The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 29, 1951, Image 1

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Lions Meet
. -By ERNIE 1 MOORE
Penn: State will open- its -1951 football sea
son Xoday on Beaver Field when the Nittany ;
Lions meet Boston University. - Kickoff time
is 2 p.m. - r ' ! f -
An opening day crowd of 15,000 is expected.to
.witness the first meeting between the two.
schools. Included in the crowd .will be President
Milton S. Eisenhower and his v party,, who will
occupy seats irTthe senior section—instead of in
the- President’s boxatop..Beaver Field. The
President and his party 1 will sit in row V (for
victory), section EG. , - . '
• The game will also mark the. retum of women
cheerleaders. It-will be the first time since 1947
that women have been represented.on the. Pdnn
State cheerleading squad - .' .
WMAJ will'air the game. Chuck Thompson
will do the r playrby-play description. . '
Rip Engle; who will be starting his second
season as coach of the Nittany Lions, announced
that “the team is up, the spirit is. good.” .
In his first season as coach, Engle led the
Lions to a. respectable five wins, three losses,
one tie record.
In Boston University, thev Lions will be up
Your Own
Respbnsi bi lity—
See Page 4
YOL. 52, No. 13
Coed Killed while
Ph Hayride Party
Corrnhe Joyce Kappes, 19-year-old,Liberal Arts junior, was ac
cidentally killed last,night when she slipped off a hayride tractor
on the Pine Grove Mills road, two-and-one-half miles west of State
College. ...
Kappesi. a member of a'party of abbut 30 cojiples, was pro:
nounced dead' at the Bellefonte
Hospital at 11:15 p.m. ' Dr.' E. H.
Adams, surgeon at the hospital,
said Miss Kappes died of internal
injuries
Slipped from Wagon ~
David Timothy, president of
Delta Tau Delta, which > id
the affair, --said-K^?/
Miss Kappes had
moved up front Warn
to the tract o r Hr
which was pull- HF
ing vthe wagon. Hw
. Timothy, said Jw
she. steered the tg
tractor for a W
while and then f
to re- '
turn to the wag-'
on.
While moving - T „■
-from the tractor Kappes
•ior/the wagon, Timothy said, Miss
Kappes slipped and fell beneath
the left front wheel of the wagon.
Oh Dirt Road
At the time that Miss Kappes
i, 1 slipped- from the wagon it was
traveling over a,bumpy dirt road.
Miss Kappes lost consciousness
; for several minutes, then regain
ed it. She was rushed to the hos
, pital by ambulance and died .there
> approximately 30 minutes after
arriving. • , >
John H. Weber, Centre- County
fi' deputy coroner, said last night
that;-an autopsy would be per-:
= 1 formed today. He said the body
had been reihovedi to the Wetz
!, ler funeral home, Milesburg, to
; await the arrival of the girl’s par
/ ents.
• Miss Kappes was the only
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. R.
315 Bth street, Oakmont.
I She was a member of Kappa Kap
< Gamma sorority.
'1 u— e was accom Panied on the
' ; hayride by John Carney, a junior
(in Liberal Arts. >
3% 3atUj ® (EoUegtatt
By MARY KRASNANSKY
8500 Attend
Year's FJrst
Pep RaHy
A crowd of over 3500 -packed
the grounds in front of Recrea
tion-Hall last night to cheer and
listen to • the jokes of Patricia
Marsteller and pep talks by Pres
ldent Milton S. Eisenhower,. All-
College President James Worth,
an£ head football Coach “Rip”
Engle. It was the first rally of the
year, prior to today’s game with
Boston University.
The Kickoff Dance attended by
over 1500, began promptly after
the rally at 5 p.m. with Jack
Huber and bis orchestra playing.
Proceeds of the dance will go to
the Campus Chest.
Prexy Speaks
Miss Marsteller, introduced to
the crowd by Howard Wright, a
cheerleader, was 1 carried to the
Recreation Hall steps wearing a
Penn State football outfit bearing
-the numbers 33—the number of
(Continued on page eight)
Sachs Draws
Weather Lion
.The lions depicting the Weather
featured on the front page of to
day’s Daily Collegian were drawn
by, Walter ,Sachs, fifth semester
Liberal Arts student.
.. “I’m one of the people who
can’t read the weather flags, so I
made, these,” Sachs said as he
pointed to the two dozen sketches
of‘the Nittaiiy Lion in various
kinds of weather. The Liberal
Arts student said he got the ideas
for-.. the ...drawings, from several
campus.characters.'
Called Skip by most of , his
Penn State acquaintances, Sachs
drives around campus. in . a yel
low MG; He is working for a cen
tral promotion', agency. and is
handling promotion for the Cam
pus Chest.
.The 21-year-old junior says he
:hiade”his;. first pen-and-ink draw
ing,,’ini ..a ninth grade .Latin
. class.”:-'-
Looking into the Future
... looiball Coach Rip Engle.
flanked by Co-captains Art Betts, left, and .Lea Shephard look into'
the future. Wfoal;' they are' pondering is just anybody's guess.
STATE COLLEGE, SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 29, 1951
By 808 FRASER
FOR A BETTER PENN STATE
Frosh, Black Hats
Lead Pep Parade
Fla
■= —Collegian photo by McNeillie
THE NITTANY Lion hugs TPrexy" Eisenhower in front of Rec
reation Hall during last (night's pep rally. Over 3500 attended the
rally, the season's first. \
Froth's M issing Canoe
Returned at Dance
The long-lost Froth canoe, for which Ronald Bonn, Froth editor,
fought, swore, sleuthed, and sweat/ was returned last night at the
Kickoff. Dance by Marvin Krasnansky, Daily Collegian editor, and
George Glazer,'city, editor.
Krasnansky, who presented the vessel to Bonn, claimed the $25
check , that . William Klis'ariin,'
Campus Chest chairman, had put
up for reward. He promptly do
nated it to the Chest fund. '
Shouts of “fix” echoed through
Recreation Hall after the presen
tation. . Some onlookers talked , : of
■a.;‘‘staged”, .promotion stunt, for
Froth.' Bufthe truth is that there
is a canoe race which will be a
part of the Flaming Foliage Fes
tival next Saturday on the Sus
quehanna 1 river. ...
Former Student
A former student at the Col
lege, Robert Kotzbauer, will rep-
resent the Lock Haven Express in
the race. He and an associate
have challenged the Williamsport
Gazette and Bulletin.
More than 30 other ■ boat crews
from all over the state will com
pete. .
Bonn, who had appeared before
All-College Cabinet in a futile at
tempt to recover the canoe Thurs
day, has made .various and sundry
statements—most of them un
printable—but he was all smiles
when he learned of the where
- (Continued cm,, page eight)
Today
against a team that already has played (me
game. The Terriers, coached by Aldo “Buff*
Donelli, were defeated by William & Mary last
Saturday, 34-25.
Led by its ace passer and quarterback,
Harry “The Golden Greek” Agganis, whom
Lion coaches regard as one of the best passers
in the country, comparing him with Kentucky’s
Babe Parelli, BU is expected to display a sharp
passing attack against Penn State this afternoon.
The Lions, usually a good pass defense team
(they finished seventh in the nation in that de
partment last year), have been working to im
prove their aerial defense all week.
The biggest, question Penn State fans were
forced to face was, “Whom will Hip Engle start
at quarterback, Tony Rados or Bob Szajna?”
Rip has finally decided on sophomore Bob Szaj
na to lead the Lion against Boston University
this afternoon. Szajna made a good showing
agaijnst Cornell in a scrimmage last week and
has won Engle’s vote for the starting job.
Starting Lineup
The Lions’ offensive team will remain about
the same as the one which has been starting in
zr (Continued on page six)
By JIM GROMILLER
and DAVE JONES
Several hundred cheering
freshmen, led by the Blue
Band and over 100 hatmen,
formed the nucleus of last
night’s pep rally paradfe that
wound up in front of Recrea
tion Hall.
Upperclassmen and women
joined the parade as it moved
over the campus. The rally be
gan in the men’s dorm areas at
about -7 p.m. .
Hatmen invaded the West
Dorm area shouting “We want
the frosh” in an attempt to get
freshmen out of their rooms to
join in the rally parade.
Cheer Before McKee
. When'' the hatmen m e't with
little success in routing out the
frosh, many freshmen, them
selves, went 'into the dorms, to
bring their classmates out.
Directed by three cheerleaders,
the frosh and hatmen formed in
front of McKee Hall singing and
cheering. Hatmen tried to prod
freshmen from their rooms by
shouting for them to show the
school spirit they were always
talking about
A group of freshman women
joined the cheering students as
they passed Thompson Hall and
went down the west side of the
Mall to College Avenue where
they moved singing down the
middle of the street.
Barrage Meets Hatmen
Hatmen-.who attacked the Nit
tany-Pollock area also found the
frosh reluctant to participate in
the parade.
As the hatmen tried to arouse
the frosh from their ‘dorms they
were met with a barrage of eggs,
oranges and apples. In many
dorms the freshmen barricaded
doorways with furniture from
the' lounges. ,
Outside of Nittany dorm 23, a
student with an Army bugle ap
peared and played Penn State
songs in an attempt to arouse the
freshmen.' Hatmen yelled at frosh
not to let the West Dorms get
ahead of them.
Coeds Join Parade
The frosh were finally brought
out of dorm 23, and that group
formed the center of a throng
that marched through Pollock
Circle and stopped to call out
I“ e „, women fr om Simmons and
McElwam Halls.
With' numerous coeds joining
the parade, the crowd moved
, (Continued on page eight)
Beat
Boston
U!
PRICE FIVE CENTS