PA SE SIX ' LaXers Slosh To Overtime Tie By STEVE SOLOMON Collegian Sports Writer They looked strangely different when they trudged heavy-footed back to the locker room after battling each other, and nature, to a 9-9 draw. Their shirts were stained a' dark blue and their legs were coated with layers of mud that never had a chance to dry and crack and drop off in small pieces. Tired arms reached to their foreheads to divert twisting rivulets of water which entered their eyes and made seeing difficult. It had been a picture of futility, this floating lacrosse game. For Cortland State. it was an inability to break open a game when it held a four-goal advantage: for Penn State, four comebacks without gaining the lead; for both, double overtime without finding a winner. Lion attackman Ken Edwards limped toward the bench. "I'm just real proud of the way we played," he said. But the speaker's face was expressionless. It had been a grueling battle. Those far from the action could not see the dull stupor of exhaustio , . in the Penn State 1 3 2 3-9 State, 4:57, Kuivalski: 8:26 Kowalski. Cortland State 2 2 5 0-9 THIRD P5)1.1013: Penn State, 13:54, Schock (Schaepflin); 14:41, Edwards FIRST PERIOD: Penn Stale, 6:59, (Curtin); Cortland State, :54, Blank; Edwards (assist Schaepflin); Cortland 3:21, Blank; 4:37, Kowalski; 11:32, State, 4:57, hlclaughlan; 10:41, Ko- Lagasse, 14:49, Kowalski. walskl. FOURTH PERIOD: Penn State, 1:23, . • • . --- - . SECOND PERIOD: Penn State, 5:52, Scheepflin (Edwards); 3:22, Schad( Edwards (Schaepflin); 7:17, Passano (Edwards); 5:12 Schaepflln. (SChoepflin); 9:29. .Passano; Cortland OVERTIME: No scoring. players' eyes or hear the heavy breathing of those kneeling on one knee at the sidelines. The fatigue could not be seen in the running or contact either, although it became ap parent later when easy passes went errant and point blank shots flew wide or high. Penn State trailed 8-4 mid-way through the third period and 9-6 when the gun sounded. The 50-odd fans in overcoats and black umbrellas had a good excuse to head for their cars. None of them made it. Bob Schoepflin pumped in a goal 83 seconds into the last quarter and Dave Schock followed with another two minutes later. Then, suddenly, dramatically, came the big play, the kind that earn Willie Mays and Carl Yastrzemski and Mickey Mantle $lOO,OOO a year. Schoepflin, eight yards out on the left side, whizzed a shot past the Cortland goalie. and the score was knotted at 9-9. The Penn State bench exploded. Twenty muddy shirts surrounded the 5-7 sharpshooter and began hoisting him into the air before they remembered that there were still 10 minutes left in the game. Thirty feet away Cortland State coach Fred Pisano, an assistant to Lion coach Dick Pencek in 1962, said a few words to his players and sent them back onto the field. Their heads were bowed. but it wasn't because of the rain which was steadily growing heavier. The clock resumed its inexorable countdown, but in stead of dragging, the action intensified. Body checks be came more crushing and 200-pound defensemen sent the lighter. faster attackmen who could no longer dodge and keep their footing sprawling into the mire. Dick Pencek walked to the scorer's table to check the time. Three minutes. "My God, if this goes into overtime . . ." And Then It Happened The gun went off. Twenty players trudged to the side lines. Pencek. water streaming into his eyes, and Pisano, shaking his head sadly, huddled with their teams. Nothing earth-shattering was said. Both teams moments earlier had sent a pair of shots screaming off the goalposts, inches from the hallowed mud under the nets. Two five-minute overtime periods, the head referee said, Pencek went to the bench and grabbed a towel that might have been used to clean up the Johnstown flood. He wiped his balding head and then threw the rag to Pisano, who smiled understandingly. Play started again. Cortland midfielder Stan Kowalski snared a Penn State pass and turned on goalie Jim Mc- Guone. He faked, then shot, but not quite so hard or ac curately as earlier. McGuone caught it in his stick. Kowal ski, who had scored on five more difficult shots during regulation time, trotted downfield a little tired and shaken. They traded fast breaks and missed shots for 10 minutes and then it was over. Tied. 9-9. Pencek smiled and congratulated his players. Someone offered him an umbrella. "Thanks." he said, "but I'm about as wet now as I can possibly get." Still on the field, Ken Edwards was examining the back of his knee. Three hours earlier, swollen and throb bing, it has been shot with pain killers and taped so he could give it a try in the game. Pencek. thinking of a certain three goals and two assists, trotted out to say a few words to his sophomore star. Then they walked off, Edwards a bit slower Relay Forfeit Gives Fayette Swim Title Montour-Pike sworn danger- BTP led off with a victory in ously during the entire intra- the 50 freestyle, bettering the mural water season and got 1M and Penn State varsity rec away with it. Yesterday, in ord on the . v-ay with a 23.8 the champimship round, they clocking. BTP then took the drowned on their own success, backstroke and butterfly, but dropping a 22-19 decision to PKP rebounded for a arst Fayette House. in diving. The relay was taken During the course of elim- by Beta in record time of 44.2 inations, Montour used only to cao the triumph. four men, and because each man can swim in only two events, they invariably ran State Rugby Club out of swimmers and forfeited the last relay in each. It never Drops Two Tilts mattered until yesterday. Mon- tour built up only a 19-17 lead Heavy rains and ankle-deep before the last relay event, mud hampered the Penn State then lost on their forfeit of the Rugby Club Saturday as it lost five points. two games to Wheeling College. Meanwhile, in the fraternity The first team lost a tough, final, Beta Theta Pi raced by 3-0 match, failing to score on Pi Kappa Phi, 29-12, several occasions when close Montour started quickly with to the goal. McAllister taking the 50 free- Wheeling's second team took style in 26.7. Fayette then took a 6-0 victory. all points coming the 50 backstroke and butter- on two tries in the second half. fly, before Smith of Montour The State Rugby Club's then forfeited the relay, but next match is the annual Alum this time it cost them the meet. ni Game. The event will be held The Creek championship was Saturday on the lacrosse prac- - a runaway. Drew Armstrong of tice field. THE DAIL LOCAL AD DEADLINE 4:00 P.M. 2 Days Before Publication Pst isB ta its ma oa bs to PA 0. 10 NAVAL AVIATION OFFICER PROCUREMENT TEAM MAY 13th to 17th If you are going to be something, why not be something special? H you demand something exciting and challenging, consider the' opportunities available as a Navy pilot, flight officer or air intelligence officer. Consider world wide travel and the invaluable experience gained through Naval aviation. Why not investi gate your chance to fly with the finest! OFFERING A COMMISSION IN THE NAVY AS: • NAVY PILOT • AIR INTELLIGENCE OFFICER • NAVAL FLIGHT OFFICER • INFORMATION ON OTHER OFFICER PROGRAMS Ask about a ride in the T-34 aircraft Tuesday-thru-Friday OLLEGIAN CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 10:30 A.M. Day Before Publication WILL BE AT THE LHUB EMIRIM EVEN THOUGH heavy rain hampered Saturday's Penn State-Syracuse track meet, the Lions' outstanding 440 relay team set a new Beaver Stadium record, :42.6. Kneeling are Ken Brinker of Dußois and Bob Kester of Media. Standing are Bob Beam of Scotch Plains. N.J. and Charlie Hull of Langley AFB, Va.,State shattered the Orangemen. 131-33. Yaz Fights Back NEW YORK (AP) It fig- points and Etchebarren 36. .348. He lost 14 points with a - ured that Carl Yastrzemski Ken Harrelson of Boston, for-18 showing. Tito Francona would sock it to 'em eventually who held the No. 1 position a of Atlanta is fourth at .340, Pol and the Boston Red Sox out- week ago with a .400 slate, fell lowed by Alex Johnson, Cincin fielder has been doing just all the way to .273. He managed nati, ,327. The figures include that while gaining con.,iderable only two hits in 26 at bats in S :day's games. ground in defense of his Ameri- last week's games. ; Willie Tops can League batting title. Pete Rose of Cincinnati held Willie McCovey of San Fran- Way down the list with a .233 onto the National League lead cisco took over the home run average a week ago, last sea- although his average dipped 33 lead with nine and tied the son's triple crown winner points to .371 with an 8-for-30 Mets' Ron Swoboda for the top caught fire the past week. He performance, spot in runs batted in with 24. collected 12 hits in 25 tries, a McCovey had three homers and Jerry Grote of the New York .480 pace, and boosted his over- seven RBIs last week. all mark to .296. This placed Mets rushed up from 10th place Washington's Frank Howard him ninth in the batting compe- to second. He had 12 hits in 28 Also slammed three homers tition, 31 points behind the tries and gained 35 points to, and moved into first place in .352. During one stretch, he had leader. Cleveland's Max Alvis. the American League with They're closely, bunched at seven consecutive hits. . nine. Roger Repoz of Cali the top. Alvis took over first Curt Flood of St. Louis fornia continues to lead in Place despite a six-point loss dropped one place to third at RBIs with 20. to .327. He had nine hits in 29 times at bat in last week's action. Red Carew of Minnesota and Bal.Freehan of Detroit are tied for second place at .321 fol lowed by Andv Etchebarren of Baltimore, .317, and Willie Horton, Detroit, .310. Carew, the runner-up Ir st wee k. slipped 38 points. by collecting only eight safeties in 14 at tempts. Freehan dropped four IM Pesults SOCCER Pt Kappa Phi over Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Psi over Kappa Sigma, 2-0 Phi Sigma Kappa over Pi Kappa Tau, Aloha Sigma Phi over Beta Sigma Rho, forfeit Lords over MMF, forfeit Remains over Conglomerations, forfeit Allegheny def. Bucks, 4-0 Tau Phi Delta clef. Theta Delta Chi, 3-0 Nanticoke def. McKeesport, 1.0 Uniontown def. Pottsville, forfeit Delta Sigma Phi def. Phi Sigma Delta Easton def. Aliquippa, 1,0 Ready For OCCUPANCY SEPT. 1, 1968 HARBOUR TOWERS 710 S. Atherton St. State College, Pa. Studio Apartments Furnished or Unfurnished 1 Bedroom Apartments Call Alex Gregory Associates, Inc. 238-5081 SUITE 102 HOLIDAY INN For information and application to HOLD AN APARTMENT FOR YOU! ,For Results=Use Collegian Classifieds ftftftftftft 15 , 1 ft ft ft 'A SEA '15:3 Ita SU 'Pa 1 1 01 I! 'LT II II 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. TfIE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Lion Games Cancelled Penn State's baseball team had another bout with the weather Saturday and the elements, as always, proved superior. A scheduled doubleheader with George Washington University was rained out, denying the Lions a chance to improve their 7-9 season record. The games will not be re-scheduled. The next action for State will be Wednesday when Mansfield State visits for a scheduled doubleheader. Since university rules prevent any weekday athletic event from starting before 3:RO p.m. the two games will be limited to seven innings each. The games against Mansfield could be very important for the Lions if they expect to survive the season with a winning record. After Wednesday only five games remain —double headers with Maryland and Pitt and a single contest with Navy. All three clubs are enjoying success ful seasons and will provide stiff competition. State has been in a slump all season, culminating with its current four-game losing streak. The week layoff since last will give Lion coach Chuck M , and it may help his hurlers. Lingenfelter have been ineffe. Wednesday's Temple game edlar a rested pitching staff All but staff leader Denny tive The Fall and Winter Pledge Class Would like to thank the SISTERS OF r.24,L DELTA GAMMA for agreat Pledge Formal Sorority Fall Rush Registration Tuesday, May 14th Wednesday, May 15th 203 N. 0.8. 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. , All girls interested in next fall must register at this time. •, Thinclo4'Thump Orange, Win Ist By DAN DONOVAN f Rick Richardson paced the Collegian Sports Writer l w a h v i e le n. li F m re c s rinthgsat'onlB4;v3hitrYesc] Penn Statt-'s thinclads won the discus 1524 1 / 4 . their first outdoor meet last Despite the fact that IC4A Saturday in convincing fashion. champion Chip Rockwell was by downing Syracuse 131-33. held out of the triple jump by During an afternoon rain an injury. State stlli managed, which soaked all the athletes, to take all three places from' State ran up a large lead by sweeping six events and taking first place in six others. The Lions were particularly strong in the distances, sweep ing all three places in both the mile and two-mile contests. Ray Smith was a double win ner in the distance events, lead ing the pack in a rain-slowed race Smith Sweeps Following Smith in the mile were Phil Peterson and Jeff Deardorff. Terry Engelder and Jim Dixon joined Smith in sweeping the two-mile race. The 440 relay team of _Bob Kester, Ken Brinker, Charlie Hull and Bob Beam ran the dis, tanee in a 42.6 time, a new Bea ver Stadium record. Kester's many abilities were in evidence in other 'ents as the junior took second in the 100 and the triple jump. Only Brinker saw action in more events as he was second in the hig hurdles, third in the 220, and ran a 48 secoi.,d anchor leg for the victorous mile re lay team. A third member o: the 440 team, Beam, took first place in the 100-yard dash. Hetrick Excelts The 120 high huidles was one of the most satisfying wins fo: State as Dave Hetrick won the event in :14.7 and Chuck Harvey followed Brinker for a clean sw.eep. Hetrick thrilled the crowd with his fine form, as he ran his best time in his four year career. In the field events, the wet weather prevented -top per formances in the hurling con tests, yet State dominated them sweeping both the javelin and the discus. Wrestling Champ Arrested Preliminary hearin g s have Henslee said police were in the day in Stillwater, Okla. been - scheduled for y3l in alerted shortly before 4 am. He was charged with second a burgulory case involving May 7 by a electric "eye" degree burglary. three Oklahoma State Univer- burglar alarm located inside a The two Kellers posted bond sity wrestlers, - men's clothing store in Nor- of $3,000 each in Cleveland Dwayne Lynn Keller, his man, Okla. County Court, twin brother Darrell Hay and When police arrived they Mickel Carrol, all 20, were ar- found the Keller brothers inside rested and charged with bur- the store. They were ordered glary May 7._ to come out with their hands Dwayne Keller was voted the up but refused. When Dwayne VOLLEYBALL country's outstanding sopho- Keller finally emerged from DORMITORY SEMI-FINALS more wrestler by -Amateur the store he broke into a run Watts-II over- Mercer, 12-IS, 15-9, 15-13 Wrestling News biter winning causing an officer Frost to fire Butternut over mnotourpik, 15-4, 15-1 the Big Eight and National 123- two gun shots. GRADUATE SEMI-FINALS pound division crowns. His per- The second shot hit Keller Bo T o s lles over Never-Was, 14-16, 13-3, formance in the national tour- "about two inches above the Physics over Atherton-Gewinners. 18-16, ney, held March 21-2 at Tint- right ankle," according to Hen- 15-9 varsity Park, was instrumental slee. Keller was listed in sat- TONIGHT'S MATCHES in bringing the national title isfactery condition at Norman Graduate and Independent Finals at to OSU. Municipal Hospital. 6:30 Dormitory and Fraternity Finals at Norman police chief William Carrol was apprehended later 7:30 . Lg. Unlimited Right Next Door Free Pickup and Delivery Service for Dry Cleaning and Laundry in the evenings 1 r Call 238-1241 Daytime; 238-1757 Evenings 'IR the Center of Pennsylvenie FREE PARKING at Rear of Store while you shop • 229 S. ALLEN ST. e 2384241 RAY SMITH - .. . double winner the Oranr.;emen. Ray Blinn stepped into Rockwell's s h oes anl was followed by Kester and Ben Whistler in the event. In commenting about the lop sided win, State coach John Lucas was less than pleased. "Aside from, the times of Het rick, Brinker, and the 440 team, we havE. no reason to cele brate," said Lucas. "We are pleased with the victory, yet we were c'^nied the expected fast times by the weather." Lucas had expected very fast times from his cerformers in preparation for the Big Four meet this weekenes with Pitt, Syracuse, and West Virginia. The freshmen went down to mac Sez— KEEP YOUR COOL: .- Right! Keep your "cool", but don't be "cold"'dur, ing the Spring Week evening activities.• Try one of our Lightweight Jackets. We've got a complete selection of zipper jackets in all the latest- shades, including Yellow, Blue, British Tan. Lined and Unlined. Starting from just 6.98. Stop in anytime —we invite browsers! HAS E RDAS ERY TUESDAY, MAY .14, 1968 defeat by the slight Margin of 75-70. State's distance running future shows much promise as Jim Miler demonstrated his ability by taking the mile and 880 titles and gamely corn peting in the two mile race for a third place finish. Miller's more vaunted com panion, Mike Schurko, was gun ning for the freshman record in the two mile, but fell short as he slipped again and again on the soaked track. Several other freshmen took first Places. Tim Donovan was the victor in the 440. Ed Seese won the pole vault and the younq Lions took both relay events. The freshman showing wag remarkable as Scate has only twelve first year men to work with and many ran in .s , veral events The hard-w rking Frosh have a meet with Cornell Saturday. Track Events MO Relay-1. State (Raster, Brinker, Ha, Beam), :42.6 (stadium record). Mire Run-1. Smith, State; 2. Peter. son. State: 3. Deardorff, State, 4:19.3. 125 High Hurdles-1. Hetrick, Stater 2. Brinker, State; 3, Harvey, stale, :14.7. 440-1. Roberts, Syracuse; 2. Calhoun, State, 4. Epstein, State, :49.6. 100-1. Beam, State; 2. Kester, Stater Maine, Syracuse, :10.0. 880-1. Marcus. Syracuse; 2. Gentry, Stater 3. Weisel, State, 1:56.2. 440 Intermediate Hurdles-1, Wood, Syracuse; 2. Harvey, State; J. Fitz patrick, Syracuse, :56.0. 220-1. Nlanne, Syracuse; 2. Beam, State; 3. Brinker, State, :22.2. 2 Mile Run-1. Smith, State; 2. En. settler, State; 3. Dixon, State, 9:26.4,_ Mile Relay-1. State (McLaughlin / Epstein, Calhoun, Brinker),-3:22.6. EEL= Long Jump-1. Blinn, State; 3 21-34 i. Rockwelf, State; 2... Nelson, Syracuse. .High Jump-1. Colston, State; 2. On , derwood. Syracuse; 3. Rockwell, State, Javelin-1. Richardson, State; 2. Bradley, State; 3. Allen. State, 184-3. Shot McWilliams, State; 2. Smith. Syracuse; 3. Kauffman, Slate, 47-21/4. Triple Jump-1. Blinn, State; 2. Kes ter, State; 3. We - later, State, .16.111:, Pole Vault-1. Beuerle, Syracuse; 2. Syracuse; 2. Kiefer, State; 3. Losch• mane, State, 11 feet. Discus-1. Kingston, State; 2, Whittle State; 3. McWilliams, State, 152-11/4, IM Results