The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 06, 1974, Image 11

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    Penn State-
Eagles tie;
Gerhart-2
B GORDEN BLAIN
Collegian Sports Writer
Peg Gerhart scored her second goal of the
game-and h& tenth of the season with only 20
seconds left to pull her Lady Lion teammates
to a 3-3 stalemate with arch rival Lock Haven
State field hockey team yesterday in Lock
Haven
On an afternoon of steady rain that, turned
an already poor playing surface into a sea of
mud. Gerhart's last second heroics came af
ter Penn State had squandered a 2-0 halftime
lead
Gerhart had a golden opportunity'to tie it
with 1:50 left when she was awarded a penalty
stroke, but Eagle goalte,,,Eathy Sherman an
swered the call with a - diving save in the one
onone showdown.
Gerhart talked about her rejected penalty
flick that was high and to the right of the Lock
Haven netminder. "I couldn't believe that I
missed it. I practice them all of the time."
('oach Gillian Rattray added sym
pathetically. "But you never practice them in
the mud."
And that seemed to tell the entire story: the
With the complete scoring circle engulfed
by the - Dozy stuff at one end of the playing sur
face and it being Penn State's offensive net in
the first half, the Lady Lions sticks made the
first noise on the scorebilard with Oerhart
scoring her first tally early and junior for
ward Sue McCoy adding another three
minutes before the half.
But ixtter the clubs changed ends it was
Lock Haven's contest. The momentum and
the mud stuck together to have the Eagles
Fplcons dump Dutchman
ATLANTA (AP) Norm
Van Brocklin was fired as
general manager and coach of
the Atlanta Falcons yesterday
and rolaced as coach by
Marion Campbell, the
National,: Football League
team's defenSive coordinator.
Falcon owner Rankin Smith
announced the action in a brief
statement.
Van Brocklin was in the
midst of one of his most
frustrating seasons since
becoming head coach of the
Falcons after the third game
of the 1968 season. The team,
picked in some preseason
estimates as a contender for
the playoffs, has a 2-6 record.
The volatile Van Brocklin, S
star quarterback during his
playing days with the Los
Angeles Rams and later the
Philadelphia Eagles, has been
under intense criticism from
local fans and news media and
HAPPY HOUR
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Meet Dean
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Wed. Nov. 6
6:30"p4n.
341 Dieke
come roaring back to take a 3-2 advantage
with three lightning-quick goals in nine
minutes in front of frantic hometown par-
Anne Chamberlain, who had two assists on
the Gerhart goals, spoke of the Lock Haven
offensive barrage in the second half. "The cir
cle was bad on the defense. Once you com
mitted yourself you couldn't get back to
cover."
Chamberlain, playing in her last regular
season game at Penn State, reflected about
the tie. "It's kissing your sister again. I've
'been here four years to beat them. It's really
discouraging." •
On a treacherous field and against a team
that has lost only once to the blue and white
stickwomen in 10 games, the Lady Lions
fared well.
"I was really proud we were able to come
back," Chamberlain said about the last
minute goal.
The Penn State stickwomen might get
another shot at their arch rival Lock Haven as
they will make the trip back to the Susque
hanna rivertown on November 9 and 10 to
play in the Susquehanna tournament in which
all stars of the round robin action will ad
vance to Mid East play in Pittsburgh:
The Lady Lions field hockey varsity
finished the ciikripaign with a 5-2-2 record
while the junior varsity wound up its season
by edging the Lock Haven jayvees 1-0 and
compiling an impressive 8-1 log.
Nanny and the Professor?
No, TV Quarterbacks! Starring, as •usual,
Fran Fisher and Jim Tarman plus the extra
attraction of Brian Masella, Penn State's
punter and Buddy Tesner, one of Joe Pater
no's linebackers.
Along with the firm of Fisher, Masella, Tar
man and Tesner will be Lion assistant coach
Bob Phillips.
The show begins at 7 p.m. on channel 3,
WF'SX.
Smith also had been criticized
for failing to fire the coach,
known as the Dutchman.
The Falcons suffered their
worst defeat in three seasons
42-7 by The Miami
Dolphins on Sunday. '
Neither Van Brocklin nor
Campbell was immediately
available for comment.
Van Brocklin b#d a brilliant
12-year NFL career that earn
ed him a berth in pro foot
ball's Hall of Fame. A master
ful quarterback, he led the
Rams to NFL titles in 1949,
1950, 1951 and 1955 and later
sparked the Philadelphia
Eagles to the championship in
1960.
But his career as a coach
hasn't been impressive. In
12'2 campaigns, he has a
career record of 66-100-7, only
a .401 percentage. He was the
initial coach at Minnesota,
coaching the Vikings from the
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8800• m 75 -kern
TV QB's
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He replaced Norb Hicker as
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* The MARX BROTHERS
* Laurel & Hardy
* W. C. Fields
* Abbot & Costello •
* Roadrunner Cartoons
* Bugs Bunny Cartoons
* Special Added Feature *
* MASTERS OF THE SKIES *
7:00 PM
8:30 PM
10:00 PM
No. 12 Tom Shuman quarterbacks
No. 7 Penn State
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Don't give pollution a break
Lions to 7th
Big 0
The two Big O's of college
football, Ohio State and
Oklahoma, continue to
dominate the weekly
Associated
.Press poll, but
Alabama has bumped
Michigan from the No. 3 spot.
Ohio State, with a clean bill
of health from the National
Collegiate Athletic Asso
ciation, remained No. 1
while Oklahoma, quarantined
from postseason play for
league infractions, again set
tled for the runner-up role,
only 122 points behind the
Buckeyes.
However, Ohio State, 8-0 af
ter a 49-7 victory over Illinois,
had a big edge over the
Sooners in the number of first
place votes received from a
nationwide panel of sports
writers and broadcasters. The
Buckeyes wound up with 49
top votes and 1,212 of a
possible 1,240 points. The
Sooners, 7-0 after a 28-10
triumph over lowa State,
reaped 10 first-place votes and
1,090 points.
The Dail• Collegian Wednesday November 11. 1971-11
's still
Alabama, fourth a week
ago, took over the No. 3 spot
after blitzing Mississippi State
35-0. Michigan, which pulled
out a 21-7 victory over In
diana, slipped to fourth in the
poll released yesterday. Ala
bama had two first-place
votes and 918 points while
Michigan received the only
other No. 1 vote and 850
points.
Texas A&M, which had been
idling in eighth place for three
weeks, roared into the top five
after throttling Arkansas 20-
10. Auburn, meanwhile, skid
ded to 10th from fifth after a
25-14 loss to Florida. its first of
the season. Florida's fine
showing boosted the Gators to
sixth from 11th, swapping
places with Southern Califor
nia which had to settle for a 15-
15 tie with California.
Penn State moved . to sev
enth 'from 10th after beating
Maryland 24-17 and Notre
Dame, the defending national
champion, slipped one place to
eighth after egging Navy 14-6.
CATHAUM
118 W. College Ave./237-3351
•••
?MEM PICIUMS MIMES
AM ALBERT inIIDDY PRODUCTION
.17 BURT REYNOLDS
~.THE LONGEST YARD" .
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\-4 COLOR BiTECHNiCOL ()FA Oi .
A PARAMOUNT riot uRE
HIGH ADVENTURE AND A TRIO OF TROUBLE
"BEARS" at 2:00-5:15-8:30 • "DOG" at 3:25-6:45-10:00
THE FLICK
129 S. Atherton St./237-2112
"LET'S JUST HAIL IT AS ONE OF THE
SOLID PICTURES OF THE YEAR. IT'S THE
BEST OF IT'S KIND. IT'S REALLY SO
GOOD IT SURPRISES YOU." N.Y. Post
# 114111 ." # 1.41444 1 1141 "
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limais
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FONAYSCWIS. TECMM:OLOR • FFO4I wARNFR gFesOft
zip a . A WARNER COMMUNICA , ONS COW.,
"BEAUTIFUL BODIES ABOUNDING AS THESE ATTRACTIVE
NUBILE NEWCOMERS ROMP THRU THEIR NOT SO INNOCENT
SCHOOL DAYS... JERRY SCHNEIDERMAN • PLEAZLRE
THEY WERE MADE TO BE PINNED!
TeenagefOrority
Girls
4 ' .-
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A/ . , .. 7
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0 .. NIGHTLY
:30..i A o
: T oo
/ C- /
Mat. today 2:30-4:00-5:30
tops
Nebraska remained ninth
with Auburn 10th.
Trailing Southern Cal in the
Second 10 were Texas, Miami
of Ohio, Maryland. Houston.
Arizona State. Oklahoma
State and California.
The Top Tu ent%it hrt-place % ot es
in parentheses. season 'ord and total
points Points tabulated on basis of 20 18it:44-1210-9-8-etc
it:44-1210-9-8-etc
1 Ohio State 149 ,
2 Oklahoma t 10 ,
.1 Alabama 12 ,
4 Michigan 1 ,
Texas A&M
6 Florida
7 Penn State 7
8 Notre Dame
9 Nebraska
10 Auburn
11 So California
12 Texas
1 i Miami.o
14 Mao laAd
15 Houston
16 Arizona St
Oklahoma St
18 California
19 Pitt
Texas Tech
Others receti ng rotes. listrd
alphabet teally Ancona. Miami ut
Florida, Michigan State, Missi,appi
State. Missouri. North Carolina State
San Diego State, Stanford. Temple t tali
state. Vanderbilt. \ ale
TONITE - 7:30-9:45
'A CRUNCH, CRACKLE AND CAMP DELIGHT!
OcCpce, root. net. neon000•O000
TONITE AT
.7:00 & 9:00
FOR LADIES AND GENTIENIFN OSFR 21
IN COLOR x
STATE
12. W College ♦re 237.7.66
8-0 1 '212
7-0-0 1.00
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800 8 - '0
7-1 U 1141
7-1-0 511
71 0 122
7 1 0 10;
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7 1 0 381
5-1 1 ;14
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