FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1942 Colgate Gricideri Practice 16 Booters Leave For Syracuse Game Game Will Be Stiffest Yet For Jeffreymen Coach Bill Jeffrey and 16 Penn State soccermen leave today at 8 a. m. for Syracuse where tomor ros,v• morning at 10 they meet the Orange of Syracuse University in what promises ,to bp the toughest game yet for the boo,ters who have won their first three games handily. . Making the trip will be Johnnie Struck,. goalie; Captain Hap Free iaan, Bill Deitrich, Frank Black, fullbacks; Dean Hartman, Boyd Etters, Sammy Schnure, halfbacks; and Paul Bender, Bill Prichard, Jose Lombana, Charley Lischer, Smiley Williams, Max Chenoweth, Walt Wozniak, Bobby Fast, and Prank Clase, forwards. . Penn Stale Club Allen -Heck, veteran fullback, who saw action in last Saturday's • ' Colgate game, will remain at home. Defeated 13-c The old leg injury which he re- . ... . ceived over a month ago bothered him again this week and has put Play in the Independent intra him out of action for an indefinite mural league got under way last time. Heck was counted on greatly night . when F'airmount Hall nosed to strengthen the Jeffreymen. out Miller Club, 6-0, Lion Club Boyd Etters was also, on the in- scored two touchdowns to defeat last year's Penn State Club cham halfback injured his leg in` one of jured list this week. The veteran pions, 13-0, the Ceramists ran up the scrimmages and did not report a. five to two advantage in first for several recent Practices. How- downs over Pioneer •House, and the Unit. Club defeated the Alle.lub , ever; he has, sufficiently recovered 4a:coich'ieffiei expects to start . 76 ' . .• - • -.• .s. -• ' • - '". him'. in tomorrows tussle. ~.% • ••• i Despite the ambiiickui Use: af ; the the, L i6ii -- • d keiii t i• Notre Dame •shift hy. the SIM State ~Last` year Coach. Artliiir Horici'eks' dringe= Club, last year's 'champs were consecu- beat g4en 13-0 on the passing and running nienc' 4-0, for their 64th of Chuck McGill. On the last play tine without defeat in theirsfre of the first half, McGill - tossed to streak. 65. This game, played on Beattie for a 40-ya_rd touchdown. lew "Beaver .Field, was featured • The same 'combination also scored by thejeffreymen's defensiVe play the second Lion Club touchdown whiCh ,bottled up, every Syracuse attempt s to score. Tomorrow' the in the second half. Blue an White will:be out toadd Climaxing a 40-yard drive with anpther' gain& to. their new. under Etnierpassing to Frasso in the end feated streak which now stands at zone enabled Fairmount Hall to top fife games. , the Miller • Club, 6-0. , - ;',The team will travel to the New, For the Ceramists A was Bach- Yiirli town 'in private cars: Making man ancl'Reagan4running and pass the trip•also will be Soccer Mana- ing for five first downs that pro ger A... Edward Leitzinger '43 and vided the margin• of victory over RObert L. Galley '44, first assistant Pioneer House. Manager. "" Although trailing in first downs, , klr,s, ' 41009 T .FampOe.ro::,; - . - ,Kappa. ..Delta will celebrate tion lateral to SYPriieW:slii, back to FoPiVer:s' Day.NYth a forn l 4dio - , Eshmont, was enough fora 7-6 vie .neTr at the Anchorage Coffee tory, Shor*%at 6:30 toay.: A- ceremony of the_ occasion, will be, h.eld'at; 5:30, aCCorditig..tO, Mary Roberts '43,. president Fai55.::F..i!.V1 . ,•:ii.ii , : , :,..,.....,.:,::::.. : „..,.,.,.. „:„,,...„2..:.:,,,:...,,,,, , ,:: ~.., . .::,-..-:::i,-, : :,, , .. .:'iiiiiii:.i.. w7*,10...74ertitt:i . :..., ...........„..................,„„..............„„,•....„,,......„„......... .i; , ) . : , , - ..v. , . . E • ..., :.3.,,::1,; ..::: ~ , : ...i.,.:: ~cl, ~,,.. .:... ~...„ t:::).,i. ,;:,:,:...,::::. .; ,F,,. 0..x.:14.1w4 I i fIATEREIVSMOKING ut:,.::,„m,...i.„,:.....„d,.:::.,....:..:.,::::::..,..„....;„.....„........ . EVERYONE WELCOME._ Annual orestry °pi) all • • Mmi flee • ie Oct, 23 $1.14 • ARISTOCRATS 9-12 P. M., 6th In Defense - A mid week release from the American Football Statistics Bu reau, official NCAA accounting department, shows that the Nit tany Lion football team is ranked sixth among the nation's gridiron learns in total defense, and fifth in passing defense. The Lions have allowed three opponents an average of only 101 yards per game in total yards gained, and only 27.7 par d s through the air. Only major team appearing above the Lions is Alabama's Crimson Tide. a successful conversion following the , Unit Club • touchdown that scored, from intercep- HP7' WAR:IO,IIDS AI4ID''S;i'AMPS 66 Baffle Filter TtirilßsS okers lISED MEDICO PIPES, CIGAR, ANO OIGAUTTE HOLDERS New York—The scientific, Absorbent filter has contributed •rb:til -- to th, TIKE.DAILY COLLEGIAN In Bellefonte; Phinney Replaces Hanover Al Halfback SPECIAL TO THE COLLEGIAN BELLEFONTE, Pa., Oct. 22. Coach Andy Kerr and 55 mem bers of his Red Raiders junior varsity and varsity football teams arrived here tonight where they will rest and practice in prepara tion for Penn State's Nittany Lions, whose den they will in vade Satuday. The only anticipated change in the Red Raider varsity lineup will find Ed Phinney, replacing injured Al Hanover at the left halfback position. Phinney, fated tls the hardest runner on the Raider squad other than Mike Micka, fullback par excellence, has been a steady alternate at the tailback position all year. He is the best punter on Kerr's squad. Coming back strong after a disappointing 1941 season, the Chenango charges of Coach Kerr this year are making a deterinin ed bid to avenge some of the &rubbings they have suffered dur ing the recent years of Colgate football decline. After last week's drpbbing , at the hands of the Duke Blue Devils, the Raiders are anxious to make the Lions victim number 'three. After the graduation of seven star performers froth the 1941 team, the early season loss of Captain Warren Anderson, and his running mate at the end posi tions, Earl Hamilton, created a serious shortage of wingmen. MuCh has been written of the Colgate_ backfield of Micka, Fox, Yakapocih, and Hanover, and their capable reserves, Phinney, McQuade, Clifford, and Williams, but Kerr 'also has a fast, tough line which has perforined_credit ably in the first four games. . 'lron-rnan' John "Red" Greer, rangy 200-pounder, has played almost 60 minutes of every game, and leads the line from his pivot position. Flanking Greer at the Guud positions are-. Bob Orland, last fall's varsity center, and soph omore George Thomas, with Foeshuk and Cusick as capable reserves. Forresiters WM Be Isl Big Tess For '46 Bolen Penn State's freshman soccer team will get its first big test to morrow afternoon when it faces the Mont Alto freshman foresters on New Beaver Field. Confined to scrimmages against the varsity for the past two months with the exception of a .game with State College High School, roach Doc Underwoo'd's forces will stack up against their first real opposition. The frosh and jayvee -coach will make up his starting lineup of freshmen Herb Lee, goalie, Bud Simpler, Herb Kinney, Bill Fall well, and Dick Ard, fullbacks, Ed Hannum, Jack Larruney, Dick Detheril, and Charley Fredericks, halfbacks, and Kenny Simons, Jim Etters, Don Rider, Bob Mar shall, Herb Jung, Al Carver and Roy Benka, forwards. Howard Horne Seeks 'Excellent Showing' la Tomorrow's Meet By DON WEBB (Editor's note: This is the sixth in a series of seven articles to acquaint readers with members of the cross.country team, who run against Syracuse in their only home meet of the season at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow.) Saturday is not only" Howard Horne's first appearance in harrier togs before a Penn State crowd, but it will be his twentieth birth day, and no amount of money would please him more than an "excellent showing" in tomorrow's meet against Syracuse. Howard, newest member of the varsity cross-country squad, is one of four sophomores in the Lions' starting lineup. He was an "unknown" before he came to Penn State from the Al toona undergraduate center this fall, and has had but one test—that in the Manhattan meet when he placed ninth in the meet and sev enth in Penn State standings. As a student in Elmira, N. Y. high school, Horne captured top honors in the district mile event his last two years. When he started to the Altoona center, he had to run cross-country or track. Upon landing in State College this fall, he lost no , time in grabbing a start ing post on the harrier team. Horne is a tall fellow—towering six feet, two and a half • inches. He weighs 130 pounds. HOward is a lower division student, who in tends •to major in pre-law next year. No one, not even himself, knows what he can really do after a little experience. He has shown much improvement .in the morph and a half that he has practiced on the harrier course, and Coach Werner expects him to do much better with several more races under his belt. Varsity Cross-country, Syracuse, 2:30 p. m., New Beaver Field. Varsity football, Penn State vs. Colgate, 2:00 p. m., New Beaver Field. 4H1MM:0...,•=• , 1)41.1..0.4MM)).M041.M. , 4,4=111r41.M.~11....1/1,4•041111N.0.2•1.14 1 •MP0YMP 11.9 .. , 1i.. 14 . 11N16/••1 1 I Et 4foo rk P J r : n. 6 n :81g i r rj I r A h 041 P WHO CAME TO DINNER" TONIGHT LNG TOMORROW NIGHT 81:30 &table TICKETS ON SALE AT STUDENT UNION $.75 Admission plus Tax The funniest Comedy to be plresented at Penn State in years X.lountrymen Ready For Syracuse Seven Coach Chick Werner pronounc ed his cross-country proteges hi the best shape of the season last right as the Lion's only home meet with Syracuse loomed only two days away. At the same time he announc ed the lineup that will face the Orangemen at 2:30 p. m. tomor row. The seven men who will oppose the invaders are Captain Norm Gordon, Curt Stone, Mac Smith, Jerry Karver, Joe Beach, Rufe Williams, and Howad Horne. The entire squad will run, but only these seven men will be is sued numbers and be eligible to score for the Nittanymen. COMFORT BEGINS • With Well • Laundered Shirts YOU CAN DEPEND ON US' For Satisfactory Laundry Service PENN STATE LAUNDRY 320 W. Beaver Dial 3201 Preienl "THE SCHWAB AUDITORIUM PAGE THREE BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS L:r:lr,r:Z