TEIURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1950 Army Power Rests On Great ackfield if the loss of an All-American quarterback is enough to disorganize a football team, the much-heralded West Point Cadets gave no evidence of disruption in their 28-0 conquest of Colgate Saturday. Although an athlete with the rare qualities possessed by Arnold Galiffa, the field general of the 1949 undefeated Black Knights, is rare indeed, the Cadet attack, sparked by a bevy of mer cury footed backs, kept right on rolling. Replacing Galiffa in the Army scheme of things is young Bob Blaik, son of Coach Earl Blaik, Blaik No Graliffa While Blaik has received good press notices to .date, reports seem to indicate the 185-pound third-year man, is not another. Ga liffa. He can pass well, call the right plays, and run, but lacks the touch of genius that made Galiffa one of the outstanding ballplayers of the era. What the Cadets may lack, however, •at quarterback is more than amply made up for by one of the greatest backfields in col legiate ranks. Both in ability and depth Blaiks ballcarriers • are hard to top. Fullback Gil Ste phenson, and halfbacks " Frank Fischl and Jim Cain, the starting trio from last year, are all back and running better than ever. Vic Pollock, a sophomore, bids fair to develop into a, one-man gang. Against Colgate the reserve fullback galloped 47 and 94 yards for touchdowns. Other backs who can give any team in the nation a rough session are Al Pollard, Jack Martin, and. Gil Reich. A strong line, an outstanding WALLET PHOTOS 20 for $l.OO Perfect for apPlication w Friendship Photos. 2% ; ,:,...,,,, .--.,...;,,,, :,-.2% double weigh V.: ,- : ,} 4 , ..00' 1 prints on best quality ..,.;- - ~' silk finish Paper. Mail' ,:i:•V,... 10, your portrait NOW fors':' '':.g.; '',,. ;: prompt service. Any size i„.:,., : .• . ..; ..:• : .,A photo will make good ':':'::.'.',::/;. reproducti on s. Original ' •.;',t::..'-:'" returned unharmed,VZ .: ::?4 Please include 15c for 1,t .. ..::.-.. . .i , '. - Postage and handling. ' Satisfaction Guaranteed MAIL TO-DAY CO. P.O. Box 1112, Altoona, Pa. We Feature . . . . • SPAGHETTI AND MEATBALLS At Its BEST Every Thursday and Monday ' CAMPUS RESTAURANT GET YOUR TICKET TO The 1950 Community Forum SEE AND HEAR AT SCHWAB AUDITORIUM Ogden Nash —Oct. 13 Archduke Otto Nov. 14 Eric Johnston Jan. 18 Andre Maurois Feb. 13 Emily Kimbrough April 19 SEASON TICKETS $3, including tax Available now at the Student Union Desk. Old Main and at the Commerce Club, 108 W. College Ave. All seats reserved. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA pass catcher in end and Captain Dan Foldberg, a swift backfield, and the coaching genius of Blaik made the Cadets a tough oppo nent on any Fall afternoon, and Rip Engle and • crew can expect just that. gosh Open Early Wyoming Sera Penn State's .freshman football team will open their season a week ahead of schedule when they meet Wyoming Seminary at Kingston Saturday afternoon. The Wyoming gaMe was added to the schedule earlier in the week giving the f r osh a five game card. Coach Earl Bruce will take 35 men to Kingston to play Penn State's first freshman football game in 9 years. Lion Soccermen Face East's Best In the words of Coach Bill Jeffrey, "We have the makings of an excellent team." These area the words the veteran mentor I used during a recent meeting of his Nittany Lion soccermen. Just what an "excellent team"l is in the Scottish jargon of Jeff rey is not certain yet. but it is I enough to assume that his , twenty-fifth State team will be able to handle itself well enough ; to be highly favored over Buck nell at Lewisburg, Saturday. Ten games lie ahead during the next eight weeks, including ' the best that the East can offer. A major portion of the season. will be spent on the road. Buck nell, Navy, Gettysburg, North Carolina, West Chest e r, and Temple will all play host to, the co-champions of the nation dur ing the season. Four schools will 3end their teams to State College, ;ncluding: Western Maryland, Colgate, Syracuse, and the Uni versity of Maryland. Jeff starts this season with -.seven lettermen, of whom four are forwards, left wing Clarence Buss, inside left Ron Coleman. center forward Joe Lane, • and inside right Harry Little, captain and 1949 All-American selection. George Emig, a reserve, is the (Continued on page four) STATIONERY 111,44 For Men •.•;,-. as well as Women For 'Gifts as well as for Your Own Correspondence COME in and see the new shipment just received. You will be as anxious to • obtain this attractive writ ing paper, we know, as we were eager to get it for you. You'll have your choice of a wide variety of styles, sizes and shades of paper and envelopes, in an equal variety of pleasing boxes and at reasonable prices. At Our Stationery Department Griggs & Kreamer Opposite Old Main Yanks. E 2 (Continued from page one) Brown, 1. who has a .600 World Series batting average, lined a double to the • left field corner. Bauer sent a fly to deep center to move him to third and Brown crosse4 on Jerry Coleman's fly to left. Raschi had a no-hittei until the fifth inning. Then with one out, Willie Jones smacked a ground ball to center and after Gran Tlamner popped up, Andy Sem inick singled to left. But Mike Goliat struck out to kill the only chance the Whiz Kids had. It was the third straight year that the World Series had opened with a 1-0 game. In 1948, Johnny Sain set the pattern by pitching ihe Braves to a win over Bob Fel ler of Cleveland. Last year Allie Reynolds bested Brooklyn's Don Newcombe on Tommy Henrich's ninth inning homer. Reynolds, by the way, is sched uled to start for the Yanks this afternoon. The Phils are expected to start their ace righthander, Robin Roberts, who pitched them to the pennant last Sunday. 000 100 000-1 5 0 000 000 000-0 2 1 e w York ARROW PRODUCTS Featured at c 2,, ~> --r •• o 1-" ••‘-(5) Q ''i - k Y ci ..:..... ~..... . 0 . „A t • r W I ' , ‘,....... ..,1,...„ e- - 4 , ,,, -- at..(,_ 11'4',,,,,,,- --, ''4• tr \\....„.. ‘.N. ,, , ~,, 0,!'4 - ; t , . „. , 7 ---- ....-7,...<--Tv),!--N-1.*.i...t.v :<,t 4-'7.:2 - 4qtF:',': IL.;1- 1 ;:\ -- 4t . - - i" I'l.. i',,, -,:- t 11.- , ~--`..--.1- r- ,', 4,-ii ----Fl' ' -V1)21 .r, --if ii_4l,-,,,- li Xi! ,-:- t -t' . r . f44., , ,1 4,6"Y.4' '5,1-14',=-FI,N ) _\ hi.1i , ? , ..7---, f r It .4-• ..., ,N,... ~--,.... ~., t?'\.7., ) , ? i ' /// Arrow Sports Shirts For all-round campus wear . . . best choice is an Arrow. They're made to fit comfortably and to give you long rugged wear. Corduroys, gabardines, colorful checks and plaids . . all washable! See your Arrow dealer. > SHIRTS & TIES UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS IN STATE COLLEGE FOR ARROW young men's 127 s.al le n irlttrt tt Nighthawks, Lions Football Winners Alpha Chi Sigma defeated Al pha Gamma Rho 7-0, and Theta Chi swamped Delta Chi, 19-0 in fraternity intramural f o o t b all play last night. In the two inde pendent games, the Nighthawks were 1-0 victors over the Black sheep, and the Lions edged the Engineers by the same score. Tonight's schedule includes on ly two games. At 7 o'clock, Wats Sparkplugs meet the Marauders in an independent game, and at 7:30 Chi Phi opposes Delta Theta Sigma in a fraternity tussle. ONLY 97c A Full Ream of Loose-Leaf Notebook Paper. 480 Sheets. Lined. a t G. C. MURPHY 130 S. Allen Street sho PAGE THREE 6- i t , ~/ o $3.95 to $lO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers