PACE FOUR Predict Crowd Of 25,000 To Witness Lion-Temple Clash (Continued from page one) Otherwise the offensive platoon will remain unchanged. Engle, however, intends to stick with the defensive shifts he announced earlier in the week, with but one exception. Don Barney will go at defensive guard, spelling Don Millhouse in a last-minute change, but tackle Con Brown, line-back er Paul Anders, and halfback Owen Dougherty will all start. D o ugh e r t y, an inspirational leader as team captain, is the only man slated to see action on both platoons. Quarterback Vince 0' Bara, halfback Tony Orsini, and fullback Jim Pollard will team with the hustling Irishman in the backfield. John Smidansky and Art Betts, two accomplished pass catchers, will go at the flanks, while Ed Hoover and Chuck God lasky will start at tackle. Veteran Ken Bunn will be over the• ball at center. Engle, Owls Old Pals Penn State football coach Rip Engle is not a newcomer to the Temple Owls. Engle played against the Templars twice in• his undergraduate days at Blue Ridge College and Western Maryland. Engle was playing, for Blue Ridge in 1927 when=according to the record books—the tiny Maryland school absorbed a 110-0 loss. Two, years later, however, Engle blocked a punt to score a safety and intercept ed a lateral for a touchdown as the Green Terrors went on to a 23-0 victory. Defensively, the Lions will line up with ends Pat McPoland and Chuck Wilson, tackles Stew Scheetz, Brown, and Barney. Len Shephard, scheduled for some of fensive duty at quarterback, and Anders will back up, with Bob Pollard, Bill Leonard, George Ja cob, and Dougherty in the back field. Starts Second Year In his second year at the helm, Kawal has come up with a team far superior to the 1949 version of the Temple Owl which won five and lost four. Kawal has a spirited club, a team which has plenty of speed up the middle and around the ends, a team that charges fast and tackles hard. The Templars opened their season by dumping tiny Albright and then upset Syr acuse, 7-6, only to be upset 'by Rutgers, 26-20, in the final seconds of play. The Temple machine sputtered for three periods against harm less Wayne before the Owls, got rolling in the final stanza to gain a 26-0 victory last week. Bateman Offensive Star Temple's first-line T-flinger is Gaven White; a converted half back who is only a fair passer, but a good runner. Much of Tem ple!s offensive punch is centered around fullback Ed Bateman, whose running mates are half backs John Wuzzardo and Gene Caterina, a fleet-footed left-hand ed passer. o.a the line Kawal will prob ably start Al Kille and Bob Mc- Cracken, ends; Steve Timko and Capt. Andy Skladany, tackles; Ron Barbeck and John Edwards, guards; and Bob Daley, center. McCracken, Skladany, Daley, White and Caterina will see dou ble duty, playing defensively. End Sam McDowell, tackle Ted Zygmcnt, guards Hugh Boyd and Dale Reese, line backer George Heil, and halfback John Florence round out the defensive contin gent. Grandelius Steps High The late-arriving spectator to a Michigan State football prac tice hustled through the field gate just as a freshman gridder was leaving with a slightly re arranged nose. "What happened to you?" the sideliner asked. "Aw," the youngster muttered. "Sonny Grandelius (the varsity's piston-legged left halfback) sud denly discovered I was in his way. He's got the highest knees I ever saw?' in.r; VAIL X eL).l_, STATJ COLLEGE,' PENNSYLVP_NLet', Leads State Eleven • • Li.:iiZ':::RI1i:::1 ugherty Owen D 19 In A ROW . . . Soccermen Risk Victory String Against Colgate Bill Jeffrey's soccermen will carry a 19-game unbeaten string into competition when they en gage the Colgate Red Raiders this morning at 10 o'clock on the Bea ver Field baseball diamond. The Lions, co-champions of the nation in 1949, will be heavy fav orites to add the visitors to their log of victims. Four of the wins have' been recorded this 'year while the rest go back to the 1948 season. The latest report on Joe Lane, prolific scoring center forward, in dicates that he may not be able to play although there is a possi bility that he will be in uniform. Class of 1951 and 1952 You Owe It To Yourself To Have A Look At The Official Ring Of Penn State As Presented By Dieges & Clust See . See . See Bill Duffee Joe Skoff TKE Phone 4823 Phone 4444 Temple Ca pt ain • • . • • : . Andrew Skladany Lane, who holds the all-time scor ing record for one game on the strength of his seven-goal perfor mance against Bucknell early this year, has been sidelined with an ankle injury. Either Ed Smith or Gary Nugent, both sophomores, may get the assignment if Lane does not play. Captain Harry Little, 1949 All- American; will lead the team from his inside right position. Ro n Coleman will play inside left, and Clarence Buss, second to Lane in scoring, will be at left wing. Gus Bigott, an All-American in 1938, will perform at right wing. (Continued on page five) National Interest Centers On Lion, Mich. St. Clash, Meet Rated As ioss•Up Coach Chick Werner sends his cross country team out today in quest of its third straight dual meet victory against a power-laden Michigan State squad. In a match rated as a toss-up, two of the top harrier con tingents in the nation will meet for early supremacy of the ;port. Coach Karl Schlademan's Spartans, paced by two of the nation's outstanding mara thoners, Warren Dreutzler and Don Makielski, will be the first stiff opposition Werner's harriers have encountered this year. Nittany Veterans A veteran group of State thin dads consisting of Bill and Don Ashenfelter, Al Porto, Dudley Foster, Bob Freebairn, Bob Par sons, Jack St. Clair, and Bill Gordon will toe the starting line against the Spartans. Dreutzler, probably .the nation's outstanding collegiate long dis tance runner, • and his running mate Don Makielski will be the feature runners of a revamped Spartan team. - - - - Schlademan's charges, last year's NCAA titilists and winners of the triple crown of cross coun try in 1948 by capturing the NCAA, senior AUU, and IC4-A crowns, will still field a formid able array. Mack, Dianetti. Gone. Gone from the championthip teams are Bill Mack, Jack Dianet ti, Clark Atcheson, Bob Sewell. and Red Maloney. Replacing this crew of stars is a new group of Wecome Ale tunnt • . . . 24 years col dervice ' the CORNER unusual You'll bowl 'au over, too—if you use your head—and "Live Action" Vitalis care. Here's the scoop—give your. noggin that famous "60-Second Workout." 50 seconds' scalp massage (feel the difference!) ... 10 seconds to comb (and will the gals see the dif ference!). Youtg look neat and natural. Bye-bye loose - flaky dan druff and dryness, too. So get hep.to Vitalis—see the man at the drug store or barber shop pronto. . OA AAICES : 1" ; °11# Wa i n and the • s' "60-Second Workout" A PRODUCT OP IRISTOL•MYSMS SATURDAY; OCTOBER, 28, 1950 Set For dig Test . . . Don Ashenfelter harriers who have alre a d y brought• the Spartan name into foreground of the thinclad sport with easy victories over Ohio State and Purdue. (Continued on page five) ::^Jn' d ; ''S u
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