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Page 70 text:
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LACROSSE U NICORN stickmen enjoyed another out- standing year as the ten-game lacrosse season again saw the ASLC undefeated in schoolboy com- petition. Rivals both new and traditional were gen- erally trampled, and the only blot on an otherwise sensational record was a tense 6-4 loss to a 10th grade team from the Hill School in Pennsylvania. Outscoring their ten opponents 98-24 l6O-9 in the first halfll, the Blue 84 Gold were led in scoring by Menehune Clifton York's 40 pts. 122 goals and 18 assistsj at attack, Glenn Robinson's 15 goals and 12 assists at midfield, along with stout defense and goaltending fled by Captains Hilliard at defense and Evans in the netsj. Whereas in the past the team had largely relied on one outstanding man to carry the bulk of the attack, this year produced a real team effort Q61 of the 98 goals were assistedll. The season opened on a warm April 19th against arch-rival Buckley, on the Unicorns' home field at Randall's Island. Quickly the Unicorn attack took charge, pouring in a goal-a-minute performance that threatened to make a laugher out of the game unless the subs saw quick action. Midfielder Leon Kinloch took opening scoring honors for the new season, soloing past several bewildered Buckley foes after only 1:50 had elapsed. After that the floodgates were open, as all the attackmen lClinton the Rab- bit johnson and Mark Tiedemann completed the starting trio along with Yorkj dented the twines for a 5-0 lead at the end of the quarter. The ASLC scored virtually at will, as the subs poured in for a 12-3 triumph. .N Y 8.1 1 ' K yiq., Q 'Jw K ., vt t -f , k , .m'ip...,..ffa- ' ' A . , M -'1.,..,ff - 1 1 A 'G .J as ..,.,,,gv . ' '. ,O ki? ' ' f 'fu ,za -4 f . Nw-. -an . M 4.,.-4g'.- Ge- 49 3. ff MS, . . . f . at fy- .- - ALLEN-STEVENSON LACROSSE CLUB - fourth row: Briger, L. Siskind, M. Seplow, P. Margolis, Y. Thrush, third row: Coach Nichols, l. lenoure, Robert Raines, R. Margolis, luly, G. Demirjian, Sommers, Coach Grassig second row: Muller manager, Lesberg, vanLeight, D. Zaloom, Tiedemann, B. ludson, Kabbash, D. Landis, Duryeag front row: Kulman, Kinloch, B. johnson, P. Livingston, York, Hilliard Co-Captain 84 Asst. Gen. Mgr. ASLC, Evans Co-Captain, Robinson, C. lohnson, Croc, A. Zaloom ,-L:
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Page 69 text:
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Page 71 text:
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fi 1V LACROSSE - back row: Coach English, Mills, P. Cohen, S Thompson, Burr, Goldfischer, Bryant, Speyerg middle row Miller, Leibg front row: lon Levy, 1. Sinclair, Anderson Kleefield, A. Seplow, Couloucoundis The following day the Unicorns faced a weak St. Bernard's team at home. York, johnson 81 Co. quick- ly went to work, building a 7-1 halftime lead, aided by outstanding play from Robinson, Kinlock and midfielder Peter Livingston. 14-2 was the final in this fiasco, which saw the Unicorns take 71 shots! Things were tougher the following Friday against Englewood, also at home on RandalI's. Suffering from the first quarter jitters, the ASLC found them- selves knotted at 1-apiece at the end of the first period, thanks to a beautiful solo effort by Liv- ingston. Things looked up quickly after the break, however, as York and Tiedemann combined for three tallies to put the Unicorns ahead to stay. Tiedemann's goal was particularly pretty, as he dod- ged two defenders to score from close-in. The sec- ond half was dominated by Robinson's play ftwo goals and an assistj as the ASLC went on to a hard- fought 8-2 win against its first tough opponent of the season. Confident from previous years' successes, and newly equipped with a potent Maryland 2-2-2 of- fense, the squad took to the busses to visit Harvey School in Katonah, longtime A-S rival in all sports. Although the Unicorns scored quickly lRobinson and Tiedemannl, the team was in for a bloodbath as the totally incompetent referee allowed flagrant vio- lations to go unnoticed. Harvey's play got increas- ingly rougher, and only enforcer tactics by Hilliard and defenseman jimmy Croc Krissel kept things in order. Fortunately the novel Boys' Latin ride kept the Katonah lads off balance enough to mess up in
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