SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1950 Nittcmy Lion Soccer Team Takes On Syracuse Today Jeffreymen Seek To Halt Win Skein Of Uneaten Toe By BUD FENTON A new and strange situation will confront the Lion soccermen today when they meet Syracuse at 2 o’clock on the Beaver soc cer field. This week it will be the duty of the Jeffreymen to break a streak instead of extend one— as the Orange come to State Col lege with a clean slate for the season. The once defeated Penn State team will attempt to end the three-game string of the vis itors. Coach Art Horrocks will i\ ..l what is touted as the best Syra cuse team since before the war. A double offensive threat in the Goekjian brothers, Sam and Greg, from Ethiopia, will have to, be stopped if the • Lions are to be successful in getting a new vic tory string under way. Buss—Offensive Ace Clarence Buss will provide the chief offensive weapons of the Staters. He will probably start at right wing, although he is also exp'ected to see action at center forward. Ron Coleman and Harry Little will perform the ball-handling duties in the anticipated assault on the Orange goal area. They wil play inside left and right re spectively. . Gus Bigott will be at left wing while Ed Smith gets the nod at the center post if Buss plays .wing. George Emig is expected to continue his steady play at the left halfback spot and will team with Kurt Klaus and Frank Foll mer on the halfback line. Klaus "and Fdllmer will start at the cen ter and right half slots. Jay Simmons will hold down the left fullback position and Bill Yerkes will work with him in front of the Lion goal which will be inhabited for 88 minutes by Ron Coder. Lions Favored- (Continued from page four) can be expected that the Lions •will be doing a little flinging, of their own. The West Virginia aerial screen has been punctured for an aver age of 146 yards per contest, while the Lions have limited their op ponents to 67:8 yards per game, to rank sixth in the nation in pass defense. Backfield Changes Lewis sent his charges through a brief workout on Beaver field yesterday afternoon and disclosed that he plans three changes'in his starting backfield. Allen will go at quarterback for Bartgep, Al Purello will spell Jimmy Corn well at one halfback post, and Bill Bryant will replace Len Bel las at fullback. Engle came up with one last minute change, announcing that Len Bartek would replace Tom Pevamik at left guard. Andy Si lock has been named to fill in for the injured Pat McPoland at defensive left end, while Engle was still undecided whether to start Con Brown or Dick Cripps at defensive right tackle. Manhattan, State \ (Continued from page four ) The Manhattan team that has dropped only one decision, a 27-28 defeat to Army, has improved considerably since the beginning of the campaign. The times turn ed in when the Kelly Green cross country team romped away from the other New York schools in the Met meet was by far the finest chalked up by the East ment crew. Bill Lucas’ winning time o: 26:01 was 58 seconds better than ' the time turned in by the-five State runners who tied for first place against N.Y.U., on the same Van Courtlandt park course. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Lion Soccer Stalwart ... Ronald Coleman Medlar Reviews Athletic Feats Amid the smell of wintergreen, perspiration, and the noise of the-whirlpool bath, Chuck Medlar reigns supreme over the athletic training room under the Beaver Field Stands Thirty-one now, and still look ing as if he could without too much’ trouble. Chuck gets that faraway look in his eyes when he talks of his days at State and his seasons with the Detroit Ti ger S’ farm teams. Chuck Medlar Charles “Chuck” Medlar, head trainer and assistant baseball coach, has been through the ath letic mill. Hte was an athlete in high school, prep school, college, and. a professional baseball play er/ He spent three years in the Navy and just when it seemed he was ready for the “Big Show,” found the old flipper ailing. The faraway look comes as he recites the list of stopping places on his tragically shortened pitch- Don’t rUk o P enn £ V J, don’t ogre® V J beHe ' d tfS P“' eh ‘ M * U.«ol «y» - vL' Lou Boudreau Released; AlLopez New Manager Lou Boudreau' was out and A 1 Lopez, ex-pilot of the Indiana polis Indians, was in as manager of the Cleveland Indians, Cleve land President Ellis Ryan an nounced yesterday. Lopez, 42, was a catcher in the National League for 18 years and played one year with the Indians before being named manager of the triple A club. He had held that position for the past three years. Arrangements are “nearing completion” for Boudreau, for nine years the Tribe’s playing [manager, to take another major I league managerial job. By GEORGE GLAZER Ing career. He started in AA ball with Beaumont in the Texas League, a Detroit Tiger farm. He moved up to Buffalo, in the triple-A International League, and then Uncle Sam beckoned. It happened on a ship, this ac cident that put an end to a career. Chuck fell on his arm and found that he couldn’t throw well. The ligaments neyer healed correctly, and even though he gave it an other try at Buffalo after the war, the mind was willing but the body wasn’t. Chuck was at State from 1938 to 1941. He played tackle under Bob Higgins, pitched for Joe Be denk,. and even played a little freshman basketball. He was a three-letter man in high school, and played ball at Pennington Prep before heading for the Nit tany Valley. ' Talk Of ‘New Era’ Recalls Old Teams By BUD FENTON Every fall football moves into the spotlight at Penn State and builds up into a fever pitch of enthusiasm as the weeks go by. This year it promises to hit an all-time high and the constant talk is about the “new system” and the “new era.” This preoccupatiipn with the “new” makes one think, what was the old? The “old” began in 1887, and football certainly was not the well organized sport it is now. The boys on the first Nittany Lion team were quite disappointed that year when the Dickinson game had to be cancelled. Why? The $4O guarantee could not be raised to give the Lions who were to make the trip. A year later, the Buck nell game had to be cancelled, even after the $2O guarantee (plus meals, of course) had been paid, In 1946, Chuck returned to the campus to complete school. A Phys Ed major, Chuck got his start with the arnica and heat corps in 1941, when he injured his knee. He helped Jack Hulme, then trainer, while recuperating. When Hulme died that Fall, Chuck took over as head train- (Continued on page eight) because the contest ended in a fight. There are some who say the Englemen were pushed around up at Army a short while ago. They should have been with the team long ago that was heroically hold ing the onrushing Columbia A. C. squad at the goal line. The home town Washington, D.C. fans, dis satisfied with the proceedings, rushed onto the field, pushed the ball-carrier over the line for a touchdown, and then went home, taking the team with them. ' Today the Lion squad is well equipped and deep in manpower. There is no danger of a recurrence of the 1889 Lehigh game which had to be played with nine men. Many “grandstand quarter backs” will wish for a turning back of time when they hear that it was not until sometime after 1900 that coaches were used. Pre viously, the team lineup was picked by aj:ommittee of students. Roses To Unemployment There was a Penn State team that went to the Rose Bowl in 1922, but things went on a slide after that. The next post-season in which State saw action was the Unemployment Fund game in 1931. (The record that year: 2 won and 8 lost). There were brighter days, of course, like the 1920 game when Lebanon Valley succumbed to the College by a 109-7 score. In those days they used to talk about the ’94 team that defeated Lafayette 72-0 and had seven schools re maining on the schedule that year immediately cancell its games. PAGE FIVE