WELCOME BACK >- 1970 CHAMPIONS EDIIMBORO STATE vs. MILLERSVILLE Sox Harrison Stadium • September 20,1980 • 1:30 pm Extra Cash Conversion Whether it’s halftime or after the game, convert your empty wallet into cash with Marine’s new Handybank® automated teller — now available at the downtown Edinboro office! Marine’s expanded Handybank network. It’s just one of many extra points available exclusively with a Handy Bank Account ... where the good news just keeps on getting better. MARINE BANK Serving Northweat:ern Pennsylvania MEMBER fEOERAL DEPOSIf INSURANCE CORPORATION EDIIMBORO STATE 1980 SCHEDULE Sept. 13 ................... WESTMINSTER (1:30) at Erie Veterans’ Stadium Sept. 20 ................... MILLERSVILLE STATE (1:30) Sept. 27 ................... at Lock Haven State (1:30) Oct. 4.....................SHIPPENSBURG STATE (2:00) Homecoming Oct. 11.....................at California State (1:30) Oct. 18.....................SLIPPERYROCKSTATE(1:30) Welcome Parents Oct. 25.....................at Indiana Univ. of Pa. (1:30) Nov. 1.................... at Univ. of Buffalo (1:00) Nov. 8.................... CLARION STATE (1:30) High School Day 1980 FIGHTING SCOT CAPTAINS Back Row (Left to Right): Jim Collins and Doug Smith. Front Row (Left to Right): Mike Garlick and Dan Allie 1980 FIGHTING SCOT COACHING STAFF Back Row (Left to Right): Jim Connolly, Tom Herman, Dave Lyon, Dave Rieck and Carl Alley. Front Row (Left to Right): Head Coach Denny Creehan, Rich Formosa, Tony Ferrari, Student Assistants Dan Gierlak and Andy Parma. 1 Q^illersville gJi ale September 20 — at Edinboro ~ 1:30 PM 1979 RESULTS (8-2) LOCATION: Millersville, Pa. ENROLLMENT: 6,500 NICKNAME: Marauders COLORS: Black and Gold STADIUM: Biemesderfer Stadium CONFERENCE: Pennsylvania - East NATIONAL AFFILIATIONS: ECAC LAST GAME: 1979, Millersville 17-6 HEAD COACH: Dr. Gene Carpenter OVERALL RECORD: 10 Years, 64-27-1 MSC 48 17 28 28 17 27 7 36 63 14 1979 CONFERENCE RECORD: 4-1 ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Dr. Lawrence McDermott SPORTS INFO. DIRECTOR: Bob Luft SID PHONE: 717/872-3586 . LETTERMEN LOST: 12 LETTERMEN RETURNING: 24 TEAM STRENGTHS: Secondary, RB, TE TEAM WEAKNESSES: Loss of 11 Starters, QB BASIC OFFENSE: Twin Veer BASIC DEFENSE: 5-2 ii OPP Fordham Edinboro Kutztown West Chester Mansfield Bloomsburg East Stroudsburg Cheyney Salisbury Wittenberg 1980 SCHEDULE Sept. Sept. Sept. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov. Nov. 6 20 27 4 11 18 25 1 8 at New York Tech at Edinboro at Kutztown WEST CHESTER at Mansfield at Bloomsburg EAST STROUDSBURG at Cheyney SALISBURY WELCOME ALUMNI SANDRA KRAUSE - President DENISE FINAZZO - Vice President CHRIS LOBINS - Secretary . Rick Bam Justina Baron William Brown Patrick Crawford Jerry Dantry President, Foster Diebold Victor Donovan Paul Foust Patricia Gagliardi JOE MINEO - Treasurer Michael Zahorchak 2 Louise Hamilton Gerald Jackson Thomas Jambro Daniel McLaughlin Robert Parker Martha Piontek Mary Rugh Laurie Sample Carl Wozniak 7 6 24 3 0 7 12 6 10 21 TODAY’S GAME: Scots Still Seek First Over Marauders Edinboro State will get a strong testing this afternoon when the powerful Millersville Marauders invade Sox Harrison Sta­ dium. The Fighting Scots, who surprised Westminster, 24-0, in their season opener last Saturday, will be battling for their first win ever against Millersville. The Marauders were 8-1 in regular season play last year before being nipped, 21-14, by Wittenberg University in the NCAA Division III national playoffs. Miller­ sville finished as the top offensive team in the Pennsylvania Conference’s Eastern Division by tatooing the scoreboard at a 30.1 points-per-game pace and also took defensive honors by yielding only 8.3 points per clash. Millersville averaged 214.7 yards per game on the ground last fall and 176.4 through the air to also lead the Pennsyl­ vania Conference in total offense with 391.1 yards per outing. Defensively, the Marauders limited their opponents to just PROGRAM FEATURES 1980 Football Schedule................................. 1 Coaching Staff................................................. 1 Team Captains................................................ 1 Opponent Information................................... 2 Today’s Game ................................................. 3 Edinboro Alphabetical Roster..................... 16 Edinboro Lineup.........................................Center Millersville Lineup.......................................Center Millersville Alphabetical Roster.................... 17 1980 Fall Sports Schedules ......................... 20 Scouting the Scots......................................... 30 Edinboro Statistics......................................... 31 Officials’ Signals............................................. 32 Punters and Placekickers to Watch............ It Johnny Mack Brown....................................... 6t Triple Threats.................................................. 9t The Swing Pass............................................... 17t The Halftime Show......................................... 27t The Cornerback............................................... 35t 1979 Academic All-Americans..................... 38t The Blitz............................................................ 40t Nickname Quiz................................................ 41t TODAY'S OFFICIALS REFEREE................. LINE JUDGE............ UMPIRE................... FIELD JUDGE........ LINESMAN.............. BACK JUDGE........ CLOCK OPERATOR ___Francis Myers Joseph Brimmeier ........Ralph Bowen . Richard Jaworski .. David Bergstedt ... Joseph Sopata ,. .Thomas Stabile LB BOB CICERCHI RB JOE EARLY 85.2 yards on the ground and 103.8 yards in passing to snare the league’s defensive honors in both categories, as well as in total defense. rauders after a stellar performance last week that stopped Westminster cold. The Titans totaled minus 9 yards at halftime and finished with a net of 16, 10 yards rushing and 6 yards passing, for the entire game. Leading the defensive line charge were tackles Jim Collins (6-5, 230) and Ron Link (6-3, 235) who sandwich middle guard Barry Swanson (6-1, 220). Collins shared the game’s tackling honors with linebacker Bob Cicerchi, as the pair to­ taled 11 stops apiece for the afternoon. End Chris McCleary (6-1, 200) followed with nine stops, Ron Link added eight, while defensive backs Dan Allie and Nick Sobecki chipped in six each. Edinboro has come away emptyhanded against the cross-state power in a three-game series which began in 1977. Since then, the Marauders have registered consecutive 24-12, 22-20 and 17-6 wins over the Scots. An ESC defense that allowed only 10 yards on the ground against Westminster will be challenged by the conference’s best running back, Robb Riddick, and a giant-sized offensive line that averages 235 pounds. Riddick, a 5-11, 198-pound senior, averaged an impressive 6.7 yards per carry every time he touched the foot­ ball. On the year, he churned up 690 yards of turf in 107 attempts. Taking the place of last year’s record­ setting quarterback, Jamie Szczecinski, is junior Brad Nau who has talented tight end Dave Havriliak (6-1, 215) and flanker John Cosenza to toss to. Placekicker Mark Zeswitz is also on hand to give the Marauders additional offensive punch. Headlining the Millersville defense is a veteran secondary with tackle Aril Smith (6-3, 242) and all-conference linebacker Chris Ciatto (6-0, 213). Millersville opened the 1980 season with a 14-14 tie against New York Tech. The Marauders were deprived of a victory when a last-minute Zeswitz field goal at­ tempt hit the goal post and bounced off to the right. In the meantime, Edinboro was busy at Erie Stadium, shutting out Westminster to record back-to-back victories over the Titans. The Scots scored their first win in history over Westminster by notching a 15-14 verdict in last year’s season finale. Edinboro’s defense will be seeking an­ other passing grade against the Ma- 3 Edinboro’s offense shifted into high gear early in the clash when the Scots drove 53 yards the first time they got the football and capped it with Mike Ray’s five-yard scamper to the end zone. The touchdown was the first of three Ray scored for the afternoon, while halfback Joe Early was busy setting up the tallies between the goal lines. The speedy senior netted 112 yards on 13 cracks at the line, his longest run being a 60-yard jaunt that put the Scots in position for their second score. Kicking specialist Rick Ruszkiewicz split the uprights squarely after all three scores and added to his point total by booting a 39-yard field goal. Scheduled to be honored during to­ day’s game are players from Edinboro State’s 1970 team which was the best in Fighting Scot football history. The 1970 squad captured the Lambert Bowl, em­ blematic of the best small college football team in the east, won the Pennsylvania Conference championship, and earned a berth in the NAIA national playoffs. That edition also had the distinction of estab­ lishing 43 new individual and team re­ cords. Wise buyers shop here and save GOOD LUCK BORO! POWELL AUTO SUPPLY, INC. Discounted Prices We Carry High Performance Parts Route 6N East Edinboro, Pa. Phone 734-1511 Main Street McKean, Pa. Phone 476-1115 or 476-1018 SCHULTZ HOTEL EVERGREEIU r FAMILY MEDICINE CLINIC DR. GEORGE DANIAL GOOD HOME COOKING SPECIALS SERVED DAILY FRIDAY FISH FRY “EDINBORO CONTRACEPTIVE” SERVICES SUNDAY BREAKFAST & DINNER Oral Contraceptives, ICJD's, Diaphragm Fitting • DAILY Afternoon and Evening Appointments • SPECIAL FEES for ESC students • — LIVE ENTERTAINMENT — Friday, Saturday and Sunday A SERVICE TO THE STUDEMTS FROM THE COMMUNITY Phone; 734-4555 Legal Beverages Served Daily • 24 Hour Answering Service; 459-1700 136 Meadville Street, Edinboro ROOMS AVAILABLE — OAILY OR WEEKLY RATES One mile south of Edinboro on Route 99 Phone 734-1363 BEST WISHES TO THE FIGHTING SCOTS Nancy and Pat Crawford Patti and Emil Magdik Connie and Paul Newman 4 ^^One was lighter and a better tasting beer ... it was BlatzW — Philip Murray, college student ••It must be the truth . . . cause I just done it — Roger Varo, college student Taste-test Blatz yourself. Join the Blatz believers. «rU be buying Blatz this weekendJJ — Lee Ramsek, marketing executive In October, 1977, these Mil­ waukee beer drinkers took the Blatz TV taste test against their regular beer. They became Blatz believers. Still skeptical? Try the Blatz taste test yourself. Next time you’re about to have your regu­ lar beer, try the Blatz taste your­ self. You’ll see why Blatz is America’s great light beer! gained respect for Blatz^^ beer^^ — Victor Brust, banker Blatz... America’s Great Light Beer, ,c 1978 G HEILEMAN BREWING CO., INC., LA CROSSE, WISCONSIN AND OTHER CITIES After die game, tiriiig home a dozen. ^IMiStor “Mister Donut never knows when to quit' 204 Plum Street Edinboro, Pa. 16412 CONSERVING ENERGY MAKES IT POSSIBLE TO STRETCH SiSiff BIRD INCORPORATED OUT THE WORLD'S DWINDLING RESOURCES WHILE NEW 28 Perry Square, Erie, PA. 4S4-6666 Charters and Tours TECHNOLOGIES ARE R. R. WALKER & SON BEING DEVELOPED. 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And in today’s grid w£irs, pitting highly-skilled, __ specialized squads of athletes, the kickers' role has been emphasized like never before. Check the Top TVventy, week in and week out, and you'll invariably discover teams that have both a solid punter and an accurate placekicker. It wasn't so long ago that coaches merely asked their players for a show of hands as to who could kick. Now, many are as highly recruited as a classy quarterback or a man-eating linebacker. The complicated situation at Arkansas probably reveals how kickers' lives can change. When Steve Cox was graduating from Charleston lArk.) High, he wanted to go to the state university, but the greatest hooter in Razorback history, Steve Little, stUl had two years left. So Cox enrolled at Tulsa, and as a frosh, he booted three field goals to upset the Hogs, 9-3. After his sophomore season, Cox transferred to Arkansas, but meanwhile, the Arkansas coach had found a great little side­ saddle artist on the West Coast in Ish Ordonez. So he wooed the 5-7,155-pounder to "The Ark," and while Cox was establishing a year of residence, Ish proceeded to lead all the field goal kickers in the nation by clicking on 18 of 22, setting an NCAA record of continued It Ka » . Cut chenille will add a timely touch to your wardrobe. N. Punters and Placekicters 16 in a row. The intriguing thing is that if Cox had gone directly to Arkansas from high school, Ordonez probably would have wound up at USC, which had been courting the Mexico City native for some time. And a year ago, when Cox was sit­ ting out, he perfected his punting tech­ nique to form the greatest one-two kick­ ing punch in the land, winding up sixth in punting on the NCAA list. The plot thickened during the off­ season when there were plans to redshirt Ordonez in ’80 to save a 3/ear of eligibility, and have Cox double up. However, during the spring drills, Lil’ Ish, who paced the Southwest Conference in scoring (a feat that escaped such celebrity hooters as Little, Tony Franklin and Russ Erxleben) outperformed Cox with his more accu­ rate placement work. So Holtz will hitch up the tandem again this fall to haunt his rivals. Firing not one, but two kicking special­ ists at the opposition is the rule these days rather than the exception. Punters use a different rhythm and foot action than placekickers, expecially if the latter is a soccer stylist. Thus, for most kickers, going back and forth can make for incon­ sistent kicking. There still is a small group, however, that can handle both chores, and this fall they're led by compact Don Stump of McNeese State, the only kicker to make both top listings last year. Stump, with a 42-yard punting average, ranked 16th on the punting lists, and with 15 out of 21 fielders, was tied for fifth in three-point accuracy. Stump boots 'em conventional style and that helps. Other punter-placekickers who pre­ sent exceptional credentials are Boston College’s John Cooper, a left-footer with a 40.5 average, plus solid FG work; Hawaii’s Jim Asmus, whose exceptional hang time on punts permitted returns of only 2.8 yards per kick, and who also placekicks ’em side-saddle; Iowa’s Reggie Roy, who has booted 61-yard punts; Mississippi State’s Dana Moore, the squad qomedian, who also gives the Bulldogs a big lift with his versatile toe; Lamar’s Mike Marlow, who authored a 53-yard FG, and had only 18 of 65 punts last fall returned; and Ball State’s Mark O’Connell, who not only placekicks and punts, but also quarterbacks, completing 10 of 16 passes for 165 yards in his first start against Bowling Green. All kickers are not recruited; some of the better ones "walk-on," like Maryland’s Dale Castro and Texas’ John Goodman, the pair who tied for runner-up honors last autumn behind Ordonez. Castro, a conventional-style hooter, came to Maryland hoping he could win a scholarship as a baseball pitcher, but when he came down with mononucleosis in his freshman year, he began watching footbcdl practice. He had booted at his high school in Maryland, eind after ob­ serving the Terps work out, he decided he could do as well as any of their kickers. He was right, hitting 17 of 21 three-pointers, including seven of 11 from 40 yards out. He hit 16 straight. Goodson had the unen­ viable task at Texas of stepping into the big shoes left by the gifted Erxleben, but Goodson did it all differently, including taking off his shoe to kick. He does it soccer style, too, hitting 17 out of 28 three-pointers, for a 1.55 per game FG average. Of the Top Ten returnees in career ac­ curacy for their placement work, all but Stump kick ’em soccer style. Tops is Georgia’s Rex Robinson (40 of 62), a senior who’s clicked on 65 straight PATs. Surpris­ ingly, Rex missed his first varsity extra­ point try, but he’s been king of the hill since. He needs 17 three-pointers this year to break Tony Franklin’s NCAA career mark of 56 FGs. Rex got his start booting in his very own backyard, kicking be­ tween two trees. Obed Arriri came to Clemson on a track scholarship, then turned to soccer. He had learned the game in his native Nigeria and helped spark the Tigers to the runner-up spot in the NCAAs. He also did the placement work for the footballers, helping them to an ACC championship and post-season bowl exposure. Baylor’s Bob Bledsoe is the most prolific kicker in Beeir history despite a poor start which saw him click on only one of his first six tries. He’s 25 of 39 going into his senior year. Other aces are Stanford’s Ken Naber (32-52, plus a 41.6 career punt average) and Nathan Ritter of North Carolina State, who hit 24 of his 28 FG tries, the nation’s best over the past two years. Nat also hit on 58 of his 60 PATs. Utah State’s Steve Casey Murphy Temple continued Dana Moore Mississippi State Steinke and Northern Illinois’ Rome Moga are other sidewinders with topnotch career FG figures. The amazing thing about kicking spe­ cialists is that the supply never seems to run dry. Take Syracuse, for example. Coach Frank Maloney lost the best kicker in Orange annals when Dave Jacobs graduated after the ’78 season after re­ writing the record book. Yet, South Africa native Gary Anderson, a high school soc­ cer star, stepped right in and nobody noticed a change, for he hit on 15 of 21 FGs, including 14 of his first 17. Anderson, who can kick with either foot, thanks to his soccer background, prefers his right for maximum distance. He Ccin hit ’em up to 65 yards and is amazingly accurate from 50 yards out. Gary has two more years to work his magic for the Orange. Virtually every place you look, colleges have record-making kickers of some de­ scription. Western Michigan’s Alton Laupp is the school’s career recordholder in three categories; Army’s Dave Aucoin set a West Point record hitting a 50-yarder to help deadlock Duke; TexasArlington’s Brian Happel holds Southland Conference marks for most PATs in a sea­ son, 40. That’s just scratching the surface. In the punting department, there are plenty of solid toes ready to thump the ball again, including Brigham Young’s Clay Brown, a well-built (6-3, 208) athlete who led the nation last fall with a 45.3 av­ erage on his 43 punts. And Clay also caught 31 passes for 498 yards, operating as a tight end. Other star returnees are Clemson’s David Sims, Michigan State’s powerful Ray Stachowicz, and Virginia Tech’s Dav Smigelsky. The latter came to Tech as a quarterback, hurt his shoulder, but concontinued 3t Punters and Placekicters tinued to punt, averaging 42.3 yards last fall. Sims, All-ACC, had only two games in which he failed to average 40 yards. The All-Big Ten top punter for the past three seasons, Stachowicz has averaged better than 42 yards from scrimmage. UCLA’s Matt McFarland was named ABC’s defensive player-of-the-week for his sparkling punting in the rain vs. Wash­ ington. Alabama’s Woody Umphrey, who kicks ’em left-footed, has a 70-yarder to his credit. Walk-on Tim Davey of Washing­ ton State likes to pass out of the^eep for­ mation, while his counterpeirt at Wash­ ington, Rich Camarillo, booted all fall without one getting blocked. YQlanova has a punter, Joe Borajkiewicz, whom his mates have tabbed "Joe Alphabet’’ for ob­ vious reasons. Joe’s an all-arounder, playing defensive hedfback, punting and holding for placekicker Chuck Bushbeck. Penn State has a fine punter in soph Ralph Gia- Ray Stachowicz Michigan State comarro, who averaged 43.2 vs. Syracuse. Northern Illinois’ Jim Hannula is from the old school. The 6-6, 235-pound offen­ sive tackle drops back out of the line when he punts. West Virginia’s Curt Carion gets outstanding hang time, while Arizona State’s Mike Black saw one of his kicks travel 92 yards. Northeast Louisia­ na’s Bill Weimer had a big year, just miss­ ing the 40-average, with a 39.9 mark. A coming punter to watch is Kelly Richardson, a frosh QB heading for Mon­ tana, from Grants Pass, Ore., who aver­ aged 40 yards in high school. Vhnderbilt 4t continued If you’re looking for a barefoot boy who tans a football, then try Oklahoma’s Mike Keeling, who can do it all. A member of the Bowling Green golf team, John Spong­ ier enters the ’80 campaign with a PAT string of 51 in a row. South Carolina's Eddie Leopard has a 52-}'ard field goal to his credit, while Dan Miller of Miami of Florida has hit three fielders in one game. Oklahoma State has Colin Andersen, a na­ tive of Denmark, who made good all of his PATs, and 12 of his 21FG attempts. There’s an ambidextrous hooter loose at Yale in the form of Anthony Jones. He’s a side­ winder soph. Another talented sidewin­ der is Wyoming’s Wayne VfinDerloo, who hit on 10 of 16 three-pointers, tops in the Western Athletic Conference. On and on this saga can go. Texas Tech’s junior Maury Buford has an edu­ cated toe. He led the NCAA punters as a frosh with a 44.1 average and was 13th nation^dly. And he’s been an Academic Allday Brown American for both of his college years, be­ Brigham Young sides. Colorado presents a one-two soph Jim Arnold is coming off a fantastic punch in placekicker Tom Field and punting season. He credits Atlanta Falcon punter Lance Olander. Field is a walk-on, ace John James for giving him some help­ while Olander led the Buffs in rushing, too. Tennessee’s Alan Duncan, a son of a ful tips. Wisconsin likes its soph, Dave Greenwood, who averaged 40.5 yards in missonary in Kenya, learned to kick a 53 kicks, and credits his high-jumping soccer ball first. He’s 23 of 32 in field goal work. Another Tennessean, Memphis background for developing a "leg.’’ Some other returnees with consistently State’s Rusty Bennett, holds every MSU high punting figures are Ohio State’s Tom record for placement work, including the Orosz, Utah State’s Guy McClure, Texas- longest in school history, 50 yards. Brown’s Bob Gransfors missed the El Paso’s Steve Folkner and the Air Force’s team bus to his first game, then went on to Scott Schafer. Schafer, who has averaged 40.6 yards in make All-Ivy. Tulsa’s Stu Crum is Allhis 205 career punts, may also queirter- Missouri Valley, beating Kansas State, 9-6 in the dying seconds. Denmark sent Mich­ back the Flyboys this fall. He was the No. 1 signal-caller at the end of spring drills, igan State Morten Andersen, who was and will run the offense or operate as the an exchange student in an Indifinapolis tight end. He’s a good-looking athlete, High School.He has demonstrated exception£il placement work with the Spartans. standing 6-2, and weighing 213 pounds. Getting back to placement work, Penn He booted five for 50 or more yards last State has a solid returnee in Herb year. Walk-on Greg Porter of TCU was a Menhardt, who hit 14 of 20, beat North crack drummer in his high school band, Carolina State and Tulane with late but had difficulties doubling as the three-pointers. Vandys Mike Woodard kicker. So as a Homed Frog, he’s given up works hard on the weights to get more band work. North Carolina has a standout punter distance. Navy has a pair of placekickers, Steve Fehrforthe shorter work, Dave Guin in Steve Streater, who averaged 41.2 yards for the long hauls. Penn’s John Dwyer has last season, better than 46 vs. Virginia. a 50-yarder to his credit and punts, too. Florida State punter Rohn Stark partici­ Oregon State’s Chris Mangold can handle pated in the mgged decathlon event on both the punting and placement work, the track team, which developed plenty and is expected to pick up the slack now of leg drive for his 40-yard average. Stark that brilli2mt hooter Kieron Walford has also owns a pilot’s license and majors in physics. That busy combination ought to departed. Iowa State has an exciting kicker in Alex keep him out of trouble, which is really Giffords, who booted three fielders vs. what punting is £ill about—kicking your own team out of trouble, while keeping Texas in the opening hadf. Long Beach State’s Ralph Petrosian was the opposition bottled up in the pressure the team’s leading scorer for the past two cooker. This year’s crop of kickers will come at f^dls, while New Mexico’s Pete Parks is a conventional kicker with a 51-yarder to his you in all shapes and sizes. And if alumni credit, but unconventional in other ways, mn true to form, the kicking won’t all be for he’s a straight-A student in the confined to the playing field, either. classroom.'* ^ ii America’s autumn ritual is underway, and the fall line up of all-stars in jeans, shirts and tops is playing at The Gap. The world’s largest seller of Levi’s® Jeans has the looks, sizes, and values you want. Plus action and sweat looks you can’t find anywhere else, for guys, gals and kids. Touch down at one of The Gap’s 450 stores nationwide. I * * JchnnyMack Brovn Football Hero, Movie Star liistorical book about the Rose Bowk has also ensured that Brown wUl live forever in the hearts of fans, or at least remember­ ed reverently. After Alabama made its bowl debut, Stiles recorded a 20-19 Crimson Tide victory over favored Washington by recognizing a clutch, two-touchdown perform­ ance by Brown in the second half. “The Rose Bowl's greatest game,” Stiles wrote. “One of college foot­ ball's most savage counter-attacks to storm the heights of victory in the face of what seemed certain and overwhelming defeat. One of the most magnificent one-man stands since Horatius held the bridge. This game was all of these." Brown, who was inducted into the Na­ tional Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1957, was easily the star of that splendid show. That made a prophet out of a staunch Alabama supporter. While on the train that carried the Crimson Tide on its 2,500-mile, five-day trip firom Tuscaloosa to Pasadena, Bob McDavid, president of the Birmingham chapter of the Alabama Alumni Association, awoke fi'om a nap and startled passengers by screaming, “ Hooray for Johnny Mack!” By late afternoon on January 1, the en­ tire nation was echoing that praise. At halftime of that Rose Bowl, Washing­ ton had a 12-0 lead and a crowd of 45,000 gave Alabama a polite ovation as the Crimson Tide ram to its dressing room. The Huskies appeared en route to a cake­ walk victory. A1 by Al Browning, Tuscaloosa NEWS Brown who helped Alabama to a success­ erious students of University of ful start of the most productive post­ Alabama football, past and present, season bowl act in the nation, therefore will tell you it was appropriate that establishing himself as the man most re­ Johnny Mack Brown made triumphant sponsible for Deep South football ridding exits on the silver screen as a Saturday af­ itself of an unmerited cloak of inferiority. ternoon movie cowboy with the song Without question. Brown left quite a "Dusty Trails" adding dignity to his legacy—one bolstered by a stunning per­ heroics. formance in the 1926 Rose Bowl, then ex­ The more experienced fans say, right­ panded by the bright lights of cinema. fully so it seems, that Brown left many de­ His death, in Beverly Hills in 1974, has fensive halfbacks hot, thirsty, hungry and done little to minimize that fame. In fact, dirty during his playing career at it was as late as 1979 that a successful mu­ Alabama Irom 1922 through 1925—most sical group, the Statler Brothers, included of them frustrated by the ease with which a reference to Brown in one of its hit rec­ the elusive running back turned their ords: “Whatever happened to Johnny "sure tackles” into Crimson Tide touch­ Mack Brown? What ever happened to downs. Randolph Scott?" Youthful fans simply marvel over tales Author Maxwell Stiles, writing in his about his exploits, realizing that it was S 6t ___ _ wi ft catching of Brown leading the way, struck quickly in the second half to make it a contest. Alabama quarterback Pooley Hubert, an All-American, ran 27 yards after a Washington punt, then ran four straight times for a touchdown. Bill Buckler kicked the point after the touchdown and the lead was trimmed to 12-7. Then, on its next possession, Alabama scored again, halfback Grant Gillis pass­ ing 63 yards to Brown for a touchdown. “All I had to do was sidestep one man and I was across,” Brown said after run­ ning 25 yards into the end zone. Buckler again kicked the point after the touchdown and Alabama led 14-12. Washington fumbled on its next pos­ session, giving Alabama the ball at the Huskies' 33-yard-line. In the huddle continued on l4t 4X4. by bod.es rOAD cboite 01 ROUGH tw I 'wbe^e «the CO'" the class-"am engi 3^ce J IN THE DatsU'^ . '^''^’'^odV nsfer i,h the h.gb^ underbodV^P^ ,rans L NtT32FL02.(lUSOTI tASUr COXTKtt'W* I *<*« ^ ,PIN^0»V ;o(t iHVDRAFLOltlNYDMHj] PENfeOlH V <2?>lubricat^ ^Ji tgA TYPEF M PERFORMOitt la; nuiSSSru* I MusiSiFUii MT32R.0Z.nU.SflT’ S§»Ubtic^g/ Mr32R.02.«U.S.0T‘ !R.0Z nus tff»’ MI32R.OZ UUSiTl? COOLANT KIOCUlfiHUR flPRBr&ai^zsRLssW' TVUO^Ctf Wtoioa GEAR . I-UBRICAN >iiifeofr 096 M«Kfpo«*2-ejieN «T I2R,0Z.‘|1U.S.‘0T.I "'lassffir MTW W0Z.IH31 ’ ;L- The Official Undsay ^ve/Foofball IQISsst: INSTRUCTIONS: Take this test between plays or at half-time. Circle the correct answers and mail this page to the college, government agency or professional football team of your choice. If they accept you on the basis of this test, you’re truly smarter than they are. 1. The difference between a Lindsay Olive and a football is: A. Footballs taste lousy in sandwiches B. Have you ever tried a mushroom-and-football pizza? C. Lindsay Olives are Green or Black, but footballs are only brown D. Lindsay Olives are ripe and delicious, footballs are chewy and hard to digest 2. Which of these does not belong with the others? (Hint: Lindsay Olives are in a class by themselves.) 6. Which of these would a fullback use to open a can of mellow, nutlike Lindsay Ripe Olives? 7. If footballs are brown, Lindsay Pitted Green Ripe Olives are green, what color are Lindsay Pitted Black Ripe Olives? A. Black B. Black C.A&B D. All of the above E. None of the above 8. NFL Linebackers enjoy Lindsay Pitted Black Ripe Olives in: A. Hospitals B. Chocolate malts C. Salads D. The Super Bowl 3. If Lindsay Green Olives grew to the size of footballs, which size martini would you put them in? A. Extra large size C. Stadium size B. Swimming pool size D. Any size 9. Which of these semi-official signals indicates time-out to enjoy wonderful Lindsay Pitted Green or Black Ripe Olives? 4. Which of these would add flavor and excitement to salads? flfl D. [• I! , i' L'. t' [ !'• 5. A true football fan would never: A. Eat anything but Lindsay Olives B. Spit Lindsay Olive pits at the opposing team C. Let his sister date an offensive tight-end D. Ignore the game to take this test E. SUMMARY: If you were patient enough to read this far in the test, you deserve a little something extra. So send your name, address and zip code to Lindsay Olive Growers, RO. Box 278, Lindsay, CA 93247, and we’II send you something sooner or later. V TAMASY BROS., INC. MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS Commercial Industrial Institutional Sound construction requires a solid foundation. Tamasy Bros. Inc. builds on the basis which has depth, strength, and structural integrity. GOOD LUCKFIGHTING SCOTS 48 Buttermilk Hollow Rd. Building 15 North Huntingdon, PA 15642 (412)837-3958 21 David. B. Tamasy President OFF ESMlglfe TO "HOME AWAY FROM HOME" Master travels with the team- I go to Bolingbroke! 734-5255 Edinboro Health Center EDINBORO HOTEL College Park Plaza 208 Waterford Street Edinboro, Pa. PHONE 734-4062 (Formerly Professional Associates Office) R.P. Ramirez, M.D. — Specializing In Internal Medicine G.J. Vilushis, D.O. — Specializing In Pediatrics V.L. Jenco, D.O. — Specializing In Obstetrics and Gynecology APPOINTMENTS MAY BE MADE BY CALLING Backing the Scots all the way! 734-4Q6S 22^ % Ed in boro Beverage LYNCH Camera, Inc. Distributor 2254 WEST 8th STREET • PHONE 454-2454 ERIE, PENNSYLVANIA 16505 Erie's Complete Photographic Supplier SOFT DRINKS - LEGAL BEVERAGES ICE - PARTY SNACKS Phone 734 - 1525 200 Plum Street Edinboro, Pa. 16412 301 Erie Street Letterheads Envelopes Business Cards Wedding Supplies Phone: 734-3621 GOOD Rubber Stamps Tickets Business Forms Publishers of the Area Hi-Lighter LUCK FIGHTING SCOTS! Culbertson Co. 23 24 continued images in the sky, releasing coUs of marching feud with Harvard as to who has the largest drum in America. The Rice smoke. Three high school bands per­ University band has been known to per­ formed, along with the Miami Barber form barefoot, Texas A&.M has marched Shop Harmony Chorus and 80 girls from goosestep. One school in the East gave a the Coral Gable High School dance band. tribute to Arthur Fiedler, complete with Farther down the field, a flatbed caboose called the "disco express" had a fireworks. Notre Dame’s Irish Guard is famous for giant piano keyboard and 2000 lightbulbs run by a computer. For the riverboat wearing kilts and Irish tarns. All members are near 6-foot-2 in height and perform a scene, McNamara ordered 80 banjo high-stepping jig that is spine tingling. pla3^ers. "Back in 1935," says McNamara, "the Orange Bowl used a huge orange cel­ lophane sphere. The Oramge Bowl queen one year almost passed out inside it." In 1980, there were fireworks, roman candles and huge lifts in the center of the field that supported fountains. There was even a smoke stack. The entire show cost more than $100,000 to plan, develop and produce. Perhaps the biggest surprise, bigger than the marching bands or the clowns on unicycles, was that the whole thing lasted only 10 minutes. The visiting team, after all, was entitled to the other 10. Probably the halftime performance most opposite to the hit musical at the Orange Bowl occurred six years ago when one Ivy League school didn't have the funds to send its bsind to an away game. The band decided to save face, of sorts, by sending one young man and a tape recorder. There, the band member an­ nounced that "The famous invisible marching band" would take the field. Ac­ companied by his taped music, the man described the most unusual performance in halftime history. The University of Tsxas is having a Mascots go into high gear at haiftime. Every year the Orange Bowi dazzies spectators with its haiftime extravaganza. The use band wears Trojan outfits, com­ plete with capes. When attention is diverted from the bands, it often falls on the mascots. There have been famous incidents, going back 50 years,when Army cadets would try to steal the Navy goat. One Southeastern Conference school has a Bengal tiger that roars after every score. Another, formerly all-m^lle school, always had a bulldog named Handsome Dan. Now that school is co-ed and the dog, a female, is named Bingo. Ralphie is Colorado's 1000-pound American bison, the real thing. When the band strikes up "Glory, Glory, Colorado," Ralphie is allowed to run the length of the field, a performance that delights the fans. Ralphie (a female, no less) stops at the opposing team’s bench long enough to snarl a warnmg, then charges back upfield. At least two schools have famous horses, one in the Pac-10, one in the Southwest Conference. Recently, when the two schools played each other, one mascot was asked to stay home. The idea stood that one horse was enough at halftime. Arkansas has a mascot that is nearly ex­ tinct, a razorback. In the Northeast, Bos­ ton College has a bald eagle, £ilso on the endangered-species list. A school in Florida has a rattlesnake. During halftime, the mascots are al­ lowed to perform, but many would prob­ ably rather stay in their cages. One mas­ cot has an air-conditioned cage, another has a huge air-conditioned dog house. People take their school mascots seri­ ously. The father and gr£mdfather of one Southern mascot, a bulldog, are buried under the stadium scoreboard. Once, when the mascot at a school in Louisiana was said to have been hurt in a highway accident, alumni offered blood. There are some unusueil animeds that are trotted out at halftime—a live owl at one school, a cougar at another. One col­ lege has a collie called Reville, another has a grizzly beeir on a leash. It's all part of the exhibition that is known as halftime, and American college experience. The traditions can be as pre­ cise as a smooth marching band or as modem as one that plays jazz. Some bands have no direction at all, jumping from each formation to the next. The college halftime show is important enough to be included in the College Fbotball Hall of Fame, along with tributes to people like Amos Alonzo Stagg and Grantland Rice. There, in Kings Mills, Ohio, a 10-minute film records the pageantry of the halftime show and pays respect to some of the best bands in America. The film presents the halftime show as it should be—a delightful break 1 in college football. 33t Rabbit than valuable yards. There's also quickness. At the snap, the Rabbit can bring you from 0 to 50 in oniy 8.3 seconds. Leav­ ing some sports cars in the backfield. With the Rabbit's front-wheel drive, there's great maneuverability, which makes moving in and out of tough spots (and finding open­ ings) a lot easier. IB And as to comfort, there's enough room so that even four mem­ bers of the Pack don't have to feel like they're packed. But probably what's most comforting is that you don't have to be a fullback to make all these gains. Just a drive in our hatchback will do. NOWICRNGAM 46a400YUDS ONJUSTONEiniKFUy O19S0 VOLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA. INC. Yes.You've read it right. Paui Hornung, one of footbail's pre­ mier running bocks, can still gain thousands of yards on the ground. This time with the Volkswagen Rabbit. Imagine. 466,400 yards. Which means you can drive from Lambeau Field in Green Bay to Soldier Field In Chicago (and with plenty to spare) without having to stop for gas. And just take a look at these stats; With the optional 5-speed manual transmission, you can pick up an EPA es­ timated [25] miles per gallon, 40 MPG highway estimate. (Use estimated MPG for comparison to other cars. Mileage may vary with speed, weather and trip length. Actual highway mileage will probably be less.) And there's more to gain by driving a WUISIIIBBBI DOBir by David Davidson, Atlanta JOURNAL all the 22 positions on a football team, comerback is perhaps the most de­ manding and the most unforgiving of them all. Most collegiate coaches will tell you quarter­ back requires more overall skill and intelligence, but much of what a quarterback accomplishes— or fails to accomplish—depends to a large degree upon how the players surrounding him perform. For instance, an incomplete pass might be the result of a poorly thrown ball, or it might be be­ cause a receiver ran a bad route, a lineman missed a blocking assignment, or a running back lined up in such a manner the defense was able to diagnose the play before it ever began. In other words, there are other places to lay the blame. When a comerback makes a mistake, the alumnus in the stands has no trouble determin­ ing the culprit. continued 35t He has no place to hide,” is the way one Far West secondary coach put it. Not only does a comerback have to live with himself after making a crucial error, he often has to endure the displeasure of the position coach, who in turn faces the wrath of the head coach, who in turn is judged, not always justly, by those who sit in the bleachers. There is the true story of a comerback at a Deep South institution a few years back who was beaten twice in the same game for long touchdown passes and his team lost. The next week, that same player, who like many comerbacks was skillful enough to return kicks in addition to playing fulltime on'defense, fielded a punt on his own 15 yardline and spent the next 20 or so seconds eluding would-be tacklers, finally reaching his opponent’s end zone for a touchdown. As he huffed and puffed his way back to the bench for a well-deserved breath of o:?ygen, the de­ fensive backfield coach meandered over and muttered, "\bu still owe me one more touchdown.” At another school, where football is taken with equal seriousness, a comer­ back was beaten so badly he didn't even show up in the film as the receiver cradled the ball in his arms and trotted across the goal line. "I tried to tell the coach I had released that guy to the free safety,” the comerback said. "But I knew that wasn’t tme, and so did the free safety and so did the coach. We won the game and we all got a big laugh out of watching that receiver catch the ball. But I noticed the coach showed that play over and over again six or seven times, so I got the mes­ sage. All jokes aside, he was telling me not to let it happen again.” Comerback is such a difficult position to play primarily because of whom the comerback must play against. "The comerback is a rare breed of foot­ ball player,” one coach noted, “a rare combination of great speed to run with the premier athletes that are playing the wide receiver positions and great strength to support the mshing defense and the intelligence to know which func­ tion to perform when.” More and more, comerbacks are being confronted with wide receivers who can cover 40 yards in 4.5 seconds and even 4.3 seconds. Thus, speed and something coaches like to refer to as ‘quickfootedness” are unconditional prerequisites to play comerback. Whereas the free safety is concerned almost entirely with covering the pass, the comerback also must keep a wary eye on the line of scrimmage, particularly against a team which deploys an option offense. Of course, there are exceptions, but most coaches like their comerbacks io be responsible for tackling the trailing running back im a pitch-option situation. 36t Thus, the comerback is paired against a Grade A athlete whether he is playing pass or run. Most comerbacks do not come straight out of high school ready-made. With the limited number of quality athletes avail­ able to most high school coaches, the best athletes ordinarily are assigned to play offense. That makes recruiting cornerbacks a less than exact science at best. The consensus seems to be that a good collegiate comerback needs to be at least six feet tall, preferably taller; he should weigh a minimum of 180 pounds, pre­ ferably more; he needs to mn the 40-yard dash in 4.6 seconds, preferably faster; not to mention intangible qualities such as aggressiveness, the jumping ability of a basketball player, feet that respond in­ stantaneously to change-of-direction sig­ nals from the brain, and the wherewitheill to know when to foresake pass coverage to charge an oncoming rush which as likely as not will be led by a much larger fullback or even a huge guard. Of course, there are exceptions. At one southern school not too many years ago, there was a universally respected comer­ back who stood only 5-7 and weighed only 140 pounds. Any wide receiver who mistook his lack of size for deficiencies in other, more important areas, soon dis­ covered otherwise. \bu better have good comerbacks,” one coach said, "because it only takes one play to get beat back there. Of all the po­ sitions on defense, comerback requires more total concentration than any other. If the comerback doesn’t read every time, then that play could result in the touch­ down that beats you. It is a real pressure position.” It must be conceded, however, that there are advantages and disadvantages to the fact that comerbacks have no place to hide on a football field, that their every move is open for inspection by everyone from the head coach to the cheerleaders to the peanut vendor. “There is gloiy in intercepting a pass for a touchdown,” admitted one coach, no question about it. And there is some­ thing to be said for going one-on-one against the other team’s fastest athlete and coming out on top, but the bad part is when the comerback gets beat. He’s out there all by himself.” In other words, he’s like the pitcher who gives up a home mn in the bottom of the ninth inning of a baseball game that is tied 0-0. He has no one to blame but him­ self, and outside his girlfi'iend he isn’t likely to receive much sympathy. Comerbacks are not the last line of de­ fense in most schemes. That distinction commonly goes to the free safety. But if a skillful receiver can elude a comerback, who is almost always a better athlete than the free safety, a touchdown at that point Covering speed is the cornerback’s role. seems almost inevitable. It is the interception that attracts the most attention to comerbacks, although since the free safety is more of a pure pass-protector it is he who is likely to intercept a pass. All coaches love it when one of their players intercepts a pass, but in most instances a coach would prefer that his comerback simply break up a pass rather than gamble for the intercep­ tion, especially since the possibility of los­ ing the game might result in a touch­ down. ‘You have your hell-bent-for-leather gamblers,” one coach observed, "and they’ll make a lot of good plays, if they’re good comerbacks. But they’ll make some bad ones, too. And in my opinion, the secondary is a bad place to do any gam­ bling, particularly in a tight game." There is no such thing as the perfect comerback. "The only guy who has never been beat is the guy who never played comerback,” one coach noted. “Either that or he played in one game and the other team never threw the ball. "But the worst thing that can happen,” that same coach continued, "is for a comerback to worry about getting beat. It’ll happen every time if he ever starts to worry. Those guys are going to get beat, period, no ifs, ands or buts. What they have to do is accept that fact and try to learn from their mistcikes. In that respect,” he added, "playing comerback is like playing quarterback. If a quarterback thinks he’s going to play a perfect game, he’s wrong. The same applies to a comerback. It’s like a golfer. Once a golfer faces the fact that he’s going to hit some bad shots and resigns himself to the fact that what he has to do is be prepared to compensate for those bad shots with more good shots, then he’s in good shape mentally.” M X After 76 years, EFHutton &Compaiv still has one name. In an industry that undergoes ups and downs, mergers and constant change, E.F. Hutton has always stood for reliability and dependability Through all those years, we've maintained an un­ broken record of profitability and of continuous service to our customers. And now, as we celebrate our 76 th year, that stability seems even more impressive. When EFHiitlion talks, people listen. Member of SI Cl M UNIVERSITY DIVISION DM FIRST TEAM OFFENSE Pos. WR WR TE OT OT OG OG C QB RB RB PK Player and School Mike Ball, Central Michigan Phil Williams, Florida State GPA 3.49 3.9 3.4 3.636 3.29 3.07 3.63 3.6 3.69 3.72 2.47* Pat Bowe, Stanford Jim Downing, McNeese Keith Vkn Home, Southern California Brad Budde, Southern Ccdifomia Randy Schleusener, Nebraska Kelly Saalfeld, Nebraska Paul McDonald, Southern California Angelo Colosimo, Colgate Major Ogilvie, Alabama Craig Jones, Virginia Military 3.716 FIRST TEAM DEFENSE DL DL DL DL LB LB LB DB DB DB DB P Bruce Filarsky, University of the Pacific Rod Horn, Nebraska Ken Loushin, Purdue Jeffrey M. Whitton, Arizona Bruce Harrell, Washington MUt McColl, Stanford LaMont Jefferson, Rice Ed Cerkovnik, Montana Alan Davis, Michigan State William Keith Jones, Florida State Joe St. Geme, Stanford Maury Buford, Texas Tech 3.83 3.296 5.20** 3.764 3.5 3.5 3.5 3.79 3.54 3.95 3.95 3.14 SECOIVD TEAM OFFENSE Phil Williams, Florida State Mike Ball, Central Michigan Pos. WR WR TE OT OT OG Player and School Mark Turley Cornell Tim Clary Ball State Rick Dennison, Colorado State Jay Patterson, East Tennessee Rob Martinovich, Notre Dame Edward Koboves, Cincinnati OG C QB RB RB PK H. Leon Shadowen, Kentucky Kevin Speer, Indiana Roch Hontas, Tulane Clarence Gaines, William &. Mary Mike Gusman, Penn State Marshall Duncan, Tennessee SECOND TEAM DEFENSE DL Mario Biaggi, Columbia Scott D. Warren, Florida State John Ward, Louisiana Tech Greg Meisner, Pittsburgh Eric Berg, Missouri Kevin Berg, Northwestern Ted Dumbauld, Navy Tom Gibbons, Notre Dame Eddie Forkerway, Texas-El Paso Patric Chester, Virginia Lloyd Levitt, Illinois Jeff Whitton, Arizona Larry Lovett, Indiana *on 3.0 scale 38t **on 6.0 scale continued on 46t Putting together do-it-yourself projects can be a lot of fun when you get started right. And our Redi-Cuts ^^ pre-cut building materials are a good first step. For example, you can build this workbench, or one of nine other home projects as easy as nailing the pieces together. Because materials are available in convenient pre-cut sizes. Just follow the instructions in our Redi-Cuts book­ let. (Ifs free with the coupon.) And in no time at all, you can nail down these easy, Georgia Fhcific attractive home projects. RB3ISTEFED DEALER - II I Homeofquality call toll frcc: \ 800/ A47 ZHS2 (except Alaska I builclingproducts & Hawaii). Illinois: 1 800/322'4400. landservice Yoti can do it.Vfe’ll help with Redi-CfitsJ' Send to: FREE REDI-CUTS BCX)KLET Dept. REP 900 S.W Fifth Ave. Portland. OR 97204 by Fred Stabley, Jr. In baseball it’s the suicide squeeze, in basketball it’s the high feed and in football it’s the safety blitz. They’re all high-risk gambles in athletics that guarantee nothing but action. Fans love them and coaches hold their breath because something will happen ... but what? If it s executed correctly the suicide squeeze can result in one run, the high feed in two points and the safety blitz in a fumble or a bungled play. If not, it’s an out, a turnover and a touchdown. A touchdown? Not always, but a big gainer is the best you can hope for. “ Hey, something is going to happen when the safety blitz is on, ” a head coach in the East chuckled. "You usually cross your fingers and hope for the best. It’s exciting and usually effective, but it can also kill you.’’ The safety blitz, in short, is an attack on the offense via the rush from the safety. Normally a pass defender who only gets into the action against the run when the ballcarrier has broken into the secondary, the safety is the primary weapon in a safety blitz. He continued Match these college teams with their nicknames. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. . 8. Texas Christian □ Virginia Tech CZ] Minnesota □ Furman □ Akron □ Tulane □ □ 7 Southern Illinois 9. 10. 11. 12. Idaho [m Wake Forest □ Marshall □ Washington State □ Oregon □ 13. Air Fbrce Academy EZI 14. Montana □ 15. Wisconsin □ A B C Q E F G H I Golden Gophers • Paladins Grizzlies Ducks Falcons Cougars Demon Deacons Horned Frogs Zips J Salukis K Thundering Herd L Gobblers M Green Wave IV Vandals O Badgers o-si .'o-fri .'a-ei ia-zi ia-ii -'m-oi -'O’G .'m-s (c-l iW-9 net: Wood and simulated woo GENERAL^ELECTRIC nmi comes barrelling through the middle of the offense at full speed trying to sack the quarterback or ballcarrier or better yet create a fumble. However, the pitfalls are obvious. The safety is his team's last line of de­ fense, and when he joins the attack troops there’s nobody back should the of­ fense ever breaik one. "I love the play,” said a former All-Big Ten safety. “We used it a lot when I was in college and I loved to stick my nose in where the action was. The only problem I found at 195 pounds was when I met some 235-pound fullback head-on. A safety gets a quick appreciation of what it’s like in the trenches.” The safety blitz is usually part of an edl-out blitz by the defense in almost cer­ tain passing situations. Not only is the safety coming but so are the linemen and linebackers—a total of eight or nine in all. "I remember the day we came with 11 guys and that’s what you call a real all-out blitz,” a defensive coordinator at a Mid­ west school recalled with a laugh. “We’d practiced it all week and when we ran it, the- other team was somehow prepared and ran the only play that could hurt us. It scored on a long run and we lost by continued seven points.” The safety blitz, however, is not as risky as the 11-man rush. “The key to the safety blitz is disguising it,” a veteran head coach in the West said. “Most people line the free safety up about 10 to 14 yards from the line of scrimmage. When he’s blitzing, he must come from five yards. Therefore, you have to set it up before using it or you’ll get burned.” What usually happens is that the free safety (he’s the one who plays centerfield as opposed to the strong safety who lines up on the tight end or wide side of the field) fakes like he’s blitzing a number of times a game. He’ll simply walk up to within five yards of the line of scrimmage and make sure the quarterback knows he’s there before backing out. “If he came from 14 yards out, he’d never get there in time to do any good, and if he walked up to five yards for the first time in the game the offense would likely call a play to burn him,” the head coach from the West continued. “It’s very important for the safety to drop back in time when he’s faked the blitz because if he gets caught in a quick count he can stUl get burned.” The safety blitz is most often done with The end result of a successful blitz: a bungled play. the free safety ailthough the strong safety can blitz from the comer. And it’s usually called by the team that is behind or an underdog in an attempt to get something going. The safety blitz is a solid, fundamental defensive play that every major college in the country has in at least one form or another. And, as is the case with many other football strategies that often bring spectacular results, the threat of the safety blitz is often as effective as the blitz itself. The safety is never on his own to call the blitz but he does have the option to, cancel it if he doesn’t like the offensive formation his opponents are in. There is a great deal of team coordina­ tion involved in this kind of play, as there is in all aspects of football. Many teams have parts of every practice session set aside to work on different kinds of blitzes, not all of them involving the safety. The safety has a specific hole in the of­ fensive line that he is to make his charge through, and it’s usually on one side of the center or the other. That means that the noseguard or the middle linebacker goes to the opposite side of the center to open the hole. Should there be a mixup in the defense and two defenders go through the same hole, the results could be devastating if the offense has called the right play. What often happens in the safety blitz, is that the ball is handed off to the tail­ back and he follows the fullback into the gaping hole filled only by the safety. This is the time the safety has to show what he’s made of. He’s got to be ready to take on the block and squeeze the play toward his teammates. If he isn’t able to force the mnner toward his help, it could mean a touchdown. Another area that has to be covered in the all-out blitz with the safety is if the backs go out on short pass routes. It’s the responsibility of the outside linebackers to blitz and then engage the backs. If they are going out on pass patterns the linebackers must cover them. “The safety blitz is most effective against dropback passing teams,” a head coach from The East said. And, it’s usually only effective two or three times a game at the most. Any more than that and you’re really taking a gamble. “This type of defensive play is not a wise choice, either against option teams or teams that have good throwing quar­ terbacks who pass from a half or . full rollout. “You rarely see a safety blitz from a team that is ahead. It’s the trailing team looking for a turnover that will try it. Whenever you see that safety coming you can rest assured that one side’s going to be smiling at the end of the play—but you never know which side.” 43t A NONTECHNICAL LOOK AT THE TECHNKAL ADVANTAGES OF USING STP GAS TREATMENT It all starts with this wonderful chemical called Alkylhydroxybenzylpolyamine. Fancy name for something that looks like a balloon on a string. But, as the primary active ingredient, it does two important things in your car’s fuel system: First, it helps remove water from your gas tank by surrounding droplets of water, suspending them in your gas so they can pass ~ harmlessly through your fuel system. Second, it helps pre­ vent grundge like gum and varnish from sticking to metal surfaces of the fuel system in two ways: By coating the metal surfaces of the fuel system and by sur­ rounding the gum and ____ varnish to keep them from getting a toehold. This helps keep your car­ buretor clean and that helps maintain peak engine performance. Still with us? So far, all you’ve got to remember is that STP Gas Treatment fights back against bad guys in your fuel system. Now for the second thing to remember: All this isn’t fiction. It’s fact. Results proven in scientific tests. For instance: FIGHTS RUST. These two steel bars were both soaked in the same gas plus water. Only dif­ ference? The gas used with the bar on the right contained STP Gas Treatment. FIGHTS WATER. Water causes more than rust. It can freeze, too. Brrrr! Regular use can lessen the likelihood of gas line freeze. Tests proved STP Gas Treatment increases the emulsifica­ tion of water and that means it helps water get through your system, out your exhaust. tests. Without us (left) nasty formations developed. With us (right) sleeves came out much cleaner. Take your pick. FIGHTS VALVE DEPOSITS. For this test, we matched up six new cars in three matched pairs. After only 12,000 miles, II look at the ■ y difference that ■ I can develop in H D valve deposit H formation. A(We’re on the “ '■ right.) That stuff on the left? Would you want that in your car? In summary. Maybe you’ve never thought about using a gas treatment. Well, you should. Odds are, you’ve got some bad guys lurking in your fuel system. Things you ought to fight back against- if you want to keep your car running like it ought to. STP Gas Treatment does exactly that. FIGHTS GARB DEPOSITS. Some carburetor openings are tiny enough to become restricted by gum and varnish, which can rob your engine of efficiency. We put clean metal sleeves in 28 engine lASj I^OUBy FIGHT BACK! ¥nTH STP GAS TREAmflENT. STP ) STP Corporation 1979,1400 W. Commercial Blvd., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 33310 It’s the best selling Gas Treatment in America. General Motors Parts Division is Mr. Goodwrench and more than 12,500 GM Parts employes dedicated to good customer care. continued from 38t COUEGE DIVISION FIRST TEAM OFFENSE Pos. WR WR TE OT OT OG OG C QB RR RB Player and School Eric Stevens, Millikin Robert Ray Coll, Ohio Northern Jerry Carder, Chadron (Neb.) Steve L. Johnson, Mississippi College Craig Groendyk, Hope (Mich.) Charles Stavley, Delta (Miss.) State Mike Ferris, Southwest Texas Blake Moore, College of Wooster (Ohio) Scott Terry, Dayton Scott Mumma, Dickinson (Pa.) Ed Rogusky, Lafayette (Pa.) GPA 4.00 3.98 3.78 3.932 3.647 3.75 3.9 3.7 3.83 3.48 3.53 FIRST TEAM DEFENSE DL DL DL DL LB LB LB DB DB DB DB PK Tom Lingg, Emporia (Kan.) Allen Kiesling, Southwest Texas Dan Radalia, Muskingum (Ohio) Scott Lindner, Rose-Hulman Institute (Ind.) Richard B. Swartz, Gettysburg (Pa.) Chris Adkins, Central (Iowa) Keith Driscoll, Northeast Missouri Terry Geraghty, St. John’s (Minn.) Mike Bettinger, St. Joseph’s (Ind.) Paul Kippley, South Dakota State Bryan D. Burney, Elon (N.C.) Tony Harris, South Dakota State SECOND TEAM OFFENSE Warren Brown, East Stroudsburg Ed Rogusky, Lafayette Pos. WR WR TE OT OT OG OG C QB RB RB Player and School Brent Aufdembrink, Central College Matt Victor, Lincoln (Mo.) Kris Robbins, Murray (Ky.) Wendell Burke, Delaware James Bailey, Defiance (Ohio) Jay Steinman, Dickinson (Pa.) Mike Lynn, Wartburg (Iowa) Tim McCannelly, Alabama A&.M Brad Baker, Gustavus Adolphus (Minn.) Mark Brockelman, Defiance (Ohio) Tim Finn, Dubuque (Ohio) SECOND TEAM DEFENSE Steve Johnson, Mississippi College 46t DL DL DL DL LB LB LB DB DB DB DB KS Craig Swanson, Gettysburg (Pa.) Chris Rood, North Dakota State John Lind, Moorhead State Joe Govern, Wittenberg (Ohio) Dan Distasio, Susquehanna (Pa.) Kenneth Pimpton, Howard Warren Brown, East Stroudsburg (Pa.) Wes Williams, Augustana Dan Nebauer, St. Cloud (Minn.) Ricky Leonard, James Madison (Va.) Ray Sperger, Northern Colorado Bob Fletcher, Northeast Missouri 3.67 3.67 3.95 3.95 3.57 3.778 3.7 3.66 4.0 4.0 3.3 3.927 At your next tailgate party, or any festive occasion, let ‘‘V-8” Spicy-Hot give your Bloody Mary a spicy hot kick. “V-p” Spicy-Hot Vegetable Juice Cocktail is £^ jted blend of 8 great vegetables' special spicy sizzle that p^lsmo the spirits |)#fore-meal Makes a spintedjna appetizer, toof^4^ HERE’S HOW TO ORDER YOUR “V-8” SPICY-HOT COOLER; ^8” Spicy-Hot has a special offer on a custom-designed cooler that’s great for tailgate parties or any outdoor get-together. It’s a Vagallon Insulated cooler with a tough, durable, yet light-weight body. The cooler has a screw-on lid plus a handy pour spout that’s covered by a snap-lock cap. The cooler Is yours for just $4.95 plus one label from any size “V-8” Spicy-Hot (mfg estimated retail value $6.95). For each cooler ordered, send a check or money order for $4.95 (no cash please) and one label from any size "V-8” Spicy-Hot (Wisconsin residents—send $4.95 and label facsimile only) along with your name, address and zip code to: ”V-8’' Spicy-Hot Cooler, Box 8466, Clinton, Iowa 52736 (please print) Address- State. -Zip Code. (must be included). Offer Expires March 31,1981. Please allow 7 weeks for deliver/ Offer good only in U.S.A., Puerto Rico and military installations, Wisconsin residents send money requirement plus label facsimile only. Void if taxed, restricted or forbidden by law. Mailing your repuest to the offeror: Cambetl Soup Company. Camden, Nbw Jersey 08101. WILL DELAY DEUVERY. I_______ ------—^ WIN A DREAM TRIP TO SUPER BOWL XV, PLUS A FABULOUS HAGGAR WARDROBd Haggar Super Bowl sweepstakes winners will join Roger Staubach in New Orleans for a weekend of Super Bowl excitement. The air crackles with anticipation as you approach the country’s most imposing sports arena. The Louisiana Superdome! Inside, tension mounts as you take your seat. Suddenly, the crowd sends up a deafening roar. Super Bowl XV is about to begin! And you’re part of it. Sound exciting? Then get in on Haggar’s Super Bowl Sweepstakes. There’s nothing to buy. Just come to the nearest participating store for complete rules and official entry blanks. You could win one of these terrific prizes. 10 GRAND PRIZES: An expensepaid trip for two to Super Bowl XV in New Orleans, January 23-25,1981. Main photo: Roger Staubach wears a tan Imperial® wool blend blazer and check slacks. Tom’s gray tweed sport coat and corduroy slacks are Body Work by Haggar® for the younger man. Trip will include coach airfare, hotel accommodations for three nights, access to the Haggar Hospitality Suite and a pre-game brunch, two tickets to The Super Bowl game, transportation to and from the game with police escort, $200 cash, plus a H^gar wardrobe consisting of one suit, one sport coat, and three pairs of slacks from the Haggar line of your choice (Comfort-Plus™, Imperial®, The Gallery by Haggar®, or Body Work by Haggar®.) 100 SECOND PRIZES: A Haggar wardrobe of one suit, one sport coat, and three pairs of slacks. 1000 THIRD PRIZES: One pair of Haggar slacks. 5000 FOURTH PRIZES: Prints of specially-commissioned Super Bowl artwork by noted American sports artist Merv Corning. NOTE: Sweepstakes begins August 1,1980 and ends December 15,1980. If you cannot find an entry form and details at a participating retailer, submit a stamped, self-addressed envelope to HAGGAR SUPER BOWL SWEEPSTAKES, P.O. BOX 9502, BLAIR, NEBRASKA 68009. Your request must be received by November 10, 1980. Each req uest m ust be mailed separately. Sweepstakes void the states of Wisconsin, Ohio, and wherever prohibited by Entrants be years age or THE OFFICIAL WARDROBE OF THE SUPBt BOVn. BORO LAKESIDE BEVERAGE Compliments Boro of Edinboro 314 ELM STREET (JUKEBOX) Officials GOOD LUCK FIGHTING SCOTS from MT. PLEASANT SKI RESORT MIDNIGHT MADNESS OPEN NOON UNTIL MIDNIGHT Edinboro, PA 16412 Phone: 734-3718 (814)734-1641 ■25 HOFFMAN CAMERA Discount Center Peach at 8 - Next to Old Boston Store Studotlt SUppUsS ERK'SGRUnSTPHOTODtSCOimS Our specialty EDINBORO AGWAY Compliments of Supplies for CROSSROADS DINOR Home Garden and Farm 6N Edinboro Edinboro, Pa. 16412 26 734-1721 1 Good Luck! FIGHTING SCOTS EDINBORO STATE COLLEGE COLLEGE UNION BOARD ESC S U CUB Jeff Beaford Buddy Camuto Michelle Deutsch Chris Fagan Steve Fleshman ESC S U CUB Marie Fox John Giordano Nancy Hartwick Tom Jackson Patty Kearns Emil Magdik, Director BEST WISHES TO THE FIGHTING SCOTS Debbie Pivirotto Nick Sarandou Ernie Strowser Cathy Watson Carolyn Yothers Edinboro Travel Service Complete Travel Service at no cost to you! from * Airline Reservations and Ticketing * Car Rentals and Hotels * Domestic and International Tours HOLIDAY ACRES GOLF CLUB 122 Erie Street Edinboro, Pa. 16412 CALL — 734-1639 GOOD LUCK FIGHTING SCOTS Intersection -1-79 & 6N m FRANK TUCCI FAMILY AND SINGLE YEARLY MEMBERSHIP AVAILABLE Grading Snow Removal Land Clearing “HOME OF THE HUMBLE MACHINE” Sand & Gravel Drakes Mills - Cambridge Springs, PA 398-8111 27 TME ARMY ROTC IN COUra AND SERVE PART ITME WITH THE ARMY RESERVE OR ARMY NATIONAL GUARD. Now when you take Army ROTC, you can choose to serve on part-time duty with your nearest Army Reserve or Army National Guard unit after you become a commissioned officer. You’ll enjoy many of the same benefits and privileges a full-time officer does. And you’ll earn a good extra income of over $1,600 for serving just 16 hours a month (usually a weekend) and two weeks a year. But, best of all, you can start using your Army ROTC leadership and management training right away in civilian life. Training that can help you build a rewarding career in your chosen field. Serving on part-time duty after recei\’ing your commission is only one of the benefits of taking Army ROTC. There are lots of others, too. Like financial assistance. Up to $1,000 a year tor your last two years of ROTC. So enroll in Army ROTC today. And take advantage of an option that lets you ser\'e on part-time duty after you be­ come a commissioned officer. ARMYROTC. LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD. For More Information Call: (814) 456-8376 or stop In and visit Room 311 Butterfield Hall - on the Edinboro Campus 28 *4. Uncle Charlie’s Family Restaurant And Pub EDINBORO CLEANERS SHIRT LAUNDRY If it’s not becoming to you, it should “be coming” to us. . SPAGHETTI . LASAGNA . . PIZZA . HOAGIES . EDINBORO LAUNDRY All legal beverages SERVICE including Frosted pitchers & mugs ENTERTAINMENT Phone 734-1214 Friday, Saturday & Sunday Edinboro Mall-734-1715 JOHN and LARRY's EDINBORO FOOD MART MtVe Here For \bu... Village Mall Each office is independently owned and operated. 119 Erie Street Complete line of PHONE 734-5616 frozen foods, meats, produce GO, SCOTS, GO!!! baked goods and groceries Your **Neighborhood Professionals” Featuring Everyday Low Prices Dottie Lata................................................... Carole DiCarlo........................................... Debbie Ponsoll ........................................... Jerry Weed................................................... 734-1227 734-3240 734-3763 796-4245 OPEN 8 a.m. — 9 p.m. Daily Marjorie J. Curtis, Broker, GRI Closed Sunday Franklin OfHce 432-2318 29 SCOUTING THE SCOTS NAME........................................................... LOCATION................................................. NICKNAME............................................... ENROLLMENT ......................................... CONFERENCE ......................................... NATIONAL AFFILIATIONS.................. STADIUM................................................... COLORS..................................................... ATHLETIC DIRECTOR........................... SPORTS INFORMATION DIRECTOR SPORTS INFORMATION PHONE.... LETTERMEN LOST................................. LETTERMEN RETURNING.................. TEAM CAPTAINS..................................... .......... Edinboro State College Edinboro, Pennsylvania 16444 ............................. Fighting Scots ................................................ 5,500 ................. Pennsylvania - West .................NCAA, NAIA, ECAC .................Sox Harrison (4,500) .............................Red and White ........................................... Al Hall ............................. Paul Newman .............................(814) 732-2745 ......................................................................... 11 ......................................................32 .............. Dan Allie, Jim Collins, Mike Garlick, Doug Smith HEAD FOOTBALL COACH........................................... Denny Creehan (Edinboro, 1971) OVERALL RECORD ..................................................................................................... 1 year, 4-6 LAST YEAR’S RECORD........................................................................................................... ’.4-6 CONFERENCE PLACE/RECORD.................................................................................4th, 2-4 ASSISTANT COACHES.............. Tom Herman - Asst. Head Coach, Defensive Coord. Dave Lyon - Defensive Backs Dave Rieck - Offensive Line, J.V. Jim Connolly - Receivers Tony Ferrari - Defensive Line Carl Alley - Offensive Backs Rich Formosa - Defensive Ends TOP RETURNEES Tim Beacham (WR, 5-10, 158, Sr.) Joe Early (RB, 5-9, 168, Sr.) Mike Garlick (OT, 6-2, 225, Sr.) Tom Kisiday (OG, 6-0, 200, Jr.) Rick Koschar (C, 6-2, 220, Sr.) Jim Collins (DT, 6-5, 210, Sr.) Dan Allie (DB, 5-9, 170, Sr.) Nick Sobecki (DB, 5-9, 175, Sr.) Bob CIcerchi (LB, 5-10, 180, Jr.) Doug Smith (DE, 6-1, 210, Sr.) TOP NEWCOMERS .......... Chris Owens (DT, 6-2, 250) Rick Rosenburg (DT, 6-4, 215) Jim Ritt (OT, 6-5, 210) Scott Roser (RB/DB, 6-0, 190) TEAM STRENGTHS . .............. Offensive Lines, Defense TEAM WEAKNESSES ........ Quarterback, Overall Depth BASIC OFFENSE .... ........................................... Edinboro I BASIC DEFENSE .... ......................................... Multiple 50 30 % 1979 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS (4-6) RUSHING NAME G ATT Early, J. Houston, R. Mifsud, F. Shover, R. Ray, M. Ayers, S. Parma, A. Riddle, S. Teknipp, J. Churma, D. McCauley, M. Piccolomini, V. Abbiatici, M. 10 10 4 10 7 7 6 5 8 7 3 2 6 94 68 57 90 45 38 24 14 4 3 2 1 1 10 441 TOTALS YG YL NET Y/C Y/G 392 261 258 199 185 120 74 49 14 12 5 36 13 16 325 24 4 3 1 356 248 242 3.8 3.7 4.2 35.6 24.8 60.5 — 161 116 72 48 14 12 5 — 3.6 3.1 3.0 3.4 3.5 4.0 2.5 TD LR -. 1 2 2 3 — 23.0 16.6 12.0 9.6 1.8 1.7 1.7 61 15 31 23 18 27 9 9 7 8 4 — — 2 — LTDR 1 14' 14 23 — — 1 — — — — 8 16 — — — — — — — — — — — 1570 446 1124 2.5 112.4 10 61 23 _ — — — — — — — _ PASSING NAME G ATT COMP INT PCT YDS Y/P C/G Y/G TD LP LTDP Shover, R. Piccolomini, V. 10 2 163 9 84 2 10 3 51.5 22.2 1184 52 14.1 26.0 8.4 1.0 118.4 26.0 6 82 — 82 40 10 172 86 13 50.0 1236 14.4 8.6 123.6 6 82 82 TOTALS PASS RECEIVING NAME G Beacham, T. Kruse, B. Strozyk, D. Houston; R. Arcarisi, M. Early, J. Ayers, S. Parma, A. Gierlak, T. Churma, D. Ray, M. Mifsud, F. Riddle, S. 10 10 7 10 7 10 7 5 6 7 7 4 5 34 15 11 5 4 4 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 590 394 125 25 43 3 10 31 5 4 -3 5 4 3.4 1.5 1.6 .5 .6 .3 .4 .4 .3 .3 .3 .5 .2 17.4 26.3 11.4 5.0 10.8 .8 10 86 1236 8.6 14.4 TOTALS PUNTS NAME Ruszkiewicz, R. Abbiatici, M. Ayers, S. TOTALS REC YDS C/G Y/C — TD LR 3 3 — 72 82 40 12 12 5 12 26 3 3 3 5 4 6 82 __ __ __ __ __ 15.5 2.5 2.0 __ __ __ 5.0 4.0 __ __ __ G NO YDS AVG LP 9 6 5 44 24 1 1346 776 17 30.6 32.3 17.0 52 53 17 10 69 2139 31.0 53 G NO YDS AVG LR Petardi, K. 10 33 122 3.7 14 Curry (RE) Cicerchi (LB) Collins (LT) Greenstone (RT) Petardi (SS) Swanson (MG) Pera (LB) Sobecki (CB) Miller (FS) Smith (LE) G NO Ruszkiewicz, R. Comer, P. 9 4 23 11 TOTALS 10 KICKOFF RETURNS NAME Beacham, T. Ray, M. Riddle, S. Early, J. Mifsud, F. Teknipp, J. Parma, A. Arcarisi, M. PUNT RETURNS NAME TACKLE LEADERS NAME KICKOFFS NAME G UA A TOT S 10 7 10 10 9 9 8 8 10 10 36 38 36 27 39 22 19 27 22 31 71 65 66 52 38 41 41 32 33 22 107 103 102 79 77 63 60 59 55 53 1 TOTALS _3 SCORING NAME G Ruszkiewicz, R. Shover, R. Beacham, T. Kruse, B. Houston, R. Mifsud, F. Parma, A. Early, J. Pera, C. Comer, P. Swanson, B. 9 10 10 10 10 4 6 10 8 4 9 TOTALS 10 — YDS 1?13 591 52.7 53.7 34 1804 53.1 G NO YDS AVG 10 7 5 10 4 7 5 7 12 4 4 3 1 1 1 1 180 72 63 38 24 12 8 15.0 18.0 15.8 12.7 24.0 12.0 8.0 - — 10 27 397 14.7 TD XP-R — — XP-K 6-10 Comer, P. 31 S TP _ _ _ _ _ _ _ — — 1 — — — — — — — 4-4 0-4 - - - - 1 16 1 10-14 5-14 1 131 — — — — — _ — — — — — — FIELD GOALS Ruszkiewicz, R. FG 5-10 21 18 18 18 12 12 12 8 6 4 2 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 3 3 1 _ _ _ _ AVG 26, 20, 40, 47, 41, 48, 20, 22, 30, 30 24, 24, 43, 37 — — _ _ — _ — 4 Offtidt (Infraction of tcrimmaio or froa kick formation) lllopl frocaduro or Position Illegal Motion 15 0% 16 Ineligible Receiver Down Field on Pass Illegal Shift 18 Substitution Infraction! Delay of Camo Roughing the Kicker or Holder Ball Illegally Touched, Kicked, or Batted Ball Dead: If Hand is Moved from Side to Side: Touchback Safety / Time out; Referee’s Discretionary or Excess Time Out followed with tapping hands on chest. Non contact Fouls Incomplete Forward Pass, Penalty Declined, No Play, or No Score 19 Helping the Runner, or Interlocked Interference Personal Foul 22 Clipping 0% ^ First Down 25 I Illegal uie of Hands and Arms Intentional Grounding Illegally Passing or Handing Bail Forward Forward Pass or Kick Catching Interference Start the Clock Lott of Down Player Disqualified SUMMARY OF PENALTIES (Includes Only Most Common Penalties) LOSS OF DOWN—Forward pass illegally touched • ‘Illegal forward pass by offense • ‘Intentionally grounding forward pass • “Offensive pass inter­ ference LOSS OF HALF DISTANCE TO GOAL LINE—If penalty exceeds half the distance to goal OFFENSE FIRST DOWN ON 1-YARD LINE—Defensive pass interference in end zone • Defensive foul behind goal line on running play. LOSS OF 5 YARDS—Delay of game • Exceeding 25-second count • Excess time out • Failure to pause full second in shift • False start • Free kick out of bounds • Illegal forward pass • Infraction of substitution rules • In­ terference with opponents or ball preceding snap • Offense illegally in motion at snap • Offside • Snapper’s position and ball adjustment • Taking more than 2 steps after fair catch • Infraction of scrimmage formation PLAYER DISQUALIFIED—Striking with a fist, extended forearm, elbow or locked hands • Flagrant player fouls OF FOUL-Defensive pass interference • Illegally batting or kicking free ball • Player fouls when ball is free LOSS OF 15 YARDS—Delay of game at start of half • Butting with helmet or head • Clipping • Defense disconcerting signals • Failure to return ball to official after> score • Grasping face mask of opponent • Illegal use of hands • Ineligible receiver downfield • Piling on • Roughing the kicker or holder • Tackling or blocking fair catcher • Tackling out of bounds after ball is dead • Unsportsmanlike conduct (non-contact foul) • Unnecessary roughness VIOLATION BUT NO PENALTY (Does not offset penalty by opponent)—First touching of free kick by kicking team before ball travels 10 yards • First touching of scrimmage kick by kicking team beyond the neutral zone ‘Plus 5 yards 32 Plus 15 yards fh^ ^on<*>* Model 5020 Crafted of wood and non-wood materiaia Simulated TV picture. 25% SHARPER COU>R PICTURE THAN EVER BEFORE POSSIBLE. MORE LI NES OF RESOLUTION MAKE THE DIFFERENCE. Lines of resolution determine how sharp your color TV picture will be. The more lines, the sharper the picture. And Magnavox has more lines than ever before possible. Ordinary color fV pictures have 260 lines. Magnavox Computer Color 330 delivers 330 lines. That’s 25% more lines of resolution for | Magnavox. I That means Magnavox has a 25% sharper, crisper, clearer color picture. For documentation of this fact, please write: Magnavox, Dept. 700, Fort Wayne, IN. 46804. MAGNAVOX /nv NEW MAGNAVOX TOUCH-TUNE” TELEVISION ALSO GIVES YOU: □ Computer Touch-Tuning... for ease and exactness. □ Computer Designed Chassis... for reliability and performance. □ improved Sound... for greater realism. And Magnavox is cable-ready for 20 cable channels without a converter.., to save you time and money. * ® 1979 MAGNAVOX CONSUMER ELECTRONICS CO. WE MAKE STAYING HOME FUN.