
he School of Liberal Arts. There are
now 48 masters' programs, with numerous fields of study and there are 32
doctoral degree fields.
. Dean Peterson points out: "In teachIng, government and industry, the
~ation has never had a greater need
Ior individuals trained at the highest
NVels, and the Graduate School at
· C. State is trying to do the best
Possible job."

Compliments

FERGUSON~s

HARDWARE
Phone 832-37 43

2900 Hillsboro St.

Power Mowers &amp; Repairs
Household Supplies
City Wide Delivery

Builders Hardware
Gorden Supplies
Tools-Seed-Fertilizer

RALEIGH, N. C.

HOUSE OF LIGHTS, INC.
616 Downtown Blvd.
ON

t:

WITH THE NEW

rh;:lllas C. Dellinger, former NCSU foot·
Player, removes his football helmet
th replace it with the academic cop of
boe Ph.D. Dellinger, who played pro foot·
N~~ With the Buffalo Bills, came bac.k to
Od U to learn more about the sw•ftly11 "a.ncing technology of his field, aero·
h~llhcal engineering. He will soon have
doctoral degree.

Raleigh, N. C.

See Bob or Tom Beverly for the best in Lighting
Fixtures, Inter-Comm Systems and Ventilating Equip.

"Service is Our Motto"
Phone 828-8174

83

�Concrete for this Beautiful Stadium was Furnished by

CAROLINA READY MIXED
CONCRETE COMPANY
1131 N. WEST STREET
P. 0. BOX 2944

PHONE VA 8-4403

RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA

�North Carolina State
Football Honor Roll
These records are correct to the
best of our knowledge. We welcome
corrections and additions that are
accompanied by adequate proof.

PEEBLES, BENSON &amp;
BARBOUR INC.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS

All-Americas
1918-John Ripple, Tackle
1935-Steve Sabol, Center
1939-Ed (Ty) Coon, Tackle
1950-Elmer Costa, Tackle
1957-Dick Christy, Halfback
1960-Roman Gabriel, Quarterback
1961-Roman Gabriel, Quarterback
1963-Don Montgomery, End
1966-Dennis Byrd, Defensive
Tackle

All-Southern
1910-D. A. Roberson, Halfback
1910-D. B. Floyd, Guard
1910-J. B. Bray, Center
1917-Dick Gurley, Quarterback
1917, 1918-John Ripple, Guard
1917-Solomon L. Homewood, Tackle
1918-Bill Wagner, Guard
1927-Jack McDowall, Halfback
1928- Fred Vaughan, Guard
1933, 1934, 1935-Steve Sabol, Center
1939-Ed Coon, Tackle
1940-Bill Faircloth, Guard
1944, 1945, 1946--Howard Turner,
Tailback
1948-Bernie Watts, Guard
1949-Charlie Musser, Guard
1950- Ed Mooney, Tailback
1950, 1951- Elmer Costa, Tackle

All-Atlantic Coast Conference
(ACSWA Balloting)
1957- Dick Christy, Halfback
1957- Darrell Dess, Tackle
1957- Jim Oddo, Center
1958- Bob Pepe, End
1958- Bill Rearick, Guard
1960-Collice Moore, Tackle
1960-Claude Gibson, Halfback
1960-Alex Gilleskie, Guard
1960, 1961- Roman Gabriel, Quarterback
1961-John Morris, End
1962, 1963-Don Montgomery, End
1963- Jim Rossi, Quarterback
1963- Bill Sullivan, Guard
1963-Bert Wilder, Tackle
1964-Bennett Williams, Guard
1964-Ray Barlow End
1964-Glenn Sas~r, Tackle
1965, 1966-Dennis Byrd, Def.
Tackle
1965- Tony Golmont, Def. Safety
1965- Shelby Mansfield, Halfback
1965- Pete Sokalsky, Def. End
1965, 1966-John Stec, Guard
1966-Don DeArment, Halfback
1966--Dave Everett Linebacker
1966-Bill Gentry Offensive Tackle
1966-Art McMahon, Defensive
Back
1966-Gary Rowe, Halfback

We get a

KICK

Specializing In Sa les A nd
Sales Promotion Of
Residential Property
Exclusive Sales Agents For Ashley Park,
Scarsdale and Plantation Estates
Sub-Divisions

out of you .
our loyal fans :who roar your approval

of our

c::~ots,

suits, dresses, and sports-

wear. V1s1t us soon in any or all of our
three locations: downtown and Moe
Josephs or MJ's Casual' Colony in
Cameron Village.

COMPLETE REAL ESTATE
SERVICE
5500 Six Forks Rd.

Dial 787-1828

Stockton, White
&amp;
Company
MORTGAGE BANKERS

Professionals In
Long Term Financing

GATEWAY
RESTAURANT
Across From The Main

RALEIGH
700 First-Citizens Bank Building

Entrance At STATE

CHARLOTTE
118 South Church Street
GREENSBORO
First-Cit izens Bank Building
FAYETTEVILLE
First-Citizens Bank Buiding

85

�NORTH CAROLINA
STATE UNIVERSITY
1967 Freshman
No. Player

Good Luck, North Carolina State!
Good student performance-in athletics and studies
-depends on planned nutrition. Slater is proud to
serve appetizing balanced meals at North Carolina State and 280 other leading U.S. educationa l
institutions.
One Slater belief is that student dining is an important part of college life and should be a cuitural growth experience. Therefore, Slater offers
a variety of tastefully prepared meals, served in a
friendly fashion. We hope you continue to enjoy
our dining service!

32

33
36
43

44
46
50
51
52
53
54
60
61
62
64
65
66
67

70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
85
87
88

QB
QB
QB
QB
QB
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
FB

John Bradsher
FB
Gary Moser
FB
Larry Clark
FB
Don Bradley
WB
Pete Burgess
WB
Tom Litchfield WB
John Elliott
C
John Wilson
C
Dan Sarik
C
George Smith
C
John Norris
C
Butch Powers
G
Michael Nicklas
G
Andy Barker
G
David Whitehead G
Bill Phillips
G
Stuart Deibel
G
Gary Zickefoose
G
Richard Dellinger
John Ivancic
Harry Messenger
Don Kelly
Vann Blake
Dan Medlin
Bill Vlachos
David Phillips
John Shepherd
Bruce Purvis
Nick Wehrmann
Phil Marquis
Mike Cloy
Jacques Descent
Pat Kubes
Dave Adamczyk
Richard Thornton

Slater School &amp; College Services
Joseph D. Grogon, Director of Dining Service

Pos.

11 Dennis Britt
12 Rick Lanoy
14 Paul Sharp
15 Mike Iatarola
16 Bob Guillaume
17 Bill Baker
20 Lynn McElroy
21 Mike Holveck
22 Mike Gukich
24 Art Bethel
26 Glenn Overman
30 Mike Malian
31 Neil Seguine

T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

Roster
Hometown
Zelienople, Pa.
Patton, Pa .
Ahoskie
Hammond, Ind.
Florence. Ky.
Miami Beach, Fla.
Charlotte
Allentown, Pa.
Roanoke Rapids
St. Clairsville, Ohio
Ahoskie
Hickory
New Monmouth,
N. J .
Roxboro
Graham
Neptune, N. J.
Meriden, Conn.
Burlington
Washington
Belle, West Va.
Fayetteville
L ebanon, Pa .
McKeesport, Pa.
Knoxville, Tenn.
Chesapeake, Va.
Lock Haven, Pa.
Kingsport,

Tenn .

Covington, Va.
Durham
Richmond, Va.
Buckhannon,
W.Va.
Hickory
Valencia, Pa.
Charlotte
Raleigh
Wallace
Thomasvtlle
F ayetteville
Durham
Pittsburgh, Pa.
T arboro
N. W ilkesboro
Brooklyn, N. Y.
E ast Point, Ga.
Montreal, Canada
Fayetteville
Evans City, Pa.
Goldsboro

1967 F RESH MA N SCHEDULE
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

Duke
North Carolina
Wake Forest
Davidson
North Carolina

22
29
6
20
27

Away
Home
Hom e
H ome
A wa y

1966 F R ESHMAN R ESULTS
N.C. State

W on 2

86

7
28
7
28
6

North Carolina
North Carolina
Wake Forest
Davidson
Duke
Lost 3

21
7
18
3
14

�we've been working on the skyline
Nello L. Teer's new Building Division is scarcely a year old,
but already we've been working on the skyline of North
Carolina. The new Liggett &amp; Myers and General Telephone
buildings in Durham are good examples of things we're
doing.
Experience in highway and heavy construction, domestic
and foreign, paving, dredging, railroading, quarrying and
engineering- all have helped to make our new Building
Division a going concern from the very start.
If you are contemplating an industrial, institutional or commercial building, contact Wayne H. Harrold, Vice President
and General Manager, Building Division.
NELLO L. TEER COMPANY

~

87

�HELMOLD FORD

•

For Best Deal-Best Service
at New Location
US-1 So. ot Cary Macedonia Rd. Intersection
2.8 Miles from Hillsboro St.
Tel.: 467-1881

Raleigh, N. C.

PIEDMONT WELDING SUPPLY COMPANY
OFFICES
Charlotte • Gastonia • Greensboro • High Point •
Winston-Salem

Anything and Everything for the Welder

0avidson and gones, Sfnc.
Contractors
625 Tucker Street, Post Office Box 10605
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA 27605
Area Code 919-832-3437
Industrial -

Commercial -

~~;~ TwoF~~:S~~ Apls.

1,JtCI

(Includes Utilities)

(Located at intersection of
Lak• Boone Trail &amp; U.S. Hwy.
,.AftTM.NTS

One Bypass-No. 29 on map)

RALEIGH'S FINEST APARTMENT
COMMUNITY
• Best Area

• Best Schools

and Air-Conditioning

Wooded Site

• Individual Heating

• Situat~d in Park-like 40-acre

• Includes Pool and Clubhouse

DECORATED MODEL APARTMENTS OPEN D AILY
NOON-6 P . M .

For Information Dial 787-2158 Raleigh

88

Residential

INDEX
OF
ADVERTISERS
Page
18
Acme Laundry ..... .
78
Adams Concrete Products
82
Albemarle Plumbing &amp; Heating
92
Amedeo's ...... .. .
16
American Personnel . .
12
The Angus Barn
........ 14
Army ROTC
35
Associated Insurers, Inc.
29
Athey Products Corp.
5
Atlantic Chemical Corp. . .
79
Balentines
99
Burnie Batchelor
72
Bonleigh Knitting Mills
22
Borden Brick &amp; Tile
.. cover
Boren Clay Products
34
Brancli Banking &amp; Trust
63
Burton's, Inc.
99
Canton Cafe
Carolina Builders
67
Carolina Maintenance Co., Inc.
24
Carolina Power &amp; Light Co.
10
Carolina Ready Mixed
84
Carolina Trailways
96
Cary Page
66
Central Truck Sales
75
58
Chevrolet Motor Division
74
Coble Dairy Products
.center
Coca-Cola
30
College Inn .. .
33
Colonial Stories, Inc.
57
Crowder Construction
16
Custom Brick Co.
Dande!l Bread ........ .
99
Davidson &amp; Jones, Inc.
88
T. A. Dick Insurance Agency
29
Charles B. Douglas &amp; Co., Inc.
78
Downtowner Motel ...
78
Dr. Pepper Bottling Co. . ..
64
Durham Life Insurance Co.
32
Fallon's Florist ............ .
8
Ferguson's Hardware .......... . 83
Finch's Drive In
89
Fincolor Photo Finishers
79
A. E. Finley &amp; Associates, Inc.
20
First Citizens Bank
27
First Federal Savings &amp; Loan .
21
Vic Fisher Insurance Agency .
26
Ford-Cross Ceramic Tile &amp; Glass
91
Gateway Restaurant
84
Gordon Foods
32
Greensboro Coliseum
90
Gregson Manufacturing Co.
62
Hanes Corp. . ..
37
Hanover Frozen Foods
..
76
Harriet &amp; Henderson Cotton Mills 91
Heater Well Co.
25
Heilig-Levine
59
Helmold Motor Co.
88
Holly Farms Poultry Co.
82
House of Lights, Inc.
83
Huneycutt, Inc. .
39
Jimbo's Jumbos
79
Johnny's, Inc. . .....
36
Johnson Lambe Co.
71
Jesse Jones Sausage Co.
1
Kerr Rexall Drug
68
Lambeth Construction Co.
98
Land's
........ . 33
F. D. Lewis &amp; Son, Inc.
64
Longines
4
Long
....... .
97
Long Meadow
9
Mac Josephs
85
Otto B. May, Inc.
94
The Mebane Co. .
36
Mims Distributing Co.
.
33
Mitchell Distributing Co. .
7
Mitchell Funeral Home .
26
Modern Oil Co. . . . ...
62
Nationwide Insurance Co.
99

�81
William Kreisler Neal .. . ..
18
Norfolk Southern Railroad
92
N. C. Butane Gas Co.
.cover
N. C. Equipment Co.
2
N. C. National Bank .
60
N. C. Products .. . ....... .
74
North Hills Steak House .
10
North State Pyrophyllite .
21
Nowell's ................ .
73
Occidental Life Insurance
88
The Palms Apartments
79
Par Golf Driving Range
89
Park Central Hotel
96
Partitions, Inc.
17
Peden Steel Co. . ..
85
Peebles, Benson and Barbour
6
J. C. Penney's .
.
93
Pepsi Cola . . . .
. .... · ·
92
George E. Pickett, Jr. &amp; Assoc.
43
Piedmont Chemical
88
Piedmont Welding Supply
19
Pine State Creamery Co.
96
The Plantation Inn
.
79
Public Service Co. of N. C.
.center
Oldsmobile Division
69
Raleigh Cabana
41
Raleigh Linen Service
76
Raleigh Savings &amp; Loan
21
The Ranch Motel
67
Red Carpet Inn
79
Rike Wrecking Co.
26
Roses Stores, Inc.
49
Sanders Ford Co.
35
Sanford Brick
65
Sealtest Foods
..
.100
Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co.
91
Senter-Sanders Tractor Corp.
69
Shenandoah Life Insurance
81
Shoney's
98
Sir Walter Hotel
86
Slater's Food Service
..
34
AI Smith Buick Co., Inc.
91
Smith Coal &amp; Oil Co.
..
70
Smith Textile Apron Co.
22
Snelling &amp; Snelling .
15
Southern Dyestuffs Co.
70
Stahl-Rider, Inc. . .
Stan's Restaurants ....... · · · · · · 31
77
State Capital Life Insurance Co.
36
Stephenson,
Inc.
.
.
.
.
.
J
42
· P. Stevens
.
29
Stewart Vending
85
SStockton White &amp; Co.
.
80
tudent Supply . . . . ..
68
~Uper Dollar Stores, Inc. . . · · · · · ·
92
Naylor Biscuit Co.
87
T~~~p~~nTce:diii~~ o1d.~n;~bil~ · · 38
28
Tire Sales &amp; Service . . . . . . · ·
8
To:vn
and
Country
Tire
Service
T
78
nangle Brick Co.
64
~r!angle Chevrolet, Inc.
.
22
1{~angle Foods, Inc. . ..... · · ·
98
tJ Jangle Motel ...... .
13
tJ ncle Don's Barbeque House .
33
Vpchurch Esso Service ..... .
63
VIllage Steak House
83
oyager Inn .....
25
WPTF Radio Co. . ..
21
WWadsworth Wrecking Co.
.cover
alker Martin, Inc.
23
WWats&lt;?n Electrical Const. Co.
22
ays1de Furniture Co.
18
~- R. Weir Auction Co . . .
36
Wesco &amp; Assoc. . ......... .
78
~stern
Manor
Apts.
W Ickes
30
26
Al~red Willia~~ &amp; Co.
83
~~!son-Emerson Construction Co.
12
Wilson Parts &amp; Equipment Co.
13
omble, Inc.
78
~orth Chemical Corp.
89
\' renn-Pharr
. . . . . ...
91
ancey Insurance Agency .
91
orba's Den, Inc. . ...... .

"Insurance and Bond Service"

611 Tucker Street
Phone 833-9761

Park
Central
Hotel

P. 0. Box 9602
Raleigh, N. C.

FINCH'S
RESTAURANTS
FINCH'S DRIVE IN &amp; CAFETERIA
401 W. Peace St.,
Open 6:00 a.m. til Midnight

THE BROILER, INC.
217 Hillsboro St.,
Open 24 hours daily

ALSO CONCESSIONS
CATERING SERVICE

z

89

�FOUNDATJ:
ARE FORE
1967-68
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE

Dec. 1

DUKE VS. VfRGINIA TECH
Dec. 12
Here, in the heart of North Carolina's
Piedmont Plain, are exhibition facilities Ia
challenge the/ nation's flnest.

Three units: an auditorium, town hall and
coliseum built to accommodate the most
elaborate (or the simplest) presentation.
These impressive structures place facilities of
unparalleled excellence at your command.
For Illustrated Brochure,
Information or Availabilities
contad:
ROBERT H. KENT, MANAGING DIRECTOR

Greensboro Auditorium and Coliseum

CAROLINA VS. KENTUCKY
Dec. 16

CAROLINA VS. PRINCETON
Dec. 30

DUKE VS. WAKE FOREST
Jan . 18

ST. LOUIS HAWKS VS.
BALTIMORE BULLETS
Regular Season N.B.A. Game
Jan. 27

WAKE FOREST VS. DAVIDSON

1n1 W. L.. St. e Tel, 292·1222
GrMn.boro • North Carolina

•

Much of the rapid progress North
Carolina State University has made
during the past quarter-century has
been accomplished through the financial assistance of numerous industrial
and business organizations and individuals.
This private £nancial aid is received
through nine separate foundations: The
N. C. State University Foundation, the
N. C. Agricultural Foundation, the
N. C. Dairy Foundation, the N. C.
Design Foundation, the N. C. Engineering Foundation, the N. C. Forestry
Foundation, the Pulp and Paper Foundation, the N. C. Textile Foundation
and the North Carolina 4-H Development Fund.
The first of these organizations, the
N. C. Textile Foundation, was incorporated in 1942.
Since 1942, NCSU foundations have
collected more than $14 million in nontax funds to aid the dynamic teaching,
research and extension activities of the
University.
Directing the foundation programs
at NCSU is Robert W . Shoffner, a
veteran in the drive to build a stronger
University.
Chief among the benefits of the
foundation programs has been faculty
salary supplements enabling the University to attract and hold top scholars .
Scholarship programs, financed by
the foundations, have insured university education for many outstanding
students who otherwise may never
have had the opportunity to come to
NCSU.
The foundations also have helped
the University to acquire much needed
equipment and books.

GREENSBORO

90

Funds are received in various ways:
Through wills and bequests, regular
corporate and individual contributions,
special donations, and through voluntary assessment programs. Included
among the latter is the well-known
"Nickels for Know-How" program,
whereby farmers assess themselves a
nickel on every tone of feed and fer-

�[lll\Ts
BUILDING

BOLENS

FORD-CROSS
tilizer to assist the School of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
Evidence of the significance of the
yniversity's private support programs
~~ the growing interest in the institution by national foundations and governmental agencies . Federal agencies
have challenged the NCSU foundations
on several occasions for matching
grants, and on each occasion these
challenges have been met with enthusiasm.
The growth of the foundation programs at N. C. State reflects in a very
tangible way the faith of the University's alumni and friends in the NCSU
aim to be a leader in higher education.

CERAMIC
TILE AND
GLASS
COMPANY

HUSKY TRACTORS
take
the work out of
yard care •••
leave just the FUIV1
A Bolens Husky offers a
complete system for year
round yard care. Select at•
tachments from a full range
-rotary and reel mowers
snow casters, tillers, culti:
vators, plows, rakes, carts
-each designed to save
you time, give your yard
the care it deserves.
4 HUSKY TRACTOR MODELS
- 7 TO 12fh HP

Bolens-First in powered
equipment since 1918

~~~~
TRACTOR CORPORATION
200 S. SAUNDERS ST.
RALEIGH
834-6788

·.. KOSHER
. SANDWICHES

ORB A'S
N
Featuring

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
plus

•

FUEL OIL

•

KEROSENE

• OLGA STOKER COAL
•

HEATER COAL

•
•

BRIQUETS
FURNACE SERVICE
FILL UP YOUR COAL

BIN or OIL TANK NOW
PROMPT SERVICE

Warm up with Smith Coal
&amp; Oil and the Wolfpack.

The Very Finest In

GREEK OR AMERICAN DISHES
2414 Old Wake ForestRALEIGH
ZORBA'S

DEN-(TAVERN

RESTAURANT

~RIVATE CLUB)-2414 Old'Woke Forest Rd'

ome 1n for luncheon, dinner, 0 snack 0 ;
? SIP:"' call ahead and pick up at our driveIn wmdow. J 1m my Vossill ion features reo I
Rou d
ltol1on p1zzo, Kosher sandwiches
kebob and Zorbo's Greek Salad. Si;,g ala~
w1th Harry Goy at the piano. Open 11 0 m _
11 :45 p.m. (Zorba's is now taking o . 1icot1ons for our Private Club to open ~n)
Phone 832-9240 or 833-1393.

91

�OUR SPECIALTIES
Homemade Pizza, Spaghetti,

North Carolina

CONTINUING
KNOWLEDGE

and Italian-

Butane Gas
SUBMARINES
STEAK

Company

MEATBALLS
SANDWICHES
HAM OH ROLL
SAUSAGE

AMEDEO DeANGELIS, Proprietor
Phone IU-1112

Tok..Out ond

A

w

Delivery Service

3905 WISTDH BOULEVARD

Try our smorgasbord at
2008 Poole Road Location
Lou DeAngelis, Proprietor

Ra leig h-Fayettevi lie
North Carolina

AM ED EO'S
North Hilla Shopping Center

George E. Pickett, Jr.
&amp; Associates
MANUFACTURERS REPRESENTATIVE
N.C., S.C., VA.
RALEIGH
CHARLOTTE
Peanut Butter Sandwiches

The Industrial Extension Service of
orth Carolina State University is now
doing for industry what the Agricultural Extension Service has traditionally
done for the farmer.
IES, a division of the School of
Engineering, was established in 1955.
Headed by Dr. John R. Canada, IES
helps the enterprising individual and
small firm get a foothold in the business and industrial complex of the
State.
Requests posed by small firms may
range from general information to details of a highly technical procedure.
The Industrial Extension Service is
ready to help without charge, no matter how simple or how complex the
request.
In addition to a field staff of specialists who make personal visits to
small firms, the IES last year presented
more than 60 short courses and workshops-out in the State, on the campus
and over educational television.
Last year, IES also made 1,382 loans
of training films throughout the State
and distributed 2,116 informative publications.
Working cooperatively with all the
schools of the University, the IES field
staff last year assisted in 217 projects
across the State.
Some examples of the kinds of help
offered by the field staff are analysis
of materials, disposal of industrial
wastes, automation and establishment
of quality control and industrial diversification.

Sweet Fill Sandwiches
Peanuts- Home Packs and Vend
EDISON ELECTRIC HEAT
AND
CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING

CELLULOSE
INSULATION
MAXIMUM INSULATION
EFFICIENCY-NEW OR
EXISTING HOMES

Packs

TAYLOR
BISCUIT CO.
Bakers of Taylored to Taste
Food Products
POTATO CHIPS

~
VENTROLA

RANGE HOODS
VENTILATING FANS

92

COOKIES

Sponsored by the NCSU Industrial Extension Service and the Department of
Continuing Education, informative short
courses are held for industrial personnel
throughout the state sa that they may
keep abreast of the latest developments
in their fields. Industrial supervisors are
shown here touring an analog computer
laboratory at the School of Engineering.

�You're in the Pepsi generation!
This is the liveliest, most energetic time ever... with the most active generation
living it. You're part of it. Pepsi -Cola is part, too. Pepsi is the modern,
light refreshment ...with that bold, clean taste and energy to liven your pace.
It'S the official drink of everyone with a thirst for living!

~
~
PEPSI~COLA BOTTLING CO. OF RALEIGH, N.C., INC.
28 3 8 WAKE FOREST RO AD

RALEIGH . NORTH CAROLINA 27604

TELEPH ONE 8 2 8 -0 391

93

�MAY~

OTTO B.
~"~"An

INC.

Exciting Company"

SPECIALIZING IN DYES, CHEMICALS AND
SERVICE FOR THE TEXTILE INDUSTRY
~

~

~

MAYFAST

~

~

MAYVAT

NEWARK, NEW JERSEY

94

~

~

MAYFON

~

MAYESTER

~

MAYWET

•

~

MAYSPERSE

~

~

~

MAYTEX

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA

~

�for
the
best
•

In

yarns

&amp;
(( yardage"

�~g!tutumM~
MOTEL and RESTAURANT
Trailways and the new
Interstate Highways bring
You Faster, Smoother and
Safer Travel.

Nationwide Thru Service- Vacation Tours
Charter Service- Package Express Shipping

CAROLINA TRAILWAYS
EASIEST TRAVEL ON EARTH

MAIN OFFICES, RALEIGH, N. C.

For a week-end or a week,
when you stay at The Plantation Inn your visit to the Raleigh Area wi II be even more
pleasant. The Plantation Inn
offers you one of Raleigh's
finest Restaurants featuring
U.S.D.A. Choice Steaks, Panfried Chicken and the Famous
Sunday Buffet.
• 67 Deluxe Units
• 26 Acres of Relaxation
• Complete Convention Facilities
• Heavily Stocked Private
Fishing Lake

PHONE 833-3601

• Challenging 9-Hole Putting
Green
• Temperature Controlled
Swimming &amp; Wading Pools
• Room And Poolside Service
7 A.M. Until 11 P.M.

PARTITIONS, INC.

• Free Coffee 24 hrs.-A-Day
• Extensive Playground Equipment Including An 80-Ton
Sandbox

Specialist in VAUGHAN interior WALLS

VAUGHAN Walls are built at the jobsite or warehouse fabricated by
PARTITIONS, INC. - to your specifications. VAUGHAN Walls are
adaptable for buildings of every size and shape - statewide. Immediate
installations.
PARTITIONS, INC. is ready and qualified to pilot the complete project
from consultation to finished interiors - complete in every detail from
layout to finish, including walls frames doors and wall coverings
(vinyl, wood or paint).
'
'

OVERNIGHT GUESTS
ENJOY THE
CARRIAGE CLUB

It Doesn't Always Cost More

To Enjoy The Finest
Ten Pleasant Minutes North of
Raleigh on U.S. 1

911 N. West St., P. 0 . Box 10507, Raleigh, N. C. 27605
Telephone 91 9-834-626 I

96

�See Your Dealer For Other Long Products

Aeration, Storage and Drying Bins, Fans and Heaters, Leg Elevators, Handling Equipment

Peanut Combines

Manure Spreaders

Flail Choppers

TARBORO, N. C. / DAVENPORT, IOWA
BRANCHES: TIFTON, GA. I DALLAS. TEXAS I COLUMBUS. OHIO I MEMPHIS, TENN.

GRAIN BINS /

CROP DRYING FANS /

DOUBLE CHAIN ELEVATORS /
PEANU'I' COMBINES

/

SUPPLEMENTAL HEATERS

BALE CONVEYORS /

PEANUT DIGGERS &amp;

BULK TOBACCO CURERS /

TOBACCO

COTTON HARVESTERS /

AUGERS /

ROTARY CUTTERS

SHAKERS /

HARVESTERS /

f

FLAIL CHOPPERS

f MANURE SPREADERS

PEANUT DRYING EQUIPMENT

TOBACCO CURERS /

CONTINUOUS FLOW GRAIN DRYERS

DISC HARROWS

�1966 FINAL
STATISTICS

~- 1 e motel

Overall Record: 5-5; ACC Record 5-2

RALEIGH/DURHAM AIRPORT

• 100 YARDS FROM RALEIGH / DURHAM AIRPORT TERMINAL
• SO LAVISHLY DECORATED, ULTRA-SOUNDPROOF ROOMS
• LARGE POOL, PATIO -

HEAR FINE RESTAURANTS AND THEATER

PHONE 919/ 787-8121

Opps.

NCS Team Statistics

RALEIGH

160
83
66
11
17
11
27
227

Total First Downs ...... .......... .... 140
First Downs Rushing .............. .. 80
First Downs Passing .................. 56
First Downs Penalty .......... .. .... 4
Fumbles ......... .... ..................... 16
Fumbles Lost .. .... .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .... .. 9
Penalties .................................. 53
Yards Penalized .............. ....... .487

TOTAL OFFENSE:

Post Office Box 20508

Telephone 273-0836

LAMBETH CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
1705 Battleground Avenue
Greensboro, North Carol ina 27 420

Player

Yardage
Plays Rush

Pass

Tot.

Play
avg.

Donnan
DeArment
Noggle
Borchuk
Klebe
(AIL others

180 -38 859
177 727
29
149 342 233
34 129
5
32
64
65
some as rushing)

821
756
575
134
129

STATE
OPPS .

692 1683 1191 2874
637 1409 1340 2749

4.3

no.

4.6
4.3
3 .8
3 .9

4.0
4.1

RUSHING

GRADING-UTILITIES

$1 MILLION CHANGED EVERYTHING
(EXCEPT RATES)

gain

DeArment
Noggle
Rowe
Borchuk
Wyland
Hall
Klebe
Mason
Coleman
Dockery
Lisk
Donnan

175
103

STATE
OPPS.

470 1887

766
389
44 227
31
132
38 105
17
82
19
69
14
59
4
19
2
2
1
1
22
36

426 1693

lost

net

avg.

39

727
342
208
129
102
72

4 .2
3.3

47
19
3
3
10
2
2
2
0
0

74

4.7
4 .2
2.7
4.2

64

3.4

57
17
2
1
-38

4.1

204 1683
284 1409

4.3
1.0
1.0
-1.6
3.6
3.3

PASSING:
att. comp. int. yds. TD

THE NEW

Donnan
Noggle
Klebe
DeArment
Borchuk

158

74

46

21
6
2

STATE
OPPS.

222 104 12 1191 5
211 107 16 1340 11

13
2
3

9
2
1
0
0

859
233
65
29
5

4
0
0
0
1

PASS RECEIVING:

RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA

Executive Offices

98

27602

(919 ) 832-7711

Rowe
Mortell
Coleman
DeArment
Donaldson
Borchuk
Gentry

caught

yds.

TD

47
13
10
9
8
6
5

571
142
132
52
115
52
69

1
1
2
1
0
0
0

�2
2

28
15
8
7

0
0
0
0

104
107

1191
1340

5
5

Wyland
Hall
Mason
Tayloe
STATE
OPPS.

SCORING: Conversions
TD R Poss Kick FG
0
0
DeArment 9 0
0
Deters
0 19-19 10-22
0 0
0
0
Rowe
3 0
0
0
Coleman
0
2 0
0
0
0
Williams 2 0
McMahon, Martell, Dockery
Wyland, Donnan, Marrow,
1 TD each
0-2
2-2
Warren, G. 0 0
0
STATE
OPPS.

Tot.
54
49
20
12
12

can- now pay
for all your
insurance
Nationwide's new PREMIUM
PAY PLAN combines all
your Nationwide premiums

6
2

0 1-2 21-21 10-24 191
5-8 168
0 21 22
0

23
22

~~t CHEc..t

into one -and you pay in
easy-to-meet installments over
the year. Whether it's cover-

4

Tot.

27
34

82
76

191
168

48
44

STATE ............ 34
OPPS. ············ 14

check takes care of every-

Donnan
Noggle
Klebe
Team
STATE
OPPS.

yds.
1643
190
142
0

54
69

1975
2687

Call your man from
Nationwide .••

36.6
38.9

TD
1
0
0

avg.
10.3
6.0
5.5

All Foods Prepared

To

Take Out

Call TE 2-7867
Open 7 Days a Week
40B Hillsboro St.

Blocked avg.
36.5
0
47 .5
0
35.5
0
0.0
2

Dishes

thing. For details,

PUNTING:
no.
45
4
4

Chinese &amp; American

age for your life, health, car,
home or property, just one

SCORING BY QUARTERS:
3
2

CANTON CAFE

Raleigh, N. C.

PUNT RETURNS:
Rowe
Combs
Morrow
STATE
OPPS.

no.

yds.

17
4
4

175
23
22

25
34

220
323

8 .8
9.5

KICKOFF RETURNS:
no.
Rowe
20
Hall
4
Donaldson
2
Barchuk
Ca_lllpbell

yds.

TD

avg.

505
80
11
6
0

0
0
0
0
0

25.3
20.0
5.5
6.0
0.0

STATE
OPPS.

602
782

0
0

21.5
19.6

28
40

PASSES INTERCEPTED:
Jackson
Williams
James
McMahon
Morrow
Arna to
Cornbs
STATE
OPPS.

no.
4
3
3
2
2
1

yds.
14
89
25
78
51
9
0

TD

16
12

262
50

4
0

nE!L
CLD F!SHICNED
EnE!D T!STE

BURNIE
BATCHELOR

0
2
0
1
1
0
0

99

�STADIUM INFORMATION

Sears
You Can't Do
Better Than Sears

NO

MONEY DOWN
on Sears
Easy Payment Plan

Sears Highly-Trained . Tech~i­
cians Assure You Service Satisfaction with Personalized, Professional Care . . . We Service
What We Sell, Wherever You
Live or Move in the U.S.A.

Located in
Raleigh's
Cameron
Village

!Sears I
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.

100

ISCORE·BOARD I

CARTER STADIUM
FACT SHEET
First Game-Dedicated Oct. 8, 1966,
won by South Carolina, 31-21.
Capacity-41,000. Double-decked with
all sideline seats. Lower stands hold
23,000; Upper stands 18,000.
Cost- $3.7 million, half of funds raised
from friends and alumni, balance borrowed.
Name-Carter Stadium for W. J. and
Harry Carter, textile executives and
N. C. State alumni.
Site-100-acre tract of land adjacent to
N. C. State Fairgrounds.
Parking-Approximately 14,000 automobiles.
Press Box-Triple-decked structure
with 213 capacity.
First Deck-Radio, TV, control booths
food service.
Second Deck-Two r_?WS of ~ea.t~ for
press, Western Umon, statisticians,
scouts and restrooms.
Top-Level-Television, still and gamefilm decks.
Press Box Elevator-Gift of Jimmy
Mitchell of High Point, N. C.
Scoreboard-South end of Stadium.
Thirty-two feet by 20-feet.
A. E. Finley Field House-Two levels,
with lower portion used for te~m
dressing rooms; upper level receptiOn

rooms for dignitaries. Gift of A. E.
Finley and Associates.
Ticket Booths-18 ticket booths, handling 36 sellers.
Stadium Turf- Bermuda Tifway.
Lighting- General Electric Incandescent light fixtures, with 672 fixtures
of 1500 watts each, or 900,000 to
1,000,000 watts on eight pairs of
standards providing 175-foot candle
power.
Carter Stadium Attendance (142,200 for
five games):
35,200 Oct. 8, 1966 vs. South Carolina
(Dedication) (21-31).
31,500 Nov. 19, 1966 vs. Clemson (2314)
28,000 Oct. 29, 1966 vs. Virginia ( 4221)
24,000 Oct. 15, 1966 vs. Florida (1017)
23,500 Nov. 5, 1966 vs. Maryland (2421)
First Touchdown-By Jimmy Killen of
South Carolina on 10-yard pass from
Ben Garnto.
First State Touchdown-By Billy Morrow on 32-yard pass interception.
First State Victory-42-21 over Virginia, Oct. 29, 1966.

�PERSONAL COLOR TV MODEL M210HBN

front GENERAL ELECTRIC
otcoursel
WcJlA ~ iw Pru~ 'IV
Walker Martin, Inc., Authorized Distributor • Raleigh • Charlotte • Greensboro • Asheville

�J. P. Stevens &amp; C&lt;&gt;mpany, Inc., Charlotte, N. C. Architects &amp; f,'ngineers: J. N. i'•ase, Assoc. Contractor: C. 1'. Street. Photo: Carol Martin.

We gave a high fashion manufacturer
a high fashion glazed brick.

J.P. Stevens &amp; Company, one of the world's largest textile
firms, agreed with its architects that its office building in
Charlotte, N. C., should look as good as its fabrics.
That's why the Stevens building contains Boren glazed
brick. So it can be in tune with its product of color, texture
and beauty.
Now you can get Boren glazed brick in four new vivid accent colors and nine basic colors. On one red body.
So you get the layability and economy of a red brick and
the beauty of a glazed one.
When you're building in the South Atlantic, isn't it logical
to specify glazed brick from the South Atlantic's only
manufacturer of glazed brick?

BOREN BRICK
BOREN BRICK DIVISION

KENDRICK BRICK DIVISION

BROAD RIVER BRICK DIVISION

ROCKINGHAM BLOCK DIVISION

Pleasant Garden, N. C.
Tel. 674-2255
Roseboro, N. C.
Tel. 525-7161

Charlotte, N. c.
Tel. 523-6716
Monroe, N. C.
Tel. 283-8158

Gaffney, s. C.
Tel. 489-8145
Blacksburg, S. C.
Tel. 489-8145

Leaksville, N. C.
Tel. 623--2197 or
Greensboro 274-6993

DIVISIONS OF BOREN CLAY PRODUCTS COMPANY, PLEASANT GARDEN, NORTH CAROLINA

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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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11(,

7

F~BUFFALO -1967

mr. :louc~down

•

FULLBACK LEE JONES

�STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
1967 FOOTBALL FACT BOOK FOR THE WORKING PRESS
Prepared and edited by former Sports Information Director Joe Marcin.
CONTENTS
Page
.. 30
. 31
. 4-tl
. 2-3
. 7, 10-15

Athletic Director . . . .
Athletic Staff Members
Coaches ..
Opponents
Players ..

Page
President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . . 16- 17
Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 2
. . 8-9
Season Preview . . . . . .
Statistics and Records . . . . . . . . . . . . 19-26

FOR PRESS, RADIO , TV
THE PRESS BOX is essentially for working newsmen and photographers, radi o and television
announcers, accredited scouts, telegraphers and technicians. Women (unless working for newspapers
or Western Union) and children will not be admitted.
Individuals planning to use direct Western Union wires in covering games must make their
own arrangements with that company. Commercial facilities are available at each game for those
sportswriters not desiring direct wires. Radio stations should make the necessary line arrangements
through the telephone company in their area.
Enclosed booths are available for a visiting photographer (for game motion pictures) and a
visiting radio station. Spotters for announcers are furnished on request. There are no facilities for
student radio stations.
Photographers desiring sideline passes should obtain them from their sports desks. Photographers
working on the sidelines must obey the instructions of the officers detailed to that area and must
not impede the operations of coaches or players. Commercial photographers arf" prohibited from
working in Rotary Field .
. Press box services include a quarterly play-by-play report, half-time and final statistics. sandWIChes, coffee, and soft drinks.
Complimentary press tickets for non-working newsmen are available in a very limited quantity
to sportswriters and sportscasters, with Western New York men having first priority. Because of the
limited supply of such tickets, requests from weekly newspapers will not be honored.
Requests for press tickets, informati on on the Buffalo team, pictures, or any special materials and
services should be directed to:
Sports Information Director
104 Clark Gym
University of Buffalo
Buffalo, New York 14214

Phone: 831-2924
Area Code 716

ON THE COVER .. .
LEE JONES, senior fullback, led the nation's major colleges in touchdowns (16) in 1966. His
96 points placed him third nationally in scoring and set a new UB record for a single season.
1
The 5-11 208-pound Jones, a graduate of Buffalo's Hutch-Tech High School, has a career to~a
of 1,075 yards gained rushing and has been selected as the team 's outstanding offensive backH 0~
the past two seasons. A superb blocker , jones is also a clutch ball carrier. Last year he was c_a ked
upon 26 times in third-down situations and came through with a first down 21 times . \Vas P1c e
as the fullback on the 1966 E.C.A.C . All-East team.
The 20-year old Jones, the son of a former UB player, is majoring in Physical Education.

�STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
3435 Main Street. Buffalo . New York 14214
PRESIDENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Martin Meyerson
DATE FOUNDED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1846
STATE AFFILIATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . September 1, 1962
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION FOUNDED ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1894
ENROLLMENT . . . .. . . 9,212 Undergraduate (5,514 men; 3,698 women)
11,760 Evening and Graduate
BUFFALO COLORS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Royal Blue and White
FOOTBALL STADIUM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rotary Field (13,420)
TEAM NICKNAME . . . . . ·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bulls
ATHLETIC AFFILIATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NCAA, ECAC
CONFERE 1CE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Independent
DEPARTMENT OF INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS
Director of Athletics- Mr. James E. Peelle , Purdue '34
Faculty Committee on Athletics
Dr. Anthony S. Gugino, Chairman
Dr. Arthur D. Butler
Dr. Milton Plesur
Dr. A. Westley Rowland
Dr. Claude E. Puffer Dr. Howard Tieckelmann
Dr. Merton W. Ertel!
Dr. Robert L. Ketter
Alumni Athletic Advisory Board
Dr. James J. Ailinger, Chairman
Mr. Alexander P . Aversano
Mr. Robert E. Rich
Mr. Bernard B. Skerker
Mr. Richard W. Collard
Dr. Victor L. Pellicano
FOOTBALL COACHES
Head Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Richard W. Urich, Miami (0.)
Backfield Offense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jerry A. Ippoliti, Miami (0.)
Backfield Defense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert C. Deming, Colgate
Line Offense . . . . . . . . . . . Robert E . Geiger, Western Michigan
Line Defense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . William R. Dando, Detroit
Freshman Coach . . . . . . . . . . . . Michael J . Stock, Northwestern

'51
'58
'57
'58
'59
'61

ATHLETIC STAFF
Director of Sports Information and Promotion .
To Be Named
Manager, Tickets and Program . ..... . . . . . .. . . . . . John R. Sharpe
Team Physician . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dr. Edmond J. Gicewicz, Buffalo '52
Trainer and Physical Therapist . . . . . . . . James E. Simon, Buffalo '50
Football Statistician . . . .
. . . . Alexander P. Aversano, Buffalo '36
Equipment Manager . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . Joseph Y. Warzel
Page 1

�1967 VARSITY SCHEDULE
KENT STATE - Sept. 16 - at Rotary Field - 1:30 PM (E DT)
1966 Record: 4-6-0 Head Coach: Leo Strang (12-15-2 in 3 years)
Last year Buffalo defeated Kent State, 27-23, and leads the
series, 2-1.
NORTH CAROLINA STATE - Sept. 23 - at Raleigh, N.C. 1:30PM (E DT) 1966 Record: 5-5-0 Head Coach: Earle Edwards
(56-69-6 in 13 years)
This is the first game between Buffalo and North Carolina State.
VIRGINIA- Sept. 30 -at Charlottesville, Va.- 1:30 PM (E DT)
1966 Record: 4-6-0 Head Coach: George Blackburn (4 0-40-7
in 9 years)
This is the first game between Buffalo and Virginia.
TEMPLE - Oct. 7 -at Rotary Field - 1:30 PM (EDT)
1966 Record: 6-3-0 Head Coach: George Makris (30-31-3 in
7 years)
This is Buffalo 's Homecoming Game. Buffalo and Temple last
played in 1962, Buffalo winning, 16-13. Buffalo leads series, 6-0.
BOSTON U. - Oct. 14 - at Rotary Field - 1:30 PM (E DT)
1966 Record: 5-5-0 Head Coach: Warren Schmakel (12-15-1
in 3 years)
Boston U. defeated Buffalo the past two years, but Buffalo
leads the series, 4-3.
BOSTON COLLEGE - Oct. 21 - at Chestnut Hill , Mass. 1:30 PM (E DT) 1966 Record: 4-6-0 Head Coach: Jim Miller
(48-28-0 in 10 years)
Boston College defeated Buffalo last year, 22-21, and leads the
series, 3-0.
HOLYCROSS- Oct. 28 -atWorcester ,Mass.- 1:30PM (E DT)
1966 Record : 6-3-1 Head Coach: Tom Boisture (Firs t year as
head coach)
Buffalo defeated Holy Cross last year, 35-3, but Holy Cross
leads the series, 5-1, with 1 tie.
DELAWARE - Nov. 4 - at Newark, Del. - 1:30 PM (EST )
1966 Record: 6-3-0 Head Coach: Harold " Tubby' · Raymond
(6-3-0 in 1 year)
Buffalo defeated Delaware last year, 36-6, and leads the series,
4-2.
VILLANOVA - Nov. 11 - at Villanova, Pa . - 1:30 PM (ES T)
1966 Record: 6-3-0 Head Coach: Jack Gregory (49-11-2 in
7 years)
Bufjfio defeated Villanova last year, 28-8 , for the third straight
time and leads the series, 3-2.
COLGATE - Nov. 18 - at Rotary Field - 1:30 PM (EST)
1966 Record : 8-1-1 Head Coach: Hal Lahar (75-55-10 in 15
years)
Buffalo and Colgate last played in 1965, Buffalo winning, 28-0.
Colgate leads the series, begun in 1898, 6-4.

Page 2

�FOR FURTHER INFORMATION REGARDING BUFFALO'S
OPPONENTS. CONTACT THE FOLLOWING SPORTS
INFORMATION DIRECTORS:
PAUL SCHLEMMER , Kent State University, Kent , 0 . 44240
Area Code 216 Office : 672-2110 Home: 673-9125
FRANK WEEDON , North Carolina State University, Ral eigh , N.C . 27607
Area Code 919 Office: 755-2102 Home : VA8-5070
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va . 22903
Area Code 703 Office : 295-2166 (Ext. 3011 )
AL SHRIER, Temple University, Philadelphia , Pa. 19122
Area Code 215 Office : 787-7445 Home : GR7-1234
ART DUNPHY , Boston University, Boston , Mass . 02215
Area Code 617 Office : 254-8000 Home : 545-9607
EDDIE MILLER , Boston College, Chestnut Hill , Ma ~s . 02167
Area Code 617 Office : 632-3200 (Ext . 387 ) Home: OX6-6111
RICHIE LEWIS , Holy Cross College, Worcester,
Area Code 617 Office : 793-2583 Home: 754-3653

~lass.

01610

JOHN MORRIS , University of Delaware, Newark, Del. 19711
Area Code 302 Office : 368-0611 (Ext. 392 ) Home: 368-4333
JIM MURRAY, Villanova University, Villanova , Pa. 19085
Area Code 215 Office : LA5-4600 Home : MA3-4906
BILL MEANS , Colgate University, Hamilton , N.Y. 13346
Area Code 315 Office: 824-1000 (Ext. 206) Home : 824-1451

1967 FRESHMEN SCHEDULE
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.

22 -ARMY
30 - MANLIUS
6 - COLGATE
13 - ITHACA COLLEGE
27 - NAVY
3- SYRACUSE
10- KENT STATE

Page 3

-at
- at
-at
- at
- at
-at
- at

West Point, N.Y.
Rotary Field
Hamilton, N.Y.
Rotary Field
Annapolis, Md.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Rotary Field

�Richard "Doc" Urich (pronounced Yur-ick) became head coach at the
University of Buffalo in 1966. In his first season the team won five and
lost five, established seven new UB offensive records and displayed to Western
New York fans the most exciting college football ever seen in the area.
Urich came to Buffalo from Notre Dame, where he was Ara Parseghian ' s
top offensive aide. Prior to then "Doc " served with Parseghian at Northwestern and Miami (0. ), his alma mater.
"Doc" Urich was born on September 10, 1928, in Wapakoneta, Ohio.
He attended Wapakoneta High School where he captained both the football
and basketball squads as a senior.
·
At Miami (0.) Urich was a standout in college football . He played four
years and in his freshman and senior seasons his teams made appearances
in the Sun Bowl and the Salad Bowl. Miami defeated Texas Tech at El
Paso on January 1, 1948, and downed Arizona State at Phoenix on January
1, 1951. " Doc" was captain of the Miami team in his senior year. In his
junior and senior seasons he won All-Ohio honors , and in his last three
years he was selected All-Conference (Mid-America) end.
After graduation from Miami in February, 1951, " Doc" assumed teaching
and coaching chores at Massillon (0. ) High School for the remainder of
the school term before joining the staff of Head Coach Ara Parseghian at
Miami that fall.
Urich holds a B.Sc. and M.Ed. from Miami , majoring in Physical Education.
" Doc " and his wife, the former Patricia Streight , also of Wapakoneta,
have two children, Cynthia (born in 1952) and Danny (born in 1955). The
Urich family now lives in Williamsville, . Y.
Urich's nickname, " Doc," is derived from the fact that he used to carry
a little black bag with him when playing some childhood games. The other
k1ds called him "Doc·· and the tag seems destined to stay with him the
rest of his life.
Page 4

�WILLIAM R. DANDO
Defensive Line Coach
Came to UB last year from Southern Methodist where he was defensive end and linebacker coach .. .
previous coaching experience was
as assistant and head coach at John
Carroll University in Cleveland and
head coach at St. Cecilia ' s High
School in Detroit . .. 1959 graduate
of Detroit University . . . was star
halfback there for 3 seasons ... also
was outstanding baseball player .. .
served 3 years in Marine Corps . . .
married to the former Frances Cavanaugh of Detroit . . . father of
5 children . .. now lives in Williamsville.

ROBERT C. DEMING
Defensive Backfield Coach
At UB since 1959 . . . before
coming to Buffalo was on the staff
at the University of Houston . . .
1959 graduate of Colgate University
where he played fullback .. . has
had notable success at UB .. . in
1963 his charges led the nation' s
major colleges in pass interceptions,
were 6th in percentage of opponents'
passes intercepted and 2nd in yards
returned by interceptions . . . in
1965 UB was 4th nationally in total
defense . . . married to the former
Jean Siebert, an ex-airline hostess .
. . lives in Eggertsville . . . father
ofa daughter, born earlier this year.
Page 5

�Ajjijfanl Coachej
ROBERT E. GEIGER
Offensive Line Coach
Came to UB last year from Earlham College in Richmond, Indiana ,
where he was head coach . . .
previous coaching experience includes being assistant coach at Ashland College and Ohio University
... 1959 graduate ofWestern Michigan University . . . was star halfback and team captain in senior
season . . . married to the former
Lois Roper . . . lives in Williamsville . . . father of a son , born
earlier this year.

•

JERRY A. IPPOLITI
Offensive Backfield Coach •
Came to U B last year from Coshocton, Ohio, High School where
he was head coach . . . previous
coaching assignments were at Goshen High School in Sebring, Ohio,
and Findlay, Ohio, High School
. . . 1958 graduate of Miami (0.)
... was outstanding halfback there
... married to the former Rosalie
Cesare . . . lives in Williamsville
... father of 2 children.

MICHAELJ. STOCK
Freshman Coach
Came to UB last year from South
High School in Akron, Ohio, where
he wa~ assistant coach . . . 1961
graduate of Northwestern .. . had
outstanding college career ... was
All-Conference fullback for two seasons and won the Big Ten Medal
for Athletic and Scholastic Achievement . . . also was star baseball
pia yer . . . served with the U.S.
Army in Europe . . . married to
the former Margaret Rawlins of
Pittsburgh .. . lives in Buffalo, a
short distance from the UB campus.
•

Page 6

�PERSONNEL ANALYSIS
1966 Offensive Lettermen Lost (6): Ends Paul Kleiber and Jim Dunn,
tackles Bill Taylor and Tony Miceli, center Bruce MacKellar, halfback Jim
Barksdale.
1966 Defensive Lettermen Lost (6): End Ron Pugh, tackles Russ MacKellar and John Basta, halfbacks Nick Capuana, Dan Sella and Bob Sinclair.
1966 Specialists Lost: None
1966 Offensive Lettermen Returning (11): Ends Dick Ashley and Chuck
Drankoski, guards Jim Finochio, Mike Maser and Mike Rissell (w ill play
tackle in 1967), quarterback Mick Murtha, halfbacks Rick Wells, Ken Rutkowski and Steve Svec, fullbacks Lee Jones and Tom Brennan.
1966 Defensive Lettermen Returning (11): Ends Dennis Brisky and John
Przybycien, tackle Joe Riccelli , linebackers Irv Wright, Rod Rishel, John
Lupienski, Ted Gibbons (w ill play tackle in 1967), Tom Kowalewski (will
play offensive guard in 1967) and Jack Wesolowski (w ill play center on
offensive unit in 1967), halfback Tom Hoke, safety Tom Hurd.
1966 Specialists Returning (2): Placekicker Bob Embow, Punter Dave
Richner.
PROBABLE STARTING LINE-UP
Offense
Defense
TE "Dick Ashley (S r. )
RE
"John Przybycien (Jr.)
SE "Chuck Drankoski (Jr.)
LE
"Dennis Brisky (S r. )
ST "Mike Rissell (Sr.)
RT
"Joe Riccelli (Jr.)
WT Chris Wolf (So ph. )
LT
"Ted Gibbons (S r.)
SG "Jim Finochio (Sr.)
RILB Mike Luzny (So ph. )
WG "Mike Maser (Jr.)
LILB "John Lupienski (jr.)
C "Jack Wesolowski (Jr.)
ROLB "Rod Rishel (Sr.)
QB "Mick Murtha (Jr.)
LOLB "Irv Wright (S r. )
FB "Lee Jones (Sr.)
LHB "Tom Hoke (S r. )
TB "Ken Rutkowski (S r. )
RHB
Gary Grubbs (So ph. )
FL "Rick Wells (Sr.)
SAF "Tom Hurd (S r. )
" - Lettermen
PLAYERS TO WATCH
Junior Dennis Mason turned in a sensational performance in the intrasquad game which closed spring practice and should give the Bulls adequate
depth at the quarterback position ... Junior Bennie Washington, a letterman in 1965 who did not p lay last season, will be used as a flanker
Sophomore tailback Pat Patterson is likely to see plenty of action . . .
Sophomore linebacker Mike Luzny appears to be of star material . . . Sophomores who will be vying for starting roles include Jon Spencer at offensive
guard, Scott Clark and Chris Wolf at offensive tackle, Speed Powrie at
center, Rovell Jones at defensive tackle and Gary Grubbs at defensive halfback.
Squad Breakdown by Class: 18 Seniors 21 Juniors32 Sophomores 71 TOTAL
Squad Breakdown by States:
38 New York
5 Michigan
2 Indiana
10 Ohio
2 Massachusetts
2 Ontario (Canada)
10 Pennsylvania
2 Rhode Island
71 TOTAL

Page 7

�By BOB POWELL
Buffa lo Couri er-Express

You'd almost think Doc Urich would be satisfied. You 'd almost think
that 'til you realize that Doc is a football coach and they 're hardly ever
satisfied.
Urich' s second edition of the University of Buffalo football team has a
plentiful supply of backs and ends. It has an experienced, record-breaking
quarterback, a lively offensive attack and a fairly experienced defensive unit.
Wouldn't you think the coach would be satisfied?
The main reason for his not being satisfied centers around a glaring shortage of big, strong, experienced, tigerish interior offensive linemen.
That's where the Bulls will be hurting this season unless Urich and his
aides can uncover and develop the " horses" at tackle, guard and center.
If he can plug these obvious gaps, Urich might be convinced that quarterback Mick Murtha will add two or three UB offensive records to tile three
he collected last year as a sophomore and end Dick Ashley up his school
records from five to possibly eight in the receiving department .

Murtha can whip the ball with the best of 'em, but if he doesn ' t get
the necessary time to get it away, he and the Bulls are in trouble.
Lee Jones could be the best fullback in the East this season if explosive
running, multiple touchdown-making and exceptional blocking talents mean
anything, but the best back in the world isn't worth a nickel until he crosses
the line of scrimmage.
That's where those tackles, guards and centers play such an important
role.
Then too, there ' s another worry plaguing Urich' s satisfaction structure. It
is the 1-2-3 punch his Bulls face in launching the season. First it is Kent
State, then North Carolina State and finally Virginia.
After that, a new seven-week worry takes over.
Doc might admit to being satisfied with a 10-0 record when it's all over,
but you never can tell.
Page 8

�By DICK JOHNSTON
Buffa lo Even ing News

Anyone who has been close to the University of Buffalo football scene
has to look forward to this , Doc Urich's second season as coach.
The Bulls have assimilated Doc 's system and there are lettermen for
nearly every position on offense and defense. Some of the athletes Doc and
his aides recruited themselves are ready to play.
Which would make everything look rosy--until you check the schedule.
UB never has played a tougher one. The Bulls could come through with
three fine games and still go into their fourth with an 0-3 record.
UB had an exciting offense last season , however , and nearly every game
was a good one. Win or lose , the same should be true of 1967 , only more so.
Quarterback Mickey Murtha , record-setting passer as a sophomore, has
his record receiver, Dick Ashley , back plus a few others who can hang onto
the ball when it comes their way, in the open or in thick traffic.
Lee Jones , the nation 's top touchdown-maker in major-college football ,
and the versatile Rick Wells , give the Bulls running strength. With a slight
change made in the offense, the small but elusive Ken Rutkowski should
be utilized more fully this year and there are some sophomores who should
be able to cause excitement.
The defense seems in good hands , particularly the all-important linebacking corps. The defensive backfield is two-thirds veteran. Ted Gibbons
is probably as good a defensive tackle as UB foes will see all year.
But the offensive line is the problem . It probably will be manned by
lettermen playing new positions and by sophomores. Tackle, especially , is
a problem . So is depth. The offensive line must develop fast for Murtha and
his aerial circus to get off the ground and for the runners to get a start.
Page 9

�cfeltermen

Richard Ashley

Thomas Brennan
DICK ASHLEY
E- Sr.- 20-6-1-201 -Massena, N.Y.
Has rewritten the UB record book for pass receiving . .. holds school
records for most passes caught in a season, most TD passes in a game, a
season and for career, also for most yardage in receiving for a season . . .
closing in on career records for most receptions and total yardage .. . has
scored 74 points over the past two seasons . . . is being moved from split
end to tight end for 1967 to take advantage of his blocking ability and to
give the team a strong receiving threat from the tight end post . . . a definite candidate for post-season All-Star honors . . . majoring in Physical
Education.
TOM BRENNAN
FB- Sr.- 20-5-10-205 -Rochester, N.Y.
Graduate of McQuaid Jesuit High School . . . has averaged better than 4
yards per carry during his varsity career ... majoring in History.
DENNIS BRISKY
DE - Sr. - 20 - 6-2 - 209 - Detroit, Mich.
Graduate of St. David 's High School in Detroit . . . has played defensive
tackle, linebacker and defensive end .. . twice a letter winner . . . made
ECAC weekly All-East as a sophomore . .. majoring in Sociology.
CHUCK DRANKOSKI
E- Jr.- 20-6-0- 183 - Endwell, N.Y.
Graduate of Maine-Endwell High School . . . played quarterback in
high school and was a halfback at UB until shifted to split end after the
1966 season had begun ... caught 5 passes for 84 yards and 2 touchdowns
looked very good in spring practice and is being counted on for a big
season.

Dennis Brisky

Charles Drankoski

Page 10

�c:feltermen

James Finochio

Robert Embow

BOB EMBOW
K- Jr. - 19 - 6-0- 210 - Hamburg, N.Y.
Graduate of Hamburg High School . . . came to UB as an end but a
shoulder injury has limited his play to being a kicking specialist . . . booted
17 out of 17 PAT attempts last year and 1 field goal in 2 attempts . . . gives
team a strong hand in the placekicking department . . . majoring in History.
JIM FINOCHIO
G- Sr.- 21-5-10-219 -East Syracuse, N.Y.
Graduate of Christian Brothers Academy in Syracuse . . . starter in every
game last season . . . adds experience to offensive line . . . majoring in
Economics.
TED GIBBONS
DT - Sr. - 21 - 5-10 - 232 - Newport, R.I .
Has been a starter from his first game as a sophomore . . . has played
both offensive and defensive guard and linebacker ... moved to defensive
tackle for 1967 to strengthen that position . . . tough, agile . . . Buffalo' s
best interior lineman and one of the best in college football.
TOM HOKE
DHB - Sr.- 21- 5-8- 189- Marcy, N.Y.
Graduate of Whitesboro High School . . . has been a letter winner for
the past two seasons . . . majoring in Physical Education .

Thomas Hoke

Theodore Gibbons
Page 11

�of!eftermen

Thomas Hurd

Thomas Kowalewski

TOM HURD
DHB- Sr.- 21-6-1 -197 -Elmira, N.Y.
Led team in punt returns the past two seasons and in pass interceptions
last year when he equaled UB record for a single season in that department . . . a smart play diagnostician and sure ta ckler . . . was selected as
team's most valuable defensive back for 1966 . . . has attracted favorable
attention from pro scouts . .. majoring in Physical Education.
TOM KOWALEWSKI
G -Jr. - 20 - 5-11 - 210 - Detroit, Mich.
Graduate of De La Salle Collegiate in Detroit . . . played linebacker
la st year but has been moved to offensive guard for 1967 . . . majoring in
Business Administration.
JOHN LUPIENSKI
LB- Jr. - 20- 5-10- 210 - Springdale, Pa.
Graduate of Springdale High School . . . was in the starting line-up
last year as a sophomore ... Dean's List student , majoring in Liberal Arts.
MIKE MASER
G- Jr.- 20- 5-11-214 - Clayton, N.Y.
Graduate of Clayton High School . . . should make a strong bid for a
starting berth ... majoring in Physical Education.

John Lupienski

Michael Maser

Page 12

�cfetfermen

John Przybycien

Mark Murtha

MICKMURTHA
QB - Jr. 20- 5-11- 176 - Endicott, N.Y.
Excellent passer, both long and short . . . hurled for 1,241 yards last
year while setting 3 school records ... should be among the nation's leaders
in total offense for 1967 ... majoring in Business Administration.
JOHN PRZYBYCIEN
DE- Jr.- 19 - 6-1 - 200 - Detroit, Mich.
Graduate of Detroit University High School
made starting line-up
as a sophomore ... majoring in Engineering.
JOE RICCELLI
DT - Jr. -20 -6-2 -242 - Syracuse, N.Y.
Graduate of Henninger High School . . . adds size and experience to
defensive line ... majoring in Physical Education .
ROD RISHEL
LB- Sr. - 21 - 5-11 - 194 - East Smethport, Pa.
Graduate of Smethport High School ... has won two varsity letters . . .
missed spring practice because of a shoulder operation but is fit and ready
now ... Dean's List student, majoring in Physical Education.

Rodney Rishel

Joseph Riccelli
Page 13

�cfetlermen
MIKE RISSELL
T- Sr.- 21 - 5- 11 - 233 Coatesville, Pa.
Graduate of Scott Senior High
School in Coatesville . .. has been
a starter at offensive guard in every
game for two straight years . . .
moved to tackle for 1967 ... majoring in Geography.

KEN RUT KOWSKI
HB - Sr. - 20 -5-9 - 180 -

Tonawanda, .Y.
Graduate of Kenmore East High
School ... did not play football as
as a freshman or sophomore . . .
came out for team last year and
proceeded to lead club in kickoff
returns with 9 for 216 yards (24yards per return ) .. . star on UB
baseball team . . . pitching record
showed ERA of 0.41 . . . batting
average of .429 . . . Dean's List
student, majoring in Business Administration.

STEVE SVEC
20 - 6-0 - 201 Endicott, N.Y.
Graduate of Union- Endicott
High School . . . gained 73 yards
rushing in 20 carries last season
(3 .6 average ) . . . majoring in Engineering.
HB -

Page 14

Jr. -

�cletfermen

Richard Wells

RICK WELLS
HB- Sr. - 20- 6-0- 198 Ithaca, N.Y.
One of the finest athletes ever to
come to UB . . . was first-string
quarterback as a sophomore .. .
despite suffering broken leg in midseason led team in total offense for
that year . . . shifted to halfback
last season and gained 291 yards
rusing in 67 carries (4.3 average)
caught 19 passes for 267 yards, returned 8 kickoffs for 177 yards (22.1
average) . . . has accounted for
1,547 yards in all phases (rushing,
passing, receiving, punt and kickoff
returns) during varsity career . . .
as outfielder on UB baseball team
this spring batted .339, led club in
doubles and tied for lead in extra
base hits . .. Dean 's List student ,
majoring in History.

Irvin Wright

John Wesolowski

JACK WESOLOWSKI
C- Jr.- 21- 5-11 - 214 - Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Was All-Western New York selection while playing for Cleveland Hill
High School .. . last year played center on offense and linebacker on defense . . . will concentrate on the offensive position in 1967 . .. majoring
in History.
IRV WRIGHT
LB - Sr. - 21- 5-11- 203 - Norristown, Pa.
Came to UB last year from Dodge City, Kansas, Junior College
moved into a starting role . .. majoring in Physical Education.
Page 15

�1967 VARSITY ROSTER
No.

..,

"'
"'.....
"'

O'&lt;l

87
74
25
28
30
86
78
70
54
56
72
26
40
89
44
60
16
82
65
67
45
27
68
91
42
29
48
17
73
36
83
62
85
66

Name

•ASHLEY, RICHARD
BECK, RUSSELL
BELL, HARRY
BIERS BACH, RONALD
•BRENNAN , THOMAS
•BRISKY, DENNIS
CARNEY, PATRICK
CAVANAUGH , JAMES
CHAPP, GARY
CHERN EGA , DAVID
CLARK, SCOTT
DeMARCO, DOUGLAS
DiROSA, PAUL
DOHERTY, JOHN
•DRANKOSKI, CHARLES
JERRY ELWELL
•EMBOW , ROBERT
ENDRESS , TERRE NCE
0 F'INOCHIO, JAMES
•GIBBONS, THEODORE
GRUBBS , GARY
HANSEN , BRIAN
HAYDEN , WILLIAM
HENLEY, PRENTIS
•HOKE , THOMAS
HORN , RICHARD
•HURD, THOMAS
JACK, PAUL
JONES , D. ROVELL
•JONES , LEELAND
KOVEY , ROBERT
•KOWALEWSKI, THOMAS
LANG , PAUL
•LUPIENSKI, JOHN

Pos.

Class

Age

Ht.

Wt .

Hometown

E
DT
DHB
DH B
F'B
DE

Sr.
Soph .
Soph.
Soph.
Sr.
Sr.
Soph.
Soph .
Soph.
Soph .
Sop h.
Sop h.
Soph.
J r.
J r.
So ph .
J r.
Soph.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sr .
J r.
Soph .
Sr .
Sop h.
Sr.
Soph.
Soph.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr .
Sop h.
J r.

20
18
21
19
20
20
19
20
19
20
20
20
19
20
20
19
19
19
21
21
19
21
20
20
21
20
21
19
19
21
19
20
20
20

6-1
6-3
5-10
6-0
5-10
6-2
6-0
5-9
5-8
5-11
6-0
5-9
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-10
5-9
5-11
5-10
6-1
5-8
6-1
6- 1
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-0
5-10

201
232
180
189
205
209
200
222
200
187
212
168
193
209
183
210
210
202
219
232
175
166
213
205
189
188
197
178
228
208
202
210
210
210

~l asse n a, N. Y.
Ind ia napo li s, Ind .

c

DT
LB
LB
T
DH B
JI B
E
E

c

K
E

c

DT
D II B
K

c

DE
D HB
DHB
DH B
QB

DT
F'B
DE

c

E
LB

Potsda m, N.Y.
Hamburg, N.Y.
Roc hes te r, N. Y.
De tro it , Michiga n
Ne w Kens in gto n, Pa .

Buffa lo, N.Y.
Cente rlin e, Mich .

Endico tt , ~ . Y .
Cos hocton, 0 .
Dolgeville, N.Y.
Bu ffa lo , N.Y.
New Bedford , ~ l a s s .
E ndwell , N.Y.
Hochester, ~ . Y .

Ham burg , N.Y.
C uya hoga fa ll s, 0 .
E . Syrac use , N.Y.
Newport , R.I.
Cos hocton, 0 .
De troit , M ich.

Clevela nd , 0 .
Buffa lo, N.Y.
~ l a r cy, N.Y.
Dove r, 0 .

E lmira, N.Y.
Springda le , Pa .
Akron, 0 .
Buffalo , N.Y.
Youngs town , 0 .
De troit , Mich .

Ithaca , N.Y.
Springda le , Pa .

High School
Masse na H .S.

Cathedral H .S.
Potsd am H .S.
f ro nti er Centra l H .S .

McQua id Jes uit II .S.
St . David 's H .S .
N. Ken'ton II .S.
St . Jos . Collegia te
St . Clement H .S.
Union-E ndicott H.S .
Cos hocton H .S.
Dolgeville Cent ra l
C an isius H .S .

Bishop Sta ng H .S.
H .S.

~ l ai n e-E n d w e ll

Cardin al Mooney II .S.

Hamb urg Sr. H .S.
St. Vincen t's
C hrist. Bros . Acad .

Rogers H .S.
Coshoc ton H .S.
Eas t H .S .
Cathed ral La t in H .S.
South Pa rk H .S .
Whitesboro Ce nt. H .S.
Dover H .S.
Southside H .S .
Springda le H .S .
Buchtel H .S .
Hut c hinso n Tec h . H .S .
Ca rdin al Moo ney H .S .

De LaSalle Collegiate
Ithaca H .S.
Springda le H .S .

�"'""'

IJ'&gt;

"'
.....

.....

34
71
15
64
19
55
97
59
79
50
81
14
80
20
94
53
84
76
88
75
32
58
61
57
21
69
35
63
98
24
90
22
49
52
77
51
23

LUZNY, MICHAEL
MARICLE, DONALD
MARTIN, DANIEL
•MASER, MICHAEL
MASON , DENNIS
McCULLOUGH, STEVEN
McGARRY, DENNIS
MIHALE, DENNIS
MOLER, ROBERT
MOSHER, JAMES
MURPHY, THOMAS
•MURTHA, MARK
NAPIERKOWSKI, CHESTER
PATTERSON, PATRICK
PIROZZOLO, RICHARD
POWRIE, CHARLES
•PRZYBYCIEN,JOHN
REID, FRANK
REMILLARD, JAMES
•RICCELLI, JOSEPH
RICHNER, DAVID
•RISHEL, RODNEY
•RISSELL, MICHAEL
RUGGERIO, ALFONSE
•RUTKOWSKI, KENNETH
SABO, DONALD
SMITH, ROBERT
SPENCER, E. JON
STECKMEYER, PAULJ .
•sVEC, STEVEN
WALGATE, DANIEL
WASHINGTON, BENNIE
•WELLS, RICHARD
•WESOLOWSKI, JOHN
WOLF, CHRIS
•WRIGHT, IRVIN
YORK, BRIAN
•- 1966 Lettermen (23) Student

LB
T
DHB
G
QB
LB
DE
LB
DT
LB
DE
QB
DE
HB
T

c

DE
T
DE
DT
LB
LB
T

c

HB
LB
LB
G
LB
HB
DT
HB
HB

c

T
LB
E
~lanager

20
Soph .
5-9
209
South Bend , Ind .
20
Sop h.
6-0
224
Ithaca , N.Y.
20
5-11
187
Huntington , L.l.
Jr.
20
5-11
214
C layton , N.Y.
Jr .
19
5-11
188
Buffalo, N .\ .
Jr .
Soph .
19
5-10
201
Coshocton , 0 .
So ph .
20
215
Lancaster , N .Y.
5-11
Soph .
21
6- 0
214
New York City
Soph .
20
Orchard Park , N.Y.
6-2
226
20
'
6-1
212
Central Islip, L.l.
Jr.
21
6-0
192
Johnstown , Pa .
Jr.
20
5-11
176
Endicott , N.Y.
Jr.
20
221
Soph .
6-3
Arnold. Pa .
Ambridge, Pa .
191
5- 11
Soph .
19
Elmira ,- N.Y.
Sr .
21
6-2
232
21
Sop h.
6-0
195
Cuyahoga fall s, 0 .
19
6-1
200
Detroit, Mi ch.
Jr.
Soph .
21
6-3
217
Ottawa , Ont.
20
198
New Bedford , ~tass .
6-0
Jr .
20
6-2
242
Syracuse , N.Y.
Jr.
20
5-11
197
Greenhurst
, N .Y.
Jr .
Sr .
21
194
East Smethport , Pa .
5-11
Sr.
21
5-11
233
Coatesville , Pa .
Sr .
20
205
6-1
Buffalo, N.Y.
Sr.
20
Tonawanda, N .Y.
5-9
180
20
210
5-10
Johnstown , Pa .
Jr .
20
6-0
213
Depew , N.Y.
Jr.
Soph .
20
5-11
213
Sault Ste . Marie , Ont.
Sr.
22
230
6-0
East Aurora , ~ . Y .
20
6-0
201
Endicott , N.Y .
Jr .
Grand Island , N.Y.
Sop h.
19
6-2
255
20
198
Woonsocket , R.I.
5-10
Jr.
Sr.
20
Ithaca , N.Y.
6-0
198
21
214
Cheektowaga , N.Y.
5-11
Jr.
Solon , 0 .
220
19
6-3
Soph .
Sr.
Norristown , Pa .
21
5-11
203
Sr.
22
Rochester , N .Y.
5-9
169
- FRANCIS WELK, Clarence N.Y.

St. Joseph 's II .S .
Ithaca H.S .
Huntington I-I .S.

Cia yton H .S.
Bishop fallon H .S.
Coshocton H .S.
St. Mary's H.S.
Stuyvesant H .S.
Orchard Park H .S.
Cent. Islip H.S.
Wes tm o nt - Hillto p H .S .
Union-Endico tt 1-1 .S.

Arnold H .S.
Ambridge Area H .S .

Southside H.S.
Cuyahoga falls H .S.
Detroit Univ. H .S .

fisher Park H .S.
1\ . Bedford H .S.
Henninger H .S .
Bemus Point Cent.

Smethport H.S.
Scott Sr . H .S.
Bishop fallon H .S.
Kenmore East H .S .

Bishop McCort H .S.
Depew H.S .
Scollard Hall
East Aurora H .S .

Union-Endicott H .S.
Grand Island H .S.
Woonsocket H .S.
Ithaca H.S.
Cleveland Hill H .S .
Solon H .S.
Eisenho wer H .S .
~lontgomery

H .S.

�NUMERICAL ROSTER
14
15
16
17
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
~
&lt;1'&gt;
"' 26
"'...... 27
Co
28
29
30
32
34

Mick Murtha, QB
Dan Martin, DHB
BobEmbow, K
Paul Jack, QB
Dennis Mason, QB
Pat Patterson, HB
Ken Rutkowski, HB
Bennie Washington, HB
Brian York, E
Steve Svec, HB
Harry Bell, DHB
Doug DeMarco, DHB
Brian Hansen, K
Ron Biersbach , DHB
Dick Horn, DHB
Tom Brennan, FB
Dave Richner, LB
Mike Luzny, LB

35 Bob Smith, LB
36 Lee Jones, FB
40 Paul DiRosa, HB
42 Tom Hoke, DHB
44 Chuck Drankoski , E
45 Gary Grubbs, DHB
48 Tom Hurd, DHB
49 Rick Wells, HB
50 Jim Mosher, LB
51 Irv Wright, LB
52 Jack Wesolowski, C
53 Chuck Powrie, C
54 Gary Chapp, LB
55 Steve McCullough, LB
56 Dave Chernega, LB
57 AI Ruggerio, C
58 Rod Rishel, LB
59 Dennis Mihale, LB

60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77

Jerry Elwell, G
Mike Rissell, T
Tom Kowalewski, G
Jon Spencer, G
Mike Maser, G
Jim Finochio, G
John Lupienski, LB
Ted Gibbons, DT
Bill Hayden, G
DonSabo, LB
Jim Cavanaugh, DT
Don Maricle, T
Scott Clark, T
Rovell Jones, DT
Russ Beck, DT
Joe Riccelli, DT
Frank Reid, T
Chris Wolf, T

78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
94
97
98

Pat Carney, G
Bob Moler, DT
Chet Napierkowski, DE
Tom Murphy, DE
Terry Endress, E
Bob Kovey, DE
John Przybycien, DE
Paul Lang, E
Dennis Brisky, DE
Dick Ashley, E
Jim Remillard, DE
John Doherty, E
Dan Walgate, DT
Prentis Henley, DE
Dick Pirozzolo, T
Dennis McGarry, DE
Paul Steckmeyer, LB

PRONOUNCIATION GUIDE
Biers bach (BEERS-bach)
Chernega (Cher-NAY-ga)
Deming (DEMM-ing)
Embow (E MM-bo)
Geiger (GUY-ger)
Hoke (HOKE)
Rovell Jones (Roe-YELL)

lppoliti (Eye-POL-it-ee)
Kowalewski (Ko-val-EV-skee)
Lupienski (Loo-PIN-skee)
Luzny (LUZZ-nee)
Maser (MA YS-er)
Mihale (Mi-HAH-lee)
Napierkowski (Napper-COW-skee)

Peelle (PEEL)
Pirozzolo (Pir-a-ZOE- lo)
Powrie (POW-ree)
Przybycien (PREE-biss-in)
Riccelli (Riss-EL-ee)
Richner (RISH-ner)
Rishel (RISH-1 )

Rissell (RISS-1)
Sabo (SAY-bo)
Svec (SVEC)
Urich (YUR-ick)

�UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO FOOTBALL RECORDS
RUSHING
One ploy: B7 yards lTD ), Bob Edward, vs. Boston U., 1962
One go me: 205 yards, Roy Weser, vs. Rhode Isla nd, 1949
One season: 620 yards, Willie Evans, 1959
Career: 1,559 ya rds, Willie Evans, 1957-59 llee Jones has 1,075 yards going into the 1967 season)

PASSING
Yordoge, one ploy: B6 yards ITO ), Ordeon Shonabrook to Andy Podlucky, vs. Bucknell, 1951
Yardage, one season: 1,241 yards, Mick Murtha, 1966
Yardage, career: 2,133 yards, John Stoia, 1961-63
TO posses, one game: 5, Joe Kubisty, vs. Bucknell, 1956
TO passes, one season: 9, Gordon Bukoty, 1958
Attempts, one season: 210, Mick Murtha, 1966
Completions, one season: 84, Mick Murtha, 1966

PASS RECEIVING
One game: 7, Ed Gicew ia , vs. Buckne ll, 1951 ; Don Stanley, vs. Cortland State, 1955; Bob Baker, vs.
V.M.I., 1961
One season: 30, Dick Ashley, 1966
Career: 49, Ed Gicewicz, 1949- 51 (Dick Ashley has 47 receptions going into the 1967 season)
TO pones, one game: 3, Dick Ashley, vs. Colgate, 1965
TO posses, one season: 7, Dick Ashley, 1965
TO pones, career: 11 , Dick Ashley, 1965-66
Yardage, one game: 144 yards, Ed Gicewicz, vs. Bucknell, 1951
Yardage, one season: 411 yards, Dick Ashley, 1966
Yardage, career: 789 yards, Ed Gicewicz, 1949- 51 (Dick Ashley has 760 yards going into the J 967 season)

TOTAL OFFENSE
One game: 291 yards, Ordean Shanabrook, vs. Bucknell, 1951
One season: I ,337 yards, Do n Gilbert, 1964
Career: 2,730 yards, John Stolo, 1961-63

FIELD GOALS
Most in one season: 2, Joe Oscsodal, 1965
Most in career: 3, Joe Oscsodo l, 1964-65
longest: 44 yards, Joe Oscsodal, vs. Cornell, 196.4
LONGEST KICKOFF RETURN: 1oo yards lTD ), Chuck Daniels, vs. Cortland State, 1956
LONGEST PUNT RETURN: BO yards lTD ), Lou Carriere, vs. Johns Hopkins, 1946
LONGEST INTERCEPTION RETURN: 90 yards [TO), Gerry LaFounta in, vs. Delaware,
1965

PASS INTERCEPTIONS
One game: 4, Peter Roo, vs. Cortland State, 1953
One season: 6 , Gordon Bukaty, 1959; Tom Hurd, 1966
Career: 12, Don Sella, 1964-66 1Tom Hurd has 8 going into 1967 season)

PUNTING
lon"est punt: 81 yards , Bill Brogan, vs. Cortland State, 1959
Best aveerage, one season: 40.6 - yords , Bill Brogan, 1959

POINTS SCORED
One game: 36, lou Carriere, vs. Hobart, 1942
One season: 96, lee Jones, 1966
Career: 162, lou Carriere, 1942 and 1946-47 (lee Jones has a caree r total of J02 points going into
1967 season)

LARGEST CROWD AT ROTARY FIELD: 11 ,466, vs. Bostonu., 1963
LARGEST CROWD EVER TO SEE U.B. PLAY: 26,126, vs. Colgate
Stadium, Buffalo, 1951

Page 19

ot Civic

�STATISTICS FOR 1966 SEASON
(All Buffalo football statistics are recorded and filed by Mr. Alex Aversano,
Vice-President of Foster-Milburn Co., and former Buffalo quarterback who
received degrees in '35 and '36. He has served as volunteer, official statistician since 1946.)

RUSHING
Jim Barksdale
"Lee Jones
"Rick Wells
"Steve Svec
"Ken Rutkowski
"Tom Brennan
jim McEwen
"Dick Ashley
"Dennis Mason
"Chuck Drankoski
"Nick Coupas
"Mick Murtha

ATT.
118
146
67
20
8
10
12
2
2
1
4
61
451

PASSING
"Mick Murtha
"Dennis Mason
Dan Sella

ATT.
210(00 )
5
1
216

RECEIVING
"Dick Ashley
Jim Barksdale
"Rick Wells
Paul Kleiber
"Chuck Drankoski
Jim McEwen
"Ken Rutkowski
"Lee Jones
"Steve Svec
"Mick Murtha

NO.
30("")
20
19
8
5
2
1
1
1
1
88

COMPL.
84(00 )
3
1
88
YDS.
411 (00 )
312
267
163
84
19
34
17
16
4
1,327
Page 20

ET
612
544
291
73
44
36
27
10
3
-2
-8
-14
1,616
INT.
16
0
0
16
TD
4
2
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
8

AVG.
5.1
3.7
4.3
3.6
5 .5
3.6
2.2
5.0
1.5
0.0
0.0
0.0
3.5

TD
2
16
4
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
23

NET
1 ,241( 00 )
82
4
1,327

TD
7
1
0
8

�1966 FOOTBALL STATISTICS (Continued)
PUNTING
0Dave Richner
Dan Sella
0Tom Brennan

NO.
16
30
2

AVG.
38.8
33.5
30.0

PUNT GE"i"~RNS
0Tom Hurd
Dan Sella
0Tom Hoke
Bob Sinclair
Nick Capuana
0Rick Wells

NO.
19
1
1
1
1
1

KICKOFF RETURNS
°Ken Rutkow ski
0Rick Wells
0Tom Brennan
Jim McEwen
0Dan Martin
0Lee Jones
Paul Kleiber
0Dick Ashley

NO.
9
8
7
4
1
3
1
1

YDS.
216
177
96
72
34
36
10
3

INTERCEPTIONS
0Tom Hurd
Dan Sella
ick Capuana
0Tom Hoke
0lrv Wright
0Tom Kowalewski
0John Lupienski

NO. YDS.
6(00) 167
22
5
37
2
2
2
0
1
0
1
0
1

SCORING
0Lee Jones (16 TD 's rushing)
0Dick Ashley (4 TD 's pass rec., 4 PAT pass rec.)
0Rick Wells (4 TD 's rushing, 1 PATR)
Jim Barksdale (2 TD 's pass rec. , 2 TO 's rushing)
0Bob Embow (17 PATK in 17 att., 1 FG in 2 att.)
°Chuck Drankoski (2 TD 's pass rec.)
0Tom Brennan (1 TD rushing)
0Mick Murtha (1 PATR)
°Ken Rutkowski (l PATR)
TOTAL
0 - indicates pia yer will return for 1967 season
( 00 )-indicates UB record for single season

TEAM TOTALS
First Dowm
Rushing
Passing
Total Offense
Penalties
Fumbles

YDS.
132
8
2
1
0
-2

PTS.
96(00 )
32
26
24
20
12
6
2
2

220

OPPONENTS
142
1,616 yds. in 541 carries 1,582 yds . in 435 carries
88/216 (40. 7%) 1,241 yds. 84/180 (44.4%) 1,152 yds.
2,734 yds. in 615,plays
2,857 yds . in 667 plays
46 for 441 yd s.
40 for 416 yds.
21 (lost 10)
20 (lost 12)
BUFFALO

165

Page 21

�W-L-T SUMMARY OF
59 CAMPAIGNS
Head Coach
Year W L T
1894 0 1 1 Volunteer Coach
1895 0 1 1 Volunteer Coach
1896 0 0 2 Volunteer Coach
1897 7 0 0 Volunteer Coach
1898 4 1 0 Volunteer Coach
1899 6 1 1 Volunteer Coach
1900 3 2 2 Volunteer Coach
1901 4 2 0 Volunteer Coach
1902 1 4 1 Volunteer Coach
1903 4 4 0 Volunteer Coach
1904-14 No Varsities
1915 3 4 0 Frank M . Pleasant
1916 3 5 2 Arthur M. Powell
1917 4 4 0 Arthur M. Powell
1918 6 1 0 Arthur M . Powell
1919 0 5 1 Arthur M. Powell
1920 1 4 0 Arthur M . Powell
1921 2 3 2 Arthur M. Powell
1922 1 5 0 James Batterson
1923 2 5 1 James Bond
1924 1 7 0 Russell Garrick
1925 3 4 1 Russell Garrick
1926 0 8 0 Russell Garrick
1927 0 6 1 Russell Garrick
1928 1 6 0 Russell Garrick
1929 5 2 0 Biffy Lee
1930 3 5 0 Biffy Lee
1931 2 6 0 William Pritchard
1932 1 5 1 James Wilson
1933 2 3 2 James Wilson
1934 2 4 1 George Van Bibber

Year W L T
Head Coach
1935 2 6 0 George Van Bibber
1936 6 3 0 James E . Peelie
1937 4 4 0 James E. Peelie
1938 2 6 0 James E. Peelie
1939 0 7 0 James E. Peelie
1940 3 5 0 James E. Peelie
1941 3 4 1 James E. Peelie
1942 6 2 0 James E. Peelie
1943-45 World War II
1946 7 2 0 James E . Peelie
1947 8 1 0 James E. Peelie
1948 6 1 1 Frank Clair
1949 6 3 0 Frank Clair
1950 5 3 0 James Wilson
1951 4 4 0 James Wilson
1952 1 7 0 Fritz Febel
1953 1 5 1 Fritz Febel
1954 2 7 0 Fritz Febel
1955 4 4 1 Richard W. Offenhamer
1956 5 3 0 Richard W. Offenhamer
1957 5 4 0 Richard W. Offenhamer
1958 8 1 0 Richard W. Offenhamer
1959 8 1 0 Richard W. Offenhamer
1960 4 6 0 Richard W. Offenhamer
1961 4 5 0 Richard W. Offenhamer
1962 6 3 0 Richard W. Offenhamer
1963 5 3 1 Richard W. Offenhamer
1964 4 4 1 Richard W. Offenhamer
1965 5 3 2 Richard W. Offen hamer
1966 55 0 RichardW . Urich
TOTALSTied 28
Lost 220
Won 200

Page 22

�FIFTY-NINE SEASONS OF UB FOOTBALL
1894 - 1966
1894 (0- 1- 1)
6 Hobart . . .
0 Rochester

12
0
1895 (0- 1-1 )

4 Rochester

6
6

6 Rochester
1896 (0-0- 2 )
6 Hobart .
6 Syracuse

6
6
1897 (7 -0-0)

28
16
10
16
32
16
26
29
12
36
23
0
51
0
16
5
18
30
5
46
0
0
12

0
10
6
0

Hobart .
Syracuse

Syracuse
Western Reserve .
Niagara . . . . . . . .
Hamilton . . . . . . . .
Union . .. . . . . . . .
1898 (4- 1- 0)
Case . . . . . . . . .
R.P.l. . . . . . . .. .
Bucknell . . . . . . .
Colgate .. . . . . . .
Cornell .
1899 (6- 1- l)
Hobart .
Rochester . . . . . . . . . .
Syracuse . . . . . . . . • . .
Western Reserve . . . . . . .
Case . . . . ... .. . . . . .
Bucknell .. . . . . . . . . . .
Duquesne C. &amp; A.C . . . . . .
Erie A.A . . . . . ... . .. .
1900 (3-2- 2)
Western Reserve . . . . . . .
Case . .. . . . . . . . . . .
Erie A.A . . . . . . •• . ..
Columbia . . . . . . .••.
Penn State . . . . . . •
Tonawanda A.C . . . . . .
Elmira A.C . . . . . . . . .
1901 (4- 2-0)

6 Western Reserve . . . . .. .

6
5
5
16
0

0
6
0
0
0
0
0
0
10
17

Case . . . . . . .. .. .
Columbia . . . . . . . .
Oberlin . . . . . .• • .
Lehigh . . . . . . . . .
Michigan . . . . . . . . . . .
1902 (1- 4- 1)
Hobart . . .. . . . . . .. .
Rochester . . . . . . . . . . .
Western Reserve . . . . . ..
Bucknell .. . . . . . .
Columbia .. . . . . . . . . .
Alfred .. . . . . . . . . . .
1903 (4-4-0)
Hobart .. . . . .. . . .
Rochester
Niagara
Niagara .

0
0
0
6
0
6
0

0
5
5
0
27
0
0
0
0
0
0
52
0

0
0
0
17
0
0
15

17
0
0
0
0
128

0
0
22

29

5
12
12
47
8
6

0 Allegany . . . . . . . . . . .
14 Westminster . . . . . .. .
10 Masten Park H.S .. . . . . .
0 Oakdales .. . . . . . . . . . .
1904- 1914
NO VARSITIES
1915 (3-4-0)
6 Hobart ..
7 Rochester . . . . .
6 Syracuse . . . . . .
6 Alfred . . . . . . . .
6 St. Bonaventure . . . . . . .
0 Geneva . . . . . . . . . .
7 Grove City . . . . . . . . .
1916 (3-5- 2)
6 Hobart .. . . . . . . .
2 Rochester . . . . . . ..
0 Hamilton . . . . , . ..
0 Allegany . . . . . . . • •
7 Westminster . . . . . . . .
0 St. Bonaventure . . . . . . .
9 Thiel . . . . . . . . • .
0 Geneva . . . . .. . . .
0 Grove City . . . . . . .
0 Detroit
1917 (4-4- 0)
45 Hobart
28 Rochester . . . . . . . .
0 Hamilton . . . . . . . .
0 Westminster . . . . . .
6 St. Bona venture . . . . . . .
27 Thiel . . . . . . . . . . •
7 Detroit . . . . . . . . .. .
12 Mansfield . . . . . . . . . .
1918 (6- 1-0)
81 Hobart . . . . . . .. .
19 Rochester . . . . . . .. .
41 Niagara . . . . . . . . • •
0 Cornell . . . . . . . . .••
6 Curtis Plant .. ... . • .
40 Naval Officers . . . . . . .
47 Naval Officers . . . . . . .
1919 (0- 5-l)
Hobart . . . . .. . .
0 Rochester . . . . . . .
0 Westminster .. . . .
6 St. Bonaventure . . . .. . •
0 Detroit . . . . . . . . .. .
0 St. Lawrence . . . . . . . . .
1920 (l -4- 0)
2 Hobart . . . . . . .
3 Alfred . . . . . . . . . . .
0 Thiel . . . . . . . . . . . .
0 St. Lawrence . . . . . . .
12 Canisius
. . ..... .
1921 (2-3-2)
0 Hobart .
0 R.P.I . .
14 Alfred .

Page 23

23
0
0
33

20
3
20
0
0
29
10
0
14
19
29
0
12
7

7
0

0
0
0
6
7
13
7
20
6

0
6
0
28
0
0
6
21
33
6
6
25
23
20
7
13
20
0
35
0
3

�13
0
0
53
13
0
0
3
12
0
0
6
7
6
0
7
40
0
6
7
0
7

Allegany . . . • • . .
Thiel .. . . . . . . .
Bethany . . . . . .. .
St. Stephens . . . . . . .
1922 (1- 5-0)
Hobart . . . . . . . . .
Rochester . . . . . . ..
Alfred .. . . . . . . . .
Thiel . . . . . . . .. .
Mechanics Institute . .. . .. .
Clarkson . . .... . . . .
1923 (2-5-1 )
Hobart .. . .. . . . . .
Rochester ...... . .
Hamilton . . . . . . . .
Alfred . . . . . .. . . .
Thiel ..
Clarkson . . . . . . . .
Rochester Optometry .
Hol y Cross . . . .
1924 (1- 7-0)
Hobart . . . . . . . . .
Rochester . . . . . . ..
Alfred .. . . . . . .• .
Westminster . .. . . .

7 St. Lawrence . . . ... .

0 Clarkson .. . . . . . . .
0 Davis-Elkins .. . . . .. .
0 George Washington . . . .. . .
1927 (0-6-1 )
0 Hobart . . . . . . . . .
0
0
0
0
7
0

Rochester . . . . . . . .
Niagara . . .. .. , .

Alfred . . .. . .. •. .
Westminster . . .
St. Lawrence . . . . . . .

Clarkson .

. . . .... .
1928 (1-6- 0)

0 Hobart ..
0 Rochester . . . . . . . . .
0 Niagara . . . . . .. . . .
0 St. Lawrence .. . . . . .

6 Clarkson . . . . . . . .
12 Long Island .. . .... .
0 Edinboro . . . . . ... .
1929 (5-2-0)
13 Hobart .. . . . . . . . . . .
0 Rochester . . . . . . . . . . .
19 Alfred . . . . . . . . . • ••.
12 Clarkson . . . .
. . . . . . . •
13 Long Island . . . . . . . • . . .
7 Upsala .. . .. . . . . . .
27 Hiram . . .. . . . . . . . .

1930 (3-5-0)
20 Hobart . . . . . . . . . . . .
7 Rochester . . . . . . . . . .

6
0
6
39
2
0

Hamilton . .. .. . . . .
Alfred . . . . . . . . . . .
Clarkson . . . . . . . . . .
Upsala . .. . .. . . . . .
Carnegie Tech . . . . . .
Fordham . . . . . . . . .

.
.
.
.
.
.

26
0
42
0
28
19
6

15
0
18
7

13
6

16
29

29
7
2
20
0
0
0
6

13
21
16
16
0
26
48
6
49
47
34
0
43
20
19
38
36
38
12
19
0
35
7

20
12
9
0
14
12
6
24
0

20
14
0
75
71

Hamilton . . . . . . . .

Alfred .. . . . . . .. .
Clarkson . . . . . . . .•
Carnegie Tech .. . .. . .
Dartmouth .. . . . . . . ..
Notre Dame B .. .. . . .
1932 (1- 5- 1)
6 Hobart . . . .. . . . . . .
7 Rochester . . . . . . . . . .
0 Western Reserve . .. .. . .

0 Cornell . . . . . . .
6 Alfred . . . . . . . . . .
0 Clarkson . . . . . .
0 Harvard .. .. . . . . . .

1933 (2- 3- 2)
Hobart . . . . . . . . . . . .

7
0

37

1931 (2-6-0)
Hobart . . .
Rochester . . . . . . ..

7 Western Reserve .. . .

0
0
12
0
19

Niagara .. . . . . . •.
Hamilton . . . . . . ••
Alfred . . . . . . . . •
Clarkson
Adrian .
1934 (2-4-1 )
13 Hobart .
0 Western Reserve . . . . .. .
0 Niagara .. . . . . . . ,
0 Hamilton . . . . . . . .

14 Alfred . . . . . . .•.
0 Clarkson
8 Toledo .
1935 (2- 6-0)
7 Alfred.
13 Hobart
0 Western Reserve .. . . . . .

0 Hamilton . . . . . . . . .. .
0 Mechanics Institute . . . . . . ,

6 Toledo .
0 Wayne .
0 Defiance
27
2
29
12
0
19
6
26

1936 (6- 3- 0)
Alfred . . . . . . . . . .
Hobart .. . . . . . . . .
Rochester . .
Rensselaer . . . . ... .
Mechanics Institute . . . . . .. . .
Upsala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . .
Wa yne . . . . ... .
Defiance .. . .. .

19 Hiram . . .

7
12
12
13
13
6
12
13

Page 24

1937 (4-4_.j))
Hobart. . .
Rochester . . . . . . . .
Rensselaer . . • . .
Alfred . . . . . • . .
Allegany
Wayne . . . . • . .
Defiance . . . . . .
Kent .. . . . . . . . •.. . . .. . .. .

14
6
13
13
25
61
33

0
12
11
72
6
41
66
0
6
28
15
12
20
14
19
33
27
0
0
27
0
0
12
61
20
32
19
55
14

0
52
2

0
41
12
14
6

12
12
7
13
25
7
23
7
0

�1938 (2-6-0)

0 Hobart . ..
26 Rensselaer .

0
47
0
0
2
6

Alfred . . . . .•. ..
Allegany .
Wayne . . . . . . . .
Kent . . . . . . . . . .
City College of N.Y. . .

0
0
0
0
0

Hobart . . . . . . . . . .
Lehigh . . . . . . . .
Alfred . . . . .. . . .
Wayne . . . . . . . .
City College of N.Y.

Manches ter . . . . . . . .
1939 (0-7-0)

7 Connecticut . . . . .

. .
0 Susquehanna . . . . . . . .
1940 (3-5-0)
7 Hobart . . . . . . . . . .
0 Alfred. . . . . . . . . . .
0 Wayne . .. . . . . .. . .
7 City College of N.Y. . . .
6 Susquehanna . . . . ... .
7 Connecticut . .
. . .
0 Williams .. . . . . . . . .
20 Drexel Institute .. . .. .
1941 (3-4-1 )
12 Hobart ..
6 Rensselaer
0 Lehigh . .
0 Alfred . . . . . .. .
6 City College of N.Y. . . •
19 Susquehanna . . . . . . . .
6 Drexel . .. . . . . . . ,· ..
6 Wash. &amp; Jefferson .. .
1942 (6- 2-0)
66 Hobart . . . . . . . . . . . . .
13
20
14
19

Rensselaer . . . . . . .. . . .

St. Lawrence .. . . .. ..•
Carnegie Tech . . .. . ..•
Susquehanna . . . . . . . . .

7 Wash. &amp; Jefferson . . ... .
50 Hartwick .. . . . . . . . . . .
26 Johns Hopkins . . . . . . .
WORLD WAR II (No Teams)
1946 (7- 2- 0)
20 Hobart . . . . . . . . . .
28 Rensselaer . . . . ... .

0
20
32
28
20
36

Buclcndl . . . . • . . .
Alfred . . . .. .. . . .
Bethany . . . .... . . . .
C.unegie Tech .. . . . . .
Wayne . . . .
Johns Hopkins . . . . . ..

40 Moravian . . . . . . . . . .
1947 (8- 1- 0 )
54 Hobart . . . . . . . . .
27 Niagara . . . . . . . . .
14 Rensselaer . . . . .••.
14 Buclcnell . . . . . . . . . •••
40 Alfred . . . . . ... . •. .
40 St . Lawrence
50 Bethany .. . ... .. .. .

19
7
7
0
35
54
15
21
20
22
14
20
19
25
6
19
19

6
6
20
6
27
13
7
21
0
14
0
0
19
14
0

0
0
27
0
13
6
6
7
13
21
12
6

0
25
0
7
0
14
7
6
7
7
6

12 Wayne . .
7 Moravian .

32
0

39
13
39
47
0
8
41
48

0
13
21
13
25
0
14
19

26

.... . .
. .
1948 (6-1 - 1)
Hobart .
. ... .
Niagara
...
Rensselaer .
. ... .
Bucknell .
. . ..•
Colgate .
..
Alfred .
Wash. &amp; Jefferson
Louisville .
1949 (6- 3-0)
Niagara

26 Rensselaer .

. . . ..

7 Bucknell .
0 Colgate .
32 Alfred .

. . .. • .
.•
..

7
26
39
20

St. Lawrence .

34
13
19
33
14
13
52

Rensselaer .

. .. .

Wash. &amp; Jefferson .
. ..
Rhode Island .
. ... .
Ohio .
. . . ... .
1950 (5-3-0)
13 Niagara
... .

33
32
13
13
20
26

.. .. .

Alfred.
.. . •
Louisville .
. •.
Rhode Island
. •• ..
Ohio.
. .... • •.
Cortland .
. . ...
Brooklyn
1951 (4-4- 0)

L2
6

20
62
47
6
6
0
21
27

. •.
..

Connectic ut

Cortland
0 Ohio Wesleyan .

....

7 Miami of Ohio . . . . .
1952 (1- 7- 0)
13 Western Reserve

0
0
7
7
12

Buclcnell
Colgate .
Lehigh
Alfred .
St. Lawrence .

7 Connecticut
13 Cortland

35
22
13
26
19
6
47
33

. ••.
. . . ..
..

..
1953 (1-5- 1)

26
35
27
47
12
34
0

6 Western Reserve . . .... .

6
0
0
12
0
20

Buclcnell .
Lehigh . .. . .. . .
Alfred .
. •••.
Cortland
Findlay .
..
Ohio Northern .
. ...
1954 (2- 7- 0 )
0 Alfred .
.. . .
6 Brockport .
...

20 Brandeis

6 Cortland
0 Hobart
0 Lafayette .

Page 25

• . . . .
. •
. . . • .

27
14
0
48

22
0

Rensselaer

Buclcnell
Colgate .
Alfred.

7
0
21
32
6
13
2
7
7

. • .
. ••.
. •.

25
19
52
20
45
26

�20 R.P.I..
..
. •
13 St. Lawrence .
....
7 Western Reserve
.. .
1955 (4-4-l}
7 Cortland
26 Brockport .
...
29 McMaster .
.... . • •
0 Hobart
...•.
13 Western Reserve .
. ...
14 Al&amp;ed .
. ...• •
39 St. Lawrence .
. . .•
13 Brandeis
. ...
45 R.P.I..
1956 (5- 3-0)
13 Carnegie Tech .
..
. . . .
26 Cortland
13 Western Reserve .. . . .. .
41 St. Lawrence .
. . .•.
19 Al&amp;ed .
. ..• • ••
31 Bucknell
. .• •
72 Ohio Northern
..
12 Hobart
1957 (5-4- 0)
14 Carnegie Tech .
. .
6 Lafayette .
. ..
6 Western Reserve .

14
15
33
0
7
13
6
7
19

0
34
54
44
34
38
28
68
21
27
22
16
41
19
37
0

14
21
0
40
44
20
24
36
14

. . . .

St. Lawrence .
Alfred . • .
..
Wayne
Cortland
Lehigh
Temple .
1958 (8- 1-0)
Harvard
... .
Cortland
.. . .
Western Reserve .
. .. .
Baldwin-Wallace
Columbia .
. ..
Temple .
Wayne
Lehigh
Bucknell
1959 (8-1-0)
Temple.
Cortland
Bucknell
Baldwin-Wallace
Western Reserve .
. . . .
Youngstown .
. .... .
Rhode Island .
. ..• .
Gettysburg .
. ....
Marshall
1960 (4- 6- 0)
Army
V. M.I.
Temple .
Bucknell
Youngstown
Western Reserve . . . . . .
Colgate .
..
Connecticut
Gettysburg . .. . . . . .
Boston U. . . . • . . . .

1961 (4- 5-0)

19
6
34
28
0
0
0
32
26
12
20
0
6
12
20
12
26
13
0
33

14 Gettysburg .
24 Boston U.
12 Delaware .
8 Holy Cross
6 Villanova
30 Temple .
30 Connecticut
6 Bucknell
6 V.M.I.
27
6
6
20
16
6

28
44
6

34
7

9

14
13
6
0
7

20
27
6
3
6
6
26
14
6
14
26
0

14
2
26
18
2
7
6

6
12
37
28
12
41
13
0
28
31
6
42

6
14
8
22

6

. .. ..
. ..
..•.

1962 (6-3-0)
Boston U. . .
Holy Cross
... .
Villanova
... .
Delaware .
. ..
Temple .
Ohio U . . . . .. . .
Bucknell
Gettysburg .
Colgate .
1963 (5- 3- 1)
Gettys burg .
Ohio U.
. . . .
Holy Cross
. ..•
Villanova
...•
Marshall U .
Boston U.

6 Delaware .

12
36
20
28
3
7

12
39
23
16
36
19
13
41
0
0
0

0
0

6
7
10
13
34

0 Boston College .
....
15
23 Colgate .
.. . .
0
1964 (4-4- 1)
34 Boston U .
. . . . .
0
9 Cornell .
9
22 Massachusetts .
24
12 Marshall
14
14 V.M.I.
. .
10
14 Holy Cross
. • •..
20
37 Delaware .
. . •.
0
28 Richmond .
....
13
6 Colgate .
..
7
1965 (5-3- 2)
6 Boston College .
....
18
.....
13
13 Tampa .
6
18 Massachusetts .
7 Boston U.
. . ... • •
14
24 Richmond .
.... .
0
0 Dayton .
• •
0
7 Holy Cross
. . .•.
20
22 Delaware .
. •.
0
28 Co!gate .
0
....
7
20 Villanova
1966 (5 - 5- 0)
27 Kent State .
23
21 Cornell .
28
28 Villanova
... • •
8
16 Boston U.
..... •
26
. • .
13
3 Dayton .
21 Boston College . • • . . .
22
•• .
3
35 Holy Cross
36 Delaware .
.• • ••
6
8 Tampa .
..... . .
27
25 Youngstown . .
. . . . 16
FIFTY- NINE YEAR RECORD - 200- 220- 28

Page 26

�Page 27

�THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
The University of Buffalo has been the educational and cultural center
of Western New York since 1846. At that time the City of Buffalo was
14-years old and was the home of 28,000 people .
The " University " was the School of Medicine untill886 when the School
of Pharmacy was added . The school's first chancellor was Millard Fillmore,
a leading citizen of the community who continued his UB leadership during
his term as 13th President of the United States.
The 14 University Divisions are : School of Medicine (1846); School of
Pharmacy (1886); School of Law (1886); School of Dentistry (1892); College
of Arts and Sciences (1913); Summer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College , Evening Division (1923); School of Business Administration (1927);
School of Education (1931 ); School of Social Work (1936); Graduate School
of Arts and Sciences (1939); School of ursing (1940); School of Engineering
(1946); and University College, including associate degrees (1958 ).
UB's total enrollment is more than 20,000 , of which almost half are
full-time undergraduate students.
Few institutions can equal the pace of construction which has taken
place on the North Main Street campus in recent years . More than 30 new
buildings and additions to existing buildings have been undertaken , including the Western New York uclear· Research Center, the 11-floor Tower
Residence Hall for Men, the 11-floor Goodyear Residence Hall for Women,
the $4.5-million Norton Hall (student union) the Schools of Medicine and
Dentistry (Capen Hall ), and the Acheson Hall of chemistry.
But this is only a beginning. In 1962 UB abandoned its private operation
to become the major campus segment of the State University of New York.
The official name of the college, created by State University officials , is :
State Universi.t y of ew York at Buffalo . However , popular usage, particularly in the realm of intercollegiate sports, retains the familiar name of University of Buffalo, or just UB. The State University at the present time is
making arrangements for moving to a tract of land in excess of 1,500 acres
in the Town of Amherst , about 3 miles from the site of the prnt campus.
There a new campus, costing upwards of $200-million and able to accommodate 20,000 full-time undergraduates, will be built. The present campus
will then become a center for continuing education .
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic
freedom , the University of Buffalo continues its fine tradition of service to
the Niagara Frontier and the State of New York .
Page 28

�Martin Meyerson became the President of the State University of ew
York at Buffalo on September 1, 1966. He came to Buffalo from the University of California at Berkeley where he was Dean of the College of Environmental Design and where he also served as Acting Chancellor.
President Meyerson has had an outstanding career in teaching, scholarship, educational administration and urban planning. He received his A. B.
in 1942 from Columbia, and in 1949 he received his M.C.P. (Professional
degree, doctoral equivalent) from Harvard where he was a Wheelwright
Fellow.
He has been a member of the faculties of the University of Chicago,
the University of Pennsylvania, Yale, Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and also has been a consultant to and an active member of the boards of various mnnieipalties , private foundations , the Federal
Government and the United Nations .
An author of note, President Meyerson has written and edited books
and articles on urban planning and development, a field in which he is
recognized as one of the nation's foremost authorities.
President Meyerson , 44-years old, is married and has three children.

Page 29

�2Jireclor o/ Athfeficj

JAMES E. PEELLE
Jim Peelle has been with the University of Buffalo Athletic Department for more than 30 years.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the ~orth Main Street
campus in 1934, following a career as a star quarterback for Purdue University, a career which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football coach. He became head
coach and athletic director in 1936 and has held the latter job ever since.
His greatest teams at Buffalo were developed in the post-World War II
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He then gave up foot ball coaching to devote his time more fully to being athletic director as the
university began its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master' s Degree, Jim still enjoys teaching classes. He
is also coach of the UB baseball team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in NCAA Regional Tournaments. His 1967 team posted a record of
16-1 and won the Western New York Intercollegiate Conference Championship for the 9th straight time.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children while still finding time
to participate in numerous civic activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their
home in suburban Snyder is Jim 's pride and joy, and he spends much of
his spare time gardening.
Page 30

�At~felic :J.)eparfmenf Sta//

JOHN R. SHARPE
Ticket and Program Manager
On UB staff since 1960 --- served
with 28th Infantry Division during
World War II ... winner of numerous citations and awards for radio
traffic reports via helicopter ... owner of world 's record-holding racing
hydroplane .

JAMES E. SIMON
Trainer and Physical Therapist
Wa~ graduated from UB in 1950 ...
was football letterman while a student . . . coached basketball and
baseball at Riverside High School
before joining UB staff two years
ago.

JOSEPH V. WARZEL
Equipment Manager
Native of Buffalo ... served in Navy
during World War II ... in private
business prior to joining UB staff
in 1962.

Page 31

�Coach Urich's phone numbers : Office 831-2938, Home 634-9657
Radio Station WBEN Will carry all UB football games in 1967 , live and direct from the scene of
action. Participating sponsors include:

THE WESTERN SAVINGS BANK OF BUFFALO
COHR DISTRIBUTING CO., INC . (Distributors of Genesee Beer &amp; Ale)
AUDIO CE;\TER (Radio Equipment Corporation)
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.

1968 BUFFALO SCHEDULE
14- at Iowa State
Oct. 19- Villanova
21 - at Kent State
Oct. 26 - at Holy Cross
28- Massachusetts
Nov.
2- at Temple
5- at Boston College
;\ov.
9- at Northern Illinois
12- at Delaware
~ov. 23- at Boston U.
University of Buffalo E.C.A.C. All-East Selections
1963- Gerry Philbin , tackle
1965- Gerry LaFountain, end
1966- Lee Jones . fullback

Former UB players in professional football at start of 1967 training: Gerry Philbin, New York Jets;
Don Gilbert. Ottowa Rough Riders ; John Cimba. Hamilton Tiger Cats; John Stofa, Miami Dolphins ;
Greenard Poles , Edmonton Eskimos; Gerry LaFountain, Toronto Rifles ; Larry Cergley, Orlando
Panthers ; Ron Pugh , Toronto Argonauts.
Graduate Assistants
Three former UB stars will work with the coaching staff this fall as graduate assistants: Gerry
Ge rgley, varsity wrestling coach, who played fullback on the 1959 and 1960 teams; Jim McNally,
who won letters at guard in 1963 and 1964 ; and Russ MacKellar , a letter winner at tackle the
past three years who was selected as the team's Most Valuable Defensive Lineman for last season.
Gergley will help coach the freshmen , McNally will be with the offensive prep team and MacKellar
with the defensive prep team .

The bull pictured here first appeared in
the March 11 , 1963, issue of Sports Illustrated .
We are grateful to artist Robert Riger and the
publishers of Sports Illustrated for their permission to reproduce it and use it as the official symbol of all University of Buffalo athletic
teams .
The actual Buffalo mascot seen at the football games is Buster V, a combination of
Black Angus and Scottish Dexter . He is a
direct lineal descE-ndent of Buster I who was
a gift to the University of Buffalo from Elizabeth Taylor and the late Mike Todd when they
visited the campus in 1958 .
As far as can be determined, Buffalo is
the only collegiate team with a bull for a
mascot.

Page 32

�WESTERN
SAVINGS BANK
salutes

The
Buffalo Bulls
and extends best wishes for an exciting and rewarding
1967 season

THE

WESTERN
SAVINGS
OF

BANK

B U FFALO

Where You and Your Family Feel at Home
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�1967 COMPOSITE SCHEDULE OF
UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO AND OPPONENTS

KENT
STATE

SEPT. 16

SEPT. 23

SEPT. 30

OCT. 7

at
BUFFALO

Northern

at
Ohio U.

Miami IO.)

Illinois

OCT. 14

OCT.21

OCT. 28

NOV. 4

at

Bowling
Green

at
Toledo

Louisville

Western

at
Virginia

NOV. 11

Marshall

NOV. 18

NOV. 25

DEC. 2

at
Xavier

Michigan

NORTH
CAROLINA
STATE

North

VIRGINIA

at Army

TEMPLE
BOSTON U.

BUFFALO

Carolina

at Kings
Point

Bucknell

BOSTON
COLLEGE

at
Colgate
at
Villanova

HOLY
CROSS

BUFFALO

at Wake
Forest I N)

at
Maryland

Wake
Fores"t IN )

Duke

Duke

at South
Carolina
IN)

V.M.I.

West
Chester

COLGATE

IN )- Night Game

Boston
College
Boston U .

at

State

Clemson

North

North

at

Carolina

Ca rolina

Tulane

State

Akron

at

at

Dayton

Delaware

at
Bucknell

Gettys-

IN)

at

at
Harvard

at
BUFFALO

at Holy
Cross

Mossochusetts

Rhode
Island

Connecticut

Temple

Penn
State

BUFFALO

Maine

at

V .M.I.

Syracuse

Colgate

Boston U.

at
Syracuse

Rutgers

Army

at

Villanova

at

at

Hofstra

Rutgers

burg

Conn

BUFFALO

Villanova

at
Lafayette

Temple

BUFFALO

lehigh

at Holy
Cross

BUFFALO

at
lehigh

Buckne ll

at

at Virgin-

Quantico

at

Delaware

ia Tech

Marines

Xavier

at
Columbia

Cornell

at Holy
Cross

at
Princeton

at Brown

at
Maryland

IN)

Hofstra

Dartmouth

Rhode
Island

at Penn

at
BUFFALO

Boston U .

at ·Yale

DELAWARE

VILLANOVA

at Florida
at
State IN ) Houston IN)

at

Manachusetts
at

Boston

Conn

College

at
Bucknell
NOV. 23
at Toledo
at
BUFFALO

at Holy
Cross

at
Rutgers

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>Mr. Touchdown - Fullback Lee Jones</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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                    <text>OFFICIAL

PltOGRAM

- 50f

oungs+own
/ NOV. lQ, \966
.I

�IROQUOIS BREWERY, BUFFALO, N.Y. (DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL BREWERIES, INC.)

�1 cordially welcome you to State

m-

versity of New York at Buffalo and to our
59th season of inter-collegiate football. At
the same time 1 welcome our new coach,
Richard \V. "Doc" Urich. From the time
of the Greeks, athletics have been a part of
the education and cultivation of man.
'Vhatever our win-los record may be, he,
his associates and the young men who repre ent the University on the playing field
will, I know, give their best, to achieve an
excellence which will be worthy of a great

MARTIN 1EYERSON
President

University.

By the mid-1970's the State University of

lew York at Bufialo will be ready to take its place a one ol the

nation's out tanding University centers. 'Ve will serve in a humane and meaningful way a student enrollment
of perhap 37,000. 'Vithin the next decade, a program of expansion and building, currently estimated at more
than

200 million, will transform the size and nature of our campus and its programs. A study is now under-

way to determine the best possible location for these developments. Wherever that location may be, we shall
create an educational program as intellectually exciting and rewarding as any to be found in the world, with
the closest ties between University and metropolis .

.-\ series of challenges and opportunities lie ahead. 'Ve shall, I'm sure, respond to our fullest measure.

;\fARTIN

!EYER 0:-\

�U . B. QUEEN CAND I DATES

~ JACKIE ALESSI-Sigma
Kappa Phi Sorority, a Junior
majoring
in
Mathematics,
Assistant Treasurer of Sigma
Kappa Phi Sorority, Group
Leader for Freshman Orientation, Scholarship Chairman of
Pledge Class, when not watching or participating in various
sports, likes to read and sew.
Jackie lives in Buffalo.

~BERNADINE

POPIELASZ
Theta Chi Sorority, a Senior
majoring in Spanish, Recording Secretary of Theta Chi,
Greek Sing, Stunt Night Committee, outside interests in addition to sports include dancing and knitting.

~ JUDY KERR Sigma
Kappa Phi Sorority, a Junior
majoring in English, Social
Chairma!l for Sigma Kappa
Phi, Sophomore Sponsor, Publicity Comm. Spring Weekend
Alpha Lambda Delta Honor
Society, Group Leader Freshman Orientation, Likes to ski,
swim , and sew. Lives in Cortland, New York.

ARLENE ARDANOWSKITheta Chi Sorority Vice-Pres.,
Senior, English Major, cheerleader, majorette, Chairman of
Mr. Formal, Silver Ball Committee, Sophomore Sponsors,
Judo and Ski Clubs, Girl's
Swimming team 1964-65, Phi
Epsilon Pi's "International
Dream Girl" in 1964-65, Asst.
Editor of 'The Oracle', Dean's
List student, Lives in Scarsdale, New York .
~

BONNIE BURKE Alpha
Gamma Delta, Senior, Business Education major, President of Cooke Hall, Newman
Club, winner of Greek Pan
Hellenic Scholarship for 196667, loves to swim, water ski,
and travel. Interested in all
sports and travel, lives in
Rochester, New York.
~

ANNE GARONO Alpha
Gamma Delta, Junior majoring in Sociology, Newman
Club, Corresponding Secretary
of Alpha Gamma Delta, Group
Leader Program for Freshman Orientation, taught underprivileged c h i 1 d r e n in
Puerto Rico, has modelled, enjoys sports, modern dance,
domestic arts, music and literature. A native of Buffalo. ~

FOOTBALL QUEEN BALLOT
................ JACKIE ALESSI

... ............. ANNE GARONO

................ ARLENE ARDANOWSKI

.. ..... ..... .... JUDY KERR

....... ......... BONNIE BURKE

............... BERNADINE POPIELASZ
DEPOSIT YOUR BALLOT IN CONTAINERS AT THE GATES !

2

�BUFFALO
A GROWING UNIVERSITY

Twelve million square feet of space, 30,000 students, parking for 12,500 cars, at least 1,000 acres of
land-these figures sound like a report from a city
planning board, and in a sense that is what they arc.
These are the projections for the "city" that will be
the State University of New York's new UB campus.
'Vith the tremendous opportunities and challenges
such an undertaking involves, the entire University
community eagerly awaits this next step in "UB's"
journey to the truly great
niversity we have all
dreamed of.
On eptember lst, 1962, the University of Buffalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become
the major campus segment of the widespread system
of the tate University of Tew York. The new name,
created by State University officials, is: State University of New York at Buffalo. However, in deference
to sweatshirt- titchers and typewriter repairmen,
alumni seem to prefer the continuance of "UB" or
"University of Buffalo" where intercollegiate teams
arc concerned.
One of Amcraica's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo has been the educational capitol of 'Vestern New
York since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the
fourteen-year-old home of 28,000 people. The "University" was the School of Medicine until 1886 when
the School of Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, a first-citizen of the young
community, who continued his UB leadership during
his term as the thirteenth President of the United
States.
The fourteen
niversity Divisions arc: School of
i\Iedicine (1846); chool of Pharmacy (1886); School
of Law (1887); School of Dentistry (1892); College of
Arts and Sciences (1913; Summer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College, evening clivi ion (1923); chool
of Business Administration (1927); School of Education (1931); School of Social Work (1936); Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences (1939); School of Nursing
(1940); School of Engineering (1946); and University
College (including associ a tc degrees, I 958).
Buffalo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood
of 18,000 - of which 9,000 are full-time undergraduate students. The enrollment is expected to soar in
the next few years, especially in view of the State
affiliation.
The present campus is slated to become one of the
outstanding graduate centers in the country and will
have a teaching hospital on the present site of Rotary
Field. Present dormitories in some cases will be converted for married graduate students and there will
also be a building program at North 1\fain Street.
::\Ieanwhile, a record student enrollment, somewhat
crammed into the existing space, eagerly faces the
challenge of today's educational opportunities at UB.
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of
Buffalo continues its fine tradition of service to the
Niagara Frontier and the State of New York.

3

�Back Row: Mike Stock, Freshman Coach; Bob Deming, Backfield Coach; Jerry Ippoliti, Backfield Coach.
Front Row: Bill Dando, Line Coach; Richard " Doc" Urich, Head Coach, and Bob Geiger, Line Coach.

SIEGFRIED

Leo Sauer

CONSTRUCTION

FUNERAL HOME
INC.

CO., INC.

•

•

• 1933 KENSINGTO

AVENUE

TF 3-1695

6 N. PEARL STREET

•

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

• 823 GENESEE STREET

886-2300

TX 2-7183
4

�JAMES E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at UB than genial Jim.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the
orth Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue niversity, a career
which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War II
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gave up football coaching to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the university began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball
team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in
TCAA Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of
anecdotes make him a much sought-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerous civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy, and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.

Richard "Doc" Urich (pronounced Yur-ick) comes to his
present position with a set of impressive credentials. He has
been associated with Ara Parseghian for 16 years, at Miami
(0.), Northwestern and Notre Dame.
Here is what Parseghian says about rich:
"When I was appointed head football coach at l\orthwestern,
my first choice was Coach Urich. Eight years later when I was
appointed football coach at the Uni\ersity of l\otre Dame, my
first choice again was Coach rich. i\1uch of our offensive success has been due to his preparation and strategy."
"Doc" Urich was born on September 10, 1928, in Wapakoneta,
Ohio. He attended Wapakoneta High School where he captained both the football and basketball squads as a senior.
At Miami (0.) Urich was a standout in college football. He
played four years and in his freshman and senior seasons his
teams made appearances in the un Bowl and the Salad Bowl.
:\1iami defeated Texas Tech at El Paso on January 1, 1948, and
downed Arizona State at Phoenix on January l, 1951. "Doc"
was captain of the Miami team in his enior year. In his
junior and senior seasons he won All-Ohio honors, and in his
last three years he wa selected All-Conference (i\fid-America)
end.
After graduation from i\liami in February, 1951, "Doc" assumed teaching and coaching chores at :\Iassilion (0.) High
School for the remainder of the school term before joining
Head Coach Ara Par eghian at his alma mater that fall as
head freshman coach.
rich 's frosh team posted a 3-1 record ,
including an upset over a highly regarded Univer ity of
i\fichigan freshman squad.
In 1952 Urich moved up to a position on the 1iami varsity
staff from whence his trail led to i\'orthwestern, i\'otre Dame
and then to Buffalo.
In his first year at Notre Dame, Urich was responsible for
shifting Jack Snow to split end and devising the exciting
offense which broke numerou • otre Dame records and brought
the Fighting Irish back to the heights of glory after a number
of seasons in the football doldrums. Knowledgeable football men
declare that Coach Urich 's 1965 Notre Dame o!Ien e, going
without a real pas ing threat, was an even more superb job of
coaching.
"Doc" and his wife, the former Patricia Streight, also of
Wapakoneta, have two children , Cynthia (born in 1952) and
Danny (born in 1955) .

5

Urich holds a B. c. and M.Ed. from Miami, majoring in
Physical Education.

RICHARD "DOC" URICH
Head Football Coach, University of Buffalo

�THOMAS HURD

PAUL KLEIBER

RICHARD WELLS

THEODORE GIBBONS

ANTHONY MICELI

BRUCE MacKELLAR

DENNIS MASON

JOHN LUPIENSKI

CHARLES DRANKOSKI

JIM BARKSDALE

DENNIS BRISKY

ANTHONY RICCELLI

JAMES MOSHER

STEVEN SVEC

JOHN WESOLOWSKI

�RUSS MacKELLAR

NICK CAPUANA

WILLIAM TAYLOR

RON PUGH

JAMES DUNN

DANIEL SELLA

RICHARD ASHLEY

~

~
MARK MURTHA

MICHAEL RISSELL

IRVIN WRIGHT

RODNEY RISHEL

JOHN PRZYBYCIEN

TOM KOWALEWSKI

LEELAND JONES

JOHN BASTA

�BUFFALO BULLS -

1966

1st Row, L. to R. : Capuana, Sella, Basta, Finochio, R. MacKellar, Miceli, Capt. Bill Taylor, Kleiber, Dunn, B. MacKellar,
Pugh, McEwen, Barksdale.
2nd Row, L. toR.: Sinclair, Pirozzolo, York, Rishel, Brisky, Brennan, Hoke, Wright, Jones, Wells, Ashley, Rissell, Dolan.
3rd Row, L. to R.: Gibbons, Lehner, Rutkowski, Lansing, Mosher, Kuzmitski, Scaletta, Lupienski, Remillard, Hurd, Smith,
Doherty.
4th Row, L. to R. : Wilbur, Wesolowski, Sabo, Maser, Hayden, Kowalewski, Embow, Murphy, Martin, Thomas, Riccelli,
Przybycien.
5th Row, L. to R.: Coupas, Mason, Walters, Ruggerio, Richner, Kovack, Svec, Murtha, Drankoski.
Top Row, L. to R. : Garofalo (ass't. freshman coach), Gergley (ass't. freshman coach), Stock (freshman coach), Ippoliti
(ass't. coach), Dando (ass't. coach), Head Coach Richard (Doc) Urich, Deming (ass't. coach), Geiger
(ass't. coach), Simon (trainer), McNally, (ass't. freshman coach).

NINE DECADES AGO

the launching of
"advice in depth "

W

HEN ships with sails studded Buffalo's seascape over 90 years ago, when Buffalo and
the whole nation began to feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution .. . Dominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning to make its mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp;D's services for the investing public sustained
a steady growth despite financial panics, wars and
depressions. Today the talent of an organization of
more rhan 400 - including research specialists,
counselors, and administrative people stands behind
our Buffalo office, giving you opportunity for investment advirt in dtpth. Let us advise you about your
future investment plans or review your portfolio.

D OMIN ICK &amp; D OMINICK,
Incorporated
H . K r&lt;o x III, Vice President
112 2 Marine Trust Bldg. 856· 7471

S EY M OU R

Aftmlurs Ntw Yor.f. AmtriCan, AfidutJt, and Toronto Stotk ExthangtJ

BILL TAYLOR

Captain
8

�AERIAL VIEW OF BUFFALO CAMPUS

COMPLETE LOCAL STOCKS •..

Onetto's Restaurant
&amp; Seafood House

structure Is -

bars -

plates - sheets

FULL FACILITIES .•.
shearing - pickling - ailing
- burning - sawing

TIMETABLE DELIVERY •..
when you need it - as you ordered it
- ready far use

3630 MAIN STREET AT BAILEY

Serving Quality Foods at Moderate Prices
Since 1928

"Western New York's Oldest and Largest
VOLKSWAGEN
JIM

Kelly's

PARTS AND SERVICE

•

CARL C. GRIMMI INC.

DEALER "

Plumber

INC.

•

NEW AND USED

Home of " KELLY CARED FOR CARS"

259 DELAWARE AVENUE

3325 GENESEE STREET AT THRUWAY OVERPASS

TL 2-7080

BUFFALO, N. Y.

NF 3- 8000

9

�1864 - 102nd Anniversary - 1966
1966 marks our 102nd year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo a rea.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.
Est. 1864

REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
17-21 S. Division Street
TL 4-5700

Ell icott Square

Gentlemen's Furnish ings and Natural Shoulder Clothing

The Campus Corner of Buffalo, Inc.
Opposite the University of Buffalo

THE

WESTERN SAVINGS BANK
MAIN orncr
.,....., NMI c-rt
I M-llU

I

OF BUFFALO
tu:Vt. HILl OfTIC£

a .,....... !"ta u

1(..,_,.,,,.., • I £A•I1 !till.

I

OUAw.utr PAliK ')rrlc£
,........ .
Sh..,,... 1
Otol••ue Au- ,.....,,. ttl ""'"• •• I
,.,~

l l74JU

c-1-~

1 11 11 ~01

I _,..,

3262 Main Stree t

Buffalo, N. Y. 14214

,....,., .. o..,...n
,,.• ..,.

I'C:It

c.,...,..,.

TF 2 • 3221

Where you and your family feel at Home.

Everything for the Athlete and Sportsman

PLA-MOR
SPORTING GOODS

•

SKIS AND CLOTHING
•

ICE SKATES
•

BOWLING EQUIPMENT
•

HODGE

FOOTBALL AND BASKETBALL
EQUIPMENT

Inc.
Sweaters and

Jacke~s

for Fraternities and Sororities

FLORISTS
360 Delaware Ave nue

Buffalo, N. Y. 14202

627 MAIN STREET

TL 6 • 9000

BUFFALO, N. Y.
TL 2 • 3456

10

�B

u
F
F
A
L

0

�~~on Can1pus~~

HOURS
Monday-Friday
8:30-8:30
Saturdays
10:00-2:00

The
UNIVERSITY
Book tore

Largest
Selection

Students, Old Students, Future Students •••

of

HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY ITEMS AVAILABLE

QIJALITY
PaJJerbacks
ill

Weste1·11
New York

Con1e in anti BrOIIJSe • ••

COLLEGE CLOTHING

GIFTS

(adult, youth, juvenile)

College Jewelry

Sweat Shirts

Ceramics

Sweaters

Glassware

Blazers

Stuffed Animals

College Jackets

Studio Cards

Pennants -

12

Banners

�1/uun

the BULLPEN
By Bob Powell, Courier-Express

By Dick Johnston, Evening News

It was beginning to look like a repeat C?f t~1e finish of the 1965 football season. It was begmnmg to
look as though the Bulls would trample over the remainder of the 1966 football schedule.

The first football season for the Bulls of Doc
Urich comes to a close today and, even though his
charges need a victory against Youngstown to keep it
from being a losing campaign, it has been a memorable one.

Doc Urich is the kind
of football coach who
plans ahead; he is an exc e 1 1 e n t organizer. The
Bulls had reached the degree of gridiron efficiency
that he had sought
throughout his first season
as head coach.

The new head coach
has had many things happen to him since he came
to Buffalo from Notre
Dame. lore rain than he
ever thought p o s s i b I e,
snow, food poisoning for
the team and himself, a
quarterback with allergies,
practice by the light of a
gas station sign after Daylight Saving Time ended.

Where did Urich fail?
He didn't foresee the
food poisoning incident
that was to befall the
Bulls last week in an otherwise pleasant v i s i t to
Tampa.

Doc, the team and the
rest of the coaching staff
have come through it all in good pirit, however, and
go into today's finale determined to win it and bring
the season record to won-5 lost-5. Not as good as many
followers expected, perhaps, but in many ways, despite all the handicaps encountered the season has
been a good one.

As in the final stages of the '65 campaign, the
University of Buffalo football team had reached a
peak. The club was going trong. It had overpowered
two usually strong opponents and seemed on the
road to a 6-4 finish.

Doc, his young staff and his first UB team have
given Buffalo grid followers many things to remember. That thrilling come-from-behind upset of Kent
State in the opener. The near-miss at Boston College.
The first victory ever over Holy Cross and what an
impressive victory it was. And the other resounding
triumphs here on Rotary Field, over Villanova and
Delaware, two teams that have produced orne impressive wins themselves.

Last Friday night the Bulls worked out at a high
school field in Tampa and they were the ame bouncy,
highly spirited players who had bombed Holy Cross
and Delaware on successive Saturdays.
The tainted food reaction first struck a short
time before the team was to board buses that would
take it to its arc-light meeting against the Spartans.

There has been the passing of the poised young
quarterback who is allergic to wool, l\Iickey l\Iurtha.
The record-setting catches of Dick Ashley. The rugged runs of Lee Jones, who zoomed to the top of the
nation in scoring after the Delaware game. The headlong dashes and clutch pass receptions of Jim Barksdale. The switch of Rick \ Veils from a competent
quarterback to a very competent halfback. The sometimes astounding pass catches by tight end Paul
Kleiber.

The outcome was a nightmare for Bulls' fol lowers but it lasted much longer for the Bulls. By
mid-week, several of the players still had not regained
the strength necessary to play the game.
How lasting the effects of the malady will be best
can be measured today as they close their first season
under Urich's able direction.

Barksdale and Kleiber will be gone next season
and so will such defensive stalwarts as Nick Capuana
and Dan Sella and such mainstays up front as the
MacKellar brothers, Russ and Bruce; Capt. Bill Taylor, Tony l\Iiceli, Ron Pugh, Jim Finochio, Jim Dunn
and John Basta.

Youngstown, a lesser name in college football, always has a strong, well-drilled football team. The
Penguins bring a 5-2-l record into today's game and
should be mentally steeled for the Bulls.

But a good nucleus will be back and some fine
prospects come up from the freshman team. Doc's
second season should be one to look forward to.

Youngstown has little to lose in losing to Buffalo
and it has everything from a prestige standpoint to
gain. That's one of the edges Tampa had, too.
13

�ALUMNI AND FRIENDS

Beer -

THE "FRIENDS OF THE BULLS" PROUDLY PRESENT
THEIR SECOND SEASON OF POST-GAME

Pop -

Chips -

Pretzels

Ell KONIKOFF DIXIELAND BAND
Entertainment- $1.50 per person

TUNKS

Faculty Club
Dress -

Immediately Following Each Home Game

As You Are

BUFFALO LINE-UP

c-4nse/

Offense

Defense

S.E.

87 ASHLEY
44 DRANKOSKI

R.H.B.
R.E .

42 HOKE
40 SELLA

70 PUGH

84 PRZYBYCIEN

•
tnc.
"Buffalo's
leading

R.T.
71 TAYLOR
79 THOMAS

R.l.B .

51 WRIGHT

R.H.B.

R.T.

49 WELLS

76 R. MacKELLAR

26 McEWEN

72 BASTA

62 KOWALEWSKI

R.G.

67 GIBBONS
64 MASER

I

exponent

R.G .

of quality
printing"

67 GIBBONS
C.

Q.B.

56 B. MacKELLAR

14 MURTHA

55 KOVACK

19 MASON

l.H.B.

52 WESOLOWSKI

22 CAPUANA
49 WELLS
l.G.

66 LUPIENSK I

Printers

&amp;
Lithographers

69 SABO
L.G.
61 RISSELL

36 JONES

65 FINOCHIO

30 BRENNAN

l.T.

l.H.B.

73 MICELI

20 BARKSDALE
24 SVEC

78 PIROZZOLO

126 S. ELMWOOD

T.E.

Buffalo, N.Y. 14202

89 DOHERTY

TL 3-3005

F.B.

l.T.

LL.B.

72 BASTA

58 RISHEL

75 RICCELLI

54 MOSHER

L.E .

s.

50 BRISKY

48 HURD

88 REMILLARD

46 SINCLAIR

85 KLEIBER

SPECIALISTS:
P.A.T., F.G. &amp; K.O. PUNT

-

80 EMBOW, 48 HURD

40 SELLA, 44 DRANKOSKI

�BARTLETT BUICK
3080 MAIN STREET

TF 6-1000

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

OPEL KADETT BULL WAGON
ONLY $1883 (minus art work, of course)

UNIVERSITY

YOUNGSTOWN UNIVERSITY LINE-UP

Offense

Defense

PLAZA

R.E.
84 ROSE

R.E.

80 WINSTON

80 WINSTON
81 RUDZ IK
R.H.B.
25 RANDALL

R.T.

R.H.B.

75 SMART

43 KACENGA

74 HORVATH

41 FRANKLIN

R.l.B.
19 LUTIS

41 FRANKLIN

R.T.
73 HOUSE
78 GARY

R.G.
62 ADAMS
67 MATEY

F.B.
32 BRIYA
31 JOSEPH

c.

s.

52 SANDINE

C.L.B.
34 AVERHART

M.G.
67 MATEY
30 GALlE

82 CASGAR
Q .B.
16 PIUNNO
17 ROTH

L.G.
64 Di LULLO

L.T.

67 MATEY

74 HORVATH
76 FERRO
L.H .B.

L.T.

33 RIVERS

73 HOUSE

26 RIPPEY

76 FERRO

LL.B.
L.H .B.

81 RUDZIK

83 COTTON

31 JOSEPH

L.E.
88 THOMPSON
70

L.E.
83 COTTON

SPECIALISTS:
PUNT -

40 KENT, 83 COTTON

P.A.T. &amp; K.O. -

81 RUDZIK

15

ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSON CO.
AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Cards
LEES DRUGS
GUSTAV A. FRISCH- Jeweler
KOEGL'S BAKERY
LEONARDO'S RESTAURANT
M and T TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
STYLE CREST MEN'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP
ULBRICH'S- Stationery
FEDERAL MEATS
THE PLAID SHOP
DEALS JEWELERS
YOUR MATERNITY SHOP
AEXANDER KATZ and
LOU KROP - Optometrists
EVANS - Gifts and Cards
W. T. GRANT CO.
FANNY FARMER
AMHERST
Clothes Tree, Inc.
JOHNSON'S-Amherst Bootery

�1966 VARSITY SCHEDULE

THE COVER

Sept. 17

Kent State

away

Oct. 22

Boston Col.

away

Sept. 24

Cornell

home

Oct.

29

Holy Cross

home

Oct.

Villanova

home

Nov.

5

Delaware

home

Boston U.

away

Nov. 12

Tampa

away

Dayton

away

Nov. 19

Youngstown

home

Oct.

8

Oct.

15

SIX

*

GIRLS, ONE WILL
BE QUEEN.

CAST YO R BALLOT
FOR YOUR FAVORITE.
BALLOT O r

PAGE 2.

BUFFALO BULLS 1966 ROSTER

JONES-

RICH

MILK
CORP.

"It!s Flavor Guarded"

70 E. FERRY STREET

TT 3-4080

o.
arne
1·1 Murtha, Mark
15 Martin, Daniel
Ill \ ork, Brian
1!I Mason, Dennis
· 20 Barksdale, James
21 Rutkowski, Kenneth
":L2 Capuana, Nicholas
~I
Svec, Steven
·~6
McEwen, James
'!.7 Coupas, 1 icholas
30 Brennan, Thoma
32 Rich ner, David
3.1 "mith, Robert
· 36 Jones, Leeland
~40 Sella, Daniel
"42 Hoke, Thomas
44 Drankoski, Charles
45 Murphy, Thomas
46
inclair, Robert
"48 Hurd, Thoma
•49 Wells, Richard
•so Brisky, Dennis
51 Wright, Irvin
52 Wesolowski, John
5·1 ;\1osher, James
55 Kovack, John
"56 MacKellar, Bruce
57 Ruggerio, Alfonse
"58 Rishel , Rodney
60 Walters, Gregory
•61 Rissell, Michael
62 Kowalewski, Thomas
63 Lehner, Lawrence
61 l\1 aser, l\f ichael
65 Finochio, James
66 Lupienski, John
"67 Gibbons, Theodore
68 Hayden , William
69 Sabo, Donald
"70 Pugh, Ronald
"71 Taylor, William
72 Basta, John
"73 Miceli, Anthony
75 Riccelli , Joseph
•76 MacKellar, Rus ell
77 Kuzmitski, Kenneth
78 Pirozzolo, Richard
79 Thomas, Jeffrey
80 Embow, Robert
82 Dolan, James
82 Wilbur, Curtis
84 Przybycien, John
85 Kleiber, Paul
0 86
Dunn, James
•87 Ashley, Richard
8
Remillard, James
89 Doherty, John
•go Hansen, Brian
• - Lettermen (20)

16

Class
So.
So.
J r.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
o.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
S~:.

Sr.
Sr.
o.
Sr.
o.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
r.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.

Pos.
Qll

Age
1~

l,.lrl

1!1

1.-DHB

~1

Qrl

Ill

l-1.13
HB
HB
Hll
Hll
Hll

~0

Fll
1'11

l!J
l!J
l!J

FB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
LB
G
C
G

C
C

c

LB

G
G
C
G
G

G

G
G
G
G
T

T
T

r

T

T

T
T
T
E
E

E
E
E
E

E
E
E
K

1!1
~0
1~
:L~
1~

1!1
:LO
~0

19
~0

19
20
20
1!1
20
20
18
19
20
19
20
18
20
19
20
1!1
20
19
20
19
19
21
22
22
21
19
22
18
20
19
18
21
19
18
22
21
19
19
19
20

Ht.
5-11
5-11
5·10
5·11
5·11
5-10
5·!1
6·0
5·10
5-10
5-10
5·11
5·11
5·10
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-0
6·2
5-10
6-0
6-3
5-10
6-0
5-11
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-11
6-1
6·2
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-2
6·0
6-1
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-1
5-11

Wt.
171
loU
165
1b0
177
175
175
1!15
190
llH
~07

1!10
loU
~0~

17:L
174
180
185
198
191
191
196
204
205
190
195
200
190
197
170
215
203
201
200
210
203
235
203
198
232
225
216
223
230
220
255
230
215
195
190
205
193
225
213
201
191

205
172

Hometo"n
Endicott, N. \.
Huntington, L. 1.
Rochester, 1 . Y.
Bullalo, 1 • Y.
Syracuse, N. \ .
'1 onawanda, r . \ .
Uuca, , . Y.
Endwell, N. \.
Moon Run, l'a.
Johnstown, Pa.
Rochester, N. \ .
Greenhurst, N. \ .
Depew,
Y.
Bullalo, . \.
Ioon Run, Pa.
Marcy, . Y.
Endwell, N. \ .
Johnstown, Pa.
Watertown,
Y.
Elmira, 1 Y.
Ithaca, N Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Norristown, Pa.
Cheektowaga, N. \'.
Central Islip, L. 1
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
Kenmore, . Y.
Buffalo, r . Y.
E. Smethport, !&gt;a.
Kenmore,
Y
Coatesville, l'a.
Detroit, Mich.
Pittsburgh, J&gt;a.
Clayton, . Y.
E. Syracuse, N. Y.
Springdale, Pa.
1 ewport, R. I.
Cleveland, 0.
Johnstown, Pa.
McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N. \'.
Glens Falls, . Y.
Batavia, N. Y.
Syracuse,
. Y.
Kenmore, . Y.
Methuen, l ass.
Elmira,
Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Hamburg, . Y.
Glens Falls, . Y.
Ovid, . Y.
Detroit, 1ich.
Auburn, N. Y.
Cranston, R. I.
Mas ena, . Y.
New Bedford, l\fass.
, ew Bedford, ~ra~s
Detroit, Mich

�What's the Geneseecret

• •

•

YOUNGSTOWN 1966 ROSTER
!'lo.

1.)
16
17
18
19
21
23
2-1
C),"'

-J

26
30
31
32
33
3-1
40

-11
12

-13
15

-16
:)0

·'""

.)3
61

,_
(''&gt;

63
61
6.3
66
67

68
69

71
73
7l
7'J
76
78
80
81
82
3
8-1

']

~)

86
88
89

'ame
Joe Brimmeier
Joe Piunno
Joe Roth
Sam Brutz
Joe Lutsi
Joe ~Iagliocca
Tom :\Iurray
Gene Vactor
Phil Randall
Darrell Rippe1
\'ince Galie
Chas. Joseph
Rav BriYa
Sat{ford ' Rivers
Louis . \\ erhan
Joe Kent
Tom Franklin
James Clontz
Ken Kacenga
Ken Gresko
Ron Barnes
Dennis Richards
Ralph Sandine
Richard Peterson
Dan ~I organ
James .\dams
Garn Smith
:\'ino Dilullo
Sam Fuda
'1erry Brad1
Ed ~fatev
Don Garclncr
Ho\\·ard Seidel
" ' m. ulenski
" 'm. House
Gan Honath
James Sman
Gene Ferro
Gregon Gar~
Ro1 '\'inston
Chad Rudzik
Da1e DelSignore
Craig Cotton
Barn· Rose
Ralph Goodman
Tames Burns
Robert Thompson
\f ichacl :\fcGarn

Class Pos

Age

Fr.
Jr.
Jr.
Fr.
Jr.
Fr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Fr.
Fr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So .
Fr.

18
20
19
18
20
18
18
21
19
18
18
18
18
22
19
18
19
19
19
18
18
19
18
20
18
18
19
19
17
18
21
20
18
18
22
20
19
18
18
21
21
19
19
20
19
20
21
19

0.

Fr.
So.
Fr.
Fr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Fr.
0.
0.

Jr.
Fr.
lor.
Sr.
Jr.
Fr.
Fr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Fr.
Sr.
Sr.
Fr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Fr.
'lr.
. 0.

Hgt.

Wgt.

5-11

162
141
189
200
201
180
170
180
180
151
209
186
205
195
198
203
165
171
18-1
161
161
201
238
206
190
194
195
190
182
194
212

5-10

6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-9

5-10
5-11
:i-10
6-0
6-0
5-9

6-0
5-10
6-0
5-9

:i-10
5-10
5-9

5-11
6-0
6-3
5-11
5-10
6-1
6-0
5-9

5-10
5-10

6-0
3-10
.i-11
6-1
6-3
6-2
3-11
6-1
3-11
6-2
6-0
5-11
6-3
6-1
5-11
6-4
6-0

6-2

IS~!

169
197

__ ,

2t3
&lt;)&lt;)-

219

263
234
200
180
175
177
192
191
184
205
185

Home
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Cleveland, 0.
:\'ew Castle, Pa.
;\Iiles, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
:\1' iles, 0.
Wilkinsburg, Pa.
Youngstown, 0.
Canton, 0.
:\'ew Kens:ngton, Pa.
Salem, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Girard, 0.
Campbell, 0.
Young town, 0.
Campbell, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Struthers, 0.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Youngstown, 0.
Oakmont, Pa.
Youngstown, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
:\Tiles, 0.
Perryopolis, Pa.
Youngstown, 0.
:\Torth Lawrence, 0.
Poland, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Elizabeth, Pa.
andusky, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
. iles, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Struther , 0.
Youngstown. 0.
Elizabeth, Pa.
Geneva, 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Youngstown. 0.
Youngstown, 0.
Youngstown , 0 .

GE ESE

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

~

�YOUNGSTOWN UNIVERSITY SQUAD

I st Row: left to right: ·1 ony Young, Da' e \\' hitaker. Tom :\[urra\, Frank Bors. Dick Peterson , Da'e Ceorge.
.\ dams, Craig C'ollon. Ralph Goodman , Said chaheen , Chad Rudlik, Gene \ 'aclOr.

Ro~

\\' insLOn. Jim

2nd Row: Cecil Haily, Gene Ferro, Ken Kish, Tom Se\ich, Dennis Richards. Joe Piunno, Ra) Briya, Tom Franklin , Phil Randall,
Joe Lutsi, Ken Kacenga, :\ino Dilullo, Jacob Ferro.
3rd Row: Bob Thompson, Ralph Sandine, Ron Schuster, :\like :\!cGarr) . Joe Roth , Barq Rose, Bill House, Can· Horvath. Sanford
Ri,ers, Ed Mate), Tom Courtney. Dick .\ dipotti , Can Smith. Lou .-\ \erhart.

GRANVILLE MOTORS INC.

1967 U. B. SCHEDULE

VOLKSWAGEN

•
KENT STATE

SEPTEMBER 23

NORTH CAROLINA ST.

SEPTEMBER 30

AT VIRGINIA

OCTOBER

7

OCTOBER

14

BOSTON UNIV.

OCTOBER

21

AT BOSTON COLLEGE

1500 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

OCTOBER

28

AT HOLY CROSS

JUST NORTH OF THE BOULEVARD
MALL OPPOSITE TWIN FAIR

NOVEMBER

AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE CENTER
; • SEDANS
-• • SUNROOFS

• STATION WAGONS
• KARMAN GHIAS

OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 836-4600
•

SEPTEMBER 16

AUTHORIZED
OUL.CR

All Late Model VW's and Domestic Used Cars Warranted

18

4

TEMPLE

AT DELAWARE

NOVEMBER 11

AT VILLANOVA

NOVEMBER 18

COLGATE

�A History of Youngstown University
fhe Youngstown University is located
ncar downtown Youngstown, a major industrial center in Northeastern Ohio and a vital
link in the nation's steel industry. Situated
midway between Pittsburgh and Cleveland, it
is a modern, urban center in every respect.
The Youngstown University had its beginning in I 908 with the establishment of the
School of Law of the Youngstown Association
School, sponsored by the Young ~len's Christian ,\ssociation. The University has witncs :ed
many changes in its development and today
is recognized as a modern urban university
serving the needs of the community. The Institution is fully accredited by the Noah Central ,-\ssociation of Colleges and Secondary
Schools.
The Univer ity seeks to develop in its
students qualities of emotional and intellectual maturity to enable them to become socially valuable and culturally mature. To
achieve this goal, the University recognizes
the need to provide broad presentations of
social, political, economic, religious and cultural ideas relevant to an understanding of
contemporary existence.
In addition to its academic goals, the
University recognites the need for spiritual
development. Iany churches near the University provide religious opportunitie for students and two full-time chaplains have
offices on campus. The University has weekly
chapel services and there are active religious
groups on campus.
In addition to the 18 major buildings already in
usc on the campus, the University is currently engaged in an eight-year 25-million plus campus development program. The long range project, to be
completed in 1971, will provide the University with
the means to meet a constantly growing enrollment.
The 68 acre campus will include such structures as
a Fine Arts Building, Technical Institute, Physical
Education Plant, Liberal Arts Classroom Building,
dormitorie and other related buildings. The new
\Vard Beecher Science Hall and the Engineeringcience Building are currently under construction
with the latter to be completed this year.

DR. ALBERT L. PUGSLEY
President
attractive careers is available to men and "·omen in
numerous professional areas. Graduate of the University hold responsible positions in government,
teaching, law, medicine, science, business, mu ic, art
and many other fields.
A co-educational college, Youngstown Univer ity
has an enrollment of over 12,000 students. Faculty
members are selected on the basis of their experience
and academic achievement. l\Iembers of the faculty
are constantly engaged in research and personal development to further develop their academic competence.

The first major step in the development program
was the completion this year of the 1.8 million dollar
Kilcawley Student Center. The building contains dining and snack bar facilities for 1,200 students and
250 faculty ~embers, a large s~udent l?tmge, faculty
lounge, meetmg rooms, a dormitory umt for 250 men
and space for other tudent activities.
Youngstown University offers complete curriculums in the liberal arts and in most technical and
professional undergraduate fields. Preparation for

Youngstown University grants the degrees of
Bachelors of Arts, Bachelor of Engineering, Bachelor
of Music, Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Science in
Education and Bachelor of Science in Business Administration. It strives to provide quality education
to the student at the lowest possible cost.
The Universiy seeks to serve its community and
the nation by being continually alert to the demands
of a dynamic society.
19

�YOUNGSTOWN UNIVERSITY COACHING STAFF

Dike Beede

.Jim Vcchiarclla

Ralph Wolf

Tony Cougras

SCIENTIFIC

EQUIPMENT

and

MEDICAL SUPPLIES
for

• INDUSTRY

• PHYSICIANS
• SCHOOL

• HOME

• HOSPITAL

JEFFREY-FELL CO., INC.
1700 MAIN ST.

Phone TT 3 - 1700

20

BFLO., NEW YORK 14209

�WILLARD L. WEBSTER
Athletic Director and Trainer
\Villard L. \\' ebster, the man respon ible lor the
well organited sports department, is also the chairman of the Biology Department.
\\' illard L. \Vebster became team trainer when
he first came to the University in 1938. He became a
full-time professor a year later and was appointed
.\thletic Director in 1946.
In addition to his duties as Athletic Director,
\\'illard has become a councilor to many athletes. As
seems to be the case everywhere, athletes always have
very special and different problems, and their answers
arc usually found in the athletic department after a
talk with \Villard.
Just recent!), \Villard received the \\'alter E. and
Caroline H. \\'atson Foundation Award which is an
annual presentation to a member of the YU faculty
who in the judgment of other faculty members docs
the most for the student, faculty, University and community. La t ,\pril \Vebster received a contributionsto-sports citation-from all area high school coaches
for his fine work guidance.
Every athlete who leaves Youngstown University
will remember \Villard L. \Vebster as director,
teacher, trainer and particularly as a friend.

DWIGHT V. (DIKE) BEEDE
Head Coach

,

Dwight \ '. (Dike) Beede ha coached at Youngstown University since the inception of the sport in
1938. Prior to that he directed grid activities at \\'estminster and Geneva Colleges in Pennsylvania. Over a
33 year span, Beede has compiled 155 victorie against
107 losses and 17 ties. His mark in 25 )Cars with the
Penguins is 127 wins, 79 defeats and 12 ties.
Dike "·as the first to introduce the popular practice of Hags denoting fouls in football, rather than ; he
horn. Back in 1941, when Oklahoma City met Youngs·
town, Beede asked officials "Red" (Fifth Down) Friescll, .Jack McPhee and other to try throwing a fiag
rather than blowing a horn. It was Beede's contention
that the whistle or horn often caused players to halt
during a play a mancm·er that proved cost!). He also
(el t it would lessen the blow of a pen a It} erasing a
long run if the fans were a ware that it had been
con;m i ttc~l before the action ceased. l\Irs. Beede made
the Hags and they were first used in Youngstown. The
plan proved an immediate success. lt is standard
equipment for ofEcials now.
Beede is also credited with introducing the lamous "spinner" play while starring for Judge \\' ally
Steffan's Carnegie Tech teams in the 20's. It is still a
favorite of his offense today.
In August of 1957 Beede received his highest
honor when he was acclaimed "Small College Coach
of the Year" b) the Football \\'riters of .\mcrica.

21

�YOUNGSTOWN

BARRY ROSE

ED MATEY

CHAD RUDZIK

JOE LUSTI

GARY HORVATH

GENE FERRO

RAY BRIYA

CHARLES JOSEPH

JOE ROTH

PHIL RANDALL

TOM FRANKLIN

BILL HOUSE

22

�UNIVERSITY

KEN KACENGA

JOE PIUNNO

JIM ADAMS

LOU A VERHART

SANFORD RIVERS

CRAIG COTTON

JOE KENT

BOB THOMPSON

RALPH SANDINE

ROY WINSTON

GARY SMITH

23

DICK PETERSON

�u
N
I

v
E
R

s
I

T
y

OF
YOUNGSTOWN

24

�All restricted guages, precise tempers and finest
finishes made to your exact specifications.

COLD ROLLED STRIP STEEL
Warehouse and Mill Deliveries
COIL

•

ROLLER LEVELING

•

SHEETS
•

SHEARING

PLATE
•

SLITTING

GIBRALTER STEEL
CORPORATION
NT 4-1020
2555 Walden Avenue

•

Buffalo, N. Y. 14225

JIM SIMON, Trainer

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.

FOR A D ASH OF A D VENTURE ...
IN YOUR WARDROBE

HEATING- AIR CONDITIONING
Power Plants -

Process Piping -

Fire Protection

Come To

•
TL 4-8435

120 W. TUPPER

CAPPELLINI'S RESTAURANT
and
CATERERS, INC.

2900 DELAWARE AVENUE
KENMORE, N . Y. 14217

•

Complete Fonnal Rental Service - Group Rates

101 NIAGARA STREET
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14202

Phone: 873-3228

25

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFF:\LO

27
21
28
16

3

:'\0\ .

I otal

21
33
36
!l
19

(4·5·0)
Kent State
Cornell
Villano\ a
Bo ton c.
Dayton
Boston Col.
Hoi} Cross
Delaware
J'ampa
Youngstown

19:;

. \ ttendancc
14,500
10,91
9,153
7,500
12,399
17,200
10,303
5,434
7,000

23
28
26
13
22
3
6
27

~lick ~lunha

.Jim Barksdale
Lee Jones
Rick Wells
Steve vee
Ken Rutkowski
rom Brennan
Jim McEwen
Dick Ashle}
Dennis \fason
Chuck Dranko~ki
\fick \furtha
'\icl.. Coupas

Net
551
185
241
7!1

41
36
27
10
3

2

-2
•&lt;)

rOT.\LS

·'-4

- I
- 8

402

1,459

PASSING
Yds.
Compl.
•( .125
•77
3
82

Avg.
5.3
3.8
4.0
!1.6
5.5
3.6
2.2
5.0
1.5
0.0
0.0
0.0

TD
2
13
3
0
0

3.6

19

I

I

I

~

(1

TOTALS

192

~I

J ,21 I

II

Yds.

• '&gt;-I

• 3ii

19

261
211
J3j
84
20

17

:;,,

TD
-1
2
()
()

0

3·1
Ii

0
0

16
.J-

0
0

1.211

HI

TOT.\LS
• - :'\ew UB Record

0
0
0
0

0

5

Dick Ashle)
Jim Barksdale
Riel.. Wells
Paul Kleiber
Chuck Drankoski
Jim McEwen
Ken Rutkow-ki
Lee Jones
Steve Svec
\ fick ;\lurtha

TD
7
1
0

lnL
II

Dennis ;\Jason
Dan ella

R ECEIVING
No.

156

R USHING
Au.
103
127
60
20
8
10
12
2

Att.
• ISfi

COR ING
Lee Jones (13 TO's rushing)
Dick .\shle\ ( I ' I D's pass rec .. 4 P.\ r pass rec.)
Jim Barksdale (2 TD's pass rec., 2 TD 's na hing)
Rick Well (3 TD's rushing, I P.\TR)
Bob Embow (16 PATK in 16 attempts. I FG
in 2 attempts)
Chuck Drankoski (2 TO's pass rec.)
Tom Brennan (l TD rushing)
~1ick Murtha ( l PATR)
Ken Rutkow ki II PATR)

0

0

BUFFALO
Team Totals
O PP O NENTS
150
First Downs
131
1,459 yds. in 402 carries
Rushing
1,475 yds. in 398 carries
81 / 192 (42.! 010 ) 1,211 yds.
Passing
76/ 162 (46.9010 ) 1,009 yds,
2.670 yds. in 594 plays Total Offense 2,481 yds. in 360 pia"
~6 for 366 \anls
Penalties
36 for 350 yards
I 3 I lost 7)'
Fumbles
19 llost 8)

roT,\l

19
12
ti

19:i

Students ...

·~· YAMAHA

The John W.
Cowper Co.

Big Wheels On Campus

SUBURBAN CYCLES, Ltd.
3165 MAIN ST. near UB Campus

INCORPORATED

Open Daily til 6 P.M.

Thurs. &amp; Fri. til 9 P.M.

836.5765

Old Post Road Inn

Engineers - Contractors

•

3151 MAIN STREET

873-4200

The Finest in

Post Office Box 1068

Traditional Cooken

1945 Sheridan Drive

Reservations

Buffalo, New York 14240

835-7745

26

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
PUNTING
D. Richner

D. ella

r Brennan

No.
12
30
2

Avg.
39.7
33.5
30.0

PASS I NTERCEPTIONS
No.
Yds.
1 . Hurd
I
72

D. Sella
r. Hoke
~- Capuana
I. \\' right
T. Kowalewski
1 Lupienski

33
''

5
2
37
0

0
0

PUNT RETUR NS
No.
r. Hurd
16
D. Sella
l
I . Hoke
1

SIGHTSEEING? CONVENTIONS?
SCHOOL TRIPS? GOING TO THE GAME?

Avg.
89
8
2

KICKOFF RETURNS
No.
Yd~.
K. Rutkowski 8
196
R. Wells
8
177
LBrennan
6
85
J. McEwen
4
72
34
D. :'&gt;fartin
I
21
L. Jones
2
P. Kleibet·
10

Phone
853-3377

Go where YOU want-When YOU wantfor as long as YOU wish and have more
fun on a Grand Island Transit Corp.
charter bus. Your group stays together
and relaxes on your modern-deluxe Airconditioned, Air-ride, Restroom equipped
bus. Trips to anywhere in the U.S. and
Canada.

GRAND ISLAND TRANSIT CORP.
"THE B UFFALO-NIAGARA FALLS BUS LINE,.

200 W. Mohawk St., Buffalo, N.Y. 14202

U.B. FOOTBALL RECORDS
Rushing
One play: 137 yards (TD), Bob Edwards, vs. Boston U., 1962
One game: 205 yards, Ray Wcser, vs. Rhode Island, 1949
One season: 620 yards, Willie Evans, 1959
Career: 1,559 yards, Willie Evans, 1957-1959
Passing
Yardage, one play: 86 yards (TD), Ordean Shanabrook to Andy
Podlucky, vs. Bucknell, 1951
Yardage. one season: 869 yards. Don GilbcrL, 1964
Yardage. career: 2,133 yards, John Stofa, 1961-63
TD passes, one game: 5, Joe Kubisty, vs. Bucknell, 1956
TD passes, one season: 8, Gordon Bukaty, 1958
.-\uempts, one season: 128, Don Holland, 1951
a unique new setting for
Completions. one season: 64, Don Holland, 1951; John Stofa 1961
break!ast, lunch, dinner and late supper,
Pass R eceiving
where you eat like a Roman emperor
One game: 7, Ed Giccwicz, vs. Bucknell, 1951 ;
on centurion's pay.
Dan Stanley. \ 'S. Cortland State, 1955;
Bob Baker, vs. V.i\f.T .. 1961
One season : 23, Bob Baker, 1961
Career: 49, Ed Gicewicz, 1949-51
In the North Wing of the MAPLE+LEAF MOTOR LODGE
rD passes, one game: 3. Dick Ashley, vs. Colgate. 1963
1620 Nia&amp;ara Falls Bo ul evard
1 Mile North of Sheri da n Dr.
ro passes, one season: 7, Dick Ashley, 1965
\1.1 m i. So., Youngmann Exwy.
TD passes. career: Ed Gicewicz, 1949-51
AMPLE PARKING FOR YOUR CHARIOT
Yardage. one game: 144 yards, Ed Gicewicz, \'S. Bucknell , 1951
Phone: TF 5 • 2610
Yardage. one season: 349 yards, Dick Ashley, 196!i
Yardage. career: 789 yards, Ed Gicewicz, 1949-51
ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHTLY
Total Offense
One game: 291 yards, Ordean Shanabrook, vs. Bucknell. 1951
One season: 1,337 yards. Don Gilbert, 1961
Career: 2.730 yards, John Stofa, 1961-63
Field Goals
~ rost in one season: 2, Joe Oscsodal, 1965
:'&gt;fost in career: 3, Joe Oscsodal, 1964-65
Longest: 4-1 yards. Joe Oscsodal, vs. Cornell, 196-1
Longest kickoff return
C);, yards (TD), Jim Ryan , vs. Villanova, 1963
Longest pun t return
75 yards (TD), Frank Nappo, vs.Niagara, 19-19
Longest interception return
90 yards (TD), Gerry LaFountain , vs. Delaware, 1965
DRIVING A "SPORTS CAR" IS
Pass Interceptions
One game: 4, Peter Rao, vs. Cortland State, 1953
TWICE THE FUN
One season: 6, Gordon Bukaty, 1959
Career: II, Gordon Bukaty 1958-60
Punting
Longest punt: 81 yards, Bill Brogan, vs. Cortaland State, 1959
Best average. one season : 40.6-yards. Bill Brogan , 1959
Points Scored
One game: 36, Lou Corriere, vs. Hobart. 19-12
837-5600
2301 ~IN STREET
One season: 90, Lou Corriere. 1942
Largest crowd a t R otary Field
11,466, vs. Boston U.. 196!1
''Where Service is the Tail that Wags the Dog"
Largest crowd ever to see U.B. play
26.126, vs. Colgate, at Civic Stadium, Buffalo, 1951

the
new

THREE COINS RESTA VRAN T
andLOVNGE

You're Not Seeing Double !

BOB DeGRAW

27

�1966 FOOTBALL RULES CHANGES
by Dr. Ellwood A. Geiges
Editor, TCAA Football Rules Committee
Assistant to the Commissioner
Eastern College Athletic Conference

After continued attempts annually for the past
several years to liberalize rules governing substitutions, the NCAA Football Rules Committee at its
meeting in New Orleans last January made no alterations in the 1965 substitution regulations.

New rules were enacted (I) that prohibit throwing
a backward pass out of bounds to conserve time, and
(2) that make it illegal to pyramid players on defense
in an attempt to block a place kick.
Approval was given for the optiontal use of a pylon
marker in place of the flags marking the intersection

However, the Committee adopted a new rule which
prohibits players from being equipped with any electronic, mechanical or other signal devices for the
purpose of communicating with any source.

of the goal lines and side lines.
Hurdling was redefined and the regulation governing players out-of-bounds was amended to allow an

The rule on the numbering of players on offense
was revised to make it mandatory for those ordinarily
occupying the Center, Guard and Tackle positions
wear numbers from 50 through 79.

in-bounds player to touch a game official in an outof-bounds position without being ruled out of
bounds.

YOU MEET THE NICEST
PEOPLE ON A HONDA!

BEST WISHES TO
THE U.B. BULLS
FOR ANOTHER
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SEASON

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iC

Come in and meet the sports at ...

RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE

SUPER SPORTS

Next to Lord Amherst Motor Hotel
Main Street at the Thruway

3676 SHERIDAN AT MILLERSPORT

Plenty of Parking Space

Phone 833-9888

28

Open Evenings

�BUFFALO BULLS

JEFFREY THOMAS

JOHN DOHERTY

SUPPORT THE BULLS -

ROBERT EMBOW

KEN RUTKOWSKI

GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW

I w ish to purchase .......... season tick ets for 1967. No paym ent required until billed July 1s t .
Na m e

................................................. Telephone

........................................... .

Addr ess ........................... · .. ·. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·. · · · · · · · · .. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zone . . . . . . . . . State ........................ .
Fill out the application and mail to Ticket Office, Clark Gym, Buffalo, N . Y. 14214

SWIFTNESS IS OUR BUSINESS !
Store w ith your point of view

PI ERIE
MOTORS
INC.

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Furniture
1386 HERTEL AVENUE

"Authorized Sunbeam - Simca Dealer''

Buffalo's Most Outstanding Furniture Store

3700 SHERIDAN DRIVE

29

833-0035

�PROGRAM PATRONS
Harold A. Adel

M. Robert Koren

J. Edwin Alford

Dexter S. Levy

William C. Baird

Norman B. Lewis

Charles F. Banas

Robert W. Lipsett

Robert R. Barrett

Samuel D. Magavern

Bartlett Buick, Inc.

Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co.

Bissell, Bronkie &amp; Assoc., Engineers

Charles Matthews

Stanley B. Blach

Harold F. Meese

Walter Brock

Robert J. Metzen

Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Carrel

Frank Meyers

Ross M. Cellino

Leo M. Michalek

Emil

J.

Robert

Celmer

Wallace H. Miller

J.

Edward F. Mimmack

Collins

Charles H. Diefendorf

Arthur Mogerman

Arnold E. Di Laura

Carlton C. Rausch

John H. Dittman

Herbert R. Reitz

James P. Donnelly

Rich Products Corp.

George E. Easterbrook

Frank T. Riforgiato

Robert J. Ehrenreich

William R. Root

Robert D. Fernbach

Leo J. Rosen

William H. Georgi

Charles G. Salisbury

A. Donald Gilden

Vincent Scamurra

Chester P. Glor, Jr.

Roy E. Seibel

George L. Grobe, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. George N. Seifert

In Memory of Dom Grossi

George Selkirk

Dr. and Mrs. Norman Haber

Shanor Electric Supply Co.

Fenton F. Harrison

Samuel Shatkin

William

J. Hildebrand, Jr.

Herbert Simon

Houdaille Corp.

Suburban Cycles, Ltd.

Sheldon Hurwitz

James R. Sullivan

Edwin F. Jaeckle

Gertrude S. Swarthout

Grover R. James, Jr.

Harlan Swift

Rudolph V. Johnson

Irvin L. Terry

Russell Kidder, Jr.

Louis De Vincentis

tephen F. Kissel

Wilcox Motors, Inc.

Seymour H. Knox

Compliments of Dr. Wolfsohn

30

�FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WHEN-Radio
VAN
MILLER
keeps you
in the

CENTER
OF THE

ACTION
of all games

at home
or away

AT THE CENTER OF THE DIAL 930

31

�1966- 1967
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
FRE HMA:-&lt; FOOTBALL
EPTE 1BER
23-at Army Plebes
OCTOBER
S-Colgate
22-at Ithaca
2S-at avy
, OVEl\1BER
11- yracuse
CRO
COUNTRY V.\RSlTY
SEPTEMBER
20-at Brockport
24-at Syracuse
29-Canisius
OCTOBER
! - Invitational at LeMoyne
5- at RIP- Cortland
12- at iagara
15-Colgate
IS- iagara Community
2l-Lel\1oyne
26-RIT &amp; Fredonia
29-Invitational at Canisius
NOVEl\1BER
! - Buffalo State
5-H ystxa - Alfred
12- at Wheaton NCAA College
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTE:\1BER
19- Canisius
23- Bulfalo tate
26- St. Bonaventure
2S- Niagara
30- Bulfalo State
OCTOBER
4- Canisius
7- St. Bonaventure
8-ECAC
12- iagara
15-ECAC
22-ECAC
29-M eM aster
:-.'OVEMBER
2-McMaster
VAR ITY BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
2-Toronto
3-Gannon
j - \Vestem Ontario
10- at Albany
14- Syracuse
17- St. Barbara U. Calif.
20-Cornell
j.\NUARY
14-Rochester
IS-1 iagara (Aud)
21-To be announced (Aud)
2·1-Brockport
2S- St. Michaels
FEBRUARY
4-\Vayne State
7-Windsor
I O- at Ph. Textile
11- Wi consin (Aud)
11-at Kent tate
17-lthaca
IS-Albany
24-at Colgate
2S- Bulfalo tate (Aud)

FRESHl\lAr BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
2-Canisius
5-at Western Ontario
14-Syracu e
20-at Cornell
21-at St. Bonaventure
JAr UARY
l.J.-Rochester
IS-Niagara (Aud)
24-Brockport
2S-Bulfalo State
FEBRUARY
4-St. Bonaventure
7- iagara Community
10-at Buffalo State
14-at Canisius
I 7- Ithaca
22- 0ntario Aggies
24-at Colgate
2S-Buffalo State (Aud)
VARSITY SWIMMING
DECDIBER
3-at Hobart UPNYSM
7- Roche ter
9- Notre Dame
I 0- Syracuse
19-Buffalo State
JANUARY
17-at Niagara
20-Kings Point
21 - at W . Ontario
2S-Brockport
FEBRUARY
3- at Cortland
4- at Colgate
11 - at Me faster
15-at Geneseo
2.5 - t. Bonaventure
2S-Niagara
FRESH fAN SW!l\fi\fl ' G
DECE fBER
3- at UPNYSM
?- Rochester
I 0- Syracuse
19-Buffalo State
JANUARY
17-at iagara
2S-Brockport
FEBRUARY
3-at Cortland
4-at Cortland
25-St. Bonaventure
2S- iagara
VARSITY WRE TUNG
JANUARY
17-at . Guelph
21 - lthaca
25-McMaster
2S- at Alfred
FEBRUARY
4- Colgate
I 0- \Vayne State
11-Cortland
15-at Geneseo
IS- W. Ontario
21-at Brockport
25-at Rochester

32

MARCH
4-0swego
FRESHMAN WRESTLING
JANUARY
17-at U. Guelph
21-Ithaca
2S-at Alfred
31-at ECTI
FEBRUARY
4-Colgate
10-ECTI
11-Cortland
21-at Brockport
25-at Rochester
~lARCH

4-0swego
VAR IT\' FE:--ICING
DECE fBER
3-RIT
9-~1cl\Iaster

I 0-Case-Cornell

JANUARY
14- yracuse
21-at RIT
2S- Hobart
FEBR ARY
1- at McMaster
ll-at Penn State
24-at Hobart
25-at Syracuse
\lARCH
4- at Notre Dame
11 - at Syracu e N. Athletics
24-at NCAA
25- San Francisco State
FRESHMAN FE CI G
DECD1BER
3-RIT
10-Cornell
J .\NUARY
14- yracuse
21- at RIT
2S- Hobart
FEBRUARY
2·1- at Hobart
25-at Syracuse
VAR ITY BASEBALL
\PRlL
13-ECTl
14- at ECTI
19- at Geneseo
20-at St. Bonaventure
24- Canisius
26- Colgate
29-Rochester
:\lAY
! - at RIT
3-at Canisius
4- Niagara
S- Syracuse
10- RIT
FRESHi\fA, BASEBALL
\PRIL
29-at Rochester
\fAY
3-at Brockport
6-Bryant Stratton
10- at RIT

I

'
..

:

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... where the field of selections
is mammoth
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satisfaction
... and you're sure to score
savings every day of the
week!

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�</text>
                  </elementText>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1477963">
                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
                </elementText>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1477964">
                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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              <name>Identifier</name>
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                  <text>LIB-UA049</text>
                </elementText>
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1495579">
              <text>Programs</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495554">
                <text>1966-11-19 Bulls - Youngstown</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495555">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495556">
                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495557">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495558">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495559">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495560">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Archival resources.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495561">
                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495562">
                <text>Official Program 50¢</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495563">
                <text>University of Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495564">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495565">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495566">
                <text>1966-11-19</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495567">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
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                    <text>Official
Souvenir
Program

""9

20559

�In memory of those who did so much for the University
of Tampa and the department of athletics.

DR. ELLWOOD C. NANCE
FRANK TRAYNOR

J. W. DUPREE
DAVID A. F ALK
DONALD B. McKAY
DAVID E. SMILEY
GEORGE B. HOWELL
LOUIS WELLHOUSE, JR.
R. J. BINNICKER
C. C. "MILO" VEGA, JR.
COL. H. C. CULBREATH
MRS. SIDNEY "JANE" ALLEN
CHARLES E. "PETE" NORTON
A. W. BELLEAU

J. S. MIMS
KITTY LEA FARNELL
Wm. J. "BILL" Steen
W. FRANK HOBBS

��'

.

Assuming office July 1, 1958, Dr. David M. Delo became the fifth president of the
University of Tampa. He has distinguished himself most notably as an educator, author, geologist, and more recently as a college administrator.
Dr. Delo came to Tampa from Staten Island, New York, where he had been
president of Wagner College since 1952. Prior to that he was executive director of the
American Geological Institute and executive secretary of the Division of Geology and
Geology and Geography of the National Research Council in Washington, D. C.
As Chief of the Scientific Manpower Branch in the General Staff's Research and
Development Division, Department of the Army, from 1946 to 1949, Dr. Delo instituted
the first formal reserve program for scientists and engineers. In 1951 , he served as a
special consultant to the Research and Development Command of the U. S. Air Force,
concentrating on the efficient utilization of scientific manpower.
Completing his undergraduate work at Miami ( Ohio ) University in 1926, he was
elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa. In 1928, Dr. Delo was awarded the master of
arts degree from the University of Kansas, and in 1935, while studying under an Austin
Fellowship at Harvard University, he received the doctor of philosophy degree.
A contributor of numerous articles to technical and educational journals, Dr.
Delo is also the co-author of Years of This Land ( 1943 ) and Scientists in Uniform
(1948). In 1954, Dr. Delo received the Erasmus Haworth Distinguished Alumni
Award from the Department of Geology, University of Kansas.
Under the capable leadership of Dr. Delo, the University of Tampa has
emerged as one of the finest private institutions in the South. During his presidency a
successful fund-raising program has enabled the University of Tampa to build new
dormitories, a student center, and renovate most of the famous main building. A new
library will soon be constructed on the river-front campus, climaxing another of Dr.
Delo's efforts to improve the overall program at the University of Tampa.
Born in Mount Morris, Illinois, in 1905, Dr. Delo is the son of a Lutheran minister, the late Reverend Frank S. Delo.
He and his wife, the former Elsie M. Crooker, have three children-Diana,
David and Virginia.

�HEAD FOOTBALL COACH and ATHLETIC DIRECTOR

The 1966 season marks the 17th year Coach Bailey has been with the University of Tampa
Athletic Department. Sam Bailey was born and reared on Sanibel Island near Fort Myers,
Florida. He prepped at Fort Myers High School where he earned 12 varsity letters and then
went to Hampden-Sydney before entering the University of Georgia. At Georgia, Coach Bailey
lettered in football, basketball, baseball and track. He graduated from Georgia in 1946 and then
played professional ball with the Boston Yanks, Richmond Rebels, and was player-coach for the
Erie, Pa. , pro football team. Mter four years of professional ball, Coach Bailey came to the University of Tampa to begin his college coaching career.
Coach Bailey came to Tampa in the spring of 1950 as Head Basketball Coach and Head
Line Coach. In 1952 he also became the Spartans' Head Baseball Coach, then relinquished his
basketball duties in 1955. He was named Assistant Athletic Director in 1957 and four years later
was appointed Athletic Business Manager and Public Relations Director.
Coach Bailey became Athletic Director in 1962 and Head Football Coach in 1964. He
is the ninth Head Football Coach at the University of Tampa. Coach Bailey has been consistently
striving to upgrade the entire athletic program at Tampa, and his efforts have been very successful. During his years as Head Line Coach 7 Little All-American linemen were named from
the Spartans; his basketball teams produced five All-State players, and 10 baseball players were
voted to the All-State Team from his diamond squads.
Coach Bailey's spare time is usually devoted to his favorite hobbies: fishing on Sanibel
Island, and tennis on the Davis Islands Courts. He and his wife, Cookie, and their three
daughters, Tee Ann 8 , Toy Lynn 5, and Tye Lee 1, live on Julia Circle in Tampa.

5

�VIC PRINZI

LARRY BECKISH

CHARLES BAILEY

1
COACH VICTOR PRINZ!
Coach Prinzi hails from Waverly, New York, where he lettered in football, basketball and
baseball during his high school career. His football ability earned him a scholarship to Florida
State University. At FSU Coach Prinzi became one of the outstanding quarterbacks in the
school's history.
During his college career he was named Honorable Mention All-America, Associated Press
Back-of-the-Week, and received many state honors. During his senior year at FSU, Coach Prinzi
was elected Co-Captain of the football team.
Mter graduation from college Coach Prinzi went to the New York Giants football team and
then returned to FSU as a graduate assistant coach. In 1960 he spent six months with the
Army and then reported to the Denver Broncos. In 1962 he was recalled to the Army during
the Berlin crisis and after his release returned once again to FSU where he coached the freshman team.
Coach Prinzi joined the Tampa coaching staff in February, 1964, as Offensive Backfield
Coach. As the number one assistant on the staff, Prinzi has taken on the added responsibility of
directing the Spartans' recruiting system. Coach Prinzi and his wife, Barbara, and 8-year-old
son Greg live on Omar Street in Tampa. Most of Coach Prinzi's spare time is devoted to his hobbies of golf and tennis.

COACH LARRY BECKISH
Coach Beckish is the newest member of the Spartan staff, joining the department in June.
He is a native of Haledon , New Jersey, where he lettered three years in football and baseball at
Patterson Central High School. Coach Beckish attended Wichita State University on a football
scholarship and lettered three years. His football prowess earned his All Missouri Valley Conference honors his senior year, and he was also Captain of the Wichita squad that year.
After graduating in 1964 he played professional football in the Canadian League for
one season. He then returned to Wichita to work on his Master's and served as graduate assistant coach in football.
Coach Beckish is married, and he and his wife Alice have a 1lfz-year-old son , Michael.
COACH CHARLES BAILEY
A native of Poca, West Virginia, Coach Bailey was a three-year letterman in football , basketball and baseball at Poca High School. Charlie came to Tampa where his love for defensive
football helped to make him one of the top defensive players in Spartan history. During his
four-year career at Tampa he received numerous honors for his outstanding play. His list of
awards include: Outstanding Freshman Football Player, Outstanding Freshman Athlete, Outstanding Blocker, and Outstanding Lineman. He was also elected Captain of the team his senior
year at Tampa.
After graduation from the University of Tampa, Coach Charlie returned to his
home town to coach at Poca High School and then came back to Florida to coach Brandon High
School. At Brandon he soon built a fine reputation as a defensive coach , and when an opening
became available at Tampa he returned to his Alma Mater as Defensive Coach.
In addition to his football playing at Tampa, Coach Bailey also earned two letters in
baseball and was elected to Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities. He is married
to the former Gail Davis , a native Tampan and former Spartan cheerleader. They have a 4-yearold son Jeffrey, and Jive in Tampa. Coach Charlie's spare time is devoted to relaxing with his
favorite hobbies of fishing and golf.
6

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TIGER!

... UNLESS IT'S A PONTIAC!
Drive One ... Price One

You'll buy it from

JIM HARRELL PONTIAC

3800 W . Hillsborough at Dale Mabry

1101 Florida Ave.
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�CHEER
FOR MILK'S
VITALITY
Put Vitality on your team ...
drink milk! A glass of cool,
refreshing milk with meals
and snacks helps see you
through the busiest fall
schedule. No other beverage
helps you get the lasting
energy found only in nature's
Vitality drink ... Milk. You'll
cheer for milk's Vitality.

a message from dairy farmer members of

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american
dairy
associati on

�OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

*******
LON
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THE WORLD'S

MOST HONORED
WATCH

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longines S·Star Admiral -Automatic with Calendar,
sweep-second, 14K gold strap·$185.00

All-Proof~ .

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Every Longines watch,
whatever its type, for whatever
its use, today, as for almost
a century, is manufactured to
be the finest of its kind and
worthy in every respect to be called
The World's Most Honored Watch

LONGINES-WITINAUER WATCH CO.
NEW YORK
GENEVA
MONTREAL
Maker of Watches of the Highest Character Since 1867

9

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University Auto Sales

Foremost Dairies

2555 N. Dale Mabry

Is Happy to be Among The

Wants to help the SPARTANS

1212 E. Fowler Ave .

Continue smoothly on the Road
to Greater Success.

FOREMOST SUPPORTERS

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DEALER IN LOW MILEAGE

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HERTZ AUTOMOBILES

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HOUSE OF SANDWICHES, INC.
909 W . KENNEDY BLVD.

3706 MANHATTAN

Tampa's Greatest Variety of Delicious Exotic Sandwiches

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MARDI GRAS LOUNGE

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The UNIVERSITY of TAMPA
is

GOOD INSURANCE
for Tampa's Future

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___::~!
Tampa Association of

Complim ents of

Spotless Cleaners
and

Laundry, Inc.
20 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
Phone 236-5541

Plants

6210 Florida Ave.
2701 Price at Bayshore
Bearss Plaza Shopping Center

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Entertainment Nightly

* * *

For the discriminating diner the

MAISON ROUGE
at the

OLD ORLEANS MOTEL
2055 N. Dale Mabry

- Tampa, Florida

LINDELL

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MOTORS

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3900 W . Kennedy Boulevard

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GOOD

SPORTS

SPO RTS
with

VINCE

MEL OY

Florida's Most Controversial Sportscaster

Mon.-Fri. 5 :30 P.M. and 11:15 P.M.
Saturday 6:45 P.M.
Ch. 10 ABC
On the scene and behind the scene reports on
all top sporting events.

Learn the Facts in Sports W ith

VINCE MELOY
Ch. 10 ABC
VINCE MELOY a nd BOB HOPE

Afl
StnJL
DO -IT-YOURSELF
TEAM!

READY TO GO TO WORK
FOR YOU

13

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Mike Farley

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Donna Zendegui

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Cheri Ellis

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Armando Flores

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SPARTANS ARE COLORFUL
So Is T .V. Viewing From

PIONEER
Headquarters for

ZENITH &amp;R.C.A. COLOR TV
40 Years of Dependable Service From

PIONEER
Tampa at Washington Streets

TAMPA, FLORIDA

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Good Things To Eat
WE GIVE TOP VALUE STAMPS

�GOOD QUARTERBACKS CALL THE PLAY FOR •.•

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GOOD LUCK
SPARTANS!

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COFFEE BAR

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DOUGHNUT COMPANY I
3113 W. Kennedy Blvd.
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OPEN 24 HOURS

_ (._.._.,- •

LYKES BROTHERS
INSURANCE AGENCY
GLEN EVINS

RYAN D. BALLENGER

203 Franklin Street

GUY R. WEBB
PHONE 223-3609

TAMPA, FLORIDA

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UNIVERSITY OF TAMPA

~aH of ~am£
Bob Lovely

Crockett Farnell

Bill Godwin

1950-51-54-55

1934-37

1933-37

Football

Football

Football, Baseball, Track

Paul Straub

George B. Howell

Nash ·Higgins

1944-48

1934-1962

1933-41

Football, Basketball, Baseball

Contribution

Spartan Head Coach

George Montz

Al Yorkunas

Bill Minahan

1949-53

1936-39

1952-56

Basketball, Baseball

Football

Football, Baseball

Holland Aplin

Harry Bryan

1948-1951

1949-1952

Football, Basketball

Basketball
15

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60 SECONDS SOUTH OF
TAMPA AIRPORT

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Featuring World's Best
Prime Ribs

TAMP A AIRPORT MOTEL
Telephone 877-6131

2222 N. Westshore Blvd .

_..,_,_,_.__,_,_~--~---,..... ,1_11 -()

Go Rambler
Northside Rambler Co.
Sales - Parts - Service

Complete METAL FINISHING Service

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Military Specifications

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10409 FLORIDA AVENUE
Phone 932-6171

QUALITY- GUARANTEED PAINTS
&amp;

EVERY 2nd CAN

FREE
AT NO EXTRA COST

Mary Carter Paint Co.
More Than 900 Stores, Coast To Coast
...-.tl -~.._...._1 ~~------ 1

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PHONE 248-3 151

• Hard Chromium
• Barrel Plating
• Anodizing of Aluminum

1116 CARMEN STREET

Phone 253-0178

J . F. "Monk" Robinson

·-

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Products

• Hop Dip Galvanizing

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MILK
CREAM

• All Types of Plating

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FLORIDA DAIRY, INC.
ICE

Flodda's Largest &amp; Most Modern

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ACME PLATING &amp;
GALVANIZING CO.

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Dick Nittenger

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BERING

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Exquisite Cigars

___ ____

Made in Tampa Since 1905

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TAMPA U. STUDENT CENTER

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RESTAURANTS

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GORHAM SILVER
DISTINCTIVE GIFTS
FINE CHINA
CRYSTAL
LINENS
IMPRINTED
CHRISTMAS CARDS

MARGARET UHL SMITH
1914 S. Dale Mabry Hwy.
Telephone 257-3831
TAMPA, FLORIDA
9301-56th Street
Telephone 988-2406
-·------~·--~----....0

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Rambler
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Also

Clearwater and St. Petersburg

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SCHULSTAD

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DALE MABRY RAMBLER

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Sales - Parts - Service
700 North Dale Mabry

Phone 872-587 5

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17

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FREE DELIVERY

Reliable
Prescription
Service

GO

Stop By
Before
or
After
The
Game

SPARTANS

Complete
Fountain
Service
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''Shea &amp; Prange Pharmacy''
702 WEST KENNEDY BLVD.

DRUG STORE OF THE T. U. STUDENTS

Armondo
Flores

Dan
Cogan

Cosmetics

New lines of

Jewelry
Sundries

Cologne for
Men and Women

Gary
Rapp

Department
Store
Merchandise

Phone 253-5384

STORE Hours 6:30A.M. to 12 P.M.

_,,_,,_,._,_,,_,,~,,._,_,--,--~~-----~-.-c-•-·---~-~.,--,-•--•-.-,_,_,_._.,_,_,_

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Better PAINTS Since 1904

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•

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Made in Tampa
For Southern Painting

•

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See The Yellow Pages For Yo ur
Nearest Harris Dealer

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Bobby Fernandez

Fred
Keely

OFFICES

•

FACTORIES

19th Street at Adamo Drive

•

LABORATORIES
Tampa, Florida

i

Schulstad Rambler Co.

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See Rambler I
LEILA
ELLIS

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Office
Mgr.

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Sales - Parts - Service
1111 E. Cass Street
__.l)-

Phone 223-3701

ll- l)_ l_ . _,......

)_l..-.&lt;~~--(..-.t)--(,._(1-I)-CI-)

CONNELLY'S
MARINE Inc.
• Sales &amp; Service For J uhnson Motors
• MFG-Boston Whaler-Westwind
&amp; Hunter Boats

I

• Murray Trailer s

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e Marine Hardware

I ·-·-··- ·-·- ·- ··- ·- ·- ·-·-·-·-·-·- -·-·-·-·-·

SYLVIA
ROGUE
Office
Asst.

I

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MIKE MOORE
Public Relations

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19

Your complete marine store since '44

·- ·- ...-

-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·- - ,_ ,.,_ ,

732 N . DALE MABRY- Phone 876-3157

�JOE OSBORNE, JR.

SANDY LISS

DICK HARTE

DAVE DRISCOLL

FRANK LORENZO

A WINNING TEAM
BOB STEVENS

PAUL WAGNER

ANGUS WILLIAMS, JR.
Agency Manager

Phone: 872-7941

4030 Hende rson Blvd.
TOMMY Dl BONA

TOMMY GOMEZ

TAMPA, FLORIDA

Personal and Estate Planning
Bus iness Insurance -

Group -

Pensions

Profit Sharing

JOE CAPPEL

RON PEREZ

SELECT
SERVICE
FROM THESE
RESPONSIBLE
AGENTS
ANGUS WILLIAMS, JR.

ED BLACKBURN

20

BILL STEEN, JR.

�All Press Box Food Donated By Frisch's Restaurant
University of Tampa 1966 Football Roster
-ENDSNo.

Name

Ht.

Wt.

Home Town

12
43
80
81
82
83
84
86
87

BOBBY FERNANDEZ
JEFF MILTNER
HANK DIXSON
BILL HURT
JOE HERNANDEZ
DAN COGAN
JESSE WRIGHT
BUCKY BIALLAS
WAYNE HAYES

5-11
6-0
6-l
6-l
6-2
5-ll
6-0
6-2
6-4

165
175
194
200
220
208
195
2 10
220

Tampa, Florida
Brandon, Florida
Dewey, Okl ahoma
Butler, New Jersey
Miami, Florida
King of Prussia, Pa.
Tampa, Florida
Orlando, Florida
Jacksonville, Florida

FR*
FR
SR
FR *
FR
SR*
FR
SO*
FR*

60
70
71

RON BOYLAN
NORM SOASH
GREG HARRIS
JIMMY CROWE
DICK NITTENGER
VASA STOLBRAND
GENE FLORES
ARMANDO FLORES
MIKE FARLEY

Dallas, Texas
Plymouth, M ichigan
Nitro, West Virg inia
Atlanta, Georgia
Sayre, Pennsylvania
Jacksonv ille, Florida
Tampa, Florida
Tampa, Florida
Stuart, Florida

SR
FR*
FR
FR
FR*
FR*
FR*
SR*
SO*

Hurricane, West Virg inia
Orlando, Florida
Green Bay, W isconsin
Largo, Florida
Miami, Florida
Cedartown, Georgia
Miami, Florida
Wauchula, Florida
Fort Pierce, Florida
Clearwater, Florida

SO*
JR

Class

-TACKLES-

72

73
75
76
77

78

6-0
6-4
6-4
6-3
6-3
6-l
6-l
6-l
6-4

225
220
235
205
235
225
227
245
245

-GUARDS-

61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
74

DOUG ERWIN
GARY HALLAUER
MIKE CLARK
STEVE STARNES
JOE FLAHERTY
RUSSELL EDGE
PAT TURNER
RANDY BENNETT
DICK THOMAS
BOB YOUNTS

6-2
6-2
5-11
6-l
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0

200
203
210
192
211
190
207
200
212
200

so
FR
so
so
so
FR
FR

FR

-CENTERS-

50
51
53
55
88

JOHN TREZONA
DAN SIKES
FRED KEELY
BUTCH REDDING
TONY CORALLO

6-0
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-2

200
195
215
195
213

FR

Homestead, Florida
Jacksonville, Florida
Plant City, Florida
Starke, Florida
Ozone Park, N. Y.

SR*
SR

FR
FR

-QUARTERBACKS-

10
14

JESSE KAYE
ED NIZWANTOWSKI

6-0
5-11

194
175

Green Bay, Wisconsin
Peabody, Massachusetts

SR*
JR

Tampa, Florida
Lexington, Kentucky
Tampa, Florida
Anniston, Alabama
Laconia, New Hampshire
Columbia, Alabama
Ellijay, Georgia
Redington Shores, Florida

SO *

-HALFBACKS-

20
22
30
31
41
44
45

FRED BRANCH
KELLY WAINSCOTT
ERNIE CASARES
MIKE TOLLESON
NICK NOUCAS
WAYNE BLOUNT
LARRY ELLINGTON
GARY GROVES

25
85

JIM LAKE
GARY RAPP

6-2
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-1
6-0
6-0

210
185
200
200
180
197
202
180

FR

so

FR

FR

SR*

FR*

FR

-FLANKERBACKS-

6-3
6-2

194
208

FR*

Plymouth, Michigan
Sebring, Florida

JR

-DEFENSIVE SPECIALISTS-

11
15
21
23
24
32
34
42

MIKE DAVIS
JOE PIRRELLO
JOHN BENNEDETTO
VERNON KORHN
PAT GISPERT
TED MIMS
DON REDDING
WILMONT WILLIAMS
54 RON BROWN
RONNIE KELLER
40 DAVID MORGAN
*Players that have been red-shirted.

5-11
6-1
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-0
5-11
5-11
6-1
5-10
5-11

170
187
175
182
180
185
176
190
210
185
185

JR*

Jacksonville, Florida
Boston, Massachusetts
Ozone Park, N. Y.
Tampa, Florida
Hialeah, Florida
Lexington, Kentucky
Melbourne, Florida
Atlanta, Georgia
Sayre, Pennsylvania
Cocoa, Florida
Cedartown, Georgia

FR
FR
JR
JR

so
so
so
FR

FR

FR*

IC

Jl,___·_·o::..;F_;_F;_:IC:.:..:IA..:.:l_;_W_:__;__A_;_TC::.:H.;_:_F.:..O.:..:..R_;_T.:..;H;_:IS_G.:..A:...::M...:.::..E_-_:l:...:O:...:N.:..G=-:..:.1N..:.:E:..=S_-__;_TH_;_E:.__;_W:...:O:...:R:..=lD:...'.:..S_;_M_;_O::..;S:..;_T_:H_O:...N_O.:_R_E_D_W_A_TC_H_"_ _

21

�PR "lTEO '"' U S.A

"COCA·COLA" ANO "COKE" ARE REG .,TERED TRADE MARKS WHICk IDENT FY ONLY THE PRODuCT OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY

ALWAYS REFRESHING,
THAT'S WHY THINGS
GO BETTER WITH COKE
AFTER COKE
AFTER COKE

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
j

-:of

...

OFFENSE

1

t

* ,f

4-

.¥-

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....

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+t

*
t-

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85
73
61
56
65
71
87
20
49

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36

14

Paul Kleiber
Tony Miceli
Mike Rissell
Bruce MacKellar
Jim Finochino .
Bill Taylor
Dick Ashley
Jim Barksdale
Rick Wells
Lee Jones
Mick Murtha

LE
LT
LG

c

. RG
RT
... RE
LH
. RH
.. FB
. QB

DEFENSE

70
76
66
67

.

75

so

~

+

.

51
58
22
42
48

,f-

'

Ron Pugh
Russ Mac Kellar
John Lupienski ... __
Ted Gibbons
Joe Riccelli
Dennis Brisky
lrv Wright
Rod Rishel
Nick Capuana .
Tom Hoke
Tom Hurd

LE
LT
LG
RG
RT
_ RE
LLB
RLB
.. LHB
RHB

POS

Referee: E

s

things go

b~~th

Coke
0

REFEREES' SIGNALS

0

{

0

~:e:,:c~~~;~~n

#===S-0' {
Personal foul.

'\

~ 6::!-..~_r--o_o_
tllegalfo•wa•d o
handing.

~--· · ~· · ·
of f•ee·k;ck •ules.

_.....

......,_ Crawl1ng.

both hands.

,..

cnpp;ng.

~ ~

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-------- •
~

of hall.

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Illegal use of

0

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Grasp.ng

the kkke•.

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0

~,

-

........... ~.

Interference with fair

g .........

Illegal forwa•d pass.

down field on

�WITH THE TASTE YOU
NEVER GET TIRED OF
1'

UNIVERSITY OF TAMPA

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20
73
66
53
62
78
86
41
30
85
10

Fred Branch -------------------------Dick Nittinger ------- _ Russell Edge ____ -----Fred Keely _ -------------------Gary Hallauer _ __ ___ _____ _

LE
LT
LG
C
RG

Mike Farley - --- -------Bucky Biallas ______ _ ____ _
Wayne Blount -----------------------Ernie Casares
Gary Rapp
Jesse Kaye __

RT
RE
HB
FB
FL
QB

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DEFENSE

I

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(For T ypical Scrimmage Play)
Behin d offen sive team.
Behind defensive lin e.

fl:

On scrimmage line, h ome team side of field.
l, dge: On scrimmage line, visitors side of field.
c.ye: 8 yards back of defensive lin e.

I

OFFENSE

85 Gary Rapp - -------------- 60 Ron Boylan
54 Ron Brown -· -- --· ---- -- - - 77 Armando Flores
80 Hank Dixson
51 Dan Sikes
67

Pat Turner

11 Mike Davis
15 Joe Pirrello

23 Vernon Korhn
2

Pat Gis pert

LE
LT

G

RT
RE
LL
RL
LH
___ RH
Monster
Safety

things go

b~Wfth

Coke

�BUFFALO BULLS 1966 ROSTER
No.
Name
14 Murtha, Mark
15 Martin, Daniel
18 York, Brian
19 Mason, Dennis
20 Barksdale, James
21
Rutkowski, Kenneth
• 22 Capuana, Nicholas
24 Svec, Steven
*26 McEwen, James
27 Coupas, Nicholas
30 Brennan, Thomas
32 Richner, David
35 Smith, Robert
• 36 Jones, Lee land
*40 Sella, Daniel
*42 Hoke, T homas
44 Drankoski, Charles
45 Murphy, Thomas
46 Sinclair, Robert
* 48 Hurd, Thomas
• 49 Wells, Richard
*50 Brisky, Dennis
Wright, Irvin
51
52 Wesolowski, John
54 Mosher, James
55 Kovack, John
*56 MacKellar, Bruce
57 Ruggerio, A lfonse
*58 Rishel, Rodney
60 Walters, Gregory
* 61
Rissell, Michael
62 Kowalewski, Thomas
63 Lehner, Lawrence
64 Maser, Michael
65 Finochio, James
66 Lupienski, John
* 6 7 Gibbons, Theodore
68 Hayden, William
69 Sabo, Donald
* 70 Pugh, Ronald
* 71
Taylor, William
72 Basta, John
*73 Miceli, Anthony
75 Riccelli, Joseph
*76 MacKellar, Russell
77 Kuzmitski, Kenneth
78 Pirozzolo, Richard
79 Thomas, Jeffrey
80 Embow, Robert
82 Dolan, James
82 Wilbur, Curtis
84 Przybycien, John
85 Kleiber, Paul
*86 Dunn, James
* 87 Ashley, Richard
88 Remillard, James
89 Doherty, John
*90 Hansen, Brian
*-Letterman (20)

Pos.

Ag e

Ht.

QB
QB

19
19
21
18
20
19
20
19
22
19
19
19
19
19
20
20
19
20
19
20
20
19
20
20
18
19
20
19
20
18
20
19
20
20
20
19
20
19
19
21
22
22
21
19
22
18
20
19
18
21
19
18
22
21
19
19
19
20

5-11
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
S-9
6-0
5-l 0
5-10
5-10
5-11
5 - 11
5-10
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-3
5-10
6-0
5-11
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
5 - 11
5-10
5-10
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-1
5-11

E-DHB

QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
FB
FB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
LB

G

c
G

c
c

c
LB

G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
T

T
T
T
T
T
T
T

T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
K

Wt.
171
180
165
180
177

175
175
195
190
184
207
190
180
202
172
174
180
185
198
191
191
196
204
205
190
195
200
190
197
170
215
203
201
210
210
203
235
203
198
232
225
216
223
230
220
255
230
215
195
190
205
193
225
213
201
191
205
172

Endicott, N. Y.
Huntington, L. I.
Rochester, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Utica, N. Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Johnstown, Pa.
Rochester, N. Y.
Greenhurst, N. Y.
Depew, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Marcy, N. Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Watertown, N. Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Norristown, Pa.
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Central Islip, L. I.
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
E. Smethport, Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Coatesville, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Clayton, N. Y.
E. Syracuse, N. Y.
Springdale, Pa.
Newport, R. I.
Cleveland, 0.
Johnstown, Pa.
McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N. Y.
Glens Falls, N. Y.
Batavia, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Met huen, Mass.
Elmira, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Hambu rg, N. Y.
Glens Falls N. Y.
Ovid, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Auburn, N. Y.
Cranston, R.I.
Massena, N. Y.
New Bedford, Mass.
New Bedford, Mass.
Detroit, Mich.

so.
so.
JR.
SO.
SR.
JR.
SR.

so.
SR.
SO.
JR.

so.
SO.
JR.
SR.
JR.

so.
SO.
JR.
JR.
JR.
JR.
JR.

so.
so.
SO.
SR.
JR.
JR.
SO.
JR.

so.
JR.

so.
SR.

so.

JR.

so.
SO.
SR.
SR.
SR.
SR.

so.
SR.

so.
JR.

so.
SO.
JR.
SO.
SO.
SR.
SR.
JR.
JR.
SO.
JR.

--,_
" OFF ICIAL WATCH FOR TH IS GAME- LONGINES -THE WORLD ' S MOST HONORED WATCH"
...._8~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--ft_

24

�- ·•- c,_ c_o-.._,_,._,,_ ,,_ ,,._,._,._,,_.__,,_ ,_ ,,_ ,,_._,_ ._

BASKETBALL SCHEDULE December
3

7
10
12
13

29-30

_.,_ , _,_,_.-, _ ,,_ ,._,,._.__,_,,_,_ ,~, ~

UNIVERSITY OF TAMPA -

1966-67

HOME
HOME
(Curtis Hixon Hall )
HOME
Rollins College
THERE
Western Kentucky State College
THERE
Xav1er
THERE
University of Louisville
THERE
Birmingham Classic Tournament
University of Miami
Louisiana State University

January

3, 4 or 9
6
11
16

24
26

28
30
31

February

7
9
15
18
21

25

27

HOME
HOME
THERE
THERE
HOME
THERE
HOME
THERE
THERE
THERE
THERE
HOME
THERE
HOME
HOME
HOME
HOME

One Game, TBA
Taylor University
Stetson University
University of Miami
University of North Carolina
Rollins College
Mercer University
Florida State University
Valdosta State College
Mercer University
Florida Southern College
Stetson University
Florida Presbyterian College
Augusta College
Florida Southern College
Valdosta College
Florida State University

All Home Games at Howell Field House _ ,,_ ,,_ 1_ c. _ _,,_ ,_ ,._tl- -t....-.cl_

HEAD

COACH

DANA

KIRK

Tip-Off at 8 P.M.

_. ,_l._,_._,_._,._~ ,-c .._.cl-1- c&gt;-.t-..-.cl-~ l-.-c&gt; _,._._,,_l_ l.-.l~

I

I
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I

1966 SP ARTAN BOOSTERS
Mr.
Dr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Dr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.

I

i

Sid Allen
Frank Lindeman
Vincent Thornton
Joe Cordell
Bill Ebsary
Manuel Corrall
Charles Younger
Jim Trezevant
Charles Guy
George Levy
Bob Carlton
Bill Watson
Jim Harrell
Dilmon K. Steen
M. ]. Catena
Paul Tarnow, Sr .
Richard E. Darby
Frank Lorenzo
James Kynes
Terrell Sessums
Jack Faircloth
David Pinholster

I
i

I

i
I
I
I

SEATING ARRANGEMENT -

I
I

I

II
i

I

II

PHILLIPS FIELD

Sl.50
$2 00

S 3.00

0

a:
oCt

&gt;
....

...J o
=&gt;o
O N
CD Ill

J:
1-

a:
0

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52 00

Students

$3.00

$2 .50

I
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tl. - &lt; 1 - -l -

l, _( _

l_

l _ . _1. _ _1, _1_ , _11-

c. - t . J o . - ( _l _

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_.,_,.__..._.t_ ll_ t._l,_ll-ti-CI- CI-II_I_I -II_._,_ ,_C~

25

�'
I
I

TROPHIES- PLAQUES- CUPS- AWARDS- GIFTS

I

i
i

Ed
N izwantowski

Wayne
Blount

Listen to the
UNIVERSITY

George A. Levy, Inc.

I
I
I
I

Trophies &amp; A wards
2614 J. F. KENNEDY BLVD.

i

footba II games on

W*FLARADIO

DIAL97
WATCH AFL FOOTBALL
exclusively on WFLA- TV

_CHANNELB3
_ _ ___

ADVERTISING SPECIALISTS LIGHTERS PENS
i
I~~~~........~~~~-·~
i
I
i

I
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George W. Crites, Jr.
General Agent

Representing
Southwestern Life Insurance Co.
Atlantic Division

I

!

__

.._.._.,_;;....,.

_.._...

TAMPA, FLORIDA

PHONE B77-8279

I

OF TAMPA

,

I

~~-~~~- · .-~

is there, only if YOU care

Support Tampa USO Through
United Fund

HEART

I
I
I

Jewelry Company
Certified Gemologists and

I

Registered Jewelers
American Gem Soc iety

I

I

440 W. Kennedy Blvd.

Phone 251·1409

~.-~~,

GOVIN'S~~ INC.
Office Supplies
Manufacturers of Rubber Stamps
All Kinds and Sizes

ONE DAY SERVICE
Most Modern Equipment

SEALS

•

1905 Florida Ave.

NAMEPLATES

•

STENCILS
Phone 223-3000

.......

I

I

uso

Suite 348
308 Tampa St. Bldg.
Tampa, Florida
Phone: 229-1700

I
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CREWS &amp; GARCIA. Inc.
RUSKIN PACKAGING, Inc.

II

I
!

26

Owners:
W. 8. (Tubby) CREWS
ANDREW GARCIA
ERNEST (Cookie) GARCIA

~

�UNIVERSITY OF TAMPA
All Time Opponent Record
Florida State

1948-49, 51-55, 57-59

2-8-0

Bowden

1933-34

2-0-0

Abilene Christians

1949

0-1-0

Southern

1933-34

2-0-0

Delta State

1949-50, 53 , 56-57, 65

3-3-0

Miami

1933-42

3-5-2

Camp LeJeune

1950

1-0-0

Miami "8 11

1946

0-1-0

Jacksonville State College

1950-52, 57 ' 58-64-65

5-2-0

Stetson

1933-40-46-48-55

7-8-2

Wofford

'50-51, 57, 59, 61, 63-64

4-3-0

Rollins

1933-42, 28, 49

1-11-0

Livingston

1950-52, 54-55, 61

6 -0-0

Southern Ga. State

'33-35-38, 41, 46, 51-54 11-1-0

Quantico

1950-62

0-2-0

Record

Oppon ent

Howard

1933, 41

0-1-1

Patrick A.F.B.

1951

1-0-0

Oglethorpe

1933, 40

2-0-0

Bradley

1951

0-1-0

Auburn Fresh

1933

0-1-0

Lenoir Rhyne

1951-52

2-0-0

Southern Ga. Tech

1934, 36, 39, 40

4-1-0

Brandeis

1951

Alabama Teachers

1934-3!:', 42, 46

3-1-0

Troy State

1952-63

11-1-0

Newberry

1934-36

3-0-0

Miss. Southern

1952-53

0-2-0

McNeese

1952-53, 59' 60, 62,
1952, 54, 56, 58

Birmingham South.

1934

0-1-0

Atletico de Cuba

1934

2-0-0

Navy Base

1934

1-0-0

Chattanooga

63-64-65

1-0-0

2-5-1
1-3-0

Cumberland

1935-36

0-1-1

Catawba

1952

1-0-0

Western Ky .

1935-38, 63

0-4-1

Sam Houston St.

1953

0-1-0

L. P. I.

1935, 37

0-2-0

East Carolina

1953-55, 63

3-1-0

Lebanon

1935

0-1-0

Arkansas Tech

1953

1-0-0

Ga. Tech "B"

1936

1-0-0

Mexico Univ.

1954, 63

2-0-0

La. Tech

1936

0-1-0

Morris Harvey

1954-56

3-0-0

Spring Hill

1937

1-0-0

Southeastern La.

1955-62

1-7-0

Mercer

1937

0-1-0

Western Carolina

1955-56, 58-61' 64

5-2-0

Miss. College

1937

1-0-0

Missouri Valley

1956

1-0-0

U. of Cincinnati

1938-39

0-2-0

V. M. I.

1957-58

0-2-0

Havana

1938-39

2-0-0

Arkansas State

1958-59

2-0-0

Florida

1938-42

0-5-0

McMurry

1959-60

0-2-0

Boston U.

1938-39

0-2-0

Furman

1960-62

1-0-1

Tennessee

1960

0-1-0

Louisiana Poly

1939

0-1-0

Appalachian

1940-4 1' 50-62

8-7-0

Elon

1960

1-0-0

Erskine

1941' 48, 49

1-2-0

Alabama

1960

0-1-0

MacDill Field

1941, 46

1-1-0

Northern Mich.

1961' 65

2-0-0

Jacksonville Naval

1942, 53

1-1-0

Southwestern La.

1962-63-64-65

1-2-1

Tennessee State

1942

1-0-0

Eastern Kentucky

1962-63

1-1-0

Ft. Benning

1942

1-0-0

Mississippi

1963-64

0-2-0

V. P. I.

1964

0-1-0

Drew Field

1942 (2)

2-0-0

Presbyterian

1942, 56-59' 61-63-64

7-2-0

North East La .

1964

1-0-0

Norman Park

1946

1-0-0

Mississippi State

1965

0-1-0

Milligan

1948-49

0-2-0

Buffalo

1965

0-0-1

Memphis State

1948-49-64

0-3-0

Maine

1965

1-0-0

Pensacola N.A.S.

1948

0-1-0

North Texas State

1965

1948

1-0-0

TOTAL

1933-65

Colegio Militar

27

1-0-0
138- 124- 11

�.._..~._.,_..._,._,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ (._,._.~,._.,._.._._., _ _C_

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We Are Proud to Back the Spartans A ll the Way

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Hallauer

Doug
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We're with the SPARTANS

J. C. Valenti

Company, Inc.
TAMPA, FLORIDA

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28

Wayne Blount

�;-·- ·- ·- ·- ·- -- ·- ·-TEAR
·- ·-OUT
·- ·-ON·-DOTTED
·- ·- ·- LINE
·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·- ·-

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The
University
Of
Tampa

For The Outstanding

Player Of Your Choice

•

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SPARTANS

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Season oz rj _________L_I_N_E_M_A_N_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
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Every Evening

THE TAMPA TRffiUNE

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Morning and Sunday

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MY ADDRESS
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Dear Friend:
Please send your dollar contribution to Saint Jude's
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Tennessee.
Thank you,
DANNY THOMAS.

29

�1933
Coach Nash Higgins
Tampa 28-Bowden
Tam pa 1 2-Southern
Tampa Q-.M1ami
Tampa 8 -Stetson
Tampa 6-Rollins
Tampa 13-South Georgia
Tampa 6-Howard
Tampa 13-0glethorpe
Tampa 6-Auburn Fresh
W
L
T
PT
G
10
6
2
2
98

Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
G

12

0

0
0
- 10
7
6

0

18
OP.

so

1934
Coach Nash Higgins
12-So. Ga. Teadcers
19
?-Miam1
6
2-Rolllns
6
6-Stetson
_
19
6-Aiabama Teachers 2
36-Newberry
6
13-Southern
2
12-Birmingham So.
13
39-AtletlcO de Cuba 13
2S..:....Navy Base
0
44-Bowden
0
25-Atletico de Cuba 0
W
L
T
PT
OP .
8
4
0 227
80

1935
Coach Nash Higgins
Tampa 19-South Georgia
0
Tampa 12-Miami
------- 7
7
Tampa 13-Newberry _
__ 6
Tampa 19-Rollins __
Tampa 12-Cumberland ___ 13
9
Tampa ?-Stetson
Tampa 0-Western Kentucky 18
Tampa 6-L. P . 1.
.
33
Tampa 0-Lebanon
6
Tampa 9-Aiabama Teachers 7
W
L
T
PT
OP.
G
5
5
0
97
105
10

1936
Coach Nash Higgins
Tampa 27-So. Ga. Teachers _ 0
Tampa 27-So. Ga. College __ 0
_
_ 0
Tampa 0-Miami _
Tampa 6-Georgia Tech B __ 0
___
0
Tampa 6-Stetson
Tampa 57-Newberry ------ 0
Tampa 0-Rollins
6
Tampa 0-La . Tech.
6
Tampa 0-Cumberland
0
Tampa 21-Western Kentucky 23
G
W
L
T
PT
OP.
10
5
3
2 144
36

1937
Coach Nash Higgins
Tampa 20-South Georgia
18
Tampa 12-Stetson ----18
__ ... _ 0
Tampa 12-Miami
Tampa 0-Western Kentucky 13
Tampa 13-Spring Hill ____ 0
Tampa 13-L. P. I. -------- 26
Tampa 0-Mercer -· ------ 21
____ 20
Tampa 18-Rollins
Tampa 21-Miss. College ___ 6
G
W
L
T
PT
OP.
9
5
0 103
104
4
1938
Coach Nash Higgins
Tampa 40-So. Ga. Teachers 0
Tampa 20-So. Ga. College __ 0
Tampa 0-U. of Cincinnati _ 7
Tampa 6-Miami
32
Tampa 33-Havana
0
33
Tampa 0-Fiorida
Tampa 0-Stetson
42
Tampa O-Roll1ns
23
__ 31
rampa 7-Boston U.
Tampa ? -'-Western Kentucky SO
W
L
T
PT
OP.
G
3
7
0 113
218
10
1939
Coach Nash Higgins
Tampa 27-So. Ga . Teachers
0
Tampa 7-U. of Cincinnati _ 26
Tampa

7-Miaml

SPARTAN FOOTBALL PAST

c

_ 32

Tampa 0-Fionda
7
Tampa 0-LOUISiana Poly ... 13
Tampa 8-Stetson
__ _ _ 0
Tampa 0-Rollins
46
Tampa 0-Boston U.
12
Tampa 13-Rollms
_ 26
Tampa 26-Havana
7
G
W
L
T
PT
OP.
10
3
7
0
80
169

19'10
Tampa 6-Appalachian
13
0
Tampa 6-Stetson _
Tampa O-F lorida
23
Tampa 0-Miami
- 27
39
Tampa 0-Rollins Tampa 12-Stetson
19
Tampa 64--{;eorgia Teacher
14
Tampa 53--0glethorpe
0
Tampa 6-Rollms -- ·- 20
PT
OP.
L
T
G
w
0 137
155
9
3
6

Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
G

9

Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
fampa
G

10

Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
G

6

Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
G
8

194 1
Coach Flucie Stewart
26-Aiabama State
0
44-So. Georgia
0
6-Fioripa _ ·46
6-Miami ·-20
13-Howard __
16
6-Rollins
13
37-Erskine
-·
_ 0
10-Appalachian ____ 6
7-MacDill Field
2
W
L
T
PT
OP.
5
4
0 215
103
1942
Coach Melvin Vines
6-Fiorida
26
6-Miami
65
0-Jacksonville Naval 26
27-Aiabama State
0
13-Tennessee State
0
30-Ft. Benning
0
21-Drew Field
13
0-Rollins
48
0-Presbyterian
39
45-Drew Field
0
W
L
T
PT
OP.
5
5
0 1 43
217
19 46 .I informa l)
Coach Paul Straub
6-MacDill Field ___ 7
13-South Georgia __ 2
13-Norman Park ___ 9
6-Miami B -·
20
0-Stetson .
___ 20
7-Aiabama State __ 12
W
L
T
PT
OP.
2
4
0
45
70
1948
Co8ch Mike Gaddis
13-Milligan ------- 20
16-Memphis State __ 40
24-Stetson -------- 13
32-Pensacola NAS __ 37
77-Colego Militar __ 0
6-Rollins -------- 35
O-Ersk1ne -------- 34
12-Fiorida State ___ 33
W
L
T
PT
OP.
2
6
0 180
200

1952
Coach Marcelino Huerta, Jr.
Tampa 7 -Troy State ----- 0
Tampa 66-South Georgia __ 6
Tampa 25-Miss. Southern __ 52
Tampa 20-Jacksonville, Ala. 6
_ _____ 6
Tampa 6-Stetson
Tampa 20-McNeese State __ 42
Tampa 27-Livmgston
12
0
Tampa 19-Appalachlan
Tampa ?-Chattanooga
30
_
6
Tampa 20-Catawba
6
Tampa 39-Fiorida State _
Tampa 2 1-Lenoir Rhyne ___ 12
(Cigar Bowl)
W
L
T
PT
OP.
G
8
3
1 . 277
179
12
1953
Coach Marcelino Huerta, Jr.
Tampa 21-Troy State
·--- 7
Tampa 33-South Georgia ___ 0
Tampa 6-Miss. Southern __ 42
Tampa 26-Jacksonville Navy 6
Tampa ?-Stetson
_ 14
Tampa 25-McNeese State __ 7
Tampa 6-Sam Houston State 26
Tampa 18-East Carolina ___ 13
Tampa 26-Arkansas Tech __ 20
Tampa 12-Apoalachian
·-- 35
Tampa 6-Delta State ____ 13
Tampa 6-Fiorida State
41
G
W
L
T
PT
OP.
12
6
'6
0 192
224

1964

Coach Marcelino Huerta, Jr.
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
G
10

31-Mexico
·-- ___ 26
6-Chattanooga . ... - 28
67-South Georgia
7
64-Stetson -·
9
26-Troy .. ... ----- 0
27-E. Carolina _____ 14
38-Livlngston _____ 7
25-Appalachian
·- 20
0-Fiorida State ____ 13
21-Morris Harvey __ 0
W
L
T
PT
OP.
8
2
0 306
124

1955
Coach Marcelino Huerta, Jr.
Tampa 12-Morris Harvey __ 6
Tampa 38:._Troy State ----- 0
Tampa ?-Southeastern La. _ 13
Tampa 40-Stetson -------- 13
Tampa 51-Livingston State _ 7
Tampa 33-East Carolina ___ 14
Tampa 48- Western Carolina 0
Tampa 38-Appalachian ____ 0
Tampa ?-Florida State ____ 26
G
W
l
T
PT
OP.
9
7
2
0 274
80

1949
Coach Mike Gaddis
6-Memphis State __ 70
19-MIIIigan ------- 20
13-Rollins -------- 26
12-Abilene Christians 38
6-Erskine -------- 23
7-Delta State ---- 36
?-Florida State ___ 34
W
·L
T
PT
OP.
0
8
0
84
297

1956
Coach Marcelino Huerta, Jr.
Tampa 16-Morris Harvey __ 0
Tampa 32-Troy State _ ·--- 19
·Tampa 6-Southeastern La ... 40
Tampa 19-Presbyterian ____ 7
__ 12
Tampa 21-Delta State
Tampa 0-Chattanooga ___ 33
Tampa 41-Western Carolina 9
Tampa 21....:...Appalachian ____ 7
Tampa 31-Missouri Valley __ 14
W
l
T
PT
OP.
G
7
2
0 187
141
9

1950
Coach Frank Sinkowich
Tampa 13-Camp LeJeune __ 7
Tampa ?-Jacksonville 'State 20
Tampa 13-Wofford ------- 0
Tampa 27-Stetson _ ------ 20
Tampa 19-Appalachian ____ 36
Tampa 41-Livmgston ----- 39
Tampa 34-Delta State ----- 7
Tampa 0-Quantico ------- 34
Tampa 7-F. S. U. -------- 35
G
W
L
T
PT
OP.
9
5
4
0 173
211

1957
Coach Marcelino Huerta, Jr.
Tampa 0-V. M. I. -------- 7
Tampa 53-Troy State _____ 7
Tampa 39-Presbyterian ---- 14
Tampa 6-Wofford
----- 14
Tampa 33-Soutreastern La. _ 13
Tampa 14-Jacksonville State 13
9
Tampa 26-Appalachian
26
Tampa 27-Delta State ___
21
Tampa ?-Florida State _
W
L
T
PT
OP.
G
6
3
0 205
124
9

1951
Coach Frank Sinkowich
Tampa 72-Patrick A FB ____ 0
Tampa 6-Bradley -------- 32
Tampa 14-Wofford ------- 21
Tampa 40-Jacksonville State 0
Tampa 27-Lenoir Ryne ____ 13
Tampa 14-Stetson ______ _ 14
Tampa 13-Appalachian ___ _ 14
Tampa 28-Livingston _____ 13
T8mpa 54-South Georgia __ 13
Tampa 14-Fiorida State ___ 6
Tampa 7-Bradels --------- 0
G
W
L
T
PT
OP.
11
7
3
1 289
126

1958
Coach Marcelino Huerta, Jr.
Tampa 39-Troy State __ __ 6
Tampa 19-Western Carolina 12
Tampa 20-Arkansas State __ 14
Tampa 12-V. M. I. _______ 13
Tampa IS-Presbyterian ____ 6
Tampa 0-Fiorida State ___ 43
Tampa 12-Jacksonville ____ 6
Tampa 25-Chattanooga ____ 19
Tampa 26-Appalachian ____ 34
Tampa 0-S. E. Louisiana __ 19
G
W
l
T
PT
OP.
10
6
4
0 171
172

Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
G

8

30

1959
Coach Marcelino Huerta, Jr.
Tampa 35-Troy State ______ 15
Tampa 8-Western Carolina 19
Tampa 14-McNeese ------- 27
Tampa ?-Wofford
14
Tampa 0-Presbyteri,;,:;----- 27
Tampa a-Southeastern La._ 33
Tam oa 14-Arkansas State __ 13
Tam pa 12-McMurry
28
Tampa 23-Appalachian
6
Tampa 0-Fiorida State
33
G
W
L
T
PT
OP.
10
3
7
0 121
215

1960
Coach Marce li no Huerta Jr
Tampa 7-Furman U. --~--· 7
Tampa 8-Western Carolina_ 28
Tampa ?-Tennessee
(52
Tampa 3-Eion College _____ 0
Tam pa 0-McNeese State·:::: 3
Tampa 12-S. E. Louisiana __ 28
Tampa 22-Troy State __ _ 7
Tampa 8-McMurry
41
Tampa 6-Aiabama _ __ _ 34
Tampa IS-Appalachian ____ 22
G
W
L
T
PT
OP
10
2
7
1
88
185

196 1
Coach Mi!rcelino Huerta Jr
Tampa 41-Livingston
' __· 8
Tampa 24-Western Carolina _ 14
Tampa 13-Eion College _____ 0
Tampa !?-Presbyterian ___ 16
Tampa 3-S. E. Louisiana
27
Tampa 27-Troy State ___ :::: 6.
Tampa 27-Northern Mich
6
Tampa 14-Appalachian _"_ -:: 0
Tampa 22-Wofford
21
G
W
L
T
PT
OP.
9
8
1
0 188
98

Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa

1962
Coach Fred Pancoast
6-Eastern Kentucky
?.:_Southeastern La. _
10-McNeese ...
___
14-Southwestern La ...
10-Presbyterian _ __

22
27
10
14
0

(Homecoming)

Tampa 3-Quantico Maripes 32
Tampa 30-Troy State ______ 3
Open
Tampa 15-Furman University 14
Tampa ?-Appalachian ___ 9
G
W
l
T
PT
OP.
9
3
4
2 102
131

Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
G

10

1963
Coach Fred Pancoast
14-Western Ky. ____ 14
33-Mexico Poly ____ 14
17-U.ofS.W.La. __ 19
12-McNeese
_ 37
26-Presbyterian
_ 0
?-Eastern Ky. ___ _ 3
0-Troy State ____ 7
0-U. of Mississippi _ 4 1
?-Wofford ... ____ 6
B-East Carolina _
14
W
L
T
PT
OP.
4
5
1 124
155

1964
Coach Scm Bailey
Tampa 8-Jacksonville _... 10
Tempo 14-V. P. 1.
.. ... 18
Tempo 0-Memphis State .. 13
Tampa 0-McNeese State .. 12
Tempo 6-Southw'tn La. . . 37
Tampa 42-Presbyterian . . . 0
Tampa ?-Northeastern La .. 6
Tampa 0-Mississippi
36
Tompa 22-Wofford . . .
14
Tampa 21-West'n Carolina
7
G
W
L
T
PT
OP.
10
4
6
0
120
1 53

Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
Tampa
G
9

1965
Coach Sam Bailey
16-McNeese State
12
13-Buffalo ..
.. ........... 13
?-Mississippi State .. 48
17-North Texas State 14
7-Southwest Louisiana 6
32-Delta State
....... 33
30-Jacksonville State .. 11
2-University of Maine 0
19-Northern Michigan
7
W
L
T
PT
OP.
2
143
144
6

�I
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I
I

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I

Support

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Tampa

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uso

HERTZ SATURDRYar
SUDDRY SPEEIRL
ONLY

$6

and

12c
a mile

Rent a new Ford or other fme car all day Saturday
or all day Sunday. This special low rate includes everything: insurance and gas. And only Hertz offers Certified
Service, your guarantee of complete rental satisfaction .

II

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United
Fund

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let Hertz put you in the driuer's seat!

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in TAMPA

877-8227 or 229-8334
Tampa, Florida

405 East J . F. Kennedy Blvd.

SPARTAN FACTS
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
(1966)

SPARTANS RECEIVING HONORABLE MENTION
ALL-AMERICA

SPARTAN TEAM CAPTAINS SINCE 1948
Jerry Jackson
Jerry Jackson
Jack Larley
Lou Sequella
Vince Chico, Tom Mahin (Co)
Joe Zalupski, Nick Waytovich, Charles Harris (Tril
Bob Lovely
Tom Mahn
Dickie Hart, Bill Sefcik (Co)
Bill Post
Ken Belliveau
Billy Turner
Joe Glisson
Charles Bailey
Paul Gore, Bill Croft, Earl Bramlet &lt;Tril
Tony Yelovich
Larry Maier, Rick Gillis, Jim Galmin (Player Counsell
John Perry
Dan Sikes, Dan Cogan, Armando Flores (Tri)

LOU SEQUELLA
JACK MARLEY
CHARLES HARRIS
TOM MAHN
BILL MINAHAN
TED GREENE
DON E'CONE
HOLLIS CURLING
RON PEREZ
CHARLES ROSE
DON SCOTT
TONY YELOVICH
Bl LL Y HOWELL
JIM GALMIN
RICK GILLIS

HB

G
HB
T
QB

c
T

G
DB
E
T

c

HB
E
T

1950
1950
1953
1954
1954
1955
1959
1 961 (Scholastic)
1962
1962
1962
1962-63
1963
1963
1964

TEAM SINGLE SEASON RECORDS

SPARTANS RECEIVING ALL AMERICA
HOLLAND "LUKE" APLIN, 1951, End-now Head Coach at
Robinson High School in Tampa
NICK WAYTOVICH, 1953, Guard-now teaching and coaching in Hillsborough County
ROBERT "BOB" LOVELY, 1955, Tackle-now Student Union
Director at University of Tampa
DICKIE HART, 1956, End-now employed at the First
National Bank of Tampa
DON HERNDON, 1957, Halfback-now Head Coach at
Hardee County High School
FRED "MOOSE" CASON, 1958, Halfback-now teaching at
Turkey Creek High School
JIM GALMIN, 1964, EndJOHN PERRY, 1965, Halfback-Signed with St. Petersburg
Blazers of the NAFL

First downs rushing
First downs passing
First downs by penalties
Total first downs
Number attempts rushing
Net yards gained rushing
Number passes attempted
Number passes completed
Number passes had intercepted
Net yards gained passing
Number plays rushing and passing
Total Offense yardage
Number passes intercepted
Net yards interceptions returned
Number times punted
Punting average
31

1955
1964
1964 &amp; 1955
1955
1957
1955
1964
1964
1959
1964
1964
1955
1954
1964
1965
1963

112
55
15
159
440
2406

232
114
17
1311
573
3221
20
233
62
39.0

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At
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Furman
University

Northern
M ich igan

New Mexico

Parsons

State

Texu

At
Musklngum

Western

At
TAMPA

At

East

loulnllle

Carolina

Open

Dayton

AI

At
Western
M i ch igan

Wi ttenberg

TAMPA

At
T oledo

Wooater

AI
Tutu

Kent State

Bal dwin·
Wa llace
AI
Nor thern
Illinois

Southern
ffffno ls

AI
Butler

C incinnati

Colorado
State
North
Texas
State
At
Memph is
Stat e

Oct. 2t

At
C incinnati

Nov. 5

AI
Houston

AI
Mloml
(Oh io)

I

Mar shall

University
of
Houston

At
Dnldson

Wofford

AI
TAMPA
Newberry

AI
George
Wash ington

AI
Drake

I
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Northeast
Loui sian a

State College

At
F lorida
State
S e p t. 23
Wash ington
State

Southeast
Missouri
At
East

Okl ahoma
State

Northwestern
State

Nov. 12
Nov. 1 9

Montana
State

AI
Wlchlto

Howard

University

AI
Louisville

AI
Temple

Chattanooga

Cllodel

Nov. 24
Wich ita

Heidelberg

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32

At
Austin
Peay

Cornell

At
Marshall

Vlllenova

Sopt. 30
AI
Mlddfo
Tennessee
East
Tenneasee

Open

Loui si an a
College

M i ssissi pp i
State

AI
M cNeese
At
South eu tern
Louisl ena

At
Dayton
AI
Boston
Coif ego

Southwestern
loui si ana

Holy
Crou

TAMPA

At
TAMPA

Oh io

----

At
Kent State

AI
Boston
University

Tu tu

AI
Richmond

Kentucky
State College

Carolina

AI
M i ssiss ippi

AI
Delta
State

At
Kentu,..kv
No v. 26
Memnhis
State
Dec. 3
Uloh

louisiana
Tech

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Eutern

Universi ty
of
Buffal o

Delaware

At
TAMPA
Youngstown

State

Flndfoy
AI
Western
Kentucky
Tennessee
Tech
Morehead
State

AI
TAMPA

�I

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GO-GO SPARTANS

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W e're with you all the way

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Serving the Tampa Area for
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�THE

SPARTAN SPEARS

UNIVERSITY of TAMPA
LOCATION AND HISTORY

The name " SPARTAN" was originated by the first
Tampa football coach Nash Higgins, now a Hall of Farner
. . . The 1936 team held their opponents to 36 points,
and kept them from scoring in 7 of the 10 games that
year . . . The 1939 SPARTAN team scored only 80
points in 10 games for the lowest number of points ever
by a Tampa team . . . The 1954 team scored the most
points in SPARTAN history, putting 306 points on the
scoreboard and compiling an 8-2 record . . . The first
SPARTAN football team compiled a 6-2-2 record under
Coach Nash Higgins in 1933 . . . Don Herndon traveled
100 yards on a punt return aga inst Western Carolina
in 1956; it was the longest in the nation that year . . .
In his four-year career at Tampa, Herndon averaged
over seven yards per carry and went on to play with
the New York Titans . . . Former SPARTAN player
and coach, Charles McCullers, ran 91 yards from scrimmage against Tennessee for a TD in 1960, and that's a
record on the Vols home field . . . Vince Chicko h olds
the Tampa record for the longest kickoff return with a
98-yard run against Florida Stat e in 1952 . . . Chicko
also was the only SPARTAN in history to suffer the
fate of being tackled by a twelfth man and it happene:i
twice, two weeks in a row in 1952 . . . John Labosky
threw 19 TD passes in his collegiate career here to establish a SPARTAN record . . . Bill Manahan gained 3,343
yards passing in his four years at Tampa, nearly two
miles . . . Fireman Jim White was the first SPARTAN
WARRIOR to score a touchdown . . . Champ Williams
and Mike Whitewell both crossed the goal line for a
TD the first time they carried the ball . . . The highest
s core compiled by a Tampa team was 77 points against
Colegio Militar de Mexico in 1946 . . . The most points
ever scored on a Tampa team was 70, and it w as turned
in by Memphis State in 1949 . . . Rudy Rodriguez,
halfback on the '33-'36 teams, and now County Com.
missioner, won the 100-yard dash when the SPARTANS
were State A.A.U. track champions in '33 . . .Charles
Coleman started and lettered at four different positions:
Fullback in '55, center in '56, center in '57 and end in
'58 .. . Billy Turner earned 12 varsity letters in football,
basketball and baseball during his career from '56-'60 .. .
Ron Perez led the nation in pass interceptions in 1962
with 8; after graduation he signed a pro baseball contract
.. . Hillsborough County School Supt. J. Crockett Farnell
and Supervisor of Physical Education Phil Patterson are
both SP ARTAN Alumni . . . The University of Tampa
has provided more high school coaches on the west
coast and central portion of Florida than any other
college or university . . . Eight of the ten high schools
in the City of Tampa have SPARTAN grads as head of
their athletic program ... The 1947 SPARTAN t eam
was undefeated, untied and unscored upon; they played
one game and won 48-0.

The first glimpse of the University of Tampa will be
of thirteen silver minarets which stand above the buildings and trees of the city. These minarets, each representing a month of the Moslem year, have become a
symbol of Tampa and educational opportunity. They
rise from the main University building, erected in 1890
as the Tampa Bay Hotel by railroad magnate Henry B.
Plant at a cost of $3,500,000. Considered the finest
example of Moorish architecture in the country, this
building is five stories high, 1,200 feet long, and contains
more than 500 rooms. It has been host to crowned heads
of Europe and to Teddy Roosevelt and his Rough Riders
during the Spanish-American war. Formerly the hotel
was the center of the social and cultural life of Tampa.
Today the building houses classrooms, laboratories, offices , library, clubrooms, theatre, and a Municipal Museum which preserves its original furnishings and objects
of art.
Leased from the City of Tampa in 1933 on a 99-year
lease, the building has been constantly modernized and
restored for more efficient educational use, yet continues
to reflect the Tampa tradition.
The University is located in beautiful Plant Park,
replete with tropical foliage and overlooking the scenic
Hillsborough River. Although an urban institution and
only a seven-minute walk from the downtown shopping
district, the beauty of its location on the riverfront provides a campus which rivals many suburban colleges.
The proximity of downtown offices, banks, and business
establishments is an important factor for those who
wish to earn while they learn. The campus is fifteen
minutes from Tampa International Airport and twentyfive minutes from the St. Petersburg-Clearwater Airport.
The Seaboard and Atlantic Coast Line railroads and
major bus lines also serve Tampa. Miles of causeways
lead to the white beaches of the Gulf of Mexico. Warm
fresh and salt waters encourage swimming, skin diving,
water skiing, fishing and boating. Sunny skies and subtropical climate offer opportunities for year-round picnicking and other outdoor living.
The State Fair grounds, adjacent to the campus, are
the center for the annual Gasparilla celebration and
State Fair, held each February.
The University was founded in 1931 by public-spirited
citizens of the community to provide higher education for
young people who lacked the financial resources to go
away to college.
Today, it is a residential institution. Beneath its
minarets one finds students from 40 states and 16 foreign
countries, a friendly faculty, and all the elements of a
sound liberal arts education.
Although the University bears the name of the city
in which it is located, it is a private institution. It is
non-denominational, chartered under the laws of the
State of Florida as a non-profit corporation, and is governed by a self-perpetuating Board of Trustees elected
from among leaders in business, industry, and the professions.

ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT STAFF
Athletic Director: Sam Bailey
Head Football Coach : Sam Bailey
Head Basketball Coach: Dana Kirk
Head Wrestling Coach : Larry Beckish
Head Crew Coach : Brad Wickersham
Head Base ball Coach : Larry Gable
Head Tennis Coach : Gene Vash
Assistant Football Coach: Vic Prinzi
Assistant Football Coach : Charles Bailey
Assistant Football Coach: Larry Beckish
Advisory Football Coach : Ray Ellis
Head Secre tary &amp; Office Manage r: Mrs. Lelia Ellis
Assistant Secretary: Sylvia Roque
Publicity Director: Mike Moore
Faculty Athletic Committee Cha irman: Dr. Jesse Keene
Building and Grounds: Kirby Karshner

FOOTBALL COACHES RECORDS 1933-65

NASH HIGGINS ------· ---------FLUCIE STEWART -------------MELVIN VINES -----------------PAUL STRAUB ----------------MIKE GAD IS ---------------------FRANK SINKOWICH -------- ·MARCELINO HUERTA ------ ·FRED PANCOAST --------------.
SAM BAILEY -· -- -----------

1933
1941
1942
1946
1948
1950
1952
1962
1964

w.

L.

37
5
5
2
2
12
61
7
10

39
4
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10
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34

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The University of Tampa

SPARTANS

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36

�Spartans turned B azers

Here are 14 former Spartans, now playing for powerful St. Petersburg Blazers.
Front row, left to right: Bill McManigal, Frank Vining, Tom Doan, Billy Turner, Charlie Lyle, John Perry, Ed Owen.
Back row: Paul Gore, Mark Beaubien, John Yates, Sam Rodriguez, Don Herndon, Charles Foures, John Felicione.

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Larry Ellington

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Joe Pirrello

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AFTER THE

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GAME.

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Dan

Sikes

• •

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Joe
Flaherty

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Go Spartans
Go Like a DODGE

Massey Motors
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1201 Florida Avenue

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PURE OIL FOR TAMPA

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PHONE 935-3489

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40

PHILLIPS FJELD

�UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO

Coach Richard (Doc ) Ur ich

President Martin Meyerson

Dick Ashley

Captain Bill Taylor

Mick Murtha

Scouting Report on University of Buffalo

The University of Buffalo has one of the best
balanced attacks of any Spartan opponent this
season. The Bulls can run and pass with equal
effectiveness. Quarterback Mike Murtha has already set records for the most passing yardage
and most completions in a single season. His
favorite target is Dick Ashley who has set new
records for pass receptions and yardage in one
season. Halfback Jim Barksdale is just a little

over 100 yards away from setting a new single
season rushing mark for the Bulls.
Buffalo's
defensive backfield has intercepted 13 passes this
season , and is sure to put plenty of pressure on
Tampa's passing attack. This will be the first
trip to Florida for Buffalo. The Spartans traveled to New York to play the Bulls last season , and
the game ended in a 13 to 13 tie.

41

�UNIVERSITY OF TAMPA TOTALS FOR SEVEN GAMES

-RUSHINGGain

Player

Att.

Casares

82
14
36
36

421
41
40
127

29
5
4
1
2

95
16
5
5
0

Branch
Kaye
Blount
Ellington
Tolleson
Korhn
Davis
Wright

-PASS RECEIVINGLoss

Net

Avg.

Player

No.

Yds.

8
5
188
19
6
2

413
36
-148
108

5.0
2.6

Rapp

3.0

Biallas

41
26
24
11

89
14

3.1
2.8

Blount

11
0
15

-6
5

Hurt

4

440
238
336
154
129
86
56

Tolleson

3

20

Branch
Fernandez

10
4

Bennedetto

5.0

TD Avg.jYds.

4
3
5
0
0
0
0
0

10.7
9.2
14.0
14.0
12.9
21.5
14.0
6.7

-15
-PUNTING-

-PASSINGPlayer

Kaye
Korhn
Davis

Att.

252
16
1

Com pl.

116
6
1

lntc. Yds.

16 1375
2
0

45
39

TD

% Av./ Yds.

11

46

0
1

38
100

11.8
7.5
39.0

Player

No.

Wright

42
2

Team

Avg.

Yds.

39.5

1657
(blocked)

-PUNT RETURNS() ~1-l_ l _ t) -t i _ ) _ I -.J- CI _ O _ C _ I _ tl - ti - CI _ l _ I _ O ~-

No.

Player

11
3
2

Pirrello
Davis
Branch

Yds.

Avg.

52
12
26

4.7
4.0
13.0

-KICKOFF RETURNSNo.

Flayer

28
7
1
1
1
0

Pirrello
Branch
Rapp
Davis
Kaye
Blount

Yds.

Avg.

532
103
8
14
9
32

19.0
14.7
8.0
14.0
9.0

-PASS INTERCEPTIONSPlayer

Pirrello
Gispert
Davis
Korhn

Karol Kelly, the Channel 10 Weather Girl,
predicts a bright future for the Tampa Spartans.

Williams

42

No.

5
4
2
1
0

Yds. Ret.

158
49
12
0
26

Avg.

37.3
12.2
6.0

TO

2

�Players Of The Week

Freshman Steve Starnes from

Freshman David Morgan, who

Largo, Florida, was selected as

hails from Cedartown Georgia,

Outstanding Lineman of the

was selected as Outstanding

week.

Back of the Week.

II

UNIVERSITY OF TAMPA

I National Auto
Super Market

ALMA MATER
Steadfast and true,

Proud beat our hearts,

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And all our days

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Sing we thy praise,
Alma Mater free.

We'll raise song to thee.
We'll go forth to love and praise thee
And be ever true.
Hail to thee, our Alma Mater
Hail, our Tampa U.

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�19 66

THANKS

Sept. 24

Bowling Green University

Oct.

University of Akron

1

Oct. 15

Furman University

Nov.

Northeast Louisiana State

FOR COMING!
5

NOW LET OUR
SPARTANS

Nov. 12

University of Buffalo

Nov. 19

Eastern Kentucky State

KNOW YOU'RE
HERE!

{Homecoming)

ALL HOME GAMES ABOVE PLAYED AT
PHILLIPS FIELD. KICKOFFS 8:15P.M.
(Homecoming at 2:30 p.m.)

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1477964">
                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA049</text>
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          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1495551">
              <text>Programs</text>
            </elementText>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495524">
                <text>1966-11-12 University of Tampa vs. University of Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495526">
                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495527">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495528">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495529">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495530">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Archival resources.</text>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495533">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495536">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495537">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1966-11-12</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495539">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>NEXT HOME GAME
NOV. 5th 1966
.
.

OFFICIAL

_PROGRAM

50f

vs.

Holy Cross
/ OCT. 'l-9~ I966.

�IROQUOIS BREWERY, BUFFALO, N.Y. (DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL BREWERIES, INC.)

�s now under-

111

C.::C~il

dliU

lUC.::UU(JUll;') .

. \ ~cries of challenges and opportunities lie ahead. \\'c shall, I'm sure, respond to our lullest measure.

MART!£\ MEYERSO:'\

�0 Nar ~
a prescriptivonunf.-or-"BJet ' ~
the Bills here today.
j

"We can beat '11 if vi
nate or at least cu¢own '~~
takes," the youngman.
golden passing armthe g1
and the keen qua:terback
said Saturday.
~
In the infant stges of !&gt;
tournament the ets rna&lt;
they were 'going .o w_heel
division championhip m.
chair. They were4-0-l m
then, ·somehow, tle rockers
They were 1umbled
reversal.from an earlier 5
and were edged ty Oaklant
the Raiders came from be

Cassatta engineered Sysecond
touchdown,
the Oran.:e 80 yards in
and hittin£( Oley Allen
end zcne with a 35 yard

AS A RESULT OF
by the Jets, and a two-g
the Eastern section now
battleground. New York
Buffalo 3-3-1.

BEER
IROQUOIS BREWERY, BUFFALO, N.Y. (DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL BREWERIES, INC.)

�1 cordially welcome you to State Uni-

ersity of New York at Buffalo and to our
59th season of inter-collegiate football. ,\t
the same time I welcome our new coach,
Richard \ V. "Doc" Urich. From the time
of the Greeks, athletics have been a part ol
the education and cultivation of man.
" ' hatever our win-loss record may be, he,
his associates and the young men who represent the University on th e playing field
will, I know, give their best, to achieve an
excellence which will be worthy of a great

i\IARTIN l\IEYERSON
President

University.

By the mid-1970's the State University of

ew York at Buflalo will be ready to take its place as one ol the

nation's outstanding University centers. vVe will serve in a humane and meaningful way a student enrollment
of perhaps 37,000. \Vithin the next decade, a program or expansion and building, currently estimated at lllOre
than $200 million, will transform the size and nature ol our campus and its programs. A study is now underway to determine the best possible location for these developments. vVherever that location may be, we shall
create an educational program as intellectually exciting and rewarding as any to be found in the world, with
the clo. est ti s between University and m etropolis.

, \ series of challenges and opportunities lie ahead. \ Ve shall, l'm sure, respond to our fullest measure.

i\IARTlN MEYERSO;'\"

�U . B. QUEEN CANDIDATES

~ JACKIE ALESSI-Sigma
Kappa Phi Sorority, a Junior
majoring
in
Mathematics,
Assistant Treasurer of Sigma
Kappa Phi Sorority, Group
Leader for Freshman Orientation, Scholarship Chairman of
Pledge Class, when not watching or participating in various
sports, likes to read and sew.
Jackie lives in Buffalo.

~BERNADINE

POPIELASZ
Theta Chi Sorority, a Senior
majoring in Spanish, Recording Secretary of Theta Chi,
Greek Sing, Stunt Night Committee, outside interests in addition to sports include dancing and knitting.

~ JUDY KERR Sigma
Kappa Phi Sorority, a Junior
majoring in English, Social
Chairman for Sigma Kappa
Phi, Sophomore Sponsor, Publicity Comm. Spring Weekend
Alpha Lambda Delta Honor
Society, Group Leader Freshman Orientation, Likes to ski,
swim, and sew. Lives in Cortland, New York.

ARLENE ARDANOWSKITheta Chi Sorority Vice-Pres.,
Senior, English Major, cheerleader, majorette, Chairman of
Mr. Formal, Silver Ball Committee, Sophomore Sponsors,
Judo and Ski Clubs, Girl's
Swimming team 1964-65, Phi
Epsilon Pi's "International
Dream Girl" in 1964-65, Asst.
Editor of 'The Oracle', Dean's
List student, Lives in Scarsdale, New York.

BONNIE BURKE Alpha
Gamma Delta, Senior, Business Education major, President of Cooke Hall, Newman
Club, winner of Greek Pan
Hellenic Scholarship for 196667, loves to swim, water ski,
and travel. Interested in all
sports and travel, lives in
Rochester, New York.
~

ANNE GARONO Alpha
Gamma Delta, Junior majoring in Sociology, N ewman
Club, Corresponding Secretary
of Alpha Gamma Delta, Group
Leader Program for Freshman Orientation, taught underprivileged c h i 1 d r e n in
Puerto Rico, has modelled, enjoys sports, modem dance,
domestic arts, music and literature. A native of Buffalo. ~

FOOTBALL QUEEN BALLOT
................ JA CKIE ALESSI

.......... ..... . A NNE GARONO

....... ......... ARLENE ARDANOWSKI

................ JU DY KERR

.............. .. BONNIE BURKE

............... . BERNA DINE POPIELASZ
DEPOSIT YOUR BALLOT IN CONTAINERS AT THE GATES !

2

�Twelve million square feet of space, 30,000 students, parking for 12,500 cars, at least 1,000 acres of
land-these figures sound like a report from a city
planning board, and in a sense that is what they are.
These are the projections for the "city" that will be
the State University of New York's new UB campus.
·with the tremendous opportunities and challenges
such an undertaking involves, the entire University
community eagerly awaits this next step in "UB's"
journey to the truly great University we have all
dreamed of.
On September lst, 1962, the University of Buffalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become
the major campus segment of the widespread system
of the State University of ew York. The new name,
created by State University officials, is: State University of New York at Buffalo. However, in deference
to sweatshirt-stitchers and typewriter repairmen,
alumni seem to prefer the continuance of "UB" or
"University of Buffalo" where intercollegiate teams
arc concerned.
One of Ameraica's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo has been the educational capitol of \¥estern New
York since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the
fourteen-year-old home of 28,000 people. The "University" was the School of Medicine until 1886 when
the School of Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was 1\Iillard Fillmore, a first-citizen of the young
community, who continued his UB leadership during
his term as the thirteenth President of the United
States.
The (ourtccn University Divisions are: School of
Medicine (1846); School of Pharmacy (1886); School
of Law (1887); School of Dentistry (1892); College of
Arts and Sciences (1913; Summer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College, evening division (1923); School
of Business Administration (1927); School of Education (1931); School of Social Work (1936); Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences (1939); School of ursing
(1940); School of Engineering (1946); and University
College (including associate degrees, 1958).
Buffalo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood
of 18,000 - of which 9,000 are full-time undergraduate students. The enrollment is expected to soar in
the next few years, especially in view of the State
affiliation.
The pre~cm cam pus is slated to become one of the
outstanding graduate centers in the country and will
have a teaching hospital on the present site of Rotary
Field. Pre cnt dormitories in some cases will be converted for married gTacluate students and there will
also be a building program at orth Main Street.
i\Ieanwhile, a record student enrollment, somewhat
crammed into the existing space, eagerly faces the
challenge of today's educational opportunities at UB.
~ationally rerogniLed as a leader in scholastic cxcdlencc and academic freedom, the University of
Buffalo continues its fine tradition of service to the
Niagara Frontier and the State of New York.

BUFFALO
A GROWING UNIVERSITY

�Back Row: Mike Stock, Freshman Coach; Bob Deming, Backfield Coach; Jerry Ippoliti, Backfield Coach.
Front Row: Bill Dando, Line Coach; Richard " Doc" Urich , Head Coach , and Bob Geiger, Line Coach.

SIEGFRIED
CONSTRUCTION
CO., INC.
•

Leo Sauer
FUNERAL HOME
INC.

•
• 1933 KENSINGTON AVENUE
TF 3-1695

6 N. PEARL STREET

•

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202
• 823 GENESEE STREET

886-2300

TX 2-7183

�JAMES E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at UB than genial Jim.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the
North Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue University, a career
which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War II
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gave up football coaching to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the university began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball
team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in
TCAA Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of
anecdotes make him a much sought-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerous civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy, and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.
Richard "Doc" Urich (pronounced Yur-ick) comes to his
present position with a set of impressive credentials. He has
been associated with Ara Parseghian for 16 years, at l\liami
(0 .), Northwestern and Notre Dame.
Here is what Parseghian says about rich:
''When I was appointed head football coach at .'\orthwestern ,
my first choice was Coach Urich. Eight years later when I was
appointed football coach at the niversity of Notre Dame, my
ftrst choice again was Coach Urich. Much of our offensive success has been due to his preparation and strategy."
"Doc" Urich was born on September 10, 1928, in Wapakoneta,
Ohio. He attended Wapakoneta High School where he captained both the football and basketball squads as a senior.
At Miami (0.) Urich was a standout in college football. He
played four years and in his freshman and senior seasons his
teams made appearances in the Sun Bowl and the Salad Bowl.
\1 iami defeated Texas Tech at £1 Paso on J a nuary I, 1918, and
downed Arizona State at Phoenix on January I, 1951. "Doc"
was captain of the l\liami team in his senior year. In his
junior and senior seasons he won .\ 11-0hio honors, and in his
last three years he was selected .\11-Conference (:\lid-A merica)
end.
After graduation from ;\liami in February, 1951, " Doc" assumed teaching and coaching chores at l\Iassillon (0.) High
School for the remainder of the school term bdore joining
Head Coach ,\ra l'arseghian at his alma mater that fall as
head fre hman coach. Urich's frosh team posted a 3-1 record,
including an upset over a highly regarded University of
Michigan freshman squad.
In 1952 Urich moved up to a position on the Miami varsity
staff from whence his trail led to Northwestern, :\'otre Dame
and then to Buffalo.
In his first year at Notre Dame, Urich was responsible for
shifting Jack Snow to split end and dedsing the exciting
offense which broke numerous Notre Dame records and brought
the Fighting Irish back to the heights of glory after a number
of seasons in the football doldrums. Knowledgeable football men
declare that Coach Urich's 1965 Notre Dame offense, going
without a real passing threat, was an even more superb job of
coaching.
"Doc" and his wife, the former Patricia Streight, also of
\Vapakoneta, have two children, Cynthia (born in 1952) and
Danny (born in 1955).
Urich holds a B.Sc. and l\f.Ed. from Miami , majoring in
Physical Education.

5

His nickname, " Doc," was acquired during his boyhood days
and seems destined to stay with him the rest of his life. Its
origin has been lost through the )Cars.

RICHARD "DOC" URICH
Head Football Coach, University of Buffalo

�CHARLES DRANKOSKI

PAUL KLEIBER

RICHARD WELLS

ANTHONY MICELI

BRUCE MacKELLAR

JAMES McEWEN

JOHN LUPIENSKI

KEN RUTKOWSKI

STEVEN SVEC

ROBERT EMBOW

ANTHONY RICCELLI

JOHN WESOLOWSKI

�RON PUGH

NICK CAPUANA

WILLIAM TAYLOR

RUSS MacKELLAR

JAMES DUNN

DANIEL SELLA

RICHARD ASHLEY

MARK MURTHA

IRVIN WRIGHT

JOHN PRZYBYCIEN

TOM KOWALEWSKI

MICHAEL RISSELL

RODNEY RISHEL

LEELAND JONES

JOHN BASTA

�BUFFALO BULLS -

1966

1st Row, L. to R.: Capuana, Sella, Basta, Finochio, R. MacKellar, Miceli, Capt. Bill Taylor, Kleiber, Dunn, B. MacKellar,
Pugh, McEwen, Barksdale.
2nd Row, L. to R.: Sinclair, Pirozzolo, York, Rishel, Brisky, Brennan, Hoke, Wright, Jones-, Wells, Ashley, Rissell, Dolan.
3rd Row, L. to R.: Gibbons, Lehner, Rutkowski, Lansing, Mosher, Kuzmitski, Scaletta, Lupienski, Remillard, Hurd, Smith,
Doherty.
4th Row, L. to R.: Wilbur, ·wesolowski, Sabo, Maser, Hayden, Kowalewski, Embow, Murphy, Martin, Thomas, Riccelli,
Przybycien.
5th Row, L. to R. : Coupas, Mason, Walters, Ruggerio, Richner, Kovack, Svec, Murtha, Drankoski.
Top Row, L. to R.: Garofalo (ass't. freshman coach), Gergley (ass't. freshman coach}, Stock (freshman coach}, Ippoliti
(ass't. coach}, Dando (ass't. coach), Head Coach Richard (Doc) Urich, Deming (ass't. coach), Geiger
(ass't. coach}, Simon (trainer), MeN ally, (ass't. freshman coach).

NINE DECADES AGO

the launching of
"advice in depth"

W

HEN ships with sails studded Buffalo"s seascape over 90 years ago, when Buffalo and
the whole nation began to feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution ... Dominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning to make its mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp;D"s services for the investing public sustained
a steady growth despite financial panics, wars and
depressions. Today the talent of an organization of
more than 400- including research specialists,
counselors, and administrative people stands behind
our Buffalo office, giving you opportunity for investment adviet in depth. Let us advise you about your
future investment plans or review your portfolio.

DOMINICK

&amp;

OMINICK,

Incorporated

SEYMo u R H. K"' ox II I, Vice President
1122 Marine Trust Bldg. 856-7471
MtmbtrJ Ntw York, Amtr~can, Jt,(idwtJI, and Toronto Stock Exchangrs

BILL TAYLOR

Captain

8

�AERIAL VIEW OF BUFFALO CAMPUS

COMPLETE LOCAL STOCKS .•.

Onetto's Restaurant
&amp; Seafood H ouse

structurals -

bars -

plates - sheets

FULL FACILITIES •.•
shearing - pickling - oiling
- burning - sawing

TIMETABLE DELIVERY •••
when you need it - as you ordered it
- ready for use

3630 MAIN STREET AT BAILEY

Serving Quality Foods at Moderate Prices
Since 1928

" W estern New York's Oldest and Largest
VOLKSWAGEN
JIM

Kelly's

PARTS AND SERVICE

•

CARL C. GRIMM, INC.

DEALER "

Plumber

INC.

•

NEW AND USED

Home of " KELLY CARED FOR CARS"

259 DELAWARE AVENUE

3325 GENESEE STREET AT THRUW A Y OVERPASS

TL 2 - 7080

BUFFALO, N.Y.

NF 3-8000

9

�1864 - 102nd Anniversary - 1966
1966 marks our 102nd year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.
Est. 1864

REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
17-21 S. Division Street
TL 4-5700

Ellicott Square

Gentlemen's Furnishings and Natural Shoulder Cloth ing

The Campus Corner of Buffalo, Inc.
Opposite the University of Buffalo

THE

WESTERN SAVINGS BANK
WAIN Of'flCE

w .... afMI c-tt
I H -.U2Z

I

OF BUFFALO

CLEVE-HILL OI'J'ICE
c !.. n -Hitl l'hu
Kensln11.., at Eue&lt;1 11:1111.
ll 7· Ull

I

DELAWARE ,.ARK OffiCE
Sto~n1 c ... t..,
o.lew•r• A~•~ Nerth Ill Amhent
177-1120

Del•w••• "•'*

I ....

Buffalo, N.Y. 14214

3262 Main Street

Federal Deposit
lnsur1nc:1

TF2-3221

Corporation

Where you and your family feel at Home.

Everything for the Athlete and Sportsman

PLA-MOR
SPORTING GOODS

•

SKIS AND CLOTHING
•

ICE SKATES
•

BOWLING EQUIPMENT

•

HODGE

FOOTBALL AND BASKETBALL
EQUIPMENT

Inc.
Sweaters and Jackets for Fraternities and Sororities

FLORISTS
360 Delaware Avenue

Buffalo, N.Y. 14202

627 MAIN STREET

n 6-9ooo

BUFFALO, N. Y.
TL 2 • 3456

10

�B

u
F

F
A
L

0

,

11

�HOURS
Monday-Friday . 8:30-8:30
Saturdays
10:00-2:00

The
UNIVERSITY
Bookstore

Largest
Selection

Students, Old Students, Future Str•dents •••
Come in and Browse • ••

of

HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY ITEMS AVAILABLE

QIJALITY
Paperbacks
in
Western
New York

GIFTS

COLLEGE CLOTHING
(adult, youth, juvenile)

College Jewelry

Sweat Shirts

Ceramics

Sweaters

Glassware

Blazers

Stuffed Animals

College Jackets

Studio Cards

Pennants -

12

Banners

�1/uun

tk BULLPEN

By Dick Johnston, Evening News

By Bob Powell, Courier-Express

What makes Jimmy run?
The "Jimmy" is Jim Barksdale, a 177-pound senior
halfback from Syracuse who is well on his way to
establishing a UB rushing record for one season.

As the Bulls from the University of Buffalo come
to this Homecoming football game they don't have
touch of a won-lost record (2-4) but they certainly
have played some exciting football, some very good
football, and they have
produced so m e colorful
players for their fans to
talk about.
Three players particularly, a sophomore, a junior,
and a senior, are setting
off offensive fireworks nearly every game. Mick Murtha, sophomore quarterback; Dick Ashley, junior
end, and Jim Barksdale,
senior halfback, are almost
sure to join the all-time
UB standouts by season's
encl.
Murtha's passing, Ashley's receiving and Barksdale's running (and receiving) are likely to break
records set by such heroes of bygone days as Don Holland, Don Gilbert, Gordy Bukaty, Bob Baker, John
Stofa and Dr. Ed Gicewicz.
Murtha stepped in and took over as regular quarterback in his first varsity game. He's not the cocky,
take-charge type of player, yet he has handled the
field general's duties admirably. He's made sophomore
mistakes, of course; He wouldn't be human if he
didn't_ But Mick has come through in the clutch on
many a scoring drive.
As a sophomore, Ashley set two UB pass catching
records, so he was a marked man from the first game
on in this campaign. Double coverage and other defense gimmicks are used to stop him. Yet, Dandy Dick
has caught 22 passes, just one under the UB seasonal
record, and he has scm·ecl 30 points.
Barksdale has been the big surprise. He was a regular last year but carried the ball only nine times for
minus yardage, as a blocking wingback. He caught
one pass.
Given a chance as a running back, Jim turned into
one of the hardest-to-bring-down ball-carriers UB has
had in recent years. He also became a fine pass receiver; ranks second to Ashley in receptions.
The other two members of UB's starting backfield
haven't been so conspicuous as Murtha and Barksdale
but they have been very important in the 116 points
the Bulls have scored. Fullback Lee Jones, in fact, has
scored six touchdowns. But blocking has been his
forte. And left halfback Rick Wells, who was throwing passes last year as a quarterback, is tl!rni~g into
a fine receiver. He never had to block unttl thts year.
Now he's become accomplished at that, too.

It's the same Jim Barksdale who no one noticed in
his sophomore and junior
years; The same one who
wasn't figured to do much
for the Bulls this season.
Ask Jim about his
cess and he'll tell you
anyone can run with
kind of blocking he
been getting.

sucthat
the
has

Ask Coach Doc Urich
and he'll tell you that it is
declica tion and desire.
Ask his teammates and they'll tell you: "Jimmy."
Barksdale hit a solid wall of Boston College linemen last Saturday on his first rushing attempt. He got
back to the line but was twisted around, pushed
back, belted and buried.
A lesser performer would have been done for the
day. As it was, Jim finished the aftenoon with 131
yards in 21 rushing tries and caught three passes from
Mick Murtha for 27 additional yards. He also scored
the Bulls' second touchdown.
Against BC, Barksdale was running against defenders that out-weighed him by as much as 90 pounds.
That may seem ludicrous, but Boston College has the
biggest team in the East-maybe the nation.
Here's what Jim has clone to get into position to
rewrite Willie Evans' 620-yards record for one season's rushing:
Against Kent State, he accounted for 56 rushing
yards in 12 carries, scored a touchdown and caught
one pass for 15 yards; against Cornell he rushed 27
yards in five tries, caught three passes for 85 yards and
scored a touchdown; ran 108 yards in 15 attempts
and caught two passes for 18 yards against Villanova;
picked up 62 yards in nine carries, scored _one touchdown and caught four passes for 68 yards 111 the Boston University game, and had a 62-yard clay on_ 14
attempts and caught three passes for 18 yards agamst
Dayton.
Not bad for a £ella, who didn't figure too heavily
in pre-season plans.
13

�ALUMNI AND FRIENDS

Beer -

THE " FRIENDS OF THE BULLS" PROUDLY PRESENT
THEIR SECOND SEASON OF POST-GAME

Pop -

Chips -

Pretzels

Ell KONIKOFF DIXIELAND BAND
Entertainment- $1 .50 per person

TUNKS

Faculty Club
Dress - As You A re

Immediately Following Each Home Game

BUFfALO LINE-UP

a4nsef

Defense

Offense

S.E.
87 ASHLEY
R.H.B.

44 DRANKOSKI

Press

R.E.

49 WELLS

88 REMILLARD
R.T .

•

tnc.

76 R. MacKELLAR
R.L.B.

79 THOMAS

"B uffalo's
leading

62 KOWALEWSKI

R.T.

R.H.B.

I

40 SELLA

84 PRZYBYCIEN

49 WELLS

72 BASTA

26 McEWEN

7l TAYLOR

54 MOSHER

R.G.
67 GIBBONS
64 MASER

exponent

R.G.

of quality
printing"

52 WESOLOWSKI

c.

Q.B.

56 B. MacKELLAR

14 MURTHA

55 KOVACK

19 MASON

L.H .B.

67 GIBBONS

22 CAPUANA
42 HOKE
L.G.
66 LUPIENSKI

Printers

&amp;
Lithographers
126 S. ELMWOOD

69 SABO
L.G.

F.B.

61 RISSELL

36 JONES

65 FINOCHIO

30 BRENNAN

L.T.

L.H.B.

73 MICELI

20 BARKSDALE

71 TAYLOR

24 SVEC

L.T.

LL.B.

70 PUGH

58 RISHEL

76 R. MacKELLAR

51 WRIGHT

L.E.

s.

50 BRISKY

48 HURD

73 MICELI

46 SINCLAIR

T.E.
85 KLEIBER

Buffalo, N. Y. 14202

89 DOHERTY
SPECIALISTS:

TL 3-3005

P.A.T., F.G. &amp; K.O. -

~®

PUNT -

14

80 EMBOW, 48 HURD

40 SELLA, 44 DRANKOSKI

�BARTLETT BUICK
3080

~IN

STREET

TF 6-1000

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

OPEL KADETT BULL WAGON
ONLY $1883 (minus art work, of course)
HOLY CROSS LINE-UP
Defense

Offense

R.E.

R.E .

81 HALEY

85 KRZYZEK

82 VRIONIS

83 PELETIER

UNIVERSITY
PLAZA

L.B.
R.T.

79 MAHONEY
72 REILLY

D.B.
R.H.8 .

33 D'AGATA

39 KURCZ
35 SHIMKUS

23 GIARD!
80 CAVANAGH

41 PENNY

R.T.

77 WILLIAMS
78 CRIMMINS
R.G.

67 HEILMANN

62 KANV ANA UGH

F.B.

40 LILORE

38 O ' ROURKE
D.B .

c.

43 KELLY

52 GRISE

19 LEE

54 DELANEY

D.8.

M .G .

61 SCOPETSKI

64 GRIECO
63 MASTRACCH IO

70 GORTER

Q.B .

16 LENTZ
18 O ' NEIL
L.G .

60 MORRIS
69 ABBATE

L.T.
75 DUNNE
72 REILLY

D.B .
L.H .B.

L.T.
70 GORTER

17 LAWSON

46 KNIGHT
36 RING

32 HAWKES
D.B.

71 FARINELLA

59 RAYMOND!
24 GARVIN

L.E .

L.E .

88 KIMENER

86 DESCHENES

89 NEARY

65 QU I NN

SPECIALISTS :

15

ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSON CO.
AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Cards
LEES DRUGS
GUSTAV A. FRISCH- Jeweler
KOEGL'S BAKERY
LEONARDO'S RESTAURANT
M and T TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
STYLE CREST MEN'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP
ULBRICH'S - Stationery
FEDERAL MEATS
THE PLAID SHOP
DEALS JEWELERS
YOUR MATERNITY SHOP
AEXANDER KATZ and
LOU KROP - Optometrists
EVANS - Gifts and Cards
W. T. GRANT CO.
FANNY FARMER
AMHERST
Clothes Tree, Inc.
JOHNSON'S-Amherst Bootery

�1966 VARSITY SCHEDULE
THE COVER

Sept. 17

Kent State

away

Oct.

22

Boston Co l.

away

Sept. 24

Cornell

home

Oct. 29

Holy Cross

ho me

Oct.

Villanova

home

Nov.

Delaware

home

CAST YOUR BALLOT
FOR YOUR FAVORITE.

Boston U.

away

Nov. 12

Tampa

away

BALLOT ON PAGE 2.

Dayton

away

Nov. 19

Youngstown

home

Oct.

8

Oct.

15

5

SIX

*

GIRLS, ONE WILL
BE QUEEN.

I

BUFFALO BULLS 1966 ROSTER

JONES-

RICH

MILK
CORP.

"I t's Flavor Guarded"

70 E. FERRY STREET

TT 3-4080

No.
14
15
18
19
•20
21
•22
24
*26
27
30
32
35
•36
*40
*42
44
45
46
•48
•49

Name
Murtha, Mark
Martin, Daniel
York, Brian
Mason, Dennis
Barksdale, James
Rutkowski, Kenneth
Capuana, Nicholas
Svec, Steven
McEwen, James
Coupas, icholas
Brennan, Thomas
Richner, David
Smith, Robert
jones, Leeland
Sella, Daniel
Hoke, Thomas
Drankoski, Charles
Murphy, Thomas
Sinclair, Robert
Hurd, Thomas
Wells, Richard
•so Brisky, Dennis
51 Wright, Irvin
52 Wesolowski, John
54 Mosher, James
55 Kovack, John
*56 MacKellar, Bruce
57 Ruggerio, Alfonse
*58 Rishel, Rodney
60 Walters, Gregory
•61 Rissell, Michael
62 Kowalewski, Thomas
63 Lehner, Lawrence
64 Maser, Michael
65 Finochio, James
66 Lupienski, John
*67 Gibbons, Theodore
68 Hayden, William
69 Sabo, Donald
•70 Pugh, Ronald
•71 Taylor, William
72 Basta, John
•73 Miceli, Anthony
75 Riccelli, Joseph
•76 MacKellar, Russell
77 Kuzmitski, Kenneth
78 Pirozzolo, Richard
79 Thomas, Jeffrey
80 Embow, Robert
82 Dolan, James
82 Wilbur, Curtis
84 Przybycien, John
85 Kleiber, Paul
*86 Dunn, James
•87 Ashley, Richard
88 Remillard, James
89 Doherty, John
•go Hansen, Brian
•-Lettermen (20)

16

Class Pos.
Age
So. Qb
1~
So. ~ti
19
Jr. .1:.-DHB :(1
So. Qli
18
SL 1-113
:.:0
Jr. HB
19
Sr. HB
20
So. HB
19
Sr. HB
:(:(
So. HB
19
Jr. FB
19
So. .Fb
1!J
So. FB
19
Jr. FB
19
Sr. HB
:(0
Jr. HB
20
So. HB
19
So. HB
20
Jr. HB
19
Jr. HB
20
Jr. HB
20
Jr. LB
19
Jr. G
20
So. c
20
So. G
18
So. c
19
Sr. C
20
Jr. C
19
Jr. LB
20
18
So. G
Jr. G
20
So. G
19
Jr. G
20
So. G
19
Sr. G
20
So. G
19
Jr. G
20
So. G
19
So. G
19
Sr. T
21
Sr. T
22
Sr. T
22
Sr. T
21
So. T
19
Sr. T
22
So. T
18
Jr. T
20
So. T
19
So. E
18
Jr. E
21
So. E
19
So. E
18
Sr. E
22
Sr. E
21
Jr. E
19
Jr. E
19
So. E
19
Jr. K
20

Ht.
5-11
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
5-9
6-0
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-3
5-10
6-0
5-11
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-1
5-11

Wt.
171
H!O
165
180
177
175
175
195
190
184
207
190
lbO

202
174
174
180
185
198
191
191
196
204
205
190
195
200
190
197
170
215
203
201
200
210
203
235
203
198
232
225
216
223
230
220
255
230
215
195
190
205
193
225
213
201
191
205
172

Hometown
Endicott, N. Y.
Huntington, L. 1.
Rochester, N. Y.
Bul[alo, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Utica, r . Y.
Endwell, . Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Johnstown, Pa.
Rochester, N. Y.
Greenhurst, N. Y.
Depew,
. Y.
Butfalo, r . Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Marcy, . Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Watertown,
Y.
Elmira,
. Y.
Ithaca, N Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Norristown, Pa.
Cheektowaga, N. \'.
Central Islip, L. I.
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
E. Smethport, Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Coatesville, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Clayton, . Y.
E. Syracuse, . Y.
Springdale, Pa.
ewport, R. I .
Cleveland, 0 .
Johnstown, Pa.
McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N. Y.
Glens Falls, N. Y.
Batavia, N. Y.
Syracuse, . Y.
Kenmore, . Y.
Methuen, Mass.
Elmira, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Hamburg, N. Y.
Glens Falls, N. Y.
Ovid, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Auburn, N. Y.
Cranston, R. I.
Mas ena, . Y.
New Bedford, Mass.
New Bedford, Mass.
Detroit, Mich.

J

�What•s the Geneseecret

• •

HOLY CROSS 1966 ROSTER
No.

1

J

11
13
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
23
24
26
28
31
32
33
35
36
38
39
40
41
42
43
45
46
47
50
52
53
54
56
57
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
67
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93

Name
Stier, Bob
Tyler, Tom
Farrell, Charlie
Lentz, Jack
Lawson, Bob
O'Neil, Phil
Lee, Jim
Tripp, Bill
Bourque, Pat
Ciardi, Dick
Garvin, John
Stagliano, Paul
Meduski, Rich
Himmelberg, John
Hawkes, Tim
D'Agata, Tony
Shimkus, Pete
Ring, Richie
O'Rourke, Dan
Kurcz, Bob
Lilore, Ralph
Penny, Bob
W'alsh, Don
Kelly, Tom
Kaminski , Mike
Knight, Webster
1ecca, Bill
Clark, Steve
Grise, Dick
Maslowski, Bob
Delaney, Jack
Ambrose, Wayne
Faulkner, Don
Raymondi, Dan
Morris, Bill
Scopetski, Paul
Kavanaugh , Brian
Mastracchio, Joe
Grieco, Glenn
Quinn, Mike
Heilmann, Tom
Abbate, Bob
Gorter, John
Farinella, Dave
Reilly, Mike
Maldonis, Bob
Weaver, Ray
Dunne, Bob
Smith, Greg
Williams, Ralph
Crimmins, Mike
Mahoney, Bob
Cavanagh, Bill
Haley, Tom
Vrionis, John
Pelletier, Roger
McDonald, Fred
Krzyzek, Dick
Deschenes, Dick
Lavery, Tom
Kimener, Pete
1 eary, Bob
Cannignani, Dick
Robinson, George
Finnerty, Dennis
Torpey, Bill

Class Pos
HB
So.
QB
Jr.
QB
Jr.
QB
Sr.
HB
Jr.
QB
So.
HB
Jr.
QB
Jr.
FB
So.
LB
Jr.
LB
So.
HB
Jr.
LB
Sr.
LB
Jr.
HB
So.
HB
So.
HB
Jr.
HB
Jr.
FB
So.
HB
So.
FB
Jr.
HB
So.
HB
Jr.
HB
Sr.
KSp.
Jr.
HB
So.
LB
So.
T
So.
c
Jr.
c
Jr.
So.
c
LB
So.
So.
G
LB
So.
G
Sr.
So.
LB
G
Sr.
G
So.
G
Jr.
E
Jr.
G
Jr.
G
Jr.
T
Sr.
T
So.
T
So.
T
Sr.
E
Sr.
T
Jr.
T
Sr.
T
So.
T
So.
T
Jr.
E
So.
E
Sr.
E
Jr.
E
Jr.
E
So.
E
Jr.
E
Jr.
E
Jr.
E
Sr.
E
So.
E
Jr.
E
Jr.
T
Jr.
So.
E

Age
19
19
20
21
19
19
20
20
19
20
20
20
21
20
19
19
20
20
19
19
20
19
20
21
20
19
18
19
21
19
19
20
18
18
21
19
21
19
19
20
20
20
21
19
18
21
21
20
21
19
19
20
20
21
20
19
19
20
21
20
20
18
19
19
19
18

Hgt.
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-9
5-10
5-9
5-10
5-11
5-10
5-9
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-0
5-6
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-10
5-10
6-3
6-2
6-2
5-8
5-11
6-1
5-10
5-10
6-l
6-l
6-4
6-2
6-2
5-11
6-2
6-6
6-2
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-4
6-1
6-3

Wgt.
174
197
195
194
200
185
188
195
200
197
205
180
198
178
188
183
195
180
195
186
180
180
180
178
190
188
185
232
225
210
207
224
217
208
245
210
255
215
222
212
208
222
215
222
226
220
206
225
220
240
2~0

215
185
200
210
200
195
220
185
182
201
195
180
202
205
190

Home
Detroit, Mich.
Thompsonville, Conn.
ew London, Conn.
Baltimore, Md.
New City, - y_
vVorcester, Mass.
Somerville, Mass.
Taunton, Mass.
Shrewsbury, Mass.
E. Hartford, Conn.
Portland, Me.
Medford, Mass.
Worcester, Mass.
Washington, D. C.
Jersey City, N. J .
Methuen, Mass.
Southboro, Mass.
Mattapan, Mass.
Wilmette, IlL
Barwyn, IlL
Belleville, N. ]Worcester, Mass.
Milton, Mass.
Cranford, N. ]Hyattsville, Md.
Washington, D. C.
Eastchester, . Y.
Whitesboro, N. Y.
Manchester, .H.
Weirton, W. Va.
Chicago, Ill.
Framingham, Mass.
Norfolk, Mass.
Quincy, Mass.
ew York, N. Y.
Worcester, Mass.
Hudson, Mass.
1ewark, N. ]Bayonne, N ]Charleston, Mass.
Upper Sadie River, N. ]New York, N. Y.
E. Providence, R . I.
Mansfield, Mass.
Greenwich, Conn.
Watertown, Mass.
Johnstown, Pa.
Cranston, R. I.
West Orange, N. ]Hattapan, Mass.
Norwood, Mass.
Arlington, Va.
Scituate, Mass.
Hingham, Mass.
Larchmont, I . Y.
Wiscasset, Me.
Billerica, Mass.
Seekonk, Mass.
Fitchburg-, Mass.
Closter, N. J.
Arlington, Va.
Yonkers, N. Y.
Chicag-o, Ill.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Wilbraham, Mass.
Jersey City, N. J.

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

•

�HOLY CROSS SQUAD

lst Row: left to right: Don Walsh, Phil 0':\Teil, Wayne Ambrose, Don Faulkner, Dan Raymondi , Tim Hawkes, John Bioty, Tony
D'r\gata, Joe ;\fastracchio, Ralph Lilore, Bob Penny, Bill ~fecca, Tom Kelly.
2nd Row: Bob Neary, ;\like Drain (manager), Mike Quinn, Glenn Grieco, Bob Dunne, Bob Abbate, Dick Grise, Rich Meduski, Pete
Kimener, Charlie Farrell, Paul Stagliano, Tom Heilmann, Charlie Hinckle, Jack Lentz, Ray Blake, Tom Lavery, George
Shea.
3rd Row: Brian Kavanagh , Tom Haley, Jack Garvin, Fred ;\[cDonald, Bob ;\[aslowski, Bill Torpey, Dick Carmignani, Bob Mahoney,
Tom Tyler, Bill Tripp, Bob Kurcz, 'Vebster Knight, Paul Scopetski, Bill Herlihy, Jim Lee, Richie Ring, Dick Ciardi, Jack
Delaney, Bob Stier, Dan O'Rourke, Dick Deschenes, John Bachini.
lth Row: Bill Morris, Mike Reilly, Ray Weaver, Dave Farinella, Mike Crimmins, John Vrinnis, Roger Pelletier, Bob Maldonis,
Greg Smith, Bob Lawson, George Robinson , Steve Clark , Ralph Williams, Bill Cavanagh , Dennis Finerty, Dick Krzyzek,
Bob Ribaudo.

GRANVILLE MOTORS I.NC.
VOLKSWAGEN

AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE CENTER
• SEDANS
• SUNROOFS

• STATION WAGONS
• KARMAN GHIAS

1500 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
JUST NORTH OF THE BOULEVARD
MALL OPPOSITE TWIN FAIR

OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 836-4600
•

AUTHOR! lEO

OI.AL.ER

All Late Model VW's and Domestic Used Cars Warranted

ROBERT P. (Pete) KIMENER

End and Captain
18

�A History of Holy Cross College
By JOHI\' POWER
Class of 1969
College of the Holy Cross

The Nipmuc Indians, back in the 1600's,
called it Pachachoag - Hill of the Pleasant
Springs - and at one time it was commonly
known as l\Iount Saint James. Today, residents of \Vorcester, Massachusetts refer to it
as College Hill for it is on these slopes that
the ?lfost Reverend Benedict Joseph Fenwick,
Second Bishop of Boston, founded the College
of the Holy Cross in 1843.
Holy Cross was founded on the site of
l\Iount Saint James Academy, a seminary
which gave the hill its second name. The
Academy was founded by Father James
Fitton, pioneer Catholic missionary of the
Jacksonian era after whom the college's football and baseball stadiums have been named.
Bishop Fenwick gave the College the name of
his Cathedral with the motto and seal of the
Boston Diocese and entrusted its direction to
the Fathers of the Society of Jesus. The first
classes began on November 2, 1843 and in the
following year the College's first building, a
dormitory for 90 students, was erected. The
ftrst president of the College was Father
Mulledy, a former president of Georgetown.
Since the College was unable to obtain a charter from the State of Massachusetts, degrees
were conferred through Georgetown.
By 1904 the College enrollment had
passed the 500 mark. A west wing was added
to the central building in 1868 along with
two stately towers. In 1893 O'Kane Hall, actually a
wing of Fenwick Hall, was constructed and classes
were held in the building the following year. However, to meet the increased enrollment in 1904,
Alumni Hall was built; and in 1914 Beaven Hall was
constructed under the sponsorship of Right Reverend
Thomas D. Beaven, '70, Bishop of Springfield.

VERY REV. RAYMOND J. SWORDS, S. J.

President
added to the College buildit:gs an? in the following
year, \VCHC, the campus radto statwn, was dedicated.
On June 16, 1960, Very Reverend Raymond ].
Swords, S.J., became the 24th president of the College.
Under his direction, the most ambitious development
program in the history of the College has been undertaken. Presently under construction and scheduled
for completion by next fall is Hogan Hall, a campus
center building which will house a new post office, a
cafeteria and offices and rooms for student activities.
vVith the opening of Mulledy Hall, Fenwick and
O'Kane Halls have been renovated to provide office
space and also the left wing of O'Kane was remodeled into the modern Fenwich Theatre for the
use of the College's dramatic society.

In the period between the first and second World
Wars five new buildings were constructed. Among
these new buildings were St. Joseph's Memorial
Chapel and Dinand Memorial Library. In 1941, a
peacetime Naval ROTC program was inaugurated
but it was soon converted into the V-1, V-5, V-7 and
V-12 wartime programs. In the wartime centennial
year of 1943, the student body numbered 1200. Holy
Cross had come a great distance in its first 100 years
but not all was changed. The curriculum was _still
firmly based on liberal arts but it had evolved mto
one geared to the formation of liberally educated
specialists. In 1946 the naval wartime programs were
discontinued and a new era of expansion began.

Over the years Holy Cross has earned a high and
respected rank among the colleges of the nation. At
the same time, Holy Cross has not neglected athletic
and with its well-conducted athletic program while
keeping a strict, disciplined academic hold on its
athletes, the College also holds a high and respected
place in this area.

In 1947, under the presidency of Reverend William ]. Healy, S.J., an intramural gymnasium was
19

�HOLY CROSS COACHING STAFF

Mel Massucco, head coach; Fran Donaher, asst. freshman coach; Ecio Luciano, defensive line coach; Carlin Lynch, freshman coach;
i\Iilt Piepul, offensive backfield coach; Tom Boisture, defensive backfield coach; Oscar Lofton, o!Tensive line coach.

SCIENTIFIC

EQUIPMENT

and

MEDICAL SUPPLIES
for

• PHYSICIANS

• INDUSTRY
• SCHOOL
• HOME

• HOSPITAL

JEFFREY-FELL CO., INC.
1700 MAl N ST.

Phone TT 3 - 1700

20

BFLO., NEW YORK 14209

�Vince Dougherty, who was a halfback on some
of the great Holy Cross teams of the mid-30's, is
starting his first full year as athletic director, assuming this new post this past July 1, succeeding Gene
Flynn who retired. Dougherty, a 1937 gTaduate of
Holy Cross, is a native of Scranton, Pa., and recently
resigned after 25 years of service with the Federal
Bureau of Investigation. He attended and was graduated from Scranton Central High School where he
was an outstanding football player and state low
board diving champion. He entered Holy Cross in
ex-Coach Dr. Eddie Anderson's first year (1933) and
earned three varsity letters. He was graduated with
a degree in Philosophy in 1937 and received his L.L.B.
from Georgetown Law School in 1940. Vince is married to the former Ruth Francis Howe of Pelham
Manor, New York, and the couple now reside in
\Vorcester, Mass. with their six children.
VI

CENT G. DOUGHERTY
Director of Athletics

Mel Massucco, who has devoted more than half
of his life to football and one of the all-time greats
at Holy Cross, is in his second year as head coach at
his alma mater. fassucco, who was graduated from
Holy Cross in 1952 after having played three years
at right halfback, joined his alma mater as freshman
coach and chief scout in 1954 before finally moving
up to the top job a year and a half ago. Mel held the
college record for most yards rushing in a season,
732, until two years ago when Jack Lentz, his current
quarterback, rushed for 802 yards. &lt;lei, however, still
holds the Holy Cross career rushing record of I ,598
yards. After the 1951 season, 1\Iel played in the
annual North-South game in Florida and was drafted
by the Chicago Cardinals of the National Football
League. But he passed up the opportunity of playing
pro ball to enter the coaching ranks. He served for
two years as freshman football coach, varsity football
scout, varsity hockey coach and freshman baseball
coach at Massachusetts before returning to his alma
mater. ,\ native of Arlington, 1\Iass., where he was a
three-sport star at Arlington High School, 1\Icl resides
in \Vorcester, Mass., with his wife, the former Joan
Howard of Cambridge, 1\Iass., and his four children.

Head Coach

21

�HOLY CROSS

ROBERT R. DUNNE

HENRY F. LENTZ

MICHAEL DRAIN

RICHARD DESCHENES

RICHARD H. GIARDI

MICHAEL T. CRIMMINS

JOHN GORTER

22

THOMAS E. KELLY

RALPH LILORE

ROBERT W . MAHONEY

RICHARD L. GRISE

ROBERT J . KIERCZ

�COLLEGE

RALPH WILLIAMS

ROBERT J . LAWSON Jr.

ANTHONY G. D'AGATA

MIKE KAMINSKI

PAUL F. SCOPETSKI

TOM HEILMANN

WEBSTER T. KNIGHT

THOMAS E. ;HALEY

RICHARD A . KRZYZEK

GLENN A. GRIECO

WILLIAM R. MORRIS

23

DANIEL G . RAYMOND!

�H

0
L
y

c
R

0

s
s
COLLEGE

24

�All restricted guages, precise tempers and finest
finishes made to your exact specificatio ns.

COLD ROLLED STRIP STEEL
Warehouse and Mill Deliveries
COIL

•

•

SHEETS

ROLLER LEVELING

•

SHEARING

PLATE
•

SLITTING

GIBRALTER STEEL
CORPORATION
NT 4- 1020
2555 Walden Ave nue

•

Buffalo, N. Y. 14225

JIM SIMON, T rainer

FOR A DASH OF ADVENTURE . ..

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.
HEATIN G Power Plants -

IN YOUR WARDROBE

AIR CONDITIONING

Process Piping -

Fire Protection

Come To

•
TL 4-8435

120 W. T UPPER

CAPPELLINI'S RESTAURANT
and

2900 DELAWARE AVENUE

CATERERS, INC.

KENMORE, N . Y. 14217

•

ComfJlete Fomwl R ental Service - Grou p Rates

101 NIAGARA STREET
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14202

Phone: 873-3228

25

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFFALO
27
21
28
16
3
21
Oct. 29
:\'ov. 5
:'\ov. 12 at
:'\ov. 19

(2-4-0)
Kent Stale
Cornell
Villanova
Boston U.
Dayton
Boston CoL
Holy Cross
Delaware
Tampa
Youngstown

ll6

RUSffiNG

Attendance
14,500
10,958
9,153
7,500
12,599
17,200

23
28
8
26
13
22

Jim Barksdale
Lee Jones
Rick Wells
Steve Svec
M ick l\[ u rtha
Jim McEwen_
Dick Ash ley
Tom Brennan
TOTALS

120

u.

Att.
76
69
39
14
40
12
2
l

Net
446
217
165
44
32
27
10
3

253

944

Avg.
5.8
3.1
4.2
3.1
0.8
2.2
5.0
3.0
3.7

PASSING

B. PLAYERS
Att.

Compl.

Yds.

Int.

TD

868
4

II

0

6
0

872

II

6

Mick Murtha
Dan Sella

136
l

58
l

TOTALS

137

59

RECEIVING

DENNIS BRISKY

JIM BARKSDALE

No.

Yds.

TD

Dick Ashley
Jim Barksdale
Rick Wells
Paul Kleiber
Chuck Drankoski
Jim McEwen
Lee Jones
Steve Svec
:\rick :\furtha

22
16
10

333
231

'~

2
2
l
l
I

85
20
20
17
16
4

4
2
0
0
0
0

TOTAL

59

8'72

146

0
0
0
6

Students ...

't-i YAMAHA

The John W.

Big Wheels On Campus

Cowper Co.

SUBURBAN

CYCLE~ L~.

3165 MAIN ST. near UB Campus

INCORPORATED

Open Daily til 6 P.M.

Thurs. &amp; Fri. til 9 P.M.
836.5765

Old Post Road Inn

Engineers - Contractors

•

3151 MAIN STREET

873-4200

The Finest in

Post Office Box 1068

Traditional Cookery

1945 Sheridan Drive

Reservations

Buffalo, New York 14240

835-7745

26

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
PUNTING
D. Sella
T. Brennan
D. Richner

No.
36
2
I

Avg.
36.2
30.0
42.0

P ASS I NTER CEPTIONS
N o.
Yds.
T. Hurd
2
44
D. Sella
2
0
I
0
T. Hoke
I
0
T. Kowalewski
I
0
J. Lupienski

P UNT RETUR NS
N o.
T. Hurd
10
N. Capuana
I
R. Wells
I

Avg.
61
0

SIGHTSEEING? CONVENTIONS?
SCHOOL TRIPS? GOING TO THE GAME?

-2

KICKOFF RETU R N S
No.
Yds.
6
112
R. Wells
98
K. Rutkowski 5
4
72
J. McEwen
3
34
T. Brennan
1
15
L. Jones
I
10
P. Kleiber

Go where YOU want-When YOU wantfor as long as YOU wish and have more
fun on a Grand Island Tra nsit Corp.
charter bus. Your group sta ys together
and relaxes on your modern-deluxe Air·
conditioned, Air-ride, Restroom equipped
bus, Trips to anywhere in the U.S. a nd
Canada,

Phone
853-3377

GRAND ISLAND TRANSIT CORP.
"THE B UFFALO-NIAGARA FALLS BUS LINE"

200 W. Mohawk St., Buffalo, N.Y. 14202

U.B. FOOTBALL RECORDS
R ushing
One play: 87 yards (TD), Bob Edwards, vs. Boston U., 1962
One game: 205 yards, Ray Weser, vs. Rhode Island, 1949
One season: 620 yards, Willie Evans, 1959
Career: 1,559 yards, Willie Evans, 1957-1959
Passing
Yardage, one play: 86 yards (TD), Ordean Shanabrook to Andy
Podlucky, vs. Bucknell, 1951
Yardage, one season: 869 yards, Don Gilbert, 1964
Yardage, career: 2,133 yards, John Stofa, 1961-63
TD passes, one game: 5, Joe Kubisty, vs. Bucknell, 1956
TD passes, one season: !!, Gordon Bukaty, 1958
Attempts, one season: 12!!, Don Holland, 1951
Completions, one season: 64, Don Holland, 1951; John Stofa

the
new

1961THREE COINS RESTA VRANT

Pass Receiving
One game: 7, Ed Gicewicz, vs. Bucknell, 1951;
Dan Stanley, vs. Cortland State, 1955;
Bob Baker, vs. V.M.I. , 1961
One season: 23, Bob Baker, 1961
Career: 49, Ed Gicewicz, 1949-51
TD passes, one game: 3, Dick Ashley, vs. Colgate, 1965
TO passes, one season: 7, Dick Ashley, 1965
TO passes, career: Ed Gicewicz, 1949-51
Yardage, one game: 144 yards, Ed Gicewicz, vs. Bucknell, 1951
Yardage, one season: 349 yards, Dick Ashley, 1965
Yardage, career: 789 yards, Ed Gicewicz, 1949-51
Total Offense
One game: 291 yards, Ordean Shanabrook, vs. Bucknell , 1951
One season: 1,337 yards, Don Gilbert, 1964
Career: 2,730 yards, John Sto[a, 1961-63

andLOVNGE
a unique new setting for
breakfast, lunch, dinner and late supper
where you eat like a Roman emperor '
on centurion's pay.

In the North Wing of the MAPLE+LEAF MOTOR LODGE
1620 Niaga ra Falls Bo ulev ard
Youngmann Exwy.

\4 mi. So.,

1 Mil e No rth of Sheridan Dr.
AMPLE PARKING FOR YOUR CHARIOT

Phone: TF 5 • 2610
ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHTLY

Field Goals
Most in one season: 2, Joe Oscsodal, 1965
Most in career: 3, Joe Oscsodal, 1964-65
Longest: H yards, Joe Oscsodal, vs. Cornell, 1964

You're Not Seeing Double!

Longest kickoff return
95 yards (TD), Jim Ryan, vs. Villanova, 1963
Longest punt return
75 yards (TD), Frank Nappo, vs. iagara, 1949
Longest interception return
90 yards (TD), Gerry LaFountain, vs. Delaware, 1965
Pass Interceptions
One game: 4, Peter Rao, vs. Cortland
One season: 6, Gordon Bukaty, 1959
Career: II, Gordon Bukaty. 1958-60

tate, 1953

DRIVING A "SPORTS CAR" IS
TW I CE

Punting
Longest punt: 81 yards, Bill Brogan, vs. Cortaland State, 1959
Best average, one season: 40.6-yards, Bill Brogan, 1959

THE

FUN

BOB DeGRAW

Points Scored
One game: 36, Lou Corriere, vs. Hobart, 1942
One season: 90, Lou Con·iere, 1942

2301 htAIN STREET

Largest crowd at Rotary Field
11,466, vs. Boston U., 1963

837-5600

"Where Service is the Tail that Wags the Dog"

Largest crowd ever to see U.B. play
26,126, vs. Colgate, at Civic Stadium, Buffalo, 1951

27

�1966 FOOTBALL RULES CHANGES
by Dr. Ellwood A. Geiges
Editor, NCAA Football Rules Committee
Assistant to the Commissioner
Eastern College Athletic Conference

After continued attempts annually for the past
several years to liberalize rules governing substitutions, the 1 CAA Football Rules Committee at its
meeting in ew Orleans last January made no alterations in the 1965 substitution regulations.

New rules were enacted (l) that prohibit throwing
a backward pass out of bounds to conserve time, and
(2) that make it illegal to pyramid players on defense
in an attempt to block a place kick.

However, the Committee adopted a new rule which
prohibits players from being equipped with any electronic, mechanical or other signal devices for the
purpose of communicating with any source.

marker in place of the flags marking the intersection

Approval was given for the optiontal use of a pylon
of the goal lines and

sic!~

lines.

Hurdling was redefined and the regulation governing players out-of-bounds was amended to allow an

The rule on the numbering of players on offense
was revised to make it mandatory for those ordinarily
occupying the Center, Guard and Tackle positions
wear numbers from 50 through 79.

in-bounds player to touch a game official in an outof-bounds

position

without

being

rul ed out

of

bounds.

YOU MEET THE NICEST
PEOPLE ON A HONDA!

BEST WISHES TO
THE U.B. BULLS
FOR ANOTHER
SUCCESSFUL
SEASON

14 MODELS FROM $265.

Before or After the Game - or Anytime!

*

LAUBE'S AMHERST

*

Come in and meet the sports at ...

RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE

SUPER SPORTS

Next to Lord Amherst M otor Hotel
Main Street at the Thruway

3676 SHERIDAN AT MILLERSPORT
Phone 833-9888

Plenty of Parking Space

28

Open Evenings

�BUFFALO BULLS

JOHN DO HERTY

JEFFREY THOMAS

SUPPORT THE BULLS -

JAMES M OSHER

JOHN KOVACK

GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW

I wish t o purchase . . ....... . season tickets for 1967. No payme:-tt required until billed July 1st.
Name
Address

. .. ... .. ......... ..... .. ......... .. ....... .... ... Telephone
•

•••••••••••

••

••••

••••••

•

0

•

•

0

•••

0

•

••

•

0

•

•••••••

•

••••

0

.. . .... . .. . ... .. .... ...... ........ ..... .... .

••••••••••••••

•

••

••

••

•

0

•

•

••

•••••

0

••

•

•

••••

0

0

•••

0

•••

•

•

City ......... .. ... .. .... . .... ........ · · · .. . · · · · · . · · . . . . . . . . . . . . Zone . . . . . . . . . State .................. . ..... .
Fill out the application and mail to Ticket Office, Clark Gym, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214

SWIFTNESS IS OUR BUSINESS !
Store with your po int of view

PI ERIE
MOTORS
INC.

NORTH PARK
Furniture
1386 HERTEL AVENUE

"Authorized Sunbeam - Simca Dealer''

3700 SHERIDAN DRIVE

Buffalo's Most Outstanding Furniture Store

29

833-0035

�PROGRAM PATRONS
Harold A. Adel

M. Robert Koren

J. Edwin Alford

Dexter S. Levy

William C. Baird

Norman B. Lewis

Charles F. Banas

Robert W. Lipsett

Robert R. Barrett

Samuel D. Magavern

Bartlett Buick, Inc.

Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co.

Bissell, Bronkie &amp; Assoc., Engineers

Charles Matthews

Stanley B. Blach

Harold F. Meese

Walter Brock

Robert

Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Carrel

Frank Meyers

Ross M. Cellino

Leo M. Michalek

Emil

J.

J. Metzen

Wallace H. Miller

Celmer

Robert J. Collins

Edward F. Mimmack

Charles H. Diefendorf

Arthur Mogerman

Arnold E. Di Laura

Carlton C. Rausch

John H. Dittman

Herbert R. Reitz

James P. Donnelly

Rich Products Corp.

George E. Easterbrook

Frank T. Riforgiato

Robert

J. Ehrenreich

William R. Root

Robert D. Fernbach

Leo J. Rosen

William H. Georgi

Charles G. Salisbuq

A. Donald Gilden

Vincent Scamurra

Chester P. Glor, Jr.

Roy E. Seibel

George L. Grobe, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. George N. Seifert

In Memory of Dom Grossi

George Selkirk

Dr. and Mrs. Norman Haber

Shanor Electric Supply Co.

Fenton F. Harrison

Samuel Shatkin

William J. Hildebrand, Jr.

Herbert Simon

Houdaille Corp.

Suburban Cycles, Ltd.

Sheldon Hurwitz

James R. Sullivan

Edwin F. Jaecklc

Gertrude S. Swarthout

Grover R. James,

Jr.

Harlan Swift

Rudolph V. Johnson

Irvin L. TeiT}

Russell Kidder, Jr.

Louis DeVincentis

Stephen F. Kissel

\Vilcox Motors, Inc.

Seymour H. Knox

Compliments of Dr. Wolfsohn

30

�FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

BILLS
ON

WHEN-Radio
VAN
MILLER
keeps you
in the

CENTER
OF THE

ACTION
of all games

at home
or away

AT THE CENTER OF THE DIAL 930

31

�1966- 1967
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
l'RESHi\IA:'-1 FOOTBALL
SEPTEMBER
23-at Army Plebes
OCTOBER
8-Colgate
22-at Ithaca
28-at :'-lavy
.:\!OVEi\1BER
!!- Syracuse
CROSS COU:'-ITR Y \ '.\RSITY
SEPTHIBER
20-at Brockport
2·1-at Syracuse
29-Camsius
OCTOBER
!-Invitational at LeMoyne
5- at RIP- Cortland
12- at Niagara
15- Colgate
18- :'-/iagara Community
21-Lei\loyne
26-RIT &amp; Fredonia
29-Invitational at Canisius
.:\!OVEi\!BER
1- llullalo State
5- Hystxa- Alfred
12- at Wheaton :\C.\ .\ College
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTD!BER
19-Canisius
23- Bu!falo State
26- St. Bonaventure
28- :\ iagara
30- Buf[alo State
OCrOBER
4- Canisius
7- St. Bonaventure
tl- ECAC
12- Niagara
15-ECAC
22-ECAC
29- McMaster
:\'OVEl\!BER
2- Mci\Iaster
VARSITY B.\SKE.'l BALL
DE.CL\IBER
2-Toronto
~\-Gannon
~&gt;-\Vestern Ontario
10-at Albanv
14- Syracuse '
17- St. Barbara U. Calif.
20- Cornell
j .\:\U,\RY
14- Rochestet
I tl-Niagara (Aud)
21-To he announced (Aud)
21-Brockport
28-St. :-.r ichaels
FEBRUARY
1- \Vayne State
7- Windsor
10- at Ph . Textile
11 - Wisconsin (Aud)
11- at Kent State
17-Ithaca
\8-Alban)
24-at Colgate
28-Bullalo State (Aud)

FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
2-Canisius
5-at \Vestern Ontario
14-Syracuse
20-at Cornell
21-at St. Bonaventure
_),\NU.\RY
1·1-Rochester
18- :'-liagara (Aud)
21-Brockport
28-Bullalo State
FEBRUARY
4-St. Bonaventure
7-Niagara Community
10-at Buffalo State
14- at Canisius
17- Ithaca
22- 0ntario Aggics
24-at Colgate
28-Bu!Ialo State (Aud)
VARSITY SWIMMING
DECEMBER
3-at Hobart UPNYSM
7-Rochester
9- Notre Dame
I 0- Syracuse
19- Buffalo State
.JA:-.IUARY
17-at Niagara
20-Kings Point
21-at W. Ontario
28-Brockport
FEBRUARY
3- at Cortland
4-at Colgate
I 1-at McMaster
15- at Geneseo
25-St. Bonaventure
28-Niagara
FRESHMAN SWil\fMll G
DECEMBER
3- at UPNYSM
7- Rochester
10- Syracuse
19- Buffalo State
).\NUARY
17-at iagara
28- Brockport
FEBRUARY
3- at Cortland
4-at Cortland
25- St. Bonaventure
28- Niagara
VARSITY WRESTLING
JANUARY
17-at U. Guelph
21 - Ithaca
25-McMaster
28-at Alfred
FEBRUARY
4- Colgate
10- ,Vavne State
11 - Cortland
15-at Geneseo
18-W. Ontario
21-at Brockport
25- at Rochester

32

MARCH
4-0swego
FRESHMAN \VRESTLl:\G
JA:'-IUARY
17-at U. Guelph
21-Ithaca
28-at Alfred
31-at ECTI
FEBRUARY
4-Colgate
10-ECTI
ll-Cort1and
21 -at Brockport
25-at Rochester
:\!ARCH
4- 0swego
VARSITY FENCI:\'G
DECEMBER
3-RIT
9-i\1ci\faster
I 0-Case-Cornell
j.\NUARY
14-Syracuse
21-at RIT
28- Hohart
FEBRUARY
·1- at McMaster
11-at Penn State
24-at Hobart
25-at Syracuse
:-.lARCH
4-at Notre Dame
11-at Syracuse N. Athletics
24-at NCAA
25- San Francisco State
FRESHMAN FE:-.ICI:\'C.
OECE:VIBER
3-RIT
10-Cornell
.J .\l'IUARY
14- Syracuse
21 - at RIT
28-Hobart
FEBRUARY
21 - at Hobart
25- at Syracuse
V.\RS!TY B.\SEB.\LI.
\PRIL
13-ECTI
11-at ECTl
19- at Genesco
20-at St. Bonaventure
24- Canisius
26-Colgate
29- Rochestcr
\lAY
\-at Rn
3-at Canisius
!-Niagara
8- Syracuse
10- RIT
FRESH\L\:\ B.\SEBALL
.\PRIL
29- at Rochester
i\IAY
3-at Brockport
6- Bryant Stratton
10-at RIT

.·-

�SATTLER'S
... where the field of selections
is mammoth
. . . the constant goal is spectator
satisfaction
... and you're sure to score
savings every day of the
week!

*998 BROADWAY *1021 BROADWAY *THRUWAY PLAZA BRANCH
*BOULEVARD MALL, NIAGARA FALLS BLVD., NORTH OF SHERIDAN
*HOME FURNISHINGS CITY, U.S.A., HERTEL AT ELMWOOD

�Simon Pure
Means Pure Pleasur
... pure Pleasure because you alway get
Simon Pure at its very best. Beer is
never better than the day it's bottled
and nobody gets it to you faster than we do.
In the entire brewing process,
the only thing we hurry is the delivery.
Th• W olloo"' ~•....,on I ••-• '' l ..,ll o lo ""•"" 1o•~

J,.fllo lo

t

Or~ lr lnd"""""""' 1••-•r• "

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1966-10-29 Bulls vs. Holy Cross</text>
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                    <text>�•
reserve: our
Strength 1n

More than 30 million gallons of quality
fuel in constant reserve. That's one
more reason why Metropolitan
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fuel oil distributor in New England.
Our "bench" keeps our present customers
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new members of our expanding team.

METROPOLITAN PETROLEUM COMPANY OF MASS.
500 NEPONSET AVENUE, BOSTON • TEL. 288-1100

�BOSTON COLLEGE 1966 SOUVENIR PROGRAM
BOSTON COLLEGE vs. UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
OCTOBER 2.2., 1966

Conlenf:J

From
the Desk
of the
Editor

Very Rev. Michael P. Walsh, S.J.

3

Boston College Athletic Association ------------------------

5

Duty, Honor, Country
by Cadet Captain fohn f. Lambert, Jr.
6
About Buffalo _ ______ _____________ ___________________ ___ __ ________ _ 9
B.C. Songs ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 10
The Science of Scouting by Dick Dew _____ _
11

EDDIE MILLER

The Boston College freshman team will play its first
game of the season tomorrow afternoon at Fitton Field
in Worcester against the Holy Cross fre shman. Freshman Coach Emerson Dickie and his assistant J ohn
Miller, do an excellent job with the freshmen every
year, and 1966 is no exception. It's an exciting team
to watch so give them your support by sitting on the
B.C. side of Fitton Field tomorrow afternoon, 2:00
P.M. kickoff.
We're very pleased to salute the several thousand
members of the Knights of Columbus with us at the
Stadium this afternoon cheering for the Eagles. Each
year their numbers grow, breaking the record attendance of the previous season. Boston College is indeed
grateful to the officers of the K. of C. who worked so
hard to make this annual "football day" the tremendous
success it is, and in particular, to Captain Mike Faherty
of the State Police who is the Deputy Warden of the
Knights and to Al Ricci, Chairman of this year's "football day."
Today's game with Buffalo is the third meeting between the Bulls and the Eagles. We won the first game
in 1963 15-0 and last season 18-6. Buffalo has a new
head coach this season in Doc Urich, former assistant
to Ara Parseghian at Miami of Ohio, orthwestern and
Notre Dame.
We have an open date next Saturday (October 29th)
and should have a chance to get real healthy for our
next encounter, two weeks from today against William
and Mary. The date of this one is November 5th here
at Alumni Stadium. It will be Family Day, incidentally,
an excellent chance to get the whole gang out to a
game at a modest price ($4 adults and $ 1 for children).

{;JJie rfJt/fer

Boston College Players ------------------- ____________ _ 12, 13, 15
Buffalo Coach and Roster _________ _ ____________ ------------- 16
Today' s Starting Lineups -------------------------------------------- 19
Boston College Coaching Staff and Roster ___________ 21
Good Banjo Players are Hard to Find
by f oe Concannon __ ______ _____ _______ _____

22

Buffalo Players ____ ----------------------------------------------- 24, 25
S ta tis tics ______---------------------------------------------------------------- 27
Signals ________________________ ----------------- ______ ____ ___ ___________ 29
Soccer at Boston College by Daniel Connolly ____ 32

The Eagle is published by the Boston College Athletic Association
Editor, Edward D. Miller, B.C., '57

Photo Credits
Jet Commercial Photographers - Fasch Photo Studio
Cortoon Credits
Phil Bissell

1966 SCHEDULE
Sept. 17
Sept. 24
Oct. 1
Oct. B
Oct. 15
Oct. 22

at Novy
7-27
Ohio Univ.
14-23
Virginia Military 14-0
at Penn Stote 21-30
Syracuse
C-30
Univ. of Buffalo

Oct. 29 Open
Nov. 5 William &amp; Mary
Nov. 12 at Villanova
Nov. 19 at Univ. of Mass.
Nov. 26 Holy Cross

1966 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Oct. 23
Nov. 6

at Holy Cross
Holy Cross

Nov. 11

at Dartmouth

H. 0 . Zimman, Advertising Representatives
475 Fifth Ave., N.Y.- 156 Broad St., Lynn

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MORE THAN 750 REST AU RANTS
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BOB DUNN '42

DAN DUNN '42

2

��"Nowhere's my
plan:'
·

John Hancock has as many insurance plans as there are people in this stadium. And more.
You see, we tailor your insurance plan to suit your own personal needs. (We
have a special plan for college students. And kids with 19?? on their sweatshirts.)
Give your John Hancock agent a call. He can't start designing your plan till you do.

�EDDIE CARROLL

Assistant Director of Athletics
Boston College

�Yours is the profession of
arms ... the will to win . ..
the sure knowledge that in
war there is no substitute
for victory, that if you lose,
the nation will be destroyed,
that the very obsession of
your public serv ice must be
by

CADET CAPTAIN JoHN

J.

LAMBERT, JR.

which is composed of the basic course and the advance
course; and the two year program which was inaugurated in 1964 and has already proven to be highly
successful. This program makes it possible for a student who initially did not sign up for his military obligation - to enroll in ROTC during the second semester
of his sophomore year.
During a cadet's Junior and Senior year of college he
is a sworn member of the Army Reserve and is already
under contract and receiving pay for his services. His
knowledge of the Army is increasing rapidly now and
his self-confidence is strengthening daily as he practices
his leadership ability by actually "leading" his peers.
The culmination of his training comes between his
Junior and Senior years when each cadet is required to
go to summer camp. Diagrams and lectures become
reality during his six week_s at Fort Devens in Ayer,
Mass. Each of the cadets Is carefully scrutinized and
evaluated to determine his senior class standing. He
learns responsibility by leading as many as 180 men
under near battle conditions. They rely on him and
look to him for leadership. Each day consists of seventeen hours of field training in things such as marksmanship, patroling, bayonet, first aid and using many of
the Army's latest weapons. The highlight of the 1966
summer camp was the Viet-Cong Village. Each cadet
company was given a day of actual Vietnam training
which was unbelievably real.
The Boston College ROTC is one of the most active
?rganizations on campus. R9':fC members may be seen
m almost every campus actiVIty and major field. The
major activities which the ROTC sponsors are:
The ROTC Band - the most popular activity on
campus (not restricted to ROTC members).
. The R!fle ':feam - ~hich promotes proficiency and
mterest m nfle shootmg. One of the best in New
England (not restricted to ROTC).
The Cadet Officers' Club - the service organization of ROTC which organizes, administers, and supervises
many ROTC and college sponsored activities.
The Lewis Drill Team- promotes proficiency in drill
and represents Boston College· in parades and other
ceremonies. Also one of the best in New England.
The Counterguerilla Platoon- inaugurated this year
as a means to familiarize its members with counterguerilla operations.

T HESE were the words of General Douglas MacArthur on the occasion of his farewell address to the
men of West Point, May 12, 1962. These words may
also be addressed to each graduate of the Boston College Reserve Officers' Training Corps.
The four hundred and fifty-two men that march on
the field today are future leaders of our country. These
men_ have _accepted t~e challenge and responsibility of
servtng this country In the armed services. Each one
has shown his initiative by volunteering to meet the
standards of a Cnited States Army Officer.
~OTC is a program of instruction in military science
wh1c_h complements the college curriculum, making it
possible for an undergraduate student to obtain a commission in the C nited States Army Reserve or if he so
desires, in the Regular Army at the sam; time he is
earning his degree. It requires effort on the part of the
student. Frequently it is a great deal of effort but what
in life that is worth while does not: It requ'ires classroom work, and instruction in drill and command and
field training. It covers all phases of military s~rvice
from the customs and traditions that weld our citizen
soldiers into the best of military units to the latest in
the realm o_f conflict and perhaps the most devastating
- counter msurgency.
There are currently two programs offered under the
ROTC curriculum. The traditional four year program,

TTheHEFallhighlights
of the military calendar are:
ROTC Day- today's pre-game parade and
open house after the game.
The Military Mass - a special Mass for the cadets
of .t~e brigad.e. All are welcome to participate in this
religious serv1ce.
The Spring ~eview - the official Dept. of the Army
annual InspectiOn of the ROTC unit. Outstanding
cadets are decorated at this formal ceremony.
The Military Ball - "the" social event of the year.
Th1s formal dance will be held at the Sheraton-Boston

CADET LT. COLONEL D. MICHAEL RYAN
CADET BRIGADE COMMANDER.

6

�CADET LT. J. PETER OSMOND
SUMMER CAMP TRAINING AT FORT DEVENS. ORGANIZING A PATROL.

Hotel on April 18, 1967 for cadets and their dates. All
cadets hold that this is the best dance on campus.
The Distinguished Military Students Ceremony designed to honor outstanding ROTC students. There
are nine such students this year. They are: Robert F.
Cartwright, Jr., Thomas W. Cecil, Richard A. Cummins, John ]. Lambert, Jr., Joseph P. Mariani, Jr.,
Robert P. O'Connor, Dennis M. Ryan, Noel A. Schaub,
and John H. St. George. The ceremony will be conducted in the Faculty Lounge of McElroy Commons,
tomorrow afternoon at 2 P.M.
The end result of the ROTC program is the commissioning of seniors as Second Lieutenants. On that
Saturday before graduation each senior will look back
on his four years of work and realize that his decision
was the right one. The responsibility of leadership is his
and he is confident in himself.
The Boston College ROTC Instructor Group is commanded by Col. John L. Murphy who is the Professor
of Military Science. He is an alumnus of Northeastern.
Col. Murphy has seen 26 years of active service, including four major campaigns in the South Pacific
during World War II and two years service in the
Korean War. Prior to coming to Boston College in
1964, he served with the Army General Staff in
Washington, D.C.
Col. Murphy is assisted by Major Amona K. Ho, an
alumnus of the University of Hawaii, who is assigned
as the unit's adjutant.
Other officers in the unit are Captain Kenneth H.
Montgomery, a West Point graduate. Ca'Pt. Montgomery, an airborne ranger, has just returned from
serving with the U. S. Military Advisory Command in
Vietnam. Completing the list of officers is Captain
Floyd J. Schafer, a graduate of St. Bernadine of Siena
College in London ville, ew York.
Members of the non-commissioned cadre are Sgt.
Major William L. Cote; Staff Sgt. Francis X. Gabriel;
Staff Sgt. Jesse L. Horn and SP 5 James A. Noel.
The Cadet Brigade is currently commanded by Cadet
Lt. Col. D. Michael Ryan of Gloucester. Brigade

Executive Officer is Cadet Major Joseph P. Mariani.
The First Battalion is commanded by Cadet Major
Thomas W. Cecil, and the Second Battalion is commanded by Cadet Major Richard A. Cummins.

COL. JOHN L. MURPHY
DETACHMENT COMMANDER.

7

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"The GOOD Coffee"

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Waltham Plant:

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BALDWIN STEEL ERECTION CO., Inc.
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8

�UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AT BUFFALO
The l..Jniversity of Buffalo has
been the educational and cultural
center of \Vestern :\Tew York since
1846. At that time the City of Buffalo was 14-years old and was the
home of 28,000 people.
The "University" was the School
of Medicine until 1886 when the
School of Pharmacy was added.
The school's first chancellor was
Millard Filmore, a leading citizen of
the community who continued his
UB leadership during his term as
13th President of the United States.
The 14 Cniversity Divisions are:
School of Medicine ( 1846); School
of Pharmacy (1886); School of Law
(1886); School of Dentistry (1892);
College of Arts and Sciences ( 1913) ;
Summer Sessions (1915); Millard
Fillmore College, Evening Division

( 1923); School of Business Administration (1927); School of Education ( 1931); School of Social Work
( 193 6) ; Graduate School of Arts
and Sciences ( 1939); School of
~ursing (1940); School of Engineering (1946); and University College, including associate degrees
(1958).
CB's total enrollment is more
than 20,000, of which almost half
are full-time undergraduate students.
Few institutions can equal the
pace of construction which has taken
place on the North Main Street
campus in recent years. Xo less
than 20 new buildings and additions
to existing buildings have been undertaken, including the Western
:\lew York Nuclear Research CenMARTIN MEYERSON
President

HAYES

ter, the 11-floor Tower Residence
Hall for Men, the 11-floor Goodyear Residence Hall for Women,
the $4.5-million ::--.Jorton Hall (student union), the Schools of Medicine
and Dentistry (Capen Hall), and
the Acheson Hall of chemistry.
But this is only a beginning. In
1962 UB abandoned its private
operation to become the major
campus segment of the State University of ew York. The official
name of the college, created by
State l..Jniversity officials, is: State
Cniversity of ~ew York at Buffalo.
However, popular usage, particularly in the realm of intercollegiate
sports, retains the familiar name of
University of Buffalo, or just UB.
The State University at the present
time is completing arrangements for
the purchase of a tract of land in
excess of 1,500 acres in the Town
of Amherst, about 3 miles from the
site of the present campus. There
a new campus, costing upwards of
$130-million and able to accommodate 20,000 full-time undergraduates, will be built. The present
campus will become a Health-Science Center second to none in the
world.
Nationally recognized as a leader
in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of
Buffalo continues its fine tradition
of service to the Niagara Frontier
and the State of New York.

TOWER

9

�BOSTON COLLEGE

Songs
HAIL! ALMA MATER

SWEEP DOWN THE FIELD

~0\.unrtt~

Sweep down the field for Boston,
Marching on to glory,
Forward fighting Eagles.
Carry home the spoils of victory.
OHI We'll crush the foe before us
As the Boston men of old;
So, Fight! Fight! Fight! Fight!
Fight! Fight!
Fight!
For the old Maroon and Gold.

CO·OP£RATIV£

BAnK

Hail! Alma Mater!
Thy praise we sing.
Fondly thy mem'ries round
our heart still cling.
Guide of our youth, thro' thee
we shall prevail!
Hail! Alma Mater! Hail! All Hail!
Hail! Alma Mater!
lei on the height,
Proudly thy tow'rs are raised
for the Right
God is thy Master, His law
thy sole avail!
Hail! Alma Mater! Hail! All Hail!
Words and music by T. J. Hurley, '85

Cheered to victory our team
sweeps on.
The foe is vanquished and
their spirit gone.
B-0-S-T-0-N
Boston! Boston! Boston!
Words by H. A. Kenny, '34
Music by T. N. Marier, '34

FOR BOSTON

For Boston, for Boston,
Thy glory is our own!
For Boston, for Boston,
'Tis here that truth is known;
And ever with the Right
Shall thy sons be found,
Till time shall be no more
And thy work is crowned.
For Boston, for Boston,
For thee and Thine alone!

For Boston, for Boston
We sing our proud refrain!
Fos Boston, for Boston,
'Tis wisdom's earthy fane
For here men are men
And their hearts are true,
And the towers on the Heights
Reach to heaven's own blue.
For Boston, for Boston,
Till the Echoes ring again!

Words and music by T. J. Hurley, 'B5

Cu1'rent Dividend on All Accounts

r.r~~-:r&amp;;:;f:~-::~:m~~~:;?:::?:~.::=:::r::;:::r::t.:::~====:::f{:;:t:;:;:r::~;;::::;:::::-:::=~====r:====r:::====:::-==:::-====;~:::==:::r=====::==============r:======~~~==========:===:========r============~=::::::~~r:r~.r:~=*JJ

I

Dividends paid
4 times a year.

I

I

,

I
w

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•

If you're anywhere in Boston, New York or in fact any- R
where in the North East during next January 26th thru 29th- ~{
You're Out ! ! !
f#.

m
g

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More than 5000 students from over 90 Universities will be leaving on
specially chartered GO-GO trains from Boston and New York going to &lt;-:Quebec City.
!@

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REFinancing

1~
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209 Washington Street,opposite State St.
Boston. Phone LA 3-4880

•

DANCING TO WELL KNOWN BANDS ON THE TRAINS
STREET DANCING AND NIGHT PARADES IN QUEBEC CITY
CANOE RACES ACROSS THE ICE RIDDEN ST LAWRENCE RIVER
SNOWMOBILE RACES, DOG SLED RACES, FREE SKIING

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All this including your transportation to Quebec City and first class
accommodation for only $85.00
ij
See your local campus rep today or phone Boston 734-6680 . . . New
York 349-3900 or write

m_.j

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Ownership

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QUEBEC WINTER WEEKEND
550 Sherbrooke St West,
Montreal, Canada.

$85

No reservations can be accepted after December 1st 1966

~- ·:'-~
;.~
M

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f~:_..·
~-

~;!
f:~

•··

~,L_~-

,~

~

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k~~®:$.":?.:;:r:~::=:::.t:::=m.-?::::~l=r:.=::.:::::-a:;~~:r.::::::::::-x~::::::r:::::::::::~::~:~::::~~;~~~~=:::::::::~;:::::::::::r:::::~:::s:::=::::::~t::~r:r::::::::~:::::::~;:::.:::::::::;:;:;reJn~

�o/ Scouting
By D rcK D Ew
New England Sports Editor, U.P.l.

It's a common failing of the paying customers to look
on football as a form of recreation for the biggest of
collegians who might otherwise be out ripping up trees
to get rid of their excess energy.

The detailed book on the Bulls includes analysis of
what the quarterback is likely to call on a particular
down with a specific yardage need and from a particular field position.

Entirely too many of the faithful are convinced that
the players learn their assignments under a system of
rote in which the simplest instructions are painstakingly drilled into them.

Boston College's defensive signal caller, linebacker
and Captain Eddie Lipson, has been instructed at
length on Buffalo's tendencies under particular circumstances and in countless details of which Buffalo players might do to top off a play.

The fact of the matter is, however, that today's football is so thoroughly complicated that both coaching and
playing the game is a near-science involving just about
everything from higher mathematics to extra sensory
perception.

Buffalo's tendencies, for example, include the entirely normal habit of running to the left from a field position on the right hashmark.
The Bulls' pet and most effective offensive play, the
one the Eagles will be best prepared to stop, is what
John Miller calls the "28 or 29 pitch."

The Boston College coaching staff has, for prime
example, devoted something like 224 man hours-the
equivalent of more than nine full days-to a detailed
study of this week's opponent, the Bulls of the State
University of Buffalo, .Y.

''It's run from the ~L' formation with two men lined
directly behind the quarterback and one to the right.
They can run it either way but the tendency is to the
right.

The bulk of that preparation, involving a mmtmum
of two scouting assignments and one game film, has
been compressed into the period from Sunday noon to
Tuesday afternoon or evening.

"The quarterback takes the ball, rolls, fakes to the
fullback but pulls it back and pitches to the tailback
or halfback coming around."

Jim Miller's Eagle staff, likes to have its detailed
breakdown and tendency sheets completed, the decisions made, and both the offensive and defensive assignment cards completed by Tuesday noon.

In case you want to watch for that one, the principals are sophomore quarterback Mike Murtha (14)
who fakes to junior fullback Lee Jones (36) and pitches
to senior right halfback Jim Barksdale (20).

The Buffalo analysis, for example, includes a key report by assistant freshman pilot John Miller who has
seen the Bulls perform twice and has personally devoted close to 60 hours to his study of this Saturday's
opponent.

To control that play, the Eagle staff has been concentrating on the defensive end assignments, particularly on the left side.

John was a standout three-season tackle for the
Eagles, O'Melia trophy winner as a sophomore in 1953,
and a professional player for four years before taking
up a teaching career at Revere High School.

"The end's job is to prevent the play from getting
outside, to turn it into the linebacker's zone. The end
has to recognize it in time to float parallel to the line
to bring it back inside," the final scouting report said.

Since joining Jim Miller's Boston College staff, he's
become intimately acquainted with all of the Eagle
rivals and is classified as an outstanding scout by his
boss.

If that single play study sounds simple, consider that
it is only one entry of a voluminous report which has
been served to the Eagles this week after they finished
classes in accounting, English, finance, philosophy and
the like.

There are no shortcuts in the business of scouting a
collegiate rival. It's a careful, detailed study that pays
off when one of your own offensive plays is perfectly
executed or a defensive alignment is precisely set to
stop a rival move before it ever gets rolling.

Football a form of organized recreation for the bigger kids? Forget it.

11

�BOSTON
COLLEGE
Gasson
Hall

ED LIPSON
CAPTAIN

BILL STETZ

TOM SARKISIAN

DICK POWERS

BOB HYLAND

JOHN BLAIR

GORDON KUTZ

MIKE VIOLANTE

HARRY CONNORS

TOM CARLYON

BILL DONOVAN

JOHN KANE

DICK COLLINS

TOM SCHNEIDER

MIKE O'NEILL

�BOSTON
COLLEGE

DICK DeLEONARDIS

TERRY ERWIN

BRENDAN McCARTHY

RON PERSUITTE

PAUL DellaVILLA

JOE DIVITO

DOUG SHEPARD

LEN PERSIN

MIKE EVANS

AL GIARDI

BARRY GALLUP

DAVE THOMAS

JOHN EGAN

GARY ANDRACHIK

�ENJOY THE GAME ON RADIO
BROUGHT TO YOU
BY
THE DODGE BOYS
THE DEPENDABLE DODGE
DEALER IN YOUR
NEIGHBORHOOD

DOM VALENTINO

" The Voice of Boston College"

FOR BOSTON COLLEGE
FOOTBALL
HOCKEY AND BASKETBALL

~

• • •

HOUSEHOLD
FINANCE

FOR NBC NEWS
ON THE HOUR

• • •
MONITOR

• • •
AWARD WINNING
LOCAL NEWS

IS PROUD TO PRESENT

• • •

BOSTON COLLEGE FOOTBALL

GET WITH RADIO BOSTON

ON

P=l

RADIO BOSTON WCOP

WCOP
1150 AM

100.7 FM

RADIO

14

�BOSTON
COLLEGE

LARRY KUHARICH

BILL LADEWIG

DICK KRONER

JIM GAROFALO

DICK CLEMENS

PAUL CAVANAGH

JERRY RAGOSA

JOE MARZEnJ

GEORGE LAVOIE

JOHN LAWRENCE
Senior Manager

FRITZ MASSMAN
Head Trainer

Equipment Manager

JIM GRACE

KERRY HORMAN

JIM TOUPAL

�1966

University of Buffalo

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
ROSTER

RICHARD "DOC" URICH- COACH

No.

14
15
18
19
20
21
22
24
52
26
27
3D
32
35
36
40
42
44
45
46
48
49
5D
51
53
54
55
56
57
58
6D
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
75
76
77
78
79
80
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

Name

Murtha, Mark
Martin, Daniel
York, Brian
Mason, Dennis
Barksdale, James
Rutkowski, Kenneth
Capuana, Nicholas
Svec, Steven
Wesolowski, John
McEwen, James
Coupas, Nicholas
Brennan, Thomas
Richner, David
Smith, Robert
Jones, Lee land
Sella, Daniel
Hoke, Thomas
Drankoski, Charles
Murphy, Thomas
Sinclair, Robert
Hurd, Thomas
Wells, Richard
Brisky, Dennis
Wright, Irvin
Wilbur, Curtis
Mosher, James
Kovack, John
MacKeller, Bruce
Ruggerio, Alfonse
Rishel, Rodney
Walters, Gregory
Rissell, Michael
Kowalewski, Thomas
Lehner, Lawrence
Maser, Michael
Finochio, James
Lupienski, John
Gibbons, Theodore
Hayden, William
Sabo. Donald
Pugh, Ronald
Taylor, William
Basta, John
Miceli, Anthony
Riccelli, Joseph
MacKeller, Russell
Kuzmitski, Kenneth
Pirozzolo, Richard
Thomas, Jeffrey
Embow, Robert
Przybycien, John
Kleiber, Paul
Dunn, James
Ashley, Richard
Remillard, James
Doherty, John
Hansen, Brian

Pos. Class Ht. Wt.

Q8
QB
E
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
C
HB
HB
FB
FB
FB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
LB
G
LB
G
C
C
C
LB
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
K

69
69
68
69
67
68
67
69
69
67
69
68
69
69
68
67
69
69
69
68
68
68
68
68
69
69
69
67
68
68
69
68
69
68
69
67
69
68
69
69
67
67
67
67
69
67
69
68
69
69
69
67
67
68
68
69
68

5-11
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
S-9
6-D
6-D
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
5-10
6-D
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-D
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-3
5-10
6-0
5-11
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-1
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-1
5-11

171
180
165
180
177
175
175
195
205
190
184
207
190
180
202
172
174
180
185
198
191
191
196
204
205
190
195
200
190
197
170
215
203
201
200
210
203
235
203
198
232
225
216
223
230
220
255
230
215
195
193
225
213
201
191
205
172

Hometown

Endicott, N.Y.
Huntington, L. I.
Rochester, N. Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Utica, N.Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Johnstown, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y.
Greenhurst, N. Y.
Depew, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Marcy, N. Y.
Endwell, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Watertown, N.Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Norristown, Pa.
Ovid, N. Y.
Central Islip, L. I.
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
E. Smethport, Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Coatesville, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Clayton, N.Y.
East Syracuse, N. Y.
Springdale, Pa.
Newport, R. I.
Cleveland, Ohio
Johnstown, Pa.
McKees port, Pa.
Youngstown, N. Y.
Glens Falls, N. Y.
Batavia, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Methuen, Mass.
Elmira, N.Y.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Hamburg, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Auburn, N. Y.
Cranston, R. I.
Massena, N.Y.
New Bedford, Mass.
New Bedford, Mass.
Detroit, Mich.

Coach C'rich comes to his present position wit h a set
of impressive credentials. F or 16 years he was associated with Ara Parseghian at Miami (0.), :\'orthwestcrn and :\otre Dame.
I n his first yea r at Notre D ame, Urich was responsible
for shifting Jack Snow to split end and devising the exciting offense which broke numerous Notre Dame
records and brought the F ighting Irish back to the
heights of glory after a number of seasons in the foo tball doldrums.
"Doc" Urich was born on September 10, 1928, in
Wapakoneta, Ohio. He attended Wapakoneta High
School where he captained both the football and basketball squads as a senior.
At Miami (0.) Urich was a standout in college football. He played four years and in his fresh man and
sen ior seasons his teams made appearances in the Sun
Bowl and the Salad Bowl. Miami defeated T exas Tech
at El P aso on J anuary 1, 1948, and downed Arizo·na
State at Phoenix on J anua ry 1, 195 1. " D oc" was captain
of the Miami team in his senio r year. In his junior and
senior seasons he won All-O hio honors, and in hi s last
three years he was selected All-Conference (MidAmerica) end.
After graduation from Miami m F ebruary, 195 1,
"Doc" assumed teaching and coach ing chores at M assillon (0.) High School for the remai nder of the school
term before joi ning Ara P arseghian at his alma mater
that fall as freshman coach. In 195 2 U rich moved up to
a position on the M iami varsi ty sta ff from wh ence hi s
trail led to Northweste rn, Notre D ame and then to
Buffalo.
"Doc" and his wife, the former P atricia Streight, also
of Wapakoneta, have two children, Cynthia (born in
195 2) and D anny (born in 1955 ). They now make their
home in the Town of Amherst.
Urich holds a B.Sc. and M.Ed. from Mia mi , maj oring in P hysical E ducation.

16

�After you've walked off with all the honors,
what do you do for an encore?
Meet Olds Toronado-'67 edition.
Awards for this. Awards for that. Awards for just about everything. But rest on its laurels?
Not Toronado. Swinging new look outside. Posh new detailing inside. Doors with torsion-bar
spring assists that open easier than ever to the flat-floored, room-for-six interior.
Even that fal;ulous front-wheel-drive ride is smoother artd quieter for' 67. And front disc
brakes and radial ply tires are available. Trend-settirtg Torortado: Proved and applauded
by tens of thousands of satisfied owners. Greater than ever the second time arourtd!
Olds th10ks of your safety, too, with the GM-developed enero-absorbint

steering column that can compress on severe impact up to a:.-. inches;
wtlh lour.way hazard warn•nt flasher; outstde rearvtew mtrroc; dual master
cylinder brake system, plus many other safety features- all standard for '67.

�~~£~ FOR THE TASTE
lA(

loUo~,

·•

�University of Buffalo vs. Boston College
OCTOBER 22, 1966
BUFFALO

BOSTON
PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP

PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP
POS.

NO.

NAME

NO.

NAME

85

KLEIBER

TE

87

GALLUP

LE

73

MICELI

LT

75

HORMAN

LT

64

MASER

LG

60

HYLAND

LG

56

MacKELLAR

c

50

EVANS

65

FINOCHIO

RG

66

COLLINS

71

TAYLOR

RT

76

SARKISIAN

RT

87

ASHLEY _

SE

85

O'NEIL _

RE

14

MURTHA ____

QB

7

MARZETTI

QB

20

BARKSDALE

LH

10

DELLAVILLA

LH

49

WELLS

RH

25

BENNETT

RH

36

JONES _

FB

44

McCARTHY

FB

14
15
18
19
20
21
22
24
26
27
30
32
35
36
40
42
44
45
46

Murtha, qb
Martin, qb
York, e
Mason, qb
Barksdale, hb
Rutkowski, hb
Capuana, hb
Svec, hb
McEwen, hb
Coupas, hb
Brennan, fb
Richner, fb
Smith, fb
Jones, fb
Sella, hb
Hoke, hb
Drankoski, hb
Murphy, hb
Sinclair, hb

1/.

f.

Xi-

SQUAD
68
48 Hurd, hb
69
49 Wells, hb
50 Brisky, lb
70
71
51 Wright, g
52 Wesolowski, c 72
53 Wilbur, lb
73
75
54 Mosher, g
55 l&lt;ovack, c
76
56.-MacKellar, cYJ 77
57 Ruggerio, c
78
58 Rishel, c-lb
79
80
60 Walters, g
84
61 Rissell, g
62 l&lt;owalewski, g 85
63 Lehner, g
86
64 Maser, g
87
65 Finochio, g
88
66 Lupienski, g
89
67 Gibbons, g-lb 90

Hayden, g
Sabo, g
Pugh, t
Taylor, t
Basta, t
Miceli, t
Riccelli, t
MacKellar, t
l&lt;uzmitski, t
Pirozzolo, t
Thomas, t
Embow, e
Przybycien, e
l&lt;leiber, e
Dunn, e
Ashley, e
Remillard, e
Doherty, e
Hansen, k

3
5
7
9
10
12
20
21
22
23
24
25
27
29
30
33
35
36
37

POS.

c

--------- --·--

SQUAD
DiVito, qb
40 Violante, fb
42 Zailskas, fb
Thomas, qb
Marzetti, qb 43 Carlyon, fb
Blair, qb
44 McCarthy, fb
DellaVilla, hb 50 Evans, c
51 Borsari, c
Grace, hb
Giardi, qb
53 Lavoie, g
Pierandri, hb 54 Kitlowski, g
Erwin, hb
55 Stetz, c
Robertson, hb 60 Hyland, g
Kuharich, hb 61 Andrachik, g
62 Kroner, g
Bennett, hb
Deleonardis,hb 63 Schneider, g
64 Garofalo, g
Fleming, hb
65 Nevard, g
Donovan, fb
66 Collins, g
l&lt;ane, hb
Gurry, hb
67 Hazlin, g
Salmon, hb . z yipson,g
Connors, hb

·---- -

------

RG

70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87

Powers, t
Shepard, t
Ragosa, t
Persuitte, t
Ladewig, t
Horman, t
Sarkisian, t
Kruger, t
Clemens, t
Egan, e
Kavanagh, e
Persin, e
Kutz, e
Cavanagh, e
O'Neil, e
Pesapane, e
Gallup, e
88 Hunt, e
89 Petruzziello, e

OFFICIALS
Referee
Umpire
Linesman

Fie ld Judge
Back Judge
Clock Operator

'COCA-COLA" AND

COKE" .-.FtE

Henry R. Roche
James F. Brennan
Benjamin B. Zecker
.. Lawrence J . Drew
. Francis Keough, Jr.
William T. Halloran

[,.!STEREO TRADE-MARK$ W~ICH l0(NT fV ONLY TH( PROOUC

Of THE COCA

..... ~OMPANY

PRI"'TED IN J II A

YOU NEVER GET TIRED OF

��1966

BOSTON COLLEGE

BOSTON COLLEGE

Coaching Sta/1

ROSTER
No.

3
5
7
9
10
12
20
21
22
23
24
25
27
29
30
33
35
36
37
40
42
43
44
50
51
53
54
55
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Name

DiVito, Joe
Thomas, Dave
Marzetti, Joe
Blair, John
DellaVilla, Paul
Grace, Jim
Giardi, AI
Pierandri, Harry
Erwin, Terry
Robertson, Mike
Kuharich, Larry
Bennett, Dave
Deleonardis, Dick
Fleming, Jeff
Donovan, Bill
Kane, John
Gurry, Jack
Salmon, John
Connors, Harry
Violante, Mike
Zailskas, Dan
Carlyon, Tom
McCarthy, Brendan
Evans, Mike
Borsari, AI
Lavoie, George
Kitlowski, Chris
Stetz, Bill
Hyland, Bob
Andrachik, Gary
Kroner, Dick
Schneider, Tom
Garofalo, Jim
Nevard, Mike
Collins, Dick
Hazlin, John
Lipson, Ed (Capt.)
Powers, Dick
Shepard, Doug
Ragosa, Jerry
Persuitte, Ron
Ladewig, Bill
Horman, Kerry
Sarkisian, Tom
Kruger, Bud
Clemens, Dick
Egan, John
Kavanagh, Jim
Persin, Len
Kutz, Gordie
Cavanagh, Paul
O'Neil, Mike
Pesapane, Dave
Gallup, Barry
Hunt, Carter
Petruzziello, Mike

Pos. Class Ht.

QB
QB
QB
QB

HB
HB
QB

HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
FB
FB
FB

c
c

MG
G

c

G

G
G
G
G

G
G
G
G
T
T
T
T
T
T

T
T

T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

68
69
69
67
68
69
68
68
68
69
68
69
68
69
67
66
67
69
67
67
69
67
68
68
68
69
67
67
67
69
69
67
68
68
67
68
67
67
68
69
68
68
69
67
69
68
69
68
68
67
69
67
67
69
68
67

6-2
6-2
6-0
6-5
5-9
5-11
6-1
6-2
5-11
5-9
6-1
6-0
5-10
5-10
5-11
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-3
6-0
6-0
6-3
6-4
6-1
6-3
6-2
6-2
6-5
6-2
6-1
6-1
5-11
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-3
6-8
6-3
6-2
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-4
6-2
6-4
6-2
6-4
6-2
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-4

Wt.

205
200
180
215
175
180
180
180
185
170
190
180
195
170
200
185
180
180
200
210
190
190
215
240
220
220
215
230
250
200
225
230
220
190
200
205
215
245
265
240
250
225
235
240
220
225
205
210
235
225
210
200
210
200
190
220

Hometown

Lynn
Stamford, Conn.
Washington, D.C.
New Britain, Conn.
Schenectady, N.Y.
Cleveland, 0.
Salem
Ridgefield, Conn.
Beverly
St. Paul, Minn.
Pen Valley, Pa.
Andover
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Hyde Park
Coaldale, Pa.
South Boston
Cambridge, Mass.
Malden
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Waterbury, Conn.
Hazelton, Pa.
Washington, D.C.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Wareham
Fall River, Mass.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Pewaukee, Wise.
White Plains, N.Y.
Cleveland, 0.
Milwaukee, Wise.
Erie, Pa.
Cos Cob, Conn.
Gardner, Mass.
Marion
Mystic, Conn.
Lynn
Manchester, N.H.
Lanesborough
Norwalk, Conn.
Everett
Waukesha, Wise.
N. Attleboro
Belmont
Lackawanna, N.Y.
Waban
New Milford, N.J.
Providence, R.I.
Oakmont, Pa.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
Lynn
N. Syracuse, N.Y.
West Haven, Conn.
Swampscott
New Bedford, Mass.
Old Tappan, N.J.

THE HEAD COACH AND HIS STAFF-left to Right: Jim Miller, lee
Royer (Defensive Backs), John Miller (Asst. Freshman Coach), John
McCauley (Offensive Backs), Emerson Dromgold (Offensive line),
George Clemins (Defensive line) and Emerson Dickie (Freshman Coach).

JIM MILLER- Head Football Coach

The 1966 football season will mark the beginning of
Jim :\1iller's 5th season as head coach of the Boston
College Eagles.
Jim came to the Heights in 1962 after 3 successful
seasons as head coach at the University of Detroit
where he posted records of 6-4 in 1959, 7-2 in 1960 and
5-4 in 1961. In 1962 Miller took a B.C. squad which
hadn't had a winning season in two years and directed
it to a tremendous 8-2 season. He has followed with
excellent records of 6-3 in both 1963 and 1964 and 6-4
in 1965. Thus the 45 year old Massilon, Ohio native,
who brought an 18-10 (.630) won and lost slate with
him from the Midwest, has added 26 wins against only
12 losses (.684) in his first four years at the Heights
for a grand total of 44 wins and 22 losses (and incidentally, has never been involved in a tie) over a seven
year span as head coach with a healthy overall winning
percentage of .667.
Miller played his college football at Purdue, where
he was a starting guard for 3 years and captain of the
1941 Boilermaker squad before graduating in June of
1942. He then served as a Lieutenant in the Navy Air
Corps. During his 3 0 year hitch, Miller was a Flight
Instructor and Assistant Engineering Officer.
He began his coaching career in 1946, working up
from Monticello High School (Indiana), Wabash College, ::\fiagara l.'niversity and the University of Buffalo
before returning to Purdue in 1954 as freshman coach.
In 1955, Boilermaker head coach Jack Mallenkopf appointed Jim to the varsity staff. With Jim as defensive
line coach, Purdue ranked second nationally in 1958
and always was among the Big 10's defensive leaders.
Miller is serving his second term as President of the
year old New England College Coaches Association
representing over 100 head coaches and assistants from
some 3 5 colleges in the six state area.
Jim, his wife, the former Vickie Konkel of Canton,
Ohio, and their four children, Tim, 18 (now a freshman
at his Dad's Alma Mater); Jeff, 14; Doug, 13 and
Carrie, 11; have just recently moved into their new
home in Dover, Massachusetts.
21

�by JoE CoNCANNON
College Sports Writer
The Boston Evening Globe

he wasn't playing first base for the Winchester team in
the Carling League and, of course, when he wasn't
"Strummin' on the Old Banjo.''
The future?
"I'm a marketing major. I'll see what happens in
sports. I'd like to play football if I get the opportunity.
I also like coaching. My brother is in it now and it
appeals to me."
He could always fall back on the banjo. Good ones
are hard to find.

Did you ever see a 6-2, 245 pound, left-handed Armenian banjo player?
Boston College has one.
He doesn't play in the Eagles spirited marching band.
There's no place in such an ensemble for a banjo
player.
Even if there was, he couldn't make it. He's busy
doing other things on a Saturday afternoon.
The young giant in mention answers to the name of
Tom (Zeke) Sarkisian. He's a football player. A good
one. He's the starting offensive tackle on the Boston
College football team.
"I just took it up this Summer," says Zeke. "Someone gave it to me. I bought a book that told you 'How
to Play the Banjo in so Many Easy Steps.'
"I'm not that good. I took it to Lenox pre-season.
We had a talent show one night. I strummed away and
they all sang - Paul Della Villa, Mike Violante, AI
Borsari, Jack Gurry, Tom Schneider, Jimmy Grace.
What a group.''
Sarkisian is a likeable chap who came out of Belmont High School where he played on a team that was
unscored upon in every game but one when he was a
senior. "We lost that one and played two other scoreless ties.''
He played both ways in high school, admits he
"would rather play defense" but "got stuck on offense"
when Jim Chevillot was injured a year ago. "When he
came back they kept him there and moved me to
offense.''
Zeke is a two-sport athlete at Boston College. He
plays first base on Eddie Pellegrini's baseball team and
he shuffled between the two sports when Jim Miller
was running Spring drills.
"I started in the outfield in Little League (when he
must have been the biggest one around-at 160 pounds)
but I never could catch the ball. I'm left-handed, so I'm
limited. The coach moved me to first base. I've been
there ever since.''
The name Zeke was passed down from an older
brother, Martin, who now teaches and coaches at Newburyport High School. His name is Armenian and he
was told it means "Big Body" in translation. Quite
apropos.
This past summer Zeke stayed around the Heights
"I worked in the intramural office and I painted. Dick
DeLeonardis and myself painted the locker rooms and
the offices right here (Roberts Center)." That's when

TOM SARKISIAN

22

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Boston College Football Programs
We also print programs for:
BAY STATE RACEWAY, FOXBORO
BOSTON GARDEN
BOSTON PATRIOTS
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GARDEN STATE, NEW JERSEY
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Don't forget to visit our Chestnut Hill store
where you will find New England's most modern
meat and produce section and a new cozy coffee
shop, "On the Green" where you may relax
while shopping.

23

�UNIVERSITY
OF
BUFFALO
Sherman
Hall

WILLIAM TAYLOR
Captain

DICK ASHLEY

JAMES BARKSDALE

JOHN BASTA

DENNIS BRISKY

NICHOLAS CAPUANA

JIM DUNN

BOB EMBOW

JAMES FINOCHIO

TED GIBBONS

TOM HOKE

THOMAS HURD

LEELAND JONES

PAUL KLEIBER

TOM KOWALEWSKI

�UNIVERSITY
OF
BUFFALO
Baird

Music
Hall

JOHN LUPIENSKI

MICK MURTHA

ROD RISHEL

BRUCE MacKELLAR

JOHN PRlYBYCIEN

MIKE RISSELL

RUSS MacKELLAR

RON PUGH

DAN SELLA

JIM McEWEN

JIM REMILLARD

RICK WELLS

ANTHONY MICELI

JOE RICCELLI

�/

r

BEST WISHES TO JIM MILLER AND THE SQUAD
BILL ABELY- '49
General Manager
Fore River Motors

r ~J

418 Quincy Avenue
Junction of the Southern Artery
Quincy, Mass. 479-2200

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Includ ing
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Steel Scaffold ing, Swing Stages
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SERVING INDUSTRY WITH FINE JEWELS SINCE 1913

Hilcrest 4-4050
RANDALL P. CAMERON, President
Class of 1949 CBA

26

�1966 Boston College Football Statistics
SCORE BY PERIODS
Boston College
Opponents

1 2 3 4
15 14 14 13
19 35 22 34

TEAM STATISTICS
Total First Downs
First Downs Rushing
First Downs Passing
First Downs Penalties
Net Rushing Yardage
Net Passing Yardage
Total Yardage
Total Plays
Rushing Plays
Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
Passes Int. By
No. Penalties-Yards
Fumbles Lost
No. Punts- Yard
Punting Average

Total
56
110

Opp.
B.C.
89
78
49
40
26
32
4
6
828
981
528
608
1589
1356
"337
344
233
219
104
125
46
38
7
7
27-238 20-186
3
9
31-1094 29-1092
37.6
35.3

INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
McCarthy
Bennett
Erwin
Thomas
DeLeonardis
Donovan
DellaVilla
Marzetti
Violante
Kane
DiVito
PASSING
Marzetti
Thomas

No.
61
24
5
18
5
16
"31
48
7
3
1

Yds.
279
106
22
78
21
66
93
140
19
0
(-5)

Avg.
4.5
4.5
4.4
4.3
4.2
4.1
3.0
2.9
2.7
0.0

TD
0
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
0

Att. Comp. Yds. TD Int.
66
20
276 2 6
59
18
252 1 1

RECEIVING
Gallup
DellaVilla
O'Neill
Bennett
Kavanagh
Eagan
McCarthy

No.
11
8
7
6
4
1
1

PUNTING
DiVito
Robertson

No.
25
5

Yds.
157
88
140
66
54

12
11
Yds.
932
162

TD
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
Avg.
37.4
32.4

Avg.
PUNT RETURNS
No.
Yds.
Zailskas
4
25
0
DeLeonardis
4
14
0
Grace
3
0
0
1
0
0
Salmon
1
Carlyon
0
0
INTERCEPTION RETURNS No.
Yds.
TD
2
35
0
Grace
Lipson
2
19
0
Carlyon
1
18
0
14
1
0
Salmon
1
0
0
Connors
TD
PAT Total
FG
SCORING
5-5
11
1
O'Neill
0-3
2(pass) 8
1
0
Bennett
6
1
0
0
DellaVilla
6
0
0
Donovan
1
6
0
1
0
Kane
6
1
0
0
Marzetti
1
0
0
6
McCarthy
6
1
0
0
Thomas
1-1
1
0
0
Kutz
Won 1 Lost 4
THE SCHEDULE
Sept. 17-at Navy
7-27
Sept. 24-0hio University
14-23
14-0
Oct. 1-V.M.I.
21-30
Oct. 8-at Penn State
Oct. 1&gt;-Syracuse
0-30
Oct. 22-Buffalo
Nov. &gt;-William and Mary
Nov. 12-at Villanova
Nov. 19-at Massachusetts
Nov. ~Holy Cross

"Keeping an Eagle Eye on the Opponents"
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

NAVY 2-3-0
17-Boston College
24-at Southern Methodist
1-at Air Force
8--at Syracuse
15-at Pittsburgh
22- William and Mary
29--Notre Dame (Phila.)
&gt;-Duke
12-at Vanderbilt
~Army (Phila.l

OHIO U. 4-1-0
Sept. 17-at Purdue
Sept. 24-at Boston College
Oct. 1-at Kent State
Oct. 8--Toledo
Oct. 15-at Xavier
Oct. 22-Miami (0.)
Oct. 29--Dayton
Nov. &gt;-at Western Michigan
Nov. 12-at Bowling Green
Nov. 19--Marshall
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

V.M.I. 2-3-0
17-at Villanova
24-Georgia
1-at Boston College
7- at Richmond
1&gt;-at Virginia
22-George Washington
29--William and Mary
5-at So. Mississippi
12-at The Citadel
24-Virginia Tech

27-7
3-21
7-15
14-28
24-7

3-42
23-14
12- 10
21- 6
24-10

14-13
7-43
0-14
34-20
27- 38

PENN STATE 2-3-0
Sept. 17-Maryland
Sept. 24-at Michigan State
Oct. 1-at Army
Oct. 8--Boston College
Oct. 1&gt;-at U.C.L.A.
Oct. 22- at West Virginia
Oct. 29--California
Nov. &gt;-Syracuse
Nov. 12-Georgia Tech
Nov. 19--at Pittsburgh
SYRACUSE "3-2-0
Sept. 1O-at Baylor
Sept. 24-U.C.L.A.
Oct. 1-Maryland
Oct. 8--Navy
Oct. 15-at Boston College
Oct. 22-at Holy Cross
Oct. 29--Pittsburgh
Nov. &gt;-at Penn State
Nov. 12-Fiorida State
Nov. 19--at West Virginia
BUFFALO 2-3-0
Sept. 17-at Kent State
Sept. 24-Cornell
Oct. 1- Villanova
Oct. 8--at Boston University
Oct. 15-at Dayton
Oct. 22-at Boston College
Oct. 29--Holy Cross &lt;Hl
Nov. &gt;-Delaware
Nov. 12-at Tampa (Nl
Nov. 19--Youngstown
(H) Homecoming
&lt;Nl Night Game
HOLY CROSS 2-1-1
Sept. 24-at Army
Oct. 1-Dartmouth
Oct. 8-at Colgate
Oct. 15-at Boston University
Oct. 22-Syracuse
Oct. 29-at Buffalo
Nov. &gt;-Massachusetts
Nov. 12-Rutgers
Nov. 19--Connecticut
Nov. 2~t Boston College

27

1&gt;- 7
8--42
0-11
30-21
11-49

12-35
12-31
28-- 7
28--14
30-0

27-23
21- 28
28-- 7
1~26

3-13

0-14
7-6
14-14
17-14

Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

WILLIAM AND MARY 3-1-1
17-East Carolina
24-at West Virginia
1-at George Washington
8--Villanova
1&gt;-The Citadel
22-at Navy
29-at V.M.I.
S-at Boston College
12-Virginia Tech
19-at Richmond

VILLANOVA 2-3-0
Sept. 17-V.M.I.
Sept. 24-Toledo
Oct. 1-at Buffalo
Oct. 8--at William and Mary
Oct. 1&gt;-Delaware
Oct. 22-West Chester
Oct. 29--Xavier
Nov. 12-Boston College
Nov. 24-at George Washington
Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

MASSACHUSETTS 3-1-0
17-Maine
24-at Dartmouth
8--Connecticut
15-at Rhode Island
22-Boston University
29--at Vermont
&gt;-at Holy Cross
12-New Hampshire
19--Boston College

7-7
13-24
10-3
34-14
24-6

13-14
20-11
7-28
14-34
1~14

10-7
7-17
12- 6
14-9

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28

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�OFFICIAL SIGNALS

•

••
1. Offside (infraction
of scrimmage or
free kick formation)

7. Personal foul

3. Illegal
motion

2. Illegal procedure,
position, or substitution

8. Clipping

9. Roughing
the kicker

4. Illegal shift

10. Unsportsmanlike conduct

~
I

20. Touchdown or
field goal

6. Delay of game

11. Illegal use of
hands and arms

••

,

I

13. Illegally passing
or handing
ball forward

5. Illegal
return

14. Forward
pass or kick
catching
interference

21. Safety

15. Ineligible
receiver
downfield
on pass

17. Incomplete
forward pass,
penalty
declined, no
play or no
score

16. Ball
illegally
touched,
kicked, or

22. Time-out; referee's
discretionary or excess
time-out: follow with
tapping hands on chest

23. First down

29

18. Helping
runner or
interlocked
interference

24. Ball ready
for play

••

'

19. Ball dead; if hand
is moved from side
to side: touchback

25. Start the
clock

�GOLF

TENNIS

who are privileged
to outfit the Eagles

BASEBALL

~.a) \

t

FOOTBALL

~
HOCKEY

wish Jim Miller, his staff and the
players every success ...

•
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JOHN W. (BUCKY) WARREN '33-W. JOSEPH SWANSON
BUCKY WARREN B.C. '62

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I

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31

�SOCCER AT BOSTON COLLEGE
by

DANIEL

J. CoNNOLLY

The 1966 Boston College Soccer Club: Front Row: Tom Warwick, Roman Martinez, Bayo
Jegede, Jim Hinchey, Alonso Villegas, Pradeep Niihawan; Second Row: Barry Cahill, Frank
Sapienza, Alfred "Skip" Gostyla, President Carmine "Saab" Sat-no, Captain Rich Quinn,
Charlie Ponera, Steve Angelini; Back Row: Secretary Dan Connolly, John Buckley, Stan
Wasowski, David "Doc" Cavan, Jeff McCormack (goalies must wear a contrasting uniform ),
Steve Innes, Tony Narciso, Coach AI Rufe; Missing: Frank Mwaura, Bill Plunkett, and Alex
Kalindawalo.

While you are enjoying today's
football game in Alumni Stadium,
the "other" Boston College football
team will be playing at Lowell,
Mass ., against Lowell Tech. The
"other" team consists of Boston
College students who play the
world's football game-Soccer.
~ow in its fourth season the
first with a regular schedule and
coach-the Boston College Soccer
Club is attempting to establish to
new fall sport on an intercollegiate
level. Until this season the Club
operated on a limited basis, playing
only scrimmage games against junior varsities and freshman teams
in the area.
With the financial aid from various student government organizations on campus, the Club has been
able to equip themselves with uniforms and goal nets. The Athletic
Association has supplied lockerroom facilities and the use of the
new intramural field north of Alumni Stadium. The players have supplied the transportation and hustle
-and the team owns a respectable
3-2 record in regular play.
The Club has a definite international flavor with many of the
University's foreign students participating; but the majority of Club
members are local students with no
experience in soccer before attending Boston College. An example of
this is the team Captain - Rich
Quinn. Rich is a senior in C.B.A.
whose play at fullback has been a
big factor in Club successes. He
played football at Boston College
High before moving to the Heights.

Carmine "Saab" Sarno is the Club
president and one of the few Americans with extensive experience before coming to Boston College. Carmine played for the Acton-Boxborough High team; while Skip
Gostyla, the leading scorer, played
at Bloomfield High in Bloomfield,
Conn., before taking the field for
B.C.
The Club's new coach is AI Rufe
-a second year graduate student
in the College of Business Administration. AI brings a great deal of experience to Boston College as he was
All-Mason-Dixon Conference his
senior year at goalie at Mt. St.
Mary's College in Emmitsburg,
Maryland. His status this season is
volunteer coach, but many feel that
he will be in the coaching ranks for
a long time.
Hard work and persistence has
paid off for the Club in a big way
this season, and it appears that Boston College now has another team
they can be proud of.
1966 SCHEDULE
Opp.
B.C.
5
3
Gordon College
1
12
Worcester Jr. Col.
6
American International
3
5
0
ichols College
0
7
Worcester Jr. Col.
TODAY At Lowell Tech
Oct. 25 Wentworth Institute
Oct. 27 At Assumption College
Oct. 29 Nasson College
Nov. 1 St. Francis (Me.) College
Nov. 5 At Salem St. College
• ov. 9 At Holy Cross College
• ov. 13 At Stonehill College

32

W: H. Davis (left), Alcoa's General ManagerIndustrial Relations, says: "We've found that
Army ROTC graduates with active duty experience as officers possess better than average
initiative, foresight, and responsibility . These
are qualities we rate very highly, and we gladly
pay a premium to get them."

Why did
Alcoa
hire
Rod WilsonP
Because Alcoa needs men to fill key
positions-men capable of moving to
the top; men who seek and measure up
to responsibility . Rod W ilson is that
kind of man. An Army ROTC Distinguished Military Graduate at Colorado
State University, Rod won an officer's
commission in the Regular Army along
with his degree. Forty-four months of
active duty, including 16 months overseas as an artillery commander, earned
Rod Wilson 24-carat credentials as a
leader, a man schooled in the demanding disciplines of command, the kind
of man Alcoa looks for.
If you're this kind of man, prove it to
yourself, and to the companies like
Alcoa who are looking for you. How?
Get in Army ROTC. Stay with Army
ROTC, all the way to success.

ARMY ROTC

�REAL ESTATE

•

MORTGAGES

•

INSURANCE

Eddie Pellagrini Real Estate Co., Inc.

94 WASHINGTON STREET
WEYMOUTH 88, MASS.
ED 5-9000

Ths 52-story Prudential Tower stands in
ths heart of the new
Boston.

*

*

EASTMAN DILLON
SHATTERS TRADITION

*

*
*

STADIUM INFORMATION
The First Aid Room is located directly under the opening at
Gote A (The Main Gate). A doctor and nurse are on duty at
every game.

Lost and Found Headquarters is also located at Gate A.
For the convenience of our fans, rest rooms for ladies and
gentlemen are located under the stands on either side of the
field .
The Boston College side of the field-the home side-is referred to as the Eost stands and Press Box A is on this sideThe Visiting side is the West stands and Press Box B is on
this side.
Public telephones are located inside and outside Gate A-Ask
the gate ottendant for a pass out check to make your coli.

Be/ore
and
After
the
When ]ames F. Cleary, right, partner, Eastman
Dillon Union Securities &amp; Co., signed for headquart;rs space in Prudential Tower's 40th floor, his
firm became ths first brokerage to move its entire
Boston operation from the downtown financial district to Prudential Center. At left is John T. Fallon,
executive vice-president, R. M. Bradley &amp; Co., Inc.,
the tower's exclusive office leasing agents.

Game

BOOKSTORE
McELROY COMMONS
JEWELRY

(I R~o~;.,~~~~~~~~ !..~?·· INC.
RESIDENTIAL 250 Boy Iston St.
Boston
co 7-5010

COMMERCIAL -

INDUSTRIAL

99 Mt. Auburn St.

622 Hammond St.
Chestnut Hill
LO 6-8150

Cambridge
UN 4-6660

* GLASSWARE

SOUVENIRS
Open: 8:30 a.m. to Noon; 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

*

EAGJ.E•S NEST
Snack Bar, McElroy Commons
Open: 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.

Our Prudential leasing oiiice.- 4352 Prudential Tower

33

�BAKER &amp; COMPANY, Inc.
General Contractors
3475 WASHINGTON ST.
BOSTON 30, MASS.

Tonight, you can enrich your home with
the sound ol this KLH stereo masterpiece
... and record selections lrom Boston's
linest Hi Fi 1stereo center.

MANUFACTURERS &amp; PAVERS
of Bituminous Concrete Pavements
Special Purpose Pavements
and Colored Pavements
our Specialty

CRAMER
817-821 Boylston Street 1 Boston· CO 7-4700

OPPOSITE THE PRUOENTIAL
GPEN EVERY EVENING ' TIL 9 , SATURDAYS

TIL 5 P . M .

WONDER

Frankfurter

ROLLS

~·--

34

�ALL the Staff
CHARLES F.

of

MURPHY
INCORPORATED

@ N u r HILL TRAVEL, rNa.

Insurance

wish

BOSTON COLLEGE
A WINNING SEASON

Rose M. Gilford, President

CHARLES F. MURPHY, '30

1200 Boylston St.

CHARLES F. MURPHY JR., '55

Chestnut Hill 67, Mass.
REgent 4-0600

MERCHANTS
CO-OPERATIVE BANK

M. B. Foster Electric Co., Inc.

LARGEST CO-OPERATIVE BANK IN
NEW HAVEN, CONN. -

MASSACHUSETTS

BOSTON, MASS.

Conveniently located at

PORTSMOUTH, N . H.

125 Tremont at Pork Street
Boston
HENRY H. PIERCE, President

Electrical Contractors
Boston College Buildings

LARGEST in Assets ····-·························· Over $100,000,000.00
LARGEST in Holdings of
Government-Guaranteed Loans ........ Over $ 44,000,000.00
LARGEST in Cash and Securities ............ Over $ 20,000,000.00
LARGEST in Guaranty,
Surplus and Reserves ····················----- Over $

New Stadium-School of Education-School of low
Philosophy Building St. Mary's Hall -

Science Building -

6,600,000.00

SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

library

Individual Accounts, Joint, Corporate, Pension,
Charitable, Retirement and Trust Accounts up to ......$30,000.

St. Ignatius Church

Gymnasium - Skating Rink

DIVIDENDS PAYABLE QUARTERLY
ALL ACCOUNTS INSURED IN FULL

Higgins Hall

35

�MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

Purveyors of Bread

to

164 SCHOOL STREET
SOMERVILLE, MASSACHUSETTS
MOnument 6-4750

02145

BOSTON COLLEGE

WonJerlanJ,

Howland

REVERE BEACH

LINEN SUPPLY COMPANY
INCORPORATED

cThe Home of Greyhound Racing"

40 BRISTOL STREET
BOSTON 18, MASS.
HAncock 6-6630

36

�Football excitement ...
invigorating autumn air . ..
and dining at Valle's Steak
House ... the perfect
combination!

Famous 1-LB. Broiled
Boneless

SIRLOIN
STEAK

Only the finest U.S. Choice and
Prime Western Steer Beef
gets Valle's Circle V Brand

Complete
Dinners
$1.95 to $3.95

Four Course
Luncheons
99c to $1.85
Except Sun. &amp; Hoi.

WARWICK
(Six Miles south of Providence)
ROUTE 1 Near Airport
Exit 37 off Rte 95
Newton, Saugus, Braintree and
Andover, Mass. - Kittery and
Portland, Me. - Hartford, Conn.
All Prtc:es Subject to

Ch~nce

SAUGUS

NEWTON

Route 1

BRAINTREE

Route 9

S.E. Expressway
----~----

�CHEER
FOR MILK'S
VITALITY
Put Vitality on your team ...
drink milk! A glass of cool,
refreshing milk with meals
and snacks helps see you
through the busiest fall
schedule. No other beverage
helps you get the lasting
energy found only in nature's
Vitality drink ... Milk. You'll
cheer for milk's Vitality.

a message from dairy farmer members of

•

•
amer1can
dairy
association

�Alumni Stadium- Univ. of Buffalo vs. Boston .College- Oct. 22, 1966
BULLS

14
15
18
19
20
21
22
24
26
27
30
32
35
36
40
42
44
45
46

48
49

50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
75
76
77
78
79
80
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

Mu rtha, Mick ________________ QB
Martin, Dan ____________________ QB
York, Brian _______________________ E
Mason, Dennis _____________QB
Barksdale, Jim ______________ HB
Rutkowski, Ken ______________ HB
Capuano, Nick ______________ HB
Svec, Steve ____________________ HB
McEwen, Jim _________________ HB
Coupas, Nick _________________ HB
Brennan, Tom ______________ FB
Richner, Dave -------------~--FB
Smith, Bob ___________________ FB
Jones, lee ____________________ FB
Sella, Dan _____________________ HB
Hoke, Tom ____________________ HB
Drankoski, Chuck ________ HB
Murphy, Tom _________________ HB
Sinclair, Bob __________________ HB
Hurd, Tom _____________________ HB
Wells, Rick ____________________ HB
Brisky, Dennis __________________ LB
Wright, lrv ________________________G
Wesolowski, Jack ________C-LB
Wilbur, Curtis __________________ LB
Mosher, Jim ______________________ G
Kovack, John ____________________ C
MacKellar, Bruce _____________C
Ruggerio, AI ___________________ C
Rishel, Rod __________________ C-LB
Walters, Greg _________________G
Rissell, Mike ______________________G
Kowalewski, Tom ____________ G
Lehner, larry _________________G
Maser, Mike ___________________ G
Finochio, Jim ___________________G
lupienski, John ______________G
Gibbons, Ted ____________ G-LB
Hayden, Bill ___________________G
Sabo, Don _____________________G
Pugh, Ron ______________________T
Taylor, Bill ______________________T
Basta, John --------------------T
Miceli, Tony ______________________T
Riccelli, Joe ______________________T
MacKellar, Russ _____________T
Kuzm itski, Ken _________________T
Pirozzolo, Dick ________________T
Thomas, Jeff ___________________T
Embow, Bob _____________________ E
Przybycien, John ______________ E
Kleiber, Paul ____________________ E
Dunn, Jim ______________________ E
Ashley, Dick ______________________ E
Remillard, Jim _________________ E
Doherty, John __________________ E
Hansen, Brian __________________ K

DEPTH CHART

DEPTH CHART
OFFENSE
TE 85 Kleiber
LT 73 Miceli
LG 64 Maser
c 56 MacKellar
RG 65 Finochio
RT 71 Taylor
SE 87 Ashley
QB 14 Murtha
LBH 20 Barksdale
FB 36 Jones
RHB49 Wells

86
79
61
52
68
79
44
19
24
30
21

Dunn
Thomas
Rissell
Wesolowski
Hayden
Thomas
Drankoski
Mason
Svec
Brennan
Rutkowski

OFFENSE
LE 87 Gallup
LT 75 Horman
LG 60 Hyland
c 50 Evans
RG 66 Collins
RT 76 Sarkisian
RE 85 O'Neil
QB
7 Marzetti
LH 10 Della Villa
RH 25 Bennett
FB 44 McCarthy

s

70
76
66
67
75
50
51
62
22
42
48

Pugh
MacKellar
Lupienski
Gibbons
Riccelli
Brisky
Wright
Kowalewski
Capuano
Hoke
Hurd

84
72
69
52
71
84
58
54
42
40
22

Przybycien
Basta
Sabo
Wesolowski
Taylor
Przybycien
Rishel
Mosher
Hoke
Sella
Capuano

LE
LT
LLB
MG
RLB
RT
RE
LC
LS
RS
RC

87 Gallup
71 Shepard
68 Lipson
53 Lavoie
61 Andrachik
72 Ragosa
83 Kutz
20 Giardi
43 Carlyon
12 Grace
36 Salmon

SPECIALISTS
PAT, FG and K0-80 Embow, 48 Hurd
Punt-40 Sella, 44 Drankoski

BUFFALO SCHEDULE

Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

17
24
1
8
15
22
29
5
12
19

at Kent State
27-23
21-28
Cornell
Villanova
28-7
at Boston Univ. 16-26
at Dayton
3-13
at Boston College
Holy Cross
Delaware
at Tampa
Youngstown

OFFICIALS

Referee
Henry R. Roche
Umpire
James F. Brennan
linesman
Benjamin B. Zecker
Field Judge
lawrence J. Drew
Back Judge
Francis Keough, Jr.
Clock Operator
William T. Halloran

J_ Kavanagh
Powers
Garofalo
Borsari
Kroner
Penuitte
Egan
DiVito
Kane
Deleonardis
Violante

DEFENSE

DEFENSE
LE
LT
LG
RG
RT
RE
LLB
RLB
LHB
RHB

81
70
64
51
62
73
80
3
33
27
40

84
74
67
77
65
73
88
35
21
37
9

Cavanagh
Ladewig
Hazlin
Kruger
Nevard
Penuitte
Hunt
Gurry
Pierandri
Connors
Blair

SPECIALISTS
Punting -

23 Robertson, 3 DiVito

Kickoffs and PAT's -

85 O'Neil, 83 Kutz,

BOSTON COLLEGE SCHEDULE

Sept.
Sept.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

17
24
1
8
15
22
5
12
19
26

at Navy
7-27
Ohio University 13-23
V.M.I.
14-0
at Penn State 21-30
Syracuse
0-30
Buffalo
William &amp; Mary
at Villanova
at U. Mass.
Holy Cross

SERIES RECORD

THIRD MEETING
B.C. Won 2, Lost 0, Tied 1
Last Meeting- 1965
B.C. 18 - Buffalo 6

EAGLES

3
5
7
9
10
12
20
21
22
23
24
25
27
29
30
33
35
36
37
40
42
43
44
50
51
53
54
55
60
61
62
63
64

65
66
67
68
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

DiVito, Joe
QB
Thomas, Dave
_QB
QB
Marzetti, Joe
Blair, John _ _ _ _ _QB
Della Villa, Paul _ _ _ HB
Grace, Jim
HB
Giardi, AI
QB
Pierandri, Harry
____ HB
Erwin, Terry
HB
Robertson, Mike _ _ _ KS
Kuharich, larry ____ HB
Bennett, Dave
HB
Deleonardis, Dick _ _ HB
Fleming, Jeff
HB
Donovan, Bill
FB
Kane, John
HB
Gurry, John
HB
Salmon, John
HB
Connors, Harry _____ HB
Violante, Mike
FB
Zailskas, Dan
_fB
Carlyon, Tom
FB
McCarthy, Brendan _ _ fB
Evans, Mike
C
Borsari, AI
C
Lavoie, George ____________ MG
Kitlowski, Chris __ __MG
Stetz, Bill _______JAG
Hyland, Bob _______G
Andrachik, Gary _______G
Kroner, Dick ________G
Schneider, Tom __
G
Garofalo, Jim _________G
Nevard, Mike
G
Collins, Dick
G
Hazlin, John ____________G
Lipson, Ed ____________G
Powers, Dick _ _ _ _T
Shepard, Doug
T
Ragosa, Jerry _______T
Persuitte, Ron ______T
Ladewig, Bill
T
Horman, Kerry ______T
Sarkisian, Tom _ _ _ _T
Kruger, Bud
T
Clemens, Dick
T
Egan, John _______ E
Kavanagh, Jim
E
Persin, Len _______ E
Kutz, Gordie _______ E
Cavanagh, Paul _____________ E
O'Neil, Mike _______________ E
Pesapane, Dave ___________ E
Gallup, Barry _________________ E
Hunt, Carter ________________ E
Petruzziello, Mike ____ E

�A

OOTBALLST
Qui

Halftime and After Game Reports of Vital Team Statistics and Individual Lea

G~~
tEAM

Circle One

FINAL

23 ..

srAnmcs

.......

~do

Q.

'7

RusiWag Yardage (Net)

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

rJ
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Pcwlllfl YCIJ'daae (Met)

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

~s--

Pauu (Comp tlon$-Attempta) •

•

•

•

•

Pcuaes lntercepiecl by

•

• • •

flnt Downs •

•

• •

•

•

•

Punts (Number-Average) •

•

•

-

Fumbles 1olf •

•

Yards Penalized

•

• •

........
.......

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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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              <text>Programs</text>
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                <text>1966-10-22 Boston College vs. University of Buffalo</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text> Includes "Flash Football Stats" and a rundown of each period of play</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1966-10-22</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>UNIVERSITY
OF DAYTON

GAME

THE
QUEEN
CANDIDATES

(Page 17)

•

�earner a stores , inc.
'21 E. SECOND ST.
TOWN AND COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTER

TWA SUPERJETS
To
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an
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os Angele
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Las Vegas

�SAVE

NEVER

TWICE

A DULL

-

AT

MOMENT

KROGERS

A scene from the coming
arts series production,
THE WHITE DEVIL.

I.
A University offers many things. Not
the least is entertainment. Naturally,
athletics first come to mind when one
speaks of entertainment within a University. The football game today, the
soccer contest tomorrow, the basketball,
ice hockey and wrestling games and
matches of this winter and the baseball,
tennis and golf competition in the spring
please the man or woman who is seeking relaxation.
But this is only one area where a
University proves its versatility. While
you are watching this football game
today many people on this campus are
planning more entertainment for you.
There is a committee who spends the
year planning the University Arts Series.
Another group seeks the best religious
speakers of the world for its Religion in
Life Series. Others seek your applause
through the drama, lecture, film and the
art gallery.
While one end of campus buzzes once
a week with a football game, or twice
a week in the basketball season, the rest
of our 76 acres is continually aglow with
the achievements of others in the University family.
Not long ago the Ballroom of the
Kennedy Union overflowed with an audience of 1,000 for Juan Serrano and his
Flamenco guitar in the Arts Series. There
is more to come in the next two months.
The Series offers John Canaday, internationally-known Art Critic of the New
York Times, October 27th in the Ballroom. The Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra, a constant visitor to the campus,
is in the Fieldhouse November 2nd.
Carolyn Faust, a gifted soprano, sings
in the little Theater November 9th and
a professional theater group from New
York, the Circle in the Square, offers
White Devil, an Elizabethan tragedy, November 14th.
The Religion in life Series presents
two programs this year. Two weeks ago
a German Lutheran minister, Pastor Max
Lackmann, imprisoned by the Nazis,

talked on Vatican II. On October 26th,
in the Catholic portion of Religion in
Life, Dr. John Boutselis, an expert on
the much-talked-about birth control pill,
will discuss this latest development in
the Kennedy Union. Later, Rev. Dr. Harvey Cox of the Harvard Divinity School
and author of the controversial book,
Secular City, will speak at the Westminister Presbyterian Church, November 3rd.
The U.D. Players, a tradition at the
University, are going bigger and better
this year with six plays, all Broadway or
off-Broadway hits. Thorton Wilder's great
play, The Skin of Our Teeth, is the first
offering October 20 through 23, in the
Little Theater. Before the first of the
year, the comic play, The Days and
Nights of Beebee Fenstermaker, bursts
onto the little Theater stage, December
1 through 4. Later, Wonderful Town (My
Sister Eileen), and The Lark (Joan of
Arc) will be presented.
Films from over the world come to the
Kennedy Union through the efforts of the
Classic Film Society. Godard's Breathless, a French production, is the November 20 offering with successful showings
in many countries. A Japanese picture,
Shindo's The Island, with no dialog, is
the unique feature on December 11.
Versatility is the keyword in the quietly
comfortable Kennedy Union Art Gallery.
Bela Horvath, a noted and local painter,
has his "color-full" paintings in the JFK
until October 29th. The Miami University Print Show and the Art Exhibition
Posters from Dayton Art Institute library
are exhibited October 30th to November
26th. Marianist Religious Art, in keeping
with the Christmas season, is in the
Gallery November 28 through January 5.
There it is. While our football and
basketball teams have drawn loyal and
dedicated fans, these other productions,
open to you and you and you, also have
had their devotees through the years.
These are some ways in which the University tries to enrich itself, its student
body, its employees and the community.

Low, Low

Prices

2.
plus Top
Value

Stamps

1

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Multiplex
Stereo
Broadcasts
in Dayton

I
M 0 TEL
76 Luxurious air·
conditioned units

•

Free swimming pool

WVUD
The Radio Voice of
the University of Dayton

•

Free TV and Tele·
phones in every room

•

Dining room Cocktail Lounge
1/.;

•

Mile to 36 hole
golf course

•

3 Miles from Downtown
2700 SOUTH DIXIE
HIGHWAY 25 SOUTH

MUSIC
Classical, Easy, Standard

•

298-1411

COFFEE BREAK EDUCATION
Short Topical Talks
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News, Sports, Markets Daily
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Religion, Culture, Service

LET YOUR
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IN THE ...

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CO.~ INC.
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DAYTON

Yellow
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ON YOUR FM DIAL

CONTRACTORS
for

SHERMAN HALL
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STADIUM

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LIBRARY
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General Manager

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L. M.

BE R R V

AND COMPANY

JOE BURNS

WOHLLEBEN HALL

Program Director

JOHN F. KENNEDY UNION
BUILDING

�THE UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON STADIUM

@

ENTRANCE

MOVIE CAMERAS and ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES NOT PERMITTED IN STADIUM
LOCATION OF REST ROOMS
LADIES' . . . At West End of North and South Concrete Stands.
MEN'S ... At East End of South Stand and in Zehler
Hall directly behind East Corner of North Stand.

UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON

Where is your seat in the stadium? Have you found it? Now
study the chart and , for your
own convenience, determine
where all facilities are in relation to your seat.

U. D. TICKET OFFICE

CONCESSIONS

Open 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Monday-Friday
Saturday, 9 To 12 Noon

CHARLES KINZELER, Proprietor
Stand

JACK BROWN

Finance Director
of Athletics

Vendor

SOFT DRINKS:

SERVICE WHILE

Large .. . . . ...... .

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Reliable Since the 70's

3

�Lifeline
TO THE FUTURE
By JOHN McVAY
Head Football Coach

Locating outstanding student-athletes and introducing them to the opportunities at the University of Dayton is one of our top pursuits. The
football staff spends a great portion of its time, twelve months a year,
recruiting.
classroom here at U.D. RecommenWe compete for student-athletes
dations also come from interested
against schools from all over the
fans, alumni and friends. We have
country. Most often it's the Midcontacted and have responses from
American Conference schools, Big
over 500 coaches recommending
Ten, Missouri Valley Conference
700 plus young men from their
and independents like Xavier, Buf1966 high school teams.
falo, Villanova, Boston College,
Holy Cross, and the Military AcadWe collect the names and write
emies.
to each boy recommended, encourThe general mid-western area is
aging him to keep up the good
divided among our five assistant
work on the football field and in
coaches. Coach Eaglowski recruits
the classroom. The young man is
northern Ohio; Coach Moore, southasked to complete a questionnaire
ern Ohio and Kentucky; Coach
and return it to us. When these
Perles, Toledo, Michigan and Chicquestionnaires are returned, the
ago. Coach Young handles the
elimination process begins, some
Pennsylvania area. Our new man,
for .size, serious injuries, or certain
Wayne Fontes, handles junior colpositions (if we already have a
lege recruiting and works with the
good group of young guards we
other coaches to familiarize himmay not recruit any guards.)
self with our system. Our 1965
Frosh team had young men from
The remaining group is watched
closely through the fall of their
seven different states: Ohio, Michsenior year. When the season ends,
igan, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Tenwe check on the names of the boys
nessee, Kentucky and Florida. The
we have to see if there is anyone
1966 Frosh team represents Ohio,
else that should be added to our
16; Michigan, 8; New York, 2;
We ask again for the coaches
files.
Pennsylvania, 2; Illinois, 2; and
opinion
and check the boys' local
Maine, 1.
reputation (All - State, All - League,
Our locating process begins in
etc.) If everything is still good, we
the spring of the year. We ask
write to the school to get some
high school coaches to recommend
indication of his academic ability.
top men from their upcoming squad
If he qualifies for financial aid
(present juniors) whom they feel
according to N.C.A.A. 1.6 predictare capable of playing major colabilty, film of the boy is requested.
lege football and who are qualified
The 1965 team had an average
academically to succeed in the

4

College Board score (S.A.T.) of 927
and the 1966 squad 943.
If the boy looks good in a film he
is given a letter grade--A (Good),
B (maybe), C (hold him until we
see another film). The film means
a great deal to us. We look for
movement and if he'll hit when he
has the opportunity. Of course, we
look for certain skills in quarterbacks, backs and ends. If we like
the young man in film and his
academic grades are good, he is
invited to visit our campus. The
prospective student-athlete is taken
for a tour of the campus, meets a
faculty member and spends an evening with some member of our
squad. When he returns. to his
home we follow-up with a visit to
meet his parents and tell them
about our University. The young
man is signed to our "letter of
intent" (financial aid form) any
time after his visit. In 1966 we
had 120 men visit and signed 31
to some type of financial aid. In
granting a young man financial aid
we do not attempt to reward or
pay him for participating in football. The financial aid is granted
to a young man to assist him with
his college expenses and to enable him to receive his education.
During the summer we stay in
touch with the boy and send him
additional information about the
University of Dayton. When he arrives in September of his Frosh
year, he finally becomes an official
part of the University family.

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312 MOUND STREET
DAYTON 7, OHIO
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JOHN L. MACBETH Company

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Complete, modern offset platemaking department. No job too large, none too small.
Printing Service Company, 630-652 South Main Street, Dayton, Ohio 45402-461-4580.

5

�LOCAL REAL ESTATE DEALERS SALUTE THE FLYERS
Insurance &amp;
Appraisals

Realtor

CHARLES KRICK REALTV
and ASSOCIATES
5114 Far Hills Avenue

VALDHERE FILMS, Inc.
Serving Ohio Television with News Film

MIAMI
LITHO, INC.
101 Pine St., Dayton, Ohio

DAYTON, OHIO 45429

phone 222-8663

Residential • Commercial • Farms
Photo Listing Service

COMMERCIAL, OFFSET

CHAS. W. KRICK

434-3263

and
LEITERPRESS PRINTING

Serving Ohio Schools with Sports Film

Serving Ohio Industry with Film Production

SEE US FOR
PERSONAL SERVICE
in

3060 Valleywood Drive

BUYING • SELLING • TRADING
REAL ESTATE

Best Wishes to The Flyers
from

RAY J.
KRONENBERGER
Realtor and

REALTY CO.

KRONENBERGER
INSURANCE AGENCY

3015 Oakmont

2400 E. DOROTHY LANE

BOB ABERNATHY
293-2191

299-0153

299-8781

298-7568

Other U.D. grads in our firm include Dave Droesch, class of '65 ... and-oh, yes!-a
fellow named Paul Tipps, class of '60. (Remember him?)
Whatever your real estate need

P&lt;ml Tipps
REALTORS

Street/Telephone 461 -5725

6

�University of Dayton

ADMINISTRATORS

REV. CHARLES L. COLLINS, S.M.
Chairman, Student Welfare Council,
Athletic Department

VERY REV.
RAYMOND A.
ROESCH, S.M.
President

HARRY C. BAUJAN
Notre Dame, '17,
Consultant to Athletic Programs

About the University of Dayton

THOMAS J. FRERICKS
Dayton, '53,
Director of Athletics

Little St. Mary Institute, built on the Stuart farm upon a hill in 1850,
has grown into the nationally-known University of Dayton , educating
almost 10,000 yearly, possessing three campuses and 26 bu ildings ,
boasting six schools; Art &amp; Sciences, Engineering, Education , Business
Administration , Graduate School of Arts &amp; Sciences, and Technical In stitute; the famous Marian Library and a comprehensive research
center. This and more constitutes the University of Dayton , administered by the Roman Catholic Society of Mary, today.

7

�The

"ft"'AGXER-S~IITH
Company

PUMPINC MACHINHRY
MUNICIPAL &amp; INDUSTRIAL
WATHR &amp; ELHCTRIC
INSTALLATIONS

Registered

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS
and

CONTRACTORS
3178 ENCRETE LANE

111-113 e third st.
Dayton, Ohio 45402 ... 228-6175
DAYTON, OHIO 45439
One of the nation's largest suppliers of fine
office furniture, stationery and equipment.

THE ~ACK WALKUP PAPER CO.
Dayton
AC 513 -

Cincinnati

298-5227

AC 606-291-3600

Louisville
AC 502 -

582-2316

PAPERS FOR

ADVERTISING LITERATURE

MAGAZINES

ANNUAL REPORTS

MENUS

CATALOGS

OFFICE PAPERS

ENVELOPES

8

VISIT OUR SAMPLE ROOM FOR PAPER
SAMPLES AND INFORMATION

SALES BROCHURES

�UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON

football
COACHING STAFF
These six men will, for the second year,
guide the UD football fortunes.
Headed by John McVay, the young staff
possesses the know-how and experience to
"get the job done."

ED YOUNGS
Michigan State, '63
Freshman Coach

THOMAS MOORE
Iowa, '61
Offensive Backfield

WAYNE FONTES
Michigan State, '61
Defensive Backfield

JOHN McVAY
Miami, '53
Head Coach

GEORGE PERLES
Michigan State, '60
Defensive Line

JOSEPH EAGLOWSKI
Heidelberg, '60
Offensive Line

9

�Let Our Sales Engineers
Assist You on Your

MACHINE TOOL
REQUIREMENTS

from
••• THE •••

FREEMAN A.

C. H. GOSIGER

PRETZINGER

MACHINERY CO.

and

ALBERT

108 McDonough Street
Dayton, Ohio

PRETZINGER, II

•

Kodak

SALEM CAMERA CO.
142 SALEM AVENUE

.

PHONE 223-7206

QUICK SELF SERVICE
OR A STAFF OF TECHNICIANS FOR PERSONAL GUIDANCE

10

228-5174

�FINKJIM
BlUBAUGH

DENNIS
BUCHERT

MARTY
COATES

Center, 6-1 , 232

End, 6-2, 200

Fullback, 5-11 , 197

JESKE
Chevrolet

KEN
CONUFFE

TOM
GORIUS

DOUG
JONES

End, 6-1, 210

Guard, 6-0, 200

Linebacker, 6-0, 208

BOB
KOCHER

DAN
KRAMARCZVK

TOM
lEDINSKY

Tackle, 6-2, 241

Tackle, 6-3, 250
M ore Lettermen Page 13

End, 6-3, 195

11

�FOR THE BEST IN FOOD and GOOD ENTERTAINMENT
_ _.
(Additional Restaurants Page 32)

SISARI'S

C.as66a

BECK'S

WESTWARD HO

Restaurant and Bar

101 E. STEWART ST.
(Across from NCR and 3 blocks west of stadium)

TWO

DANCING
EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT
9:30 TO 2 A.M.

1064 Brown St.

228-7392
Open 5 :30a.m. to 2:30a .m.
a/so
Cafeteria open from 5 :30 a.m. to 1 a.m .

LOCATIONS
2900 North Dixie

Good Roast Beef

BUDGET PRICED

,,,a~s~et«J
FEATURING

CHOICE STEAKS
AND CHOPS
SEA FOODS

TELEPHONE

Open 4:00p.m. to 2:30 o.m.
Closed Sundoys

228-0454

HANK COLLIN8-PROPRIETOR

AIR
CONDITIONED

STEAKS • CHOPS • CHICKEN
LUNCHES

CHOICE LIQUORS

DINNERS

DELICIOUSLY PREPARED • DELIGHTFULLY SERVED
Member of Diners Club &amp; Hilton Carte Blanche

• Fine Food at Reasonable Prices

FOR RESERVATIONS CALL

;£~!~~~
1926 BROWN STREET

1298-9888

1

r£~~~~

969 PATIERSON RD . AT WILMINGTON PIKE

Lloyd M. Meinzer

BEST WISHES TO THE FLYERS

NEIL'S
HERITAGE HOUSE
2189 SOUTH DIXIE DR.
298-8611
Rooms For Private Parties

12

*

LINDEN HOUSE
2932 LINDEN AVE.
253-8969
Open Until 2:30A.M.

�BOB
LOWE

BILL
MAYO

GARY
PRIESSER

Back, 6-0, 190

Halfback, 5-1 0, 160

Quarterback, 6-0, 180

BOB
PRINT

BARRY
PROFATO

PETE
RICHARDSON

End, 6-1, 219

Middle Guard, 6-0, 185

Back, 6·1, 205

JIM
SCHMALZ

BOB
SHORTAL

TOM
STANGLE

Back, 5-11, 172

Linebacker, 6-2, 219

Tackle, 6-4, 250

MEL

THERON
SUMPTER

TAYLOR

Back, 5·8, 160

Halfback, 5-10, 185

Team Pictures on Pages 14-15-26-31

13

�UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON FLYERS

SOUTH PARK
BARBER SHOP
930 Brown St.

CARL F. BRANDING
H. E. THOMUSEIT
228·2832

Formerly

TONY FURST FLOWERS

DAN
ANDRICK

RAY
BACHUS

JERRY
BIEBUYCK

Tackle, 6-3, 250

Guard, 6-2, 210

Quarterback, 6-1, 210

DENNIS
BLOBACH

GREG
BRINGARD

FELIX
CAR MELLO

Guard, 5-11, 208

Guard, 5-11, 185

Tackle, 5-11 , 225

TOM
CLARK

JOE
DAHM

End, 6-0, 178

Middle Guard,

DICK
FAUCETTE

GEORGE
FERLIC

JOHN
FLYNN

Quarterback, 6-0, 195

Middle Guard, 6-1, 220

End, 6-2, 190

Flowers for
All Occasions

224-1794
731 TROY STREET

&amp;-o, 205

JOE
DePALMA
End,

s-o. 190

Ken McCallister Co.
Artist materials, signs supplies
picture framing, fine prints
314-318 SALEM AVE.
DAYTON 6, OHIO

14

�UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON FLYERS
Best Wishes For
a Successful Season
from

HELLDOERFER-CASTELLIN.

2535 Needmore Rd.

Dayton, Ohio
TOM
GOODWIN
Halfback, 5-8, 165

DENNIS
GRAF
Back, 6-1, 196

TOM
KAVANAUGH
Center, 6-0, 210

278-5736

253-4142

NORTHWESTERN
TOOLS, INC.

Halfback, 5-8, 170

GEORGE
KOHl
Tackle, 6-2, 212

BERNIE
KRESS
Halfback, 6-0, 194

JIG &amp; FIXTURE
COMPONENT
SET-UP TOO:lS~
GENE THOMECZEK
117 Hollier Avenue
Dayton 3, Ohio

I

~~ 0
-~

1~ ---

Jl

~~JL. -.
Patronize Your Nearest Drug Store

CHUCK
lUCIDORE
Tackle, 6-1, 270

BOB
MADDEN
Halfback, 5-10, 185

Bill
MANlEY
Tackle, 6-2, 213

SOUTH END
PHARMACY
Brown Street
at Fairground Ave.
Registered Pharmacist
on duty at all times

Free Delivery Service
MIKE
McCAll
Linebacker, 5-11, 216

MIKE
McGINNIS
End, 6-0, 180
More Team Pictures on Pages 26-31

MIKE
McKEEVER
End, 5-10, 198

Call 223-4293

15

�Transistor Radios • Tape Recorders
Television Antennas and Rotators

works wonders in sight and sound...
FRANTZ FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCES • 2721 LINDEN AVE. • 254·3535

SUCCESS TO FLYERS
From

Best Wishes to the Flyers

NORB BOEHMER

for a Successful Season

FRIGIDAIRE LOCAL 801

MEYER &amp;
BOEHMER

International Union of
Electrical, Radio &amp; Machine Workers

IUE-AFL-CIO

FUNERAL DIRECTORS

313 SOUTH JEFFERSON

BA 4-7658

BA 4-7659

1733 BROWN ST.

Joe Shump, Pres.

223-9119

Arch Little, Financial Sec.

~"

~&lt;:::,

uor_,e
""'

LOWE BROTHERS CO.
The Largest and Most Complete Paint Supply Store in the Miami Valley
223-8284
110 E. Third St.
BRANCHES:

Free Parking

16

275-6073 North Plaza Shopping Center
293-9616 Town &amp; Country, 512 E . Stroop
293-4203 2318 East Dorothy Lane, Woodlane Plaza
878-5671 Fairborn Plaza
866-3801 Miamisburg Plaza, 1226 E. Central
Huber Heights Shopping &lt;;enter 6178 Ch~bersburg Rd . 233-1633
Free Delivery
Middletown Shoppmg Center Bre1el Ave. 423-9931

�Today's Game
~

~-....,

~aster_~~~
17 CONVENIENT

LOCATIONS

DOWNTOWN
CARL SCHMIDT MASTER DRUG

114

w.

5th 228·1185

WELCOME ALUMS!
This afternoon the Flyers take on the
Buffalo Bulls in the 1966 Homecoming
Game. The Bulls move into town with
a 2-2 record on the strength of wins
over Kent State 27-23 and Villanova
28-8. The losses came at the hands of
Cornell 28-21 and Boston U. 26-16.
Last year, the Flyers and Bulls played
to a 0-0 tie at Buffalo which was the
first time the two teams had met.
The Flyers will be trying to extend
their record to 4-1 with this game. Last
week they defeated Louisville 20-17 in
a thriller before more than 10,000 UD
fans.

NORTH
VICTOR MASTER DRUGS

3518 N. Main St. 274·2113
EAST
ALLEN'S MASTER PHARMACY

2916 linden 253·8161
HELLER'S MASTER DRUGS

1442 Wayne &amp; Wyoming 256·5522
DAYTON VIEW
BETTMAN'S MASTER DRUGS

2163 Miracle lane 274·2101
CORNELL MASTER PHARMACY

3521 Cornell Drive 277·0501
RAY'S MASTER PHARMACY

2206 Catalpa Drive 274·1187
ROBERT'S MASTER PHARMACY

one of the Dayton

* * * *
The homecoming queen candidates and
attendants pictured on the cover of this
program are:
Top photo (top to bottom) Laurie Miller from Munhamm, Pa.; Stephanie Heit,
Hamilton, Ohio; Cathy Cleary, Drexel
Hill, Pa.; and Jeanette Steuerle from
Louisville, Ky.
The attendants L-R in lower photo are:
Eileen Gunn, Carol McDougal, Maureen
O'Neill, and Barb Franke.

524 N. Broadway 461·5180

area's leading
appliance dealers

TOM
PRISKE'S

TV &amp;
APPLIANCE
SALES &amp; SERVICE
4645 SALEM AVENUE
(at Brumbaugh)
277-3362
"come on out Dayton's
'Northwest Passage' and
visit our beautiful color
television and stereo
lounge."

SALEM·GRAND MASTER PHARMACY

501 Salem &amp; Grand 274·2161
WEST
HOOVER MASTER PHARMACY

1966 SCHEDULE

1128 N. Gettysburg 268·6683
TROTWOOD
KELLEY'S FREE PIKE MASTER DRUG

498 E. Main, Trotwood 837·1416
FAIRBORN
RUBIN'S MASTER PHARMACY

15 E. Main 878·9801
SLOAN'S MASTER DRUGS

4 W. Main 878·3212
NEW CARLISLE
PARK LAYNE MASTER PHARMACY

600 Dayton·lakeview 849·6741
OAKWOOD· KETTERING
AllEN'S MASTER PHARMACY

3036 Far Hills 298·5211
EMMONS MASTER PHARMACY

Richmond

23-0

Cincinnati
Bowling Green

23-7
0-13

Louisville
Oct. 15 Buffalo (H)

20-17
1:30 p.m.

Oct. 22 North. Mich. {H) 8:00 p.m.
Oct. 29 Ohio U. (A)
Nov.

5 Xavier (H)

1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.

Nov. 12 Miami (A)

1:30 p.m.

Nov. 19 Toledo (H)

1:30 p.m.

CONCRETE
PRODUCTS
Manufacturers
Only Local Mfgrs. of Concrete, Sewer
Culvert and Pressure Pipe
Concrete Specialties of all kinds
Largest Local Producers of
Building Blocks

2900 Shroyer Road 293·1113

OUR EXCLUSIVE DEVELOPMENT
OF PRECAST FLEXICORE SLABS

SOUTHEAST
NELSON'S MASTER PHARMACY

2258 Patterson Road 252·2731

TOTAL
SERVICE

UD Anthem
On mountain high and hillside,
o'er meadow and through dell,
In busy mart and hamlet where
hearts their story tell,
A clarion voice is ringing; it rises
now it falls;
Arouse Ye Sons of Dayton!
Your Alma Mater calls.
UD, we hear you calling;
Fidelity's the test.
Your stalwart sons all answer
from north, south, east and west.
With measured tread advancing,
our emblem full in view,
We sound your praise and pledge
our loyalty to the Red and Blue.

For Industrial, Commercial,
Public, Industrial, Agricultural
and Residential Building

PRICE BROTHERS
COMPANY
55 Years in Dayton

1932 E. Monument Ave.
222-7861

17

�22. TIMI.ou1

I. OfniDI

~
~
~~.......

~...,.,...,-~.,
:t. ILUOAl rOSITIOit
011 ,.OCIDUll

j'n

21. "''""

I'

I. ILUOAliiOTION
OIIIHIIT

home of the

BIG BOY
original double
decker hamburger

•

IOVCNDOWN 01 IIIlO OOA&amp;

.. fQIOIWfOUI

f, IOUOHINO M
IDCKil

1624

6060

KEOWEE ST.

FAR HILLS

224-9611

434-2421

f.'-zr.\}
11

I

'&amp;

30

4301

W. THIRD ST.

N. MAIN ST.

224-1154

274-1142

4830

2701

S. DIXIE HWY.

SALEM AVE.

293-1134

277-9344

Ito

CIAWUNO. . .~INO M tUNNil
01 INIIllOCitiD INIIlPHINCI

..\

~,-I

~"'111::::::-::::::'~

t1. INCOII'liU

IOIWAtO rAil,

PINAlTY OKUNID.
NO 'LAY 01 NO SCOII

108

222

N. MAIN ST.

STEWART ST.

223-9907

222-6752

~~

II. IAU llliOA&amp;lY IOUCIIID.
KI(KIO 01 IAYIIO

t.

VNI'OlfSMANU•I CONDUCT

;_~

,,~
II. llliOAI USI 01 •HANDS
AND AIMS

18

~~

Ill. IHIINTIONAl OlOUNDINO

tr.~

-~,

14. fOIIWAlD rASS 01
Kl(• CATCNINO INIIUIIIHCI

JJ. ...liOIIll ISCIMI
DO- . .lO ON PASS

�1966 UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON FOOTBALL ROSTER
NO.

76

NAME &amp; POSITION

Andrick, Daniel, OE
Bachus, Raymond, DE
10
Biebuyck, Jerry, QB
50 **Blubaugh, Jim, C
61
Balbach, Dennis, G
65
Bringard, Gregory, G
88 • Buchert, Dennis, OE
Carmello, Felix, OT
72
57
Clark, Thomas, OE
32 • • Coates, Marty, FB
81 •Conliffe, Ken, OE
69
Dahm, Joe, MG
53
DePalma, Joe, DE
15
Faucette, Dick, QB
78
Ferlic, George, OT
79
Flynn, John, OE
46
Goodwin, Tom, HB
62 ••Gorius, Tom, G
48
Graf, Dennis, DB
55 • • Jones, Doug, LB
51
Kavanaugh, Tom, C
45
Kelly, Kieran, DB
73 • Kocher, Bob, DT
75
Kohl, George, DT
74 • Kramarczyk, Dan, OT
44
Kress, Bernie, HB
86 •Ledinsky, Tom, OE
25 •Lowe, Bob, DB
70
Lucidore, Chuck, DT
20
Madden, Bob, HB
Manley, Bill, DT
77
26 •Mayo, Bill, HB
McCall, Mike, LB
64
McGinnis, Mike, OE
83
McKeever, Mike, DE
89
Muzi, Chuck, DB
63
29
Nelson, Mike, HB
30
Olds, Harold, HB
82
Pasco, Gregory, OE
87
Petrigala, Jim, DT
84
Place, Jim, DE
12 ••Preisser, Gary, QB
85 ••Print, Bob, DE
68 • Profato, Barry, MG
33
Ragon, Donald, QB
41 • Richardson, Pete, DB
19
Schaffer, Denny, QB
24 •Schmalz, Jim, DB
40
Shatteen, Alan, DB
60 * *Shortal, Bob, LB
14
Siewe, James, FB
71 ••Stangle, Tom, OT
22 •Sumpter, Theron, DB
28 •Taylor, Mel, HB
17
Thomas, Bob, Kick
66
Thompson, Bill, G
52
Van Jura, Richard, DB
67
Watterson, Glen, LB
35
Wiesenhahn, Gale, FB
36
Wilson, Mike, FB
42
Wittbrodt, Tony, DB
• Denotes Lettermen

80

CLASS

HT.

WT.

HOMETOWN

HIGH SCHOOL
COACH

Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Soph.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Soph.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Soph.

6'3"
6'2"
6'1"
6'1"
5'11"
5'11"
6'2"
5'11"
6'
5'11"
6'1"
6'
6'
6'
6'1"
6'2"
5'8"
6'
6'1"
6'
6'
5'8"
6'2"
6'2"
6'3"
6'
6'3"
6'
6'1"
5'10"
6'2"
5'10"
5'11"
6'
5'10"
5'10"
6'
5'9"
6'3"
6'5"
6'4"
6'
6'1"
6'
6'2"
6'1"
5'9"
5'11"
5'9"
6'2"
6'
6'4"
5'8"
5'10''
5'11"
6'
5'6"
5'11"
6'1"
6'2"
5'9"

270
210
210
232
208
190
200
225
178
197
210
205
190
195
220
190
165
200
196
208
210
170
241
212
250
194
195
190
250
185
213
160
216
180
198
200
190
180
210
229
211
180
219
185
200
205
165
172
170
219
185
250
160
185
175
210
145
205
200
240
170

Elyria, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Detroit, Michigan
Canton, Ohio
Toledo, Ohio
Detroit, Michigan
Cincinnati, Ohio
Youngstown, Ohio
Dayton, Ohio
Niles, Ohio
Louisville, Kentucky
Belleville, Illinois
Elizabeth, New Jersey
Woodbridge, Virginia
Lorain, Ohio
Kenmore, New York
Jackson, Michigan
Newark, Ohio
Akron, Ohio
New Lebanon, Ohio
Dayton, Ohio
Chicago, Illinois
Cleveland, Ohio
Grosse Point Pike, Michigan
Chicago, Illinois
Akron, Ohio
Columbus, Ohio
Youngstown, Ohio
New Castle, Pennsylvania
Dayton, Ohio
New Cumberland, W. Va.
Lima, Ohio
Dayton, Ohio
Massillon, Ohio
St. Petersburg, Fla.
Massillon, Ohio
Hometown, Illinois
Grand Ledge, Michigan
Cincinnati, Ohio
Medina, Ohio
Massillon, Ohio
Orlando, Florida
Euclid, Ohio
Niles, Ohio
Canton, Ohio
Youngstown, Ohio
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Southfield, Michigan
Dayton, Ohio
Dayton, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Evanston, Illinois
Sharon, Pe~nsylvania
Dayton, Oh1o
.
Fairport Harbor, Oh1o
Niles, Ohio
Amelia, Ohio
Wilmington, Ohio
Flint, Michigan

Bill Barton
Richard Loechtenfeldt
Don Sloan
John McVay
Tom McHugh
George Perles
Gerald Faust
Jerry Hanlon
Barney Otten
Anthony Mason
Charles Quire
Max Hamilton
Joe Kasberger
Dan Crane
Armin Riesen
Jule Yakapovich
James Crowley
Jack Bickel
Ed Wentz
Raymond Amigo
Hank Schneider
Tom Ososkie
Bill Connors
George. Perles
Joe Yonto
Ed Wentz
Bill Gutbrod
Jim Friend
Soc's Roussos
Ed Reagan
Robert Starky
AI Scribner
Ed Reagan
Joe Eaglowski
Tom Canfield
Joe Eaglowski
Tom Ososkie
Charles Gorman
Gerry Faust
John Moore
Joe Eaglowski
Carl Genito
Bill Gutbrod
Glenn Stennett
Joe Eaglowski
Jim Friend
Tony Paris
Bron Bacevich
Sam Ruvolo
Frank Buford
Ed Reagan
Ed Reagan
Ron Davidoff
Murney Lazier
Tony Razzano
Jim McDermott
Chet Rojeck
Glenn Stennett
Bob Geiser
Dean Waddell
Jack Pratt

�Service with a smile ...
when you touch down at

OVER 60 POPULAR MENU ITEMS
Dixie Golden Fried
Chicken
Jumbo Burger
Parky Steak
Ocean Whitefish
Olympic Sandwich
Desserts
Beverages

RED HORSE MOTOR INN
4625 S. DIXIE DR.
u.s. 25 &amp; 741

Let ~~

r

NEAR THE UNIVERSITY
5 MIN. SOUTH OF DAYTON

Be Your Host

1

DRIVE IN-CARRY OUT-DINING ROOM

299-3553

1966 UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON FOOTBALL ROSTER
(Numerical)

DAYTON

NO.

FLYERS
Probable Starting Defensive
Lineup

No.

Pos.

Player

LE

Bob Print

85

LT

Jim Petrigala

87

LB

Bob Shortal

60

MG

Barry Profato

68

LB

Doug Jones

55

RT

Bob Kocher

73

RE

Jim Place

84

DB

Bob Lowe

25

DB

Jim Schmalz

24

DB

Theron Sumpter

22

DB

Pete Richardson

41

KEEP SCORE . . • Page 25

20

10
12
14
15
17
19
20
22
24
25
26
28
29
30
32
33
35
36
40
41
42
44
45
46
48
50
51
52
53
55
57

NAME &amp; POSITION
Biebuyck, QB
Preisser, QB
Siewe, FB
Faucette, QB
Thomas, DB (Kicker)
Schaffer, QB
Madden, HB
Sumpter, DB
Schmalz, DB
Lowe, DB
Mayo, HB
Taylor, HB
Nelson, HB
Olds, HB
Coates, FB
Ragon, DB
Wiesenhahn, FB
Wilson, FB
Shatteen, HB
Richardson, DB
Wittbrodt, DB
Kress, HB
Kelly, HB
Goodwin, HB
Graf, HB
Blubaugh, C
Kavanaugh, C
VanJura, DB
De Palma, DE
Jones, LB
Clark, OE

NO.

60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68

69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

NAME &amp; POSITION
Shortal, LB
Balbach, G
Gorius, G
Muzi, DB
McCall, LB
Bringard, G
Thompson, G
Watterson, LB
Profato, MG
Dahm, MG
Lucidore, DT
Stangle, OT
Carmello, T
Kocher, DT
Kramarczyk, OT
Kohl, DT
Andrick, OT
Manley, DT
Ferlic, MG
Flynn, OE
Bachus, DE
Conliffe, OE
Pasco, OE
McGinnis, E
Place, DE
Print, DE
Ledinsky, OE
Petrigala, DE
Buchert, OE
McKeever, DE

�HEAR

TOM
HAMLIN

a few tips on coaching
First, a ballplayer has to have spirit, desire and

WHIO Sports Director

pride ... in h imself and his team. Most UD
ballplayers and many Flyer fans find this catchy

BROADCASTING

spirit at the Met. In a winning line-up of clothes

PLAY-BY-PLAY

four teams deep. If browsing is your strategy,

ALL U. of D.

you'll brook no interference from Met sales-

\

J

people. If you want some coaching, the Met

FOOTBALL AND BASKETBALL

has the staff. Real pros who've been on most

GAMES ON

people's All- Dayton team as long as they've

WHIO

been buying clothing.

the metropolitan

RADIO

1290 K

See and hear Tom's sports program daily on
WHIO-TV at 6:15 and 11:20 P.M.
WHIO Radio at 6:00 P.M.

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO

BUFFALO

(Numerical)
NO.

~

I

14
15
18
19
20
21
22
24
26
27
30
32
35
36
40
42
44
45
46
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58

NAME &amp; POSITION
Mick Murtha, QB
Dan Martin, QB
Brian York, E
Dennis Mason, QB
Jim Barksdale, HB
Ken Rutkowski, HB
Nick Capuana, HB
Steve Svec, H B
Jim McEwen, HB
Nick Coupas, HB
Tom Brennan, FB
Dave Richner, FB
Bob Smith, FB
Lee Jones, FB
Dan Sella, HB
Tom Hoke, HB
Chuck Drankoski, HB
Tom Murphy, HB
Bob Sinclair, HB
Tom Hurd, HB
Rick Wells, HB
Dennis Brisky, LB
I rv Wright, G
Jack Wesolowski, C-LB
Curtis Wilbur, LB
Jim Mosher, G
John Kovack, C
Bruce MacKellar, C
AI Ruggerio, C
Rod Rishel, C-LB

NO.

60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71

72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
84

85
86
87
88
89
90

NAME &amp; POSITION
Greg Walters, G
Mike Rissell, G
Tom Kowalewski, G
Larry Lehner, G
Mike Maser, G
Jim Finochio, G
John Lupienski, G
Ted Gibbons, G-LB
Bill Hayden, G
Don Sabo, G
Ron Pugh, T
Bill Taylor, T
John Basta, T
Tony Miceli, T
Chuck O'Hara, T
Joe Riccelli, T
Russ MacKellar, T
Ken Kuzmitski, T
Dick Pirozzolo, T
Jeff Thomas, T
Bob Embow, E
Ryan Danescu, E
Jim Dolan, E
John Przybycien, E
Paul Kleiber, E
Jim Dunn, E
Dick Ashley, E
Jim Remillard, E
John Doherty, E
Brian Hansen, K

BULLS
Probable Starting Offensive
Lineup
Pos.

Player

TE

Paul Kleiber

85

LT

No.

Tony Miceli

73

LG

Mike Rissell

61

c

Bruce MacKellar

56

RG

Ted Gibbons

67

RT

Russ MacKellar

76

SE

Dick Ashley

87

QB

Mark Murtha

14

LH

Jim Barksdale

20

RH

Rick Wells

49

FB

Lee Jones

36

KEEP SCORE • • • Page 25

21

�AFTER THE GAME HAVE A
"HOORAY FOR OUR SIDE" PIZZA PARTY

CASSANO

PIZZ-A KING

Featuring the Old Italian recipes of Mom Donisi
Just the thing for a quick "pepperupper" following a hard after~oon of
cheering. Pizza and your favonte beverage go down, Oh so smooth. Or later
in the evening, what could be a better
way to end a busy, fun-filled day? Plan
now to dine in or carry out a real Italian treat from your nearby Cassano
Pizza King.

34 LOCATIONS
For Your Convenience
Throughout the Miami Valley
from Piqua to Cincinnati!
From Eaton to Springfield
The following Cassano Pizza Kings are
located minutes away from Baujan
Field.

2210 Patterson Blvd.

298-1481
4021 Far Hills Ave.

299-3568
2405 Smithville Rd.

253-1147
2308 E. Dorothy Lane

298-7291
1445 Wayne &amp; Wyoming

223-7269
3121 E. Dorothy Lane

293-6925
Dine in romantic Italian decor or call
for convenient Carry·out!
Beer - Wine - Beverages

"Ia prova e nel austo"
TH..... 00~ 18 tN TH. TAaT•

22

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
(Alphabetical)
NO.

NAME &amp; POSITION
87
* Richard Ashley, E
20
• James Barksdale, HB
72
John Basta, T
30
Thomas Brennan, FB
50
* Dennis Brisky, LB
22
* Nicholas Capuana , HB
27
Nicholas Coupas, HB
89
John Doherty, E
82
James Dolan, E
44
Charles Drankoski, HB
86
• James Dunn, E
80
Robert Embow, E
65
James Finochio, G
67
* Theodore Gibbons, G
90
• Brian Hansen, K
6B
William Hayden, G
42
*Thomas Hoke, HB
48
* Thomas Hurd, HB
36
• Leeland Jones, FB
85
Paul Kleiber, E
55
John Kovack, C
62
Thomas Kowalewski, G
77
Kenneth Kuzmitski, T
63
Lawrence Lehner, G
66
John Lupienski, G
56
* Bruce MacKellar, C
76
• Russell MacKellar, T
15
Daniel Martin, QB
64
Michael Maser, G
19
Dennis Mason, QB
26
* James McEwen, HB
* Anthony Miceli, T
73
54
James Mosher, G
Thomas Murphy, HB
45
14
Mark Murtha, QB
Richard Pirozzolo, T
78
John Przybycien, E
84
70
* Ronald Pugh, T
James Remillard, E
88
Joseph Riccelli, T
75
David
Richner, FB
32
* Rodney Rishel, LB
58
• Michael Rissell, G
61
Alphonse Ruggerio, C
57
Kenneth Rutkowski , HB
21
Donald Sabo, G
69
* Daniel Sella, HB
40
Robert Sinclair, HB
46
Robert Smith, FB
35
Steven Svec, H B
24
* William Taylor, T
71
Jeffrey Thomas, T
79
Gregory Walters, G
60
* Richard Wells, HB
49
John Wesolowski, C
52
82
Curtis Wilbur, E
51
Irvin Wright, G
18
Brian York, E
* Lettermen

CLASS
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.

So.
So.
So.

Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.

So.

So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.

So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
.Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.

So.

Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.

HT.

6-2
5-11
6-2
5-10
6-2
5-9
5-10
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-4
6-1
5-10
5-10
5-11
5-10
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-5
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-2
5-11
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-2
6-2
6-1
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-3
5-10
5-11
5-10
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-1
5-10

WGT.

201
177
216
207
196
175
184
205
190
lBO

213
195
210
235
172
203
174
191
202
225
195
203
255
201
203
200
220
180
200
lBO

190
223
190
185
171
230
193
232
191
230
190
197
215
190
175
198
172
198
180
195
225
215
170
191
205
205
204
165

HOMETOWN
Massena, N.Y.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Glens Falls, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Utica, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa .
New Bedford, Mass.
Glens Falls, N.Y.
Endwell, N.Y.
Cranston, R.I.
Hamburg, N.Y.
E. Syracuse, N.Y.
Newport, R.I.
Detroit, Mich.
Cleveland, Ohio
Marcy, N.Y.
Elmira, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Auburn, N.Y.
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Methuen, Mass.
Pittsburgh, Pa .
Springdale, Pa.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Huntington, L.l .
Clayton , N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Moon Run, Pa .
Batavia , N.Y.
Central Islip, L.l.
Johnstown, Pa .
Endicott, N.Y.
Elmira, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
McKeesport, Pa.
New Bedford, Mass.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Greenhurst, N.Y.
E. Smethport, Pa .
Coatesville, Pa.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa .
Moon Run, Pa .
Watertown, N.Y.
Depew, N.Y.
Endwell, N.Y.
Youngstown, N.Y.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Ovid, N.Y.
Norristown, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y.

�ThereSA

HASTY TASTY

Near You ...

Greenville

KeHering

Skyway

Huber Heights

Drexel

Troy

&amp;

~~

Middletown

Da'yton

Fairborn

~a

23

�THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK at BUFFALO
The University of Buffalo has been
the educational and cultural center of
Western New York since 1846. At that
time the City of Buffalo was 14-years
old and was the home of 28,000 people.
US's total enrollment is more than
20,000, of which almost half are fulltime undergraduate students.
Few institutions can equal the pace
of construction which has taken place
on the North Main Street campus in
recent years. No less than 20 new buildings and additions to existing buildings
have been undertaken, including the
Western New York Nuclear Research
Center, the 11-floor Tower Residence
Hall for Men, the 11-floor Goodyear Residence for Women, the $4.5-million Norton Hall (student union), the Schools of
Medicine and Dentistry (Capen . Hall) ,
and the Acheson Hall of chemistry.
But this is only a begi nning. In 1962
UB abandoned its private operation to
become the major campus segment of

the State University of New York. The
official name of the college, created by
State University officials, is: State University of New York at Buffalo. However,
popular usage, particularly in the realm
of intercollegiate sports, retains the familiar name of University of Buffalo, or
just UB . The State University at the
present time is completing arrangements
for the purchase of a tract of land in
excess of 1,500 acres in the Town of
Amherst, about 3 miles from the site
of the present campus. There a new
campus, costing upwards of $130-million and able to accommodate 20,000
full-time undergraduates , will be built.
The present campus will become a
Health-Science Center second to none
in the world .
Nationally recognized as a leader in
scholastic excellence and academic freedom , the University of Buffalo continues
its fine tradition of service to the Niagara
Frontier and the State of New York.

A University Landmark,
Hayes Hall

Western New York Nuclear Research
Center--one of the few campus reactors in the nation and the only one
in the State of New York-is devoted
to scientific, medical and industrial
projects.

Bill Taylor
Team Captain

Martin Meyerson
President

Mick Murtha

24

Quarterback

James E. Peelle
Director of Athletics

Richard (Doc) Urich
Head Coach

�KEEP SCORE
Opponent
Dayton
OPPONENT SCORING
DAYTON SCORING
!TD 6 pts.; PAT's 1 pt. kicking, 2 pts. pass or run; FG's 3 pts.; Safety 2 pts.l

NOTHING FINER

PNzUl
The Finest in Town!
460 PATTERSON RD.
Just West of Shroyer Road

293-6991
OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. to 1 A.M.

Shown is Dayton's newest, dining
room at MARION'S PIAZZA ... the
most attractive pizza house in Day·
ton. Come in and enjoy your fav·
orite PIZZA OR GIANT SANDWICH,
DRAFT BEER BY THE PITCHER or
GLASS.

Huge seating capacity and plenty
of free parking space. Just 5 min·
utes from the University of Dayton.

NORTH STORE
3315 NORTH

DIXIE DR.

25

�UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON FLYERS

CHUCK
MUZI

MIKE
NELSON

HAROLD
OLDS

GREG
PASCO

Back, 5-10, 200

Halfback, 6-0, 190

Halfback, 5-9, 180

End, 6-3, 210

JIM
PETRI GALA

JIM
PLACE

DON
RAGON

DENNIS
SCHAFFER

End, 6-5, 229

End, 6-4, 211

Back, 6-2, 200

Quarterback, 5-9, 165

ALAN
SHATTEEN

JIM
SIEWE

BOB
THOMAS

BILL
THOMPSON

Halfback, 5-9, 170

Quarterback, 6-0, 185

Back, 5-11, 175

Guard, 6-0, 210

. . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - M o r e Team Pictures on Page 31

Good Luck,
Neighbors!
The NCR Employees Credit Union, Inc.
1600 Brown Street
Dayton 9, Ohio

26

�Things
go better
with

COKE

Hertz Kick- on special
•
Pr1ce
1Jflt

s1soo

Away game? Don't miss one kick-off
this season. Scoot on out to the stadium in a new Hertz Ford or other fine
sedan. Low rate includes insurance

Enjoy
Coca-Cola
right
now!

and gas. Reserve your car now for the
big game! And rah rah zisboombah.

let HERTZ put you In the driver's seat!

--------------Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by

RENT A CAR

in Dayton call

The Dayton
Coca-Cola Bottling Co.

330 West First Street

224-1774

27

�The
BERINGER
Printing Co.

The
H. J. OSTERFELD
COMPANY

ROBERTS
FUNERAL HOME

Printers and Publishers

"No Job Too Large
or Too Small''

Plumbing

W. E. ROBERTS

Heating
Air Conditioning

228-1751

W. W. ROBERTS

124 E. 3rd St.

Service and Satisfaction

Dayton, 0.
ESTABLISHED 1912

•

362 Huffman

Sincere Economical Service

I

Avenue

223-8ll7

253-2172

921 Brown St.

JEROME MUTH
TOM MUTH
From

HOWARD MUTH
JED MUTH

GREETINGS

MUTH BROTHERS., INC.

MACHINERY MOVING-REA VY HAULING-RIGGING-CRANE SERVICE
613 E. Second St.

223-2281

1018 Irving Avenue
293-0141

"Where Good Sports Meet"

DILLS SUPPLY
DAYTON~

OHIO
222-5537

~0.
also

SPRINGFIELD~

325-6441

INDUSTRIAL AND CONTRACTOR SUPPLIES

OHIO

�SUMMARY OF PENALTIES
loss of a Down
1. Illegally handing ball forward (also loss of 5
yards).
2. Illegal forward pass by Team A (also loss of 5
yards) .
3. Intentionally grounding pass (also loss of 5 yards).
4 . Offensive pass interference (also loss of 15 yards).
5. Forward pass illegally touched.
6. Forward pass illegally touched (also loss of 5
yards).
7. Forward pass illegally touched (also loss of 15
yards).

loss of 5 Yards
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.

Excess time·out illegally used or requested.
Illegal delay of game.
Infraction of substitution rule.
Putting ball in play before declared ready for play.
Infraction of free kick formation.
Player out of bounds when ball free kicked.
Free kick out of bounds.
Illegal kick.
Taking more than two steps after fair catch.
Illegal snap.
Infraction of scrimmage formation.
Interference with opponents or the ball.
Player out of bounds when ball is snapped.
Offensive player illegally in motion at the snap.
False start or simulating start of a play.
Player on line receiving snap.
Illegally handing ball forward (also loss of down
if by Team A)
Failure to pause full second in shift play.
Illegal forward pass (also loss of down if by
Team A).
Intentionally grounding pass (also loss of a down).
Forward pass illegally touched (also loss of a
down).
Crawling.

32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.

Invalid signal for fair catch.
Tackling or blocking fair catcher.
Offensive pass interference (also loss of a down).
Ineligible receiver down field.
Forward pass illegally touched (also loss of a
down).
Striking, kicking, kneeing, elbowing, etc.
Meeting with knee, striking with open hand, etc.
Grasping face mask of opponent.
Roughing the kicker or holder.
Unsportsmanlike conduct.
Infraction of rules during intermission.
Side line coaching.
Persons illegally on the field.
Illegal return of disqualified player.
Piling on.
Hurdling.
Tripping, tackling out-of-bounds.
Running into opponent obviously out of play.
Clipping.
Interlocked interference.
llegal use of hand or arm by offense.
Illegal use of hand or arm by defense.
Illegally kicking ball.

loss of Half Distance to Goal line
55. Foul by defensive team behind its own goal line
when enforcement spot is inside 1-yard line.
56. If distance penalty exceeds half the distance.

Offended Team's Ball at Spot of Foul
57.
58.
59.
60.
61.

Defensive pass interference.
Illegal use of hand or arm when ball is free.
Illegally batting free ball.
Illegally kicking a free ball.
Other fouls when the ball is free.

Violation

loss of 15 Yards
30. Team not ready to play at start of either half.
31. Interference with opportunity to catch a kick.

QUALITY
PRINTING!

62. Illegal touching of free kick by kicking team.
63. Illegal touching of scrimmage kick or return kick.

Brown &amp; Kroger
PRINTING AND PUBLISHING CO.
1220 E. Third St.

•

Dayton, Ohio

Phone 222-1136

29

�,

"WHERE SPORTSMEN SERVE SPORTSMEN"

'WI/

JACK DOOLAN
Form~r All - Amer ic an ,
Georgetown U . football

WILSON
SPALDING

SPORTING

star. Pla yed pro boll w ith
Redskins , G iants , and was
on world chomp Cords
football team 3 yrs . Also
h o lds 3 world i ndoor

GOODS

BA 2-2884-5-6-7-8
132 EAST SECOND ST.

t ra ck re co rd s at Mad i son
Square Gorden.

SALES

We feature
Name Brand
Merchandise

DAYTON, 0.

RAWLINGS
SPOTBELT
CONVERSE

Forest Plaza and Van Buren

SERVICE

PARTS

224-1822

SERVING YOU FOR 63 YEARS

BORCHERS FORD
" D eal Wh ere Dad D ealt"

ESTABLISHED 1903

366 SOUTH MAIN

One Block S outh of O verhead

~=0 ~( MARIO'S
S~"':~
'::::::p~

1~

~{·;(. )
/

/

Made from Real Dough

"If it's Pizza or Beer you can get it here"
DANCING
WED., FRI. and SAT.

At Our Dining or Pub
Room with a Rustic

TILL 12:30

Atmosphere

NATIONAL BOWLING LANES
1155 SOUTH BROWN ST.
222-4055

�MORE
U.D.
PLAYERS

GO! DAYTON! GO!

222 N. ST. CLAIR ST.
223-2272

Best Wishes to the Flyers

ALLEN DRUGS
2916 Linden At Smithville
3036 Far Hills At Dorothy Lane
GLENN
WATTERSON

GALE
WIESEN HAHN

linebacker, 5-11, 205

Fullback, 6-1, 200

For 56 Years
Your OLDSMOBILE
dealer in Dayton

THE CENTRAL MOTOR
SALES CO.
"Where everyone gets a good deal"

800 W. THIRD ST.

MIKE
WILSON

TONY
WITTBRODT

Fullback, 6-2, 240

Back, 5-9, 170

222-1101

in Dayton ...
downtown convenience
at the

r-Str..,.tfor:&gt; /-l.,..,.u
Th e ul t imate in accommodations with 203 decorator styled
rooms and suites, exotic Madr id Dini n g Roo m, intimate
Fiesta Lo unge featuring entertainment nightly, Pavilion Ballroom , numerous meeting and
reception rooms, elevated Sun
Deck and Swimmmg Pool plus
free guest parking.
Mobilguide •••• Rating

J~'l

~- ·

MANAGERS
First row, 1. tor.: Tom Whitesel, Tony DiMatteo, Bob Archer. _
2nd row; Larry Froelich, Marley Myers (Head Manager), Art English.
3rd row; Dick Kramer, Mike Thomas.

rStr~tfDr~ ~""'·•se
330 W. Fmt St Dayton, Ohio
Phone: (513)223-7131 TWX: 513 944 0338

31

�FOR THE BEST IN FOOD and GOOD ENTERTAINMENT

VITO'S VENICE INN
2001 E. DOROTHY LANE
• SUNKEN BAR
• COCKTAIL LOUNGE
LASAGNA • PARMIGIANA
SPAGHEITI • RAVIOLI
SEA FOODS • CHICKEN
PRIME RIBS
CHAR-BROILED STEAKS &amp;
CHOPS

Tonight-Meet your friends for
the Best in Italian Foods

Kettering Village ll1ll
REAL ITALIAN CUISINE

• CHICKEN
• STEAKS
• SEAFOODS

Spaghetti - Ravioli - P1zza
Italian Specialties
SIZZLING STEAKS &amp; CHOPS
CHICKEN- SEA FOOD

also

CALL FOR CARRY OUT

293-2144

PIZZA-SANDWICHES

Intimate Cocktail lounge

and

We Cater to
Private Parties
&amp; Small Groups

COCKTAILS

Room for Parties &amp; Rehearsal Dinners
3045 Salem Avenue • Telephone 277-2264
Open Sundays

Open 6 Days
10 AM-1 AM
3910 FAR HILLS

GO WITH YOUR FRIENDS
TO RED BARN WHERE EVERYBODY'S A WINNER!

3

BIG: BAiNEY o~~~
A delicious double-deck hamburger with
2 big patties of grilled beef, crunchy
fresh lettuce, creamy melted cheese, tangy

GO

1 ¢

pickle ... and special savory sauce!

RED BARN~
1144 BROWN

32

•

1000 N. MAIN

•

1640 WOODMAN DRIVE

�INDIVIDUAL FOOTBALL RECORDS ( GAME )
SCORING
Most Points
Most Touchdowns

30 pts.
TO's

••

Most Extra Points Attempted_ 8
Most Extra Points Scored ••• 6

longest Extra Pomt from
Scrimmage

PAT's
PAT's

lB yds

17 yds
2 FG's
2 FG's
longest Field Goal
47 yds
Most Scormg Passes 'ComPI. 4
Most Scorme Passes Caught . 2
TQP OFFENSIVE MARKS
Net Offense • • • •
276 yds

Most Field Goals_ • • • • •

RUSHING
Most Times Carried .

Net Rushing ••

PASSING

Richard Uenny) Punch
(Acquinas)
Richard !Jennyl Punch
(Acquinasl
Barney Otten IScrantonl
Barney Otten (Scrantonl
Rich Winkler,
St Joseph's !lnd.l
Barney Otten
(St. Bonaventure)
Bob Potter (Toledol
JockMcGarrylloyola,lll.l
Vrnce Moir 'Wilmington)
Frank Siggrns (Toledol
Several

• . • . 27 times Roosevelt Melt
(Cincinnati)
Melt Clouisvillel
26
Melt (Xavier)
22
Jim Aklu (louisville)
22
Jim Overman (Ohio U.l
22
185 yds Jim Akau
1St. Bonaventure!

Most Puses Attempted

. 37

Most Passes Had Intercepted 5
Net Passmg Yardage
290 yds

Most Passes Caught
9
Yds. Gamed Pass Rece1v1ng .•• 173 yds

KICKING
Most Punts ••.•.

.. 10

8
8
Most Yardage Punts ... • •
Most Punts Caught.

356 yds
6
Most Krck-Offs Cauehi: ·: : ·:. 4
Most Ydge. Krck-Offs Return .• 172 yds

(19161
Cl9491
Cl9491
(19641
(1949)
119241
119241
fl924l
11951)
119511

Frank Siggms
(Quantico Marines)

Most Passes Completed . . _23
Most Consec. Passes Comp. 8

(19161

119641
119641
09641
119521
H9621
09511

Joe Zaleski •Miam1)
Joe Zaleski ~Miami!
Frank Srggms (Marsha Ill
Joe Zaleski (Xav1erl
Frank Siggrns
/Quantico Marines)
Danny O"Brien •.Mrami)
Jim Currin
{Quantrco Marmesl

&lt;19501
119501
119521
119491
119511

Vince Palyan (Rrchmondl
Art Bok !Toledo)
Vic Krrstopartis
CVillanovrl"svllleJ
Vic Kristopaitis (l'svlllel
Fred Dugan (C1ncinnatil
Bobby Recker &lt;Xavier)
Bobby Recker &lt;Xavrer)

119591
119471
f1956l

119501
119511

tl956l
(1957l
11950)
1 1950)

INDIVIDUAL FOOTBALL RECORDS ( SEASON )
SCORING
~ost Pornts . . . . . .... 72 pts.
ost Touchdowns ........ 12 TO's
Most Extra Pornts Attempted .37 PAT's

J~ ~~~!

Most Extra Points Scored.

28 PATs
14
~ost ConseC\Itive Extra Pornts 11
ost Freid Goals ............ 3
s
3
conng Passes Completed .. IS
Sconng Passes Caught
.. 8
TOP OFFENSIVE MARKS
Net Offense
. 1348 yds
RUSHING
.. .....
Most Times Carried • • • • . 166 times
Net Yards Rushing
Cl34 carries) •.••
780 yds
Best Yards Per Try
(99 carries).
.7.8 yds
PASSING
Most Passes Attempted
224
Most Passes Completed . •
.103
Most Consecutive Passes
Completed
9
Most Passes Had 'lnt~;ce.pted 16
14
Net Passing Yardage
1397 yds
Most Passes Caught .••
37
36
Yards Gamed Pass Receivrng

~~6 yds
546

KICKING
Most Punts
71
2665 yds
Most Yardage Punts
•
Most Punts Caught _ • . 26
Most Yardage Punts Returned
C28l Punts
338 yds
Best Puntmg Av.eraie
41.25
Most K1ck·Offs Caught
16
Most Yardage K1ck-Offs •
Returned tm 14)
356 yds

Leroy Ka-Ne
Leroy Ka-Ne
Barney Otten

~~~~;:o~~~kr

Paul Spakowskr
Rrch Winkler
Paul Spakowski
JoeWrndbrel
Jock McGarry
Frank Siggms
J1m Cumn
FrankSiums

119491
11949)
119491

::m:

119511
(19641
119511
119161
119241
!19Sll
tt95ll
11951)

Roose-velt Melt

119641

JimAkau

(19511

leroy Ka-Ne

(19491

Frank Siggins
Frank Sicgins

09521
119521

Frank S1ggins
Frank SJo:ins
Joe Zaleski
Frank S;gems
Fred Dugan
Jim Currin
Bobby Recker
Jim Currrn
Fred Dugan

119521
119521
09491
&lt;19511
11957)
119511
119521
11951)
119571

Tom Prmz

119651
119651
119481

Tom Pnnz
Joe Zaleski
Joe Zaleski
John Vukelich
Bobby Recker

(19511
1194BI
11952)

Bobby Recker

119501

INDIVIDUAL FOOTBALL RECORDS ( CAREER )
SCORING
Most Points

132 pts
pts
TO"s
PAT's
PAT's
PAT's
FG's

1
Most Touchdowns
Most Extra Pts Attempt
84
Most Consec Extra Pts
18
~ost htra Pomts Scored 63
ost F1eld Goals
5
~cormg Passes Co~pletfd · 28
14

1~

Tg~'oM~~~~E ~N~~

~u~H~~cn"

·

. 2681 yds

Jack Padley
Art Bok 14 yrs.l
Jack Padley
Barney Otten
R1ch Wmkler
Barney Otten
Jock McGarry
Frank Sigg1ns
J•m Curnn

11937-19391
0946-19491
11937-19391
1194819501
11963-19641
11948-19501
11924·19261
(1950-19511
11950-19521

frank Siggrns

11950-19521

Most T1mes Carried

.. 303
1570 yds

BiltySm1th
leroy Ka-Ne

11954-19561
(1948-19501

Most Passes Attempted

• 447
209

Frank S1ggms
FrankStums

11950-19521
11950-1952)

42
28
2853 yds
. • 74

Joe Zalesk&gt; 14 yrs.l
Frank S&gt;ggrns 13 yrs.l
Frank Srggrns
Bobby Recker
Jom Currrn
Jim Currrn
Bobby Recker

11947·19501
11950-19521
(1950-1952)
11950-19521
(1950-19521
(1950-19521
'1950-19521

~~~s~~Ghrng

~ost Passes Completed,
Passes Had
Intercepted

1'110St

~et PasSing Yardage

ost Passes Caught ..

Yds. Gar ned Pass Recerving

nos

yds.
1082 yds

KICKING
Most Punts .. • ..... Ill
Most Yardage Punts
3899 yds.
Most Yardage Returned . 394 yds.
Most Punts Caught
• 39
Most Krck·Offs Caught • . 35
Most Yardage K1ck-Offs
Returned
.
.
722 yds.

Joe Zaleski
JoeZaleskr
Bobby Recker
Bobby Recker
Bobby Recker

11948-19501
11948·19501
11950-19521
11950-19521
(195().1952)

Bobby Recker

(195().1952)

TEAM FOOTBALL RECORDS (GAME)
OFFENSE
Net Offense
Net Rushing
No. Rushing Plays.
Most First Downs

681 yds
543 yds
.70
30
29
19
Most First Downs Rushing
. 8
Most Fumbles
8
... 6
Most Fumbles lost
6
Most Opponents' Fumbles
.. 6
Recovered
6
.. 13
No Penalties . •.•
12
12
163 yds
No. Yards Penalized •.
119 yds
PASSING
37
Most Passes Attempted .•
37
.23
Most Passes Completed .•
290 yds
Net Passing Yardage ..
Most First Downs Passing ... 10
9
.5
Most Passes Intercepted
5
4
4
Most Passes Had Intercepted 5
SCORING
161 pts.
Most Pomts .
25 TO's
Most Touchdowns • .• •
18
Most Rushmg Touchdowns.
Most Passing Touchdowns
• 7
25
Most Extra Pomts Attempted
11
Most Extra Points Scored .
KICKING
• 11
Most Punts . . •
Most Yardage Punting . . . 413 yds
7
Most Punts Caught. • . •
7
Most Yardage Punts Returned .94 yds.
Best Yds. Per Krck 15 Punts). 476 yds

St. Bonaventure
St. Bonaventure
Cincinnati
Adrian College
St. Bonaventure
Marshall
Chattanooga
Holy Cross
North Texas State
Chattanooga

(1951)
Cl95l)
119561
11931)
(1951)
119511
119551
119551
119521
119541

Lejeune Marines
Miami I())
Detroit
Cincinnati
Richmond
Detroit
Richmond

Cl952)
119541
11961)
11957)
1195))
11961)
1195))

Miam1
11950)
Holy Cross
119581
Miami
119501
Quantico Marines 119511
Chattanooga
11950)
Drake
11952)
Richmond
11959)
Kent State
(1965)
Chattanooga
119541
Holy Cross
(19561
Xav•er
119491
Indiana
lnd1ana
Indiana
lndrana
Indiana
Indiana

Central
Central
Central
Central
Central
Central

Kentucky
Kentucky
Youngstown
Cincmnat•
Youngstown
North Texas State

Cl917 and 19181
Be(1\J:J8Jnt Defensive Year .held opponents to 7 pts. won 7, lost D. tied 1
Best Defensive Year_ Yardage
.Cl9511
~~:~;'~: ~:: yds.. • .. • • . • • •
.. Cl9481
Net - 1954 /ds.. .. •
•
.... 119511
32
Most Games With~u~- ·s~i~g. Heici seo;et"e~s
(1923-1927)
lo~~ds~::i~}.}9~~.yds.. Paul Spakowski, vs North Texas State. 1952

=

Most ~oints Scored- Single Quarter
!lndrana Central, 19231
·
Most. Plays Per Game
&lt;M~ami, 1950 and cinc·i~~.1tr: 't9.s6i · · ·

•

..

52 t
Ps
87

· · · · · · ·· · ·

Patronize
Our

Advertisers

SEITZ &amp; GEORGE
OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.
224-0658

119231
119231
11923)
11923)
119231
119231
119501
119501
(1950l
fl957J
1950)
(19521

• ·

114 N. St. c:lair

Dayton 2, Ohio

TEAM FOOTBALL RECORDS (SEASON)
Net Offense . . . . . .
BestAverageYardsPerGame
RUSHING
Net Rushing . •
• .•
No. Rush1ng Plays .. • ....
Most First Downs ..
Most F~rst Downs Rushmg . .
Most Fumbles • • . . . •
Most Fumbles lost. . . • . . • • •
Most Opponents Fumbles Recovered
No. Penalties
• . •• • •
No. Yards Penalized.
PASSING
Most Passes Attempted
Most Passes Completed .
Net Passmg Yardage . •.
Most First Downs Passing .
Most Passes Intercepted. •
Most Passes Had Intercepted
SCORING
Most Points {Season). ••
Highest Point Average Per Game
Most Touchdowns • . .
Most Passing Touchdowns
Most Rushing Touchdowns
Most Field Goals
•
.
Most Extra Points Attempted
Most Extra Points Scored . •
KICKING
Most Punts •
Most Yardage Punting
Best Yards Per Kick

3731 yds.
4146yds

11951)
.1951

2647 yds
549
193

11949)
(19511
119511
119511
11954-19551
119541
119541
(19561
094BI

ll5
40
24
24
62
530 yds
247

100

1413 yds

73
18
17
21

119521
119511
11951)
11951J
11959)
119521
119481

37
29

11924)
119061
119491
119511
119511
119241
119491
11951)

74
62
2665 yds.
2112 yds
39.2
38.9

119331
119501
119331
119501
11963)
119561

261
30 0 1180 pts. in 61
37
15

20
5

OF SPECIAL NOTE
longest Winmng Streak
8
longest losing Streak
ll
Longest Sconng Play. Rushing. 94 yds
80 yds
BOyds.
80 yds
Longest Scoring Play· Passmg. 76 yds
70 yds
67 yds

93 yds.
90 yds
longest Touchdown Punt Return •
Longest TO Krck Off Return
98 yds
longest TO Pass Interception 92 yds
Most Passes Intercepted. Game
3
longest Punt Return

11936-19371
1196{).19611
leroy Ka-Ne (Scranton)
(1949)
Joe Quinn !Wichita)
09411
Don Weeks !John Carroll) (!9541
Earl Spivey (Xavier)
1960)
Ralph Harper to Mike
Monaghan CDetrortl
(19591
AI Mahrt to Babe Zimmerman
IOhro Northern)
11914)
Lou Mahrt to Aug1e Cabrinha
!Haskelllndransl
119261
Brll Knisley IMarshalll
09411
Wrlhe Banks :Wittenberg! 119361
Same as above
Bobby Recker IXavrerl
119501
Wtllre Banks 1W1ttenbergl (}936)
Paul Spakowskr
(Toledo, 1951)
Jrm Spoerl
IMramr. 1953)
Bob Cyphers
IRrchmond. 19591
Jack Unverferth lOetroit, 1961)
Gary Hussron (Kent State, 19651

Most Passes Intercepted- Season
Paul Spakowski 119511. . . . .
Bob Cyphers 119591. ..
.. ..
Most Opponents' Fumbles Recovered
Jrm Shafer 11953 and 19541
Most Opponents' Fumbles Recovered !Cr.).
Jrm Shafer 11953-19541
Most Consecuttve Shut-Outs Registered •.

RELIANCE
ELECTRIC &amp;
ENGINEERING

co.
298-7366-7-8
909 IRVING
RELIANCE -

MASTER

REEVES
Paul J. Heckman
-

District Manager

12

33

�OTHER
ATHLETIC
DEPARTMENT
MEMBERS

224-9618

DON OONOHER
Head Basketball
Coach

CHUCK GRIGSBY
Assistant Basketball
Coach, Golf Coach

HERB DINTAMAN
Facilities, Intramural
Director

JIM HOOVER
Administrative Assistant,
Baseball Coach

GENE SCHILL
Sports Information
Director

SHAW EMMONS
Tennis Coach

ED YOUNGS
Wrestling Coach

BERNIE HARAWA
Soccer Coach

WALT DeANNA
Ice Hockey Coach

EDDIE KWEST
Trainer, Equipment
Manager

TOM DOWLING
Assistant to Finance
Director

DR. EDWARD
LESCH AN SKY
Team Physician

735 WAYNE AVE.
DAYTON, 0.

�ANOTHER SIDE ... ACADEMIC ... OUR DEANS

WILLIAM J. HOBEN,
Dean, School of
Business
Administration

DR. LEONARD A. MANN,
S.M., Dean,
College of
Arts and Sciences

OR. JOSEPH PANZER,
S.M., Dean,
School of Education

JAMES L. McGRAW,
Director,
Technical Institute

DR. MAURICE GRANEY,
Dean, School
of Engineering

BRO. AUSTIN J.
HOLIAN, S.M., Dean
for Graduate Studies
and Research

9f/b1/ll eztkkom1s [}fiu
lo J)aylon s
8%clusivl ~oojlop J)inin9
Albert is our century old symbol of welcome to gracious dining. And in the brand
new rooftop atmosphere you will enjoy Dayton's finest dining.
• Luncheon and Dinner
• Late Evening Snacks
• Cocktail Lounge Entertainment
Special Facilities for Banquets and Meetings

HEHRICI's

~a'Mi4 ~ (:~ dUia 1168
located atop the

21

rna II motor inn

SOUTH

JEFFERSON

DAYTON, OHIO

35

�INDEX OF ADVERTISERS
Abernathy Realty Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

~~;n DJ~!~Ie.rs · : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ~~

Anticoli's Restaurant . .. . ....... . .. . . . ........ .... ..... 32
Beringer Printing Co .. . ... . ... . .•..... . ....... . ........ 28
Berry, L. M. Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Blommel Sign Co. . .. . .. . ......•....... . . . .. . .. . .... . . 34
Borchers Ford . . . . . . . .... . .. . ..... . . . ..... . ....... . . 30
Brooks Sporting Goods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

~~~~n ;of~oger

TO EACH MEMBER OF
THE 1966 UNIVERSITY
OF DAYTON
FOOTBALL TEAM
AND
COACHING STAFF

THE
STANDARD
REGISTER
COMPANY
0

Business forms and equipment for Paperwork Simplification

DAYTON, OHIO 45401

36

2~

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::
Cashba Restaurant .. . .. . . . ........... . .... . ....... . .. 12
Cassano Provision Co . ... . .. . .. . . . . . .. . . . .... . . . ... . ... 22
Central Motors ... . ............... . . . .. . .. . ....... . .. . 31
Coca Cola .. . ..... . ....•.... . ..... . . . ... . ...... . .. . . . 27
Danis, B. G. Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Dayton Blue Print Co . ....... .. ..... . . ... .. .. .....• ... . 31
Dayton Monument Co . .... . ........ . ..........•..... . .. 39
Dills Supply Co ... . . . .. . ... . ... . ........ . ... ... ....... 28
Dominic's Restaurant .. . ........ . ..... .. ........ .. .. .. 13
Dorothy Lane Markets ............ . . . ... .. ............ 39
Dumar Typesetting, Inc. . ............ . .... . .. . ... . .. . .. 37
Fidelity Prescriptions .. . ... .. .... . .. . .. . ... . ....... . ... ~9
Flynn Sporting Goods .. . .. . ... . ... . .............. . ..... .:SO
Focke, Wm . &amp; Sons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Frigidaire Local 801 .... . .... . .. . .......... .. . . . . ..... 16
Fink·Jeske Chevrolet . . . . . . . ...... . ..... . ... . .. .. . . . . 11
Frisch's . ... . ............ . ..... . . . .... . ... . . . ...... . 18
Gosiger, C. H. Machinery Co .................. . .......... 10
Hasty Tasty ....... . .. . ......... . •... . .... . ...... . ... 23
Helldoerfer &amp; Castellini . . . . ........ .... ... . . .. ........ . 15
Henrici's ....... . ... . .. . .•. .. ...... . . . .... . . . .... .. . 35
Hertz Rent A Car ..... . ..... . .. .. ...... .. ....... . ..... 27
Hockey, Dayton Gems . ....... . ..... . ......... . .... ... . 37
Jacque's Flowers ... .. .. . .......... . ...•.•.......... . . 14
Kaylor Service Station . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Kettering Village Inn . .
. .... . ........ . .... . ... . .. . ... 32
Kramers Party Supply . . .... . .. .. ..•............... . ... 28

~~~:e~:a~ty.

~

: . : : . . : : : : : : ·. : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :
Kronenberger Realty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Kuntz, Peter Lumber Supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Lowe Bros. . . . . . . .
. ...... . .. . ....... . ........ . ..... 16
Macbeth, John L. Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Malone Camera Stores .. .. ........ ... ..... Inside Front Cover
Mann's Barber Service .. ... . .. . ........... . ... . ....... 39
Maries . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... . .... . ............ . ... . .... 30
Marion's Piazza .
. ..... . . .. ... .... ...... . ... . .... . 25
Master Drugs . . . . .
. ............ .... ......... . ..... 17
McCallister, Ken . . .
.. ....... ..........
. ... 14
Metropolitan Clothers ............ . . . .. . ..... .. ......... 21
Meyers &amp; Boehmer . .. . ...... . ....... . ...... . . . . . .•.. . 16
Miami Litho, Inc.. .. . . . .... . .......... . ... . ........... 6
Moler's Dairy .. . ..... . ................. . . . ...•...... . 19
M~B~ . ............ . .. . ... . ....... .. .... . ...... ~
National Lanes ... . .. . ..... . ... . .... . ...... . ... . ..... 30
NCR Employee's Credit Union . .... . .. . ..... . ...... . .... 26
Neil's Heritage House . ....... .. ........... . . . ..... . . . . 12
Neil's Linden House ............ . •.. . ... . ......•. . .. . . . 12
Northwestern Tool Inc . ...... .. .. . ..•.. . ..... . .. . . ..... 15
Osterfeld, H. J. Co ......... ... ...... .. ....... .. ..... . . 28
Parkmoor .. . ................ ... ....•..... . . . ..... . .. 20
Park Row Supper Club ......... . .....• .. ..... .. .. . .... 12
Penny Oldsmobile . . .. . ......... . ....... . .. . ... . .•... 39
Pine Club ........ .. ........ . .... . ...... . ... . ....... . 12
Poeppelmeier's .... .. ...........•.. . ... .. . . . . •. ... . . . 39
Pretzinger &amp; Son .... .. ........... ... ..... . .. .. . .. .. . . 10
Price Bros. . .. .. ............ . ..... . ..... . . . ..... . ... 17
Printing Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Priske's TV &amp; Appl. ............... . .... . .. . ....... . ... 17
Quality Courts ...... . ..... . .... . ........• . .......... 20
Red Barn Restaurants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . ...... . . 32
Reliance Electric &amp; Engineering .. .. .. .. .... . ........... . . 33
Roberts Funeral Home . . . . . . .. .. ......... . ... . .•..... 28
Roth Office Supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Rubicon Barbers .........• . •... .. ............. . ... .. . 39
Salem Camera Stores ............ . .. . .. .. ......... . .. . 10
Seitz &amp; George .. ..... . ........ . .. ... ..... . .... . . .. ... 33
Sinclair . . . . . . . . . . .
. ....... ... ..... . ..... Back Cover
South End Pharmacy ...... . .......... .. ... . . . ....... . . 15
South Park Barbers
...... .. ...... . . . .... . ... . ... .. .. 14
Srepco .......... . .... .. ....•....... . ...... . ........ 16
Standard Register . . . . . . ...•... .. ... . ............ . . . . 36
Stratford Motel .. . ..... . ......... ... .. . .............. 31
Tipp Realtors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
TWA ...............•... . . . •........ . .. Inside Front Cover
Valdhere Films, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Vitos Venice Inn .... ... . . . .. .. . .. . . . ........ .. ..... . . 32
Wagner-Smith Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Walkup, Jack Paper Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Weiffenbach, Marble &amp; Tile Co . .. . ........ . ........... . .. 39
Whalen, Charles W. Jr. ................. .. .. . . . .•.... . . 40
Westward Ho ............... . . . .. . ............... . ... 12
WHIO .. . . . .... .. .... . . . ..... .. ... .. . . ... . ....... . .. 21
White Allen Chevrolet . ........... . ... . .. . . Inside Back Cover
WVUD ... . ..... . ........ . . . •......•........ . .. . ..... 2

�A PAGE FROM THE PAST (Reprinted from 1951 Homecoming Program)

ONES WE REMEMBER
By Sl BURICK, Sports Editor, Dayton Daily News
My association with University of Dayton football goes back to a dank, blustery afternoon in the fall of 1925, which
happened to be my debut year as a
sports writer for The News.
_My boss had assigned me to cover a
St~vers-Roosevelt high school game at
Tnangle Park, but conditions were so
ridiculously bad on that virtually unsodded gridiron that the authorities
smartly decided at noon to call the
Whole thing off until the following Tuesday. "Better go out to the stadium and
do some notes on the U.D.-Haskell Indians game," the boss said. "It'll be
good experience for you. They'll play out
there if it floods."
. It didn't quite flood but they played
In a downpour that never ceased on a
turf that turned into a creek. And this
n_aive reporter was so awed by the asSignment that he didn't even think about
a~mission to the enclosed pressbox. BeSides, who ever heard of being under
cover, anyway, when you covered a game
at Triangle or old Athletic field? I took
a seat in the stands and waited for
developments. The Indians were big and
rough-looking. 1 remember two tremen~ous tackles named Roebuck and Stidam and a great back named John Levi.
Baujan's Gamble
I~ later years, I came to know Harry
Ba!JJan as a conservative coach, who
b 1~1lt strong defenses and was not inc 1ned to do much gambling on offense.
~ut t~at day, Dayton received the openIng k1_ckoff and Harry gave his quarter~a~k Instructions to pass on first down.
h1s was in an era when a pass on a
~et day was considered the ultra-ultra
~~ open football, for the aerial game
en was a threat-not the main part
of the offense, as it is so often today.
From. deep in Dayton territory, Lou
Mahrt Pitched the ball to Augie Cabrinha,
~h fleet little halfback who was one of
_e many of the Hawaiian Islands' con~~butions to U.D. football down through
e years. "Cabby" hung on to the already water-soaked ball and outsped the
ponderous Indians to the goal line. Day-

ton clung to those six points the rest of
the way, finally gave up a safety, and
went on to win, 6-2.
Dayton has never had any pretenses
about wanting to grow any bigger in
ball than its total enrollment should
merit. Baujan's Flyers and now Joe
Gavin's Flyers merely wanted to be
good enough to be represented in a good
league in a class just a few steps removed from the "big leagues."
Well, that game and that victory
against the Indians in 1925 in what was
then a spanking new U.D. Stadium
started the trend towards good football
in the school's own class. No reformer
could ask for anything else.
In the years that have followed, Dayton has gone out of its class now and
then to meet such stalwart foes as Boston College, Detroit, Holy Cross, Tennessee and Kentucky. Dayton never felt it
had a right to beat them and didn't.
But the Flyers have won their share and more - from such as Miami, Ohio
U., Ohio Wesleyan when the Bishops
were in a higher gridiron bracket, Xavier,
Marshall, Chattanooga, Western Reserve,
Cincinnati, John Carroll, St. Bonaventure
and the like.
Red Cats Dropped
After the Quantico game, among happy
memories of Dayton football, my most
poignant home-game recollection is that
of the Western Reserve game of 1937,
which was the year that. Jack Padley,
Coley McDonough, Ed Marre and Joe
Thomas gave Dayton an all-Pennsylvania
backfield. They were sophomores then
and Reserve brought to town a team
coached by Bill Edwards, now of Vanderbilt. that had not met defeat in 28
games.
The largest crowd that had ever seen
a football game in Dayton to that point
some 13,000 filled the stadium,
expecting the worst. But the boys put
on an unforgettable show to eclipse the
mighty Red Cats - taking t~e edge off
the visitor's idea of a rout w1th a quick
first-quarter touchdown and winning
18 to 6.

Away from home, the top memory ot
all has to do with the junket to San
Fran_c isco in 1939 for a game with Slip
Mad1~an's Galloping Gaels of St. Mary's,
the little "big league" college in the
Moraga Valley. They called "us" a cow
college from the Ohio sticks. The great
Padley and his mates were seniors by
then and, unbeknownst to the coaches,
those upperclassmen made a pledge the
morning of the game to make this the
all-out effort of their careers.
Padley, helped by gorgeous blocking,
and by one of the prettiest fakes I ever
~aw to foil a tackler just beyond the
lme of scrimmage, scored on a run of
more than 50 yards to put Dayton
~head. Eventually, the biger, more heavIly manned Gaels came back to score,
too. T~e game ended, 6-6, and though
I ~esp1se the phrase, "moral victory,"
th1s one was for Dayton.
New Order on the Hill
Harry Baujan moved into the "front
office" as athletic director after the
1946 campaign and now Joe Gavin and
~is concept of the T formation, with all
1ts modern splits and flanker alignm~nts,
is coaching Dayton to new
he1ghts in his fifth year.
The team that won its first two games
over the rugged Quantico Marines and
St. Bonaventure (this piece was written
befor~ the Youngstown game) gives
prom1se of new heroes and new achievements. Names like Siggins, Recker,
Akau, Raif!, Noll, Currin, Maloney, Kramer, Cass1dy and their buddies should
bien~ perfectly with the Padleys, Mahrts,
Cabnnhas, Fursts, Niehauses, Eiseles
Bel~nichs and Ka-Nes, who wrote such
glonous chapters of Dayton football history in the past.

DUMAR

TYPESETTING, INC.

DAYTON GEMS
Home Hockey Schedule 1966-1967

HARA ARENA
OCTOBER 19- Toledo (Exhibition Game, 7:30P.M.)
31-Des Moines, 7:30
7-Des Moines, 7:30
OCTOBER
FEBRUARY
11-Columbus, 7:00
23-Fort Wayne, 7:00
s-Muskegon, 3:00
13-Des Moines, 7:30
25-Port Huron, 7:30
7-Des Moines, 7:30
18-Toledo, 7:00
30--Columbus, 7:00
12-Columbus, 3:00
25-Port Huron, 7:00
NOVEMBER
16---Port Huron, 7:30
27-Columbus, 7:30
9--Muskegon, 7:30
19-Muskegon, 7:00
13-Toledo, 7:00
JANUARY
22-Fort Wayne, 7:30
16--Columbus, 7:30
!-Muskegon, 7:00
26---Port Huron, 7:00
20--Fort Wayne, 7:00
4-Toledo, 7:30
28-Des Moines, 7:30
23-Toledo, 7:30
8-Des Moines, 3:00
MARCH
27-Muskegon, 7:00
11-Columbus, 7:30
14-Muskegon, 7:30
30--Port Huron, 7:30
15-Fort Wayne, 3:00
16---Port Huron, 7:30
22......:.Toledo, 3:00
DECEMBER
19-Toledo, 3:00
29-Fort Wayne, 3:00
4-Fort Wayne, 7:00

2341 Tacoma Street

Dayton, Ohio 45410

Phone 253-3531

Henry Deuer

Keith Marshall

37

�UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON ATHLETIC HALL OF FAME

.....
Harry Solimano, '07
Inducted: 1962

AI Mahrt, '12
Inducted: 1962

lou Mahrt, '26
Inducted: 1962

Sam Hipa, '28
Inducted: 1962

Stan Corbett, '35
Inducted: 1962

Jack Padley, '40
Inducted: 1962

Bernard Keiter, '42
Inducted: 1962

Bill Knisley, '47
Inducted: 1962

Don Meineke, '52
Inducted: 1962

Charles Noll, '53
Inducted: 1962

Herb Eisele, '26
Inducted: 1963

leland Norris, '52
Inducted: 1963

William Blake, '26
Inducted: 1964

John Horan, '55
Inducted: 1964

Richard Snelling, '27
Inducted: 1965

Tony Furst, '40
Inducted: 1965

Jim Katcavage, '56
Inducted: 1966

Bob Swan, '29
Inducted: 1966

The University of Dayton Athletic Hall of Fame
is under the sponsorship of the Montgomery
County Chapter of the Alumni Association. It
was created in 1962 when 10 charter members
were inducted at ceremonies during half·time
of a basketball game. This practice has been

38

continued. Two new members, who must have
graduated from the University at least five years
before their entrance into the Hall, are voted
into the coveted membership each year after a
poll of the Alumni Association membership and
final selection by a special committee.

�DAYTON

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LOCATIONS

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DOROTHY LANE SUPER CENTER

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Complete

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18

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COUNTRY

BARBERS

18

Department Store &amp; Food
5225 Springboro Pike

39

�FOR U.S. CONGRESS
THIRD DISTRICT

CHARLES W. WHALEN, JR.
One of the University of Dayton's Most Distinguished Alumni

THE MAN WITH THE RECORD
Ohio Legislature

University of Dayton

Community Service

• State Senator-Two Terms.

• Professor of Economics, Chairman of
the Department.
• Alumni and Athletic Boards , two
terms each.

• Board Member or Trustee- United
Cerebral Palsy Association, Child
Gu idance Center, Aviat ion Hall of
Fame, SCOPE, Grandview Hospital,
Urban League, The Loretto.

• State Representative-Three Terms.
• Chief sponsor of over 100 bills in education , highway development, public finance, urban affairs , human
rights, and a Master Plan for Ohio
Higher Education .
• Voted the Outstanding Member of
The Ohio Senate, 1963.

• Winner of Miami Valley Chapter
Award for Outstanding Civic Contribution by a Univers i ty &lt;3f Dayton
Alumnus, 1957.
• Class President, last three years as
U.D. Undergraduate.
• Winner of three national debate tours.

• Past President American Legion Post
# 5 Building Corporation, Harvard
Business School Alumni Association,
Agonis Club, Nomad Club.
• Former Director or Trustee-Dayton
Council on World Affairs, Gaelic Cumman, Dayton Bicycle Club.

• Winner of scholarship to Harvard
Graduate School of Business.
Whalen for Congress Committee, Charles D. Ross, Chairman • 235 Spirea Drive, Dayton, Ohio 45419

40

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�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
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 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text> Saturday, October 15, 1966 1:30 P.M.</text>
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                    <text>Nickerson Field

October 8, 1966

•

.

.

. -

.

---

.

-

-

,..

-.._
- -

/

- -- -

�Football excitement ...
invigorating autumn air . ..
and dining at Valle's Steak
House ... the perfect
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�FOLLOW B.U. FOOTBALL
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over WBUR &amp; WTBU Radio
Pregame Show at 1:15 P.M. Every Saturday
Brought to you by

T.ADE·WARK

4ID

Bottling Company of Boston.

�-

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- - - - --- -

~-~~--

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~---·-----

THE OPPONENTS • • •

BOSTON UNIVERSITY
FOOTBALL NEWS

THIS WEEK
BUFFALO at BOSTON, October 8th
\\'eather permittin&lt;Y, Terrier fans should be exposed to
an aerial attack this afternoon, a first-year coach Richard
··Doc'' Urich has opened up the Buffalo offense into "a
wide open attack." Urich i the former top offensive back- - -field aide to Ara Parseo-hian,
and Bull fans are hopeful that
some of Ara's magic came with
Urich from South Bend.
The Bulls work out of both
the Pro "I" and "T" formations and according to BU
coach Warren Schmakel, \\-ho
scouted Buffalo's spring intersquad game, the Bulls haYe all
DICK ASHLEY
the ingredients for a really
explosi,·e team. Key players in the B offen e are QB
~1ike Murtha and split end Dick Ashley. :Murtha,
although young and green, is an exceptional prospect.
Ashley set school records last year for pass receiving·. Fullback Lee Jone &lt;Yained more than 500 yards last fall.
The Bulls finished the 1965 eason with a 5-3-2 record,
with the Terriers up etting them 14-7 at Buffalo for one
of those losses. Thus far, the two teams have met ix
times since the opener in 1960, with Buffalo holding a
4-2-0 edge in the series. Buffalo opened this season with
a win over K ent tate in that tou&lt;Yh Ohio league, then
dropped a decision to Cornell-a tean1 that is regarded as
a possible hy League champ this year. Last weekend, the
Bulls hosted Villanova and

NEXT WEEK
HOLY CROSS at BOSTON, October 15th
HOMECOMING
There is little doubt but what the Terriers will be in
for another tough one as Homecoming rolls around. The
Crusaders of Holy Cross may well be . the most improved
team in the East, battling the Cadets of West Point down
to the wire with a 14-7 scoreboard loss, but a moral victory. Last weekend, they snapped Dartmouth's undefeated
streak at 11 with a 7-6 upset victory over the Big Green.
Holy Cross's recovery can probably be summed up in one
word- LE TZ. The return of Jack Lentz to quarterback
is enough to give any opponent worries and those of you
" -ho remember the Homecoming Game here two years
ago against Holy Cross certainly remember what Lentz
is capable of.
Other top returnees for the Crusaders are end Pete
Kimener and center Dick Grise on offense; and Dick
Kryzyzek, halfback Dick Ciardi, and middle guard Glenn
Grieco on defense. Top sophomores include tackles Mike
Crimmins and Mike R eilly. and halfback Tim Hawkes.
A sellout crowd is e&gt;,:pected at ickerson Field for
this one.

Nickerson Field

October 8, 1966

Features
11

B.U. Sophomore Tackle by Marvin Pave
Boston University sophomore tackle John DeLucca feels he'.s
lucky to hat•e a big brother u•ho played professional football.

12 Bring Us Your Boys ... We'll Make Our Own Men
A look into BU's highly successful u•eight training program
that has remlted in a transformation of several key players.

29

Globe Boy Had a Quiet Wit by Harold Kaese
A columnist pays tribute to a Boston University student
who u•as killed in an automobile accident this summer.

30

Terrier Tales by Art Dunphy
Coach Paul Maguire has a fine group of freshman prospects,
and one of his future standouts is just a growing boy at
265 pounds.

Departments
A Look At The Opponents 5
Presidents and Athletic Director 7
The Captains 9
Boston University Squad Roster 14
Starting Lineups 17
Buffalo University Squad Roster 19
Boston University Coaching Staff 21
Boston University Players 22
Buffalo University Coaching Staff 25
Buffalo University Players 26
OFFICIALS
Referee- J ohn ]. Bane
Field Judge- Paul A. Massey
Umpire- Frank G. Power
Linesman- Benjamin B. Zecker
Official Timer- Leroy ]. Kelley
Cover Design by

ARTHUR

L.

jERRY ScHUERGER

DcNPHY,

Editor

Photos by University Photo Service
Published by H. 0. Zimman, Lynn, Mass.

�"Now h eresmy
'
1 "
pan.

John Hancock has as many insurance plans as there are people in this stadium. And more.
You see, we tailor your insurance plan to suit your own personal needs. (We
have a special plan for college students. And kids with 19?? on their sweatshirts.)
Give your John Hancock agent a call. He can't start designing your plan till you do.

�--

-~---~---

~

-

--

~

---------------

JAMES E. PEELE
Director of A thletics, University of Buffalo

MARTIN MYERSON
President, University of Buffalo

DR. HAROLD C. CASE
President, Boston University

DR. ROBERT R. PECK
Director of P. E. and Athletics, Boston University

7

�BOSTON ARENA AUTHORITY
1966-67 Terrier Varsity Hockey Schedule
Dote

Day

Fri.
Sat.
Wed.
Sot.
Tue.
Tue .

Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

Opponent

25 u. of New Brunswick
26 u. of New Brunswick
30 R.P.I.
3 Boston College
6 Providence
13 Boston College

Fri .

Cornell

Sot.
Wed.
Sot.
Mon.

Sat.

Princeton. Yale, St. lawrence
Clarkson, Minnesota

-

(N)
(H)
(N)
(H)
{A)
(H)
(H)
(A)

9,0C
a,3o

Fri.

Dec. 19
Dec. 20

Northeastern

11
13
18
21
24
1
4

Jon.

Mon.

Dec. 28
Dec. 29
Dec. 30

Harvard

Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Mar.
Mar.

Sot.

EC/',C HOLIDAY
TOURNEY BU

Wed.
Thu .

Jon.
Jon.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

a,Jo
a,oc
a,oo
8,31)
a,oo

Day

a,oo
a,Jo
a ,oo
8 ,1 5
8,15
a,Jo

Dec. 17

ARENA CH Rl STMAS
TOURNEY
Harvard

P.M.

(H)
(A)
(A)
(H)
(A)

P.M.

IN)*
(H)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(H)

Sat.

Tue.

Location

7 Clarkson
27 U. of Denver
28 U. of Denver
1 Brown
4 Yale
6 BEAN POT TOURNEY

Date

Location

(N)

-

Mon.

-

Tue.

-

Sot.

Fri.
Wed.
Sot.
(N)
(N)
(N)

9,00
7,00
9,oo

Opponent

-

St. lawrence
BEAN POT
Army

FINALS

Northeastern
Providence
Dartmouth
Colgate

Home Gomes -

a,3o
a,3o
8 ,30
8:3C
2,30

Boston Arena

•-Four Seasons Arena, Walpole
Coach : Jack Kelley

Season Tickets on Sale at the Boston University Ticket Office

HOME OF BOSTON UNIVERSITY HOCKEY
Birthplace of Collegiate, Schoolboy, and Club Hockey
Site of State Interscholastic Tourney
Commonwealth Skating Club
Modem arena available for boxing, wrestling, basketbalL
graduations, conventions, industrial exhibits
238 ST. BOTOLPH STREET

JOSEPH TOMASELLO, Gen. Mgr.

co

7-3810

Before and After the Game!
Breakfast
lunch
Dinner
Snacks

...........------·

ANTHONY LUCCI

MEDFORD SCi)UARE
SPORTING GOODS

COs INC.

?~f~

WHOLESALE and RET AIL OUTFITTERS

SNACK SHOP
645 COMMONWEALTH AVENUE (Next to B. U.)

MEDFORD SQUARE

Other PETER PAN SNACK SHOPS at

391 -4071

581 BOYLSTON ST., BOSTON (at Copley Square)
NORTHSHORE SHOPPI NG CENTER, PEABODY

8

33 SALEM STREET

Open from 7:30A.M. to 1:30 A.M .
Fridays and Saturdays 'til 2 A.M .

�The
Captains

BILL TAYLOR
University of Buffalo Captain

BOB NICHOLS
Boston University Captain

�• •

~iJfincfive . . .

~

:Jhe

Official BoJlon

Copyright, Boston University, 1966

UniverJil'f Jenff

* Your Symbol of Achievement
* Sale Limited to Juniors, Seniors
and Graduates

* Orders Taken for the Class of 1968
on October 10, II, 13 from 8:30AM
to 5:00PM

Boston University Bookstore
GEORGE SHERMAN UNION
775 COMMONWEALTH AVE.
10

�B. U. Sophomore Tackle
Owes Debt to 'Big Brother~
By ~fARVIN PAVE
Boston Herald Sportswriter

J

OH NY DeLUCCA, Boston
niversity's sophomore tackle
from Peabody, considers himself a lucky guy.

The doorbell rang. There was Gerry DeLucca at the door with
.John. Gerry introduced us. That started the ball rolling."

"Lucky to have a brother who has been a tremendous help to
me throughout my football career," admits J ohn, who made his
varsity collegiate debut for the Terriers against Colgate.

Johnny performed as a defensive end on Tom Daubney's freshman squad last season, and his move to tackle this year was quite
accidental, despite his experience at that position in high school.

Johnny's brother is Gerry DeLucca, also a former Peabody
High tackle, later a standout lineman at Middle Tennessee State

"Another sophomore. Billy Flippin, was scheduled to start at
tackle," says John. Billy suffered a possible hernia, and the
coach switched me to his spot."
It doesn't appear as if anyone is going to step right in and
take the offensive tackle job away from him, either.
".John still makes sophomore mistakes," admits chmakel, "but
they're aggressive mistakes. H e"s always digging, and I'm impressed with his attitude. He has tenacity and mobility, too. Those
qualities are absolute necessities for a tackle."
.Johnny just loves contact, as his coach says, he's not gun-shy
on the line despite his varsity inexperience.
"I never thought I'd make the starting lineup so quickly,"
admits John. 'Tm real happy. Gerry's tickled too. He retired from
football in '64, and is operating a moving van line in Salem. I
\\Orked for him during the summer, and we worked out together
during our spare time. He's been ju t great to me."
John is enrolled in B.U."s School of Education and he hopes to
become a teacher-coach after graduation. He also has an interest
in astronomy .
.Judging from his coach"s appraisal and John"s attitude, it's
the linemen playing opposite the younger DeLucca who'll be
seeing stars this season.

GERRY D eLUCCA
College, and more recently (until 1964) a member of the Boston
Patriots.
"Every success I've enjoyed in football can be attributed in
some way to Gerry," says John. "We've had a very close relationship. We talk football, we practice together and, in general,
Gerry helps me every chance he gets."
The brothers have much in common. Both, as mentioned, "ere
top-notch tackle at Peabody High. Gerry's playing weight in college was 215, same as John is. Both stand 6-3, and now .John has
followed Gerry to the college varsity level.
It was Gerry \\ho persuaded John to attend B.U.
" I was trying to decide whether to go South, or stick close to
home for my college education," relates J ohn, former Honorable
Mention All-Scholastic at Peabody in 1964, and a starter in the
Harry Agganis Memorial Game at Manning Bowl in 1965.
"Gerry told me it would be best to attend a local school and
get a good education. My high school coach, Art Adamopolous,
had received a questionnaire from Warren Schmakel (B.U.
coach) at the end of the '64 football season, and Art told me
B.U. was interested."
Schmakel, who is most impressed with John's aggres iveness,
tells the rest.
"I was sitting at home on New Year's Day (1965) with my
family and my backfield coach, Larry aviaux," recalls Warren.

JOHNNY DeLUCCA

11

�Bring Us Your Boys,
We'll Make Our Own Men
By

JACK SHEEHAN

Boston Herald Sportswriter

T

OI\TY GALLAGHER and Bob Bossert pinched from
either end of the Boston University line and teamed
to insert an enemy quarterback deep into the turf.
And on that plea ant autumn afternoon Ralph Jelic
smiled and thought, "Two of the boys."
Ray Norton croaked the big fullback. Then Billy
Campbell batted away a third down pass effort. And
vVarren Schmakel's face broke into a grin as his mind
flashed back to the long winter months.
Gallagher, Bossert, Torton, Campbell and more-John
DeLucca, Dick Farley, Fred Me eilly, Joe Novoset and
still more. They' re all products of the new Terrier charm
school, operated by chmakel and Jelic. It's a new way
to win friends and influence people-through weight
training.
"Oh, oh," you say. You've seen those fat, muscle-bound
slobs who lift the weights. Well, now, why don' t you take
that kind of talk directly to Mr. Gallagher or Mr. Bossert
or Mr. Torton. I'm sure they could straighten you outin more ways than one.
The first thing they'd do, pal, is set you straight on the
fact that this is weight training as opposed to weight
lifting. Sure there is some lifting invoked but it's as J elic

says, "'Ve lift the weights to develop muscle to use, not
for show." That's how it differs from body building too.
And have they been using the muscle? ince the University's cooperation in supplying a fine weight room,
which, by the way, is open to the student body and faculty
seven days a week, the results have been fairly obvious.
"Our program boils down to two key points," said
Schmakel. "First we've been very fortunate in getting
definite physical results. And second, it's a great way of
bringing the kids together in the off- eason. It actually
builds unity, esprit de corps."
Gallagher is a prime example of the B.U. program.
"Tony came to us as a 6-3 freshman who weighed only
187," recalled chmakel. "He was di appointed in himself
that season, mainly because of his lack of strength and
weight. He went on the program from December to April
and put on 35 pounds of good, solid muscle mostly in his
arms and chest where he needed it."
"Of course, we got Gallagher at the right time," added
Jelic who has been involved with weight training programs
for some 17 years, and, who along with the now departed
Dave Barnes was instrumental in the Terrier set up.
"Actually the 11th and 12th grades in high school are the
ideal times to get them.
"Our program does a lot more than build size and
trength. One of the biggest things it does is build confidence. You get so you ne\·er feel physical pain playing
football. It gets to the point where you feel nobody can
hurt you. Just look at Gallagher. He thinks he's King
Kong."
Schmakel is sold on the program. He's directed similar
ones at Miami (Ohio ) , Toledo, N ebraska, Rutgers and
Central Michigan. "The thing that makes it go," he said,
"is that we work out ourselves and the kids follow. "
"You have to battle many fallacie ," said J elic. " People
will always say that it' ll ruin you phy ically, that it will
build a big body which will become fat later, that it will
hurt your heart. They're all wrong. vVe have to tell the
freshmen here the same thing.
" 'Ve've got to sell him first on the idea that it'll make
him a better athlete. Don't get me wrong. It doesn't necessarily make a great football player. But what it does do

Tony Gallagher, Schmakel's best salesman for weight training,
does some pullovers with 150 pounds of weight while Gerry
Smith-another convert-holds his legs. In the background, Neil
Smith puts in some time at a machine especially designed to
improve leg muscles. This is one of the most modern and complete weight training facilities in the country.

�is take a kid with some ability and make him a hell of a
lot better.
"Of course, we've had more success here at B.U. because of Warren. He does it himself. The kids know it's
important to him so they do it. Then finally they believe.
It's a way of getting a lot closer to the kids too. I get to
know them pretty well and they get to know me.
The program itself is based on isotonics rather than
isometrics. The members of the Terrier staff feel strongly
about it. They feel a player can more easily move an
opponent as a result. E\'erything is individual- in areas
where the player needs help most. What it amounts to
basically, perhaps, is a personal challenge.
:M ost schools try to use a weight program. Its success
or lack of success depends largely on supervision and interest. It can become a borina thing, but, if you can see
the end result, it helps. It's also good for any sport- tennis,
swimming, crew- under correct supervision.
J elic, who has been battling non-believers for year , ha
done enormous research on progressive weight training.
"Billy Canon was one of the first to give it a push,' ' said
J eli c. "He disproved the theory that it would cost agility.
Bob Petit, Jim Taylor- a lot of great athletes and entire
teams use it.
" What we actually try to develop are explosive power,
strength and body size. Ifs by no means a substitute for
football techniques, rather a supplementary measure to
make bigger and better athletes. It kind of makes them
tand a little taller and straighter."
Coach Warren Schmakel (foreground) and Ralph Jelic, work
out regularly in the weight room. It is their interest in the program that has sold its importance to the athletes.

Ray Norton, a big man who has grown bigger, lifts a heavy load on his shoulder, while getting some moral encouragement from football captain Bob Tichols. Norton is now 250 pounds, while Nichols built himself up to 218. In the background, a pair of Terriers
work out on another of the many machines available in the facility.

�BOSTO N uNIV.

R
0
s
T
E
R

No.

Name

Pos.

Class

Age

Ht

Wt.

School

11
12
14
15
16
17
21
22
24
25
26
27
28
30
31
32
35
36
37
38
39
41
42
43
44
45
46
50
51
52
55
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Saurino, Joe
Cleary, Bob
*Kobus, Bob
*Thornton, Tom
Chamberlain, Don
Lucca, Dan
Rucker, Reggie
Smith, Gerry
McNeilly, Fred
Symes, Herb
*Smith, Neil
Grant, John
Weist, Joe
*Fournier, Marc
Salipante, Andre
Middleton, Tom
*Rosinski, Roger
Novosat, Joe
Donabedian, Jay
Farrell, Jack
Smith, Robert
*Raymer, Bruce
*Farley, Dick
Dexter, Pete
Uhlar, John
*Schweikert, Alan
Glenn, Paul
*Ashley, Jim
*Butterfield, Chuck
*Stawitzky, Dick
Hazell, Dave
Scheller, Arnie
Aguair, Jim
Gapinski, Phil
*Brown, Jeff
*Campbell, Bill
Bloom, Mike
Wittorf, Jim
Marcus, Bob
Lepore, Rick
Burton, Cliff
Corbett, Ed
Delucca, John
*Rafferty, Bill
*Norton, Ray
Seppa, Ron
*McWeeny, Bob
Miniacci, Dom
Doty, Clark
~'Whitty, Wilson
*Bokoski, Stan
Young, Bill
Dunn, Terry
Bossert, Bob
Pearson, Chuck
*Gallagher, John
*Redgate, Howie
*Nichols, Bob
Bryant, Jeff
*Donahue. Jim
*Tibaldi, Chuck

QB
QB
QB
QB

Soph.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Soph.
So ph.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Soph.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
So ph.
So ph.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Soph.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Soph.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So ph.
Sr.
Jr.

19
20
20
19
20
19
19
19
19
19
19
20
19
19
19
19
20
19
19
20
19
21
19
20
21
20
19
20
19
21
19
18
19
19
20
19
19
20
19
20
19
23
19
21
20
20
19
20
19
19
21
19
19
19
19
19
19
23
19
22
19

5:10
6:1
6:1
5:10
6:0
5:10
6:1
5:10
6:1
5:10
6:0
6:3
5:10
5:8
5:10
5:11
5:10
5:11
6:1
6:0
6:0
5:10
6:0
6:0
5:11
5:7
5:7
6:0
6:0
6:1
6:0
5:11
6:0
6:2
5:10
6:0
6:0
6:0
6:0
6:0
5:11
5:11
6:3
6:2
6:2
5:11
6:1
6:1
6:2
6:2
6:0
6:2
6:1
6:1
6:1
6:3
6:0
6:2
6:1
5:9
5:11

190
175
195
178
185
177
190
195
196
193
192
175
185
195
193
200
200
180
192
195
192
175
185
190
185
157
190
210
205
210
186
212
200
206
201
215
200
215
200
205
215
182
215
230
248
223
218
230
210
212
220
186
193
225
210
225
190
214
200
170
205

SED
SED
CBA
SED
SED
SED
SED
SED
SED
SED
CLA
SED
SED
SED
CBA
SED
SED
SED
CBA
SED
CLA
CLA
SED
SED
CLA
CBA
SED
SED
SED
CBA
SED
ENG
SED
SED
CBA
SED
SED
SED
SED
CBA
CBA
SED
SED
SED
SED
ENG
CLA
SED
CBA
SED
SED
SED
SED
SED
SED
SED
SED
SED
ENG
SED
CBA

s

QB
HB
HB
CB
HB
HB

s

HB
FB
CB
FB
FB
CB
CB
CB

s
s

s

HB
HB
HB
HB

c
c

MG
LB
MG
LB
LB
G
LB
G
LB
G
G
LB
LB
T
T
T
T
T

T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

E

*Indicates Returning Lettermen

Hometown
Bethleham, Pa.
Quincy
Hartford, Conn.
So. Portland, Me.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Schenectady, N. Y.
Washington, D. C.
Rockaway, N. J.
Peabody
Maynard
Kenmore, N. Y.
Schenectady, N. Y.
Rutherford, N. J.
Auburn, Me.
Belmont
Schenectady, N. Y.
Claremont, N. H.
Creighton, Pa.
Salem, N. H.
Jamaica Plain
Fall River
Schenectady, N. Y.
Danvers
Newton
Valley Stream, N. Y.
Chatham, N. J.
Pottsville, Pa.
Swansea
Leominster
Tonawanda, N. Y.
W. Roxbury
Warwick, R. I.
Middleford, Me.
Swampscott
Bedford Hills, N. Y.
Somerville
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Lyndhurst, N. J.
Newark, N. J.
Somerville
Morristown, N. J.
Arlington
Peabody
Wakefield
Hingham
Meriden, Conn.
Greenwich, Conn.
Bronx, N. Y.
Concord
Foxboror
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Medford
Schenectady, N. Y.
Williamsville, N. Y.
Washington, Pa.
Rockland
Arlington
So. Boston
Bridgevlile, Pa.
Woburn
Providence, R. I.

�After you've walked off with all the honors,
what do you do for an encore?
Meet Olds Toronado-'67 edition.
Awards for this . Awards for that. Awards for just about everything. But rest on its laurels?
Not Toronado. Swinging new look outside . Posh new detailing inside. Doors with torsion -bar
spring assists that opett easier than ever to the flat-floored, room -for-six interior.
Even that fabulous front-wheel-drive ride is smoother and quieter for '67. A t~d front disc
brakes and radial ply tires are available . Truzd-settit~g To ron ado: Proved and applauded
by tens of thousands of satisfied owners. Greater that~ ever the second time around!
Olds thinks of your safety, too, with the GM -dmloped enern·absorbiOI
steennt column that can compress on sevet'e unpxt up to • ~• Inches ~
with four -way hazard warmnt fJasher ; outside rearview mmor; dual master
cylinder brake system, plus many other safely feotures-all standard for '67.

�~~J~ FOR THE TASTE

�BUFFALO

BOSTON

Probable Starting lineups
OFFENSE
85 PAUL KLEIBER ..............................................LE
73 TONY MICELI ................................................LT
61 MIKE RISSELL ................................................LG
56 BRUCE MacKELLAR ........................................C
67 TED GIBBONS ................................................RG
76 RUSS MacKELLAR .......................................... RT
87 DICK ASHLEY ................................................RE
14 MICKY MURTHA ............................................QB
20 JIM BARKSDALE ........................................ LHB
49 RICK WELLS ................................................RHB
36 LEE JONES ...................................................JB

Probable Starting lineups
OFFENSE
85 HOWIE REDGATE ..........................................LE
74 BOB McWEENY ..............................................LT
67 DICK LEPORE ................................................LG
50 JIM ASHLEY ......................................................C
62 JEFF BROWN ................................................RG
70 JOHN DeLUCCA ..............................................RT
86 BOB NICHOLS ................................................RE
15 TOM THORNTON ..........................................QB
43 PETE DEXTER ............................................ LHB
26 NEIL SMITH ................................................RHB
35 ROGER ROSINSKI ..........................................FB

DEFENSE
50 DENNIS BRISKY ............................................ LE
70 RON PUGH .................................................... LT
66 JOHN LUPIENSKI ......................................... LG
52 JACK WESOLOWSKI ...................................... RG
71 BILL TAYLOR ................................................RT
84 JOHN PRZYBYCIEN ........................................ RE
58 ROD RISHEL ................................................ LLB
62 TOM KOWALEWSKI ...................................... RLB
22 NICK CAPUANA .......................................... LHB
40 DAN SELLA ................................................RHB
48 TOM HURD ......................................................S

DEFENSE
84 JOHN GALLAGHER ........................................LE
72 RAY NORTON ................................................LT
71 BILL RAFFERTY ............................................MG
78 WILSON WHITTY ............................................RT
82 BOB BOSSERT ................................................ RE
63 BILL CAMPBELL ..........................................LLB
68 CLIFF BURTON ............................................RLB
24 FRED McNEILLY ..........................................LCB
37 JAY DONABEDIAN ......................................RCB
41 BRUCE RAYMER ............................................ LS
42 DICK FARLEY ................................................RS

THE BUFFALO SQUAD
58
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
75
76
77
78
79
80

14
15
18
19
20
21
22
24
26
27
30
32
35
36
40
42
44
45
46
48
49
50
51
52
53

Murtha, b
Martin, b
York, b
Mason, b
Barksdale, b
Rutkowski, b
Ca pua na, b
Svec, b
McEwen, b
Coupas, b
Brennan, b
Richner, b
Smith, b
Jones, b
Sella, b
Hoke, b
Drankoski, b
Murphy, b
Sinclair, b
Hurd, b
Wells, b
Brisky, b
Wright, g
Wesolowski, b
Wilbur, b
5~- Mosher, g
55 Kovack, c
56 MacKellar, c
57 Ruggerio, c

'

CA-COLA

8~

85
86
87
88
89
90

A

COli.

'AR

THE B. U. SQUAD

Rishel, b
Walters, g
Rissell, g
Kowalewski, g
Lehner, g
Maser, g
Fi nochio, g
lupienski, g
Gibbons, b
Hayden, g
Sabo, g
Pugh, t
Taylor, t
Basta, t
Miceli, t
Riccelli, t
MacKellar, t
Kuzmitski, t
P:rozzolo, t
Thomas, t
Embow, e
Przybycien, e
Kleiber, e
Dunn, e
Ashley, e
Remillard, e
Doherty, e
Hansen, k

REG ST RE

A E-MAAK

11
12
14
15
16
17
21
22
24
25
26
27
28
3D
31
32
35
36
37
38
39
41
42
43
44
45
46
50
51
52
55

WH'CH

Ill'

Saurino, b
Cleary, b
Kobus, b
Thornton, b
Chamberlain, s
Lucca, b
Rucker, b
Smith, b
McNeilly, b
Symes, b
Smith, b
Grant, s
Weist, b
Fournier, b
Salipante, b
Middleton, b
Rosinski, b
Novosat, b
Donabedian, b
Farrell, b
Smith, s
Raymer, s
Farley, s
Dexter, b
Uhlar, b
Schweikert, b
Glenn, b
Ashley, c
Butterfield, c
Stawitzky, g
Hazell, b

N 'f THE PROOUC•

THE

A

59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

LA C MPA ... Y

Scheller, g
Aguair, b
Gapinski, b
Brown, g
Campbell, b
Bloom, g
Wittorf, b
Marcus, g
Lepore, g
Burton, b
Corbett, b
Delucca, t
Rafferty, t
Norton, t
Seppa, t
McWeeny, t
Miniacci, t
Doty, t
Whitty, t
Bokoski, t
Young, e
Dunn, e
Bossert, e
Pearson, e
Gallagher, e
Redgate, e
Nichols, e
Bryant, e
Donahue, e
Tibaldi, e

~" "!TE

1,.. US

A

YOU NEVER GET TIRED OF

��Bu FFA L0
No.

Name

14 Murtha, Mark
15 Martin, Daniel
18 York, Brian
19 Mason, Dennis
20 *Barksdale, James
21 Rutkowski, Kenneth
22 *Capuana, Nicholas
24 Svec, Steven
26 *McEwen, James
27 Coupas, Nicholas
30 Brennan, Thomas
32 Richner, David
35 Smith, Robert
36 *Jones, Leeland
40 *Sella, Daniel
42 *Hoke, Thomas
44 Drankoski, Charles
45 Murphy, Thomas
46 Sinclair, Robert
48 *Hurd, Thomas
49 *Wells, Richard
50 *Brisky, Dennis
51 Wright, Irvin
52 Wesolowski, John
54 Mosher, James
55 Kovack, John
56 *MacKellar, Bruce
57 Ruggerio, Alfonse
58 *Rishel, Rodney
60 Walters, Gregory
61 *Rissell, Michael
62 Kowalewski, Thomas
63 Lehner, Lawrence
64 Maser, Michael
65 Finochio, James
66 Lupienski, John
67 *Gibbons, Theodore
68 Hayden, William
69 Sabo, Donald
70 *Pugh, Ronald
71 *Taylor, William
72 Basta, John
73 *Miceli, Anthony
75 Riccelli, Joseph
76 *MacKellar, Russell
77 Kuzmitski, Kenneth
78 Pirozzolo, Richard
79 Thomas, Jeffrey
80 Embow, Robert
82 Wilbur, Curtis
84 Przybycien, John
85 Kleiber, Paul
86 *Dunn, James
87 *Ashley, Richard
88 Remillard, James
89 Doherty, John
90 *Hansen, Brian
• Lettermen (20)

Pos.

Class

Age

Ht.

Wt.

QB
QB
E
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
FB
FB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
LB
G

Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Soph.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
So ph.
So ph.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sr.
So ph.
Jr.
Sop h.
Soph.
Soph.
Sop h.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.
Jr.

19
19
21
18
20
19
20
19
22
19
19
19
19
19
20
20
19
20
19
20
20
19
20
20
18
19
20
19
20
18
20
19
20
19
20
19
20
19
19
21
22
22
21
19
22
18
20
19
18
19
18
22
21
19
19
19
20

5:11
5:11
5:10
5:11
5:11
5:10
5:9
6:0
5:10
5:10
5:10
5:11
5:11
5:10
5:10
6.0
6:1
6:1
6:1
6:2
6:0
6:2
6:1
6:0
6:2
5:10
6:0
6:3
5:10
6:0
5:11
6:0
6:2
5:11
5:10
5:11
5:10
5:10
5:11
6:1
6:2
6:2
6:2
6:2
5:10
6:0
6:1
6:2
6:1
6:0
6:1
6:5
6:4
6:2
6:1
6:1
5:11

171
180
165
180
177
175
175
195
190
184
207
190
180
202
172
174
180
185
198
191
191
196
204
205
190
195
200
190
197
170
215
203
201
200
210
203
235
203
198
232
225
216
223
230
220
255
230
215
195
205
193
225
213
201
191
205
172

c
c
c
c

G

LB
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

K

Hometown
Endicott, N. Y.
Hunti ngton, L. I.
Rochester, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Utica, N. Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Johnstown, Pa.
Rochester, N. Y.
Greenhurst, N. Y.
Depew, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Marcy, N. Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Johntown, Pa.
Watertown, N. Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Norristown, Pa.
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Central Islip, L. I.
Mt. Carmel , Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
E. Smethport, Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Coatesvi lie, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Clayton, N. Y.
E. Syracuse, N. Y.
Springdale, Pa.
Newport, R. I.
Cleveland, 0.
Johnstown, Pa.
McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N. Y.
Glens Falls, N. Y.
Batavia, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Methuen, Mass.
Elmira, N. Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Hamburg. N. Y.
Ovid, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Auburn, N. Y.
Cranston, R. I.
Massena, N. Y.
New Bedford , Mass.
New Bedford, Mass.
Detroit, Mich.

0
s
T
E
R

�BUILDERS AND
CONTRACTORS

Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

•

876-7505

E. V. YEUELL. INC.
253 Medfo rd St., Malde n, Mass. 02148

Etched -

Lithographed -

Anodized

MoB. Foster Electric-Company
368 CONGRESS STREET
BOSTON

Self-Stick Foil

M ETA L NAMEPLATES

DIALS

DATA AND IDENTIFICATIO N PLATES

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
For Personal S ervice, Call

DA 2-6116

K. M. YEUELL, CGE ' 59, SPRC ' 61 , MBA ' 66
Assistant General Manager

20

NEW HAVEN

PORTSMOUTH

CONNECTICUT

NEW HAMPSHIRE

�BOSTON
. UNIVERSITY

LARRY L. NAVIAUX
Offensive Backfield Coach
Nebraska '59

WARREN SCHMAKEL
Head Coach
Central Michigan University '43

RALPH A. JELIC
Defensive Backfield Coach
Pittsburgh '58

RICK LANTZ
Line Coach
Central Conn. '63

PAUL MAG IRE
Freshman Coach
Temple '53

In just three short seasons, Warren Schmakel reversed a trend
of losing football at Boston University that had gone unchecked
since 1957. There were those who believed it would have been
easier to reverse the flow at Niagara Falls.
Warren, together with a young and energetic coaching staff,
combined enthusiastic coaching with tireless recruiting to produce a winning football team in their second season.
A 1943 graduate of Central Michigan University, Warren
served three years with the "silent service" before launching his
coaching career at Toledo as a line coach. In two seasons there,
Toledo won 16 - lost 3 - and tied 2. In 1948 he moved to
Miami of Ohio to serve in a similar capacity under coach Ara
Parseghiam, present coach at Notre Dame. The Miami teams
po ted an equally impressive record of 12-5-1 during the next
two seasons.
In 1950, Schmakel was named head coach at his alma mater,
where he won six of 10 games in his only season there. The
following September he returned to Miami of Ohio for two
additional years, where the teams won 15 and lost 4.
From 1953 to 195 7 he was engaged in government service,
sening as an Assistant Chief of Plans in Europe Special Activities. After one year he was promoted to Chief of Plans. He
"'as in charge of an athletic program for 22-5,000 soldiers stationed in Germany and France.
Upon completion of the government assignment, Warren returned to collegiate coaching, this time as an assistant to Bill
Jennings at the Uni,·ersity of Nebraska. In 1960 he joined John
Bateman's staff at Rutgers, where the Scarlet Knights posted
a 25 and 12 record over the next four seasons.
In 1964 Warren came to Boston University and inherited a
squad of which the most outstanding players of a 1-6-1 1963
team had graduated in June. He attempted to overcome the
problems with enthusiasm and esprit, but this wasn't enough
to offset the lack of of talent. Although the squad never once
quit on him, he was unable to reverse the trend, posting a 2-7
record.
With the inilux of his first crop of recruits last fall , the outlook improved . Going with a predominately sophomore-junior
team, the Terriers rolled to their most successful season since
1957, turning in the first winning record in eight years, 5-3-1.
Included in the win column were major victories over Temple,
Buffalo, and Rutgers.
To this day, Schmakel still lists "attitude, motivation, and
esprit" as three of the most important ingredients in a successful team . . . but doesn't overlook the need for talent.

21

�JAMES ASHLEY

PETER DEXTER

C. BUTTERFIELD

TO.l\TY GALLAGHER

JAMES DONAHUE

BILL CAMPBELL

JOHN GRANT

JEFF BROWN

DICK FARLEY

JOHN DeLUCCA

-

CLIFF BURTON

BOB KOBUS

�RICK LEPORE

ARNOLD SCHELLER

NEIL SMITH

CHARLES TIBALDI

A. SCHWEICHERT

R. STAWITZKY

JOHN UHIAR

BILL RAFFERTY

HOWARD REDGATE

BOB McWEENY

GERRY SMITH

TOM

THO~NTON

BOSTON UNIVERSITY

JOE SAURINO

�If you're anywhere in Boston, New York or in fact anywhere in the North East during next January 26th thru 29th You're Out!! !
More than 4000 students from over 90 Universities will be leaving on
specially chartered go-go trains from Boston and New York.

e
e
e
e
e

Dancing to well known bands on the trains
Street Dancing and Night Parades in Quebec City
Canoe Races Across the Ice Ridden St Lawrence River
Snowmobile Races, Dog Sled Races, Free Skiing
Ice Palace, Ice Sculptures, "Queens" Crowning

All this including your transportation to Quebec City and first class
accommodation for only $85.00
See your local campus rep today or write

Boston Tel: 734-6680

QUEBEC WINTER WEEKEND
550 Sherbrooke Street West
Montreal, Canada
Telephone 842-6637 (Area Code 514)

W. H . Davis (left), Alcoa's General ManagerIndustrial Relations , says: " We 've found that
Army ROTC graduates with active duty experience as officers possess better than average
initiative, foresight, and responsibility. These
are qualities we rate very highly, and we gladly
pay a premium to get them."

No reservations can be accepted after December 1st 1966.
THIS WEEKEND IS SPONSORED BY THE COMBINED INTER UNIVERSITY QUEBEC CARNIVAL COMMITTEE.

THREE BIG COLLEGE SPORTS EVENTS
E.C.A.C. CHRISTMAS COLLEGE HOCKEY TOURNAMENT
Fri. December 16-7 P.M.

9 P.M.
Sat. December 17-7 P.M.

9 P.M.

Cornell Vs. Northeastern
Boston College vs. Michigan State
Loser vs. Loser
Winners vs. Winner

CHRISTMAS COLLEGE BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT
Tues. December

20-7 P.M.
9 P.M.

Wed. December

21-7 P. M .
9 P.M .

Manhattan vs. Univ. of Massachusetts
Syracuse vs. Bosto n College
Lo ser vs. Lo ser
Winner vs. Winner

BEANPOT HOCKEY TOURNAMENT
M o n. Fe b ru a ry

6 - 7 P. M .
9 P.M .

Mon. Febru a ry

13 -

Bosto n Co ll eg e vs. N o rthe a stern
Bosto n U niversity vs. H a rvard

7 P.M .

Lo ser vs. Lo ser

9 P.M.

Winner vs. Winner

*BOSTON GARDEN*
24

Why did
Alcoa
hire
Rod WilsonP
Because Alcoa needs men to fill key
positions-men capable of moving to
the top; men who seek and measure up
to responsibility. Rod Wilson is that
kind of man. An Army ROTC Distinguished Military Graduate at Colorado
State University, Rod won an officer's
commission in the Regular Army along
with his degree. Forty-four months of
active duty, including 16 months overseas as an artillery commander, earned
Rod Wilson 24-carat credentials as a
leader, a man schooled in the demanding disciplines of command, the kind
of man Alcoa looks for.
If you're this kind of man, prove it to
yourself, and to the companies like
Alcoa who are looking for you. How?
Get in Army ROTC. Stay with Army
ROTC, all the way to success.

ARMY ROTC

�UNIVERSITY
of BUFFALO

BOB GEIGER

RICHARD "DOC" URICH
BOB DEMING

JERRY IPPOLITI

MIKE

TOCK

BILL DANDO

Head Coach
The picture on the front cover was taken February 17, 1966.
Richard "Doc" Urich, assistant football coach at the University
of otre Dame, had just been announced as the new head coach
at the niversity of Buffalo and was facing a battery of microphones, television cameras and reporters in his first Buffalo press
conference. It marked the beginning of a new era in University
of Buffalo football.
Urich comes to his present position with a set of impressive
credentials. For 16 years he was associated with Ara Parseghian
at Miami ( 0.), orthwestern and Notre Dame.
In his first year at Notre Dame, Urich was responsible for
shifting Jack Snow to split end and devising the exciting offense
which broke numerous
otre Dame records and brought the
Fighting Irish back to the heights of glory after a number of
seasons in the football doldrums.
"Doc" Urich was born on September 10, 1928, in Wapakoneta,
Ohio. He attended Wapakoneta High School where he captained
both the football and basketball squads as a senior.
At Miami (0.) Urich was a standout in college football. He
played four years and in his freshman and senior seasons his
teams made appearances in the Sun Bowl and the Salad Bowl.
Miami defeated Texas Tech at El Paso on Jan_uary 1, 1948, and
downed Arizona State at Phoenix on January 1, 1951. "Doc"
was captain of the Miami team in his senior year. In his junior
and senior seasons he won All-Ohio honors, and in his last three
years he was selected All-Conference (Mid-America) end.
After graduation from Miami in February, 1951, "Doc" assumed teaching and coaching chores at Massillon ( 0.) High
School for the remainder of the school term before joining Ara
Parseghian at his alma mater that fall as freshman coach. In
1952 Urich moved up to a position on the Miami varsity staff
from whence his trail led to orthwestern, otre Dame and then
to Buffalo.
"Doc" and his wife, the former Patricia Streight, also of Wapakoneta. have two children, Cynthia (born in 1952) and Danny
(born in 1955) . They now make their home in the Town of
Amherst.
Urich holds a B.Sc. and M.Ed. from Miami, majoring m
Physical Education.

25

�TED GIBBONS

DENNIS BRISKY

TOM HURD

NICK CAPUANA

TOM HOKE

LEE JONES

.JIM FINOCHIO

�WILLIAM TAYLOR

PAUL KLEIBER

JOE RICCELLI

RICK WELLS

BRUCE MacKELLAR

RODNEY RISHEL

JIM McEWEN

MIKE R ISSELL

MARK MURTHA

UNIVERSITY
of BUFFALO

�•
reserve: our
Strength -.n

More than 30 million gallons of quality
fuel in constant reserve. That's one
more reason why Metropolitan
Petroleum is the largest independent
fuel oil distributor in New England.
Our "bench" keeps our present custonters
warm ... and is always ready to serve
new members of our expanding team.

METROPOLITAN PETROLEUM COMPANY OF MASS.
500 NEPONSET AVENUE, BOSTON • TEL. 288-1100

�Globe Boy Had a Quiet Wit
By

HAROLD KAESE

Boston Globe Columnist

T

HE sports department lost one of its young, shining
members over the Summer. Automobile accident.
Two fellows from Melrose were killed at Amherst, one
Tom Mahoney, the other AI Filadoro of the Globe.

On Friday, sitting at the department's switchboard, he
had asked between calls, " \Vhat are you writing today?"
"Brimsek, Frankie Brimsek, for Sunday."
"He was before me," he said. "The first Bruins goalie
I remember is Jim Henry."
"You don't remember Brimsek, Dit Clapper, Bill
Cowley, do you?"
" o, they were before me."
"Tough luck," I told him, "but remember one thing:
it's great to be young."
ot many hours later, in Amherst, a car hit a pole and
overturned, ending the fine promise of a young man who
almost certainly would have written a commanding by-line
as a sports writer. Why? Because he had sports interest
and sports savvy, becau e he had imagination, nerve and
wit.
He was our Boston University correspondent, an apprentice journalist, and what we call a ''boy"-a fellow who
is earning some money or credits on the side, while working towards a degree.
His assignment as a "boy" is to answer telephones, take
the results of ball games, golf tournaments, sailing races,
track meets, curling matches, skeet shoots, dig up answers
if he can for the endless questions of staff reporters on
the road, paste together race entries and results and get
coffee and sandwiche for his superiors.
A "boy" may or may not like sports work, may or may
not aspire to be a newspaper man, may or may not do
a good job, but he is important to his paper. Jerry ason,
Globe executi\·e sports editor; Fran Rosa, A.M. sports

editor; Ernie Roberts, P.M. sports editor-all were once
"boys".
Filadora had the same makings. ot only did he like
all sports, but he liked to chase the big story. He had
initiative.
He once awoke me after midnight in Florida with a
long distance call to say he wanted to write a book about
Frank Lane. He was then 18.
He never wrote the book, but it was Filadoro who discovered Jerry Stephenson in Flagstaff, Ariz., June 23,
when the Red Sox did not know what had become of
their starry young pitcher, after they had released him
to Toronto.
He also was the first to reveal the chagrin of the '76ers
when the Celtics announced they were paying Bill Russell
more than Wilt Chamberlain's $100,000-a-year.
Only a month ago, he worked out one day with Patriots
rookies at Andover- the sports department's answer to
Sara Davidson, who had tried out as a Playboy bunny.
For an hour-and-a-half in the morning, he chased the
passes of John Huarte and Billy Laird.
"Then," he wrote, "came my part of the day-lunch."
After the afternoon workout, :M ike Holovak gave him
his release, but Filadoro \\·as happy. He had lost six pound
and had a good story.
A laughing light danced often in Filadoro's eyes. He was
a mimic who could call you from a nearby desk and con\·ince you he was Roger Birtwell calling from Scottsdale.
AI Filadoro was the youngest of the good men and dear
friends we have lost lately around here; and when you
lose such a young fellow in such a manner, there' s a strong
temptation to damn and double-damn automobiles. Unreasonable, I suppo e.
29

�Terrier Tales ...

Over 50 years of safe, dependable,
pub Iic transportation
by ART DuNPHY
Director of Sports Information

Charters and tours to all points
in Continental United States

It's Not Too Early to arrange your tour to

EXPO 67

Imagine being a freshman tackle on a football team
and finding yourself looking across the line of scrimmage
at a 6-5, 265-pound opponent.
If that isn't enough to concern you. Imagine instead of

MICHAUD BUS LINES, INC.

hearing threats of bodily harm, he spouts Shakespeare's

230 JEFFERSON AVE., SALEM

oliloquies. Then as he pushes you aside, he gives you the
mathematical formula for Em2 .
Thi combination of brain and brawn i presently the
pride of Boston Univer ity freshman coach Paul Maguire,
and for the first-year Terrier mentor the presence of such
a promising tackle, who he is relatively sure is not going
to have academic problems, is a matter of considerable
consolation.
The giant is Gilbert Holloway, a 19-year-old youngster
from Beaufort, S. C., who-according to the coaches- has
yet to grow to his full size. An outstanding student ,,·ho
is on a full academic cholarship, Gilbert was Valedictorian of his high school graduating cia , president of the
student council and a member of the National Honor
Society. In addition, he ang bass in the school choir and
played the tuba in the marching and concert bands. All
this and 265 pounds.
"He's amazingly quick for such a big boy," reports
Maguire, "and I'm sure he's going to develop into a good
college football player." Head coach Warren Schmakel of
BU has already outlined a weight-training program for
Gilbert to follow this winter, in order to build up his
strength. "He could make Ernie Ladd look small," according to Schmakel, "I don't know just how big Gilbert is
going to grow, but I'm sure he'll level off some\1·here
around 300 pounds. He's still a growing boy."

30

��CHEER
FOR MILK'S
VITALITY
Put Vitality on your team ...
drink milk! A glass of cool,
refreshing milk with meals
and snacks helps see you
through the busiest fall
schedule. No other beverage
helps you get the lasting
energy found only in nature's
Vitality drink ... Milk. You'll
cheer for milk's Vitality.

a message from dairy farmer members of

•

american
dairy
association

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1966-10-08 Boston University - Buffalo</text>
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                <text>1966-10-08</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>NEXT HOME GAME OCT.lst 1966

OFFICIAL

PROGRAM

. 50f

vs.

·cORNELL
_.SEPT. 24, 1966
'

�'~~:....,..,....-.""'.~a n d gets it at

SATTLER'S
... where the field of selections
is mammoth
. . . the constant goal is spectator
satisfaction
... and you're sure to score
savings every day of the
week!

*998 BROADWAY *1021 BROADWAY *THRUWAY PLAZA BRANCH
*BOULEVARD MALL, NIAGARA FALLS BLVD., NORTH OF SHERIDAN
*HOME FURNISHINGS CITY, U.S.A., HERTEL AT ELMWOOD

�I cordially welcome you to State Uni-

crsity of

ew York at Bu[alo and to our

59th season of inter-collegiate football. At
the same time I welcome our new coach,
Richard \V. "Doc" Urich. From the time
of the Greeks, athletics have been a part of
the education and cultivation of man.
'Vhatevcr our win-loss record may be, he,
his associates and the young men who represent the University on the playing field
will, I know, give their best, to achieve an
excellence which will be worthy of a gTcat

l\fARTI MEYERSON
President

University.

By the mid-1970's the State University of New York at Buflalo will be ready to take its place as one ol the
nation's outstanding University centers. \ 'Ve will serve in a humane and meaningful way a student enrollment
of perhaps 37,000. \ Vithin the next decade, a program of expansion and building, currently estimated at more
than S200 million, will transform the size and nature of our campus and its programs. ,\ study is now underway to determine the best possible location for these developments. \ Vherever that location may be, we shall
create an educational program as intellectually exciting and rewarding as any to be found in the world, with
the closest tics between University and metropolis.

A

~eries

of challenges and opportunities lie ahead.

" 'e shall,

I'm

~ure, re~pond

to our

fulle~t mea~ure.

MARTI ' J\lEYERSOI\

�U . B. QUEEN CANDIDATES

~ JACKIE ALESSI-Sigma
Kappa Phi Sorority, a Junior
majoring
in
Mathematics,
Assistant Treasurer of Sigma
Kappa Phi Sorority, Group
Leader for Freshman Orientation, Scholarship Chairman of
Pledge Class, when not watching or participating in various
sports, likes to read and sew.
Jackie lives in Buffalo.

~BERNADINE

POPIELASZ
Theta Chi Sorority, a Senior
majoring in Spanish, Recording Secretary of Theta Chi,
Greek Sing, Stunt Night Committee, outside interests in addition to sports include dancing and knitting.

~ JUDY KERR Sigma
Kappa Phi Sorority, a Junior
majoring in English, Social
Chairman for Sigma Kappa
Phi, Sophomore Sponsor, Publicity Comm. Spring Weekend
Alpha Lambda Delta Honor
Society, Group Leader Freshman Orientation, Likes to ski,
swim, and sew. Lives in Cortland, New York.

ARLENE ARDANOWSKITheta Chi Sorority Vice-Pres.,
Senior, English Major, cheerleader, majorette, Chairman of
Mr. Formal, Silver Ball Committee, Sophomore Sponsors,
Judo and Ski Clubs, Girl's
Swimming team 1964-65, Phi
Epsilon Pi's "International
Dream Girl" in 1964-65, Asst.
Editor of 'The Oracle', Dean's
List student, Lives in Scarsdale, New York.
~

BONNIE BURKE Alpha
Gamma Delta, Senior, Busi"
ness Education major, President of Cooke Hall, Newman
Club, winner of Greek Pan
Hellenic Scholarship for 196667, loves to swim, water ski,
and travel. Interested in all
sports and travel, lives in
Rochester, New York.
~

ANNE GARONO Alpha
Gamma Delta, Junior majoring in Sociology, Newman
Club, Corresponding Secretary
of Alpha Gamma Delta, Group
Leader Program for Freshman Orientation, taught underprivileged c h i I d r e n in
Puerto Rico, has modelled, enjoys sports, modern dance,
domestic arts, music and literature. A native of Buffalo. ~

FOOTBALL QUEEN BALLOT
................ JACKIE ALESSI

................ ANNE GARONO

................ ARLENE ARDANOWSKI

................ JUDY KERR

................ BONNIE BURKE

........ ........ BERNADINE POPIELASZ

DEPOSIT YOUR BALLOT IN CONTAINERS AT THE GATES !

2

�BUFFALO
A GROWING UNIVERSITY

Twelve million square feet of space, 30,000 students, parking for 12,500 cars, at least 1,000 acres of
land-these figures sound like a report from a city
planning board, and in a sense that is what they are.
These are the projections for the "city" that will be
the State University of 1ew York's new UB campus.
vVith the tremendous opportunities and challenges
such an undertaking involves, the entire University
community eagerly awaits this next step in "UB's"
journey to the truly great University we have all
dreamed of.
On September 1st, 1962, the University of Buffalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become
the major campus segment of the widespread system
of the State University of ew York. The new name,
created by State University officials, is: State University of New York at Buffalo. However, in deference
to sweatshirt-stitchers and typewriter repairmen,
'alumni seem to prefer the continuance of "UB" or
"University of Buffalo" where intercollegiate teams
are concerned.
One of Ameraica's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo has been the educational capitol of \Vestern New
York since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the
fourteen-year-old home of 28,000 people. The "U niversity" was the School of Medicine until 1886 when
the School of Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, a first-citizen of the young
community, who continued his UB leadership during
his term as the thirteenth President of the United
States.
The fourteen University Divisions arc: School of
Medicine (1846); School of Pharmacy (1886); School
of Law (1887); School of Dentistry (1892); College of
Arts and Sciences (1913; Summer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College, evening division (1923); School
of Business Administration (1927); School of Education (1931); School of Social Work (1936); Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences (1939); School of 1 ursing
(1940); School of Engineering (1946); and University
College (including associate degTecs, 1958).
Bul[alo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood
of 18,000 - o[ which 9,000 are full-time undergraduate students. The enrollment is expected to soar in
the next few years, especially in view o[ the State
affiliation.
The present campus is slated to become one of the
outstanding gTaduate centers in the country and will
have a teaching hospital on the present site of Rotary
Field. Present dormitories in some cases will be converted for married graduate students and there will
also be a building progTam at Torth Main Street.
Meanwhile, a record student enrollment, somewhat
crammed into the existing space, eagerly faces the
challenge of today's educational opportunities at UB.
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic ex·
ccllcnce and academic f1·eedom, the University of
Buffalo continues its fine tradition of service to the
Niagara Frontier and the State of New York.

3

�Back Row: Mike Stock, Freshman Coach; Bob Deming, Backfield Coach; Jerry Ippoliti, Backfield Coach.
Front Row: Bill Dando, Line Coach; Richard " Doc" Urich, Head Coach, and Bob Geiger, Line Coach.

SIEGFRIED

Leo Sauer

CONSTRUCTION

FUNERAL HOME
INC.

CO., INC.

•

•

• 1933 KENSINGTON AVENUE
TF 3-1695

6 N. PEARL STREET

•

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

• 823 GENESEE STREET

886 - 2300

TX 2-7183

4

�JAMES E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of
13uffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at UB than genial Jim.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the
North Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue University, a career
which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War II
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gave up football coaching to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the university began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball
team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in
TCAA Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of
anecdotes make him a much sought-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerous civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy, and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.
Richard "Doc" Urich (pronounced Yur-ick) comes to his
present position with a set of impressive credentials. He has
been associated with Ara Parseghian for 16 years, at J\liami
(0.), Northwestern and Notre Dame.
Here is what Parseghian says about Urich:
"When I was appointed head football coach at 1\'orlhweslern,
my first choice was Coach rich . Eight years later when I was
appointed football coach at the niversity of Notre Dame, m y
first choice again was Coach Urich. Much of our offensive su ccess has been due to his preparation and strategy."
''Doc" Urich was born on September 10, 1928, in Wapakon eta ,
Ohio. He attended ·wapakoneta High School where he captained both the football and basketball squads as a senior.
At Miami (0.) Urich was a standout in college football. He
played four years and in his freshman and senior seasons his
teams made appearances in the Sun Bowl and the Salad Bowl.
:\liami defeated Texas Tech at El Paso on January 1, 1918, and
downed Arizona Slate at Phoenix on J anuary I , 1951. " Doc"
was captain of the l\liami team in his senior year. In his
junior and senior seasons he won All-Ohio honors, and in his
last three years he was selected All-Conference (Mid-America)
encl.
After graduation from ;\~iami in February, _195 1, "Doc" _assumed teaching and coachmg chores at l\1assdlon (0.) Htgh
School for the remainder of the school term before joining
Head Coach Ara Parseghian a t his alma mater that fall as
head freshman coach. Urich 's frosh team posted a 3-1 record ,
including an upset over a highly regarded University of
:'l!ichigan freshman squad.
. .
.
.
.
In 1952 Urich moved up to a posnwn on the Mtamt varsll}
staff from whence his trail led to Northwestern , Notre Dame
and then to Buffalo.
In his first year at Notre Dame, Urich was responsible for
shifting Jack Snow to split end and devising the exciting
offense which broke numerous Notre Dame records and brought
the Fighting Irish back to the heights of glory after a number
of seasons in the football doldrums. Knowledgeable football men
declare that Coach Urich's 1965 Notre Dame offense, going
without a real passing threat, was an even more superb job of
coaching.
. .
.
"Doc" and his wife, the former Patnoa Stretght, also of
\Vapakoneta, have two children , Cynthia (born in 1952) and
Danny (born in 1955).
Urich holds a B.Sc. and 1\!.Ed. from l\liami, majoring in
Physical Education .

5

His nickname, "Doc," was acquired during his boyhood days
and seems destined to stay with him the rest of his life. Its
origin has been lost through the years.

RICHARD "DOC" URICH
Head Football Coach, University of Buffalo

�THOMAS HURD

PAUL KLEIBER

RICHARD WELLS

THEODORE GIBBONS

ANTHONY MICELI

BRUCE MacKELLAR

JAMES McEWEN

DENNIS MASON

JOHN LUPIENSKI

KEN RUTKOWSKI

STEVEN SVEC

CHARLES DRANKOSKI

ROBERT EMBOW

ANTHONY NICCELLI

JOHN WESOLOWSKI

�NICK CAPUANA

WILLIAM TAYLOR

RON PUGH

RUSS MacKELLAR

JAMES DUNN

DANIEL SELLA

RICHARD ASHLEY

MARK MURTHA

IRVIN WRIGHT

JOHN PRZYBYCIEN

TOM KOWALEWSKI

LEELAND JONES

JOHN BASTA

MICHAEL RISSELL

RODNEY RISHEL

�BUFFALO BULLS -

1966

1st Row, L. to R.: Capuana, Sella, Basta, Finochio, R. MacKellar, Miceli, Capt. Bill Taylor, Kleiber, Dunn, B. MacKellar,
Pugh, McEwen, Barksdale.
2nd Row, L. toR.: Sinclair, Pirozzolo, York, Rishel, Brisky, Brennan, Hoke, Wright, .Jones, Wells, Ashley, Rissell, Dolan.
3rd Row, L. to R.: Gibbons, Lehner, Rutkowski, Lansing, Mosher, Kuzmitski, Scaletta, Lupienski, Remillard, Hurd, Smith,
Doherty.
4th Row, L. to R.: Wilbur, Wesolowski, Sabo, Maser, Hayden, Kowalewski Embow Murphy Martin, Thomas, Riccelli,
Przybycien.
'
'
'
5th Row, L. to R.: Coupas, Mason, Walters, Ruggerio, Richner, Kovack, Svec, Murtha, Drankoski.
Top Row, L. to R.: Garofalo (ass't. freshman coach), Gergley (ass't. freshman coach), Stock (freshman coach), Ippoliti
(ass't. coach), Dando (ass't. coach), Head Coach Richard (Doc) Urich Deming (ass't. coach), Geiger
(ass't. coach), Simon (trainer), McNally, (ass't. freshman coach). '

NINE DECADES AGO

the launching of
"advice in depth"

W

HEN ships with sails studded Buffalo's seascape over 90 years ago, when Buffalo and
the whole nation began to feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution ... Dominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning to make its mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp;D's services for the investing public sustained
a steady growth despite financial panics, wars and
depressions. Today the talent of an organization of
more chan 400 - including research specialists,
counselors, and administrative people stands behind
our Buffalo office, giving you opporcunity for investment advia in depth. Lee us advise you about your
future investment plans or review your porcfolio.

OMINICK &amp; DOMINICK,
Incorporated
S EYMO UR H . K&gt;&lt;ox III, Vice President
1122 Marine TruSt Bldg. 856-7471
Mtmbtrs Ntw York, Amtruan, AfidwtJI, and Toronto Stock Exchangts

BILL TAYLOR
Captain

8

�AERIAL VIEW OF BUFFALO CAMPUS

Onetto's Restaurant
&amp; Seafood House

COMPLETE LOCAL STOCKS •..
structurals -

bars -

plates -

sheets

FULL FACILITIES ...
shearing - pickling - ailing
- burning - sawing
when you need it - as you ordered it
- ready far use

3630 MAIN STREET AT BAILEY

R

~

TIMET ABLE DELIVERY . . .

.

~

•

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1'}/J
(ll'b~·

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sERVICE ~NUC~FALO "~:li:.~~.~'"

Serving Quality Foods at Moderate Prices
Since 1928

,

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"Western New York's Oldest and Largest
VOLKSWAGEN
JIM

Kelly's

PARTS AND SERVICE

•

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DEALER "

Plumber

INC.

•

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Home of " KELLY CARED FOR CARS"

259 DELAWARE AVENUE

3325 GENESEE STREET AT THRUWAY OVERPASS
BUFFALO, N . Y.

TL 2 - 7080

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9

�1864 - 102nd Anniversary - 1966
1966 marks our 102nd year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.
Est. 1864

REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
17-21 S. Division Street

Ellicott Square

TL 4-5700

Gentlemen's Furnishings and Natural Shoulder Clothing

The Campus Corner of Buffalo, Inc.
Opposite the University of Buffalo

THE

WESTERN SAVINGS BANK
OF BUFFALO

Buffalo, N.Y. 14214

3262 Main Street
TF 2 • 3221
Where you and your family feel at Home.

Everything for the Athlete and Sportsman

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BOWLING EQUIPMENT
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FOOTBALL AND BASKETBALL
EQUIPMENT

Inc.
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FLORISTS
360 Delaware Avenue

Buffalo, N.Y. 14202

627 MAIN STREET

TL 6 • 9000

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TL 2 • 3456

10

�B

u
F

F
A
L

0

�HOURS

Monday-Friday ... 8:30-8:30
Saturdays
.. 10:00-2:00

Largest
Selection
of

QIJALITY
Paperbacks
in
Western
New York

The
UNIVERSITY
Bookstore

Old Students~ Future Students •••
Come in and Browse •••

Students~

HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY ITEMS AVAILABLE
GIFTS

COLLEGE CLOTHING
(adult, youth, juvenile)

College Jewelry

Sweat Shirts

Ceramics

Sweaters

Glassware

Blazers

Stuffed Animals

College Jackets

Studio Cards

Pennants -

12

Banners

�BULLPEN
By Dick Johnston, Evening News

By Bob Powell, Courier-Express

vVho could ask for a better attraction? Two undefeated teams, from schools located only 150 miles
apart and who played to a tie last time they met.
Both with new coaches and high hopes.

It was a gorgeous day for a football game. There
was just enough snap in the air to keep it from being
hot and the wind was only a waf of its normal self.
The Bulls won on their first gamble. Capt. Bill
Taylor predicted the toss
of a coin and was correct.
Then he elected that Kent
State kick to his team.

That's today's football
game on Rotary Field.
One reason Cornell is unbeaten, of course, is that
today's game is the Big
Red's opener. And the
University of Buffalo was
only a foot from defeat in
its only game to date.

Rick \Vells returned
the kickoff to UB's 21-yarcl
line, and C o a c h Doc
Urich's lads were ready to
show how well he had
prepared them for their
tough opener.

But that victory over
favored Kent State last
week was a big one for
Buffalo's Bulls and their
new coach, Doc Urich. It
came on Ohio soil, where
home teams are not used to losing to visitors from the
effete East and from whence most of the UB coaching
staff came~ That made the u·iumph the sweeter. Before the game no one around Kent or nearby Ak~on
seemed to give Buffalo much of a chance to survive,
much less to win.
Although this is Cornell's inaugu.ral, the. Big Red
has played a practice game and won 1t handily, ~6-13,
over Rutgers. The Big Red is at its fastest and biJSgest
in many years, according to observer~ from the Fmger
Lakes region. New coach Jack Musick took many of
the maneuvers that helped Dartmouth's Ivy League
champions go undefeated last year when he moved to
Ithaca from Hanover, . H.
Musick brings along several Buffalo-area athletes,
for the many Cornell alums who .live. hereab?uts to
cheer today. Mike Moore, who did his runnmJS for
Amherst Central High School a few years back, IS the
starting fullback for the Big Red.
John Zankowski, from iagara Falls,
the ro~er
on the defense unit. He roams around behmd the !me
and hits where he thinks the play is coming. Ron
Gervase Mount Morris, one of Cornell's best pass receivers in recent years, has been switched from wingback to split end, the better to uti!ize his abilities.
Frank Gugino, who played With Buffalo fullback
Lee Jones at Hutch-Tech, is a defensive end for Cornell, and Ron Wick, a Kenmore East graduate, is a
defensive guard.
Not all the visitors from Ithaca today will be
rooting for Cornell. Rick Wells, UB's ha.rcl-running
right halfback is a graduate of Ithaca High School.
Local Cor~ell alums are making this a gala occasion. Never before has their alma mater played UB in
Buffalo. And never has UB defeated Cornell. The
three games between the two have resulted in two
Cornell victories and a tie.

Mick Murtha, a nervous, but talented young
sophomore
quarterback,
began to announce the signals ... a Bull jumped offsic!~. Go back to jail-no, go back five yards and try
agam.
They d~cl and Wells picked up two of the lost
ycls. Then JImmy Barksdale, a journeyman halfback
scooted o.ut to the UB 35. H~ hadn't seen the penalty
nag floating clown. The OffiCials detected that his run
had been aided by a clip, so try again from UB's 11.
Murtha went to the other deep back, Lee Jones,
on the next call and last year's leading ground gainer
was hurled back for a five-yard loss.
Buffalo halted Kent's deep penetration-sort of
came off the ropes in the 1966 opener and nipped the
Golden Flashes, 27-23.
That was a big stepping stone for Urich's first
team, but t?day's encounter with Cornell is equally
- or more-Important.

!s

Two years ago the Bulls went into Ithaca with
a first-game hide nailed to the records and the Big
Reel took the wind out of their sails with a 9-9 finish.
Cornell, too, has a first-year man at the helm and
his career in the coaching ranks has a parallel to
Urich's.
Jack Musick for a long time was an aide to a
highly successful coach-Bob Blackman at Dartmouth.
The Bulls may have wanted to "win one for the
Doc" last week, and the Cornell players are just as
determined to make Musick's coming out an artistic
success.
If UB can get by the Big Red this afternoon, it
very well could mark the pivotal point in the season
remembered as Buffalo's best, record-wise, since 1959
when Dick Offenhamer's forces duplicated its '58
won-lost mark of 8-l.
13

�ALUMNI AND FRIENDS

Beer -

THE "FRIENDS OF THE BULLS" PROUDLY PRESENT
THEIR SECOND SEASON OF POST-GAME

Pop -

Chips -

Pretzels

ELl KONIKOFF DIXIELAND BAND
Entertainment- $1.50 per person

TUNKS

Faculty Club
Dress -

Immediately Following Each Home Game

As You Are

BUFFALO LINE-UP
Offense

Defense

S.E.

87 ASHLEY
R.H.B.

44 DRANKOSKI
R.E.

40 SELLA

84 PRZYBYCIEN

49 WELLS

88 REMILLARD

•
tnc.
" Buffalo's
leading

R.T .

76 R. MacKELLAR
R.l.B.

79 THOMAS
R.H.B.

R.T.

49 WELLS
26 McEWEN

72 BASTA

62 KOWALEWSKI
54 MOSHER

71 TAYLOR

R.G.

67 GIBBONS

64 MASER

I

exponent

R.G.

of quality
printing''

52 WESOLOWSKI

C.

Q .B.

56 B. MacKELLAR

14 MURTHA

55 KOVACK

19 MASON

L.H.B.

67 GIBBONS

22 CAPUANA
42 HOKE
L.G.

Printers

&amp;
Lithographers
126 S. ELMWOOD

66 LUPIENSKI
69 SABO
L.G.

F.B.

61 RISSELL

36 JONES

65 FINOCHIO

30 BRENNAN

l.T .

L.H .B.

73 MICELI

20 BARKSDALE
24 SVEC

71 TAYLOR

l.T .

LL.B.

70 PUGH

58 RISHEL

76 R. MacKELLAR

51 WRIGHT

L.E.

s.

50 BRISKY

48 HURD

73 MICELI

46 SINCLAIR

T.E.

85 KLEIBER

Buffalo, N.Y. 14202

89 DOHERTY
SPECIALISTS:

TL 3-3005

P.A.T., F.G. &amp; K.O . PUNT

14

-

40 SELLA,

80 EMBOW, 48 HURD

44 DRANKOSKI

�BARTLETT BUICK
3080 ~ I N STREET

TF 6-1000

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

OPEL KADETT BULL WAGON
ONLY $1883 (minus art work, of course)

UNIVERSITY

CORNELL UN IVERSITY LINE-UP

Defense

Offense
R.E .

14 GERVASE

PLAZA

88 CHAPMAN
R.E.
81 GERKEN

H.B.

26 MURPHY
44 RAFALSKI

89 LUCAS

R.H.B.

25 ZAK
23 HEEPS

R.T.

77 VANNERMAN
66 HAVENS
R.l.B .
58 DEVLIN
55 ZOGBY

H.B.
10 KINCAID

R.T.

R.G.

79 SPONHEIMER
68 GANNON

67 MUSMANNS
60 DUNN

F.B.

30 MOORE
32 McCULLEN

40 SPIEGEL

c.
50 DENTES
52 ROLL

M.G.
57 HOMICZ

68 GANNON
Q .B.
12 ABEL
16 FRENCH

H.B.
49 WITWER

L.G.

20 BATTAGLIA

LL.B .
61 KOPICKI
34 KLEIBER

53 McWEENEY
62 WICK

L.T.
65 WALLACE
75 HEATH

L.T.

74 GARMAN
66 HAVENS

L.H.B .
H.B. (Rover)
L.E.
73 DIEHL
85 GUGINO

48 ZANKOWSKI
29 RUTH

40 LARSON
21 HULING

L.E.
83 TAMULONIS
80 FULLERTON

SPECIALISTS:
PUNT - 18 PAITISON
P.A.T. &amp; F.G. - 18 PATTISON
K.O . -

55 ZOGBY

15

ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSON CO.
AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Cards
LEES DRUGS
GUSTAV A. FRISCH- Jeweler
KOEGL'S BAKERY
LEONARDO'S RESTAURANT
M and T TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
STYLE CREST MEN'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP
ULBRICH'S- Stationery
FEDERAL MEATS
THE PLAID SHOP
DEALS JEWELERS
YOUR MATERNITY SHOP
AEXANDER KATZ and
LOU KROP - Optometrists
EVANS - Gifts and Cards
W. T. GRANT CO.
FANNY FARMER
AMHERST
Clothes Tree, Inc.
JOHNSON'S-Amherst Bootery

�1966 VARSITY SCHEDULE
THE COVER

Sept. 17

Kent State

away

Oct. 22

Boston Col.

away

Sept. 24

Cornell

home

Oct.

29

Holy Cross

home

Oct.

Villanova

home

Nov.

5

Delaware

home

CAST YOUR BALLOT
FOR YOUR FAVORITE.

Boston U.

away

Nov. 12

Tampa

away

BALLOT ON PAGE 2.

Dayton

away

Nov. 19

Youngstown

home

Oct.

8

Oct.

15

SIX

*

GIRLS, ONE WILL
BE QUEEN.

BUFFALO BU LLS 1966 ROSTER

JONES-

RICH

MILK
CORP.

((It's Flavor Guarded"

70

E. FERRY STREET

TT 3-4080

No.
14
15
18
19
•20
21
•22
24
•26
27
30
32
35
•36
•40
•42
44
45
46
•48
•49
•50
51
52
54
55
•56
57
•5s
60
•6 t
62
63
64
65
66
•67
68
69
•70
•71
72

Name
Murtha, Mark
Martin, Daniel
York, .Brian
Mason, Dennis
.Barksdale, James
Rutkowski, Kenneth
Capuana, icholas
Svec, Steven
McEwen, James
Coupas, Nicholas
Brennan, Thomas
Richner, David
Smith, Robert
Jones, Leeland
Sella, Daniel
Hoke, Thomas
Drankoski, Charles
Murphy, Thomas
Sinclair, Robert
Hurd , Thomas
Wells, Richard
Brisky, Dennis
Wright, Irvin
Wesolowski, J ohn
Mosher, J ames
Kovack, John
MacKellar, .Bruce
Ruggerio, Alfonse
Rishel, R odney
Walters, Gregory
Rissell, Michael
Kowalewski, Thomas
Lehner, Lawrence
Maser, Michael
Finochio, J ames
Lupienski, John
Gibbons, Theodore
Hayden , William
Sabo, Donald
Pugh, R onald
Taylor, William
Basta, John
•73 Miceli, Anthony
75 Riccelli, Joseph
•76 MacKellar, Russell
77 Kuzmitski, Kenneth
78 Pirozzolo, Richard
79 Thomas, Jeffrey
80 Embow, Robert
82 Dolan, James
82 Wilbur, Curtis
84 Przybycien, John
85 Kleiber, Paul
•s6 Dunn, James
•s7 Ashley, Richard
88 R emillard, James
89 Doherty, John
•go Hansen, Brian
•-Lettermen (20)

16

Class
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
J r.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
J r.
So.
So.
Jr.
J r.
Jr.
J r.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
J r.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.

Pos.
~ll
~13
~-DHB

Qtl
hil
HB
Hil
HB
HB
HB
FB
FB
F.B
F.B
H.B
H.B
HB
HB
H.B
H.B
H.B
LB
G
C
G

c

C

c

L.B

G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
T
T
T

r

T
T
T

T
T
E
E
E
E

E
E
E
E
E
K

Age
1~

19
:.:!1
u;
40
19
20
19
:.:!2
19
19
19
19
19
:.:!0
20
19
20
19
20
20
19
20
20
18
19
20
19
20
18
20
19
20
19
20
19
20
19
19
21
22
22
21
19
22
18
20
19
18
21
19
18
22
21
19
19
19
20

Ht.
5-11
5-11
5·10
5·11
5-11
5·10
5·9
6-0
5-10
5-10
5-10
5·11
5·11
5·10
5-10
6-0
6-1
6·1
6-1
6·2
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-3
5-10
6-0
5-11
6-0
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-11
6-(
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-l
6-l
5-11

Wt.
171
180
165
180
1/7
175
175
195
190
184
207
190
1ts0
202
17:.:!
174
180
185
198
191
191
196
204
205
190
195
200
190
197
170
215
203
201
200
210
203
235
203
198
232
225
216
223
230
220
255
230
215
195
190
205
193
225
213
201
191
205
172

Hometown
Endicott, N. Y.
Huntington, L. l.
Rochester, N. Y.
.Bul[alo, 1 . Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Utica, N. Y.
Endwell, N. Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Johnstown, Pa.
Rochester, N. Y.
Greenhurst, ' . Y.
Depew, N. Y.
Bul[alo, N. Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Marcy, N. Y.
Endwell, 1 . Y.
J ohnstown, Pa.
Watertown, N. Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Ithaca, N Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Norristown, Pa.
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
Central Islip, L. I.
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
BuiTalo, N. Y.
E. Smethport, Pa.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Coatesville, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Clayton, ·. Y.
E. Syracuse, N. Y.
Springdale, Pa.
1 ewport, R. I.
Cleveland, 0 .
Johnstown , Pa.
McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N. Y.
Glens Falls, N. Y.
Batavia,
Y.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Methuen, Mass.
Elmira, N. Y.
Syracuse,
. Y.
Hamburg, . Y.
Glens Falls, N. Y.
Ovid, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Auburn, . Y.
Cranston, R . I.
Massena, . Y.
ew Bedford, Mass.
New Bedford, 1\fass.
Detroit, Mich.

�What's the Geneseecret

• •

CORNELL UNIVERSITY 1966 ROSTER
No.

Name
I 0 Kinca id, John
II Bubrick, George
* 12 Abel, William
* I ,J Gervase, Ronald
I 5 Ritter, Christopher
16 French, Jeffrey
17 Hinman, William
J 8 Pattison, Bruce
19 Robertson , William
20 Battaglia , Timothy
21 Huling, William
23 Heeps, James
2+ Walker, Daniel
25 Zak, Edward
•26 Murphy , William
27 Cervasio, Joseph
28 Dei , Seth
29 Ruth, Lloyd
30 Moore, l\!ichael
32 McCullen, Arthur
33 l\forris, David
3-J. Kl eiber , Douglas
37 Newton, Malcolm
38 Pavka, John
39 ~faier , John
•40 Larson, Peter
41 Spiegel, Mich ael
14 Rafalski , L arry
46 Dayton, Howard
47 Horn , Robert
48 Za nkowski, John
•·19 Witwer, Dale
•so Dentes, John
51 Church-Smith, Pete
•52 Roll, Charles
•53 l\f c'Veeney, George
5,1 Black , Thomas
•55 Zogby, Peter
56 Effron, Sanford
•57 Homicz, Joseph
•s8 Devlin, Frederick
:;9 Gould, Robert
•GO Dunn, Ernest
•61 Kopicki , Ronald
62 Wick, Ronald
63 Sampson, Peter
64 'Valton , Andrew
•65 Wallace, John
66 Havens, Thomas
•67 Musmanno , Richard
•68 Gannon , Craig
69 Moores, Richard
70 Hadley, Jon
71 Kunsman, 'William
72 Harris , Sherwood
73 Diehl, Thomas
•7 1 Garman, Harry
75 Heath , Richard
76 Hearn , Donald
•77 Vanneman, Reeve
78 Signorelli, John
79 Sponheimer, John
80 Fullerton, Stuart
•8 ! Gerken, Richard
82 Pegan, Robert
•s3 Tamulonis, Frank
84 DiSalvo, Samuel
85 Gugino, Frank
87 White, Fred
88 Chapman, George
•s9 Lucas, Thomas
• !965 letterman

Class
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.

Pos
B
B

B
E-B
B
B
B

K
B
B
B
B
B
B

B
B
K
B
B
B
B

LB
LB
G
LB
B
B

Age

19
19
21
21

Hgt. Wgt.
5-10
180
180
5-10
6-0
180
5-10
185
6-0
6-2

190

5-11

175
170
210

20
20
21
20
19
19
20
19

5-10
5-8\h
5-9

21

5-11

18
20
19
21
19

5-9

ISO

6-0

5-10
6-lYz

185
175
155

21

5-11

19
18
19

5-11
6-1
6-1

19

6-0

19

5-11
5-11

19

5-9
6-1

5-9

185

180

170
165
185

185
200
190

220
205
205
210
200
195
170
185
175

B

19

B
E
B

22
20

6-0
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0

21

5-11

21
20
24
20
21
20
20

ISO
6-0
5-11Y2 210
6-2
225
6-1
220
6-5
5-11

19
21

5-11
6-3
6-0
6-2Yz

B
C
C

c

G
T
LB
G

G

22

19

LB

21

C

19

G
LB
G·T

19
20
18
20
20
20

G
T
T

T
G
G
T
T
G
T
E

T
T
T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

19

19
20
20
19

19
19
21
21
19
21
21
19
19
21
21
19
20
19
19
19
19

21

6-3

5-9
5-10
6-2

5-10
6-l
6-2

6-2\h
5-10
6-3
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-0

6-5
6-5
6-4
6-1
6-5

6-1
6-5
6-2

6-2

ISO
185

225
235
210
210
225
210
205
210
185
205
205
220
220
215
190
290
200
205
200
215
250
230
230

225
230
215
240
195
205

6-2

195

6-1

200
210
195
185

6-3
6-2

5-11
6-3
6-1

205

210

H ome
Evanston, Ill.
Berkeley Heights, ~. J.
Rochester, N. Y.
i\fl. Morris, N . Y.
Belvidere, N. J.
Devon, Conn.
Lake Bluff, 111.
Aurora, Ont.
Corvallis, Ore.
Belleville, Ill.
Canandaigua, N. Y.
Allentown, Pa.
Milford , Conn.
Clifton , N. J.
Glen Ridge, N. J.
Belleville, N. J.
Williamstown, l\fass.
Glenview, Ill.
Stamford , Conn.
White Plains, N. Y.
New Hartford , N . Y.
Auburn, N. Y.
Dansville, N. Y.
Brockport, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Paxton, Ill.
Pittsford, N. \'.
Canonsburg, Pa.
Daytona Beach, Fla .
Piusburgh, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N. \'.
Robesonia, Pa.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Greene, N. Y.
Berkeley Heights, :\' .J.
'Vest Haven , Conn.
Jackson, Mich .
New Hartford , . Y.
Eastlake, 0.
Amherst, N. H.
Temperance, Mich.
Port Crane, 1 • Y.
Lynn, Mass.
Kingston , Pa.
Tonawanda, N. Y.
Scotch Plains, N . .J.
Bernardsville, N. J.
Elmhurst, III.
Vestal , N. Y.
Corapolis, Pa,
Saugus, Mass.
Wakefield, Mass.
Glens Falls, N. Y.
Cressona, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Rochester, N. Y.
Lancaster, Pa.
Vestal, N. Y.
Everett, Mass.
Old Greenwich, Conn.
Endicott, N. Y.
Derby, Conn.
Essex, Conn.
Stamford, Conn.
Lancaster, Pa.
Pottsville, Pa.
Pittsburgh , Pa.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Ann Arbor, Mich.
Maumee, 0.
Washington, D. C .

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

•

�CORN ELL UNIVERSITY SQUAD

1st Row: Gervase, Witwer, Homicz, Wallace, Gerken, Vanneman, Capt. Devlin, Garman, McWeeney, Lucas, Fullerton,
Larson, Abel.
2nd Row: Sampson, Dunn, Dentes, Tamulonis, Gannon, Hinman, Norton, Zankowski, Moore, Roll, Murphy, Zogby, Kopicki,
Musmanno, Huling.
3rd Row: Battaglia, Heeps, Krochina, Horn, Church-Smith, French, Moores, Diehl, Black, Walton, Schuck, Walker,
Kincaid, Bubrick, Zak, Cervasio.
4th Row: Stanard, Gugino, Kleiber, Morris, Sulpizio, DiSalvo, Heath, Sponheimer, Chapman, Gould, Havens, Robertson,
Ruth, Hadley, Fegan, Pavka.
Top Row: Pattison, Spiegel, F. White, Rafalski, Maier, McCullen, Ritter, Signorelli, Wick, J. White, Newton, Kunsman,
Harris, Effron, Pease, Hurey, Manager Smith.

GRANVILLE MOTORS I.NC.
VOLKSWAGE~

AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE CENTER
• SEDANS
• SUNROOFS

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OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 836·4600
•

~

AUTHORIZE D
Oi.AL.ER

All Late Model VW's and Domestic Used Cars Warranted

18

FREDERICK DEVLIN
Captain

�A History of Cornell University
Since its conception more than 100 years
ago, Cornell University has been heralded as
an innovator. The innovations started with
founder Ezra Cornell who sated his intention to "found an institution where any person can find instruction in any study."
The University was unique when it opened
its doors on Oct. 7, 1868, having been
founded as a university rather than growing
into one. It offered courses in agriculture,
engineering and veterinary medicine, placing
them on a level with the humanities that comprised the curricula of most universities of
the era.
Cornell still holds a unique position with
four New York state units-agriculture, home
economics, veterinary medicine, and industrial and labor relations-supported as "contract colleges" by the state while the other
units exist as private, endowed colleges.
The first president of the University, Andrew Dickson ·w hite, first met Ezra Cornell
while both were serving in the New York
Senate. He encouraged Cornell to concentrate his philanthropy on higher education
and undertook the development of the University's academic program.
The University today is seen as an outgrowth of the successful melding of the ideas
of its co-founders - Ezra Cornell, a roughhewn, self-educated inventor whose fortune
had come from his laying the lines for Samuel Morse's telegraph, and Andrew \Vhite,
an urbane professor of history who was educated at Yale and abroad_
Ezra Cornell contributed the school's campus "Far
Above Cayuga's ·w aters," a large part of its endowment, and the idea of teaching mechanical arts and
technology as part of a university program_ From
\Vhite came a pioneering concept of education, a reaction against the strict classics and mathematics he
abhorred in his own college clays.
The two combined to produce the University's
then radial support of co-education and a principle
of freedom from domination by "persons of any one
religion or of no religion," a principle for which the
infant University was charged with "godlessness" in
pulpits and in the press.
The University contributed many firsts to the
history of science and technology in America. The
first Gramme dynamo was designed and constructed
on the campus, poweri~g the earli~st outd.oor electric lighting system in this country. Sigma XI, the national honorary scientific society, was founded on the
campus in 1866 and the "~hysical . Review" :was
founded in 1893 as the first JOurnal 111 the United
States devoted wholly to physics.
Cornell awarded the first doctorate in veterinary
medicine in America in 1876. The University's first
contract college was established in 1894 when the

JAMES A. PERKINS,
President

New York State Veterinary College was established
through a 50,000 appropriation by the state legislature.
Ten years later, agriculture acquired the status of
a state college. The College of Home Economics was
approved in 1929 and the University's complement of
state-supported colleges was completed with the
pioneering School of Industrial and Labor Relations
in 1944.
Cornell administers the four state schools with state
appropriations but with complete academic freedom.
The modern Cornell comprises 15 schools and colleges. The University maintains 17 research centers
ranging from the Agricultural Experiment Station in
Geneva, r. Y., established in 1879 to the Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratory in Buffalo and the Ionospheric Observatory at Arecibo, Puerto Rico, which
boasts the world's largest radio-radar telescope.
One of Cornell's biggest assets is its beautiful campus in the heart of ew York's scenic Finger Lakes
Region. The campus sits between two deep, wooded
gorges and includes Beebe Lake and a spectacular
view of the city of Ithaca and the surrounding Appalachian hills.
19

�CORNELL UNIVERSITY COACHING STAFF

Left to right: Coach Jack Musick. Asst. Coach Chuck Gottfried, Ted Thoren, Chuck R amsey, Paul Pawlak, Carmen Piccone, Jim
Lemen, Bob Valesente, Trainer Frank Kavanagh.

SCIENTIFIC

EQUIPMENT

and

MEDICAL SUPPLIES
for

• INDUSTRY

• PHYSICIANS
• SCHOOL
• HOSPITAL

• HOME

JEFFREY-FELL CO., INC.
1700 MAIN ST.

Phone TT 3 - 1700

20

BFLO., NEW YORK 14209

�Robert J. Kane, Director of Physical Education and
Athletics at Cornell University since 1944, was the
chief administrative official of the United States
delegation at the 1964 Olympic Games. He was chairman of the Administrative Committee correlating
and supervising all activities of the teams competing
in Tokyo.
He is Secretary of the U. S. Olympic Committee
through 1969.
In 1952 he was manager of the men's track and
field team at the Olympics in Helsinki. In 1953 he
was chairman of the Television Committee of the
National Collegiate Athletic Association, a position
to which he was elected again for 1957. In 1960 he
~as co-ordinator for all U.S. teams at the Olympics
m Rome.
A 1934 graduate of Cornell, Kane started his
career as an administrator in 1939 when he was appointed assistant to Athletic Director James Lynah.
He had served two years as assistant track coach under tbe late John F. Moakley.
. Kane has held numerous other top positions in
mtercollegiate athletics. He is a member of the Board
of Directors of the United States Olympic Committee and was a member of the NCAA Television Committee from 1951 through 1955. He was president of
the Eastern College Athletic Conference in 1950 and
1959 and was president of the IC4A in 1944, 1948
and 1952.

ROBERT J. KANE
Director of Physical Education and Athletics

John Elmore (Jack) l\Iusick, head line coach at Dartmouth
the last 1 l seasons, was appointed Cornell's I 7th head coach of
football January 26.
He succeeds Tom Harp who was named head coach at
Duke January 16 after directing the Big Red since 1961.
:\I usick , 4 I, was ch ie£ assistant to Bob Blackman [or 17 . of
the last 19 years. Their associa~ion started in 1947, fol!owi~g
Jack's graduation [rom th~ Umversny of Southern c.ahforma
where he was a standout lmeman [rom !944 through 46.
He assisted Blackman at Monrovia, Calif., High School in
1947 and '48 and at Pasadena City College the next two years.
In !951 and '52 he was head coach at Hart High School in
ewhall, Calif., rejoining Blackman at Denver University in
1953 and moving with him to Dartmouth in '55.
During the past season, in which the Indians had a 9-.o
record Jack was in charge of overall defense. Dartmouth s
record' the last II years was 69-27-3, including a per~ect '_62
campaign, with three Ivy League titles and a co-champwnship.
He plans to attack from a vVing-T formation similar to that
employed at Cornell the last two years.
In 1915 , as a tackle, Jack was named to the All-Pacific
Coast first team. The following year he played guard and was
recipient of the award to the senior best e":emplifying South~rn
California's athletic tradition. He played m the 1915 and 46
Rose Bowl games.
In 1943 he was an infantryman with the 32nd Division in
the Pacific Theater.
Jack is a nati\e of Santa .\na , Calif. H_c is married to the
former Patricia Tapscott of Glendale, Cahf. They have three
daughters.

JACK MUSICK
II ead Football Coach

21

�CORNELL

RICHARD GERKEN

EDWARD ZAK

THOMAS LUCAS

RONALD GERVASE

JOHN ZANKOWSKI

REEVE VANNEMAN

ERNEST DUNN

DALE WITWER

JOHN WALLACE

22

JOSEPH HOMICZ

THOMAS DIEHL

MICHAEL MOORE

�UNIVERSITY

PETER ZOGBY

FRANK TAMULONIS

JOHN SPONHEIMER

WILLIAM MURPHY

PETER LARSEN

GEORGE McWEENEY

JOHN DENTES

WILLIAM ABEL

HARRY GARMAN

JOHN KINCAID

DOUGLAS KLEIBER

23

RONALD KOPICKI

�c
0
R
N
E
L
L

UNIVERSITY

24

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finishes made to your exact specifications.

COLD ROLLED STRIP STEEL
Warehouse and Mill Deliveries
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•

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and

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KENMORE, N . Y. 14217

•

Complete Fonnal R ental Service - Group Rates

101 NIAGARA STREET
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14202

Phone: 873-3228

25

�1965 0 ·FFI CIA-L 8UFFAL0 STAT I STI CS
Player
"Lee Jones
Jim Webber
"Rick Wells
·~ick Capuana
"Tom Hurd
Dennis PrLykuta
Bennie Washington
"Tom Brennan
Fred Geringer
"Jim Barksdale
Ron Ridolfi

RUSHING
Att.
115
113
97
68
37

Net
531
354
286
175
Ill
108
14
10

_,

&lt;)-

3
l
l
9
9

Avg.
4.6
3.1
2.9
2.5
3.0
3.7
4.6
10.0
1.0
0.0
0.0

1

- 5
-II

Player
"Brian Hansen
John Smigelski
"Tom Hurd

Player
"Rick Wells
":-lick Capuana
Ron Ridolfi
Fred Geringer

Int.
8
I

9
1

et
349
161
163
0

l

PUNT RETURNS
Player
No.
•Tom Hurd
13
14
"Dan Sella
"Nick Capuana
6
6
Fred Geringer
I
•Rick Wells
I
Craig Helenbrook

480
1,574
3.2
Longest run from scrimmage: 42 yards (Lee Jones vs. Delaware)
PASSING
Com pl.
Att.
23
63
II
36
9
30
0
2

PUNTING
No.
48
10

KICKOFF RETURNS
No.
Player
5
"Nick Capuana
5
"Tom Hurd
3
"Jim McEwen
2
•Rick Wells
l
Jim Webber
l
•Tom Hoke

TD
4
3
3
0

131
43
19
673
10
Longest pass play: M yards TD (Wells to Ashley, vs. i\lass.)

INTERCEPTIONS
No.
Player
4
•Dan Sella
3
Gerry Lafountain
•Tom Hurd
2
2
Tom Ridolfi
2
":-lick Capuana
2
Joe Holly
l
Jim Duprey
l
Joe Garafalo
l
Fred Geringer

RECEIVI G
"Dick Ashley
17
349 (..) 7 ("")
("")- New UB
"Jim Dunn
13
127
I
Records
"Tom Hurd
4
71
0
Dennis Burden
3
39
I
Jim \&gt;\'ebber
3
37
0
"Jim Barksdale
I
23
l
Bennie Washington I
IS
0
.Jim McNamara
I
9
0
Team leader in total offense: Rick ·wells, 635 yards.

Avg.
33.2
40.4
25.0

Yds.

154
120
64
50
29
16

Yds.
119
102
71
50
24
12

Yds.

32
109
91
15
14
0
7
4

0

Students . ..

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Cowper Co.

Big Wheels On Campus

SUBURBAN CYCLES, Ltd.
3165 MAIN ST. near UB Campus

INCORPORATED
Thurs. &amp; Fri. til 9 P.M.

Open Daily til 6 P.M.

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Old Post Road Inn

Engineers- Contractors

•

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873-4200

The Finest in

Post Office Box 1068

Traditional Cookery

1945 Sheridan Drive

Reservations

Buffalo, New York 14240

835-7745

26

�1965 BUFFALO STATISTICS
SCORING
•Dick Ashley (7 TD's pass reception)
•Rick Wells (4 TD's rushing, :l PATR)
Joe Oscsodal (13 PAT's, 2 FG
•Jim Dunn (l TD pass reception)
•Jim Barksdale (l TD pass reception)
•Lee Jones (1 TD rushing)
•Nick Capuana (l TD rushing)
Craig Helenbrook (l TD, recovered blocked punt)
Gerry LaFountain (l TD, interception return)
•Tom Hurd (1 TD, interception return)
Jim Webber (l TD rushing)
Dennis Burden (l TD pass reception)
Jim McNamara (l PAT, pass reception)

Pts.
42
28
19
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
2

SIGHTSEEING? CONVENTIONS?
SCHOOL TRIPS? GOING TO THE GAMEt
Go where YOU want-When YOU wantfor as long as YOU wish and have more
fun on a Grand Island Transit Corp.
charter bus. Your group stays together
and relaxes on your modern- deluxe Airconditioned, Air-ride, Restroom equipped
bus. Trips to anywhere in the U.S. a nd
Canada.

Phone
853-3377

GRAND ISLAND TRANSIT CORP.
"THE BUFFALO-NIAGARA FALLS BUS LINE"

145
Longest scoring play: 90 yards, Gerry LaFountain (Return of
pass interception vs. Delaware)
• - indicates player will return for 1966 season.

200 W. Mohawk St., Buffalo, N.Y. 14202

U.B. FOOTBALL RECORDS
Rushing
One play: 87 yards (TD), Bob Edwards, vs. Boston U., 1962
One game: 205 yards, Ray Weser, vs. Rhode Island, I 949
One season: 620 yards, Willie Evans, 1959
Career: 1,559 yards, Willie Evans, 1957-1959
Passing
Yardage, one play: 86 yards (TD) , Ordean Shanabrook to Andy
Podlucky, vs. Bucknell, 1951
Yardage, one season: 869 yards, Don Gilbert, 1964
Yardage, career: 2,133 yards, John Stofa, 1961-63
TD passes, one game: 5, Joe Kubisty, vs. Bucknell, 1956
TD passes, one season: ~. Gordon Bukaty, 1958
Attempts, one season: 128, Don Holland, 1951
Completions, one season: 64, Don Holland, 1951; John Stofa 1961
a unique new setting f or
Pass R eceiving
breakfast, lunch, dinner and late supper,
One game: 7, Ed Gicewicz, vs. Bucknell, 1951;
Dan Stanley, vs. Corlland State, 1955;
where you,eat like a Roman em peror
Bob Baker, vs. V.M.I., 1961
on centurion's pay.
One season: 23, Bob Baker, 1961
Career: 49, Ed Gicewicz, 1949-5 1
TD passes, one game: 3, Dick Ashley, vs. Colgate, 1965
In the North Wing of the MAPLE+LEAF MOTOR LODGE
TD passes, one season: 7, Dick Ashley, 1965
1620 Niarara Falls Boulevard
1 Mile North of Sheridan Dr.
TD passes, career: Ed Gicewicz, 1949-51
,
Yardage, one game: 144 yards, Ed Gicewicz, vs. Bucknell, 1951 t;.l mi. So., Youngmann Exwy.
AMPLE PARKING FOR YOUR CHARI OT
Yardage, one season: 349 yards, Dick Ashley, 1965
Phone: TF 5-2610
Yardage, career: 789 yards, Eel Gicewicz, 1949-5 1
Total Offense
ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHTLY
One game: 291 yards, Ordean Shanabrook, vs. Bucknell. 1951
One season: 1,337 yards, Don Gilbert, 1964
Career: 2,730 yards, John Stofa, 1961-63
Field Goals
Most in one season: 2, Joe Oscsodal, 1965
Most in career: 3, Joe Oscsodal, 1964-65
Longest: 44 yards, Joe Oscsodal, vs. Cornell, 1964
Longest kickoff return
95 yards (TD), Jim Ryan , vs. Villanova, 1963
Longest punt return
75 yards (TD), Frank Nappo, vs.N iagara, 1949
Longest interception return
90 yards (TD), Gerry LaFountain, vs. Delaware, 1965
Pass Interceptions
DRIVING A " SPORTS CAR" IS
One game: 4, Peter Rao, vs. Cortland State, 1953
One season: 6, Gordon Bukaty, 1959
TWICE T H E FUN
Career: II , Gordon Bukaty. 1958-60
Punting
Longest punt: 81 yards, Bill Brogan, vs. Cortaland State, 1959
Best average, one season: 40.6-yards, Bill Brogan, 1959

the
new

THREE COINS RESTA VRANT
andLOVNGE

You're Not Seeing Double!

BOB DeGRAW

Points Scored
One game: 36, Lou Corriere, vs. Hobart, 1942
One season: 90, Lou Corriere, 1942
Largest crowd at Rotary Field
11 ,466, vs. Boston U ., 1963
Largest crowd ever to see U.B. p lay
26,126, vs. Colgate, at Civic Stadium, Buffalo, 1951

2301

~IN

STREET

837-5600

''Where Service is the Tail that Wags the Dog"

27

�1966 FOOTBALL RULES CHANGES
by Dr. Ellwood A. Geiges
Editor, NCAA Football Rules Committee
Assistant to the Commissioner
Eastern College Athletic Conference

After continued attempts annually for the past
several years to liberalize rules governing substitutions, the NCAA Football Rules Committee at its
meeting in New Orleans last January made no alterations in the 1965 substitution regulations.

New rules were enacted (l) that prohibit throwing
a backward pass out of bounds to conserve time, and
(2) that make it illegal to pyramid players on defense
in an attempt to block a place kick.
Approval was given for the optiontal use of a pylon

However, the Committee adopted a new rule which
prohibits players from being equipped with any electronic, mechanical or other signal devices for the
purpose of communicating with any source.

marker in place of the flags marking the intersection
of the goal lines and side lines.
Hurdling was redefined and the regulation governing players out-of-bounds was amended to allow an

The rule on the numbering of players on offense
was revised to make it mandatory for those ordinarily
occupying the Center, Guard and Tackle positions
wear numbers from 50 through 79.

in-bounds player to touch a game official in an outof-bounds

position without

being ruled out of

bounds.

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PEOPLE ON A HONDA!

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*

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iC

Come in and meet the sports at . . .

RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE

SUPER SPORTS

Next to Lord Amherst Motor Hotel
Main Street at the Thruway

3676 SHERIDAN AT MILLERSPORT

Plenty of Parking Space

Phone 833-9888

28

Open Evenings

�BUFFALO BULLS

JOHN DOHERTY

JEFFREY THOMAS

JAMES MOSHER

JOHN KOVACK

SUPPORT THE BULLS- GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW
I w ish t o purch ase .......... season tickets for 1967. No payment r equired until billed July 1s t .
Name
Address

........................ . ........................ Telephone
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•

••••••••••

0.

0

•••••

•

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Fill out the a pplication and mail to Ticket Office, Clark Gym, Buffalo, N . Y. 14214

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29

833-0035

�PROGRAM PATRONS
Harold A. Adel

M. Robert Koren

J. Edwin Alford

Dexter S. Levy

William C. Baird

Norman B. Lewis

Charles F. Banas

Robert W. Lipsett

Robert R. Barrett

Samuel D. Magavern

Bartlett Buick, Inc.

Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins. Co.

Bissell, Bronkie &amp; Assoc., Engineers

Charles Matthews

Stanley B. Blach

Harold F . Meese

Walter Brock

Robert J. Metzen

Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Carrel

Frank Meyers

Ross M. Cellino

Leo M. Michalek

J. Celmer
Robert J. Collins

Wallace H. Miller
Edward F. Mimmack

Charles H. Diefendorf

Arthur Mogerman

Arnold E. DiLaura

Carlton C. Rausch

John H. Dittman

Herbert R. Reitz

James P. Donnelly

Rich Products Corp.

George E. Easterbrook

Frank T. Riforgiato

Emil

Robert

J. Ehrenreich

William R. Root

J. Rosen

Robert D. Fernbach

Leo

William H. Georgi

Charles G. Salisbury

A. Donald Gilden

Vincent Scamurra

Chester P. Glor, Jr.

Roy E. Seibel

George L. Grobe, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. George N. Seifert

In Memory of Dom Grossi

George Selkirk

Dr. and Mrs. Norman Haber

Shanor Electric Supply Co.

Fenton F. Harrison

Samuel Shatkin

William

J. Hildebrand, Jr.

Herbert Simon

Houdaille Corp.

Suburban Cycles, Ltd.

Sheldon Hurwitz

James R. Sullivan

Edwin F. Jaeckle

Gertrude S. Swarthout

Grover R. James, Jr.

Harlan Swift

Rudolph V. Johnson

Irvin L. Terry

Russell Kidder, Jr.

Louis D e Vincentis

Stephen F. Kissel

Wilcox Motors, Inc.

Seymour H. Knox

Compliments of Dr. \Volfsohn

30

�FOLLOW THE

BULLS
AND THE

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ON

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VAN
MILLER
keeps you
in the

CENTER
OF THE

ACTION
of all games

at home
or away

AT THE CENTER OF THE DIAL 930

�1966 - 1967
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
SEPTEMBER
23-at Army Plebes
OCTOBER
S-Colgate
22-at Ithaca
2S-at Navy
NOVEMBER
It-Syracuse
CROSS COU 1 TRY \ ', \RSn'
SEPTEMBER
20-at Brockport
24-at Syracuse
29-Canisius
OCTOBER
1-Invitational at LeMoyne
5-at RIP- Cortland
12-at Niagara
15-Colgate
IS-Niagara Community
21-Lel\loyne
26-RIT &amp; Fredonia
29-Invitational at Canisius
NOVEMBER
1-Bu!Ialo State
5-Hystxa- Alfred
12-at Wheaton NC.\A College
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTD1BER
19-Canisius
23-Buf[alo State
26-St. Bonaventure
2S- Niagara
30-Buffalo State
OCrOBER
4-Canisius
7-SL. Bonaventure
~-ECAC

12-Niagara
15-ECAC
22-ECAC
29-M eM aster
:'\OVEMBER
2-~IcMaster

VARSITY B.\SKETBALL
DECEMBER
2-Toronto
3-Gannon
.) -Western Ontario
I O-at Albany
14-Syracuse
17-St. Barbara U. Calif.
20-Cornell
j .\N ARY
14-Rochester
18-Niagara (Aud)
21-To be announced (Aud)
21-Brockport
2S-St. ;\I ichaels
FEBRUARY
!- Wayne State
7-,Vindsor
I O-at Ph. Texule
It-Wisconsin (Aud)
I 1-at Kent State
17-Ithaca
IS-Alban}
24-at Colgate
28-BufTalo State (Aud)

FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
2-Canisius
5-at \Vestern Ontario
14-Syracuse
20-at Cornell
21-at St. Bonaventure
JANUARY
1 !-Rochester
IS-Niagara (Aud)
24-Brockport
28-Buffalo State
FEBRUARY
4-St. Bonaventure
7-Niagara Community
1O-at Buffalo State
14-at Canisius
17-Ithaca
22-0ntario Aggies
24-at Colgate
28-BufTalo State (Aud)
VARSITY SWIMl\!ING
DECEMBER
3-at Hobart UPNYSM
7-Rochester
9-Notre Dame
I 0-Syracuse
19-Bu!Ialo State
JA:\!UARY
17-at Niagara
20-Kings Point
21-at W. Ontario
2S-Brockport
FEBRUARY
3-at Cortland
4-at Colgate
I 1-at Me faster
15-at Geneseo
25-St. Bonaventure
28-Niagara
FRESHMAN SWIMMING
DECEMBER
3-at UPNYSM
7-Rochester
I 0-Syracuse
19-Buffalo State
j .\ UARY
17-at iagara
2S-Brockport
FEBRUARY
3-at Cortland
4-at Cortland
2.5-St. Bonaventure
28-Niagara
VARSITY WRESTLING
JANUARY
17-at U . Guelph
21-Ithaca
25-M eM aster
2S-at Alfred
FEBRUARY
4-Colgate
I 0-,Vayne State
11-Cortland
15-at Geneseo
IS-W. Ontario
21-at Brockport
25-at Rochester

32

;\lARCH
·!-Oswego
FRESHMA:\ \VRES'I LL'\(,
JANUARY
17-at U. Guelph
21-lthaca
28-at Alfred
31-at ECTI
FEBRUARY
4-Colgate
10-ECTI
11-Cortland
21-at Brockport
25-at Rochester
:\lARCH
4-0swego
VARSITY FE:\!CING
DECEl\IBER
3-RIT
9-:\lcl\!aster
I 0-Case-Cornell
jA:\!UARY
14-Syracuse
21-at RIT
2S-Hobart
FEBRUARY
!-at McMaster
11-at Penn State
24-at Hobart
2.5-at Syracuse
;\!ARCH
4-at Notre Dame
11-at Syracuse N. Athletics
24-at NCAA
25-San Francisco State
FRESHMAN FENCING
DECEMBER
3-RIT
10-Cornell
JANUARY
14-Syracuse
21-at RIT
2S-Hobart
FEBRUARY
21-at Hobart
2.5-at Syracuse
V,\RSITY B.\SEBALL
,\PRIL
13-ECTl
I t-at ECTI
19-at Geneseo
20-at St. Bonaventure
24-Canisius
26-Co1gate
29-Rochester
;\lAY
1-at RIT
3-at Canisius
1- iagara
8-Syracuse
10-RIT
FRESH:\IA:\1 BASEBt\LL
.\PRIL
29-at Rochester
;\'lAY
3-at Brockport
6-Bryant Strallon
10-at RIT

�IROQUOIS BREWERY, BUFFALO, N.Y. (DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL BREWERIES, INC.)

�Simon Pure
Means Pure Pleasure
.•. pure Pleasure because you always get
Simon Pure at its very best. Beer is
never better than the day it's bottled
and nobody gets it to you faster than we do.
In the entire brewing process,
the only thing we hurry is the delivery.

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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              <text>Programs</text>
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                <text>1966-10-01 Bulls vs. Cornell</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text>Official Program 50¢</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1966-10-01</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>Official Program
50c

Memorial Stadium
September 1 7, 1 966
1:30 P.M.

BUFFALO BULLS
Northeast Ohio Band Day

U of B Capt. Bill Taylor
• • • two way tackle

�TV -

Phones -

Carte Blanche

Air Conditioned - Room Music - Free Ice - Restaurants - Gift Shop _
Bowling - Golf - Coffee Shop - Lounge
Diners
American Express

Heated Pool
AAA

eastwood motor lodge
2296 E. Main Street, Kent, Ohio; on Rt. 5, East,

I mile from Campus -

Phone _

673-4434

Good Luck To uThe Golden Flashes"
Steaks

The World's
Finest Eating

Chops

.. BROASTED CHICKEN""

Spaghetti

After the game come and enjoy
The ALL NEW and MODERN . . .
Reservations
Accepted

KENTWOOD
RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

"State route 5 on the Strip"
2

OPEN
FROM
II :00 A.M.
Daily

�SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS
This week, and in weeks to come, the Kent State
fall sports program will be featured in the football
program.
Today, the spotlight falls on cross country, headed by
nationally known coach Doug Raymond and spearheaded by two-time All America Pete Lorandeau.
Lorandeau, a senior from Surry, New Hampshire, is
the greatest cross country runner ever to appear for
the Golden Flashes. Pete not only won All America
honors twice, but also won the MAC title in 1964 and,
that year, was picked as New Hampshire's collegiate
athlete of the year.
Running with Pete will be Junior Sam Bair, a Scottdale, Pa., product.
Sam last season was an outstanding cross country
runner and the finest miler Kent and the MAC has
ever seen. The slender Bair's performances bordered
on the fantastic and there is little doubt that a healthy
Bair will give Kent two All American runners this
season.

Raymond is used to All America performers, having
turned out three at Boston University, including high
jumper John Tomas.
The balding coach is known throughout the world
and has coached Olympic squad members. In addition,
Doug has introduced innovations in track equipment.
The Flashes will have more than Sam and Pete,
however, and , if the veterans stay healthy, could produce an outstanding track team. Last season, injuries
and illness stripped Doug of the late season depth needed to show we11 in the MAC finals.
Returning again this season are Paul Anderson, Curt
Battiste11i, Dan Hostetler, Neil Murray and Rick
Gibson.
Kent's task in capturing the MAC title is difficult at
best since Western Michigan not only has captured
that title the past two years, but the NCAA national
title as well.

PETE LORANDEAU

CONTENTS
Spotlight on Sports .................................................... 3
President's Message .................................................... 4
Meet Leo Strang .......................... .............................. 5
Athletic Staff ................................................................ 7
Team Records .............................................................. 9
Alma Mater ................................................................ 17
Co-Captains .................................................................. 19
Today's Band Show .................................................... 22
Golden Flash Roster ....................................................23
Line-Ups ..................................................................24-25
Visitor's Roster ............................................................ 26
Visitor's Data .......................................................... 26 -27
Flash Frosh ..................................................................29
The MAC .................................................................... 31
Ara's Words of Wisdom ............................................ 33
Flashes On Airwaves .................................................. 35
The Cheerleaders ........................................................ 40
K .S.U. Map ..................................................................42
lbaka ............................................................................ 46
Services for usherin g a nd sale of progr ams h a ve been dona t ed
b y m embers of t h e ser vice organization s of the Army and
Air Force ROTC . We wish t o t h ank t h e future officers of
our n a tion 's a rmed forces for their h elp .

3

�A Warm
Welcome to

K ENT STATE
UNIVERSITY

"Kent State University welcomes you to its campus whether you be student,
alumnus, parent, or visitor warmly including those whose loyalties lie with
our football opponents.
"Kent State University is a member of the Mid-American Conference. We value
this association. At the same time that the institutions in the Conference are developing
respected and strong teams in all sports, the Conference maintains defensible standards
of competition and for the kinds of students who participate as athletes. As a member
of that Conference, it is our goal to compete equally under those reasonable standards.
It is our desire that everything we do be done both with integrity and well. We are
also happy to note the rapidly growing stature of the MAC among the nation's
conferences.
"In the same light, we hope we have proved to be good hosts to you today.
We look forward to your return."

Sincerely,

Robert I. White
President

4

�meet leo strang
Leo enters his third season at
Kent with an 8-9-2 mark and
hopes that the fruits of two
building years are ready to be
picked.
Strang puts himself on a limb
by bluntly stating that this is the
best football team ever assembled at Kent. Obviously, Leo
believes the squad will win this
season.
The Golden Flashes last season turned in the first winning
season in five years with a 5-4-1
mark. This was not good enough
for Strang and neither he, his
staff nor the team will be satisfied with a repeat this season.

W . H. Davis (left), Alcoa's General ManagerIndustrial Relations , says: " We've found that
Army ROTC graduates with active duty experience as officers possess better than average
initiative , foresight , and responsibility. These
are qualities we rate very highly, and we gladly
pay a premium to get them. "

Why did
Alcoa
hire
Rod WilsonP
Because Alcoa needs men to fill key
positions-men capable of moving to
the top; men who seek and measure up
to responsibility. Rod Wilson is that
kind of man. An Army ROTC Distinguished Military Graduate at Colorado
State University, Rod won an officer's
commission in the Regular Army along
with his degree. Forty-four months of
active duty, including 16 months overseas as an artillery commander, earned
Rod Wilson 24-carat credentials as a
leader, a man schooled in the demanding disciplines of command, the kind
of man Alcoa looks for.
If you're this kind of man, prove it to
yourself, and to the companies like
Alcoa who are looking for you. How?
Get in Army ROTC. Stay with Army
RO TC, all the way to success.

ARMY ROTC

The 43-year-old coach expects to win, a holdover from his high
school coaching days when his teams won 109, lost 26 and tied one.
His prep teams won five league titles, three Ohio Championships and
two national titles.
"Those records are nice to reflect upon, but they don't mean much
now. It's what we do here, at Kent, that counts. It's time we had a
big winner and we hope this is the season," Leo says.
Strang is Kent's seventh head coach and enters his 16th season
of coaching.
A native of Ashland, Ohio, Strang graduated from Ashland high
school in 1943 where he played football and was named All-League
and All-State. He served on a destroyer in the South Pacific during
World War II.
Strang returned to Ashland after his discharge and attended
Ashland College where he was a star halfback for the Eagles. He
graduated in 1950 and returned to his alma mater in 1961 to receive
the Outstanding Alumnus Award.
His first coaching job was at Caldwell high school. Strang spent
the next five years at Upper Sandusky high school where his teams
won two Northern Ohio League championships and one co-championship. His 1955 team was undefeated and untied.
Strang then moved on to Cleveland Shaw high school where in
1957 he led Shaw to its first undisputed Lake Erie League championship, with a 9-1 record.
In 1958 Strang was tapped to take over as head coach and athletic
director at Massillon. In six years with the Tigers his teams won 54,
lost eight and tied one. It was as head coach of the famed Tigers
that he picked up two national and three state titles and was himself
named Ohio High School Coach of the year in 1959.
The coach is married to the former Bettie Barrell of San Francisco.
The Strangs have two sons, both of whom will be football players
according to Strang.

5

�WHERE THE ACTION IS

....
I I I I

THE

FIFTH QUARTER
1208 S. DEPEYSTER ST.l

Kent's Newest and Largest College Nite Club

Live Entertainment Nitely,

DANCING, and
Your Favorite Beverages

NOW ! ! - At The FIFTH QUARTER
Fabulous PIZZA by Leone's ! ! !
Eat it here or have it delivered FREE.

OPEN
7:30 P.M. - 1:00 A.M.
Wednesday thru Sunday
HAPPY HOUR EVERY FRIDAY
AFTERNOON AND AFTER
EVERY FOOTBAll GAME

Warren Suburban, I n c . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone EX 5-4036
Warren, Ohio

CHARTERED BUS SERVICE
ANYWHERE

Air Conditioned
Air Ride
Scenic Cruisers
Rest Rooms

It is Smarter to Charter

CONTACT THE SMOKE SHOP
118 North Water St.
Kent, Ohio

---------------------Call
6

673-4141

�Dr. Carl E. Erickson . .

Athletic Director

Equipment Man
Jim Delano

Managers
Ron Lerman, Steve Licht, Steve Bowman

Medical Team
Trainer Tom Blosser, Dr. Tony Adamle,
Asst. Trainer Don Lowe

The Coaching Staff
Head Coach Leo Strang,
Frank Smouse, Nick Coso, Tony Ware, JacR Robb and Hap Lillick.7

�Kent Business Backs Kent
MIDWAY

W. H. DONAGHY CO.

LANES

2245 Kent-Ravenna Road

PRESCRIPTIONS

-RESTAURANTOpen Bowling and Leagues
Live Entertainment - Thursday, Friday, Saturday
in The TENpin Room

Russell Stover Candies
Compliments of John Carson
Main and Water St.

Kent, Ohio

673-3465

Pets of Every Description

THE DAVEY TREE
EXPERT COMPANY

Kent Aquarium and Pet Center
120 S. Water St.

OFFICES IN
FIFTY PR INC IPAL CITIES

HOURS : 10 A .M . - 9 P.M . M.T.T.F.
I 0 A.M. • 6 P.M. Wed., Sat.
12 - 6 an Sunday

Kent, Ohio

HOME OFFICE: KENT, OHIO

673-3011

GOOD LUCK LEO

Music Mart of l{ent., Inc.

DON JOSEPH, INC.

CONN KIMBALL PIANOS and ORGANS

Chrysler, Plymouth, Valiant

MAGNAVOX TV
RADIOS and PHONOGRAPHS
RECORDS
TAPE RECORDERS
WOLENSAK &amp; VM

Brand Name Merchandise
Musical Instruments

1127 W. Main St.

673-2100

173 E. Main St.

Kent, Ohio

GRAND UPHOLSTERY

BEST OF LUCK FROM

Custom Styled Furniture and Showroom

PARTY FARE

Free Pickup and Delivery
J . CACKOWSKI

127 W. Main St.

-

673-7158

"ALL YOUR PARTY SUPPLIES"

PETE MOORS

673-4637

Kent, Ohio

257 South Water St.

673-3336

BARNEY'S 15 4 HAMBURGERS

Compliments of

Cheeseburgers - Fish - Malts

The University Shop

FOR BIGGER BURGERS SEE BARNEY'S
Across From Campus

408 EAST MAIN STREET

CRAIG'S SUNOCO

LAWRANCE CLEANERS
Dry Cleaning

Where you RENT your HONDA

303-309 North Water Street
715 East Main Street
Kent, Ohio

8

Kent, Ohio

Telephone 673-4433

�STATISTICS and RECORDS
MOST PUNTS
49 John Todd (1952)
Season:
115 Ron Mollrlc ( 1963-65)
Career:

TD CATCHES:
7 Jim Betteker
Career:
7 Jack Mancos
7 Jim Betteker
Season:
3 Jack Mancos
Game:

YARDAGE:
4337 Ron Mollrlc (1963-65)
Career:
1671 John Todd (1952)
Season:
281 Ron Mollrlc vs. Penn State 1965 (6 kicks)
Game:

TOTAL OFFENSE:
2339 yards, Jack Mancos (1949-51)
Career:
Season: 1037 yards, Lou Mariano (1954)
Game:
324 yards, Dick Mostardl vs. Marshall ( 1958)

PUNTING

AVERAGE:
37.7
Career:
40.1
Season:
46.8
Game:
51.0

yards,
yards.
yards,
yards,

Ron Mollrlc (1963-65) 115 kicks
Ron Mollrlc ( 1963)
Ron Mollrlc vs. Penn State 1965 (6 kicks)
John Martin vs. Xavier 1958 (2 kicks)

SCORING
MOST POINTS:
200 Mike Norcia (1952-55)
Career:
86 Lou Mariano (1954)
Season:
30 Jack Mancos vs. Western Michigan 1951.
Game:
30 Carmen Falcone vs. Buffalo (1938)
MOST TOUCHDOWNS:
28 Jack Mancos (1949-51)
Career:
14 Lou Mariano (1954)
Season:
5 Jack Mancos vs. Western Michigan (1951)
Game:

RUSHING
YARDS GAINED:
Career:
2255 Jack Mancos (1949-51 )
2206 Jim Cullom (1951-53)
Season:
1037 Lou Mariano (1954)
998 Willie Asbury (1965)
Game:
226 Lou Mariano vs. Western Reserve 1954
220 Jack Mancos vs. U. of Conn. 1949
ATTEMPTS:
Career:
420
353
Season:
238
212
Game:
34
32

Jim Cullom (1951-53)
Willie Asbury (1962 -65 )
Willie Asbury (1965)
Jim Cullom (1952)
Dick Merschman vs. Toledo, 1962 (111 J•.lrds)
Willie Asbury vs. Bowling Green, 1965 (130 yds.)

AVERAGE GAIN:
9.5 Lou Mariano, 1952-54 ( 195 att. , 1853 yards)
Career:
Season: 10.9 Lou Mariano, 1954 (95 att .. 1037 yards)
22.6 Lou Mariano vs. Western Reserve, 1954
Game :
(10 att., 226 yards)
16.9 Jack Mancos vs. U. of Conn. 1949
(13 att., 220 yards)

PASSING
YARDS GAINED:
1371 Nick Dellerba (1949-51)
Career:
847 Nick Dellerba, 1951
Season:
198 Dick Mostardo vs. Marshall, 1958 (8 of 10)
Game:
PASSES ATTEMPTED:
Career:
221 Jim Flynn (1960 -62 ) 100 completed.
Season:
122 Frank Artino (1952) 44 completed.
Game:
24 Jim Flynn twice (Miami and Louisville) 1962 .
PASSES COMPLETED:
Career:
100 Jim Flynn (1960-62) 221 atts.
Season:
45 John Moore ( 1946) 74 atts.
Game:
13 John Moore vs. Bluffton (1946) 19 atts.
PASSING
Career:
Season:
Game:

% o/o o/o:
47.3 Nick Dellerba (1949-51) 192-91 for 1221 yards.
60.8 John Moore ( 1946) 74-45 for 644 yards.
100 Jerry Tuttle 10 for 10 vs. BG (1948)

TOUCHDOWN PASSES:
Career:
14 Dick Dellerba ( 1949-51)
14 Jerry Tuttle ( 1948-49)
Season:
8 Jerry Tuttle (1949)
Game:
3 Nick Dellerba vs. Western Michigan 1951
3 Jerry Tuttle vs. Central Michigan, 1949

RECEIVING
CAUGHT:
33
Career:
30
Season:
7
Game:
YARDAGE:
575
Career:
337
Season:
104
Game:

Dick Wolfe (1960-62)
Billy Blunt ( 1965)
Billy Blul't vs. Miami 1965
Dick Mihal us ( 1956-58)
Billy Blunt (1965)
Dick Mlhalus vs. Western Michigan (1956)

( 1951)
( 1949-51)
( 1951)
vs. Western Michigan 1951

PLACE KICKING
EXTRA POINTS:
Career:
61 Don Campbell (1951 -52 )
Season:
31 Don Campbell (1951)
Game:
6 Don Campbell vs. Western Michigan, Akron U.
&amp; Western Reserve (1951)
Consecutive: 23 by Frank Mesek (1949)
EXTRA POINT ATT.:
Career:
95 Don Campbell (1950-52)
Season:
34 Don Campbell (1951)
GamP:
7 Don Campbell vs. Western Michigan, 1951
FIELD GOALS:
Career Atts.: 18
Season Atts.:
8
Game Atts.:
2
Made Career: 10
Made Season : 4
Made Game:
2
Longest FG:
41

Tom Zuppke (1962-65)
Tom Zuppke (1965)
Tom Zuppke and several others
Tom Zuppke (1962-65)
Tom Zuppke, 1963
Tom Zuppke vs. Louisville 1963
yards, Tom Zuppke vs. Louisville 1963.

TEAM SEASON RECORDS
Rushing Yards: 3392 (1954) - 483 attempts
Rushing Plays: 535 (1951) - 2535 yards
First Downs Rushing: 108 (1955)
Total Offense: 4062 yards (1954) - 546 plays
Passing Yards: 1223 (1940) - 79 of 177
Passes Attempted: 177 (1940)
Passes Completed: 79 (1940)
Most Passes Intercepted : 22 (1953)
Passes Had Intercepted: 18 (1965)
First Downs Passing: 37 ( 1956 and 1962)
Touchdown Passes: 10 ( 1950)
Points Scored: 324 (1954)
Least Points Season: 30 (1929)
Points Against: 260 (1923)
Least Points Allowed: 32 (1928)
Touchdowns: 49 (1954)
Extra Points: 31 (1951) of 34
Most Punts: 53 (1961) - 2042 yards
Yards Punting: 2042 (1961)
Best Punt Average: 40.1 yards (1963) - 39 punts
Biggest Winning Margin: KSU 65, Western Reserve 0 (1954)
Biggest Losing Margin: Baldwin Wallace 118, KSU 0 (1923)
Most Points Both Teams, season: 462 (1954)
Rushing per Game: 376.8 yards, 1954
Total Offense per Game: 451.3 yards, 1954
Points per Game: 36, 1954
Average Rush: 7.0 yards, 1954 (483 carries for 3392 yards)
Average per Play: 7.5 yards, 1954 (546 plays, 4062 yards)

TEAM RECORDS
Most points both teams game: 77, KSU 58- Akron U. 19 (1954)
Most points game: 65, vs. Western Reserve (1954)
Most points opp. game: 118, Baldwin Wallace (1923)
Most games won season: 8, ( 1940-1954)
Most games lost season: 8, (1961)
Most consecutive wins: 7, (1949) (1953-54)
Most consecutive losses: 20, (1920-24 )
Most shutouts: 6, (1940)
Most times shutout: 7, (1922) (1932)
Most consecutive shutouts: 4, (1940)
Most consecutive times shutout: 13, (1920-23)
Most consecutive games scored: 37, (1952) thru (55)
Most consecutive games scored upon: 42, (1958-63)
Total Offense: 569 yards vs. Wooster (1948)
Rushing Yardage: 540 vs. Wooster (1948)
Passing Yardage: 280 vs. Toledo (1956) (5 passers)
Passes Attempted: 26, vs. Miami (1947) (6 com., 78 yds.)
Passes Completed: 14, vs. Toledo ( 1956) (5 passers)

9

�ABBOIT

BLUNT

10

AMES

BRADLEY

BALS

BROOKS

BYRNE

CHESTER

COOK

COOKE

COVINGTON

CROW

�BUCKEYE SPORT CENTER

COMPLIMENTS

CAMPUS SUPPLY
CAPTAIN BRADY
Supplying the needs
of the faculty and
students of K. S. U.

"Most Exclusive Sporting Goods
Store in Ohio"
4610 Akron-Cleveland Rd. - Rt. 8
TRAP RANGE
MARINE SUPPLY
Ski Clothing - Equipment of all kinds
Phone 929-3366

GOOD LUCK FLASHES

W. W. REED &amp; SON
The Insurance Agency That
Specializes in Service
FI:R...__ST FEDEIZ_AL SAVINGS
ESTABLISHED 1913

AND LOAN ASSOCIATION

/JQ::NT

157 North Water Street
Savings Accounts

673-3438
Mortgage Loans

141 East Ma in St.

Phone 673-5838

PETIT'S

BAR-8-QUED CHICKEN
Greatest Chicken

You've
Ever Tasted!
AT BETTER STORES
EVERYWHERE

Geo.l. Petit, Inc.

DOYLESTOWN, OHIO
Phone 216·658-4455
11

�DOMIN

FITZGERALD

FRLICH

GREZLlK

12

ECKARD

FOXX

GATEWOOD

GUENTHER

EPPRIGHT

FRALEY

GO LASH

HARRIS

�Kent Business Backs Kent
KOPPER

What a Wonderful Way to Look

KETTLE

See Our Kopper Kettle Lounge

SHIRTS &amp; SKIRTS
Campus Center

RONNIE HARRIS
University Plaza

"Italian Cuisine a Specialty"
Between Kent and Ravenna an Route 5
Come out to see us, we're expecting you I

For the Finest in W omens Apparel

VILLAGE SHOP
HIS

Pat Carlozzi Inc.

HERS

OLDSMOBILE- CADILLAC

132 S. Water Street

SALES and SERVICE

Chargette Member

1116 West Main

Downtown Kent

Phone 673-9559

Kent, Ohio

Class 1924

THOMPSON DRUG STORES
KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS
FRATERNAL JEWELRY

TROPHIES

DIAMONDS

WATCHES
Ken{·, Ohio

673-6346

141 South Water St.

I00-102 East Main Street
673-9841
Kent, Ohio
BRIMFIELD PLAZA
STREETSBORO PLAZA
673-2510
626-3222
Brimfield, Ohio
Streetsboro, Ohio
ONE HOUR CLEANING

VALE EDGE FLOWER SHOP
Corsages -

Cards -

CAMPUS CLEANERS

Novelties

Angelo Battista, Owner

Fresh and Permanent Flowers
We Specialize in Floral Arrangements
296-3510

247 S. Chestnut

Phone 673-2072

Ravenna

Campus Center
Kent, Ohio

409 E. Main St.

SHIRT SERVICE

TRIANGLE SERVICE

Lyman Chevrolet

TIRES- BATTERIES- ACCESSORIES
General Auto Repairing
Corner Gougler and Mantua Streets
Kent, Ohio

Bruce Hansford
-

"Red" Greer
Since 1938 -

673-9015

Larry Sisson

Greer Heating &amp; Air Conditioning, Inc.
Represents the Finest in Year Round Comfort
in the "Progressive Portage Area"
Kent, Ohio
673-5636
"The Best Costs Less"

BEST WISHES FOR A MOST
SUCCESSFUL SEASON

Akron Standard Meats &amp; Foods Co.
Akron, Ohio

13

�HAZEN

HOOVER

ISAACS

JONSEOF

KING
14

HOYNE

JONES

JORDAN

KAVCAR

KUNTZMAN

KURAS

�BILL LAN DI S

DOUG LAN DIS

FOLLOW
THE
FLASHES

LESKY

NEXT HOME GAME
OCTOBER 1
OHIO UNIVERSITY

LYNN

University Pizza
Phone 673-6360

3 14 S. Lincoln Street

Dining Room, Carry Out
Free Delivery -

Closest to Campus

Hours 5:00 p.m. to I :00 a.m.

7 Days a Week

Dungard Inc.
ALUMINUM FACE MASKS
MOLDED CHIN STRAPS

AVAILABLE AT ALL LEADING

Campliments of

SPORTING GOODS STORES

Brecksville, Ohio

e~u.~en

?Itai«J't

Home of the $1.00 Chicken Dinner
Campus Center -

Student Charges

Kent's Newest Traditional Shop for Men

Carry Out Service--Banquet Facilities
Route 5, Kent

Phone 673-9355

15

�NCAA WRESTLING RETURNS

Kent State again is proud to host the NCAA wrestling championships next year. The best of the nation's collegiate wrestlers
will vie here March 23-24-25, 1967.
It is a tribute to those who worked so hard, and so well, just ·
a few years ago that the NCAA again should choose Kent as
the site for one of the great college events of the year. It too is
a tribute to Joe Begala, Mr. Wrestling in college circles.

MAKE PLANS TO ATTEND

16

�THE ALMA MATER
From the beauty land Ohio comes
a universal praise.
'Tis the song of Alma Mater that
her sons and daughters raise.
'Tis a hail to Kent forever, on the
Cuyahoga shore.
Now we join the loving thousands
as they sing it o'er and o'er.

From the hilltop Alma Mater, gazing
on her portals wide,
Sees the coming generations as they
throng to seek her side.
Seek her side to win her blessing,
throng her gates to bear her name.
Leave her gates to sing her praises;
go afar to spread her fame.

Hail to Thee, our Alma Mater
Oh, how beautiful thou art,
High enthroned upon the hilltop,
Reigning over every heart

Hail to Thee, Our Alma Mater
Oh, how young and strong thou art,
Planning for the glorious future,
Firm enthroned in ev'ry heart.

17

�S. C. Bissler &amp; Sons, Inc.

Call or Visit the

HaJIInsurance Agency, Inc.

COMPLETE HOME FURNISHINGS
FUNERAL DIRECTORS

"Hall of Insurance"

EXCLUSIVE INVALID CAR SERVICE
Corner W. Main and Gougler Ave.
Kent, Ohio

628 W. Main

Phone 6 73-585 7

For any type of insurance you might need
Kent, 0.

234 South Water St.

WELCOME TO THE

Class and Award
Jackets and Sweaters
Trophies

Athletic Equipment and
Supplies for all
Sports and Leagues
SPORTING

GOODS

DIAMOND
Phone 733-9927 -

KENT MOTOR INN
and RESTAURANT

1454 East Market

One Block from the University

AKRON , OHIO

303 East Main Street

" Located at the East Market Cambridge Ex if
of the Akron Expressway"

Jules Calderone

Russ Kulchycky

Merritt Lancaster

Phone 673-5874

Kent, Ohio

673-3411

KENT STATE'S MOST COMPLETE BOOKSTORE

WE ARE PROUD TO
SERVE KENT U.

NEW and USED TEXTS and SUPPLIES

and to Congratulate them on Their
BUILDING PROGRAM

DuBOIS BOOK STORE INC.

Complete Towel, linen and Uniform
Service

Kent, Ohio

332 South Lincoln Street

Serving Staters for Over 25 Years

AKRON TOWEL SUPPLY CO.
407-23 WABASH AVE., AKRON, 0.

Phone 434·9127

SPORTING GOODS
NICK ZENAlliS

ALL-OHIO
Athletic Equipment, Inc.
Team Equipment Fraternity &amp; Award Jackets
Sweaters
Trophies

TOPP'S CHALET
RESTAURANT and LOUNGE

5401 WHIPPLE NW.

GEORGE FLORIN

-

BUD KRAMPE
CANTON, OHIO

54 East Mill St.
18

253-6669

Akron, Ohio

499-6644

�KENT STATE CO-CAPTAINS
II

.

.

Jerry Soltis

Ron Domin

FOLLOW THE
FLASHES

MONTIGNEY HARDWARE, INC.
B.P.S. PAINTS

-

GLIDDEN

Glass, Tools and Hardware - Gifts
Plumbing - Electrical Supplies
WE DELIVER
115 E. Main St.

Phane AX 6-3411

"AFTER THE GAME"

--

STOP AT

CIRO'S Restaurant &amp; Lounge
Above the Kent Motor Inn

For Your Favorite Drink or Snack
Ravenna, Ohia

After watching the Finest Football, Why not eat
at the Finest Restaurant?
The Kasermans

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
AND TRUST

Perkins PANCAKE HOUSE

FIRST FOR MOST PEOPLE

"Everybody's Favorite"
21 VARIETIES OF PANCAKES
Sandwiches and Dinners Daily - Open 7 Days a Week
421 E. Main - "Located in Campus Center" - Kent, 0.

Capital and Surplus $3,000,000.00
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
Member Federal Reserve System

RAVENNA

•

MANTUA

•

AURORA

19

�GOOD LUCK,
((GOLDEN FLASHES!"
THE

Portage Notional Bank
5 OFFICES TO S E RVE YOU

MAIN OFFICE

101 E. Main St., Kent, Ohio

GARRETTSVIllE OFFICE North Streeot

BRIMFIELD OFFICE Bnmf1eld Plcuo

For Time and Temperature CALL 673-9811
Ohio's most delicious sandwich

Curfman's SOHIO Service

THE SHORT STOP

BUTTER-BURGER

Kent, Ohio

805 East Main St.

673-9084

A Quality Made Sandwich
COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP-WHEEL BALANCE

The Burger with the THICK Ground Steak Patti

HEADLIGHT AIM-COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE

GOOD LUCK FLASHES

TIRES- TUBES- BATTERIES

Short Stop Drive In

SERVICE CA LLS

APPLIANCE CENTERS

PORTAGE MEDICAL SUPPLY, Inc.

Appi;a"'"'- TV- S t e . e o .
KENT
'1. I

SALES and RENTALS
All Types Hospital and Sick Room Equ ipmPnt

Route 5 -

Kent, Ohio

1329 West Main St.
Phone 673-5506

•

123 S. Depeyster St.
Phone 673-6151
~
BRIMFIELD
r,
Brimfield Ploza
Phone 673-6133
HOURS : 9:00 to 9 :00
9 :00 to 6 :00 Saturday

Pool Table Supplies

AKRON MOTION PICTURE SERVICE

Rubber. Cushions - Pockets - Cloth
Tips - Balls

Bill Leib

Akron Billiard &amp; Bowling Supply Co.

24 Hour Service, Black &amp; White

20

Akron, Ohio

-

- Cues

Reasonable Charge far Service Work

SPORTS FILM PROCESSING

2530 W. Market -

PIC KUP •nd DELIVERY

673-5626

1100 W. Main St., Kent

1070 E. Tallmadge Ave. ( Rt. 18)
864-8254

New and Used Tables For Hames, Clubs, Commercial Use

633-81 04

Akron, Ohio

�FOLLOW the FLASHES in

Compliments Of

the SPORTS PAGES of the

RICH HELMLING
CONCRETE CONTRACTOR

RECORD-COURIER

Complete Septic Systems
Back Hoe and Dozer Work

Kent, Ohio

5853 Roc-Marie Drive
673-8503

Latest Local, National
Sports Coverage

RED BARN
Home of the Big Barney
1609 East Main St.

HAVRE
CHEVROLET 1345 Main Street

OLDS
Ravenna, Ohio

296-3838

AKRON PHONE
376-1041

CANTON PHONE:
877-9391

Good Luck to the 1966
"FLASHES"

Top Photo Store in the League

rooi:~:t:rr~:t~r:~:t:~l

ROBERT A. HONEYCHUCK
Mason Contractor

PHOTO SUPPLY COMPANY

925 E. Market St.

535-2693

Akron, Ohio

P. 0. Box 591

Phone: 673-7209

Let's Go "FLASHES"

TOWN COUNTRY MOTOR HOTEL

We're Behind You
AT

I 00 Air Conditioned Rooms
KITCHENETTES, TELEVISION, ASSEMBLY ROOMS

On Ohio Rt. 8 -

W AI nut 3-9966

1850 State Road

Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio

PISANELLO'S PIZZA
The Pizza All The College
Students Talk About

"When You're· Thinking of Pizza
Think Pisanello's"
Phone OR 3-7255 For Fast Delivery
"We're Thinking About You"
"HOME OF CRISP CHICKEN"

21

�Guest Conductor: Arthur L. Williams, professor of wind instruments and director of bands a t
Oberlin Conservatory. Williams,
in 1929, started the State High
School Orchestra Contest at Oberlin and, a year later, influenced
the Ohio Band Association to accept orchestra in the program. As
president of the Ohio School Band
and Orchestra Association in 1931,
he changed the groups name to
Ohio Music Education Association
(OMEA) . Williams originated
"TRIAD" magazine in 1933 and it
became the official publication of
OMEA. He is a member of the
College Band Director's National
Association as well as the American Bandmasters Association. It is
an honor to have this musician, conductor, author, editor and teacher as guest
conductor.

TODAY'S BAND SHOW
9th Annual Northeastern Ohio Band Day
PRE-GAME SHOW:

Claymont H.S., Harper Froman director.
UHRICHSVILLE, OHIO
NORTON H.S., Thomas Knapp , director
NORTON, OHIO

HALFTIME SHOW:

The massed bands from 34 high schools.
Formation: OMEA - playing "Triad" by Ed. L. Masters, director of KSU Bands
OHIO playing "Men of Ohio March" by Henry Fillmore.

VISITING BANDS
SCHOOL

DIRECTOR

W. Liberty-Salem ................R. L . McAtee
Lexington ·················--- ----··-········D . A. Wells
Ashtabula H arbor ................Oliver K aura
Painesville Harvey ..............T edd Nichols
Erie McDowell ............Ralph Perkins, Jr.
Newport, Ohio
___oral J. Heckler
Norton -----··············----···-·········---·T . E. Knapp
Midvale ··-----·----··········----Mrs. Jea n M a thias
Newcomers town
________ connie Dlchler
Toronto, Ohio ·---------··-······-J · D. Crawford
Carlisle ·················----------·········--C. R. Wyrick

SCHOOL

DIRECTOR

________ R. C . Gunn
Moon Union, Pa.
Clear Fork -··--...Thomas Hitchcock
Grove City , Pa . ..... ______ M. R. Thompson
Brush ·-----····-··--···· ________ Robert Hodgkinson
Stanton Local ·-.....Arch M yers
Wellsville ··--········--· __________________ John Pangle
Claymont ................. ___________________ J _ c . Rlbo
Port W ashing ton
__ _________J. R. Pfeiffer
Dillonva le ········--...... Don Turne r
Mifflin (Columbus) ________ Gerald Snyder
Danbury
_____________ Paul Lawrence

Caldwell ·---···············----·-···D avid

22

McMaken

SCHOOL

DIRECTOR

Mogadore
-------······-··--W . B. Hammond
Green ··-····-·-·········----·-········ __________ J _ R. Losik
Madison Memorial ···-------······J . c. Acerra
Little Miami
........D on Workma n
Chamberlin ·-·- -------·-··········---.R . A. Latimer
Celina ····-·---·-· ---------·----·········-·--J . B. M o r gan
Sharpsville ····-···--·············------·R. D. Smith
Cha mpion
······--··-----·······--D avid Ready
Warren v ille .................... _______ David Meeker
Reynoldsburg ..
......Dan Nawrocki
...Carl Lemponen
Newbury ·-········-

�KSU FOOTBALL ROSTER
No.

81
79
66
20
42
68
31
83
36
30
64
69
61
24
51
33
19
71
76
29
34
56
82
14
87
67
62
16
37
22
63
85
65
21
53
70
35

Name

Pos.

DE
Abbott, Don
DT
Ames, Ernie
Bals, Bob
LSG
WB
Blunt, Billy
Bradley, Dale
WB
Brooks, Jon
SSG
Byrne, Mark
CM
Chester, Ted
E
FB
Cook, Stephen
Cooke, Steven
TB
LB
Covington, Bob
Crow, Bob
SSG
Domin, Ron
MG
Eckard, Graydon
CB
Eppright, William
E&amp;K
Fitzgerald, Don
TB
Foxx, Jim
QB
Fraley, Larry
1ST
Frlich, Waldo
OST
Gatewood, Lucian
CB
Golash, Ken
WB-FB
Grezlik, Rick
LB
Guenther, Dennis
DE
Harris, Lou
s
Hazen, Gordon
DE
Hoover, Dick
LSG
Hoyne, Richard
LSG
Infante, George
QB
Isaacs, Doug
CB
Jones, Charles
FB
Jonseof, Ernie
1ST
Jordan, Paul
DE
Kavcar, John
c
King, Vernon
CB
Kuntzman, Charles
c
Kuras, Tom
DT
Landis, Doug
DE
55 Landis, Bill
LB
50 Lesky, John
LB
74 Lynn, Joe
DT
32 Medved, Bob
ss
11 Mokros, Tom
QB
60 Morgan, Dennis
1ST
26 Parrish, Jim
TB
44 Perry, Wil
E
41 Pinkerton, Clark
LB
48 Pledger, Joe
FB
84 Price, Earl
SSE
72 Reidenbaugh, Ron
OST
54 Reisland, Charles
LB
23 Richburg, Orin
WB
75 Rodenberg, Bill
DT
86 Seither, Jerry
LSE
52 Smith, Don
c
46 Smith, Doug
LSE
88 Soltis, Jerry
LSE-WB
18 Stikes, Charles
ss
12 Swartz, Ron
QB
73 Tarle, Steve
OST
77 Tennebar, Howie
DT
78 Thomas, Terry
MG
10 Van Valkenburg, Bob QB
40 Wiley, Tom
TB
80 Witukiewicz, Ben
SSE

Ht.

Wt.

Class

6-4
6-3
6-2
5-9
5-10
6-1
5-10
6-1
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-2
5-11
5-9
6-6
5-11
6-2
6-1
6-5
5-9
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-4
6-1
6-1
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-3
6-3
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-11
5-11
6-4
6-3
5-11
5-10
6-5
6-3
5-11
6-2
5-11
6-1
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-7
6-3

210
235
222
170
178
260
174
200
190
186
225
220
207
174
225
220
181
235
230
180
192
225
207
178
216
216
205
170
185
185
222
210
215
192
222
250
200
218
225
250
182
192
193
196
220
195
190
245
220
225
155
235
218
202
200
195
190
180
242
250
230
185
178
240

Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.

Hometown/High School &amp; Coach

Cincinnati (Princeton) Pat Mancuso
Homestead, Florida, Leo Martin
Cleveland (Collinwood) Joe Trivisonno
Massillon (Wash.) Leo Strang
Chagrin Falls, John Piai
Cleve. (Holy Name) Carl Falivene
Kent (University) Geo. Dostal
Avon Lake, Jim Howe
Cincinnati (Anderson) Joe Miller
New London, Gary Pranst
Cleveland (Glenville) Ron Davidroth
Syracuse, Ohio, Chas. Chancey
Cleveland (Rhodes) Jim Templin
Massillon (Wash.) Leo Strang
Newark, Jim Allen
Sewickley, Pa., Andy Radi
Lakewood, Bob Duncan
Gallipolis, Carl Justus
Copley, Bill McLain
Louisville, Ky., Dan White
Cleveland (Shaw) Don Drebus
Maple Heights, Don McCright
Cincinnati (Wal. Hills) Lloyd Bailey
Alexandria, Va., Lou Johnson
Brantford, Ontario
Copley, Bill McLain
Tyrone, Pa., Ron Corrigan
Niles, Glenn Stennett
Cincinnati (Princeton) Pat Mancuso
Cincinnati (Princeton) Pat Mancuso
E. Pitt., Pa., Emil Pantalone
Washington, D. C.
Westlake, Jim Janosek
Louisville, Ky., Dan White
Canton (Perry) Jerry Wampfler
Cleveland (Holy Name) Carl Falivene
Westerville, Nick DeCenzo
Whitehall, Jim Bline
Brantford, Ontario
Cleveland (John Adams) Lou Ralston
Euclid, Don Mohr
Bellaire, Don Ault
Massillon, Earl Bruce
Dayton (Fairview) Ron Bradley
Massillon, Leo Strang
Genoa, Ohio, Jim Firestone
Cleveland (East) Bob Madison
Indianapolis, T. Rosenburger
Columbus (Mifflin) Tom Vernon
Lakewood, Bob Duncan
Pittsburgh, Joe Dimperio
Tipp City, AI Richards
Cleveland (John Adams) John McKenna
Cuyahoga Falls, Paul Cary
Toronto, Ontario, Bill Myers
Enola, Pa., Ed Books
Louisville, Ky., Dan White
Massillon (Wash.) Leo Strang
Massillon (Wash.) Leo Strang
Cleveland (Collinwood) Joe Trivisonno
Port Hurson, Michigan, Dave Woodcock
Elyria, Bill Barton
Gorham, Maine
Smith, Creek, Michigan, Bob Sullivan
23

�KENT'S NUMERICAL ROSTER
10
11
12
14
16
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
26
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36

Van Valkenburg, QB
Mokros, QB
Swartz, QB
Harris, DB
Infante, QB
Stikes, DB
Foxx, QB
Blunt, WB
King, DB
Jones, FB
Richburg, WB
Eckard, DB
Parrish, TB
Gatewood, DB
Cooke, TB
Byrne, DB
Medved, DB
Fitzgerald, TB
Golash, WB
Landis, LB
Cook, FB

37
40
41
42
44
46
48
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67

68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88

Isaacs, FB
Wiley, DB
Pinkerton, LB
Bradley, WB
Pe rry, WB-E
Smith, SSE
Pledger, FB
Lesky, LB
Eppright, K
Smith, C
Kuntzman, C
Reisland, LB
Landis, LB
Grezlik, LB
Morgan, 1ST
Domin, MG, Capt.
Hoyne, LSG
Jonseof, 1ST
Covington, LB
Kavcar, C-T
Bals, LSG
Hoover, LSG

Brooks, SSG
Crow, SSG
Kuras, DT
Fraley, CST
Reidenbaugh, CST
Tarle, 1ST
Lynn, DT
Rodenburg, DT
Frlich, 1ST
Tennebar, DT
Thomas, MG
Ames, DT
Wituklewicz, SSE
Abbott, DE
Guenther, DE
Chester, LSE
Price, DE
Jordon, DE
Seither, LSE
Hazen, DE
Soltis, LSE

KENT STATE
Probable Starting Lineup

80
68
53
62

88
33
48

BEN WITUKIEWICZ
JON BROOKS
CHARLIE KUNTZMAN
DICK HOYNE
ERNIE JONSEOF
STEVE TARLE _______
WIL PERRY ---- -- --BOB VAN VALKENBURG
JERRY SOLTIS
DON FITZGERALD
JOE PLEDGER
- -----------

SSE
SSG

c

---

LSG
1ST
OST
LSE
QB
WB
TB
.FB

�'I
BUFFALO'S NUMBERICAL ROSTER
14
15
18
19
20
21
22
24
26
27
30
32
35
36
40
42
44
45
46

Murtha, QB
Martin, QB
York, E-DHB
Mason, QB
Barksdale, HB
Rutkowski, HB
Capuana, HB
Svec, HB
McEwen, HB
Coupas, HB
Brennan, FB
Richner, FB
Smith, FB
Jones, FB
Sella, HB
Hoke, HB
Drankoski, HB
Murphy, HB
Sinclair, HB

48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67

Hurd, HB
Wells, HB
Brisky, LB
Wright, G
Wesolowski, C-LB
Wilbur, LB
Mosher, G
Kovack, C
MacKellar, C
Ruggerio, C
Rishel, LB
Walters, G
Rissell, G
Kowalewski, G
Lehner, G
Maser, G
Finochio, G
Lupienski, G
Gibbons, G-LB

68
69
70
71
72
73
75
76
77
78
79
80
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

Hayden, G
5abo, G
Pugh, T
Taylor, T
Basta, T
Miceli, T
Riccelll, T
MacKellar, T
Kuzmitski, T
Pirozzolo, T
Thomas, T
Embow, E
Przybycien, E
Kleiber, E
Dunn, E
Ashley, E
Remillard, E
Doherty, E
Hansen, K

FOLWW

THe

OllOWD

TO

BUFFALO
Probable Starting Lineup
85
73
61

56
67
76

87
14
20

49
36

PAUL KLEIBER
__ ----------------------------------------------LE
______________________ ---------------- LT
TONY MICELI
MIKE RISSELL
___ . ----------------------------------- ..... LG
BRUCE MAC KELLAR
_____________________________ C
TED GIBBONS
........ ---------------------------- RG
RUSS MAC KELLAR
_ ----------------------- ______________ .. RT
DICK ASHLEY
________ ------------------------------------- RE
MARK MURTHA
..... ----------------- _________________ QB
JIM BARKSDALE
------------------------------------- RH
RICK WELLS
__________ -------------------------------------- LH
LEE JONES . .
------------------------------------------------- FB

. ....... .:. .

8Frell

THe Gamel
Get the town's deliciously
different Roast Beef Sand·
wich! Buy an Arby's today!
The proof is in the eating!
AKRON
1636 W. Market at Wall haven
CANTON
4620 W. Tuscarawas
3302 N. Cleveland Avenue
CLEVELAND
Pearl at York, Panna Hts.
Northfield Rd. Rt. 8 Across from Southgate
Lorain Rd. Across from Great Northern

�UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO ROSTER
No.

Name

87 Ashley, Richard
20 Barksdale, James
72 Basta, John
30 Brennan, Thomas
50

Pos.

Ht.

Wt.

E
HB
T
FB
LB
HB
HB
E
E
HB
E
E
G
G
K
G
HB
HB
FB
E

6-2
5-11
6-2
5-10
6-2
5-9
5-10
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-4
6-1
5-10
5-10
5-11
5-10
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-5
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-2
5-11
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-2
6-2
6-1
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-11
6-3
5-10
5-11
5-10
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-1
5-10

201
177
216
207
196
175
184
205
190
180
213
195
210
235
172
203
174
191
202
225
195
203
255
201
203
200
220
180
200
180
190
223
190
185
171
230
193
232
191
230
190
197
215
190
175
198
172
198
180
195
225
215
170
191
205
205
204
165

Brisky, Dennis
Capuana, Nicholas
Coupas, Nicholas
Doherty, John
Dolan, James
Drankoski, Charles
Dunn, James
Embow, Robert
Finochio, James
Gibbons, Theodore
Hansen, Brian
Hayden, William
Hoke, Thomas
Hurd, Thomas
Jones, Leeland
Kleiber, Paul
Kovack, John
c
Kowalewski, Thomas
G
Kuzmitski, Kenneth
T
Lehner, Lawrence
G
Lupienski, John
G
MacKellar, Bruce
c
MacKellar, Russell
T
Martin, Daniel
QB
Maser, Michael
G
Mason, Dennis
QB
McEwen, James
HB
Miceli, Anthony
T
Mosher, James
G
Murphy, Thomas
HB
Murtha, Mark
QB
78 Pirozzolo, Richard
T
84 Przybycien, John
E
70 Pugh, Ronald
T
88 Remillard, James
E
75 Riccelli, Joseph
T
32 Richner, David
FB
58 Rishel, Rodney
LB
61 Rissell, Michael
G
57 Ruggerio, Alfonse
c
21 Rutkowski, Kenneth HB
69 Sabo, Donald
G
40 Sella, Daniel
HB
46 Sinclair, Robert
HB
35 Smith, Robert
FB
24 Svec, Steven
HB
71 Taylor, William
T
79 Thomas, Jeffrey
T
60 Walters, Gregory
G
49 Wells, Richard
HB
52 Wesolowski, John
c
82 Wilbur, Curtis
E
51 Wright, Irvin
G
18 York, Brian
E-DHB

22
27
89
82
44
86
80
65
67
90
68
42
48
36
85
55
62
77
63
66
56
76
15
64
19
26
73
54
45
14

26

Class
Jr.

20
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.

Hometown
Massena, N.Y.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Glens Falls, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Utica, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
New Bedford, Mass.
Glens Falls, N.Y.
Endwell, N.Y.
Cranston, R.I.
Hamburg, N.Y.
E. Syracuse, N.Y.
Newport, R.I.
Detroit, Mich.
Cleveland, 0.
Marcy, N.Y.
Elmira, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Auburn, N.Y.
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Methuen, Mass.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Springdale, Pa.
Kenmore, N .Y.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Huntington, L.I.
Clayton, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Moon Run, Pa.
Batavia, N.Y.
Central Islip, L.I.
Johnstown, Pa.
Endicott, N.Y.
Elmira, N .Y.
Detroit, Mich.
McKeesport, Pa.
New Bedford, Mass.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Greenhurst, N.Y.
E. Smethport, Pa.
Coatesville, Pa.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Johnstown, Pa.
Moon Run, Pa.
Watertown, N.Y.
Depew, N.Y.
Endwell, N.Y.
Youngstown, N.Y.
Syracuse, N .Y.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Ovid, N.Y.
Norristown, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y.

�Buffalo
Officials

• • •

James E. Peelle
Under the leadership of Athletic Director James Peelle
and new coach "Doc" Urich, Buffalo plans to further
its stature as a growing Eastern power.
The Bulls and Kent have not met since 1938 when
the Flashes won 54-0. The first meeting, a year earlier,
resulted in a Buffalo win, 13-0.
Buffalo is a slight one point favorite going into the
game, mainly on the strength of a great passing attack
featuring remarkable sophomore quarterback, Mark Murtha, and an all America nomination in split end Dick
Ashley.
Ashley set almost all pass catching records for the
Bulls last season.
The running game features Lee Jones, who gained 531
yards last year and averaged 4.6 yards per carry.
Urich, no stranger to the MAC since he graduated
from Miami, figures to employ a pro set offense used so
well at Notre Dame, where he was an aide to Ara Parseghian. In fact, he was an aide to Parseghian for 16 years.
The Bulls are big and agile. If any advantage lies with
Kent it is that Buffalo may lack depth in the line.
It figures to be a dandy opener.

Lee Jones, fullback

Dick Ashley, split end

Richard "Doc" Urich

27

�Saving For A Dream

VACATION?
If you missed taking that dream vacation this year, don't let it happen again!
Plan ahead, and open a City Bank Vacation Account. Special purpose savings
accounts are another new service of The
City Bank and their are eight special accounts you can open .

The
Also Available

• • •

Student
Checking
Accounts
Personalized checks with special blue and
gold K.S.U. checkbook cover.

CITY
BANK
115 South Water St.
University Plaza Branch

Ask about ThriftiCheck - no minimum
balance and no service charge!

Erie St.

Drive-In

Brimfield Offices - Routes 18 &amp; 43

28

�The Frosh

• • •

The plight of a freshman football coach is not an
easy one, for he must take 66 stranger~ and mold them
into a team in a two to three week penod.
The coach also must decide whether the reason for
his team's being is to win a freshman schedule or
prepare first year men to take their place next season
with the varsity.
Santo Pino, Kent's personable freshman coach, feels
his job is to combine both aspects. "We must find
players talented enough to make the varsity, sure, but,
"he added," we also want to develop a winning attitude.
We can't let freshmen enter a game feeling it doesn't
matter if they win."
This year, Pino, aided by Tom Heckert and Jim
Blackburn, will take the yearlings through a five game
schedule that features the return of Pitt to the schedule.
It was two years ago that a romping frosh win over
Pitt signaled for many the start of a new football era
at Kent.
Pino will handle a group of frosh that is big, strong
and mobile. Twenty-five of the boys reporting are over
200 pounds and another 16 are over 190. There also
is speed.

Also, again, there are nine Canadians joining Kent's
ranks this fall, but, as Santo puts it, there shouldn't
be any language problem.
Why so many Canadians?
"Because it is getting ever so difficult to find, and
compete with other colleges, over the good talent
closer to home. Each year, the recruiting gets bigger
and bigger and the competition gets tougher and
tougher," Pino explains.
Santo and his staff are intense young men with
pride who feel that coaching freshmen is a job vital
to the lifeline of the varsity.
Kent's future is in the hands of Pino, Heckert and
Blackburn. There can't be six better hands to be in.

FROSH SCHEDULE
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.

13
20
27
3
10

YOUNGSTOWN
at Dayton
at Pitt
at Bowling Green
TOLEDO
Home games in caps.

3:00
3:15
3:30
3:00
3:30

p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
29

�l&lt;ent's
most
beautiful
.
1nn
. . . the new
face of luxury
in Kent.
Here you will
find the
finest overnight
accommodations
for the
traveling
family or
executive.
Here you will
find elegant
suites and
rooms, convenient
parking and
all hotel
services.
Here you will
find warmth
and hospitality.
This is the
University Inn.

UNIVERSITY INN
!540 SOUTH WATER STREET

30

e

KENT , OHIO

e

( 216 )

678-0123

�the mac

• • •

Kent State has more than a passing interest in the
Mid-American Conference, for, obviously, as the MAC
goes so goes Kent.
But, more than that, Kent has an affection for James
Carfield, assistant to the commissioner, who held the
sports information director's post here for a year.
It was Carfield's drive and understanding of promotion that attracted the attention of Commissioner Bob
James. The combination should project the MAC into
its rightful place among the nation's leading collegiate
conferences.
The conference is starting its 20th year of football
this season and it should be the best ever.
No less than five teams have a real chance at winning the title that through the years has been claimed
by Bowling Green, Ohio U and/ or Miami. It is
healthy for the MAC that a well balanced league
should come into being this season, and healthier for
the teams that, in the past, have been also-rans.
The MAC has been growing in stature and strength
during the past 20 years with more and more people
attending conference games. For the past three seasons,
the MAC has been second, first and third in the nation
in attendance percentage increase.
The member schools now have over $40 million
worth of athletic facilities being built, on the drawing
board or in preliminary planning stages.

Conference stadia have been either newly built or
increased during the past two years to give MAC
schools facilities for crowds up to 23,000.
MAC teams dot the schedules of Big Ten, Big Eight,
eastern powers and other top-notch opponents not only
this year but in future years.
Television looms in the conference plans for the
next two years with MAC schools scheduled to appear
on NCAA regional telecasts.
James and Carfield have a solid product to sell the
nation and sales are up.
The conference came into being in the winter of
1946-47. Ohio U is the remaining charter member.
The original conference had Butler, Cincinnati,
Wayne, Western Reserve and OU as members.
A year after its inception, Wayne withdrew and
Miami and Western Michigan were admitted. In 1950,
Butler dropped out and was replaced by Toledo.
Kent State and Bowling Green cast their lot with the
MAC in 1951. A year later Marshall became the final
team to enter.
Cincinnati left in 1953 and Western Reserve got out
in 1955, leaving the present seven team set up.
James replaced the retiring, and original, commissioner, Dr. David E. Reese in 1964. Under Reese's
leadership, the MAC won major college status in nine
sports in 1962.

1966 MID-AMERICAN CONFERENCE FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Bowling
Green

Kent
State

Marshall

Miami

Ohio
Univ.

Toledo

Western
Mi chigan

Sept. 17

Open

Buffalo
Home

Morehead
Away

Indiana
Away

Purdue
Away

Xavier
Home

Lamar Tech
Home

Sept. 24

Tampa
Away

N. Ill.
Away

Eastern Ky.
Home

Xavier
Away

Boston
College
Away

Villanova
Away

Central
Michigan
Home

Oct. 1

Dayton
Home

Ohio U
Home

Toledo
Away

Western
Michigan
Home

Kent
Away

Marshall
Home

Miami
Away

Oct. 8

Western
Michigan
Away

Miami
Away

Quant ico
Away

Kent
Home

Toledo
Home

Ohio U
Away

Bowling
Green
Home

Oct. 15

Toledo
Away

Western
Michigan
Home

Miami
Home

Marshall
Away

Xavier
Away

Bowling
Green
Home

Kent
Away

Oct. 22

Kent
Home

Bowling
Green
Away

Louisville
Home

Ohio U
Away

Miami
Home

Western
Michigan
Away

Toledo
Home

Oct. 29

Miami
Away

Toledo
Home

Western
Michigan
Home

Bowling
Green
Home

Dayton
Home

Kent
Away

Marshall
Away

Nov. 5

Marshall
Home

Louisville
Away

B. G.
Away

Toledo
Away

W. M.
Away

Miami
Home

Ohio U
Home

Nov. 12

Ohio
Home

Marshall
Away

Kent
Home

Dayton
Home

B. G.
Away

Quantico
Home

Xavier
Away

Nov. 19

Temple
Away

Xavier
Home

Ohio U
Away

Cincinnati
Away

Marshall
Home

Dayton
Away

West Texas
Away

Date

31

�•• and now a word about
an ·aftl!r-fhl!-gaml! · favorifl! ....
~

q()NEYS
~
~

ALL MEAT
WIENE

THE SUGARVALE PROVISION CO. •

32

C~~. OHIO

�PARSEGHIAN AND FOOTBALL
A LESSON IN LIFE ···
u.

Iotre Dame Football Coach Ara Parseghian has some interesting
comments on why he wants his son to play football, views which deserve
airing now as the grid season gets underway.
"First of all," he said, '·maybe I should really say, 'I hope he play~
football,' because I will not force him. He has to like it and want it. I
will, however, lead him in this direction and encourage his participation
for I know he will gain much in his preparation for life, whether he is
a star or rides the bench. I want him to play because he enjoys it, but
also for the lessons in life it will teach him: hard work, loyalty, spirit
of competition, desire for success, courage, confidence, poise and the
ability to bounce back.
"Learning to work hard at a job is an important quality. Football
is hard work. Take roughly 14 pounds of equipment, long practice sessions, exposure to the fall weather conditions and jarring tackles and it
adds up to real work.
"He will gain from learning to be part of a group, feeling loyalty
to teammates, school and coaches. He will forget the pretty prejudices
of color and religjon in the bond that common desire to win provides.

"He will find that the good of the team comes first and the team
will only be as good as the effort each individual puts forth. Being a
part of the team, sharing the comradeship of locker room and field and
the triumphs and disappojntments of competition will be one of the highlights of his life. Success and failure in football come quickly. The ability
to accept defeat and bounce back is an important lesson of the game.
What can better prepare a boy for bouncing back from setbacks he'll
~xperience jn life itself?

"I will worry about injuries just as any normal parent, but my
common sense tells me he is safer putting in his hours on the football
field than in a car or at loose ends on the streets looking for trouble. I
will know that he is equipped wjth helmet, shoulder pads, hip pads, rib
pads and knee pads and that the speed he can generate is his own rather
than of a h~~h horse powered engine. The mortality rate for the last 30
years in football has been 1Yz per 100,000 boys in high school. Compare
this to the annual mortality rate of teenagers in cars.
"I'm a firm believer that the more you have to do, the more efficient you are. The less you have to do, the more time you idle away.
Football, like everything else, is not perfect, but without question, the
good far outdoes the bad."

* ** * *
F
0
0
T
B
A
L
L

or the greater honor
f Alma Mater and
f my coach
o play a
all game that
11 can be proud of, ever
earning that winning and
osing is like life itself.

P
L
A
Y
E
R

rofiting by my mistakes,
eaning toward fair play
II the game through.
es, these are the things
ver more which will make me
emember to play every game . . . for the greater
honor.

33

�WE EXTEND OUR
BEST
WISHES TO KENT
STATE UNIVERSITY
FOR THE 1966 SEASON

Compliments of the

TREXLER RUBBER COMPANY

WESTINGHOUSE
ELECTRIC SUPPLY
600 S. HIGH ST.

503 N. Diamond

Ravenna, Ohio

AKRON, 0.

PHONE 376-4141

296-9677

Tune-Up -

Wheels Balanced - Wash - Polish - Mufflers
Complete Brake Work
Seat Belts Atla s Tires, Batteries &amp; Ace.
Free Pick-up and Delivery
We Give TV Stamps
EBER BRUNNER, Mgr.
BRUNNER ' S PLAZA

HUMBLE SERVICECENTER
1403 S. Water St.

673-9377

Kent, Ohio

RICHARD•s FLOWER SHOP
Inc.

"Serving Kent 45 Years"
KENT, OHIO

BOB BYRNE
REAL ESTATE COMPANY
" HOMES ARE OUR BUSINESS"
Buell Graven, '38 -Sales Manager
Kent, Ohio
673-9503
234 South Water St.

Brady Lake's Own

COMPLIMENTS OF

GETZ BROTHERS HARDWARE
e

Best Wishes to
Leo Strang and his 1966 Golden Flashes

THE CLEVELAND SPORT
GOODS COMPANY

EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS
SPORTING GOODS
K E N T

132 N. Water Street

GO

Exclusive Sport &amp; Athletic Outfitting
Complete Equipment for Gym &amp; Field
Cleveland, Ohio

Phone 673-3121

COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICE

GO

PORTAGE TRAVEL SERVICE
138 E. Main Street
673-7478

Kent, Ohio

LA TEST STYLES IN FRAMES
REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE

W. A. JONES OPTICAL CO.
151 East Main St.

MIDWAY DRIVE-IN THEATRE
Phone 296-9829
Route 5 between Kent and Ravenna
BOX OFFICE OPENS 7: 15 P.M.
This ad good for one FREE admission per car any
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday
1966 SEASON ONLY

34

673 -2044

Member Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association

SAND BAR
LOUNGE

e
e

1312 North Mantua Street

-

Kent, Ohio

-

673-9440

-KENT LANES24 Alleys -

Cocktail Lounge -

Restaurant

Open Bowling - Saturday and Sundays
Free Instruction
673-1448

1524 South Water Street
Stop In After the Game

�FLASHES ON AIRWAVES

John FitzGerald

Kent State's radio network, a smashing success
last season, has been increased from six to nine
stations this season and
will broadcast into Ohio,
P ennsylvania and New
York.
D ick Scholem, newly
named coordinator of radio and television for the
University, will handle the
color again for play-by-

play voice John FitzGerald.
FitzGerald is known to thousands in the Northeastern Ohio area for his sports show on a Cleveland
television station.
Stations on the network include WNOB-FM Cleveland, WCUE Akron, WBBW Youngstown, WCNS
Canton, WTIG Massillon, WKNT Kent, WREO Ashtabula, WWGO Erie, Pa., and WEOL Elyria.
With in the listening area of Kent State football , audiences spend $_5 11:! -billion each year. We prefer most
of them spend it here, at the stadium, but, if not, at
least the vast number of people in the area of broadcast
can listen to a couple of pros keep them abreast of
what the Flashes are doing.
Kent's network was the first in the MAC and, since
its inception, others around the conference have followed suit.
The network's growth is testimonial to the growing
popularity of football here and the growing number of
fans following the Golden Flashes. Through the radio,
Kent hopes to reach enough homes and influence
enough people that attendance at the games will swell
with those who have known the team only over the
airwaves.

Fitzgerald and Scholem
bring a wealth of sports
background with them to
the microphone.
John has worked NFL
games, baseball's "Game
of the Week," Indiana and
Browns telecasts and other
spec ial assignments for
WJW.
He is best known, probably, for his late night
D ick Scholem
sports program over TV.
According to "Fitz," his biggest thrill in broadcasting hasn't happened yet. "That will come in broadcasting Kent's winning of the MAC this fall."
Aside from being talented and the father of seven,
he obviously is optimistic.
Scholem may be a stranger to some fans in the
Kent area, but he certainly is no stranger to Leo Strang
or Strang's brand of football.
Dick has broadcast every Massillon Tiger footbal l
game for the past seven years.
Scholem was vice-president of the J/ R Broadcasting
chain and was instrumental in publication of "Stark
County Football." a 10-week magazine throughout the
fall that keeps 18,000 readers alerted to what's new
with that county's 21 AA high school teams.
Both men will have to give up old ties with the MAC.
Scholem graduated from Bowling Green and FitzGerald
attended Miami U before graduating from Michigan.
We prefer to have you fans in the stands so you
can thrill to the F lashes this year. However, if you
can't make it, at least follow the squad with the best
two football announcers in the business.

HELLO

BILL:

ONLY

BURGER

Kent lodge # 1377 B.P.O. Elks invites all Elks
and their guests to visit their new lodge and
lounge - The ladies are a lso welcome.

CHEF

HAS " OPEN FLAME BROILING"
623 E. Main St.

Kent, Ohio

Located Two Miles West of the Stadium on Rt. 5
On the hill behind the Bowling Alley
EDUCATIONAL TV

Best Wishes for The M.A.C. Title

STAGE EQUIPMENT

MINIATURE MEADOWS GOLF

PLANETARIUMS

2 Miles South of Kent
on Route 43

THE JANSON INDUSTRIES
CANTON, OHIO

35

�MEDVED

PARRISH

PLEDGER

REISLAND

36

MOKROS

MORGAN

PERRY

PINKERTON

PRICE

REIDENBAUGH

RICHBURG

RODENBERG

�GOOD LUCK TO THE GOLDEN FLASHES OF KENT STATE UNIVERSITY

THE SCHWEBEL BAKING COMPANY
965 E. Midlothian Boulevard
Youngstown, Ohio

Servicing Kent State University exclusively with bakery products

WCUE 1150

NORTHEAST OHIO'S MOST TALKED
ABOUT RADIO STATION ! ! ! !
They talk about the world's finest music with
artists like Mantovani, Frank Sinatra, Roger
Williams, Julie London, Ray Conniff, Norman
Luboff.
They talk about Joel Rose comments at 12: I 0
and 5:55 p.m. Monday thru Friday and conversations heard on the "Night Mayor" with Ted
Wesley from 9 until II p.m., or on "Feedback"
I 0 to I I a.m. with Bob Martin.
Tune In .............. You'll be talking too!

WCUE 1150 · WCUE FM 96.5
37

�SEITHER

SOLTIS

TARLE

VAN V ALKENBURG

38

DON SMITH

DOUG SMITH

STIKES

SWARTZ

TENNEBAR

THOMAS

WILEY

WITUKIEWICZ

�FRESHMEN CANDIDATES
Name

BAILEY, David
BOBB, Nelson
BRADLEY, Bernard
CADENELLI, Steve
CLARK, Jesse
CLAY, Nelson
CLEMENS, Jerry
COLEMAN, Lonzo
CORRIGAL, Jim
CRABBE, David
CRISP, Gary
DELOST, Frank
DENNIS, Craig
DRIER, Frank
DUGAN, Jim
EAST, Jim
FISHER, Wayne
FOLTZ, Rick
FOLUSEWYCH, Bud
GILHOUSEN, Joe
GINLEY, Mike
GOVERN, Bob
HAVERLAND, Ken
HOFFMAN, Steve
HOINSKI, Jeff
HOUSTON, Roger
IRELAND, Terry
JANSON, Paul
JASTROMB, Tony
KERKEL, Mike
KERPAN, Bill
LEOVIC, Jeff
LINDSEY, David
LONG, Greg
McDERMOTT, Dennis
NEEFE, Brian
O'BRIEN, Richard
OLSON, Mike
PINKERTON, John
PIPMAN, Bruce
RAY, Terry
REBELLINO, Bob
REEVES, William
RENAUD, Gary
ROECKER, Ed
SCHOFIELD, Jeff
SEITZINGER, Randy
SHOLOS, Randy
STRAUB, David
TALLY, Bob
TERRY, Dan
THOMPSON, Dave
THUYNS, Bob
TRUSTDORF, Steve
WALTER, Tom
WATTERS, Gary
WELBAUM, Scott
WHITE, Dwayne
WILSON, Garland
YOUNG, Jeff
ZIP, Vic
ZOLLETTE, Dick
ZUJ, Nick

Ht.

Wt.

5-9
6-1
6-3
5-11
6-0
5-10
5-10
6-0
6-4
6-2
5-11
5-11
6-2
6-0
6-4
5-11
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-0
5-9
6-2
6-2
6-5
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-2
5-9
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-2
5-11
6-1
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-10
6-3
6-0
5-9
6-3
6-2
6-3
5-11
6-1
5-10
6-0
6-4
5-8
6-2
6-3
5-10
6-3
6-1
5-8
6-3

161
215
200
200
185
180
177
180
235
195
215
195
170
210
240
170
180
180
200
195
190
190
190
250
210
217
225
197
190
230
180
200
190
185
190
205
190
195
195
189
195
160
190
175
215
205
180
230
210
220
230
217
185
178
290
170
220
195
185
235
240
165
215

Pos.

B
L
L
L
B
B
B
L

L
B
L
B
B
L
L

B
B
B
B
B
B
L
L
L
L
L
L
L
B
L

B
B
B
L
L
L
L

B
L
L

B
B
B
B
B
B
L
B
L
L
L
B
B
L
B
L
B
B
B
L
B
L

Hometown

Akron
Gahanna
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Lee, Mass.
Akron
Louisville, Ky.
Enola, Pa.
Warrensville
Barrie, Ontario
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Hamilton, Ohio
Scarborough, Ontario
Clifton, N. J.
Lancaster, Ohio
Pittsburgh
Toledo
Pittsburgh
Whitehall
Kirtland Lake, Ontario
Canton
Trafford, Pa.
Chardon
Cincinnati
Windsor, Ontario
Euclid
N. Canton
Brantford, Ontario
Ravenna
Northfield
Willoughby
Greenville, Pa.
Wickliffe
Chesterland
Conmack, L. I., N.Y.
Canton
Coudersport, Pa.
Springfield
Ravenna
Martin
New Kensington, Pa.
Oil City, Pa.
Canton
Cleveland
Erie, Pa.
Genoa
Kent
Pittsburgh, Pa.
W. Mifflin, Pa.
Oil City, Pa.
Cleveland
Oakville, Ontario
Reynoldsburg
Marion
Dover
Tiffin
Greenville
Berea
Louisville, Ky.
Dayton
West Reading, Pa.
Hamilton, Ontario
University Heights
Niagara Falls, Ontario

39

�~

0

UP IN THE AIR OVER KENT
The Flashes' cheerleaders strike a high pose In expectation of a high-flying season for the Golden Flashes. Cheerleaders Kathy
Mendiola (Ravenna) Kathy Schrag (Springfield), Sue Burd (Pittsburgh), Janie Smith (Youngstown) and Nancy Sell (Cuyahoga
Falls) will lead the Kent backers In yells this year.

�Kent Business Backs Kent
BEST WISHES TO

Three Complete Stores

K S U for 1966

Men 's, Women 's, and Children 's Clot'hing

MEL'S CHUCK WAGON, INC.

at

PUl{CELL~S

CATERERS and VENDORS
673-9857

INC.
Kent, Ohio

113 W. Main St.

EDDIE'S

Cheatwood Safety Tire Service, Inc
Kent, Ohio

707 N. Mantua Street

Franklin Ave. - Downtown Kent
Music Friday and Saturday

673-3114

"BEST FOOD IN TOWN"

You won't have to block or kick when you buy at

Tinker Funeral Directors

VOGIAS

1005 E. Main
LINCOLN -

MERCURY -

COMET
Phone: 673-3484

Kent, Ohio

300 Gougler Avenue

ALL PRO GOLDEN CUE
Campus Shopping Center
12:00 p.m. to I :00 a.m.
18 TABLES

BREAKFASTS

Lad ies Welcome {FREE 12-7) with Escort

Phone: 673-9346
" Bill iards in a

DINNERS

LUNCHEONS

673-9077

230 South Willow Street

Luxurious Atmosphe re "

"GOOD LUCK FLASHES"

CALLAHAN'S CARPET HOUSE

BOYLE'S AUTO WRECKING
and PARTS
673-5891

Kent, Ohio

151 0 South Water Street

Fa irest Prices Pa id for Cars , Trucks and Junkers

Kent, Ohio

L. J. Callahan

673-5178

New -

Use d -

Re bu ilt Parts

Best of Luck from

MONTONI'S PIZZA

IVY CORNERS

Carry-out Pizza to Order, phone 673-5731

FLOWERS AND GIFTS
426 E. Main
"one-half block west of KSU"
Member of F T D

673-4565

108 West Main Street
FREE DELIVERY SERVICE
Complete Line of Beverages
Hou rs 6 :00 to I :00

6 days a wee k

Closed Mondays

41

�E

H

K

K

L

L

M
N

Bureau of Educational Reann:h (c:-1860) ....... H4
28 Lowry Hall (1912) .
27 " M" Residence Hall (1967}
28 Manchester !tall (1963} .
29 Married Students Apartmenla (1962) .
{Addilion-190.5)
30 McDowelll-h•ll (t966)
E2
"""''~'
32 M emorial Gymnasium (1950)
. 119
33 Memorial Stadium (UISO) .
.. )9
34 Merrill llall(t912)
.... 05
3~ Moulton llall (19!7)
.. C6
38 MusicimdSpeechCenter(t960]
37 Nb:.on 1-1• 11 (t9M)

"'" r,,.., .

INDEX OF BUILDINGS "
1 Administration Bulldina (1914)
2 Asanit !louse (c.-H160)
3 Allyn llall (1963)

: :::.~~~~~:;~~%)
6

7

8

Clark llall(l963)
Cunningham Uall {l9S7)
.... _ . . . ,
DeWeese tleallh Center (tS•BJ .

. E4
r.3
. . ... ItS

·~~:

.... Ill S
. Kt 1
fJ
)1 7

8A 1-'uture(Addition-1967)

g
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24

Dunb.lr lla ll (ts5o)
. .. .. ,
El 2
Edu&amp;BIIon Build•na (1968)
C7
Engleman Jlaii(19Jll)
. . , ••
07
Fle!cher llall(1963)
.... Jill
Franklin llall (1926)
... o 2
lnrormallon Boo!h
. . . . c2
Cn~duale S!udenla Residence Jlall (1967)
.E14
Taylor llaii(19G6)
.... FlO
Healing Plan! (liMO)
E5
!lome Manasemenl llouse (c-1800)
GJ
Johnson llall (1957)
F8
Kenlllall {191,.)
E3
Ken! S!ale Union (1949)
.. ,,
E6
Korb I hill (1964)
C l4
" 1." Residence llall (1967)
F14
l.ake Hall [1961)
Co

311 Olson_Hall (1961)
39 Pren_t•ce ~tall (1959) .
40 Pretldenlt llouae (c-1850)
41 Rockwell Llb~a.ry (1927)
(Add•t•on-1958)
42 S.tterlield llall (1967)
.. . C7
43 S!opher llaii(IG49)
44 Temporary Eas!llall(1947)
45 Temporary- Norlh Jlall(1947) ..
f-'6
46 Temporary Sou!h llall(1947)
.. F6
47 Temporary Weslllall (1947) .
F6
48 Terrace lhall (1954)
............ C9
49 UniversllySchool(1956) .
. ....... K4
50 Univeraily Supply Cenler (1964) .
016
51 VanDeusen llall (1950)
F5
52 Verder llall (1957)
........... 011
53 Williams llall (1966)
. . . .. .
. KIO
54 W1lls Gymnasium {1923)
•• •• .
. E4
55 Small Croup llou1lng
121
56 Rad1oTower
. • .. .
EU
57 Science-J Physics
Kll

..
·",

,WllMNUM.JSINDICATE,AAKII'IGAR£A

T
2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

-

CJII:WAY!Wfl(:

20

M
N

0
p

Q
R

s
T

�HOLIDAY INN OF AMERICA
• 311 Rental Units-Central A ir Conditioning
• Coffee Shop, Tavern Style Dining
• 3 Large Banquet Rooms {Up to 600)
• Valet and Laundry Service
• Elevator
• Television in Every Room
• Swimmin·g Pools
• Massagamatic Mattress
• Advance Reservations {Free)
• Children Free Under 12 Years

•

Route 43

State Highway 805

2 Miles from Kent State U.
PH. 673-0662

Luxury at No Extra Cost
After the Game -

PENALTIES
1. OFFSIDE by either team; Violation
of scrimmage or free kick formation;
Encroachment on neutral zone-Loss of
Five Yards.
2. ILLEGAL PROCEDURE, POSITION
OR SUBSTITUTION-Putting ball in play
before referee signals "Ready-for-play";
Failure to complete substitution before
play starts; Player out of bounds when
scrimmage begins; Failure to maintain
proper alignment of offensive team when
ball is snapped; False start or simulating start of a play; Taking more than
two steps after Fair Catch is made;
Player on line receiving snap-Loss of
Five Yards.
3. ILLEGAL MOTION-Offensive player
illegally in motion when ball is snapped
-Loss of Five Yards.

4. ILLEGAL SHIFT-Failure to stop one
full second following shift-Loss of S
Yards.

player)-Loss of Fi ve YMds. Team not
ready to play at siMI of either halfLoss of 15 Yards.
7. PERSONAL FOUL-Tackling or blocking defensive player who has made fair
catch; Piling on; Hurdling; Grasping
face mask of opponent; Tackling player
out of bounds, or running into player
obviously out of play; Striking an opponent with fist, forearm, elbow or locked
hands; Kicking or kneeing-Loss of 15
Yards. (Flagrant offenders will be disqualified.)
8. CLIPPING-Loss of 15 Yards.

9. ROUGHING THE KICKER or holder-Loss of 15 Yards.
10. UNSPORTSMANLIKE CONDUCTViolation of rules during intermission;
Illegal return of suspended player;
Coaching from side lines; Invalid signal
for Fair Catch; Persons illegally on
field-Loss of 15 Yards. (Flagrant offenders will be disqualified.)

Enjoy Our Dining Facilities

13. ILLEGALLY PASSING OR HANDING BALL FORWARD-Loss of Five
Yards from spot of foul, Plus Loss of
Down.
14. FORWARD PASS OR KICK CATCHING INTERFERENCE-Interference with
opportunity of player of receiving team
to catch a kick-Loss of 15 Yards. Interference by member of offensive team
with defensive player making pass interception-Loss of 15 Yards, Plus Loss
of Down. Interference by defensive team
on forward pass-Passing Team's Ball at
Spot of Fou l, and First Dowc.

15. IN.ELIGIBLE RECEIVER DOWN FIELD
ON PAS5-Loss of 15 Yards.

16. BALL ILLEGALLY TOUCHED
KICKED OR BATTED-Forward pass being touched by ineligible receiver beyond
the line of scrimmage-Loss of 15 YMds
from Spot of Preceding Down, and
Loss of a Down. Eligible pass receiver
going out of bounds and later touching
a forward pass-Loss of Down.

5. ILLEGAL RETURN of substitute not
previously disqualified-Loss of IS Yards.

11. ILLEGAL USE OF HANDS AND
ARMS by offensive or defensive player
-Loss of IS Yards.

17. PENALTY DECLINED: Incomplete
forward pass; No play or no score.

6. ILLEGAL DELAY OF GAME; Taking
mo re than five times out during either
half (except for replacement of injured

12. INTENTIONAL GROUNDING of
forward pass-Loss of Five YMds from
spot of poss, Plus Loss of Down.

18. CRAWLING by runner-Loss of
Five Yards. Interlocked inlerferencelo ss of IS Yards.

43

�olio
olio

the 1966 golden flashes

• • •

FIRST ROW: Coach Leo Strang, Charlie Jones, Capt. Ron Domin, Jon Brooks,
Dick Hoover, Jerry Seither, Ron Reidenbaugh, Wally Frlich, Tom Kuras,
Ernie Ames, Dennis Guenther, Charlie Stikes, Jim Parrish, Capt. Jerry
Soltis, Coach Frank Smouse .

FOURTH ROW: Coach Tony Ware, Mark Byrne, Don Smith, Steve Grezllk,
Ken Galosh, Terry Thomas, Jimmy Foxx, Joe Lynn, Ted Chester, John
Kavcar, Terry Lipak*, Ge orge Infante, Ernie Jonseof, Charles Reisland,
Dr. Tony Adamle .

SECOND ROW: Coach Jack Robb, Graydon Eckard, Billy Blunt, Don Fitzgerald,
Larry Fraley, Howie Tennebar, Charlie Kuntzman, Don Abbott, Ben
Witukiewlcz, Bob Van Valkenburg, Bob Covington, Bill Landis, Lou Harris,
Vern King, Coach Nick Coso.

FIFTH ROW: Coach Santo Pino, Dale Bradley, Steve Cook, Tom Mokros, Bob
Medved, Bob Crow, Earl Price, Bill Eppright, Bill Rodenburg, Doug Smith,
Dennis Morgan, Steve n Cooke, Clark Pinkerton, Orin Richburg, Dr .
Ralph Honzik .

THIRD ROW: Coach Hap Lilllck, Lucian Gatewood, Ron Swartz, Joe Pledger,
Dick Hoyne, Wil Perry, Steve Tarle, Gordon Hazen, Paul Jordon, Bob
Bois, Doug Landis, John Lesky, Dick Lutsch*, ·Tom Wiley, Bus. Mgr .
Chet Williams .

BACK ROW: Trainer Tom Blosser, Asst . Trainer Don Lowe, Marty Eisner*,
Jim Standford*, Jim Vancik* , Doug Isaacs, Mgrs . Ron Lerman, Steve
Licht, Steve Bowman, Asst . Bus. Mgr . Jay Firzlaff, Coach Tom Heckert,
Coach Jim Blackburn.

* Denotes no longer on roster.

�Come to where the biggest stars in show business Shine Nightly

THE YANKEE CLIPPER INN
Presents for your entertainment . . . Such outstanding stars as Lou "Satchmo"
Armstrong, Marie Wilson, Buddy Hackett, Joey Bishop, Mel Torme, Joe E. Lewis, Phil
Foster, Sylvia Sims, Stylers, Barton Brothers, Fran Warren, Modemares, 4 Coins.
These and countless others are at The Yankee Clipper weekly; plan to join us soon.
.Follow The "INN" Crowd to THE YANKEE CLIPPER INN
SWIMMING POOL

•

GOLF COURSE

-

244 ROOMS, BANQUET FACILITIES TO 1,000

Located at the intersection of Ohio srote route #8 and exit #12 of the Ohio Turnpike. The INN is
approximately 12 miles from the center of downtown Cleveland and downtown Akron. Hudson 653·8111.

FRANK MARAGAS, O.U. '54-JOANN (Lattavo) MARAGAS, K.S.U. '57

Stadium Directory
SEATING -Reserved- Section 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 E- W
Student- Sections 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
Student Guest &amp; General Adm -

ADVANCE TICKET OFFICE -Lobby, South Stadium -

All Others

Days of Game

CONCESSIONS -North &amp; South Stadium Lobbies
FIRST AID -Lower Level, North Stadium
REST ROOMS -Mt:n &amp; Women- Lobbies, North &amp; South Stadium
PUBLIC TELEPHONE -North &amp; South Stadium Lobbies
45

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CONTINUES TO GROW

We design and build fractional horsepower motors to drive many kinds of products
in many fields: home appliances, business machines, aircraft components, industrial
and commercial equipment, machine tools, portable e lectric tools.
The varying needs of these diverse industries present an interesting challenge - one
which the people of Lamb Electric eagerly, and successfully, meet. Their pride of
workmanship is an important reason for the outstanding performance and dependability of Lamb Electric Motors . . . an important factor in the continual growth of
Lamb Electric during the past 50 years.
As a result of this growth, we today provide steady work for more than 750 employees,
Kent's largest single work force. Of them over 52% have been with us 10 years or
more; over 27%, 20 years or more .
. LAMB ELECTRIC
KENT, OH IO
A Division of AMETEK, Inc.

El~
SPECIAL APPLICATION
FRACTIONAL HORSEPOWER

MOTORS

All the fans
go to Lujan's
after the game
It's Kent's most popular, most
glamorous meeting and eating
place home of the famous
Burger Boy, and a ~onderf~l
variety of other tempting, satisfying treats to suit every taste.
Enjoy LUJAN'S fast~ cour_te~ms
service in the beautiful dmmg
room, or in your car.

•
•

KENT, E. Main St.,

'h

mile East af Campus .................. 673-9565

TALLMADGE, an Beautiful Tallmadg e Circle ............ 633-4913
CUYA. FALLS, State Rd . next ta Shoppi ng Center ....923-1234
CANTON , 3250 Cleveland Avenue N.W................ .454-6445
MASSILLON, 211 2 lincoln Way West ........................... .

AKRON , 205 0 South Main ........................................724-4959
AKRON , 2196 East Market ...................................... 733-1481
AKRON, Wooster-Hawkins, a cross from ShOP'- Cen .....836-7987
FAIRLAWN, 2650 W. Market .................................... 836-0473

47

�The Originator of
READY - MIXED CONCRETE
in Kent

'Radio/
Equipped

. / ' " Trucks '

HORNING BUILDERS SUPPLY
115 Lake Street I Kent I Ohio
COMPLETE LINE OF BUILDING SUPPLIES AND READY - MIXED CONCRETE
Sewer Pipe

Concrete Block

Cement

Windows

Glass Block

Slag

Lath &amp; Plaster

Flue Lining

Lime

Brick

Drain Tile

Limestone

Sand

OR 3-5881

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�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text> Setpember 17, 1966 1:30 P.M.</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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                <text>1966-09-17</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>IN THIS ISSUE • • •
• TRIBUTE TO AMOS ALONZO STAGG
• WELCOME PARENTS
• BLUE KEY SOCIETY
• BAND DAY

PARENTS

DAY
f

r

Villan·ova
OFFICIAL PROGRAM 50¢

•

r

vS~

VILLANOVA STADIUM

•

NOVEMBER 20, 1965

�I
BILL PHEIFFER'S
Play- By- Play
of

VILLANOVA FOOTBALL
Analysis by Ted Youngling
Color by Jim Haughton

WDEL Wilmington 1150AM
93.7 FM
WRCP Philadelphia 1540 AM
(formerly WJMJ)
Co-sponsored by FIERSTIEN OLDSMOBILE and
GARFIELD SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASSN.

�THE VILLANOVA

I

OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

*******
LON GINES
THE WORLD'S
MOST HONORED
WATCH

VILLANOVA vs. BUFFALO
November 20, 1965

•

Villanova Stadium

Written and Edited by KEN MUGLER
Sports Information Director, Villanova University

Represented fo r National Advertising by
SPENC ER ADVERTISING COMPANY, INC.
271 Madison Ave., New York City
Distributed by JOSEPH FRIEDLANDER ASSOCIATES

l ongines 5·Star Admiral Automatic with Calendar
AII·ProofS&gt;, sweep.second, 14K gold strap·$185.00

g/ze}jjtgbter {;edo
Every Longines watch,
whatever its type, for whatever
its use, today, as for almost
a century, is manufactured to

ABOUT THE COVER • • •
L on K eller, the d ean of America's sports illustrators, has prod uced this remarkable portrait of football's " Grand Old M an."
In 70 years as a college coach, Mr. Stagg was the most compelling single force for the tactical growth and ethical elevation of
the game. His son, Dr. Paul Stagg, has written a heartwarming
arti cle about his late father which you wiil find on page 25.

be the finest of its kind and
worthy in every respect to be called
The World's Most Honored Watch

LONGINES-WITI'NAUER WATCH CO.
MONTREAL

NEW YORK

GENEVA

Maker of Watches of the Highest Character Since 1867

�WILLIAM H. WALTERS &amp; SONS
Incorporated
MECHANICAL

CONTRACTORS

HEATING • PLUMBING • AIR CONDITIONING • POWER PIPING

1306-16 North Carlisle Street
PO 3-8500

Philadelphia 21, Pa .

Put a Wildcat in Your Checking Account I

The Mainline Bank
for Wildcat Winners
Checking Accounts
Savings Accounts
Travelers Cheques
Education Loans

New Car Loans

THE

BRYN MAWR TRUST
COMPANY

6

•

M E •

The Main Line's Own Bank

PAGE

2

If l

f

0

I

C

HAVERFORD · BRYN MAWR· WAYNE

Mortgage Loans

�Villanova's 1965 Varsity Football Tearn

Front row, from left: Assistant freshman coach Ted Aceto, backfield coach Joe Rogers, equipment manager Charlie Farnan, head coach

Alex Bell, captain Tom Brown, trainer Jake Nevin, freshman coach Ed Michaels and line coaches Joe Faragalli and Lou Ferry.
Jim Ewart, Gerry Bellotti, Brian McDonnell, Tony Ferrainolo, Joe Scerca, Jerry Strid, Dave Capozzi, Dave Connell, Larry
Jones, Harry Walter and Bud Piper.

Second row:

Greg Prosack, Leo Rossi, Paul Owen, Dennis Ditze, Joe Nolan, John Valenza, John Schunke, John Fry, John Kolmer, Don
Cranley, and Lou Morda.

1"hird row:

Steve Weglarz, George Hunt, Barry Grossman, Bill McCormick, Frank LoBiondo, Ed Bollinger, Jim Bach, John Connor, Paul
McGrath, John Bosacco, Bill Andrejko and Paul Sodaski.

Fourth row:

.,
)&gt;

Cl
m

w

Brendan Murray, Mike Poehner, Fred Levinsky, Bruce Bendish, Steve Geary, Jerry Rinder, Rich Fabrizio, AI Becker, Rudy Jugo,
Joe Greco, Jim Case and Chip Bender.

Fifth row:

Sixth row: AI Stopko, Joe Colistra, Tom Flandera, Nick Cirone, John Dzurenko, Dallas Webb, Cliff Tallman, Jack Lignelli, Ray Covi and

manager Rich Rosensteel.

�•

~ave/
reservations
steamship

DOYLE &amp;HEMCHER, INC.

airlines
tours &amp; cruises

Plastering Contractors

829 CONESTOGA ROAD

resort hotel

I

The
Suburban
Travel Agency, Inc.

ROSEMONT, PA.

•

SUBURBAN SQUARE, ARDMORE, PA.
Opposite Penno . Roilrood Stotion

Midway 9-4700

Doyle and McDonnell, Inc.
Nursery and General Contracting
landscapers for Villanova University

MAIN OFFICE

BERWYN, PENNA.

PAGE

4

Niagara 4 -0270

�Villanova's President
The Very Rev. Joseph A. Flaherty, O.S.A., is
the twenty-fourth Augustinian Priest to serve as
President of Villanova University. He was appointed this past June.
Father Flaherty, 49, had been serving as the
university's Vice President for Academic Affairs.
He succeeded the Very Rev. John A. Klekotka,
O.S.A., who had been president since 1959.
A Philadelphian, Father Flaherty joined the
Augustinian Order in 1938 following his graduation from St. Joseph's College. He was ordained in
1943. He earned his Master of Arts Degree at
Catholic University in Washington and received
his Ph.D. in English from Harvard in 1949.
Until his appointment as Vice President at
Villanova in 1964, Father Flaherty had been associated with Merrimack College, an Augustinianconducted college in Andover, Mass. He played a
vital role in Merrimack's rapid rise to academic
prominence in the 14 years he spent there.
Villanova's new President has a brother who
is a Maryknoll Priest. The Rev. James A. Flaherty,
M.M., is a missionary serving in Guatemala, while
a sister, Mrs. Frances X. Quinn, resides in BalaCynwyd, Pa.
VERY REV. JOSEPH

A.

FLAHERTY,

O.S.A.

Buffalo's President
Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, President of the State
University of New York at Buffalo, has enjoyed
a distinguished career as athlete, scholar, educator, research scientist and public servant.
His undergraduate work was at Purdue
where he won the Big Ten Conference Medal for
the best combined scholastic and athletic record.
He represented the United States in the 5,000meter run in the 1920 Olympic Games at Antwerp,
Belgium.
His catholicity of interests is evidenced by
the various and varied positions he has held: research metallurgist for the U. S. Bureau of Mines,
associate professor at Yale University, coordinator for the National Defense Research Committee,
director of the Curtiss-Wright aeronautical research laboratory in Buffalo, and Executive VicePresident of the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory.
Dr. Furnas became Chancellor of the University of Buffalo on September 1, 1954. He took
a leave of absence from December 1, 1955, to
February 1, 1957, to serve under President Eisenhower as Assistant Secretary for Defense for
Research and Development. He continues to be
an active member of various technical boards and
panels for the government, particularly in the
Department of Defense.
DR. CLIFFORD C. FURNAS

PAGE

5

�ATHLETIC DIRECTORS
Arthur L. Mahan has been athletic director at Villanova for five years, and in that time has helped the University make great strides in the field of athletics and, of
even greater importance, that of making new friends for
Villanova and its programs-be they academic or athletic.
Mahan was appointed athletic director of Villanova
University on March 1, 1961. He has been head baseball
coach for 16 years.
A graduate of the Villanova class of 1936, Mahan has
already made a fine impression on his fellow college administrators with his willingness to listen and learn and
his desire to cooperate with them on such important athletic matters as scheduling and rule making.
A former major league first baseman, Mahan spent six
years in professional baseball and also served as a minor
league manager for one season. Art played with the Philadelphia Phillies during the 1940 campaign. He also played
with such top minor league teams as Louisville in the
American Association and Little Rock in the Southern
Association.
Upon graduating from Villanova after a fine athletic
career, Mahan was signed by the Boston Red Sox. After
an excellent season with Little Rock in 1941, Mahan entered the Navy as an Ensign and served in Tom Hamilton's
V-5 athletic program with the Navy Air Corps during
World War II.
Mahan returned to his alma mater as head baseball
coach in 1950. During the 16 years he has been at the
helm, the Wildcats have become a power in the East competing in the NCAA District 2 playoffs six times. '
Mahan is married to the former Helen Malin, a Philadelphian and a graduate of Chestnut Hill College. The
Mahans have ten children, the eldest being Art Jr., who
graduated from Villanova this past June.
VILLA OVA'S ARTHUR L. MAHAN

Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University
of Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at UB than ge~ia! Jim ..
Peelle a native of Staunton, Illmois, arnved on the
North Main Street campus in 1934, fol!owing a career. as
a star quarterback for Purdue University, a caree~ whi.ch
saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten Champwnship.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War II years,
with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He then gave
up football coaching to devote his time more fully to being
athletic director as the university began its great period
of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball team
and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in NCAA Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of anecdotes make him a much-sought-after guest.
.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three childp=:n
while still finding time to participate in numerous CIV!C
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home m
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy, and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.
BUFFALO'S }AMES

PAGE

6

E.

PEELLE

�HEAD COACHES
Alex Bell is starting his sixth year at the helm of the
Wildcats. The quiet, soft-spoken leader has done an outstanding job during the past five years and has put together a fine record over the last four seasons, winning
28 of the last 41 games played.
Included in this record were trips to two post-season
games, the Sun and Libe;rty Bowl classics.
Last year's 6-2 record marked the fourth straight
winning season for Villanova football teams.
The former standout end on Wildcat teams in the
late '30s is hopeful that this year's squad can continue
the success story, but realizes it will be a difficult task to
accomplish.
Alex is on his second tour of duty with the Wildcats, having served as line coach under Art Raimo from
1951 to 1953.
His coaching career started with Loyola of Los
Angeles in 1940, and was interrupted by the Second World
War in which he served as a Naval Gunnery Officer aboard
a tanker, seeing action in all theatres of operation before
his discharge in 1946.
Bell's next assignment was directing Delone Catholic
High of McSherrystown, Pa., to two championships while
registering a 20-game winning streak.
After a year at St. Augustine High in California,
Alex answered Raimo's call to return to the Main Line
and help tutor the Wildcats for the next three years.
Bell dropped out of football in 1954, but returned to
Delone in 1955. His teams posted a 15-4-2 mark during
the next two years.
Bell's biggest move before returning to the Main Line
came in 1957 when he traveled to Harvard to work as
end coach under John Yovicsin for three seasons.
Alex and his wife Margaret and their three children
reside in Broomall, Pa.
VILLA OVA'S ALEX BELL

Dick Offenhamer attended Colgate University where
he was light-heavyweight boxing champion of the school
and he also starred on the baseball team. He received his
B.A. in 1936.
Offenhamer coached football at Kenmore High School
for 11 years, and his teams won or tied five championships
in the Niagara Frontier Conference. At one stage his
charges won 50 out of 55 games, including a skein of
21 straight.
He was prominent, too, as an official in Western New
York basketball and swimming circles.
After World War II he returned to Colgate as director of freshman athletics, freshman football coach and
boxing coach.
Dick came to the University of Buffalo in 1955, a time
at which UB's football fortunes were at their lowest ebb.
H e promptly applied his skills, knowledge and personality
to a difficult situation and the results speak for themselves.
During Offie's 10-year tenure UB has won 53, lost 34,
and tied 3. He had 8-1-0 seasons in 1958, when UB won
the Lambert Cup, and again in 1959, when UB was runner-up for that trophy.
Offenhamer has won numerous personal honors. He
was national "Coach of the Week" in 1958 after his team
scored a 34-14 upset over Columbia. The same year the
Buffalo Evening News cited him as one of Western New
York's 10 Outstanding Citizens. This past spring both the
Buffalo Council of the Knights of Columbus and Cardinal
Dougherty High School saluted him as Western New
York's "Coach of the Year."
Always energetic and vibrant, Offenhamer continues
his coaching at Buffalo with a high pitch of ambition and
enthusiasm. He looks not to the past but to the future,
planning bigger and better things for UB football.
B UFF ALO'S RICH ARD

W.

0 FFENHAMER

PAGE

7

�VILLANOVA COACHING STAFF

Left to right: (standing) Eo MICHAELS, freshman and line coach; ALEX BELL, head coach;
Lou FERRY, line coach; TED ACETO, assistant freshman coach;
(kneeling) jOE ROGERS, backfield coach; jOE fARAGALLI, line coach.

JOE ROGERS- Joe has been coaching at Villanova since
1952 with the exception of five years ago when he was coordinator of alumni activity for various Villanova clubs
throughout the East. He served from 1952 until 1955 as
freshman coach when he moved up to his present backfield
post. During his playing days, Rogers was a star halfback
and was 12th in the nation in rushing as a freshman in
1946 when he gained 620 yards on 90 carries for a 6.9 average. Upon his graduation in 1950 Rogers served as athletic
director and head coach at Waldron Academy. Rogers was
head coach at Villanova for the last six games during the
1959 season. After that interim term he took on his new
duties with the Alumni Office and also scouted for the
Green Bay Packers of the N.F.L. in 1960. Joe is a native
Philadelphian and makes his home in the city with his
wife and nine children- four boys and five girls. A brother,
John, is line coach at Temple University.
LOU FERRY- Lou was an outstanding tackle at Villanova from 1946 to 1948. He was selected to the All-East
team twice during his career. He also captained the 1948
team which compiled an 8-2-1 mark and played in the
Refrigerator Bowl against Kentucky in Cleveland. After
graduation, he played on the Eastern College All-Star
team which upset the ew York Giants of the ational
Football League, 26-13, and then started on a professional
career which spanned seven years. He played with the
Green Bay Packers in 1949 and the Chicago Cardinals in
1950 before moving on to play with the Pittsburgh Steelers
for the next five years. He retired at the end of the 1955
campaign. Ferry then started his coaching career. First
stop was Salpointe High in Tucson, Ariz., where he had a
7-3 record. He then took over at Homestead High in Pittsburgh for the 1958 and 1959 seasons. In 1960 Ferry received his first college assignment when Bell asked him
to return to Villanova and join the staff. Lou and his wife
live in Drexelbrook, Pa.

PAGE

8

JOE FARAGALLI-Joe returned to his alma mater after
serving as head coach at St. Thomas More High School for
four years. A star tackle and letterman for three ;year.s,
Faragalli was also an outstanding student, graduatmg m
1954. Two years in the service followed and t~en one year
as assistant at St. Thomas More before assuming the head
coaching duties. Joe was an All-Scholastic a~d Ali-Publi_c
choice during his career at John Bartram H1gh. In addition to his duties at St. Thomas, he taught for five years
at Penn Treaty Junior High. Joe was a junior ~tandout on
the Wildcat team that compiled a 7-1-1 record m 1952 and
was a 60-minute performer as a soph in 1951. Faragalli
is married and has a daughter and two sons.

ED MICHAELS, SR.-One of the most famous names in
Villanova football, Ed attained fame as the Wildcats' first
grid All-American. A guard during the 1933-34-35 seasons,
he was captain of his freshman squad and of the varsity in
his senior year. Upon his graduation in 1936, he played in
the National Football League with the Chicago Bears. He
was traded to the Washington Redskins in 1937 and returned to Chicago the very next season, where he remained
until 1940. He was then made player coach of the Wilmington, Del., team of the American Association, where his
team won two championships. He later played w~th t~e
Philadelphia Eagles for four more years before trymg h1s
hand as player coach of the Ottawa Rough Riders of the
Canadian League. He joined the Villanova staff in 1951 as
line coach but resigned to enter business in 1954. He returned as line coach the next year and in 1956 t~ok over
as freshman coach. Ed is married and has four childr~n­
three girls and a boy, Ed, Jr., who graduated from Villanova in 1958, where he distinguished him~elf bot~ on the
gridiron and in the classroom. Michaels 1s a resident of
Wilmington, Del.

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Niagara 4-7200
P A GE

9

�Dea'r Pa'rents:
It is my honor to welcome you to Villanova
and to wish you a happy and enjoyable weekend.
Each fall a weekend is set aside by the administration to honor the parents and also to give
the parents an insight into the Villanova spirit.
In a few short days we attempt to show you, the
parents, the various phases of your son's or
daughter's student life, as well as provide an
interesting weekend.
This year, as President of the Blue Key Society, it has been my privilege to be General Chairman of Parents Weekend. A weekend such as
this requires hard work and cooperation between
the student committee and the administration.

PAGE

10

Thanks to the efforts of the Blue Key and the help
of the Development Foundation the plans have
been implemented and the weekend is a reality.
It has been a pleasure working on this weekend. It gave me an opportunity to show my
appreciation to my parents for sending me to
Villanova. This gratitude is not a feeling unique
to me, but indicative of the feeling of all Villanovans today.
Once again, have a good weekend and weicome.
Since1·ely,
PAUL E. DIXON,
GeneTal Chai1·man

�Dear Villanova Parents:
There is little doubt that the highlight of the fall semester is
the one weekend in which you join us at Villanova. We plan the weekend's activities to show, if only for a few short hours, our deep appreciation for your having made our stay here at Villanova possible.
Parents Weekend as such has existed for only a few years.
Its short history makes its present pre-eminence even more remarkable. The credit for this rapid evolution belongs to the Blue Key, a
truly unique organization which has proved invaluable to the Student
Government Association.
We welcome you, mom and dad, to what we hope is the most
successful Parents Weekend to date, and ask that you accept the occasion as a token payment for a debt of gratitude no amount of effort
could completely repay.
Sincerely,
FRANCIS T. ECK
Acting Student Body President

PAGE

11

�Pictured above is the Blue Key Society of Villanova University, a group of students whose hard work and dedicated effort have
produced Parents Weekend.
Composed of five sophomores, ten juniors and fifteen seniors,
the membership is selected each spring on the basis of academic
achievement, leadership ability and service to the university.
During the year the society serves as a public relation service
organization. They sacrifice a week of their summer vacation to assist
at Freshman Orientation. Spring finds them participating in College
Nights in high schools throughout the Eastern seaboard and conducting Candidates' Day, when freshmen-to-be visit the campus with their
parents.
Every summer the members contact the incoming freshmen
to answer questions and remove uncertainties. They give tours of the
campus to all prospective students who request them and, in general,
personify the aims and ideals of Villanova.
The officers of the Blue Key Society for 1965-66 are: kneeling,
from left, Brendan Moore, Treasurer; Paul Dixon, President; Leo
Carroll, Vice-President and Don Serafano, Secretary.

PAGE

12

�What does she mean "cigars ... cigarettes ...Tiparillos"?
You'll be hearing that chant more and
more-now thatTiparillos have arrived.
And arrived they have. In all the right
places. With all the right people.
The new Tiparillo has a neat, trim
shape. It looksyoungand debonair. And
its pearly, pliable tip pays more than
lip service to your smoking pleasure.

And never before such mildness!
The most careful blending of choicest
imported tobaccos has seen to that.
So, too, has the exclusive, veinless
Ultra Cigar Wrapper* that burns so
evenly and smoothly it insures complete mildness.
You can even see the mildness. The

surprisingly whiter ash is visible evidence. Smoker's proof. Here is flavor
you don't have to inhale to enjoy.
"Cigars ... cigarettes ... ?" Who
knows, maybe someday it will be just
"Tiparillos!"
Why don't you ask for one today?

Tiparillos are on sale at this stadium.

PAGE

13

�AT THE HALF
Phone MUrray 8-5800 for
reservations- eight
banquet rooms for 10-500
persons available for
private parties.

AFTER THE GAME
Relax, warm-up with a
TREADWAY TOUCHDOWN
COCKTAIL in the 'ORDINARY'
Lounge . ... Have Dinner
in the 'PUBLICK' Dining
Room and savour tasty famed
Tread way dishes ....
Reservations advisable.

*

TREADWAY INN
St. Davids, Pennsylvania

"ONE MILE WEST OF
Villanova University"
RoBERT

MUrray 8-5800

Reddy Kilowatt
scores every time

C.

BENNETT

Innkeeper

Wayne Sporting
Goods Co .

•
Outfitter of the
Villanova Wildcats
School Jackets and Sweaters
- also featuring White Stag Speedo
Bathing Suits

Your dependable low-cost
electric servant

MUrray 8-8680

124 E. Lancaster Ave.

PHILADElPHIA ElECTRIC COMPANY
AN I NVESTOR -OWNED COMPANY WITH MORE TtiAN 100.000 STOCKHOLDERS

PAGE

14

Wayne, Pa.

�Villanova
1965 Schedule

*

Villanova Roster
NO.

NAME

POS.

AGE

HT.

WT.

CLASS

HOME TOWN

September 1 8
Toledo 9
Villanova 7

*

Septe mbe r 25
Boston College 28
Villanova 0

*

October 9
Washin g to n State 24
Villanova 14

*

October 16
Del a w are 24
Villanova 21

*

October 23
Villanova 28
West Chester 13

*

October 30
Xavie r 35
Villanova 0

10
11
12
14
15

Koshlap, Don
Andrejko, Bill
Bellotti, Gerry
Connell, Dave
Lignelli, John

HB
QB
QB
QB
QB

22
20
20
22
19

5-11
5-11
6-0
6-3
5-11

175
190
205
195
185

Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.

22
23
25
26

Kolmer, John
Bender, Chip
Bollinger, Ed
Connor, John

HB
HB
HB
HB

20
19
18
21

5-11
6-0
6-0
5-11

185
185
180
190

Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.

31
33
34
35

Ditze, Dennis
Brown, Tom
Ferrainolo, Tony
Dzurenko, John

FB
FB
FB
FB

19
21
20
20

6-1
5-9
5-11
5-10

215
200
205
210

So.
Phillipsburg, N. J.
Sr.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Jr. West New York, N. J .
J r.
Portage, Pa.

40
41
44
46
48

HB
Sa ntomauro, Joe
HB
Bosacco, John
HB
G reco, Joe
HB-K
Case, Jim
Murray, Brendan
HB

22
20
19
20
19

5-9
6-1
5-11
6-0
5-10

185
205
180
175
180

Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.

Scranton,
Glenolden,
Mt. Carmel,
Bethlehem,
Philadelph ia ,

50
52
53
54

Poehner,
Weglarz,
Valenza ,
Ca pozz i,

c
c
c
c

19
20
19
20

6-0
6-0
5-11
6-0

200
210
210
210

So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.

Chicago, Ill.
Haddonfield, N. J.
Woodside, N. J.
West New York, N. J.

60
61
62

Ciro ne, Nick
Levinsky, Fred
Mc Donnell, Brian
Becker, AI
Morda, Lou
Colistra, Joe
Sto pko, AI
Ge a ry, Steve

G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G

20
19
20
22
21
19
20
18

6-0
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-0

225
210
215
215
230
220
220
190

Philadelphia, Pa.
So.
So.
Baltimore, Md .
Jr.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Sr. West New York, N. J.
Jr.
Paulsboro, N. J.
So.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Jr.
Meriden, Conn.
So.
Hamden, Conn.

78

Strid, Jerry
G rossman, Barry
Walter, Harry
Hunt, George
Nolan, Joe
Jones, Larry
Scerca, Joe
Fry, John
Ahrens, Charlie

T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T

22
20
22
20
19
21
22
20
20

6-3
6-2
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-3
6-2
6-3
6-2

230
235
230
225
230
230
245
230
235

Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.

80
81
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Bendish, Bruce
Piper, Bud
Fabrizio, Rich
Covi, Ray
Webb, Da llas
Sodaski , Paul
Schunke, John
Owen, Paul
Flandera, Tom

E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

19
20
22
20
20
20
19
19
20

5-10
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-1

180 So.
Plainview, N. Y.
210 Jr. West New York, N. J .
195 Sr.
Washington, D. C.
195 Jr.
River Edge, N. J .
215 So.
Media, Pa.
210 Jr.
Phoen ixville, Pa.
200 Jr.
River Edge, N. J .
200 So.
Pittsburgh , Pa.
185 Jr.
Cleveland, Ohio

Ewart, Jim
McCormick, Bill
McG rath, Paul
O 'Toole, Brian
Prosack, Greg
Rinder, Jerry
Rossi, leo

QB
T
HB
G
T
HB
E

19
19
21
18
19
19
19

6-0
6-3
5-9
5-10
6-1
5-11
6-1

200
220
175
195
230
180
200

65

66
67
68
69
70
71
72

73
74

*

Nove m ber 6
Qua ntico 32

75

76
77

Villanova 7

*

November 13
Virg inia Tech 21
Villanova 19

*

November 20
BUFFALO

at
Villanova

Mike
Steve
John
Dave

So.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
So.

Wayne, N. J .
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Un ion City, N. J .
Havertown, Pa.
Boyertown, Pa.
Bola-Cynwyd,
Gallitzin,
Westminster,
Baltimore,

Pa.
Pa .
Md .
Md .

Po.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.
Pa.

Torrington , Conn.
Ph iladelphia, Pa.
McSherrystown, Pa.
Atlanta, Ga .
Fairless Hills, Pa.
Baltimore, Md .
Newtown Sq ., Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Levittown, Pa.

Arl ington Hgts., Ill.
Millville, N. J .
Rye, N. Y.
Irvington, N. J.
Floral Park, N. Y.
San Diego, Cal.
Morrisv ille, Pa.

___IIL___~"O~F~F~IC~IA~L~W~A~TC~H__F~O_R~T~H~IS~G~A~M~E_-~LO~N~G~IN~E~S~--T_H_E_W_O__RL_D~'S_M~O~ST__H_O_N_O_R_ED__W_A_T_C_H_" ___~

PAGE

15

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to complete insurance protection

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120 W. Lancaster Avenue
Paoli, Pennsylvania 19301
Phone: 644-7070

0/J CovereJ Wagon .!fnn
Official Hosts for Villanova Football and Track Dinners
and
HOMECOMING COCKTAIL PARTY

lUNCH AND DINNER SERVED DAilY EXCEPT SUNDAY
Banquet Facilities

Dancing Saturday Evenings

LANCASTER AVENUE AND OLD EAGLE SCHOOL LANE
STRAFFORD, PENNSYLVANIA

For reservations call MUrray 8-1169

PAGE

16

�400-cubic-inch V-8, 4-barrel carb, twin pipes: Buckle up and have yourself a ball! This is the 350-hp
4·4·2. With heavy-duty suspension, built to K.O. the roughest roads. Front and rear stabilizers to take the
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swinging-est thing about Olds 4·4·2 is its surprisingly modest price!
Oldsmobile Oivisio'l • General Motors Corp,

�7

VILLANOVA
Probable Starting Lineup
NO.

87
75
62
54
68
74
86
14
22
40
31

NAME

POS.

10 Koshl
11 Andr
12 Bello

JOHN SCHUNKE .. . . . . LE

14 Conn

LARRY JONES .. .. . . . . LT

15 Ligne

BRIAN McDONNELL . .. LG

22 Kolm

DAVE CAPOZZI . ...... C

23 Bend
25 Bollin

AL STOPKO .. . .. .... RG
JOE NOLAN .. . . . . . . . RT
PAUL SODASKI

••

0

0

RE

••

DAVE CONNELL . . . . . QB
JOHN KOLMER

0

•••

•

LH

•

JOE SANTOMAURO .. RH
DENIS DITZE ... ..... . FB

26 Conn
31 Ditze,
33 Brow
34 Ferra
35 Dzure
40 Santo
41 Bosac
44 Greco

BUFFALO

14 Gerin l

Probable Starting Lineup
NO.

-ngs

go

b~\!$Ith

Coke
TRADE MARK®

87
74
67
52
62
71
86
16
44
20
36

NAME

16 Capu 9
POS.

18 R. Ri d

DICK ASHLEY . . . . .. . . LE

20 Barksc

BILL ABBEY . . . . . . . . . . LT

22 Wash l
24 T. Ric{

TED GIBBONS . . . . . . . LG
JOE HOLLY . . . . .. ...

c

MIKE RISSELL . . .. . ... RG

26 McEwl

28 Hense
30 Brenn1

BILL TAYLOR . . . . . . . . RT

32 Hoke,

JJM DUNN . .... .. ... RE

34 Sincla i

NICK CAPUANA .. . .. QB

35 Smige

JIM WEBBER .... ... . . TB
JIM BARKSDALE ... . . WB
LEE JONES . . . . . . . . . . FB

36 Jones,

38 Przyh
40 Sella,
44 Web l

~
Referee : J oh n P. We g e rski (St. Bonave nture )

Umpire : Joseph R.

Field Judge : lou is V. Koerber (J &lt;

�SQUAD

WILDCATS
hlap, HB
rejko, QB
Iotti, QB
nell, QB
elli, QB
mer, HB
der, HB
inger, HB
~ nor, HB

e, FB
lwn, FB
rainolo, FB
renko, FB
tomauro, HB
acco, HB
co, HB

46 Case, HB-K
48 Murray, HB
50 Poehner, C

72
73
74
75
76
77
78
80
81
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

52 Weglarz, C
53 Valenza, C
54 Capozzi, C
60 Cirone, G
61 Levinsky, G
62 McDonnell, G
65 Becker, G
66 Morda, G
67 Calistro, G
68 Stopko, G
69 Geary, G
70 Strid, T
71 Grossman, T

BULLS

Walter, T
Hunt, T
Nolan, T
Jones, T
Scerca, T
Fry, T
Ahrens, T
Rossi, E
Piper, E
Fabrizio, E
Covi, E
Webb, E
Sodaski, E
Schunke, E
Owen, E
Flandera, E

SQUAD
73 Miceli, T

·inger, DHB

46 Swiderski, DE

r uona, QB

48 Hurd, DHB

74 Abbey, T

~idolfi, QB

50 Duprey, LB

75 Finochio, G

ksdale, HB

52 Holly, C-LB

76 Wuest, DG-T

fhington, HB

55 Garofalo, LB

idolfi, DHB

56 B. MacKellar,

nan, FB

78 Pirozzolo, DG

c

79 Ratel, T

58 Rishel, LB

80 Helenbrook, DE

61 Botula, DG

81 Lehner, DE

62 Rissell, G

83 McNamara, E

e, DHB

63 Poles, DT

84 LaFountain, DE

·lair, DHB

67 Gibbons, G

85 Kleiber, E

gelski, K

68 R. MacKellar, DG

86 Dunn, E-DT

s, FB

69 Dechowitz, G

87 Ashley, E

kuta, FB

70 Pugh, DT

88 Remillard, E

, DHB

71 Taylor, T

89 Burden, E

,er, HB

72 Brisky, DT

90 Oscsodal, K

things go

b~~th

Coke
TRADE· MARK®

tFFICIALS
R. Saverine (Georgetown )
(Johns Hopkins)

linesman:

Vincent J . Presto (West Chester)

Electric Clock : George F. Erb

�Introducing the tuned car. 1966 Buick.
What makes a car a car is styling, per/orrnan.ce, ride and handling. On.ly when. they're all tun.ed together is the car a Buick.
Like this '66 Riviera Gran. Sport.

Every last thing that goes into a Buick-suspension, body mounts, shock absorbers-not
only has to work, it has to work with everything else. That's tuning.
Tuning is what we do more of (and care
more about) than anybody we know of. And
then we go out and test it in more places, too.
On roads like the ones you'll be driving on.
Why we do it will be obvious when you take
your first ride. The tuned car rides and handles as handsomely as it looks. (Tuning may
be hard to explain. But it's easy to notice.)
What the tuned car will do for you. And
your family. For a start, the new Riviera

will comfort you. You'll see that when you
slip into the Riviera's new bench seats. Space
for six. If you like buckets, they're available,
with a reclining arrangement for the rightfront passenger. And we have another comforting option available: a new notch-back
seat that converts from bench to semi-bucket.
Choosing the tuned car. Visit your Buick
dealer. Every Buick you see is the tuned car.
Riviera, the new international classic. Riviera
Gran Sport. Every '66 Buick.
And with a choice like that, how in the
world can you go wrong?
Wouldn't you really rather have a Buick?

�Buffalo
1965 Schedule

Buffalo Roster

*

September 18
Boston College 18
Buffa lo 6

*

September 25
Buffa lo 13
Tampa 13

*

October 2
Buffalo 18
Massachusetts 6

*

October 9
Boston Univ. 14
Buffalo 7

*

October 16
Buffalo 24
Richmond 0

*

October 23
Buffa lo 0
Dayton 0

*

October 30
Holy Cross 20
Buffalo 7

*

November 6
Buffalo 2 2
Delaware 0

*

November 13
Buffa lo 28
Colgate 0

*

November 20
VILLANOVA
at
Villanova, Pa.

NO .

HO ME TO W N

PO S.

AGE

HT.

WT.

CLASS

DHB
QB
QB

20
19
21

5-9
5-9
5-9

165
170
171

Sr.
Jr.
Sr.

Danville, Pa.
Utica, N.Y.
Pawtucket, R. I.

HB
HB
HB
HB
K

19
18
21
21
19

5-11
5-9
5-9
5-10
5-11

170
181
167
190
170

Jr.
So .
Sr.
Jr.
So.

Syracuse, N.Y.
Woonsocket, R. I.
Pawtucket, R. I.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.

NAME

14
16
18

Geringer, Fred
Capuano, Nick
Ridolfi, Ron

20
24
26
28

Barksdale, Jim
Washington, Bennie
Ridolfi, Tom
McEwen , Jim
Hansen, Brian

30
32
34
35
36
38

Brennan, Tom
Hoke, Tom
Sinclair, Bob
Smigelski, John
Jones, Leeland
Przykuta, Dennis

FB
DHB
DHB
K
FB
FB

18
19
18
21
19
20

5-10
6-0
6-1
6-1
5-10
5-10

205
180
188
176
194
206

So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.

40
44
46
48

Sella , Dan
Webber, Jim
Swiderski, Walt
Hurd, Tom

DHB
HB
DE
HB

19
22
21
19

5-10
5-9
6-0
6-2

172
167
177
190

Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.

McKees Rocks, Pa.
Manlius, N.Y.
Utica, N.Y.
Elmira, N. Y.

50
52
55
56
58

Duprey, Jim
LB
Holly, Joe (Capt.) C-LB
LB
Garofalo, Joe
MacKellar, Bruce
c
LB
Rishel, Rod

21
20
19
19

5-10
6-1
5-10
6-0
5-10

217
204
207
190
197

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.

Peru, N. Y.
Lyons, N. Y.
Gloversville, N. Y.
Kenmore, N. Y.
E. Smethport, Pa .

61
62
63
67
68
69

Botula, Charles
Rissell, Mike
Poles, E. Greenard
Gibbons, Ted
MacKellar, Russ
Dechowitz, Dick

G
LB
T
G
G
G

19
19
22
19
21
23

6-0
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-10
6-0

206
215
218
239
215
195

Jr. Riverhead, L. 1., N. Y.
So .
Coatesville, Pa.
Sr.
Rochester, N.Y.
So.
Newport, R. I.
Jr.
Kenmore, N. Y.
So.
Brooklyn, N.Y.

70
71
73
74
75
76
78
79

Pugh, Ron
Taylor, Bill
Brisky, Dennis
Miceli , Tony
Abbey, Bill
Finochio, Jim
Wuest, Mike
Pirozzolo, Dick
Rate!, .Jim

DT
G
DT
T
T
G
G -T
T
T

20
21
18
20
20
19
20
19
22

6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-1
6-3

218
225
192
216
210
202
223
230
217

Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.

80
81
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Helenbrook, Craig
E
Lehner, Larry
E
McNamara, Jim
E
LaFountain, Gerry
E
Kleiber, Paul
E
Dunn , Jim
E- DT
Ashley, Dick
E
Remillard, Jim
E
Burden, Dennis
E

21
19
21
21
21
20
18
18
21

6-1
6-2
6-2
5-11
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-1

207
204
205
227
225
213
201
190
185

Sr.
Cheektowaga, N. Y.
So.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Sr.
Binghamton, N.Y.
Sr.
Saranac Lake, N.Y.
Jr.
Auburn, N. Y.
Jr.
Cranston, R. I.
So.
Massena, N.Y.
So.
New Bedford, Mass
Sr. Franklin Sq., L. 1., N. Y.

90

Oscsodal, Joe

22

5-10

165

Sr.

22

72

K

22

Rochester,
Marcy,
Watertown,
Solvay,
Buffalo,
Depew,

N.
N.
N.
N.
N.
N.

Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.
Y.

McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N. Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Batavia, N.Y.
Peru, Ind .
E. Syracuse, N. Y.
Utica, N.Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.

Buffalo, N . Y.
PAGE

2 1

�VILLANOVA BAND DAY

Director: Mr. C. Dudley lowden
Moderator: Rev . Edward C. Doherty, O .S.A.
President: Alf red Bin gham
Student Council Representative:

Once again this year the Villanova University
Marching Band, affectionately known as "The Pride of
the Main Line," exhibits the many reasons for its dignified title. Each member of this outstanding group does
his best to bring out the more accurate points of precision and the finer elements of style, which contribute to
the crisp look of the band.
Inspired by its fine director, Mr. C. Dudley Lowden,
the band promises to surpass all previous performances.
Musically, the sound is superb. In stride with the times,
a majorette corps leading the marchers has been introduced. Greater sound and improved appearance will
serve to accent Villanova's proud tradition.
An attractive itinerary has been planned for the
1965-66 season. The Wildcat Band will travel to Virginia, New J ersey, and New York. In addition to these
performances the band has planned several local con certs, and will once again provide outstanding entertainment at the Christmas Concert on D ecember 10 and
the Spring Concert in April.
The Villanova University Band wishes to extend its
congratulations and thanks to each member of the high
school bands participating in the 1965 edition of B and
D ay. The administration of Villanova University, the

PAGE

22

Vice President: Da vi d Boyl e
Secretary: Ru sse ll Will ia m s
Drum Major: Michael Kome lasky

Leo Commerfo rd

entire student body, and the thousands of visiting parents and friends are appreciative of the efforts involved
in this spectacu lar performance by the participat ing
high schools.

PARTICIPATING HIGH SCHOOL BANDS

Bishop McDevitt High School, Ha rrisburg , Pa .
Director: Mr. Russell H. W ill iams
York Catholic High School, Yo r k, Pa.
Director: Mr. AI Johnson
Haddon Township High School, Haddon , N. J.
Director: Mr. C. Dudley Lowden
Trinity Catholic High School, Sh iremenstown , Pa .
Director: Mr. l. Schmidt

�KICK OFF
YOUR NEXT
FOOTBALL WEEKEND
WITH A
LONG DISTANCE
CALL

Telephone old classmates to plan a reunion
at the next game. Then call for
reservations at your favorite place to stay.
P .S. For undergrads, too, a phone call
is the easy way to arrange a date
and settle details for a big weekend.

t1i:\ ~~r~!an~!e~!~e~d
\!!!::)

Telegraph
and Associated companies

" Mr. Kickoff ," Lou Groza of the
Cleveland Browns

Be sure to watch the new college comedy series, Hank . It's on every Friday night.

Check your local TV listings for time and station.

PAGE

23

�VILLANOVA ATHLETIC STAFF

ROBERT M. WHELAN
Athletic Secretary alld Busituss Manager

PAGE

24

M.D.
Team Physician

JEREMIAH F. LEE,

}AKE NEVIN

CHARLES FARNAN

Trainer

Equipme11t Manager

�My Dad
by DR. PAUL STAGG

University of the Pacific
the Pacific, at Susquehanna University, and finally at Stockton College,
he fulfilled his dedication as a teacher
and coach. He retired from football
coaching at the age of 98.

The Grand Old Man of football,

Amos Alonzo Stagg, was a living legend in his time. He spent more than
70 years coaching football and making his students better citizens. His
coaching methods were years ahead
of his time. No one ever had a better
sense of fair play. His story is told by
the man who knew him best-his son,
Dr. Paul Stagg, athletic director at
University ·of the Pacific.

M

Y DAD, Amos Alonzo Stagg,
was born in 1862 and died in
March of this year at 102 years of age .
His life spanned the complete history
of football, which was first played on
an intercollegiate basis in 1869. I believe his first contact with the game
of football was at Yale, where he
played two years on the team at end,
being selected on Walter Camp's AllAmerican Team in 1889.
As a student, my Dad planned to
prepare himself for the ministry;
however, during his days at Yale an
incident occurred which made him
believe that he was not a good enough
speaker. At that point he decided to
dedicate his life to the teaching of
young men on the athletic field. For
seventy years, first at the University
of Chicago, then at the College of

As a member of the NCAA Football
Rules Committee for 61 years, he had
a part in molding the rules. In the
early 1900's the game had fallen into
disrepute due to the inability of the
old football rules committee to
change the rules and open up the
game from the heavy line play prevalent at that time. The Western Athletic Conference (Big Ten), with Chicago as a member, threatened to
make its own football rules, appointing a committee, with my Dad as
chairman, to draw up a set of rules
for the conference. This prompted the
large Eastern universities, which
made up the old· football rules committee in 1904, to invite my Dad to
be the first Western representative of
that committee. Although the big
change in the football rules occurred
after the NCAA came into the picture
in 1906, it is interesting to note that a
surprising number of the changes
proposed by my Dad's "Big Ten Committee" were written into the rules in
the next few years. From that time
on my Dad was very active on the
rules committee and I would judge,
made a real contribution.
As a coach, Amos Alonzo Stagg was
a very creative individual. Through
my 28 years of college coaching, we
corresponded a great deal, passing
football plays back and forth among
my brother, my Dad and myself. I
found my Dad was always developing new formations and plays from
those formations . In fact, a number of
formations which later became popular were used by my Dad at an earlier date. In 1890, while attending
Springfield College in Massachusetts
as a player-coach, he developed a
new formation by dropping his ends
back off the line into a double wingback formation. The double wingback
formation was used very extensively

many years later. The shift, which
was later called the Notre Dame shift,
was used by the University of Chicago under my Dad in 1904. Army's
"Lonesome End" formation (a single
flanker who never entered the huddle), which received wide acceptance
as something new in football in the
1950's, was used by my Dad at the
College of the Pacific in 1933 or 1934.
I borrowed it from my Dad and used
it when I was coaching at Moravian
College in Pennsylvania in 1935.
One of my Dad's inventions which
is used very extensively today is the
spread punt formation. He started using it at Chicago in 1918. It took
about 25 years to become popular but
is now used for punting by nearly all
major college teams in essentially its
original form.
My Dad has always been a strong
advocate of the passing game, using
spreads of all kinds. Single flankers,
double flankers, man in motion, and
pedinger plays have been in his repertoire of plays for years, and he
made many contributions to the development of this type play.
Although he had some fine teams
and a good record as a coach; even
though he made many contributions
to the rules and to the play itself;
even though he coached longer than
any man coached and may ever
coach, I believe perhaps his contribution to the game goes deeper. Perhaps
it has been his steadfast belief in amateur sport, in football and in the
youth of our nation. It may have been
his forthright honesty and sense of
fair play which once caused him in his
early years of coaching to go out on
the football field and object to a penalty on the opponent. It could have
been his example of clean living and
his expectation that his players would
live up to the best standards. Whatever it was, the hundreds of letters
written to him which I have read in
the last couple of years indicate that
he has become a symbol of the best
in the coaching profession.

PAGE

25

�JOHN KOLMER , HB

BUD PIPER, E

STEVE WEGLARZ, C

JERRY STRID, T

TOM BROWN, HB

JOE GRECO, HB

BRIAN McDONNELL, G

PAGE

26

�CHARLIE AHRENS, T

RAY COVI, E

PAUL SODASKI, E
JOE SCERCA, T

TONY FERRAINOLO, FB

LOU MORDA, G

JOE COLISTRA, G

JOHN CONNOR, HB

PAGE

27

�LARRY JONES, T

GEORGE HUNT. T

BILL ANDREJKO, QB

DICK FABRIZIO, E

JIM CASE, HB

DAVE CAPOZZI, C
JOHN FRY, T

PAGE

28

�BRENDAN MURRAY, HB

JOHN VALENZA, C
MIKE POEHNER, C

DALLAS WEBB, E

JOHN BOSACCO, HB

PAGE

29

�MARl-NAY DINER
ROSEMONT

Union Paving Company
One East Wynnewood Road
Wynnewood, Po.

FRANK X. PURCELL

•

Painting Contractor

Midway 9-9900
TRinity 8-1200

•
25 Master Painters

•
Bituminous

•

and
Concrete

MO 4-0327

PAGE

30

NARBERTH, PA.

Paving

�1965 Villanova University NROTC Drill Team
Professor of Naval Science:
Moderator:

Major James L. Black, Jr.

Executive Officer:

Robert N. Mangone

"Whiskey Company," the official designation of
the drill team, was formed in 1949, and during its
embryo years, participated in several local meets in
order to gain experience and familiarize it with other
teams and to obtain a reputation.
It was during these formative years that the team
developed what is considered by many as one of the
most difficult routines in the country.
In 1959 the team made its first appearance in the
National Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington, D. C.
Never finishing lower than eighteenth out of approximately fifty teams, the last two years. "W" Company
has finished eighth and seventh respectively.
During its brief history, the Drill Team has brought
many honors to the unit and the university. Some of

Captain Marlin D. Clausner
Company Commander:
First Platoon:

Thomas J. Kelly, Jr.

George T. Ackerson

the honors gained are: Fourth Naval District champions four out of six years; Greater Philadelphia ROTC
drill champions four ou'N?.f six years; winning performances at invitational drill Iheets sponsored by colleges
and universities throughout the country, and half-time
performances at home football games.
More recently, the Drill Team has performed at
the World's Fair in New York and at the Saints and
Sinners Banquet honoring William W. Scranton, Governor of Pennsylvania.
Commanded by Midshipman Ensign George T.
Ackerson, the 1965-66 edition of the Drill Team will
strive to follow the winning tradition which has been
the trademark of "Whiskey Company."

PAGE

31

�RON RIDOLFI, QB

BRUCE MacKELLAR, C

TOM RIDOLFI, HB

MIKE RISSELL, LB

NICK CAPUANA, QB

DENNIS BRISKY, DT

JOE OSCSODAL , K

BILL ABBEY, T

BUFFALO
PLAYERS
JIM DUPREY, LB

TED GIBBONS, G

PAGE

32

DENNIS BURDEN, E

GERRY LaFOUNTAIN , E

MIKE WUEST, T

JIM DUNN , E

�DENNIS PRZYKUTA, FB

DAN SELLA, DHB

JIM BARKSDALE, HB

JIM WEBBER, HB

CAPT. JOE HOLLY, C

JIM RATEL, T

RON PUGH, DT

TOM HURD, HB

FRED GERINGER, DHB

BILL TAYLOR, G

RUSS MacKELLAR, G

LEELAND JONES, FB

CRAIG HELENBROOK, E

E. GREENARD POLES, T

JOE GAROFALO, LB

DICK ASHLEY, E

PAGE

33

�44th
ANNUAL FOOTBALL BANQUET

ADVERTISING

Sponsored by
Villanova Club of Philadelphia

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29,1965
THE

OLD

COVERED

WAGON

INN

Lancaster Pike, Strafford
Tickets . .

292 Montgomery Avenue

. $7.00 each

For reservations, call
Paul Lloyd ' 53 . ... .... . CH 7-8231

Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.

Marty Whalen '62 .. .. .. . 825 -0206
Dan Walsh '61 ... . . ... MO 4-2065
Bill Vincent ' 60 ....... . . Ll 9-2666

MOhawk 4-9886

Vince Cavanagh '35 . ... LU 3-07 44
Bill Walsh '43 .... . ..... MI 9-3161

VILLANOVA FOOTBALL:
The UNIVERSITY SHOP in
Dougherty Hall has a complete
selection

of

Villanova

clothing

and souvenirs in addition to a

A Statistical History
By Rev. Michael J . O ' Donnell, O.S.A.
Villanova Un iversity' s Sports Historian

Villanova University Press

complete line of men's and boys'
wearing apparel.
You are invited to stop in
and

browse

around

after

the

game.

ON
FROM

PAGE

34

Price $4.50 (postage included)

FEATURING

• All varsity, junior varsity, freshman and
150-lb. football records .

•
OPEN

On sale at University Shop, Dougherty
Hall, Villanova, Pa. 19085

FOOTBALL

• A history of sports fields at Villanova .

SATURDAYS

10:30 TO 5:00

• Villanovans on All-America, All-East and
other All-Star teams.
• Excerpts from local newspapers and national publications.

�After the game . . .
Enjoy refreshing cocktails
and fine food at
THE ALL NEW

Compliments of

Chetwynd Restaurant
AND COCKTAIL LOUNGE

"Just
A
Punt
Away"
LANCASTER PIKE

•

Albert F. Dagit
Daniel C. Dagit, '51
Albert F. Dagit, Jr., '47

ROSEMONT, PA.

Dancing Wednesdays, Fridays
and Saturdays
For reservations call LA 5-6294
Now managed by Mr. John Rekas- formerly
at the Emlen Arms Dining Room for 18 years

How do athletes
handle athlete's foot?
They follow their trainers' advice and
use Desenex® for prevention and treatment
It's excellent protection against itching, cracking
and irritation of Athlete's Foot. Helps prevent
spreading, too. No wonder Desenex is the Athlete's
Foot treatment most widely used by college football trainers.
We know you don't have a trainer to keep you on
your toes. But that's no reason to suffer from Athlete's Foot. Start using Desenex yourself. Avoid
Athlete's Foot problems with Desenex Powder or
new, cooling Desenex Aerosol-and for treatment
use Desenex Ointment. Desenex is guaranteed to
work or your money back.

WTS-PHARMAGRAFT, Rochester, N.Y. 14603
PAGE

35

�Villanova
ALMA MATER

By A. DUBIN and JOSEPH BUitJ.&lt;E
Villanova Unive1'sity Anthem
1
When the twilight shadows gather
Out upon the Campus green,
When the blue and purple night
Comes stealing on the scene,
Loyal sons of Villanova
Sing a hymn of praise
To our dear old ALMA MATER
And our College days.
2
Villanova, Villanova
When we leave your shelt'ring walls,
We shall leave an echo r inging
Through your treasured halls
We will leave an echo ringing
In the silent night
While our memories are singing
Of the Blue and White.

3
When the last big game is over
And the last roll call is heard,
When the oldest pedagogue
Has had his final wordWe shall come to ALMA MATER
In our dreams again
With a prayer for Villanova
And a sweet amen.

MARCH OF THE WILDCATS

By CARMEN GIORDANO, '36
March, you Wildcats-march right on,
We are out to win the day;
We'll march straight through to victory
So onward let us go-Rah! Rah!
Let us fight, fight, fight, fight, fight!
Villanovans one and all
Join to sing a praise to Alma Mater
H a il, Blue and White.

''V" FOR VILLANOVA
(''V" for Victory)
By LES IRVING
"V" for Villanova
"V" for Victory
"B" for Blue and "Double-D" for White
For the Blue and White, we will fight! fight!
fight! fight!
Fight! for VILLANOVA! Fight for Victory.
For we're out to win the fray,
VILLANOVA lead the way
With a capital "V" for Victory!
lnte?'lude
VIL-LA-NO-V A! V-1-L-L-A-N-0-V -A
"V" for Vic-to-ry! V -I-C-T-0-R-Y
It's a tooth for a tooth, and an eye for an eye
And a "V" for a V-1-C-T-0-R-Y!!!
"V" for Villa nova
"V" f or Victory
"B" for Blue and "Double-D" for White
For the Blue and White, we will fight! fight!
fight! fight!
Fight! for VILLANOVA! Fight for Victo r y
For we're out to beat the foe
Show the en-e-my we know,
How to win with a "V" for Victory.

PAGE

36

COLLEGE DAYS
I'll sing you a song of College Days
I'll tell you where to go
Johns Hopkins for your knowledge,
Cornell to learn to row,
To Harvard for your dandy dudes
Villanova for your men,
To Bryn Mawr for your pretty girls
For hard luck go to Penn.

Chorus
Hand me down my bonnet,
Hand me down my shawl,
Hand me down my calico dress
To go to the calico ball;
First she gave me honey,
Then she gave me cake,
Then she gave me gingerbread
And sent me out the gate.
2
As we go marching,
And the band begins to P-L-A-Y
You can hear the people shouting,
Villanova's out to win today
Villanova White, Villanova Blue,
Villanova, Villanova, we'll be true to you.
Villanova Blue, Villanova White,
Villanova, Villanova, you're all right.
Hurrah for the Wildcats!
Damn right!

RAH! RAH! LOCOMOTIVE
(Very Slowly) Rah-Rah-Rah-Rah Vil-La-No-Va
(Slowly) Rah-Rah-Rah-Rah Vil-La- o-Va
(Little Faster) Rah-Rah-Rah-Rah Vil-La-No-Va
Fight-Fight-Fight-Fight
VI-VL
Vi-VI-Viii An-An-Ov-Va
Villanova-Villanova, Team! Team! Team!
LONG CHEER
Villanova (drawn out)
Villanova (drawn out)
Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah!
Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah!
Villanova (drawn out)
Fight!
WILDCAT CHEER
Let's Go, Wildcats!
Clap-Clap, Clap-Clap-Clap.
(Repeat to Signal of Cheerleader s)
Let's Go!
GO CHEER
Go ................... Villanova
Beat ................. (Other Team's Name)
(Repeat four times)
Go !

�Cowapfete {acihties {or printing

ba

letterpress anJ o{{set

The Legal lntelligencer
ESTABLISHED 1843

10 South 37th Street, Philadelphia

EV 6-1535

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FOR

VITAllY

HALF TIME-ANYTIME-MAKE IT MILK!
Busy football weekends call for extra energy. And that
calls for a refreshing glass of milk. Milk is nature's vitality
drink . .. that helps you stay in peak conQ.ition, sees you
through the busiest fall days.
Half time; snacktime, anytime-when you take a break,
make it milk. Keep up with the fun with milk's vitality!

aW

a mess=ge from

da~ry farmer men:ber: of

amer1can da1ry assoc1at1on

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1965-11-20 Villanova vs. Buffalo</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>�SKI

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�\\'elcome to the 58th season of UB Football, our fourth as a major intercollegiate
competitor.
Ju t eleven year ago, the schedule we are
facing this year seemed a distant dream.
But with the dedicated effort and support of
so many, both in the Univer ity and in the
community, that dream i now being realized every aturday afternoon. '\'in or lose,
the Football Bulls have taken their place
among the top independent colleges in the
East, just as the University has achieved a
top rank among the leading graduate centers
in this section of the nation.
Football, of course, is but one of many
facets of the niversity. The latest available
figures show that BuiTalo now stands among
the top Universities in the nation in terms
of annual research expenditures with a total
volume approaching $10 million per year. Total enrollment for the 1965-1966 year exceeds the 20,000 mark (more
than half of whom will be full-time ) . And our faculty and student have reached the highest level of quality and
achievement in history.
oon our physical facilities will keep pace. An unprecedented $310 million building program will, in a few years,
result in the development of the new 1,000-acre campus site in Amherst and in the conversion of the pre ent campu to one of the nation's mo t comprehensive health sciences centers.
Some 17,200 full-time students will attend the new Amherst campus, 5,200 of them at the graduate level, and
8,000 in residence. The faculty, measured in terms of full-time equivalents, will number about 1,700. ome 3,000
students will attend the Health Science Divisions on Main Street .
.\nd even this will be just the beginning of major accomplishment and service for the community, the State
and the nation.
lt"s an exciting pro pect - one that we hope will be matched by the color and spirit of today's game at your
State University of New York at Buffalo.
C. C. FUR A

�1864- 101st Anniversary- 1965
1965 marks our 101st year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.

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The Campus Corner of Buffalo, Inc.
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2

�The announcement last summer by the State University of Tew York of a multi-million dollar expansion
of the State University at Buffalo marked another step
forward by the University in becoming a major Eastern
educational institution "among the finest in the land."
The day we have been waiting for has come!" exclaimed Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, University President.
"We now have the go-ahead to build the truly great
University that all of us have dreamed of."
On September 1st, 1962, the University of Buffalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become the
major campus segment of the widespread system of the
State University of New York. The new name, created
by State University officials, is: State University of Tew
York at Buffalo. However, in deference to sweatshirtstitchers and typewriter repairmen, alumni seem to prefer the continuance of "UB" or "University of Buffalo"
where intercollegiate teams are concerned.
One of America's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo
has been the educational capitol of Western New York
since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the fourteenyear-old home of 28,000 people. The "University" was
the School of Medicine until 1886 when the School of
Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was Millard
Fillmore, a first-citizen of the young community, who
continued his UB leadership during his term as the
thirteenth President of the United States.
The fourteen University Divisions are: School of
Medicine ( 1846 ) ; School of Pharmacy ( 1886 ) ; School
of Law ( 1887 ) ; School of Dentistry ( 1892 ) ; College of
Arts and Sciences (1913; Summer Session (1915 ) ; Millard Fillmore College, evening division ( 1923 ) ; School
of Business Administration ( 1927 ) ; School of Education
( 1931 ) ; School of Social Work ( 1936 ); Graduate School
of Arts and Sciences ( 1939) ; School of Nursing ( 1940 ) ;
School of Engineering ( 1946 ) ; and University College
(including associate degrees, 1958 ) .
Buffalo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood of
18,000- of which 9,000 are full-time undergraduate
students. The enrollment is expected to soar in the next
few years, especially in view of the State affiliation.
To meet the influx of resident students during the
past decade a total of seven dormitories have been constructed, with the seventh dedicated last fall. The
$2 million Acheson Hall of Chemistry, the new Norton
Union, the Baird Music Hall and the Western Tew
York Tuclear Research Center represents the efforts of
private endowment and local leadership.
Past projections have indicated that State University
of New York at Buffalo will need by 1970:
More than 9,000,000 square feet of space for an
anticipated total enrollment of 27,500 students.
Immediate needs include classroom buildings, a
library, residence halls, a fine arts center, an infirmary
and health services building, a university teaching
hospital, a health sciences building, a continuing education center, a physics building, an engineering building,
a physical education and intramural building, and an
administration building.
Adequate parking space for 12,500 automobiles will
be needed.
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of Buffalo
continues its fine tradition of service to the Niagara
Frontier and the State of New York.

3

�Back Row: Jim Wolfe, Freshman Coach; Bob Deming, Backfield Coach; Dewey Wade, Line Coach.
Front Row: Buddy Ryan, Line Coach; Dick Offenhamer, Head Coach; Ron LaRocque, Backfield Coach

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• 823 GENE EE

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TX 2-7183
4

TREET

�JAME E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle ha been the mainstay of the Univer ity of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for port at UB than genial Jim.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinoi , arrived on the
~orth Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a tar quarterback for Purdue University, a career
which saw the Boilermaker win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first po ition at UB was a si tant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. Hi greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World \\'ar II
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gave up football coachina to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the uniwr ity began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Dearee, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball
team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in
~C,\A Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performer on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of
anecdotes make him a much sought-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while till finding time to participate in numerous civic
acti\'ities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim' pride and joy. and he pends
much of hi spare time gardening.

DICK OFFEXHA~fER
Architect of r·ictory
"Local boy makes good" could well be the theme of this
piece, for it accurately describes the brilliant althletic
career of UB football coach Dick Offenhamer.
Although Offie grew up just a "hoot 'n' a holler" from
the UB campus, his trail to that campus was long and
sinuous.
An All-High baseball and football star at Bennett High
School, Dick chose to attend Colgate University.
It was a wise choice. Colgate was then enjoying the
halcyon days of Andy Kerr, when the Red Raiders of the
Chenango Valley went on scalping forays to such waystations as Yankee Stadium, New Orleans, Iowa City, and
Columbus, Ohio. Offenhamer was more than merely present on these trips; he was the right-halfback in the Kerr
double wing attack and he achieved lasting fame as one
of Colgate's all-time greats.
While at college, Offenhamer was light-heavyweight
boxing champion of the school and he also starred on the
baseball team. He received his B.A. in 1936.
Offenhamer coached football at Kenmore High School
for 11 years, and his teams won or tied 5 championships
in the Niagara Frontier Conference.
After World War II he returned to Colgate as director
of freshman athletics, freshman football coach, and boxing coach.
Dick came to the University of Buffalo in 1955, a time
at which UB's football fortunes were at their lowest ebb.
He promptly exerted his skills, knowledge and personality to a difficult situation and the results speak for themselves.
During Offie's 10-year tenure UB has won 53, lost 34,
and tied 3. He had 8-1-0 seasons in 1958, when UB won
the Lambert Cup, and again in 1959, when UB was
runner-up for that trophy.
Offenhamer has won numerous personal honors. He
was national "Coach of the Week" in 1958 after his
team scored a 34-14 upset over Columbia. That same year
the Buffalo Evening News cited him as one of Western
New York's 10 Outstanding Citizens.

5

�FRED GERINGER

GERALD LaFOUNTAIN

WILLI A 1 TAYLOR

ANTHONY MICELI

..

JO EPH HOLLY

�JOE GARAFOLA

BRUCE MacKELLAR

RUSS MacKELLAR

JOSEPH OSCSODAL

�BUFFALO

BULLS

1965

1st Row (L. toR.) - Tom Brennan, Rick Wells, Larry Lehner, Tom Pettit, Mike Rissell, Tom Hoke, Bennie Washington, Jim Remillard, Ted Gibbons Bob Sinclair Dick Pirozzolo, Dennis Brisky, Stan Baranowski, Mario Amorese, Rod
Rishel, Tom Hurd, Dick Ashley, Lee Jones.
2nd Row ( L. to R.) - Joe Oscsodal, Tom Ridolfi, John Savage, John Smigelski, Mike Douglas, Russ MacKellar, Jim
Duprey, Fred Geringer, Captain Joe Holly, Ron Ridolfi, Jim Webber, E. Grennard Poles, Dennis Burden, Craig Helenbrook, Joe Garafola, Dennis Przykuta, Gerry LaFountain, Bill Taylor.
3rd Row (L. toR.) - Paul Kleiber, Jim Dunn, Jim Ratel, Ron Pugh, Dick Enyart, Jim McEwen, Nick Capuana, Dan
Sella, Jim Finochio, Jim Barksdale, Walter Swiderski, Ron Donohue, Charles Botula, Bill Abbey, Bruce MacKellar,
Tony Miceli, Mike Wuest, Richard Dechowitz.
Top Row (L. toR.) - Jim Simon (trainer), Bob Deming (as!;'t coach), Jim Wolfe (ass't coach), Dick Offenhamer (head
coach), "Buddy" Ryan (ass't coach), Ron LaRocque (ass't coach). Dewey Wade (ass't coach), Larry Teller (student
manager).

N I NE DECADES AGO

the launching of
"advice in depth"

W

HE ships with sails smdded Buffalo's seascape over 90 years ago, when Buffalo and
the whole nation began to feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution ... Dominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning to make its mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp;D's services for the investing public sustained
a steady growth despite financial panics, wars and
depressions. Today the talent of an organization of
more than 4 00 - including research specialists,
counselors, and administrative people stands behind
our Buffalo office, giving you opportunity for investment ad•ict in dtpth. Let us advise you about your
future investment plans or review your portfolio.

D OMIN ICK

&amp;

D OMINIC K ,

Incorporated
Vice President
1122 Marine Trust Bldg. 856·7471

SEYMOUR H. KNOX Ill,

i\ftmbtrJ Ntw York, Amtfl(an, Afidu.tJI, and Toronto Stolk Exthangtl

JOE HOLLY
Captain
8

�AERIAL VIEW OF BUFFALO CAMPUS

COMPLETE LOCAL STOCKS • • •

Onetto's

structura!s - bars - plates - sheets

FULL FACILITIES • • •

Restaurant &amp; Seafood House

shearing - pickling - oiling
- burning - sawing

TIMET ABLE DELIVERY •• •

MAIN AT BAILEY

when you need it - as you ordered it
- ready for use

(Across from Campus)

e

'

~

~[$}~
·-)
41
&lt;nl

ITALIAN DISHES
e AMERICAN FAVORITES
e SEAFOOD PLATES
e LEGAL BEVERAGES

SENECA STEEL
'--------' sERVICE ~NJ~FALO .

Serving from 11 A.M.

"Western New York's Oldest and Largest
VOLKSWAGEN
JIM

CARL C. GRIMM, INC.

DEALER"

Kelly's

Plumber

INC.

•

PARTS A TD ERVICE
•
TEW AND USED
HOME OF "K ELLY CARED FOR CARS"

259 DELAWARE AVENUE
TL 2-7080

3325 GENESEE ST.
BUFFALO,

. Y.

AT THRUWAY OVERPASS
TF 3-8000
9

N.

v.

�B

u
F
F

A
L
0

10

�lL

�'''BUS'l'ER''
'l'HE 'BULI1S MASCOT
AND FRIEND

"Buster" is like the real Buster, the Bull's Mascot. He stands 8 Y2'' high , is black with white
ivory horns and has a blue and white saddle blanket. The Buffalo Bull's Doll is a caricature
of a Buffalo Bull's football player. The Doll has a bobbing head and comes in authentic
colors. Both are available at the University Bookstore "On Campus ."

$:1.00

$4.9S

12

�FROM THE BULLPEN
By Bob Powell, Courier-Express

By Dick Johnston, Evening News

If you were a college football fan in the 1965
season, you experienced a memorable year.

Seventeen Bulls are playing their final Rotary
Field football game today. ·win, lose or draw today
against Colgate and next week at Villanova, the University of Buffalo will miss the e 17 athletes.
This is the last chance
for UB fans to see Capt.
Joe Holly straighten up an
opposing ball carrier and
knock him back. Come to
think of it, maybe you
'von't see Joe perform his
specialty today. He's playing more offense than linebacker these days. And
helping that young offense
platoon move.
Two seniors, Joe Garafalo and Jim (Ringo) Duprey, are handling line.4'
backing chores on Rotary
today, they have seen considerable action over the last
three seasons.
And today is the last time for the hometown to
see such other defensive stars as E. Greenard Poles, the
tackle who plays in the opposing backfield; Gerry LaFountain and Craig Helenbrook, two of the best defensive ends in the East. LaFountain in other years
played both offense and defense, yet, this season, as a
defensive specialist, he has caught only one less pass
than he did last year playing both ways. He has intercepted three and ran one of them 90 yards to a touchdown. Helenbrook, who caught ll passes last year as a
two-way player, this season has confined himself to
containing the enemy's running attack, often pulling
clown opposing ball carriers before they get started.
Tom Ridolfi, the quiet, hard-working little defensive halfback, and his twin brother, quarterback
Ron, who has thrown two touchdown passes, will be
missed in the classroom as well as on the gridiron, for
they tarred there, too.
Speedy Jim Webber, who missed the first four
games because of an injury, has hit his full stride now
and undoubtedly will gain considerable yardage in his
final two starts.
Versatile Iike \'\Tuest, who has played both offense and defense, at both tackle and guard, is playing
his last home game, too; where he will play today no
one can be sure. Joe Oscsoclal will kick off with a
Buffalo wind at his back for the last time today.
Then there's Dennis Burden and Jim McNamara,
who caught passes for the last eight points against Delaware last week. And Fred Geringer, who came here as
a quarterback and became a defensive halfback. And
Dennis Przykuta, who has gained considerable yardage,
when he wasn't hurt. And Jim Rate!, who knocked
around all the line positions before he became a starting tackle. And punter John Smigelski.

It was a season in which the rules-makers voted
the return of platoon specialization, only to have one
of the game's winningest
coaches, Alabama's Bear
Bryant, chuck it early in
favor of two-way players.
You may have been
fortunate enough, if you
are defensive minded, to
have witnessed the lowest
J
scoring non-shutout victory
possible when Clemson
edged Duke, 3-2.
If your game is offense, you had your day
when West Virginia shelled
Pittsburgh, 63-48. For upsets - the early-season variety - you had Purdue's 25-21 victory over Notre
Dame.
For streak-ending thrills there was Rensselaer
Poly's upset of Middlebury, snapping a 40-plus-game
losing string.
College fans also had a bare-footed placekicker
at Michigan State, whose toe, not instep, make initial
contact ... ouch!
You had your frustrating moments following the
Bulls, but you also had moments of satisfaction.
Among them would be Gerry LaFountain's 90-yard
scoring run with a pass interception against Delaware
to help the Bulls bury the "visitors-never-win" tenet
in the UB-UD series.
Maybe you saw Colgate's "can't-do-anythingwrong" performance in a squeaker over Army at \'\Test
Point, or had the opportunity to watch Syracuse's
Floyd Little in one of his multi-touchdown exhibitions.
If you are one to compare scores of college games,
you must be wondering what's going on when Purdue
can whip mighty D, then tie a team like Southern
Methodist the following week ... especially when the
Mustangs fell victim to Illinois the preceding week,
42-0.

It was a typically screwball college season typically unpredictable and interesting.
But if you're strictly a college fan, there's something you've missed, pal.
It is the color, the tension, the pagentry and the
strategy of the time-out for a television commercial.
13

�YOU MEET THE NICEST PEOPLE ON A HONDA!
14 MODELS FROM $265.
Come in and meet the sports at . . .

SUPER SPORTS
3676 SHERIDAN AT MILLERSPORT
Phone 833-9888

Open Evenings

BUFfALO LINE-UP

Bl'F.FALO, N. Y., Tov. 13• Sopromore End Dick A hky
caught three touchdown pa.~s·
es today to pace Buffalo to a

Defense

Offense
S.E.
86 DUNN
83 McNAMARA

LH.S.
LE.

24 T. RIDOLFI

84 LaFOUNTAIN

32 HOKE

81 LEHNER

•
tnc.
" B uffalo's
leading

I

S.T.
71 TAYLOR
79 RATEL

LL.B.
F.B.

LT.

36 JONES

70 PUGH

38 PRZYKUTA

72 BRISKY

S.G.

58 RISHEL
50 DUPREY

62 RISSELL
75 FINOCHIO

exponent
LG.

of quality
printing''

Q.B.

52 HOLLY

16 N. CAPUANA
18 R. Rl DOLFI

56 B. MacKELLAR

s.

76 WUEST
78 PIROZZOLA

c.

48 HURD
34 SINCLAIR

R.G.
56 R. MacKELLAR

Printers

&amp;
Lithographers
126 S. ELMWOOD
Buffalo, N. Y. 14202

W.G.

T.B.

67 GIBBONS
69 DECHOWITZ

44 WEBBER

61 BOTULA

22 WASHINGTON
R.l.B.
R.T.
63 POLES

W.T.

W.B.

74 ABBEY

20 BARKSDALE
26 M cEWEN

73 MICELI

W.E.

55 GAROFALO
50 DUPREY

R.E.

R.H.B.

80 HELENBROOK
46 SWIDERSKI

40 SELLA
14 GERINGER

87 ASHLEY
89 BURDEN

SPECIALISTS: P.A.T. &amp; F.G. -

TL 3-3005

90 OSCSODAL

PUNTS - 35 SMIGELSKI, 28 HANSEN
KICKOFFS - 90 OSCSODAL

14

�BARTLETT BUICK
3080

~IN

STREET

TF 6-1000

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

OPEL KADETT BULL WAGON
ONLY $1650 (minus art work, of course)

{)

COLGATE UNIVERSITY LINE-UP
Defense

UNIVERSITY

Offense
Split E.
42 HUDDLESTON

L.E.

83 SCHAUTZ
88 McGOWAN

l.H.B.
41 BAUMGARTNER

88 McGOWAN
T.B.
24 HUBBARD

18 LAHTINEN

49 BUCKLEY

LL.B.

L.T.

65 PASKE
63 BECHTEL

76 KAISER

W .T.

70 PAGANO
82 EUBANK

74 STANKOVITS
W.G.

68 MILLER
62 HOFMANN

F.B.

L.G.

14 RADMAN

71 TRIPP

20 MOORADIAN

62 HOFMANN

s.

c.

43 WILSON

66 HARRIS
50 MINK

23 MEASE
R.G .

60 ST. PIERRE
61 SHUMICK

R.L.B.
32 ILG

37 GRIMES

12 PLATT

S.G.

25 MARK

64 JUREDINE
78 CHANDLER

.&lt;.T.
S.T.

77 ALLEN
60 ST. PIERRE

W .B.

47 SHOFF

18 LAHTINEN
21 ZETZ

Q.B.

74 STANKOVITS
75 SCHNEIDER

R.H.B.

33 PORT

R.E.

87 O'HARA

S.E.

23 MEASE

85 DAVIS

86 O ' HARA

SPECIALISTS
PUNTS -

14 RADMAN

PLACE-KICKS

-

PLAZA

74 STANKOVITS

15

ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSO CO.
AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Cards
LEES DRUGS
GUSTAV A. FRISCH. Jeweler
KOEGL'S BAKERY
LEO ARDO'S RESTAUR T
M and T TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
STYLE CRE T ME 'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP
ULBRICH'S- Stationery
FEDERAL MEATS
THE PLAID SHOP
DEALS JEWELERS
YOUR MATERNITY SHOP
AEXANDER KATZ and
LOU KROP . Optometrist
EVAN - Gift and Cards
W. T. GRANT CO.
FA Y FARMER
AMHERST
Clothe Tree, Inc.
JOH SO 'S-Amherst Bootery

�1966 VARSITY SCHEDULE

Sept. 18

Kent State

15

Dayton Univ.

away

22

Boston College

away

Touchdown! Dick Ashley,
fine Sophomore End, goes in
for six with a pass.

29

Holy Cross

home

iC

home

by
Ivan
Cover photo
Makuch, U. B. Spectrum.

Sept. 24

Cornell

home

Oct.

Villanova

home

Oct.

8

Boston Univ.
Nov. 12

COVER

Oct.
Oct.

Oct.

THE

away

away

Nov.

5

Tampa

Delaware

J

away

BUFFALO BULLS 1965 ROSTER

J0NEs•
RI cH
MI LK
c0RP.
"It's Flavor Guarded"

70 E. FERRY STREET
TT 3-4080

No.
*14
*16
17
18
20
22
24
25
26
28
30
32
34
35
36
*38
*40
*44
46
48
*50
*52
*55
56
58
61
62
*63
67
*68
69
*70
*71
72
73
74
75
76
78
*79
*80
81
83
*84
85
*86
87
88
89
*90

Name

Pos.

Age

Ht.

Wt.

Hometown

DHB
HB-QB
QB
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
K
FB
FB
HB
HB
FB
FB
DHB
HB
HB
HB
LB
C-LB
LB

20
19
18
21
19
18
21
22
21
19
18
19
18
21
19
20
19
22
21
19
21
20
22
19
19
19
19
22
19
21
23
20
21
18
20
20
19
20
19
22
21
19
21
21
21
20
20
18
21
22

5-9
5-9
6-0
5-9
5-11
5-9
5-9
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-1
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-9
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-1
5-10
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-1
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-2
5-11
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-1
5-10

165
180
190
170
170
186
170
160
195
172
210
185
190
180
200
210
175
170
184
192
215
210
205
225
195
200
215
225
230
210
215
225
230
200
220
215
212
230
235
220
210
195
191
220
225
200
215
180
190
158

Danville, Pa.
Utica, N. Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Woonsocket, R. I.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Rochester, N. Y.
Marcy, N.Y.
Watertown, N. Y.
Solvey, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Depew, N.Y.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Manlius, N. Y.
Utica, N.Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Peru, N.Y.
Lyons, N.Y.
Gloversville, N. Y.
Kenmore, N. Y.
E. Smethport, Pa.
Riverhead, L. I.
Coatesville, Pa.
Rochester, N. Y.
Newport, R. I.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Batavia, N. Y.
Peru, Ind.
E. Syracuse, N. Y.
Utica, N. Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Binghamton, N. Y.
Saranac Lake, N. Y.
Auburn, N. Y.
Cranston, R. I.
Massena, -N. Y.
New Bedford, Mass.
Franklin Square, L. I.
Buffalo, N. Y.

Class

Geringer, Frederick
Capuana, Nicholas
Wells, Richard
Ridolfi, Ronald
Barksdale, James
Washington, Bennie
Ridolfi, Thomas
Scalleta, Paul
McEwen, James
Hansen, Brian
Brennan, Thomas
Hoke, Thomas
Sinclair, Robert
Smigelski, John
Jones, Leeland
Przykuta, Dennis
Sella, Daniel
Webber, James
Swiderski, Walter
Hurd, Thomas
Duprey, James
Holly, Joseph (Capt.)
Garafola, Joseph
MacKellar, Bruce
Rishel, Rodney
Botula, Charles
Rissell, Michael
Poles, E. Greenard
Gibbons, Theodore
MacKellar, Russell
Dechowitz, Richard
Pugh, Ronald
Taylor, William
Brisky, Dennis
Miceli, Anthony
Abbey, William
Finochio, James
Wuest, Michael
Pirozzolo, Richard
Ratel, James
Helenbrook, Craig
Lehner, Lawrence
McNamara, James
LaFountain, Gerald
Kleiber, Paul
Dunn, James
Ashley, Richard
Remillard, James
Burden, Dennis
Oscsodal, Joseph

* -Letterman

16

Sr .
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.

c

C-LB
G
G
T
G
DG
G
DT
G
E
T
E

·r
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
K

i

'I

�Whats the Geneseetret. • •
J

UNIVERSITY OF COLGATE 1965 ROSTER
No. Name
11
*12
14
15
lti

18
20

*21
22

i
·I

*23
24
25
27
28
30
31
*32
33
35
37
40
*41
42
*43
44
45
47
*48
*49
50
51
53
57
58
*60
61
62
*63
*64
*65
66
67
*68
69
70
71
72
73
74
*75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
33
85
86
*87
88
*89

*

Class

Lynch, James
Platt, Buford
Radman, Joseph
Brooks, John
Canterna, Ronald
Lahtinen, John
Mooradi.a n, Donald
Zetz, Michael
Ciesluk, John
Mease, William
Hubbard, Marvin
Mark, Robert
Carroll, Larry
Steinberg, Rtchard
Kikla, Samuel
Hansen, Norman
Ilg, Raymond
Port, Paul
Edmunds, Wayne
Grimes, Michael
Boney, Robert
Baumgartner, Karl
Huddleston, John
Wilson, Thomas
Baybak, Victor
Lennon, Michael
Shoff, Harry
Carpenter, Thomas
Buckley, James
Mink, Robert
Damski, Melvin
Klika, William
Kozakowski, Stephen
Justin, Allen
St. Pierre, Richard
Shumick, Tony
Hofmann, Robert
Bechtel, Carroll
Juredine, Martin
Paske, John
Harris, Richard
DeSimone, William
Miller, Raymond
Marean, Allen
Pagano, Carmen
Tripp, Martin
Commerford, Gerald
Fanning, John
Stankovits, Lawrence
Schneider, James
Kaiser, John
Allen, Peter
Smith, Paul
Knapp, William
Chandler, Carlton
Donovan, Anthony
Eubank, Robert
Schautz, Kenneth
Davis, William
O'Hara, Terrence
Clark, Norris
McGowan, John
Clare, Joseph

So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
:So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
::;o.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.

Pos.
QB
QB
FB
QB

s

HB
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
QB
QB
HB
HB
FB
LB

E
HB
LB
HB
HB
E

s

HB
G
HB
FB
HB

c
c
c
c

LB

T
G
G
LB

G
LB
T
G
G
G
T
G
G
T
T
T
T
G
T

c

E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

Ht.
19
21
20
19
19
19
19
21
19
21
19
20
20
20
19
19
20
19
19
19
19
22
20
20
19
19
19
21
22
20
19
20
20
18
21
19
20
20
21
21
18
19
21
20
19
19
19
21
20
20
19
19
19
20
19
21
20
19
19
21
19
21
20

Wt.
5'10"
6'2"
6 '0"
5'7"
6'0"
6'0"
6'0"
6'0"
6'0"
5'10"
6'2"
5'11"
6'0"
6'0"
5'11"
5'8"
6'1"
6'1"
5'9"
6'1"
5'11"
5'10"
6'2"
6'1"
5'10"
6'2"
6'2"
6'0"
5'10"
6'0"
5'10"
5'11"
6'3"
6'2"
6'1"
6'0"
6'0"
5'11"
5'11"
6'2"
6'1"
5'11"
6'2"
6'1"
6'1"
6'3"
5'10"
6'4"
6'3"
6'5"
6'4"
6'1"
6'2"
6'2"
6'0"
6'5"
6'1"
6'2"
6'0"
6'2"
5'10"
6'4"
6'1"

Hometown
172
190
185
150
180
185
197
182
190
175
220
194
165
160
178
178
210
190
187
196
175
170
185
180
185
193
180
185
163
192
185
192
210
215
220
215
200
205
210
226
221
210
226
210
225
228
200
207
229
227
220
228
225
215
186
205
195
200
187
195
182
200
200

Darien, Conn.
Haddon Hgts., N. J.
Lorain, Ohio
Lebanon, Pa.
Freeport, Pa.
Port Henry, N. Y.
Revere, Mass.
Canton, Ohio
Wellesley, Mass.
Nutley, N. J.
Salamanca, N.Y.
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Taylor, Pa.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Monongahela, Pa.
Plainfield, N. J.
Darien, Conn.
Darien, Conn.
Shrewsbury, N. J.
Mt. Hermon
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Stillwater, Okla.
Burnt Hills, N. Y.
Montclair, N. J.
New York, N. Y .
Buffalo, N. Y.
Newville, Pa.
Erie, Pa.
Albany, N. Y.
Coraopolis, Pa.
Roslyn Hgts., N. Y.
Bronx, N.Y.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Schenectady, N. Y.
Wethersfield, Conn.
Canton, Ohio
Harrington Pk., N.J.
Pottstown, Pa.
Cleveland Hgts., 0.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Rome, N.Y.
Providence, R. I.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Binghamton, N. Y.
Arnold, Pa.
Hempstead, N. Y .
Rome, N.Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Milltown, N. J.
Clifton, N. J.
Nutley, N. J.
Winthrop, Mass.
Milton, Mass.
Bradford, Pa.
Chambersburg, Pa.
Avon, Conn.
Larchmont, N. Y.
Bloomfield, N. J.
Birchrunville, Pa.
Mayfield, Ohio
Wilkinsburg, Pa.
Yonkers, N. Y.
Lewistown, Pa.

Denotes Lettermen

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

�COLGATE UNIVERSITY SQUAD

First Row. Left to Right: James Buckle) , Buford Platt, ;\Iartin Juredine, Richard St. Pierre, Captain John Paske, Raymond i\Iiller,
Thomas Carpenter. Karl .Baumgartner, \\'illiam Mease.
Second Row: Terrence O'Hara, Raymond :.riller, Ra) monel Jig, Carroll Bechtel, Norris Clark, Peter Beaulieu , James Schneider, Larry
tanko\its, Thomas Wilson, William Klika.
Third Row: Wayne Edmunds. LalT) Carroll, William Knapp, Stephen Kozakowski, Robert Hofmann , John Lahtinen. Robert Eubank,
John Huddleston, Richard Steinberg, Robert Mark, Theodore Griggs
Fourth Row: John Fanning. Michael Lennon , John Brooks, Norman Hansen, .\nthOn) Dono,an, :.rarvin Hubbard , \\' illiam De Simmone, John Ciesluk, Peter .\lien , James L)nch, amuel Kikla, Carmen Pagano.
Fifth Row: Carlton Chandler, Gerald Commerford, Richard Harris, Robert Boney, Paul Port , Kenneth Schaut£, John Kaiser, :.ranin
Tripp, Paul Smith , i\Ielvin Damski, Harr) Shoff. Donald Mooradian , William Davis, John Canterna.
Sixth Row: George Beck , :.ranager :.rark Janis , Coach Howard Hartman, Coach Chester 0':\'eil, Trainer Lewis Williams, Coach
James .Butterfield, Coach :\'eil Wheelwright, Head Coach Harold Lahar.

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18

�A History of Colgate University
COLG TE UNIVERSITY was founded
in 1819 by the Baptist Education Society of
the State of ew York to prepare young men
for the Baptist ministry. During the 146 years
since, the university has undergone changes
in phy ical appearance and in name but it
still holds closely to the provision of its original charter which states "that if the said
Society ... shall at any time pass any law or
regulation affecting the rights of conscience
... said corporation shall cease and be void."
In 1826 the Hamilton Literary and Theological Institution, as the school was then
known, acquired the nucleus of the present
campus and the first permanent college building, now called \Vest Hall, was erected the
follmving year. The State of Jew York granted
a charter on l\Iarch 26, 1846, empowering the
institution to grant degrees under the name of
Madison University. In 1890, the name was
finally changed to Colgate University in recognition of the generous service and devotion
of members of the Colgate family for nearly
seventy years.
The present site of Colgate University was
determined by the purchase in 1826 of one
hundred twenty acres of land from Samuel
and Betsy Payne. Various additions have been
made until now the university grounds include
one thousand acres of which the original one
hundred twenty comprise the campus proper.
DR. VINCENT MacDO\VELL BARNETT
President

Whitnall Field, covering 27 acres on one level, is
in a beautiful natural setting which provides a colorful
arena for intercollegiate and intramural sports. The
Field includes the varsity football stadium with accommodations for more than 15,000; varsity baseball
diamond, enclosed within the general area, seating
2,500; varsity practice field, freshman football field,
soccer and lacrosse areas and five auxiliary fields. The
\Villiam A. Reid Athletic Center contains team
rooms, indoor practice space, the Starr Hockey Rink,
coaches' offices, and eight bowling Janes among its
features.

which, with the "carry over" sports program, makes
possible a sports for all emphasis.
Since it fielded its first football team in 1890, Colgate has maintained a tradition in independence in
sports. Although not a member of a conference, the
University has long been associated with and is active
in the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the
Eastern College Athletic Conference and the Ea tern
Intercollegiate Football Association.
As traditional as its independence is the spmt
which has long been a trade mark of the Red Raider
teams and of the student body. \Vith an enrollment
that numbers slightly more than 1,600 men, Colgate
has taken the field against schools many times larger
and can point with pardonable pride to a record
which few school its size can equal.

Other facilities incorporated in the outdoor program include nine tennis courts and the 18-hole Seven
Oaks Golf Course. pecial provision has been made
both indoors and in Huntington Gymnasium for
adequate space for the extensive Intramural program

19

�Coaching Staff

Front R ow, Left to Right: Thomas Parnell, Jame Butterfield, Chester 0'1'\eill
Back R ow: Howard Hartman, Neill ·w heelwright, Head Coach Harold Lahar

KICK your Money Worries
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with a low-cost loan from Bank of Buffalo. Borrow for College
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any worthwhile purpose. Just dial 854-4950 and pick up the
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BAN I( OF BUFFALO
Member : Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

20

�EVERETT D. BAR1 ES
Director of Physical Education and Athletics
Colgate University
President, .Vational Collegiate Athletic Association
Everett D. Barnes was appointed Director of Physical
Education and .\thletics at Colgate t:ni\ersity in 1955 . .\ grad·
uate of Colgate in 1922. he is the third .\thletic Director in the
college's history, following in the footsteps of Dr. Ellery C.
Huntington and " ' illiam .\. Reid.
In January, 1965 , he was elected president of the :\ational
Collegiate .\thletic .\ssociation. He is also president of the
United States Baseball Federation and of the Eastern Inter·
collegiate Football Association, was a founder and first president
of the .\merican .\ssociation of College Baseball Coaches, and is
a past president of the Eastern College Athletic Conference, of
the IC.\ .\ .\ ,\, and of the Ice Hockey .\ssociation of .\merica. He
has sened as chairman of the :\C.\ .\ Ol)mpic Baseball Commiuee and has been a leader in auempts to improve relations
with professional baseball.
~Ir. Barnes was born in Ossining and recei\ ed his secondary
education at Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn. ,\fter
earning his degree at Colgate. he studied business administration
at :\ew York l ' niyersity and physical education at Syracuse
Uni\ersity.

One of Colgate's outstanding baseball and basketball players,
he played professional baseball with the Piushurgh Pirates in the
late twenties. He left a career in business and banking to return
to his alma mater in 1939 as baseball coach and assistant
athletic director. In 19+9. he relinquished his coachin" duties in
0
fa\·or of administrati\e work.

HAL LAHAR
Head Football Coach
Assistant Director of Athletics
Harold \\' . Lahar has sened as head football coach at
Colgate University since 1952 with the exception of the period
from 1957 through 1961 when he held a similar position at the
niversity of Houston.
He was named assistant director of athletics in 1965. He is
also an assistant professor of physical education.
In 1964, his Red Raider football team reached a 30-year
high with a record of seven wins and two losses. The team's
succe earned him the nomination of :'\ortheast Coach of the
Year.
Lahar, 46, is a nati\e of Durant. Oklahoma, and is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma. Class of 1941. While with
the Sooners, he played in the 1938 Orange Bowl Classic as an
interior lineman , captained the 19+0 ele\en and played for
three years with the golf team.
Upon graduation, he joined the Chicago Bears and was a
member of the national championship team of 1941 . He spent
the war )ears as a naval officer in the South Pacific. returning
to pro football in I 9.J6 as captain of the Buffalo Bills of the
old .\1!- \merica Conference.
He embarked on his coaching career in 1949 as an aide at
.\rkansas. The next two vears found him in a similar role at
" ' est Virginia and the wit;ter of 1952 saw him enroute to Pittsburgh when Colgate offered him the post as its head coach.
Poised and given to an easy smile that punctuates his
drawl , Lahar is an excellent golfer, a witty speaker and an
enthusiastic audience. He is married to the former Dorothy
Carter of Bartlesville, Oklahoma, and shares their new home
with a son. Gary, and a daughter, Karla.

21

�COLGATE

RICHARD LEE

THOl\IAS \VILSON

BUFORD PLATT

ROBERT l\IINK

RAYl\IOND l\IILLER

22

]Al\IES BUCKLEY

�UNIVERSITY

NORRIS CLARK

JOSEPH CLARE

K. BAUi\IGARTNER

TERRANCE O'HARA

CARROL BECHTEL

PETER BEAULIEU

MICHAEL ZETZ

23

ROBERT l\IARK

�COLGATE
UNIVERSITY

24

�BUFFALO TRAINING STAF F

Bill Andrews; Jim Simon, Head Trainer; Norb Baschnagel

CAPPELLI N I'S REST AU RANT
and
CATERERS, INC.

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.
HEATING Power Plants -

AIR CONDITIONING

Pro cess Piping -

Fire Prot ection

•

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TL 4-8435

120 W. TUPPER

NIAGARA STREET

FRONTIER MICROFILM, INC.

The Women of

• • •
128 SO. ELMWOOD

.

SIGMA KAPPA PHI

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14202

boost the Bulls
TL 3-7182

25

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFFALO

(3-3-2 )

Attendance

6
13

Boston College

18

Tampa

13

8,016

18
7

Massachusetts
Boston U.

6
14

10,200
7,314

24

Richmond

0

7,705

Dayton

0

6,096

0
7
22

Holy Cross
Delaware

RUSHING
Player
Att.
Net
Lee Jones
437
90
*Rick Wells
97
286
219
Jim Webber
69
Tom Hurd
37
111
Dennis Przykuta
27
99
Nick Capuana
28
46
Bennie Washington 2
11
Tom Brennan
10
1
Fred Geringer
1
1
Jim Barksdale
-5
9
Ron Ridolfi
- 11
9

21,700

20

7,500

0

10,401

71

78,932

Nov. 13
Colgate
Nov. 20 at Villanova

370
97

3.2

1,204

TEAl\1 TOTALS
Buffalo
First downs

Avg.
4.8
2.9
3.1
3.0
3.6
1.6
5.5
10.0
1.0
0.0
0.0

(8 Games)
Opponents
92

95

Rushes, net yds., avg. 370 for 1,204 (3.2) 324 for 634 (1.9)
PASSING
Player

Att.

*Rick Wells

Comp.
23

63
29

Ron Ridolfi
Nick Capuana
Fred Geringer

8
9

8
4

14

2

Passes
Int.

0
1

0

Yds.

TD's

349

4

128

2

47

1

0

35 for 108 ( 524 yds.)

Pet. completions
Total off.

0

1, 728 yds. in 4 78 plays

Interceptions

13 for 172 yds.

Fumbles

26 (lost 13)

Penalties
Totals

108

18

35

524

76 for 166 (933 yds l
45.8

32.4

45 for 461 yards

1,567 yds. in 490 plays
18 for 308 yds.
23 (lost 12)
32 for 281 yards

7

Students ...

The John W.

'i i'YAMAHA
Big Wheels on Campus

Cowper Co.

SUBURBAN CYCLES, Ltd.
3165 MAIN ST. near UB Campus
Open Daily til 6 P.M.
Thurs. &amp; Fri. til 9 P.M.
836-5765

INCORPORATED

Engineers -

Contractors

LET'S MEET AFTER THE GAME AT THE . ..

•
OLD

873-4200

POST

ROAD

INN

Post Office Box 1068
1945 Sheridan Drive

3151 Main Street

Buffalo, New York 14240

26

Buffalo, N. Y. 14214

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
INTERCEPTIONS &amp; RETURNS
Player
No.
Yardage
Gerry LaFountain
3
109
Dan Sella
2
17
Nick Capuana
2
14
Joe Holly
2
0
Tom Hurd
1
21
Jim Duprey
1
7
Joe Garofalo
1
4
Tom Ridolfi
1
0
SCORING
*Rick Wells (4 TD's rushing, 2 PAT runs)
Dick Ashley (4 TD's pass rec.)
Joe Oscsodal (7 PAT's, 2 FG)
Jim Dunn ( 1 TD pass rec.)
Jim Barksdale (1 TD pass rec.)
Gerry LaFountain (1 TD, pass int. ret.)
Jim Webber (1 TD rushing)
Dennis Burden (1 TD, pas rec.)
Jim McNamara (1 PAT, pass rec.)

RECEIVING
Player

Jim Dunn
Dick Ashley
Tom Hurd
Dennis Burden
Jim Webber
Jim Barkslade
Bennie Washington
Jim McNamara

Pts.
28
24
13
6
6
6
6
6
2
97

TD's

Yards

Receptions

1
4
0
1
0
1
0
0

127
207
71
39
30
23
18
9

13
10
4
3
2
1
1
1
PUNTING

Player
Brian Hansen
John Smigelski
Tom Hurd

PUNT RETURNS
Yardage
No.
Player
139
11
Tom Hurd
95
10
Dan Sella
64
6
Nick Capuana
29
1
*Rick Wells
7
2
Fred Geringer
KICKOFF RETURNS
No.
Yardage
Player
5
119
Nick Capuana
3
71
Jim McEwen
52
3
Tom Hurd
2
50
*Rick Wells
1
24
Jim Webber

No.

Average

35
10
1

34.0
30.4
25.0

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SLITTING

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CORPORATION
NT 4-1020
2555 Walden Avenue

•

Buffalo, N. Y. 14225

27

�1965 FOOTBALL RULES CHANGES
The rule limiting the height of a tee for place kicks

The most important rule change in col lege football

has been amended to permit a two-inch tee.

for the 1965 season is the adjustment in the regulation
governing substitutions which permit:

The rule governing free kicks out of bounds between
goal lines ha been changed. If such a kick goes out of

( 1) Two eligible substitutes of either team to enter

bounds untouched inbounds by Team B it is a foul.

the game a t any time before the ball is put in
play.

In order to emphasize the restriction on ''spearing"

( 2 ) Any number of substitutes of either team to enter

maliciously butt or ram an opponent has been broadened

the rule prohibiting the use of the helmet or head to
the game between periods, after a score or try,

to include any part of an adversary's body.

when Team B is awarded a first down or when,
.\ few minor changes include the permission, to use

following a kick, Team A is awarded a first down.

by mutual agreement, a ball with two white stripes:
This revision wi ll a llow the use of specialists at any
time with the same freedom of u tilization as in 1964.

provides that the game clock be stopped when Team B
is awarded a first down or when following a kick Team

nlimited sub titutions when team possession changes is

A is awarded a first down; and se\·eral other adju t-

the major change. R esorting to the commission of a foul

ments made to conform with the 1964 rule change

to stop the clock in order to make more than two subti tutions as in 1964 is not now possible.

governing scrimmage kicks which cross the line of
scrimmage.

Uuturr.atty
salui£s

iuffaln iulln
A DY'

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KITCHE

B RBA

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BATT CO. HE TI G &amp; PLUMBING

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ELL LUC

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OL'S ESQUIRE SHIRT LAU DRY, INC.

COLO IAL HOU E RESTAURANT

MARl E TR ST COMP

Yniversity Office

28

�BUFFALO BULLS

RICHARD ASHLEY

~fiCHAEL

RISSELL

RODNEY RISHEL

SUPPORT THE BULLS- GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW
I wis h t o purchase . ..... . ... season tickets for 1966. No payment required until billed July 1st.
Name

.... . .... . ......... . .. . .. . ............. . . . ....... Telephone

................ . ...... . ........... . ....... .

Address ....... . ..... . ................ . .. . ... . .... · . · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·. · · · · · · · · · . ........ . . . . .. ... . ..... . .... .
City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zone . . . . . . . . . State .. . . . . .. ................ .
Fill out the application and mail to Ticket Office, Clark Gym, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214

SCIENTIFIC

EQUIPMENT

and

MEDICAL SUPPLIES
for

• INDUSTRY

• PHYSICIANS
• SCHOOL

• HOME

• HOSPITAL

JEFFREY-FELL CO., INC.
1700 MAl N ST.

Phone TT 3 - 1700

29

BFLO., NEW YORK 14209

�PROGRAM PATRONS

Pearce &amp; Pearce

Matthew J. Pantera,

Jr.

University Manor Motel

Matthew J. Pantera,

r.

E. P. Lauer, Optician

Arthur F. Movalli

Ben Kurtz Insurance

Arthur Mogerman

Charles W. Moses "Insurance"

Edward F. Mimmack

Bob Kerner Restaurant

Wallace H. Miller

inatra's Centre

Leo M. Michalek

Hunt Real Estate Corporation

Frank Meyers

Aurora Building &amp; upply, Inc.

Harold F. Meese

Brunner Tavern

J. Eugene McMahon

"Top Market"

James C. McGarvey

Bocce Club Pizzeria

Anthony J. Manzella

Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.

David J. Mahoney, Jr.
amuel D. Magavern

Rich Products Corp.
Robert

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lipsitz

. Wolf on

Fred H. White

Stephen F. Kissel

Joseph C. Vispi

Rudolph U. Johnson

Irvin L. Terry
Daniel T.

heldon Hurwitz

zymoniak

William J. Hildebrand,

Harlan J. Swift

Donald W. Hall

James R.

Anthony

ullivan

[n Memory of a Friend
)i{r. and Mrs. George
Gerard E.

Jr.

. Gugino

George L. Grobe, Jr.
eifert

Lewis J. Greenky

chultz

A. Donald Gilden

Gerald C. Saltarelli

In Memory of Dom Grossi

Hugh Me M. Russ

Edward D. Flaherty

Albert G. Rowe

Robert D. Fernbach

Che ter P. Glor, .Jr.

Edward H. Farnham

Leo J. Rosen

Robert .J. Ehrenreich

William R. Root

George E. Easterbrook

30

�James P. Donnelly

Louis A. Vendetti

Arnold E. DiLaura

Gertrude S. Swartout

John F. Connelly

Carlton C. Rausch

Ros M. Cellino

Robert W. Lipsett

John F. Canale

Russell Kidder, Jr.

Max W. Burstein

Charles F. Banas

Walter Brock

Robert R. Barrett

Francis B. Borowiec

William H. Georgi

Melvin L. Bong

.J. Edwin Alford

Stanley B. Blach

Harold E. Sippel

Bertram Portin

Donald R. Barber

Willard H. Bernhoft

Kevin Kennedy

Owen B. Augsburger

Fenton F. Harrison

Charles 1. McDonough

Roy E. Seibel

Charles H. Diefendorf

Ernest L. Colucci

Edwin F. J aeckle

Herbert R. Reitz
Sanford B. Sugarman

eymour H. Knox
M. Robert Koren

Samuel Shatkin

Louis J. Russo

Mr. and Mrs. William George Willis

Robert J. Metzen

James T. McFarland

Francis C. Hornung

Emil J. Celmer
Thomas C. McDonald

eymour Schuller

Harold A. Adel

John H. Dittman

Lewis Goldstein

Norman Haber

amuel Battaglia

Abraham N. Carrel

Warren Jack W aldrow

William L. Marcy

Allen V. Gibbons

Roger T. Cook

William Rathke

Douglas H. Brock

S. Howard Payne

Norman B. Lewis
Fred S. Schwarz

Charles May

John A. Krull

Harold M. Harris
tanley J. Zambron

James W. Jordan
Frank T. Riforgiato

Louis DeVincentis

Gerald 1. Lankes

George

Leonard Swagler
Fred B. Wilkes

Kenneth M. Alford
Vincent Scamurra

George M. Masotti

Charles Matthews

31

elkirk

�1965-1966

SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
SEPTEMBER
24- at Army Plebes
OCTOBER
8- at Colgate Frosh
15- at Navy Plebes
3
Manlius School
NOVEMBER
5- Ithaca College Frosh
12- at Syracuse Frosh
VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY
SEPTEMBER
25- at Syracuse
28- Canisius &amp; State
OCTOBER
2- at Invitational LeMoyne
5- at RIT
9- Brockport
13- Niagara
16- Cortland
23- at LeMoyne - Colgate
27- at Fredonia State
30- at Invitational Canisius
NOVEMBER
2- at Gannon
6- at Alfred
13- at Cortland NYSCYT
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTEMBER
20- St. Bonaventure
22- Canisius
28- Niagara
30- State
OCTOBER
1- McMaster
5- at Canisius
7- at St. Bonaventure
12- at Niagara
14- at State
19- at McMaster
VARSITY BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
! - Brockport State
4- at Syracuse
10-at Ithaca College
11- at Albany State
14- Penn State at Mem. Aud.
18- Bucknell
21- San Francisco State
JANUARY
14--Colgate
15---Akron at Mem. Aud.
20- at Western Ontario
25- Toronto
28- Plattsburgh State
29- Northern Illinois at Mem. Aud.
FEBRUARY
2- Cornell at Mem. Aud.
4- at Winds or
5- at Wayne State
at Niagara
10- Buffalo State at Mem. Aud.
16-at Alfred
19- Albany State
26- Kent State at Mem. Aud.

MARCH
1- at Rochester
VARSITY SWIMMING
DECEMBER
4- Cortland
7- at State
11- at Syracuse
16- at Brockport State
JANUARY
15---Toronto
22- Western Ontario
29- at Toronto
FEBRUARY
2- State
5- Colgate
8- Niagara
12- at Oswego
19- at Rochester
23- Geneseo
26- at St. Bonaventure
MARCH
1- at Niagara
5---Upper N. Y . Syracuse
VARSITY WRESTLING
JANUARY
15- 0ntario Ag.
21- at RIT
25---Brockport
28- Plattsburgh
FEBRUARY
4- at Colgate
5- at Oswego
8- Toronto
11- at Cortland
12- at Ithaca
16-Alfred
19- Western Ontario
2
Rochester
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
! - Brockport State
4-at Syracuse
10- at Ithaca
11- to be announced
14- to be announced
15- at St. Bonaventure
18- to be announced
21- to be announced
JANUARY
14- Colgate
21- to be announced
25- Canisius
28- to be announced
. FEBRUARY
2- Cornell at Mem. Aud.
8-at Niagara
10- Buffalo State at Mem. Aud.
i6- at Alfred
19- St. Bonaventure
21- at Canisius
25- Buffalo State
MARCH
1- at Rochester

32

FRESHMAN SWIMMING
DECEMBER
4- Cortland
7- at Buffalo State
11- at Syracuse
16- at Brockport
JANUARY
15- Toronto
22- Western Ontario
29- at Toronto
FEBRUARY
2- Buffalo State
5---Colgate
8- Niagara
12- at Oswego
19- at Rochester
26- at St. Bonaventure
MARCH
1- at Niagara
VARSITY BASEBALL
APRIL
18- RIT
23- at Colgate
27- at Syracuse
29-Geneseo
30- at RIT
MAY
4- St. Bonaventure ( 2) games
10-at Rochester
FRESHMAN BASEBALL
MAY
7- Brockport
Remainder of schedule
to be announced.
VARSITY FENCING
DECEMBER
3- at McMaster
11- at Cornell
17- at Syracuse
JANUARY
15- McMaster
22- RIT
FEBRUARY
5---at Hobart
1
at Oberlin (CSV Fenn)
19- at Case, Western Reserve-Case
26- Syracuse
MARCH
5- Hobart - Notre Dame
12-at Drew - North Atlantic
25- NCAA
26-NCAA
FRESHMAN FENCING
DECEMBER
11- at Cornell
17- at Syracuse
JANUARY
22-RIT
FEBRUARY
5---at Hobart
19- at RIT
26-Syracuse
MARCH
5---Hobart

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®OOCECE~CErn3QD00ffi[]:00~
as you like 'em!
... cheddar goodness
... nippy 'n' tangy
... grilled to taste
... with 100% pure &amp;eef
... served piping hot
••• on toasted bun
... m'm'm'm'm good!
TRY 'EM- YOU'RE SURE TO LIKE 'EM!

-look lOt the golden a"/oesl

McDonaldS

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

e

Just Past Boulevard Mall
3424 SHERIDAN DR. AT SWEET HOME RD.
Down Bailey Ave. Turn Right at Sheridan

BOTH LOCATIONS- 5 MINUTES FROM CAMPUS

�·I "'

Can a Leopard change his spots?
Your Simon Pure Man is starting to think so. He has seen a lot
of tigers, young bucks and gay dogs switch to fresh-tasting
Simon Pure Beer and who can tell where it will all end?
Try Simon Pure ... the great light beer with everything about
it premium except the price. Take some home ... watch your
kitten start purring.
The William Simon Brewery, Buffalo, New York,
"Buffalo's Only Independent Brewers."

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                    <text>�ElEGANCE

DINING
SUTTON MASSACHUSETTS

Delightful Decor I Unsurpassed Food I Unmatched Setting
Music by JOHNNY MASON

•

Dinner- Dancing Saturday Evenings-RAY MORTON'S ORCHESTRA

* *** *

SITE OF THE 1965 CARLING WORLD GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP

PLEASANT VALLEY MOTOR LODGE
Worcester Area's Newest, Most Luxurious Accommodations, Adjacent to Country Club.
Ten Minutes from Mount St. James
Route 146

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Worcester· Providence Turnpike

Reservations: Motor Lodge 865·5222

Country Club 865·4441

HOME CO-OPERATIVE

BANK
282 MAIN STREET
WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS
Edward C. Maher, President
Class of '40
William A. Dean, Jr., Vice President
Class of '36
Edward R. Bryson, Treasurer
Class of '58
Leo W. Malboeuf, Director
Class of '32
Robert J. Cousy, Director
Class of '50

�BEST WISHES FROM
NEW ENGLAND'S LARGEST

Worcester Federal Savings
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
RAYMOND P. HAROLD, President

Dedicated to Thrift and Home Ownership Since 1877

HOME OFFICE· 22 ELM ST., WORCESTER, MASS.
BRANCH OFFICE· MAIN &amp; SANFORD, SPRINGFIELD, MASS.

Resources over
ONE QUARTER BILLION DOLLARS

�Guaranty Bank &amp; Trust Co.
Steady Progress Through Sound Helpful
Banking

MESSIER'S DINER INC.

Worcester, Auburn, Grafton, Leominster,
Southbridge, Sturbridge, Westboro, Mass.
SHELL ROOM
The Best in Seafoods &amp; Steaks

Me mber F.D.l.C.
Full License Privileges
Lobsters Our Specialty

"GOOD LUCK CRUSADERS"
Plenty of Parking Room

OlYMPIC SPORTS CO.

PL 7-1188

49 Millbury St.

204 Main Street
Worcester, Massachusetts

Austin W. Keane
Class of 1947

Tel: Pleasant 6·6281

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

WASHINGTON

PRESS

OF

WORCESTER,

110 West Boylston Drive • Worcester 6, Massachusetts

2

INC.

�FITTON FIELD INFORMATION

REFRESHMENTS
Soft

drinks,

candies,

sandwiches,

peanuts, cigars, cigarettes ore offered

for sale at stands operated for the
convenience of the spectators. Re-

In order that there be no confusion among those who leave their se a ts
during the halves, patrons are requested to retain the stubs of their tickets
that designates their section and seat number.

re;h men I stands are located under
Section 2, 13, 16.

Frankfurters
Coffee

25c
15c

Candy
Cigars
Cigarettes
King Size Cigarettes
Tonic
Coca Cola

lOc
15c
35c
40c
15c
15c

Rest Roams

CJ

I II 11 -----~
I (2o) I(ls) I ~-@;;;_s---l..J.--®-=-North Press Box

Ladies-Men

D .,g~

0~

0

i

~o
0

~0

.=o
v

TELEPHONES

0

Public Telephones are locoled be-

"C

hind Section

""c

0
0

13 adjacent Ia ex-

0

change booth.

"~"

REST ROOMS
Rest Rooms are located underneath

Refreshments

Men

the stands. Ladies' rest roams are
under Sections 11-12 and 20. Men's

Public Telephones ore located behind
Section 13 adjacent to exchange booth.

rest rooms ore under Sections 8-9;
15-16 and 20.

How do athletes
handle athlete's foot?
They follow their trainers' advice and
use Desenex" for prevention and treatment
It's excellent protection against itching, cracking
and irritation of Athlete's Foot. Helps prevent
spreading, too. No wonder Desenex is the Athlete's
Foot treatment most widely used by college football trainers.
We know you don't have a trainer to keep you on
your toes. But that's no reason to suffer from Athlete's Foot. Start using Desenex yourself. Avoid
Athlete's Foot problems with Desenex Powder or
new, cooling Desenex Aerosol - and for treatment
use Desenex Ointment. Desenex is guaranteed to
work or your money back.

WTS-PHARMACRAFT, Rochester, N.Y. 14603

3

�The Bentley Contemporary console with RCA Hi-Lite Color Tube for brightest picture ever from RCA Victor

Get set for
the color kickoff

e
u

Coming up for the Action Crowd , the most exciting color TV season ever. And if this is your year for color TV

remember: RCA has more experience in color development than anybody. Doesn't it stand to reason that
the most experienced one will give you the most true-to-life, troublefree, perfected Color TV? See it at your dealer's now.
The Most Trusted Name in Electr:~:::

~ RCA VICTOR BRINGS YOU NCAA AND AFL FOOTBALL EVERY WEEK IN COLOR.

" tiSMASTU'S YOK:('

O'COINS
239 MILL STREET
WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS
4

�OFFICIAL WATCH
FOR THIS GAME

HolyCross
Football
October 30, 1965

Fitton Field

Th e Buffalo Game

*******
LON
GINES
THE WORLD'S

MOST HONORED
WATCH

Features
8 A Look Back and A Look Ahead
We see the highlights of the Boston University game through the lens of photographer
Dave Lehan and we discuss the happenings of the past two weeks as well as what's in
store from Buffalo this afternoon.

10 The Holy Cross Freshman Football Team
How strong is the current Holy Cross freshman football team? Its big test may come
tomorrow afternoon when the Boston College freshmen visit Fitton Field. We take a brief
look at the Holy Cross personnel and season to date.

13 Parents' Weekends
One of the most popular parts of the football season for the students and the parents
at Holy Cross are the two parents' weekends so ably run by the Purple Key. Kevin McVeigh,
the Purple Key chairman, takes. us through a typical weekend.

35 On Sports, Spectators and Education
Dr. Harold Bowen, the President of the University of Iowa, discusses the found·
ations of intercollegiate athletics in this NCAA-prepared article.

37 The Scholar-Athlete
Wiles Hallock, the NCAA Director of Public Relations, discusses the Association's scholar·
ship program whereby outstanding student-athletes at its member colleges qualify for
$1,000 postgraduate scholarships.

39 The University of Buffalo
The roots of the University of Buffalo date back to 1846 and it has long been an educa·
tiona! and cultural center in Western New York. We take a brief glance at the scope of
the recently renamed State University of New York at Buffalo.

Departments
3
7
15
16
21
22
24
25

Fitton Field Information
The Editor Takes Time Out
Presidents and Athletic Directors
Holy Cross Players
Holy Cross Roster
Holy Cross Coaches
Holy Cross Lineup
Buffalo Lineup

27
29
30
43
45
47
48

Buffalo Coaches
Buffalo Roster
Buffalo Players
The Opponents
Songs of Holy Cross
Other Fall Sports
Penalty Signals

longines S·Star Admiral Automatic with Calendar,
AII·Proof!l, sweep-second, 14K gold strap·$185.00

flk./iitgbles{jer/iJ
Every Longines watch,
whatever its type, for whatever
THE HOLY CROSS ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
Faculty Moderator, Rev. John F. Devlin, S.J.
Director of Athletics, Eugene F. Flynn, '22
Business Manager of Athletics, Joseph W. McDonough, '48
Director of Sports Information, Joseph P. Concannon
This Program published by the Washington Press of Worcester, Inc.
Joseph P. Concannon, Editor
Joseph W. McDonough , Advertising Manager
Editorial Contributors:
Joe Marcin,
Kevin McVeigh '66,
Wiles Hallock,
Dr. Harold Bowen,
Phil Mclaughlin '67
Pictures by: Marvin Richmond Studios, Danny Pitts, Dave Lehan, Buffalo Sports
Information Office, The Worcester Telegram.
Represented for National Advertising by SPENCER ADVERTISING COMPANY

its use, today, as for almost
a century, is manufactured to
be the finest of its kind and
worthy in every respect to be called
The World's Most Honored Watch

LONGINES-WITINAUER WATCH CO.
MONTREAL
NEW YORK
GENEVA
Maker of Watches of the Highest Character Since 1867

5

�PE NN Y EDWAIIIOS-''MISS TIPIIIIIILL0''

What does she mean "cigars ... cigarettes ...Tiparillos"?
You'll be hearing that chant more and
more- now that Ti pari Ilos have arrived.
And arrived they have. In all the right
places. With all the right people.
The new Tiparillo has a neat, trim
shape. It looksyoungand debonair. And
its pearly, pliable tip pays more than
lip service to your smoking pleasure.

And never before such mildness!
The most careful blending of choicest
imported tobaccos has seen to that.
So, too, has the exclusive, veinless
Ultra Cigar Wrapper* that burns so
evenly and smoothly it insures complete mildness.
You can even see the mildness. The

surprisingly whiter ash is visible evidence. Smoker's proof. Here is flavor
you don't have to inhale to enjoy.
"Cigars .. . cigarettes ... ?" Who
knows, maybe someday it will be just
"Tiparillos!"
Why don't you ask for one today?

Tiparillos are on sale at this stadium.
6

• r.M. GENERAL CIGIIIIt CO,

�The Editor
Takes Time Out
The University of Buffalo long ago
set this up as an objective game. You
see, the Bulls have never beaten Holy
Cross in the recently-made annual
series. Holy Cross has won four times
and tied once ( 1963). Each year
Buffalo sets its sights on catching a
team it has never before defeated.
Two years ago it was Villanova and
last year it was VMI. This year the
Buffalo office informs us the target
is Holy Cross. We might point out,
however, that Buffalo has already
chalked up a "first" then it scored its
first victory over Massachusetts, 18-6,
earlier this Fall. Isn't it best to take
them one at a time?

The newly-formed Holy Cross varsity soccer team hopes to catch some
of the early-comers this morning when
it plays Fairfield in an 11:30 game on
the adjoining baseball field. The new
field was set up for the home opener
against Stonehill two weeks ago and
it worked out well. The Stonehill
coach noted that it was the best field
his team had played on in its six
games to date. The Crusaders have
two remaining home dates against
Norwich (Nov. 5) and Rhode Island
(Nov. 10).

We're hoping that today's game
program can see double-duty service.
The article on pages 10-11 delves with
the personnel on the current Holy
Cross freshman football team that
makes its big home appearance of the

Fall tomorrow afternoon ( 2: 00)
against arch-rival Boston College. A
separate one-page program will be put
together for complete lineups but the
editorial copy takes you a little more
into depth. Please note on your calendars that the second Holy CrossBoston College freshman game-originally scheduled for next Saturday
afternoon (Nov. 6) at Chestnut Hill
-has been changed to next Sunday
(Nov. 7). Game time is 2 p.m. at
BC's Alumni Stadium.

Can you picture big tackle Mike
Addesa on a pair of hockey skates?
Well, Mike is one of those who does
turn to the sport come Winter. Holy
Cross football manager Jack Hodges
is one of his teammates and this pair
makes a weekly trio up the Mass Pike
each Sunday to see the Boston Bruins
in action at the Boston Garden. The
sport of hockey has a lasting appeal
for those once bitten with the bug and
we're happy to note it might at last
be gaining a foothold at Holy Cross.
Bill Kane, the coach at Nichols College for the past four years, was appointed the new head coach at Holy
Cross this past Summer. His first call
for candidates goes out in another
week (Nov. 8). The sport will
remain more on a club basis for another year but plans call for varsity
status then.

With six games "on the road" this
Fall it's reassuring to know that the

play-by-play broadcasts are once
again in the capable hands of WTAG
sportscaster Bob Gamere. His color
man this Fall is Tom Reardon, who
has the nightly "Talk of the Town"
show on WTAG. Gamere and Reardon were classmates at Holy Cross,
Class of 1962, and are graduates of
the campus station WCHC. This is
Gamere's third season on the air for
the Crusaders and he does an outstanding job. The "third man" on the
WTAG team is producer-engineer
Don Spencer who is the popular host
of his own show, "Concert Hall,"
heard nightly on WT AG.

The Holy Cross basketball team
makes an appearance in Buffalo this
Winter when the Crusaders compete
in the annual Queen City Tournament on Dec. 30 and Jan. 1. Holy
Cross is scheduled to play host Canisius in the first-round game with
Memphis State and Drake meeting in
the opener. The winners square off
New Year's night.

This is the last game at Fitton Field
for almost a month. The Crusaders
take to the road for the next three
weeks at Massachusetts, Rutgers and
Connecticut before returning for the
traditional season finale against Boston College. We remind you that tickets are still available for all four
remaining games and will be op sale
at the Athletic Association ticket office
following the game today.

7

�H

s

w

0
L

0
p
H
0
M
0
R
E

I

y

c

R
0

s
s

..
ONE OF THE PLEASANT SURPRISES of the Holy Cross season to
date has been the excellent punti ng of sophomore Charlie Farrell,
shown here in action against Boston University. Farrell has punted
for a 36.8 average.

s

s

N
G
into

A

c
T
I

0
N

Photographed by
David J. Lehan, Jr.
HOLY CROSS HAS A NEW QUARTERBACK in the person of Bob Lawson. The hard·
running sophomore made an impressive debut against Boston University, gaining
75 yards in 18 carries. He's shown here en route for another solid gain.

�A Look Back and A Look Ahead

ll's AllNays The Darkest Before The DalNn
The Holy Cross football team enters
the second half of its season this afternoon still bent on winning that first
game of a snake-bitten campaign.
There were unmistakeable signs
last Saturday in the second-half
against mighty Syracuse that maybe
things are about to take a turn for
the better. This may sound somewhat
awkward in view of the final 32-6
score but if you consider just the
course of those final 30 minutes you
can see a little more of import in the
statement.
The Crusaders failed to complete
a pass or record a first down during
a sloppy first half but in the second
stanza the team came back for nine
first downs (to eight for Syracuse)
and passed for 115 yards. And don't
think that Syracuse pulled any of its
horses. This was done against the firstline personnel and by a scrappy team
that used many of its players both
ways in contrast to the two-platoon
of the Orange. Trailing, 24-6, at the
half it would have been easy to let
down. This never happened.
Sophomore quarterback Tom Tyler
( 13) was the second half spark. He
showed a cool front out there in relief

HOLY CROSS STATISTICS
Rushing-Earl Kirmser, 135 yards in 40
carries, 3 .4 avg., 1 touchdown; Jack Dahl ·
strom, 118 yards in 38 carries, 3. 1 avg.;
Bob Lawson, 86 yards in 30 carries, 2.9
avg.
Passing-Tom Tyler, 15 completions in 39
attempts (3 intercepted) for 149 yards;
Brian Flatley, 16 completions in 31 attempts (3 intercepted) for 127 yards and
2 touchdowns; Charlie Farrell, 7 completions in 25 attempts (4 intercepted) for
72 yards.
Pass Receiving-Pete Kimener, 12 receptions for 138 yards ; Dahlstrom, 8 receptions for 68 yards and 1 touchdown; Tom
Haley, 7 receptions for 66 yards.
Punting-Farrell, 35 punts for 1288 yards
and a 36.8 avg.

of starter Bob Lawson (17) and he
triggered two sustained drives-one
of 56 yards (four first downs) and
one alternating with Lawson of 43
yards (four first downs)-but both
were ended by pass interceptions.
Very easily there might have been two
more touchdowns on the board.
What is the significance? Quite
possibly it could mean that this team
has lived through the worst. It is to
the credit of the Crusaders-led by
co-captains Joe Lilly (78) and Earl
Kirmser (38)-that the spirit has
never faltered. The team to a man
wants to win and it wants to win for
its coach Mel Massucco who has
worked so hard all season long. This
team has had to pick itself up after
first one stroke of misfortune and
then another. The rewards are soon
to come in time.
The Crusaders came out of the
Syracuse game in good physical condition and this in itself is significant.
Such previously-injured players as
linebackers Tom Kiley ( 63) and Dick
Krzyzak ( 61) saw their first action
in some time and both were outstanding. Krzyzak, a sophomore who was
injured in the second game of the
season against Dartmouth, was forced
into duty as a defensive end-a position he had never played before. He
was credited with five unassisted
tackles and eight assists and that was
more than any other player on either
side.
Now the prospects look good that
several more players may soon be
coming off the medical list. Defensive
end Dennis Dwyer ( 86), halfback
Jack Dahlstrom (27), fullback Ralph
Lilore ( 40), halfback Pete Shimkus
(35) and end Dick Terry (80)-who
were all out of the Syracuse gamemay be back for Buffalo today. This

coupled with some encouraging performances by a host of sophomores
against the Orangemen augurs well
for the future.
Once again tackles Mike Addesa
(72) and Joe Lilly were immense in
a losing cause. "Those two don't have
to take their hats off to anybody,"
commented Massucco in the Crusader
locker-room following the game. The
pair played virtually the entire game
and gained immeasurable praise from
the opposition as well. "This team
hit harder than Penn State," commented Syracuse star Floyd Little.
The big obstacle right now is Buffalo. The Crusader coaching staff and
team saw the Bulls open at Boston
College and were tremendously impressed with the Buffalo defense. This
defense was sixth in the nation against
rushing last week and is even better
this week after a shutout (tie) against
Dayton. But Buffalo received a severe
setback when quarterback Rick Wells
broke a leg two weeks ago and was
lost for the season. He had accounted
for better than 50 per cent of Buffalo's
total offense at that point and Coach
Dick Offenhamer is still searching for
his replacement. Sound familiar?

BUFFALO STATISTICS
Rushing-Rick Wells•, 286 yards in 97
carries, 2.9 avg.; Lee Jones, 226 yards in
58 carries, 3.8 avg.; Jim Webber, 150
yards in 43 carries, 3.4 avg.; Tom Hurd,
111 yards in 37 carries, 3 .0 avg.
Passing-Wells• , 23 completions in 63
attempts (8 intercepted) for 349 yards
and 4 touchdowns; Ron Ridolfi, 5 completions in 24 attempts (8 intercepted)
for 103 yards and 1 touchdown.
Pass Receiving-Jim Dunn, 11 completoons for 113 yards and 1 touchdown· Dick
Ashley, 8 receptions for 180 yards ~nd 3
touchdowns; Hurd, 4 receptoons for 71
yards.
Punting-Brian Hansen, 21 punts for 731
yards and a 34.8 avg.
"Lost for season with leg injury.

9

�Play Boston College Here Tomorrow

The Holy Cross Freshmen-

H ow strong is the current edition of the Holy Cross
freshman football team?
Certainly this spirited group made a flashing debut
at Fitton Field a little more than three weeks ago with
a 20-14 victory over a highly-regarded Dartmouth team.
The next outing was somewhat disappointing-a 17-15
reversal at Connecticut--but there were three starters on
the sidelines that rainy afternoon and the game ended
with Holy Cross sitting on the three-yard line after only
minutes earlier surrendering a field goal that gave Connecticut its first advantage of the game.
If nothing else, past performance has proved that
this is a team that can explode. The three touchdowns
against Dartmouth were scored on a pair of 69-yard
bursts by halfback Tim Hawkes (20) and a 64-yard
scamper by running mate Dan O'Rourke ( 42). It might
be noted that Hawkes sat out the Connecticut game and
O'Rourke left in the first quarter. Quarterback Phil O'Neil
( 18) then showed the other side of this exciting Crusader
attack when he completed 11 out of 14 passes-two for
touchdowns-and connected on a 40-yard "bomb" to
end Webster Knight ( 83) with only 28 seconds to play
to almost pull the game out.
Hawkes was the man of magic against Dartmouth.
The former All-State back out of St. Peter's Prep and
Jersey City, N.J., gained a smashing 230 yards on the
ground in 15 carries (15.3 avg.). His second 69-yard
gallop put the game out of reach after Dartmouth had
clicked on a couple of pass plays for two quick touchdowns to cut the Crusader margin to 13-12. Hawkes
had plenty of support from O'Rourke, a hard-hitting
fullback from Wilmette, Ill., who gained 83 yards in seven
carries-including that 64-yard touchdown run-and had
another scoring run of 50 yards called back. You can
see how much these two were missed at Connecticut.
10

O'Neil and Bob Connors (12) are a pair of talented
quarterbacks. O'Neil stayed pretty much on the ground
against Dartmouth (and who can blame him?) but when
he was forced to take to the air at Connecticut he showed
what he could do. He also handles the punting. Connors
has been used both as a defensive back and as an offensive quarterback and he was a game captain at Connecticut
as well. Tony D'Agata or Pat Bourque of St. John's High
School in Shrewsbury is the other halfback in the backfield. D' Agata gained 59 yards against Dartmouth as
part of the impressive team total of 392 yards rushing.
"The line," says Coach Carlin Lynch, "may lack
depth in some spots. But we've got some excellent frontline material." He points quickly to his pair of two-way
performers: tackle Mike Crimmins (73) and guard-linebacker Dan Raymondi ( 62). Crimmins also missed the
game at Connecticut but he and O'Neil will be the game
captains against BC tomorrow.
The squad is deep at tackle where Crimmins has
plenty of competition from Bob Ribaudo ( 7 6), Mike
Reilly ( 71), Ralph Williams ( 78) and Dave Farinella
(51). The guard spot is strong with Raymondi and Paul
Scopetski ( 65), also of St. John's High in Shrewsbury,
holding forth as linebackers and Joe Mastracchio ( 69)
showing the way on offense. The Crusaders show three
good offensive ends in Bob Neary ( 82), Bill Cavanagh
(81) and Fred McDonald (87). McDonald is also a
starter on defense. Jack Delaney (54) is the offensive
center.
Lynch and assistant coach Fran Donaher have done
an excellent job bringing this team along. Lynch, a former
end at Holy Cross, returned to his Alma Mater last
Spring following a highly successful schoolboy coaching
career that saw him with a lifetime record of 44 victories
against only four defeats and four ties. His teams at

�An Exciting Team to Walch

Somerset High School (Class D) and at Bishop Stang
High School (Class C) each won Massachusetts state
championships. Danaher, who coaches the backfield and,
together with Lynch, scouts for the varsity, is a well
known name in Worcester. A graduate of Catholic University, he has coached Worcester schoolboys for the
past 28 years and during this time his teams at St. Peter's
High and Trade High (23 years) won a total of 10 city
championships.

The big test for the Holy Cross freshmen may come
tomorrow afternoon right here at Fitton Field. That's the
date of the first Holy Cross-Boston College freshman
clash of the Fall and it's an annual crowd-pleaser. The
two teams play the return go next Sunday at BC's Alumni
Stadium. "We'll know a lot better tomorrow," says Lynch,
"Just how strong we are."
One thing is already abundantly certain: This is a
team that can excite a crowd.

THE HOLY CROSS FRESHMAN FOOTBALL TEAM showed its talent in a 20-14 victory over Dartmouth
three weeks ago at Fitton Field. Tony D'Agata (left panel) thwarts a Dartmouth drive in the third period
with this alert interception. Tim Hawkes (20) breaks away for the first of his two dashing 69-yard
touchdown runs.
Photos courtesy of the Worcester Telegram

�KICK OFF
YOUR NEXT
FOOTBALL WEEKEND
WITH A
LONG DISTANCE
CALL

Telephone old classmates to plan a reunion
at the next game. Then call for
reservations at your favorite place to stay.
P .S. For undergrads, too, a phone call
Is the easy way to arrange a date
and settle details for a big weekend.

"Mr. Kickoff," Lou Groza of the
Cleveland Browns

Be sure to watch the new college comedy series, Hank. It's on every Friday night.

12

Check your local TV listings for time and station.

�Sophomore--Senior Segment

A Full Weekend ol Activity
Is Planned lor the Parents
by J. Kevin McVeigh
Chairman
Purple Key Society

This is the 12th annual Parent's Weekend at Holy Cross-Part II. The parents of Sophomores and Seniors are visiting the campus today and tomorrow and are present at this
afternoon's football game against the University of Buffalo. The Freshman-Junior weekend
was run Sept. 16-17. The two weekends are run entirely by the Purple Key Society, the
campus honor society and chief service organization. The Chairman of the Parent's Weekends for 1965 is William L. Juska, Jr., '66. The following article was authored by Purple
Key Society Chairman, J. Kevin McVeigh '66 for today's Holy Cross football program.

T he

windy, almost wintry weather of an October afternoon . . . the scent of mum-wearing Moms and cigarsmoking Dads . . . the referee's whistle and the barking
of the quarterback . . . the crack and thud of linemen
making contact, then groaning for the advantage . . .
the megaphonic exhortation of the cheerleaders and the
martial strains of the marching band. All of these herald
the first major event of the 1965 Parents' Weekendsthe Holy Cross-Buffalo football game.
Even before the traditional afternoon of seeing the
Holy. Cross team in action, however, there are other introductions ,to life on Mount St. James. Beginning their
weekend at college with morning Mass, the parents are
feted by their sons in the upperclass lounges with a
brunch of coffee, doughnuts, and sandwiches. Each of the
four lounges features a display by one of the major campus activities (the Sodality; the school newspaper, the
Crusader; the school yearbook, The Purple Patcher; and
the college social organization, The 1843 Club).
The dormitories are open for inspection during the
morning hours when even the age-old mandate of "No
Women" is relaxed so that mothers and sisters, too, can
see their sons' (or brothers') living quarters. The science
buildings also open their doors and invite all interested
parents to examine their facilities, including a series of
displays specially arranged for the weekend. Then, just
before the game, the Crusader Marching Band performs
some of its repertoire for the parents in the Quadrangle
prior to leading the way onto Fitton Field.
When the game is over, a toast to the Crusaders is sung

by the elite student vocal group, The Paks, in Kimball
Auditorium. After refreshing themselves at the various
motels, hotels and inns in the area, the parents return to
the campus for the chief attraction of the entire weekend,
the Dinner-Dance, which is held in the spacious Fieldhouse.
Here the men of Holy Cross dine family-style with
their parents and those of their classmates. The strains of
the Crusader Dance Band usher in an evening of dancing
and general good cheer. During the evening, parents get
a chance to meet their son's professors on an informal
basis.
Sunday morning begins with the highest expression
of filial love, as the collegians offer Mass for and with
their parents in St. Joseph's Chapel. This year, the
parents will be treated to the offering of a concelebrated
Mass in which one of the concelebrants will be the College President, Very Reverend Raymond J. Swords, S.J.
A sumptuous brunch in Kimball Hall, the student refectory, gives the parents yet another glimpse of life on
the Hill. The full sphere of Holy Cross endeavor is
rounded out by a series of sample classroom lectures,
conducted in Haberlin Hall by the college professors.
And so, in the short space of a single crowded weekend, Holy Cross attempts to unveil itself to the parents
of its students. They are given a panorama of their son's
collegiate life; where be eats, sleeps and studies; where
he works, plays and prays. It is certainly not enough time
to show a Holy Cross parent all that it is to be a Holy
Cross student, but even the glimpse is well worthwhile.

13

�Be Sure to Visit the

COLLEGE BOOKSTORE
IN
KIMBALL HALL
Before and after the game

New additions of Holy Cross Glee Club
Records are available at the Bookstore

THE CHAMPION LINE
AT
THE BOOKSTORE
For The Finest
in
Charter Service
Anywhere!!

NOW AVAILABLE!
• Scenicruiser Service
• All Weather Air Conditioning
• Magic-Aire Suspension Ride
• Fully Equipped Rest Room
• Restful Background Music
Tel. Pleasant 6-8321

"With HOLY CROSS designs for
the Young and Younger"

Sweat Shirts
T-Shirts
Wool Jackets
Leather Sleeve Jackets
Parka Poplin Jackets

�The Presidents

VERY REVEREND RAYMOND J. SWORDS, S.J.
Holy Cross College

DR. CLIFFORD C. FURMAS
University of Buffalo

Athletic Directors

EUGENE F. FLYNN
Holy Cross College

JAMES E. PEELE
University of Buffalo

15

�H

0
L

v

c
R
0

s

s
HOLY CROSS CO-CAPTAINS
JOE liLLY
Senior Tackle

16

EARL KIRMSER
Senior Halfback

�13 TOM TYLER

17 BOB LAWSON
Sophomore QB

Sophomore QB

18 PETE MEEHAN
Senior FB

21 PAT DANNO
Senior LB

23 DICK GIARDI
Sophomore HB

24 DAVE DAY

27 JACK DAHLSTROM

29 RAY BLAKE

Sophomore HB

Junior HB

31 JOHN HIMMELBERG
Sophomore LB

32 CHRIS SHEA
Senior HB

33 MIKE MAGUIRE

34 TERRY MOONEY
Senior S

35 PETE SHIMKUS

Senior S

Sophomore HB

Senior HB

36 RICHIE RING
SophomoreS

�40 RALPH LILORE

45 MIKE KAMINSKI
Sophomore KSp

50 BILL MORRIS
Junior C

62 FRANK LILLY
Sophomore G

63 TOM KILEY
Senior LB

64 JOHN GORTER
Junior G

70 BRIAN KAVANAUGH
Junior T

71 GLENN GRIECO
Sophomore T

72 MIKE ADDESA
Senior T

73 PAUL MORRIS
Sophomore T

80 DICK TERRY
Senior E

81 TOM HALEY
Junior E

86 DENNIS DWYER
Senior E

88 PETE KIMENER
Junior E

Sophomore FB

61 DICK KRZYZAK
Sophomore LB

51 TOM CHENETIE
Sophomore T

�52 DICK GRISE
Sophomore C

53 BOB MASLOWSKI
Sophomore C

69 BOB ABBATE
Sophomore G

74 JOHN MALONE
Senior T

CHIP MALONEY
Senior Manager

79 BOB MAHONEY
Sophomore T

JACK HODGES
Senior Manager

�A bit of Maine in Worcester

Finest Selection of Seafoods
Choice Heavy Steer Steaks
Cocktails

RUSSELL'S on LINCOLN
265 Lincoln St.
Worcester, Mass .

•

CHARLES
RESTAURANT

"Where old friends talk over the game."

•
STEAKS
LOBSTERS
COCKTAIL LOUNGE

•

94 Millbury Street
Tel: 757-6324

Your Host "BUD" RUSSELL '50
Tel. 753-5449

Municipal Parking directly
across the street

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

YANKEE DRUMMER INN
and MOTOR HOUSE
For New England hospitality in the Early American tradition be sure to visit the Yankee
Drummer. Magnificent meals, liquid refreshments and incomparable overnight accommodations.
The new favorite of football fans . . . before and afte r the game. Special facilities
for private parties. Restaurant open daily 7:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Spirit of '76
T ap Room serving liquid refreshments until midnig ht. Motor House
has 104 luxtiry rooms.
Located on Route 12 in Auburn at Exit 10 of the Massachusetts Turnpike .
Only 10 minutes from the stadium.
For Reservations Telephone TErrace 2-3221

�1965 FOOTBALL ROSTER
Age

Ht.

Wt.

*Flatley, Brian . . ... ... ...Sr.
Tyler, Tom ............ .... Soph.
Farrell, Charles ...... .... Soph.
Lawson, Bob .............. Soph.
*Meehan, Pete ......... ... Sr.
Lee, Jim ........ ............ Soph.
Tripp, Bill ..................Soph .
*Danno, Pat ................ Sr.
Herlihy, Bill ....... ...... Soph.
Giardi, Dick ........... .. Soph.
*Day, Dave ..... .... .... ..... Sr.
Stagliano, Paul ..... ... .. Soph .
Dahlstrom, Jack ........ Soph.
*Blake, Ray ................ Jr.
*Hinckle, Charles ..... ...Jr.
Himmelberg, John .... Soph.
Shea, Chris ................ Sr.
*Maguire, Mike .......... Sr.
*Mooney, Terry ..... ....... Sr.
Shimkus, Pete .......... Soph.
Ring, Richie ..... ........ .Soph.
*Schmerge, Pete ........ Jr.
*Kirmser, Earl ............ Sr.
Lilore, Ralph ............. Soph.
Kaminski, Mike .......... Soph.

20
18
19
18
21
19
19
21
18
19
21
19
20
20
20
19
21
21
21
19
19
20
21
19
19

5'11"
6'2"
6'0"
6'2"
6'0"
6'0"
6'0"
6'3"
6'0"
5'9"
5'10"
5'9"
5'10"
6'0"
6'0"
5'11"
6'0"
6'1"
5'11"
6'2"
6'1"
5'11"
6'2"
5'6"
5'11"

175
194
195
198
190
178
194
210
180
186
175
188
177
187
194
185
185
185
185
185
180
182
185
180
190

St. John's Prep ............ Manchester, Mass.
Enfield H.S ... ... .... ....... Thompsonville, Conn.
St. Bernard's H.S ... .. .... New London, Conn.
Clarkstown H.S . ....... .. ....... New York, N.Y.
Gonzaga H.S .... ........ ... .. Silver Spring, Md .
Matignon H .S .. ...... .. ....... Somerville, Mass.
Taunton H.S. ........ ........
Taunton, Mass.
Assumption H.S. ....... .. .. .. ... Nekoosa, Wise.
Swampscott H.S . .... ...... Swampscott, Mass.
Choate .. ... .. .. . ... .. ... ... .. . E. Hartford, Conn.
Mt. Carmel ............................ Auburn, N.Y.
Matignon H.S ..................... Medford, Mass.
Catholic Memorial H.S... W. Roxbury, Mass.
Milton H.S . .................. ...... Milton, Mass.
Malvern Prep .................... Havertown, Penn.
Gonzaga H.S ..................... Washington, D.C.
Boston College H.S . ... ..... Dorchester, Mass.
St. Xavier .......................... Cincinnati, Ohio
St. Raphael's ... ........ .. ....... Pawtucket, R.I.
St. Mark's ........ ...... ...... ..... Southboro, Mass.
Catholic Memorial H.S . .... Mattapan, Mass.
Fordham Prep ................ Mamaroneck, N.Y.
Chaminade H.S . ....... . Port Washington, N.Y.
St. Benedict's ..
... ....... Belleville, N.J.
Gonzaga H .S .................... Hyattsville, Md.

CENTERS
50 *Morris, Bill ........ ..... ...Jr.
52
Grise, Dick .. ..... .. ..... Soph.
Maslowski, Bob ........ Soph.
53
Finnerty, Dennis ........ Soph.
58

19
20
18
18

6'3"
6'2"
6'0"
6'1"

235
215
205
200

Fordham Prep .... ..... .... ..... .. New York, N.Y.
Bishop Bradley H.S...... . Manchester, N.H.
Madonna H.S..................... Weirton, W.Va .
Cathedral H.S ................ Wilbraham, Mass.

GUARDS
.... Sr.
Ekert, Conrad
57
Krzyzak, Dick . ...... .. ..Soph.
61
62
Lilly, Frank .............. ..Soph.
63 *Kiley, Tom ..... ........... Sr.
64 *Gorter, John ............ Jr.
Quinn, Mike ........... ... Soph .
65
Heilman, Tom ............ Soph.
67
Dimon, Ed .. . .. .. ......... Jr.
68
Abbate, Bob ............. Soph.
69

21
19
19
21
19
19
19
20
19

6'2"
6'2"
5'11"
5'11"
6'1"
6'1"
5'10"
6'1"
5'10"

220
210
204
205
226
213
202
197
224

Cardinal Hayes H.S . ..... .. ........ Bronx, N.Y.
St. Raphael's .................... Seekonk, Mass.
Gonzaga H.S. ....... ...... ... Washington, D.C.
Chaminade H.S . ....... .. .... ....... Elmont, N.Y.
E. Providence H.S . ... ..... E. Providence, R.I.
Boston Latin ................ Charlestown, Mass.
Bergen Catholic H.S. Upper Saddle Riv., N.J.
Lawrenceville ........ ................ Roebling, N.J .
Mt. St. Michael H.S . ............ New York, N.Y.

TACKLES
Chenette, Tom ....... .....Soph.
51
Maldonis, Bob ............ Jr.
60
70 *Kavanaugh, Brian ..... .Jr.
Grieco, Glenn ............ Soph .
71
72 *Addesa, Mike ............ Sr.
Morris, Paul ... ..... ..... Soph .
73
74 *Malone, 'John ............ Sr.
Dunne, Bob .......... .... Soph.
75
78 *Lilly, Joe .......... .......... Sr.
Mahoney, Bob .......... So ph.
79

20
20
20
18
20
19
21
19
21
19

6'7"
6'2"
6'2"
5'11"
6'4"
6'2"
6'1"
5'11"
6'2"
6'0"

268
220
233
222
245
225
228
225
230
220

Boston Latin .... .............. .. Brighton, Mass.
St. Patrick H.S. ....... .. ... Watertown, Mass.
Hudson H.S ......................... Hudson, Mass.
St. Peter's Prep .................... Bayonne, N.J.
Boston English ............ W. Roxbury, Mass.
Stoughton H.S ................. Stoughton, Mass.
St. Ignatius H.S . ........ Cleveland Hts., Ohio
Bishop Hendricken H.S......... Cranston, R.I.
Gonzaga H .S. . ...... ......... Washington, D.C.
Georgetown Prep .......... ........ Arlington, Va.

ENDS
80
81
84
86
88
90

21
20
21
20
19
19

6'3"
6'0"
6'4"
6'4"
6'2"
6'2"

216
200
215
226
200
183

Newton South H.S............. .. .. Newton, Mass .
Archbishop Williams ........ Hingham, Mass.
Bronxville H.S................... Bronxville, N.Y.
Archbishop Stepinac H.S. White Plains, N.Y.
Cheverus H.S . .................. ... ... Arlington, Va.
St. Philip H.S .. .. .. .......... ....... Chicago, Ill.

No.

BACKS
11
13
15
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
26
27
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
40
45

Name

Class

*Terry, Dick ........ ........ Sr.
*Haley, Tom ......... ....... Jr.
*Noble, Bob ................ Sr.
*Dwyer, Dennis ............ Sr.
* Kimener, Pete ............ Jr.
Carmignani, Dick ...... Soph.

School

Hometown

H

0
L

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s
s

*Returning Lettermen (23)

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21

�The HOLY CROSS
Coaching Stall

ECIO L. LUCIANO
Line Coach

MELVIN G. MASSUCCO
Head Coach

There's a "changing of the guard" on Mount St. James this Fall.
Melvin G. (Mel) Massucco, one of the all-time football greats at Holy
Cross, became the Crusader's 18th head coach this past Winter to
succeed Dr. Eddie Anderson who retired following the 1964 season
after 39 years as a head college coach-21 of these at Holy Cross.
Massucco, who played at right halfback for three years at Holy
Cross, was graduated in 1952, and became the first Anderson-coached
Holy Cross player to join the doctor's staff when he returned to his
Alma Mater in 1954 as freshman coach and chief scout. For the past
two years he was also an assistant to the athletic director in charge of
the recruiting program.
Massucco and the late Johnny Turco were instrumental in restoring Holy Cross football prestige to a high level when Dr. Anderson
returned to Mount St. James for his second tour of duty in 1950. The
previous season the Crusader's football fortunes had fallen to an alltime low when the team won just once and lost nine games, climaxed
by a 76-0 drubbing at the hands of arch-rival Boston College.
The Crusaders rebounded under Dr. Anderson and in 1951,
when Massucco was the captain, compiled an 8-2 record. Mel earned
All-East and Catholic All-America honors and he established a pair
of Holy Cross rushing records. His season mark, set in 1950, of 723
yards held up until last year when sophomore quarterbac~ Jack Lentz
totaled 802 yards, and his career record of 1598 yards still stands.
After the 1951 season, Massucco played in the annual NorthSouth game in Florida and was drafted by the Chicago Cardinals of
the ational Football League. He elected to pass up a possible professional career to enter the coaching ranks and he served for two years
as freshman football coach, varsity football scout, varsity hockey
coach and freshman baseball coach at Massachusetts before he returned to join Dr. Anderson at Holy Cross.
Massucco is a native of Arlington, Mass., and he was an
all-around star at Arlington High. He played three seasons of varsity
football, hockey and baseball and competed two years in track at Arlington where he was the football and baseball captain as a senior. He
was selected a Greater Boston All-Star in football and competed against
the North Shore Stars in the Manning Bowl (Lynn) game of 1943.
That year he was selected for the Eastern Massachusetts Interscholastic
Sports Writers Association Most Valuable Player Award.
Massucco is ~1arried to the former Joan Howard of Cambridge.
They have four children, Mel Jr., ten, Jane, nine, David, six, and
Mark, five.

22

OSCAR LOFTON
End Coach

HARRY J. SHAY
Backfield Coach

CARLIN F. LYNCH
Freshman Coach

FRANCIS P. DONAHER
Assistant Freshman Coach

�400-cubic-inch V-8, 4·barrel carb, twin pipes: Buckle up and have yourself a ball! This is the 350-hp
4-4·2. With heavy-duty suspension, built to K.O. the roughest roads. Front and rear stabilizers to take the
"bend" out of curves, the bind out of corners. And under it all-pavement-biting red-line tires! But the
swinging-est thing about Olds 4-4-2 is its surprisingly modest price!
LO&lt; K fO OLD fOR THE , I\\ !
Oldsmobile Oivlsioo • General Motors Corp.

�OFFENSE
Dick Ashley ...... ....... ......... .WE
..WT
Bill Abbey .
.WG
Ted Gibbons . ....
.C
Bruce MacKellar
SG
Mike Rissell .
Jim Ratel ..................... ........ST
Jim Dunn ...... .... ............ .SE
... QB
Nick Capuana
.... TB
Jim Webber .
....... .WB
Jim Barksdale
....... FB
Lee Jones

87
74
67
56
62
76
86
15
44
20
36

Probable St

BUFFALO
14
16
18
20
22
24
25
26
28
30

Geringer, HB
Capuana, HB
Ridolfi, JB
Barksdale, HB
Washington, HB
Ridolfi, HB
Scaletat, HB
McEwen, HB
Hansen, KSP
Brennan, FB

32
34
35
36
38
40
42
44
46
48

Hoke, FB
Sinclair, FB
Smigelski, HB
Jones, FB
Przykuta, FB
Sella, HB
Evans, HB
Webber, HB
Swiderski, H B
Hurd, HB

50
52
55
56
58
61
62
63
67
68

Dupr~

Holl}l.!
Garor&lt;
MacKI
Rishe
Botul
Rissel
Poles.
GibbOI
MacKE

OFFENSE

things go

b~Wfth

Coke
TRADE-MARK®

88
78
70
52
71
70
81
17
11
29
38

Pete Kimener ..
......... LE
Joe Lilly ....
................ LT
Brian Kavanaugh .............. LG
Dick Grise ............................ C
Glenn Grieco ........................ RG
Mike Addesa ........................RT
Tom Haley .............................RE
Bob Lawson ................... QB
Brian Flatley ........................ LH
Ray Blake .......
. ........ RH
Earl Kirmser .
......... FB

11 Flatley, QB
12 Bioty, HB
13 Tyler, QB
15 Farrell, QB
17 Lawson, QB
18 Meehan, FB
19 Lee, HB
20 Tripp, QB
21 Danno, HB
22 Herlihy, FB
23 Giardi, HB
24 Day, HB
26 Stagliano, HB

HOLY

27 Dahlstrom, HB
28 Meduski, E
29 Blake, HB
30 Hinc.kle, HB
31 Himmelberg, HB
32 Shea, HB
33 Maguire, HB
34 Mooney, H B
35 Shimkus, HB
36 Ring, QB
37 Schmerge, HB
38 Kirmser, HB
39 Kluxen, FB

Referee .... Ray Chapman (Northwestern)
Linesman .... George H. Hill (Harvard)
Electric Clock .... Frederick

�84
72
71
68
63
80
55
52
24
40
48

Starting lineup

Gerry LaFountain .............. lE
Dennis Brisky ....................... l T
Bill Taylor ....................... lG
Russ Mackellar ................ RG
E. G. Poles ........................ RT
Craig Helen brook .............. RE
Joe Garofalo ....................... llB
Joe Holly .
.. .............. RlB
Tom Ridolfi ..
. .. lHB
Dan Sella
.... RHB
Tom Hurd ...
...............S

LO SQUAD

I

prfY. LB
ll}l. LB
[oi alo, LB
cKellar, C
hel, C
1ula, G
sell, G
es, E
~ons, G
cKellar, G

69
70
71
72
73

74
75
76
78

79

Dechowitz, G
Pugh, T
Taylor, G
Brisky, T
Miceli, T
Abbey, T
Finochio, T
Wuest, T
Pirozzolo, T
Ratel, T

80
81
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Helenbrook, E
Lehner, E
McNamara, E
LaFontain, E
Kleiber, E
Dunn, E
Ashley, E
Remillard, E
Burden , E
90 Oscsodal, KSP

DEFENSE

CROSS
rting lineup

18
78
71
72
61
23
64
62
34
19
33

Pete Meehan ... .. ................ lE
Joe lilly ................... ................ l T
Glenn Grieco ........................ MG
Mike Addesa ..
............... RT
Dick Krzyzak
.............. RE
Dick Giardi ....................... llB
John Gorter ....................... MlB
Frank lilly ......................... RlB
Terry Mooney ........................ lS
Jim lee ................................. MS
Mike Maguire ...................... RS

DSS SQUAD

e, FB

~er, FB
linski, KSP
ak, T
·is, C
ette, T

.c

wski, C
OCki, C

t,

G
rty, c
~. E

nis~ T

61
62
63
64
65
67
68
69
70
71
72
73

Krzyzak, G
Lilly, G
Kiley, G
Gorter, G
Quinn, G
Heilman, G
Dimon, G
Abbate, G
Kavanaugh, T
Grieco, T
Addesa, T
Morris, T
74 Malone, T

75 Dunne, T
76 Smith, E
78 Lilly, T
79 Mahoney, T
80 Terry, E
81 Haley, E
84 Noble, E
85 Higgins, E
86 Dwyer, E
87 Lavery, E
88 Kimener, E
90 Carmignani, E
91 Robinson, E

cialsUmpire . Clifford B. Calvert, Jr. (Ursinus)
Field Judge .. Bernard M. Burke, Jr. (Boston College)
A. Hardy (Georgia Tech)

things go

b~~th

Coke
TRADE-MARK®

�Introducing the tuned car. 1966 Buick.
What TTWkes a car a car is styling, per/orTTWn.ce, ride and handling. Only when. they're all tuned together is the car a Buick.
Like this '66 Riviera Gran. Sport.

Every last thing that goes into a Buick- suspension, body mounts, shock absorbers-not
only has to work, it has to work with everything else. That's tuning.
Tuning is what we do more of (and care
more about) than anybody we know of. And
then we go out and test it in more places, too.
On roads like the ones you'll be driving on.
Why we do it will be obvious when you take
your first ride. The tuned car rides and handles as handsomely as it looks. (Tuning may
be hard to explain. But it's easy to notice.)
What the tuned car will do for you. And
your family. For a start, the new Riviera

will comfort you. You'll see that when you
slip into the Riviera's new bench seats. Space
for six. If you like buckets, they're available,
with a reclining arrangement for the rightfront passenger. And we have another comforting option available: a new notch-back
seat that converts from bench to semi-bucket.
Choosing the tuned car. Visit your Buick
dealer. Every Buick you see is the tuned car.
Riviera, the new international classic. Riviera
Gran Sport. Every '66 Buick.
And with a choice like that, how in the
world can you go wrong?
Wouldn't you really rather have a Buick?

�The BUFFALO
Coaching Stall

JAMES RYAN

Defensive Coach

RICHARD W. OFFENHAMER

Head Coach

RONALD M. LA ROCQUE

Offensive Backfield Coach

DEWEY S. WADE

Offensive Line Coach

ROBERT C. DEMING

Defensive Backfield Coach

JAMES R. WOLFE

Freshman Coach

"Local boy makes good" could well be the theme of this piece,
for it accurately describes the brilliant athletic career of Buffalo football coach Dick Offenhamer.
Although Offenhamer grew up just a "hoot 'n' a holler" from
the Buffalo campus, his trail to that campus was long and sinuous.
An All-High baseball and football star at Bennett High School,
Dick chose to attend Colgate University.
It was a wise choice. Colgate was then enjoying the halcyon
days of Andy Kerr, when the Red Raiders of the Chenango Valley
went on scalping forays to such way-stations as Yankee Stadium, New
Orleans, Iowa City, and Columbus, Ohio. Offenhamer was more than
merely present on these trips ; he was the right-halfback in the Kerr
double wing attack and he achieved lasting fame as one of Colgate's
all-time greats.
While at college, Offenhamer was light-heavyweight boxing
champion of the school and he also starred on the baseball team. He
received his B.A. in 1936.
D ick's athletic activities have encompassed professional and
semi-pro baseball. A catcher, his battery mates at various times were
such as Sal Maglie, Steve Peek of the Yankees, and Emmie Dickman
of the Red Sox.
Offenhamer coached football at Kenmore N.Y. High School
for 11 years, and his teams won or tied 5 championships in the Niagara
Frontier Conference. At one stage his charges won 50 out of 55 games,
including a skein of 21 straight.
He was prominent, too, as an official in Western New York
basketball and swimming circles.
After World War II he returned to College as Director of
freshman athletics, freshman football coach and boxing coach.
Offenhamer came to the University of Buffalo in 1955, a time
at which the Bulls football fortunes were at their lowest ebb. He
promply exerted his skills, knowledge and personality to a difficult situation and the results speak for themselves.
D uring Offie:s 10-year tenure Buffalo has won 53, lost 34, and
tied 3. He had 8-1-0 seasons in 1958, when Buffalo won the Lambert
Cup, and again in 1959, when U B was runner-up for that trophy.
Offenhamer has won numerous personal honors. He was national "Coach of the Week" in 1958 after his team scored a 34-14
upset over Columbia. The same year the Buffalo Eveni ng News cited
him as one of Western New York's 10 Outstanding Citizens. This
past spring both the Buffalo Council of the Knights of Columbus and
Cardinal D ougherty High School saluted him as Western New York's
"Coach of the Year."

27

�I
I

-

------~-

-

-

-

MILK
FOR
VITALITY

L

(

l

Halftime •••
Anytime •••

Busy football weekends call for extra energy. And that calls for a
refreshing glass of LEE'S MILK. LEE'S MILK is natures vitality drink
. . . . that helps you stay in peak condition , sees you through the
busiest fall days.
Halftime, snacktime, anytime - when you take a break, make it
LEE'S MILK. Keep up with the fun with vitality from LEE'S MILK.

Make il
Lee's Milk!

YOU WON'T GET LESS FROM LEE'S

W. H. LEE MILK COMPANY
55 HARLOW ST. -

28

WORCESTER, MASS. 01605

752·2029

�1965 FOOTBALL ROSTER
School

Hometown

Age

Ht.

Wt.

* Geringer, Fred ......... Sr.
*Capuana , Nick ... ...... Jr.
Ridolfi , Ron ............ Sr.
Barksdale, Jim ......... Jr.
Washington , Bennie ... Soph.
Ridolfi , Tom
.. Sr.
Scaletta, Paul ........... Jr.
McEwen, Jim
...... Jr.
Hansen, Brian
....... Soph.
Brennan, Tom ............ Soph.
Hoke, Tom
...... Soph .
Sinclair, Bob .... ....... Soph .
Smigelski , John ........ Sr.
Jones, Lee ................ Soph.
* Przykuta, Dennis ........ Sr.
* Sella, Dan ... ............... Jr.
Evans, Dan ................ Jr.
Webbers, Jim .. ... ....... Sr.
Swiderski, Waly ........ Jr.
Hurd, Tom .. ...... ........ Soph.

20
19
21
19
18
21
22
21
19
18
19
18
21
19
20
19
23
22
21
19

5'9"
5'9"
5 ' 9"
5'11"
5'9"
5'9"
5 ' 11"
5'10"
5'11"
5'10"
6'0"
6 ' 1"
6' 1,
5'10"
5' 11 "
5'10"
5'11"
5'9"
6'0"
6'2"

165
180
170
170
186
170
160
195
172
210
185
190
180
200
210
175
183
170
184
192

Danville H.S ....................... Danville, Penn.
Utica Free Academy ............... Utica, N.Y.
St. Raphael 's Acad .. ........... Pawtucket, R.I.
Christian Bros. Acad .. ......... Syracuse, N.Y.
Woonsocket H.S . ............ Woonsocket, R.I.
S~. Raphael 's Acad . ....... .. ... Pawtucket, R.I.
N1agara Falls H.S . .......... Niagara Falls, N.Y.
McKees Rocks H.S. . .. McKees Rocks, Pa.
East H.S................... ............ Detroit, Mich.
McQuaid Jesuit H.S. ....... ... Rochester, N.Y.
Whitesboro Central H.S . ........ Marcy, N.Y.
Watertown H.S . ................ Watertown, N.Y.
Solvay Central H.S. ........ ....... ... Solvay, N.Y.
Hutch . Tech. H.S......... .......... Buffalo, N.Y.
Depew H.S. .................... ........ Depew, N.Y.
McKees Rocks H.S. .... McKees Rocks, Pa.
Bennett H.S........................... Buffalo, N.Y.
Fayetteville-Man. H.S ............. Manlius, N.Y.
Whitesboro Central H.S . ............ Utica, N.Y.
Southside H.S .. .......... .. ........... Elmira, N.Y.

CENTERS
50
Duprey, Jim .... ...... .... Sr.
52 * Holly, Joe .. ............... Sr.
55 *Garofalo, Joe .............. Sr.
56
MacKellar, Bruce ...... Jr.
58
Rishel , Rod ..... ..... ...... Soph.

21
20
22
19
19

5'10"
6' 1"
5'10"
6'0"
5'10"

215
210
205
225
195

Peru Central H.S.............. .. .. ....... Peru, N.Y.
Lyons Central H.S ........... ...... Lyons, N.Y.
Gloversville H.S. ............ Gloversville, N.Y.
Kenmore East H.S . ........... ... Kenmore, N.Y.
Smethport H.S . ...... ..... ..... E. Smethport, Pa .

GUARDS
61
Botula, Charles ...... .... Jr.
62
Rissell , Mike .... ...... .. Soph .
63 * Poles, Greenard .... .... Sr.
67
Gibbons, Ted .... ........ Soph.
68 * MacKellar, Russ ........ Jr.
69
Dechowitz, Dick ........ Soph.

19
19
22
19
21
23

6'0"
5'11"
5'10"
5'10"
5'10"
6'0"

200
215
225
230
210
215

Riverhead H.S . ... .. ............... Riverhead, L.l.
Scott H.S . ....... ................... Coatesville Pa .
Mad'1son H.S............. ........ Rochester, ' N.Y.
Rogers H.S . .......................... Newport, R.I.
~~nrT)ore East H.S .............. . Kenmore, N.Y.
1dwood H.S. ....... ........... Brooklyn, N.Y.

TACKLES
70 * Pugh , Ron ... ........ ..... Jr.
71 * Taylor, Bill ... .... .... .. ... Jr.
72
Brisky, Dennis ..... ..... Soph .
73
Miceli, Tony ......... ..... Jr.
74
Abbey, Bill ................ Jr.
75
Finochio, Jim ............ Jr.
76
Wuest, Mike ........ ...... Sr.
78
Pirozzolo, Dick ... .. .... Sop h.
79 *Ratel, Jim ... ........ ....... Sr.

20
21
18
20
20
19
20
19
22

6'1"
6'2"
6'2"
6'2"
6 ' 2"
5'10"
6'3"
6'1"
6'3"

225
230
200
220
215
212
230
235
220

McKeesport H.S. ... ...... ..... McKeesport, Pa.
Lewiston-Porter H.S..... Youngstown, N.Y.
St. David's H.S. .................... Detroit, Mich.
Batavia H.S. .......... ................ Batavia, N.Y.
Peru H.S..................................... Peru, Ind .
Christian Bros. Acad . ...... E. Syracuse, N.Y.
Whitesboro Cent. H.S . ........ ........ Utica, N.Y.
Southside H.S . ........................ Elmira, N.Y.
Bishop Fallon H.S . ................ Buffalo, N.Y.

ENDS
80
81
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

21
19
21
21
21
20
18
18
21

6'1"
6'2"
6'2''5'11"
6'5"
6'4"
6'2"
6'1"
6'1"

210
195
191
220
225
200
200
180
190

Cleveland Hill H.S . ........ Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Baldwin H.S. ........................ Pittsburgh, Pa.
Binghamton Central H.S. .. Binghamton, N.Y.
Saranac Lake H.S......... Saranac Lake, N.Y.
East H.S ................................. Auburn, N.Y.
Moses Brown School ........ .. .. Cranston, R.I.
Massena H.S............ ...... ..... Massena, N.Y.
New Bedford H.S . ........ New Bedford, Mass.
Frank Carey H.S. ............ Franklin Sq., L.l.

22

5'10"

158

Bugard H.S. ........................ Buffalo, N.Y.

No.

BACKS
14
16
18
20
22
24
25
26
28
30
32
34
35
36
38
40
42
44
46
48

Name

Class

* Helenbrook, Craig ...... Sr.
Lehner, Larry ............ So ph .
McNamara, Jim .......... Sr.
*LaFontain, Gerald ...... Sr.
Kleiber, Paul .. .. .......... Sr.
*Dunn, Jim ..... ... .. ...... Jr.
Ashley, Dick ...... ........ Soph.
Remillard , Jim .......... Soph.
Burden, Dennis .......... Sr.

KICKING SPECIALISTS
90 * Oscsodal, Joe ............ Sr.

B

u
F
F
A
L
0

*Returning Lettermen (15)

" OFFICIAL WATCH FOR THIS G AME

LONGINES

THE W O RLD ' S MOST HONORED WATCH"

29

�B

u
F
F

A
L

0

�24 TOM RIDOLFI
Senior HB

36 LEE JONES
Sophomore FB

46 WALT SWIDERSKI
Junior HB

18 RON RIDOLFI
Senior QB

20 JIM BARKSDALE

26 JIM McEWEN

35 JOHN SMIGELSKI

Junior HB

Junior HB

Senior HB

38 DENNY PRZYKUTA
Senior FB

40 DAN SELLA
Junior HB

44 JIM WEBBER

48 TOM HURD
Sophomore H 8

50 JIM DUPREY
Senior LB

52 JOE HOLLY
Senior LB

Senior HB

�55 JOE GAROFALO
Senior LB

56 BRUCE MacKELLAR
Junior C

58 ROD RISHEL
Sophomore C

67 TED GIBBONS
Sophomore G

68 RUSS MacKELLAR
Junior G

70 RON PUGH
Junior

74 BILL ABBEY
Junior T

75 JIM FINOCHIO
Junior G

84 JERRY LaFONTAIN
Senior E

32

85 PAUL KLEIBER
Junior E

61 CHARLIE BOTULA
Junior G

76 MIKE WUEST
Senior T

78 DICK PIROZZOLO
Sophomore T

86 JIM DUNN
Junior E

87 DISK ASHLEY
Sophomore E

�62 MIKE RISSELL
Sophomore G

72 DENNY BRISKY
Sophomore T

79 JIM RATEL
Senior T

89 DENNY BURDEN
Senior E

63 GREENARD POLES
Senior T

73 TONY MICELI
Junior T

80 CRAIG HELENBROOK
Senior E

90 JOE OSCSODAL
Senior KSp

�Granger Contracting Co., Inc.
General Contractors
306 Main Street
Worcester, Mass.

34

�On Sports, Spectators, and Education
by Dr. Howard Bowen
President, University of Iowa

DR. HOWARD BOWEN brings a
unique viewpoint to his subject since
he has served as president of a smatl
coLlege (GrinneH) and is current
president of one of the nation's largest universities.
S

;.

PORTS always have been close to
the human heart. In ancient
times, Plato emphasized the value of
athletics in the cultivation of a balanced and healthy life, and in our
time President Kennedy was an eloquent spokesman for physical vigor.
Today, we stress the character-building aspects of sport, along with its
role in maintaining physical fitness.
We particularly prize the lessons of
sportsmanship and teamwork which
athletics can teach, the preparation
they give for life in a competitive
world, the self-discipline implied in
rigorous programs of training, and
the deep sense of achievement which
comes from the successful challenge
of a rival or the breaking of a longstanding record. We also value sport
for its own sake as something inherently interesting and even beautiful.
It is not surprising, then, that a
strong pattern of intercollegiate athletics has emerged in the United
States, and that many thousands of
young_ men have benefited. At the
same time, this tradition has not been
without critics. On occasion, our colleges and universities have been
charged with overemphasis and professionalism, and with a "win-at-allcost" approach which distorts the
aims of amateur athletics.

As an educator and sports enthusiast, I would concede that such criticism sometimes has been justified. Because of the emotional overtones in
athletic rivalries, there have been occasional abuses. However, our colleges and universities, through such
organizations as the National Collegiate Athletic Association, have set
high standards for themselves and
over the years have achieved notable
progress in self-regulation. Naturally, I am proud of the hct that faculty

members at my own institution, The
University of Iowa, have contributed
to this effort. For example, Dean
Robert Ray and Professor Karl Leib
both have been presidents of NCAA.
During my years in higher education,
the great majority of cqaches, faculty
members, and administrators have
helped to make intercollegiate athletics in the United State something
to be proud of.
The future advancement of varsity
sports will require that we continue
to attract men of high standards to
our programs. It also will demand
that intercollegiate athletics be kept
in proper perspective as only one aspect of our educational effort. There
are obligations here for both educators and sports fans.
Educators need to reaffirm a concept of sports as a means of individual expression and creativity available to all who wish to participate.
Our colleges and universities should
sponsor the newer intercollegiate
sports such as soccer, lacrosse, squash,
rowing, and junior varsity football.
The sizes of the squads in some sports
should be greatly increased. For example, a tennis or a golf team might
well include fifty or a hundred play-

ers rather than five or ten. Intramural
sports programs should be strengthened, and more opportunities and incentives should be given for developing excellence in connection with
intramurals. Facilities for informal
sports and outdoor recreation should
be enlarged. We should foster keen
interest among millions of young men
and women in those sports which can
be followed throughout a lifetime.
Those of us who are sports fans
hdve shown our interest and our loyalty to the teams of our choice by attending football games and other athletic contests across the country by
the millions-to the point where
some observers have been moved to
call us a "nation of spectators." Many
of us might also benefit from participating in sports. I can think of no
better way to keep in touch with the
fundamental values and purposes of
athletics than to take part actively in
sports. Among the beneficial results
would be an improved level of physical fitness and a heightened appreciation for the outstanding performances which we, as spectators, often
witness on the playing field-whether
these be accomplished by teams we
support or oppose, or by players on
the winning or losing sides.

�SULLIVAN, GARRITY
and DONNELLY
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
Successor to Arthur K. King

GENERAL INSURANCE

•
21 ELM STREET

WORCESTER 8, MASS.

TEL. PLeasant 4-1768

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

The

MEATS
that

SCORE I
FOSTER'S OF MANCHESTER
U.S . GOVERNMENT INSPECTED

36

�NCAA Feature

ROY0. LEONARD, INC.
Industrial Maintenance Painting

The Scholar-Aihlele
by Wiles Hallock
NCAA Director of Public Relations

543 UNION AVENUE
FRAMINGHAM, MASSACHUSETTS
873-7975

Wiles Hallock has the demanding and highly challenging
position' of Director of Public Relations for the National
Collegiate Athletic Association. He is a former collegiate
director of sports information at both the University of
Wyoming and the University of California and he now
works out of Kansas City. He has interests on the East
Coast, too, as he follows the career of his son, Mike, who
is a hurdler on the Harvard University track team.

"Everything in Travel"

McEVOY TRAVEL BUREAU
Worcester 9, Massachusetts
Tel: Pleasant 6-4691

T hanks to the National Collegiate Athletic Association's
first annual postgraduate scholarship program, studentathletes in the truest sense are going to bolster the medical
and law fields in the very near future.
Those two professions head the selection of graduate
studies by the 33 student-athletes who were honored with
$1 ,000 postgraduate scholarships by the NCAA during
1964-65. Funds were derived from the Association's four
per cent share of football television rights fees.
What's ahead? First, it is hoped that student-athletes
from sports other than football and basketball will be
eligible for the scholarships soon, if not this year. Second,
through a cooperative venture with the National Educational Marketing Service, more funds for the scholarship
program will be made available.
There are two main qualification standards to be
met before a student-athlete is eligible for the scholarships. He must have logged a grade point average of at
least 3.0 (based on a 4.0 maximum) and he must have
performed with distinction as a member of the varsity
football or basketball team. Having met the 3.0 requirement, the student's athletic achievement is weighed at
least equally with his academic performance.
Not too surprisingly, the field for the first year was
loaded with success-potential. There was one Rhodes
scholar. More than one-third of the recipients were in
pre-law or pre-med. All were outstanding athletes. All
rate a titanic chance for careers of distinction.
Take John Ritch, a standout basketball center for
the U. S. Military Academy. He will go to Oxford College
in England as a Rhodes Scholar, where he will study
philosophy, politics and economics. In addition to the
NCAA award, he also received the merit medal for
excellence in both athletics and scholarship from the

•

36 Elm Street

BONARDI ' S
CLOTHES FOR STYLEWISE MEN

Everything in Formal Dre ss Cloth e s
TO RENT
16 PLEASANT STREET

WORCESTER 8 , MASS.

DARLING'S DELICIOUS
FINE MEAT PRODUCTS
AND

IDLEWILDE FARMS
ROCK CORNISH HENS
Division of Chicago Dressed Beef
Worcester, Mass.

Continued on page 39

37

�JAMES P. BROWN CO. INC •
. . at all NE supermarkets and
31 0 FRANKLIN ST.

leading independent grocers

WORCESTER

FLOUR - FEED - FERTILIZERS

and
FROZEN FOODS

THE MARLEY- HALL COMPANY

distributed by

Providence

Rhode Island

NEW ENGLAND GROCER
SUPPLY CO.

Makers ol Holy Cross College special keys
and college jewelry.

Worcester, Mass.

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

Wholesale Distributor
Electrical Supplies
Lighting Equipment

ESTA BLISH ED 1909

A. C. BOWLER CO.
69 GREEN ST.

WORCESTER, MASS.

DeFalco Concrete Corp.
WORCESTER • MILLBURY • BERLIN
MASSACHUSETTS

BOB DEVLIN SPORTING GOODS CO.

Ready Mix ed Concrete

95 PLEASANT ST.

BOB DEVLIN '46
and

THE BRUCE COSTUME CO.

SAND

•

GRAVEL

91 PLEASANT ST.

JOHN MADDEN, MANAGER '47

George F. DeFalco '39
Pr esident

Bowling Shirt and Jacket Specialists

38

�The Scholar Athlete
Continued from page 37

Eastern College Athletic Conference.
Ritch was an outstanding student every semester.
That wasn't true with Gary Hassmann, Oklahoma State's
classy cage star. He started slowly, but gradually improved his grades until he was a straight A student.
Hassmann is the young man who saved teammate
Bob Swaffar's arm after it had been severed in a laundromat accident. The arm was reimplanted in a six-hour
surgery, and doctors gave much of the credit for the successful maneuver to Hassmann, whose speedy action at
the scene of the accident may have saved Swaffar's life.
Hassmann will attend medical school at the University
of Oklahoma.
Probably the most versatile scholar-athlete was
Arnold Chonko, a football-baseball hero at Ohio State
University. Chonko was an All-American in both sports
and completed his collegiate action by playing on the
OSU team that finished second in the College World
Series at Omaha. "As fine a fielding first baseman as
there has been in the Big Ten for a long time," was the
reaction of Wisconsin coach Dynie Mansfield to Chonko.
Here are the 33 student-athletes whose knowledge
will increase and careers advance as a result of the
scholarship program:
FOOTBALL

Washington Press of Worcester, Inc.

110 West Boylston Drive
Worcester, Massachusetts, 01606

College Division

Jerry Jones, Williams College
David Wion, Allegheny College
Frank Stubblefield, U. of the South
Sherman Riemenschneider, Hiram College
Leon Hardy, Texas Southern Univ.
Gene Carlson, University of Montana
Robert Jones, U. of Redlands
Steve Ingram, Bowdoin College
Steve Miller, Cornell College
Phillip Steans, Ripon College
Peter Smith, Tufts University
University Division

John Kelly, Brown University
Pat Donnelly, U.S. Naval Academy
Jimmy Bell, Clemson University
Arnold Chonko, Ohio State University
Ron Oelschlager, Univ. of Kansas
Edward Fausti, U.S. Air Force Academy
James Ellis, Texas Technological Col.
Russel Mowrer, Colorado State Univ.
Bill Douglas, Univ. of Washington
William Eastlake, Xavier University
Joe Neal, Stanford University
BASKETBALL
College Division

David Coolidge, Williams College
Robert Smith, Johns Hopkins University
James Jepson, Knox College
Thomas Nicolai, Kalamazoo College
Gary Schlarbaum, Coe College
University Division

John Ritch, U.S. Military Academy
McCarthy Crenshaw, U. of Georgia
Robert Dwors, Bowling Green St. U.
Dennis Dairman, Arizona State U.
Gary Hassmann, Oklahoma State U.

IJ

I'

ON SALE
IN THE
STADIUM

�Remember:
We are never too busy to accommodate you in an emergency.

SULLIVAN BROS., PRINTERS
Main office and Plant
95 Bridge St., Tel. 458-6333, Lowell

Auxiliary plants: Boston -

Camden, N. J. -

Pawtucket, R. I. -

Miami -

Oceanport, N. J.

Philadelphia

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

Domestic and Industrial

FUEL OILS

SULLIVAN TRAVEL
SERVICE INC.
5 Pleasant Street
Worcester, Mass.
PL 2-2845

CLAFLIN-DONOHUE

Peter Sullivan, Jr., Class of '34

COMPLETE HEATING SERVICE

60 Mechanic St.

Tel. 754-5331

40

COMPLIMENTS
OF A
FRIEND

�The University

ol Bullalo

Hard Wearing Campus Clothes
For Thrift Minded Students

JOBBERS OUTLET, INC.
WTAG Radio Sponsor for Holy Cross Football Games

139-145 FRONT ST.
JoE CASDIN, Owner
T he University of Buffalo has been the educational and
cultural center of Western New York since I 846. At that
time the City of Buffalo was 14-years old and was the home
of 28,000 people.

.

The "University" was the School of Medicine until
1886 when the School of Pharmacy was added. The school's
first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, a leading citizen of
the community who continued his UB leadership during his
term as 13th President of the United States.
The 14 University Divisions are: School of Medicine
( 1846); School of Pharmacy (I 886); School of Law ( 1887) ;
School of Dentistry (1892); College of Arts and Sciences
(1913); Summer Session ( 1915); Millard Fillmore College,
Evening Division ( 1923); School of Business Administration ( 1927); School of Education ( 1931); School of Social
Work ( 1936); Graduate School of Arts and Sciences ( 1939);
School of Nursing ( 1940) ; School of Engineering (1946) ;
and University College, including associate degrees ( 1958).

GILMAN BROTHERS INC.
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS

The Service House of New England
BOSTO

• WHITMAN • WORCESTER

Buffalo's total enrollment is about 19,000, of which
one-half are full-time undergraduate students.
Few institutions can equal the pace of construction
which has taken place on the North Main Street campus in
recent years. No less than 20 new buildings and additions to
existing buildings have been undertaken, including the
Western New York Nuclear Research Center, the 11-floor
Tower Residence Hall for Men, the It-floor Goodyear
Residence Hall for Women, the $4.5-million Norton Hall
(student union), the Schools of Medicine and Dentistry
(Capen Hall) , and the Acheson Hall of Chemistry.

AL VUONA'S
MENS SHOP
and
FORMAL WEAR FOR HIRE
Tuxedos. Full Dress Cut Aways and Summer Formals

SW :\lain Street

But this is only a beginning. In 1962 Buffalo abandoned
its private operation to become the major campus segment
of the State University of New York. The official name of
the college, created by State University officials, is: State
University of New York at Buffalo. However, popular usage,
particularly in the realm of intercollegiate sports, retains the
familiar name of University of Buffalo, or just UB.

sw

The State University at the present time is completing
arrangements for the purchase of a tract of land in excess
of 1,500 acres in the Town of Amherst, about 3 miles from
the site of the present campus. There a new campus, costing
upwards of $130-million and able to accommodate 20,000
full-time undergraduates, will be built. The present campus
will become a Health-Science Complex second to none in the
world.
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence
and academic freedom, the University of Buffalo continues
its fine tradition of service to the Niagara Frontier and the
State of New York.

1- 1749

Life Insurance
Safeguarding
Tomorrow
GERALD R. ANDERSON

Chartered Life Underwriter
NoRTH WESTERN MuTUAL LIFE INSURANCE Co.
332 Main St.

Worcester, Mass .

PL 2-2859

�JOSEPH P. MANNING CO.
ESTABLISHED 1859
198 FRONT STREET

•

WORCESTER, MASS •

•
TOBACCO

CIGARETTES

CIGARS- CANDY- PIPES- SUNDRIES
Exclusive Distributors of World Famous

La Corona -

Antonio y Cleopatra and

Bock y ca -

Cigars

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

GOOD LUCK "CRUSADERS"

COYLE-PALAZZI
LINCOLN PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER
WORCESTER, MASS.

Don Coyle

42

Togo Palazzi, '54

�C UST O M

A Briel Glance

RO A STED Q UALITY C O FFEE

for Hotels , Restaurants

&amp; Ins t itutions

Complete Service

At The Opponents

--

•-- , -

Established

19 21

Schedule and Record to Date
Tel. PL

40 C anterbury St.
Sept .

25

HARVARD
Away

Oct.

2

DARTMOUTH
Home

30 Pennsylvania
6 • Princeton
13 Brown
20 Yale

17 •Holy Cross 7
33 •Tufts 0
Columbia 6
21
Cornell 3
3
0. 23 •Dartmouth

0.
N.
N.
N.

56 •New Hampshire 6
Holy Cross 6
27
Pennsylvania 19
24
Brown 9
35
0. 23 Harvard

0. 30 Yale
N. 6 Columbia
N. 13 •cornell
N.20 Princeton

6-2624

Walte r J . Cunn i ng h am- '40

Worcester 's
Finest

Oct.

9

COLGATE
Away

Oct . 16
BOSTON
UNIVERSITY
Home

Oct.

23

SYRACUSE
Away

Oct.

30

BUFFALO
Home

Nov.

6

UMASS
Away

Nov.

13

RUTGERS
Away

Nov. 20
CONNECTICUT
Away

Nov.

27

BOSTON
COLLEGE
Home

40
0
7
7
0

• LaFayette 0
Cornell 0
Yale 0
Holy Cross 3
Princeton 27

0.
0.
N.
N.
N.

23 Brown
30 Army
6 • Bucknell
13 Buffalo
20 Rutgers

7 •Maine 18
14 Temple 7
14 Buffalo 7
7 Holy Cross 7
0 . 23 • Massachusetts

0 . 30 •Rutgers
N. 6 •connecticut
N. 13 Delaware
N.20 • Rhode Island

14 Navy 6
0 •Miami 24
24 Maryland 7
14 U.C.L.A. 24
28 Penn State 21

0. 23 •Holy Cross
0 . 30 Pittsburgh
N . 6 •o regen State
N. 13 W. Virginia
N. 20 • Boston College

6 Boston College 18 0 . 23 •Dayton
0 . 30 Holy Cross
13 •Tampa 13
N. 6 Delaware
18 Massachusetts 6
N. 13 •colgate
7 Boston U. 14
N. 20 Villanova
24 Richmond 0
8
41
6
20
30

Maine 10
A.I.C. 0
Buffalo 18
Connecticut 7
Rhode Island 0

0 . 23
0 . 30
N. 6
N. 13

Boston U.
Vermont
Holy Cross
New Hampshire

6 Princeton 32
17 Connecticut 8
6 Lehigh 0
6 Army 23
0 . 23 •columbia

0 . 30 Boston U.
N. 6 Lafayette
N . 13 • Holy Cross
N.20 •colgate

13 Yale 6
8 •Rutgers 17
7 M assachusetts 20
6 Maine 24
0 . 23 •Temple

0 . 30 •New Hampshire
N. 6 Boston U.
N. 13 Rhode Island
N .20 •Holy Cross

18 • Buffalo 6
28 •Villanova 0
0 Army 10
0 Penn State 17
0 . 23 •Richmond

0. 30 •v. M. I.
N. 5 Miami
N . 13 •wm. &amp; Mary
N . 20 Syracuse
N. 27 Holy Cross

Restaurant
Since 1858

PUTNAM &amp; THURSTON'S RESTAURANT
19 -27

Mech an ic Street • P h o n e

753-5427

HASTINGS DRUG CO.
390 Main Street
Slater Bu ilding
2nd Floor

" The House Prescriptions Built"

PETRONE'S SERVICE STATION
Cities Service Gas Products
Corner BELMONT and SHREWSBURY STREETS
WORCESTER, MASS.

• Home Games

43

�HOWLAND liNEN SUPPlY CO., INC.
-10 RRI STOL STREET

BOSTON 18.

~1ASS.

HAncock 6-6630

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

Best Wishes From

Anderson-Little Co., Inc.

RUDNICK &amp; MEAGHER, INC.
Successors

GENERY STEVENS CO.
A GREAT NAME in the
MANUFACTURING of FINE CLOTHING

Tom Daley-Manager
Gold Star Blvd.
Worcester, Mass .

Everybody Enjoys
TOW"N ~

&lt;/ TALK

Wholesal e D1stnb utors

MEADOW GOLD AND HOLLAND BUTTER
58-64 BRIDGE STREET

WORCESTER, MASS.

Tel. 756-2434
COLD STORAGE W AREHOUSE

JIM REDICAN
The Life

Insurance Man
ESTATE PLANNING
NORTHWESTERN
MUTUAL
Office
Home

44

752-2859
791-7372

�ot t-to\Y

crosS

l\IA:\IIE REILLY
ALMA MATER
Oh hear thy sons in happy song
Holy Cross, old Holy Cross!
Thy sons are loyal, true and strong,
Holy Cross, old Holy Cross!
Thy purple banner floats on high
While songs of praise swell to the sky,
Thy honored name shall never die,
Hoi y Cross, old Holy Cross!

0 Mamie Reilly. How do )OU do toda~ -Jiey!
0 Mamie Reilly, going far a11a) - Hr)!
Come. kiss your cladd ~. before ) e drpart
0 Mamie. Mamie, Mamie Reill).
!ide. Kell), Slide. Ca~e) ·~ at the hat
0 Mamie Rei-11). 11 hrrc"d ) ou get that hat
It was do11 n in old Kcntul'k),
Old Black Joe,
0 Mamie. Mamie. Mamie Reilly- lie)!!

VARSITY SONG
Hail, Alma Mater
Hail, Holy Cross
Fair Pakachoag,
On high thy banners toss,
Hail to thy warriors
Valiant for thee
Hail to the Purple Var-si-ty.

LINDEN LANE
HOLY CROSS SLOGAN
Give another hoia,
With a Chu, chu, rah, rah.
A chu, chu, rah, rah,
Chu, chu, rah, rah, rah, rah, rah,
Give another hoia
And a chu, chu, rah, rah,
Chu, chu, rah, rah, for Holy Cross.
March on as knights of old
With hearts as loyal and true, and bold
And wage the bitter fight
With all your might,
Fight on for Holy Cross,
RAH,
RAH,
RAH,
you 'II know when battle's done
It was for her that the fight was won.
Oh, may it never die, that battle-cry
Fight On! for Holy Cross.

There's a hill that's al11ays joll) ,
In the sunshine or in the rain.
And the winding road Ll1at climbs it
Is our dear old Linden Lane.
It is blighty cold in Winter
But it's mighty fine in Spring,
With a heart of song for Holy Cross,
Good fellows always sing.

THE CRUSADER'S MARCH
Give a toast to Holy Cross today
Our lov'd college on the hill
Let's salute her purple banner
As it floats for all to thrill
Sing her praises, sing out loud and bold,
The Crusader's battle cry,
As we march along to victory
Holy Cross shall never die.

�WORCESTER'S LARGEST

''WE SERVE YOU''

MEAT MARKET
Best Steer Beef
Pork - Lamb - Veal
Turkeys - Chickens
Top-Grade A.A.

PUBLIC MARKET
728 SOUTHBRIDGE ST. NEAR HOLY CROSS

3 Sl LVER DOLLARS FREE
Every $137.00 in trade we give you cash. It's the best gift.

3 Silver$

50 Years on the Meat Market

GOOD MEATS • FRESH CUTS • MORE TENDER • MORE GOODNESS • MORE FLAVOR
Lower Price

ACME ROOFING CO., INC.

GIBNEY

INDUSTRIAL ROOFING
SHEET METAL WORK
STEEL DECKS AND

Recond itioners of Athletic Equipment

INDUSTRIAL SIDING

........ .....
'

796 Main Street

Office Shap -

46

Auburn, Mass. -

Worcester 3, Mass.

Tel. TE 2 -2873

Worcester, Mass. __: Tel. PL 2-6432

Phone PL 6-0324

�"

Oct.
Oct .
Oct .
Nov .
Nov .

FAll SCHEDUlES AND RESUlTS
Varsity Soccer
Won 2, Lost 2
9 Assumption
6
0 Nichols
3
1
2 Clark
4
0 Stonehill
1:00 p.m .
23- at St. Peter's
3:00 p.m .
26- Lowell Tech
11:30 a.m .
30- Fairfield
3 :00 p.m .
5 - Norwich
3 :00 p.m .
10- Rhode Island

Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov .
Nov.

Varsity Cross Country
Won 3 , Lost 2
(Low Score Wins)
19
40 Springfield
34
24 Albany State
57 Providence 18, Boston U. 65
19 Boston College 41
19- at W.P.I. &amp; Tufts
22- Connecticut
30- at St. Anselm 's
8 - New Englands at Boston
15- IC4A' s at New York

Bill Palmer

••. When it's needed

For Hospital Expenses &amp; Disability Income-For Business
Contingencies- To Guarantee a College Education-To
Provide Your Early Retirement

The

PALMER

AGENCY

The Slater Sldg. -Worcester, Mass.

"Specializing in The Problems of Lit~ing •.• Not just Dying"

Freshman Football
Won 1, Lost 1

Oct. 31 Nov. 6 Nov. 11 -

20 Dartmouth
15 Connecticut
Boston College
at Boston College
Rhode Island

14
17

PITTSFIELD . MASS . • A MUTUAL COMPANY • 1851

2 :00 p.m .
1:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m .

PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS

ONE SOURCE
for all

PAPER
requirements

If you are building a new home
or remodeling your present home

Call

CARL M. FOLEY '55

W. H. SAWYER LUMBER CO.
PL 5-2561

Gold Star Boulevard

PRINTING AND INDUSTRIAL PAPERS

CENTRAL SUPPLY COMPANY

CARTER RICE STORRS &amp; BEMENT INC.
WORCESTER

39 Waldo St.

156 Commercial St.
Worcester, Moss.

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Boston
Allentown
New York
Hartford
Augusta
Providence
Baltimore
Newark
Worcester
Springfield

EVERYTHING IN

Plumbing, Heating and Water Supplies
Branch at Marlboro , Mass.

47

�PENALTV SIGNALS

0

0
-

2 Illegal orocedure,
pos i tion or

Ille gal

shift

0

0- (!JJ)) €:&amp;
})~
~
substitution

~

3 Ill

1

m:t~~n

1 Offsid e

13

04

0

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passing o r
.

5

0

~

J~ ~
~

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17

15

14

.
1ne 1•19 1'bl ~ recePI'er

1ncomp 1e 1e 1orwor d
ass
0
peno 1ty d ec 1.1ne d , no p 1oy•

downfield or oou

or no "ore

~

0

0

~

l

;nlerlerence

Illegal u•e of

hand s and arms

~

0 '""""" ~
~0

'' er

')

....-_-

\
0 \.==::\ ~\
0
~ ~
0
r7i
~ :;: : ~.:.-: "11
~'- _..,.,..::.........~r,

hondong boll forward

the

10 Unsportsmonlike

7 Penonol fou.l

6 De lay of
game

Illegal return

11

9 R 9 h' 9
k?~ '"

k;cked or belled

//

18

~

Helping
runner
or
.
.

onlerlocked onlerference
( 19

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\\ I\J0 ,. . . . ~. .
~,O~o~~o~; moved

0

from ,;de to ,;de •
touchback

\\

flel d ooa l

FOOTBALL FANS
HOLY CROSS TICKETS
may be p urchased at the following p laces

•
HOLY CROSS ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION

•
OLYMPIC SPORTING GOODS STORE
204 Main Street

48

•
"BOB" DEVLIN SPORTING GOODS
95 Pleasant Street

•

•

"DON" COYLE SPORTING GOODS

AL VUONA MEN'S SHOP

Lincoln Plaza

540 Main Street

�Main St. Worcester-Fitchburg

The Right Look, Rain or Shine
Is Yours in this selection from
I

~~ London Fog®
Impeccable tailoring and trim split-shoulder styling in
the Poole make it the perfect coat for almost any occasion
and all kinds of weather. The Poole is completely wash n' wear and
water-repellent. In a wide range of sizes in natural, ol!ve,
black/red and ivory. $37.50

In London Fog's Dalton Maincoat, you enjoy impeccable
split-shoulder tailoring and an exclusive weave of 65%
Dacron ':', 35% cotton that's both water-repellent and
completely wash -and-wear . And the Dalton 's luxurious
100% Alpaca liner keeps you warm in winter, but zips
out for cool comfort when the temperature rises . In natural ,
black , mica or olive; with black liner. $60.00

Raincoats 2nd Floor

�MILK
FOR
VITALITY

HALF TIME-ANYTIME-MAKE IT MILK!
Busy football weekends call for extra energy. And that
calls for a refreshing glass of milk. Milk is nature's vitality
drink ... that helps you stay in peak conQ.ition, sees you
through the busiest fall days.
Half time; snacktime, anytime-when you take a break,
make it milk. Keep up with the fun with milk's vitality!
a mess:ge from da:ry farmer me":ber= of
•

amer1can da1ry assoc1at1on

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                    <text>�SKI

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�Welcome to the 58th season of B Football, our fourth as a major intercollegiate
competitor.
Just eleven years ago, the schedule we are
facing this year seemed a distant dream.
But with the dedicated effort and support of
so many, both in the University and in the
community, that dream is now being realized every Saturday afternoon. Win or lose,
the Football Bulls have taken their place
among the top independent colleges in the
East, just as the
niversity has achieved a
top rank among the leading graduate centers
in this section of the nation.
Football, of course, is but one of many
facets of the University. The latest available
figures show that Buffalo now stands among
the top Universities in the nation in terms
of annual research expenditures with a total
volume approaching $10 million per year. Total enrollment for the 1965-1966 year exceeds the 20,000 mark (more
than half of whom will be full-time ). And our faculty and students have reached the highest level of quality and
achievement in history.
Soon our physical facilities will keep pace. An unprecedented $310 million building program will, in a few years,
result in the development of the new 1,000-acre campus site in Amherst and in the conversion of the present cam pus to one of the nation's most comprehensive health sciences centers.
Some 17,200 full-time students will attend the new Amherst campus, 5,200 of them at the graduate level, and
8,000 in residence. The faculty, measured in terms of full-time equivalents, will number about 1,700. Some 3,000
students will attend the Health Science Divisions on Main Street.
And even this will be just the beginning of major accomplishments and service for the community, the
and the nation.

tate

It's an exciting prospect - one that we hope will be matched by the color and spirit of today's game at your
State University of ew York at Buffalo.
C. C. FURNA

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1965 marks our 101st year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area.

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2

�J3u/{a/o - ~ (;rowing Universitu
The announcement last summer by the State University of New York of a multi-million dollar expansion
of the State University at Buffalo marked another step
forward by the University in becoming a major Eastern
educational institution "among the finest in the land."
The day we have been waiting for has come!" exclaimed Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, University President.
"We now have the go-ahead to build the truly great
University that all of us have dreamed of."
On September 1st, 1962, the University of Buffalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become the
major campus segment of the widespread system of the
State University of ew York. The new name, created
by State University officials, is: State University of New
York at Buffalo. However, in deference to sweatshirtstitchers and typewriter repairmen, alumni seem to prefer the continuance of "UB" or "University of Buffalo"
where intercollegiate teams are concerned.
One of America's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo
has been the educational capitol of Western New York
since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the fourteenyear-old home of 28,000 people. The "University" was
the School of Medicine until 1886 when the School of
Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was Millard
Fillmore, a first-citizen of the young community, who
continued his UB leadership during his term as the
thirteenth President of the United States.
The fourteen University Divisions are: School of
Medicine ( 1846) ; School of Pharmacy ( 1886) ; School
of Law ( 1887); School of Dentistry ( 1892) ; College of
Arts and Sciences ( 1913; Summer Session ( 1915) ; Millard Fillmore College, evening division ( 1923) ; School
of Business Administration ( 1927) ; School of Education
( 1931) ; School of Social Work ( 1936) ; Graduate School
of Arts and Sciences ( 1939) ; School of Nursing ( 1940) ;
School of Engineering ( 1946) ; and University College
(including associate degrees, 1958).
Buffalo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood of
18,000- of which 9,000 are full-time undergraduate
students. The enrollment is expected to soar in the next
few years, especially in view of the State affiliation.
To meet the influx of resident students during the
past decade a total of seven dormitories have been constructed,

with the seventh

dedicated last fall.

The

$2 million Acheson Hall of Chemistry, the new Norton
Union, the Baird Music Hall and the Western New
York Nuclear Research Center represents the efforts of
private endowment and local leadership.
Past projections have indicated that State University
of New York at Buffalo will need by 1970:
More than 9,000,000 square feet of space for an
anticipated total enrollment of 27,500 students.
Immediate needs include classroom buildings, a
library, residence halls, a fine arts center, an infirmary
and health services building, a university teaching
hospital, a health sciences building, a continuing education center, a physics building, an engineering building,
a physical education and intramural building, and an
administration building.
Adequate parking space for 12,500 automobiles will
be needed.
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of Buffalo
continues its fine tradition of service to the Niagara
Frontier and the State of New York.

3

�Back Row: Jim Wolfe, Freshman Coach; Bob Deming, Backfield Coach; Dewey Wade, Line Coach.
Front Row: Buddy Ryan, Line Coach; Dick Offenhamer, Head Coach; Ron LaRocque, Backfield Coach

SIEGFRIED

Leo Sauer

CONSTRUCTION

FUNERAL HOME
INC.

CO., INC.
•

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•

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• 823 GE ESEE STREET

886 - 2300

TX 2-7183
4

�JAME E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at UB than genial Jim.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the
orth Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue University, a career
which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first po ition at UB was assi tant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War II
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gave up football coaching to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the university began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball
team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in
I CAA Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endle s supply of
anecdotes make him a much sought-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerous civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy, and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.

DICK OFFE HAMER
Architect of Victory
"Local boy makes good" could well be the theme of this
piece, for it accurately describes the brilliant althletic
career of UB football coach Dick Offenhamer.
Although Offie grew up just a "hoot 'n' a holler" from
the UB campus, his trail to that campus was long and
sinuous.
An All-High baseball and football star at Bennett High
School, Dick chose to attend Colgate University.
It was a wise choice. Colgate was then enjoying the
halcyon days of Andy Kerr, when the Red Raiders of the
Chenango Valley went on scalping forays to such waystations as Yankee Stadium, New Orleans, Iowa City, and
Columbus, Ohio. Offenhamer was more than merely present on these trips; he was the right-halfback in the Kerr
double wing attack and he achieved lasting fame as one
of Colgate's all-time greats.
While at college, Offenhamer was light-heavyweight
boxing champion of the school and he also starred on the
baseball team. He received his B.A. in 1936.
Offenhamer coached football at Kenmore High School
for 11 years, and his teams won or tied 5 championships
in the Niagara Frontier Conference.
After World War II he returned to Colgate as director
of freshman athletics, freshman football coach, and boxing coach.
Dick came to the University of Buffalo in 1955, a time
at which UB's football fortunes were at their lowest ebb.
He promptly exerted his skills, knowledge and personality to a difficult situation and the results speak for themselves.
During Offie's 10-year tenure UB has won 53, lost 34,
and tied 3. He had 8-1-0 seasons in 1958, when UB won
the Lambert Cup, and again in 1959, when UB was
runner-up for that trophy.
Offenhamer has won numerous personal honors. He
was national "Coach of the Week" in 1958 after his
team scored a 34-14 upset over Columbia. That same year
the Buffalo Evening News cited him as one of Western
New York's 10 Outstanding Citizens.

5

�JAMES DUPREY

).1ICHAEL WUEST

RICHARD WELLS

THOMAS HURD

FRED GERINGER

PAUL KLEIBER

GERALD LaFOUNTAIN

WILLIAM TAYLOR

JOSEPH HOLLY

THOMAS RIDOLFI

DENNIS PRYZKUTA

CRAIG HELENBROOK

BENNIE WASHINGTON

�NICK CAPUANA

BRUCE MacKELLAR

JOE GARAFOLA

CHARLES BOTULA

RUSS MacKELLAR

DANIEL SELLA

GREENARD POLES

�BUFFALO BULLS

1965

1st Row (L. toR.) - Tom Brennan, Rick Wells, Larry Lehner, Tom Pettit, Mike Rissell, Tom Hoke, Bennie Washington, Jim Remillard, Ted Gibbons Bob Sinclair Dick Pirozzolo, Dennis Brisky, Stan Baranowski, Mario Amorese, Rod
Rishel, Tom Hurd, Dick Ashley, Lee Jones.
2nd Row (L. to R.) - Joe Oscsodal, Tom Ridolfi, John Savage, John Smigelski, Mike Douglas, Russ MacKellar, Jim
Duprey, Fred Geringer, Captain Joe Holly, Ron Ridolfi, Jim Webber, E. Grennard Poles, Dennis Burden, Craig Helenbrook, Joe Garafola, Dennis Przykuta, Gerry LaFountain, Bill Taylor.
3rd Row (L. toR.) - Paul Kleiber, Jim Dunn, Jim Ratel, Ron Pugh, Dick Enyart, Jim McEwen, Nick Capuana, Dan
Sella, Jim Finochio, Jim Barksdale, Walter Swiderski, Ron Donohue, Charles Botula, Bill Abbey, Bruce MacKellar,
Tony Miceli, Mike Wuest, Richard Dechowitz.
Top Row (L. toR.) - Jim Simon (trainer). Bob Deming (ass't coach). Jim Wolfe (ass't coach), Dick Offenhamer (head
coach). "Buddy" Ryan (ass't coach). Ron LaRocque (ass't coach), Dewey Wade (ass't coach), Larry Teller (student
manager) .

N I N E D E CAD ES AG O

the launching of
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HEN ships with sails studded Buffalo's sea·
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the whole nation began to feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution ... Dominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning to make its mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp; D. s services for the investing public sustained
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our Buffalo office, giving you opportunity for investment advice in depth. Let us advise you about your
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JOE HOLLY
Captain
8

�AERIAL VIEW OF BUFFALO CAMPUS

COMPLETE LOCAL STOCKS • • •

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when you need it - as you ordered it
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(Across from Campus)

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Serving from 11 A.M.

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HOME OF "KELLY CARED FOR CARS"
3325 GENESEE ST.
BUFFALO,

. Y.

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TL 2-7080

AT THRUWAY OVERPASS
NF 3-8000
9

�B

u
F
F

A
L
0

10

��'''JIUS'l'ER''
'l'BE 'JIULI1S MASCOT
AND FRIEND

"Buster" is like the real Buster. the Bull's Mascot. He stands 8 Y2'' high, is black with white
ivory horns and has a blue and white saddle blanket. The Buffalo Bull's Doll is a caricature
of a Buffalo Bull's football player . The Doll has a bobbing head and comes in authentic
colors . Both are ava ilable at the University Bookstore "On Campus ."

$4.95

SJ:.OO

1'2

�FROM THE BULLPEN
By Dick Johnston, Evening News

By Bob Powell , Courier-Express

Oft-asked questions that make a sports writer feel
g reat:
1-After you write a daily story about every aspect
of the University of Buffalo football team during preseason practice, 130 people
come up to you the day before the opening game and
ask, "How are the Bulls
this year?"
2- After you spend
hours scrambling your brain
and writing a story on what
happened in a UB football
o-ame on Saturday, 17 people come up the day after
the story appears and ask,
"What happened to UB
Saturday?"
~
3-After spending your
M
week-end covering a Saturday afternoon football game, a Saturday evening basketball game, and a Sunday evening hockey game, for
your own newspaper, a couple of out-of-town newspapers, a wire service or two and maybe a magazine,
finishing up about 2 AM Monday, you get the rest of
Monday off. The guy next door, who spent the weekend drinking beer and watching television, asks, "Don't
you ever work?"
4-A neighbor comes up to you and says, "That
was a great story you had on Offenhamer yesterday,"
then adds, "or was that in the other paper?" Which it
was.
5- When you mention you have to go to work,
some joker cracks, "Do you call that work?"
6----And then there's the wiseacre who always
says, "Yeah, I read what you wrote in the paper but
what really happened?"
7-When, about 2: 30 PM, you are leaving the
office, at which you arrived at 6: 30 AM, and where
you ate lunch at your desk while in the midst of writing
five good-sized stories, each of which demanded telephone calls and research or both, besides which you had
to answer a zillion asinine sports questions on the phone,
some business tycoon, who is returning from a threemartini, two-hour lunch, says, "You going home already? Wotta soft job."
8-0ne fellow asks, "Why can't you cut down on
the space you give to local sports and give more space
to national sports?"
9-The next one asks, "Why can't you cut down
on the space you give to national sports and give more
space to local sports?"
10-"Why don't the Bulls get more space?"
11-" Why don't the Bulls get as much space as the
Bills?"
12-"Just what do you cover for the paper, anyhow?"

Today's game against the University of Dayton
marks the halfway point in UB's 1965 schedule and if a
vote were taken for the team's most valuable player at
this stage, sophomore Tom Hurd would have to get
extra consideration.
The former Elmira
schoolboy star would win
the contest hands down if
it were based on vcrs:1t!lity
alone. In five games, Tom
has been used quite effectively in three key positions.
That's a pretty fine accomplishment for the teenager. The jump from high
school and college freshman
football to the college varsity level is tough enough,
but this boy has proved he's
made it with something to
spare.
Hurd was a wingback with the successful 1964
frosh eleven and was scheduled to move up to the varsity at the same spot as late as 10 days before the season's opener against Boston College.
About that time the regular tailback, Jim Webber,
bumped his knee. It didn't seem like much at the time,
but it was to keep him out of the first three games.
Hurd answered the emergency call. Within a short
period of time, he picked up the tailback assignments
and turned in a creditable job.
When Webber returned to "full-go" status last
week against Richmond, it was time for Hurd to find
other accommodations. Back he went to wingback and
did the necessary job.
In that fateful victory, sophomore quarterback
Rick Wells suffered broken bones in his right leg and
foot, plus torn ligaments in the ankle. The hurts have
sidelined Wells for the rest of the year, and naturally,
signalled another transfer for the migrant Hurd.
Early planning after Wells' loss moved safetyman
Nick Capuana to quarterback - he had some work
there last spring - leaving the deep defensive position
wide open.
Hurd, of course, has had training at Cappy's spot,
so defensive backfield Coach Bob Deming wanted him
to replace his established star.
If Tom Hurd were to go to a psychoanalyst with
his nomadic tale, the latter undoubtedly would tell him
his problem was that he simply felt unwanted and unneeded.
That would be far from the truth. The Bulls want
young Tom and need him, too.
13

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14 MODELS FROM $265.
Come in and meet the sports at .••

SUPER SPORTS
3676 SHERIDAN AT MILLERSPORT
Phone 833-9888

Open Evenings

BUFfALO LINE-UP

o4nsef

Offense

Defense

S.E.
86 DUNN

Press

l.H.B.

83 McNAMARA

l.E.

24 T. RIDOLFI
32 HOKE

84 LaFOUNTAIN
81 LEHNER
S.T.

•

tnc.
" B uffalo's
leading

I

76 WUEST
LL.B.

79 RATEL
F.B.

L.T.

36 JONES

72 BRISKY

38 PRZYKUTA

70 PUGH

S.G.

52 HOLLY
50 DUPREY

62 RISSELL
75 FINOCHIO

exponent
L.G.

of quality
printing"

71 TAYLOR

c.

Q.B.

56 B. MacKELLAR

18 R. RIDOLFI

58 RISHEL

16 N. CAPUANA

s.

78 PIROZZOLA

48 HURD
34 SINCLAIR

R.G.

Printers

&amp;
Lithographers
126 S. ELMWOOD
Buffalo, N. Y. 14202

W.G.

T.B.

67 GIBBONS
69 DECHOWITZ

44 WEBBER

56 R. MacKELLAR
61 BOTULA

22 WASHINGTON
R.l.B.
R.T.
63 POLES

W.T.

W.B.

74 ABBEY

20 BARKSDALE
48 HURD

73 MICELI

W.E.
87 ASHLEY
89 BURDEN

55 GAROFALO
50 DUPREY

R.E.

R.H.B.

80 HELENBROOK

40 SELLA

46 SWIDERSKI

14 GERINGER
J ,

I

•

SPECIALISTS: P.A.T. &amp; F.G. - 90 OSCSODAL
PUNTS - 35 SMIGELSKI, 28 HANSEN

TL 3-3005

KICKOFFS -

14

90 OSCSODAL

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TF 6-1 000

3080 MAIN STREET

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

OPEL KADETT BULL WAGON

•

ON LY $1650 (minus art work1 of course)

UNIVERSITY

DAYTON UNIVERSITY LINE-UP
Defense

Offe nse
R.E .

R.E .

80 BLUBAUGH

81 CONLIFFE

81 CONLIFFE

89 LUDE

PLAZA

R.C.B.
F.B.

41 RICHARDSON
25 LOWE

35 WIESENHAHN

75 DRESSELL
R.S.

R.T.

32 COATES

R.T.

71 STANGLE
80 BLUBAUGH

76 LUCIDORE

24 SCHMALZ
B4 SOARES
R.G.
R.G.

62 GORIUS

63 CICCOLELLA

R.H.B.

69 DAHM

30 MELL

63 CICCOLELLA

48 HORLACHER

c.

c.

50 LEGAN

60 SHORTAL

57 CHEW

57 CHEW
l.H.B.
28 TAYLOR
26 MAYO

l.G.

l.G.

66 LAWHORN

55 JONES

67 WARNER

66 LAWHORN
l.S.

Q.B .

14 HUSSION
12 PREISSER

l.C.B.

15 RUDOLPH

l.T.

l.T .

12 PREISSER

73 KOCHER

74 KRAMARCZYK

65 MANLEY

75 DRESSELL

22 SUMPTER
26 MAYO
l.E.

L.E.

85 PRINT

87 SPEAR

87 SPEAR

88 BUCHERT

SPECIALISTS
KICKOFFS, PAT &amp; FG PUNTS -

86 LEDINSKY, 42 TALl

44 PRINZ, 12 PREISSER, 83 CLARK

15

DAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSO CO.
AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Record - Cards
LEES DRUGS
GUSTAV A. FRISCH- Jeweler
KOEGL'S BAKERY
LEO ARDO'SRESTAURA T
M and T TRU T CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REP AIR
STYLE CREST ME 'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP
LBRICH'S- Stationery
FEDERAL MEATS
THE PLAID SHOP
DEALS JEWELERS
YOUR MATER ITY SHOP
AEXANDER KATZ and
LOU KROP - Optometrists
EVANS - Gifts and Cards
W. T. GRA T CO.
FA Y FARMER
AMHERST
Clothes Tree, Inc.
JOH SO 'S-Amherst Bootery

�1966 VARSITY SCHEDULE

Sept. 18

Kent State

away

Oct.

15

Sept. 24

Cornell

home

Oct. 22

Dayton Univ.

away

Boston College

away

THE

COVER
iC

Oct.
Oct.

8

29

Villanova

home

Oct.

Boston Univ.

away

Nov.

Nov. 12

5

Tampa

Holy Cross

home

Delaware

home

Three reasons why Buffalo ranks
6th in rushing defense in the
nation .

All-East End Gerry Lafountain;
All-East Tackles E. G. Poles and
Dennis Brisky.

away

BUFFALO BULLS 1965 ROSTER

J0NEs•
RI cH
MI LK
c0RP.
"It's Flavor Guarded"

70 E. FERRY STREET
TT 3-4080

No.
*14
*16
17
18
20
22
24
25
26
28
30
32
34
35
36
*38
*40
*44
46
48
*50
*52
*55
56
58
61
62
*63
67
*68
69
*70
*71
72
73
74
75
76
78
*79
*80
81
83
*84
85
*86
87
88
89
*90
*-

Name

Pos.

Age

Ht.

Wt.

DHB
HB-QB
QB
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
K
FB
FB
HB
HB
FB
FB
DHB
HB
HB
HB
LB
C-LB
LB

20
19
18
21
19
18
21
22
21
19
18
19
18
21
19
20
19
22
21
19
21
20
22
19
19
19
19
22
19
21
23
20
21
18
20
20
19
20
19
22
21
19
21
21
21
20
20
18
21
22

5-9
5-9
6-0
5-9
5-11
5-9
5-9
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-1
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-9
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-1
5-10
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-1
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-2
5-11
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-1
5-10

165
180
190
170
170
186
170
160
195
172
210
185
190
180
200
210
175
170
184
192
215
210
205
225
195
200
215
225
230
210
215
225
230
200
220
215
212
230
235
220
210
195
191
220
225
200
215
180
190
158

Class

Geringer, Frederick
Capuana, Nicholas
Wells, Richard
Ridolfi, Ronald
Barksdale, James
Washington, Bennie
Ridolfi, Thomas
Scalleta, Paul
McEwen, James
Hansen, Brian
Brennan, Thomas
Hoke, Thomas
Sinclair, Robert
Smigelski, John
Jones, Leeland
Przykuta, Dennis
Sella, Daniel
Webber, James
Swiderski, Walter
Hurd, Thomas
Duprey, James
Holly, Joseph (Capt.)
Garafola, Joseph
MacKellar, Bruce
Rishel, Rodney
Botula, Charles
Rissell, Michael
Poles, E. Greenard
Gibbons, Theodore
MacKellar, Russell
Dechowitz, Richard
Pugh, Ronald
Taylor, William
Brisky, Dennis
Miceli, Anthony
Abbey, William
Finochio, James
Wuest, Michael
Pirozzolo, Richard
Ratel, James
Helenbrook, Craig
Lehner, Lawrence
McNamara, James
LaFountain, Gerald
Kleiber, Paul
Dunn, James
Ashley, Richard
Remillard, James
Burden, Dennis
Oscsodal, Joseph
Letterman

16

Sr .
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.

c

C-LB
G
G
T
G
DG
G
DT
G
E
T
E
T

T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
K

Hometown
Danville, Pa.
Utica, N.Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Woonsocket, R . I.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Rochester, N. Y .
Marcy, N.Y.
Watertown, N. Y.
Solvey, N . Y.
Buffalo, N . Y .
Depew, N.Y.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Manlius, N. Y .
Utica, N. Y.
Elmira, N . Y.
Peru, N . Y.
Lyons, N.Y.
Gloversville, N. Y .
Kenmore, N . Y .
E . Smethport, Pa.
Riverhead, L. I.
Coatesville, Pa.
Rochester, N. Y.
Newport, R. I.
Kenmore, N . Y.
Brooklyn, N. Y .
McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N. Y .
Detroit, Mich.
Batavia, N. Y.
Peru, Ind.
E. Syracuse, N. Y.
Utica, N.Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y .
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Binghamton, N. Y.
Saranac Lake, N. Y.
Auburn, N. Y.
Cranston, R. I.
Massena, N . Y .
New Bedford, Mass.
Franklin Square, L . I.
Buffalo, N. Y .

j

J

�Whots the Geneseetret . ..
UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON 1965 ROSTER
No. Name
10
12
*14
*15
17
20
22
24
25
26
28
*30
*32
*33
35
36
41
42
44
45
*48
*50
51
53
*55
*57
*60
61
62
*63
64
65
*66
67
68
69
70
*71
72
73
74
75
76
77
*80
81
83
*84
*85
86
*87
88
*89

i

Biebuyck, Jerry
Preisser, Gary
Hussion, Gary
Rudolph, Joe
Thomas, Bob
Madden, Bob
Sumpter, Theron
Schmalz, Jim
Lowe, Bob
Mayo, Bill
Taylor, Mel
Mel!, Roosevelt
Coates, Marty
Gilmour, Don
Wiesenhahn, Gale
Bolbach, Dennis
Richardson, Pete
Talz, Frank
Prinz, Tom
Trinite, Mickey
Horlacher, Jim
Legan, Bob
Jennings, Jim
Juracek, Ken
Jones, Doug
Chew, Frank
Shortal, Bob
Day, Dave
Gorius, Tom
Ciccolella, Mike
McCall, Mike
Manley, Bill
Lawhorn, Frank
Warner, Larry
Profato, Barry
Dahm, Joe
Owens, Jim
Stangle, Tom
Carmello, Felix
Kocher, Bob
Kramarczyk, Dan
Dressel!, Larry
Lucidore, Charles
Petrigala, Jim
Blubaugh, Jim
Coniffe, Ken
Clark, Scott
Soares, Dick
Print, Bob
Ledinsky, Tom
Spear, Bill
Buchert, Dennis
Lude, Bill

Class
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.

Pos.

Ht.

Wt.

Hometown

QB
QB
QB
QB
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
FB
FB
FB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB

6-1
6-0
6-1
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-7
5-11
6-0
5-10
5-10
5-6
5-11
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-1
6-1
5-9
5-9
6-3
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-1
5-10
6-1
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-4
5-11
6-1
6-3
6-3
6-1
6-3
6-0
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-1
6-3
6-0
6-2
5-11

204
175
201
168
174
183
151
161
184
150
178
179
188
185
194
196
192
195
183
189
183
200
197
190
194
206
207
174
186
225
213
206
209
210
177
194
194
255
225
233
238
219
268
224
222
207
205
171
214
191
182
197
198

Detroit, Mich
Orlando, Fla.
Dunkirk, N. Y.
Euclid, Ohio
Sharon, Pa.
Dayton, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Youngstown, Ohio
Lima, Ohio
Evanston, Ill.
Greenville, Miss.
Niles, Ohio
Willowick, Ohio
Amelia, Ohio
Toledo, Ohio
Youngstown, Ohio
Westchester, Ill.
St. Petersburg, Fla.
Silver Springs, Md.
Kettering, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Monroe, Mich.
Belleville, Ill.
New Lebanon, Ohio
Charlorei, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Louisville, Ky.
Newark, Ohio
Follansbee, W. Va.
Dayton, Ohio
N. Cumberland, W. V.
Loveland, Ohio
Covington, Ohio
Niles, Ohio
Belleville, Ill.
Niles, Ohio
Dayton, Ohio
Youngstown, Ohio
Lakewood, Ohio
Chicago, Ill.
Jackson, Mich.
New Castle, Pa.
Medina, Ohio
Canton, Ohio
Louisville, Ky.
Louisville, Ky.
Bridgeport, Conn.
Euclid, Ohio
Euclid, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Martins Ferry, Ohio

c
c
c
c
c

G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G

c
c

T
T
T
T
T
T
T
E-T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

* Denotes Lettermen

J

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

�DAYTON UNIVERSITY SQUAD

First Row, Left to right: Mike Ciccolella, Dick Soares, Bill Spear, Roosevelt Mell, Gary Hussion, Joe Rudolph, Bob Legan, Frank
Chew, Larry Dressell, Bill Lude, Don Gilmour, Frank Lawhorn.
Second Row: Mel Taylor, Jim Horlacher, Ken Conliffe, Pete Richardson, Gary Presser, Theron Sumpter, Jim Blubaugh, Bob Print,
Dennis Buchert, Marty Coates, Billy Mayo, Dennis Bolbach, Jim Schmalz and Bob Lowe.
Third Row: Tom Prinz, Jerry Biebuyck, Bob Madden, Bob Kocher, Bob Shortal, Dan Kramarcyk, Tom Stangle, Jim Petrigala, Larry
Warner, Doug Jones, Tom Gorius, Scott Clark, Gale Wiesenhahn, Frank Talz.
Fourth Row: Bob Thomas, Mickey Trinite, Tom Ledinsky, Felix Carmello, Mike McCall, Chuck Lucidore, Bill Manley, Barry Profato,
Joe Dahm, David Day, Jim Jennings, Ken Juracek, Jim Owens.

GRANVILLE MOTORS I.NC.
VOLKSWAGEN

AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE CENTER
• SEDANS
• SUNROOFS

• STATION WAGONS
• KARMAN GH lAS

1500 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
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OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 836-4600
•

AUTHORIZED
OU.LEA

All Late Model VW's and Domestic Used Cars Warranted

FRANK CHEW and JOE RUDOLPH
University of Dayton Co-Captains

18

�A History of the University of Dayton
The University of Dayton traces its history
to the year 1850 when a modest primary
school for boys, known as St. l\Iary's Institute,
was a group of Catholic missionaries who had
left their native France just a year earlier to
bring their educational work to America.
These priests and Brothers were members of
the Society of Iary, a religious order founded
in 1817 by Father William Joseph Chaminade.
These pioneer l\Iarianists (as Society of
Mary men were called) were fortunate, while
conducting their ministry in Dayton, to become acquainted with a certain Mr. John
Stuart, scion of the royal family of Scotland. Mr. Stuart sold the Marianists his onehundred-and-twenty-acre "Dewberry Farm"
just south of the city-an ideal, hilltop property for a school. The following summer, in
1850, fourteen pupils began classes in the
homestead of Dewberry Farm.
From that humble beginning St. Mary's
Institute grew. Some years later, it became
St. Mary's College, and then in 1920, at age
seventy, the school became the University of
Dayton.
lts growth and progress continued. vVhen
the school adopted its present name, enrollment was one hundred and seventy-one. In
1937, two years after coeducation was introduced, it passed the thousand mark. Following World
War II, enrollment at the University of Dayton-as
at most other colleges and universities around the
country-expanded rapidly. In 1946, almost three
thousand students registered, and in 1965, a record
total enrollment of more than 8,500 was attained.

FR. RAYMO D A. ROESCH, S.M.
President -

University of Dayton

function on the campus, awarding twenty-four different degrees on the associate, baccalaureate, and gradate levels.
As on most busy campuses, the University of Dayton
has been engaged in a sizable building program. This
academic year began with the completion of three
buildings-a 700-capacity men's residence hall, a women's residence hall for I ,000, and a sprawling student
union- representing an expenditure of about eight
million dollars. Just completed are extensive additions to the University's main library and construction of a nine-story classroom-laboratory-office building for the School of Business Administration, Miriam
Hall.

The University of Dayton thus ranks with the
University of Detroit among the ten largest Catholic
colleges in the United States.
Growth in numbers does not necessarily represent
progress, of course. \Vhile enrollment grew, new
programs on both undergraduate and graduate levels
were initiated, curriculums and methods of presenting
them were streamlined. New buildings to house various departments and activities were built at a rapid
pace. Professional and educational groups recognized
the University's work with accreditation and approvals.

Meanwhile, new academic programs, notably in
Communication Arts, Computer Science, and in various fields on the graduate level, have been introduced
and have met with wide acceptance. The University's
research effort, now involving annual expenditures of
some three million dollars, represents a sizable portion of the annual fourteen million dollar budget on
which the institution operates.

Today, in its one-hundred-and-sixteenth academic
year, the University of Dayton includes the College of
Arts and Sciences, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, School of Business Administration, School of
Education, School of Engineering, and Technical Institute. In all, thirty-seven departments of instruction
19

�Left to right -

Ed Youngs, George Perles, John McVay, J erry Harlon, Joe Eaglowski, Tom Moore.

ICICIC your Money Worries
Out of Bounds ...
with a low-cost loan from Bank of Buffalo. Borrow for College
Tuition . .. Home Improvement ... a well deserved trip ...
any worthwhile purpose. Just dial 854-4950 and pick up the
money at the nearest B.O.B. office. 17 Court at Pearl ... 694
Fillmore at Broadway .. . 2157 Seneca near Cazenovia .. .
4248 Delaware at Dreyer ... 4954 Harlem at Sheridan .. .
3871 Union at George Urban ... 4184 Seneca at Mill Road or
the new Stuyvesant Plaza Branch , 274 Elmwood at Summer.

BANK OF BUFFALO
Member : Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

20

•

�TOM FRERICKS
Athletic Director
Thomas J. Frericks, University of Dayton, '53 , is the leader
of the youth movement placed in command of the University
of Dayton Athletic Department in the past two years. At 3 3
years of age he has been in the role of Athletic Director since
June of 1964. He followed a former teammate, Don Donoher,
to UD. Donoher, UD '54, had succeeded the late Tom Black·
burn as head basketball coach in April , 1964.
He immediately had selected 35·yea r·old Charles Grigsby as
his assistant. Grigsby had graduated from UD in 1952 after a
successful basketball career. Head football coach John McVay.
not a UD graduate, was hired, at 34 years of age, last January.
During Frericks' tenure last year as head man he re-organized
the Facilities and Equipment and the athletic financial depart·
ments, added an Administrative Assistant to oversee the aca·
demic needs of the athletes and overhauled the football depart·
ment after the previous regime had resigned in December of
1964.
Succss
sports in
per cent
close to,

was corning slow but the winning percentage of all
the 1964·65 school year went from an average of 33
to 48 per cent. Only varsity football could not stay
or above, the . 500 marks.

Frericks, who came to UD from Minster, Ohio, as a basket·
ball and baseball player, was a Dayton high school coach from
his UD graduation until 1963. He had great success as a basket·
ball tutor at Dayton Chaminade High School with a 166·54
record. He spent a year in business before returning to sports
as UD's Athletic Director in June, 1964.

John McVay has never strayed far from his native Ohio. He
was born in Bellaire, Ohio, January 5, 1931, and played his high
school football for three years with Massillon High School. His
colle:;e playing days were spent with Miami University at Ox·
ford, Ohio, and his first coaching jobs were at Lancaster and
Franklin, Ohio, High Schools, and at Canton, Ohio, Central
Catholic High.
His only excursion out of the Buckeye state was to Michigan
State University as backfield assistant to Duffy Daugherty for
the 1962 through 1964 seasons. His return to Ohio this year
has placed him as the 19th football coach in the 58-seaso n
history of the sport at the University of Dayton.
McVay was an all-state selection as a 1948 senior when Mas·
sillon was the state footba:I champion. H e was recruited to
Miami by Woody H ayes ~ nd played his fre&gt;hrn 3n and sopho·
more campaigns under the present Ohio State tutor. As a junior
and senior at Miami his head man was Ara Parseghian. He was
captain of the 1952 team, h :s senior year, and made All -Ohio
selections as a center. He graduated from Miami in 1953 ~;;ith
a B.S. in Educa~ion. He s:nce has gained a Ma ~ ters degree 111
School Administration at Ken State University in 1963.
His coaching tenures at Lancaster and Franklin were brief but
he compiled a 41·7·2 five·year record at Canton Central Catho·
lie from 1957 through 1961. Daugherty, who surrounds him·
self with knowledge football men, chose the young coach for
his staff in 1962.

JOHN McVAY
Head Coach
21

�DAYTON

LARRY WARNER

BILLY MAYO

ROOSEVELT MELL

GARY HUSSION

LARRY DRESSELL

DAN KRAMARCZYK

TOM GORIUS

JIM HORLACHER

MIKE CICCOLELLA

JOE RUDOLPH

DICK SOARES

22

�UNIVERSITY

BILL SPEAR

BOB KOCHER

BOB LEGAN

KEN CONLIFFE

BOB SHORTAL

JIM BLUBAUGH

MARTY COATES

GARY PREISSER

23

TOM STANGLE

�UNIVERSITY OF

24

DAYTON

�BUFFALO TRAINING STAFF

Bill Andrews; Jim Simon, Head Trainer; Norb Baschnagel

CAPPELLINI'S RESTAURANT

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.

and
HEATING Power Plants -

AI R CONDITI ONING

Process Piping -

CATERERS, INC.

Fire Protection

•

•

101 NIAGARA STREET
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14202

TL 4-8435

120 W. TUPPER

FRONTIER MICROFILM, INC.

The Women of

• • •
128 SO. ELMWOOD

SIGMA KAPPA PHI

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14202

boost the Bulls
TL 3-7182

25

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFFALO
6

(2-2-1)

Attendance

Boston College

18

21,700

13

Tampa

13

8,016

18

Massachusetts

6

10,200

7

Boston U.

14

7,314

24

Richmond

0

7,705

Oct. 23

RUSHING
Player
Att.
*Rick Wells
97
Lee Jones
51
Tom Hurd
36
Jim Webber
23
Dennis Przykuta
19
Bennie Washington 2
Jim Barksdale
8
Ron Ridolfi
4

Dayton

240

Net
286
199
112
108
58
11
5
-16

Avg.
2.9
3.9
3.1
4.6
3.0
5.5
0.6
0.0
3.1

763

Oct. 30 at Holy Cross

Nov.13

(5 games)

TEAM TOTALS

Nov. 6 at Delaware

Opponents

Buffalo

Colgate
First downs

Nov. 20 at Villanova

55

64

Rushes, net yds., avg. 240 for 763 (3.1)

68

54,935

51

26 for 75 ( 418 yds.)

Passes

182 for 339 (1.8

52 for 114 ( 632 yds.)
45.6

34.6

Pet. completions

Total offense 1,181 yds. in 315 plays 971 yds. in 298 plays
Interceptions
PASSING
Player

Att.

Comp.

10 for 54 yds.

12 for 237 yds.

19 (lost 10)

14 (lost 8)

Fumbles
Yds.

Int.

TD's

Rick Wells

63

23

8

349

4

Ron Ridolfi

12

3

4

69

1

75

26

12

418

5

Penalties

24 for 258 yds.

20 for 142 yds.

ECAC Weekly All-East Nominations for Boston U. game:
Outstanding Lineman - DICK ASHLEY, sophomore end,
Massena, N. Y.
Outstanding Back - LEE JONES, sophomore full back,
Buffalo, N. Y.

Students ...

The John W.

'ii YAMAHA
Big Wheels on Campus

Cowper Co.

SUBURBAN CYCLES, Ltd.
3165 MAIN ST. near UB Campus
Open Daily til 6 P.M.
Thurs. &amp; fri . til 9 P.M.
836-5765

INCORPORATED

Engineers -

Contractors

LET'S MEET AFTER THE GAME AT THE . . .

•
OLD

873-4200

POST

ROAD

INN

Post Office Box 1068
1945 Sheridan Drive
3151 Main Street

Buffalo, New York 14240

26

Buffalo, N. Y. 14214

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
INTERCEPTIONS &amp; RETURNS
Player
No.
Yardage
Nick Capuana
2
14
Dan Sella
2
17
Joe Holly
2
0
Gerry LaFountain
1
12
Jim Duprey
1
7
Joe Garofalo
1
4
Tom Ridolfi
1
0
SCORING
*Rick Wells ( 4 TD's rushing, 2 PAT runs )
Dick Ashley (3 TD's pass receptions )
Joe Oscsodal (4 PAT's, 2 FG )
Jim Dunn (1 TD, pass reception )
Jim Barksdale ( 1 TD, pass reception)
TOTAL
* - injured; will not play any more this season.

RECEIVING
Player
Jim Dunn
Dick Ashley
Tom Hurd
Dennis Burden
Jim Barksdale
Bennie Washington

Pts.
28
18
10
6

Tom
Dan
Nick
Fred
*Rick

Hurd
Sella
Capuana
Geringer
Wells

No.

Yardage

9
2

107
51
58
7

1

29

7
5

TD's

Yards

11
7

113
157

4
1

71
36
23

1

18

2

1
3
0
0
1
0

PUNTING

6

68
Player
Brian Hansen
John Smigelski
Tom Hurd

PUNT RETURNS
Player

Receptions

No.

Average

18
10

34.9
30.4

1

25.0

You're Not Seeing Double !

KICKOFF RETURNS
Yardage

No.

Player

51
50
52

2
2
3

Jim McEwen
*Rick Wells
Tom Hurd

DRIVING A "SPORTS CAR" IS
T WICE

T HE FUN

All restricted gauges, precise tempers and finest fin ishes made

BOB DeGRAW

to your exact specifications.

230 1 MAIN STREET

COLD ROLLED STRIP STEEL

837-5600

''Where Service is the Tai l that Wags the Dog"

Warehouse and Mill Deliveries
COIL

•

•

SHEETS

ROLLER LEVELING

•

SHEARING

Save at Erie Federal

PLATE
•

• All accounts insured up to $10,000 by the
Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation.
• Money deposited by the tenth of EVERY
month immediately earns high dividends from
the first of the month.

SLITTING

GIBRALTER STEEL
CORPORATION
NT 4-1020
2555 Walden Avenue

•

Buffa lo, N . Y. 14225

27

�1965 FOOTBALL RU LES CHANGES
The rule limiting the height of a tee for place kicks

The most important rule change in college football

has been amended to permit a two-inch tee.

for the 1965 season is the adjustment in the regulations
governing substitutions which permit:

The rule governing free kicks out of bounds between
goal lines has been changed. If such a kick goes out of

( 1) Two eligible substitutes of either team to enter

bounds untouched inbounds by Team B it is a foul.

the game at any time before the ball is put in
In order to emphasize the restriction on "spearing"

play.

the rule prohibiting the use of the helmet or head to
maliciously butt or ram an opponent has been broadened

( 2 ) Any number of substitutes of either team to enter
the game between periods, after a score or try,

to include any part of an adversary's body.

when Team B is awarded a first down or when,
following a kick, Team A is awarded a first down.

A few minor changes include the permission, to use
by mutual agreement, a ball with two white stripes;

This revision will allow the use of specialists at any
time with the same freedom of utilization as in 1964.

provides that the game clock be stopped when Team B
is awarded a first down or when following a kick Team

Unlimited substitutions when team possession changes is

A is awarded a first down; and several other adjust-

the major change. Resorting to the commission of a foul

ments made to conform with the 1964 rule change

to stop the clock in order to make more than two sub-

governing scrimmage kicks which cross the line of

stitutions as in 1964 is not now possible.

scrimmage.

'lnturrntty iirtgQts
zalu±£5

iuffaln iulln
A DY'S OPEN KITCHE

SUB RBA

CYCLES, LTD. YAMAHA

BARTLETT BUICK, INC.

HERZOG'S DRUG STORE, I C.

BATT CO. HEATING &amp; PLUMBING

O'CO

BITTERMAN'S RESTAURANT

SOL'S ESQUIRE SHIRT LAUNDRY, INC.

COLO IAL HOUSE RESTAURANT

MARINE TR ST COMPA Y -

ELL LUCUS &amp; CHELF, I C.

University Office

28

�BUFFALO BULLS

RICHARD ASHLEY

RODNEY RISHEL

MICHAEL RISSELL

SUPPORT THE BULLS- GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW
I wish t o purchase ... . ...... season tickets for 1966. No payment required until billed July 1st.
Name

................................................. Telephone

............... . . ............ . ...... .. ... .. .

Address ........................ · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zone . . . . . . . . . State ........................ .
Fill out the application and mail to Ticket Office, Clark Gym, Buffalo, N. Y. 14214

SCIENTIFIC

EQUIPMENT

and

MEDICAL SUPPLIES
for

• INDUSTRY

• PHYSICIANS
• SCHOOL

• HOME

• HOSPITAL

JEFFREY-FELL CO., INC.
1700 MAIN ST.

Phone TT 3 - 1700

29

BFLO., NEW YORK 14209

�PROGRAM PATRONS
Pearce &amp; Pearce

Matthew J. Pantera, Jr.

University Manor Motel

Matthew J. Pantera,

E. P. Lauer, Optician

Arthur F. Movalli

Ben Kurtz Insurance

Arthur Mogerman

Charles W. Moses "Insurance"

Edward F. Mimmack

Bob Kerner Restaurant

Wallace H. Miller

Sinatra's Centre

Leo M. Michalek

Hunt Real Estate Corporation

Frank Meyers

Aurora Building &amp; Supply, Inc.

Harold F. Mee e

Brunners Tavern

J. Eugene McMahon

"Tops Market"

James C. McGarvey

Bocce Club Pizzeria

Anthony J. Manzella

Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.

David J. Mahoney, Jr.

Rich Products Corp.

Samuel D. Magavern

Robert S. Wolfson

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lipsitz

Fred H. White

Stephen F. Kissel

Joseph C. Vispi

Rudolph U. John on

[rvin L. Terry

Sheldon Hurwitz

Daniel T. Szymoniak

William J. Hildebrand, Jr.

Harlan J. Swift

Donald W. Hall

James R. Sullivan

Anthony S. Gugino

In Memory of a Friend

George L. Grobe, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. George

Seifert

r.

Lewis J. Greenky

Gerard E. Schultz

A. Donald Gilden

Gerald C. Saltarelli

In Memory of Dom Grossi

Hugh Me M. Russ

Edward D. Flaherty

Albert G. Rowe

Robert D. Fernbach

Chester P. Glor, Jr.

Edward H. Farnham

Leo J. Rosen

Robert J. Ehrenreich

William R. Root

George E. Easterbrook

30

�James P. Donnelly

Louis A. Vendetti

Arnold E. DiLaura

Gertrude

John F. Connelly

Carlton C. Rausch

Ross M. Cellino

Robert W. Lipsett

John F. Canale

Russell Kidder, Jr.

Max W. Burstein

Charles F. Banas

Walter Brock

Robert R. Barrett

Francis B. Borowiec

William H. Georgi

Melvin L. Bong

J. Edwin Alford

Stanley B. Blach

Harold E. Sippel

Bertram Portin

Donald R. Barber

Willard H. Bernboft

Kevin Kennedy

Owen B. Augsburger

Fenton F. Harrison

Charles J. McDonough

Roy E. Seibel

Charles H. Diefendorf

Erne t L. Colucci

Edwin F. Jaeckle

Herbert R. Reitz
anford B.

eymour H. Knox

. wartout

ugarman

amuel Shatkin

M. Robert Koren
Louis J. Russo

Mr. and Mrs. William George Willis

Robert J. Metzen

James T. McFarland

Francis C. Hornung

Emil J. Celmer

Seymour Schuller

Thomas C. McDonald

.I ohn H. Dittman

Harold A. Adel

.c

Lewis Goldstein

orman Haber

Abraham

Samuel Battaglia

. Carrel

Warren Jack W aldrow

Willian-. L. Marcy

Allen V. Gibbons

Roger T. Cook

William Rathke

Douglas H. Brock

S. Howard Payne

• orman B. Lewis
Fred S. Schwarz

Charles May

John A. Krull

Harold M. Harri

James W. Jordan

Stanley J. Zambron

Frank T. Riforgiato

Louis DeVincentis

Gerald J. Lankes

George Selkirk

Leonard wagler
Fred B. Wilke

Kenneth M. Alford

George M. Masotti

Charles Matthews

Vincent camurra

31

�1965-1966
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
FRESHNU\N FOOTBALL
SEPTEMBER
24- at Army Plebes
OCTOBER
8-at Colgate Frosh
15-at Navy Plebes
30- Manlius School
NOVEMBER
5- Ithaca College Frosh
12- at Syracuse Frosh
VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY
SEPTEMBER
25- at Syracuse
28- Canisius &amp; State
OCTOBER
2- at Invitational LeMoyne
5- at RIT
9- Brockport
13- Niagara
16- Cortland
23- at LeMoyne - Colgate
27- at Fredonia State
30- at Invitational Canisius
NOVEMBER
2- at Gannon
6- at Alfred
13- at Cortland NYSCYT
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTEMBER
20- St. Bonaventure
22- Canisius
28- Niagara
30- State
OCTOBER
! - McMaster
5-at Canisius
7- at St. Bonaventure
12- at Niagara
14- at State
19- at McMaster
VARSITY BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
1- Brockport State
4- at Syracuse
10-at Ithaca College
11- at Albany State
14- Penn State at Mem . Aud.
18- Bucknell
21- San Francisco State
JANUARY
14--Colgate
15- Akron at Mem. Aud.
20- at Western Ontario
25- Toronto
28- Plattsburgh State
29- Northern Illinois at Mem. Aud.
FEBRUARY
2- Cornell at Mem. Aud.
4- at Windsor
5- at Wayne State
8- at Niagara
10-Buffalo State at Mem. Aud.
16-at Alfred
19- Albany State
26-Kent State at Mem. Aud.

MARCH
1- at Rochester
VARSITY SWIMMING
DECEMBER
4- Cortland
7- at State
11- at Syracuse
16- at Brockport State
JANUARY
15- Toronto
22- Western Ontario
29- at Toronto
FEBRUARY
2-State
5- Colgate
8- Niagara
12- at Oswego
19- at Rochester
23- Geneseo
26- at St. Bonaventure
MARCH
1- at Niagara
5- Upper N. Y . Syracuse
VARSITY WRESTLING
JANUARY
15- 0ntario Ag.
21- at RIT
25- Brockport
28- Plattsburgh
FEBRUARY
4- at Colgate
5- at Oswego
8-Toronto
11- at Cortland
12-at Ithaca
16-Alfred
19--Western Ontario
26-Rochester
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
! - Brockport State
4--at Syracuse
10-at Ithaca
11- to be announced
14- to be announced
15- at St. Bonaventure
18- to be announced
21- to be announced
JANUARY
14- Colgate
21- to be announced
25-Canisius
28-to be announced
FEBRUARY
2-Cornell at Mem. Aud .
8-at Niagara
10-Buffalo State at Mem. Aud.
16-at Alfred
19--St. Bonaventure
21- at Canisius
25- Buffalo State
NU\RCH
1- at Rochester

32

FRESHMAN SWIMMING
DECEMBER
4- Cortland
7- at Buffalo State
11- at Syracuse
16- at Brockport
JANUARY
15- Toronto
22- Western Ontario
29- at Toronto
FEBRUARY
2- Buffalo State
5- Colgate
8-Niagara
12- at Oswego
19- at Rochester
26- at St. Bonaventure
MARCH
1- at Niagara
VARSITY BASEBALL
APRIL
18- RIT
23- at Colgate
27- at Syracuse
29-Geneseo
30-at RIT
MAY
4- St. Bonaventure ( 2 ) games
10-at Rochester
FRESHMAN BASEBALL
MAY
7- Brockport
Remainder of s chedule
to be announced.
VARSITY FENCING
DECEMBER
3- at McMaster
11- at Cornell
17- at Syracuse
JANUARY
15- McMaster
22- RIT
FEBRUARY
5- at Hobart
18-at Oberlin (CSV Fenn )
19- at Case, Western Reserv e-Case
26-Syracuse
MARCH
5- Hobart - Notre Dame
12- at Drew - North Atlantic
25- NCAA
26-NCAA
FRESHMAN FENCING
DECEMBER
11- at Cornell
17- at Syracuse
JANUARY
22-RIT
FEBRUARY
5- at Hobart
19- at RIT
26- Syracuse
NU\RCH
5-Hobart

�Before or After the Game ...

®[}{]rn:rn:~rn:rn3QDoornrn:oo~
as you like 'em!
• • • cheddar goodness
••• nippy 'n' tangy
• • • grilled to taste
••• with 100% pure &amp;eel
••• served piping hot
••• on toasted bun
••• m'm'm'm'm good!
TRY 'EM- YOU'RE SURE TO LIKE 'EM!

_,""" folthe gold•• ...he.,

McDo_naldS •

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Just Past Boulevard Mall
3424 SHERIDAN DR. AT SWEET HOME RD.
Down Bailey Ave. Turn Right at Sheridan

BOTH LOCATIONS- 5 MINUTES FROM CAMPUS

�Can a Leopard change his spots 'l
Your Simon Pure Man is starting to think so. He has seen a lot
of tigers, young bucks and gay dogs switch to fresh-tasting
Simon Pure Beer and who can tell where it will all end?
Try Simon Pure ... the great light beer with everything about
it premium except the price. Take some home ... watch your
kitten start purring.
The William Simon Brewery, Buffalo, Now York,
"Buffalo'• Only Independent lrewora."

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1477963">
                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1477964">
                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
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                  <text>LIB-UA049</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="1495159">
              <text>Programs</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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      </elementContainer>
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      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
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        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495134">
                <text>1965-10-23 Bulls vs. Dayton</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495135">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495136">
                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495137">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495138">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495139">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495140">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Archival resources.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495141">
                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495142">
                <text>Official Program 50¢</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495143">
                <text>University of Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495144">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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                    <text>�SATTLER'S ... for the Most Complete and Diversified
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�Welcome to the 58th sea on of B Football, our fourth a a major intercollegiate
competitor.

Ju t eleven year ago, the schedule we are
facing thi year seemed a distant dream.
But with the dedicated effort and support of
so many, both in the Univer ity and in the
community, that dream i now beinO' realized every aturday afternoon. \Vin or lo e,
the Football Bulls have taken their place
among the top independent colleges in the
East, just as the University has achieved a
top rank among the leading graduate center
in this section of the nation.
Football, of course, is but one of many
facet of the niversity. The late t available
figures show that Buffalo now stands among
the top Universities in the nation in term
of annual research expenditures with a total
\'Olume approaching $10 million per year. Total enrollment for the 1965-1966 year exceeds the 20,000 mark (more
than half of whom will be full-time). And our faculty and tudents have reached the highest level of quality and
achievement in history.
oon our physical facilities will keep pace. An unprecedented $310 million building program will, in a few years,
result in the development of the new 1,000-acre campus site in Amherst and in the conver ion of the present campu to one of the nation' mo t comprehensive health sciences centers.
ome 1 i,200 full-time tudent will attend the new Amherst campus, 5,200 of them at the graduate level, and
8,000 in residence. The faculty, measured in terms of full-time equivalents, will number about 1,i00. ome 3,000
students \\'ill attend the Health cience Divisions on 1ain Street .
. \nd e\·en this will be just the beginning of major accomplishments and ervice for the community, the
and the nation .

tate

It's an exciting prospect - one that we hope will be matched by the color and spirit of today' game at your
State Uni\'er ity of ew York at Buffalo.
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serving the Buffalo area .

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2

�J3u{{a/o - ~ growinfl Universita
The announcement last summer by the State University of Iew York of a multi-million dollar expansion
of the State University at Buffalo marked another step
forward by the University in becoming a major Eastern
educational institution "among the finest in the land."
The day we have been waiting for has come!" exclaimed Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, University President.
"We now have the go-ahead to build the truly great
University that all of us have dreamed of."
On September 1st, 1962, the University of Buffalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become the
major campus segment of the widespread system of the
State University of Iew York. The new name, created
by State University officials, is: State University of New
York at Buffalo. However, in deference to sweatshirtstitchers and typewriter repairmen, alumni seem to prefer the continuance of "UB" or "University of Buffalo"
where intercollegiate teams are concerned.
One of America's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo
has been the educational capitol of 'Vestern New York
since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the fourteenyear-old home of 28,000 people. The "University" was
the School of Medicine until 1886 when the School of
Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was Millard
Fillmore, a first-citizen of the young community, who
continued his UB leadership during his term as the
thirteenth President of the United States.
The fourteen University Divisions are: School of
1edicine (1846 ) ; chool of Pharmacy (1886 ); School
of Law ( 1887 ); School of Dentistry ( 1892 ) ; College of
Arts and Sciences (1913; ummer Session (1915 ) ; Millard Fillmore College, evening division ( 1923 ) ; School
of Business Administration (1927); School of Education
( 1931 ); School of Social Work ( 1936) ; Graduate School
of Art and Sciences ( 1939 ) ; School of Nursing ( 1940 ) ;
chool of Engineering ( 1946 ) ; and University College
(including associate degrees, 1958 ) .
Buffalo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood of
18,000 - of which 9,000 are full-time undergraduate
students. The enrollment is expected to soar in the next
few years, e pecially in view of the State affiliation.
To meet the influx of resident students during the
past decade a total of seven dormitories have been constructed,

with

the seventh dedicated last fall.

The

$2 million Acheson Hall of Chemistry, the new orton
Union, the Baird Mu ic Hall and the Western Jew
York uclear Research Center represents the efforts of
private endowment and local leadership.
Past projections ha,•e indicated that State University
of Tew York at Buffalo will need by 1970:
More than 9,000,000 square feet of space for an
anticipated total enrollment of 27,500 students.
Immediate needs include classroom buildings, a
library, residence halls, a fine arts center, an infirmary
and health services building, a university teaching
hospital, a health sciences building, a continuing education center, a physics building, an engineering building,
a physical education and intramural building, and an
administration building.
Adequate parking space for 12,500 automobiles will
be needed.
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of Buffalo
continue its fine tradition of service to the Niagara
Frontier and the tate of New York.

3

�Back Row: Jim Wolfe, Freshman Coach; Bob Deming, Backfield Coach; Dewey Wade, Line Coach.
Front Row: Buddy Ryan, Line Coach; Dick Offenhamer, Head Coach; Ron LaRocque, Backfield Coach

SIEGFRIED

Leo Sauer

CONSTRUCTION

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886 - 2300

rx
4

2-7183

TREET

�JAME E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at B than genial Jim.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinoi , arrived on the
~orth Main treet campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue Uni,·ersity, a career
which saw the Boilermaker win the Big Ten championship.
Jim' first position at UB was assistant football coach.
lie became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever ince. Hi o-reatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War II
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gaye up football coachincr to devote his time ·more
fully to being athletic director as the uni\'ersity began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master' Degree, Jim till enjoys
teaching classe . He i al o coach of the UB baseball
team and hi 1963 and 1964 club participated in
.:'-lCAA Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless upply of
anecdotes make him a much sought-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerou civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim' pride and joy. and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.

DICK OFFEl\'HAMER
Architect of T'ictory
"Local boy makes good" could well be the theme of this
piece, for it accurately describes the brilliant althletic
career of UB football coach Dick Offenhamer.
Although Offie grew up just a "hoot 'n' a holler" from
the UB campus, his trail to that campus was long and
sinuous.
An All-High baseball and football star at Bennett High
School, Dick chose to attend Colgate University.
It was a wise choice. Colgate was then enjoying the
halcyon days of Andy Kerr, when the Red Raiders of the
Chenango Valley went on scalping forays to such waystations as Yankee Stadium, New Orleans, Iowa City, and
Columbus, Ohio. Offenhamer was more than merely present on these trips; he was the right-halfback in the Kerr
double wing attack and he achieved lasting fame as one
of Colgate's all-time greats.
While at college, Offenhamer was light-heavyweight
boxing champion of the school and he also starred on the
baseball team. He received his B .A. in 1936.
Offenhamer coached football at Kenmore High School
for 11 years, and his teams won or tied 5 championships
in the Niagara Frontier Conference.
After World War II he returned to Colgate as director
of freshman athletics, freshman football coach, and boxing coach.
Dick came to the University of Buffalo in 1955, a time
at which UB's football fortunes were at their lowest ebb.
He promptly exerted his skills, knowledge and personality to a difficult situation and the results speak for themselves.
During Offie's 10-year tenure UB has won 53, lost 34,
and tied 3. He had 8-1-0 seasons in 1958, when UB won
the Lambert Cup, and again in 1959, when UB was
runner-up for that trophy.
Offenhamer has won numerous personal honors. He
was national "Coach of the Week" in 1958 after his
team scored a 34-14 upset over Columbia. That same year
the Buffalo Evening News cited him as one of Western
New York's 10 Outstanding Citizens.

5

�CRAIG HELENBROOK

WILLIAM TAYLOR

JOSEPH HOLLY

THOMAS RIDOLFI

�NICK CAPUANA

BRUCE MacKELLAR

RON PUGH

JOE GARAFOLA

R0"0l"ALD RIDOLFI

JAMES McEWEN

�BUFFALO

BULLS

1965

1st Row (L. toR.) - Tom Brennan, Rick Wells, Larry Lehner, Tom Pettit, Mike Rissell, Tom Hoke, Bennie Washington, Jim Remillard, Ted Gibbons Bob Sinclair Dick Pirozzolo, Dennis Brisky, Stan Baranowski, Mario Amorese, Rod
Rishel, Tom Hurd, Dick Ashley, Lee Jones.
2nd Row (L. to R.) - Joe Oscsodal, Tom Ridolfi, John Savage, John Smigelski, Mike Douglas, Russ MacKellar, Jim
Duprey, Fred Geringer, Captain Joe Holly, Ron Ridolfi, Jim Webber, E. Grennard Poles, Dennis Burden, Craig Helenbrook, Joe Garafola, Dennis Przykuta, Gerry LaFountain, Bill Taylor.
3rd Row (L. to R.) - Paul Kleiber, Jim Dunn, Jim Ratel, Ron Pugh, Dick Enyart, Jim McEwen, Nick Capuana, Dan
Sella, Jim Finochio, Jim Barksdale, Walter Swiderski, Ron Donohue, Charles Botula, Bill Abbey, Bruce MacKellar,
Tony Miceli, Mike Wuest, Richard Dechowitz.
Top Row (L. toR.) - Jim Simon (trainer), Bob Deming (ass't coach), Jim Wolfe (ass't coach), Dick Offenhamer (head
coach). "Buddy" Ryan (ass' t coach), Ron LaRocque (ass't coach), Dewey Wade (ass't coach), Larry Teller (student
manager).

N I NE DECADE S A G O

the launching of
"advice in depth"

W

HEN ships with sails studded Buffalo's seascape over 90 years ago, when Buffalo and
the whole nation began to feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution ... Dominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning to make its mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp;D's services for the investing public sustained
a steady growth despite financial panics, wars and
depressions. Today the talent of an organization of
more than 400 - including research specialists,
counselors, and administrative people stands behind
our Buffalo office, giving you opportunity for investment ad~ict in dtplh. Lee us advise you about your
future investment plans or review your portfolio.

11

D OMI N ICK &amp; D OMI N I CK ,
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Aftmbtrs Ntw Yor.f. Amtr~can, AfidutJI, and Toronto Stock ExthangtJ
SEYMOUR

JOE HOLLY
Captain
8

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�B

u
F
F
A
l

0

��'''IIUS'l'ER''
'l'RE 'IIULI1S MASCOT

AND FRIEND

"Buster" is like the real Buster. the Bull's Mascot. He stands 8 Y2" high. is black with white
ivory horns and has a blue and white saddle blanket. The Buffalo Bull's Doll is a caricature
of a Buffalo Bull's football player. The Doll has a bobbing head and comes in authentic
colors. Both are available at the University Bookstore "On Campus."

$%.00

$4.95

12

�FROM THE BULLPEN
By Bob Powell, Courier-Express

By Dick Johnston, Evening News

Any reporter worth a
would most assuredly give his
three pencils and a pound of
inside when any one of the
made:

The football season to date hasn't exactly been a
glittering uccess for the
niversity of Buffalo's Bulls
but the performance of Dick Offenhamer's ophomores
gives promise that UB partisons may have somethincr to
shout about in the future.
The UB offense platoon, green and uncertain
at sea on's start, began to
function Ia t week against
Boston
niversity. Even
though the Bulls lost that
one, four sophs showed that
they can cause considerable
excitement on Rotary Field.
Rick Wells, who entered varsity ranks this season
under more pressure than
any other quarterback in
UB history, probably, has
been praised by every opposing coach to date.
He had his finest day of the early season against
Boston U., yet all he felt, in the dressing room afterward, was di appointment. He had failed on the most
important play of the game.
And he couldn't remember what happened. Rick
somewhere along the way suffered a slight concussion
and was in a fog when he slipped and fell while trying
to carry the ball over from the Boston 2-yard line in the
closing minutes.
v\ hat a day he had until then, though. Rick wound
up with 102 yards rushing, on 24 carries, and passed for
an additional 96 yard, completing even of 14. Probably his best play of the day was nullified by a penalty.
After Boston tied the score, Wells grabbed the
ensuing kickoff and running ,,·ith fierce determination
-you could see it as he ran - carried the ball all the
way to the Bo ton 45, before he was knocked out of
bounds by several oppo ing tacklers.
Rick now has a total-yardage figure of 537, which
isn't bad for four games. He has thrown for three
touchdowns and the receiver on two of them was another soph, Dick A hley, who was a sprint champion in
?\fassena, . Y. Ashley has started only two games but
has caught five passes for 126 yards.
Wells and sophomore wingback Tom Hurd give
the Bulls a serious threat on that most spectacular of all
plays, the kickoff return. Hurd also is as dangerous on
punt returns. The two he ran back at the start of the
l\1assachusetts game set up UB's first tounchdown m
that victory.
The fullback is a most important figure in the B
offense and a sophomore is coming through in that spot.
He's Lee Jones, son of a former
B player, Leeland
Jones, Jr., and he's proving tough in those important
short-yardage situations. Lee carried almost as often in
the Boston game as he had in the previous three and he
gained more yardage, 95 yards on 20 attempts.

worn typewriter ribbon
paste pot, a gum eraser,
paper clips to be on the
following remarks were

"I don't need the movies to know what happened
out there." - Lou Saban,
coach of the Buffalo Bills.
"Our next opponent is
a push-over." Dev,·ey
\Vade, UB assistant and
chief scout.
"Our brand of football
in the Southeastern is highly over-rated." - Bear Bryant of Alabama.
"Where do I sign? Pete Gogolak, placement
kicker for the Bills.

1

"\Veil, the boosters finally are out of the red." Bernie kerker, president of the Bull ' Boosters.
"You've got my vote, Rollie." Democratic mayoral candidate.

Frank Sedita,

"We'd get killed in the Big 10." of Texas.

Darrell Royal

"We don't stand a ghost of a chance this Saturday."- Joe Marcin, UB sports publicist.
"Let's back the Bulls." campus newspaper.

The Spectrum, the UB

"We were beaten by a vastly superior football
team."- AI Davis, coach of the Oakland Raiders.
"No comment." -

Jim Peelle,

B athletic director.

"Defense i the easy part of coaching." - Buddy
Ryan, UB defensive line coach.
"Let's bury the hatchet, Joe." - Pete Rozelle, National Football League commissioner.
"There is no room on offense for juniors and
seniors."-Ron LaRoche, UB offensive backfield coach.
"So we hold once in a while ... " coach of the San Diego Chargers.

Sid Gillman,

"We may be doing to football what we did to boxational television
ing and the quiz programs." executive.
"What? Me worry?" - Bob Deming, UB defensive
backfield coach.
"There's entirely too much emphasis on football
here." - Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, UB president.

"If we win the toss, we'll receive!" harner, UB head coach.
13

Dick Offen-

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BUFfALO LINE-UP
Offense

Defense

S.E.

arterback, pa~sed for o
chdown and ran for ano
before brf'aking his leg
third quarter today
Bulls beat Richmo
'f'lls hroke his right 1
the first .series of pla
1--lillllli:....r Buffalo received t
nd·half kickoff. The i
• occurrPd \\hen he r
thP Riehmond llnP aft

86 DUNN
83 McNAMARA

l.H.B.
l.E.

24 T. RIDOLFI
32 HOKE

84 LaFOUNTAIN
81 LEHNER
S.T.
76 WUEST
79 RATEL

LL.B.
52 HOLLY

F.B.

l.T.

36 JONES
38 PRZYKUTA

72 BRISKY

S.G.

50 DUPREY

70 PUGH

62 RISSELL
75 FINOCHIO
L.G.

of qualit
printing"

s.

71 TAYLOR
78 PIROZZOLA

c.

Q.B.

56 B. MacKELLAR

17 WELLS

58 RISHEL

18 R. RIDOLFI

16 CAPUANA
34 SINCLAIR

R.G.
56 R. MacKELLAR

Printers

&amp;
Lithographers

T.B.

67 GIBBONS

44 WEBBER
22 WASHINGTON

69 DECHOWITZ

R.l.B.
R.T.

Buffalo, N . Y. 14202

55 GAROFALO

63 POLES

W.T.

W.B.

74 ABBEY

20 BARKSDALE

73 MICELI

48 HURD

50 DUPREY

R.E.

R.H.B.

80 HELENBROOK

40 SELLA
14 GERINGER

46 SWIDERSKI

W.E.

126 S. ELMWOOD

61 BOTULA

W .G.

87 ASHLEY
89 BURDEN

SPECIALISTS: P.A.T. &amp; F.G. - 90 OSCSODAL
PUNTS - 35 SMIGELSKI, 28 HANSEN

TL 3-3005

KICKOFFS -

14

90 OSCSODAL

�BARTLETT BUICK
3080 ~IN STREET

TF 6-1000

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

OPEL KADETT BULL WAGON
ONLY $1650 (minus art work, of course)
RICHMOND UNIVERSITY LINE- UP
Offense

Defense
R. E.

R.E.

84 PRINCE

85 PHELPS

81 WASAKOSKI

86 RING

UNIVERSITY
PLAZA

R.H . B.
25 McKENNA

F.B.

23 KTCTDTS

31 GORDON

R.T.
70 HODSDON

33 DAVIS

R.T.

73 WORTH

R.l.B.

71 ANDREWS

63 SOLOMON

70 HODSDON

29 SCHRIEBFEDER
R.G .

61 PEW
R.H.B.

66 DELGADO

R.G.

44 ZUNICH

68 CRUM

42 MATTHEWS

78 KRIMM

c.

s.

51 SMITH

44 ZUNICH

50 ANDERSON

41 PAYNE
l.H.B.

L.G.

54 ATTAWAY
66 DELGADO

20 GRUBBS
25 McKENNA

l.G.
60 TATE
68 CRUM

L L.B.
31 GORDON
56 MORRIS

Q .B.

l.T.
75 ALBRIGHT
76 HARVEY

12 LINN

l.T.

19 SHOTWELL
77 ORTWEIN
76 HARVEY

L.H.B.

24 WHITE
26 KUPER

l.E.

l.E.

86 RING

83 KULLAF

88 HAYO

86 KING

SPECIALISTS
Passers: 12 JAN LINN, 19 LARRY SHOTWELL
Punters: 22 MIKE BRAGG, 31 RON GORDON
EP's FG's, KO's: 22 MIKE BRAGG

15

ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
DERSO CO.
AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Card
LEES DRUGS
GUSTAV A. FRISCH- Jeweler
KOEGL'S BAKERY
LEO ARDO'S RE T URA T
M and T TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PL ZA SHOE REPAIR
STYLE CREST ME 'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP
LBRICH'S - Stationery
FEDERAL MEATS
THE PLAID SHOP
DEALS JEWELERS
YOUR MATERNITY SHOP
AEXANDER KATZ and
LOU KROP - Optometrists
EV S - Gifts and Cards
W. T. GRA T CO.
FA Y FARMER
AMHERST
Clothe Tree, Inc.
JOHNSO 'S-Amher t Bootery

�1966 VARSITY SCHEDULE

Sept. 18

Kent State

away

Oct.

15

Dayton Univ.

away

Sept. 24

Cornell

home

Oct.

22

Boston College

away

THE

COVER
-+c

Courier-Express photograph·

Oct.

Villanova

home

Oct.

Boston Univ.

away

Nov.

29

Holy Cross

home

Delaware

home

er Ron Schifferle catches the
action. Wells to Dunn for

Oct.

8

Nov. 12

5

Tampa

11 yards.

away

BUFFALO BULLS 1965 ROSTER

J0 NEs•
RI cH
MI LK
c0RP.
"lt' s Flavor Guarded"

70 E.

FERRY
TT

3-4080

TREET

No.
*14
*16
17
18
20
22
24
25
26
28
30
32
34
35
36
*38
*40
*44
46
48
*50
*52
*55
56
58
61
62
*63
67
*68
69
*70
*71
72
73
74
75
76
78
*79
*80
81
83
*84
85
*86
87
88
89
*90
*-

Name

Pos.

Class

Geringer, Frederick
Capuana, Nicholas
Wells, Richard
Ridolfi, Ronald
Barksdale, James
Washington, Bennie
Ridolfi, Thomas
Scalleta, Paul
McEwen, James
Hansen, Brian
Brennan, Thomas
Hoke, Thomas
Sinclair, Robert
Smigelski, John
Jones, Leeland
Przykuta, Dennis
Sella, Daniel
Webber, James
Swiderski, Walter
Hurd, Thomas
Duprey, James
Holly, Joseph (Capt.)
Garafola, Joseph
MacKellar, Bruce
Rishel, Rodney
Botula, Charles
Rissell, Michael
Poles, E. Greenard
Gibbons, Theodore
MacKellar, Russell
Dechowitz, Richard
Pugh, Ronald
Taylor, William
Brisky, Dennis
Miceli, Anthony
Abbey, William
Finochio, James
Wuest, Michael
Pirozzolo, Richard
Rate!, James
Helenbrook, Craig
Lehner, Lawrence
McNamara, James
LaFountain, Gerald
Kleiber, Paul
Dunn, James
Ashley, Richard
Remillard, James
Burden, Dennis
Oscsodal, Joseph
Letterman

16

Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.

DHB
HB-QB
QB
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
K
FB
FB
HB
HB
FB
FB
DHB
HB
HB
HB
LB
C-LB
LB

c

C-LB
G
G
T
G
DG
G
DT
G
E
T
E
'T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
K

Age

Ht.

Wt.

20
19
18
21
19
18
21
22
21
19
18
19
18
21
19
20
19
22
21
19
21
20
22
19
19
19
19
22
19
21
23
20
21
18
20
20
19
20
19
22
21
19
21
21
21
20
20
18
21
22

5-9
5-9
6-0
5-9
5-11
5-9
5-9
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-1
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-9
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-1
5-10
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-1
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-2
5-11
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-1
5-10

165
180
190
170
170
186
170
160
195
172
210
185
190
180
200
210
175
170
184
192
215
210
205
225
195
200
215
225
230
210
215
225
230
200
220
215
212
230
235
220
210
195
191
220
225
200
215
180
190
158

l

'

Hometown
Danville, Pa.
Utica, N.Y.
Ithaca, N. Y.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Woonsocket, R. I.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Niagara Falls, N . Y.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Rochester, N . Y .
Marcy, N.Y.
Watertown, N . Y.
Solvey, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y .
Depew, N . Y.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Manlius, N. Y .
Utica, N.Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Peru, N.Y.
Lyons, N.Y.
Gloversville, N. Y.
Kenmore, N. Y.
E. Smethport, Pa.
Riverhead, L. I.
Coatesville, Pa.
Rochester, N. Y.
Newport, R. I.
Kenmore, N. Y.
Brooklyn, N. Y .
McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N. Y .
Detroit, Mich.
Batavia, N . Y.
Peru, Ind.
E. Syracuse, N. Y .
Utica, N . Y.
Elmira, N. Y .
Buffalo, N. Y .
Cheektowaga, N . Y .
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Binghamton, N . Y .
Saranac Lake, N. Y.
Auburn, N . Y.
Cranston, R. I.
Massena, N. Y.
N ew Bedford, Mass.
Franklin Square, L . I.
Buffalo, N. Y .

·~

�Whats the Geneseetret ...
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND 1965 ROSTER

l

1

No.

Name

12 Linn, Jan
19 Shotwell, Larry
*20 Grubbs, Ronnie
22 Bragg, Mike
23 Kicidis, Mike
24 White, Bob
25 McKenna, Jim
26 Kuper, Mike
29 Schriebfeder, Dave
30 Maiden, Emory
*31 Gordon, Ron
33 Davis, Doug
34 Dolan, Richard
*41 Payne, Rickie
*42 Matthews, Don
*44 Zunich, Larry
*50 Anderson, Sam
*51 Smith, Terry
54 Attaway, Don
56 Morris, Nick
*60 Tate, Ray
*61 Pew, Larry
*63 Solomon, Bob
65 Wils on, Dave
66 Delgado, Dave
68 Crum, Terry
*70 Hodsdon, Dick
69 Fisher, George
*71 Andrews, Bob
*78 Krimm, Ken
74 Robochik, Mike
*75 Albright, Bob
76 Harvey, Dave
*77 Ortwein, Bernie
73 Worth, Robin
80 Close, Jim
81 Wasakoski, Jim
82 Novotny, Nick
*83 Kullaf, Ed
*84 Prince, Bob
85 Phelps, Dennis
*86 Ring, Bob
88 Hayo, Bill

*

Denotes lettermen

Class

Pos.

Age

Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.

QB
QB
HB
KS
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
FB
FB
FB
HB
HB
HB

20
20
20
19
22
20
19
19
20
19
21
20
19
20
22
20
20
21
20
19
22
20
21
20
19
18
22
18
21
20
20
21
19
21
19
20
19
19
21
23
20
21
21

c
c
c
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
T
T
T
G
T
T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

Hgt.

6-1
6-2
6-1
5-11
5-11
6-0
5-10
6-1
5-9
6-0
6-2
6-2
5-11
5-10
5-8
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-1
5-11
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-1
6-1
5-11
6-3
6-2
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-1
6-3
6-5

Wgt.

192
195
190
185
182
205
173
191
180
197
216
214
188
179
174
200
210
219
215
207
225
205
205
210
202
214
225
210
230
240
235
230
239
221
215
198
209
198
200
210
180
198
220

Home
Lynchburg, Va.
Criglersville, Va.
Ashland, Va.
Falls Church, Va.
Union, S.C.
LaGrange, Ga.
Richmond, Va.
Richmond, Va.
Martinsville, Va.
Richmond, Va.
Camp Hill, Pa.
Bethesda, Md.
Richmond, Va.
Sarasota, Fla.
Gainesville, Fir&gt;..
Portage, Pa.
Stewartstown, Pa.
Patterson, Ga.
Wrightsville, Ga.
Richmond, Va.
Richmond, Va.
Lancaster, Pa.
Pte. Verda Bch, Fla.
W. Caldwell, N. J.
Dover, N. J.
Highspire, Pa.
Portsmouth, Va.
Patterson, N. J.
Richmond, Va.
Richmond, Va.
Taylor, Pa.
Charleston, w . Va.
Newport News, Va.
Bethlehem, Pa.
Petersburg, Va.
Enola, Pa.
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
New Brighton, Pa.
Garfield, N. J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Richmond, Va.
Harrisonburg, Va.
College Park, Md.

KS- Kicking Specialist

:1

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

�UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND SQUAD

Front Row: Kullaf, Ortwein, Hodsdon, Schriebfeder, T. Smith, Tate, Gordon, Matthews, Ring, Solomon, Prince.
Second Row: Grubbs, Zunich, Shotwell, Krimm, Payne, Anderson, Phelps, Pew, Kicidis, Davis, Robochik, Crum.
Third Row: Albright, Andrews, Worth, Fisher, Harvey, Wasakoski, Manfredi, Wilson, Hayo, Close, Maiden, Linn.
Fourth Row: Taylor, Dolan, Delgado, Bragg, Attaway, White, Kuper, Morris, McKenna, Novotny, L. Smith.
Back Row: Coach Kressler, Coach Thomasson, Coach White, Head Coach Merrick, Coach Humbert, Coach May, Assistant Trainer Carlton, Trainer McNeal.

GRANVILLE MOTORS I.NC.
VOLKSWAGE~

AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE CENTER
• SEDANS
• SUNROOFS

• STATION WAGONS
• KARMAN GHIAS

1500 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
JUST NORTH OF THE BOULEVARD
MALL OPPOSITE TWIN FAIR

OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 836-4600

AUTMORtZE I)

O&amp;.ALER

• All Late Model VW's and Domestic Used Cars Warranted

18

RAY TATE (60 ) and RON GORDON
Unive rsity of Richmond Co-Captains

�The University of Richmond - founded by
a persevering Baptist preacher with an appropriate name, Edward Baptist, in 1830-begins
its 136th academic year this Fall.
The University has seven divisions. In addition to the two coordinate undergraduate divisions, Richmond College for men and Westhampton College for women, the University
embraces the T. C. Williams School of Law,
School of Business Administration, Graduate
School, Summer School and University College.
The University, which receives support from
the Baptist denomination in Virginia, has an
enrollment of over 6,000 full and part-time
students.
The University traces its history back to the
founding of Dunora Academy in Powhatan
County by the Rev. Edward Baptist, who held
classes in his home. Two years later, in 1832,
it received official sanction of the Virginia Baptist General As ociation and was launched as
the Virginia Baptist Seminary on a farm just
north of Richmond, designed to provide theological training for Baptist Ministers.
In 1834 the institution was moved into the
City of Richmond, then on the western limits
but now a part of downtown, and 80 years later
to it present campus of 350 acres garnished by
stately trees, rolling hills and a lake. Located
about six miles from the center of this historical
capital of Virginia, its students enjoy the comforts of
a semi-rural environment and at the same time share
the advantages of the cultural institutions, governmental agencies and business and industrial organizations of this important metropolitan area.

DR. GEORGE M. MODLIN
President

for church members and ministers m 10 centers located in Virginia.

Changing its emphasis to education in the liberal
arts and sciences, the school was chartered in 1840 as
Richmond College, and today the University of Richmond is the largest privately-supported educational institution in the old Dominion.

The University is liberal in its thinking and its
educational program. "Faculty and students have never
been restricted here in their search for the truth," Dr.
Modlin said a few years ago in a commencement address commemorating the University's 125th anniversary. "Everyone has been free to follow the inquiries
of his mind and dictates of his conscience without fear
of interference or recrimination. On this campus there
~ave been breadth of opinion and freedom of expres'Sion to a degree that is rare in a church related institution."

Dr. George M. 1odlin, University of Richmond's
president since 1946, notes the rapid growth of downtown University College, the newest division created
in 1962 to serve metropolitan Richmond. The new
junior college, a division of University College, opened
last fall.
The University also operates a School of Christian
Education which provides classes in Bible and religion

19

�UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND COACHING STAFF

Head Coach Ed 1errick and Assistants R alph White, Dick Humbert, David May, K irk K ressler and Jim Thomasson

ICICIC your Money Worries
Out of Bounds ...
w ith a low-cost loan from Bank of Buffalo. Borrow for College
Tuition . .. Home Improvement ... a well deserved trip ...
any worthwhile purpose. Just dial 854-4950 and pick up the
money at the nearest B.O.B. office. 17 Court at Pearl ... 694
Fillmore at Broadway . . . 2157 Seneca near Cazenovia .. .
4248 Delaware at Dreyer .. . 4954 Harlem at Sheridan .. .
3871 Union at George Urban .. . 4184 Seneca at Mill Road or
the new Stuyvesant Plaza Branch , 274 Elmwood at Summer.

BAN I&lt; OF BUFFALO
Member : Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

20

�Mac Pitt will celebrate his 24th year as Athletic Director of the University in 1965. The soft-spoken, silverthatched, Pitt is one of the best liked and respected
coaches in the Southern Conference area.
He came to the University as a student in 1916 and
starred at quarterback on the football team, played
third base on the Spider nine, and was a consistent
point scorer in track. Strangely enough he didn't participate in basketball, a sport in which he won coaching
fame by guiding the 1934-35 team through a twe:1ty
game unblemished slate. He was elected to the Helms
Foundation Basketball Hall of Fame in 1963.
Coach Pitt no longer tutors the U of R court team,
but he still handles the baseball team. His diamond-men
have captured 15 State baseball crowns in the last thirty
seasons, two Southern Conference pennants and tied for
the SC crO\~m twice.
The "Silver-Fox" has helped develop a number of professional baseball prospects.
Mac Pitt has a wide reputation as an effective speaker
and is in frequent demand along the banquet circuit. He
teaches a Sunday School class for collegians at the First
Baptist Church where he is a member of the Board of
Deacons.
His work with boys continues into the summer months
at Camp Virginia, near Goshen, where he directs.

MALCOLM U. PITT
Athletic Director

Ed Merrick, the University of Richmond's all-time center, has been head football coach of his alma mater since
1951.
Merrick, a native of Pottsville, Pa., entered the University of Richmond in 1936 after earning gridiron fame
at Fork Union Military Academy. He played three years
of varsity football under the late Glenn Thistlewaite, and
in 1939 became the first Richmond player to be named
to the All-Southern Conference eleven. His feats on the
gridiron won him such accll"im that he was invited to
participate in the College All-Star game in Chicago, the
first player from the state of Virginia so honored.
He remained at the University in 1940 as an assistant
coach and was the Spider's freshman coach in 1941.
His coaching career was interrupted by World War
II in which Ed served with such distinction that he
rose from private to the rank of major. He now is a
lieutenant colonel in the Air Force Reserve.
Following the war, Merrick returned to Fork Union
as head football coach where he turned out prep school
elevens which won national acclaim.
Ed is district chairman of the Coaches' Football Rules
Committee. Tapped by Omicron Delta Kappa, national
honorary leadership fraternity, Merrick twice has been
choosen the state's coach of the year. He was selected
Southern Conference "Coach of the Year" in 1958.

JOEL MERRICK

He's married to the former Elaine Gentil of Richmond.
They have three children.

Head Football Coach

21

�RICHMOND

LARRY ZUNICH

DOUG DAVIS

DA

MATTHEWS

BOB ALBRIGHT

BERNIE ORTWEI

BOB SOLOMON

TERRY SMITH

RICK PAYNE

ED KULLAF

T

RON GORDO

22

�UNIVERSITY

LARRY SHOTWELL

RAY TATE

DAVE SCHREIBFEDER

BOB ANDREWS

BOB PRII CE

BOB RING

LARRY PEW

SAM ANDERSON

MIKE KICIDIS

DICK HODSDON

�'Je;c~monJ
Universitg

24

�BUFFALO TRAINING STAFF

Bill Andrews; Jim Simon, Head Trainer; Norb Baschnagel

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.

CAPPELLI N I'S REST AU RANT
and

HEATING Power Plants -

AIR CONDITIONING

Process Piping -

CATERERS, INC.

Fire Protection

•

•

101 NIAGARA STREET
BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14202

TL 4-8435

120 W. TUPPER

FRONTIER MICROFILM, INC.

The Women of

• • •
128 SO. ELMWOOD

.

SIGMA KAPPA PHI

BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

boost the Bulls
TL 3-7182

25

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFFALO
6

(1-2-1)
1

13

Tampa

13

8,016

18

Massachusetts

6

10,200

14

7,314

7

RUSHING
Player
Att.
Rick Wells
82
41
Lee Jones
Tom Hurd
35
Dennis Przykuta
14
Jim Webber
7
Bennie Washington
2
Jim Barksdale
7
Ron Ridolfi
2

Attendance

Boston College

Boston U.

Oc t. 16

Richmond

Oc t . 23

Dayton

21,700

190

Net
253
174
104
44
23
11
7
- 19

Avg.
3.0

597

3.3

4.~

2.fl
3.1
3.2
5.5
1.0
0.0

Oc t . 30 at Holy Cross
(4 games)
Buffalo
Opponents

Nov. 6 at Delaware
Nov. 13

Colgate

First downs

Nov. 20 at Villanova

49

49

Rus hes, net yds., avg. 190 for 597 ( 3.3 )

44

47,230

51

Pass es

18 for 57 ( 284 yds.)

P e t. completions

Interceptions
PASSING
Att.

Comp.

Int.

Yds.

Ric k Wells

51

18

8

284

3

Ron Ridolfi

6

0

3

0

0

57

18

11

284

3

Totals

TD's

40 for 87 ( 499 yds. )
45.9

31.5

Total offense 881 yds. in 247 plays

Player

157 for 384 ( 2.4 )

6 for 41 yds.

883 yds . in 244 plays
11 for 237 yds .

Fumbles

15 (lost 8 )

13 (los t 7 )

P enalties

15 for 173 yds.

18 for 132 yds.

ECAC Weekly All-East Nominations for Boston U. game:
Outstanding Lineman - DICK ASHLEY, sophomore end,
Massena, N . Y.
Outstanding Back - LEE JONES, sophomore full back,
Buffalo, N . Y .

Students .. .

The John W.

·~· YAMAHA
Big Wheels on Campus

Cowper Co.

SUBURBAN CYCLES, Ltd.
3165 MAIN ST. near UB Campus
Open Daily til 6 P.M.
Thurs. &amp; Fri. til 9 P.M.
836-5765

INCORPORATED

Engineers -

Contractors

LET'S MEET AFTER THE GAME AT THE . . .

•
OLD

873-4200

POST

ROAD

INN

Post Office Box 1068
1945 Sheridan Drive
3151 Main Street

Buffalo, New York 14240

26

Buffalo, N . Y. 14214

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
INTERCEPTIONS &amp; RETURNS
Pla.yer
Nick Capuana
Gerry LaFountain
Dan Sella
Jim Duprey
Tom Ridolfi

RECEIVING

Yardage
14
12
8
7
0

No.
2
1
1
1
1

P la.yer
Jim Dunn
Dick Ashley
Dennis Burden
Tom Hurd
Jim Barksdale
Bennie Washington

Pts.

SCORING

20
12
6
6

Rick Wells (3 TD's rushing, 1 PAT run)
Dick Ashley (2 TD,s pass receptions)
Jim Barksdale (1 TD pass reception )
Joe Oscsodal (3 PAT's, 1 FG)

Player

PUNT RETURNS
Yardage

No.

76
33
43
7
29

7
5
4
2
1

Tom Hurd
Dan Sella
Nick Capuana
Fred Geringer
Rick Wells

7
5
2
2
1
1

TD's

Yards

0
2

71
126
36
10
23
18

0
0
1
0

PUNTING

44

Pla.yer

Receptions

No.

Average

Brian Hansen

12

36.2

John Smigelski

10

30.4

You're Not Seeing Double !

KICKOFF RETURNS
Pla.yer

Yardage

No.

Jim McEwen
Rick Wells
Tom Hurd

51
24
52

2
1
3

DRIVING A " SPORTS CAR" IS
TWICE

THE FUN

All restricted gauges, precise tempers and finest finishes made

BOB DeGRAW

to your exact specifications.

2301 MAIN STREET

COLD ROLLED STRIP STEEL

837-5600

''Where Service is the Tail that Wags the Dog"

Ware house and Mill Deliveries
COIL

•

ROLLER LEVELING

•

SHEETS
•

SHEARING

Save at Erie Federal

PLATE
•

• All account insured up to $10,000 by the
Federal Saving and Loan Insurance Corporation.
• Money deposited by the tenth of EVERY
month immediately earns high dividends from
the first of the month.

SLITTING

GIBRAL TER STEEL
CORPORATION
T 4-1020
2555 Walden Avenue

•

Buffalo, N. Y. 14225

27

�1965 FOOTBALL RULES CHANGES
The rule limiting the height of a tee for place kicks
has been amended to permit a two-inch tee.

The most important rule change in college football
for the 1965 ea on is the adjustment in the regulation
governing substitutions which permit:

The rule governing free kicks out of bounds between
goal lines ha been changed. If such a kick goes out of

( 1) Two eligible ub titutes of either team to enter

bound untouched inbounds by Team B it is a foul.

the game at any time before the ball is put in
play.

In order to emphasize the restriction on "spearing"

(2 ) Any number of substitute of either team to enter

maliciously butt or ram an opponent ha been broadened

the rule prohibiting the use of the helmet or head to
the game between periods, after a score or try,

to include any part of an adversary's body.

when Team B is awarded a fir t down or when,
following a kick, Team A is awarded a fir t down.

. \ few minor change include the permi 10n, to use
by mutual agreement, a ball with two white stripe ;

This revision will allow the use of specialists at any
time with the same freedom of utilization as in 1964.

provides that the game clock be stopped when Team B
is awarded a first down or when following a kick Team

nlimited substitutions when team po ses ion changes is

:\ is awarded a first down; and several other adju t-

the major change. Resorting to the commi ion of a foul
to stop the clock in order to make more than two sub-

ments made to conform with the 1964 rule change
governing scrimmage kicks which cross the line of

stitution as in 1964 is not now possible.

scrimmage.

iuffaln iulln
DY'

OPE

KITCHE

UB RBA

CYCLES, LTD. YAMAHA

BARTLETT BUICK, I C.

HERZOG' DR G TORE, INC.

B TT CO. HEATING &amp; PLUMBING

O'CO

BITTERM

' OL'

COLO I L HO

RE TAUR

T

E RE TAURANT

ELL L C S &amp; CHELF, 1 JC.
ESQUIRE SHIRT LAUNDRY, INC.

M RINE TRU T

OMP

Yniver ity Office

28

�BUFFALO BULLS

~1ICHAEL

RODNEY RISHEL

RISSELL

LEELAND JONES

SUPPORT THE BULLS- GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW
I w is h t o p urchase .. .. ... . .. sea son tickets for 1966. No payment required until billed July 1s t.
Name

............... . ................................. Telephone .............. . ...... . . . ...... . . . .......... .

Address ........ . .... . ......... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zone . . . . . . . . . State .. ... ... . ... .. .. . ... . .. . .
Fill out the application and mail t o Ticket Office, Clark Gym, Buffalo, N . Y. 14214

SCIENTIFIC

EQUIPMENT

and

MEDICAL SUPPLIES
for

• INDUSTRY

• PHYSICIANS
• SCHOOL

• HOME

• HOSPITAL

JEFFREY-FELL CO., INC.
1700 MAl N ST.

Phone TT 3 - 1700

29

BFLO., NEW YORK 14209

�PROGRAM PATRONS
Matthew J. Pantera, Jr.

Pearce &amp; Pearce

Matthew J. Pantera,

niversity Manor Motel
E. P. Lauer, Optician

Arthur F. Movalli

Ben Kurtz Insurance

Arthur Mogerman

Charles W. Moses "In urance"

Edward F. Mimmack

Bob Kerner Restaurant

Wall ace H. Miller

inatra's Centre

r.

Leo M. Michalek

Hunt Real E tate Corporation

Frank Meyers

Aurora Building &amp;

Harold F. Meese

upply, Inc.

Brunners Tavern

J. Eugene McMahon

"Tops Market"

James C. McGarvey

Bocce Club Pizzeria

Anthony J. Manzella

Mas achu ett Mutual Life Insurance Co.

David J. Mahoney, Jr.

Rich Products Corp.

Samuel D. Magavern

Robert

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lipsitz

. Wolfson

tephen F. Kissel

Fred H. White
Jo eph C. Vi pi

Rudolph U. Johnson

Irvin L. Terry

heldon Hurwitz

Daniel T.

zymoniak

William J. Hildebrand,

Harlan J.

wift

Donald W. Hall

James R.

ullivan

nthony

J n Memory of a Friend
Mr. and Mr . George

Jr.

. Gugino

George L. Grobe, Jr.
eifert

Lewis J. Greenky

Gerard E. chultz

A. Donald Gilden

Gerald C.

In Memory of Dom Grossi

altarelli

Hugh Me M. Rus

Edward D. Flaherty

Albert G. Rowe

Robert D. Fernbach

Chester P. Glor, Jr.

Edward H. Farnham

Leo J. Rosen

Robert J. Ehrenreich

William R. Root

George E. Easterbrook

30

�James P. Donnelly

Louis A. Vendetti

Arnold E. DiLaura

Gertrude

John F. Connelly

Carlton C. Rausch

Ross M. Cellino

Robert W. Lipsett

John F. Canale

Russell Kidder, Jr.

Max W. Burstein

Charles F. Banas

Walter Brock

Robert R. Barrett

Francis B. Borowiec

William H. Georgi

Melvin L. Bong

J. Edwin Alford

. Swartout

Harold E. Sippel

tanley B. Blach
Bertram Portin

Donald R. Barber

Willard H. Bernhoft

Kevin Kennedy

Owen B. Augsburger

Fenton F. Harrison

Charles J. McDonough

Roy E. Seibel

Charles H. Diefendorf

Ernest L. Colucci

Edwin F. Jaeckle

Herbert R. Reitz
anford B. Sugarman

eymour H. Knox
M. Robert Koren

Samuel hatkin

Louis J. Russo

Mr. and Mrs. William George Willis

Robert J. Metzen

James T. McFarland

Francis C. Hornung

Emil J. Celmer

~ eymour

Thomas C. McDonald

Schuller

Harold A. Adel

John H. Dittman

Lewis Goldstein

orman Haber
Abraham

Samuel Battaglia

. Carrel

Warren Jack W aldrow

William L. Marcy

Allen V. Gibbons

Roger T. Cook

William Rathke

Douglas H. Brock

S. Howard Payne

Norman B. Lewis
Fred S.

Charles May

chwarz

Harold M. Harris

John A. Krull

Stanley J. Zambron

James W. Jordan

Louis DeVincentis

Frank T. Riforgiato

George Selkirk

Gerald J. Lankes

Kenneth M. Alford

Leonard wagler
Fred B. Wilkes

Vincent Scamurra

George M. Masotti

Charles Matthews

31

�1965-1966
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
SEPTEMBER
24- at Army Plebes
OCTOBER
8- at Colgate Frosh
15- at Navy Plebes
30- Manlius School
NOVEMBER
5- Ithaca College Frosh
12- at Syracuse Frosh
VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY
SEPTEMBER
25- at Syracuse
28- Canisius &amp; State
OCTOBER
2- at Invitational LeMoyne
5- at RIT
9- Brockport
13- Niagara
16
ortland
23- at LeMoyne - Colgate
27- at Fredonia State
30-at Invitational Canisius
NOVEMBER
2- at Gannon
6- at Alfred
13 at Cortland NYSCYT
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTEMBER
20- St. Bonaventure
22- Canisius
2
Niagara
30- State
OCTOBER
! - McMaster
5- at Canisius
7 at St. Bonaventure
12- at Niagara
14- at State
19- at McMaster
VARSITY BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
! - Brockport State
4- at Syracuse
10 at Ithaca College
11- at Albany State
14- Penn State at Mem. Aud.
Bucknell
1
21 San Francisco State
JANUARY
14 Colgate
15- Akron at Mem. Aud.
20- at Western Ontario
25- Toronto
28- Plattsburgh State
29 Northern Illinois at Mem. Aud.
FEBRUARY
2 Cornell at Mem. Aud.
4 at Windsor
5- at Wayne State
at Niagara
10-Buffalo State at Mem. Aud.
16- at Alfred
19- Albany State
26- Kent State at Mem. Aud.

MARCH
1- at Rochester
VARSITY SWIMMING
DECEMBER
4- Cortland
7- at State
11- at Syracuse
16-at Brockport State
JANUARY
15- Toronto
22- Western Ontario
29- at Toronto
FEBRUARY
2- State
5- Colgate
8- Niagara
12- at Oswego
19-at Rochester
23- Geneseo
26-at St. Bonaventure
MARCH
1- at Niagara
5-Upper N . Y. Syracuse
VARSITY WRESTLING
JANUARY
15- 0ntario Ag.
21- at RIT
25- Brockport
28- Plattsburgh
FEBRUARY
4- at Colgate
5- at Oswego
Toronto
11- at Cortland
12- at Ithaca
16-Alfred
19- Western Ontario
26- Rochester
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
! - Brockport State
4--at Syracuse
10- at Ithaca
11- to be announced
14- to be announced
15--at St. Bonaventure
18- to be announced
21- to be announced
JANUARY
14--Colgate
21- to be announced
25
amsms
28- to be announced
FEBRUARY
2-Cornell at Mem. Aud.
at Niagara
10-Buffalo State at Mem. Aud.
16- at Alfred
19- St. Bonaventure
21- at Canisius
25- Buffalo State
MARCH
1- at Rochester

32

FRESHMAN SWIMMING
DECEMBER
4- Cortland
7- at Buffalo State
11- at Syracuse
16- at Brockport
JANUARY
15- Toronto
22- Western Ontario
29-at Toronto
FEBRUARY
2- Buffalo State
5- Colgate
8-Niagara
12- at Oswego
19- at Rochester
26- at St. Bonaventure
MARCH
1- at Niagara
VARSITY BASEBALL
APRIL
18- RIT
23- at Colgate
27- at Syracuse
29- Geneseo
30- at RIT
MAY
4- St. Bonaventure (2) games
10- at Rochester
FRESHMAN BASEBALL
MAY
7- Brockport
Remainder of schedule
to be announced.
VARSITY FENCING
DECEMBER
3- at McMaster
11- at Cornell
17- at Syracuse
JANUARY
15--McMaster
22- RIT
FEBRUARY
5--at Hobart
18- at Oberlin (CSV Fenn)
19- at Case, Western Reserve-Case
26- Syracuse
MARCH
5- Hobart - Notre Dame
12- at Drew - North Atlantic
25- NCAA
26- NCAA
FRESHMAN FENCING
DECEMBER
11- at Cornell
17- at Syracuse
JANUARY
22-RIT
FEBRUARY
5- at Hobart
19- at RIT
26- Syracuse
MARCH
5--Hobart

�Before or After the Game ...

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as you like 'em!
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... nippy 'n' tangy
... grilled to taste
... with 100% pure beef
... served piping hot
••. on toasted bun
... m'm'm'm'm good!
TRY 'EM- YOU'RE SURE TO LIKE 'EM!

-loolc

,0, the golden arches'

McDonald\:i

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Just Past Boulevard Mall
3424 SHERIDAN DR. AT SWEET HOME RD.
Down Bailey Ave. Turn Right at Sheridan

BOTH LOCATIONS- 5 MINUTES FROM CAMPUS

�Can· a Leopard change his spots?
Your Simon Pure Man is starting to think so. He has seen a lot
of tigers, young bucks and gay dogs switch to fresh-tasting
Simon Pure Beer and who can tell where it will all end?
Try Simon Pure ... the great light beer with everything about
it premium except the price. Take some home ... watch your
kitten start purring.
The William Simon Brewery, Buffala, New York,
"Buffalo's Only Independent Brewers."

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1965-10-16 Bulls vs. Richmond</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="49">
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495110">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495111">
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          <element elementId="41">
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                <text>Official Program 50¢</text>
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          <element elementId="39">
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="45">
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            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="40">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>1965-10-16</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495120">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>36 p.</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;. If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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�Welcome to the 58th season of UB Football, our fourth as a major intercollegiate
competitor.
Ju t eleven years ago, the schedule we are
facing this year seemed a distant dream.
But with the dedicated effort and support of
o many, both in the University and in the
community, that dream is now being realized every aturday afternoon. '"' in or lo e,
the Football Bulls have taken their place
among the top independent colleges in the
East, just as the University has achieved a
top rank among the leading graduate centers
in this section of the nation.
Football, of cour e, is but one of many
facet of the niversity. The late t available
figures show that Buffalo now stands among
the top Universities in the nation in terms
of annual re earch expenditures with a total
volume approaching $10 million per year. Total enrollment for the 1965-1966 year exceeds the 20,000 mark (more
than half of whom will be full-time). And our faculty and tudent have reached the highest level of quality and
achievement in history.
Soon our physical facilities will keep pace. An unprecedented $310 million building program will, in a few years,
result in the development of the new 1,000-acre campus site in Amherst and in the conversion of the present campus to one of the nation's most comprehensive health sciences centers.
Some 17,200 full-time tudents will attend the new Amherst campus, 5,200 of them at the graduate level, and
8,000 in residence. The faculty, measured in terms of full-time equivalents, will number about 1,700. Some 3,000
students " ·ill attend the Health cience Divisions on Main Street .
•\nd even this will be just the beginning of major accomplishments and service for the community, the
and the nation.

tate

lfs an exciting prospect - one that we hope will be matched by the color and spirit of today's game at your
State University of New York at Buffalo.
C. C. FURNA

�1864- 101st Anniversary- 1965
1965 ma rks our 101st year of conti nuous business
servi ng the Buffalo area.

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.

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�---

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---

The announcement last summer by the State University of New York of a multi-million dollar expansion
of the tate University at Buffalo marked another step
forward by the University in becoming a major Eastern
educational institution "among the finest in the land."
The day we have been waiting for has come!" exclaimed Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, University Pre ident.
"We now have the go-ahead to build the truly great
Univer ity that all of us have dreamed of."
On eptember 1st, 1962, the
niversity of Buffalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become the
major campu segment of the widespread system of the
State niversity of Iew York. The new name, created
by State University officials, is: State Univer ity of New
York at Buffalo. However, in deference to sweatshirtstitchers and typewriter repairmen, alumni seem to prefer the continuance of " B" or " niversity of Buffalo"
where intercollegiate teams are concerned.
One of America's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo
has been the educational capitol of We tern ew York
since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the fourteenyear-old home of 28,000 people. The "University" was
the School of Medicine until 1886 when the School of
Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was Millard
Fillmore, a fir t-citizen of the young community, who
continued his
B leadership during his term as the
thirteenth President of the nited tates.
The fourteen Univer ity Divisions are:
chool of
Medicine ( 1846) ; School of Pharmacy ( 1886) ; School
of Law ( 1887 ) ; School of Dentistry ( 1892) ; College of
Art and Sciences (1913; ummer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College, evening division ( 1923) ; School
of Bu ine s Admini tration ( 1927 ) ; chool of Education
( 1931 ); School of ocial Work ( 1936) ; Graduate School
of Arts and cience ( 1939) ; School of ursing ( 1940) ;
School of Engineering ( 1946) ; and University College
(including associate degrees, 1958) .
Buffalo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood of
18,000- of which 9,000 are full-time undergraduate
students. The enrollment is expected to oar in the next
few years, especially in view of the tate affiliation.
To meet the influx of resident students during the
past decade a total of seven dormitories have been constructed,

with

the seventh dedicated last fall.

The

$2 million Acheson Hall of Chemistry, the new Norton
Union, the Baird 1u ic Hall and the Western Iew
York Nuclear Research Center represents the efforts of
private endowment and local leadership.
Past projections have indicated that State University
of Iew York at Buffalo will need by 1970:
More than 9,000,000 square feet of space for an
anticipated total enrollment of 27,500 students.
Immediate needs include cia sroom buildings, a
library, residence halls, a fine arts center, an infirmary
and health services building, a university teaching
ho pita!, a health sciences building, a continuing education center, a physics building, an engineering building,
a physical education and intramural building, and an
administration building.
Adequate parking space for 12,500 automobiles will
be needed.
rationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of Buffalo
continues it fine tradition of service to the Iiagara
Frontier and the tate of New York.

3

�-·

Back Row: Jim Wolfe, Freshman Coach; Bob Deming, Backfield Coach; Dewey Wade, Line Coach.
Front Row: Buddy Ryan, Line Coach; Dick Offenhamer, Head Coach; Ron LaRocque, Backfield Coach

SIEGFRIED

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4

�JAME E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the Univer ity of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at B than genial Jim.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the
North Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue
niversity, a career
which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first position at UB was a sistant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest team at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World \\'ar II
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 194 7. He
then gave up football coaching to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the university began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoy
teaching classes. He is also coach of the B ba eball
team and his 1963 and 1964 club participated in
:'-JCAA Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performer on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of
anecdotes make him a much sought-after gue t.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerous civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy. and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.

DICK OFFENHAMER
Architect of T'ictory
"Local boy makes good" could well be the theme of this
piece, for it accurately describes the brilliant althletic
career of UB football coach Dick Offenhamer.
Although Offie grew up just a "hoot 'n' a holler" from
the UB campus, his trail to that campus was long and
sinuous.
An All-High baseball and football star at Bennett High
School, Dick chose to attend Colgate University.
It was a wise choice. Colgate was then enjoying the
halcyon days of Andy Kerr, when the Red Raiders of the
Chenango Valley went on scalping forays to such waystations as Yankee Stadium, New Orleans, Iowa City, and
Columbus, Ohio. Offenhamer was more than merely present on these trips; he was the right-halfback in the Kerr
double wing attack and he achieved lasting fame as one
of Colgate's all-time greats.
While at college, Offenhamer was light-heavyweight
boxing champion of the school and he also starred on the
baseball team. He received his B.A. in 1936.
Offenhamer coached football at Kenmore High School
for 11 years, and his teams won or tied 5 championships
in the Niagara Frontier Conference.
After World War II he returned to Colgate as director
of freshman athletics, freshman football coach, and boxing coach.
Dick came to the University of Buffalo in 1955, a time
at which UB's football fortunes were at their lowest ebb.
He promptly exerted his skills, knowledge and personality to a difficult situation and the results speak for themselves.
During Offie's 10-year tenure UB has won 53, lost 34,
and tied 3. He had 8-1-0 seasons in 1958, when UB won
the Lambert Cup, and again in 1959, when UB was
runner-up for that trophy.
Offenhamer has won numerous personal honors. He
was national "Coach of the Week" in 1958 after his
team scored a 34-14 upset over Columbia. That same year
the Buffalo Evening News cited him as one of Western
New York's 10 Outstanding Citizens.

5

�FRED GERINGER

WILLIAM TAYLOR

JO EPH HOLLY

PAUL KLEIBER

�NICK CAPUANA

BRUCE MacKELLAR

RUSS MacKELLAR

RON PUGH

JOE GARAFOLA

RONALD RIDOLFI

�BUFFALO BULLS

1 965

..

1st Row (L . toR.) - Tom Brennan, Rick Wells, Larry Lehner, Tom Pettit, Mike Rissell, Tom Hoke, Bennie Washington, Jim Remillard, Ted Gibbons Bob Sinclair Dick Pirozzolo, Dennis Brisky, Stan Baranowski, Mario Amorese, Rod
Rishel, Tom Hurd, Dick Ashley, Lee Jones.
2nd Row (L. to R.) - Joe Oscsodal, Tom Ridolfi, John Savage, John Smigelski, Mike Douglas, Russ MacKellar, Jim
Duprey, Fred Geringer, Captain Joe Holly, Ron Ridolfi, Jim Webber, E. Grennard Poles, Dennis Burden, Craig Helenbrook, Joe Garafola, Dennis Przykuta, Gerry LaFountain, Bill Taylor.
3rd Row (L. toR.) - Paul Kleiber, Jim Dunn, Jim Ratel, Ron Pugh, Dick Enyart, Jim McEwen,
ick Capuana, Dan
Sella, Jim Finochio, Jim Barksdale, Walter Swiderski, Ron Donohue, Charles Botula, Bill Abbey, Bruce MacKellar,
Tony Miceli, Mike Wuest, Richard Dechowitz.
Top Row (L . toR.) -Jim Simon (trainer), Bob Deming (ass't coach) , Jim Wolfe (ass't coach), Dick Offenhamer (head
coach), "Buddy" Ryan (ass't coach), Ron LaRocque (ass't coach), Dewey Wade (ass't coach), Larry Teller (student
manager).

NINE DECADES AGO

the launching of
" advice in depth "

W

HEN ships with sails scudded Buffalo's seascape over 90 years ago, when Buffalo and
the whole nation began co feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution ... Dominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning co make its mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp; D"s services for the investing public sustained
a steady growth despite financial panics, wars and
depressions. Today the talent of an organization of
more chan 4 00 - including research specialisrs,
counselors, and administrative people stands behind
our Buffalo office, giving you opporcuniry for investment ad•ia in dtpth. Lee us advise you about your
future investment plans or review your portfolio.

DOMINICK &amp; DOMINICK ,
Incorpora[ed
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SEYMO U R H . KNOX Ill,

AftmbtrJ Ntw York, A.mtruan, AfidtuJt, and Toronto Stotk Exthangrs

JOE HOLLY
Captain
8

�AERIAL VIEW OF BUFFALO CAMPUS

COMPLETE LOCAL STOCKS • • •

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structurals • bars • plates • sheets

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shearing - pick I ing - oiling
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when you need it - as you ordered it
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Serving from 11 A.M.

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�'''BtTS'l'ER''
'l'HE 'Bl1LI1S MASCOT
AND FRIEND

"Buster" is like the real Buster, the Bull's Mascot. He stands 8 Y2'' high, is black with white
tvory horns and has a blue and white saddle blanket. The Buffalo Bull's Doll is a caricature
of a Buffalo Bull's football player. The Doll has a bobbing head and comes in authentic
colors. Both are available at the University Bookstore "On Campus."

S%.00

$4.95

12

�------

- - - -

----

-

FROM THE BULLPEN
By Dick Johnston, Evening News

By Bob Powell, Courier-Express

Except for the first and last games, the football
series between the University of Buffalo and Boston
C niversity has been a eries of thrillers.
\\"hen the t\\·o chools fir t met in football, in 1960
in \\"ar ?\1emorial Stadium,
Bo ton, as most local grid
followers feared would happen, came out a one-sided
victor, 42-14. For three
quarters, however, it was a
rrame and Boston led by
only a touchdown.
Then thing fell apart for
Buffalo and Boston ran up
the score. Jackie Farland
and Tonawanda's Tom
":i /
D a u b n e y, Boston' t w o
,
quarterbacks, completed
~
\
pas e all over the field and
~
~~
a nationally-known halfback, Dick Desmarais, rushed for a total of 74 yards.
Th~ next year, in Boston, the story was expected to
be the same. But how different it was. John Stofa, in
his first start as Buffalo quarterback, directed the Bulls
to a stupendous upset, 24-12. The Bulls scored first and
never trailed, although the game was in doubt most of
the way.
Ron Clayback tallied twice for Buffalo, on a 24-yard
reverse and on a pass from Stofa. Stofa also passed to
Bill Selent for a touchdown and a two-point conversion.
Boston expected revenge the following year, when the
game again was played in Beantown. The Terriers almost got it. But heroics by Stofa and Tom Butler won
this one for Buffalo in the final seconds, 27-23.
Bob Edward made an auspicious varsity debut in
that 1962 game. He raced 87 yards to a touchdown to
put Buffalo ahead after the Bulls had trailed by two
touchdowns. A Stofa-to-Butler scoring pass--second of
the game by that combination--provided the winning
points in the final 35 seconds.
Dennis Przykuta, who today is facing Boston for the
last time, was a dominant figure in Buffalo's last two
victories over Boston. In 1963, Przykuta, then a sophomore, took over at fullback after John Cimba was hurt
in the game, gained 76 yards and scored a touchdown
as UB won, 22-13.
Butler had another good day against Boston. He
scored a TD and a two-point conversion, intercepted a
pass and recovered a fumble. Stofa's left shoulder was
hurt in the first half but he stayed in the game with the
injury tightly taped and handed off with his right hand
throughout the second half.
Last year Buffalo had a surprisingly-easy time in Boston, winning, 35-0. Don Gilbert, who spent the freshman football season at Boston U. after starring here for
Bennett High School, passed for two Buffalo touchdowns and Przykuta scored twice.

Should the University of Buffalo seek membership
in an established athletic conference, or continue its
policy of constantly changing schedules. especially in
football?
This question currently is making the Round ,
both on the official and the
unofficial level at the now
State University of New
York at Buffalo.
One of the strongest
arguments favoring league
affiliation stems from the
lack of perennial rivalriesthe sort that are produced
in a system of more tatic
scheduling.
Some scuttlebutt ha it
that the Bulls would be \\·elcomed with open arms in the
sturdy Mid American Conference. And, a fe\1· years ago.
there was some talk about forming a new conference of
teams, many of which the Bulls already meet.
Equal to the talk for affiliation is the talk opposed
to it.
There are not a few UB people - the niversity
officers and the loyal fans, alike - who are completely
happy with the present arrangement.
They re!Jlember the "dark" days of UB sports again, especially football - when the Bulls could barely
hold their own against very mediocre competition.
The University President, Dr. Clifford C . Furnas,
obviously is one.
\\'hen he assumed the chancellorship, he made it
quite evident that he wanted excellence sought in athletics as well as engineering, medicine, science and art.
It was from Dr. Furnas' proddings that UB shucked something of an athletic deemphasis. Those proddings led to bigger and better things.
They also led to today's game against Boston U niversity . . . it might have been Sywash U. otherwise.
Don't forget, in 1960 Boston completely outclassed the
Bulls. They ha\·en' t topped them since.
Under the independent program, future UB schedules including some of the nation's most highly respected
football teams.
For sure, stepping into an already operating league.
or becoming part of a new one, some day would produce gridiron rivalries. And the work-load of the athletic department authorities certainly would be lightened.
Nevertheless, there's the feeling here that by becoming affiliated with a league or conference, UB
would be putting the reins on a program that has been
exciting and most-assuredly successful.
13

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BUFFALO LINE-UP
Offense

Defense

S.E.
86 DUNN
L.H .B.

83 McNAMARA

L.E.

24 T. RIDOLFI

84 LaFOUNTAIN

32 HOKE

81 LEHNER
S.T.

•

tnc.
"Buffalo's
leading

I

76 WUEST
LL.B.

79 RATEL

52 HOLLY

F.B.

LT.

36 JONES

72 BRISKY

38 PRZYKUTA

70 PUGH

S.G.

50 DUPREY

62 RISSELL
75 FINOCHIO

exponent

s.
L.G.

of quality
printing"

16 CAPUANA

71 TAYLOR

c.

34 SINCLAIR

Q.B.

56 B. MacKELLAR

17 WELLS

58 RISHEL

18 R. Rl DOLFI
R.G .
56 R. MacKELLAR

Printers

61 BOTULA

W .G.

T.B.

67 GIBBONS

48 HURD

69 DECHOWITZ

22 WASHINGTON
44 WEBBER

&amp;

R.H.B.
R.L.B .
R.T.

W .T.
74 ABBEY

W .B.

73 MICELI

20 BARKSDALE
26 McEWEN

14 GERINGER

50 DUPREY
55 GAROFALO

63 POLES

Lithographers

40 SELLA

R.E.
80 HELENBROOK
58 RISHEL

W .E.

126 S. ELMWOOD
Buffalo, N. Y. 14202

87 ASHLEY
89 BURDEN

SPECIALISTS: P.A.T. &amp; F.G. -

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KICKOFFS -

14

90 OSCSODAL

35 SMIGELSKI,

28 HANSEN

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IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

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ONLY $1650 (minus art work, of course)

UNIVERSITY

BOSTON UNIVERSITY LINE-UP
Defense

Offense
R.E.
86 NICHOLS

R.E.

PLAZA

87 STIPANOVICH

84 GALLAGHER
89 TI8ALDI
R.H .B.

O .T.

27 LaROCHE

71 RAFFERTY

26 SMITH

78 WHITTY

C.8.
40 PAVLOW
32 SINDONI

s.

R.T.
72 NORTON

I.T .

71 RAFFERTY

41 RAYMER

73 DYER

27 LaROCHE

72 NORTON
L.B .
63 CHAMBERLIN
64 SIMARD
R.G.

F.B.

M .G.
55 REMIS

37 MURPHY

65 McWEENY

30 HAYES

60 ORVIS
68 CAMPBELL

L.B .
68 CAMPBELL
62 BROWN

s.
11 LEWIS

L.T.

15 THORNTON

Q .B.

c.

14 KOBUS

50 ASHLEY

15 THORNTON

51 BUTTERFIELD

78 WHITTY

C.B .

73 DYER

43 O 'FLYNN

L.H .B.
42 FARLEY

24 BANKS

45 SCHWEIKERT

L.G .
65 McWEENY
62 BROWN

L.E .
85 REDGATE

L.E.

83 FISCHER

83 FISCHER
84 GALLAGHER

SPECIALISTS
PUNTERS

KICKOFFS, PAT, FG

40 PAVLOW

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25 SYMES

15

ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
A DERSO CO.
AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Cards
LEES DRUGS
GUSTAV A. FRISCH- Jeweler
KOEGL'S BAKERY
LEO ARDO'S RESTAURANT
M and T TR ST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
STYLE CREST ME 'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP
ULBRICH'S - Stationery
FEDERAL MEATS
THE PLAID SHOP
DEALS JEWELERS
YOUR MATER IITY SHOP
AEXANDER KATZ and
LOU KROP - Optometrists
EVA rs - Gifts and Cards
W. T. GRANT CO.
FA Y FARMER
AMHERST
Clothes Tree, Inc.
JOH SO 'S-Amherst Bootery

�1966 VARSITY SCHEDULE
Sept. 18

Kent State

away

O ct.

15

Dayto n Univ.

away

Sept. 24

Cornell

ho me

Oct.

22

Bosto n Co llege

away

iC

Oct.

Villanova

ho me

Oct.

29

Holy Cross

home

Rick Wells dives for six

Boston Univ.

away

Nov.

Del aware

home

Oct.

8

No v. 12

5

Tampa

THE

COVER

points against Tampa .

J

away

BUFFALO BULLS 1965 ROSTER

J0NEsRI cH
MI LK
c0RP.
" It's Flavor Guarded"

70 E. FERRY TREET
TT 3-4080

No.
*14
*16
17
18
20
22
24
25
26
28
30
32
34
35
36
*38
*40
*44
46
48
*50
*52
*55
56
58
61
62
*63
67
*68
69
*70
*71
72
73
74
75
76
78
*79
*80
81
83
*84
85
*86
87
88
89
*90
*-

Name

Pos.

Age

Ht.

Wt.

Hometown

DHB
HB-QB
QB
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
K
FB
FB
HB
HB
FB
FB
DHB
HB
HB
HB
LB
C-LB
LB

20
19
18
21
19
18
21
22
21
19
18
19
18
21
19
20
19
22
21
19
21
20
22
19
19
19
19
22
19
21
23
20
21
18
20
20
19
20
19
22
21
19
21
21
21
20
20
18
21
22

5-9
5-9
6-0
5-9
5-11
5-9
5-9
5-11
5-10
5-11
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-1
5-10
5-10
5-10
5-9
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-1
5-10
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-10
5-10
5-10
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-2
6 -2
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-1
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-2
5-11
6-5
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-1
5-10

165
180
190
170
170
186
170
160
195
172
210
185
190
180
200
210
175
170
184
192
215
210
205
225
195
200
215
225
230
210
215
225
230
200
220
215
212
230
235
220
210
195
191
220
225
200
215
180
190
158

Danville, Pa.
Utica, N . Y .
Ithaca, N. Y .
Pawtucket, R . I.
Syracuse, N . Y.
Woonsocket, R. I.
Pawtucket, R. I.
Niagara Falls, N . Y .
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.
Rochester, N . Y .
Marcy, N . Y .
Watertown, N . Y .
Solvey, N . Y .
Buffalo, N . Y.
Depew, N . Y .
M cKees Rocks, Pa.
Manlius, N . Y.
Utica, N.Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Peru, N.Y.
Lyons, N . Y.
Gloversville, N. Y .
Kenmore, N . Y.
E . Smethport, Pa.
Riverhead, L . I.
Coatesville, Pa.
Rochester, N. Y .
Newport, R. I.
Kenmore, N . Y .
Brooklyn, N . Y .
McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Batavia, N . Y.
Peru, Ind.
E . Syracuse, N. Y .
Utica, N.Y.
Elmira, N. Y.
Buffalo, N . Y .
Cheektowaga, N. Y .
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Binghamton, N . Y.
Saranac Lake, N . Y.
Auburn, N. Y .
Cranston, R. I.
Massena, N. Y .
New Bedford, Mass.
Franklin Square, L . I.
Buffalo, N . Y .

Clas

Geringer, Frederick
Capuana, Nicholas
Wells, Richard
Ridolfi, Ronald
Barksdale, James
Washington, Bennie
Ridolfi, Thomas
Scalleta, Paul
McEwen, James
Hansen, Brian
Brennan, Thomas
Hoke, Thomas
Sinclair, Robert
Smigelski, John
Jones, Leeland
Przykuta, Dennis
Sella, Daniel
Webber, James
Swiderski, Walter
Hurd, Thomas
Duprey, James
Holly, Joseph (Capt. )
Garafola, Joseph
MacKellar, Bruce
Rishel, Rodney
Botula, Charles
Rissell, Michael
Poles, E . Greenard
Gibbons, Theodore
MacKellar, Russell
Dechowitz, Richard
Pugh, Ronald
Taylor, William
Brisky, Dennis
Miceli, Anthony
Abbey, William
Finochio, James
Wuest, Michael
Pirozzolo, Richard
Rate!, James
Helenbrook, Craig
Lehner, L awrence
McNamara, J ames
LaFountain, Gerald
Kleiber, Paul
Dunn, James
Ashley, Richard
Remillard, James
Burden, Dennis
Oscsodal, Joseph
Letterman

16

Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.

c

C-LB
G
G
T
G
DG
G
DT
G
E
T
E

·r

T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
K

\

�Wh11ts the 6eneseetret. • •
BOSTON UNIVERSITY 1965 ROSTER
Class
Name
So.
10 Cleary, Bob
Sr.
*11 Lewis, Don
So.
12 Mallette, Walt
*14 Kobus, Bob
Jr.
So.
15 Thomton, Tom
So.
16 Chamberlin, Don
Jr.
17 Harris, John
So.
21 Neild, Haworth
So.
22 Fritzson, Gary
Sr.
*24 Banks, Jimmy
So.
25 Symes, Herb
So.
26 Smith, Neil
Sr.
*27 LaRoche, Dave
s:).
28 McGonigle, Barry
Jr.
29 Peters, Paul
Sr.
*30 Hayes, Pete
Jr.
31 Corbett, Ed
Sr.
*32 Sindoni, Ed
So.
34 Fournier, Marc
So.
35 Rosinski, Roger
So.
36 Jable, Jeff
Sr.
*37 Murphy, Bill
So.
38 Wittorff, Jim
Sr.
*40 Pavlow, Leo
Jr.
*41 Raymer, Bruce
So.
42 Farley, Dick
Sr.
*43 O'Flynn, Bill
Jr.
44 Uhlar, John
45 Schweikert, Alan
So.
So.
46 Chute, Robert
51 Butterfield, Charles
So.
So.
52 Ashley, James
54 Callahan, Jim
Jr.
*55 Remis, Eleo
Jr.
So.
60 Orvis, Alan
So.
61 Hazell, Dave
62 Brown, Jeff
So.
Sr.
*63 Chamberlain, Mike
*64 Simard, John
Jr.
65 McWeeney, Bob
So.
66 King, Mike
So.
67 Goldberg, Steve
So.
68 Campbell, Bill
So.
70 LaBarbara, Bob
So.
*71 Rafferty, Bill
Jr.
72 Norton, Ray
So.
*73 Dyer, Larry (Capt.)
Sr.
75 Herman, Dick
Sr.
76 Simon, Mike
Jr.
77 Krause, Gary
So.
78 Whitty, Wilson,
So.
79 Bokoski, Stan
Jr.
White, Herb
So.
80 Cibere, Bill
Jr.
*81 Duarte, Roger
Sr.
82 Elliott, Bruce
Jr.
*83 Fischer, Jim
Sr.
84 Gallagher, John
Jr.
85 Redgate, Howie
So.
*86 Nichols, Bob
Jr.
87 Stipanovich, Nick
So.
*88 Donahue, Jim
Jr.
89 Tibaldi, Chas.
So.
Doty, Vandever
So.
Duffy, Bill
So.
Shinn, Bruce
Jr.
*-Returning Letterman
No.

\
J

Pos.
QB
QB
QB
QB
QB
QB
SP
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
FB
FB
FB
FB
FB
FB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB

c
c
c
c

G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
T
T
T
T
T
1'
T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

Age

Ht.

Wt.

19
21
18
19
18
19
21
18
18
21
18
18
20
19
19
21
22
20
18
19
20
21
18
22
19
18
20
20
19
18
18
19
20
19
21
18
18
23
20
18
18
19
18
18
20
19
20
22
19
17
17
20
20
19
22
24
20
18
18
22
18
21
18
18
18
20

6-1
5-11
5-11
6-1
5-9
6-0
6-1
5-10
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-0
6-1
5-10
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-8
5-10
5-10
6-0
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-7
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-3
6-2
6-0
5-9
5-11
5-9
6-1
5-10
6-1
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-4
5-11
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-3
6-3
6-0
6-3
6-0
6-2
6-4
5-9
5-11
6-2
6-3
6-4

170
175
175
200
170
185
188
160
190
185
185
190
195
160
180
200
190
190
195
195
195
195
205
195
170
175
180
180
160
180
211
208
210
245
215
195
205
200
215
215
196
215
200
270
230
230
225
235
220
245
210
225
220
210
215
185
198
220
187
205
193
171
205
225
215
210

Hometown
Quincy, Mass.
Waterbury, Conn.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Hartford, Conn.
So. Portland, Me.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Greenwich, Conn.
Chelmsford, Mass.
Wayne, Pa.
Toledo, Ohio
Maynard, Mass.
Kerunore, N.Y.
Rochester, N. H.
Randolph, Mass.
Natick, Mass.
Rye, N.Y.
Arlington, Mass.
Schenectady, N.Y.
Watertown, Mass.
Claremont, N.H.
Trenton, N.J.
Schenectady, N.Y.
Lyndhurst, N. J.
New Haven, Conn.
Schenectady, N.Y.
Danvers, Mass.
Portland, Me.
Valley Stream, N.Y.
Chatham, N. J.
Quincy, Mass.
Leominster, Mass.
Swansea, Mass.
Gardner, Mass.
Readville, Mass.
Brattleboro, Vt.
W. Roxbury, Mass.
Bedford Hill, N . Y.
Troy, N.Y.
Danvers, Mass.
Greenwich, Conn.
Danvers, Mass.
Longmeadow, Mass.
Somerville, Mass.
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Wakefield, Mass.
Hingham, Mass.
Haverhill, Mass.
Cambridge, Mass.
Hewlett, N.Y.
Boston, Mass.
Foxboro, Mass.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Waterville, Me.
S. Norwalk, Conn.
Westfield, Mass.
N. Andover, Mass.
Tonawanda, N.Y.
Rockland, Mass.
Arlington, Mass.
S. Boston, Mass.
Lackawanna, N.Y.
Woburn, Mass.
Providence, R. I.
Concord, Mass.
S. Boston, Mass.
Stroudsburg, Pa.

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

�BUFFALO FRESHMEN -1965

Ist Row- Jim Mosher, Dave Hart, Greg Walters, Ken Kuzmitski, Terry Zameroski, Bob Embow, Tom Kowalewski,
Ralph Yanik, Dan Luciano, Dennis Mason.
2nd Row- Don Sabo, Jack Wesolowski, Jim Ebling, John Lupienski, Charles O'Hara, Mike Maser, Tom Murphy, Steve
Sue!, Ray Danescu.
3rd Row - Ray Ball, Joel Tuzynski, Jeff Thomas, Mick Murtha, Charles Drankowski, John Kovack, Ken Bazinet, Nick
Coupas, Mgr. Bill Simms.
Back Row - Coach Leo Ratamess, Coach Jim Wolfe, Coach Bruce Hart, Coach Jim McNally.
Not in Picture - John Doherty, William Hayden, Mike Kowalski, Morgan Kommer, Hale Mason, Roger Marichone,
Daniel Martin, John Przypycien, Dave Richner, Joseph Riccelli, Tom Schwartz, Art Walker, Curtis Wilbur.

GRANVILLE MOTORS I.NC.
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• SUNROOFS

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• KARMAN GHJAS

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OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 836-4600
•

AUTHORIZE D

O&amp;.AL£111

All Late Model VW's and Domestic Used Cars Warranted

18

LARRY DYER
Captain

�Universit!J
Urban in location, cosmopolitan in character,
international in scope, Boston University offers
more than 125 major a\·enues of concentration
in the diverse disciplines of its 14 Schools and
Colleges. Bordered by the banks of Boston's
historic Charles River on the north and Commom,·ealth Avenue on the south, this private,
independent, coeducational institution today
spreads east and west over 35 acres of Boston's
Back Bay area.
Not so in the beginning. Founded as a school
of religion in 1839, its first site was Newbury.
Vt. Two moves brought the institute to Boston
in 1867, where it 11·as renamed the Boston
Theological eminary. In 1869, just four year
after the Civil ' Var, the Massachusetts General
Court granted a charter to the new school in
the name of Boston University.

In 1923 the trustees voted to centralize the
University. This centralization proceeded slowly
on what is now known as the Charles River
Campus. Then in 1956, the trustee announced
a long-range development program, totalling
$60 million, to begin immediately and to continue until its completion with the Charter
Centennial in 1969.
The announcement triggered an explosive
growth that still seems implausible even to those in the
middle of it. The new Schools brought to the Campus
and those now under construction, with the approximate price tag for each, only underline this explosion:
Fine and Applied Arts, $2.2 million; Public Communications, $1.9 million; Sargent, 1 million; Chemistry and Biology, $2.4 million; physical laboratories,
$.6 million; Law-Education, $5.5 million; the University Union, $4.5 million; dormitorie , $8.9 million, parking and other facilities, $.9 million and the Medical Research building, $3.3 million.

D r. Harold C. Case
education and therapy, social work, nursing, industrial
technology, basic studies, and fine and applied arts.
On the sports scene, University student-athletes participate in intercollegiate football, baseball, basketball,
track, ice hockey, skiing, golf, soccer, crew, sailing and
rifle. Its physical plant includes Sargent Gymnasium
and the recently renovated football stadium, the former
Braves Field, seating 15,000 fans. Development plans
include a physical education center, a skating pavilion
and additional p lay and practice areas.

Today, against the Boston skyline, two Gothic towers
identify the University's central campus. As if guards
of the palace, the towers flank the architectural heart
of the campus-Marsh Chapel-a center for non-sectarian worship.

Since its founding, the University has been free of religious, social and racial discrimination. The student
body is large and diversified. More than 800 scholars
from 80 countries live and learn alongside their fello\1·
students from every state in the nation.

More than 12,000 degree candidates, plus 15,000
part-time students, specialize in a dynamic variety of
major fields of study ... including theology, law, medicine, liberal arts, graduate work, business administration, public relations, journalism, education, physical

\\'ith more than 50 per cent of the full-time students
now living on campus in residence halls and fraternity
houses, extracurricular activities are as diversified as
student interests.
19

�-

------

BOSTON COACHING STAFF

(L. toR. ) Warren Schmakel, Ralph Jelic, Larry NavialL", Dave Barnes, Rick Lantz, Tom Daubney

KICK your Money Worries
Out of Bounds ...
with a low-cost loan from Bank of Buffalo. Borrow for College
Tuition ... Home Improvement . . . a well deserved trip ...
any worthwhile purpose. Just dial 854-4950 and pick up the
money at the nearest B.O.B. office. 17 Court at Pearl .. . 694
Fillmore at Broadway ... 2157 Seneca near Cazenovia .. .
4248 Delaware at Dreyer ... 4954 Harlem at Sheridan .. .
3871 Union at George Urban ... 4184 Seneca at Mill Road or
the new Stuyvesant Plaza Branch , 274 Elmwood at Summer.

BANK OF BUFFALO
Member : Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

20

�A recently completed reorganization of the departments of Physical Education and Intercollegiate Athletics
resulted in the consolidation of the previously independent departments.
Dr. Robert R. Peck, 36, was appointed to head up the
new department and assumed the post July 1st of this
year.
A native of Teaneck, N.J., Dr. Peck attended Montclair
State Teachers College before transferring to Stetson
University in Deland, Fla. to complete his undergraduate
study.
From 1951 to 1953 he coached football and basketball
at Forsyth High School in Georgia, working summers
towards his Master's Degree in Education at N.Y.U.,
which he received just prior to entering the Marine Corps
for Korea.
While in the Marines, he served as a platoon leader and
later coached the line for the 1st Marine Division, before
returning to Quantico to become Base Recreation Officer.
He was released from active duty in 1955.
At that time he joined the staff of Bates College as
both a physical education instructor and athletic coach.
The following summer he began his graduate work at
Columbia University towards a Doctorate. For one year
he was the civilian Athletic Director at Maxwell Air
Force Base before taking up residence at Columbia to
complete his degree requirements in 1958.
Since that time, with the exception of one year spent
in Finland on a Fulbright Lecturing Grant, Dr. Peck has
been at Bates.

DR. ROBERT R. PECK

Dr. Peck is married to the former Jane Cary Chapman
of Forsyth, Georgia. They have two sons, Bobby (6¥2)
and Jimmy (5).

Director of Physical Education
and Intercollegiate Athletics
Last year's 2-7-0 debut at Boston University did little
to dampen Warren Schmakel's enthusiasm. The eternal
optimist, Warren's appetite for work was only increased,
and as a result of the past season, he and his coaches
only dug in harder.
Identified with winning football since he first began
his coaching career at the University of Toledo in 1946,
Schmakel does not intend to lose this identity. A 1943
graduate of Central Michigan University, Warren followed his undergraduate days for three years in the
"silent service" before launching his career at Toledo. In
two seasons there, as line coach, Toledo won 16, while
losing three - with two ties. In 1948 he moved to Miami
of Ohio to serve in the same capacity under Ara Parseghiam, present coach of the Irish at South Bend. The
Miami teams posted an equally impressive record of 125-1 during the next two seasons.
In 1950 he was named head coach at his Alma Mater,
where his team won six and lost four, before returning
to Miami of Ohio for two additional seasons.
From 1953 to 1957 he was engaged in government service, as an Assistant Chief of Plans in Europe Special
Activities. Promoted to Chief of Plans and Operations
after one year, he was in charge of the athletic program
for 225,000 soldiers stationed in Germany and France, to
include sports at all levels of organization.
Upon completion of the government assignment, Warren returned to coaching, this time as an assistant under
Bill Jennings at Nebraska. In 1960 he joined John Bateman's staff at Rutgers, where the Scarlet Knights won
25 and lost 12 during four seasons.
Last fall he came to Boston University as head coach
inheriting a 1-6-1 squad that was weakened by the graduation of many of the top players.
Residents of Toppsfield, Warren and his wife Elli, have
three children, Erik ( 6), Ingrid ( 5), Kurt ( 3).

WARREN

CHMAKEL

Head Football Coach
21

�BOSTON

BILL CAMPBELL

RICHARD STA WITZKY

JEFF BROWN

PETER HAYES

]L\1 DONAHUE

DICK FARLEY

22

LARRY DYER

�UNIVERSITY

JI~f

WILLIAM RAFFERTY

FISCHER

D.fARD

CHAMBERLAIN

EARL LEWIS

BOB SELLARS

JOliN

~1IKE

BOB KOBUS

DAVID LaROCHE

23

BOB NICHOLS

�~oston
Universitll

BU Law-Education building and Law Library

24

�BUFFALO TRAINING STAFF

Bill Andrews; Jim Simon, Head Trainer; Norb Baschnagel

JOSEPH DAVIS, INC.

CAPPELLINI'S RESTAURANT
and

HEATING Power Plants -

AIR CONDITIONING

Process Piping -

CATERERS, INC.

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•

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120 W. T

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BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14202

TL 4-8435

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The Women of

• • •
128 SO. ELMWOOD

.

SIGMA KAPPA PHI

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14202

boost the Bulls
TL 3-7182

25

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFFALO
6

Oct.

(1-1-1)
18

21,700

13

Tampa

13

8,016

18

Massachusetts

6

10,200

9

RUSillNG

Attendance

Boston College

Player

Boston U.

Oct. 16

Richmond

Oct. 23

Dayton

Oct. 30 at Holy Cross
Nov. 6 at Delaware
Nov.13

Colgate

Nov. 20 at Villanova

Att.

Net

Avg.

Rick Wells
Tom Hurd
Lee Jones
Dennis Przykuta
Jim Barksdale
Bennie Washington

58
29
21
13
6
2

151
86
79
42
17
11

2.6
2.9
3.7
3.2
2.8
5.5

Totals

129

386

2.9

TEAl\1 TOTALS

(3 games)
Opponents
Buffalo

First downs

29

Rushes, net yds., avg. 129 for 386 (2.9)

37

Passes

39,916

37

11 for 38 ( 188 yds.)

Pet. completions
Total Offense
Interceptions
PAS lNG
Att.
Comp.

Int.

Yds.

Rick Wells

37

11

7

188

2

Ron Ridolfi

1

0

1

0

0

38

11

8

188

2

Totals

46.1

6 for 41 yds.
11 (lost6)

Penalties

TD's

36 for 78 ( 464 yds.)

28.9

575 yds in 167 plays

Fumbles
Player

41
122 for 241 ( 1.9)

9 for 103 yds.

705 yds. in 200 plays
8 for 202 yds.
10 (lost 6)
15 for 97 yds.

ECAC Weekly All-East Nominations for l\lass. game :
Outstanding Lineman - E. GREENARD POLES, senior
defensive tackle, Rochester, N.Y.
Outstanding Back - RICK WELLS, sophomore quarterback, Ithaca, N.Y.
Outstanding Sophomore - RICK WELLS

Students ...

The John W.

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Big Wheels on Campus

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3165 MAIN ST. near UB Campus
Open Daily til 6 P.M.
Thurs. &amp; Fri. til 9 P.M.
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INCORPORATED

Engineers -

Contractors

LET'S MEET AFTER THE GAME AT THE . . .

•
OLD

873-4200

POST

ROAD

INN

Post Office Box 1068
1945 Sheridan Drive
3151 Main Street

Buffalo, New York 14240

26

Buffalo, N. Y. 14214

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
INTERCEPTIONS &amp; RETURNS
Yardage
14
12
8
7
0

No.
2
1
1
1
1

Player
Nick Capuana
Gerry LaFountain
D a n Sella
Jim Duprey
Tom Ridolfi

RECEIVING
P layer
Jim Dunn
Dennis Burden
Tom Hurd
Dick Ashley
Jim Barksdale
Bennie Washington

Pts.

SCORING

20
6
6
5

Rick Wells ( 3 TD's rushing, 1 PAT run )
Dick Ashley (1 TD pass reception )
Jim Barksdale (1 TD pass reception )
Joe Oscsodal ( 2 PAT's, 1 FG )

Player

PUNT RETURNS

Tom
Dan
Nick
Fred
Rick

Yardage

No.

Player

0
0
0
1
1
0

No.

Average

Brian Hansen

9

36.0

John Smigelski

10

30.4

59
27
32
7
29

5
4
3
2
1

Hurd
S ella
Capuana
Geringer
Wells

37
36
10
64
23
18

4
2
2
1
1
1

P UNTI NG

37

Total

TD's

Yards

R eceptions

You're Not Seeing Double !

KICKOFF RETURNS
Player

Yardage

No.

Jim M cEwen
Rick Wells
Tom Hurd

51
24
22

2
1
1

DRIVING A "SPORTS CAR" IS
TWICE

THE FUN

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to your exact specifications .

2301

COLD ROLLED STRIP STEEL

~IN

STREET

837-5600

''Where Service is the Tail that Wags the Dog"

Warehouse and Mill Deliveries
COIL

•

ROLLER LEVELING

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SHEETS
•

SHEARING

Save at Erie Federal

PLATE
•

• All accou nts insured up to $10,000 by the
Federal Savings and Loan Insu rance Corporation.
• Money deposited by the tenth of EVERY
month immediately earns high dividends from
the fi rst of the month.

SLITTING

GIBRALTER STEEL
CORPORATION
T 4-1020
2555 Walden Avenue

•

Buffalo, N . Y. 14225

27

�1965 FOOTBALL RULES CHANGES
The rule limiting the height of a tee for place kick

The most important rule change in college football

has been amended to permit a two-inch tee.

for the I 965 cason is the adjustment in the regulation
substitutions which permit:

~overning

The rule governing free kicks out of bounds between
goal line has been changed. If such a kick goe out of

( I ) Two eligible substitutes of either team to enter

bound untouched inbounds by Team B it is a foul.

the game at any time before the ball is put in

(2

play.

In order to emphasize the restriction on "spearing"
the rule prohibiting the use of the helmet or head to

Any number of substitutes of either team to enter

maliciou ly butt or ram an opponent has been broadened

the game between periods, after a score or try,

to include any part of an adversary' body.

when Team B is awarded a fir t down or when,
following a kick, Team A is awarded a fir t down.

A few minor changes include the permi sion, to usc

This revision will allow the use of specialists at any

by mutual agreement, a ball with two white stripes:
provides that the game clock be stopped when Team B

time with the same freedom of utilization as in 1964.

i awarded a first down or when following a kick Team

Unlimited substitutions when team possession changes i

A is awarded a first down ; and Se\'eral other adjust-

the major change. Re orting to the commis ion of a foul

ments made to conform with the 1964 rule change

to top the clock in order to make more than two substitution as in 1964 is not now possible.

governing scrimmage kicks which cro

the line of

c rimma~e .

Unturrntty ifrtgQtn

iuffuln iulln
DY'S OPE

UBURBA J CYCLES, LTD. Y MAHA

KITCHE

BARTLETT B ICK, INC.

HERZOG' DR G TORE, INC.

BATT CO. HE TI G &amp; PLUMBING

O'CO

BITTERM

SOL' ESQ IRE SHIRT LA

RET URANT

JELL LUCU

&amp; CHELF, INC.

M RI E TR ST COMP

COLO I L HOU E RESTAURA T

DRY, INC.

y
niver ity Office

28

�BUFFALO BULLS

RICHARD ASHLEY

~HCHAEL

RISSELL

SUPPORT THE BULLS- GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW
I wis h to purchase ..... ... .. sea son ti ck ets for 1966. No payment required until billed July 1st.
Nam e

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Telephone

. .. . ....... . ................ .. . . .... ... .. . . .

Address . . ......................... . ............. · · .. . ·. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
City . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Zone . . . . . . . . . State .. . . .. .................. .
Fill out th e application and mail to Ticket Office, Clark Gym, Buffalo, N. Y . 14214

SCIENTIFIC

EQUIPMENT

and
MEDICAL SUPPLIES
for

• INDUSTRY

• PHYSICIANS
• SCHOOL

• HOME

• HOSPITAL

JEFFREY-FELL CO., INC.
1700 MAIN ST.

Phone TT 3 - 1700

29

BFLO., NEW YORK 14209

�PROGRAM PATRONS

Pearce &amp; Pearce
niver ity Manor Motel

Matthew J. Pantera,

Jr.

Matthew J. Pantera,

r.

E. P. Lauer, Optician

Arthur F. Movalli

Ben Kurtz Insurance

Arthur Mogerman

Charles W. Mo e "Insurance"

Edward F. Mimmack

Bob Kerner Restaurant

Wall ace H. Miller

inatra's Centre

Leo M. Michalek

Hunt Real Estate Corporation

Frank Meyer

Aurora Building &amp; upply, Inc.

Harold F. Mee e

Brunner Tavern

J. Eugene McMahon

"Tops Market"

James C. McGarvey

Bocce Club Pizzeria

Anthony J. Manzella

Massachusett Mutual Life Insurance Co.

David J. Mahoney,

Rich Products Corp.
Robert

Jr.

amuel D. Magavern

. Wolfson

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lipsitz

Fred H. White

Stephen F. Kissel

Joseph C. Vispi

Rudolph U. John on

Irvin L. Terry

heldon Hurwitz

Daniel T.

zymoniak

William J. Hildebrand, Jr.

Harlan J.

wift

Donald W. Hall

.I ames R. Sullivan

Anthony

[n Memory of a Friend

George L. Grobe, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. George

Seifert

. Gugino

Lewis J. Greenky

Gerard E. chultz

A. Donald Gilden

Gerald C.

In Memory of Dom Grossi

altarelli

Hugh Me M. Russ

Edward D. Flaherty

Albert G. Rowe

Robert D. Fernbach

Chester P. Glor, Jr.

Edward H. Farnham

Leo J . Rosen

Robert J. Ehrenreich

William R. Root

George E. Easterbrook

30

�James P. Donnelly

Louis A. Vendetti

Arnold E. DiLaura

Gertrude

John F. Connelly

Carlton C. Rausch

Ross M. Cellino

Robert W. Lipsett

John F. Canale

Russell Kidder, Jr.

Max W. Burstein

Charles F. Banas

Walter Brock

Robert R. Barrett

Francis B. Borowiec

William H. Georgi

Melvin L. Bong

J. Edwin Alford

Stanley B. Blach

Harold E. Sippel

Bertram Portin

Donald R. Barber

Willard H. Bernhoft

Kevin Kennedy

Owen B. Augsburger

Fenton F. Harrison

Charles J. McDonough

Roy E. Seibel

Charles H. Diefendorf

Ernest L. Colucci

Edwin F. J aeckle

Herbert R. Reitz

. Swartout

Sanford B.

eymour H. Knox

ugarman

M. Robert Koren

Samuel Shatkin

Louis J. Rus o

Mr. and Mrs. William George Willis

Robert J. Metzen

James T. McFarland

Francis C. Hornung

Emil J. Celmer

Seymour

Thomas C. McDonald

chuller

Harold A. Adel

John H. Dittman
~ orman

Lewis Goldstein

Haber

Abraham

Samuel Battaglia

. Carrel

Warren Jack W aldrow

William L. Marcy

Allen V. Gibbons

Roger T. Cook

WiUiam Rathke

Douglas H. Brock

S. Howard Payne

Norman B. Lewis
Fred

Charles May

. Schwarz

Harold M. Harris

John A. Krull

Stanley J. Zamhron

James W. Jordan
Frank T. Riforgiato

Louis DeVincentis

Gerald J. Lanke8

George

elkirk

Kenneth M. Alford

Leonard Swagler
Fred B. Wilkes

Vincent Scamurra
Charles Matthews

George M. Masotti

31

�1965-1966
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
SEPTEMBER
24- at Army Plebes
OCTOBER
at Colgate Frosh
15- at Navy Plebes
30-Manlius School
NOVEMBER
5- Ithaca College Frosh
12- at Syracuse Frosh
VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY
SEPTEMBER
25- at Syracuse
28-Canisius &amp; State
OCTOBER
2- at Invitational LeMoyne
5- at RIT
9-Brockport
13- Niagara
16- Cortland
23- at LeMoyne - Colgate
27- at Fredonia State
30- at Invitational Canis ius
NOVEMBER
2- at Gannon
6- at Alfred
13- at Cortland NYSCYT
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTEMBER
20- St. Bonaventure
22- Canisius
28- Niagara
3
State
OCTOBER
1- McMaster
5- at Canisius
7- at St. Bonaventure
12- at Niagara
14- at State
19- at McMaster
VARSITY BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
1- Brockport State
4- at Syracus e
1
at Ithaca College
11- at Albany State
14- Penn State at Mem . Aud.
1
Bucknell
21- San Francisco State
JANUARY
14-Colgate
15- Akron at Mem. Aud.
20-at Western Ontario
25-Toronto
28- Plattsburgh State
29- Northern Illinois at Mem . Aud.
FEBRUARY
2- Cornell at Mem. Aud.
4- at Windsor
5-at Wayne State
at Niagara
1
Buffalo State at Mem. Aud.
16- at Alfred
19-Albany State
26- Kent State at Mem. Aud.

MARCH
1- at Rochester
VARSITY SWIMMING
DECEMBER
4- Cortland
7- at State
11- at Syracuse
16- at Brockport State
JANUARY
15- Toronto
22- Western Ontario
29- at Toronto
FEBRUARY
2- State
5- Colgate
8- Niagara
12- at Oswego
19- at Rochester
23- Geneseo
26-at St. Bonaventure
MARCH
1- at Niagara
5- Upper N . Y. Syracuse
VARSITY WRESTLING
JANUARY
15- 0ntario Ag.
21- at RIT
25- Brockport
2
Plattsburgh
FEBRUARY
4- at Colgate
5- at Oswego
8- Toronto
11- at Cortland
12- at Ithaca
16- Alfred
19-Western Ontario
26-Rochester
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
1- Brockport State
4-at Syracuse
10- at Ithaca
11- to be announced
14- to be announced
15-at St. Bonaventure
18- to be announced
21- to be announced
JANUARY
14- Colgate
21- to be announced
25-Canisius
28-to be announced
FEBRUARY
2-Cornell at Mem. Aud .
8-at Niagara
10-Buffalo State at Mem. Aud.
16- at Alfred
19-St. Bonaventure
21- at Canisius
25- Buffalo State
MARCH
1- at Rochester

32

FRESHMAN SWIMMING
DECEMBER
4- Cortland
7- at Buffalo State
11- at Syracuse
16- at Brockport
JANUARY
15- Toronto
22- Western Ontario
29- at Toronto
FEBRUARY
2- Buffalo State
5-Colgate
8- Niagara
12- at Oswego
19- at Rochester
26- at St. Bonaventure
MARCH
1- at Niagara
VARSITY BASEBALL
APRIL
18- RIT
23- at Colgate
27- at Syracuse
29- Geneseo
30-at RIT
MAY
4- St. Bonaventure ( 2 ) games
10- at Rochester
FRESHMAN BASEBALL
MAY
7- Brockport
Remainder of schedule
to be announced.
VARSITY FENCING
DECEMBER
3- at McMaster
11- at Cornell
17- at Syracuse
JANUARY
15-McMaster
22- RIT
FEBRUARY
5-at Hobart
18- at Oberlin (CSV Fenn J
19- at Case, Western Reserv e-Case
26-Syracuse
MARCH
5-Hobart - Notre Dame
12- at Drew - North Atlantic
25- NCAA
26- NCAA
FRESHMAN FENCING
DECEMBER
11- at Cornell
17- at Syracuse
JANUARY
22- RIT
FEBRUARY
5-at Hobart
19- at RIT
26- Syracuse
MARCH
5-Hobart

�Before or After the Game ...

®OO~~~~[IDODOOffi~OO~
as you like 'em!
. . . cheddar goodness
... nippy 'n' tangy
. . . grilled to taste
... with 100% pure beef
... served piping hot
••• on toasted bun
... m'm'm'm'm goocll
TRY 'EM- YOU'RE SURE TO LIKE 'EM!

-look lor •he gold•• arche•'

McDonald\:~ •

1385 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
Just Past Boulevard Mall

3424 SHERIDAN DR. AT SWEET HOME RD.
Down Bailey Ave. Turn Right at Sheridan

BOTH LOCATIONS- 5 MINUTES FROM CAMPUS

�Can a Leopard change his spots?
Your Simon Pure Man is starting to think so. He has seen a lot
of tigers, young bucks and gay dogs switch to fresh-tasting
Simon Pure Beer and who can tell where it will all end?
Try Simon Pure ... the great light beer with everything about
it premium except the price. Take some home ... watch your
kitten start purring.
The William Simon Brewery, Buffalo, New York,
"Buffalo's Only lndepencl•nt Brewers.''

�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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              <text>Programs</text>
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                <text>1965-10-09 Bulls vs. Boston</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495081">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495082">
                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495083">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495084">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495085">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495086">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Archival resources.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495087">
                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Official Program 50¢</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University of Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495090">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495091">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495092">
                <text>1965-10-09</text>
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          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495093">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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            <name>Format</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495095">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="44">
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495096">
                <text>en</text>
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                <text>LIB-UA049_B01-F13-003</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;. If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1717594">
                    <text>MASSACHUSETTS
BUFFALO

�We Are Proud
We Built It

H. J. MADORE, INC.
General Contractor
SOUTHBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

�Official

Football

Program

published by the Department of Atbletics

WARREN P. McGUIRK
Director

RICHARD H. PAGE
Editor

EVERETT KOSARICK
Photographer

RICHARD BRESCIANI
Assistant Editor

..................................._......................---··- · •· · ·--...............-

·..........

__..

___

.............

.•- ...............-..........-- .................

-

MASSACHUSETTS vs. BUFFALO
ALUMNI STADIUM

SATURDAY. OCTOBER 2. 1965
10
0

Maine
A.I.C.

Massachusetts 8
Massachusetts 41

The rugged Buffalo Bulls provide the opposition today against Massachusetts. Last fall the Redmen won a
24-22 thriller at Buffalo. Ends Bob Meers and Milt Morin,
along with quarterback Jerry Whelchel, were the stalwarts of the UMass win. Meers caught a touchdown pass
and caused two Buffalo fumbles late in the game to halt
scoring bids. Morin intercepted a pass and later com bined with Whelchel on a 57-yard td pass play for the
winning points. Buffalo's leading players from last fall
who would like revenge today include halfback Nick
Capuana, fullback Dennis Przykuta (selected to the Redmen All Opponent Team in 1964), center and Capt. Joe
Holly, tackle Greenard Poles and ends Craig Helenbrook
and Gerr)' LaFountain . LaFountain was selected as an end
on this week's All East team, as was Milt Morin.

*
*
*
*
Buffalo lost 19 lettermen from last year's team. The
offensive platoon lacks experience while the defensive
platoon is loaded with veterans. Soph qb Rick Wells, one
of the best all-around athletes ever produced at Ithaca
High School, can bother opponents with his running and
passing. Przykuta is a powerful fullback and soph halfbacks Bennie Washington and Tom Hurd are breakaway
threats . Two soph linemen, Ted Gibbons and Mike Rissell, have shown good potential. The Bulls defensive line
is strong, anchored by standout ends LaFountain and
Helenbrook.

*

*

*

*

The Varsity "M" Club, composed of former Redmen
athletes as well as followers and friends of Massachusetts, is presenting a certificate of achievement to the
outstanding Redmen offensive and defensive players of
each game. The players are selected by a vote of newspaper, radio and TV personnel following each game. An

Buffalo 6
Buffalo 13

Boston College
Tampa

18
13

appropriate award, in the form of a medal or trophy,
will be given to the players winning the most certificates
at the end of the season . Chosen for their performance
in the win over American International were quarterback Greg Landry, offense, and linebacker Bob Gogick,
defense . Landry completed five of eight passes for 134
yards and two td's, and ran for 89 yards and two more
td 's. Gogick blocked a punt to set up a Redmen score and
turned in a strong all-around defensive effort. The winners for the Maine game were Landry, offense, and cornerback Dave Giarla, and linebacker Bernie Dallas, defense.
*
*
*
*
Statistics for two games show sophomore Landry and
seniors Meers and Morin pacing the various offensive
departments . Landry has scored three touchdowns for
18 points, has netted 126 yards rushing, and has completed 17 of 29 passes for 324 yards and two touchdowns . He has averaged 19 yards per completion, an
excellent mark, and has a total offense of 450 yards in
just two games. Meers leads the team with six pass receptions for 82 yards and Morin has five for 171 yards.

*

*

*

*

Sports Dads Association is holding its Fall meeting
today. Members had a luncheon at noon in the Frank L.
Boyden Physical Education Building and are attending
this afternoon's game. This fine organization was founded
seven years ago and has dedicated itself to promoting
scholastic excellence and athletic achievement with several awards that are presented each year. October is
dues month and any parents who would like to join the
Association may do so by sending a check for $5.00 to
Mr. Albert Roseff, Sec.-Treas., 125 Beach Street, Sharon,
Mass. Checks should be made payable to UMass Sports
Dads Association.

PRINTED BY HAMILTON I. NEWELL, INC.

�The Early Twentieth Century
Football at the State University
As the 1890's came to a close and the Massachusetts
Agricultural College football fortunes dwindled, the continued clamor by the student body for better coaching
and facilities began to get results. In 1898, young Dr.
Weeks, an 1897 graduate of the University of Pennsylvania where he was regular quarterback, volunteered
much of his time to coaching the Aggie eleven . The team
managed only one win and a 0-0 tie with Amherst College in six games, but a foundation was laid for the
coming years.
The following season Fred W. Murphy "coached" the
squad for several weeks in September. Since the 1898
team had just two seniors Murphy inherited a veteran
team. The result was a 7-3 record that included five shutouts. In one eight-day span the Aggies defeated Vermont,
Amherst College and Connecticut to rekindle enthusiasm on the campus. James E. Halligan '00 was captain
and fullback of the Aggies.
The dawn of the 20th century saw M.A.C. have a
5-5 season with the limited help from Murphy's coaching,
which lasted just two weeks . As the fall of 1901 approached, student manager Victor A. Gates '02 managed to schedule 12 games. Mr. Irving Hunt, coach of
Brown, and Mr. Fred Jennings, coach of Dartmouth, spent
some time with the Aggie squad before the season began. The team, captained by halfback Herbert A. Paul '02,
compiled a 9-1 reco rd (Trinity and Connecticut cancelled
their games)-the most wins ever by a Massachuse tts
te am. Seven times the Aggies shutout their opponents
and only a 17-0 defeat to Williams College at Williamstown prevented an undefeated year. Among the M.A.C.
victims were Holy Cross, Wesleyan, Worcester Tech, Amherst, Tufts and Boston College.
The most significant achievement that fall however,
was the hiring of the first full-time seasonal football coach
by M.A.C. The student yearbook, the Index, described the
hiring of the first coach, James Halligan, former captain
of the successful 1899 team . "In the middle of the season
this fall, it was found that the team could not cope successfully with their opponents without the training to be
obtained from a coach; the executive committee of the
Athletic Association took the matter in hand, and sent
out circulars to about 100 of the Alumni, stating the circumstances and asking for their support. The returns
from this request were immediate and generous. A coach
was secured for the remainder of the season, and money
enough has been contributed to ensure the statement
that next year we shall have a coach all season."
In its section on Aggie Athletics the Index proudly
told about the 1901 season. "The football season was a
remarkable one. Starting in to practice two weeks later
than usual and having had the services of a coach for
only two weeks, the team "won from Holy Cr?ss, our
stumbling block for years, and Wesleyan, the Tnangular
League champions." The final result was "truly a remarkable record. The game with Amherst is worthy of special
notice. Our team having had the services of a coach but
two weeks went down onto that field and won the cleanest, prettiest game of football that could be imagined .
The Amherst team was heavier than our own, had the
Ed . Note: This is the second of a series of three articles outlining the highlights of football at the University of Massachusetts.

by DICK BRESCIANI, Asst. Sports Information Director

advantage of playing on home grounds, and for two
weeks had been holding secret practice under the direction of three coaches. This game showed what our team
could do and what they ought to do."
Coach Halligan received $256 for his efforts and
saw the figure raised to $281 for the 1902 seaso.n . The
average weight of the team was 165 pounds, wrth the
heaviest, right tackle Edward B. Snell '03 (Lawre nce),
at 190, and the lightest, quarterback Philip W. Brooks '03
(Cambridge), at 134.
Halligan firmed the Aggies into a strong defensive
unit and the 1902 team opened its season by battling to
0-0 ties with Holy Cross and Dartmouth sandwiched
around a strong 30-0 whitewashing of Boston College.
However, the Aggies managed to score just 10 points in
the final four games, losing three, to finish with a 2-3-2
record .
Alumni contributions were not good that winter and
Halligan was hired for just $1 6 8 for the 1903 season .
M.A.C. proceeded to start the season by losing three shutouts to Holy Cross, Dartmouth and Williams. Halligan
rallied the Aggies and they turned around and shutout
Rhode Island, Springfield, Vermont, Trinity and Tufts before losing an 11-6 thriller to Amherst . That was Halligan's final year but he left behind a record of 16 wins
and two ties (16 were shutouts) in 26 games.
The first decade of the 20th Century saw football
begin to grow up. As the game grew in stature and popularity its rough house tactics began to be censured by
newspapers and spectators. An official at an Aggie game
with Holy Cross remarked that "the two centers had to
be separated after nearly every play; they fought with
th~ir teeth, thei~. fist.s, t.heir legs, their knees, and everyt~rng they had. .Trrpprng, kneeing, slugging and hurdlrng were all berng overlooked by most officials and
therefore condoned by most coaches as necessary facets
of self-defense on the field.
An Aggie student reporter told about a game with
Amherst. "The observer saw his friends do some good
straight slugging and their game on the whole was a
rough one, but .he did not see any of them deliberately
walk up and krck an opponent who was down ." However, another newspaper report stated "The game was
fierce, and after nearly every scrimmage, time had to be
taken out while the injured were attended to." Fortunately football started to police itself. Stricter officiating and
a closer adherence to the rules brought about a better
game for both the players and spectators.
Although Aggie football fortunes were again dwindling two new personalities arrived in Amherst who would
make a tremendous impact upon M.A.C. athletics in general and football in particular.
Harold M. "Kid" Gore '13 entered M.A.C. in September of 1909. A native of Quincy, Gore became varsity
quarterback for two seasons. After graduation he stayed
on campus as an instructor and later became one of the
most famous Aggie coaches.
Gore coached football from 1919-27, basketball 191630 and 1931-32, and baseball 1920-22. Although diminutive in stature, he was a dynamic, colorful person highly
regarded as a coach and extremely popular with the student body. Gore was an individualist who believed that
the needs of the student came first. He stepped out of
coaching in the mid-1920's to assume the role of Director
of Physical Education for Men which he held until his
retirement in the early 1950's.

�THE 1929 AGGIES

In 1911 President Kenyon L. Butterfield hired Curry
S. Hicks away from the University of Michigan as General
Manager of Athletics. Butterfield wanted an athletic field,
but he did not want it built and controlled by alumni.
Professor Brooks, whose efforts in 1892 failed, tried again
in 1902 by reincorporating the alumni and selling nearly
200 $1 0-shares. However the trustees again did nothing.
Butterfield "felt that if intercollegiate athletics were to
experience the purification which they certainly needed,
the college administration must have a free hand." He
"persuaded the Legislature to purchase ... adequate and
convenient lands along the east of Lincoln Avenue." The
field just west of Old Chapel that had been used since
1877 was no better "than a backyard lot."
Hicks stood for reform. When he was hired by President Butterfield he "pledged to revamp the whole athletic program as it has existed here in the past ... " Hicks
felt that "athletics means games; it doesn't mean gym
work." He didn't approve of seasonal coaches. "For his
job, and his chance of another one, depend upon victories." He took the job at M.A.C. "only on condition
that all varsity coaches should be fulltime members of
the teaching staff and paid by the College." By 1918 he
achieved this goal.
Professor Hicks, in a letter dated March 12, 1914,
stated "When I came to M.A.C. in September 1911, I
found the college with the poorest athletic equipment of
any college I had ever seen. I was told that there were
fine prospects for an athletic field, but have since found
out that the same prospects existed for at least 10 years
and nothing more had developed." President Butterfield
sent Hicks on'a five-week tour in the fall of 1912 of 23
colleges and universities as far west as Kansas inspecting
their athletic fields and gymnasiums.
"I tried to find out what each college considered to
be the best features of their field," Hicks wrote, "what
mistakes they had made, and how they would correct
them if they were to repeat it. With this material I came
back to try to plan a field for M.A.C."
In 1913 a sub-committee was appointed by the Board
of Trustees and given the power to raise funds for the
field and to construct it. In June the section of land along
Lincoln Avenue was set aside. The committee plan was

presented to the student body on December 3, 1913 at
an assembly in the Old Chapel audttorium. Hicks told
the students, "Before your pledges are counted, I shall
be on my .way to Chicago to launch this campaign among
the alumn1. I want to be able to say to those alumni ...
that every man in college, every man, has pledged something, if it is only a dime ... "
"Kid" Gore, who had just graduated that June, then
stated, "You freshmen, fve got just a word for you. My
class is the freshman class among the alumni. It's the
class of '13. Last June we pledged one thousand dollars
toward this field. We challenge you to do as well." The
next day Hicks received a telegram in Chicago, stating
that the student pledges "amounted to $2,611.05 in cash
and a thousand-odd hours of labor." The message ended
"The undergraduates are with you. Go to it." Signed
"The Kid."
Actual construction began with student labor on
April 10, 1914. "All drains were laid and everything
ready for the contractor by June of that year. Each class
then in college pledged their money and time willingly
and a schedule was worked out whereby every student
took his turn with the pick and shovel to get the field
under way." The original contract called for $7,200 to
develop the seven acres of land. Final costs amounted to
just over $8,000 with student volunteer labor saving an
additional $1,000. The first game was played October 9,
1915 and the Aggies responded with a 26-0 win over
Colby.
Meanwhile, Dr. Arthur Brides was hired as a coach in
1912. Brides was a former star player at Yale and a keen
strategist. His 1913 team, which averaged 5'9" and 164
pounds, had a 4-3 record, the first winning season in
six years. For the first time the Aggies scored against
Dartmouth, losing a tight 13-3 game.
The 1915 team, the first to use Alumni Field, finished
4-2-2 and was considered a strong unit. Dr. Brides' squad
dropped its opener 13-0 at Dartmouth and then lost a
7-0 heartbreaker at Harvard. With time running out and
the game scoreless the Aggie quarterback threw a desperation pass that was intercepted and returned for a
touchdown. The Boston Traveler of Oct. 4, 1915 stated
Continued on next page

�"The Aggies played the better football ... "except for the
bad pass at the end . Brides had the team use the Minnesota shift, which found the tackles and ends shifting behind the center and guards just before the ball was
snapped. "The Aggies worked their shift as well as anything that's been seen hereabouts in years," the Traveler
reported . Brides played just 11 men and the aroused
Aggies completely stym ied Harvard 's great All-American
back Eddie Mahan.
M.A.C. then went undefeated the rest of that fall. On
December 16, 1915 the Springfield Union reported that
Harvard 's Fred W. Moore had announced the Crimson's
1916 schedule. "Massachusetts Agricultural College will
not be played next year, according to Mr. Moore, who explained that the team was too strong for an early se~son
contest with Harvard ." However Brides left that wmter
and Harvard later arranged a game with M.A.C.
As World War I grew in intensity the Aggies gave up
formalized athletics for two years. Competition was resumed in 1919 with "Kid" Gore taking over as head
coach . Gore had several World War veterans who provided the nucleus of a strong team. Stout performers
like right tackle Starr King '21, end Forrest Grayson '20
(whose brother Emory captained the 1916 team), burly
halfback John Lewandowski '22 and Captain Allan Leon
Pond '20 sparked the Aggies to a S-2-1 mark .
Burt Whitman reported in the Boston Herald Oct. 20,
1919, "There is considerable good sense used by Mass .
Aggies in runRing footbal l. They do not go up against
a lot of the big teams, although they always are requested
by practically all of the so-called big teams of the East to
play. They passed up Harvard this year, also Cornell and
Yale and agreed only to play Dartmouth . . . There is
enough steady, undimmed enthusiasm for football there
to warm the heart of a coaching staff. There are three
fully manned teams out there every afternoon ." The only
defeats that-fall were to Dartmouth, 27-7, considered one
of the nation's top teams, and to New Hampshire, 9-7.
Pond, "a splend id all-around athlete, and a fine exponent of all that is best in amateur sport," died suddenly
February 26, 1920. On November 20 of that year the
Pond Memorial Medal for general football excellence was
establ ished in his honor .
Gore molded another strong team in 1920 that again
finished 5-2-1 . King, the outstanding tackle, was chosen
first team All New England and was the first recipient
of the Pond Award . Raymond H. Grayson '23, the third
of four brothers from Milford to play at M.A.C. , was
chosen to the All New England second team along with
Captain and right halfback Harold Poole '21 .
For several years Gore's teams used different nicknames . In 1921 they were the "White Rats," in 1922
"Little Giants," in 1923 "Little Green Team," in 1924 "Flying Agrarians," and in 1925 and '26 the "Agates." The
1922 "Little Giants," captained by Ray Grayson, finished
5-3. They topped Amherst, 10-6, but lost an intersectional
game to Michigan Agricultural College (later to become
Michigan State University), 45-0 at Lansing, Mich igan .
One of the greatest of all Aggie teams was the 1924
squad that had a 6-1-1 record. " Kid" Gore's powerhouse
lost the opener, 12-10, to Connecticut, then rebounded
with six straight wins before battling to a 7-7 tie with
Tufts in the finale . The outstanding feat was a 17-7 win
over favored Amherst before a record Alumni Field crowd
of 7,000.
Gore was an exponent of a strong line and fast backs
and believed the forward pass to be a fancy but needless play. In December of 1924 he openly complained
to newspapermen that the forward pass was putting luck
into football and detracting from team play. Gore's 1924

team fit his image ideally. His interior line Was strong,
he had two outstanding ends in Larry Jones '26 and
Herb Moberg '26, and speedy backs like Charles McGeoch '25 and Joe Hilyard '27.
.
McGeoch, from Prov idence, R.I., scored nme touchdowns and was 1he third top sc:orer in Eastern footbal 1•
Jones, from Brockton, was a cool, efficient place-kicker.
He booted five field goals and 22 of 24 extra point kicks
for 37 points, the second best kicking record in the East.
His extra-point kicking records lasted almost 40 years.
The game with arch-rival Amherst was a battle between the Aggies' hard-nose power offense and the Lord
Jeff's tricky and diversified formations. Walter Graham
in the Springfield Union wrote, "Orthodox football won
for M.A.C. today and it triumphed because the men under
Coach "Kid" Gore had learned well their lessons and
because they never allowed themselves to become ruffled
or disturbed no matter how varied and novel the formations of their opponents." Graham cited the ferocious
play of the linemen . "It is hard to believe that any forwards in the nation hurled themselves at opposing ball
carriers with more well-directed force and precision than
did this Aggie rushline today. The Aggie tackling was
immense, the Aggie linemen covered themselves with
glory ." His article concluded, "Immediately after the
teams left the field the Aggie students, girls included,
went through their snake dance. The Amherst men rose
and sang their alma mater; John Coolidge, son of the
Pres ident of the United States, lending his voice to the
sorrowful but non-the-less impressive strains."
The following season the "Agates" turned in another
fine record of 6-2, led by Capt. Larry Jones . However
that was Gore's last good team. The 1926 season saw
just one win in seven game~ while 1927 produced a
0-7-1 record, the first year w1thout at least one victory
since 1896. Whereas the 1924-25 teams ran up a record
that still stands today of 11 straight games without a
loss (1 0 wins and one tie), the 1927 Aggies started
record streaks of eight straight losses and 12 gam~s without a win. That fall they could only score 13 points and
were shutout six times .
"Kid" Gore stepped out of the coaching ranks at this
time, not because of adversity on the field, but because
he wa~ needed in the _role of Director of Men's Physical
Educat1on. Professor H1cks was on a hard campaign to
raise money for what would soon develop into the finest
Physical Education bu ilding in the East.
Charles McGeoch took over the coaching reins in
1928. The hero of many victories under Gore, he failed
to ignite the Aggies and three dismal seasons followed .
Material was meager. The 1929 team fielded one of the
lightest backfields in America. Quarterback Arthur Brown
'32 was 57", 156 lbs ., halfbacks Fred Ellert '30 and Oscar
Holmberg '32 were 5'4" 153 and 5'3" 152 respectively
wh ile Richard Bond '30, was the fullback at 5'4", 142:
Yet they managed a 3-4-1 record for McGeoch's best
season .
However, the 1930 season, the last one in the history
of Massachusetts Agricultural College, . found the Aggies'
once-proud prowess on the gridiron strike rock-bottom.
They finished with a 1-8 record and allowed 258 points,
the most ever given up by a Massachusetts team.
Three significant events then occurred in 1931 that
would re-shape Massachusetts' image. The school became
Massachusetts State College, a new coach, Melvin H.
Taube arrived from the mid-west, and Louis Joseph Bush
'34 entered his sophomore year. He would become, under
Taube, Mass . State's most illustrious football hero .
Next week : 1931-1964

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U of Mass Redmenl

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ATHLETIC DIRECTORS

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I
THE 1965 UNIVERSITY OF
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AL 3-3091

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LOCATED AT

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�MASSACHUSETTS

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•. • •..

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f.,·

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JJ.• I. -

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�University of Massachusetts No.
11

12
14

15

Name
GREG LANDRY
STEVE TRBOVICH
DICK CAIN
AL CARUSO

Class

Age

QUARTERBACKS
19
Sr.
21
Sr.
21
Jr.
20

So.

1965 Football Roster
Wt.

Ht.

6'3"

190

5'1 0"
5'1 0"

180
185
190

6'0''

*LEO BIRON
ED CODY
DAVE GIARLA
DICK LEWIS
BOB DETORE

RIGHT HALFBACKS
6'0"
22
Sr.
6'1"
21
Jr.
5'1 0 11
20
Jr.
5'10"
23
Sr.
5'711
Jr.
19

33
34

*DAVE KELLEY
*DICK BENOIT
*PHIL VANDERSEA
PAUL CAMPBELL

Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.

40
41
42
43

DON DURKIN
*BOB ELLIS
*TERRY SWANSON
BILL COMPTON

LEFT HALFBACKS
Soph.
21
6'311
Sr.
22
6'2"
Sr.
23
6'011
Soph.
19
6'0"

50
51
52
53
54
55

DON RANA
*BERNIE DALLAS
DAN HARRIGAN
BRUCE GOMBAR
JOHN CLAIR
ROBERT KLIMKA

Sr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.
Sop h.

60
61

*BOB SANTUCCI
*ROD BROOKS
*LARRY SPIDLE
DONALD GLOGOWSKI
*BOB GOGICK
ERNI-E SMITH
KENT STEVENS
GEORGE TOKARCZUK
MICHAEL LANGONE
DAVE CORNA

Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sop h.
Soph.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.

JOHN BOYLE
DOUGLAS FAUCETTE
JAMES MITCHELL
*BILL CONNOR
ED TONER
DICK QUALEY
DAVE MITCHELL

Jr.
So ph.
Sop h.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sop h.

JOE BONCZEK
ALAN BECKER
*MILT MORIN
*BOB MEERS
ART SIMENSEN
JOE DIVINCENZO
MIKE CASEY
PAUL MLINAR

Sop h.
So ph.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Soph.
Jr.
Sop h.

20
21
22
23
24

30
32

FULLBACKS
22

21
22

20

CENTERS
21
22
19
20

21
19

6'0"
6'011
6'4 11
5'1 0"

187
190
175
195
165

195
215

230
190

205
205
205

170

6'011

215

6'0"
6'1

215

11

6'011
6'2"
5'11

II

210
205
215
200

Hometown
Nashua, N.H.
Midland, Pa.
Holbrook
Brooklyn, N.Y.

Webster
Clarks Summit, Pa.
Nahant
Fitchburg
Greensburg, Pa.

Geneva, N.Y.
Agawam
Whitinsville
Everett

Woburn
Beverly
Belmont
Athol

Worcester
Philadelphia, Pa.
Bristol, Conn.
West Springfield
Millbury
Fall River

GUARDS

62
63
64

65
66
67

68
70

20
21
21
21
20
20

6'011

5'11

II

19

6'2"
5'11
6'0"
5'1 0 11
6'0 11
6'011

23
21

5'1 0"
5'10

19

II

11

215
200
205
200
205
195
205
205
200
180

Newton
Ayer
Lexington
Agawam
Clifton, N.J.
Forge Village
Plymouth
Bronx, N.Y.
Mattapan
Columbus, Ohio

TACKLES

72
73

74
75
77

78
79

21

6'1"

19

6'411
6'1 11
6'611
6'2"

220
'220
225
220
220

20

6'2"

230

20

6'2 11

230

6'311
6'3"
6'4"
6'3 11

19
21
22

Leominster
Yonkers, N.Y.
Stoneham
Rockland
Lynn
Woburn
Salem

ENDS
80

81
82

83
84
86
88

89

*Lettermen

19

22
21
19
21

6'2"
6 '111

215
185
245
215
200
190
190

19

6'0"

210

19
23

6'2"

Simsbury, Conn.
E. Rutherford, N.J.
Leominster
Hudson
Wakefield
Beverly
Hinsdale
Glens Head, N.Y.

�MASSACHUSETTS

Dick Benoit

Leo Biron

Rod Brooks

Dick Cain

Dave Corna

-

-r"

Dave Kelly

Greg Landry

Bernie Dallas

Bob Ellis

Bob Gogick

Bob Meers

Milt Morin

Don Rana

Bob Santucci

Art Simensen

Terry Swanson

Ed Toner

Steve Trbovich

Phil Vandersea

Larry Spidle

��MASSACHUSETTS
Probable Sta rting Lineup

83
74
60
52
62
75
82
11
40
24
32

BOB MEERS ....... .......................... .LE
JIM MITCHELL .............................. LT
BOB SANTUCCI ....... ................... LG
DAN HARRIGAN .......................... C
LARRY SPIDLE ................ ............ RG
BILL CONNOR .............................. RT
MILT MORIN ....... ........ ................. RE
GREG LANDRY ............................ QB
DON DURKIN .............................. LH
BOB DETORE .............................. RH
DICK BENOIT .............................. FB

...

OFFIC
Refe ree: Giles Tl
Umpire: John He•
Linesman: Fay Vi
Field Judge : Anti
Electric Clock: Le
Scoreboard: Josel

THE REDMEN

things go

b~~th

Coke
TRADE-MARK@

11
14
15
20
21
22
23
24
30
32
33
34
40
42
43
50
51
52
53
54

Landry, qb
Cain, qb
Caruso, qb
Biron, hb
Cody,hb
Giarla, hb
Lewis, hb
Detore, hb
Kelley, fb
Benoit, fb
Vandersea, fb
Campbell, fb
Durkin, hb
Swanson, hb
Compton, hb
Rana,c
Dallas, c
Harrigan, c
Gombar, c
Clair, c
55 Klimka, c
60 Santucci, g
61 Brooks, g

62
63
64
65
66
67
68
70
72
73
74
75
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
86
88
89

Spidle, g
Glogowski, g
Gogick, g
Smith, E., g
Stevens, g
Tokarczuk, g
Langone, g
Corn a, g
Boyle, t
Faucette, t
Mitchell, J., t
Connor, t
Toner, t
Qualey, t
Mitchell, D., t
Bonczek, e
Becker, e
Morin, e
Meers, e
Simensen, e
DiVincenzo, e
Casey, e
Mlinar, e

�c
Tl
e•
(i

It I

.e
eJ

�MASSACHUSETTS
Probable Starting Lineup

83
74
60
52 ·
62
75
82
11
40
24
32

BOB MEERS ........... ... ... ... .............. LE
JIM MITCHELL .............................. LT
BOB SANTUCCI ... .-..................... LG
DAN HARRIGAN .......................... C
LARRY SPIDLE ........ ..... ............... RG
BILL CONNOR .............................. RT
MILT MORIN ................................ RE
GREG LANDRY ......... ............ ...... .QB
DON DURKIN ...... .... ... .. ..... .......... LH
BOB DETORE .............................. RH
DICK BENOIT ....... .. .. ... ....... ... ... ... FB

OFFICIAl

Referee : Giles T~ re
Ump;re: John Hen ril
Lines:nan: Fay \(inct
Field Judge: Antho•
Electric Clock: Lerol
Scoreboard: Joseph

THE RED MEN
11 Landry, qb

things go

b~Wfth

Coke
TRADE· MARK@

14
15
20
21
22
23
24
30
32
33
34
40
42
43
50
51
52
53
54
55
60
61

Cain, qb
Caruso, qb
Biron, hb
Cody,hb
Giarla, hb
Lewis, hb
Detore, hb
Kelley, fb
Benoit, fb
Vandersea, fb
Campbell, fb
Durkin, hb
Swanson, hb
Compton, hb
Rana,c
Dallas, c
Harrigan, c
Gombar, c
Clair, c
Klimka, c
Santucci, g
Brooks, g

62 Spidle, g
63 Glogowski, 9
64 Go9ick, g
65 Smith, E., 9
66 Stevens, 9
67 Tokarczuk, g
68 Langone, 9
70 Corn a, g
72 Boyle, t
73 Faucette, t
74 Mitchell, J., t
75 Connor, t
77 Toner, t
78 Qualey, t
79 Mitchell, D., t
80 Bonczek, e
81 Becker, e
82 Morin, e
83 Meers, e
84 Simensen, e
86 DiVincenzo, e
88 Casey, e
89 Mlinar, e

1

�BUFFALO
Probable Starting Lineup

86
76
62
56
67
74
87
17
22
20
36

JIM DUNN .................................... LE
MIKE WUEST ... ............................. LT
MIKE RISSELL .. ..............................LG
BRUCE MacKELLAR ........................ C
TED GIBBONS ............................. .RG
BILL ABBEY ........... .. ....... .............. RT
DICK ASHLEY .... .... ................... ...RE
RICK WELLS .. .... ..... ..................... QB
BENNIE WASHINGTON .. ............ LH
JIM BARKSDALE .......................... RH
LEE JONES .................. ....... ... ........ FB

:IALS
rhreadgold
tnrion

rincent
thony Minisi
eroy Kelley
1ph Paradise

THE BULLS
14
16
17
18
20
22
24
25
26
28
30
32
34
35
36
38
40
44
46
48
SO
52
55
56
58

Geringer, dhb
Capuana, hb-qb
Wells, qb
R. Ridolfi, qb
Barksdale, hb
Washington, hb
T. Ridolfi, hb
Scaletta, hb
McEwen, hb
Hansen, k
Brennan, fb
Hoke, fb
Sinclair, hb
Smigelski, hb
Jones, fb
Przykuta, f b
Sella, dhb
Webber, hb
Swiderski, hb
Hurd, hb
Duprey, lb
Holly, lb
Garofalo, lb
B. MacKe llar, c
Rishel, c-lb

61
62
63
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
78
79
80
81
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

Botula, 9
Risse ll, g
Poles, dt
Gibbons, 9
R. MacKellar, d9
Dechowitz, g
Pugh, dt
Taylor, d9
Brisky, dt-e
Miceli, t
Abbey, t
Finochio, t
Wuest, t
Pirozzolo, ~
Rate I, t
Helen brook, e
Lehner, e
McNamara, e
La Fountain, e
Kleiber, e
Dunn, e
Ashley, e
Remillard, ll
Burden, e
Oscsodal, k

�lA

..,
1ri

lei

tol

'OJ

th

PENNY EOWAROS-''MISS TIPARILLO''

What does she mean "cigars ... cigarettes ...Tiparillos"?
You'll be hearing that chant more and
more- now thatTiparillos have arrived.
And arrived they have. In all the right
places. With all the right people.
The new Tiparillo has a neat, trim
shape.lt looks young and debonair. And
its pearly, pliable tip pays more than
lip service to your smoking pleasure.

And never before such mildness!
The most careful blending of choicest
imported tobaccos has seen to that.
So, too, has the exclusive, veinless
Ultra Cigar Wrapper* that burns so
evenly and smoothly it insures complete mildness.
You can even see the mildness. The

surprisingly whiter ash is visible evidence. Smoker's proof. Here is flavor
you don't have to inhale to enjoy.
"Cigars ... cigarettes ... ?" Who
knows, maybe someday it will be just
"Tiparillos!"
Why don't you ask for one today?

Tiparillos are on sale at this stadium.

• T,M . GENER,\L CIGAR CO,

�BUFFALO
Probable Starting l ineup

86
76
62
56
67
74
87
17
22
20
36

JIM DUNN ....... .... ..... .................... LE
MIKE WUEST ................................ LT
MIKE RISSELL .. .............................. LG
BRUCE MacKELLAR ...... .................. C
TED GIBBONS .... .......................... RG
BILL ABBEY .......... ........................ RT
DICK ASHLEY ........................ .... .. RE
RICK WELLS ......................... .... ... QB
BENNIE WASHINGTON .............. LH
JIM BARKSDALE ....... ...... ............. RH
LEE JONES .......................... ....... ... FB

IALS
oreadgold
Irion

&gt;cent
•ony Minisi
·oy Kelley
•h Paradise

lHE BULLS
14
16
17
18
20
22
24
25
26
28
30
32
34
35
36
38
40
44
46
48
50
52
55
56
58

Geringer, dhb
Capuana, hb-qb
Wells, qb
R. Ridolfi, qb
Barksdale, hb
Washington, hb
T. Ridolfi, hb
Scaletta, hb
McEwen, hb
Hansen, k
Brennan, fb
Hoke, fb
Sinclair, hb
Smigelski, hb
Jones, fb
Prz:ykuta, f b
Se lla,dhb
We bber, hb
Swiderski, hb
Hurd, hb
Duprey, lb
Holly,lb
Garofalo, lb
B. MacKellar, c
Rishel, c-lb

61
62
63
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
78
79

80
81
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

Botula, g
Risse ll, 9
Poles, dt
Gibbons, g
R. MacKellar, dg
De chowitz, g
Pugh, dt
Taylor, dg
Brisky, dt-e
Mice li, t
Abbey, t
Finochio, t
Wuest, t
Pironolo, t
Rate I, t
He lenbrook, e
Lehner, e
McNamara, e
Lafountain, e
Kleiber, e
Dunn, e
Ashley, e
Re millard, OJ
Burden, e
Oscsodal, k

things go

b~Wfth

Coke
TRADE· MARK®

�What does she mean "cigars ... cigarettes. ~ .Tiparillos"?
You'll be hearing that chant more and
more- nowthatTiparillos have arrived.
And arrived they have. In all the right
places. With all the right people.
The new Tiparillo has a neat, trim
shape. It looksyoungand debonair. And
its pearly, pliable tip pays more than
lip service to your smoking pleasure.

And never before such mildness!
The most careful blending of choicest
imported tobaccos has seen to that.
So, too, has the exclusive, veinless
Ultra Cigar Wrapper* that burns so
evenly and smoothly it insures complete mildness.
You can even see the mildness. The

surprisingly whiter ash is visible evidence. Smoker's proof. Here is flavor
you don't have to inhale to enjoy.
"Cigars ... cigarettes ... ?" Who
knows, maybe someday it will be just
"Tiparillos!"
Why don't you ask for one today?

Tiparillos are on sale at this stadium.

• T. M, GEii ER"L C I GAR CO.

�BUFFALO

Richard Ashley

Dennis Burden

James Dunn

Frederick Geringer

Theodore Gibbons

Lee Jones

Paul Kleiber

Gerald LaFountain

Craig Helenbrook

Thomas Hurd

James McEwen

Joseph Oscsodal

E. Greenard Poles

Dennis Przykuta

James Ratel

Rodney Rishel

Daniel Sella

William Taylor

Bennie Washington

Richard Wells

�University of BuHalo
No.

Name

Pos.

Class

HS
HS
QS
QS

Sr.
Jr.
Soph.
Sr.

HS
HB
HS
HS
HS
HS

Jr.
Soph.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Soph.

TOM BRENNAN
TOM HOKE
SOB SINCLAIR
JOHN SMIGELSKI
LEE JONES
* DENNIS PRZYKUTA

FS
FS
HB
HB
FS
FB

46
48

* DAN SELLA
* JIM WEBBER
WALT SWIDERSKI
TOM HURD

50
52
55
56
58

61

14
16
17

18

* FREDERICK GERINGER
* NICHOLAS CAPUANA
RICHARD WELLS
RON RIDOLFI

1965 Football Roster

Age

Ht.

Wt.

Hometown

20
19

5'9"
5'9"
6'0"
5'9"

165
180
190
170

Danville, Pa.
Utica, N.Y.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Pawtucket, R.I.

170

Syracuse, N.Y.
Woonsocket, R.I.
Pawtucket, R.I.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Detroit, Mich.

18
21

21
22
21
19

5'11"
5'9"
5'9"
5'11"
5'1 0"
5'11"

Soph.
Soph.
Soph.
Sr.
Soph.
Sr.

18

5'10"

19

6'0"

18

6'1"

21
19
20

6'1"
5'1 0"
5'1 0"

HS
HS
HS
HS

Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Soph.

19
22
21
19

5'10"
5'9"
6'0"
6'2"

175
170
192

McKees Rocks, Pa.
Manlius, N .Y.
Utica, N.Y.
Elmira, N .Y.

* JIM DUPREY
* JOE HOLLY
* JOE GAROFALO
BRUCE MacKELLAR
ROD RISHEL

c
c
c
c
c

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Soph.

21
20
22
19
19

5'1 0"
6'1"
5'1 0"
6'0"

215
210
205
225
195

Peru, N.Y.
Lyons, N.Y.
Gloversville, N .Y.
Kenmore, N.Y.
E. Smethport, Pa.

G
G
T

Jr.
Soph.
Sr.
Soph.
Jr.
Sop h.

19
19
22
19
21
23

6'0"
5'11"
5'10"
5'10"
5'1 0"

69

CHARLES SOTULA
MIKE RISSELL
* E. GRENNARD POLES
TED GIBBONS
* RUSS MacKELLAR
RICHARD DECHOWITZ

200
215
225
230
210
215

Riverhead, L.l.
Coatesville, Pa.
Rochester, N.Y.
Newport, R.I.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Brooklyn, N .Y.

70
71
72
73
75
76
78
79

* RON PUGH
* SILL TAYLOR
DENNIS BRISKY
TONY MICELI
JIM FINOCHIO
MIKE WUEST
DICK PIROZZOLO
* JIM RATEL

Jr.
Jr.
Soph.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Soph.
Sr.

20
21

225
230
200
220
212
230
235
220

McKeesport, Pa.
Youngstown, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Batavia, N.Y.
E. Syracuse, N.Y.
Utica, N.Y.
Elmira, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.

80
81

* CRAIG HELENBROOK
LARRY LEHNER
WILLIAM ABBEY
JIM McNAMARA
* GERRY LAFOUNTAIN
PAUL KLEIBER
* JIM DUNN
RICHARD ASHLEY
JIM REMILLARD
DENNIS BURDEN

Sr.
Sop h.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Soph.
Soph.
Sr.

21
19
20
21
21
21
20

210
195
215
191
220
225
200
200
180
190

Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Peru, Ind.
Binghamton, N.Y.
Saranac Lake, N.Y.
Auburn, N .Y.
Cranston, R.I.
Massena, N .Y.
New Bedford, Mass.
Franklin Square, L.l.

158

Buffalo, N.Y.

20
22
24
25
26
28
30
32

34
35
36
38

40
44

62
63
67

68

82
83

84
85

86
87

88
89
90

JAMES BARKSDALE
BENNIE WASHINGTON
TOM RIDOLFI
PAUL SCALETTA
JIM McEWEN
BRIAN HANSEN

JOE OSCSODAL

* Lettermen

G

G
G

T
G
E
T
T
T

T
T
E
E
E
E

E
E
E
E
E
E

Sr.

19

18

18
20
19
20
19
22

5' 10"

6'0"
6'1"
6'2"
6'2"
6'2"
5'1 0"
6'3"

6'1"
6'3"
6' 1"
6'2"
6'2"
6'2"
5' 11 "
6' 5"

6'4"

18

6'2"

18
21

6' 1"
6' 1"

22

5'10"

186
170

160
195
172
210
185
190
180
200
210

184

Rochester,
Marcy,
Watertown,
Solvay,
Buffalo,
Depew,

N .Y.
N.Y.
N.Y.
N .Y.
N.Y.
N.Y.

�Compliments of

Central Appliance Service
of Springfield~ Inc.
COIN METERED WASHERS and DRYERS
ON CAMPUS

REPAIR SERVICE on ALL MAJOR APPLIANCES

SPRINGFIELD, MASS.

445 CENTRAL ST.

University Barber Shop
IT PAYS TO LOOK WELL

VISIT US REGULARLY

Student Union Building

On the Campus

�BUFFALO COACHING STAFF-Left to right: Asst. Coach James Ryan, Head Coach Richard Offenhamer, Asst.
Coach Ron LaRocque. Second row: Freshman Coach James Wolfe, Asst. Coach Robert Deming, Asst. Coach
Dewey Wade.

HOMECOMING WEEKEND
Saturday, October 16, 1965
ALUMNI-FACULTY ACTIVITIES
sponsored by University Women
6:00 p.m.
Social Hour
Memorial Hall
7:00 p.m.
Buffet Dinner. $2.25 per person
North Dining Commons
8:30- 12:00 Dance. $1.50 per person
Memorial Hall
Combination tickets for Dinner and Dance- $3.25

Deadline For Reservations, Oct. 13, contact:
Mrs. George Higgins
81 Harlow Drive, Amherst. Mass.

�Co\\ege

r

..ndersons
~A~ ROAD

rRurt sorAND

C\oth\et

�UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
The University of Buffalo has been the educational
and cultural center of Western New York since 1846. At
that time the City of Buffalo was 14-years old and was
the home of 28,000 people.
The "University" was the School of Medicine until 1886
when the School of Pharmacy was added. The school's
first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, a leading citizen
of the community who continued his UB leadership during his term as 13th President of the United States.
The 14 University Divisions are: School of Medicine
(1846); School of Pharmacy (1886); School of Law (1887);
School of Dentistry (1892); College of Arts and Sciences
(1913); Summer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College,
Evening Division (1923); School of Business Administration ( 1927); School of Education ( 1931); School of Social
Work ( 1936); Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
(1939); School of Nursing (1940); School of Engineering
(1946); and University College, including associate degrees (1958).
UB's total enrollment is about 19,000, of which onehalf are full -time undergraduate students .
Few institutions can equal the pace of construction
which has taken place on the North Main Street campus
in recent years. No less than 20 new buildings and addi-

tions to existing buildings have been undertaken, including the Western New York Nuclear Research Center, t~e
ll -floor Tower Residence Hall for Men, the ll-floor Goodyear Residence Hall for Women, the $4.5 million Norton
Hall (student union), the Schools of Medicine and Dentistry (Capen Hall), and the Acheson Hall of chemistry.
But this is only a beginning. In 1962 UB abandoned
its private operation to become the major campus segment of the State University of New York. The official
name of the college, created by State University officials,
is: State University of New York at Buffalo. However,
popular usage, particularly in the realm of intercollegiate
sports, retains the familiar name of University of Buffalo,
or jus; UB. The State University at the present time is
completing arrangements for the purchase of a tract of
land in excess of l ,500 acres in the Town of Amherst,
about 3 miles from the site of the present campus. There
a new campus, costing upwards of $130 million and abie
to accommodate 20,000 full-time undergraduates, will be
built. The present campus will become a Health-Science
Complex second to none in the world .
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of Buffalo
continues its fine tradition of service to the Niagara Frontier and the State of New York .

�@ongratulations U Mass . ... (9n Your Great New cJtadium

/

I

I

/

·· ........
,.·

--

'We got a 1(ick out of helping you c:Buzld it!

PRESTRESSED CONCRETE
STRUCTURAL SYSTEMS
A Division of NEW ENGLAND CONCRETE PIPE CORP., 99 Needham Street, Newton Upper Falls, Mass. LA 7-4560

�Officers of the Sports Dads Association are pictured above with scholar athletes who were recipients of
awards for the 1964-65 academic year. Seated (1. to r.) Richard Lee, Vice President; Charles O'Rourke, Jr.,
John Schroeder, and Thomas Panke. Standing: Louis Varrichione, President; Gregory Tsoucalas, Greg
Landry. James Mitchell, Donald Ferron, and Albert Roseff, Secretary-Treasurer.

Massachusetts Songs and Cheers
SO NS OF MASSACHUSETTS
Bay State's loyal sons are we;
In her pra1se our song shall be,
Till we make the welkin ring,
W1lh our chorus as we sing,
W1th the tnbute that we bring.
Holyoke's hills prolong the strain,
Echo1ng to our glad refrain,
And the gentle winds proclaim
Far and near thy peerless fame,
Pra1s1ng e'er thine honored name:
Ma a a a assachusetlsl

REOMEN FIGHT
R e e e e d . men
You can
Fight I

COME ON MAROON
Co me on Maroon
Come on Whi te
Come on Redmen
Fightl Fightl Fight!

FIGHT MASSACHUSETTS
(Footba ll Song)
Fight, fi -yi -yight Massachusetts
F1ght, f1-y1 y1ght every play ,
F1ght, f1 -y1 y1ght for a touchdown,
F1ght. all your might, to -day
F1ght down the f1eld Massachusetts.
The Stars and the Stnpes w1ll gleam;
Fi -yi -yight, f1 -yi -y1ght for old Bay State.
F1ght for the TEAM. TEAM . TFAMI

MASS. CLAP
Chorus:
Loyal sons of old Massachusetts,
Faithful, sturdy sons and true,
To our gran d ol d Alma Mater,
Let our song resound ane w.
Cheer, boys, cheer fo r old Massachusetts,
G1ve our college three times three!
Sons forever of the ol d Ba y State,
Loyal sons, loyal sons are we.
LONG MASSACHUSETTS
M a a a-s s-s s-s s Go Team Ga l

a chu -setts

M (clap)
(clap)
(clap)
(cla p)
(cla p) - (cla p)
A
S - (cla p)
(cla p)
(cla p)
(clap)
(cla p)
S - (cla p)
M (cla p) - A (clap) - S (cla p) - S (clap)
M-A-S-S
M A-S-S
Massachusetts!

REDMEN LOCOMOTIVE
R-E-0 -M-E-N rah, rah, rah
R-E-0 -M-E -N rah , rah, rah
R-E-0 -M-E-N rah , rah, rah
Go Team

(clap, clap, clap)
(clap, clap, clap)
(clap, clap, clap)
Gol

TEAM CHEER

MASS. LOCOMOTIVE

T-E A-M - Yeah Teaml
T-E-A-M - Yeah Team!
TE A-M - YEAH Team!
Gal
Teaml
Go!

M A SS -A chao chao chao sells
M A SS- A chao chao chao sells
M A SS A chao chao chao sells
Massachusetts - Gol

�LETTERPRESS
FOR

EVERY

AND

MODERN

AMHERST

•

OFFSET

REQUIREMENT

MASSACHUSETTS

vendors ...
cllvUi,on-

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CIGAREllE
Tel. 527-4280

E.&amp;w J.

C\G~R

~FOOD

CO.,lnc

VEND\NG
Easthampton, Mass.

�STADIUM

INFORMATION

Thv
University

MAY WE HAVE YOUR COOPERATION PLEASE!

As guests of the Uni-

versity today, your cooperation is requested in maintaining the dignity
and reputation of the institution.

Motor Lodgv

We request your cooperation in observing the rules and traditions

Amherst, M(Jssachusetls

to bring or consume alcoholic beverages of any kind on this campus.

of this University and of the state and local laws which ma ke it illegal

CENTRALLY LOCATED WITHIN
WALKING DISTANCE OF THE UNIVERSITY .
PIONEER VALLEY'S FINEST

REST ROOM FACILITIES: Ladies ' and Men's rest rooms are located on both
ends of the facilities building which is located just beyond the flag pole on
the South end of the stadium.

Featuring:

Television
Telephones
Air Conditioned
Quiet Electric Heat
Tile Baths
Wall to Wall Carpet
Double Beds
In Room Coffee

TICKETS: The ticket office in Room 231 Boyden Building is open each wee kday during the football season from 9:00a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and on Saturday
of home football games from 9:30a .m . to 12:00 noon. Stadium ticket booths
open at 12:15 p.m.

LOST AND FOUND: All lost and found items should be turned in at the
First Aid Office which is located in the facilities building.

ANNOUNCEMENTS OVER PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM : No special announcements are made over the public address system except in cases of extreme

AMHERST'S
LIVELY
DEALER
CAHILLANE MOTORS Inc.
Go In Ramblers

emergency.

If an emergency does arise go to the press box and give the

message to the attendant on duty.

PRESS BOX: The University of Massachusetts press box is for the use of the
working press only, and admission is limited to newspapermen , radio , and
television men and those assigned for specific duties .

REFRESHMENT STANDS: Refreshment stands are located on each corner of
the stadium plaza. Listed prices are- Hot dogs 25c, pop corn 15c, ice. cream
15c, peanuts 15c, soft drinks 15c and 25c, coffee 15c, candy 1Oc, potato
chips and Fritos 15c.

PASS OUT GATE: Spectators who must leave stadium and wish to re-enter
during the game MUST use General Admission Gate on West side of stadium.
TELEPHONES: Publ ic telephones are located on West End (Press box side) of
Facilities building.

Go Go Hondas
When leaving the stadium after today's game may we request your

320 College Street

cooperation with the parking attendants as well as the local and state police.

253 -3300

Just a little patience will make it possible for all cars to leave with a minimum of confusion -

and please drive safely and sanely,

�U of M Desk Pads
U of M Blotters
U of M Stationery
College Course Outlines

. II
.

(/

(MUTUAL)

95 Titles

Laundry Cases

lFOUIIR
SIEASONS

HARDWARE &amp;
APPLIANCES

Bulletin Boards
Crepe Paper
Sporting Goods
Typewriting Supplies
Pocketbooks, Magazines
&amp; Newspapers

RADIOS &amp;
TELEVISION

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HEADQUARTERS
63 So. Pleasant St. -

NEWSDEALER &amp; STATIONER
Amherst, Mass.

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Route 9

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Open 5 a.m. - 9 p.m. Daily
Open 5 a.m. - l p .m . Sunday

Amherst Concrete

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INCORPORATED

Plant: Railroad Street, Amhers t, Mass., ALpine 3·7891

OFFICE :

242 0

BOSTON

ROAD

NORTH

WILBRAHAM,

MASSACHUSETTS
Tr:LEPHONE

LYRI C

6 · 3964

�When Twilight Shadows Deepen
FRED D. GRIGGS, '13

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Welcomes the Class of 1969

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CALL Alpine 3-3491

�HALF TIME-ANYTIME-MAKE IT MILK!
Busy football weekends call for extra energy. And that
calls for a refreshing glass of milk. Milk is nature's vitality
drink ... that helps you stay in peak condition, sees you
through the busiest fall days.
Half time; snacktime, anytime-when you take a break,
make it milk. Keep up with the fun with milk's vitality!

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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              <text>Programs</text>
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                <text>1965-10-02 Massachusetts - Buffalo</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text>Alumni Stadium - October 2, 1965 - Official Program 50¢</text>
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                <text>University of Massachusetts</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>1965-10-02</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;. If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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    <fileContainer>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="1717593">
                    <text>~uffuln

us.

nstnn Qlnllrgr
SATURDAY -1:30 P.M.

~;iii·rDD:i~EP. 18 1965

ITIONS PRINTED ON I!ACK

ROW

6
SEAT

SEPTEMBER 18, 1965
ALUMNI STADIUM

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Powerful .. . dependable . .. ready to go instantly on wet or dry, soft or
hard-packed turf. That's what people expect of a fullback. That's what a
team needs to compile a winning record.
At Metropolitan Petroleum, our record is an impressive one 132 con secutive w inning seasons! A solid, hard-driving fullback is just one of the
reasons we ' re perennial favorites in New England.

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500 NEPONSET A VENUE, BOSTON

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CHOICE OF MANY
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$1.95 to $3.25

PRICES SUIJfCT TO CHAJICE
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soulheast Expressway seven miles South
of Boston at Exit 27 , Union Street

VALLE'S SAUGUS
Route 1, Across Mystic Brld&amp;e,
seven miles North of Boston

�•

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�BOSTON COLLEGE 1965 SOUVENIR PROGRAM
BOSTON COLLEGE vs. UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
SEPTEMBER 18, 1965

Conlenltl

From
the Desk
of the
Editor
EDDIE MILLER

Here we go again!! The summer flew by and it's that
time of year again ... and from where we sit, we think
B.C.'s loyal supporters are going to be treated to the
most exciting and (with a little bit of luck) perhaps the
best football yet since Jim Miller took command in 1962.
Today's game with the l niversity of Buffalo is only
the second meeting between the Eagles and the Bulls
... Remember the first one 2 seasons ago, and the outstanding performance turned by a fellow named Jack
Concannon ? On the slippery turf of Alumni Stadium,
in a heavy rainstorm, Jack was never a more brilliant
runner and passer as he led B.C. to a 15-0 victory.
Next Saturday we will host our old friends from
Villanova ... The Eagle-Wildcat series is one of the
top rivalries in the East, and certainly second only to
the B.C.-Holy Cross series among the Catholic College
set ... Eddie Carroll advises that there are still some
fine tickets available for this one, and that the week of
a home game his staff in the ticket office at Roberts
Center will be on hand from 9 a.m. till 8 p.m. Monday
through Friday and Saturday morning for the remainder of the season. Also for the convenience of B.C. fans
and thanks to Monsignor Glynn, the Propagation of
The Faith Office at 49 Franklin Street, Downtown Boston, will be selling tickets for all B.C. games Monday
through Friday from 9 a.m. till 5 p.m.
That big one with Army is just 2 weeks from today
... If you want to be among the 10,000 strong (literally)
from the Heights storming West Point, you'd better
pick up those fast disappearing ducats in a hurry ...
and tickets for the biggest home game of the season
against powerful Penn. State (Oct. 9th) are also going
like hot cakes ... See you next week here at the Stadium for the Villanova game ... Don't forget Alumni
Hall, open house after every home game for alumni
and friends of both schools.
P.S.-At the start of football practice a couple of
weeks ago, we had our Boston College players' pictures
taken in their handsome maroon blazers by a studio
photographer. They'll be ready in time for next week's
Villanova game program, and we think you'll agree,
worth the extra time and trouble we went to.

Very Rev. Michael P. Walsh, S.J. ------------------------------

5

Boston Co"ilege Athletic Association --------------------------

7

An Anniversary For The Humanities Series
by Leo O'Connor ________________ ------------------------------------

8

Cniversity of Buffalo ---------------------------------------------------- 11
Boston College Songs --------------------------------------------------- 12
Introducing Captain Charlie Smith
by D. Leo Monahan ------------------------------------------------ 13
Boston College Pia yers ---------------------------------- 14, 15, 17
University of Buffalo Coaching Staff and Roster__ ____ 18
Today's Starting Lineup s ______ ----------------------------- 20, 21
Boston College Coaching Staff and Roster ________________ 23
Boston College Squad Picture ------------------------------------ 24
University of Buffalo Players ------------------------------ 26, 27
S ta tis tics ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 29
"Here We Go Again .. .'' by Larry Strum ________________ 31
Cartoon by Phil Bissell ------------------------------------------------ 33
Food For Thought-A Big Operation ------------------------ 34
Signals ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 40

Th e Eagle is pub lished by the Boston College Athletic Association
Editor, Edward D. Miller, B.C., '57

Photo Credits
Jet Commercial Photographers
Cartoon Credits
Bill Robertson
Phil Bissell

1965 SCHEDULE
Se pt. 1B
Sept. 25
Oct. 2
Oct. 9
Oct. 23

Buffalo
Villanova
at Army
Penn State
Richmond

Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.

30
5
13
20
27

V.M.I .
at Miami
William &amp; Mary
at Syracuse
a t Holy Cross

1965 B. C. FRESHMAN FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Oct. 15
Oct. 22
Oct. 31

Harvard
Brown
Holy Cross

Nov. 6
Nov. 12

Holy Cross
Dartmouth

H. 0. Zimman, Advertising Representatives
475 Fifth Ave., N.Y. - 156 Broad St., lynn

�,,

fiOWARDjOHnfOn}
ON ALL IMPORTANT HIGHWAYS

for a delicious meal or snack .•. quality and courtesy

JOHN O'CONNELL'S

-o.

TlVelve-j.jtg

bty

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6

�WILLIAM J. FLYNN

Director of Athletics
Boston College

REV. DAVID F. CARROLL, S.J.

Faculty Moderator of Athletics
Boston College

EDDIE CARROLL

Assistant Director of Athletics
Boston College

�AN ANNIVERSARY
/or the

HUMANITIES SERIES
THE Boston College Humanities For
the Cossacks were those fierce,
Series-Directed by Rev. Francis
no-quarter fighters from the steppes
Sweeney, S.J., the Jesuit university's
scholarly priest-poet-is celebrating
an anniversary this year. It was just
ten years ago that the first of what
was to become a parade of cultural
leaders appeared in the series. And
in those ten years the music and the
poetry and the noblest ideas of man
have been brought to the Chestnut
Hill campus to stimulate and enlighten eager students from the
Jesuit university and others from
the Greater Boston area.
There are memories, too, of the
zenithed talents which came to the
campus to share the magic of the
past and the promise of the future
with responsive audiences.
In that decade, some of the
brightest lights of the cultural world
were snuffed out.
Never more will the leonine head
of a Robert Frost-who once said
he took the road "less travelled
by"-bend over a lectern to "say"
his poetry for a Boston College
audience, for he, having kept some
of the promises he had to keep, is
now asleep-having left a legacy
of bright memories for those who
knew and heard him.
Neither will the gentle, well-bred
T.S. Eliot charm an audience with
the reading of his poetry, written
out of a groping generation.
Nor will the talent of a Flannery
O'Connor bring a responsive reflection to the faces of an audience.
They are gone-their styles, their
imagery and their points of view
survive them.
What they have added to the rich
heritage of the Western world will
be an inspiration to those who follow
them.

THE

1965-1966 season of the
Humanities Series will open October
14 when the Gen. Platoff Don Cossack Chorus and Dancers appear
~ith their repertoire of Russian mustc.
Time was when the battle-cry of
the Cossacks, thundering to the
fight, brought thrills of fear to the
spines of the stoutest soldiers in
the ranks of the enemies of Russia.

who from the time they were children could ride like the wind and
fight like the very devil. Under the
Czars, they were the best cavalrymen-the only cavalrymen, they
wou_ld tell you-in the Russian
armtes.
Though their heroes are dead,
their legends live on in the music
that they loved-some of it gay and
rollicking with their zest for life
and some of it solemn as they consider the fate of man, but all of
it reflecting the Russian character.
The Don Cossack Chorus was
organized in Prague, Czechoslovakia, by Nicholas Kostrukoff. It
has toured all six continents and has
crossed the equator nineteen times
in places like the Atlantic, Pacific
and Indian Oceans as well as Sumatra and Ecuador. The twenty-five
men who comprise the Chorus have
visited sixty-five different countries
and have given over eight thousand
concerts. One of the most notable
was a concert of church music at
the Cathedral of ~otre Dame in
Paris before an audience of ten
thousand persons.
Members of the Chorus represent
the best of vocal talent and dancers
among the white Russian emigres
who fought Communism in Russia
and who may be considered as pioneers _in the fight against world Commumsm.
Grainne Yeats, Irish harpist and
folk singer, will appear in the series
October 28. Miss Yeats, who teaches
the Irish harp at the Royal Irish
Academy of Music in Dublin, has a
repertoire of medieval, Shakespearian, French, Spanish and contemporary music as well as selections by
Turlough Carolan, the last and bestknown of the Irish harper-composers, and several ballads by William
Buter Yeats, James Joyce and
Frank O'Connor. Yeats became interested in folk music as a young
man through hearing the country
people around Kiltartan singing
the old Gaelic songs. He wrote a
number of ballads in the traditional
style which he directed should be
sung without accompaniment.
Kerouac, Nemerov, Levertov-

8

By LEO O'CoNNOR

they were some of the leading lights
in the "beat" movement. On ~o­
vember 4, Brother Antoninus, O.P.,
who is often identified with that
group, will read his poetry in the
Humanities Series. His poetry reflects the urgency of a troubled and
haunted life. Brother Antoninus
attended Fresno &amp;tate College,
worked as a farmer and a laborer,
was a conscientious objector in
World War II and was active in anarcho-pacifist causes. His life has
been marked by a troubled marriage, a struggle in faith that led to
his conversion, withdrawal from
public life as a contemplative member of his order. He has published
two volumes of poetry, "The Crooked Lines of God" and "The Hazards
of Holiness".
Perhaps Robert Penn Warren's
best-known work is "All the King's
Men", a novel about a Louisiana
red-neck who climbed all the way
to the governorship of the state,
pushing friends and enemies alike
out of his way until he reached the
pinnacle of power. Warren's fictional character was gunned down by
one of those who was injured by him
in much the same way that Huey
Long was assassinated in the State
House at Baton Rouge in 1935.
Warren graduated summa cum
laude from Vanderbilt in 1925.
During his junior and senior years
at Vanderbilt, he was one of the
"Fugitive Group of Poets" who
jolted the Old South out of its
literary lethargy and sparked a new
group of Southern writers. Warren
was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford in
1930 and has taught at Vanderbilt,
Louisiana State University and the
University of Minnesota. He has
been a professor of English at Yale
since 1961. He also is the author of
"World Enough and Time", "Brother to Dragons", "The Cave" and
a number of other novels. He will
appear November 18 in the Humanities Series. This will be his second visit to Boston College.
The Greeks had a word for it and
so does H.D.F. Kitto, Professor of
Greek at the University of Bristol,
England, who will appear February
3 next year in the Humanities Series. Professor Kitto eats, drinks and

�DON COSSACK DANCERS AND CHOIR

lives Greek-even lists it as his hobby (the other is music). Professor
Kitto is the author of several books
on Greek tragedy. He has been a
visiting professor at Cornell, Brand~is and the University of Califorma.
The man who guided the Abbey
Theatre in Dublin for twenty-two
years, Walter F. Starkie, will appear
March 10 in the series. The author
of several works on Spanish literature and on travel, Professor Starkie also is an authority on the
customs and folklore of the Spanish
gypsies. He directed the Abbey
Theater from 1924-46. A graduate
of Trinity College, Dublin, Professor Starkie has been a visiting
professor at several universities in
England and the United States.
A veteran of several archeological
expeditions to the middle East, Professor Samuel Noah Kramer, Clark
Research Professor of Assyriology
and Curator of Tablet Collections
at the University of Pennsylvania,
will appear on the March 15 program of the Humanities Series. Professor Kramer, an authority on
Sumerian texts, has been a visiting
professor in Turkey and the Soviet
Union.
E NGLAND'S "angry young
men" will be assessed on the March
24 program by a man who was
considered somewhat of a radical
himself in his younger days. Stephen
Spender, poet and literary critic,
went to Spain during the Civil War
there to fight on the side of the

Spanish Republic, because he was
so strongly opposed to fascism.
Now the co-editor of "Encounter",
the famous British review, Spender
is a frequent visitor to the United
States, having taught at Sarah
Lawrence College, the University of
Cincinnati, the University of California and orthwestern. In 1962,
he gave three public lectures at the
Library of Congress on the Modern
Imagination. Spender was educated
at University College School in London and University College, Oxford.
While there, he met W.H. Auden,
who also was an undergraduate, and
they became good friends. Later,
Auden, Cecil Day Lewis and Spender published volumes of verse and
their works and names became associated in the public mind. During
World War II, Spender was a firefighter in the London National Fire
Service and co-editor of "Horizon",
another review. This is his third visit
to Boston College.
Honors Program students at
Boston College will have a week in
which to absorb some of the knowledge of Professor J otham Johnson,
Chairman of the Department of
Classics at New York University
who will appear March 31 on the
Humanities Series program. Professor Johnson is editor of "Classical
Weekly" and "Classical Journal".
One of the leading Jesuit philosophers of the day, Rev. Frederick C.
Copleston, S.J., Professor of the
History of Philosophy at Heythrop
College in England and at the
Gregorian University in Rome, will
speak April 18. Father Copleston,

9

son of a former chief judge of lower
Burma is a graduate of Oxford and
is the author of a monumental eightvolume History of Philosophy. He
also has written books on St.
Thomas, Nietzsche, contemporary
philosophy and existentialism. He
has lectured extensively in England
and on the Continent.
James Dickey, Atlanta-born
author of four volumes of poetry,
described the problems of the
peripatetic poet in the January
third issue of the " ew York Times
Book Revue", noting the satisfactions and disappointments he has
encountered while "barnstorming
for poetry". Dickey was educated
at Clemson and Vanderbilt and has
taught at Rice and the University
of Florida. He spent nearly six years
with advertising agencies in New
York and Atlanta. In 1961-62, he
worked abroad under a Guggenheim Fellowship. After that he was
poet-in-residence at Reed College
in Portland, Oregon, and San Fernando Valley State College in
Northridge, California. He has
written "Ill'to thie Stone", "Helmets", "Drowning With Others"
and "Buckdancer's Choice".
The Humanities Series also will
sponsor the IBM Touring Exhibition of "Small Paintings by Americans" September 19-0ctober 1 at
McElroy Commons.
On its tenth anniversary, then,
the Humanities Series can pause to
look back to some stirring programs
and look forward to an outstanding
program this year and the next
and the next.

�J. H. McNAMARA, Inc.

GOOD LU(;K EAGLES!

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10

�THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
The University of Buffalo has
been the educational and cultural
center of Western :"Jew York since
1846. At that time the City of Buffalo was 14-years old and was the
home of 28,000 people.
The "University" was the School
of Medicine until 1886 when the
School of Pharmacy was added. The
school's first chancellor was Millard Fillmore, a leading citizen of
the community who continued his
UB leadership during his term as
13th President of the United States.
The 14 University Divisions are:
School of Medicine ( 1846) ; School
of Pharmacy ( 1886); School of Law
(1887); School of Dentistry(1892);
College of Arts and Sciences(1913);
Summer Session ( 1915); Millard
Fillmore College, Evening Division
( 1923); School of Business Administr-ation (1927); School of
Education ( 1931); School of Social
Work (1936); Graduate School of
Arts and Sciences (1939); School of
:"-Jursing ( 1940); School of Engineering ( 1946); and University College, including associate degrees
(1958).
UB's total enrollment is about
19,000, of which one-half are fulltime undergraduate students.

Few institutions can equal the
pace of construction which has
taken place on the North Main
Street campus in recent years. No
less than 20 new buildings and additions to existing buildings have
been undertaken, including the
Western New York
uclea r Research Center, the 11-floor Tower
Residence Hall for Men, the 11floor Goodyear Residence Hall for
Women, the $4.5-million Norton
Hall (student union), the Schools
of Medicine and Dentistry (Capen
Hall), and the Acheson Hall of
Chemistry.
But this is only a beginning. In
1962 UB abandoned its private
operation to become the major
campus segment of the State University of • ew York. The official
name of the college, created by
State University officials, is: State
niversity of New York at Buffalo.
However, popular usage, particularly in the realm of intercollegiate
sports, retains the familiar name of
University of Buffalo, or just UB .
The State University at the present
time is completing arrangements for
the purchase of a tract of land in
excess of 1,500 acres in the Town of
Amherst, about 3 miles from the
site of the present campus. There

a new campus, costing upwards of
$130-million and able to accommodate 20,000 full-time undergraduates, will be built. The present
campus will become a HealthScience Complex second to none in
the world.
:"-Jationally recognized as a leader
in scholastic excellence and academic
freedom, the University of Buffalo
continues its fine tradition of service
to the
iagara Frontier and the
State of New York.
DR. CLIFFORD C. FURNAS
President, State University of New
York at Buffalo

Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, President
of the State University of New
York at Buffalo, has enjoyed a
distinguished career as athlete,
scholar, educator, research scientist
and public servant.
His undergraduate work was at
Purdue where he won the Big Ten
Conference Medal for the best combined scholastic and athletic record.
He represented the United States
in the 5,000-meter run in the 1920
~lympic Games at Antwerp, Belgmm.
His catholicity of interests is
evidenced by the various and varied
positions he has held: research
metallurgist for the U.S. Bureau of
Mines, associate professor at Yale
University, coordinator for the ationa! Defense Research Committee,
director of the Curtiss-Wright aeronautical research laboratory in Buffalo, and Executive Vice-President
of the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory.

Hayes Hall

Dr. Furnas became Chancellor
of the University of Buffalo on
September 1, 1954. He took a leave
of absence from December 1, 1955,
to February 1, 1957, to serve under
President Eisenhower as Assistant
Secretary for Research and development. He continues to be an active
member of various technical boards
and panels for the government,
particularly in the Department of
Defense.
Dr. Furnas is a member of the
Board of Directors of numerous
business firms. He is an author of
note, writing articles and books
in technical fields; including a work
which won Book-of-the-Month Club
honors.
11

�~a'-unrrt.,
CO·OP£RATIV£

BOSTON COLLEGE

B~nK

SongJ
SWEEP DOWN THE FIELD

Sweep down the field for Boston,
Marching on to glory,
Forward fighting Eagles.
Carry home the spoils of victory.
OH! We'll crush the foe before us
As the Boston men of old;
So, Fight! Fight! Fight! Fight!
Fight! Fight! Fight!
For the old Maroon and Gold.

Cun·ent Dividend on All Accounts

Cheered to victory our team
sweeps on,
The foe is vanquished and
their spirit gone.
B-0-S-T-0-N

Boston!

Dividends paid

4 times a year.

Boston! Boston!
Words by H. A. Kenny, '34
Music by T. N. Marier, '34

For Boston, for Boston,
We sing our proud refrain!
For Boston, for Boston,
'Tis wisdom's earthy fane
For here men are men
And their hearts are true,
And the towers on the Heights
Reach to heaven's own blue.
For Boston, for Boston,
Till the Echoes ring again!

HAIL1 ALMA MATERI
Hail! Alma Mater!
Thy praise we sing.
Fondly thy mem'ries round
our heart still cling.
Guide of our youth, thro' thee
we shall prevail!
Hail! Alma Mater! Hail! All Hail!
Hail! Alma Mater!
Lo! on the height,
Proudly thy tow'rs are raised
for the Right
God is thy Master, His law
thy sole avail!
Hail! Alma Mater! Hail! All Hail!

Words and music by
T. J. Hurley, '85

FOR BOSTON.
For Boston, for Boston,
Thy glory is our own!
For Boston, for Boston,
'Tis here that truth is known;
And ever with the Right
Shall thy sons be found,
Till time shall be no more
And they work is crowned.
For B'oston, for Boston,
For thee and Thine alone!

Words and music by T. J. Hurley, '85

Ownership

*
**

REFinancing

*

209 Washington Street,opposite State St.
Boston. Phone LA 3-4880

*

STADIUM INFORMATION
The First Aid Room is located directly under the opening at
Gate A (The Main Gate). A doctor and nurse are on duty at
every game.
Lost and Found Headquarters is also located at Gate A.
For the convenience of our fans, rest rooms for ladies and
gentlemen are located under the stands on either side of the
field.
The Boston College side of the field-the home side-is referred
to as the East stands and Press Box A is on this side-The Visiting
side is the West stands and Press Box B is on this side.
Public telephones are located inside and outside Gate A-Ask
the gate attendant for a pass out check to make your call.

12

�INTRODUCING .. .

by D. LEo MoNAHAN
Boston Record American

It's a rare year, indeed, when Boston College doesn't
have at least one outstanding end. Last year, of course,
it had two in Bill Cronin and Jim Whelan and this
season Coach Jim Miller has an outstanding end
squad headed by Captain Charlie Smith, the fifth
straight end to lead the Eagles. His predecessors were
Cronin, Joe Lukis, Art Graham and Joe Sikorski.
Leadership is not a new experience to Smith. He
captained Baltimore's Loyola high school team to the
Catholic championship.
"My junior year," he recalls, "we won both the
Catholic and Maryland State championships."
Tracy Mehr, the former B.C. assistant coach, tutored
Smith at Loyola. His teammates there included guard
Dick Cremin, who was graduated in June; halfback
Hank Blaha; Craig Smith, a top-flight guard who
went to William &amp; Mary; Stuart Christi!, another end
who went to Virginia and had a trial with the New
York Jets and quarterback Jack Lentz of, you should
excuse the expression, Holy Cross.
"Loyola is the smallest high school in Baltimore
County. It only has 750 boys, but it usually has a good
football team," said Charlie.
Smith comes from Owings Mills, Md., and he's the
second oldest of eight children. His four younger
brothers are football pia yers, too.
"Jack is a guard. He's a freshman at the University
of Maryland," said Charlie. "My brother Jim is at
Loyola now. He's a halfback. Frank and Donald are
playing with sandlot teams at the 10-12 year-old level.
I was nine and Donald wasn't even born when my dad
died. My mother's quite a woman. She did a great job
raising the family."
Smith has done quite a job, too, and he has managed
to help out at home by taking a construction job during his vacation.
"I ran a jack-hammer for the Henry Baker Co.,"
he said. "It was mostly on road construction in the
Greater Boston area. I didn't think the work was too
hard and the money was good."
"Why did you pick B.C., Charlie?"
"The Jesuits," he replied. "I wanted a Jesuit education and B.C. figured in nicely. I've been exposed to
the Jesuits since I was about six. I went to grammar
school about a mile from Woodstock, the Jesuit Theology House and Loyola, of course, is a Jesuit school."
Charlie is 21. At 6-foot-1 and 200 pounds, he's one

of the smallest members of B.C.'s impressive-looking
end squad. His two previous seasons were spent largely
on defense. That's why his career varsity total of just
four pass receptions is misleading. He caught one touchdown pass from Eddie Foley at West Point last season.
"If I had a choice, I'd rather play offense, but it was
tough getting in with guys like Cronin and Whelan
around. I'm looking forward to playing offense this
season," he said.

Charlie Smith, staying in shape, and earning good money during the
summe r months.

"I think we'll have a good year. We could have been
8-1 last year. The only really bad game we played was
at Miami. With a break here and there we could have
beaten Army and the Tennessee game, well---," he
said with a shrug.
Smith didn't go into the painful details, but from
my vantage point in the press box at Knoxville it didn't
seem the Eagles benefited from the officiating. But
that's ancient history. It's a new, exciting and, hopefully, highly-successful season at Boston College and
the Eagles couldn't have picked a better representative
to lead the team.

13

�BOSTON
COLLEGE

CHARLIE SMITH
Captain

ED FOLEY

LARRY MARZETTI

BOB BUDZINSKI

HANK BLAHA

RON GENTILI

DICK TAYLOR

BOB RYAN

PAUL GRAMLING

JOHN LEONE

MARTY Di MEZZA

DICK CAPP

JIM CHEVILLOT

DON HOSTETTER

BOB HYLAND

.-.....

�BOSTON
COLLEGE

.... •

...

BILL· RISIO

ED LIPSON

DICK POWERS

TOM SCHNEIDER

BILL STETZ

TOM SARKISIAN

GORDON KUTZ

MIKE O'NEILL

JOHN BLAIR

DAVE PESAPANE

TOM CARLYON

BILL DONOVAN

RON PERSUITTE

ART STRATTON

-

•

JIM GAROFALO

�The one beer to have
when you're having
more than one
Schaefer Breweries, New York and Albany, N.Y.. Baltimore, Md.

ANNOUNCEMENT

~

September 1, 1965 ... WCOP AM-FM became an affiliate of the National Broadcasting Company Radio Network.

HOUSEHOLD
FINANCE

NBC news 119 times weekly . . . Chet
Huntley, David Brinkley, Arlene Francis,
Joe Garagiola, great names in radio .. .
the unique weekend service "Monitor" . . .
World Series, Rose Bowl-all will be heard
exclusively on WCOP. Add our great blend
of music, people like Jack Lazare, John
Masters, Paul Harney - Boston College
Football - and you have a winning combination . . . a new force in Boston Radio.

IS PROUD TO PRESENT

It all started September 1st. on Boston's
Station of the Year. Dial 1150 AM or 100.7
FM for good listening.

BOSTON COLLEGE FOOTBALL
ON

Raclio Boston

RADIO BOSTON WCOP

Wll:(llf'
16

�BOSTON
COLLEGE

~
BRENDAN McCARTHY

DICK DeLEONARDIS

PAUL DellaVILLA

JACK KANE

JOE DiVITO

JOE PRYOR

TOM UZDAVINIS

JOHN WALTER

AL BORSARI

DAVE REARDON

PETE O'DONNELL
Senior Manager

KENT P. FALB
Head Trainer

JIM CRONIN
Equipment Manager

TERRY ERWIN

MIKE VIOLANTE

-

�1965

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO

UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
ROSTER

Coaching Sta/1

No.

Name

82 Abbey, William
87 Ashley, Richard
20 Barksdale, James
61 Botula, Charles

Pos. Class Ht.
E
E

HB
G

FB
30 Brennan, Thomas
72 Brisky, Dennis
T-E
89 Burden, Dennis
E
16 •capuana, Nicholas HB-QB
69 Dechowitz, Richard
G
86 *Dunn, James
E
50 *Duprey, James
LB
75 Finochio, James
T
55 *Garofalo, Joseph
LB
14 *Geringer, Frederick
DHB
67 Gibbons, Theodore
G
Z8 Hansen, Brian
K
80 *Helenbrook, Craig
E
32 Hoke, Thomas
FB
52 *Holly, Joseph (Capt.) C-LB
48 Hurd, Thomas
HB
36 Jones, Leeland
FB
85 Kleiber, Paul
E
84 *LaFountain, Gerald
E
81 Lehner, Lawrence
E
56 MacKellar, Bruce
C
68 *MacKellar, Russell
DG
26 McEwen, James
HB
83 McNamara, James
E
73 Miceli, Anthony
T
9D •oscsodal, Joseph
K
78 Pirozzolo, Richard
T
63 *Poles, E. Greenard
DT
38 *Przykuta, Dennis
FB
70 *Pugh, Ronald
DT
79 *Rate!, J;:mes
T
88 Remillard, James
E
18 Ridolfi, Ronald
QB
24 Ridolfi, Thomas
HB
58 Rishel, Rodney
C-LB
62 Rissell, Michael
G
25 Scaletta, Paul
HB
40 *Sella, Daniel
DHB
34 Sinclair, Robert
HB
35 Smigelski, John
HB
46 Swiderski, Walter
HB
71 *Taylor, William
G
22 Washington, Bennie
HB
44 *Webber, James
HB
17 Wells, Richard
QB
76 Wuest, Michael
T

Wt.

67
68
67
67
68

6-2
6-2
5-11
6-0
5-10

215
200
170
200
210

68
66
67
68
67

6-2
6-1
5-9
6-0
6-4

200

66
67

5-10 215
5-10 212

66
66
68
68
66
68
66
68
68
67
66
68
67
67
67
66
67
66
68
66
66
67
66
68
66
66
68
68
67
67
68
66
67
67
68
66
68
66

5-10 2D5
5-9 165
5-10
5-11
6-1
6-0
6-1
6-2
5-10
6-5
5-11
6-2
6-0
5-10
5-10
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-1
5-10
5-10
6-1
6-3
6-1
5-9
5-9
5-10
5-11
5-11
5-10
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-2
5-9
5-9
6-0
6-3

190
180
215

200

230
172
210
185
210
192
200
225
220
195
225
210
195
191
220
158
235
225
210
225
220
180
170
170
195
215
160
175
190
180
184
230

186
170
190
230

Hometown
Peru, Ind.
Massena, N.Y.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Riverhead, L.l.
Rochester, N.Y.
Detroit, Mich.
Franklin Square, L.l.
Utica, N.Y.
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Cranston, R.I.
Peru, N.Y.
E. Syracuse, N.Y.
Gloversville, N.Y.
Danville, Pa.
Newport, R.I.
Detroit, Mich.
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Marcy, N.Y.
Lyons, N.Y.
Elmira, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Auburn, N.Y.
Saranac Lake, N.Y.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Kenmore, N.Y.
Kenmore, N.Y.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Binghamton, N.Y.
Batavia, N.Y.
Buffalo, N.Y.
Elmira, N.Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Depew, N.Y.
McKeesport, Pa.
Buffalo, N.Y.
New Bedford, Mass.
Pawtucket, R.I.
Pawtucket, R.I.
E. Smethport, Pa.
Coatesville, Pa.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Watertown, N.Y.
Solvay, N.Y.
Utica, N.Y.
Youngstown, N.Y.
Woonsocket, R.I.
Manlius, N.Y.
Ithaca, N.Y.
Utica, N.Y.

1st Row-Left to Right: Ass't. Coach James Ryan, Head Football Coach
Richard Offenhamer, Ass't. Coach Ron LaRocque.
2nd Row-Left to Right: Freshman Football Coach James Wolfe, Ass't.
Coach Robert Deming, Ass't. Coach Dewey Wade.

RI C H A R D W. OFFEN H AME R , Head CoachPlayed at Colgate for Andy Kerr .. . earned fame as
one of the Red R aiders' all-time great halfbacks . . .
coached 11 years at K enmore, New York, H igh School
where his teams won or tied 5 championships in the
)Jiagara Frontier Conference . . . at one stage his teams
won 50 of 55 games, including a string of 21 straight ...
in 10 years at UB has had only 2 seasons in which his
teams lost more than they won ... his 1958 team won
the Lambert Cup ... recipient of numerous personal
honors . . . was national "Coach of the Week" in 1958
after UB scored 34-14 win over Columbia ... that same
year was cited by the Buffalo Evening News as one of
Western )Jew York's 10 Outstanding Citizens ... was
sa luted by the Buffalo Council of the Knights of Columbus and Cardinal Dougherty High School as Western
)Jew York's "Coach of the Year" for 1963.
J AMES " BUDDY" R YAN, Chief Assistant and D efense Coordinator-)Jative of Frederick, Oklahoma ...
won 4 letters at guard for Oklahoma State .. . All-Confe rence and Scholastic All-America, 1955 . . . Korea n
War veteran . . . coached at Texas high schools before
coming to Buffalo ... UB lines coached by R yan have
consistently ranked among the top 20 teams nationally
in all categories of line defense.
RO:-.JALD M. LaROCQUE, B ackfield Offense-Continuously associated with UB footba ll since 1950 as
player (3 va rsity lette rs at center, 195 1-53), ass istant
freshman coach, head freshman coach and assistant
varsity coach . . . his 1964 backfield ranked 17th nationally in rushing offense . .. also is V'arsity wrestling
coach . .. this past spri ng his grapplers won 3 individual
titles in the 4-I C hamp ionships at Cleveland.
D E WE Y S. WAD E, L ine Offense-Played 4 years of
college footba ll, 2 at Kansas State and 2 at Houston . ..
All-Service tackle while in Ma rine Corps from 195 3-55
. . . UB frosh coach for past 5 seasons . . . in 1964 his
tea m won 5 of 6 ga mes, including wins ove r the Army
Plebes and Syracuse Fresh men.
ROB E RT C. D EMI NG, B ackfield D efense-Graduate
of Colgate ... joined UB staff in 1959 after serving as
assis tant to H al La ha r at H ouston .. . in 1963 his
players ra nked in the top 6 nationally in 3 categories
of backfield defen se.

•-Letterman

18

��J

University of Buffalo
SEPTEMBEil
BUFFALO
PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP
POS.

NO .

NAME

89

BURDEN

LE

82

A BBEY

LT

62

RISSELL

56

M acKELLAR

67

GIBBONS

79

RATEL

RT

86

DUNN

RE

17

WELLS

QB

44

WEBBER

LHB

20

BARKSDALE

RHB

38

PRZYKUTA

--

·-

-

LG

-

---- c
RG

FB
SQUAD

things go

b~~th

Coke
TRADE· MARK

14
16
17
18
20
22
24
25
26
28
30
32
34
35
36
38
40

Geringer, dhb
Capuano, hb-qb
Wells, qb
Ridolfi, qb
Barksdale, hb
Washington, hb
Ridolfi, hb
Scaletta, hb
McEwen, hb
Hansen, k

Brennon, fb
Hoke, fb
Sinclair, hb
Smigelski, hb
Jones, fb
Przykuta, fb
Sella, dhb

44
46
49
50
52
55
56
58
61
62
63
67
68
69
70
71

Webber, hb
Swiderski, hb
Hurd, hb
Duprey, lb
Holly, lb
Garofalo, lb
MacKellar, c
Rishel, c-lb
Botula, g
Rissell, g
Poles, dt
Gibbons, g
MacKellar, dg
Dechowitz, g

Pugh, dt
Taylor, dg

72
73
75
76
78
79
80
81
82
83
84

Brisky, dt·e
Miceli, t
Finochio, t
Wuest, t

85
86
87
88
89
90

Kleiber, e

Pirozzolo, t

Rate!, t
Helenbrook, e
Lehner, e

Abbey, e
McNamara, e
LaFountain, e

Dunn,e

Ashley, e
Remillard, e
Burden, e

Oscsadal, k

®

O FFH
Referee
Umpire
Linesman

Field Judge
Clock Operator

- F1

�J

lo vs. Boston College
:•~

18, 1965
BOSTON
PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP
POS .

NO .

NAM E

81

SMITH

LE

70

POWERS

LT

61

LEONE

50

HYLAND

60

DiMEZZA

76

SARKISIAN

RT

83

KUTZ

RE

FOLEY

QB

5

LG

c
RG

10

DELLA VILLA

LHB

27

DeLEON ARDIS

RHB

44

McCARTHY

FB
SQUAD

44 McCarthy, fb
3 DiVito, qb
50 Hylond, c
5 Foley, qb
51 Borsari, c
7 Morzetti, qb
53 Taylor, c
9 Blair, qb
55 Stetz, c
10 Delio Villa, hb
60 DiMezza, g
20 Blaha, hb
61 Leone, g
22 Erwin, hb
62 Collins, g
23 Carlyon, hb
27 Deleonardis, hb 63 Stratton, g
64 Garofolo, g
30 Donovan,fb
65 Ryan, g
33 Gentili, hb
66 Franco, g
36 Reardon, fb
37 Gramling, fb
68 Lipson, g
39 Bulger, fb
69 Ferra nee, g
70 Powers, t
40 Violante, fb
42 Hostetter, fb
71 Chevillot, t
43 Budzinski, hb

72
73
74
75
76
77
78
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Risio, t
Persuitte, t
Manning, t
Petruzziello, t

Sarkisian, t

Wolter, I
Ladewig, t
Pryor, e

Smith, e
Persin, e

Kutz, e

Williamson, e
O ' Neil, e
Peso pane, e

Capp, e
Uzdavinis, e
McGovern, e

things go

b~Wfth

Coke
TRADE-MARK®

FFICI ALS
Donald M. Dwyer
Joseph R. Soverine
George H. Hill
Francis G . Keough, Jr.
leroy J . Kelley

�PENNY EDWAROS -

''MLSS TLPARILLO''

What does she mean "cigars ... cigarettes ...Tiparillos"?
You'll be hearing that chant more and
more-nowthatTiparillos have arrived.
And arrived they have. In all the right
places. With all the right people.
The new Tiparillo has a neat, trim
shape. It looks young and debonair. And
its pearly, pliable tip pays more than
lip service to your smoking pleasure.

And never before such mildness!
The most careful blending of choicest
imported tobaccos has seen to that.
So, too, has the exclusive, veinless
Ultra Cigar Wrapper* that burns so
evenly and smoothly it insures complete mildness.
You can even see the mildness. The

surprisingly whiter ash is visible evidence. Smoker's proof. Here is flavor
you don't have to inhale to enjoy.
"Cigars ... cigarettes ... ?" Who
knows, maybe someday it will be just
"Tiparillos!"
Why don't you ask for one today?

Tiparillos are on sale at this stadium.

• T, M. GE H ERA L CIGAR CO.

�BOSTON COLLEGE

1965

Coackinlj Stal/

BOSTON COLLEGE
ROSTER
No.

Name

9 Blair, John
20 Blaha, Hank
51 Borsari, AI
39 Bulgar, Tom
43 Budzinski,Bob
87 Capp, Dick
23 Carlyon, Tom
Carr, Dick
Carroll, John
71 Chevillot, Jim
62 Collins, Dick
Connors, Harry
27 Deleonardis, Dick
10 DellaVilla, Paul
60 DiMezza, Marty
3 DiVito, Joe
30 Donovan, Bill
22 Erwin, Terry
69 Ferrance, Art
5 Foley, Ed
Froelich, Brian
66 Franco, Nick
64 Garofalo, Jim
33 Gentili, Ron
Giardi, AI
37 Gramling, Paul
42 Hostetter, Dan
50 Hyland, Bob
Kane, John
Kitlowski, Chris
Kuharich, Larry
83 Kutz, Gordon
78 Ladewig, Bill
61 Leone, John
68 Lipson, Ed
74 Manning, Ed
Markey, Chris
7 Marzetti, Larry
44 McCarthy, Brendan
89 McGovern, John
Mclaughlin, Jim
Nevard, Mike
85 O'Neill, Mike
82 Persin, Len
73 Persuitte, Ron
86 Pesapane, Dave
75 Petruzziello, Mike
Pierandri, Harry
Porcaro, Gene
70 Powers, Dick
80 Pryor, Joe
36 Reardon, Dave
72 Risio, Bill
Roccia, Mike
65 Ryan, Bob
76 Sarkisian, Tom
Schneider, Tom
Shepard, Doug
Shores, Dave
81 Smith, Charlie
55 Stetz, Bill
63 Stratton, Art
53 Taylor, Dick
Toupal, Jim
88 Uzdavinis, Tom
40 Violante, Mike
77 Walter, John
84 Williamson, Jack

Pos.

QB
HB
C
FB
HB
E
HB
C
C
T
G
HB
HB
HB
G
QB
FB
HB
G
QB
G
G
G
HB
QB
FB
HB
C
HB
T
HB
E
T
G
G
T
E
QB
FB
E
E
G
E
E
T
E
T
QB
E
T
E
FB
T
G
G
T
G
C
T
E
C
G
C
HB
E
FB
T
E

Class

Ht.

Wt.

67
66
68
66
66
66
66
68
68
66
67
67
68
68
66
68
67
68
66
66
68
66
68
66
68
66
66
67
68
67
68
67
68
66
67
66
68
66
68
68
66
68
67
68
68
67
68
68
67
67
68
67
67
68
66
67
67
68
68
66
67
68
66
68
68
67
68
66

6-5
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-0
6-4
6-0
6-4
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-1
5-9
5-9
5-11
6-2
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-0
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-3
6-1
5-11
5-10
6-5
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-3
6-0
6-2
6-2
6-4
6-0
6-3
6-2
6-1
6-1
6-2
6-4
6-2
6-2
6-4
6-2
6-2
6-2
6-5
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-7
6-3
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-1
6-6
6-3
6-2
6-2

215
185
220
195
185
245
190
230
200
235
195
200
195
175
220
205
190
185
200
185
210
185
210
205
170
190
185
245
175
210
175
222
225
205
215
235
210
190
215
185
190
202
210
225
240
200
235
180
200
240
230
205
232
221
215
240
220
270
225
200
230
220
205
180
230
210
230
200

Hometown

New Britain, Conn.
Baltimore, Md.
Wareham, Mass.
New Bedford, Mass.
Salem, Mass.
Portland, Me.
Hazleton, Pa.
Melrose, Mass.
Arlington, Mass.
Albany, N.Y.
Marion, Mass.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Schenectady, N.Y.
East Haven, Conn.
Lynn, Mass.
Coaldale, Pa.
Beverly, Mass.
Fall River, Mass.
Woburn, Mass.
Maplewood, N.J.
Jersey, City, N.H.
Cos Cob Conn.
Mansfield, Mass.
Salem, Mass.
Milwaukee, Wis.
Osterville, Mass.
White Plains, N.Y.
South Boston, Mass.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
Waukesha, Wis.
Norwich, Conn.
Lynn, Mass.
Somerville, Mass.
Burm, Mich.
Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C.
Stamford, Conn.
St. Louis, Mo.
Gardner, Mass.
Syracuse, N.Y.
Oakmont, Pa.
Everett, Mass.
West Haven, Conn.
Old Tappen, N.J.
Ridgefield, Conn.
New York, N.Y.
Manchester, N.H.
Natick, Mass.
Melrose, Mass.
Quincy, Mass.
Everett, Mass.
Staten Island, N.Y.
Belmont, Mass.
Erie, Pa.
Lanesborough, Mass.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Owings Mill, Md.
Pewaukee, Wise.
Melrose, Mass.
Baltimore, Md.
Trinidad, Colo.
Haverhill, Mass.
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
Newark, N.J.
North Reading, Mass.

THE HEAD COACH AND HIS STAFF-Left to Right: Jim Miller, Lee
Royer (Defensive Bocks), John Miller (Asst. Freshman Coach), John
McCauley (Offensive Bocks), Emerson Dromgold (Offensive Line),
George Clemins (Defensive Line) and Emerson Dickie (Freshman Coach).

JIM MILLER-Head Football Coach
James Howard Miller will begin his 4th season as
head coach of the Boston College Eagles in September
of 1965. Jim came to the Heights from the midwest,...
bringing with him a vault of football knowledge unparalleled in ::\few England. Among the Massilon, Ohio
native's tutors were names like Carroll Widdoes and
Paul Brown, Jim's grade school and high school coaches
respectively.
In 1962 Miller took a squad which hadn't had a
winning season in two years, and directed it to a tremendous 8-2 season. In 1963 the 44-year-old head
coach parlayed a group of untested sophomores and
juniors and a great senior quarterback named Jack
Concannon, into a fine 6-3 season. Last year Jim repeated with another 6-3 record which included a stunning victory over highly ranked Sugar Bowl bound,
Syracuse.
Jim played his college football at Purdue, where he
was a starting guard for 3 years and captain of the
1941 Boilermaker squad before graduating in June of
1942. He then served as a Lieutenant in the Navy Air
Corps.
He launched his coaching career in 1946, working up
from ~Ionticello High School (Indiana), Wabash College, Niagara University and the University of Buffalo
before returning to Purdue in 1954 as freshman coach.
In 1955, Boilermaker head coach Jack Mallenkopf appointed Jim to the varsity Staff. With Jim as defensive
line coach, Purdue ranked second natiohally in 1958
and always was among the Big 10's defensive leaders.
The University of Detroit appointed Miller its head
coach in 1959 and it didn't take long for Jim to effect
miracles. He led the Titans to a 6-4 record in 1959, then
followed with a 7-2 mark in 1960 when he was voted
Catholic Coach of the Year Jim coached Detroit to a
5-4 season in 1961 and moved to Chestnut Hill in January of 1962.
Coach Miller was honored this past Spring by the
newly formed New England College Coaches Association (made up of some 80 head coaches and assistants
representing 35 colleges) by being elected its first president.

23

�Front Row: Dan HosteHer, Nick Franco, Dick Taylor, John Leone, Marty DiMeua , Charlie Smith, Larry Marzetti, Jim Chevillot, Bob Ryan, Jack
Williamson, Ron Gentili .
Second Row : Coach Jim Miller, Dick Capp, Ed Manning, Jim McLaughlin, AI Giardi, Dick Powers, Bill Stetz, Dave Pesapane, Ed Foley, Bob Budzinski, Gordon Kutz, Tom Bulgar, Bill Donovan, Dave Shores, Tony Pace, Art Ferrance, Hank Blaha, Paul Gramling, Coach Emerson Dromgold.
Third Row : Len Persin, Dick Collins, Jack Walters, John Blair, Tom Schneider, Paul DellaVilla, Dave Reardon, Mike Violante, Dick Deleonardis,
Terry Erwin, Brian Froelich, Jim Feddeck, Gene Porcaro, Tom Carlyon, Coach John McCauley, Bob Hyland.
Fourth Row: Coach George Clemens, Harry Connors, Alan Borsari, Art Stratton, John Kane, Bill Ladewig, Mike Roccia, Ed Lipson, John McGovern ,
Brendan McCarthy, Coach John Miller.
Fifth Row: Coach Lee Royer, Bob SlaHery, Gerry Fiesinger, John Hazlin , Mike O' Neil, Tom Sarkisian, Jim Toupal, Fred Shield$, Harry Pierandri,
Dick Carr, Mike Nevard, Mike Evans, Chris Markey, Kent Falb, Trainer.
Sixth Row : Bab Doherty, Larry Kuharich, John Spellacy, John Carroll, Chris Kitlowski, Paul Murphy, Doug Shepard, Tom Uzdavinis, Joe Pryar,
Mike Petruniello, John Lawrence, Pete O'Donnell.
Seventh Row: Ron Persuitte, Bill Rizio, Chip LaPlaca.

Good Luck Eagles

THOMAS A. SHEEHAN CO.

BAKER &amp; COMPANY, Inc.

TERMITE

General Contractors

AND EXTERMINATION

3475 WASHINGTON ST.

SPECIALISTS

BOSTON 30, MASS.
Established 1926

MANUFACTURERS &amp; PAVERS

1595 COLUMBUS AVE.

of Bituminous Concrete Pavements

BOSTON 19

Special Purpose Pavements

GA 7-4830

and Colored Pavements
our Specialty

Thomas A. Sheehan, Jr.
Class of '59

24

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so much more on Northeast!
Whether you're traveling for business or pleasure- your trip will get off to a
happier start on Northeast Airlines . That's because Northeast treats you like
a guest- not just a passenger. • And Northeast flies to so many places.
SuperJets to Miami and Fort Lauderdale . Commuter service between Boston and
New York, Philadelphia and Washington . Stops from one end of New England
to the other. • Fly Northeast on your next trip. See what a difference
our guest "treatment" makes.

FlYIIORTHEASfA,.l/NEI
FOLLOW BC FOOTBALL ON WCOP
BROUGHT TO YOU BY US ! ! !

S. S. PIERCE
S. S. PIERCE has become America's pacesetter for first quality food products and convenient service. At S. S. Pierce stores, you
will find adventure and excitement and a wide
selection of unique foods and delicacies.
S. S. PIERCE'S unequalled variety includes:
Wines, Liquors
Fine Foods
Cigars, Tobaccos
Fresh Meats
Frozen Foods
Perfumes, Cosmetics
Delicious Candies
Fresh Baked Pastries
Festive Holiday Gifts

Don't forget to visit our Chestnut H ill store
where you will find New England's most modern
meat and produce section and a new cozy coffee
shop, "On the G reen" where you may relax
while shopping.

�UNIVERSITY
of
BUFFALO
Diefendorf Hall
University of
Buffalo

JOSEPH HOLLY
Captain

RICHARD ASHLEY

JAMES BARKSDALE

DENNIS BURDEN

NICHOLAS CAPUANA

JAMES DUNN

JOSEPH GAROFALO

FREDERICK GERINGER

THEODORE GIBBONS

CRAIG HELENBROOK

THOMAS HURD

PAUL KLEIBER

GERALD LaFOUNTAIN

BRUCE MacKELLAR

RUSSELL MacKELLAR

�UNIVERSITY
of

BUFFALO
Goodyear Hall
University of
Buffalo

JAMES McEWEN

ANTHONY MICELI

JOSEPH OSCSODAL

E. GREENARD POLES

DENNIS PRZYKUTA

RONALD PUGH

JAMES RATEL

RONALD RIDOLFI

THOMAS RIDOLFI

DANIEL SELLA

BENNIE WASHINGTON

JAMES WEBBER

RICHARD WELLS

WILLIAM TAYLOR

MICHAEL WUEST

�WISHES
to
JIM MILLER
AND THE B.C. TEAM
from

FORE RIVER MOTORS, INC.
BILL ABEL Y '49 GENERAL MANAGER

LINCOLN CONTINENTAL •
MERCURY • COMET
418 QUINCY AVENUE,
JUNCTION OF SOUTHERN ARTERY
QUINCY,
MASSACHUSETTS

Daniel Marr &amp; Son Co.

BIRD

Steel Erectors

PRECISION JEWEL BEARINGS
and JEWEL ASSEMBLIES

Rentals of
Truck Crones, Compressors
Clam Shell &amp; Rehandling Buckets

NEW ENGLAND DISTRIBUTORS
OF

Sa/way Steel Products

,Ai~

RENTALS

SALES
Including
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INC.

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South Boston, Moss .

Tel. ANdrew 8-1660 -

0784

SERVING INDUSTRY WITH FINE JEWELS SINCE1913

Hilcrest 4-4050

28

�1965 Boston College Football Statistics
{Below are the final statistics for the 1964 season- starting next Saturday, we'll
keep you posted on up to date B.C. stats and our '65 opponents' weekly records)
No.
22
34
100
23
19
16
40
21
20
3
79
4
1

Rushing
McGOWAN
WALSH
MORAN
BLAHA
HOSTETTER
GENTILI
SHANN
BUDZINSKI
MARZETTI
REARDON
FOLEY
TESTA
WHALEN
Scoring
MORAN
WHALEN
SHANN
McGOWAN
KUTZ
DiMEZZA
FOLEY
CRONIN
BUDZINSKI
SMITH
BLAHA

TO
3
3
2
2
0
0
1
1
1
1
1

Yds.
165
149
385
77
59
48
107
55
46
4
56
-1
-3
FG
0
0
0
0
1
2
0
0
0
0
0

Avg.
7.5
4.4
3.9
3.3
3.1
3.0
2.7
2.6
2.3
1.3
0.7

PAT
0
0
0
0
8
3
2
0
0
0
0

TO
2
0
3
1
0
0
2
0
0
0
1
0
0
Total
18
18
12
12
11
9
8
6
6
6
6

Passing
FOLEY
MARZETTI

Receiving
WHALEN
CRONIN
McGOWAN
SMITH
BUDZINSKI
SHANN
GENTILI
HOSTETTER
KUTZ
GRYWALSKI
BLAHA

Punting
MURRAY
WHALEN
FOLEY

Att. Comp. Pet.
.500
144 72
.240
6
25

No.
31
19
6
4
4
4
3
3
2
1
1

No.
26
15
5

Yds.
947
123

Yds.
398
389
30
65
45
42
39

28

29
14
9

Yds.
842
516
163

TO
4
2

Int.
9
2

TO
3
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0

Ave.
32.4
34.4
32.6

Punt Returns
McGOWAN
SHANN
MORAN
BLAHA

No.
11
3
1
1

Yds.
41
20
10
0

TO
0
0
0
0

Kickoff Returns
SHANN
TESTA
REARDON
WHALEN
CRONIN
BUDZINSKI
HOSTETTER
GENTILI
McGOWAN
BLAHA
MORAN

No.
9
5
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1

Yds.
206
90
36

TO
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

Interception Returns
SHANN
WALSH
BLAHA
McGOWAN
MORAN
BUDZINSKI

No.
2
1
1
1
1
1

Yds.
41
46
10
7
1
0

28

11
25
17
15
14
8
2

TO

"Keeping an Eagle Eye on the Opponents"
BUFFALO
Sept. 18-at Boston College
Sept. 25-Tampa
Oct. 2-at Massachusetts
Oct. ~Boston Univ.
Oct. 16-Richmond
Oct. 23-Dayton
Oct. 30-at Holy Cross
Nov. 6-at Delaware
Nov. 13-Colgate
Nov. 20-at Villanova

PENN STATE
Sept. 25-Michigan State
Oct. 2-U. C. L. A.
Oct. ~Boston College
Oct. 16-Syracuse
Oct. 23-West Virginia
Oct. 3D-California
Nov. 6-Kent State
Nov. 13-Navy
Nov. 20-at Pittsburgh
Dec. 4--Maryland

MIAMI
Sept. 18 SMU
Sept. 25 at Syracuse
Oct. 2 at Tulane
Oct. 9 LSU
Oct. 16 Houston
Oct. 23 at Pittsburgh
Nov. 5 Boston College
Nov. 13 at Vanderbilt
Nov. 20 Florida
"'ov. 27 Notre Dame

VILLANOVA
Sept. 18-Toledo
Sept. 25-at Boston College
Oct. ~at Washington State
Oct. 16-at Delaware
Oct. 23-West Chester
Oct. 30-at Xavier
Nov. 6-Quantico
Nov. 13-at Virginia Tech
Nov. 20-Buffalo

RICHMOND
Sept. 18-at West Virginia
Sept. 25-Virginia Tech
Oct. 2-at Southern Mississippi
Oct. ~East Carolina
Oct. 16-at Buffalo
Oct. 23-at Boston College
Oct. 30-The Citadel
Nov. 6-at V. M. I.
Nov. 13-at Furman
Nov. 20-at William and Mary

SYRACUSE
Sept. 18 at Navy
Sept. 25 Miami (Fla.)
Oct. 2 at Maryland
Oct. 9 at UCLA
Oct. 16 Penn State
Oct. 23 Holy Cross
Oct. 30 Pittsburgh at Shea Stadium
Nov. 6 Oregon State
Nov. 13 at West Virginia
Nov. 20 Boston College

V. M.I.
Sept. 18 at William &amp; Mary
Sept. 25 at Army
Oct. 2 at George Washington
Oct. 9 at Virginia
Oct. 15 at Mississippi Southern
Oct. 23 at Davidson
Oct. 30 at Boston College
Nov. 6 Richmond
Nov. 13 Citadel
Nov. 25 Virginia Tech (Roanke)

WILLIAM AND MARY
Sept. 18-V. M. I.
Sept. 25-West Virginia
Oct. 2-at V. P. I.
Oct. ~at Navy
Oct. 16-at Davidson
Oct. 23-George Washington
Oct. 3D-Southern Miss.
Nov. 6-at The Citadel
Nov. 13-at Boston College
Nov. 20-Richmond

ARMY
Sept. 18-at Tennessee
Sept. 25-V. M. I.
Oct. 2-Boston College
Oct. ~Notre Dame at Shea Stadium
Oct. 16-Rutgers
Oct. 23-at Stanford
Oct. 3D-Colgate
Nov. 6-Air Force at Chicago
Nov. 13-Wyoming
Nov. 27- Navy at Philadelphia

HOLY CROSS
Sept. 25 at Harvard
Oct. 2 Dartmouth
Oct. 9 at Colgate
Oct. 16 Boston University
Oct. 23 at Syracuse
Oct. 30 Buffalo
Nov. 6 at U. of Mass.
Nov. 13 at Rutgers
Nov. 20 at U. of Conn.
Nov. 27 Boston College

29

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30

�"
By

LARRY STRUM

Boston Traveler Sportswriter

•
much in the picture. I don't think there's a soft touch
on our schedule. That's the kind of year it's going to
be," Miller summed up.
While the Bulls and Eagles are pounding away
here, some other first-day confrontations were on the
abbreviated slate-Syracuse at avy, Army at Tennesee, Pitt. at Oregon and Toledo at Villanova.
ext
Saturday while Villanova invades the Heights, Syracuse
travels again to Miami, Penn State opens with Michigan, Army hosts VMI, Navy visits Stanford, Oklahoma
stops at Pitt, Holy Cross debuts under Mel Massucco
at Harvard and Buffalo opens at home versus Tampa.

There's nothing to match the drama and excitement
of opening day in college football, especially when the
stakes are so high. Here's Buffalo out to shoot the
works against its most formidable opponent of the
entire season. And across the way the Eagles preparing to launch what they hope will be Jim Miller's
finest season yet.
An upset victory for the Bulls and they could gain
the momentum to go all the way. On the other hand, it's
only the beginning for the Maroon and Gold who have
Villanova, Army and Penn State lined up on the firing
line in succession with Miami, Syracuse and Holy
Cross in November. In between, Richmond, VMI and
William and Mary will be shooting to upend the burly
Eagles.
"We're going to find out where we stand pretty
quick," winked Miller preparing for the upstate " ew
Yorkers. "This club throws everything at you. You
never know what it'll try to exploit in its opener. All l
can remember is we had a pretty fair team in Jack Concannon's senior year and had to struggle for a win,
(15-0).
"Buffalo is big defensively. It always has some
bruisers at tackles and good-size backs. I can't remember when it didn't have a quarterback who could
really throw that ball around and plenty of receivers.
We know BC is its season's objective. I just hope nobody around here is taking Buffalo lightly.
"Looking over our entire schedule, there's nobody
we shouldn't be able to stand in against. I look for us
to be in the middle of the Eastern picture with probably
Penn State and Syracuse fighting it out for the top.
"Army will be tough again up there, it always is. And
Syracuse should be waiting for us since we beat it last
year. It will be its last home game too, while we have
to come back and face Holy Cross the following weekend.
"Most of the Eastern talk is over Penn State and
Syracuse, and with good reason. But people like the
Cross, Buffalo, and I hope, BC are going to be very

If the old pigskin takes a couple of funny bounces
the Lambert Trophy race for Eastern supremacy
could shake-up the pre-season favorites. Looking over
the League races the perennial Ivy round-robin is in
its usually mixed up state. Princeton has to overcome
the jinx that has never found a defending champion
repeating since 1956. The loss of Cosmo Iacavazzi
won't help either, but 19 lettermen will.

Harvard, Dartmouth and Yale are all given a good
shake if the Tigers spent their summer loafing over
their scrapbooks. Cornell is the darkhorse with Penn,
Brown and Columbia fighting to escape the basement.
Over in the nearby Yankee Conference, the hungry
University of Massachusetts is the best bet again for
the third straight year.
The Redmen, who open a lengthy series with the
Eagles next year at its spanking new stadium in Amherst, have a young quarterback named Greg Landry
who reminds you a lot of Jack Concannon. He's big6-4, 190-likes to run and throws bullets to amazon
ends Milt Morin and Bob Meers, who are definitely pro
bound.
Amherst, undefeated in '64, should hold onto its top
ranking again among the little I vies with Williams
close behind. Locally, Northeastern could ride Little
All America fullback Bob Cappadona to a big year
while Tufts and Boston University are among the
have-nots again.

31

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Boston College Football Programs
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1-----------------------ALL BC'ers-----------------------1
Joseph E. Sullivan, LL.D., '51
Thomas R. Sullivan, A.B., '39
Joseph E. Sullivan, Jr., A.B., '43

James H. Sullivan, A.B., '45
Helen M. (Sullivan) McNamee, M.Ed., '57

Walter T. Sullivan, B.S., '61

�~

~

DICK

CAPP

BO~TON COLLEGE . ·, ..\
SENIOR. END~

ENDIN6 FOOTBALL ·
CAREERS AI fi-lE'
\-\f16~1S ... .

JIM

M'lAUGUl

�Food For Thought A
BIG
OPERATION
William R. Caughlin, Director of Boston College Food Services

A FTER a steady diet of K-rations, C-rations, Spam
and powdered-dehydrated pap, an American G.I.,
World War II vintage, was asked what he would like
most to eat-if he had a choice.
He was thoughtful for a moment as his mind riffled
through an imaginary menu. Then he said. "I'd like a
thick juicy steak with plenty of French fries and about
a gallon of fresh milk."
Just the thought of a meal like that brought a broad
smile to his face.

'

Chef
leona rd Hall
trims a roa st

Then he grimaced and opened a can of C-rations
and ate his "lunch".
That G.l.'s appetite would have been sated could he
have the variety and quantity of food that Boston
College students have when it's meal time in the
McElroy Commons dining hall.
Last year, for instance, the man-sized appetites of
the Jesuit university's resident students put away some
28,000 cube steaks and some 35,000 sirloins.
They did away with over two and a half million
servings of cakes, pies and other desserts.
Milk ("They just can't seem to get enough of it,"
comments William R Coughlin, Director of the University's Food Service) disappeared at the rate of
200,000 gallons in various forms.

Paul Graves, manager of the Eagle's Nest, inspects sandwiches

"They can eat," smiles the genial Coughlin who is
deeply concerned with the preparation and serving of
the 1500 students who are in the dormitories this year.
He keeps a willing ear tuned to the Student Food
Committee which lists the preferences of the dormitory
students. The Committee, formed since Coughlin's
arrival on the Chestnut Hill campus, has told him
that the students like spaghetti, ravioli, lasagna, pizza,
fresh fruit, noodles and rice as substitutes for potatoes,
turkey, fried fish, French fries and so on. He tries to
please their tastes as well as their dietary needs.

D uRI G the last school year, the chefs under his
supervision prepared some 33 tons of roast Beef, 22
tons of ham, seven tons of stew beef, more than eight
tons of chicken, three tons of frankfurts, 14 tons of
hamburg and more than 25 tons of turkey.

�McElroy Commons Dining Hall has 1500 students for each daily meal.

They were served with 50,000 lbs. of French fries
and 250,000 lbs. of potatoes in other forms.

The kitchen prepared 9,000 lbs. of spaghetti during
the year, according to Coughlin.

Vegetables served with them included 80,000 lbs. of
tomatoes, 36,000 heads of lettuce, 14,400 bunches of
celery, 38,000 lbs. of onions and 32,000 lbs. of carrots.

HE resident students had nearly 8,000 lbs. of
cheese, Coughlin says, adding that the Food Committee has discovered that the students like grilled
cheese sandwiches on Fridays.

J

The University's bakery prepared 100,000 rolls which
were spread with eight tons of butter.

In the area of food preparation, Coughlin says,
"When we prepare items like steaks, pork chops,
cutlets, French fries and so forth, we prepare some
ahead so that we can keep the lines in the hall moving
and then we continue the preparation throughout the
meal."

For breakfast the kitchen served 250,000 individual
cereal packages and some 30,000 dozens of eggs.
Students consumed nearly five million doughnuts,
Danish Pastries and muffins. More than 10,000 lbs. of
coffee were used to brew the traditional American
mornmg beverage. Coffee also is served with other
meals.

When roast is on the menu, he says, preparation must
begin earlier. "Sometimes we start at six in the morning
and occasionally even earlier," he explains. "That's so
we can have enough roasts prepared for the meal."

In the meat line, the kitchen also prepared 5,000 lbs.
of lamb, 57,000 pork chops, 8,000 lbs. of roast pork,
9,900 lbs. of veal cutlets and 4,000 lbs. of sausage.

This year, he will be feeding 300 additional dormitory
students, Coughlin says.

Some 1,500 gallons of mayonnaise _were used on
salads while 4,800 gallons of sweet rel1sh and 15,660
gallons of ketchup were used by the students.

"We'll be cooking for a family of 1,500 and we'll try
to keep them happy," he says.

35

�GOLF

I
I

TENNIS

who are privileged
to outfit the Eagles

BASEBALL

wish Jim Miller, his staff and the
players every success ...

FOOTBALL

~
HOCKEY

•

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40

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�</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1965-09-18 Boston College versus Buffalo</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text>September 18, 1965</text>
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                <text> Alumni Stadium</text>
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                    <text>�Pour Iroquois boldly ... from 6 inches above
your glass, smack into the center! That way, you get
a rich, creamy collar that releases the
full flavor ... so you enjoy all the bold
draft taste Iroquois has brewed in. Then take
a bold sip, and you'll agree: the fun begins with
IROQUOIS-the bold beer with the bold draft taste!
IROQUOIS BREWERY, BUFFALO, N.Y.

�P,.Midenfj

me:Haff?
Welcome to the 57th season of intercollegiate football at State University at Buffalo. On behalf of the faculty and students
may I extend a warm welcome and wish you
a pleasant and exciting afternoon.
As those of you who are old friends of the
U.B. Bulls well know, the significance of this
game and the entire season goes beyond the
won-lost record. The Bulls have been fighting a come-from behind battle over the past
several years to maintain and improve nationally-recognized intercollegiate football
on the iagara Frontier. In 1958, we were
catapulted into the national football spotlight by upsetting Harvard and Columbia
enroute to a 8-1-0 record and the Lambert
Cup, symbol of Eastern Small College
supremacy.
It was the consensus of opinion that in
1958 we had achieved a highly respected
football plateau, but for the Bulls it was to serve only as a pad from which to launch into greater challenges. On
August 3, 1962, the ational Collegiate Athletic Association classified the University team in the "major college"
status. During the subsequent two seasons since the achievement of this category, the Bulls have compiled respectable records of 6-3-0 and 5-3-1.
This year we face the lOth consecutive "toughest schedule in history," without a single so-called "breather"
on the entire 10-game slate.
In joining us today for the primary purpose of enjoying top-notch football, your presence also becomes a source
of great pride to this University. It reinforces our certainty that the community, the region and the State are
all working with us in our goal to become one of the outstanding multi-purpose universities in the Nation.
A major step toward the achievement of this goal was made last spring when the Board of Trustees of State
University of ew York announced the site for the development of a new campus.
More than 1,000 acres on Millersport Highway, about three miles north of the present campus, has been earmarked for the $130 million expansion. While the new campus emerges, the present site will simultaneously be
developed into an expanded health sciences complex. Together, the two campuses will house what will ultimately
be a graduate center among the finest in the Nation.
I think you will agree that in the classrooms and laboratories as well as on the playing field, the future looks
bright indeed for the University and the community.
C. C. FURNAS, President

�1864 - 100th ANNIVERSARY - 1964
1964 marks our 1OOth year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area .

at the downtown
Western Savings Bank

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.

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Established 1 864

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BUFFALO, N. Y.

TL l-3456

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2

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Buffalo - A Growing University
The announcement this summer by the State University of ew York of a multi-million dollar expansion
of the State University at Buffalo marked another step
forward by the University in becoming a major Eastern
educational institution "among the finest in the land."
The day we have been waiting for has come!'' exclaimed Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, University President.
"We now have the go-ahead to build the truly great
University that all of us have dreamed of."
On September lst, 1962, the University of Buffalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become the
major campus segment of the widespread system of the
State University of New York. The new name, created
by State University officials, is: State University of ew
York at Buffalo. However, in deference to sweatshirtstitchers and typewriter repairmen, alumni seem to prefer the continuance of "UB" or "University of Buffalo"
where intercollegiate teams are concerned.
One of America's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo
has been the educational capitol of Western New York
since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the fourteenyear-old home of 28,000 people. The "University" was
the School of Medicine until 1886 when the School of
Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was Millard
Fillmore, a first-citizen of the young community, who
continued his UB leadership during his term as the
thirteenth President of the United States.
The fourteen University Divisions are: School of
Medicine (1846); School of Pharmacy (1886); School
of Law (1887); School of Dentistry ( 1892); College of
Arts and Sciences (1913; Summer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College, evening division ( 1923); School
of Business Administration ( 1927); School of Education
(1931); School of Social Work (1936); Graduate School
of Arts and Sciences (1939); School of Nursing (1940);
School of Engineering (1946); and University College
(including associate degrees, 1958).
Buffalo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood of
16,000- of which 8,000 arc full-time undergraduate
students. The enrollment is expected to soar in the next
few years, especially in view of the State affiliation.
To meet the influx of resident students during the
past decade a total of six dormitories have been constructed, with the seventh to be dedicated this fall. The
$2 million Acheson Hall of Chemistry, the new orton
Union, the Baird Music Hall and the Western New
York Nuclear Research Center represent the efforts of
private endowment and local leadership.
Past projections have indicated that State University
of New York at Buffalo will need by 1970:
More than 9,000,000 square feet of space for an
anticipated total enrollment of 27,500 students.
Immediate needs include classroom buildings, a
library, residence halls, a fine arts center, an infirmary
and health services building, a university teaching
hospital, a health sciences building, a continuing education center, a physics building, an engineering building,
a physcal education and intramural building, and an
administration building.
Adequate parking space for 12,500 automobiles will
be needed.
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of Buffalo
continues its fine tradition of service to the Niagara
Frontier and the State of New York.

�Back Row: Buddy Ryan, line coach; Dewey Wade, freshman coach; Bob Deming, backfield coach. Front Row: Ron LaRocque,
backfield coach; Dick Offenhamer, hood coach; Charlie Reeves, line coach.

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BANK OF
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Member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

4

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'

JAMES E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at UB than genial Jim.
Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the
orth Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue University, a career
which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War 11
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gave up football coaching to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the university began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball
team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in NCAA
Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of
anecdotes make him a much sough-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerous civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy, and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.

DICK OFFE HAMER
Architect of Victory
"Local boy makes good" could well be the theme of this piece,
for it accurately describes the brilliant athletic career of UB
football coach Dick Offenhamer.
Although Offie grew up just a "hoot 'n' a holler" from the
UB campus, his trail to that campus was long and sinuous.
An All-High baseball and footbaJl star at Bennett High
School, Dick chose to attend Colgate Univer ity.
It was a wise choice. Colgate was then enjoying the halcyon
days of Andy Kerr, when the Red Raiders of the Chenango
Valley went on scalping forays to such way-stations as Yankee
Stadium, ew Orleans, Iowa City, and Columbus, Ohio. Offenharner was more than merely present on these trips; he was the
right-halfback in the Kerr double wing attack and he achieved
lasting fame as one of Colgate's all-time greats.
While at college, Offenhamer was light-heavyweight boxing
champion of the school and he also starred on the baseball team.
He received his B.A. in 1936.
Offenhamer coached football at Kenmore High School for
11 years, and his teams won or tied 5 championships in the
iagara Frontier Conference.
After World War II he returned to Colgate as director of
freshman athletics, freshman football coach, and boxing coach.
Dick came to the University of Buffalo in 1955, a time
at which UB's football fortunes were at their lowest ebb. He
promptly exerted his skills, knowledge and personality to a difficult situation and the results speak for themselve .
During Olfie's 9-year tenure UB has won 49, lost 30, and
tied 2. He had 8-1-0 seasons in 1958, when UB won the Lambert
Cup, and again in 1959, when UB was runner-up for that trophy.
Offenhamer has won numerous personal honors. He was
national "Coach of the Week" in 1958 after his team scored a
34-14 upset over Columbia. That same year the Buffalo Evening
ews cited him as one of Western ew York's 10 Out tanding
Citizens. This past spring both the Buffalo Council of the
Knights of Columbus and Cardinal Dougherty High School
saluted him as Western ew York's "Coach of the Year."

5

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�ROBERT EDWARD

JAMES DUPREY

GERALD PAWLOSKI

WILLIAM TAYLOR

JOSEPH HOLLY

LEO RAT AMESS

BRUCE HART

RICHARD CONDINO

�JOE GARAFOLA

JOHN BASTA

MICHAEL LUCID!

GREENARD POLES

NICK CAPUANA

RON PUGH

JAMES ROBIE

JOSEPH OSCSODAL

RUSS MacKELLAR

RICHARD VITTORINI

THOMAS OATMEYER

�BUFFALO BULLS - 1964

Front Row (L to R)-Blair, Gartz, B. MacKellar, Dunbar, Botula, McEwen, Robie, Capuana, Miceli, Schleifer, Finochio, Sella, Ryan,
Barksdale, Bonner, Dunn, Wilbur.
td Row (L to R)-LaFountain, Edward, Rate!, Duranko, Oatmeyer, Poodry, Piestrak, Ratamess, Capt. Pawloski, Gilbert, Hart,
Castiglia, ichols, Garafola, McNally, Lucidi, M amara, Taylor, Holly, Helenbrook .
.xd Row (L to R)-Oscsodal, T. Ridolfi, Plummer, Geringer, Shine, Basta, R. MacKellar, Poles, Burden, Wuest, Kent, Dechowitz,
Popp, Duprey, Vittorini, Przykuta, Webber, R. Ridolfi.
4th Row (L to R)-Mgr. Lisiecki, Ass't trainer Shakan, Ass't coach Wade, Ass't coach LaRoque, Head coach Offenhamer, Ass't coach
Deming, Ass't coach Reeves, Ass't coach Ryan, Head trainer Sciera, Ass't trainer Pecorella, Mgr. Zeif.

NINE DECADES AGO

the launching of
" advice in depth "

W

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�-

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"

--

THE SEASON TO DATE
Buffalo
Buffalo
Buffalo
Buffalo
Buffalo

35
9
22
12
14

Boston U.
Cornell
Massachusetts
Marshall
VMI

0
9
24
14
10

by
Jack Sharpe

Buffalo 14
Holy Cro s
Buffalo 34
Delaware
Buffalo 28
Richmond
Buffalo 6
Colgat
Nov. 21-Villanova at Rotary Field

20
0
13
7

This afternoon the University of Buffalo ends its 1964 season against the most powerful opponent on the
schedule, the Wildcats of Villanova. The Bulls need a win to finish on the right side of the ledger, but will have
a tough time getting it against an opponent that won six straight, has since lost two, and most certainly will be on
the rebound. Villanova is in the top ten in the East and has been there all year.
They are a big, powerful club with a great line anchored by All-America prospect AI Atkinson. Their forward
wall will average about fifteen pounds to the man heavier than the UB lineman and Villanova stalwarts are not
slow and fat. They are just plain big, tough, and fast. Coach John McKenna of VMI stated that he felt the
Wildcats line was the best in the East bar none. Quarterback Dave Connell directs a power offense that features
hard runners with fullback Tom Brown number one in this category. He has gone the distance several times this
year. Villanova ranks high in several national categories. They are in the top ten in rushing offense, and rushing
defense, rate high in scoring average per game, and have the ends to throw to if necessity arises. The Mainliners
are the best club Buffalo will face this season. Watch Atkinson, guard Mike Strofolino, and end John McDonnell
on defense, they are fearsome indeed.
Buffalo will once again rely heavily on the play of quarterback Don Gilbert. Don has broken two UB records
this season and has three more in reach today. He owns the total offense mark for one season, 1,337 yards, and
most passing in one year, 869 yards. Five completions and two TD passes would set new single season marks, and
another mark is sure to fall as Gilbert needs only six passing attempts to set that record for one year. He gets
plenty of help offensively from ick Capuana, Dick Condino, and Dennis Pryzkuta all of whom have punched
out more than 250 yards rushing. The offensive and defensive lines have the big problem this week. On offense
seniors such as Jim McNally, Leo Ratamess, Bruce Hart, Dom Piestrak, and Dave Nichols will try to get the job
done and these same stalwarts with the addition of Joe Holly, Joe Garafola, and Greenard Poles who leads the
charge from his defensive tackle slot.
Last Saturday against Colgate it was a matter of six inches. When Buffalo scored late in the game, everyone
knew they'd go for two and Gilbert was stopped six inches away from victory. UB had much the better of the statistics, rolling up 282 yards to 153 for the Red Raiders, but Colgate's defense, one of the best in the country, did
the job when it was essential. The Bulls were handicapped by the complete breakdown of their kicking game, Which
led to the only Colgate touchdown and kept Buffalo in its own end of the field most of the second half. Gilbert
once again was a standout as was Nick Capuana. Don had a poor day passing but a good one running to end up
with 168 yards for the day. Capuana led all the runners with 84 yards gained. Dennis Pryzkuta saw no action and
Willie Shine little and it is hoped they are ready to go this afternoon. John Paske and Ray Ilg keyed the Colgate
defense that won the ball game while Captain Lee Woltman was far and away their best offensive threat. Defensive halfback Tom Wilson set up the TD with a fine play on a quick kick and also recovered a UB fumble.
Buffalo scored with less than thirty seconds to play on a 32 yard effort from Gilbert to Oatmeyer all alone in the
end zone.
So today we end another season
yet faced. Buffalo has lost two games
couple of TDs in the right place are
they should not be. Before the season
he has proved a prophet. Buffalo has
game right up to the last moments.

that has seen UB play a ten game schedule against the toughest competition
by two points, one game by six points, and another by one point. A tie and a
all that have kept away an unbeaten season. Many fans are disappointed but
began Coach Offenhamer stated the Bulls would be in every ball game and
battled all the way in every contest and has had a chance to win in every

The future is bright. The Baby Bulls have concluded a remarkable season that saw them defeat Army, Colgate,
Manlius, Ithaca, and shut out Syracuse 13-0. Their only loss was to Navy. This is a tremendous feat when one remembers that they have little time to themselves, spending most of the week running enemy plays against the
varsity. Injuries also took their toll of the frosh, but they never lost their desire, poise, or ability to win. Coach
Dewey Wade, his staff, and of course the players are to be congratulated on the writing of the finest chapter in
University freshman football history. Many of these boys will be playing next fall to replace those seniors who don
the Blue and White for the last time this afternoon. To them we say thank you for four years of thrills and wish
them good luck, good fortune, and nothing but victories in future years.

13

�HAVE A TRANSISTOR RADIO WITH lOU? ===:===:===:===:
DIAL 910 FOR U. B. PLAY- BY-PLAY !

JACK SHARPE
Every U. B. Game
Home and Away :::=:::=:::=:::=:=
"THE SOUND
OF THE CITY"

PROBABLE BUFFALO LINE-UP
S. E.
80 HELENBROOK
84 LaFOUNTAIN
81 McNAMARA
83 MICELI

WEBR

W . B.

42 OATMEYER
S.T.

970 AM
94.5 FM

77
71
76
79

RATAMESS
TAYLOR
WUEST
RATEL

S.G .

62
63
68
61

H
e
•

CANISIUS
and ST. BONA
BASKETBALL

POLES
MacKELLAR
BOTULA

c.

D

r

McNALLY

52
54
50
55

HOLLY
LUCIDI
DUPREY
GARAFOLA

Q .B.
17 GILBERT
15 ROBIE

F.B.

14 GERINGER

20 BARKSDALE

32 PRYZUTA
36 CONDINO

T. B.

45 EDWARD

W .G .

22 CAPUANA

64 HART

60 DUNBAR
66 CASTIGLIA

44 WEBBER
40 SELLA

W .T.

72 KENT

74 PIESTRAK
70 PUGH

Charlie Bailey's
Sportscasts at
5:30 and 6:15 p. m.
Mon. thru Sat.

78 BASTA

W . E.
88 PAWLOSKI
82 NICHOLS

86 DUNN
89 BURDEN
HEAD COACH- DICK OFFENHAMER

!4

�BARTLETT BUICK
3080 MAIN STREET

TF 6-1000

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
Y ou too can own an

OPEL KADETT BULL WAGON
ONLY $1793
PROBABLE VILLANOVA LINE-UP
R.E.
88 McDONNELL
80 KELLEHER
83 FABRIZIO

R.T.
74 ATKINSON

77 FRY
70 STRID

R.G.

40 SA NTOMAURO

60 STROFOLINO
66 MORDA
68 STOPKO

26 CONNOR

UNIVERSITY
PLAZA
''Boosts the
Buffalo Bulls''
ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSON CO.

R.H .
23 BENDER

(Minus art work, of course)

AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Cards

Q .B.

F.B.

14 CONNELL

33 BROWN
34 FERRAINOLO

15 GREEN
11 ANDREJKO

48 O "CONNOR

c.
50 MOORE

53 AGIN
54 CAPOZZI

L.H .

L.G.

44 SERNYAK

61 McDONALD

22 KOLMER

65 QUIGLEY

25 FAY

67 BUONO

Compliments of A FRIEND
GUSTAV A. FRISCH - Jeweler
KOEGL'S BAKERY
LEONARDO'S RESTAURA NT
M and T TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR

L.T.

76 SMITH
72 WALTER
73 HUNT

POHL'S SHOES
UB Loafers &amp; Flats
STYLE CREST MEN'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP
ULBRICH'S - Stationery

L.E.
85 MICHAELS

86 SODASKI
HEAD COACH -

ALEX BELL

81 PIPER

15

UNIVERSITY RESTAURANT
AND DELICATESSEN

�1965 VARSITY SCHEDULE

Sept. 18

Boston College

away

Oct.

16

Richmond

home

Sept. 25

Tampa

home

Oct.

23

Villanova

away

Oct.

2

Massachusetts

home

Oct.

30

Holy Cross

away

Oct.

9

Boston University

home

Nov.

6

Delaware

away

Nov. 13

Colgate

home

THE COVER
Jim Peele, a man who has
given a lifetime to UB athletics. To him, we respectfully dedicate this program
and day.

BUFFALO BULLS 1964 ROSTER

JONES-

RICH
MILK
CORP
"It's Flavor Guarded"

70 E. FERRY STREET
TT 3-4080

Class
Pos. Age
Ht.
Wt.
Hom etown
19
QB
160
Jr.
S-9
Danville, Pa.
QB
IS Robie, James
So.
18
6-3
202
Williamsville,
Y.
16 Duranko, Frederick
QB
21
6·0
195
Jr.
Johnstown, Pa.
21
*17 Gilbert, Donald
Sr.
QB
190
5-10
Buffalo, N. Y.
18 Ridolfi, Ronald
QB
20
165
Jr.
S-9
Pawtucket, R. I.
20 Barksdale, James
So.
HB
18
5-11
Syracuse, N. Y.
165
22 Capuana, icholas
18
HB
So.
173
Utica, . Y.
S-9
24 Ridolfi, Thomas
HB
20
165
Jr.
S-9
Pawtucket, R. I.
24
25 Gartz, Ronald
HB
175
So.
S-8
Rochester, . Y.
HB
26 McEwen, James
20
So.
185
5-10
McKees Rocks, Pa.
32 Wilbur, Gerald
FB
19
So.
190
Factoryville, Pa.
6-0
FB
*36 Condino, Richard
Sr.
21
6-2
205
iagara Falls, N. Y.
FB
*38 Pryzkuta, Dennis
19
202
Depew, . Y.
5-10
Jr.
40 Sella, Daniel
So.
HB
McKees Rocks, Pa.
18
5-10
180
Buffalo, . Y.
HB
*42 Oatmeyer, Thomas
Sr.
20
S-8
176
HB
21
Manlius, N. Y.
182
44 Webber, James
Jr.
S-9
HB
*45 Edward, Robert
Sr.
21
205
Buffalo, N. Y.
6-2
21
HB
46 Vittorini, Richard
197
Lackawanna, N. Y.
5-11
Jr.
20
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
HB
49 Shine, Willie
6-3
205
Jr.
20
*50 Duprey, James
c
5-10
215
Peru, . Y.
Jr.
c
19
*52 Holly, Joseph
6-1
Lyons, . Y.
210
Jr.
c
21
195
*54 Lucidi, Michael
Sr.
New Kensington, Pa.
6-1
21
c
200
Gloversville, N. Y.
55 Garafola, Joseph
Sr.
5-11
18
Kenmore, N.Y.
So.
c
208
56 MacKellar, Bruce
6-0
203
18
Dearborn, Mich.
60 Dunbar, Richard
So.
G
5-11
20
Kenmore, . Y.
206
G
*62 Me ally, James
Sr.
S-9
Riverhead, N. Y.
18
200
G
61 Botula, Charles
So.
6-0
21
210
G
5-10
Rochester, N. Y.
*63 Poles, E. Greenard
Jr.
24
205
Youngwood, Pa.
*64 Hart, Bruce
Sr.
G
6-0
22
204
Fulton, . Y.
G
Sr.
66 Castiglia, icholas
5-10
20
212
Kenmore, N.Y.
G
68 MacKellar, Russell
5-10
Jr.
Brooklyn, . Y.
22
215
G
6-0
69 Dechowi tz, Richard So.
220
McKeesport, Pa.
T
20
70 Pugh, Ronald
6-1
So.
Youngstown, . Y.
213
T
20
6-2
71 Taylor, William
Jr.
Detroit, Mich.
20
225
6-1
T
72 Kent, Brian
Jr.
Wayne, Mich.
195
T
22
6-0
*74 Piestrak, Dominic
Sr.
Syracuse, . Y.
200
18
T
75 Finochio, James
5-10
So.
Whitesboro, . Y.
225
6-3
19
76 Wuest, Michael
T
Jr.
Berwick, Pa.
260
T
21
6-2
*77 Ratamess, Leo
Sr.
Glens Falls, . Y.
206
20
78 Basta, John
T
6-1
Jr.
Buffalo, . Y.
209
21
79 Rate!, James
6-3
Sr.
T
Cheektowaga, . Y.
20
200
*80 Helenbrook, Craig
E
6-1
Jr.
Binghamton, N. Y.
20
6-2
191
81 Me amara, James
Sr.
E
Factoryville, Pa.
20
215
*82 Nichols, David
E
6-1
Sr.
Batavia, . Y.
210
83 Miceli, Anthony
19
6-2
E
So.
Saranac Lake, . Y.
210
E
*84 LaFountain, Gerald Jr.
20
5-11
Cranston, R. I.
86 Dunn, James
190
So.
E
19
6-4
Lincoln Park, Mich.
*88 Pawloski, Gerald
21
195
Sr.
5-11
E
Franklin Sq., L. I.
89 Burden, Dennis
20
185
E
6-1
Jr.
Budapest, Hungary
90 Oscsodal, Joseph
170
K
21
5-10
Jr.
* -Lettermen
Managers: Michael Zeif, Rochester, . Y.; Frederick Brace, Buffalo, . Y.
No.

Nam e

*14 Geringer, Frederick

16

l

�What's the Geneseecret. • •

l

VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY
No.

10
11
12
14
IS

22
23
25

26
33
34
35
40
41
42
44

46
48
50
52
53
54

60
61
62
66
65
67
68
69
70
71
72

j

73
74
75
76
77
78
80
81
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Name

Koshlap, Don
Andrejko, Bill
Bellotti, Gerry
Connell, Dave
Green, Rich
Kolmer, John
Bender, Phil
Fay, Greg
Connor, John
Brown, Tom
Ferrainolo, Tony
Dzurenko, John
Santomauro, Joe
Bosacco, John
Tallman, Cliff
Sernyak. Dick
Case, Jim
O'Connor, Tom
Moore, Chappy
Weglarz, Steve
Agin, Roger
Capozzi, Dave
Strofolino, Mike
McDonald, Jack
McDannel, Brian
Morda, Lou
Quigley, Bill
Buono, Mike
Stopka, AI
Ambrosius, Barry
Strid, Jerry
Becker, AI
Walter, Harry
Hunt, George
Atkinson, Al
Jones, Larry
Smith, Tom
Fry, John
Ahrens, Charlie
Kelleher, John
Piper, Bud
Fabrizio, Dick
Covi, Ray
Michaels, Emmett
Sodaski, Paul
Schunke, John
McDonnell, John
Flandera, Tom

Class

Pos.

Age

Jr.
So.
So.

QB
QB
QB
QB
QB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
FB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB

21
19
19
21
19
19
18
20
20
20
19
19
21
19
21
21
19
21
21
19
21
19
20
20
19
20
21
21
19
20
21
21
21
19
21
20
22
19
19
21
19
21
19
21
19
18
20
19

Jr.
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.

c
c
c
c
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
T
G
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E

E
E
T
E

Ht.

Wt

5-11
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-0
5-10
6-0
5-10
5-11
5-9
5-11
5-10
5-9
6-1
5-10
5-10
6-0
6-2
5-10
6-0
5-10
5-11
6-2
5-10
6-1
6-1
6-1
5-9
6-2
5-9
6-3
5-11
6-1
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-2
6-3
6-2
6-0
6-1
6-2
6-1
6-1
6-0
6-1

175
175
190
195
185
190
180
180
185
195
205
210
185
185
180
180
175
200
200
210
215
215
230
220
215
220
225
205
220
205
230
215
220
235
230
235
240
230
225
180
185
195
195
215
200
190
200
185

Hometown

Wayne, r. J.
Brooklyn, . Y.
Union City, . J.
Havertown, Pa.
Everett, Mass.
Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.
Gallitzin. Pa.
Weathersfield, C ~an.
Baltimore, Md.
Philadelphia, Pa.
West New York, _ .J.
Portage, Pa.
Scranton, Pa.
Glenolden, Pa.
Fairfield, Conn.
Havertown, Pa.
Bethlehem, Pa.
La:1sdale, Pa.
Broomall, Pa.
Haddonfield, . J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
West e\\ York, .J.
Brooklyn, . Y.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Paulboro, . J.
Steelton, Pa.
Broorr.oll, Pa.
Meriden, Conn.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Torrington, Conn.
West ew York, .J.
McSherrystown, Pa.
Atlanta, Ga.
Upper Darby, Pa.
Baltimore, Md.
St. Clair Shores, Mich
Philadelphia, Pa.
Levittown, Pa.
Lawrence, Mass.
West New York, .J.
Washington, D.C.
River Edge, . J.
Portage, Pa.
Phoenixville, Pa.
River Edge, . J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Cleveland, Ohio

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

�.,
···rr•
~~r:;

·' .l

·l

Front row, from left: Assistant freshman coach Ted Aceto, backfield coach Joe Rogers, co-captain AI Atkinson, head coach Alex
Bell, co-captain John McDonnell, trainer Jake Nevin, line coaches Joe Faragalli and Lou Ferry.
Second row: Paul McGrath, Joe Santomauro, Dick Sernyak, Tom Smith, Mike Strofolino, Jack McDonald. Emmett Michaels, Dave
Connell, Chappy Moore, Harry Walter and Bill Quigley.
Third row: Mike Buono, AI Becker, Dave Capozzi, John Fry, Lou Morda, Rich Green, George Hunt, Tom O'Connor, John Burke,
Steve \Veglarz and Larry Jones.
Fourth row: Joe Scerca, Greg Fay, Don Koshlap, John Schunke, AI Stopko, Bill Andrejko, Tom Flandera, John Kolmer, Jim Johnston, Barry Ambrosius and Brian McDonnell.
Fifth row: John Kelleher, Paul Sodaski, Gerry Bellotti, George Piper, Phil Bender, John Connor, Jim Case, Charlie Ahrens, Ray
Covi and Frank Sherlock.
Sixth row: Managers Gerry Franceksi and Roger Elsasser, John Dzurenko, Tony Ferrainolo, Dick Fabrizio, Otto Schoenborn, Rudy
Jugo, Tow Brown, Roger Agin, Jerry Strid and managers Tom Fitzgerald and Dick Rosensteel.

GRANVILLE MOTORS I.NC.
VOLKSWAGEN
~·

• STATJON WAGONS
• KARMAN GH lAS

1500 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
JUST NORTH OF THE BOULEVARD
MALL OPPOSITE TWIN FAIR

OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 836-4600

AUTHORIZEr&gt;

Co-captains John McDonnell and AI Atkinson with
Head Coach Alex Bell.

18

�-

--

~

.

.

.

.- -..

--

·A HISTORY OF
VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY
Villanova University is a Roman Catholic
institution founded by the Fathers of the Order
of St. Augustine in 1842. Its growth in the pr.st
18 years alone has more than doubled in both
the number of buildings and the enrollment of
the period prior to the Second World War.
In October of 1841, the Augustinian residents at St. Augustine's Church in Philadelphia purchased the land which is the present
site of the University. The property, located in
Radnor Township, was known as "Belle Air,"
the country estate of the Revolutionary officer
and merchant, John Rudolph. Legal title to the
property, comprising approximately two hundred acres with the mansion house and outbuildings, was conveyed in January 1842.
Villanova derives its name from an old
Catholic custom. The University was placed
under the patronage of a saintly hero of the
past, St. Thomas of Villanova. a distinguished
Augustinian writer, educator, and Bishop of
sixteenth century Spain. Villanova refers to
that part of Spain where St. Thomas received
his early education as a seminarian. The community of Villanova, Pa., has taken its name
from the University.
Villanova attained University status in
1953 after being known as Villanova College
for more than 100 years. Governor John Fine
of Pennsylvania signed a bill which permitted
a petition to the courts of the Commonwealth
to change the name to Villanova University.
During the past 17 years, 12 new buildings, including chemical engineering, law
school, naval science, library, commerce and
finance school, student union and two dormiREV. JOHN A. KLEKOTKA, O.S.A., President
tories have been erected. The most recent additions to the university are Mendel Hall, the
magnificent science building, dedicated in 1962,
and a new seminary. St. Mary's Hall, dedicated this year. In this same space of time the enrollment has rocketed
from a modest 800 to 4,500 undergraduate students. Including evening and summer sessions, the total student enrollment numbers 10,600.
Villanova grants a total of 17 different degrees in its liberal arts and science school; four in engineering; five
in commerce and finance, and one in nursing. Graduate courses are also offered in religion, arts and science, education, engineering. law, library science, statistical quality control, theatre, and philosophy-political science. The two
latest degrees offered are in medical technology and astronomy.
For many years, Villanova was strictly a school for men. In 1953 it expanded its nursing division and opened
its doors to undergraduate women in this course only. Undergraduate women number 200 with the first class receiving its degree of Bachelor of Science in Nursing in 1957.

19

........

�VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY COACHING STAFF - 1964

(Left to right) Assistant Freshman Coach Ted Aceto, Backfield Coach Joe Rogers, Head Coach Alex Bell, Line Coach Lou Ferry, Line
Coach Joe Faragalli. ( ot shown-Freshman and Line Coach Ed Michaels).

KEYSER BROS. PONTIAC-CADILLAC INC.

SIEGFRIED

NX 4-1910

CONSTRUCTION

75 Main Street
North Tonawanda, New York

CO., INC.

Corner of
N. LONG and MAIN
WILLIAMSVILLE, N.Y.

6 N. PEARL STREET
BUFFALO, N. Y. 142.02.

Western N. Y.'s Most
Complete Ski Shop
For the Entire Family

886-2300

Shops at Glenwood Acres
20

�- - -

~

0&gt;"&gt;

•

~

---.,--

ARTHUR L. MAHAN
Athletic Director
Arthur L. Mahan has been athletic director at Villanova for
four years, but in that time has helped the University make great
strides in the field of athletics and, of even greater importance,
that of making new friends for Villanova and its programs-be
they academic or athletic.
Mahan was appointed athletic director of Villanova University
on March I, 1961. He has been head baseball coach for IS years.
A graduate of the Villanova class of 1936, Mahan has already
made a fine impression on his fellow college administrators with
his willingness to listen and learn and his desire to cooperate
with them on such important athletic matters as scheduling and
rule making.
A former major league first baseman, Mahan spent six years
in professional baseball and also served as a minor league manager for one seson. Art played with the Philadelphia Phillies
during the 1940 campaign. He also played with such top minor
league teams as Louisville in the American Association and Little
Rock in the Southern Association.
Upon graduating from Villanova after a fine athletic career,
Mahan was signed by the Boston Red Sox. After an excellent
season with Little Rock in 1941, Mahan entered the Navy as an
Ensign and served in Tom Hamilton's V-5 athletic program with
the Navy Air Corps during World War II.
Mahan returned to his alma mater as head baseball coach in
1950. During the 15 years he has been at the helm, the Wildcats
have become a power in the East, competing in the CAA
District 2 playoffs six times.
Mahan is married to the former Helen Malin, a Philadelphian
and a graduate of Chestnut Hill College. The Mahans have ten
children, the eldest being Art, Jr., 21, who is a senior at Villanova.

ALEX BELL
H ead Coach
Alex Bell is starting his fifth year at the helm of the Wildcats.
The quiet, soft-spoken leader has done a standout job during
the past four years and has put together a fine record over the
past three seasons, winning 22 of the last 33 games played. Included were trips to two post-season games, the Sun and Liberty
Bowl classics.
Last year's S-4 record marked the third straight winning season
for Villanova football teams.
Alex is on his second tour of duty with the Wildcats. He was
line coach under Art Raimo from 1951 to 1953.
As an undergraduate, Bell played on what some fans regard
as Villanova's finest teams. During his junior and senior seasons
the Wildcats registered the majority of the school's longest winning streak of 22 consecutive victories.
His coaching career started with Loyola of Los Angeles in
1940, and was interrupted by the Second World War in which
he served as a Naval Gunnery Officer aboard a tanker, seeing
action in all theaters of operation before his discharge in 1946.
Bell's neJ&gt;.t assignment was directing Delone Catholic High of
McSherrystown, Pa., to two championships while registering a
20-game winning streak. It was here at Delone that he gained
the reputation as one of the finest scholastic grid coaches in the
state.
After a year at St. Augustine High in California, Alex answered Raimo's call to return to the Main Line and help tutor
the Wildcats for the neJ&gt;.t three years.
Bell dropped out of football in 1954, but returned to Delone
in 1955. His teams posted a 15-4-2 mark during the next two
years.
Bell's biggest move before returning to the Main Line came
in 1957 when he traveled to Harvard to work as end coach under
John Yovicsin for three seasons.
Alex and his wife Margaret and their three children reside in
Broomall, Pa.

21

-

�VILLANOVA

TOM SMITH

BILL ANDREJKO

HARRY WALTER

JOE SANTOMAURO

CHAPPY MOORE

PAUL SODASKI

DICK SERNYAK

JOHN KOLMER

EMMETT MICHAELS

�-

-

-

-

-

--

---

.

UNIVERSITY

TOM BROWN

MIKE STROFOLINO

RICH GREEN

JOH

JOHN FRY

KELLEHER

GREG FAY

GERRY BELLOTTI

LOU MORDA

23

�Main entrance and general
view of Villanova University

Augustinian Monastery on
Villanova University Campus

Villanova
University
Main entrance to Villanova's
School of Commerce and Finance

24

�BUFFALO MEDICAL AND TRAINING STAFF

JOHN SClERA,
Trainer

NORB BASCHNAGEL,
Asst. Trainer

MG

Alfa
Romeo

ROVER

VOLVO

AUSTIN
HEALEY

DR. TOM MARRIOTT,
Team Physician

JAGUAR

Leo Sauer

Land

FUNERAL HOME

Rover

INC.

HUNT
• 1933 KENSINGTON A VENUE

IMPORTED CARS INC.

TF 3-1695

1025 HERTEL A VENUE
(JUST WEST OF DELAWARE AVE.)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK
• 823 GENESEE STREET

TELEPHONE

TX 2-7183

873-6717
25

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFFALO (4-4-1)
Buffalo 35 Boston U.
Buffalo 9 Cornell
Buffalo 22 Massachusetts
Buffa lo 12 Marshall
Buffalo 14 V.M.I.
Buffalo 14 H oly Cross
Buffalo 37 Delaware
Buffalo 28 R; c-hmond
Buffalo 6 Colgate
Nov.21 Villanova
177

RUSIDNG
Attendance:

0
9
24
14
10
20
0
13
7

103,885

97

Player
Don Gilbert
Jim Robie
Bob Edward
Ron Ridolfi
Totals

6,600
17,000
9,754
6,500
21,000
8, 136
8,253
8,007
8,635

Player
Don Gilbert
N ick Capuana
Dick Condino
Dennis Przykuta
Bob Edward
Jim Webber
W illie Shine
Jim Robie
Tom Oatmeyer
Jim Barksdale
Fred Geringer
T. Ridolfi
R. Ridolfi
Totals

in 9 games

17

62

879

135
63
70
75
37
30
21
9
7
3
1
1
1
453

Yards

Avg.

468
307
278
274
160
151
40
38
19
7
0
-4

3.4
4.8
3.9
3.6
4.3
5.0
1.9
4.2
2.7
2.1
0.0

- 10
1,728

3.8

BUFFALO TEAM:
(9 games)
OPPONENTS
1st downs
155
107
Rushes, net yds., avg.
453 for 1,728 (3.8)
336 for 1,199
Passing
62 / 132 (879 yards) 72/152 (1,195 yards)
Pet. completions
46.9
47.3
Interceptions
9 for 163 yards
17 for 168 yards
Penalties
28 for 279 yards
52 for 363 yards
Fumbles
24 (lost 11)
22 (lost 15)

PASSING
Attempts Completions Interceptions Yds. TDs
123
15
60
869 8
2
2
10 0
7
0
1
0
0 0
0
1
0
0 0
132

Carried

8

ADAM , MELDRUM &amp; ANDERSON ' S CIRCLE OF BEAUTY BEAUTY SALON

The John W.
Cowper Co.

STYLE DIRECTOR
keeps t hem
cheering

INCORPORATED

• •• w ith hair fash ions that
score a beauty.goal for you .
He and a talented staff are

Engineers -

at your service for styl ing , co lor ing ,
and wjg.des ign, too!
Free consultations with Mr. Gene.
Haircut, $2.25 Regu lar Operator,
$2 .75 Styl ist
Shampoo &amp; Set, $2 .50 Regular Operator,

Contractors

•

2nd Floor

$3 .00 Styli st
TF 4-4020
Ext. 14

DAVID DONALD, Pres ident

O netfo j

FRED 0 . FRANCIS, Vice Presiden t

RESTAURANT &amp; SEAFOOD HOUSE
MAIN AT BAILEY
(Aero s from Campus)

DONALD J. GREER, Secy.-Treas.
PHILIP P. THOIN , Asst. Secy.-Tre as.

• Italian Dishes

•

• American Favorites
• Seafood Plates

Post Office Box 1068

• Legal Beverages

Buffalo, New York 14240

Serving from 11 A.M.
26

�OFFICIAL B U FFALO STATISTICS
INTERCEPTIONS &amp; RETURNS
Yardage
Player
No.
Dan Sella
3
7
Dick Condino
2
8
Fred Geringer
I
64
Jim Duprey
1
60
Joe Garafola
1
23
I
Gerry LaFountain
1
SCORING
Gilbert, 7 TD's rush, 2 PATK, 46 Pts.; Condino, 5 TD's rush,
I TD rec., 36 Pts.; Oscsodal, 1 FG, 12 PATK, 15 Pts.; Oatmeyer,
2 TD's rec., 1 PAT rec., 14 Pts.; Edward, 2 TD's rush, 1 PATR,
14 Pts.; Nichols, 2 TD's rec., 12 Pts.; Przykuta, 2 TD's rush,
12 Pts.; Dunn, 1 TD rec., 1 PAT rec., 8 Pts.; Capuana, 1 TD
rush, 6 Pts.; LaFountain, 1 TD rec., 6 Pts.; Pawloski, 1 TD rec.,
6 Pts. Safety 2 Pts.; Total-177 Pts.
PUNT RETIJRNS
Yardage
Player
No.
8I
Nick Capuana
6
33
Fred Gerringer
5
46
Dan Sella
4
20
Dennis Przykuta
2
II
Gerry LaFountain
2
I
6
Bob Edward
4
Jim Webber
1
KICKOFF RETURNS
Player
Yardage
No.
Willie Shine
200
7
Bob Edward
76
5
Dan Sella
67
3
Dennis Przykuta
52
3
Dick Condino
3
51
Gerry LaFountain
2
44
Nick Capuana
I
23
Jim Dunn
1
0

Player
Gerry Pawloski
Craig Helenbrook
Dave Nichols
Jim Dunn
Bob Edward
Dick Condino
Gerry LaFountain
Willie Shine
Tom Oatmeyer
Nick Capuana
Jim Webber
Dennis Burden

RECEIVING
Receptions
13
II
6
6

5
5
4
4
3
3
I
I
62
PUNTING
No. of Punts
23
3
5

Totals
Player
Bob Edward
Gerry Pawloski
Dick Vittorini

Yards
177
133
85
75
97
78
56
49
87
16
20
6

TDs
I

879

8

Yardage

2
I
0
I
I
0
2
0
0
0

Average

352
32.0
26.9

Save at Erie Federal
•

All accounts insured up to $10,000 by
the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation.

•

Money deposited by the tenth of EVERY
month immediately earns high dividends
from the first of the month.

All restricted gauges, precise tempers and finest finishes made
to your exact SJ.1ecificatians.

COLD ROLLED STRIP STEEL
Warehouse and Mill Deliveries
COIL

e

SHEETS

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ROLLER LEVELING

SHEARING

~:LUNT&amp;CO.

PLATE

e SLITTING

BROKERS, DEALERS IN LISTED and UNLISTED SECURITIES
COMPLETE TRADING FACILITIES

GIBRALTER STEEL
CORPORATION
•

RETAIL DISTRIBUTION

Members New York Stock Exchange
Associate Members American Stock Exchange

PHONE TL 4-4035
MARINE TRUST BUILDING, BUFFALO, N. Y., 14203

N T 4-102.0

2555 Walden Avenue

e

Office in New York, Rochester and Norwich, N. Y.

Buffalo, N. Y. 14225

Direct wire to Pershing &amp; Co. , New York

27

�With the naming of UB as a major NCAA team in football, the University is now listed among the top 119 in
the nation and so referred to in historical football directories.
In researching UB football statistics and records for Mr. Steve Bodo, Jr., 9905 63rd Drive, Forest Hills, N. Y., we
have come up with some interesting facts through Mr. Bodo 's records.
One fact verified by Mr. Art Powell- UB coach in 1916-22, is that UB's first coach (full-time and official )
was Frank Mt. Pleasant - one of the original Carlisle Indians and teammate of the famous Jim Thorpe. He coached
our 1915 team. (3 -4-0)
Until his appointment, Buffalo was under the informal guidance of volunteer coaches from 1894-1903. UB did
not field teams from 1904-1914.

University of Buffalo Football Records:
INDIVIDUAL: (for single season)

TEAM: (single season)

Points scored: 90 by Lou Corriere in 1942
Rushing : 620 yards by Willie Evans in 1959
Most passes attempted: 128 by Don Holland in 1951
127 by John Stofa in 1961
Most passes completed : 64 by Don Holland in 1951
64 by John Stofa in 1961
Most passing yardage: 807 by John Stofa in 1961
Most TD passes : 9 by Gordon Bukaty in 1958 ( soph)
Individual total offense: 1,092 yards by Don Holland in 1951
Most passes received: 23 by Bob Baker for 233 yds in 1961
Most receiving yards: 233 by Bob Baker in 1961
Best punting average: 40.6 yds by Bill Brogan in 1959

Points per game: 31.0 ( 279 in 9 games) - 1959
Rushing per game: 226.7 in 1959
Passing yds per game: 151.2 in 1960
Total Offense per game: 355.6 in 1959

Nuiuersity JteigQts
salutrs tqr

~uffaln ~ulls
AMHERST DRIVING SCHOOL

HERZOG'S DRUG STORE, INC.

ANDY'S OPEN KITCHEN

E. P. LAUER OPTICIAN

BARTLETI BUICK, INC.

NORTH MAIN LIQUOR STORE

BAIT CO. HEATING &amp; PLUMBING

O'CONNELL LUCAS &amp; CHELF, INC.

BITIERMAN'S RESTAURANT

RAY-WAN FURNITURE

CAMPUS CORNER OF BUFFALO, INC.

ROSSI'S STEAK HOUSE

COLONIAL HOUSE RESTAURANT

SOL'S ESQUIRE SHIRT LAUNDRY, INC.

GREAT LAKES MOTOR CORP.

UPPER LEVEL

28

�BUFFALO BULLS

DANIEL SELLA

RICHARD D U NBAR

JAMES WEBBER

MICHAEL ZEIF, Mgr.

SUPPORT THE BULLS - GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW
I wish to purchase ................ season tickets for 1965 . No payment required until billed July 1st.
Nome ···········-·········--·---··------·············----················-·-······························· Telephone ·························-············-·········
Address ···-·-- ·····--············· --···········-···········--·········································· ·······························----·········-·······························································
City .............................................................................................................. Zone ....................... State ................................................................ .
Fill aut the application and mail to Ticket Office, Clark Gym, Buffalo, N. Y.

14214

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK

Phone TF 3-7131

3610 MAIN (near Bailey)

Park Free next door- University Manor Motel

USED TEXTS
We buy- sell

SWEATSHIRTS
Jackets, Pennants, Animals

I

-r

WALL TO WALL
I

PAPERBACKS

SPECIAliZING IN

MEDICAL
DENTAL
NURSING

·r

ENGINEERING
SCIENTIFIC
TECHNICAL

We're Open Saturdays 9 to 6

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
29

�PROGRAM PATRONS
In Memory of Dom Grossi

George E. Easterbrook
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Eaton

Kenneth M. Alford
Owen B. Augspurger
J. Edwin Alford
Vincent G. Andronico
Harold A. Adel
William Aubitz

Benjamin Franklin
Robert D. Fernbach
Grant Fisher
Thomas S. Fanning
Edward D. Flaherty

Willard H. Bernhoft
Melvin L. Bong
Douglas Brock
Virgil H. F. Boeck
David E. Brennan
Francis B. Borowiec
Walter Brock
Charles F. Banas
Donald R. Barber
Stanley S. Blach
Max W. Burstein
Robert R. Barrett
William C. Baird

Lewis J. Greenky
George L. Grobe, Jr.
Joseph C. Gauchat
L. Robert Gauchat
William H. Georgi
A. Donald Gilden
Anthony S. Gugino
Norman Haber
Francis C. Hornung
Donald W. Hall
Lewis G. Harriman, Sr.
Fenton F. Harrison
Harold M. Harris
William Hildebrand, Jr.
Sheldon Hurwitz

John F. Canale
Roger T. Cook
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham N. Carrel
Ross M. Cellino
Ernest L. Colucci
John F. Connelly
John J. Cooney

Edwin F. Jaeckle
James W. Jordon
Grover R. James, Jr.
Evan E. James
Rudolph U. Johnson

John H. Dittman
Charles H. Diefendorf
James P. Donnelly
Louis A. DeVincentis
Arnold E. DiLaura

Russell Kidder, Jr.
M. Robert Koren
Kevin Kennedy
Edward W. Kinney
Bernard A. Kolber
Stephen F. Kissel
Seymour H. Knox
John A. Krull
Anthony W. Kozlowski

Robert J. Ehrenreich
George J. Evans
Milton Etengoff
Francis E. Ehret

30

�Vincent Scamurra
George H. Selkirk
Charles R. Sandler
Gerard E. Schultz
Roy E. Seibel
Carrol J. Shaver
James R. Sullivan
Harlan J. Swift
Seymour Schuller
Emile C. Sauer
George N. Seifert
Herbert Simon
Harry A. Sultz
Daniel T. Szymoniak
Leonard Swagler
Eugene M. Sullivan
Gerald C. Saltarelli
Burton B. Sarles
Fred S. Schwarz
Gertrude S. Swartout

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lipsitz
Norman B. Lewis
Glen H. Leak
Dexter Levy
Robert W. Lipsett
Angelo J. LaMastra
Willard Magavern
Charles J. McDonough
Robert J. Metzen
Leo M. Michalek
Wall ace H. Miller
Edward F. Mimmack
William L. Marcy
Frank Meyers
Luther Musselman
Joseph Manch
James C. McGarvey
Charles E. May
George M. Masotti
Harold F. Meese
Arthur F. Movalli
Samuel R. Miserendio
David J. Mahoney
J. Eugene McMahon
Anthony Manzella
Arthur Magerman
Charles F. Matthews

Irvin L. Terry
Joseph C. Vispi
Charles P. Voltz
Louis A. Vendetti
Robert S. Wolfson
William G. Willis
Fred H. White
Fred B. Wilkes

John F. Nelson
Bertram Portin
Sidney B. Pfeifer
Matthew J. Pantera, Sr.

Aaron Yasimow

William R. Root
Leo J. Rosen
George J. Roberts
Robert E. Rich
Raymond Roll
Louis J. Russo
Hugh Me. M. Russ, Sr.
Frank T. Riforgiato
William W. Rathke
Herbert R. Reitz
Albert G. Rowe
Carlton C. Rausch

Stanley

J. Zambron

tirown Pontiac, Inc.
Hunt Real Estate Corp.
Maier-Schule G.M.C. Inc.
Morris &amp; Reimann Wreckers, Inc.
Parkhill and Hart Cleaners &amp; Launderers
Pearce and Pearce
Syracuse Restaurant Inc.
University Manor Motel
Williamsville Inn Corp.

:31

�1964 -1965
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE U IVERSITY OF BUFFALO
VARSITY BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
!-at Brockport State
3-Ameri.can University
9-Assumption (Ont.) University
12-Albany State
16-Western Ontario
19-at Tennessee
29-30-at LeMoyne Invitational Holiday Tournament
JANUARY
16-Buffalo State at Memorial Aud.
23-Ithaca College
27-Toronto
3D-Steubenville at Memorial Aud.
FEBRUARY
6-Wayne State
9- iagara at Memorial Aud.
13-at Colgate
20-at Albany State
24-Rochester
27-LeMoyne at Memorial Aud.
MARCH
!-at Buffalo State
3-Alfred
6-Bucknell
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
1-at Brockport State
3-Niagara
9-Canisius
12-Waterloo
16-Buffalo State
17-at St. Bonaventure
JA UARY
23-Ithaca College
27-Canisius
FEBRUARY
3-at Canisius
6-St. Bonaventure
9-Niagara at Memorial Aud.
13-at Colgate
19-at Waterloo
24-Rochester
MARCH
!-at Buffalo State
3-Alfred
VARSITY FENCING
DECEMBER
5-Hobart
12-Cornell &amp; Case
19-at Syracuse

MARCH
13- orth Atlantic Championships
at Buffalo, . Y.
18-20- CAA Championships at
Detroit University
(2 additional matches to be
scheduled)

MARCH
6-Ithaca College

VARSITY SWIMMING
DECEMBER
6-Upper . Y. State Relays (site
to be announced)
9-Buffalo State
12-Rochester
16-Syracuse
J.&lt;\ UARY
23-at Buffalo State
27-Brockport State
30-0swego State
FEBRUARY
S-at Colgate
6-at Cortland State
9-at iagara
13-at Geneseo State
27-St. Bonaventure
MARCH
3- iagara
S-Upper
.
ships (site
11-13-NCAA
pionships
25-28- CAA
Iowa City

Y. State Championto be announced)
College Div. Cham(site to be chosen)
Championships at

FRESHMAN SWIMMING
Same as varsity, except that no meets
scheduled on Feb. 13 or after Mar. 2.
VARSITY WRESTLING
JA UARY
16-0ntario Aggies
23-Colgate
29-at Western Ontario
30-at Waterloo
FEBRUARY
6-0swego State
13-at Rochester
19-R.I.T.
24-at Alfred
27-Cortland State
MARCH
6-Ithaca College

JANUARY
23-at Notre Dame
FRESHMAN WRESTLING
FEBRUARY
13-at Hobart
27-Syracuse &amp; Fenn

FEBRUARY
6-0swego State
13-at Rochester
20-Western Ontario
24-at Alfred
27-Cortland State

JANUARY
23-Colgate

:t.~

FRESHMAN FENCING
DECEMBER
5-Hobart
12-Cornell
19-at Syracuse
FEBRUARY
13-at Hobart
27-Syracuse
VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY
SEPTEMBER
23-at Brockport State
26-at Syracuse
29-at Buffalo State
OCTOBER
1-R.I.T.
3-at LeMoyne
10-at Colgate
17-at Canisius
20-Alfred
28-at Cortland
31-at Canisius

Invitational
with LeMoyne
State
Invitational

OVEMBER
3-Gannon
7- . Y. State Championships at
Oswego
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTEMBER
24-St. Bonaventure
29-Niagara
OCTOBER
1-at Buffalo State
3-BrookLea Invitational at Rochester
5-Canisius
7-at St. Bonaventure
!0-ECAC Regional Tourney at
Colgate
12-Buffalo State
14-at iagara
17-ECAC Championships at Beth
Page, L. I.
19-at Canisius
23-McMaster
FRESHMA
SEPTEMBER
25-at Army

FOOTBALL

OCTOBER
3-at Ithaca College
10-Colgate
24-at avy
31-at Manlius
13-Syracuse

�WHY'?

Because Marine, with 64
neighborhood locations, is more convenient. And Marine offers more services (58)
than any other bank. We're friendly, too!
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

�Buffalo's only remaining Independent Brewers
invite you to try Simon Pure Beer. It's made
right here by your friends and neighbors. It's
The William Simon Brewery, Buffalo, New York

enjoyed right here by your friends and neighbors. Simon Pure, a good-natured beer with a
naturally good beer taste. Ask for Simon Pure
•

"Buffalo's only independent brewers"

�</text>
                  </elementText>
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            <element elementId="50">
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              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1477963">
                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1477964">
                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="1495021">
              <text>Programs</text>
            </elementText>
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                <text>1964-11-21 Buffalo vs Villanova</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494995">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494996">
                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494997">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494998">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494999">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495000">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Archival resources.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495001">
                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495002">
                <text>64 Bulls</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495003">
                <text> November 21, 1964</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495004">
                <text> Official Program 50¢</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University of Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="48">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495006">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495007">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495008">
                <text>1964-11-21</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495009">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495011">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495012">
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              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495014">
                <text> Image</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
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            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1495015">
                <text>LIB-UA049_B01-F12-006</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1495016">
                <text>New York (State) -- Buffalo -- University at Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;. If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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                    <text>�Pour Iroquois boldly ... from 6 inches above
your glass, smack into the center! That way, you get
a rich, creamy collar that releases the
full flavor ... so you enjoy all the bold
draft taste Iroquois has brewed in. Then take
a bold sip, and you'll agree: the fun begins with
IROQUOIS-the bold beer with the bold draft taste!
IROQUOIS BREWERY, BUFFALO, N.Y.

�Pre6idenlj
m66afje
Welcome to the 57th season of intercollegiate football at State University at Buffalo. On behalf of the faculty and students
may I extend a warm welcome and wish you
a pleasant and exciting afternoon.
As those of you who are old friends of the
U.B. Bulls well know, the significance of this
game and the entire season goes beyond the
won-lost record. The Bulls have been fighting a come-from behind battle over the past
several years to maintain and improve nationally-recognized intercollegiate football
on the Niagara Frontier. In 1958, we were
catapulted into the national football spotlight by upsetting Harvard and Columbia
enroute to a 8-1-0 record and the Lambert
Cup, symbol of Eastern Small College
supremacy.
It was the consensus of opinion that in
1958 we had achieved a highly respected
football plateau, but for the Bulls it was to serve only as a pad from which to launch into greater challenges. On
August 3, 1962, the ational Collegiate Athletic Association classified the University team in the "major college"
status. During the subsequent two seasons since the achievement of this category, the Bulls have compiled respectable records of 6-3-0 and 5-3-1.
This year we face the lOth consecutive "toughest schedule in history," without a single so-called "breather"
on the entire 10-game slate.
In joining us today for the primary purpose of enjoying top-notch football, your presence also becomes a source
of great pride to this University. It reinforces our certainty that the community, the region and the State are
all working with us in our goal to become one of the outstanding multi-purpose universities in the Nation.
A major step toward the achievement of this goal was made last spring when the Board of Trustees of State
University of ew York announced the site for the development of a new campus.
More than 1,000 acres on Millersport Highway, about three miles north of the present campus, has been earmarked for the $130 million expansion. While the new campus emerges, the present site will simultaneously be
developed into an expanded health sciences complex. Together, the two campuses will house what will ultimately
be a graduate center among the finest in the Nation.
I think you will agree that in the classrooms and laboratories as well as on the playing field, the future looks
bright indeed for the University and the community.
C. C. FUR AS, President

�1864 - 100th ANNIVERSARY - 1964
1964 marks our 1OOth year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area .

at the downtown
Western Savings Bank

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.

SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES

Established 1 864

for your convenience on the ground
floor (Court Street entrance)

REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
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PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Ellicott Square

17-21 S. Division St.,
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Welcome to

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(5 minute drive from U.B.)
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TT 5-5227

• BOWLING EQUIPMENT
• FOOTBALL AND BASKETBALL
EQUIPMENT

HODGE !lnc.

0

Sweaters a11d Jackets for Fratemities and Sororities

•
Buffalo, N. Y. 14202

360 Delaware Ave.

62.7 MAIN STREET

BUFFALO, N.Y.
TL 2.-3456

TL 6-9000
2

�Buffalo - A Growing University
The announcement this summer by the State University of ew York of a multi-million dollar expansion
of the State University at Buffalo marked another step
forward by the University in becoming a major Eastern
educational institution "among the finest in the land."
The day we have been waiting for has come!" exclaimed Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, University President.
"We now have the go-ahead to build the truly great
University that all of us have dreamed of."
On September lst, 1962, the University of Buffalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become the
major campus segment of the widespread system of the
State University of New York. The new name, created
by State University officials, is: State University of New
York at Buffalo. However, in deference to sweatshirtstitchers and typewriter repairmen, alumni seem to prefer the continuance of "UB" or "University of Buffalo"
where intercollegiate teams are concerned.
One of America's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo
has been the educational capitol of Western New York
since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the fourteenyear-old home of 28,000 people. The "University" was
the School of Medicine until 1886 when the School of
Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was Millard
Fillmore, a first-citizen of the young community, who
continued his UB leadership during his term as the
thirteenth President of the United States.
The fourteen University Divisions are: School of
Medicine (1846); School of Pharmacy (1886); School
of Law (1887); School of Dentistry (1892); College of
Arts and Sciences (1913; Summer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College, evening division (1923); School
of Business Administration (1927); School of Education
(1931); School of Social Work (1936); Graduate School
of Arts and Sciences (1939); School of Nursing (1940);
School of Engineering (1946); and University College
(including associate degrees, 1958).
Buffalo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood of
16,000- of which 8,000 are full-time undergraduate
students. The enrollment is expected to soar in the next
few years, especially in view of the State affiliation.
To meet the influx of resident students during the
past decade a total of six dormitories have been constructed, with the seventh to be dedicated this fall. The
$2 million Acheson Hall of Chemistry, the new orton
Union, the Baird Music Hall and the Western New
York Nuclear Research Center represent the efforts of
private endowment and local leadership.
Past projections have indicated that State University
of New York at Buffalo will need by 1970:
More than 9,000,000 square feet of space for an
anticipated total enrollment of 27,500 students.
Immediate needs include classroom buildings, a
library, residence halls, a fine arts center, an infirmary
and health services building, a university teaching
hospital, a health sciences building, a continuing education center, a physics building, an engineering building,
a physcal education and intramural building, and an
administration building.
Adequate parking space for 12,500 automobiles will
be needed.
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of Buffalo
continues its fine tradition of service to the Niagara
Frontier and the State of New York.

�Back Row: Buddy Ryan, line coach; Dewey Wade, freshman coach; Bob Deming, backfield coach. Front Row: Ron LaRocque,
backfield coach; Dick Offenhamer, head coach; Charlie Reeves, line coach.

LOOKING FOR A SOLUTION TO YOUR

FINANCIAL PROBLEMS?
Need money for college tuition? A much needed
vacation? An addition to your home? In fact,
for any worthwhile purpose? The solution is as
near as your phone. Dial 854-4950. Ask for Mr.
Redicash Phone-Loans. Pick up the money at
any B.O.B. office: 17 Court at Pearl/ 694 Fillmore at Broadway/2157 Seneca near Cazenovia/ 4248 Delaware at Dreyer/ 4954 Harlem
at Sheridan/3871 Union at George Urban/ 4184
Seneca at Mill Road.

BANK OF
BUFFALO
Member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�JAMES E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at UB than genial Jim.

(

Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the
orth Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue University, a career
which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War 11
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gave up football coaching to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the university began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball
team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in NCAA
Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of
anecdotes make him a much sough-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerous civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy, and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.

DICK OFFE HAMER
Architect of Victory
"Local boy makes good" could well be the theme of this piece,
for it accurately describes the brilliant athletic career of UB
football coach Dick Offenhamer.
Although Offie grew up just a "hoot 'n' a holler" from the
UB campus, his trail to that campus was long and sinuous.
An All-High baseball and football star at Bennett High
School, Dick chose to attend Colgate University.
It was a wise choice. Colgate was then enjoying the halcyon
days of Andy Kerr, when the Red Raiders of the Chenango
Valley went on scalping forays to such way-stations as Yankee
Stadium, New Orleans, Iowa City, and Columbus, Ohio. Offenharner was more than merely present on these trips; he was the
right-halfback in the Kerr double wing attack and he achieved
lasting fame as one of Colgate's all-time greats.
While at college, Offenhamer was light-heavyweight boxing
champion of the school and he also starred on the baseball team.
He received his B.A. in 1936.
Offenhamer coached football at Kenmore High School for
II years, and his teams won or tied 5 championships in the
iagara Frontier Conference.
After World War II he returned to Colgate as director of
freshman athletics, freshman football coach, and boxing coach.
Dick came to the University of Buffalo in 1955, a time
at which UB's football fortunes were at their lowest ebb. He
promptly exerted his skills, knowledge and personality to a difficult situation and the results speak for themselves.
During Offie's 9-year tenure UB has won 49, lost 30, and
tied 2. He had 8-l -0 seasons in 1958, when UB won the Lambert
Cup, and again in 1959, when UB was runner-up for that trophy.
Offenhamer has won numerous personal honors. He was
national "Coach of the Week" in 1958 after his team scored a
34-14 upset over Columbia. That same year the Buffalo Evening
ews cited him as one of Western ew York's !0 Outstanding
Citizens. This past spring both the Buffalo Council of the
Knights of Columbus and Cardinal Dougherty High School
saluted him as Western ew York's "Coach of the Year."

5

�JAMES DUPREY

JOSEPH HOLLY

ROBERT EDWARD

FRED GERINGER

GERALD PAWLOSKI

WILLIAM TAYLOR

LEO RAT AMESS

BRUCE HART

RICHARD CONDINO

�JOE GARAFOLA

WILLIE SHINE

MICHAEL LUCID!

GREENARD POLES

JAMES ROBIE

JOSEPH OSCSODAL

RUSS MacKELLAR

THOMAS OATMEYER

�BUFFALO BULLS - 1964

Front Row (L to R)-Blair, Gartz, B. MacKellar, Dunbar, Botula, McEwen, Robie, Capuana, Miceli, Schleifer, Finochio, Sella, Ryan,
Barksdale, Bonner, Dunn, Wilbur.
2nd Row (L to R)-LaFountain, Edward, Rate!, Duranko, Oatmeyer, Poodry, Piestrak, Ratamess, Capt. Pawloski, Gilbert, Hart,
Castiglia,
ichols, Garafola, M ally, Lucidi, M amara, Taylor, Holly, Helenbrook.
3rd Row (L to R) - Oscsodal, T. Ridolfi, Plummer, Geringer, Shine, Basta, R. MacKellar, Poles, Burden, Wuest, Kent, Dechowitz,
Popp, Duprey, Vittorini, Przykuta, Webber, R. Ridolfi.
4th Row (L to R)-Mgr. Lisiecki, Ass't trainer Shakan, Ass't coach Wade, Ass't coach LaRoque, Head coach Offenhamer, Ass't coach
Deming, Ass't coach Reeves, Ass't coach Ryan, Head trainer Sciera, Ass't trainer Pecorella, Mgr. Zeif.

N I NE DECADES AGO

the launching of
"advice in depth "

W

HEN ships with sails studded Buffalo's seascape over 90 years ago, when Buffalo and
the whole nation began to feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution ... Dominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning to make irs mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp; D's services for the investing public sustained
a steady growth despite financial panics, wars and
depressions. Today the talent of an organization of
more than 400 - including research specialises,
counselors, and administrative people stands behind
our Buffalo office, giving you opportunity for invest·
ment advict in d~pth. Let us advise you about your
future investment plans or review your portfolio.

I

DOMINICK

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Aftmbtrs Ntw York, Amtri~an, Afidu·tsl, and Toronto Srorlt Exrhangti
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Captain
8

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ERNST LANDES

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when you need it • as you ordered it • ready for use

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•
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TL 2-8087

OUR TENTH YEAR SELLING

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BUFFALO, N. Y.

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u
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F

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Hours
Monday-Friday 8:30-8:30
Saturdays ... 10:00-2:00

Largest
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Stutlents., Old Students., F11t1tre Students •••
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of

HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY ITEMS AVAILABLE

QIJALITY
Paperbacks
ill

Wester11
New York

COllEGE ClOTHING

GIFTS

(adult, youth, juvenile)

College Jewelry

Sweat Shirts

Ceramics

Sweaters

Glassware

Blazers

Stuffed Animals

College Jackets

Studio Cards

Pennants -

Banners

�THE SEASON TO DATE
Buffalo
Buffa lo
Buffa lo
Buffalo
Buffalo

35
9
22
12
14

Boston U.
Cornell
Massach usetts
Marsh all
VMI

0
9
24
14
10

by
Jack Sharpe

Buffalo 14
H oly Cross 20
Buffalo 34
D elaware 0
N ov. 7-Richmond at Rotary Field
N ov. 14-Colgate at Rotary Field
N ov. 21-Villanova at Rotary Field

The University of Buffalo Bulls, 1964 version, came of age last Saturday as they knocked all the cackle out of
the Blue Hens of Delaware 37-0. It was the worst defeat suffered by D ave elson in his seventeen years at Dela·
ware and avenged a one-sided 34-6 loss in 1963. This was the contest that saw Buffalo put four quarters together
for the first time since the opening game. It was an even more impressive performance than that win over Boston
University as Delaware is a fine football team, defending small college national champions, and considered a lot
better than Boston University. Although elson was extremely reticent about praising the Bulls preferring to
criticize his own team, his assistant coaches felt Buffalo, at least last Saturday was on a par with Villanova, a 34-0
winner over Delaware and second ranked team in the East.
D on Gilbert had his greatest day as a UB quarterback, running for three touchdowns, passing for two more,
and also throwing for two point conversions twice. Jim Webber made his debut as a tailback and rolled for 75
yards with some great moves in the open field. The full- backs, Condino an Prvzkuta, continued their fine play as
they ground out consistent yardage all afternoon. Offensively the club got a lift from D ave Nichols who replaced
the injured Gerry Pawloski and caught four passes, one for six points. With all these heroics it was the line that
spelled the difference.
On offense the forward wall opened up holes all day long and gave Gilbert fine pass protection. Rarely were
Bull backs hampered at the line of scrimmage and the D elaware linebackers were not making many tackles, being
blocked out most of the game. Defensively it was no contest, Buffalo's wide tackle six held D elaware to six first
downs, 66 yards rushing, and blocked a punt, Gerry LaFountain getting that honor. Delaware had been averaging
261 yards a game rushing and 19 first downs. It should be noted that a lot of that rushing yardage, if 66 yards is
a lot, was "donated" at the end of the first half when Buffalo was playing everyone deep to guard against the long
pass and giving up the running yardage when it meant nothing. The UB forwards had a devastating rush on Van
Grofski all afternoon throwing him for several losses and hurrying his passes other times. They also forced some
costly fumbles with hard tackles. It was by far the best two-way effort by the line this year.
A word here for the defensive backfield which played their finest game. Numerous times Van Grofski was forced
to eat the ball as his receivers were well-covered. At no time did the "bomb" connect. Frith got one big gain on
a slant pattern but it meant nothing as Buffalo was leading 30-0 at the time and the Blue Hens were starting from
their two yard line. Condino picked off one pass that set up a touchdown and the secondary was alert and aggres sive all afternoon.
They will be severely tested this afternoon by one of the most potent pass offenses in the country will be on
display for Richmond. In quarterback Ronnie Smith, 6-4, 225 pounds, the Spiders have the leading passer in the
Southern Conference and the 13th ranked heaver in the country. Going into the Holy Cross game, Smith was 62
for 124, 720 yards and 5 touchdowns. Their big end, John Hilton, already drafted by the Buffalo Bills and the
Detroit Lions, ranks 17th in the nation with 22 receptions for 364 yards and 5 six pointers. Smith has also been
drafted by the Los Angeles Rams and San Diego Chargers. If these two weren't enough, the other end is Pete
Emelianchik, a 210 pounder, who is a fine short pass receiver and scored twice against Holy Cross. The Spiders
also boast a fine halfback in Co-captain Kenny Stoudt. The clubs have faced two common opponents, VMI and
Holy Cross and off the scores it should be a cliff hanger. Richmond beat VMI 20-14, Buffalo won 14- 10. Holy
Cross dumped the Rulls 20 - 14, and whipped Richmond 36-22, with Jim Marcellino, who didn't play against us,
scoring three times for the Crusaders.
Next week the Red Raiders of Colgate, having a fine season, pay their annual visit to Rotary Field. Colgate is
in the top ten in the country in defense against scoring, allowing less than six points a game. Last week they
trampled Lehigh 41-0. Having lost two years in a row, Colgate will be higher than the sky for their contest against
the Bulls. After that, the season wind -up with Villanova, unbeaten and virtually unscored on! They lead the
country in defense against scoring, rank sixth in scoring themselves, and rank fourth in rushing offense. They also
are eighth in rushing defense, allowing opponents only 74 yards a game. To say they come highly recommended
is an understatement!
However, today it's Richmond and the Bulls try to win two in a row for the first time this year and get a win
streak going for the rest of 1964. Remember, next Friday afternoon, the U B freshman, 4 and 1 for the year, meet
Syracuse here at I :30 p.m.

�HAVE A TRANSISTOR RADIO WITH lOU? ~~~~
DIAL 970 FOR U. B. PLAY-BY-PLAY!

JACK SHARPE
Every U. B. Game
Home and Away
"THE SOUND
OF THE CITY"

PROBABLE BUFFALO LINE-UP
S. E.
80 HELENBR OO K
84 LaFOUNTAIN
81 McNAMARA
83 MICELI

WEBR

W . B.

42 OATM EYER
49 SHINE
46 VITTORINI

S.T.

970 AM
94.5 FM

77 RATAMESS
71 TAYLOR
76 WUEST

79 RATEL

S.G .

1

62 McNALLY

63 POLES
68 MacKELLAR
61

H
e
D

r

~

CANISIUS
and ST. BONA
BASKETBALL

BOTULA

c.

Q . B.

F. B.

52 H O LLY

17 G ILBERT
15 ROBIE

32 PRYZUTA

54 LUCIDI
50 DUPREY
55 GARAFOLA

14 GERINGER

36 CONDINO
20 BARKSDALE

T. B.

45 EDWA RD

W .G .

22 CAPUANA

64 HART
60 DUNBAR
66 CASTIGLIA

44 WEBBER
40 SELLA

W .T.

72 KENT

Charlie Bailey's
Sportscasts at
5:30 and 6:15 p. m.
Mon. thru Sat.

74 PIESTRAK
70 PUGH
78 BASTA

W .E.
88 PAWL O SKI
82 NICHOLS

86 DUNN
89 BURDEN
HEAD COACH- DI CK O FFENHAMER

14

�BARTLETT BUICK
3080 MAIN STREET

TF 6-1000

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

OPEL KADETT BULL WAGON
ONLY $1793
PROBABLE RICHMOND LINE-UP
R.E.
88 HILTON
85 KRESSLER
86 PHELPS

R.T.

71 H O DSDON
76 ALBRIGHT
73 ROBOCHIK

UNIVERSITY
PLAZA
''Boosts the
Buffalo Bulls''
ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSON CO.

R.H.B.

R.G.

2 5 BRITTON

75 TATE

22 ALDRIDGE

60 ORTWEIN
87 KRIMM

28 MATTHEWS

(M inus art work, of course)

AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES - Records - Cards

F.B.

Q .B.

31 GORDON

19 SMITH, R.

30 MOORE
33 DAVIS

13 SILVI

1 2 LINN

c.
51 SMITH, T.
50 ANDERSON
54 PRYOR

L.H.B.

L.G.

24 STOUDT
20 HAYES

66 STRICKLAND

21 GRUBBS

63 SOLOMON

61 PEW

Compliments of A FRIEND
GUSTAV A. FRISCH - Jeweler
KOEGL'S BAKERY
LEONARDO'S RESTAURANT
M and T TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR

L.T.
70 DEETER
65 ANDREWS

72 DILLON

POHL'S SHOES
UB Loafers &amp; Flats
STYLE CREST MEN'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP

L.E.
82 EMELIANCHIK
83 KULLAF
HEA D COA CH- EDWIN J. MERRICK

84 PRINCE

15

ULBRICH'S - Stationery
UNIVERSITY RESTAURANT
AND DELICATESSEN

�1965 VARSITY SCHEDULE

Sept. 18

Boston College

away

Oct.

16

Richmond

home

Sept. 25

Tampa

home

Oct.

23

Villanova

away

Oct.

2

Massachusetts

home

Oct. 30

Holy Cross

away

Oct.

9

Boston University

home

Nov.

Delaware

away

THE COVER
Don Gilbert runs for big

Nov. 13

Colgate

6

home

yardage.

Don

needs

just

over 1 50 yards total offense
to set all-time UB record.

BUFFALO BULLS 1964 ROSTER

JONES-

RICH
MILK

CORP.
"It 's Flavor Guarded "

70 E. FERRY STREET
TT 3-4080

No.

Name
Class
Pas. Age
Ht.
Wt.
Hometown
Geringer, Frederick
QB
19
Jr.
5-9
160
Danville, Pa.
Robie, James
So.
QB
18
202
6-3
Williamsville,
Y.
Duranko, Frederick
21
QB
Jr.
6-0
195
Johnstown, Pa.
Gilbert, Donald
QB 21
Sr.
5-10
190
Buffalo, . Y.
Ridolfi, Ronald
QB 20 5-9
Jr.
165
Pawtucket, R. I.
Barksdale, James
So.
HB
18
5-11
165
Syracuse, N. Y.
Capuana, Nicholas
So.
HB
18
173
5-9
Utica, . Y.
Ridolfi, Thomas
HB
20
Jr.
5-9
165
Pawtucket, R. I.
25 Gartz, Ronald
HB
So.
24
5-8
175
Rochester, N. Y.
HB
26 McEwen, James
So.
20
5-10
185
McKees Rocks, Pa.
32 Wilbur, Gerald
So.
FB
19
190
6-0
Factoryville, Pa.
*36 Condino, Richard
FB
Sr.
21
6-2
205
iagara Falls, . Y.
*38 Pryzkuta, Dennis
FB
19
202
Jr.
5-10
Depew, . Y.
40 Sella, Daniel
HB
18
So.
180
5-10
McKees Rocks, Pa.
HB
*42 Oatmeyer, Thomas
Sr.
20
176
5-8
Buffalo, . Y.
HB
21
44 Webber, James
182
Jr.
Manlius, N. Y.
5-9
HB
*45 Edward, Robert
21
Sr.
6-2
205
Buffalo, . Y.
HB
46 Vittorini, Richard
21
5-11
197
Lackawanna, . Y.
Jr.
HB
20
49 Shine, Willie
205
Jr.
6-3
iagara Falls, N. Y.
20
*50 Duprey, James
c
5-10
215
Jr.
Peru, . Y.
19
c
*52 Holly, Joseph
210
6-1
Jr.
Lyons, N . Y.
c
21
*54 Lucidi, Michael
Sr.
195
6-1
ew Kensington, Pa.
c
21
Sr.
55 Garafola, Joseph
200
5-11
Gloversville, . Y.
c
208
18
56 MacKellar, Bruce
So.
6-0
Kenmore, N.Y.
18
203
60 Dunbar, Richard
G
So.
5-11
Dearborn, Mich.
206
G
20
Sr.
Kenmore, . Y.
*62 Me ally, James
5-9
18
200
Riverhead, . Y.
So.
G
61 Botula, Charles
6-0
G
21
210
5-10
*63 Poles, E. Greenard
Rochester, N. Y.
Jr.
205
24
G
Sr.
Youngwood, Pa.
*64 Hart, Bruce
6-0
22
204
Fulton, . Y.
Sr.
G
5-10
66 Castiglia, icholas
G
20
212
5-10
Kenmore, . Y.
68 MacKellar, Russell
Jr.
215
Brooklyn, . Y.
22
G
69 Dechowitz, Richard So.
6-0
McKeesport, Pa.
220
T
20
So.
6-1
70 Pugh, Ronald
Youngstown, N.Y.
20
213
T
6-2
71 Taylor, William
Jr.
Detroit, Mich.
225
20
6-1
T
72 Kent, Brian
Jr.
Wayne, Mich.
195
Sr.
T
22
6-0
*74 Piestrak, Dominic
Syracuse, . Y.
200
18
5-10
T
So.
75 Finochio, James
Whitesboro, . Y.
225
T
19
6-3
76 Wuest, Michael
Jr.
Berwick, Pa.
260
Sr.
T
21
6-2
*77 Ratamess, Leo
206
Glen Falls, . Y.
T
20
6-1
78 Basta, John
Jr.
209
Buffalo, N. Y.
21
Sr.
T
6-3
79 Rate!, James
200
E
20
Cheektowaga, . Y
6-1
*80 Helenbrook, Craig
Jr.
20
6-2
191
Binghamton, N. Y.
E
Sr.
81 Me amara, James
20
215
Factoryville, Pa.
E
6-1
Sr.
*82
ichols, David
210
Batavia, . Y.
E
19
6-2
83 Miceli, Anthony
So.
20
210
Saranac Lake, . Y.
E
*84 LaFountain, Gerald Jr.
5-11
Cranston, R. I.
19
190
86 Dunn, James
So.
E
6-4
Lincoln Park, Mich.
195
*88 Pawloski, Gerald
Sr.
E
21
5-11
Franklin Sq., L. I.
89 Burden, Dennis
20
185
E
6-1
Jr.
Budapest, Hungary
170
90 Oscsodal, Joseph
K
21
5-10
Jr.
* - Lettermen
Managers: Michael Zeif, Rochester, . Y.; Frederick Brace, Buffalo,
Y.

*14
15
16
*17
18
20
22
24

16

�What's the Geneseecret. • •
RICHMOND UNIVERSITY
No.

12
13
18
19
20
21
22

23
24
25

26
28

29
30
31
32
33
35
44

so
51
54
60
61
62
63
65
66
68
69
70
71

72
73
74
75
76
77
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
88
:• -

Class
Name
So.
Linn, Jan
Sr.
Silvi, Bill*
So.
Zunich, Larry
Smith, Ronnie*
Sr.
Hayes, Warren*
Sr.
Grubbs, Ronnie
So.
Aldridge, orris*
Sr.
Payne, Rick
So.
Sr.
Stoudt, Kenny*
Britton, Pete*
Sr.
Shotwell, Larry
So.
Matthews, Don
Jr.
Kicidis, Mike
So.
Moore, Roger*
Sr.
Gordon, Ron*
Jr.
Stromick, Joe*
Sr.
Davis, Doug
So.
Flaim, Louis
So.
So.
Maiden, Emory
Schriebfed ~r. Dave
Jr.
Anderson, Sam
So.
Smith, Terry
Jr.
Pryor, Larry
Jr.
Ortwein, Bernie
Jr.
Pew, Larry
So
Ballowe, Bill
Jr.
Solomon, Bob
Jr.
Andrews, Bob
So.
Strickland, W. D.
Jr.
Cook, Bob
So.
Oberg, Ken
So.
Wilson, Dave
So.
Smith, Jim
So.
Deeter, John*
Sr.
Hodsdon, Dick*
Jr.
Gillen, John
Jr.
Robochik, Mike
So.
Krimm, Ken
So.
Tate, Ray
Jr.
Albright, Bob
So.
Carfagna, Don
So.
Soderstrom, Bruce
So.
So.
Close, Jim
Emelianchik, Pete* Sr.
Kulla£, Ed*
Jr.
Prince, Bob
Jr.
Kressler, Kirk*
Sr.
Phelps, Dennis
So.
Hilton, John*
Sr.
Lettermen

Pas.
QB
QB
QB

HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
FB
HB
FB
HB
FB
FB

c
c
c
G
G
G
G
T
G
G
G
G
G
T
T
T
T
G
T
T
G
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

Age

Ht.

Wt.

19
22
22
19

6-1
6-0
6-4
6-0
6-3
6-1
5-11
S-9
S-9
6-3
5-10
S-9
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-2
S-9
6-0
6-0
6-2
6-2
5-10
6-3
6-0
5-10
5-11
6-3
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-3
6-3
6-1
6-3
6-3
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-2
6-2
6-1
6-3
6-5
6-1

194
183
225
193
200
185
171
167
165
187
172
175
185
213
208
180
203
169
198
196
210
218
183
230
211
205
205
225
205
202
203
207
196
220
215
249
242
230
240
212
245
200
195
210
208
217
194
220
170

22

19
21
21
21
19
19
20
21
21
20
22
19
19
20
18
19
20
21
20
19
22

20
20
20
19
19
19
19
22

21
21
19
21
20
19
19
18
19
20
20
22

21
22

19

Hometown
Lynchburg, Va.
Plains, Pa.
Portage, Pa.
Richmond, Va.
Wilmington, Del.
Ashland, Va.
Lexington, Va.
Lancaster, Pa.
Suffolk, Va.
Criglersville, Va.
Sarasota, Fla.
Gainesville, Fla.
Union, S.C.
Brooklyn, . Y.
Camp Hill, Pa.
McClellandtown, Pa.
Bethesda, Md.
Martinsville, Va.
W. Hazelton, Pa.
Richmond, Va.
Stewartstown, Pa.
Patterson, Ga.
McKeesport, Pa.
Bethlehem, Pa.
Lancaster, Pa.
Richmond, Va.
Ponte Verda Beach, Fla.
Richmond, Va.
Patterson, Ga.
Portsmouth, Va.
Sarasota, Fla.
W. Caldwell, N . J.
Irwin, Pa.
Berlin, Pa.
Portsmouth, Va.
Medford Lakes, N.J.
Taylor, Pa.
Beaverdam, Va.
Charleston, W. Va.
Farrell, Pa.
Richmond, Va.
Eastville, Va.
Enola, Pa.
Brooklyn, . Y.
Garfield, . J.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Berwick, Pa.
Richmond, Va.
Richmond, Va.

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

�RICHMOND UNIVERSITY - 1964

Front Row-Emelianchik, Hayes, Hilton, Deeter, Aldridge, Britton, Stoudt, Stromick, Smelser, Silvi, R. Smith, Kressler,
Moore.
Second Row-Tate, Flaim, Ortwein, Gordon, Hodsdon, Pryor, Matthews, Gillen, Schriebfeder, Solomon, Strickland, T.
Smith, Prince.
Third Row-Close, Kullaf, Ring, Pew, Anderson, Davis, Grubbs, Linn, Shotwell, Kicidis, Payne, Robochik, Ballowe.
Fourth Row- Kr:imm, Andrews, Cook, Soderstrom, Phelps, Oberg, Carfagna, Maiden, Wallace, Albright, J. Smith, Zunich,
Wilson.
Fifth Row-Manager Leviner, Publicist Drewry, Coach Rapp, Coach Bolt, Coach Tnomasson, Athletic Director Pitt, Head
Coach Merrick, Coach DeFalco, Coach Humbert, Trainer McNeal, Assistant Trainer Carlton.

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• SEDANS
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MALL OPPOSITE TWIN FAIR

OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 836-4600

AUTHORIZ£1)

O&amp;AL.EA

18

�A History of

RICHMOND UNIVERSITY
I

I

From a humble beginning in 1830 as a Baptist Seminary in Powhatan County, the University of Richmond has grown into the largest
privately-supported institution of higher learning in the State of Virginia.
Today in its seven undergraduate, graduate
and professional divisions the University is
serving some 6,000 students.
Through the years the institution has held
steadfastly to the belief of the founding fathers
that the Development of character is every bit
as important as the development of the intellect,
that a college should teach its students how to
live as well as how to make a living.
The University is particularly proud of its
scholarship program which attracts each year
the scholastic leaders of high and preparatory
schools in Virginia and other states. During the
current session the University will give more
than $150,000 in scholarships.
At the undergraduate level, the University of
Richmond is coordinate rather than coeducational. Richmond College men and Westhampton College women have separate faculties,
among them the library, chapel and laboratories, are used jointly. Of course, men and
women students participate together in the
extra-curricular activities and in the social life
of the campus.
Other units of the University are the T. C.
Williams School of Law, the School of Business Administration, the Graduate School, the
Summer School and University College which
was established in 1962 to serve the metropolitan Richmond area.
DR. GEORGE M. MODLIN
No period has been so fruitful as the adminPresident
istration of Dr. George M. Modlin, only one
of four presidents in the University's long
history. Since 1946 when he became president
the University has constructed nine new buildings and has increased its endowment from $3,043,000 to $9,209,000.
The new buildings include the Frederic William Boatwright Memorial Library, a monument to Dr. Modlin's
predecessor. There were also constructed three new dormitories for men (Wood Hall, Robins Hall and Dennis
Hall), a dormitory for women (South Court), a building for the T. C. Williams School of Law, a building for
the School of Business Administration, a Student Center Building for men, and the handsome Fanny G. Crenshaw
Swimming Pool and building at Westhampton College.
Buildings projected for the near future include a dormitory for men, a building to house University College
at a downtown location and a fine arts building.
Privately-endowed, church-supported, the University of Richmond is a bulwark of the democratic way of life,
a monument to Christian education.

19

�RICHMOND UNIVERSITY COACHING STAFF- 1964

..

Left to right: Freshman Coach Jim Thomasson, Assistant Freshman Coach George Rapp, Varsity End Coach Dick Humbert, Varsity Line Coach Danny DeFalco, Varsity Backfield Coach Carl Bolt, Varsity Head Coach Ed Merrick.

KEYSER BROS. PONTIAC-CADILLAC INC.

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BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

Westem N. Y.'s Most
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For the Entire Family

886-2300

Shops at Glenwood Acres
20

�Mac Pitt will celebrate his 23rd year as Athletic
Director of the University in 1964. The soft-spoken,
silver-thatched Pitt is one of the best liked and respected
coaches in the Southern Conference area.
He came to the University as a student in 1916 and
starred at quarterback on the football team, played third
base on the Spider nine, and was a consistent point
scorer in track. Strangely enough he didn't participate
in basketball, a sport in which he won coaching fame
by guiding the 1934-35 team through a twenty game
unblemished slate. He was elected to the Helms Foundation Basketball Hall of Fame in 1963.
Coach Pitt no longer tutors the U of R court team,
but he still handles the baseball team. His diamond-men
have captured IS State baseball crowns in the last thirty
seasons, two Southern Conference pennants and tied
for the SC crown twice.

\

The "Silver Fox" has helped develop a number of
professional baseball prospects, including Lew Burdette,
an ace hurler now with the Chicago Cubs.
Mac Pitt has a wide reputation as an effective speaker
and is in frequent demand along the banquet circuit.
He teaches a Sunday School class for collegians at the
First Baptist Church where he is a member of the
Board of Deacons.
His work with boys continues into the summer
months at Camp Virginia, near Goshen, which he
directs.

MALCOLM U. PITT
Athletic Director

Ed Merrick, the University of Richmond's all-time
center, has been head football coach at his alma mater
since 1951.
Merrick, a native of Pottsville, Pa., entered the University of Richmond in 1936 after earning gridiron fame
at Fork Union Military Academy. He played three
years of varsity football under the late Glenn Thistlewaite, and in 1939 became the first Richmond player to
be named to the All-Southern Conference eleven. His
feats on the gridiron won him such acclaim that he was
invited to participate in the College All-Star game in
Chicago, the first player from the state of Virginia so
honored.
He remained at the University in 1940 as an assistant coach and was the Spiders' freshman coach in 1941.
His coaching career was interrupted by World War
II in which Ed served with such distinction that he rose
from private to the rank of major. He now is a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force Reserve.
Following the war, Merrick returned to Fork Union
as head football coach where he turned out prep school
elevens which won national acclaim.
Ed is district chairman of the Coaches' Football Rules
Committee. Tapped by Omicron Delta Kappa, national
honorary leadership fraternity, Merrick twice has been
chosen the state's coach of the year. He was selected
Southern Conference "Coach of the Year" in 1958.
He's married to the former Elaine Gentil of Richmond. They have three children.

JOEL MERRICK
Head Football Coach

21

�RICHMOND

PETE BRITTON

JOHN HILTON

DICK HODSDON

JOHN DEETER

TERRY SMITH

RON SMITH

PETE EMELIANCHIK

RAY TATE

JOH

GILLEN

WARREN HAYES

�UNIVERSITY

JOE STROMICK

BOB ANDREWS

ORRIS ALDRIDGE

ED KULLAF

ROGER MOORE

BOB ALBRIGHT

DON MATTHEWS

BILL SILVI

SAM ANDERSON

BER IE ORTWEIN

W. D. STRICKLAND

23

KIRK KRESSLER

�KicltmoJtd

University

24

�BUFFALO MEDICAL AND TRAINING STAFF

JOHN SClERA,
Trainer

NORB BASCHNAGEL,
Asst. Trainer

MG

Alfa

Romeo

ROVER

VOLVO

AUSTIN
HEALEY

JAGUAR

DR. TOM MARRIOTT,
Team Physician

Leo Sauer

Land

FUNERAL HOME

Rover

INC.

HUNT
• 1933 KENSINGTON A VENUE

IMPORTED CARS INC.

TF 3-1695

1025 HERTEL AVENUE
(JUST WEST OF DELAWARE AVE.)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK
• 823 GENESEE STREET

TELEPHONE

TX 2-7183

873-6717
25

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFFALO (2-2-1)
Buffalo 35 Boston U.
0
Buffalo 9 Cornell
9
Buffalo 22 Massachusetts 24
Buffalo 12 Marshall
14
Buffalo 14 V.M.I.
10
Oct. 24 Holy Cross
Oct. 31 Delaware
Nov. 7 Richmond
Nov. 14 Colgate
Nov. 21 Villanova
92

Attendance: 6,600
17,000
9,754
6,500
21,000

60,854

57

Player
Don Gilbert
Dennis Przykuta
Bob Edward
Dick Condino
Nick Capuana
Jim Robie
Willie Shine
Tom Oatmeyer
Jim Webber
Jim Barksdale
Fred Geringer
Ron Ridolfi

in S games

Totals

Player
Don Gilbert
Jim Robie
Ron Ridolfi
Totals

BUFFALO TEAM:
1st downs
Rushes, net yds., avg.
Passing
Pet. completions
Interceptions
Penalties
Fumbles

PASSING
Attempts Completions Interceptions Yds. TDs
415 4
55
26
7
0
2
10 0
2
0
1
0
0 0
58

7

28

425

4

RUSIDNG
Carried
64
58
31
29
27
6
13
3
4
2
1
I
239

Yards
244
214
IS!
132
148
25
23
9
4
I
0
-10

Avg.
3.8
3.6
4.11
4.5
5.4
4.0
1.7
3.0
1.0
0.5
0.0
0.0

941

3.9

(S games)
79
239 for 941 (3.9)
28 for 425 yds.
48.2 (28/ 58)
6 for 130 yds.
15 for 154 yds.
16 (lost 8)

OPPONENTS
67
224 for 732 (32)
39 for 671 yds.
47.5 (39/ 82)
7 for 97 yds.
27 for 232 yds.
12 (lost 8)

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Ext. 14

Contractors

•
DAVID DONAlD, President

Onetlo j REST AU RANT &amp; SEAFOOD HOUSE

FRED 0 . FRANCIS, Vice President

MAIN AT BAILEY
(Across from Campus)

DONAlD J. GREER, Secy.-Treas.
PHiliP P. THOIN, Aut . Secy.-Treas.

• ltaliatz Dishes

•

• American Favorites
• Seafood Plates

Post Office Box 1068

• Legal Beverages

Buffalo, New York 14240

Serving from 11 A.M.
26

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
INTERCEPTIONS &amp; RETURNS
Yardage
No.
1
64
1
1
2
1
2
3
60
1

Player
Gerry Pawloski
Bob Edward
Dick Condino
Jim Dunn
Willie Shine
Dave Nichols
Gerry LaFountain
Craig Helenbrook
Dennis Burden
Nick Capuana

Player
Fred Geringer
Gerry LaFountain
Dick Condino
Dan Sella
Jim Duprey

SCORING
Dick Condino, 3 TD's rush, 1 TD rec. 24 pts; Bob Edward, 2
TO's rush, 1 PATR, 14 pts; Dennis Przykuta, 2 TD's rush, 12 pts;
Don Gilbert, 1 TD rush, 1 PATR, 8 pts; Joe Oscsodal, 1 FG,
5 PATK, 8 pts; ick Capuana, 1 TD rush, 6 pts; Gerry Pawloski,
1 TD rec., 6 pts; Jim Dunn, 1 TD rec., 6 pts; Dave ichols, 1
TD rec., 6 pts; Safety (Ball intentionally downed in end zone)
2 pts; Total 92 pts.
PUNT RETURNS
Player
No.
Fred Geringer
5
Dennis Przykuta
2
ick Capuana
1
Gerry LaFountain
1
Jim Webber
1
Bob Edward
1

Total.
Player
Bob Edward
Dick Vittorini
Gerry Pawloski

Yardage
33
20
12

28
PUNTING
No. of Punts
14
1
2

Yards
138
61
51
37
17
35
39
32
6
9

TDs

425

4

Yardage
549
32
42

1
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0

Average
39.1
32.0
21.0

Save at Erie Federal

7
4
6

KICKOFF RETURNS
Player
No.
Willie Shine
6
Bob Edward
4
Dennis Przykuta
3
Dick Condino
1
Jim Dunn
I

RECEIVING
Receptions
10
4
2
2
2
1
2
2
1
2

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Yardage
188
69
52
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Office in New York, Rochester and Norwich , N. Y.

Buffalo, N.Y. 14225

Direct wire Ia Pershing &amp; Co., New York

27

�With the naming of UB as a major NCAA team in football, the University is now listed among the top 119 in
the nation and so referred to in historical football directories.
In researching UB football statistics and records for Mr. Steve Boda, Jr., 9905 63rd Drive, Forest Hills, N. Y., we
have come up with some interesting facts through Mr. Bodo's records.
One fact verified by Mr. Art Powell- UB coach in 1916-22, is that UB's first coach (full-time and official)
was Frank Mt. Pleasant - one of the original Carlisle Indians and teammate of the famous Jim Thorpe. He coached
our 1915 team. (3-4-0)
Until his appointment, Buffalo was under the informal guidance of volunteer coaches from 1894-1903. UB did
not field teams from 1904-1914.

University of Buffalo Football Records:
INDIVIDUAL: (for single season)

TEAM: (single season)

Points scored: 90 by lou Corriere in 1942
Rushing: 620 yards by Willie Evans in 1959
Most passes attempted: 128 by Don Holland in 1951
127 by John Stofa in 1961
Most passes completed: 64 by Don Holland in 1951
64 by John Stofa in 1961
Most passing yardage: 807 by John Stofa in 1961
Most TD passes: 9 by Gordon Bukaty in 1958 (soph)
Individual total offense: 1,092 yards by Don Holland in 1951
Most passes received: 23 by Bob Baker for 233 yds in 1961
Most receiving yards: 233 by Bob Baker in 1961
Best punting average: 40.6 yds by Bill Brogan in 1959

Points per game: 31.0 ( 279 in 9 games) - 1959
Rushing per game: 226.7 in 1959
Passing yds per game: 151.2 in 1960
Total Offense per game: 355.6 in 1959

Buiurrsity BrigQts
sulutrs tqr

~uffaln ~ulls
AMHERST DRIVING SCHOOL

HERZOG'S DRUG STORE, INC.

ANDY'S OPEN KITCHEN

E. P. LAUER OPTICIAN

BARTLETT BUICK, INC.

NORTH MAIN LIQUOR STORE

BATT CO. HEATING &amp; PLUMBING

O'CONNELL LUCAS &amp; CHELF, INC.

BITTERMAN'S RESTAURANT

RAY-WAN FURNITURE

CAMPUS CORNER OF BUFFALO, INC.

ROSSI'S STEAK HOUSE

COLONIAL HOUSE RESTAURANT

SOL'S ESQUIRE SHIRT LAUNDRY, INC.

GREAT LAKES MOTOR CORP.

UPPER LEVEL

28

�BUFFALO BULLS

RICHARD D U NBAR

JAMES WEBBER

MICHAEL ZEIF, Mgr.

SUPPORT THE BULLS - GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW
I wish to purchase ................ season tickets for 1 965. No payment required unti l billed July 1st.

Name ..................................................................................................... Telephone ............................................... .
Address ............................ .. ........................................ ............................ ·--·······································································------·-················--------··
City ......................................................................................................•....... Zone ....................... State ·········-·----······----------·····-------·------···············
Fill out the application and mail Ia Ticket Office, Clark Gym , Buffalo, N. Y.

14214

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK

Phone TF 3-7131

3610 MAIN (near Bailey)

Park Free next door- University Manor Motel

USED TEXTS
We buy- sell

SWEATSHIRTS
Jackets, Pennants, Animals

I

I

WALL TO WALL
I

PAPERBACKS

SPECIALIZING IN

MEDICAL
DENTAL
NURSING

I

ENGINEERING
SCIENTIFIC
TECHNICAL

We're Open Saturdays 9 to 6

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
29

�PROGRAM PATRONS
In Memory of Dom Grossi

George E. Easterbrook
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Eaton

Kenneth M. Alford
Owen B. Augspurger
J. Edwin Alford
Vincent G. Andronico
Harold A. Adel
William Aubitz

Benjamin Franklin
Robert D. Fernbach
Grant Fisher
Thomas S. Fanning
Edward D. Flaherty

Willard H. Bernhoft
Melvin L. Bong
Douglas Brock
Virgil H. F. Boeck
David E. Brennan
Francis B. Borowiec
Walter Brock
Charles F. Banas
Donald R. Barber
Stanley S. Blach
Max W. Burstein
Robert R. Barrett
William C. Baird
John F. Canale
Roger T. Cook
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham
Ross M. Cellino
Ernest L. Colucci
John F. Connelly
John J. Cooney

Lewis J. Greenky
George L. Grobe, Jr.
Joseph C. Gauchat
L. Robert Gauchat
William H. Georgi
A. Donald Gilden
Anthony S. Gugino
Norman Haber
Francis C. Hornung
Donald W. Hall
Lewis G. Harriman, Sr.
Fenton F. Harrison
Harold M. Harris
William Hildebrand, Jr.
Sheldon Hurwitz
. Carrel
Edwin F. Jaeckle
James W. Jordon
Grover R. James, Jr.
Evan E. James
Rudolph U. Johnson

John H. Dittman
Charles H. Diefendorf
James P. Donnelly
Louis A. DeVincentis
Arnold E. DiLaura

Russell Kidder, Jr.
M. Robert Koren
Kevin Kennedy
Edward W. Kinney
Bernard A. Kol her
Stephen F. Kissel
Seymour H. Knox
John A. Krull
Anthony W. Kozlowski

Robert J. Ehrenreich
George J. Evans
Milton Etengoff
Francis E. Ehret

30

�Vincent Scamurra
George H. Selkirk
Charles R. Sandler
Gerard E. Schultz
Roy E. Seibel
Carrol J. Shaver
James R. Sullivan
Harlan J. Swift
Seymour Schuller
Emile C. Sauer
George N. Seifert
Herbert Simon
Harry A. Sultz
Daniel T. Szymoniak
Leonard Swagler
Eugene M. Sullivan
Gerald C. Saltarelli
Burton B. Sarles
Fred S. Schwarz
Gertrude S. Swartout

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lipsitz
Norman B. Lewis
Glen H. Leak
Dexter Levy
Robert W. Lipsett
Angelo J. LaMastra
Willard Magavern
Charles J. McDonough
Robert J. Metzen
Leo M. Michalek
Wall ace H. Miller
Edward F. Mimmack
William L. Marcy
Frank Meyers
Luther Musselman
Joseph Manch
James C. McGarvey
Charles E. May
George M. Masotti
Harold F. Meese
Arthur F. Movalli
Samuel R. Miserendio
David J. Mahoney
J. Eugene McMahon
Anthony Manzella
Arthur Mogerman
Charles F. Matthews

Irvin L. Terry
Joseph C. Vispi
Charles P. Voltz
Louis A. Vendetti
Robert S. Wolfson
William G. Willis
Fred H. White
Fred B. Wilkes

John F. Nelson
Bertram Portin
Sidney B. Pfeifer
Matthew J. Pantera, Sr.

Aaron Yasimow

William R. Root
Leo J. Rosen
George J. Roberts
Robert E. Rich
Raymond Roll
Louis J. Russo
Hugh Me. M. Russ, Sr.
Frank T. Riforgiato
William W. Rathke
Herbert R. Reitz
Albert G. Rowe
Carlton C. Rausch

Stanley J. Zambron
lsrown Pontiac, Inc.
Hunt Real Estate Corp.
Maier-Schule G.M.C. Inc.
Morris &amp; Reimann Wreckers, Inc.
Parkhill and Hart Cleaners &amp; Launderers
Pearce and Pearce
Syracuse Restaurant Inc.
University Manor Motel
Williamsville Inn Corp.

31

�1964-1965
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
VARSITY BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
1-at Brockport State
3-American University
9-Assumption (Ont.) University
12--Aibany State
16-Western Ontario
19-at Tennessee
29-30-at LeMoyne Invitational Holiday Tournament
JA VARY
16-Buffalo State at Memorial Aud.
23-Ithaca College
27-Toronto
3D-Steubenville at Memorial Aud.
FEBRUARY
6-Wayne State
9- iagara at Memorial Aud.
13-at Colgate
20-at Albany State
24-Rochester
27-LeMoyne at Memorial Aud.
MARCH
1-at Buffalo State
3-Aifred
6-Bucknell
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
1-at Brockport State
3- iagara
9-Canisius
12-Waterloo
16-Buffalo State
17-at St. Bonaventure
JA VARY
23-Ithaca College
27-Canisius
FEBRUARY
3-at Canisius
6-St. Bonaventure
9-Niagara at Memorial Aud.
13-at Colgate
19-at Waterloo
24-Rochester
MARCH
1-at Buffalo State
3-Aifred
VARSITY FE CING
DECEMBER
5-Hobart
12-Comell &amp; Case
19-at Syracuse

Y!:\RCH
13-North Atlantic Championships
at Buffalo, . Y.
18-20- CAA Championships at
Detroit University
(2 additional matches to be
scheduled)

MARCH
6-Ithaca College

VARSITY SWIMMING
DECEMBER
6-Upper . Y. State Relays (site
to be announced)
9-Buffalo State
12-Rochester
16-Syracuse
JA VARY
23-at Buffalo State
27-Brockport State
30-0swego State
FEBRUARY
5-at Colgate
6-at Cortland State
9-at Niagara
13-at Geneseo State
27-St. Bonaventure
Y!ARCH
3- iagara
S-Upper
.
ships (site
11-13- CAA
pionships
25-28- CAA
Iowa City
FRESHMA

Y. State Championto be announced)
College Div. Cham(site to be chosen)
Championships at

SWIMMI G

Same as varsity, except that no meets
scheduled on Feb. 13 or after Mar. 2.
VARSITY WRESTLI G
VARY
16-0ntario Aggies
23-Colgate
29-at Western Ontario
30-at Waterloo
FEBRUARY
6-0swego State
13-at Rochester
19-R.I.T.
24-at Alfred
27-Cortland State
MARCH
6-Ithaca College

JANUARY
23-at otre Dame
FRESHMAN WRESTLING
FEBRUARY
13-at Hobart
27-Syracuse &amp; Fenn

FEBRUARY
6-0swego State
13-at Rochester
20-Western Ontario
24-at Alfred
27-Cortland State

JANUARY
23-Colgate

FRESHMAN FENCING
DECEMBER
5-Hobart
12-Cornell
19-at Syracu e
FEBRUARY
13-at Hobart
27-Syracuse
VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY
SEPTEMBER
23-at Brockport State
26-at Syracuse
29-at Buffalo State
OCTOBER
1-R.I.T.
3-at LeMoyne
10-at Colgate
17-at Canisius
20-Alfred
28-at Cortland
31-at Canisius

Invitational
with LeMoyne
State
Invitational

NOVEMBER
3-Gannon
7- . Y. State Championships at
Oswego
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTEMBER
24-St. Bonaventure
29- iagara
OCTOBER
!-at Buffalo State
3-BrookLea Invitational at Rochester
5-Canisius
7-at St. Bonaventure
10-ECAC Regional Tourney at
Colgate
12-Buffalo State
14-at Niagara
17-ECAC Championships at Beth
Page, L. I.
19-at Canisius
23-McMaster
FRESHMA
EPTEMBER
25-at Army

FOOTBALL

OCTOBER
3-at Ithaca College
10-Colgate
24-at avy
31-at Manlius
13-Syracuse

�WHYY

Because Marine, with 64
neighborhood locations, is more convenient. And Marine offers more services (58)
than any other bank. We're friendly, too!

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

�Buffalo's only remaining Independent Brewers
invite you to try Simon Pure Beer. It's made
right here by your friends and neighbors. It's
The Willia m Simon Brewery, Bu ffa lo, New York

enjoyed right here by your friends and neighbors. Simon Pure, a good-natured beer with a
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•

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�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1964-11-07 Buffalo vs Richmond</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494970">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494971">
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                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
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                <text> November 7, 1964</text>
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                <text> Official Program 50¢</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494978">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494979">
                <text>1964-11-07</text>
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          <element elementId="37">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494980">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                <text>36 p.</text>
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                    <text>�Pour Iroquois boldly ... from 6 inches above
your glass, smack into the center! That way, you get
a rich, creamy collar that releases the
full flavor ... so you enjoy all the bold
draft taste Iroquois has brewed in. Then take
a bold sip, and you'll agree: the fun begins with
IROQUOIS-the bold beer with the bold draft taste!
IROQUOIS BREWERY, BUFFALO, N.Y.

�fJrMidenl3
mM6afje
Welcome to the 57th season of intercollegiate football at State University at Buffalo. On behalf of the faculty and students
may I extend a warm welcome and wish you
a pleasant and exciting afternoon.
As those of you who are old friends of the
U.B. Bulls well know, the significance of this
game and the entire season goes beyond the
won-lost record. The Bulls have been fighting a come-from behind battle over the past
several years to maintain and improve nationally-recognized intercollegiate football
on the Niagara Frontier. In 1958, we were
catapulted into the national football spotlight by upsetting Harvard and Columbia
enroute to a 8- 1-0 record and the Lambert
Cup, symbol of Eastern Small College
supremacy.
It was the consensus of opinion that in
1958 we had achieved a highly respected
football plateau, but for the Bulls it was to serve only as a pad from which to launch into greater challenges. On
August 3, 1962, the National Collegiate Athletic Association classified the University team in the "major college"
status. During the subsequent two seasons since the achievement of this category, the Bulls have compiled respectable records of 6-3-0 and 5-3- 1.
This year we face the lOth consecutive "toughest schedule in history," without a single so-called "breather"
on the entire 10-game slate.
In joining us today for the primary purpose of enjoying top-notch football, your presence also becomes a source
of great pride to this University. It reinforces our certainty that the community, the region and the State are
all working with us in our goal to become one of the outstanding multi-purpose universities in the Nation.
A major step toward the achievement of this goal was made last spring when the Board of Trustees of State
University of New York announced the site for the development of a new campus.
More than 1,000 acres on Millersport Highway, about three miles north of the present campus, has been earmarked for the $130 million expansion. While the new campus emerges, the present site will simultaneously be
developed into an expanded health sciences complex. Together, the two campuses will house what will ultimately
be a graduate center among the finest in the Nation.
I think you will agree that in the classrooms and laboratories as well as on the playing field, the future looks
bright indeed for the University and the community.
C. C. FURNAS, President

�1864 - 100th ANNIVERSARY - 1964
1964 marks our 1OOth year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area .

at the downtow n
Western Savings Bank

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.

SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
f or you r convenience on the ground
floor (Court Street entrance)

Established 1 864

REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
APPRAISALS
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
17-21 S. Divisio n St.,

Ellicott Squa re
Tl 4-5700

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360 Delaware Ave.

Buffalo, N. Y. 14202

627 MAIN STREET

BUFFALO, N.Y.
TL 2-3456

TL 6-9000
2

�Buffalo - A Growing University
The announcement this summer by the State University of New York of a multi-million dollar expansion
of the State University at Buffalo marked another step
forward by the University in becoming a major Eastern
educational institution "among the finest in the land."
The day we have been waiting for has come!" exclaimed Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, University President.
"We now have the go-ahead to build the truly great
University that all of us have dreamed of."
On September lst, 1962, the U nivcrsity of Duffalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become the
major campus segment of the widespread system of the
State University of New York. The new name, created
by State University offtcials, is: State University of New
York at Buffalo. HO\\Cver, in deference to sweatshirtstitchers and typewriter repairmen, alumni seem to prefer the continuance of "UB" or "University of Buffalo"
where intercollegiate teams are concerned.
One of America's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo
has been the educational capitol of Western New York
since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the fourteenyear-old home of 28,000 people. The "University" was
the School of Medicine until 1886 when the School of
Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was Millard
Fillmore, a first-citizen of the young community, who
continued his UB leadership during his term as the
thirteenth President of the United States.
The fourteen University Divisions are: School of
Medicine (1846); School of Pharmacy (1886); School
of Law (1887); School of Dentistry (1892); College of
Arts and Sciences (1913; Summer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College, evening division (1923); School
of Business Administration (1927); School of Education
(1931); School of Social Work (1936); Graduate School
of Arts and Sciences (1939) ; School of Nursing (1940);
School of Engineering ( 1946); and University College
(including associate degrees, 1958).
Buffalo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood of
16,000- of which 8,000 arc full-time undergraduate
students. The enrollment is expected to soar in the next
few years, especially in view of the State afftliation.
To meet the influx of resident students during the
past decade a total of six dormitories have been constructed, with the seventh to be dedicated this fall. The
$2 million Acheson Hall of Chemistry, the new Norton
Union, the Baird Music Hall and the Western New
York Nuclear Research Center represent the efforts of
private endowment and local leadership.
Past projections have indicated that State University
of New York at Buffalo will need by 1970:
More than 9,000,000 square feet of space for an
anticipated total enrollment of 27,500 students.
Immediate needs include classroom buildings, a
library, residence halls, a fine arts center, an infirmary
and health services building, a university teaching
hospital, a health sciences building, a continuing education center, a physics building, an engineering building,
a physcal education and intramural building, and an
administration building.
Adequate parking space for 12,500 automobiles will
be needed.
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of Buffalo
continues its fine tradition of service to the Niagara
Frontier and the State of New York.

�Back Row: Buddy Ryan, line coach; Dewey Wade, freshman coach; Bob Deming, backfield coach. Front Row: Ron LaRocque,
backfield coach; Dick Offenhamer, hood coach; Charlie Reeves, line coach.

LOOKING FOR A SOLUTION TO YOUR

FINANCIAL PROBLEMS?
Need money for college tuition? A much needed
vacation? An addition to your home? In fact,
for any worthwhile purpose? The solution is as
near as your phone. Dial 854-4950. Ask for Mr.
Redicash Phone-Loans. Pick up the money at
any B.O.B. office: 17 Court at Pearl/694 Fillmore at Broadway/2157 Seneca near Cazenovia/ 4248 Delaware at Dreyer/ 4954 Harlem
at Sheridan/ 3871 Union at George Urban / 4184
Seneca at Mill Road.

BANK OF
BUFFALO
Member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

�JAMES E. PEELLE
Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at UB than genial Jim.

(

Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the
orth Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue University, a career
which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War II
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gave up football coaching to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the university began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball
team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in NCAA
Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of
anecdotes make him a much sough-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerous civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy, and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.

DICK OFFENHAMER
Architect of Victory
"Local boy makes good" could well be the theme of this piece,
for it accurately describes the brilliant athletic career of UB
football coach Dick Offenhamer.
Although Offie grew up just a "hoot 'n' a holle( from the
UB campus, his trail to that campus was long and smuous.
An All-High baseball and football star at Bennett High
School, Dick chose to attend Colgate University.
It was a wise choice. Colgate was then enjoying the halcyon
days of Andy Kerr, when the Red Raiders of the Chenango
Valley went on scalping forays to such way-stations as Yankee
Stadium, New Orleans, Iowa City, and Columbus, Ohio. Offenharner was more than merely present on these trips; he was the
right-halfback in the Kerr double wing attack and he achieved
lasting fame as one of Colgate's all-time greats.
While at college, Offenhamer was light-heavyweight boxing
champion of the school and he also starred on the baseball team.
He received his B.A. in 1936.
Offenhamer coached football at Kenmore High School for
11 years, and his teams won or tied 5 championships in the
Niagara Frontier Conference.
After World War II he returned to Colgate as director of
freshman athletics freshman football coach, and boxing coach.
Dick came td the University of Buffalo in 1955, a time
at which UB's football fortunes were at their lowest ebb. He
promptly exerted his skills, knowledge and personality to a difficult situation and the results speak for themselves.
During Offie's 9-year tenure UB has won 49, lost 30, and
tied 2. He had 8-1-0 seasons in 1958, when UB won the Lambert
Cup, and again in 1959, when UB was runner-up for that trophy.
Offenhamer has won numerous personal honors. He was
national "Coach of the Week" in 1958 after his team scored a
34-14 upset over Columbia. That same year the Buffalo Evening
News cited him as one of Western ew York's 10 Outstanding
Citizens. This past spring both the Buffalo Cou~cil of the
Knights of Columbus and Cardinal Dougherty H1gh School
saluted him as Western New York's "Coach of the Year."

5

�JAMES DUPREY

JOSEPH HOLLY

ROBERT EDWARD

FRED GERINGER

GERALD PAWLOSKI

CRAIG HELENBROOK

WILLIAM TAYLOR

LEO RAT AMESS

BRUCE HART

DAVID NICHOLS

DENNIS PRYZKUT A

RICHARD CONDINO

�JOE GARAFOLA

JOHN BASTA

JAMES ROBIE

MICHAEL LUCIDI

JOSEPH OSCSODAL

RUSS MacKELLAR

GREENARD POLES

RICHARD VITTORINI

THOMAS OATMEYER

�BUFFALO BULLS - 1964

Front Row (L to R)-Blair, Gartz, B. MacKellar, Dunbar, Botula, McEwen, Robie, Capuana, Miceli, Schleifer, Finochio, Sella, Ryan,
Barksdale, Bonner, Dunn, Wilbur.
2nd Row (L to R)-LaFountain, Edward, Rate!, Duranko, Oatmeyer, Poodry, Piestrak, Ratamess, Capt. Pawloski, Gilbert, Hart,
Castiglia, Nichols, Garafola, McNally, Lucidi, McNamara, Taylor, Holly, Helenbrook.
3rd Row (L to R)-Oscsodal, T. Ridolfi, Plummer, Geringer, Shine, Basta, R. MacKellar, Poles, Burden, Wuest, Kent, Dechowitz,
Popp, Duprey, Vittorini, Przykuta, Webber, R. Ridolfi.
4th Row (L to R)-Mgr. Lisiecki, Ass't trainer Shakan, Ass't coach Wade, Ass't coach LaRoque, Head coach Offenhamer, Ass't coach
Deming, Ass't coach Reeves, Ass't coach Ryan, Head trainer Sciera, Ass't trainer Pecorella, Mgr. Zeif.

NINE DECADES AGO

the launching of
"advice in depth "

W

HEN ships with sails studded Buffalo's seascape over 90 years ago, when Buffalo and
the whole nation began to feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution ... D ominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning to make its mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp;D's services for the investing public sustained
a steady growth despite financial panics, wars and
depressions. Today the talent of an organization of
more than 400 - including research specialists,
counselors, and administrative people stands behind
our Buffalo office, giving you opportunity for invest·
ment advict in depth. Let us advise you about your
future investment plans or review your portfolio.

D OMI NICK

&amp;

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H . K,;ox III
Gtntral Parlntr
112 2 Floor, Marine TruSI Bldg. 856·7471
Mtmbtrs Ntw York, A.mtrican, Midwtst, and Toronto Stock ExchangtJ
SEYMOUR

GERRY PAWLOSKI
Captain
3

�AERIAL VIEW OF BUFFALO CAMPUS

COMPLETE LOCAL STOCKS . . .

ERNST LANDES CO .

structurals • bars • plates • sheets

FULL FACILITIES . . .

COMMERCIAL PRINTING

shearing • pickling • oiling
• burning • sawing

TIMETABLE DELIVERY . . .

Reserved Seat Ticket Printers

when you need it • as you ordered it • ready for use

Don Kroeger

•
TL 2-8087

363 GENESEE STREET

OUR TENTH YEAR SELLING

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THE AMAZING VOLKSWAGEN AT

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Kelly's

Plumber
INC.

•

PARTS AND SERVICE
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NEW AND USED
HOME OF "KELLY CARED FOR CARS"
3325 GENESEE ST.
BUFFALO, N.Y.

259 DELAWARE AVENUE

TL 2-7080

AT THRUWAY OVERPASS
NF 3-8000

s

�B

u
F

F
A
L
0

�11

�Hours
Monday-Friday 8:30-8:30
Saturdays . . . 10:00-2.:00

Largest
Selection
of

QIJALITY
Paperbacks
in
Western
New York

Students~

Old Students~ Future Students •••
Come in and Browse •••
HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY ITEMS AVAILABLE
GIFTS

COLLEGE CLOTHING
(adult, youth, juvenile)

College Jewelry

Sweat Shirts

Ceramics

Sweaters

Glassware

Blazers

Stuffed Animals

College Jackets

Studio Cards

Pennants -

Banners

�THE SEASON TO DATE
Buffalo
Buffalo
Buffalo
Buffalo
Buffalo

35
9
22
12
14

Boston U.
Cornell
Massachusetts
Marshall
VMI

0
9
24
14
10

by
lack Sharpe

Buffalo 14
Holy Cross 20
Oct. 31-Delaware at Rotary Field
Nov. 7-Richmond at Rotary Field
Nov. 14-Colgate at Rotary Field
Nov. 21-Villanova at Rotary Field

Today the University of Buffalo plays its seventh game of the season and faces one of its toughest opponents
in Delaware. The Bulls record to date is 2-3-1, below expectations at this stage in a season that has been the
most frustrating to coaches and players alike. Everything that can happen in a football game has happened to
Buffalo, and most of them occur all over again in every game. How long this state of affairs will continue is the
question of the moment and it is fervently hoped that it will end this afternoon against the Blue Hens of Dave
Nelson.
The Holy Cross game of last week is a perfect example of the problems that have beset Coach Dick Offenharner's charges this year. Bad passes from center, dropped forward passes, a critical fumble, and three long gainers
by the Crusaders spelled out a 20-14 defeat. These are the exact same occurences that have wrecked UB all year.
There is no need to go into detail about the plays mentioned. Suffice to say they set up two Holy Cross touchdowns and scored the third on a 76 yard pass play to what must be the slowest end in eastern football. With a
ten yard start on UB's defensive back and only thirty yards to go, he just made it, being hit at the goal line. The
thing is, he made it and it is just such plays as this, a "busted" play that ends up in a TD, that have killed Buffalo's
hopes all season. Even then the Bulls might have won but a fumble on a first down play when the runner was all
by himself with nothing but grass ahead of him stalled that drive and was Buffalo's last threat.
It would be well for the disappointed fans to remember that the players, after such a game, feel a hundred
times worse. They have practiced hard all week, gone out and hit and been hit all Saturday afternoon, and
winning is what makes it worthwhile, no matter what the poets say. When they lose, they lose hard but they come
back next week and try again with just as much dedication and drive as before. The ability of college athletes to
come back and fight back against adversity when things are going badly is a valuable quality that could well be
emulated by all of us.

Today Delaware visits Rotary Field and brings with it another fine afternoon of football. The Blue Hens have
been nothing but trouble to the Bulls in the past three years and will be again today. Three years ago Buffalo
went to Delaware and lost 36-12 in a game that saw them down thirty points at half time thanks to passes over
the punters head, fumbled kickoffs, interceptions and various other misfortunes. The next year Delaware came to
Rotary Field and John Stofa turned in one of the most remarkable performances in UB history when he passed
the Bulls the length of the field twice in the last eight minutes for a 20-19 victory on Homecoming Day. Last year
it was disaster again as Delaware won 34-6 in a contest that saw Buffalo stop the Blue Hens completely on the
ground, but give up three TD passes. The small college national champions took advantage of every mistake to get
thirty four points in a game that saw the UB line completely stop Delaware's running game and contain completely
their fine back, Mike Brown. Gerry Philbin had one of his finest contests and spent most of the afternoon in
the Blue Hen backfield knocking people down. However, it's the score that counts and here Delaware had a big
edge.
Coach David Nelson has another potent crew in 1964, rolling to a 48-6 win over Lehigh last week. Earlier
they were whipped by Villanova, but the Wildcats, a future UB opponent, have whipped everybody else as well.
In Bill Hopkins they have the sixth ranked runner in the nation with 648 yards in 98 carries and 7 touchdowns.
Their quarterback, Van Grofski, has completed 52 of 98 for 703 yards and 5 TDs while their fine end Wes Firth
has nabbed 22 passes for 227 yards and 2 six pointers. You can see they have a potent offense and pose defensive
problems to any ball club they meet. In Coach Dave Nelson they have the prime exponent and originator of the
Winged-T and he runs from a lot of other offensive formations as well. A nationally-known and respected Coach,
Nelson's teams are always well coached, alert, aggressive, and have great desire.
Next week Richmond comes to town with one of the most potent offenses in the country. They have two ends
already drafted by the pros, a 6-4, 225 pound quarterback who is in the top ten in the country in passing and a
big, tough line. It will be an interesting afternoon, but right now it's Delaware and a great ball game. Enjoy it!

�HAVE A TRANSISTOR RADIO WITH lOU ? ==:::==:::==:::==:::
DIAL 910 FOR U. B. PLAY- BY-PLAY !.

JACK SHARPE
Every U. B. Game
Home and Away
"THE SOUND
OF THE CITY"

PROBABLE BUFFALO LINE-UP
S. E.
80 HELENBROOK

84 LaFOUNTAIN

WEBR

81

McNAMARA

83 MICELI
W .B.

42 OATMEYER
S.T.

970 AM
94.5 FM

77 RATAMESS
71 TAYLOR
76 WUEST
79 RATEL

H

e

c.

D

r

~

CANISIUS
and ST. BONA
BASKETBALL

52
54
50
55

HOLLY
LUCID!
DUPREY
GARAFOLA

Q .B.
17 GILBERT
15 ROBIE

F. B.

14 GERINGER

20 BARKSDALE

32 PRYZUTA
36 CONDINO

T.B.
W .G.

45 EDWARD

64 HART

22 CAPUANA
44 WEBBER
40 SELLA

60 DUNBAR
66 CASTIGLIA

W.T.

72 KENT

Charlie Bailey's
Sportscasts at
5:30 and 6:15 p. m.
Mon. thru Sat.

74 PIESTRAK
70 PUGH
78 BASTA

W .E.
88 PAWLOSKI
82 NICHOLS
86 DUNN
89 BURDEN
HEAD COACH- DICK OFFENHAMER

14

�BARTLETT BUICK
3080 MAIN STREET

TF 6-1000

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

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ONLY $1793
PROBABLE DELAWARE LINE-UP
R.E.
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89 PURZYCKI
82 WALDMAN

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76 SPANGLER
72 FREEBERY

74 STEWART

R.G .

47 MUELLER

65 SLATTERY
61 CHRISTENSEN

F. B.

30 McCRANN
36 BURSLEM

37 !lARRABEE

UNIVERSITY
PLAZA
''Boosts the
Buffalo Bulls''
ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSON CO.

R.H .

22 GREEN
43 HOOPES

(M inus art work, of course)

67 HIRST

AMHERST THEATER
A &amp; P SUPER MARKET
CAVAGES- Records- Cards

Q.B .
19 VonGROFSKI

1 7 ROMBERGER
14 LUBY

l.H .
45 HOPKINS
41 BILLS
46 FAY

C.
56 TODDINGS
63 ANDERSON
5)

BONADONNA

l. G.
64 INSUA
68 Di CLEMENTE
3 2 LAPINSKI

Compliments of A FRIEND
GUSTAV A. FRISCH - Jeweler
KOEGL 'S BAKERY
LEONARDO'S RESTAURANT
MandT TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office
PLAZA SHOE REPAIR

L.T.
70 GIBBONS
75 OGDEN
77 BROWN

POHL'S SHOES
UB Loafers &amp; Flats
STYLE CREST MEN'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP

l.E .
86 FRITH
81

ULBRICH'S - Stationery

DREUDING

85 SAND
COACH- DAVE NELSON

15

UNIVERSITY RESTAURANT
AND DELICATESSEN

�..

~

1965 VARSITY SCHEDULE
Sept. 18

Boston College

away

Oct.

16

Richmond

home

Sept. 25

Tampa

home

Oct.

23

Villanova

away

Holy Cross

away

Delaware

away

THE COVER
~

Willie Shine drives for yardOct.

2

Massachusetts

home

Oct.

30

Oct.

9

Boston University

home

Nov.

6

Nov. 13

Colgate

home

age but not much against
VMI. Buffalo won this one
in the last quarter, 14-10.

BUFFALO BULLS 1964 ROSTER
No.

JONESRICH
MILK
CORP.
'
~

"It's Flavor Guarded "

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70 E. FERRY STREET
TT 3-4080

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*-

Name
Class
Pos. Age
Ht.
Wt.
Hometown
Geringer, Frederick
QB
19
Jr.
5-9
160
Danville, Pa.
Robie, James
QB
So.
18
202
6-3
Williamsville, N. Y.
Duranko, Frederick
QB
21
Jr.
6-0
195
Johnstown, Pa.
Gilbert, Donald
QB
Sr.
21
190
5-10
Buffalo, N. Y.
Ridolfi, Ronald
QB
20
Jr.
5-9
165
Pawtucket, R. I.
Barksdale, James
HB
So.
18
5-11
165
Syracuse, N . Y.
Capuana, Nicholas
So.
HB
18
5-9
173
Utica, N.Y.
Ridolfi, Thomas
HB
20
Jr.
165
5-9
Pawtucket, R. I.
Gartz, Ronald
So.
HB
24
175
5-8
Rochester, N. Y.
McEwen, James
So.
HB
20
185
5-10
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Wilbur, Gerald
So.
FB
19
190
6-0
Factoryville, Pa.
FB
Condino, Richard
Sr.
21
6-2
205
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Pryzkuta, Dennis
FB
19
202
5-10
Jr.
Depew, N.Y.
HB
Sella, Daniel
So.
18
5-10
180
McKees Rocks, Pa.
HB
Oatmeyer, Thomas
Sr.
20
176
5-8
Buffalo, N. Y.
HB
21
Webber, James
182
5-9
Manlius, N. Y.
Jr.
HB
Edward, Robert
Sr.
21
6-2
205
Buffalo, N. Y.
HB
Vittorini, Richard
21
197
5-11
Jr.
Lackawanna, N. Y.
HB
20
Shine, Willie
205
6-3
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Jr.
c
20
215
Duprey, James
5-10
Jr.
Peru, N.Y.
c
19
210
Holly, Joseph
6-1
Jr.
Lyons, N.Y.
21
Sr.
c
195
Lucidi, Michael
6-1
New Kensington, Pa.
21
Sr.
c
200
Garafola, Joseph
5-11
Gloversville, N . Y.
18
208
c
MacKellar, Bruce
So.
6-0
Kenmore, N.Y.
18
203
G
5-11
Dunbar, Richard
So.
Dearborn, Mich.
20
206
Sr.
G
5-9
McNally, James
Kenmore, N.Y.
18
200
G
6-0
Riverhead, N. Y.
Botula, Charles
So.
210
21
G
5-10
Poles, E. Greenard
Jr.
Rochester, N . Y.
205
G
24
Sr.
6-0
Hart, Bruce
Youngwood, Pa.
22
204
G
5-10
Sr.
Fulton, N. Y.
Castiglia, Nicholas
212
20
G
5-10
Kenmore, N.Y.
MacKellar, Russell
Jr.
215
22
G
6-0
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Dechowitz, Richard So.
220
20
6-1
T
McKeesport, Pa.
So.
Pugh, Ronald
213
20
6-2
Youngstown, N. Y.
T
Taylor, William
Jr.
225
20
6-1
Detroit, Mich.
T
Kent, Brian
Jr.
195
Wayne, Mich.
22
T
6-0
Sr.
Piestrak, Dominic
200
Syracuse, N. Y.
18
5-10
T
Finochio, James
So.
225
Whitesboro, N. Y.
19
T
6-3
Wuest, Michael
Jr.
260
Berwick, Pa.
21
6-2
Sr.
T
Ratamess, Leo
206
Glens Falls, N. Y.
20
6-1
T
Basta, John
Jr.
209
Buffalo, N. Y.
21
6-3
Sr.
T
Rate!, James
200
20
6-1
E
Helenbrook, Craig
Cheektowaga, N.Y.
Jr.
191
20
6-2
Binghamton, N. Y.
Sr.
E
McNamara, James
215
20
Factoryville, Pa.
Nichols, David
6-1
Sr.
E
210
Batavia, N. Y.
19
6-2
Miceli, Anthony
E
So.
210
20
5-11
Saranac Lake, N. Y.
LaFountain, Gerald Jr.
E
190
Cranston, R. I.
Dunn, James
19
6-4
So.
E
195
Pawloski, Gerald
21
5-11
Lincoln Park, Mich.
Sr.
E
185
Franklin Sq., L. I.
Burden, Dennis
6-1
20
E
Jr.
170
Budapest, Hungary
21
5-10
Oscsodal, Joseph
K
Jr.
Lettermen
Managers: Michael Zeif, Rochester, N. Y.; Frederick Brace, Buffalo, N. Y.

lli

\

�~

What's the Geneseecret. • •
DELAWARE UNIVERSITY ROSTER
No.

10
11
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16
17
19
21
22
25

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32
34
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37
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43
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47
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52
53
54
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59
60

61
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71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89

Name
Fleming, Mike
Alleman, Ted
Luby, Buddy
Istnick, Jack
Romberger, Jim
Van Grofski, Tom
Slobojan, AI
Green, Stu
Carlyle, Bruce
McCrann, Mike
Lapinski, Tom
Donolli, Joe
Burslem, Dave
Barrabee, Brian
Bills, Ken
McAneny, Neil
Hoopes, Jack
Hopkins, Bill
Fay, Mike
Mueller, Paul
Godek, Joe
Palumbo, John
Shalaway, Alex
Bonadonna, Russ
Smack, Jim
Toddings, Denny
Podgorski, Joe
Csatari, Bill
Christensen, Art
Neiger, Bill
Anderson, Ed
Insua, Manny
Slattery, Herb
Mate, Bill
Hirst, Tom
DiClemente, Bert
Brunner, Don
Gibbons, John
Newman, Dick
Freebery, Jim
Smith, Jim
Stewart, Dave
Ogden, Stan
Spangler, Bill
Brown, Jim
Wilkinson, Paul
Kennedy, John
Powell, Don
Dreuding, Bill
W aidman, Gene
Bianco, Ron
Price, Mike
Sand, Ed
Frith, Wes
Peterson, Ron
Vanderford, Tom
Purzycki, Mike

Class
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
J r,
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Sr.

Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.

Age
Pos.
QB
20
DB
20
QB
19
QB-DB 21
QB
19
QB
20
19
HB
23
HB
20
HB
20
FB
20
FB
21
FB
19
FB
21
FB
19
HB
20
HB
19
HB
21
HB
21
HB
20
HB

c

G
T

c
T

c

E
G
G
G

c

G
G
G
G
G
G
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
G
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

19
19
20
19
21
20
20
20
20
20
20
21
19
19
20
20
21
20
21
20
19
20
19
21
21
19
19
21
20
19
21
21
19
20
21
19
19

Ht.

Wt.

5-9
6-1
6-0
5-8
6-0
6-1
5-ll
5-8
5-8
6-l
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-l
5-9
5-ll
5-11
5-11
6-l
6-0
5-10
5-11
6-1
6-l
6-1
6-0
6-2
5-11
6-l
5-11
5-11
5-11
6-3
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-1
6-0
6-2
6-0
6-2
6-4
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-0
6-l
6-2
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-l

160
170
185
162
173
180
170
170
162
203
190
205
190
200
170
185
165
185
200
187
162
185
210
208
220
225
205
185
200
195
200
190
235
195
195
200
195
225
200
215
220
230
220
205
215
170
190
195
190
185
205
170
200
195
185
190
190

Hometown
Wenonah, N. J.
Altoona, Pa.
Clifton Heights, Pa.
E. Palestine, Ohio
Middletown, Pa.
Bloomfield, N. J.
Glenside, Pa.
Newark, Del.
New Castle, Del.
Amityville, N. Y.
Phoenixville, Pa.
Bethpage, N. Y.
Wilmington, Del.
Oakhurst, N. J.
Danville, Pa.
Wilmington, Del.
Ridley Park, Pa.
Dover, N.J.
Wilmington, Del.
State College, Pa.
Wilmington, Del.
Little Silver, N. J.
Niantic, Pa.
Lindhurst, N. J.
Milford, Del.
Bricktown, N. J.
Dayton, N. J.
South River, N. J.
W. Englewood, . J.
Wilmington, Del.
Clark, N.J.
Belleville, N. J.
Wilmington, Del.
Trenton, N. J.
Olean, N.Y.
Wilmington, Del.
Buffalo, N. Y.
State College, Pa.
Long Beach, N. Y.
Wilmington, Del.
Wilmington, Del.
Moorestown, N. J.
Flourtown, Pa.
Baltimore, Md.
Barberton, Ohio
Turtle Creek, Pa.
Wilmington, Del.
Delmar, Del.
Trevose, Pa.
Melrose Park, Pa.
Wilmington, Del.
Lewistown, Pa.
Montclair, N. J.
Flourtown, Pa.
Tallahassee, Fla.
Charlestown, W. Va.
Newark, N. J.

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

�DELAWARE UNIVERSITY - 1964

Left to Right, FRONT ROW: Jay Gibbons, Jim Brown, Wes Frith, Danny Toddings, Captain Ron Bianco, Head Coach Dave Nelson,
Herb Slattery, Bill Spangler, Don Brunner, Alex Shalaway.
SECOND ROW: Manny Insua, Joe Donolli, Ron Peterson, Bill Dreuding, Dave Stewart, Dick Newman, Mike Price, Gene Waldman,
Tom Hirst, Paul Wilkinson, Stan Ogden.
THIRD ROW: Bill Mate, Jim Freebery, Ed Sand, Tom Vanderford, Don Powell, Bill Neiger, Russ Bonadonna, Bert DiClemente,
John Kennedy, Jim Smith, Jim Smack, Joe Podgorski, Bill Csatari.
FOURTH ROW: Ed Anderson, Art Christensen, John Palumbo, Mike Purzycki, Joe Godek, Jack Istnick, Mike Fay, Neil McAneny,
Tom Lapinski, Bill Hopkins, Brian Barrabee, Tom Van Grofski, Mike McCrann.
FIFTH ROW: Paul Mueller, Harvey Johnson, Harry Starrett, Dave Burslem, Bruce Carlyle, Ken Bills, Stu Green, Jack Hoopes, Alan
Slobojan, Buddy Luby, Mike Fleming, Ted Alleman, Jim Romberger.
SIXTH ROW: Freshman Coach Jimmy Flynn, Backfield Coach Tubby Raymond, Trainer Roy Rylander, Assistant Trainer Chuck
Hewlings, Line Coach Ed Maley, End Coach Whiz Wisniewski, Assistant Coach Scotty Duncan, Assistant Coach Ted Kempski,
Assistant Coach Joe Slobojan, Manager Jeff Frey, Assistant Manager Noel Bryson.

• STATION WAGONS
• KARMAN GHIAS

RON BIANCO Captain
18

�A History of

DELAWARE UNIVERSITY
The University has its origin in a small colonial church school founded in 1743 near New
London, Pennsylvania, by the Reverend Francis
Alison, a Presbyterian clergyman. It was moved
to Newark, Delaware, by the Reverend Alexander McDowell about 1765 and chartered by
Thomas and Richard Penn in 1769. Instruction in the academy was interrupted by the
Revolutionary War in the period between 1777
and 1780 and again by financial difficulties
between 1769 and 1799. From this time until
1834 it continued as one of the outstanding
academies of its day.
When the degree-granting institution known
as Newark College was opened in 1834, under
a charter granted by the General Assembly of
Delaware, Newark Academy was merged with
it as its preparatory department. The name
of the institution was changed to Delaware
College in 1843.
The University of Delaware, at the same
time, is proud to be numbered among the 52
original land-grant institutions of the nation.
Land-grant colleges were founded as a protest
against the limited opportunities for higher
education, then available only to the wealthy
few who sought to prepare for the learned
professions. Their establishment led, however,
to the important end of supplying the young
nation with the practical knowledge and skills
needed for its development and progress.
The Women's College, affiliated with Delaware College, was establishment in 1913, and
DR. JOHN A. PERKINS
opened to students on September 15, 1914.
In 1921 Delaware College and the Women's
President
College were united under the name of the
University of Delaware.
The University is controlled by a 32-member
Board of Trustees composed of representatives
from the three counties of the state and including four ex officio members, the President of the University, the
Governor of the State, the Master of the State Grange and the President of the State Board of Education.

19

�DELAWARE UNIVERSITY COACHING STAFF- 1964
: . ~. ~
I

Left to Right: Head Coach Dave Nelson, Backfield Coach T ubby Raymond, Assistan t Coach Raymond (Scotty) D uncan, T rai ner Roy
Rylander, Freshman Coach Jimmy Flynn, Li ne Coach Ed Maley, End Coach Whi z W isniewski .

KEYSER BROS. PONTIAC-CADILLAC INC.

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NX 4-1910

CONSTRUCTION
CO.~

75 Main Street
North Tonawanda, New York

INC.

Corner of
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6 N. PEARL STREET
BUFFALO, N. Y. 142.02.

Western N. Y .'s Most
Complete Ski Shop
For the Entire Family

886-2.300

Shops at Glenwood Acres

20

�Dave Nelson, one of the nation's most respected
athletic figures and the outstanding personage of the
University of Delaware's 72-year gridiron history, has
been athletic director and head football coach at Delaware since 1951.
"The Admiral," articulate spokesman for the game
and an authority on its rules and play, holds a remarkable 75-33-2 record at Delaware and an over-all log of
96-39-6 in his 17 years as a head coach. His undefeated,
untied 1963 team, American small-college champion
according to the United Press, was considered the finest
team in Blue Hen football history.
For the past two seasons, Nelson has coached his
squads to the Middle Atlantic Conference University
Division championship, and both teams have won the
Lambert Cup, emblematic of Eastern small college
football supremacy. No other team had ever successfully defended the Cup. Delaware's 1959 squad also
earned the Lambert Cup and Middle Atlantic Conference championship.
Nelson has built the Delaware football powerhouse
around his now-famous Winged-T offensive system,
which emphasizes speed, deception and technical preCISIOn. While a halfback at the University of Michigan,
Nelson played under the single-wing system of Fritz
DAVID NELSON
Crisler; he led the Wolverines in rushing during his
Athletic Director and Coach of Football
senior year, averaging 6.3 yards per carry.
Innumerable college and high school coaches across
the nation have accepted Nelson's philosophy and
system of play, often with striking results. During the
1956 and 1958 seasons, the University of Iowa gridders-coached by Forest Evashevski, former teammate and
long-time friend of Nelson-swept to victory in the Big Ten and subsequently in the Rose Bowl using the borrowed
Delaware Winged-T offense. Nelson and Evashevski collaborated on a book, Scoring Power with the Winged-T
Offense, published in September, 1957. Since then, Nelson has written two other gridiron best sellers-Football,
Principles and Play, and The Winged-T Playbook.
In 1956, Dave was elected District II representative to the Rules Committee of the National Collegiate Athletic
Association. He continues as editor of the NCAA rules committee, a position of considerable influence. Nelson
served as president of the Eastern College Athletic Conference during 1960. He also coached the North squad
in the North-South Shrine Game at Miami, Fla., in 1959, and handled the Small College All-Stars in the AllAmerican Bowl, Tucson, Ariz., for three years. In 1962, his charges defeated their major counterparts in a significant upset.
The Detroit, Mich. native has been recognized academically as well. He earned the Big Ten Conference award
for proficiency in scholarship and athletics in 1941, was elected to membership in Phi Kappa Phi and was chosen
by the University of Michigan's School of Education as a William H. Payne scholar for 1946-47, in recognition
of "unusual academic proficiency and the maintenance of high professional ideals." He received his bachelor's
degree from Michigan in 1942 and later earned the Master of Science diploma there.
Nelson, who won three battle stars as a U.S. Navy lieutenant in the Pacific Theatre, has been head football
coach and director of athletics at Hillsdale College, backfield coach at Harvard and head football coach at Maine.
He and his wife, Shirley, have three children. Chess is numbered among his favorite hobbies, and he is also one
of the nation's best paddleball players. The Nelsons reside in Newark.

:!I

�DELAWARE

MIKE PURZYCKI

BILL HOPKINS

BERT DICLEMENTE

JIM FREEBERY

MANNY INSUA

STAN OGDEN

TOM VAN GROFSKI

BILL SPANGLER

WES FRITH

JACK HOOPES

KEN BILLS

BUDDY LUBY

22

�UNIVERSITY

MIKE McCRANN

DENNY TODDINGS

ED ANDERSON

BILL DREUDING

ART CHRISTENSEN

JAY GIBBONS

TED ALLEMAN

PAUL MUELLER

JACK ISTNICK

23

DAVE BURSLEM

�Hugh M. Morris
Library

Delaware
University
Hullihen Hall

Old College
24

�BUFFALO MEDICAL AND TRAINING STAFF

I

J :

JOHN SClERA,
Trainer

NORB BASCHNAGEL,
Asst. Trainer

AHa
MG Romeo
ROVER

VOLVO

A USTIN
HEALEY

DR. TOM MARRIOTT
Team Physician
'

JACiUAR
Land
Rover

Leo Sauer
FUNERAL HOME
INC.

HUNT
IMPORTED CARS INC.

• 1933 KENSINGTON AVENUE
TF 3-1695

1025 HERTEL AVENUE
(JUST WEST OF DELAWARE AVE.)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK
• 823 GENESEE STREET

TELEPHONE

873-6717

TX 2-7183

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFFALO (2-2-1)
Buffalo 35 Boston U.
0
Buffalo 9 Cornell
9
Buffalo 22 Massachusetts 24
Buffalo 12 Marshall
14
Buffalo 14 V.M.I.
10
Oct. 24 Holy Cross
Oct. 31 Delaware
Nov. 7 Richmond
Nov. l4 Colgate
Nov.21 Villanova
92

Attendance: 6,600
17,000
9,754
6,500
21,000

60.854

57

Player
Don Gilbert
Dennis Przykuta
Bob Edward
Dick Condino
ick Capuana
Jim Robie
Willie Shine
Tom Oatmeyer
Jim Webber
Jim Barksdale
Fred Geringer
Ron Ridolfi

in 5 games

Totals

Player
Don Gilbert
Jim Robie
Ron Ridolfi
Totals

BUFFALO TEAM:
1st downs
Rushes, net yds., avg.
Passing
Pet. completions
Interceptions
Penalties
Fumbles

PASSING
Attempts Completions Interceptions Yds. TDs
26
55
7
415 4
2
2
0
10 0
0
1
0
0 0

58

28

7

425

4

RUSHING
Carried
64
58
31
29
27
6
13
3
4
2
1
I
239

Yards
244
214
151
132
148
25
23
9
4
1
0
-10

Avg.
3.8
3.6
4.8
4.5
5.4
4.0
1.7
3.0
1.0
0.5
0.0
0.0

941

3.9

(5 games)
79
239 for 941 (3.9)
28 for 425 yds.
48.2 (28/ 58)
6 for 130 yds.
15 for 154 yds.
16 (lost 8)

OPPONENTS
67
22-1 [or 732 (32)
39 for 671 yds.
47.5 (39/ 82)
7 for 97 yds.
27 for 232 yds.
12 (lost 8)

ADAM , MELDRUM &amp; ANDERSON'S CIRCLE OF BEAUTY BEAUTY SALON

The John W.
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STYLE DIRECTOR
keeps them
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INCORPORATED

•• • with hai r fash ions that
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He and o talented staff are

Engineers -

at your service for styling , coloring,
and wig-design, too!
Free consultations with Mr. Gene.
Haircut, $2 .25 Regu la r Operator,
$2.75 Stylist
Shampoo &amp; Sot, $2 .50 Regu la r Operator,
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2nd Flaar
TF .( . .(020
Ext. 14

Contractors

•
DAVID DONALD, President

O nelto j RESTAURANT &amp; SEAFOOD HOUSE

FRED 0 . FRANCIS, Vice Presiden t

MAIN AT BAILEY
(Across from Campus)

DONALD J. GREER, Secy.-Treas.
PHILIP P. THOIN, Asst. Secy.-Tre a s.

• ltaliall Dishes

•

• A merican Favorites
• Seafood Plates

Post Office Box 1068

• L egal Beverages

Buffalo, New York 14240

Serving from 11 A.M.
26

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
INTERCEPTIONS &amp; RETURNS
Player
No.
Yardage
Fred Geringer
64
1
Gerry LaFountain
1
1
Dick Condino
1
2
Dan Sella
2
3
Jim Duprey
1
60

Player
Gerry Pawloski
Bob Edward
Dick Condino
Jim Dunn
Willie Shine
Dave Nichols
Gerry LaFountain
Craig Helenbrook
Dennis Burden
Nick Capuana

SCORING
Dick Condino, 3 TD's rush, 1 TD rec. 24 pts; Bob Edward, 2
TD's rush, 1 PATR, 14 pts; Dennis Przykuta, 2 TD's rush, 12 pts;
Don Gilbert, 1 TD rush, 1 PATR, 8 pts; Joe Oscsodal, 1 FG,
5 PATK, 8 pts; Nick Capuana, 1 TD rush, 6 pts; Gerry Pawloski,
1 TD rec., 6 pts; Jim Dunn, 1 TD rec., 6 pts; Dave Nichols, 1
TD rec., 6 pts; Safety (Ball intentionally downed in end zone)
2 pts; Total 92 pts.
PUNT RETURNS
Player
No.
Fred Geringer
5
Dennis Przykuta
2
Nick Capuana
I
Gerry LaFountain
1
Jim Webber
1
Bob Edward
1

Total.
Player
Bob Edward
Dick Vittorini
Gerry Pawloski

Yardage
33
20
12

Yards
138
61
51
37
17
35
39
32
6
9

10
4
2
2
2
1
2
2
1
2
28
PUNTING
No. of Punts
14
1
2

TDs
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0

425
Yardage
549
32
42

4
Average
39.1
32.0
21.0

Save at Erie Federal

7
4
6

KICKOFF RETURNS
Player
No.
Willie Shine
6
Bob Edward
4
Dennis Przykuta
3
Dick Condino
1
Jim Dunn
1

RECEIVING
Receptions

• All accounts insured up to $10,000 by
the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation.

Yardage
188
69
52
18
0

• Money deposited by the tenth of EVERY
month immediately earns high dividends
from the first of the month.

All restricted gauges, precise tempers and finest finishes made
to your exact specifications.

COLD ROLLED STRIP STEEL
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Associate Members American Stock Exchange

PHONE TL 4-4035
MARINE TRUST BUILDING, BUFFALO, N. Y., 14203

NT 4-102.0

2555 Walden Avenue

e

Office in Ne w York, Rochester and Norwich, N. Y.

Buffalo, N.Y. 14225

Direct wire to Pe rshing &amp; Co., New York

27

�With the naming of UB as a major NCAA team in football, the University is now listed among the top 119 in
the nation and so referred to in historical football directories.
In researching UB football statistics and records for Mr. Steve Bodo, Jr., 9905 63rd Drive, Forest Hills, N. Y., we
have come up with some interesting facts through Mr. Bodo's records.
One fact verified by Mr. Art Powell- UB coach in 1916-22, is that UB 's first coach (full -time and official )
was Frank Mt. Pleasant- one of the original Carlisle Indians and teammate of the famous Jim Thorpe. He coached
our 1915 team . (3-4-0)
Until his appointment, Buffalo was under the informal guidance of volunteer coaches from 1894-1903. UB did
not field teams from 1904-1914.

University of Buffalo Football Records:
INDIVIDUAL: (for single season)

TEAM: (single season)

Points scored : 90 by Lou Corriere in 19 4 2
Rushing : 620 yards by Willie Evans in 1959
Most passes attempted : 128 by Don Holland in 1951
127 by John Stofa in 1961
Most passes completed: 64 by Don Holland in 195 1
64 by John Stofa in 1961
Most passing yardage: 807 by John Stofa in 1961
Most TD passes: 9 by Gordon Bukaty in 1958 (so ph)
Individual total offense: 1,092 yards by Don Holland in 1951
Most passes received : 23 by Bob Baker for 233 yds in 1961
Most receiving yards: 233 by Bob Baker in 1961
Best punting average : 40.6 yds by Bill Brogan in 1959

Points per game: 31.0 ( 279 in 9 games) - 19 59
Rushing per game: 226.7 in 1959
Passing yds per game: 151.2 in 1960
Total Offense per game: 355.6 in 1959

lltuiuersity lteigQts
salutes tqr

muffaln

~ulls

AMHERST DRIVING SCHOOL

HERZOG''S DRUG STORE, INC.

ANDY'S OPEN KITCHEN

E. P. LAUER OPTICIAN

BARTLETT BUICK, INC.

NORTH MAIN LIQUOR STORE

BATT CO. HEATING &amp; PLUMBING

O'CONNELL LUCAS &amp; CHELF, INC.

BITTERMAN'S RESTAURANT

RAY-WAN FURNITURE

CAMPUS CORNER OF BUFFALO, INC.

ROSSI'S STEAK HOUSE

COLONIAL HOUSE RESTAURANT

SOL'S ESQUIRE SHIRT LAUNDRY, INC.

GREAT LAKES MOTOR CORP.

UPPER LEVEL

28

�BUFFALO BULLS

RICHARD DUNBAR

JAMES WEBBER

DANIEL SELLA

MICHAEL ZEIF, Mgr.

SUPPORT THE BULLS - GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW
I wish to purchase ................ season tickets far 1965. No payment required until billed July 1st.
Nome .............................................................. ........................................ Telephone ............................................... .
Address ................................................................................................ -···········································································································
City ................................................... .......................................................... Zone ...................... State ................................................................ .
fill out the application and mail to Ticket Office, Clark Gym , Buffalo, N. Y.

14214

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29

�'
PROGRAM PATRONS
George E. Easterbrook
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Eaton

In Memory of Dom Grossi
Kenneth M. Alford
Owen B. Augspurger
J. Edwin Alford
Vincent G. Andronico
Harold A. Adel
William Aubitz

Benjamin Franklin
Robert D. Fernbach
Grant Fisher
Thomas S. Fanning
Edward D. Flaherty

Willard H. Bernhoft
Melvin L. Bong
Douglas Brock
Virgil H. F. Boeck
David E. Brennan
Francis B. Borowiec
W a! ter Brock
Charles F. Banas
Donald R. Barber
Stanley S. Blach
Max W. Burstein
Robert R. Barrett
William C. Baird

Lewis J. Greenky
George L. Grobe, Jr.
Joseph C. Gauchat
L. Robert Gauchat
William H. Georgi
A. Donald Gilden
Anthony S. Gugino
Norman Haber
Francis C. Hornung
Donald W. Hall
Lewis G. Harriman, Sr.
Fenton F. Harrison
Harold M. Harris
William Hildebrand, Jr.
Sheldon Hurwitz

John F. Canale
Roger T. Cook
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham N. Carrel
Ross M. Cellino
Ernest L. Colucci
John F. Connelly
John J. Cooney

Edwin F. Jaeckle
James W. Jordon
Grover R. James, Jr.
Evan E. James
Rudolph U. Johnson

John H. Dittman
Charles H. Diefendorf
James P. Donnelly
Louis A. DeVincentis
Arnold E. DiLaura

Russell Kidder, Jr.
M. Robert Koren
Kevin Kennedy
Edward W. Kinney
Bernard A. Kol her
Stephen F. Kissel
Seymour H. Knox
John A. Krull
Anthony W . Kozlowski

Robert J. Ehrenreich
George J. Evans
Milton Etengoff
Francis E. Ehret

30

�Vincent Scamurra
George H. Selkirk
Charles R. Sandler
Gerard E. Schultz
Roy E. Seibel
Carrol J. Shaver
James R. Sullivan
Harlan J. Swift
Seymour Schuller
Emile C. Sauer
George N. Seifert
Herbert Simon
Harry A. Sultz
Daniel T. Szymoniak
Leonard Swagler
Eugene M. Sullivan
Gerald C. Saltarelli
Burton B. Sarles
Fred S. Schwarz
Gertrude S. Swartout

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lipsitz
Norman B. Lewis
Glen H. Leak
Dexter Levy
Robert W. Lipsett
Angelo J. LaMastra
Willard Magavern
Charles J. McDonough
Robert J. Metzen
Leo M. Michalek
Wall ace H. Miller
Edward F. Mimmack
William L. Marcy
Frank Meyers
Luther Musselman
Joseph Manch
James C. McGarvey
Charles E. May
George M. Masotti
Harold F. Meese
Arthur F. Movalli
Samuel R. Miserendio
David J. Mahoney
J. Eugene McMahon
Anthony Manzella
Arthur Mogerman
Charles F. Matthews

Irvin L. Terry
Joseph C. Vispi
Charles P. Voltz
Louis A. Vendetti
Robert S. Wolfson
William G. Willis
Fred H. White
Fred B. Wilkes

John F. Nelson
Bertram Portin
Sidney B. Pfeifer
Matthew J. Pantera, Sr.

Aaron Yasimow

William R. Root
Leo J. Rosen
George J. Roberts
Robert E. Rich
Raymond Roll
Louis J. Russo
Hugh Me. M. Russ, Sr.
Frank T. Riforgiato
William W. Rathke
Herbert R. Reitz
Albert G. Rowe
Carlton C. Rausch

Stanley J. Zambron
hrown Pontiac, Inc.
Hunt Real Estate Corp.
Maier-Schule G.M.C. Inc.
Morris &amp; Reimann Wreckers, Inc.
Parkhill and Hart Cleaners &amp; Launderers
Pearce and Pearce
Syracuse Restaurant Inc.
University Manor Motel
Williamsville Inn Corp.

31

�•

1964 -1965
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
VARSITY BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
1-at Brockport State
3-American University
9-Assumption (Ont.) University
12-Aibany State
16-Western Ontario
19-at Tennessee
29-30---at LeMoyne Invitational Holiday Tournament
JANUARY
16-Buffalo State at Memorial Aud.
23-Ithaca College
27-Toronto
30---Steubenville at Memorial Aud.
FEBRUARY
6-Wayne State
9-Niagara at Memorial Aud.
13-at Colgate
20---at Albany State
24-Rochester
27-LeMoyne at Memorial Aud.
MARCH
1-at Buffalo State
3-Aifred
6-Bucknell
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
1-at Brockport State
3-Niagara
9-Canisius
12-Waterloo
16-Buffalo State
17-at St. Bonaventure
JANUARY
23-Ithaca College
27-Canisius
FEBRUARY
3-at Canisius
6-St. Bonaventure
9-Niagara at Memorial Aud.
13-at Colgate
19-at Waterloo
24-Rochester
MARCH
1-at Buffalo State
3-Aifred
VARSITY FENCING
DECEMBER
5--Hobart
12-Cornell &amp; Case
19-at Syracuse

:VlARCH
13-North Atlantic Championships
at Buffalo, N. Y.
18-20---NCAA Championships at
Detroit University
(2 additional matches to be
scheduled)

MARCH
6-Ithaca College

VARSITY SWIMMING
DECEMBER
6-Upper N. Y. State Relays (site
to be announced)
9-Buffalo State
12-Rochester
16-Syracuse
JA UARY
23-at Buffalo State
27-Brockport State
30-0swego State
FEBRUARY
5-at Colgate
6-at Cortland State
9-at iagara
13-at Geneseo State
27-St. Bonaventure
MARCH
3- iagara
S-Upper N.
ships (site
11-13-NCAA
pionships
25-28-NCAA
Iowa City

Y. State Championto be announced)
College Div. Cham(site to be chosen)
Championships at

FRESHMAN SWIMMING
Same as varsity, except that no meets
scheduled on Feb. 13 or after Mar. 2.
VARSITY WRESTLING
JANUARY
16-0ntario Aggies
23-Colgate
29-at Western Ontario
30---at Waterloo
FEBRUARY
6-0swego State
13-at Rochester
19-R.I.T.
24-at Alfred
27-Cortland State
MARCH
6-Ithaca College

JANUARY
23-at Notre Dame
FEBRUARY
13-at Hobart
27-Syracuse &amp; Fenn

FEBRUARY
6-0swego State
13-at Rochester
20---Western Ontario
24-at Alfred
27-Cortland State

FRESHMAN WRESTLING
JANUARY
23-Colgate

32

FRESHMAN FENCING
DECEMBER
5--Hobart
12-Cornell
19-at Syracuse
FEBRUARY
13-at Hobart
27-Syracuse
VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY
SEPTEMBER
23-at Brockport State
26-at Syracuse
29-at Buffalo State
OCTOBER
1-R.I.T.
3-at LeMoyne
10---at Colgate
17-at Canisius
20---Alfred
28-at Cortland
31-at Canisius

Invitational
with LeMoyne
State
Invitational

NOVEMBER
3-Gannon
7-N. Y. State Championships at
Oswego
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTEMBER
24-St. Bonaventure
29-Niagara
OCTOBER
1-at Buffalo State
3-BrookLea Invitational at Rochester
5--Canisius
7-at St. Bonaventure
10---ECAC Regional Tourney at
Colgate
12-Buffalo State
14-at Niagara
17-ECAC Championships at Beth
Page, L. I.
19-at Canisius
23-McMaster
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
SEPTEMBER
25--at Army
OCTOBER
3-at Ithaca College
10---Colgate
24-at Navy
31-at Manlius
13-Syracuse

�WHY 1

Because Marine, with 64
neighborhood locations, is more convenient. And Marine offers more services (58)
than any other bank. We're friendly, too!
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

�Buffalo's only remaining Independent Brewers
invite you to try Simon Pure Beer. It's made
right here by your friends and neighbors. It's
The William Simon Brewery, Buffalo, New York

enjoyed right here by your friends and neighbors. Simon Pure, a good-natured beer with a
naturally good beer taste. Ask for Simon Pure
•

"Buffalo' s only independent brewers"

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                <text>1964-10-31 Buffalo vs Delaware</text>
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                <text> October 31, 1964</text>
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                <text> Official Program 50¢</text>
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                <text>31/3/1303</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
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                    <text>�I

Pour Iroquois boldly ... from 6 inches above
your glass, smack into the center! That way, you get
a rich, creamy collar that releases the
full flavor ... so you enjoy all the bold
draft taste Iroquois has brewed in. Then take
a bold sip, and you'll agree: the fun begins with
IROQUOIS-the bold beer with the bold draft taste!
IROQUOIS BREWERY, BUFFALO, N.Y.

�P.e6idenfj
me66atje
Welcome to the 57th season of intercollegiate football at State University at Buffalo. On behalf of the faculty and students
may I extend a warm welcome and wish you
a pleasant and exciting afternoon.
As those of you who are old friends of the
U.B. Bulls well know, the significance of this
game and the entire season goes beyond the
won-lost record. The Bulls have been fighting a come-from behind battle over the past
several years to maintain and improve nationally-recognized intercollegiate football
on the Niagara Frontier. In 1958, we were
catapulted into the national football spotlight by upsetting Harvard and Columbia
enroute to a 8-l-0 record and the Lambert
Cup, symbol of Eastern Small College
supremacy.
It was the consensus of opinion that in
1958 we had achieved a highly respected
football plateau, but for the Bulls it was to serve only as a pad from which to launch into greater challenges. On
August 3, 1962, the National Collegiate Athletic Association classified the University team in the "major college"
status. During the subsequent two seasons since the achievement of this category, the Bulls have compiled respectable records of 6-3-0 and 5-3-l.
This year we face the lOth consecutive "toughest schedule in history," without a single so-called "breather"
on the entire 10-game slate.
In joining us today for the primary purpose of enjoying top-notch football, your presence also becomes a source
of great pride to this University. It reinforces our certainty that the community, the region and the State are
all working with us in our goal to become one of the outstanding multi-purpose universities in the Nation.
A major step toward the achievement of this goal was made last spring when the Board of Trustees of State
University of New York announced the site for the development of a new campus.
More than 1,000 acres on Millersport Highway, about three miles north of the present campus, has been earmarked for the $130 million expansion. While the new campus emerges, the present site will simultaneously be
developed into an expanded health sciences complex. Together, the two campuses will house what will ultimately
be a graduate center among the finest in the Nation.
I think you will agree that in the classrooms and laboratories as well as on the playing field, the future looks
bright indeed for the University and the community.
C. C. FURNAS, President

�'
1864 • 100th ANNIVERSARY • 1964
1964 marks our 1OOth year of continuous business
serving the Buffalo area.

at the downtown
Western Savings Bank

Gurney, Becker &amp; Bourne, Inc.

SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES

Established 1 864

for your convenience on t he ground
floor (Court Street entrance)

REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE
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Welcome to

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•

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0

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•
360 Delaware Ave.

Buffalo, N. Y. 14202

62.7 MAIN STREET

BUFFALO, N. Y.

TL 2.-3456

TL 6-9000

2

�Buffalo - A Growing University
The announcement this summer by the State University of New York of a multi-million dollar expansion
of the State University at Buffalo marked another step
forward by the University in becoming a major Eastern
educational institution "among the finest in the land."
The day we have been waiting for has come!" exclaimed Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, University President.
"We now have the go-ahead to build the truly great
University that all of us have dreamed of."
On September lst, 1962, the University of BufFalo
abandoned its 116-year private operation to become the
major campus segment of the widespread system of the
State University of New York. The new name, created
by State University officials, is: State University of New
York at Buffalo. However, in deference to sweatshirtstitchers and typewriter repairmen, alumni seem to prefer the continuance of "UB" or "University of Buffalo"
where intercollegiate teams are concerned.
One of America's fastest-growing universities, Buffalo
has been the educational capitol of Western New York
since 1846 when the City of Buffalo was the fourteenyear-old home of 28,000 people. The "University" was
the School of Medicine until 1886 when the School of
Pharmacy was added. The first chancellor was Millard
Fillmore, a first-citizen of the young community, who
continued his UB leadership during his term as the
thirteenth President of the United States.
The fourteen University Divisions are: School of
Medicine (1846); School of Pharmacy (1886); School
of Law (1887); School of Dentistry (1892); College of
Arts and Sciences (1913; Summer Session (1915); Millard Fillmore College, evening division (1923); School
of Business Administration (1927); School of Education
(1931); School of Social Work (1936); Graduate School
of Arts and Sciences (1939); School of Nursing (1940);
School of Engineering ( 1946) ; and University College
(inc! uding associate degrees, 1958).
Buffalo's total enrollment is in the neighborhood of
16,000- of which 8,000 are full-time undergraduate
students. The enrollment is expected to soar in the next
few years, especially in view of the State affiliation.
To meet the influx of resident students during the
past decade a total of six dormitories have been constructed, with the seventh to be dedicated this fall. The
$2 million Acheson Hall of Chemistry, the new Norton
Union, the Baird Music Hall and the Western New
York Nuclear Research Center represent the efforts of
private endowment and local leadership.
Past projections have indicated that State University
of New York at Buffalo will need by 1970:
More than 9,000,000 square feet of space for an
anticipated total enrollment of 27,500 students.
Immediate needs include classroom buildings, a
library, residence halls, a fine arts center, an infirmary
and health services building, a university teaching
hospital, a health sciences building, a continuing education center, a physics building, an engineering building,
a physcal education and intramural building, and an
administration building.
Adequate parking space for 12,500 automobiles will
be needed.
Nationally recognized as a leader in scholastic excellence and academic freedom, the University of Buffalo
continues its fine tradition of service to the Niagara
Frontier and the State of New York.

�Back Row: Buddy Ryan, line coach; Dewey Wade, freshman coach; Bob Deming, backfield coach. Front Row: Ron LaRocque,
backfield coach; Dick Offenhamer, hood coach; Charlie Reeves, line coach.

LOOKING FOR A SOLUTION TO YOUR

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BANK OF
BUFFALO
Member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

4

�JAMES E. PEELLE

Director of Athletics
Jim Peelle has been the mainstay of the University of
Buffalo Athletic Department for 30 years; nobody has
done more for sports at UB than genial Jim.

(

Peelle, a native of Staunton, Illinois, arrived on the
orth Main Street campus in 1934, following a career
as a star quarterback for Purdue University, a career
which saw the Boilermakers win the Big Ten championship.
Jim's first position at UB was assistant football coach.
He became head coach and athletic director in 1936 and
has held the latter job ever since. His greatest teams at
Buffalo were developed in the post-World War 11
years, with records of 7-2 in 1946 and 8-1 in 1947. He
then gave up football coaching to devote his time more
fully to being athletic director as the university began
its great period of expansion.
The holder of a Master's Degree, Jim still enjoys
teaching classes. He is also coach of the UB baseball
team and his 1963 and 1964 clubs participated in NCAA
Regional Tournaments.
Jim is one of the top performers on the banquet
circuit. His ready wit and seemingly endless supply of
anecdotes make him a much sough-after guest.
Jim and his wife, Jane, have raised three children
while still finding time to participate in numerous civic
activities throughout the Buffalo area. Their home in
suburban Snyder is Jim's pride and joy, and he spends
much of his spare time gardening.

DICK OFFENHAMER

Architect of Victory
"Local boy makes good" could well be the theme of this piece,
for it accurately describes the brilliant athletic career of UB
football coach Dick Offenhamer.
Although Offie grew up just a "hoot 'n' a holler" from the
UB campus, his trail to that campus was long and sinuous.
An All-High baseball and football star at Bennett High
School, Dick chose to attend Colgate University.
It was a wise choice. Colgate was then enjoying the halcyon
days of Andy Kerr, when the Red Raiders of the Chenango
Valley went on 'Scalping forays to such way-stations as Yankee
Stadium, New Orleans, Iowa City, and Columbus, Ohio. Offenharner was more than merely present on these trips; he was the
right-halfback in the Kerr double wing attack and he achieved
lasting fame as one of Colgate's all-time greats.
While at college, Offenhamer was light-heavyweight boxing
champion of the school and he also starred on the baseball team.
He received his B.A. in 1936.
Offenhamer coached football at Kenmore High School for
11 years, and his teams won or tied 5 championships in the
Niagara Frontier Conference.
After World War II he returned to Colgate as director of
freshman athletics, freshman football coach, and boxing coach.
Dick came to the University of Buffalo in 1955, a time
at which UB's football fortunes were at their lowest ebb. He
promptly exerted his skills, knowledge and personality to a difficult situation and the results speak for themselves.
During Offie's 9-year tenure UB has won 49, lost 30, and
tied 2. He had 8-1-0 seasons in 1958, when UB won the Lambert
Cup, and again in 1959, when UB was runner-up for that trophy.
Offenhamer has won numerous personal honors. He was
national "Coach of the Week" in 1958 after his team scored a
34-14 upset over Columbia. That same year the Buffalo Evening
News cited him as one of Western ew York's 10 Outstanding
Citizens. This past spring both the Buffalo Council of the
Knights of Columbus and Cardinal Dougherty High School
saluted him as Western ew York's "Coach of the Year."

5

�ROBERT EDWARD

JAMES DUPREY

WILLIAM TAYLOR

JOSEPH HOLLY

GERALD PAWLOSKI

CRAIG HELENBROOK

LEO RATAMESS

BRUCE HART

DENNIS PRYZKUTA

RICHARD CONDINO

�JOE GARAFOLA

NICK CAPUANA

JAMES ROBIE

MICHAEL LUCID!

JOSEPH OSCSODAL

RUSS MacKELLAR

GREENARD POLES

RICHARD VITTORINI

THOMAS OATMEYER

�BUFFALO BULLS - 1964

Front Row (L to R)-Blair, Gartz, B. MacKellar, Dunbar, Botula, McEwen, Robie, Capuana, Miceli, Schleifer, Finochio, Sella, Ryan,
Barksdale, Bonner, Dunn, Wilbur.
2nd Row (L to R)-LaFountain, Edward, Rate!, Duranko, Oatmeyer, Poodry, Piestrak, Ratamess, Capt. Pawloski, Gilbert, Hart,
Castiglia, Nichols, Garafola, McNally, Lucidi, McNamara, Taylor, Holly, Helenbrook.
3rd Row (L to R)-Oscsodal, T. Ridolfi, Plummer, Geringer, Shine, Basta, R. MacKellar, Poles, Burden, Wuest, Kent, Dechowitz,
Popp, Duprey, Vittorini, Przykuta, Webber, R. Ridolfi.
4th Row (L to R)-Mgr. Lisiecki, Ass't trainer Shakan, Ass't coach Wade, Ass't coach LaRoque, Head coach Offenhamer, Ass't coach
Deming, Ass't coach Reeves, Ass't coach Ryan, Head trainer Sciera, Ass't trainer Pecorella, Mgr. Zeif.

NINE DECADES AGO

the launching of
"advice in depth"

W

HEN ships with sails studded Buffalo's seascape over 90 years ago, when Buffalo and
the whole nation began to feel the first effects of
the Industrial Revolution ... Dominick &amp; Dominick was there, beginning to make its mark in
financial circles. The soundness and depth of
D &amp; D's services for the investing public sustained
a steady growth despite financial panics, wars and
depressions. Today the talent of an organization of
more than 400 - including research specialists,
counselors, and administrative people stands behind
our Buffalo office, giving you opportunity for investment adviet in depth. Let us advise you about your
future investment plans or review your portfolio.

I

D OMINICK

&amp;

D OMI NICK

SEYMOUR H . KNOX 111

Gtntral P11rtntr
1122 Floor, Marine Trusr Bldg. 856-7471
Mtmbtrs Ntw York, .Amtrican, Midwtii, and Toronto Stork Exrhangts

GERRY PAWLOSKI
Captain
8

�AERIAL VIEW OF BUFFALO CAMPUS

COMPLETE LOCAL STOCKS . . .

ERNST LANDES CO .

structurals • bars • plates • sheets

FULL FACILITIES . . .

COMMERCIAL PRINTING

shearing • pickling • oiling
• burning • sawing

TIMETABLE DELIVERY . . .

Reserved Seat Ticket Printers

when you need it • as you ordered it • rudy for use

Don Kroeger

•
TL 2-8087

363 GENESEE STREET

OUR TENTH YEAR SELLING

THE AMAZING VOLKSWAGEN AT

JIM

Kelly's

Plumber
INC.

PARTS AND SERVICE
•
NEW AND USED
HOME OF "KELLY CARED FOR CARS"
3325 GENESEE ST.
BUFFALO, N.Y.

CARL C. GRIMM, INC.

AT THRUWAY OVERPASS
NF 3-f~OOO

•
259 DELAWARE A VENUE

TL 2-7080

�B

u

F

F

A
L
0

�- -----·

J

�Bours
Monday-Friday 8:30-8:30
Saturdays ... 10:00-2.:00

Largest
Selection

Students, Old Students, Future Students •••
Come in and Browse •••

of

HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE MANY ITEMS AVAILABLE

fllJALITY
Paperbacks
in
Western
New York

COLLEGE CLOTHING
(adult, youth, juvenile)
Sweat Shirts
Sweaters
Blazers
College Jackets
Pennants -

GIFTS
College Jewelry
Ceramics
Glassware
Stuffed Animals
Studio Cards
Banners

�THE SEASON TO DATE
Buffalo
Buffalo
Buffalo
Buffalo
Buffalo

35
9
22
12
14

Boston U.
Cornell
Massachusetts
Marshall
VMI

0
9
24
14
10

by

Jack Sharpe

Oct. 24-Holy Cross at Rotary Field
Oct. 31-Delaware at Rotary Field
Nov. 7-Rich mond at Rotary Field
Nov. 14-Colgate at Rotary Field
Nov. 21-Villanova at Rotary Field

The University of Buffalo Bulls open the second half of their 1964 season today against the Crusaders of Holy
Cross. Buffalo is 2-2-l at the halfway point and not very happy about it but definitely looking for better results
in the next five weeks. It was felt when the season began that UB could win ten or lose ten and would be in every
contest right to the finish. This has proved to be one hundred percent correct so far.
The opening win against Boston University was most impressive but in the next three weeks, nothing went
right, or so it seemed. The tie against Cornell and the two point losses to Massachusetts and Marshall were bitter
pills for the squad and coaches to swallow. All three games could have been won just as easily but a football is
pointed on both ends bounces crazily, and never once bounced for the Bulls. A few mistakes that can be made by
any player, collegiate or professional, occurred and it seemed everyone was turned into an enemy score. Then
came last week against VMI and a trait that had been prevalent throughout the season was shown to all who
attended, namely spirit.
The UB club had never given up no matter what adversity befell them. They fought and fought and fought
some more when most teams would have folded up and called it a day. They came back from a ten point deficit
against Massachusetts, only to lose the game with two fumbles contributing materially to the result. They were
hurt badly by two long passes against Marshall, but scored late in the fourth quarter, only to lose again when a
two point conversion attempt failed. Against VMI they were down by ten points in the fourth quarter when a
big break finally went their way, an interception by Jim Duprey that set the Bulls up on the VMI six. They
went in from there and made it 10-8 as Gilbert ran for two points. Right now, the tide may have turned on that
play. The next time UB got the ball they drove for another TD and a 14-10 win that ended a month of frustration. This week they've been a confident ball club in practice, convinced they can win all the way to the finish.
This football team is probably the best Coach Offenhamer has had on the campus and is certainly the unluckiest. However, no matter how the breaks have gone, no matter what has happened, they have never lost their
spirit, desire, will to win, or their confidence in themselves. Now come the five toughest games of the season and UB
is ready.
Today it is Holy Cross, a team Buffalo has never beaten, Coach Eddie Anderson is retiring this year after
thirty nine years, twenty one of them at The Cross. He suffered a severe blow early in the season when Fran
Coughlin, his starting quarterback, severely injured his hand, requiring extensive surgery, and was lost for the
season. The Crusaders started slowly due to this mishap but are coming strong. They led Syracuse for a half
before succumbing to superior manpower and last week they shutout the Quantico Marines 16-0. Quantico is a
club made up of former college stars who are in the service and is not to be taken lightly. Holy Cross has what
may be the best halfback UB will meet all year in Marcellino who caught the TD pass that gave the Crusaders a
6-6 tie last year. He can do it all offensively and has badgered the Bulls for two seasons. In 1962 he was selected
as sophomore of the week for his play against Buffalo. Since Tom Hennessey, AI Snyder, and Pat McCarthy were
in the same backfield you can imagine the kind of day he had. Watch for him today.
The man Holy Cross will have to contain is Don Gilbert. Don is in the top twenty in the country in total
offense with 659 yards in five ball games. He leads the team in rushing and of course in passing. Opposing coaches
have been unanimous in their praise of Gilbert. Marshall's Coach thought he was as good if not better than Ernie
Kellerman, Miami of Ohio's great signal caller and VMI mentor John McKenna called him the best he's seen all
year. Gilbert is not alone by any means as Willie Shine is coming into his own and soph Nick Capuana looks
better every week. Buffalo fullbacks Dennis Pryzkuta and Dick Condino have been tremendous. They probably
are the best one-two punch from that position in the East and have gained big yardage in every single game.
Condino leads the scorers with 24 points. The line as always has been excellent and is just coming to full strength
physically after damaging injuries earlier in the season. There is much to be proud of and in the next five weeks
you will be able to see for yourself as Buffalo is home until the end of the season. Delaware, Richmond, Colgate and
unbeaten and second ranked in the east Villanova will follow the Crusaders in at Rotary Field. Your support is
welcome, needed, and appreciated. Thank you for coming.

13

�HAVE A TRANSISTOR RADIO WITH YOU~~========
DIAL 910 FOR U. B. PLAY-BY-PLAY I

JACK SHARPE
Every U. B. Game
Home and Away=::=::=::=::=:
" THE SOUND
OF THE CITY"

PROBABLE BUFFALO LINE-UP
S.E.
80 HELE N BROO K

84 LaFOUNTAIN

WEBR

81

970 AM
94.5 FM

77
71
76
79

McNAMARA

83 MICELI
W.B.
S.T.

~

RATA MESS

42 OATMEYER
49 SHINE
46 VITTOR INI

TAYLOR
WUEST
RATEL

S.G.

H

e

c.

D

r

~

CANISIUS
and ST. BONA
BASKETBALL

52
54
50
55

HO LLY
LUCIDI
DUPREY
GARAFOLA

Q .B.

F.B.

17 GILBERT

32 PRYZUTA

15 ROBIE
14 G ERINGER

36 CO N DIN O
20 BARKSDALE

T.B.
W .G .

45 EDWARD

64 HART

22 CAP UANA
44 W EBB ER
40 SEL LA

60 DUNBAR
66 CASTIGLIA

W .T.

72 KENT

Charlie Bailey's
Sportscasts at
5:30 and 6:15 p. m.
Mon. thru Sat.

74 PIESTRAK
70 PUGH
78 BASTA

W .E.
88 PA WL OS KI
82 NICHOLS
86 DUNN
89 BU RDEN
HEAD COACH- DICK OFFENHAMER

14

�BARTLETT BUICK
3080 MAIN STREET

TF 6-1000

IS PLEASED TO BOOST THE BULLS
You too can own an

OPEL KADETT BULL WAGON
ONLY $1793

(Minus art work, of course)

PROBABLE HOLY CROSS LINE-UP
R.E.
81 HA LEY
90 DONOVAN
86 DWYER

UNIVERSITY
'•.

..,:::

~ -til

''Boosts the
Buffalo Bulls''

R.T.

76 DUGAN
70 KAVANAUGH

74 MALONE

R.H.B.

ADAM MELDRUM &amp;
ANDERSON CO.

R.G .

38 KIRMSER

69 COSTANTINI

17 BLAKE

34 MOONEY

~

F.B.
28 M EE HAN

....
..

44 BACHINI
21 DANNO
~

-.

AMHERST THEATER

58 NISSI

~·

75 WILLIAMS

Q.B.
14 CUNNION
19 LENTZ
1 2 STRUZZIERO

A &amp; P SUPER MARKET

c.
50 MORRIS
66 FOLEY
71 MEE

~t:::&gt;

lit..: ...

......

20 GRAVEL

~

CA VAGES - Records - Cards
Compliments of A FRIEND
GUSTAV A. FRISCH - Jeweler
KOEGL 'S BAKERY
LEONARDO'S RESTAURANT
MandT TRUST CO.
University Plaza Office

l.H .B.
26 J. MARCELLINO
23 O 'DONOVAN

PLAZA

~

PLAZA SHOE REPAIR
l.T.
78 LILLY
72 ADDESA
77 EKDAHL

~ :~

POHL ·-~ SHOES
UB Loafers &amp; Flats
STYLE CREST MEN'S SHOP
THE COBBLER SHOP

l.E.
88 KO CHANSKY
80 TERRY
83 KIMENER
HEA D COACH -

DR . EDWARD ANDERSON

15

ULBRICH'S - Stationery
UNIVERSITY RESTAURANT
AND DELICATESSEN

�1965 VARSITY SCHEDULE

THE COVER

Sept. 18

Boston College

away

Oct. 16

Richmond

home

Sept. 25

Tampa

home

Oct. 23

Villanova

away

Oct.

2

Massachusetts

home

Oct. 30

Holy Cross

away

Oct.

9

Boston University

home

Nov.

Delaware

away

Nov. 13

Colgate

6

home

William J. Connors Ill , Editor and
Publisher of the Buffalo CourierExpress and Wade Stevenson ,
General Chairman are all sm iles
at the huge crowd on hand for
todays homecom ing game . Thank
you !

BUFFALO BULLS 1964 ROSTER

JONES-

RICH
MILK
CORP.
"It's Flavor Guarded"

70 E. FERRY STREET
TT 3-4080

No.
*14
15
16
*17
18
20
22
24
25
26
32
*36

*38
40
*42

44
*45
46
49
*50
*52
*54
55
56
60
*62
61
*63
*64
66
68
69
70
71
72
*74
75
76
*77
78
79
*80
81
*82
83
*84
86
*88
89
90

*-

Name
Class
Pos. Age
Ht.
Wt.
Hometown
Geringer, Frederick
Jr.
QB
19
5-9
160
Danville, Pa.
Robie, James
So.
QB
18
6-3
202
Williamsville, N. Y.
Duranko, Frederick
Jr.
QB
21
6-0
195
Johnstown, Pa.
Gilbert, Donald
Sr.
QB
21
5-10
190
Buffalo, N. Y.
Ridolfi, Ronald
Jr.
QB
20
5-9
165
Pawtucket, R. I.
Barksdale, James
So.
HB
18
5-11
165
Syracuse, N. Y.
Capuana, Nicholas
So.
HB
18
5-9
173
Utica, N. Y.
Ridolfi, Thomas
Jr.
HB
20
5-9
165
Pawtucket, R. I.
Gartz, Ronald
So.
HB
24
5-8
175
Rochester, N. Y.
McEwen, James
So.
HB
20
5-10
185
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Wilbur, Gerald
So.
FB
19
6-0
190
Factoryville, Pa.
Condino, Richard
Sr.
FB
21
6-2
205
Niagara Falls, . Y.
Depew, N.Y.
Pryzkuta, Dennis
Jr.
FB
19
5-10
202
Sella, Daniel
So.
HB
18
5-10
180
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Oatmeyer, Thomas
Sr.
HB
20
5-8
176
Manlius, . Y.
HB
21
5-9
182
Webber, James
Jr.
HB
21
6-2
205
Buffalo, N. Y.
Edward, Robert
Sr.
Lackawanna, N . Y.
HB
21
5-11
197
Vittorini, Richard
Jr.
Niagara Falls, . Y.
Shine, Willie
Jr.
HB
20
6-3
205
c
20
5-10
215
Duprey, James
Jr.
Peru, N.Y.
c
19
6-1
210
Lyons, N.Y.
Holly, Joseph
Jr.
c
21
6-1
195
New Kensington, Pa.
Lucidi, M ichael
Sr.
c
21
5-11
200
Gloversville, N . Y.
Ga rafola, Joseph
Sr.
Kenmore, N.Y.
MacKellar, Bruce
So.
c
18
6-0
208
Dearborn, Mich.
G
18
5-11
203
Dunbar, Richard
So.
Kenmore, N.Y.
G
20
5-9
206
McNally, James
Sr.
Riverhead, N . Y.
G
18
6-0
200
Botula, C harles
So.
G
21
5-10
210
Rochester, N. Y.
Poles, E. Greenard
Jr.
Youngwood, Pa.
G
24
6-0
205
H art, Bruce
Sr.
Fulton, N . Y.
G
22
5-10
204
Castiglia, Nicholas
Sr.
Kenmore, N.Y.
G
20
5-10
212
MacKellar, Russell
Jr.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
G
22
6-0
215
Dechowitz, Richard So.
McKeesport, Pa.
T
20
6-1
220
Pugh, Ronald
So.
Youngstown, N. Y.
T
20
6-2
213
Taylor, William
Jr.
Detroit, Mich.
T
20
6-1
225
Kent, Brian
Jr.
Wayne, Mich.
T
22
6-0
195
Piestrak, Dominic
Sr.
Syracuse, N.Y.
T
18
5-10
200
Finochio, James
So.
Whitesboro, . Y.
T
19
6-3
225
Wuest, Michael
Jr.
Berwick, Pa.
T
21
6-2
260
Ratamess, Leo
Sr.
Glens Falls, . Y.
T
20
6-1
206
Basta, John
Jr.
Buffalo, N. Y.
T
21
6-3
209
Rate!, James
Sr.
E
~
~1
200
Cheektowaga, . Y.
Helenbrook, Craig
Jr.
Binghamton, . Y.
E
20
6-2
191
Me amara, James
Sr.
Factoryville, Pa.
E
20
6-1
215
Nichols, David
Sr.
Batavia, N. Y.
E
19
6-2
210
Miceli, Anthony
So.
Saranac Lake, . Y.
E
20
5-11
210
LaFountain, Gerald Jr.
Cranston, R. I.
E
19
6-4
190
Dunn, James
So.
Lincoln Park, Mich.
E
21
5-11
195
Pawloski, Gerald
Sr.
Franklin Sq., L. I.
E
20
6-1
185
Burden, Dennis
Jr.
Budapest, Hungary
K
21
5-10
170
Oscsodal, Joseph
Jr.
Lettermen
Managers: Michael Zeif, Rochester, . Y.; Frederick Brace, Buffalo, . Y.

lfi

1

1

�What's the Geneseecret. • •
HOLY CROSS ROSTER
No.

I

11

II
I2
I4
IS
I7
IS
I9
20
21

22
23
24
26
28
30
33
34
35
37
38
39
42
44

so

52

54
56
58
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
7I

72

1
1

73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

Nam'-'
Flatley, Brian
Struzziero, Ralph
Cunnion, Mike
McCarvill, Jim
Blake, Ray
Meehan, Pete
Lentz, Jack
Gravel, Jim
Danno, Pat
Flynn, Tom
O'Donovan, AI
Day, Dave
Marcellino, Jim
Meduski, Dick
Hinckle, Charles
Maguire, Mike
Mooney, Terry
Mirante, Art
Schmerge, Peter
Kirmser, Earl
Kluxen, Ken
Weaver, Ray
Bachini, John
Morris, Bill
Sindoni, John
Higgins, Pat
Versocki, Tom
Nissi, Tom
Maldonis, Robert
Marcellino, Bill
Tarasiewicz, Charles
Kiley, Tom
Gorter, John
Smith, Gregory
Foley, Tom
Blum, Bill
Dimon, Edward
Costantini, Joe
Kavanaugh, Brian
Mee, John
Addesa, Mike
McCabe, Paul
Malone, John
Williams, Bob
Dugan, John
Ekdahl, Charles
Lilly, Joe
Georgiana, Dan
Terry, Dick
Haley, Tom
Motley, Bill
Kimener, Bob
Noble, Bob
Ekert, Conrad
Dwyer, Dennis
Sexton, Bill
Kochansky, Dick
Hyman, Jim
Donovan, John

C 1ass

Pos.

Age

Jr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
So.
St.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.

HB
QB
QB
FB
HB
FB
QB
HB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
HB
FB
HB
FB

I9
20
I9
2I
I9
20
18
20
20
20
20
20
20
I9
19
20
20
20
19
20
20
19
19
IS
19
20
20
20
19
22
21
20
18
19
20
18
I9
20
19
20
19
21
20
22
20
19
20
20
20
I9
20
18
20
20
19
20
20
19
20

s".

Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
So.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
Sr.

c
c
c
c
c

G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E
E

Ht.
5-II
5-ll
5-II
6-0
6-I
6-0
6-0
5-10
6-3
5-11
S-9
5-11
5-11
5-IO
6-0
6-1
5-11
6-0
5-11
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-0
6-2
5-11
6-0
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-2
5-11
6-l
6-2
5-10
6-0
6-1
5-ll
6-2
6-3
6-3
6-1
6-0
6-2
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-2
6-2
6-0
6-2
6-I
6-4
6-I
6-4
6-2
6-1
6-0
6-3

Wt
I65
I86
177
206
I90
I86
187
177
20I
I72
I 59
167
182
19I
I84
168
I81
186
I72
173
210
I93
21I
223
200
202
224
193
218
232
203
196
215
213
200
222
199
228
215
212
234
202
214
207
223
206
210
227
205
189
196
184
214
216
206
167
209
193
212

Hometown
Manchester, Mass.
Scituate, Mass.
Mt. Vernon, N.Y.
Jacksonville, N. C.
Milton, Mass.
Silver Spring, Md.
Baltimore, Md.
S. Attleboro, Mass.
Nekoosa, Wis.
Brookline, Mass.
Mechanicsburg, Pa.
Auburn, N. Y.
Milton, Mass.
Worcester, Mass.
Havertown, Pa.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Pawtucket, R. I.
N. Bergen, N. J.
Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Port Washington, . Y.
Newark, N. J.
Johnstown, Pa.
Haverhill, Mass.
New York City
Syracuse, N. Y.
E. Williston, N. Y.
Cranford, . J.
Haverhill, Mass.
Watertown, Mass.
Milton, Mass.
Brockton, Mass.
Elmont, N. Y.
E. Providence, R. I.
W. Orange, N. J.
Douglaston, . Y.
New York City
Roebling, N. J.
Syracuse, N. Y.
Hudson, Mass.
Brighton, Mass.
Roxbury, Mass.
West Roxbury, Mass.
Cleveland Hts., Ohio
Dorchester, Mass.
Silver Spring, Md.
E. Hartford, Conn.
Washington, D . C.
Syracuse, . Y.
Newton, Mass.
Hingham, Mass.
Rockville Ctr., N. Y.
Arlington, Va.
Bronxville, N. Y.
Bronx, N.Y.
White Plains, N. Y.
Watertown, Mass.
Elizabeth, N . J.
Edgewood, R. I.
Milton, Mass.

LIGHTNESS WITH FLAVOR
17

�HOLY CROSS CRUSADERS

-

1964 -

HOLY CROSS CAPTAIN

GRANVILLE MOTORS I.NC.
VOLKSWAGEN

AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE CENTER
• SEDANS
• SUNROOFS

• STATION WAGONS
• KARMAN GH lAS

1500 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
JUST NORTH OF THE BOULEVARD
MALL OPPOSITE TWIN FAIR

OPEN EVENINGS
PHONE 836-4600

AUTH O RIZE !)

OU.i..ER

JOHN DUGAN, Captain
18

�A HISTORY OF HOLY CROSS

,_.

The short ride up quiet, shaded Linden
Lane ... The stately towers of O'Kane Hall, a
tall and majestic landmark of Worcester and of
Catholic Education since 1893 ... The friendly,
humble face of old Fenwick Hall, the original
building from the founding of the college by the
Most Rev. Benedict Joseph Fenwick in 1843 ...
The beauty of a sprawling campus undergoing
continual face-liftings atop one of Worcester's
many well-defined hills ... This is The College
of The Holy Cross.
The words of President Theodore Roosevelt
in his Commencement Address of June 21, 1905,
when he said: "It is eminently characteristic of
our nation that we should have an institution
of learning like Holy Cross, in which the effort
is constantly made to train, not merely the body
and mind, but the soul of man, that he should
'"'"
be made a good American, and a good citizen
of our country." ... This is Holy Cross.
The writings of Very Rev. William A. Donaghy, S.J., then President of the College: " ...
But with all the change that has swirled about
this 'tall mountain citied to the top, crowded
with culture' there are also comforting permanences. The basic undergraduate spirit of friendliness and fraternity, the deep spirituality which
morning after morning crowds the altar rails
and finds secretive figures in the dim chapel,
the bright idealism so much in contrast to the
cynicism on all sides-these, thanks to God,
have not been altered. And I feel that if Bishop
Fenwick were to return, he would undoubtedly
be confused by the material expansion at the
same time that he would be consoled by the
spiritual continuity." ... This is Holy Cross.
The strong traditions of athletic and scholVERY REV. RAYMOND J. SWORDS, S.J.
astic achievement and the coaching and teachPresident of Holy Cross College
ing of great and dedicated men ... This is Holy
Cross.
The indefinable everything that brings young men together in a melting pot of friendship, good will and harmony and saturates them all with an indelible characteristic that might be called spirit or camaraderie ... This is
Holy Cross.
Founded in 1843, Holy Cross is the oldest Catholic College in New England and one of the oldest Jesuit institutions in the United States.
Over the years, the yield, through a gentle and delicate blending of the spiritual needs, the traditions, the mores
and classroom education of Holy Cross College, has been distinguished graduates in every contemporary professional
and business field and an unrivaled loyalty among alumni and friends.
Holy Cross, indeed, holds a lofty place in New England college education.
At the same time, Holy Cross also retains a high and respected place with its well-conducted athletic program
while keeping a strict, disciplined academic hold on the athletes. There are no soft courses, no short-cuts to a
degree.
Still, its basketball teams have won many titles, including two national championships. Its baseball team, perennially guided to Eastern College supremacy by the late Jack Barry and now by H. C. immortal Albert (Hop) Riopel, has likewise won a national (NCAA) crown. Its football team has made New Year's Day Bowl news, and
under Dr. Eddie Anderson, dean of the nation's major college coaches, is always a precision-drilled, top-ranked New
England standard-bearer. And its many track greats have won countless national championships under the watchful eyes of craggy-faced, universally beloved Bart Sullivan, himself a Holy Cross institution of SO years and now
Coach Emeritus, and Tom Duffy.
19

�HOLY CROSS COACHING STAFF - 1964

Holy Cross Coaching Staff, from left: Ecio Luciano, Line Coach; Mickey Connolly, Backfield Coach; Dr. Eddie Anderson, Head Coach;
Mel Massucco, Freshman and Defensive Coach; Oscar Lofton, End Coach.

KEYSER BROS. PONTIAC-CADILLAC INC.

SIEGFRIED

NX 4-1910

CONSTRUCTION

75 Main Street
North Tonawanda, New York

CO., INC.

Corner of
N. LONG and MAIN
WILLIAMSVILLE, N.Y.

6 N. PEARL STREET
BUFFALO, N. Y. 14202

Western N. Y.'s Most
Complete Ski Shop
For the Entire Family

886-2300

Shops at Glenwood Acres
20

�EUGENE F. FLYNN
Director of Athletics
This is Gene Flynn's 36th year with the Holy Cross
Athletic Association. Since 1928, he has played a vital
part in the development of Holy Cross' well rounded
and solid athletic program.
As assistant to the late Cleo O'Donnell and Tom
McCabe, he served the athletic association from 1928
until he entered the Army in 1942. When McCabe died
in 1943, Holy Cross authorities named Gene Flynn as
athletic director to take over at the end of World War II.
Since 1945-'46, the Crusaders have become a national basketball power under his scheduling, with an
NCAA championship in 1947, and Sugar Bowl and NIT
championships in 1954. The Crusaders were also NCAA
baseball champions in 1952 and finished third at Om:lha in 1958.
As a member and director of several NCAA and
ECAC top level committees, Flynn has helped to shape
national and regional athletic policies. He has been one
of the leaders in developing the present College-TV program, and has served as president of several Eastern
college sports associations within the Eastern College
Athletic Conference. He is presently serving as president
of the ECAC.

Dr. Eddie Anderson keeps adding to his record as the nation's senior active major college football coach. The 1964 season
is his 39th as a head coach and his 21st at Holy Cross.
His won-lost record over the years ranks him with the top
coaches in the country . . . at all colleges. Anderson coached
teams have won 196 games, lost 131, and have played 15 ties; at
Holy Cross, his clubs have won 124 games, lost 63 and tied eight.
Born in Mason City, Iowa, the genial M.D. starred for three
years in high school, before entering Notre Dame in 1918. Although lighter and less experienced than other candidates, he
became a regular varsity end for the immortal Knute Rockne as
a freshman. In his four years as a regular, the Irish lost only one
game, and that, ironically enough, was to Iowa, where Dr.
Anderson later achieved coaching fame. Dr. Eddie was captain
of the 1921 Notre Dame team and received All America honors.
His coaching career began in 1922 at Columbia College, now
Loras College, Dubuque, Iowa, while he also managed to take a
brief fling at professional football with the Chicago Cardinals. In
1925, he shifted to DePaul University in Chicago, where he
coached football while he completed his medical studies at Rush
College. In 1933, he first came East to coach Holy Cross.
During the next 6 years, 1933 through 1938, his Crusaders
established one of the finest records in collegiate football, winning 47 games, playing 4 ties and losing only 7 games!
His home state beckoned in 1939, and in his first year of Big
Ten coaching, Dr. Eddie wound up as " ational Coach of the
Year" and the late Nile Kinnick of that Iowa team was named
"Player of the Year."
During his brilliant career, Dr. Eddie has twice coached the
College All Stars in Chicago in the August classic ... in 1940,
his team of collegians lost to the Green Bay Packers, but in 1950,
the All-Stars defeated the Philadelphia Eagles under Dr. Eddie's
direction. He has several times acted as an assistant coach of
the East team in the annual East-West Shrine game in San Francisco, and as head coach he directed the East to a 14-13 win over
the West in 1955.

Head Coach
21

�HOLY CROSS

-BILL MARCELLINO

BOB WILLIAMS

JOE COSTANTINI

MIKE ADDESA

AL O'DONOVAN

TOM HALEY

RALPH STRUZZIERO

BILL MORRIS

CHAS. T ARASIEWICZ

JOHN BACHINI

JOHN MALONE

JOHN DONOVAN

22

�HOLY CROSS

DICK KOCHANSKY

JIM GRAVEL

JOE LILLY

BRIAN KAVANAUGH

JIM MARCELLINO

BOB KIMENER

EARL KIRMSER

MIKE CUNNION

PETE MEEHAN

RAY BLAKE

23

DENNIS DWYER

�Holy Cross College

24

�BUFFALO MEDICAL AND TRAINING STAFF

JOHN SClERA,
Trainer

NORB BASCHNAGEL,
Asst. Trainer

MG

AHa
Romeo

ROVER

VOLVO

AUSTIN
HEALEY

JAGUAR

DR. TOM MARRIOTT,
Team Physician

Leo Sauer

Land

FUNERAL HOME

Rover

INC.

HUNT
• 1933 KENSINGTON AVENUE

IMPORTED CARS INC.

TF 3-1695

1025 HERTEL A VENUE
(JUST WEST OF DELAWARE AVE.)

BUFFALO, NEW YORK
• 823 GENESEE STREET

TELEPHONE

TX 2-7183

873-6717
25

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
BUFFALO (2-2-1 )
Buffalo 35 Boston U.
0
Buffalo 9 Cornell
9
Buffalo 22 Massachusetts 24
Buffalo 12 Marshall
14
Buffalo 14 V.M.I.
10
Oct. 24 Holy Cross
Oct. 31 Delaware
Nov. 7 Richmond
Nov.l4 Colgate
Nov.21 Villanova
92

Attendance: 6,600
17,000
9,754
6,500
21,000

60.854

57

Player
Don Gilbert
Dennis Przykuta
Bob Edward
Dick Condino
Nick Capuana
Jim Robie
Willie Shine
Tom Oatmeyer
Jim Webber
Jim Barksdale
Fred Geringer
Ron Ridolfi

in 5 games

Totals

Player
Don Gilbert
Jim Robie
Ron Ridolfi
Totals

BUFFALO TEAM:
1st downs
Rushes, net yds., avg.
Passing
Pet. completions
Interceptions
Penalties
Fumbles

PASSING
Attempts Completions Interceptions Yds. ms
26
415 4
7
55
2
0
10 0
2
0
0
0 0
1
58

28

7

425

4

RUSHING
Carried
64
58
31
29
27
6
13
3
4
2
1
1
239

Yards
244
214
151
132
148
25
23
9
4
1
0

-10

Avg.
3.8
3.6
4.8
4.5
5.4
4.0
1.7
3.0
1.0
0.5
0.0
0.0

941

3.9

(5 games)
79
239 for 941 (3.9)
28 for 425 yds.
48.2 (28/ 58)
6 for 130 yds.
15 for 154 yds.
16 (lost 8)

OPPONENTS
67
22-1 for 732 (32)
39 for 671 yds.
47.5 (39/ 82)
7 for 97 yds.
27 for 232 yds.
12 (lost 8)

ADAM, MELDRUM &amp; ANDERSON'S CIRCLE OF BEAUTY

The John W.

BEAUTY SALON

STYLE DIRECTOR

Cowper Co.

keeps them
cheering

INCORPORATED

. . . with hair fash ions that
score a beauty-goal for you.
He and a talented staff ore

Engineers -

at your service for styling, coloring,
and wig-design, too!
Free consultations with Mr. Gene .
Haircut, $2. 25 Regular Operator,
$2 .75 Stylisl
Shampoo &amp; Set, $2 .50 Regu lar Operator,

Contractors

•

2nd Floor

$3 .00 Slylist
TF 4-4020
Ext. 14

DAVID DONAlD, President

Onetlo j RESTAURANT &amp; SEAFOOD HOUSE

FRED 0 . FRANCIS, Vice President

MAIN AT BAILEY
(Across from Campus)

DONAlD J. GREER, Secy.-Treas.
PHiliP P. THOIN, Asst. Secy.-Treas.

• ltalimz Dishes

•

• American Favorites
• Seafood Plates

Post Office Box 1068

• Legal Beverages

Buffalo, New York 14240

Serving from 11 A.M.
26

�OFFICIAL BUFFALO STATISTICS
INTERCEPTIONS &amp; RETURNS
No.
Yardage
Player
I
64
Fred Geringer
1
Gerry LaFountain
I
Dick Condino
I
2
2
Dan Sella
3
Jim Duprey
1
60

Player
Gerry Pawloski
Bob Edward
Dick Condino
Jim Dunn
Willie Shine
Dave Nichols
Gerry LaFountain
Craig Helenbrook
Dennis Burden
Nick Capuana

SCORING
Dick Condino, 3 TD's rush, I TD rec. 24 pts; Bob Edward, 2
TD's rush, I PATR, 14 pts; Dennis Przykuta, 2 TD's rush, 12 pts;
Don Gilbert, I TD rush, I PATR, 8 pts; Joe Oscsodal, 1 FG,
5 PATK, 8 pts; Nick Capuana, I TD rush, 6 pts; Gerry Pawloski,
1 TD rec., 6 pts; Jim Dunn, I TD rec., 6 pts; Dave Nichols, I
TD rec., 6 pts; Safety (Ball intentionally downed in end zone)
2 pts; Total 92 pts.

Total.
Player
Bob Edward
Dick Vittorini
Gerry Pawloski

PUNT RETURNS
Yardage
33
20
12

No.

Player
Fred Geringer
Dennis Przykuta
Nick Capuana
Gerry LaFountain
Jim Webber
Bob Edward

5
2
I
I
I
I

28
PUNTING
No. of Punts
14
I
2

Yards
138
61
51
37
17
35
39
32
6
9

TDs
I
0
1
I
0
1
0
0
0
0

425

4

Yardage
549
32
42

Average
39.1
32.0
21.0

Save at Erie Federal

7

4
6

KICKOFF RETURNS
Player
No.
Willie Shine
6
Bob Edward
4
Dennis Przykuta
3
I
Dick Condino
I
Jim Dunn

RECEIVING
Receptions
lO
4
2
2
2
I
2
2
I
2

• All accounts insured up to $10,000 by
the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation.

Yardage
188
69
52
18
0

• Money deposited by the tenth of EVERY
month immediately earns high dividends
from the first of the month.

All restricted gauges, precise tempers and finest finishes made
to your exact specifications.

COLD ROLLED STRIP STEEL
Warehouse and Mill Deliveries
COIL

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ROLLER LEVELING

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COMPlETE TRADING FACiliTIES

GIBRALTER STEEL
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•

RETAil DISTRIBUTION

Members New York Stock Exchange
Associate Members American Stock Exchange

PHONE TL 4-4035
MARINE TRUST BUILDING, BUFFALO, N. Y., 14203

NT 4-1 0 2.0

2555 Wa lden Avenue

•

Office in New York, Rochester and Norwich , N. Y.

Buffalo, N.Y. 14225

Direct wire to Pershing &amp; Co., New York

27

�With the naming of UB as a major NCAA team in football, the University is now listed among the top 119 in
the nation and so referred to in historical football directories.
In researching UB football statistics and records for Mr. Steve Bode, Jr., 9905 63rd Drive, Forest Hills, N. Y., we
have come up with some interesting facts through Mr. Bode's records.
One fact verified by Mr. Art Powell - UB coach in 1916-22, is that UB's first coach (full-time and official)
was Frank Mt. Pleasant - one of the original Carlisle Indians and teammate of the famous Jim Thorpe. He coached
our 1915 team. (3-4-0)
Until his appointment, Buffalo was under the informal guidance of volunteer coaches from 1894- 1903. UB did
not field teams from 1904-1914.

University of Buffalo Football Records:
INDIVIDUAL: (for single season)

TEAM: (single season)

Points scored : 90 by Lou Corriere in 1942
Rushing: 620 yards by Willie Evans in 1959
Most passes attempted : 128 by Don Holland in 1951
127 by John Stofa in 1961
Most passes completed: 64 by Don Holland in 1951
64 by John Stofa in 1961
Most passing yardage: 807 by John Stofa in 1961
Most TO passes: 9 by Gordon Bukaty in 1958 (soph)
Individual total offense: 1,092 yards by Don Holland in 1951
Most passes received : 23 by Bob Baker for 233 yds in 1961
Most receiving yards : 233 by Bob Baker in 1961
Best punting average: 40.6 yds by Bill Brogan in 1959

Points per game: 31.0 ( 279 in 9 games ) - 1959
Rushing per game: 226.7 in 1959
Passing yds per game: 151.2 in 1960
Total Offense per game: 355.6 in 1959

lltniuersity Jteigf1ts
salutes tqe

muffaln mulls
AMHERST DRIVING SCHOOL

HERZOG'S DRUG STORE, INC.

ANDY'S OPEN KITCHEN

E. P. LAUER OPTICIAN

BARTLETT BUICK, INC.

NORTH MAIN LIQUOR STORE

BATT CO. HEATING &amp; PLUMBING

O'CONNELL LUCAS &amp; CHELF, INC.

BITTERMAN'S RESTAURANT

RAY-WAN FURNITURE

CAMPUS CORNER OF BUFFALO, INC.

ROSSI'S STEAK HOUSE

COLONIAL HOUSE RESTAURANT

SOL'S ESQUIRE SHIRT LAUNDRY, INC.

GREAT LAKES MOTOR CORP.

UPPER LEVEL

28

�BUFFALO BULLS

DANIEL SELLA

RICHARD DU NBAR

JAMES WEBBER

MICHAEL ZEIF, Mgr.

SUPPORT THE BULLS - GET YOUR SEASON TICKETS NOW
I wish to purchase ................ season tickets for 1965. No payment required until billed July 1st.
Name ...................................................................................................... Telephone ............................................... .
Address ............................................................................................................................................................................................................ ..
City .............................................................................................................. Zone .......................State ............................................................... ..
Fill out the application and mail to Ticket Office, Clark Gym, Buffalo, N. Y.

14214

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK

Phone TF 3-7131

3610 MAIN (near Bailey)

Park Free next door -

University Manor Motel

USED TEXTS
We buy- sell

SWEATSHIRTS
Jackets, Pennants, Animals

I

I

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I

ENGINEERING
SCIENTIFIC
TECHNICAL

We're Open Saturdays 9 to 6

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
29

�PROGRAM PATRONS
In Memory of Dom Grossi

George E. Easterbrook
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Eaton

Kenneth M. Alford
Owen B. Augspurger
J. Edwin Alford
Vincent G. Andronico
Harold A. Adel
William Aubitz

Benjamin Franklin
Robert D. Fernbach
Grant Fisher
Thomas S. Fanning
Edward D. Flaherty

Willard H. Bernhoft
Melvin L. Bong
Douglas Brock
Virgil H. F. Boeck
David E. Brennan
Francis B. Borowiec
Walter Brock
Charles F. Banas
Donald R. Barber
Stanley S. Blach
Max W . Burstein
Robert R. Barrett
William C. Baird

Lewis J. Greenky
George L. Grobe, Jr.
Joseph C. Gauchat
L. Robert Gauchat
William H. Georgi
A. Donald Gilden
Anthony S. Gugino
Norman Haber
Francis C. H ornung
Donald W . Hall
Lewis G. Harriman, Sr.
Fenton F. Harrison
Harold M. Harris
William Hildebrand, Jr.
Sheldon Hurwitz

John F. Canale
Roger T. Cook
Mr. and Mrs. Abraham N. Carrel
Ross M. Cellino
Ernest L. Colucci
John F. Connelly
John J. Cooney

Edwin F. Jaeckle
James W. Jordon
Grover R. James, Jr.
Evan E. James
Rudolph U . Johnson

John H. Dittman
Charles H. Diefendorf
James P. Donnelly
Louis A. DeVincentis
Arnold E. DiLaura

Russell Kidder, Jr.
M. Robert Koren
Kevin Kennedy
Edward W. Kinney
Bernard A. Kolber
Stephen F. Kissel
Seymour H. Knox
John A. Krull
Anthony W. Kozlowski

Robert J. Ehrenreich
George J. Evans
Milton Etengoff
Francis E. Ehret

30

�Vincent Scamurra
George H. Selkirk
Charles R. Sandler
Gerard E. Schultz
Roy E. Seibel
Carrol J. Shaver
James R. Sullivan
Harlan J. Swift
Seymour Schuller
Emile C. Sauer
George N. Seifert
Herbert Simon
Harry A. Sultz
Daniel T. Szymoniak
Leonard Swagler
Eugene M. Sullivan
Gerald C. Saltarelli
Burton B. Sarles
Fred S. Schwarz
Gertrude S. Swartout

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lipsitz
Norman B. Lewis
Glen H. Leak
Dexter Levy
Robert W. Lipsett
Angelo J. LaMastra
Willard Magavern
Charles J. McDonough
Robert J. Metzen
Leo M. Michalek
Wall ace H. Miller
Edward F. Mimmack
William L. Marcy
Frank Meyers
Luther Musselman
Joseph Manch
James C. McGarvey
Charles E. May
George M. Masotti
Harold F. Meese
Arthur F. Movalli
Samuel R. Miserendio
David J. Mahoney
J. Eugene McMahon
Anthony Manzella
Arthur Mogerman
Charles F. Matthews

Irvin L. Terry
Joseph C. Vispi
Charles P. Voltz
Louis A. Vendetti
Robert S. Wolfson
William G. Willis
Fred H. White
Fred B. Wilkes

John F. Nelson
Bertram Portio
Sidney B. Pfeifer
Matthew J. Pantera, Sr.

Aaron Yasimow

William R. Root
Leo J. Rosen
George J. Roberts
Robert E. Rich
Raymond Roll
Louis J. Russo
Hugh Me. M. Russ, Sr.
Frank T. Riforgiato
William W. Rathke
Herbert R. Reitz
Albert G. Rowe
Carlton C. Rausch

Stanley J. Zambron
Brown Pontiac, Inc.
Hunt Real Estate Corp.
Maier-Schule G.M.C. Inc.
Morris &amp; Reimann Wreckers, Inc.
Parkhill and Hart Cleaners &amp; Launderers
Pearce and Pearce
Syracuse Restaurant Inc.
University Manor Motel
Williamsville Inn Corp.

31

�1964-1965
SPORTS SCHEDULES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO
VARSITY BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
1-at Brockport State
3--American University
9-Assumption (Ont.) University
12--Albany State
16-Westem Ontario
19-at Tennessee
29-30-at LeMoyne Invitational Holiday Tournament
JANUARY
16-Buffalo State at Memorial Aud.
23--Ithaca College
27-Toronto
3D-Steubenville at Memorial Aud.
FEBRUARY
6-Wayne State
9-Niagara at Memorial Aud.
13--at Colgate
20-at Albany State
24-Rochester
27-LeMoyne at Memorial Aud.
MARCH
1-at Buffalo State
3--Alfred
6-Bucknell
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL
DECEMBER
!-at Brockport State
3--Niagara
9-Canisius
12-Waterloo
16-Buffalo State
17-at St. Bonaventure
JANUARY
:n-Ithaca College
27-Canisius
FEBRUARY
3--at Canisius
6-St. Bonaventure
9-Niagara at Memorial Aud.
13--at Colgate
19-at Waterloo
24-Rochester
MARCH
1-at Buffalo State
3--Alfred
VARSITY FENCING
DECEMBER
5-Hobart
12--...cornell &amp; Case
19-at Syracuse
JANUARY
23--at Notre Dame

MARCH
13--North Atlantic Championships
at Buffalo, N. Y.
18-20-NCAA Championships at
Detroit University
(2 additional matches to be
scheduled)

MARCH
6-Ithaca College

VARSITY SWIMMING
DECEMBER
6-Upper N. Y. State Relays (site
to be announced)
9-Buffalo State
12-Rochester
16-Syracuse
JANUARY
23--at Buffalo State
27-Brockport State
3D-Oswego State
FEBRUARY
S-at Colgate
6-at Cortland State
9-at Niagara
13--at Geneseo State
27-St. Bonaventure
MARCH
3--Niagara
S-Upper N.
ships (site
11-13--NCAA
pionships
25-28-NCAA
Iowa Oity

Y. State Championto be announced)
College Div. Cham(site to be chosen)
Championships at

FRESHMAN SWIMMING
Same as varsity, except that no meets
scheduled on Feb. 13 or after Ma'r. 2.
VARSITY WRESTLING
JANUARY
16-0ntario Aggies
23--Colgate
29-at Western Ontario
30-at Waterloo
FEBRUARY
6-0swego State
13--at Rochester
19-R.I.T.
24-at Alfred
27-Cortland State
MARCH
6-Ithaca College
FRESHMAN WRESTLING

FEBRUARY
13--at Hobart
27-Syracuse &amp; Fenn

FEBRUARY
6-0swego State
13--at Rochester
20-Western Ontario
24-at Alfred
27-Cortland State

JANUARY
23--Colgate

FRESHMAN FENCING
DECEMBER
5-Hobart
12-Cornell
19-at Syracuse
FEBRUARY
13--at Hobart
27-Syracuse
VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY
SEPTEMBER
23--at Brockport State
26-at Syracuse
29-at Buffalo State
OCTOBER
1-R.I.T.
3--at LeMoyne
10-at Colgate
17-at Canisius
20-Alfred
28-at Cortland
31-at Canisius

Invitational
with

LeMoyn~

State
Invitational

NOVEMBER
3--Gannon
7-N. Y. State Championships at
Oswego
VARSITY GOLF
SEPTEMBER
24-St. Bonaventure
29-Niagara
OCTOBER
1-at Buffalo State
3--BrookLea Invitational at Rochester
5-Canisius
7-at St. Bonaventure
10-ECAC Regional Tourney at
Colgate
12-Buffalo State
14-at Niagara
17- ECAC Championships at Beth
Page, L. I.
19-at Canisius
23--McMaster
FRESHMAN FOOTBALL
SEPTEMBER
25-at Army
OCTOBER
3--at Ithaca College
10-Colgate
24-at Navy
31-at Manlius
13--Syracuse

�WHY 1

Because Marine, with 64
neighborhood locations, is more convenient. And Marine offers more services (58)
than any other bank. We're friendly, too!
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

�Buffalo's only remaining Independent Brewers
invite you to try Simon Pure Beer. It's made
right here by your friends and neighbors. It's

enjoyed right here by your friends and neighbors. Simon Pure, a good-natured beer with a
naturally good beer taste. Ask for Simon Pure

The William Simon Brewery, Buffalo, New York

•

~'Buffalo's

only independent brewers"

�</text>
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                  <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                  <text>The Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo football programs collection contains programs from UB and opposing teams from the 1930s to 2010.  The rich history of the University at Buffalo’s Buffalo Bulls spans decades and is well documented in this collection. Included in the programs are team rosters, season schedules, photographs of various teams and events, and local advertisements specific to the college hosting the program. There is a gap in coverage between the following years: 1975-1986, 1986-1993, 1993-2000, and 2004-2010.  The history of collegiate sports at the University at Buffalo began in 1894 when the football team played their inaugural season. Although the entire UB athletics program was cancelled in 1904 due to a lack of financial support, personnel, and leadership, it was reinstated in 1915. All intercollegiate athletics were suspended for the duration of World War II. UB sport teams returned in 1946 and the football program continued to grow and flourish. The football program has celebrated many accomplishments over the decades. The UB Bulls won the Lambert Cup in 1958 and the Mid-American Conference in 2008. On September 4th, 1993, the Bulls joined Division I for the first time since the establishment of the three subdivisions in 1973. September 28th, 2013 marked the Bulls bowl eligibility for the third time after their 41-12 win over Connecticut.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
This collection of football programs was compiled by Tom Borrelli.  Born September 12th, 1957 in Buffalo, New York, Borrelli was a prominent sports journalist and reporter, the first ever to be inducted into the National Lacrosse League Hall of Fame in 2007.  He graduated from St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute in 1975 and from SUNY Buffalo State in 1979. He worked for newspapers in Bluefield, West Virginia; Binghamton, New York; and Painesville, Ohio as part of their sports departments before he began working at The Buffalo News in October, 1989; and continued reporting for the News until his death in 2008. He covered the Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo’s professional lacrosse team and local high school sports teams in Western New York. In 2005, the National Lacrosse League created a scholarship in his honor. Originally for the league’s writer of the year, it changed, along with its title (Media Person of the Year) in 2011 to allow for a broader range of media members within the league to qualify for the award.&#13;
&#13;
 &#13;
&#13;
Tom Borrelli was severely injured at Robert Rich All High Stadium while covering a local high school football game on November 8th, 2008; passing away two weeks later at the age of 51 on November 20th. Following his death in 2008, The Buffalo News created a scholarship along with a trophy named in his honor in 2009. Each year the scholarship and trophy goes to the top high school lacrosse player in Western New York.</text>
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                  <text>LIB-UA049</text>
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              <text>Programs</text>
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                <text>1964-10-24 Buffalo vs Holy Cross</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494906">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494909">
                <text>University of Buffalo. -- Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494910">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Football.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494911">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Football.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494912">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Archives.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494913">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Archival resources.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494914">
                <text>College sports -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>64 Bulls</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494916">
                <text> October 24, 1964</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494917">
                <text> Official Program 50¢</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494918">
                <text>University of Buffalo</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494919">
                <text>31/3/1303</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494920">
                <text>University at Buffalo. University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494921">
                <text>1964-10-24</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="37">
            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494922">
                <text>University of Buffalo. Football Team.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494924">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494925">
                <text>en</text>
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            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494926">
                <text>Text</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494927">
                <text> Image</text>
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            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>LIB-UA049_B01-F12-003</text>
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                <text>New York (State) -- Buffalo -- University at Buffalo</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1494930">
                <text>2018-05-21</text>
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                <text>Tom Borrelli University at Buffalo Football Program Collection, 1930-2010</text>
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                <text> LIB-UA049</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1494933">
                <text>36 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1927328">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;. If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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