A fresh start at lowa It seems as if more than a year separates this football x season from its predecessor. A year ago the only thing Lion coach Joe Paterno had to complain about was the length of the grass at Beaver Stadium. “It looks pretty when they let the grass get long, but if there’s rain and you know how short the cleats are it’s pretty tough. It’s not fair to the kids to make them play on something like that. The grass should be cut the way it’s supposed to be. ” Paterno said that after annihilating his third straight opponent, lowa. Stanford was first, 20-6. The score wasn’t overwhelming, but Penn State clearly dominated. Navy yas crushed like a toy boat, 39-0. - Then dame lowa. Frank Lauterbur was coaching the Hawkeyes at that time, a big rugged man, cursed with an unrealistically tough schedule. He didn't last the year. But not only have the comparative Scores been drastically different to date, it also seems the level of competition has completely reversed itself. Last year Stanford, after falling before the Lions, went on to very nearly upset Southern Cal 26-27 la ter'in the season. It doesn’t look like history will repeat for Stan ford, particularly after Illinois drubbed the Cards 41-7 Saturday. Everyone knows about Navy’s upsurgence against Paterno U. last week. Now what will lowa do? Prior to last year’s contest with Penn State, lowa was streamrolled by Michigan and UCLA. But last weekend lowa pulled an upset topped only by Navy’s when it pulled the rug out from under UCLA. A big reason must be the fresh system that new lowa head coach Bob Commings has installed. Commings sounds like a winner. “I don’t want any short-haired freaks on my team,” "When I was a player here we had some good Commings responded on the subject of crew cuts. “How from out of state, but we could have never won wil could I possibly be opposed to hair? The length of hair is lowa kids,” he said. not a criterion for measuring a young man’s integrity. But as he once cracked to his former team! There is a common sense point. We all know what it is.” Karras, “We are looking for Greeks Bearing All this despite ,the fact that a hat is the only tiding Gary.” 'anks slide by Bo sox NEW YORK (AP) Elliot addox.’s one-out single ■ove in the game’s only run id gave the New York ankees a ' 1-0, 10-inning Jcision over the Boston Red ix last night. The victory kept the ankees half a game behind le front-running Baltimore £uou| Thmdag 4:30 pM. M 9 pM. Spaghetti Special AM you causal (My $ 2 25 Spaghetti wifk mat aauce, teased &a£ad with 9ta£uw dmtiug, soon dough Imead & Imtten. tea on soda. Tke Twin Sfotuut ATTENTION MEMBERSHIP SI UP FOR OTIS FO COOP. Former members MUS sign up Monday, September 30, in order get priority. All others who wish to join must sign up Tuesday, October 1, and Wednesday, October 2. NOTE: Membership will be limited to 300 people. The Sign-up Table will be open between 9:30 and 4:30 on the Ground Floor in the HUB. The Happy Valley Market will begin taking orders on Thursday, October 3rd. Orioles in the American sacrificed to second by Fred League East. Baltimore beat Stanley. Alomar took third on the Detroit Tigers 5-4. .an infield hit by Roy White Doc Medidi went the and raced home on Maddox’s distance for his 19th victory single, against 14 defeats while Bill The Red Sox failed to score Lee, 17-14, took the loss. Each in the early going although pitcher allowed seven hits, they had their leadoff batter Sandy Alomar led off the aboard with a hit four times in 10th with a walk and was the first six innings A Hfioeh*r Bntmrprism— Rick Starr flilllf Sports Editor covering the top of his head. “I hope we can appeal to the intelligence of our football team and' take it from there,” Commings continued. “Just to go in like a wild man and make a lot of absurd rules... I don’t think tliit’s the way to do it. “Youwon’t see any stickers or stars on our bats. That’s not playing the game honestly. I mean, we’re playing the game to share values.” When Commings played his college football at lowa from 1955 till 1957, he was the smallest linemim in the Big Ten at 173 pounds, and a junior guard on lowa’s Big Ten and Rose Bowl championship team of 1956. In other words, he’s used to battling things that are bigger than he, which helps considerably with the schedule lowa plays. It’s the worst. Michigan, UCLA, Penn Southern Cal the first four weeks and Illinois State later. Commings is nonplussed. “A lot of young people are very romantii venturous, and some are crazy,” was all he sai One improvement Commings wants to see i: of state recruiting. ■ ONSUMER Monday’s ORNER Collegian University Park Calendar September 26-October 6,1974 SPECIAL EVENTS Friday, September 27 - Folk and Square Dance Roundup, 7:30 p.m., North Gym, White. Friday, September 27 Commonsplace Coffeehouse, 8 p.m., Room 102 Kern. Saturday, September 28 Artists Series, Marilyn Horne, soprano, 8:30 p.m., Uni versity Auditorium. Saturday, September 28 Sports:" Cross country, vs. Viilanova. Sunday, September 29 Chapel Service, 11 a.m., Eisenhower Chapel. Or. Tony SEMINARS Thursday, September 26 Agronomy, 3:45 p.m., Room 301 Ag. Adm. Gerry Jung, U.S. Regional Feature Research Lab., on “Agronomic Research in the .British Isles and Switzerland." Thursday, September 26 Physics, 3:45 p.m., Room 117 Osmond. Kenneth G. Wilson, Laboratory for Nuclear Studies, Cornell University, on “The Renormaliza tion Group The Physicist's St. George." Thursday, September 26 Computer Sci ence, 4 p.m., Room 101 Althouse. Dr. L. Stockmeyer, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, on “Some Simplified NF-Complete Problems.” Thursday, September 26 —' Natural Disas ters. 2.20 p.m , Room 220 Willard. Dr. Joseph Golden, National Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Okla., on “Observa tional Studies jpf Tornadoes and Water Spouts." . LECTURE Wednesday, October 2 Firsf annual Paul M. Althouse Memorial Lecture, 4 p.m., Hospital Auditorium, Hershey Medi cal Center. Dr. Paul Berg, Stanford University, on "Molecular Anatomy of a Viral Chromosome." Thursday, October 3 Dr. Luis Alberto Sanchez, Peruvian writer-politician-edu cator, 8 p.m., Roonr>iol Kern, on “Lit erature and Politics of the APRA Politi cal Party." Thursday, September 26 Commonsplace Theatre, 8 and 10 p.m., Room 112 Kern. “The Dead Are Alive." Wednesday, October 2 Commonsplace Theatre, 8 and 10 p.m., Room 112 Kern. “To Have and Have Not." Wom*n play field hockey egalnet Slippery Rock Sep|. 30. Artists Series offers Horne, Winter Two Pennsylvania natives, Marilyn Horne and Paul Winter, are featured in Artists Sdties events this week and next. Miss Horne, soprano star of the Metro politan Opera, La Scala, Covent Garden, and the Chicago Lyric, will sing Saturday rright, Sept. 20. at 8:30$ p.m., at University Auditorium as the firs£ performer in the 1974-75 Music Series. Her program in cludes a Handel aria from “Semele," an other aria to be announced, and pieces from Henry Purcell, Schumann, Debussy, and Dvorak. The Paul Winter Consort, co-sponsored by the Artists Series and the Penn State "Jazz Club, will be here for a three-day visit, Thursday through Saturday, Oct. 3-5. They will present free workshops, a session of improvisation open to "anyone who plays Pirates lose one, Phils win two ; ST. LOUIS (AP) Rookie iJim Dwyer’s 'sacrifice fly capped a'four-run St. Louis 'rally in the nth inning and gave the Cardinals a wild 13- 12 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates last night that lifted Uie Cards back into first place in the National League East. The victory gave St. Louis a one-half game edge over Pittsburgh in the tense race. St. Louis has six games remaining and the Pirates seven.. *r~ PHILADELPHIA (AP) Larry Cox doubled home two runs to key a five-run second inning and the Philadelphia Phillies went on to defeat the New York Mets 6-3 for a sweep of their Wednesday twi-night doubleheader. The Phillies used a three run pinch-hit home run by Tommy Hutton off Tom Seaver in the fifth to win the opener 8-2. PITTSBURGH (AP) Pittsburgh Pirate pitcher Jerry Reuss has challenged the club’s policy of fining players whose wives ac company them on road trips. Reuss, with the club in St. Louis, said he has been fined a total of $6OO for bringing his wife along on trips to Los Angeles, San Francisco and Huston. After he was fined the third A. Mobley, chairman. Recreation and Parks. Sunday, September 29 Black Christian Fellowship worship service, 11 a.m.. Black Cultural Center. Monday, September 30 Women's field hockey, vs. Slippery Rock, 2:30 p.m. Monday, September 30 Gamma Pi Ep silon program on “Addiction and Reha bilitation” by speakers from “On Drugs," 8 p.m., McElwain Hail piano lounge. Tuesday, October 1 “Emitai,” color fea ture-length film from Senegal, 7:30 p.m.. Black Cultural Center, Walnut Bldg. Sponsored by the Center, the Liberal Thursday, September 26 Mathematics, 4 p.rn.. Room 102 McAllister. N. Grossman, on "On the Problem of Atmospheric Re fraction." Thursday, September 26 Statistics. 4 p.rn.,'Room 75 Willard. Betty Thorne. Capitol Campus, on "Linear Estimation in General Linear Models." Thursday, September 26 Nuclear En gineering. 4 p.m.. Room 111 Breazealp Nuclear Reactor. John L. Wise, chief engineer. Field Startup and Test Depart ment. Gilbert Associates, Inc.. Reading, Pa., on "Startup and Testing of Nuclear Power Plants.” Monday, September 30 Environmental Problem Solving. 8 p.m.. Room 105 Forum. Mike Brill, architecture and en vironmental design, State University of Newi York a: Buffalo, on "Everything You Always Wanted to Know about Sys tems but Were Afraid to Ask." Monday, September 30 Plant Pathology. 9:45 a.m.. Room 213 Buckhout. Richard Woodward on "The Symbiont Theory: MEETINGS Thursday, September 26 College of ; Arts and Architecture faculty meeting. 4 p.m.. Room 122 Music Bldg. Thursday, September 26 USG Senate. 7 p.m.. Boom 213 HUB. Thursday, September 26 Student Af fairs, 4 p.m., HUB assembly-room. Monday, September 30 Council of Ex ceptional Children. 7 p.m.. Room 169 Willard. Monday, Septemtar 30 OTIS. 6:30 p.m.. Room 203 HUB Monday, September 30 Colloquy, 8:15 p.m.. Room 203 HUB. Tuesday, October 1 Faculty Senate. 2:10 p.m.. Room 112 Kern. Tuesday, October 1 ARHS, 7:30 p.m., Room 309 Boucke. Wednesday, October 2 AWS, 7 p.m., Room 203 HUB. any instrument, no flatter how well," an evening of Charles Wes music Oct. 5 at 8:30 p.m in the HUB ballroom, and a more formal Artists Series concert Oct. 4 at 8:30 p.m. in Schwab Auditorium. Winter's group usee, more than 100 musi- Tickets" for Paul Winter’s Schwab Audi cal instruments fronv dozens of cultures torium concert go on sale Oct. lin the in the performance of music that has ele- HUB at the same hours. All other events mpnts of rock, jazz and classical music. in the \\mter residency are either free This season, the Altoona native is using or cost 50 cents at the door, a combination of alto saxophone, keyboard. , The Artists Series has announced; that cello and “drums and things” for much of its 1974-75 Theatre/Dance Series is'sold his music. out. However, persons who wish to see Tickets for the Horne concert or the Agnes De Mille’s. Heritage Dance Theatre, entire Music Series wilf be available week- , the Royal Shakespeare Company. “Don days from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Saturday Juan in Hell’' or the Martha Graham Dance from 10 a.m. to noon at University Audi- Company may btly tickets to second per torium and the HUB. or at the door one forihancesj which are classed as Special hour before the performance if not sold £ Events. These tickets will go on sale short out beforehand. • ly before each ■'event. time, he brought the situation to the attention of the Major League Players Association, which filed an official grievance against the Pirate management. * General Manager Joe L. Brown declined to.comment on the situation Wednesday, noting/that it was scheduled for arbitration in November. i _ BALTIMORE They’re off and writing, but in different directions this time as the Daily Collegian Sports initiates a new policy, bringing our readers live coverage of the top college football action across the country all 'season long. For the upcoming weekend Tim Panaccio heads for Pittsburgh where he’ll be on hand at Pitt Stadium for Saturday’s Pitt-USC game. Rick Starr will be head ing westward for South Bend, Indiana, and a look at Notre Dame’s first home pep rally Friday night. Then he’ll continue on to lowa City Saturday where the lowa Hawkeyes host Penn State in a make or break game for the Nittany Lions. Make sure you catch their reports and all the weekend’s college grid ac tion Monday morning in the Daily Collegian Sports. Arts African Studies Committee and the Black Studies Program. Wednesday, October 2 Claremont Wood wind Quintet, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg, re cital hall. Wednesday, October 2 Reception to honor Dr.' Luis Albert Sanchez, 3-5 p.m., Rare Books Room, Pattee. Public in vited. Wednesday, October 2 Free-University course registration, 9 a.m.-10 p.m., HUB ballroom. Thursday, October 3 Sports: West Ger man Women’s National Volleyball Team vs. U.S.A. Eastern Zone National Team, One Explanation of Mitochondria and Chloroplast Origin in the Eukaryotic Cell." Monday-Tuesday, September 30-October 1 Biochemistry, 11:10 a.m., Room 101 A/thouse. Thomas Smyth, entomology, on "Chemical Synapses In Retro spect;" "Chemical Synapses Pros pectus." Tuesday, October 1 Comparative litera ture. 12:15 p.m., Beaver Room, Hotel State College. Dr. Luis Albert Sanchez, writer-politician-educator. Tuesday, October 1 Air Pollution Con * trol, 2:20 p.m., Room 140 Fenske. Doug las M. Whelpdale, Atmospheric Environ ment Service, Downsview, Ontario, on "Pollutant Removal at the Earth’s Sur face." Wednesday, October 2 Analytical Chem istry, 11:30 | a.m.. Room 333 Whitmore. Robert Goldberg. National Bureau of Standards, On "Bioanalytical Applica tions of Heat Measurements." Thursday, October 3 Natural Disasters, Wednesday, October 2 Penn State Fac ulty Club Annual Meeting, 8 p.m., Room 101 Kern. OFFICIAL Thursday-Saturday, September 26-28 Preregistration for Winter Term. Thursday-Saturday, September 26-28 Fife for Repeat Course. Monday, September 30 Preregistration deadline for Winter Term. Monday, September 30 filing Course Drops. Monday, September 30 File for Pass/ Fall. | Monday, September 30 filing Course ! Repeat. Friday, October; 4 Deadline for applica tion for Winter Term Tuition Grants-in- Aid, Room 317 Kern. Campus to host Darv~h The internationally acclaimed Danish Gym Team will appear Tuesday, Oct. 8, at 8 p.m. in the gymnasium of the Worthington Scranton Campus, under the sponsorship of the Art and Lecture Series at the Cam pus. The performers on the team were select ed from among the many skillful gymnasts Denmark produces. Their demonstrations include a variety of modern Danish gym nastics for women and men and a selec tion of Danish folk dances, for which they wear colorful native costumes. Most of the program is accompanied by music. Tickets for the performance may be re served by contacting Richard N. Barsh inger, assistant .professor of mathematics and chairman of the Art and Lecture Ser ies. at (717; 861 r 4784 or (717; 563-2295. A limited number of tickets will be avail able at the door on the evening of the performance. Collegian sports Tommy Davis capped a three-run Baltimore rally in the ninth inning with a two out, two-run single to carry the Orioles past the Detroit Tigers 5-4 last night. The victory kept the Orioles in first place in the American Items to be included in this calendar should be sent to the ed/for, Room 312 Old Main, by Thursday o / the week preceding publication. Deadline for Deadline for League East Division race. Al Kaline, who received a congratulatory telephone call prior to the game from President Ford, singled for his 3,002nd career hit in the sixth and scored on a hit by Reggie Sanders. 8 p.m., Rec Hall. Friday, October 4 Artists Series, Winter Consort, 8:30 p.m., Schwab. Saturday, October 5 Paul Winter, Ives program, 8:30 p.m., HUB ballroom. Sunday, Oetobar 6 Chapel Service, 11 a.m., Eisenhower Chapel. Sister Beverly Stanton, Campus Ministry, Morgan State College. Sunday, Oetobar 6 Black Christian Fel lowship worship service, 11 a.m., Black Cultural Center. Sunday, October 6 -7 Sigma Delta Epsilon, 2:30 p.m.. Room 102 Kern. Talk on job opportunities. 2:20 p.m., Room 220 Willard. Dr. Barry L. Myers, business law, on "Legal Con trols in Flood-Prone Areas." Thursday, October 3 Agronomy, 3:45 p.m., Room 111 Tyson. Dr. Rufus Chen . ey, USDA, Washington, 0.C., on "Heavy Metal Contamination in Soils via Waste Disposal." Thursday, October 3 Physics, 3:55 p.m., : Room 117 Osmond. Helmut Frltzsche, James Frank Institute, University of Chi cago, on "Amorphous Semiconductors.’’ Thursday, October 3 Chemistry, 12:45 p.m.. Room 333 Whitmore. John Ross, M.1.T., on, "Chemical Instabilities." Thursday, October 3- Acoustical Society ' and Engineering Acoustics Graduate Pr.ogram, 4 p.m.. Room 71 Willard. Dr. Francis Fenlon, Westinghouse Corp., on "Present Trends In Nonlinear Acoustics." Thursday, October 3 Mathematics, 4 p.m.. Room 102 McAllister, N. Grossman, on "Examples of Bang-Bang Controls in Infinite Dimensions." EXHIBITS Museum of Art Manayunk and Other Places: Francis Speight’s paintings and drawings, Galleries A and C. Selections from the permanent collection, Gallery B. Free public tours Thursdays, 1:30 p.m. ' Chambers Gallery Jearyie Stevens-Soll man, drawings and ceramics, opening September 27. Kem Gallery Ralph G. Kaleshefski, sculpture, and Mary Martha Proud, paint ings, through September 28. Pedgie Lawson, pottery, through September 30. Bob and Susan Duncan, oil paintings, opening September 29. Hammond Gallery Architectural Engi neering Student Projects Exhibition, through September 29. Pattee Library Central foyer, memora bilia of George Gilbert Pond, through September 30. HUB specials Sunday, Sept 39 dinnar, roast pork/ apple, Jf 71, supper, lasagne. $1,22. Monday, Sept. 30 lunch, grilled cheese sand wich, $.76; dinner, beef liver w/onion», $1.23. Tuesday, Ocf. 1 lunch, spaghetti w/meat sauce. - $.92; dinner, meatloef w/potato border, $1.05. Wednesday, Oct. 2 chicken chow main w/rlce, s'9l; dinner, Salisbury steak w/fclue cheese dress* Ing, $1.33. Thursday, Oet 3 lunch, stufted frank w/bun, $.63; dinner, stuffed flank steak, Friday, Oct 4 lunch, Ashwlch w/bun, $1.05; dinnar, French fried clams, $1.34. „ Saturday, Oct —. chill, $.64; dinner, spaghetti w/meat sauce, $1.17.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers