TUEBcO W, OCTOBER 4, 1949 'D'iiites To Forget' 20th Century . P, October 10, 1903, Penn 39, Penn State 0 October 25, 1930," Cdlkate" . 4o; • - z - Penn State 0 ' ' October 31, 1931, Pitt 41, Penn State 6 October 21, 1939, Cornell 37, Penn State 0. . October 7, NaVy 55, .Pefin state 14 October 1, 1949, Army 42; Penn State 7 .- • Too Many Teams' It was an outnumbered but not outplayed Penn State , team that sat on the bench and' watched four Army teams rip .and tear at Coach Bedenk's reserves. Almost dead' on their feet from th'e mag nificent first .half stand c .,agains,t the Army Wm-plat:ion systein ? Nittany regulars like Negley. Nor ton and Don Murray 's'&t• in fa tigued silence as the Cadets,poM-, pletely bottled ,up 'the . I..Acax i pS; tack. Turning. Point The turning point , in Saturday's battle was missed , byralie . : Penn: State fans who tuned(;imitceithe game; since the announagi.. , 6l74 ering the t•lay"was too rushed'to describe the details. , -To the, fans caching the game in State , College, - the desdrip , Fl lion went 'something "Shaginaw ' hit& his Wair;#3.rei; to the :33 for-a firalltovirnlor Penn State-.. . . and now- Galiffa passes - to oldberg wbci 'step's_ out of bounds on the ; "Penn State three yard' line Seven minutes after the second half kickoff, • Arnold ' Galiffa • bucked over for - the first Ariny touChdown -and the score was knotted at 7,-7 when '. - Mackmull 'booted the .first, of six perfect con versions. After an 'exchange' 'of - ritifiti;:Penn State started, a sus tafrieedriVe •froin the 'Nittany. 22 Yktdline. , • ay. m agaw • smas hed his the ,25 and on 'the next me4e, a first down 'prr the 33. • Vffille''the ., amiouncer was check •lirietlielineup's for the .neict play, •Shagine.* -fumbled rand Army re :covered. The 'Cadets rushed into ormat~ign,: and Galiffa flipped a perfeataarial to_ big Dan Voldberg .Who itOppt - d• out' of bounds on the thiee yard line. ' • •StePhenson, • tip toed over' the left side • of. the line Un-' ;touched and .from that point !on. the game'• changed from a closely pitChed battle, into a .1 rout. • • oaliffci-F'oldbeirg Foldberg's. catch, which was a finger tip', effort just' inside of• the east side:line, was in example of the - perfect accuracy of one of Ahe- best T-formation quarter backs in the business, Arnold Ga liffa. In pre-game, practiee, the Donora' passer brough the crowd to its feet Unit and time again by spinning • t e ball right 'into the , ,outstretched hands of the eiii - ds 'and - backs. • galiffa's passes, in practice and during the game were not of the right-in-my -hands variety, but each end or back had to run at Op speed, stretch to the .fullest extend arid then take the ball over his shoulder to snag one of the quarterback's 'offerings. Nittany Passing o,‘ On the other side of the'ledger was the Penn State passing at tack. Bill Luther's first pass of the afternoon was the $6 -yard .touchdown flip to cwo erty. On the next passing attempl; a .buck pass thrown by Fran Ro gel, the Army defensive ..back, Bob Ableman, snagged the toss, and the Black. Knights converted the interception into AeW Plays later. . .. Earle Mundell's fist passing at tempt was _ also .oiterpepted and Aulle(l' ] into , 41 totiohcioWn; As' -was, Lack of Reserves Defeats State, 42-7 It can't be denied any longtr— Penn State's former strength has become its greatest weakness. Lack. of the seasoned bench tnanpoWer that helped bring the Nittany Lions two of their best seasons on record in 1947 and '4B, threatens this year to spoil Coach Joe,..Bedenk's first season ~at ,the helm of the Blue and White. • Sudden realization of the re serve problem cane for Penn State followers Saturday as they ‘Watchdd;_ d heard „the , outm an tied L'lons tire and succumb to a brilliant Army team, 42-?, at West Point's Michie Stadiuni. But it was no surprise to Be denk, who ever since Fall prac tices ,began has' been warning State partisans of the lack of cap able reserves. "We have a good 'first eleVen," the coach said time after time,'" but after thal we fatl off sharply.' - That second team falls off more sharply than ever"-this week NVith the loss of tackle BolilloSs. Rogs sustained an elbow dislocation Saturday and trainer Chuck Med lar reports this Week thgt he mill be out -"indefinitely." Other in juries are comparatively minor. Chuck Drazenovich sprained his ~ankle, Bill Luther 1 itiffers , from 'be ready but they .should b,p . ready to go Saturday and with RA y. Hedderick back, the Lion's fitststring will be'unmarred. =Eli Over 27,000 fans watched State's p . tr'Orrr ;first team outplay, out- SCoe, out-everything the famed a later, attempt by Saginaw. Al though the Army pass defense was good, it wasn't .as perfect as the interception rate would indi cate' The passers were rushed, bait, When they did toss the ball, it soared- high into' the air and Wobbled to the ground—an easy mark fOr.any defensive back. ,Niffpoy..Kickfiig - "Why didn't Penn State get off better kicks?" was the cry of the M_o n d a y Morning Quarterback Club*:-Luther's quick kick in the second 'period set; up the only Penn State score but, from ,there .orx,, the Nittaily kicks set up the 41triy scores.' The future • At this point the grid future looks very dark for• Coach Bedenk and'his Lion eleven—seven more tough• • games • with a possible breather in the Syracuse contest. But the one bright spot in the otherwise dreary weekend was the realization that Penn' State's first elevefi men were as. good as the first twenty two of 'Army. The ' Lion team was not out played and in future weeks it will be pitted against only one instead of two full teams in one 'game. In the Villanova game, Penn State was outplayed from the opening gun, 'but from here on out, Peni State ,can and will win games—if the team is able , to dup licate the_ first half of the Army game for two full halves: .fins many, many uses. Hite it for books nicknacks-as an end table-or for group arrangement. Made of select fir ply wood, in 4. lengths, so that any avail able space may be fully utilized. Well sandpapered :and ready for any de sired finish. No Hardware needed. . Bookcase Is 24" high, 8" deep, lower shelf 9 5.8" upper shelf 8 5.8" . ' high high 18" long , 4.85 ;30" long . 6.20 C24m7lang 5.50 • 36" long 6.55 It's fun and easy to assemble and the savings are worth' while. ,Assembly and finishing 'instructions included In each package. ' Send Check or Money Order. l . Sorry no, Q.O.D.'s, Shipped Postpaid. Write for folciei on other products. LASCALITE CORP. 25-18 37th Ave, tong yland City N.Y THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA INJURIES Army mule for two quarters last Saturday, and go off the gridiron with a 7-0 halftime edge. Sev points, however, was-too small an advantage for tired players ..o stock against the rested "two pla toons," and thereby lies the tale. Arnold Galiffa, ArMy's superb "T" formation quarterback who handles a football like his town mate Stan Musial wields a bat, sparked the Cadet offensive ma chine to two third-period touch dciwns against the Lion second squad. Then the roof fell, with almost evey man wearing Black; Gold and Grey getting into the act as the Cadets stomped to four fourth period scores, completing the .rout. RUNNING GAME Army was every bit the great team that - experts have been pointing up as the cream of the East. Though' stalled in . the fint: half, the Cadet running game fea tures breakaway speedsters in Jim Cain, Frank Fischl, Gil Ste phenson . and Jack Martin •wno cari..blow:, any !game Wide "Open; and did. Galiffa's passing to ends Dan Foldberg .and Bill Kellum was the key to the attack ; and the line- appearedi able to - stabk , Aip well against a similar array of gorillas. i , :State's offense• can still"• be spelled 'with one name, Rogel.' Francis 'Fullback, with the line proViding holes, charged up and down the field,• bowling over Ca dets,• tramping over Cadets, and in general making Army's mascot mule appear relatively docile. Bill Luther ran with spirit from the, tailback for several good gains, but otherwise the Lions found it hard to move. Reverses continued to show the need of a Wally Trip lett, and the aerial attack sput tered. STATE SCORES Strangely enough, howev,er,. it was• a pass, Luther to Owen Dougherty, that accounted for States only score. The• Lions marched 65 yards on the ground in the second quarter, aided by. a 15-yard penalty against Army fpr roughing the kicker just when the drive seemed stalled on • the State 49, to set up the pass on the Ari - ny 5. Joe Drazenovich's place kick split the uprights. The Cadets shied away from aerials through the , first quarter. In the second, Galiff a heaved to. Cain for a TD that covered• 60 ydrds, and was called back. Both sides had" jumped the gun. State * * *.* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *.* *: PLAYERS PRESENT * * • * • "GLASS . MENAGERIE // ' • at CENTRE STAGE * * • Every Fri. and Sat. * .* • . * * OPENS OCT. 14 • . * * *_ * * * * * * * * * * ••• At Your Warner, 'Theater • NOW! Cathatern • ' HELD OVER! i Gary Cooper Wayne Morris "TASK FORCE" State • • Wayne Morris Janis Paige "HOUSE ACROSS THE STREET" F it any Laurence Olivier's "HAMLET" Continuous Perforinance Stlll#lo,:PKtep was sparea- Galiffa again .wail the second half. Two bad• ,Nittany punts Put Army in scoring position early in the third stanza. Luther kicked out of bounds on the State 33 just after the half opened, the Cadets moved, but Luther staved off disaster by stealing the ball . from Foldberg on a Galiffa pass and kicking out to the 40. But from there, Galiffa tossed to Kel lum for 11 yards and to Martin for 9, and, two quarterback sneaks gave Army its .first TD. Jack Mac mull knotted the count with nis placement: Roy Shaginaw fumbled on his own 32 shortly after, and Galiffa went right to work, heaving to Foldberg on, the 3, from where Stephenson carried over with Mackmull converting to make it 14-7. In the final period, Cain went through his ; own 'right-tackle for 39 yards . giving Mackmull a chance to 'make it 21-7. Bob Abel- Man intercepted ''Rogel's, pass on the State 15, and Martin Stephen son, and Galiffa Tacked up the yardage for the . fourth TD, Ga liffa scoring. Mackmull succeeded again. 2a-7. ' Coach Earl Blaik's son, Bob ~,„ 11 uatilithing. All Types of Printing C9RnprcialPrinting Inc. -- Glerinlami Bldg., State College Alen's PAJAMAS the comfort name .is It's the patent-proti4teci idea that maker, Pleetway the , , "World's Most Coinfortable rajamas." Side. Tabs : . and Balloon Seat too—for comfort . where it counts.. ; $2. 95 uP Young Men's .S`hop ~, • 127 S. ALLEN • He's racing over - between classes to order his a . PENN STATE" - CLASS: RING • .. Balfour Office ih Athletic Store W , . M t- • A • Music • Requests • Chatter • Fun GROOVOLOGY 54 with "Prof." GEORGE KAHL 10 'HI 12 Sun. thru Thurs. wrote his name in the book with a 37-yard pass to Fischl for the next; Mackmull (oh, hum) made the point; and after Shaginaw's pass was intercepted by, Hal Schultz on the Army 49, the Ca dets marched for their last touch down, Herb Johnson going over after. Vic Pollock had scampered 34 yards to open the door; Mack mul converted again to make it the final 42-7. Army, with Bob Blaik passing, was on the mover again, down to the Lions' when the merciful timekeeper signaled the end of hostilities. All of which added up to Army's thirteenth win without a loss. The Cadets outcharged the Lions, 232 to 84, erasing the margin State held, 102 to 55, in the first half. Army also made 156 yards through the air. SLT OF FORMAL dress tails, two" vests, size 36-JB. Price $5.00.. Call 2859. 383 Ridge Ave. FOR SALE: SIZE 6 1 / C, AA Tipple Canoe loafers bought one week ago. Reduced, call 6440. 4 FOR SALE: . All Aluminum Spartan • • Trailercoach. Excellent .condition, see Jerry Byrem aftek 6 o'clock, Hoover's Trailer Park. FOR SALE: 1938 CLCSMOBILE 4. door sedan with radio, heater, defroster, 'seat covers. See it at 730 W. Foster Ave. or call State College 6680: TYPEWRIT . ER, AINDEEtWOOD, portable. excellent condition. Call 2706 between 5 and 10 p.m. 21 FT. ELCAR trailer. Excellent condi tion, sl4oo...lnquire at,1168 Windcrest.' 1224 F0RD,..2-door, excellent running con dition, radio and heater. 122 Windcreet. MAGNAVOX RADIO-phonograph in beau tiful light oak - cabinet. Two speakers. New record changer" pliys all sizes and speeds of records automatically. Only $295. Dial 2419. • • TRAILER FOR SALE. .1348 Sun 27. Ft. Excellent ' condition, like , ' new,, fully equipped. A rearbuy. dull Fred 2584. FOR SALE—',I. IC. , and E ' drawing set. Practically new.., Triangles .et.e., included: , Leo 4126. . . QUONSET HUT,•'furnished, 3 rooais,'bath All conveniences, six miles front campus Phone 7341 after 5:30 p.m. .25' HOWARD,' built-in baby . bed, inter-spring ma - tress,- excellent; con dition. $l2OO. Location "Hoover's, inquire 503 Windcrest. HARLEY DAVIDSON 74 DIM - 1947. 12,000 miles,' excellent condition.' /limit sell. 416 Watts dorm. Phone 5051 Ext. 787; See Archie Keenan.. LOOKING FOR A BARGAIN? Large trailer, excellent condition:- Extra room. Inquire 820-B Windciest. Immediate occu- PdncY•. _ .• " THAYER STROLLER. Also bicycle. Needs . paint • but •in good mechanical •eondition. . (Continued on page four) 1450 ON YOUR DIAL We're Back • Sixth Semester PAGE THREII CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE
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