The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 10, 1968, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
Angevine Strikes Gold
After Shifting Roles
By DON McKEE
Assistant Sports Editor
A tall, blue-shirted figure cut into the
clear and sprinted down the sidelines.
Penn State quarterback Chuck Burkhart
fired a long pass, the receiver made a
fine catch and the Nittany Lions had just
completed a 25-yard touchdown toss.
The fans, bored in the closing mo
ments of a 25-9 win over Kansas State.
leaned back and started talking about
Ted Kwalick making another great scor
ing catch Right?
Wrong. The man pulling in the pass for
one of State's two touchdown bombs this
season wasn't Kwalick. but Leon
Angevine. While Kwalick was digging out
from underneath about 10 KSU defenders.
Angevine was quickly but quietly runniiig
a pass pattern that fooled the defense and
led to a score.
Last week at West Virginia, while
Kwalick was getting stomped on by
defenders and wiped out by hordes of
blockers, Angevine was slipping loose to
catch four passes for 54 yards.
In fact, Angevine is leading the team
after three games with 10 receptions,
good for 13.6 yards a catch. Not bad for
an old running defensive back who's now
playing split end.
In Joe Paterno's switch-conscious
brand of football, Angeline is one of the
best examples of the profits reaped when
UCLA Listed To Top
Penn State, 17-14
by WILL GRINISLEY
Associated Press Sports Writer
MEXICO CITY (AP) "No se puede ganar siempre".
No matter the language, it's the same: "You can't win
'em all". Despite the sabotage of Mississippi and Syracuse.
we scored 47-13 for .784 last week and a season's average of
.786.
Now reports are in from all the scouts across the border
and it looks like a gold medal week across the board:
Purdue 35, Ohio State 17: The Buckeyes are on the re
bound but the bounce is not enough to hurdle Leroy Keyes
and Mike Phipps.
Oklahoma 14, Texas 10: This is the one that starts hearts •
and oil wells pumping in the Southwest. The Sooners win
the one that got away in 1967.
California 25, Army 7: The Golden Bears finally have the
scoring punch they lacked in recent years.
Alabama 28, Vanderbilt 14: Absence of strong running
speed has taken much of the whip from the Crimson Tide.
Texas Christian 21, Southern Methodist 18: Count on the
Horned Frogs to build a fence around Jerry Levias.
UCLA 17. Penn State 14: The rugged Bruins can't afford
to lose two in a row to eastern rivals.
Navy 20, Air Force 13: The Midshipmen have a knack of
rising over their heads against service academy rivals.
Notre Dame 38, Northwestern 7: Ara Parseghian expends
a little mercy on his former team.
Michigan State 19, Michigan 17: We must go with the im- •
proved Spartans, but don't be surprised if it's the other way
sround.
Southen California 24, Stanford 20: A prediction that the
Trojans' 0. J. Simpson will have one of his roughest days
of the season.
Tennessee 21, Georgia Tech - 14: The Vols' defense is far '
too strong for Tech's sluggish runners but Lanfy Good may . ,
toss a couple of TDs.
Georgia 18, Mississippi 14: The Bulldogs, who escaped
Dietzel by a point, are always tough between the hedges at
Athens.
Put It in Print
(Continued from page three)
responses from students and faculty. Because it was,
after all, a dialogue before the word was bastardized
to a whimper.
"Want of feeling; lack of passion, emotion, or' ex
citement": begin again?
What for? Who needs abuse? Revolution could
come to PSU and walk on by.
Passion Better Spent
If the faculty and students together make a
university what it is and we believe they must
maybe all that passion, Mr. Editor, is better spent up
a tree, in attacks on billboards, in a slumschool pro
ject, in a capital punishment group, in a petition to
the MLA to get the next annual meeting out of
Chicago, in Upward Bound, an experimental film
or in writing a novel about universities and goats.
But if 50 people were anxious to resuscitate S
FD? Might be nice to get out the huff-colored paper
and see if 530 could be scraped' together again. Or
some new cornflower blue paper... The ideas are
nearly the same, but a new color might be interest
ing...though there's something to be said for conti
nuity. On second thought: anyone with some intellect
and guts can have the paper.
WDFM. Radio Penn State
First in Music - Stereo 91 -
BLOCK & BRIDLE CLUB
7:30 Thursday, October 10
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Quaker City
Rock Festival
Presented by Larry Magid
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FOR RESERVATIONS AND
INFORMATION: LOVE-222
moving men to different positions. He's
been moved more often than a chess
pawn, but suddenly he's found a home.
Angevin was the starting wingback
for four games his sophomore year. Then
a broken foot kicked him out of a job, and
out of the rest of the season. Last year,
Angevine was .a part-time starter as a
defensive halfback. Now, he's the split
end.
"Leon was a kid who had good size, a
lot of courage and good speed and we felt
we had to find a place where he could
play," Lion coach Joe Paterno said.
"He has a very long stride and didn't
look like he'd be a good running back. He
doesn't have the quick feet he's a
glider.' So we had him on defense last
year. and now he's the split end."
The object of all this planning
characterizes the position changes as
"different."
"It's also been confusing," Angevine
said. "When you learn one position and
then get moved, it's pretty rough There's
a whole different theory on playing each
position."
Ted Kwalick enters into the Angevine
story again. This summer he taught the
new split end'some of what he knows
and what Kwalick knows about playing
end would make any pass receiver better.
"I played split end in the last couple
games last year. and then all Spring,"
Car Buffs do it!
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Enters Again
Tigers Smash Cards
ST. LOUIS t 4 The arous
ed Detroit Tigers clobbered St.
Louis pitching for a record
tying 10 runs in the third in
ning yesterday and squared the
World Series at three games
each with a 13-1 victory behind
Denny McLain, a two-time
loser.
Jim Northrup's grand slam
homer off relief pitcher Larry
Jaster was the big blow in the
tnird when the Tigers sent 15
men to the plate against loser
Ray Washburn and three
others.
It was the biggest Series in
ning since Hack Wilson mis
judged a fly ball at Philadel
phia in 1929 and opened the
gates for 10 runs by the
Philadelphia A's against the
Chicago Cubs. The A's, trailing
8-0 at the time, also sent 15
men to bat.
The final score didn't quite
match the New York Yankees'
18-4 rout of the New York
Giants in 1936.
Julian Javier's single with
two out and two on in the ninth
saved the Cards from suffering
the' most lopsided 'shutout in
Series history.
McLain. second, choice to in
jured Earl Wilson in Manager
Mayo Smith's pre-game opi
nion, made up for two earlier
defeats by Bob Gibson as he
came back strong with a cor
tisone shot easing his aching
right shoulder.
Up to Gibson
The Tigers' victory once
again puts it squarely up to
Gibson, the Cards' strikeout
ace, in a seventh game duel to
day with left-handed Mickey
Lolich,. .also a two-time Series
winner.
Morning showers delayed the
start for 10 minutes and um
brellas sprouted in the crowd
of 54,692 at Busch Stadium as
the rain resumed in the last of
the seventh inning. The lights
were turned on all during the
dark, cloudy afternoon. Play
was held up for 49 minutes by
rain in the last of the eighth.
By the time the game was
resumed only a handfuli of
fans remained in the rain
soaked stands. Some press box
wags thought it should have
been declared a TKO as soon
as it became legal to save the
battered Cards' from absorb
ing further punishment. For Good Results
The Series thus followed the
same pattern as 1967 when the
Cards opened up a 3-1 edge on
Boston only to drop two in a
row before Gibson bested Jim Collegian Classifieds
Lonborg in the final. The only
A used to be for Apple...
Now it's for
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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA
Angevine said. "Then Chuck (Burkhart)
and Ted and I worked out together all
Summer and that really helped."
Some opposing defenses may think
that Angevine has replaced Kwalick as
everybody's favorite receiver, but Pater-
EXCEED
"We try to adjust from game to
game and do what we can against each
opponent," he said.
"The plays are pretty w ell
balanced," Angevine said. "Most of them
come from the man upstairs with the
headphones, what he seems to think will
open up."
With all the defenders keying on
Kwalick and Charlie Pittman. Angevine
is the logical man to go to the pass.
"Yes, we've been going to Leon," said
quarterback Burkhart. "He's improved a
lot, has great speed and he's developed a
lot of moves."
Angevine once ran the 100 in 9.9 se
conds, but that was back at Peru Central
High in New York. The broken foot may
have slowed him down, but it hasn't
made much difference, since he's outrun
every defense so far.
So the next time you see a Penn State
end grab a pass for a long gain, don't as
sume automatically that it's just another
Kwalick spectacular.
Check the program. More often than
not these days, it's Leon Angevine playing
secondary receiver to an All-American
and doing a great job.
Gibson, Lolich in Finale
teams to come back from 3-1 Washburn, a winner with relief
deficits were the Boston Red help from Joe Hoerner in the
Sox in a best-of-9 set in 1903, third game, was wild and was
the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1925 not throwing hard.
and the New York Yankees in
1958. The third inning started in
nocently enough with a walk to
Once again Gibson, who last Dick McAuliffe on four pitches.
worked Sunday in the rain- Before it was over 10 runs
delayed game at Detroit. will were in, 15 men had been at
have three days' rest while his bat and the Cards' Washburn,
opponent, Lolich, will have had Jaster, Ron Willis and Dick
only twodays to recover from Hughes had been roughed up
Monday's winning effort. for a grand slam homer, six
Breaks Hitless Streak singles, four walks and a hit
It was apparent early that b atsman.
this was not Washburn 's day.
The Tigers hopped on him for After McAuliffe walked,
two runs in the second when Mickey Stanley singled to Jet..
Norm Cash walked on a 3-1 and Al Kaline, who had three
pitch, Willie Horton doubled hits and drove in four runs,
him home and Bill Freehan pumped a single to center,
broke a 16-at-bat hitless streak scoring McAuliffe. That was
with a single, scoring Horton. all for Washburn.
Man Behind McLain?
Grand-Skim Northrup
ST. LOUIS lA') When Denny McLain makes his
pitch for a six-figure baseball contract in 1969, Jim
Northrup would like to go along for the ride.
McLain would be happy to have him aboard—along
with all the rest of the Detroit Tigers.
"I want to thank every guy on this club," McLain said
yesterday after going from two-time World Series goat to
just-in-time hero as the 'Tigers pummeled the St. Louis
Cardinals, 13-1, with the help of Northrup's grand slam
homer.
"I wish I could take the whole gang into salary nego
tiations with me." said the Tigers' sore-armed pitching ace,
who scattered nine hits while atoning for two Series beat
ings and setting up a seventh game showdown today.
McLain, working with two days rest on a cool, rain
marred afternoon and bolstered by a cortisone injection
that relieved the pain in his right shoulder, shut out the
Cards until the ninth.
Northrup, meanwhile, keyed a record-tying 10-run
Detroit burst in the third with a bases-loaded blast into
the upper deck in right field.
"Do you know that this guy has hit five grand slam
homers this year and four of them have come while I was
pitching," McLain said.
"It went through my mind while I was on deck that
I might get another chance to hit one for Denny," Northrup
said. "But when I went up there I was just going for a
sacrifice fly."
"I want to say something in Denny's behalf." the
Tigers' slugging center fielder added. "I was playing be
hind him both times before in this Series and I could tell
there was something wrong. He wasn't throwing right. He
told me in the locker room his arm was hurting. But he
didn't want to use it as an alibi."
IS FOR OVERKILL
PREVIOUSLY HIDDEN in the large shadow cast by All-
American end Ted Kwalick, senior Leon Angevine has
emerged as the Lions' leading pass receiver. In three games
the split end has grabbed 10 passes, good for 136 yards
and one touchdown.
Alpha Delta Pi
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Sunday, October 13 6:30 P.M.
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Jaster never did get anybody
out. Norm Cash singled, scor
ing Stanley and Willie Norton
walked, loading the bases. Nor
thrup, who hit four grand slam
homers in regular season,
including two on successive in
nings against Cleveland June
24, ripped' Jaster's second pitch
into the Card bullpen, about
380 feet away in right-field. It
was the 11th Series grand
slammer and first since the
Yanks' Joe Pepitone in 1964.
Now it was 8-0 but the Tigers
weren't through yet. Freehan,
first man to face Willis, walk
ed on four pitches. Don Wert
was hit by a pitch and McLain
made the first out, a sacrifice
bunt. An intentional walk to
McAuliffe loaded the bases
again and' Kaline singled to
center ; again,Qr,his; second. hit
of the .inning, driving in Wert
and McAuliffe.
Bad Bounce
Dick Hughes was the next
victim and Cash greeted him
with a single to right that
bounced over Orlando Cepeda's
head, scoring Stznley with the
ninth run. Horton's single off
Hughes' glove brought home
Kaline with run No. 10 of the
inning.
There was a derisive cheer
from the crowd when Hughes
finally made Northrup fly to
Lou Brock in left field.
Kaline, the hitting star of the
Tigers' fine comeback,
delivered his second Series
homer with' nobody on in the
fifth against Steve Carlton,
fifth of seven Card pitchers.
McLain never had it so good.
The 31-game winner of regular
season coasted along with a
big lead, pitching steady ball
against the deflated Cards.
McLain had the mdst lopsided
shutout in his pocket until the
ninth when singles by Roger;
Maris, Orlando Cepeda and
Javier gave the Cards their
only run. He allowed nine hits.
all singles, didn't walk a man
and struck out seven. includino
the last hitter he faced Dal
Maxvill. still hitless in 20 trips.
After the game, McLain was
asked if he had - good stuff. "It
isn't that hard to pitch when
you have a 13-run lead," he
said. "I had real good control."
Rams Overpower
Lion Bootees, 5-2
• ~
By DAN DONOVAN
, Collegian Sports Writer
West Chester's soccer team scored fast and furiously in the?
first period yesterday to shell-shock the Nittany Lion squad
and pin the second loss in A row on State's booters.
On their home fidld, the speedster Rams downed the Lions, 5-
2.
The first West Chester score came even before 40 seconds
had passed in the first period as Bill .Trimpi booted home a
goal after an assist from Tom Elwell. Elwell got his own
chance lo score as he kicked home a penalty shot 15 minutes
later: Ken Weller completed the first-period surge with an
unassisted goal only three minutes later.
West Chester showed very good overall speed and seemed to
have a height advantage as it constantly controlled the head
ball when matched man-to-man with Lion booters.
• - - -
State's John Kim lowered the halftime margin when he took
an assist from Bob Schoepflin and broke the ice for the Lions in
the second period.
John Oberholtzer added two goals for West Chester one each
in the third and last periods to complete the scoring for the
Rams.
Lion wingman Dave Stock put the last score on the board as
be took a pass from substitute Jim Watts in the fourth period.
State's goalies had an extremely busy day as West Chester
fired shots from all sides at the netmen. First-stringer Pete
Geltman and sub John Pyle had an amazing 22 saves in the
losing cause.
A spokesman for the Lion team said that the small-college
team was stronger than highly-ranked West Virginia, which
squeaked by State last Saturday, 2-1.
Another fine performance was shown by State halfback Glen
Ditzler, who's individual peformance was one of the few
bright spots in the loss.
PENN STATE
Gellman
Sears
Lonzar
Ditzler
Galvin
Carinci
Stock
Gatlo
Snyder
Klim
Schoepflin
Score by quarters
Penn State ...... ....... 0 1 0 1-2
West Chester . ..... 3 0 1 1-5
Scoring: TrimPi (WC), Elwell (WC), Weller (WC).
Klim (PS), Oberholtzer, 2, (WC), Stock (PS).
Penn' State's Rush Defense
Leads Major College Stats
Penn State's rugged defense lowest mark in the country.
against rushing has put the
The University of . Arizona
Nittany Lions first in the nation
trails the - Lions, having surren
in that department, according dered 141 yards rushing in
to official statistics issued three games for an average of
Tuesday by the National Col- 47 yards per game.
legiate Sports Service.
The Lions - have allowed only Wyoming, Ohio State and
HO yards gained rushing in Bowling Green follow the two
three games, for an average of leaders in this defensive
33.3 yards a game, also the category.
IM Football Results
FRATERNITY Snyder-Wayne 7, Aliquippa 0
Alpha Chi Rho 5, Alpha Phi Delta 4 Sullivan-Wyoming 13, Somerset.
(First Downs) Venango 0
Alpha Sigma Phl 26, Alpha Rho Chi 0 McKeesport 4, New Castle 2 (First
Alpha Tau Omega 13, Sigma Alpha Downs)
Mu 2 Easton 7, Kingston 0
Delta Upsilon 20, Phi Kappa Tau 0 Hazleton 1, Harrisburg 0 (Sudden
Delta CM 5, Beta Sigma Rho 3 (First Death)
Downs) Uniontown 7, Wilkinsburg 0
Phi Sigma Delta 7, Theta Chi 0 Pottstown 1, Sharon 0 (Sudden Death)
Phi Delta Theta 20, Sigma Phi' Epsilon 0 Sharon 7, New Kensington -0
Lambda Chi Alpha 2, Alpha Kappa Norristown 4, Pottstown 3 (First Downs)
Lambda 0 (First Downs) Watts II 20, Walnut 13 •
PI Kappa Alpha 7, Zeta Beta Tau 0 Tamarack 7, Maple 0 ".
Acacia 3, Kappa Sigma '0 Sycamore 3. Poplar 0 (First Down%)
Alpha Gamma - Rho 1, Alpha -Epsilon INDEPENDENT
.Pi 0 "(Sudden Death) Quips 7, Bellefonte Bombers 3 (First
_Beta Theta PI 6, Theta Delta Ch! It _Downs)
. "DORMITORY -'- • Super Studs 27, Hogan's 'Heridei 7
Potter-Scranton 7, Montour , Pike 0 ingineers 6, Big Men •0
Lawrence-McKean 14, Franklin 0 F-Troop 7, Red Dogs 2 (First Downs)
Indiana-Jefferson 6. Fulton 0 Smooth Guys 14, D.I.Y.E. 0
Altoona 6, Dunmore 0 Clan 6, -Fletchers 5 (First Downs)
Nittany Lion Inn
Football Rally
Set Tomorrow
A pep rally at 11:45 a.m.
tomorrow at the Nittany Lion
Inn sponsored by Students
For State, Block S, and the
cheerleaders will send the
Penn State football team off
to Los Angeles in quest of
their fourth victory of the
season, against UCLA.
Coach Joe Paterno said the
team "appreciates anything
that's done" in the way of a
rally.
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4,' TAVERN
THURSDAY—Fat Daddy's Group
FRlDAY—Dixieland
SATURDAYTerry & Sherry
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 196 r
WEST CHESTER
Shel!hammer
Charles
Boone
Pennypacker
Hand
Weller
Oberhonzer
Trimpl
Aldantockis
Elwe'l
Longnecker
RFB
LFB
RHB
CHB
LHB
OR
Two State Coedi
Attend Conference
Women's Recreation Council
executive board member s
Judith Van Tosh and Elizabeth
Casso are representing Penn
State at the Pennsylvania At
hletic Recreation Federation of
Oillege Women. The con
ference is being held today
through Saturday at East
Stroudsburg State College.
LACHMAN
WYNN
for
USG
Town Congressmen
featuring