The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 18, 1942, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18,
BETWEEN
THE LIONS
By BEN BAILEY
Sports Editor
One of the most expensively
entertaining athletic contests in.
the recent history of the College The Senior' class, presidential
staggered' off ,to a shaky start at brawl features anther Higgins
lunch-time yesterady, as friends end, Bob Davis, ~,alho opposes
of the schools' leading sports- Bob Faloon, VerSetilr sports edi
men answered the call of the tor of the Centre Daily Times.
phone and began the trek to Old Those of. you who were at the
Main to decide which athletes• Penn game will-Aleartember Davis
shall become undergraduate •
.ac " the guy who recovered the
statesmen. . Quaker 'fumble to -set •up 'Sparky.
The said contest—All-Collelge Browns , opening Agichclown. Fa
elections to those of you who be- loon matched, :theliLt in his de
neve the printed word—purrs in- partmera; however, when he
to - the back-stretch today and dashed doWn several tiers of
grinds to a marathon finish along seats from the press box after
about sundown tomorrow. the game to recover nearly three
The winning teams—most of feet of the Pennsylvania goal
them captained by capable mom- post. • - 144' -
hers of the, sporting world—will For All-College`' Itesident we
draw the privelege of handling have a three-way kitchen con
nearly $25,000 in inter-class stu- test starring Jackie - . Grey, Don
dent funds for the coming pbliti- Kulp, and George :NI; Smith.
cal term. " Smith apparently. doesn't stand
In the yearling race we have a a chance in the race because of
toss-up between tailback Larry the fact that he is strictly a non-•
Joe and Bud James, a reserve athletic type of fellow, and, worst
end. Joe has already proved his of all; admits that ' - he is a Po
ability as an elusive, runner, and liical- Science major! (Anyway,
should make a "happy warrior" who would remember a name so
in any, political camp. On 'the common as George Washingto'n
other hand, James Stands . out as Smith at the polls?).
a good blockei; and a very capable I heard • the •
• rnmor that Jim
receiver. • Farley is considering backing
:Probably the most exciting tus-, Frankie Sinkwich and Grantland
sle appears to be the '45 class. Rice as running males on a third
manuevers. Wingback. Cliff St. party ticket in . the.l944. elections.
Clair had the game .in the_ bag by It can happen; you' know.
,
Anniversary Sale!
Now going on! The largest money-giving
• sale in our history . . of- --
MEN'S and WOMEN'S WEAR
NEW 'FALL DRESSES MEN'S SUITS
Reg. $14.95 Reg. s29*
NOW 9015 NOW 11.95:
Hundreds of Other Values!
C iarles Shop
OPPOSITE THE CORNER ROOM
Whal the 'Check-01f' Means:
Every,student gets a paper daily.
• Students pick up paper at strategic distribution 'centers.
Readers get continued coverage of reserve news, war flash
es, and campus events. •
The College is assured a medium for passing on_ vital war
time notices and announcements.
• The Daily Collegian remains an uncontrolled, independent
students' organization.
_ .
• Every student will pay 85c on his semester fees,
0 The College will act as collecting agent for the paper.
Students will vote for or against the "check-off' at All-College
elections next Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. If you wish a
daily paper for the duration, vote for the Check-off. You need
every bit of information possible in these uncertain times. Think
and VOTE YES!
0 - )
T'i.i:e COLL_ GE DINER
Heani Ridenour, Catanoso
Star Ire 1111 Ring Matches
forefeit a week • ago, but non
athletic Walt Price, after a "lock-
el.-room" spat with
..3 his "team,"
made a belated 'entry at almost
even odds.
DAILY COLLEGIAN
OPEN UNTIL 3 A. M. ON FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
TM boxing opened the second
night of its annual slugfest, moving
the contenders one round closer to
the .finals.
Top'battle- of the afternoon for
violence and thrills was the match
between two 155-pounders, Nichols
and Hean. Hean swapped lefts and
rights against the withering blasts
of his opponent's dynamite-loaded
rights, but in the middle of the
last round Nichols began to tire
and Hean almost' mowed him down
with several well-placed blows.
Hean outpointed ;his opponent and
won the judges' decision.
•As clever with his hands in the
ring as he is on the mat, Charlie
Ridenour took his battle by a tech
nical knockout in the second round
against Grimes of KDR. Although
Charlie was dwarfed by. Grimes, he
cut loose with a barrage of whirl
wind rights and lefts that soon
made the referee stop the fight.
The next fight changed the luck
for the battling KDR's when Jen
nings trounced Clemens of Phi
Kappa Sigma. Following through
in the 145-pound class another
KDR, Maloney, copped the judges'
decision from McKean. Kappa Sig's
Golden met his equal in the ring
When he met the blocks and par
ries of Brodie of Phi Epsilon Pi.
Golden edged out his opponent for
the match but it was a highly con
tested battle.
Highlight of the independent
contenders was the battle between
Catanoso and Moyer. Catanoso, al
though smaller in stature than his
opponent, launched a series of
lunging drives that nearly floored
Moyer. Several beautiful lefts and
rights shot out by Moyer looked as
though they might be fatal but
were stopped enroute. The weak
ening resistance of Rummage in
the next contest gave a hard fought
fight of Zirm by a judges' decision.
Tomorrow's 'Anew
FRATERNITY
-127-pound, Hirsh vs. Hibner
135; Shoemaker vs. Ashby
145, Greenly, vs. Hutchings
155, Detwiler vs. Norton; Mat
tern vs. Jimeson
165, Bache vs. Tayton
INDEPENDENT
-145, Muschlitz vs. Renton-, Leib
erman vs...Whitten
CLASSIFIED SECTION
LOST: A light brown covert ov
ercoat taken from hanger, first
floor Main Eng. Bldg. Please re
turn it, it's the only,one I have.
Put it back on the hanger, or ,call
Leslie Paul, Ingleside Club.
2tpd. 17,
.18RM
LOST—Gas cap and keys, some
where in borough. Finder please
call 2459. Ask for Marty or Cyril.
2tpdl7,lBD
LOST—K & E slide rule. Name—
'. Si Newman. Call Sid Swartz,
4991. -2tpdl7,lBSß
LOST—Alligator Gold Seal Top
coat in Sparks near Room 125,
Monday, Nov. 9. Call Al 3142 or
4751.• 3tchLW
MEN!—Want a date? Contact
Dating Bureau. Interviews
Tues., Wed., Thurs., 5 to 5:30 p.
m. Penn State• Club, Room, 321
Old • Main. ltcompß
WILL PERSON who accidentally
traded raincoats Friday call
4634. I gotta newer one in trade,
but my old one, had gloves in
pocket. ltpd.c
FOR SALE—Size 39 short tux
Good condition. Reasonable
Phone 2110. ltchl7RES
FOR SALE—Tux like new. Bar
gain—original price $4B. Size 39
or 40. Call Les, 4736.
PM Has Averaged
110 Yards A Game
A quick glance at the statistics
compiled by the Pitt Panther foot
ball team this season reveals two
outstanding facts that should weigh
heavy on Nittany Lion !hearts.
First fact to make Blue and
White followers leary over Satur
day's fray is the fact that, although
they have been beaten in 5 of their
8 games this season, the Panthers
have still been able to average over
220 yards of ground gaining -1133
on the ground, and 636 yards by
passing.
Second caution sign is the record
that has been turned in by "Weston
Willie" Dutton, third r ank in g
ground gainer in the nation.
A resume of Pitt's (mostly Dut
ton's) efforts this fall show:
Leading scorer—Dutton with six
touchdowns.
Leading ground gainer (scrim
mage)—Dutton with 670 yards in
187 tries.
Leading passer—Outton with 29
completions in 76 attempts for 590
yards.
Leading in total offense—Dutton
with 1270.
Leading pass receiver—Mike So
tack, left end, with four caught for
154 yards.
Leading punter—Dutton with 61
kicks for 2153 yards and .) a 35.2
average
The opposition has totaled 1686
yards through the Panhter line,
and have connected with 70 out of
146 passes for 929 yards, for a total
offensive game average of 327
yards.
Arrow Handkerchiefs
Arrow Ties
2tpd.lB,l9MJW
Charles
(#‘
,-
-,t, /C*:,..."
.."-%\
1 0---i 4,1
..-- I #1 ---. 'irl:
1
~.;
\
i , ; , i. , ,• { pc,' -,,/,
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e the Beau of the I all!
CLASSIFIED SECTION
LOST Gag cap and keys.
Somewhere in Borough. Finder
please call 2459. Ask for Marty
or Cyril. 2t pd.17,18D
LOST Phi Delta Theta pin,
downtown on Sunday. Please call
Bruce Parker, 761
Rides Wanted—
RW—To Phila. or New York. Lv.
Wed. or Thurs. Ret. Sun. Call
Babs, 416 Watts Hall. 2 tchl7,lBG
RW—Detroit, Mich. Lv. anytime.
Ret. anytime. Call Quigley 3155.
stpdl7-21SR
R. W. Pittsburgh. Leave Wed
nesday ' afternoon, November
25. Call 830—ask for El. 2tpd.18,19
R. W. (2) Vicinity of Phila., or
Norristown. Leave Wednesday
afternoon, November 25, return
Sunday. Call 2001, ask for Bob
or George. 2t pd. 18,19
5 PASSENGERS WANTED —To
Uniontown or vicinity. Leave
Sat. noon, return Sunday. Call
4641—ask for Larry. 2tpd.
PW (S)—To Allentown. Leave
Tuesday 6 p. m. Call Les, 4736.
3t pd.19,29,23MJW
R. W.—To Phila. or New York.
L.—Wed. or Thurs. R—Sun.
Calls Babs., 4416 Watts Hall.
2tch-17,18G.
RW (2)—Kane, Penna. IN. Friday
after 10 a. m. Call Ray Jansen,
3331. 2tcomplB,l9RDS
Arrow Shirts
Shop
Arrow .Underwear
I . '
:2: ''' . ' .:, ::::
11:
145.
:::,.%ik ..'.:
(Al
fiat savoir-faire impres
• an Arrow Shoreham !
loreham has a smooth- i
semi-starched attached
a smart semi-starched
m, and- is cut to avoid.
.chiness. Sanforized
beled (fabric shrink-.
tge less than 1%).
$350
Arrow Dress
Ties, $1
PAGE THREE