Tuesday, September 18,1984 Higgins Puts Gridders Throu, More Than 100 Yearling Gridders Report To Walke For Opening Practice Sessions Bucky McKee Lost to Squad for Season; Skemp Out Apparently believing that the way to mould a football team is to let them play football, Coach Bob gins has been doing just that with the 1934 Lion grid Aspirants. Beginning with a light session Tuesday afternoon, the gridders have had at least one scrimmage every day, culminating in a regulation practice game before no loss than a thousand spectators on New Beaver field Satur day afternoon. With the scrimmage sessions came their inevitable consequence—injur ies. Fortunately there was nothing serious. Kroizman is out with a bad leg, and Frank O’Hora and Sawchak are expected to be on the ’ sidelines until .the end of the week with sprain ed ankles. But the more serious losses to the squad have not come as the result of injuries. Leo Skemp, veteran back, will be unable' to play because of an ear injury sustained last year. But the holes most difficult to fill will be the ends. Two veterans, one of them a letterman last year, will not be back. Salvatore Orlando did not return to school, and late last week Bucky McKee, letterman who reported for the early practice sessions, left school, leaVing Art Fry as the only wingman with varsity experience. Thus far little or no empasis has been laid on a ‘first’ team, Coach Higgins preferring to try all the pos sible combination. Definite progress is being made and with a week's more practice the squad should be in shape to pick a more or less permanent eleven. Coach Jerry Frock is.running the Lebanon Valley grid squad through two intensive drills daily in prepara tion for their opening game with Penn State on New Beaver field on Saturday, October G. Frock, who was named head coach at the Anville institution when ‘Hooks’ Mylin went to Bucknell, is Nittany Booters Not Discouraged By Scottish Trip 9 Veterans To Return As Mainstays of ’34 Season After that disastrous Scottish tour, in which, the Caledonian ranks just refused to give, the Lion booters are now in the frame of mind to sweep all native opposition aside in their usually successful quest of an in tercollegiate gonfalon. Material worries, fortunately en ough, will cause little furrowing of Mentor Bill Jeffrey’s brow, since nine lettermen are expected back, plus some excellent reserves. Among, the players to form the nucleus of this year’s edition are Captain Jack Flet cher,- Don Masters, George Corbett, o‘oe Bielicki and Ed Long. Others include Dick Sigel, Ben Palmer, Jack Binns, Bob Dallas, Woody Corman, Frank Osterlund, Bill McEwan, and F. Marple Ambler. Only three lettermen were lost -last June, “Shorty" Edwards, “Swede" Hansen, and Eddie Finzel. Faced by a schedule which con tains an assortment of tough spots and breathers, the lads should com fpile an average very much on’ the credit side of the ledger. Whether they can go through the season un defeated, as last year, is again an other matter. The teams which are likely to prove the stumbling blocks (on the basis of past seasons, a none too reliable barometer) are all met on successive week-ends; Syracuse, Springfield and Navy, with the going getting progressively harder. Springfield held the Blue and White to a 2-0 score last year, while Navy proved itself the only opponent ca pable of piercing the State defense ail season, scoring one goal to State’s three. Syracuse was topped,- 4-0, in another shut-out tussle. Other teams to be met this year are Get tysburg, Lafayette and Dickinson. 3 JUNIORS NAMED TO CHEERLEADING STAFF Three juniors have been named to positions on the cheer-leading staff for this year. The juniors, who will assist Head Cheerleader William B. Edwards and other members of the senior staff, are Albert E. C. Bickell, Eugene M. Decker, and John B. Har baugh. They were selected by a committee composed of Head Fotball Coach Rob ert A. Higgins, Director Hugo Bez dek, of the School .of Physical-Edu cation and Athletics; • Prof. Richard W. Grant,- of the department of mu sic; Neil M. Fleming, graduate man ager of athletics, and retiring Head Cheerleader, John T. Davies. Sports’ Scriveners Beginning with this issue, the COLLEGIAN sports department will bring you the latest dope on both varsity and freshman foot ball,- cross-crounty, and soccer teams, covering in full the things the ordinary spectator does not usually see. Don Sanders will cover varsity football, Harry Henderson will write freshman football, Jack Barnes, varsity and. freshman cross-country and Walt ’Freunsch, soccer. If you want to know what’s what and who’s who in sports, read the Collegian every Tuesday and Friday morning. ; an advocate of an open game with a speedy running attack and a decep tive passing game. No scrimmages will be held until the latter part of this week. The Valleymen are handicapped by the loss of two veteran backs, Barth old and Boran, both out for appendix citis operations. The remaining ex perienced backs arc co- Captain ‘Smoky’ Rust, ‘Scoop’ Feeser, and ‘Sully’ Whiting. The backfield will- be: built around these men, drawing upon Patrizio, Zarada, Shccsley, Tindall, Carchidi, Fridinger, Capka and .Black. The tackle candidates arc Ricker, Baugher, Bartolet, and Rozman. Crook is expected to man the flank not covered by co-Captain Smith. Three veteran guards are available from last year, -all of them letter winners. They are Furlong, Boyd Sponauglc, and Coda Sponaugle. Other guard candidates are Davies, Cl-ipa, and Knupp. At the pivot post, Coach Frock has ‘lron-Man’ Sincavage, veteran of two years experience, and Kroske and Broun. After the tussle with the Nittany Lions, Lebanon Valley will meet Mur lenberg, Drexel, Delaware, Juniata, St. Joseph's, and Albright on succes sive Saturdays with a week’s lay-off before winding up the season against Pennsylvania Military College o n Thanksgiving. Sheriff Sells Bellefonte ; Academyjor $3500 One of Penn State’s most fruit ful sources of football stars in for mer years ended a fitful career when the historic Bellefonte Academy was sold by the sheriff recently. It’s new owner is the Fidelity Trust Co., of Pittsburgh, which purchased the property for the sum of $3500. The academy failed to weather the storm of depression and was last year turned into a school of-aeronautics. Lack of students in the new venture spelled disaster and the Pittsburgh bankers forclosed the $55,000 mort gage they held against the institu tion. The exact fate of the school could not be learned today. The property sold includes a large building on S. Spring street, two other buildings and a picturesque campus on the same street, as well as an athletic i field and swimming pool. WELCOME FRESHMAN Bring your Ford for service to the authorized Ford dealer. NITTANY MOTOR CO. 1000 W. College Avenue Phone 666 AVE CALL FOR AND DELIVER. DRAWING SETS Dictzgcn Federal, Gem Union Pens $14.00 Freidman, Side or Center 'Wheel 14.00 KcufTcl & Esser, Anvil, Paragon Pens 34.00 Weber, Sphinx, Rieflcr Pens 14.00 Defiance, Sterling No. 881 14.00 Dietzgcn Special No. 1027 16-00 Dictzgcn, Gem Union 27.00 DRAWING MATERIALS Drawing Board 20x26"—Pine or Basswood —51.50 24" Maple Blade T Square .75 24" Maple Blade.T Square—Xyl. Edge. 1.50 45 Degree—B" Xylonite Triangle .50 30-60 Degree—lo" Xylonite Triangle .50 Xylonite French Curve .50 Architect’s 1 Special Scale—Boxwood— .50 Pencil Eraser—Ruby *O5 Art Gum Cleaner *lO Thumb Tacks—Metal Container .10 2H & 5H Eldarodo Pencil—each .10 2H & 5H Venus Pencil—each .10 2H & 5H Kohinoor, Caste!!, Van Dyke—each .15 Kohinoor Mechanical Pencil .45 Kohinoor Mechanical Pencil—Double End——— .65 Hardmuth Pen Holder ' .10 Special Pack Pens *lO Dictzgen Multi-file *25 Architects Pencil Sharpener—ln case .50 Extra Blades—per set *l5 Erasing Shield—Metal .15 Higgens Wrico Drawing Ink—Rubber Top. — .25 French Engineering Drawing 3.00 French Lettering Book No. 1 .30 Manilla Folders and Rings Cross Section Paper Padlock for Drawer—No duplicates .75 ALL SUPPLIES GUARANTEED AS TO PRICE AND QUALITY Cubs To Open Season With Mercersburg October 8 Out of the 100-odd freshmen that reported for the freshmen football team, Coach Nels Walke has to whip together a smooth functioning ma chine capable of taking over Mer cersburg prep when he takes a squad down there October G, just three weeks away. The job that faces the freshmen mentor is not an easy one by any means. His squad is made up of a great variety of men, some are high school and prep school stars, some have had a little high school expe rience,- and a few have hardly more than heard of the game. Walke seems to think that the way to build up a team is by hard work and he has lost no tinie putting this rule into effect. Saturday he had the first year men out on the practice field behind the East stands and aft er a general warming-up workout, he divided the squad into.two groups under Coaches Slusser, Cole and Ev erhardus. Under these new coaches they practiced pulling out of the line, charging, and getting down the field under punts. Most of the first year squad have had some experience in high school and while this experience is doubt less invaluable it also has its draw backs. For example, under some systems * high school coaches • teach their ends, when on the defensive, to charge forward as deep as possible; others have them charge one or two steps and wait there to see where the play is going. Walke also has a system and that is the system which these freshmen gridders will have to grasp, and grasp firmly before they will be able to coordinate and click smoothly and easily as a team. Three weeks doesn’t allow Coach Walke much time with which to develop and smooth down the rough places in ( a team whose members probably never saw one an other before- last Wednesday. But unless the material should prove very weak and unwilling, \the freshmen coach should -be-able tof do again what he has done so'well in the last two years. The yearling gridders will play their first home game October 20, when they meet Dickinson seminary. On November 3 they tackle the ever strong Bison yearling team which will travel here for the game. And on November 20 the Pitt freshmen will come here for the first time since 1932 when they defeated the Blue and White yearlings, 13-0 The Lion freshmen will close their 1934 sea son on November 24, when they go to Gettysburg to play the Bullet cubs. Golf Captain Defeated Lloyd “Chick" Beyer, co-captain of the 1935 golf squad, was eliminated in the national amateur tourney at Brookline, Mass., last Thursday, in his second round match,- after having drawn a first round bye.* TEXT BOOKS New and Second Hand Fillers to Fit All Size Note Books The Athletic Store inc. THE PENN STATE' COLLEGIAN h Full Length Practice Game Saturday Hamas Must Beat Lasky on October 5 To Meet Champ Steve Hamas, who was graduated from here in 1929 after winning 11 letters and a Bachelor of Arts de gree, is busy trudging about Pomp ton Lakes, N. J.,- in preparation for the most important bout of his heavy weight career—a 10-round slugfest with Art Lasky. at Madison Square Garden on October 5. Steve promises to knock Lasky all over the lot and then, he says, “You’ll hear me yodeling all over the place for a match with'Maxie Baer, whom I understand claims to be heavy weight champion. ' I’ll be the out standing challenger then and Maxie can’t evade me." Hamas hasn’t had a fight since he gave Schmeling a-terrific beating in Philadelphia last February, so two •months ago he tore himself away from the society, entanglements which resulted from his own good looks and set to work. The. wealthy Mrs. Lucy Cotton Thomas McGraw had announc township on the eastern outskirts of PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Contact one of our salesmen Sign up either at COLLEGIAN - FROTH ALL COLLEGE DANCE Frfeshman Customs Will Be Off For This Dance National Loose Leaf Note Books $1 to $5 Opposite Main Gate ed she would manage the former Penn State star and build special, training quarters for him on her $300,000 Florida estate. Old Charley] Harvey, Steve’s manager, objected ( to this turn of events and is still _ holding the strings as far as Steve is concerned. “That society stuff was all*right for awhile,” said Steve on leaving for Dr. Bier’s camp at Pompton* Lakes, New Jersey, where he will begin the < final training grind, “but I got tired; of it and decided to come down here i and buckle down to-work. “I don’t imagine I’ll have much trouble with Lasky. I have never seen him fight, but I understand he’s the stand-up type, which I like so well. 'Whether he’s good or overrated, I’ll- be ready for him. I’m in swell shape now. No, that leg I hurt in football hasn’t bothered me a bit— not since before that Schmeling fight. No, I haven’t done any boxing up here." Have You Subscribed to the 66 Issues—s2.so STUDENT UNION DESK OR NITTTANY NEWSSTAND The Receipt Entitles You to Admittance to the RADIO HEADQUARTERS Experts on short and long wave sets. AVe repair any make of set—work guaranteed. New and Used sets. 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