The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 19, 1971, Image 5

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    WEDNESDAY, MAY' 19. 1971
herkel whitewashes Indiana
Just becatise Indiana University of 'Pennsylvania's
baseball team looked like the sloppiest 11-1 team in the
business, people were going around yesterday saying Rick
Sherkel's great pitching wasn't anything to , get excited
about.
"A one-hitter, 13 strikeouts, so what," said the skeptics.
"Indiana must have been playing the little sisters of the
poor to get an 11-1 record. The only pitches Penn State
wasn't hitting were the pickoff throws to first base."
Okay. RIP wasn't exactly the Baltimore Orioles. But
you have to be impressed with Sherkers arm, even 1 he
does want to be a shortstop.
His one mistake came in the fourth inning when he
threw a pitch to Paul Petroski. Sherkel threw it so hard
Petroski could hardly get any wood on it. The ensuing
feeble ground ball to shortstop was hit too slowly for Gary
Murphy to make a play on. The only call could be a base
hit.
After a sloppy third and fourth innings, when he
walked two men and gave up the hit, Sherkel was flawless.
lie retired the last 16 men in order.
"I had good stuff in the early innings," he said after
the game. "The heat seemed to make me stronger."
Sherkel's main problem is that he would like to get
out under the hot sun more often. "I would like •to play
every day," he said. "I'm a shortstop or third baseman. Of
course, I don't mind pitching. You get a chance to be in
control of the game when you pitch."
Coach Chuck Medlar may put a roadblock in front of
that idea. He has been going with pitchers Roy Swanson
and Jim Conroy for most of the season, with relief pitching
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE
East East
W. L. Pet. G.B. W. L. Pct. G.B.
Boston 21 n .656 New York 21 12 .636
Baltimore 19 14 .576 2 1 / 2 Pittsburgh 21 14 .600 1
New York 16 16 .500 5 St. Louis 20 15 .571 2
Detroit 16 18 .471 6 Chicago 18 18 .500 4 1 / 2
Washington 15 20 .429 7% Montreal 13 14 .481 5
Cleveland 13 20 .394 8 1 / 2 Philadelphia 11 22 .333 10
West West
Oakland 25 14 .641 S Francisco 28 10 .737 1
Minnesota 19 17 .528 4 1 / 2 Atlanta 18 18 .500 9
Kansas City 18 19 .486 6 Los Angeles 18 19 .486 9 1 / 2 1
California 18 20 .474 6 1 / 2 Houston 17 19 .472 10
Milwaukee 14 18 . .438 7 1 / 2 Cincinnati 13 22 .371 13 1 / 2 1
Chicago 13 20 .394 9 San Diego 10 25 .286 161/2
Sports roundup
Collision mars game
WASHINGTON (4P) Vada
Pinson, John Lowenstein and
Jack Heidemann of the Cleve
land Indians were injured in a
collision on Tom McCraw's fly
ball to short left center field
in the fourth inning of Monday
night's game against the Wash
ington Senators.
Heidemann, the shortstop,
and left fielder Lowenstein
were carried off the field on
stretchers. Center fielder Pin
son was helped off by team
mates, All three were replaCed
in the field.
McCraw circled the bases for
an inside-the-park home run as
the three Indians lay motion
less on the field for several
minutes.
Lowenstein and Heidemann
were admitted to Doctors' Hos
pital for observation and X
rays. Pinson suffered a cut on
the cheek which was treated in
the Indians' dressing roam.
None of the three players was
knocked unconscious in the col
lisio...
Penn State said yesterday
tickets for its Oct. 9 home
If Julius Caesar
lived in Happy Valley,
he'd only eat
at the
COPPER KITCHEN
Corner Of College and Garner
I~~'
~ ~~f~
This
Is the
dawning
of The Age
of Security
Today's college student
is on to the future. He
understands the impor
tance of having financial
security. And he'll start
to plan for it now. By
investing in a life insur
ance program that pro
vides for now, and the
future.
At Provident Mutual
we have the precise pro
gram for college students.
The earlier you start, the
more security you'll have
a chance to build.
Give us a call. Or stop
by our campus office.
Make this the dawning of
your Age of Security.
THOMAS G. MUELLER
AGENT
456 L Beaver Ave.
2384544
PROVIIIQ_ENT
football game with Army had
been sold out.
Sellouts had been announced
earlier for the Oct. 2 game with
Air,, Force and the Nov. 6 en
counter with Maryland.
NEW YORK (AP) Bill
Russell, former coach and star
center for the Boston Celtics,
and Larry Brown. Denver
Rockets playmaker, yesterday
were named coaches for the
National and American Basket
ball Asgociation all-star game
May 28 at the Houston Astro
dome.
Russell will direct the NBA
team, Brown the ABA squad.
The game has been organized
by players from both leagues.
Russell paced the Celtics to
nine NBA championships in 10
seasons. Brown, a leading ABA
playmaker, previously coached
the freshman team at North
Carolina, his alma mater.
The Old 'Same-
Place
311- W. Beaver
(next to Centre Film Lab)
238.7926
WATER :ED SALE!
King Size Deluxe WATER BEDS $ 95
lapped seams—lifetime . warranty
King. Size Standard
double weld butt-seams—lifetime warranty $2995
Easy play for Coval
Ice Hockey Club begins play next year
Students at Penn State go during the first five weeks of $l5 to take care of insurance.
through year after year of next year's fall term with the Anyone interested in becoming
frigid weather becoming so sick games facing off in the Ice the first Bobby Orr with a
of ice that they can't wait until Pavilion. Plans have been bachelor of science degree
the spring thaw. You wouldn't made for the building to ac- should have his own equipment
think there would be anybody comodate the ice hockey pro-
and can contact Rick Frazier,
up here who might want to gram. What this probably en- 865-6627, for any additional i
move around on the ice during tails is constructing boards formation
fall term, too, around the perimeter of the ice
Well, apparently 'OO students -and installing a public address,
would like to do just that. system to play the French Na-!
Rather than making their way tional Anthem between guar.'
across a barren parking lot, ters.
those people choose to play an- The players are to be broken,
other sport, namely ice hockey. down according to ability and
The program will be initiated there will be a club dues ofi
Free Block Party
on E. Nittany Ave.
between Locust Lane & Pugh St.
Live Music & Free "Beverages"
This Friday May 21st
between 7 p.m. & 12 p.m.
(See Friday's Collegian for more details)
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, 'UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA
headed up by Sherkel. After yesterday, Sherkel may enter
the regular , yotation.
"I can't envision the day he would be playing short
stop for us," Medlar said after the game. "He'll be a
pitcher."
For those of you who think Sherkel was the only
Penn Stater on the field yesterday, consider this: Center
fielder Dennis DeWitt had two runs batted in in the first
inning. His double to left center chased home Mike Smith
and Harry Rogers with the. only runs Penn State really
needed.
The Lions added a single counter in the second inning
on a double by Mark Tanner, which lUP's centerfielder
avoided like the plague, and two more botched plays by
the visitors. Details shall be avoided at this point in order
to save the Indians from further embarrassment. Suffice it
to say their shortstop seemed new to the position, their
leftfielder couldn't see the ball in the sky, fielding bunts
seemed foreign to their nature and wasted throws were an
integral part of their game.
The best thing that could be said about Penn State
was that it didn't join in the frivolity. Except for an error
by third sacker Don Stine, Penn State stayed clean in the
errors department.
EXTRA BASES Sherkel relied mainly on a fast ball
that tailed in on right handed hitters. After the fourth
inning, he just threw his fast ball and. challenged Indiana
to hit it. The Indians didn't. Sherkel also throws a passable
curve ball which is effective because of the slight change
in speed. Fascinating material for the sports buff!
STARLITE
NOW thru THURSDAY
Striking!" — wevg,e,2".".
ft. - cottima,AP Ta ti e li s E,S Z.,...
~ ' JACK NICHOLSON
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cow* 1:11 csa
CO-HIT
STANLEY KRAMERs gm
R s
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1 • REVOLUTIONS PER MINUTE g'cb fg;
HELD OVER
3rd WEEK !
Ladies 'lll 5 P.M. Sl.OO
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DARIEENCJRR•
L A" `IF
4-0
Sherkel strikes
INDIANA (0) PENN STATE (4)
AB R H ABR H
Isenberg,ss 4 Smith,2b 4 1 2'
Hackstr'm,2b 3 Rociers,rl 5 I T
Petroki,cl 4 DoVVltt,ct 5 1 1
Gerhart,lb 4 Coval,c 4 0 1
Ma Ilen,3b 3 Stine,3b 4 0 1
Larionhrf 2 Lanclis,lT 3 0 0
Corteso,lf 3 Tanner.lb 2 1 1
Blvlono.c 2 Murphy,ss 3 1 1
Stephens,p 1 Shorkehp 3 0 0
Splegol,p
Jank'wskt,ph I
Reglani,ph 1 0 0
Totals 19 0.1 'Totals 33 4a l
toolana . 000 000 o—o 1 4,
Penn state. 210 100 x-4 11 11
RBl—DeWitt 2. E—Stlne, Backstromd
Isenberg 2, Spiegel. 23—Dewitt, 'Tan
ner, SAC—Smith. ."" Thiegel. LOB—
Indiana 4, Penn State 10.
IP H R ER BB SO
9 1 0 0 2 12
353 3 3 3
421 0 3 3
110 0 0 0
Pitchers
Sherkel (W, 4-0)
Sephens (L,2.1)
Spiegel
Frank
IM soccer still curious
Graduate
Old Salts 1, Artful Dodgers 0
Whizdogs 1, CSA 0
DormltOrY
Dunmore 2, New Castle 0
Pottstown 3, Aliquippa 0
West Hails
Jordan I I, Watts II 0
HicKory 1, Chestnut 0
Willonshurg 2, Altoona 1
Easton 2. New Kensington 0
Fraternity
Sigma Phi Epsilon 1, Kappa Delta
Rho 0
Phi Kappa Tau over Pi Kappa Alpha
Theta Della Chi 2, Acacia 0
Tau Kappa Epsilon 4, Alpha Ph
Delta 0
FREE CAR HEATERS
8:30 open year
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7:30 CARTOON
14 Hr. Answering
Service Ph. 23741119
EMPLE
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WED. thru SUN.
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'lt may boggle the mind, but only after it boggles,
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And The Public Decider;
THIS PROVOCATIVE,
STARTLING, NEW
FILM RESTRICTED
TO LADIES AND
GENTLEMEN 18
AND OVER!
Alex deßenzy's
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a new approach.
NIGHTLY AT
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A JACK ROLLINS -CHARLES H.JOFFEPaximsm
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237-7657 •
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STARTS
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PAGE FIVE
—BOB SALMAGGI, Group W Netwo
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Now
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