PAGE SIX Booters Favored to Beat Colgate Soccermen Today The Nittany Lion soccer team will attempt to g'et back on the victory trail when it faces Colgate on the Beaver Field baseball diamond at 2 p.m. today. It will be the Lions’ fourth straight appearance at home for the 1952 season. Although Mark Randall, Red Raider soccer coach, is bringing a veteran team to the Lion hoot er ground, the Jeffreymen will be highly favored to win their third match of the campaign. The Raiders boast 12 lettermen, eight of whom are seniors. Randall is also proud of his fine crop of 'sophomore booters, who saw considerable. action last year. Although he will start out with practically all seniors, Ran dall is expected to substitute with his sophomores quite freely during the course of this after noon’s contest. The Red Raiders’ strong point will be their defense, but their offensive attack has been lacking this season. Against Hamilton College last week, for example, they held their opposition to two goals, but couldn’t score more than two goals themselves, sett ling for a 2-2 deadlock. Coach. Randall believes this year’s Red Raider team will im prove on the showing of the 1951 squad. Last season the Colgate booters had a log of three 26 wins and four losses. Bill Jeffrey, Lion soccer men tor, is pinning his hopes on his high-scoring front line of Jack Pinezich. center forward- Don Shirk and Ellis Kocher,. inside left and inside, right; and Bill Norcik and Lynn Thomann, out side left and outside right. The Lion defense will remain its usual, effective self with full backs Hap Irvin and Paul Dierks as the main line of resistance. The goalie spot will be filled by Red Harris. At halfbacks Jeffrey will start Captain Kurt Klaus, Frank Foll mer, and Ralph Hofmann. At these halfback positions. Jeffrey uses the players with the best field generalship—those booters who can visualize plays in front of them. The Nittanies will be in excel lent physical condition for today’s match, with only Hube Kline un able to play. Kline saw action only in the Lions’ first tilt with Pigskin Coin Flips ... ( Out on a Limb For the sixth weekend of football predictions the Penn State football coaches, who are still in second place behind Daily Col legian Sports Editor Jake Highton, will have another of their swamis, Jim O'Hora, trying to lift them higher in the grid fore cast race. Highton is currently leading the pack by a comfortable two game margin with a percentage of .703, while the second-place coaches have .676. Sportswriter Bob Schoellkopf, .662, is third, and Assistant Sports Editor Ted Soens is fourth with .635. This week the contestants differ in their predictions of 11 games. The two top games of the day, California-Southern Cali fornia and UCLA-Wisconsin, find Highton alone in his predictions of Southern Cal and UCLA to win. The predictions: Games Army-Columbia Colgaie-Bucknell Cal.-S. Cal. Dari.-Harvard Navy-Penn Georgia-Fla. H. Cross-Syra. Purdue-111. Ind.-Northw. Kansas-SMU Minn.-Mich. Ore. St.-Wash. St. Wash.-Stan. Texas A&M-Baylor UCLA-Wise. Bucknell, sustaining a bad leg in jury in a practice session the fol lowing week. Jeffrey said that he wants Kline to rest the leg in an effort to have it heal completely, rather than risk possible aggra vation of the injury. The Nittany Lion freshman soccer team will also see action, today, engaging the Center Hall booters on the golf course at 1 p.m. Soccer Lineup Penn State Harris Dierks Irvin Follmer' Klaus Hofmann Norcik Kocher Pinezich Shirk Thomann BEAT MICHIGAN STATE! Soens (.635) Highton (.703) . Columbia Columbia ißucknell ißucknell S. Cal. Harvard Dartmouth Florida Georgia H. Cross Syracuse Purdue Purdue jNorthw. Indiana Kansas Michigan Michigan 'Michigan Wash. St. Wash. St. Ore. St. | Stanford .Stanford Stanford ißaylor Baylor IUCLA ■Wisconsin iWisconsin Wisconsin THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA ★ ★ Paul Dierks (Right Fullback) Colgate Merrick Delapena Smith, ■ T. Muller Covill Stern Jaycox Shaw RF LF RH CH LH OR IR Shuttlew'ih Smith, R. Foster Coaches (.676) i Schoe'kopf | (.662) Army | Army Colgate ißucknell Dartmouth Dartmouth Florida Georgia H. Cross Syracuse Purdue Purdue Indiana Indiana Kansas Kansas Michigan Wash. St. Stanford Baylor Baylor „ Rip Engle Picks Best Grid Player He Has Coached In a recent Saturday Evening Post article, football Coach Rip Engle states that Charlip Tiede mann, a halfback who played un der him at Brown University, was the best player he ever coached. Tiedemann was sent to Brown in-1943 under the Navy transfer program. Although unheralded when he went out for the team, he admitted previous experience at a small Connecticut prep school. “We weren’t overly enthusias tic when we installed Charlie at left halfback in our winged-T for mation,” Engle says, “but he was never replaced until the second quarter of the Dartmouth game in 1944.” ' , After an injury to Tiedemann, Dartmouth came from two touch downs behind to nip Brown, 14-13. Brown did. not score in the next two games against Coast Guard Academy and Yale. Charlie re turned in the next game and led the team to a 13-0 win over Col umbia. He also was the main fac tor in Brown’s first win over Col gate in 16 years, 32-20. Tiedemann starred in basket ball and track, both of which En gle . coached at the time. Al though Tiedemann won sectional football honors, he was limited to two years at Brown and didn’t have a chance for an All-America selection. “When I last heard from him,” said Engle, “he was a mechanical engineer for a Boston paper com pany—and no doubt good at any thing else he tackled too.” Touch Football Will Resume Play Monday Activity in intramural touch football was at a standstill yes terday, but play will resume Monday night. The schedule for Monday re ported by Dutch Sykes, assistant director of intramurals, is: 7 p.m. Mustangs vs. Nighthawks; 7:45 p.m. Acacia vs Phi Epsilon Pi; 8:30 p.m. Coal Crackers vs Dorm 25; and 9:15 p.m. Alpha Phi Delta vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Alpha Tau Omega and the Fireballs, defending champions of their leagues, are still unbeat en. Both had to go overtime, how ever, to protect their unblem ished records in their last skirm ishes. ATO edged Phi Kappa Tau, and the Fireballs edged the Hep Cats. Competition is now rougher and of better caliber since all teams have at least two games played; therefore, a better type of football is expected. Independents posting three wins in tournaments play are the' Coal Crackers, Dorm 25, Fire balls, Blue Streaks, Beaver House, Dorm 35, and Dorm 30. Fraternities registering three wins are Delta Sigma Phi, Delta Upsilon, Sigma Chi, Sigma Nu, Alpha Tau Omega, and" Delta Tau Delta. Jockey Wins 300th SALEM, N.H., (fP)—ITony 1 Tony Des pirito, the 17 year old jockey who was grounded for incompetency after each of his first two races, today became the eighth Ameri can rider to bring home 300 win ners in a year. Despirito needed two winners in yesterday's Rockingham Park cards. He collected his 299th win on J. J. Crowley’s Printers Devil in the i third race and. then achieved his ambition by bringing Henry Forrest’s Master Brian home in front in the ninth and final race. Despirito took his ascension in to the ranks of such great 300 winners as Walter Miller, Vincent Fowers. Jackie Westrope, and Johnny Longden. 1 Spartans to Be Tough For Unbeaten Harriers From all reports up .East Lansing way, Penn State’s undefeated cross-country team will be in for a rough time when it races against one or. possibly two of the strongest harrier teams in the Midwest in Michigan and Michigan State today. The Lion thinclads will defi nitely run against the Spartans, but the University of Michigan angle is uncertain. If the Wol verines do compete, the meet will enter the, books as a tri angular contest. Currently sporting a 2-0 log for the season and a four meet dual winning skein which started last autumn, the Nittan-y harriers will have to be up to their “Army par” of last week if their re'cord is to remain intact. 4-Mile Race The harriers will run over a very flat four-mile course. It’s the type of course where a dis tance man has to stay up front with the pack if he wishes to win any of the low scoring slots. Despite a possible Michigan entry, Coach Chick Werner said his forces would concentrate on beating the upset-minded Spar tans. Victors over Cornell and pow erful Army in their first two outings, the Nittany hill-and dalers hope to duplicate their previous achievements over MSC today- If the opposition has any thing to say about it. such wish ful thinking will not materialize. MSC Enjoys Rest Spartan Coach Karl Schlade man termed his team’s perform ance against Wisconsin as “very disappointing” and predicted that his club would give the Lions an interesting time, when they tangle today. MSC’s distance runners have been enjoying a layoff the past two weeks. That is, only in the sense that the men of Schlade man have engaged in competi tion since their opener with the Badgers, Oct. 11. y After they were dealt a devas tating 27-28 upset blow by the Badgers, Schlademan decided that his crew needed plenty of work. With State’s powerful harrier runners providing the opposition today, the MSC squad ran through heavy drills over the campus four-mile course, as well as running up to 35 minutes— without resting—over the hills’ of a nearby golf course. Schlademan Pleased Last Friday afternoon, an in tra-squad time" trial was held to determine the success of the workouts. And it seems that Schlademan was quite pleased with the results, when virtually everyone of the 18 participants turned in their best times of the campaign. Veteran Dick Jarrett, whose fall at the finish of the Wisconsin tilt cost MSC the victory, showed a definite improvement. He crossed the finish line first with a creditable 20:48.2 clocking, just Our JACKETS Look a million ... cost less than you'd expect. Have Warm, Quilted Linings. In All Colors: Sizes. S ICTa 204 W. College Ayve. SATUKDAT, four and one-tenth seconds slow er than Captain Jim Kepford’s winning time of a week ago. John Cook, who became ill and couldn’t finish in the Bad ger race, -followed Jarrett with a 21:05.1 timing. Third was letter man Wayne Scutt with a time of 21:15.3 seconds s The Spartans also have vet eran Jerry Zerbe and Kyle Garbe to depend on. Others expected to give the Nittanies trouble are Ed Townsend and Den Barley. All in all, Schlademan will field a well-balanced crew, cap able of snapping the Lions’ four meet win .string. 3 Big Jen Games Set For Today NEW YORK (JP) —Three games matching members of the top 10, including a possible preview of the Rose Bowl, provide the spice for the nation’s college football dish todayi The advance peek at Pasa dena’s Jan. 1 show may be the special offering, though not nec essarily. of the fans who turn out at Madison, .Wis., for the in tersectional headliner between Wisconsin and UCLA. Both are prime contenders for respective conference champion ships which would land them in the, Rose Bowl, although they still have a rough road to travel. To rate the bowl bid, Red San ders’ Uclans must still take the measure of . California, whom they meet next week, or South ern California, to be encountered Nov. 22—or possibly both. Brewster to Address Faculty Luncheon Club Dr. R. Wallace Brewster, pro fessor and head of the Depart ment of Political Science, will ad dress the Faculty Luncheon Club at noon Monday at the State Col lege Hotel. He will analyze issues in the presidential campaign. , Dance Class to Begin The first class in the Latin American dancing course, spon sored by Interfraternity Council, will be held from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Monday at the TUB. Approxi mately 200 students have regis tered for the seven-week course. s ir Suits, Topcoats, and Slacks in Central Penna. zb, froa
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