PAGE SIX To Remain Intact Soccer Coach,Bill Jeffrey announced yesterday that he will stand pat on the same starting lineup for the Navy clash tomorrow as he used last week. Starting time for the match is 10 a.m. at the baseball field. The Lions will be at full strength for the Middies, with PL :fyr>v* Capt. Kurt Klaus and Coach Bill Jeffrey the possible exception of Hubie Kline, who is still handi capped with a bad leg. Kline may dress for the.game, how ever, and may even see action, Jeffrey said. The Jeffreymen, who piled up 21 goals in their two starts this season, will pit their three ace scorers, Jack Pinezich, Bill Nor cik, and Lynn Thomann —against Floyd “Glenn” Warner’s Middies. Pinezich has accounted for nine o-oals so far, while Thomann and Norcik have found the net four times each. The Lion hooters’ defense will also put its reputation on the line against Navy. Only one goal has been scored against the Nittanies this season, and last week the Lion defense allowed the Mary land kickers only eight shots m holding the Terps scoreless. 2-2 Tie Last Year Jeffrey plans to start Pinezich, Ellis Kocher and Don Shirk at center forward, inside right, and inside left respectively and Tho mann and Norcik at the wings. Captain Kurt Klaus. Frank Foil mer, and Ralph Hofmann will be at the halfbacks. At left and right fullbacks Will be Hap Irvin and-, Paul Dierks, while Red Harris will be at his customary goalie spot. The Jeffreymen will seek to avenge a 2-2 tie game to which the Midshipmen held them last fall at Annapolis. Navy, however, will be without the services ot ;ts chief goal manufacturer of 1951, Gordon Jayne, who was lost to the team through graduation. The Midshipmen, who were weakened considerably this year by the loss of five other senior lettermen. were victorious in their last match, a 5-1 win over Haver ford last Friday at Annapolis. Navy showed its ability to scoie late in the game as it tallied four goals in the last half. Klaus Started for Lions Middie Coach Warner, a former All-American booter at Spring field College. Mass., in 1931 and 1932, is in his seventh year as HUNTERS You Have Another Week To Bag Your Deer With Bow and Arrows. .We Have A Complete Line Of Archery Supplies. AND REMEMBER Duck Season Starts Monday, October 20 Max HarfswScks soccer coach at the Naval Aca demy. In last year’s dual center half back Klaus shone for the Lions on both offense and defense. It was his third-period goal that gave the Lion booters a temporary 2-1 lead. 1 However, the Middies re taliated and eventually tied the score, 2-2; and sent the match into overtime. 'Vcmdy' Released CINCINNATI (/P)— Johnny Vander Meer, who pitched two successive no hit games for the Cincinnati Reds in 1938, has ob tained his release from the Reds’ Tulsa farm in the Texas League, the club announced yesterday. The leftie, who also pitched a no hitter for Tulsa last summer, is expected to land a position with the Reds’ organization before the 'start of next season. Cows which produce 5000 pounds of milk eat $2.42 worth of food per hundred pounds of milk, while 9000-pound producers aver age only $1.71 for the same am ount of m^k. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Shutouts Mark IM Grid Play By DURK RORIE Shutouts .were the order of the day in last night’s Intramural football play. All four of the games ended in whitewashes for the losers. Dorm 30 eked out a 1-0 overtime win over McElwyn Hall Waiters, Acacia edged Pi Kappa Alpha 6-0. the Dragons rolled over the Centralites 13-0. and Phi Epsilon Pi nipped Chi Phi, 1-0, in the second overtime battle of the evening. Though they threatened sev eral times. Dorm 30 never man aged to cross the final chalk stripe into pay dirt. In the overtime period, the Nittanymen pushed 15 yards into Waiter territory for its lone tally. Acacia overcame an alert Pi Kappa Alpha defense to post its victory. Sparked by Lefty Mcln tyre’s deadly passing, Acacia twice moved deep into Pi Kap territory before a Mclntyre to Ralph Stral ey to John Johnson combination paid-off. Pat Wellen contributed two fine catches to the touchdown drive, and was a standout on of fense throughout. Razzle-dazzle offensive play by the Dragons, proved too much for the Centralites. Accurate long passes by Bill Body, coupled' with fine pass snagging by his team mates, kept the Centralites in con stant trouble. Late in the first half. Body took IM Entry Deadlines Entries for intramural bas keiball and golf-medal tourna ments should be made no later than 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dutch Sykes, assistant director of intramurals, said yesterday. Basketball entry fee is $1 per team, while the fee for golf is 50 • cents per man. a punt at midfield and rifled the ball to Laine Rinker in the end zone. Don Port connected with Mitch Dickerson for the extra point. Body engineered the sec ond -tally, also, hitting Doug Co fiell with a 30 yarder for the score. The nightcap was a tight de fensive battle. Phi Epsilon droye into Chi Phi territory to gain its winning margin in overtime. Because of the heavy homecom ing weekend social schedule, no games will be played tonight. The slate for Monday night is: 7:00 p.m. Mustangs vs. Nit fany Cats. 7:45 p.m. Alpha Phi Della vs. Alpha Zeta. 8:30 p.m. Cougars vs. Night hawks. 8:15 p.m. Alpha Gamma Rho, vs. SAE. fikMUS 9 Charcoal grey an 4 ® Light grey 9 Hollywood Style 9 Sizes 29-40 $795, Nebraska Owns 2d High Offense With unbeaten Nebraska Boasting the second highest average rushing offensive team in the nation and Penn State averaging 26 points per game, 30,000 Homecoming Dayers can expect a parade of touchdowns when the Cornhuskers and. Lions clash tomorrow on Beaver Field. Highscoring has been the key note of the Lion gridders to date en route to their 3-0-1 season record. Twice State has scored 20 points and the last two times out it has struck'for 35. Nebraska too, has been score happy, winning four and losing none. Only against lowa State two weeks ago were the Com huskers kept below 20 • points while defeating the Hawkeyes, 16-0. The Nebraska shoutout of lowa State —South Dakota was also blanked —shows the Cornhuskers have the edge on Penn State de fensively. In fact, the Cornhus kers are ninth in the nation in total defense and are a lofty fourth in rushing defense. Big Total Offense Still looking over the possible strengths and weaknesses of both teams, it appears as though the Big Seven eleven lacks the pass ing to match Penn State’s. In four games, the Huskers have averaged 385 yards per to tal offense. Of this total, an av erage of 320 yards per game has ben picked up along the ground. Nevertheless, the Cornhuskers have a southpaw passer in Johnny Bordogna who will keep the Lions continually wary for aerial thrusts. Yielded 3 TD's Per Matching the Nebraska power ful ground offense, State has come up with a passing attack which has been awfully potent to date. In four games State has hit for 'an average of 154 yards per game—only 19 yards less than the usually preponderant ground gaining average per game. As to the Lions defensively, they have yielded three touch downs in every game but the Temple opener. Purdue, West Vir ginia and William & Mary all scored three times and W&M added a field goal. However, in -all cases except Purdue, the third touchdown was scored after the Lions had sewed the game up. In respective formations, the Lions have stowed plenty of speed and deception into the Rip Engle winged-T. But the Cornhuskers have some flashiness up their sleeves also. Last week they were forced to take the wraps off their dashing spread forma tion in order to defeat Kansas State. Your "dates" will admire FRIDAY, OCTOBER IT, IR3Z Collegiate Chatter The unbeaten Purdue Boiler makers, heading into the middle third of a strenuous schedule, must now tackle three of the na tion’s top elevens on successive Saturdays. So far, it has been impossible to focus attention on anything except the immediate objective. First on the list comes always dangerous Notre Dame, which will' provide the opposition in the Boiler maker's Ross-Ade Stadium tomorrow in the 24th renewal of a rivalry that has produced some classic encoun ters in the past. Boilermaker scouts who watched the Irish tie Penn and defeat Texas, be fore the upset loss to Pittsburgh, have warned that Frank Leahy has one of the country's great est aggregation of hack field speeders. Second on Purdue’s rugged card is once-defeated Illinois, defend ing Big Ten and Rose Bowl cham pion. The game, on Oct. 25, has already been tabbed as a key en counter in the current conference race. ' Purdue returns home the fol lowing week to face the _ na tion's No. 1 team, Michigan State. At present, the Spartan's boast a string of 18 straight victories. The game will afford the Spartans an opportunity io even the all-time series with the Boilermakers. For a breather in the final third of their schedule, Purdue will face the always hazardous teams of Minnesota, Michigan, and In diana in that order. Early Opening Penn State will launch its 1952-53 basketball campaign against Alfred University Dec. 12. Host to Tourney Penn State will be host to the national collegiate wrestling championships in 1953. See the latest Phi Bales styles ati STATE COLLEGE 130 S. Allen Street our Bates Exclusive comfort feature "SLIPPER-FREE WHERE YOUR FOOT BENDS”
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