TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1952 Spartans Beat State Harriers Penn State’s short-lived domination of the cross-countfy world came to an end Saturday in the triangular ineet staged over the Spartans’ four-mile course at East Lansing, Mich. 1 ? The Michigan State harr: | time since 1949 that the Sp; | victorious frame of mind. '( MSC . scored 31 points while | the Lions were second with 41 | and Michigan trailed with 55. « It was State’s first setback of i ■ the campaign against two vic f tories and ended their four meet >: dual winning string. The Spar -5 tans’ log reads 1-1. ,/ Captain Jim Kepford of MSC ■» rewrote the record ledgers when i he finished first in 20:06.6, eras ’’ ing the school and dual meet jj standards of 20:27 and 20:20, re -3 spectively. I Lack of Depth .3 The Spartans Iso - -> f< -th. jpaiv. .is also won sixth, seventh, and 13th ] to account for their other tallies. 1 State’s thinclads placed second, i; third, ninth, and 17th, while the 1 Wolverines took fifth, eighth, ’ 11th, 12th. and 14th place. A Lack of middle depth and a J fast pace over the flat four-mile ■ course proved detrimental to ; Coach Chick Werner’s forces as , Lamont Smith and Red Hollen \ were the only two Nittanies who withstood the pressure. Smith and Hollen crossed the v finish line some 50-yards behind ■ Kepford to tie for second place with a 20:26 timing. In the scor ing column this put the Lions out f front, but it was only momen : tary since three Spartans—Wayne Scutt, 4th; Jerry Zerbe, 6th; and| Future Foe Grid Bits Three of Penn State’s future foes are included among the many upsets featured during Saturday’s football activities. Navy held favored Penn to its second deadlock, 7-7; Syracuse knocked Holy Cross from the unbeaten ranks, 20-19; and Pitt lost to underdog West Virginia, 16-0. Not-among the upsets was Rutgers who won its first game of the sea son, downing a mediocre Brown team, 19-7* Steve Schoderbek, playing his first season of varsity football as a senior, led Navy in its 94-yard paydirt drive in 3rd quarter to tie Penn, the Nittany Lions next foe. He ran 21-yards to start the drive. Ed Bell was outstanding defen sively for Penn. The All-America end stopped Dean Smith from scoring just before intermission time, and also deflected a 16-yard field goal attempt by Bob Hempel. A Pat Stark-to-Donald Ronan pass combination in the final 40 seconds of the fourth period en abled Syracuse to hand Holy Cross ’ its first defeat. Syracuse DO AS YOUR BARBER DOES! Lano-Lotion! Try it! || til iniM ier conquest marked the/ first irtans left the battlesite in a Lyle Garbe, 7th, streaked across the line to reverse the score. Lindner Finishes 17ih State was still in the thick of things when Captain Jack Horner (21:01) and Jim Hamill (21:07) placed ninth and tenth, respec tively. The Lions’ inability to score another runner until the 17th man—Stan L i n d n e r—finished, clinched the laurels for MSC. Other Blue and White hill-and dalers to finish were John Chill rud, 18th;. and Skip Slocum, 21st. A running account of the meet went something like this. At the outset Captain Horner, Kepford, Garbe. Slocum, Hollen, and John Ross of Michigan were running bunched. • ,'ourtn, place 3>/2 Mile Turning Point At the two-mile site the field dwindled somewhat, but Hollen, Smith, and Kepford continued their pace, with sophomore Ham ill breaking into'the spotlight. This'was the turning point in the meet, for at the 3%-mile mark, Kepford began to bear down and led his nearest rival by about 20-yards.' Kepford’s-winning record time (20:06.6) was the fastest the vet eran harrier has run this season.. Last time out against Wisconsin, ■he ran a 20:44.3 clocking. scored two touchdowns in the final period to upset the Crusad ers. Spotting Brown a 7 point lead in the first period, passer John ny Jeffers and halfback Ron Mas trolia collaborated to give Rutgers its first win in five games. Rut gers tied Muhlenburg in its opener. Spearheaded by freshman Fred Wyant, who passed a 23-yard TD and scored another, West Virginia handed Pitt its second defeat of the season. The total population of Nevada is 110,247, according to the 1950 census. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA' x a DTD, Penguins Score Swim Wins Twenty-four was the magic number for Delta Tau Delta and the Penguins in IM swimming at Glennland Pool last night. Each tallied that many, points in down ing Sigma Nu and the Barracudas, respectively, by identical 24-17 scores. Penguin tanksters Rick Rossi, Duke Miller, Jerry Huston, and Paul Fisher won handily in 1:05 to take the independents’ meet. DTD had a little more trouble distancing the Sigs. Its combo of Bill Johnson, Dick Haenel, Bob proof: | reason: Kaywoodie burns cooler | 3 Kaywoodie Throat Guards •W t ; j * ; COMPARATIVE INCREASES \ 32 •" * *: • I 3 “ : INjTEMPERATUKE OF t 3 28 £ : CIGARETTE ‘SMbKE • -» : u 24”*' : ” - ' •• : •** : . Z ‘ ; AKO PIPE SMOKC : wj : Z 20 f s »-S Uf-f-iV-p-l | 9 l, > > : 1 >■»«”< ;■ .—i Solid line shows how Koywoodio Pipe rises only one degree jn tem perature . . . dotted line shows how hot cigarette smoko gels. It rises 35 degreos during some length of time « ••reaching 115 degreesl ONLY 59* 3 great new Kaywoodie pipes winning college men aH over with their smart, modern styling... their smooth, easy smoking! View from back Kaywoodie Streamliner is the thinnest pipe ever! 4 8 12 16 20 24 28 CONSECUTIVE PUFFS Kaywoodie pipes are available in a wide variety of shapes, sizes and finishes, from *4 to $25 Dahle, and Dave Murphy never led by more than three feet, and took the race—and thus the meet —by less than a foot. Time was 1:07. Duke Miller took the freestyle in 34:2, edging Skip Whitmer and Jim Reid of the Barracudas. Wtut mer came back to garner the backstroke. 43:9, however, with teammate Dave Albert second, and Huston third. Rossi flashed to victory in the breaststroke. The Penguin star’s time of 38:9 was half a second off - the IM record Wide-opening bit diffuses smoke...holps cool it down. ■ _ / ' * **\ > Drinkloss device mokes smoko cooler, traps tar- World's resistant, porous for cooler, sweeter smoking. D Smart for even your most formal evening. kaywoodie white hriar has contrasting white bowl, black bit to make it perfect for evening wear. Streamlined, to end pocket b'ulge. $5 C all briar! Every puff passes through briar all the ivay in the kaywoodie all briar ... because even the stem is made of briar! Rich brown lustre is a kaywoodie exclusive. $lO. •KAYWOODIE Look for the Kaywoodie cloverlcaf NEW YORK . LONDON . Sine• 19SI he set in 1950. Cuda George Vas ley “hutterflied” into second, with Fisher third. Louis Masciotti, Pen guins, dominated the diving. Dave Murphy paced the Delts, .winning the backstroke 43:4, and the diving, as well as aiding in the relay win. Whitey Miller and Bill Camp of Sigma'Nu trailed Mur phy. John Hessel scored in the freestyle 35:9 for SN, beating Delt Bob Dahle and teammate John Hoe r r. The breaststroke went to SN’s Russ Bond in 47:2. PAGE SEVEN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers