Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, November 16, 1937, Image 4

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    Pared Fair'
Lion Grid Yearlin
Peters, Patrick Score On
Long - 3rd Quarter Dashes;
White Tallies In Ist Period
Victory Marks Cubs' 3rd In . 6 Starts; White's
Punting Drives Middies Back Deep
Into Own Territory
Penn State's yearling gridders proved themselves true thoroughbred
madders Saturday, defeating the Navy Plebes, 19-0, in a thick sea of mud at
Annapolis. It marked the season's finale for both teams and State's third
Will against as ninny losses
A heavy. steady 24-hour downpour on Friday transformed the playing
Itch! into a quagmire through which players slid and splashed, the Midship
ment coming out second best. Numerals on the jerseys were barely diseer-
nible after four plays were run and
the managers were tearing:on and off
the field with the rosin.
Lions Score on Long Runs
Treacherous as the footing was,
State and Navy backs slithered
through the line to reel otr long gains.
Malcolm. Navy back, crashed olf left
tackle, shook off would-be tacklers,
and waded 50 yards before Wade
Mori cut him down from the rear on
State's •20 early in the third quarter.
Later in thd period, Blount picked up
20 yards to the State's 26 on a fake
reverse that completely fooled State.
I T TAN Y
A Warner Bros. Theafte
Evenings at . . . 6:30 and 8:30j
;Complete show as late as 9:05 p.m.l
TODAY ONLY
WILLIAM GARGAN,
JUDITH BARRETT in
"BEHIND
THE MIKE"
I I WEDNESDAY ONLY . .
I A RETURN SHOWING
-ww
F..e.A.tToue•i.e.tYonng
Mille Burke • Reginald Ovum
BY SAL SALA
The Lions were wore fortunate in
that their long canters resulted in
points. In an exchange of punts that
opened the second half, Chuck Peters
snared boo of I3lount's kicks on the
Plebe': 45-yard line. Charging down
the center ti eI d . Peters slipped
through two knots of Middies. cut to
the sidelines, received effective block
ing to cross the line standing up.
Receiving the succeeding kick-off,
Navy passed on the first play. John
ny Patrick, State's blocking back, in
tercepted the ball on the Plebes' 40,
picked up interference and sprinted
over the goal unmolested.
State Talots Early Lead
, The Nittany Lions chalked up sev
en points in the opening four minutes
of play. With the ball on their 20-
yard stripe after a running play lost
two yards, the Plebes called on Blount
to punt. State's forward wall crashed
through and Abe. Karlin, State cen
ter, blocked the punt. Parsons, right
end, recovered for State on the nine
from where Craig White sped around
left end on a reverse to score. Pat
”iek place-kicked the extra point.
State twice threatened in the sec
ond uarte• but the power that drove
them within sriking distance Suddenly
left them and Navy took possession
to kick out of danger. Chalking up
Gist downs in one or two plays, the
earlings marched GO yards to a first
down on the Middies' 10 in seven
plays. But here, as in the Pitt, Cor
nell, and Syracuse tilts, goal-shyness
overtook them and fourth down found
the ball three yards short of a touch
down.
Lions Stopped on One-Font Line
An exchange of punts drove Navy
hack oa its :31-yard line with State in
possession of the ball. Peters passed
to Vargo who Intended to Beal= just
before he was tackled. &ohm con
tinued to the 10 where he was knock
ed out of bounds by Blount.
- However, the Lions were penalized
to the Navy 30 on a holding penalty
called by the referee on the 15-yard
line. Crowell leaped high to grasp
Realm's puss on the four but in three
plunges, the ball rested on the one
foot line. Referee Wilkinson started
to raise his hands as White cracked
into the line front the one-yard line,
but he lowered them as Craig was
pushed back. He placed the ball just
short of the doub:e line.
The Plebes were forced to play a
defensive flame during the first half,
continually finding themselves with
their hacks to the wall as a result of
State drives and White's punting.
Blount kicked 1..? times in the first
s Defeat Plebes, 19-0, In Mud To Close Season
He Didn't Pass, But .
his hard, timely blocking and' vicious tackling was instrumeatal in
stumping Jim Meade and 'the Maryland Terps Saturday.
half, seven of them on first down,
Navy not caring to risk a fumble
with the soggy pigskin.
White Out-Punts Blount
White clearly out-punted' Blount in
the first three periods. He placed his
kicks out of reach of the safety man,
the ball rolling for extra yardage in
to Navy territory and preventing the
safety nun from returning them. His
punts never failed to set Navy bad:
into its own territory and save his
team from possible scoring. Crowell
took up the punting duties in the last
period. -.
The Lions opened the second half
with the intention of protecting their
slim 7.0 lead, and made no effort to
run or pass. While the Midshipmen
vainly attempted to blast the Cubs'
line, State called on White's toe to
boot the Middies back into their ter
ritory.
The Middies staged three offensives
that carried them beyond State's iO
- line. The first of these came
after Blount's 20-yard romp on a
fake reverse to State's 26-yard line.
Four platys gave them a first down on
the 16 but here the Lions held and
White punted over the safety man's
head to Navy's 20.
The others canes in the last period
and were stopped on the .19 and 22-
yard lines respectively.
The lineups:
Pos. Penn State
L.E. Vargo -----
LT. Wolfe
L.G. _Smith
C. Karlin
R.G. Woodward _
R.T. Platt
It.] ._ 'Parsons ____
Q.B.__. ___Peters
L.lL_____ _White
R.II. Patrick ____
P.B. Bea
Score by periods-
Penn State
Navy Plebes
Navy
Foster
--.--_ Steen
Kemnitz
___ Harwood
-___ Raylter
____ Rhodes
___ Rowney
_ Smith
Blount
___ Malcolm
__ Boyer
7:0 12 U-19
0 (I U U
Touchdowns: Penn State, IThite,
Peters, Patrick. Points after touch
down: Patrick (placement).
Substitutions—Penn Stele: Crowell,
Katana, Berealow, Garner, Vella, Ke
vin, Herr, Strychelski, Covey, Mori,
Kopec'', Scully, Drum, Dow!.2r, Hoff
man. Navy: Borg, Cooper, Backus,
Crenshaw, Moore, Macri, Mathew,
Hastings, Blandin, Rowse, McCulloch.
- CLASSIFIED
TYPHWRITERS—AII makes expertly
repaired portable
s and olriee ma
chines for sole or reel.. I)ial 2342.
Harry Mann 12.7 West, Genver Are.
yr. G. I).
FOR SAL p; —llarles-Davidsoli mo
torcycle SSU. In fine menden. Call
Dick , at 754. 04.1-21-pd-GO
WILL .THE IL P. Q. who traded lair
black seal coat for another onecon
taining the label "Lebanon - Furriers"
at the Beta Sigma Rim,house on Sat
urday, night please call .at the Stu
dent Union Office?
FOR RENT—one half very 'desirable
room.' Call 2000 or inquire 217 E.
Foster avenue. _ 06-It-pd-CD
LOST—nenr' .Beaver avenue, purse
containing $2O. Finder please return
to S. U. office. Reward. OS-It-pd-CD
LOST—n brief 'history of Physical
Education. Please call 3844 ask for
Sweigart, Reward.. 97,1t-pd-Gll
LOST—a black wallet. Finder may
keep money. Please return to Stu
dent Union desk or mail.
_lOO-1t-pd-\IB
ROOM FOR RENT—for two. Locution
near campus. Rates reasonable.
Cull ut 110 McAllister street.
00- I t-pd-W.B
THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN
TONY GIANNANTONIO
Probe S. C. 7'aproonts
Operatives of the State Liquor Con
trol Board made simultaneous visits
on State College's taprooms at about
11 o'clock Saturday night, at the
height of the annual houseparty cel
ebration. Operatives termed their vis
it a "routine investigation" as they,
checked on licenses and the ages of
patrons of the town's establishments.
#
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Frosh Bootors Crush
I McAllisterville, 6 To, 2
(Continitcd frtml. vatic three)
Lloyd Watts tallied a shot that.was
too high for goalie Davidson to get.
Score as HO: Cluses
As the first half
,closed, the Cubs
again beghn to click and Taylor tied
up the score as the whistle blew.-
.On the kick-off . that opened the sec
ond half; the 'Cubs - drove the ball
down the field on successive passes
and Hartman scored. From then . on,
the yearlings tallied at with
-Taylor chalking up two more go'als
and Hartthan, sinking his -second.
The lineups:
Pos. State Frosh MeAllisterville
G; 'Davidson Nace
L.F. Halsey R. Watts
R.F. Shortlidge Fronk
Bosler
C.H. - Miller • Phillips
R.H. - Clark Harris
O.L. Brad ford L. Watts
I.L. Green Bowersox
C.F. 'Taylor • Benner
I.R. Haitman Adams
O.R. Meinsler Fultz
Score by periods:
State-Frosh 1 1 3 1-6
MeAllisterville 1 1 0 0-2
GoalS: Taylor 4, ilartnnin 2, Ben
ner, L. Watts.
Substitutes: State Frosh--,Ritten
house. MeAllisterville--Yorks. Ref-
James:fekes. Time of quarters
30 minutes.
Earthquake Recorded
The seismograph at the - school of
mineral industries. at the College re
corded an earthquake at 6.14 a.m. yes
terday morning. The instrument re
corded a disturbance for about three
quarters of an hour. Distance of the
focus was about 3,300 miles from
State College, and it is assumed to
have been in Alaska.
Ile put Broadway on the newspaper map ••' froul the top of his COl
man you can see BeowaWejlevada, on a clear day: He talks to an au"
en
ce of many millions of people every day, but be won't answer his cn
telephone. He lived for years at the Ritz because they let his dog, ridc
the elevators• lie composes "Thoughts While Strollig," from the back
of aßolls•Royce. What manner of, man is he, with his 0 dressMg,
and 30 pairs of pajamas? Where does he "get his 300,000 words a year?
a word picture of the incredible "Odd" 'Mclntyre, see
Gallipolis
,Boy Makes Good
by I. BRYAN, ill
02MONTYRE—I'aill51“'1104,111
at your newsstand
Campus Bulletin
The Red Wing bird society will hold
a seminar and show films tonight in
Room 35 lid building at,7:30 o'clock.
TOMORROW
Deutscher Verein will holds its No
vember meeting tomorrow night at
the Alpha Chi Rho house at 7 o'clock.
A Milk! fireside forum will be held
in the Hugh Beaver room, Old Main
tomorrow night at 8:30 o'clock. Philip
Jacob will speak on "Peace for a War
Bent World.".
THURSDAY ' -
There will be a Lakonides meeting
in Room 318 0111 Main at 8:30 p.
The Cosmopelitian club will meet
at the home of Dr..and Mrs. Dengler,
at ro'clock. All students and faculty
members born outside the United
States, or have lived abroad for three
years, arc "Ipso Facto" eligible for
membership. If you can attend please
611 Mrs. Dengler (2233) by tomorrow
EAT WELL—ECONOMICALLY' at
STRIA'S RESTAURANT
BILL BOTTORFS BAND!.
Al the Annual Penn State Football Dance
CHATTERBOX
HOTEL WILLIAM PENN
_ • PITTSBURGH
9 to I—SAT. NITE, Nov. 20, 1937—52.50 Couple •
150•PUUND FOOTBALL
IN YOUR COLLEGE?
At Princeton, Yalc, Rutgers, Penn, Lafayette, Cornell and other
schools a new kind of football is coming to the fore. It's fast, spec
tacular. You can't play'on these bantam teams if you weigh more
than 150 pounds. Speed and brains count more than weight. With'
no big stadiums, no big training tables, no big injuries, the pigskin
peewees have made their sport most exciting to watch, most popular ,
to play. Let Arnold Nicholson tell you the story of midget football,
and why it's sweeping the colleges, in Little Men—Here's How.
by ARNOLD NICHOLSON
ANDYOU CAN'T BEAT THE GOVERNMENT. Stanley 'High
reports on the world's biggest publicity campaign, which,
through newspapers, posters, radio and movies sells the
New Deal to America.
"SOCKING A CROOK," said young Larry Wayne, "is definitely out-
moded." So he went after the cop-hating Carmichaels his own way.
Leslie T. White tells how, in The Last Wayne.
AN AMERICAN DOCTOR IN CHINA. Victor Heiser, M. D., relates the
deeply human story of China's battle against disease.
TROUBLE, TROUBLE. Charley Hackett had just ten hours left to finish
Highway Project 721. Then, mysteriously, the 40-ton digger started to
slip. A short story by Karl Detzer.
NEWFOUNDLAND SPENDS ITS WAY INTO BANKRUPTCY. Bertram
B. Fowler tells how it happened, and what they tried next, in Govern
ment by Receivership.
• .
"DOCTORS HUMAN?" To Sally, they were soulless bums, untirone
overlooked a measle, in Hannah Lees' Hospitals Aro for Sick People..
. . Read Tish Marches On, by Mary Roberts Rinehart, and Just
Call Me Margie, by Kenneth Payson Kempton. •• .
Tuesday, November 16, 1937
Outdoor Group To Shotot
Hiking 'Movies Thursday
Movies of - a — summer mountain
camp, showing its facilities, activities,
and personnel, will be shown in the
Home Economics auditorium, to all
interested students and faculty mem
bers at 7 o'clock Thursday night, un
der. the auspices of the Students Hik
ing committee.
The hiking activities of the comp
are featured and include pictures of
short afternoon, overnight, and lveck
end hikes. Of most value to the out
door-conscious students are the pic
tures of proper equipment and, cloth
ing, and techniques of cooking and
fire building. Color pictures of this
Fall's hikes froM this campus will
also be shown:
noon.
MISCELLANEOUS
The Athletic calendar may be pur
chased at the Student Union Office.
Directories are.now on sale at the
Registrar's office.
( _