The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 24, 1953, Image 7

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    SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1953
Trackmen
Meet Two
Foes Today
Today's triangular cross-coun
try meet at the Naval Academy
between Georgetown, Navy and
the Lions will go a long way to
ward answering some vital ques
tions.
In the first place, it will pro
vide a good yardstick for measur
ing how good this year's harrier
team really is. All three entries
have strong teams and the win
ning combination will have to
show good balance.
Secondly, it will determine how
well Red Hollen has recovered
from his injury in the Cornell
meet. Hollen, one of the finest
hill-and-dalers in the east, hurt
his foot while covering the hard
ened ground on the golf course
layout.
Second Meet for Lions
A third question which may be
answered concerns the sopho
mores on the present Nittany
team. This will be the first away
meet for the Lions and should
give the sophs a chance to show
their true abilities. Doug Moor
head, Ted Garrett, Jim. McKelvey
and Ed Steel are the second
year men who will be competing
against the Middies and the
Hoyas. In the Cornell meet Moor
head tied for first with Hollen
and Lamont Smith. Garrett fin
ished sixth, while Steel and Mc-
Kelvey placed 13th and• 14th re
spectively.
This is the second meet of the
campaign for the Blue and White
who beat the Big Red of Cornell,
19-39. It is also the first of three
straight away meets before the
IC4A and NCAA championships.
Gehrdes is Navy Coach
Three Midshipman, Charley
Cook, John Hurt and Norm Harp
er have all turned in good per-
formances this seasc n. Cook
placed fifth in a quadrangular
meet with St. -John's, Manhattan
and Syracuse as he paced the
Middies to second place. Hurt
finished tenth in the same meet.
Harper has been inconsistent so
far.- In the quadrangular meet he
could do no better than 21st;
however, he placed first in a dual
meet with Manhattan.
Jim Gehrdes, ex-Nittany hurd
ling star, who is now cross-coun
try coach at Annapolis will be
out to show his former teacher,
Lion Coach Chick Werner, that
he learrfed his lessons well. Wer
ner, on the other hand, will be
out to- demonstrate that he has
not lost his touch for developing
outstanding teams.
Big Game Ahead
Tremendous interest is building
in the' forthcoming clash of Penn
State and West Virginia at State
College• Oct. 31.
Keith Vesling, baseball captain,
and Jack Sherry, basketball cap
tain, both play on the Penn State
football team.
AUDREY HEPBURN
"ROMAN HOLIDAY"
JAMES STEWART
JOANNE DRU
IN
"THUNDER BAY"
Mrarnif
CLARK GABLE
"ACROSS THE
WIDE MISSOURI"
THE DAILY COLLEGIAIf. COTACM‘x.e,, PlffiviS-YLITANTA
Pigskin Coin Flips ...
Out On a Limb
Fighting desperately to move back into first place in the
Daily Collegian football prediction contest, head Football Coach
Rip Engle has named Earl Bruce to represent the coaches in this
week's contest. The coaches dropped three games off the pace last
Saturday, when Al Michaels selected only eight winners from
the 15-game list.
Sam Proc - Opio, Collegian Sports Editor will be Bruce's main
objective this week. Procopio is sporting a .776 percentage to
hold the first place position, and Assistant Sports Editor Dick
McDowell is in the number two spot with a .750 mark.
The coaches are tied for third with staff writer Herm Weiskopf.
Both hold .716 marks.
Probably the most controversial game on today's selection
sheet is the Pitt-Northwestern battle. The four contestants have
split decisions an the outcome. Procopio and Bruce favor North
western, and McDowell and Weiskopf are picking the Panthers.
Game
Pitt-N'western
Princeton-Cornell
Missouri:Nebraska
Wis-Ohio State
S. Cal-California
Notre D.-Ga. Tech.
Yale-Colgate
Minn.-Michigan
Arkansas-Miss.
LSU-Florida
Navy-Penn
Harvard-Dart.
Mich. St.-Purdue
111.-Syracuse
Villanova-Ken
IM Pool, Court
Action to Open
Two more Intramural sports
will hit the calendar next week.
Swimming competition will begin
at 5:15 p.m. Monday at Glennland
Pool. The basketball program will
open Wednesday. -
A basketball schedule is being
prepared and will be sent to each
squad's captain.
According to the swimming
schedule issued by the . Intramural
office, it will be necessary for
each team to send one member to
the pool early with the correct
lineups so that the meets may
begin promptly.
In an IM tennis singles match,
Zucker, Phi Sigma Delta, over
came Adler, Beta Sigma Rho,
6-8, 6-3, 6-3, to advance to the
finals of flight four.
WELCOME AL UMNI
for the
, Fastest Service
of the
Best Foods
in town
Try
INSTA BURGERS
the tastiest burger yet
INSTA - SHAKES
smooth and rich
AT THE
Chuck Wagon
200 E. COLLEGE
CARRY OUTS
A SPECIALTY
Procopio
(.776)
McDowell
(.750)
Princeton
Cornell
Nebraska
Missouri
Ohio Si.
Ohio St.
S. Cal.
S. Cal.
Noire D.
Notre D.
Michigan
Michigan
Navy
Navy
Harvard
Harvard
Mich. St.
Mich. St.
Kentucky
Kentucky
Coaches
(.716)
Weiskopf
(.716)
Cornell
Cornell
Missouri
Nebraska
Ohio St.
Ohio St.
S. Cal.
S. Cal.
Notre D.
Ga. Tech
Michigan
Michigan
Arkansas
Harvard
Harvard
Mich. St.
Mich. St.
Kentuck
Kentuck
Irish-Ga. Tech
To Meet Today
NEW YORK, Oct. 23 (JP)—Col
lege football's longest living un
beaten streak and the No. 1 na
tional ranking are the pawns
when Notre Dame and Georgia
Tech collide tomorrow in the
game of the day.
The pressure-packed conflict at
South Bend. Ind., pitting two
prime contenders for champion
ship honors, overshadows an at
tractive mid-season schedule
which includes such rivalries as
California-Southern California at
Berkeley, Baylor-Texas A&M at
College Station, Michigan-Minne
sota at Minneapolis and Navy-
Penn at Philadelphia.
The unbeaten skein belongs to
Georgia Tech, which hasn't suf
fered a setback since late Novem
ber, 1950.
The No. 1 ranking is held by
the Fighting Irish, who have
Autumn Ball
Tonight
The Highlight of
Homecoming Weekend
Tickets on Sale
at the Door
9-12 Rec Hall
'Unsung Hero'
Penn State's Rip Engle nomi
nates center Don Balthaser, of
Reading, as the "unsung hero" of
his 1953 football squad.
Last Two on Road
Penn State, at home four
straight weeks, will close out its
1953 football campaign on the
road against Rutgers and Pitt.
Promising Sophomore
Otto Kneidinger, sophomore
tackle of Bellwood, is rated the
most promising lineman on Penn
State's 1953 football squad.
Penn State's foo t b all team
played before more than 130,000
persons in its first four games
of 1953.
swept past three opponents and
who rule seven-point favorites to
maintain their position over a
speedy Tech squad rated fourth
in the Associated Press poll.
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