PAGE FOUR Nittany Booters Win Lane, Coleman Pace Attack As Lions Outclass Bucknell The Blue and White soccer Lions blended sharp offensive ma neuvering with a five-goal scoring barrage in their weekend en counter with Bucknell to annex their second consecutive win of the current season. At the same time the 5-0 trouncing enabled the Jeffreymen to run their unbeaten skein to nine over the past two seasons. Not since Navy turned the tables on the Lions last season have they dropped an outing. Although Joe Lane, the Balti more flash, stole into the scoring limelight by tallying twice, it was a scrappy Missourian, Ron Cole man who really deserves the Lion’s share of the glory for the lopsided win over the visitors. ALERT PLAY Coleman, a soccer veteran of many high school campaigns, by his alert downfield play and sharp passing ably assisted both Lane .?nd Ted Lieb in finding the scor ing zone. The tussle was just four min utes old when Penn State scored, with diminutive Harry Little sending one through the net on a penalty kick. Although, as. it later turned out, that one point was enough for the margin of victory. Lieb fol lowed through with the second goal. TWO APIECE Thus by scoring, both Little and Lieb ran their total to two for the season. Little was runner up in scorign last season. After a scoreless second canto which saw the Lions’ all- America duet, Ralph Hosterman ' and Dick Hannah, in the midst of ' action on numerous occasions, the Nittanies came back strong in the period after the half. Play concentrated mostly in the Bucknell half of the field in that third quarter and when one of the Bison players committed a foul, Hosterman sent the penalty boot past Bucknell’s goalie Dick Freed. RESERVES Coach Jeffrey, then poured all available reserve power into the fracas to give the boys on the bench the much-needed experi ence for the future. Teaming up' with the second stringers, Lane went on a scoring spree in the final quarter by blitz ing two past the Bison goalie to easily wrap up the victory. Hoping to make it three straight and ten without a loss, the Lions Double Winner During the summer of 1940 Barney Ewell, former Penn State track star, who gained world wide fame in the ’4B Olympics, won both 100 and 220-yard inter collegiate titles. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Adds Another Win Bil Jeffrey now are pointing for their Satur day road-encounter against Syra cuse. Summary Pos. , Buckncil G Freed RF Fuller LF Child RH Shoener CH Jaclcaon LH Brooks OR Strasstier 1R Raynor' C Machamer IL Biedolf TL Biedolf f Score by periods Bucknell 0 0 0 o—o Penn State 2 0 1 2—5 Scoring:: Penn State—Little* Leib, Hos> terman, Lane 2. Substitutions: Penn State— : Buznd, Yeag* ley, Coder, Lmvroski, Kurty, Spurling, Bucknell—Sloat, Rousch, Mfinning, Kerr, Ramer. Officials: Herman, Spealer. Gym Managers Candidates for assistant mana gerial posts on the gymnastics team are asked to report to Bob Anderson, head manager, in the gym at 4 p.m. today. Men's Suits The prices of the 1934 fall suits 'was sky-high. Two pants suits were selling for as much as $22.50. 9th, Trip Bisons 5-0 Twelve Fraternity Teams Meet First IM Touch Football Tests Victories by Phi Sigma Kappa, Phi Kappa Sigma, Delta Theta Sigma, and Delta Upsilon.on Friday night brought to 12 the number of teams to survive the first round of fraternity intramural football. Phi Epsilon Pi, touch football winner for the past two years, eeked out a 6-0 decision over Theta Kappa Phi Thursday night, while Zeta Beta Tau blanked Triangle 13-0, Phi Gamma Delta shut out Phi Kappa Tau, 12-0, and Alpha Epsilon Pi went overtime to squeeze by Sigma Phi Alpha, 1-0. A touchdown and conversion in the final two minutes of play en abled Delta Theta Sigma to edge out Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 7-6, for a dramatic finish to one of the closest games of the season. Rodger Madigan scored the ty 4 1 Lion Defense Falling Down Penn Sate’s pet boast about its football team, superiority in de fense against rushing, is out the window this year, at least tem porarily. Lion opponents, in three games to date, have made their way through the State line for 580 yards in 137 tries, and an average of 193.3 per game. Against three of the best pass ers in the country, Steve Roma nick of Villanova, Arnold Galiffa of Army and Ed Songin of Bos ton College the Lions have given up a total of 350 yards through the air. Opponents threw 55 passes, completed 21, for a 38 per cent completion record and a 116.6 average per game. Penn State Lawthet Yerkes Margolf Kraybill Hosterman TOTAL DEFENSE State’s total defense has allow ed 310 yards per game on the average. Hannah Leib Coleman Lnine Little Little . Offensively, the Lions rolled for a total of 615 yards in three games, or 205 average per game. Of the total yardage gained, rush ing accounted for 393 yards and passing, with 15 completions in 36 tries, for 222 yards. Fullback Fran Rogel, with 159 yards rushing and a total offense mark of 201 yards, leads his team mates in yards gained. Rogel, in the three contests, plunged for ah average of 3.3 yards per try. Owen Dougherty leads the aver age-per-try parade, having made 5.1 yards each time he carried the ball. Bill Luther’s seven completed aerials have accounted for 77 yards and Vince O’Bara’s _ five have rolled up 97. John Smidan sky leads the receivers with three catches for 66 yards. Penn State has fumbled ten times, recovering seven; the op position, bobbled seven times, re covering only one of their own fumbles. ROGEL ing six-pointer, racing across with a Ray Ard pass which some times was in possession of Dave Conover. The play covered 40 yards. Conover converted the ex tra point and margin of victory, taking a pass from Gordon Walk er. -A 40-yard aerial from Jack Walker to Charley Gerdees re sulted in Sigma Alpha Epsilon’s lone score early in the first period. Two long runs by Ned Han kins, former West Philadelphia Scatback, paced Delta Upsilon to a 20-0 rout of Alpha Sigma Phi. Hankins streaked 45 yards for the first. score and 55 yards for the final counter. Rusty Lieb account ed for the final tally, taking a 25- yard pass from Don Parish. ROY AND ROTH Jack Roy and Jerry Roth team ed up to account for both of Phi Sigma. Kappa’s touchdowns in a 13r0 conquest of Delta Chi. Roth was on the end of a Roy-sponsor ed 20-yard toss' on the first play of the game; and raced another 30 yards for the score. Late in the final stanza Roy found the range again and connected with Roth on the five, from where the latter went over. , Otto Grupp tallied the lone score in Phi Kappa Sigma’s 7-0 win over Alpha Phi Delta. Grupp took a second half 30-yard throw from Jim Davis and raced 20 yards for the score. • A touchdown by Murray Ruset sky in the-final minutes of play provided Phi Ep with its margin of victory. Held scoreless for all but the last two minutes Phi Ep, which is seeking the title for the third straight year, drove down the field as the.clock rah out. Rosetsky rushed the ball over from the two-yard line after a long pass play set up the score. In tonight’s fraternity competi tion Pi Kappa Alpha faces Delta Tau Delta at 7 p.m., Tau Kappa Epsilon meets Kappa Sigma at 7:45, while the independent side of the schedule calls for the Jets to line up against Dorm 14 at 8:30 and the Coal Crackers and Dorm 1 to square off in the finale at 9:15.. Gloom Pervades Yogis, Flatbush Gloom in the Collegian sports office was comparable to the sor row at Flatbush. At Brooklyn the wrong team won while in Other spots all over the nation the wrong teams also won, as Colleg ian yogis found the weekend pickin’s mighty slim. Sports editor Elliot Krane came through with three right out of eight, for the week’s weakest ef fort. Bob Kotzbauer and George Va dasz both played it safe and emerged with an even .500 mark with four wrong and the same number right. Koehler real ly hit the skies with five right predictions. Vqdasz continues, for the third week, to lead the local prognosti cators with a not-so-hot .690 aver age. This week Total Pet. Vadasz 4-4 20- 9 .690 Koehler 5-3 19-10 .655 Kotzbauer 4-4 18-11 .621 Krane 3-5 15-14 .517 .He's racing over between classes to order his PENN STATE CLASS RING Balfour Office itr Athletic Store TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1949 Lion Harriers < Eye NYU Team For First Meet Coach Chick Werner today ‘ named seven .veterans as possible starters when the Penn State? Cross Country team opens its sea son Saturday against N.Y.U. atC New Beaver Field. The group is headed by Captain ) Bob Parsons and includes Bill Ashenfelter, Don Ashenfelter,. John St. Clair, Bob Freebairn, John McCall and A 1 Porto. In ad- .i dition to these men, Coach Wern er chose Bill Gordon, Bob David- 1 son and Dudley Foster to start if he decides to send a ten man. team against the New Yorkers. FIVE MILE RUN i The meet will begin at 2:15 p.m. Saturday on the New Beaver ,i Field Track in front of the stands. The course covers five miles. Hor- ( ace Ashenfelter, star of last year's team, set the course record last season, traveling ( the distance in 25 minutes and 3.2 seconds. In N.Y.U., the Lions face a team coached by one of the ablest men tors in collegiate circles. Coach Emil Von Elling has turned out winning teams for many years and was selected as one of the coaches of the American Olympic team last year. Last year’s meet between the two teams resulted in a victory for the forces of' Coaches Werner and Norm Gordon by a score of 19 to 36. The Lions this year will miss the services of several standouts of last seasons team. Gone -are Mitch Williams and Bob Longe necker in addition to Asheiifelter, all of whom have graduated. LAST YEAR This year’s Harriers will .have to go some to match the record hung up by the team last season. Th 4 Blue and White squad last season captured second place in the NC4A meet and fourth in the NCAA meet, meeting top com petition in both contests. In 1 addi tion they were victorious in two of their three dual meets and in the other, lost only to ,k ! great Michigan State team. Pitt Maintains Clean Slate Penn State’s traditional rival,. Pittsburgh’s Panther,, continued as the Lion's only undefeated fu ture rival in Saturday’s football clashes. Pitt spanked West' 1 Vir ginia, 20-7. Nebraska, Michigan State and Temple also worn Lion future rivals in caps: * ’ NEBRASKA 13, Kansas State 6 MICHIGAN ST. 14, Maryland-7 TEMPLE 20, - SYRACUSE. .14 PITT 20, WEST VIRGINIA 7 Records to date: Nebraska Michigan State Syracuse West Virginia Temple Pitt Med School Tests The Association of American Medical Colleges announces that it will give medical college ad mission .tests Sat. Oct. 22, from 9 a.m. to .noon,' and 2 to 5 p.m. All applicants must register before Oct. 8 in 210 Buckhout Labora tory at the above hours. Lie Detector •As early as 1934, the lie detec tor found use at Northwestern University, in questioning stu dents who failed to return books to the library. Won -Lost 2 1 2-v - 1 ' 1, :• •'• •-2 2 • 2 2 1 3 0 12 -7