Between the Lions Mother Nature is tough to beat. If you don’t believe so justask Pete Sarantopoulos, Chick Werner’s 31-year old harrier. Pete, a senior, had finally reached his peak condition for Saturday’s meet with Pitt, but once again' was knocked out of the meet with a pulled ligament in his leg., Pete’s dogged determination to make gbod made Saturday’s injury even toughgr than usual, i For Pete, who had made' a re markable comeback after a de layed absence from running com petition, had strived for three years to do what he was doing at the beginning of the meet. After" the two-mile mark he was right up among the leaders and was a good bet for one of the top positions. Coach Chick Werner and his assistant No - garded Pete ■ One of their ti candidates for Stale scoring pi silion Salurd; because of h: excellent' com tion- For Sara) topoulos realize that he had lw< strikes again; him and had summer. This ing pul him ahead of most of the squad and made him a likely scorer for the Lions in their early meets. Pete earned a letter last year, and did it the hard way. He was one of the hardest-and most sin cere workers on the team. Against Michigan State he injured his leg, but continued funning de spite the pain. This injury both ered him throughout the season and kept him sidelined for most of the meeits. If fhe injury isn't too serious, Pete will be back, romping over the hill and vales of the Col lege's golf course, struggling to regain the superb condition he had reached. His absence would be sorely missed since this fall's team lacks the depth of 1950's harriers. Every top man will be needed if the Lions are to approach their '5O record as IC4A and NCAA cross-country champions. * * * * In the first week of multiple varsity athletic competition Penn State managed to win two of three events. While the football team lost to Villanova the cross country and soccer teams were victorious. This week it will be tough to repeat that 2-1 record. The gridders meet a tough foe in Nebraska and All-American Bobby Reynolds; Bill Jeffrey’s booters exchange kicks with Ar my’s top-flight soecermen, and Chick Werner’s hill-and-dalers match strides with Cornell. Yanks Win - (Continued from page one) chomping reliefer, to fill the sacks and bring Casey Stengel shooting from the dugout as though he had been stung. In came Kuzava, a portsider, to pitch to Monte Irvin, most dan gerous man in the Giants’ lineup. Monte needed only one more safety to equal the World Series record of 12.' But all Monte had in his system this time was a long fly to left on- which Stanky raced home and. Dark made third. Bobby Thomson then skied an other one to left.to bring in Dark and electrify the great crowd. Yvars came in from* the bullpen to take the biggest lick any Giant had had at;.a. ball all year. He didn’t whit. He laid into the first is all over. New York (A) Ab R H Rlzzuto.ss- 4 0 1 Coleman,2b 4 11 Berra,c 4 1, 2 DiMaggio, cf 2 11 McDoug’d,3b 4 0 0 Mize.lb ' 2 11 Collins,lb ,10 0 pitch, and it;.wa New- York (N) : - Ab R H Stanky ,2b5 11 Dark,ss „ '3 .1 1 Lockmariylb '5 0 3 Irvin,lf •« , A\ 0 0 Thomson,3b 4 1 Thompson.rf 3 0-1 c-Yvars i 0 0 Bauer,rf,m 3 ’6 1 Woodling,lf 3 0 0 Raschi,p 10 0 Sain,p 1 0 0 Kuzava,p 0 0 0 Westrum.c 3 0 1 b-Williaras 0 0 0 Jansen,p 0 0 0 Mays,cf 3 12 Koslo,p 2 0 0 a-Rigney . 10 1 Hearn,p 0 0 0 Noble.c .10 0 Totals 35. 311 Totals 29 4 7 A—singled for Koslo in 7th B—ran for Westriim in Bth C—flied out for Thompson in 9th New York (N) 000 010 002—3 New' York (A)' 100 s 003 OOx—4 ■ E-7-Thompson, -SRBI —McDougald, Stanky, Bauer 3, Irvin, Thomson. 2B—Lockman, Berra, DiMaggio. 3B Rizzuto and Mize 2; Rizzuto, Coleman,' and Mite; Dark, Stanky, and- Lockman. Left—New York (N) 12; 'New York (A) 5. BB—Koslo 4 By DAVE COLTON Assistant Sports Editor Shattuck, Shopa Place Among Pa. Scorers Ted Shattuck, Penn State halfback and Pete Shopa, Lion fullback, placed among the lead ers of the collegiate football scorers in Pennsylvania. 1 Shattuck placed seventh with 24 points. He scored three, touch downs against Boston University and one against Villanova..' ✓ Shopa is deadlocked with 11 other players for twelfth place. Pete has scored 18 points, getting two touchdowns against BU and one against- Villanova. Ed Romanowski of Scranton is on top with 44 points. He ■ has played three games._ Bob Haner, Villanova fullback, is sixth with 23 points and his teammate Ben Addiego is tied for twelfth place with 18 points. 7 Men Advance In IM Tennis Six more fraternity men have advanced to the third round of the 1951 fraternity tennis singles of the IM tourney while one Independent moved up. Charles Crispens, Sigma Phi Alpha, after dropping the. first set, rallied to win from Omega Psi Phi’s Cook, 5-7, 6-2, 6-4. Nich olas Casale, Phi Delta Theta, took straight sets from Jack Brown, Beta Theta Pi, 6-4, 6-2, as did Kappa Sigma’s Dick Allio from William D’Zurko, Sigma Phi Al pha, 6-0, 6-2. Another straight set win found William Shoot, Phi Gamma Del ta, dumping McHenry, Delta The ta Sigma, 6-4, 6-I.''Dick Hoch reiter, Phi Kappa, lost to Samuel Engle, Alpha Chi Sigma, in two sets, 6-2, 6-4. In the first bracket Michael Kirshner, Sigma Nu, won by forfeit from Alpha Phi Delta’s Tony Grimaldi. Independent first round play found M. Unger win ning over Weston Thomlinson; 6-0, 6-3. (DiMaggio 2, Raschi, Mize); Raschi 5 (Westrura, Dark 2, Irvin, Thomson) ; Sain 2 (Thompson, Mays) ; SO —Raschi 1 (Dark); Sain 2 (Dark, Noble); Koslo 3 (Raschi, Bauer, Coleman). HO—Koslo 5 in 6 innings; Hearn 1 in 1; Jansen 1 in 1. Raschi 7 in 6 (none out in 7th) ; Sain 4in 2 (none out in 9th); Kuzava 0 in 1. WP—Koslo. PB—Berra. Winner—Raschi; Loser—Koslo. V —Lee 1 Ballanfant (NL) home plate; Joe Paparella (AL) first base; A 1 Barlick (NL) second base; Bill Summers (AL) third base; Art Gore (NL) left field foul line; John Stevens (AL) right field foul line. T—2:59. A— -61,711 (paid). Receipts—s3o3,926.lo. Last of Brothers Bill Ashenfelter, last of the fabulous Perm State distance run ners, closes out his career in cross-country this fall. Tipi 0! $7.95 Young Men's Shop STATjE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA "> AP Writer Picks Lions To Win PHILADELPHIA. Oct. 10— (JP) —Things are getting tough all over and the football competition is no exception. There are 36 games on tap for Pennsylvania collegiate football teams this weekend and even the coin stands on end trying to pick some of them. Well, here goes a .650 ave rage with a punt, pass, and prayer: Penn State at Nebraska Certain' people at Penn Stale will be happy to learn they're going to win this week—Penn State. Albright at Temple—Unbeaten Albright to feel the pain of losing —Temple. Villanova at Alabama Art Raimo thinks he has a great team. Who wants to argue?—Villanova. Princeton at -Penn—Princeton by a field goal. lowa Over Pitt Pitt at. lowa Captain Tom Hamilton’s a nice guy, but lowa apparently, has a stronger foot ball team —lowa. Bucknell at Kent State The thundering herd keeps thunder ing—Bucknell. Muhlenberg at Lafayette—Clip per’s boys have ben mixing in rougher company—Lafayette. Lehigh at Gettysburg The batlefield boys surprised last week, but not this week—Lehigh. Akron Over Tech Carnegie Tech at Akron—heads, tails—its Akron. PMC at Delaware —West Ches ter beat PMC and Delaware beat West Chester. Why wait for a. hit in the head?—Delaware. Hurying around the circuit it’s Scranton to remain unbeated, un tied and unscored on by taking St. Francis, Ursinus over'Dickid sop, Allegheny over Juniata, Western Maryland over Franklin and Marshall, Bloomsburg over Millersville, Wagner over Swarth more, Lincoln over Virginia Union, East .Stroudsburg over Shippensburg, Moravian over Hof stra, Lebanon Valley to take Up sala, Thiel over Clarion, Mans field to beat Brockport, Hiram over Grove, City, Trenton State Teachers to whip National Aggies, Washington and Jefferson over Geneva, Westminster over Beth any, Indiana over Edinboro, West Chester over Lock Haven, Muskingum to beat Slippery Rock, California to beat Concofd, Haverford over Randolph-Macori, Kutztown to beat Montclair. On Sunday look for St. Vincent to beat Kings. World Series Facts and Figures By The ASSOCIATED PRESS Attendance —61,711 Receipts—s3o3,926.lo Commissioner’s 5hare—545,588.92 Clubs’ and League’s share—s2sB,- 337.18. Six Game Total: Attendance—34l,977 Receipt 5—51,633,457.47 Players’ Share (first four games] —5560,562.37 Commissioner’s Share—s24s,olB.- 63. Clubs’ and Leagues’ Share —$827,- 876.47. Bagoonies, Edinboro, DU Win IM Grid Contests By GEORGE BAIREY A sharp Bagoonie squad took full advantage of one break and made another, to beat the Buckeyes, 13-0, in a second round in dependent grid game last night at the IM field. • The Bagoonies came up with a trio of smooth ball handlers who collaborated for the first tally midway in the initial half. Mickey Herzing gathered in a Buckeye punt on the 43 yard line, flipped to Tom Ceraso who in turn found Bob Sutter alone in the end zone for the TD. The final j Bagoonie score materialized when Wayne Ruppert fell on a loose ball in the Buckeye end zone. Ceraso hit Herzing for the thir teenth point. DU Wins In a tense battle of defenses, Delta Upsilon advanced to the third round of the fraternity grid tourney by eliminating The ta Xi, 1-0, in overtime. The winning play came on a 44 yard sleeper pass on the fourth play of the six-play overtime series from,. DU’s Neil Diehl to Charles Robb. Edinboro Romps Edinboro never eased the pres sure in the first half and scored an easy 27-0 win over the Jerks in the third game of the night. Almost able to score at will, Edinboro counted on a 6 yard, Dick Benyon to- Fred Mueller aerial, a long looping 52 yarder, from Harry Meabon to Bill Mi halich, and a 6 yard spurt of an interception by Mueller, all in' the first half, good for 21 points. The under-m a n n e d Edinboro team mustered up their final touchdown, this one, Benyon to Ed Brown good for 21 yards mid way through the game. The Jerks, although they outnumbered their opponents nine to eight, were no match for the defending IM bas ketball champs. r ATO Wins The second fraternity game of the evening, found Alpha Tau Omega outgunning Chi Phi, 12-0, on' two first half markers. A 75 yard march in two plays, cli maxed by John McCall’s lateral to Donald Vosel who fired a 46 yard beauty into the waiting arms of Louis Gomlick in the end zone, gave the ATO’s their first. The second and final score followed shortly when Paul Ste f anic snared a Chi Phi pass on the 18. On the next play Srtefjanic threw to Jack Groves for the touchdown. ATO threatened continually in the last half, but were stymied each time inside the Chi Phi 20 yard line. In Tuesday night’s final con test, Dorm 8 edged Atherton Hall, 6-0. Tongue Twister Penn State’s sophomore quar terback, Bob Szajna, of Reading, Pa., pronounces Ms name “Shine uh.” Makes a Man Love and a Tfbman Love % \ l & A PAGE SEVEN Mother Files Suit For Son's Death GREENSBURG, Pa., Oct. 10— (g>) The mother of a deceased professional basketball player filed a suit for $50,000 damages today in the Westmoreland coun ty court as a result of the traffic accident which cost her son’s life last Jan. 11. Mrs. Mildred Karmarkovich, who claimed her son, Charles, was her sole support, is sueing Raymond Cozzens of Homestead and Nicholas Hickey and Tony Bagnato, both of Johnstown. The Conemaugh woman char ges Hickey and Cozzens were negligent in operating the two autos involved in the Ligonier township crash. Bagnato owned the car in which he and Kar markovich were riding with Hickey. Tfea Son Hair SMMi Who First IntnxfeceJ Tbs Home Permanent Wave Kit Have Jnst !EW SHAMPOO NO NACfIINEBY... NO WAITING... NOT A NAVE SET! This exciting, new, easy SHAMPOO actually glye* soft, natural-looking, ions lasting curls and waves, right while you wash your hair . . . yes, while ytti shampoo out dirt, duet, excess oils and loose dan druff, you shampoo-in personalized waves and curls that suit you best ... a halo of soft ringlets or a loose, natural-looking casual wave. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers