Photo by Edward NO. Jr John Andress may start working out with the Lions next week. Andress injured, his shoulder in the Kentucky game. .Veterans head golf field LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) A pair of old pros from Texas, Don January and Miller Barber, offer a challenge of veterans to pro golf's young stars this week in tide $200,000 National Team Championship. Barber; 45, and January, 46, longtime friends, own some of the most impressive credentials of any of the 102 two-man teams assembled fca today's start of this event. They have combined for more than $285,000 in win nings this season, with one victory, four second-place finishes and three thirds. Perhaps 'most impressive of J. XEROX COPIES - Complete Printing Service - Grove's Instant Printing• 157 S. 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Well, almost no one. To a forgotten member of the Penn State football team, Oct. 2 was the beginning of darkness. His number .18, his position quarterback, and his name John Andress. Yes, the second day of October probably marked the darkest day of the senior's collegiate career. It was the day when a shoulder injury in Kentucky sidelined him for the remainder of that game, the five games that 'have followed, and perhaps the rest of the season. "It occurred during the first series," Andress said.' "The play was a sprint -out where the flanker and tight end do a 14- yard out pattern and by rolling out, I try to hit one of them." "However, a guy on the left side hit me from behind and I landed smack on my right shoulder." Andress, who hasn't attended a practice session in over a month, hopes to start working out again next week. "Even though I'll start practicing once again," Andress said, "I'm fully aware that Chuck Fusina is the team's starting quarterback." "I think he's done an outstanding job," he added, "and if I'd ever get the starting assignment over him, it wouldn't be fair to either of us." In his first full season at quarterback in 1975, Andress completed 71 of 149 passes (47.7 per cent) for 991 yards, and two touchdowns. This season, prior to his injury, the 6-2, 204- pounder completed a mere 26 of 61 (42.6 per cent) for 330 yards, and no six-pointers. • "There are two areas in which I feel the team as a whole needs the most improvement," he said. "They are overall execution and precision." And the Lions saw a perfect example of a team who used those two tools last Saturday. "Yes, but I expected us to have a tough time against Temple," Andress said. :!They have good talent and their record is not a good example of how tough they really are. Raiders feel brunt of holding crackdown By the AP The regulation is stated simply and clearly in the national Football League rule book, It says: "A runner may ward off op ponents with his hands and arms but no other player on ofiense may use hands or arms to obstruct an opponent by grasping with his hands, pushing or encircling any part of his body during a block." Then it continues with a discussion of pass blocking, saying in part: "The hands must be cupped or closed and remain inside the blocker's elbow and inside the frame of the bodies of both the blocker and his opponent." In other words: No holding. There *as no change in that rule this season. But suddenly, offensive linemen have been playing in a sea of yellow penalty flags. Most of the calls have been for holding. Two Sundays ago, the Oakland Raiders played the Green Bay Packers and officials called 34 penalties, 17 against each club. 'There were more flags than at the United Nations," cracked Raiders guard Gene Upshaw, who attracted his share of yellow handkerchiefs for holding. "Funny," continued Upshaw. "I've The Daily Collegian Thursday, November 4,1916—i "However, a close game like that should have a great effect on us," he added. "We won the three previous games by a lot of points and now realize we've got to prepare extra hard for the remainders." And the Greensburg (Pa.) native will join his teammates in preparing for those games and hope for the opportunity to grasp the laces just one more time. "Injuries are a part of the game," he said. "And when I see how many seniors practice, but never play at all, it won't make it hard for me." done the same things for eight years, but for the past three weeks, they've been illegal." That's just not so, according to Art McNally, the NFL's supervisor of of ficials. "There hasn't been a change in the interpretation or working of the rule," he said. "But in our grading of films every week, we noticed a lot of uncalled holding and we called that to the attention of our officials." The Raiders have lost a league-high 663 yards through penalties in the first eight weeks of the season. They've been penalized 71 times, second only to Tampa Bay's 77.
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