MONDAY; SEPTEMBER 8, 1952 PENN STATE FOOTBALL ROSTER ' Name Hometown ARNELLE, Jesse—New Rochelle; N.Y BAILEY, Don—Pittsburgh BALTHASER, Don—Reading BARNEY, Don—Erie BIEVER, Bill—Schuykill BOWDEN, Al—Seaford, Del. BROWN, Chuck=-McDonald DANSER, Gene—Monessen DeFALCO, Danny—New Castle DOOLEY, Jim—Williamsport • DUBINSKY, John—lndiana, Pa. ESHBACH, Jim—Williamsport EYER, Don—Chambersburg FREY, Tony—AllentOwn GARRITY, Jim—Monaca GREEN, Sam—Pottstown GRIER, Rosey—Roselle, N. J. GRATSON, Joe—Leisenring HALDEMAN, Dubs—Lititz HICKEY, Norm—Upper Darby HORN, Keith—Williamsport JONES, Dick—Bellevue KURJIAKA, Ken—West Pawlet, Vt. LANCASTER, Larry—Bellevue LEONARD, Bill—State College MALINAK, Don—Steelton MILSOM, Jack—Apollo NEWMAN, Ken—Bronx, N.Y. PAUL, Norm—Ambler PATTERSON, Bill PFIRMAN, Carl—South Williamsport Pollard, Bob—Berwick RADOS, Tony—Steelton RAIFSNIDER, Herb—Manon ROHLAND, Bob—Bethlehem ROWELL, Buddy—Natchez, Miss. SCHEETZ,' Stu—Lansdale SCHODERBEK, Pete—Duquesne SHANK, DonL-Norristown SHATTUCK, Paul—Warren • SHERRY, Jack—Drexel Hill SHOPA, Pete—Blakely SIMON, Dave—Brownsville SMITH, Bob—Bentleyville SOWERS, Chuck—Monongahela SZAJNA, Bob—Reading VAN SICKEL, Dan—Corydon VESLING, Keith — Clarendon WAGNER, Ralph—Wyomissing WATERS, Bob—Philadelphia WOLFKEIL, Wayne—Wilkes-Barre YANOSICH, Matt—Beaver YOUNKERS, Ron—Windber YUKICA, Joe—Midland State Boasts Big I M Schedule By LIX NEWELL Following the birth of intra mural sports at the College in 1931, Penn State has developed one of the finest programs in the country. All men students are eligible to enter competition in any sport in which they have not previ olisly won a var sity letter, ac cording to Gene Bischoff and Dutch Sykes, di rector and assist ant respectively, of the IM pro gram Starting with touch football in the fall and ending with soccer in the spring, there are 17 IM Penn, Pitt Oldest Rivals Penn and Pitt are the two old est rivals on - , Perm State's 1952 football schedule.. The Lions first met the Quakers in 1890 an d Pittsburgh in '1893. The Lions, however, have ‘ played the Pan thers more often than Penn. Com ing up are Game No. 41 with Penn and Game No. 51 with Pitt. ATTENTION Graduate Students and Upper Classmen Graduate students and upper classmen will find comfortable rooms with hot and cold run ning water or private bath at Colonial Hotel, 123 W. Nittany Ave. Central location. Quietly operated for rest and study. Low student rates. Phone 4850 State College. Ask for C. R. tourneys to run the gamut of ways to prove physical prowess. Included in .the program are the already mentioned . touch football :and soccer, tennis singles and doubles, handball singles and doubles, golf medal and team play, horseshoe singles and dou bles, basketball, boxing, wrest ling, badmiriton, swimming, track and volleyball. Softball was dropped from the agenda two years ago due to a lack of playing field facilities. ,Most of the IM contests are held at night so that studenlrs might more easily participate and to af ford other students a greater chance to "participate" as spec tators. Gene Bischoff The IM's are divided into two sections—fraternity and indepen- THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Sure, we're not just kidding either. Ask any upperclassman and he'll say, "my freshman year was the best of my college career." And while you're,asking that upperclassman, see if he doesn't steer you straight on good car service. He'll also say, "Sure, Jack Wimmer's Sunoco Station is the place to get friendly, effi cient, at-no-extra-cost service for your car ... he has the finest automotive supplies too." _ dent which do not compete against each other. The Indies work for sterling silver medals while the fraternity men work as teams toward trophies. Points for every win in any IM sport are awarded to the various frat ernities and the champion of the entire fraternity division is awarded a cup. Approximately one in every four undergraduates compete in one or more phases of the pro gram. Backs Are Few Of Penn State's 20 returning lettermen.. only seven are backs. Ends and tackles number four each, the guards three, and cen ters two. 'lt's great to be a FRESHMAN' JACK WIMMER'S State College Sunoco ACROSS FROM WINDCREST Pos. Age Class E 19 , 55 QB 19 55 C 18 55 G 21 53 T 20 55 T 20 54 T 19 54 19'T 55 T 18 55 C 20 53 QB 18 55 T 18 55 HB 21 54 HB 18 54 E 19 55 G 18 55 T 19 55 T 22 53 G 22 55 HB 24 55 G 19 55 HB 19 54 T 20 55 C 20 55 HB 20 , 53 E 19 54 20 54 19 54 19 55 54 551 53 53 53 55 55 52 54 55 55 55 54 53 53 55 54 53 54' 55 55 54 54 55 53 G HB HE FB 20 21 21 21 Sports Thru The Lion's Eye By JAKE HIGHTON Collegian Sports Editor Breathes there a student, in the fall of the y; is so dead that he doesn't thrill from the top of his head to the tip of his toes over the greatest collegiate show of them all—football? Can there be any who aren't inebriated on a fall Saturday morning by the thrill of Lord Football? Can any fail to catch the exhilaration of two athletic armies battling with brawn and brain? Is there a student who doesn't tingle at the dazzling run, the jarring tackle, the spectacular leaping catch, the "crisp block, the goal line heroics or the sustained march to a touchdown? For those whose souls aren't dead, Penn State's Graduate Man ager . of Athletics "Ike" Gilbert, class of 1926, has booked the Nittany grid team with a schedule to satisfy the most lusty of football lovers. State's first 10-game grid slate in 21 years has a threefold beauty: First, the schedule has big names with a well-balanced, cos mopolitan flavor. The Lions meet hardy perennials of the Midwest, Michigan State, Nebraska an d Purdue. Games are on deck with two of the East's football strong hold, Penn and Pitt. And the Nittany twenty-two will tangle with football representatives from below the Mason-Dixon, William & Mary and West Virginia. In the second and most im portant ,place from the student standpoint, five of the games will be played. on State's Beaver Field where 30,000 seats provide plenty of room for all. The Lions host Temple, Purdue, William & Mary, Nebraska and Rutgers in that order, with the first three open ing the season. Third, and what isn't likely to make the Nittany coaching staff do handsprings, is the potential All-Americans gracing the lineups of Penn State's opponents. Several of the pre-season stars probably will turn up in the sports writers' "Flop of the Year" polls, but the biggest majority will undoubtedly flash painfully through the dreams of Engle, Michaels, Paterno,, O'Hora, Toretti and Bruce. The imposing array of predicted All-Americans or All-Confer ence gridders among State's opponents is headed by the• Touchdown Kid, Bobby Reynolds, Nebraska's 1950 scoring champ of the nation. Purdue's passing sensation Dale Samuels will have more than one professional scout watching the boilermakers Saturday afternoons. "Pore little ole" Michigan State lost All-Americans Bob Carey and Don Coleman, but the Spartans figure to have more than adequate replacements in nearly everyone's All-Ameridan rosters in the persons of end Paul Dekker and center Dick Tamburo. Pennsyl vania can't miss with at least one All-American from its three chances, end Ed. Bell, tackle Bob Evans and plunger Joe Varaitis. Coming down to likely All-Conference stars on the Nittany schedule, West Virginia end Paul Bischoff really plucks the leather out of the air. William & Mary can brag of mammoth tackle John Kreameheck and Syracuse backs will be glad to have' tackle Bob Fleck in the line. 'lke' Gilbert "It's a Jim Dandy schedule and should 'provide plenty of thrills and excitement for students "with a soul." And, as sure as if winter comes spring cannot be far behind, so if school starts the football season cannot be far behind. In fact, the gala grid season is less than two weeks away from infecting the Nittany campus. All-Winning Team Charlie Speidel's wrestlers, un beaten in 20 straight matches, posted Penn State's only all-win ning record in 1952, Penn State's athletic trainer, Charles (Chuck) Medlar. had to give up his Olympic assignment because of an injured wrist. PAGE THIRTEEN Ca-Captain Is Giant Co-Captain and tackle Stewart Scheetz, of Lansdale, Pa., once again will be the biggest man on the Penn State football squad. Scheetz, who currently weighs 250, will get down to 235-240 by season's start. The big fellow is newly-married. , :',A1114111 . 11 , 1' SUNDAY MIDNIGHT SHOW Doors Open 11:30 Seats.6o • . . .... ﻊ. . GINgElt, .. . ... ).I)reamboat