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Fiftieth Anniversary: Photos of Beaver Stadium

Posted on September 22, 2014 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Blue Band Prepares to March

I was feeling kind of down today, so I thought I should do something that would cheer me up. I hope you will be the beneficiary of my efforts.

About seven years ago, I posted a link to some photos I took while I was a freshman at Penn State in 1864 (oops, typo) 1964. On the fiftieth anniversary of taking these glorious pictures of Beaver Stadium, I felt that it would be fun to re-post them for people who didn’t get a chance to see them way back when.

Actually, Todd Sponsler (The Lion’s Den, Living the Eye Life) had posted a link to the original site of the pictures when he had a blog on PennLive.com at the time I first published them, so they got a lot of views, but maybe you missed them back then.

The scoreboard is particularly appropriate in view of the recent brouhaha about our new scoreboards concentrating on scores instead of advertising.

Please enjoy da photos and remember, they were taken by a 17 year-old freshman with illegal access to alcohol! If you wish to see larger pictures, just click on any of the photos below.

Beaver Stadium from East Halls
Beaver Stadium from East Halls, 1964

I had a brand-new 35 mm camera and a brand new 70-270 mm telephoto lens, but I obviously had no tripod with which to steady that rig for this shot. Nevertheless, in addition to the Beaver Stadium as it was back then, you can find some vintage automotive machinery parked in the fields between my dorm (East Hall E, now McKean) and the stadium. Many were parked on the fields on which the Blue Band used to practice. As it was Band Day, the stadium was filling up with multi-colored high school bands, undoubtedly conveyed to the stadium by those vintage school buses. I’m glad I was a profligate spender back then, buying unaffordable color film for my photographic exploits that would live on for a half-century.

Note the pennants flying from atop the east and west stands representing each of our opponents.

 

Block S Does Its Thing
Block S Does Its Thing, 1964

Beaver Stadium photo above taken from what was then the freshman/sophomore section, at what was called “the closed end of the horseshoe” and is now referred to as the north stands. Now, both ends are closed and there is no view of Mt. Nittany from inside the stadium. The Block S card section salutes the mighty Nittany Lions and the University, 1964-style, on Band Day.

 

Homecoming Day, 1964
Homecoming Day, 1964

Syracuse vs. Penn State. Guess who won? You’re right, it was Syracuse, 21-14. Syracuse beat us three years in a row from 1964 to 1966. Under head coach Rip Engle, the Nittany Lions went on to finish 6-4 that year and were ranked #14 in the final AP poll. (Syracuse was ranked #12, doggone it!) Floyd Little #44 was the stud runner for Syracuse that day, and it was only his sophomore year. Big Jim Nance wore number 32. Both were unstoppable. The following year, a converted linebacker named Larry Csonka would take over for Nance. Syracuse was a running powerhouse in the 1950s and 1960s! Nevertheless, the sun shone brightly upon Mt. Nittany, visible behind the east stands, on that glorious fall day.

In the Friday night/Saturday morning darkness the night before the game, a bunch of us students held an all-night vigil to guard the Nittany Lion shrine, as it was rumored that a contingent from Syracuse had loaded up a trunk with orange paint they were going to use to deface the holy shrine. The girls served coffee outside the Pattee Library and a few of us got lucky that night just by hanging around exuding team spirit — but not this freshman.

Note the wider goal posts, which were 23′ 4″ wide until 1991, when the present width of 18′ 6″ was adopted. Only three FBS schools still use the twin posts instead of a single stanchion for supporting the goal posts. Those are FSU, LSU, and Washington State.

 

Blue Band Prepares to March
Blue Band Prepares to March, 1964

There is no longer such a glorious view of Mt. Nittany from inside the stadium, as there was on this day in 1964. The Blue Band would always line up the same way under the direction of director James W. Dunlop, who served from 1947 through 1975. It was pretty ordinary, but the Floating Lions Drill jazzed it up beginning in 1965.

 

The Old Scoreboard
The Old Scoreboard, 1964

In this age of JumboTrons and lots and lots of advertisements, it is tempting to want to simplify stuff to the way it was back in the day–at least for us geezers. With Mt. Nittany and the ridges surrounding Happy Valley as a backdrop, the old scoreboard was a beautiful sight. It showed only game status, although the modest sign below asked for support for the alumni fund. This scoreboard, along with the stadium timer and a bronze plaque for the scoreboard, was a gift from the Class of 1926. The clock on the scoreboard was a gift of the recently graduated Class of 1964.

The guys who helped with parking were given seats in the south stands under the scoreboard behind the south end zone.

 

Class of '68
Class of ’68 – saluted in a 1964 game at Beaver Stadium

The incoming freshmen got their own salute from Block S in 1964.

 

I’ve published other pictures during the 10 years the Nittany Turkey has been in existence as a blog. A couple of cool ones can be found in “A Time-Trip with the Lions“, published in 2009. That one was also Band Day in 1964, but it dissected the loss to Oregon on that day. How things were at Penn State in 1964 can be found in “Footballistic Confessions of a Geezer“, published in 2007. Finally, for a picture of Beaver Stadium in 1959 (before it was physically moved piece-by-piece to its current location), check out “Beaver Stadium, Wayyyy Back“, also published in 2007.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: 1964, Beaver Stadium, nostalgia

Almost Famous

Posted on September 22, 2014 Written by The Nittany Turkey

I woke last night to the sound of thunder,
How far off? I sat and wondered
Started humming a song from 1962
Ain’t it funny how the night moves
When you just don’t seem to have as much to lose
Strange how the night moves
With autumn closing in.

Working and practicing…

Happy Autumnal Equinox! It’s football season.

I woke this morning at the crack of 10 to read an email from Bleacher Report that stated Penn State was almost ranked.

Yeah, almost ranked. Almost famous.

There it is, already. Big win over little team euphoria settles in over Happy Valley. But beware! Beware the feeling of invincibility that led to the first quarter versus UMass. Don’t let it go to your heads, especially those of you who take the field on Saturday against Northwestern. But this is the first the Lions have been allowed to be ranked by the USA Today poll, so there is something to celebrate about, anyhow.

Here’s how the polls shape up:

AP Top 25: Penn State was among “others receiving votes” with 81 votes, behind Duke, which got 86. The “rest” of the Top 25 were FSU, Oregon, Alabama, Oklahome, Auburn, Texas A&M, Baylor, Notre Dame, Moo U., Ole Miss, UCLA, Georgia, South Carolina, Mississippi State, ASU, Stanford, LSU, USC, Wisconsin, BYU, Nebraska, Ohio State, East Carolina, Oklahoma State, and Kansas State.

USA Today: Penn State was among “others receiving votes” with 67 votes, behind Oklahoma State, which received 110. The rest of the coaches’ poll teams were, starting at #1 and moving toward increased suckage, FSU, Alabama, Oklahoma, Oregon, Auburn, Baylor, Texas A&M, Notre Dame, Moo U., UCLA, Ole Miss, ASU, Georgia, Stanford, South Carolina, Mississippi State, Wisconsin, LSU, Nebraska, Ohio State, BYU, USC, Duke, East Carolina, and Kansas State.

Just sayin’…

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Filed Under: Penn State Football

Thanks! I needed that.

Posted on September 21, 2014 Written by The Nittany Turkey

It couldn’t have been much better for the Nittany Lions as Penn State (4-0, 1-0 Big Ten) summarily dispatched the hapless UMass Minutemen (0-4, 0-0 MAC) by the lopsided score of 48-7 before a crowd of supposedly 99,155 at Beaver Stadium.

This thoroughgoing domination was roundly anticipated by most of us, although most of us restrained our impulse to call for the blowout. Only one of our ace predictors anticipated that Penn State would score more than 40 points. RD‘s prediction was 41-10, and by virtue of it, he is this week’s Star Predictor of the Week.

We got to see lots of the proverbial clean jerseys in the second half, when James Franklin finally decided to unload the bench after the first offensive series had been played. Fourth-string quarterback D. J. Crook, interestingly a Massachusetts native, combined with junior Brent Wilkerson for the capstone touchdown with 17 seconds left in the third quarter, and sturdy albeit short sophomore running back Cole Chiapialle has 16 carries for 35 yards. Even the walk-on freshman Australian punter Daniel Pasquariello, got into the act, which was cool because his parents were present, visiting from Down Under. D-Pas punted twice for an average of 43.5 yards.

Of course, the spoiler happened against the clean shirted defense early in the fourth quarter, as UMass’ huge senior quarterback Blake Frohnapfel hit junior star receiver Tajae Sharpe for a 77-yard touchdown pass that took no prisoners and left no survivors. It was, without a doubt, the play of the game for the sadly outmatched Minutemen.

The vaunted Penn State defense for the most part lived up to its vauntedness. Mike Hull and Nyeem Wartman had five tackles each, and UMass could only manage three rushing yards on 28 attempts. By my calculation, that amounts to slightly more than 0.1 yards per carry. Suffice to say that the overmatched Minute-man offensive line couldn’t do shit with the mighty PSU front seven.

As everyone expected, Penn State used this game to see if it could actually create some semblance of a rushing offense. The final numbers show balance, with 236 yards passing and 228 yards rushing. Whether this is sustainable in non-cupcake competition is certainly debatable.

Furthermore, whether Christian Hackenberg was dreaming of his purported lacrosse star girlfriend in the first quarter is an additional debatable conjecture. He looked flat and awful, giving me heartburn with his errant throws. This would break Hack’s string of 300-yard games with a vengeance. But it was good that the running game was there to save his ass for a change, and he was back on the mark in the second quarter, as the 28 points scored therein suggest, even though those were all rushing TDs. His favorite receivers looked good, Geno Lewis snagging five passes for 82 yards, and DaeSean Hamilton getting four for 65. Jesse James added two for 26 and was actually seen effectively blocking on one running play. Hackenberg wound up with 12-23 for 179 yards.

It is cool that five of six PSU touchdowns were scored on running plays. We haven’t seen that for a lonnnnnng time.

Lest I overlook the perfect performance of Kickin’ Sam Ficken, he was perfect with two field goals, the longer of which was 42 yards, and six extra points. The Big Ten Network showed a clip of how Franklin prepares Ficken to handle distractions by squirting water on him and yelling at him while he is kicking in practice. That was pretty hilarious. Kicken’ Ficken was also drilling his kickoffs deep, and there were a lot of them to drill, already.

This should be a confidence builder for the offensive line. Their innate ability and coachability will have to take it from here, but at least they know they can be and have been effective. We’ll have to wait for some real opposition to see if any lessons have been learned.

Two more cupcakes, Northwestern and Michigan dispatched, and Penn State will be eligible for a bowl game for the first time in three years. I know, I know. Michigan is generally not regarded as a pushover, particularly in the Big House, but Utah just beat them there 26-10. Not that I’m becoming a Sanguinarian or anything, but Michigan looks as bad as K. John has been telling us they are.

Northwestern, having lost some prime meat, isn’t even as good as the disparagers have been predicting. The bloom is off the rose for much loved Pat Fitzgerald, but unlike Brady Hoke, he’ll be around next year. Meanwhile, NWU always plays Penn State tough, and it would be a mistake to underestimate them after this wonderfully uplifting victory.

I can sense your restored and unbridled optimism, but—

Not so fast!

Isn’t it grand how our spirits can be buoyed after a meaningless win over a non-conference opponent? Suddenly, the world seems to be a brighter and more cheerful place, bluebirds sing a happy, Disneyesque tune, and we Sanguinarians and temporary Sanguinarians are predicting an undefeated season for the Nittany Lions and maybe, just maybe, the Rose Bowl. No wait, they’re better than that. Barry Alvarez will surely vote for Penn State to be in the final four. Yeah, right? I saw one comment to some article this morning asking “Are we ranked in the Top 25 yet?” Oy, vay.

They just beat Massachusetts, a team not even in the FBS three years ago.

Grab hold of yourselves! Wait! Not literally — you don’t want to spoil your euphoria with testicular pain. Remember the words of the sainted Joseph V. Paterno: “You’re never as good as you think you are when you win, and you’re never as bad as you think you are when you lose.” Stay thirsty, my friends.

So, let’s temper our expectations back to the Toilet Bowl in Kohler, Wisconsin, and be pleasantly surprised when PSU is selected for the Outback Bowl or some such. To do very, very well is obviously still not ooutside the realm of possibility, but I’m not counting on anything better than 8-4 for this bunch this year. Count ’em up — that’s losses to Michigan, Ohio State, Indiana, and Moo U. Even if they beat Michigan, they could wind up looseing [sic] to Maryland. The point is that even in the present state of the Big Ten, Penn State faces some rough competition on the horizon.

And putting the big hurt on up-and-coming UMass proves nothing.

Elsewhere in the Big Ten

Iowa (3-1) spoiled Pitt’s hope for an unbeaten season (LMAO!) by kicking the snot out of the Panthers on their home turf 24-20. Under the arm!

Indiana (2-1) surprised us, showing me (show me — get it?) that they could whip Missouri at home, 31-27.

Next week’s aforementioned opponent, NWU (1-2), laid the luckless Leathernecks of Western Illinois to rest 24-7, even though WIUoutgained them by almost 100 yards and had a six minute edge in time of possession. As it turned out, the Leathernecks coughed up the ball four times to NWU’s two, which made for the difference in score. (Gotta watch that, given PSU’s typically negative turnover ratio.)

#11 Moo U. (2-1) had no trouble dispatching the Brick Dick 73-14, even though the latter team had ex-PSU, ex-LSU quarterback Rob Bolden in there as the starter.

Purdue (2-2) beat the Salukis, 35-13, while #19 Wisconsin (2-1) demolished BGSU 68-17.

Underdog Maryland (3-1) easily handled the Orangemen of Syracuse 34-20.

Michigan (2-2), as previously mentioned, lost to Utah 26-10 in a game with a significant weather suspension.

Rutgers (3-1) beat Navy 31-24, a result that many of you expected to go the other way.

Minnesota (3-1) had no problems with the “other” Spartans, 24-7.

Beckman’s Bandits at Illinois (3-1) beat the Bobcats 42-35 (that’s Texas State, in case you didn’t know).

And finally, #24 Nebraska (4-0)  capitalized on a 229-yard rushing performance by Ameer Abdullah to beat Miami 41-31.

So, everyone survived their cupcake schedule pretty well, except for those who didn’t have all cupcakes, like Michigan, Moo U., and Wisconsin. There are still some non-conference games remaining for some. This weekend Tulane goes to Rutgers for their fourth loss, USF will be annihilated by Wisconsin at Madison, as will Wyoming at Moo U. Cincinnati might be an interesting gambling play at the Horseshoe against #22 Ohio State, the latter listed as a 14-point favorite. In Big Ten matchups, we have:

At noon, NWU comes to the big Beave, while Iowa invades W. Lafayette to beat Purdue. At 1:30, Maryland and Indiana square off in Bloomington. At 3:30, Minnesota and Michigan play for that stupid brown earthenware jug in the Big House. This year, its eventual destination is far from assured. At 9 pm, the Illini should be preparing to get their asses kicked in Memorial Stadium at the behest of the Cornhuskers, who are favored by 18. Go Ameer!

Good luck to all the Big Ten teams in their forays this week!

 

I’ll be back during the week with a preview of next week’s game with the disappointing Northwestern Wildcats.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: Massachusetts, UMass

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The Nittany Turkey is a retired techno-geek who thinks he knows something about Penn State football and everything else in the world. If there's a topic, we have an opinion on it, and you know what "they" say about opinions! Most of what is posted here involves a heavy dose of hip-shooting conjecture, but unlike some other blogs, we don't represent it as fact. Read More…

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