The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 16, 1948, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
Collegian Predicts . . .
Morgan Krane Roth 1 Vadasz
GAME .714 .742 .GOO .714
Ohio Stale —Indiana j Indiana Ohio S. Ohio S. Ohio S.
Purdue—low a j Purdue Purdue Purdue ' Purdue
Georgia—LSU Georgia Georgia Georgia Georgia
Northwestern—Mich Michigan Michig p „ Michigan Michigan
Illinois —Minnesota Minn. Illinois , Minn Minn.
Missouri—Navy Missouri Missouri j Missouri Missouri
SMU—Rice SMU SMU SMU SMU
Oregon—Southern Cal, Oregon Oregon So. Ca'. Oregon
Cornell—Syracuse Cornell Cornell Cornell Cornell
Mississipi—Tulane Miss. Miss. Miss. Miss
Yale—Wisconsin
Rutgers—Princeton
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SHIRTS and TIES
UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS
Wisconsin
Wisconsin l
Princeton
uojaautjjj
Sigma Pi, Du
Cop Victories
Sigma Pi and Delta Upsilon.
who last week pounded their way
into the second round of intra
mural touch football, continued
their merry undefeated way on
Thursday night with victories over
Sigma Phi Epsilon and Delta Tau
Delta, respectively.
A long touchdown run by Jack
Riordan of Sigma Pi accounted for
its 6-0 victory, while the passing
combination of Ray Brooks to Bill
Reynolds clicked for 85 yards and
1 12-0 Delta Upsilon win.
In the other two games, Pi Kap
ca Phi triumphed over Alpha Sig
ma Phi, 6-0, and the independent
Hawks beat Riverside, 7-0.
Monday’s games are: Acacia vs.
Moha Epsilon Pi, Rockets vs.
Dorm 37, Phi Kappa Tau vs. Kap
pa Sigma, and Sigma Phi Sigma,
vs. Kappa Delta Rho.
(./on Figures
te men and
boys, women
and children
Following are complete up-to
date ball-carrying records of Nit
tany varsity football backs:
Carried (*ained Lout Cain
Triplett 13 10t» 5 194
Hopei 22 129 4 122
Luther !! 90 0 90
Dorinski 3 19 0 16
-Cooney 4 20 3 17
O’Bara 13 53 9 47
foe 6 23 3 20
IVtehel 9 24 1 23
i.'olone S 17 3 *l4
‘Vherer 2 0 0 0
L ! rion 17 0 7
’Kuekran 1
Dougherty 1
Or* ini 3
Totals 97 550 38 525
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
Wisconsin
Princeton Princeton
Yards Yds.
5 5
2 —2
—ll _ i i
ARROW
Top-Rated Spartan Harriers
Face Lions Next Saturday
Michigan State’s cross country team, which helps the Lion har
riers inaugurate the home season next Saturday, figures to be one of
the top teams in the country, based on early season reports.
Spartan Coach Karl A. Schlademan has lost none of his hill-and
dale talent through graduation and in addition has a couple of out
standing prospects coming up from the freshman team.
Captain Bob Sewell, a junior
from Cleveland, Ohio, will lead
the Spartan contingent which in
cludes Jack Dianetti, Tom Irmen,
Bill Mack and Warren Dreutzler,
last year’s mile sensation.
DIANETTI
All four of the Michigan State
runners have run the mile in less
than 4:20. The highly-rated Dian
etti failed to live up to expecta
tions in last year’s meet, how
ever, finishing sixth.
The Michigan State junior did
regain some of his form to finish
third in the IC-4A competition in
New York, and if in shape for
next week’s meet, he should pro
vide Lion captain Horace Ashen
felter with stiff competition.
From the freshman squad will!
come Druetzlcr and Mack. Mack,
a transfer from Drake University,
will be eligible to run in varsity:
competition this fall. I
Already he lias established him-1
self as one of the top distance
men in the nation and finished
fifth in tlie United States Olympic
finals mile run.
Druotzler set a Michigan State
iiile record for lroshmen and is
onsidered a brilliant prospect.
ZE LION WILL ROAR...
. . . at z e game today when he sees ze West Virginia team
come on ze field He is relishing the thought of licking ze pants
off of them, rolling up Ze score to beeg numbers, and makint
he season continue to be red hot.
He also relishes the thought of making ze lion
tracks down to Mexi-Hot's after ze game to hot dog
and celebrate ze victory!
If z e Niliany Lions can make a feast on
thees Mexican hot doge weeth ze chili con
came sauce—so can you!
Still only 15c
VIVE PENN STATE! VIVE MEXI-HOTS! !
Swimming Call
Coach William Gulleron re
quests that all candidates for
the varsity swimming team re
port to the Glennland pool at
7:30 p.m. next Thursday. This
meeting wHI be the official be
ginning of training.
'Lucky' Krone Tops
Collegian Yogis
Elliot “Lucky” Krane took over
sole possession of first Place in
the Collegian yogi contest this
week. Predicting 10 out of 1.2
winners of last weekend’s grid
skirmishes. Krane boosted his
average to a lusty .742.
George “Fred” Vadasz, picked
nine winners to move into a sec
ond place tie with Tom “Scoop”
Morgan, Collegian sports editor.
Both have a .714 prognosticating
average.
Red "Hopeless” Roth seemed to
thirl the grid wars a little perplex
ing. picking only seven winners to
drop his a verage to an even .600
mark.
OOD*
VBI6N)
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1946
Between {l%,
Lions
By TOM MORGAN
Sports Editor
*ibout Granges
Up Syracuse way, the campus
ontemporary of the Daily Col
egian awards the “daily orange,”
its gift to the gridmen, to Bemie
Uustis, passer deluxe who injected
the sting into the Orange’s at
tack against Penn State.
We quote: "Undaunted by a
highly-touted Penn Slate eleven,
and unaffected by the advance
rave_ notices of himself, Bernie
Cusiis proved the vulnerability of
the Niltany Lions as well as his
own capibiliiies."
Since last Friday’s tiff with the
New Yorkers, much has happened
m the Lion camp, and we look
for a stronger pass defense today
against the aerial-minded Moun
tain eers.
Superstitious?
® ut with or without Jimmy
wallhall, ace passer, the Moun
taineers _ have spelled doom for
crack Niitany elevens more than
once, and, as Superstitious Sam,
our admiring fraternity brother,
observes, "Will the Lions extend
their two-year unbeaten streak to
13"?
Speaking of “daily oranges” and
such, we wonder what the D.C.
™ght give away each week for
the greatest deeds of derring-do
on the Nittany gridiron. Perhaps
an engraved certificate entitling
the recipient to one cubic foot of
hallowed Mt. Nittany?
Who's He?
. Some fellow named "Tombur
mo"—referred to as a Penn Stale
varsity end—was one of 29 line
men mentioned in the Associated
Press Lineman-of-lhe-week selec
tions this week.
We suspect it was Sam Tam
buro. playing his second straight
season as first-siring Lion termi
nal.
Dud DeGroot, in his first year
as Mountaineer grid coach, has
started something new for wives
and girl friends of the West Vir
gnua football squad. It’s a weekly
Football Forum for Women Only.
In his opening remarks, DeGroot
told the large feminine attend
ance that "the men don't really
know much more about football
they just talk a better game than
the women."
DeGroot, by the way, is a Ph.D
in education, a Phi Beta Kappa at
Stanford, and, on top of football
activities, he’s one of the nation’s
formost zoologists and ornitholo
gists.
New blood on the sports staff!
Women invade sports page! Read:
rootball a la Fem.
Jayvees Tackle
Bucknell Bison;
The Pen 11 State Jayvee football
team is on the warpath again,
.his time out to maul the Bucknell
Bison.
i he grid team goes to Lewisburg
today to take on its second rival
in what is so far an undefeated
season. All week the gridders
have been brushing up on pass
eletense and running through plays
against the varsity. Some of the
new boys on the squad have been
earning the plays and will be
taken on the trip to Bucknell.
Coach O’Hora will be without
dm services of Tony Orsini and
Owen Dougherty in the backfield.
Both these boys were instrumental
in the victory over Syracuse. Bob
Mailer, who ran a punt 55 yards
or a score against Syracuse, will
no captain for the game.
i L f st ,u yea i-, the Nittany gridders
neat the Bisons by a decisive
three-touchdown margin.
Starting lineup follows: left end,
Bill Barber; left tackle, Anthony
Shumskas; left guard, Pete Chiesa
center, Bill Jacobs; right guard,’
Val Troy; right tackle, Charles
Godlasky; right end, Lloyd Amp
rini; quarterback, Jack Miller-
If". Anthony Piliggi; right
half, Bob Harter; fuUback, Fran
cis Smutney.
Lions Make History
Pen n State’s nine football vic
tories in 1047 marked die first
time in history that a Lion team
won nine games in one season.