The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 29, 1953, Image 7

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    = . rftm:7.4tvr, OCTOBER 29, 1953
First Home
Soccer Tilt
Saturday
Penn State's soccer eleven will
play its first home match of the
season Saturday against the Blue
devils of Duke. Starting time has
been changed from noon to 11
a.m. at Beaver Field.
Coach Ken Hosterman and his
booters will be gunning for their
fourth win in five starts. The
Lions handily defeated Bucknell,
edged past Maryland, 4-3, and de
feated Colgate, 1-0 in two over
, time periods.
Against Bucknell
-The Nittany offensive punch
has scored more than twice' the
number of goals its opponents
have. Penn State_ has scored 15
goals, and the opposition has net
ted only seven against the out
standing goal tending of Red
Harris, and fullbacks, Emil Borra
and Captain Hap Irvin.
The Lions booted seven goals
against the Bucknell Bisons in the
season opener, and added four
more to the tally sheet when they
handed the Maryland Terps a 4-3
defeat.
While suffering their first de
feat of the season, when they
visited Army, the Lions tallied
three more times. Penn State's
recent victory over Colgate by a
slim 1-0 score rounds out a total
number of 15 goals in four games.
Sophs Score 11
State's defense has been as ef
fective • as its offensive attack.
Bucknell and Colgate failed to
register any score, although the
latter had six periods in which to
pierce the Lions' defensive net.
However, the three points chalked
up by Maryland and the four by
Army's soccer aggregation are
scores which seldom are scored
against the Nittanies—known for
a strong defensive setup.
Of the 15 goals netted by the
Lions, 11 have been tallied by
sophomores. Dick Packer leads
the scoring parade with seven. He
scored three each against Buck
nell and Maryland, and on
against Army.
Two of Packer's classmates;
Mert Springer and Dick Matacia,
have scored the remaining four
sophomore goals. Matacia has tal
lied three - times from inside right.
He chalked up a goal in the Mary
land, Buc kn e 11, and Army
matches, and Springer tallied
State's only goal against Colgate
last Saturday.
Pinezich, Dierks Score
Two juniors, Jack Pinezich and
Paul Dierks, have each accounted
,for one Lion score. Bill. Norcik
and Captain Hap Irvin, both sen
iors, have each tallied once.
Pinezich has 'only played two
games because of an ankle in=
jury. He scored his goal against
Army, the first match in which
he played. for the '53 season.
SERVED PIPING HOT
PENN STATE DINER
: : "Stop at the Sign of the Lion"
•
. .
World Sports at a Gantt
CHICAGO, Oct. 28 (R)—Minnesota's Paul Giel and. Notre Dame's
Johnny Lattner,,All-America specialists last' year, are powerful can
didates to repeat as all-around aces of the 1953 honor teams.
Abolishment of two-platoon football enhanced, rather than les
sened the chances of these two great Midwestern performers to win
top recognition again from The
Associated Press.
That is the firm opinion of the
Midwest regional board of All-
America nominators, including
Wilfrid Smith of the Chicago Tri
bune, Dick Cullum of the Min
neapolis Tribune and Al Caoup
pee of Des Moines radio station
KRNT.
Giel last year was named to
the All-America offensive team
and Lattner to the number one
defensive unit.
Another Irish star who caught
the Midwest board's attention this
week was tackle Art Hunter, fast
moving 228-pounder, who fell on
a Tech fumble for the clinching
Irish touchdown.
Purdue's terrific upset of Mich
igan State put another lineman
into strong All-America conten
tion. Tom Bettis, 215-pound Boil
ermaker guard.• whose dynamic
work in the middle ruined one
Spartan play after another.
End Joe Collier of Northwest-.
ern, tackle Don Chelf of lowa,
tackle. Eldred .Kraemer of Pitt,
and halfbacks J. C. Caroline of
Illinois and Bobby Watkins of
Ohio State also rate high on the
board's preliminary list.
ST. LOUIS, Oct. 28 (R)—A flip
of the coin today put the St. Louis
Cardinals in fourth place for draft
purposes and the Redbirds don't
mind one' bit.
The Cards and the Philadelphia
Phils finished in a third-place tie
in the 1953 National League race.
Under the player draft, sched
uled for the annual meeting at
Atlanta starting Nov. 30, the last
place team gets pick and so on
up, the standings.
The question was: Which team
would pick first when the draft
reached the Cards and' Phils.
A three-way telephone conver
sation between Warren Giles, Na
tional League president at Cin
cinnati; Bill Walsingham, Redbird
vice president, 'here, and George
Fletcher, the Phil's secretary in
Philadelphia, was set up.
Giles Tossed the coin. Walsing
ham called it correctly. So the
Dierks, playing center halfback,
tallied in the opener against Buck
nell.
Norcik, outside right lineman,
and Irvin, playing fullback, pri
marily a deefnsive position, bath
scored once in the 7-0 rout over
the Bisons.
and with a smile too!
.•.
our food served while it's
fresh and warm.
W.. College Ave.
THE DAILY PPLTJEGLIN! STAT E COLLtF'GE PN/TSITT'VAIiTA
Where is the 4%
sweetest deal
in town a
Looks good
doesn't it?
We think so
That's why
we have all
Cardinals will take part in the
draft ahead of the Phils.
NEW YORK, Oct. 28 (IP) —Sugar
Ray Robinson will be welcome, if
he returns to the ring,. but the
fig h t mob thinks he won't be
back.
The retired middleweight cham
pion, now a song and dance man,
is making a series of one-night
stands in armories and auditor
iums with a dance band and a
busload of entertainers. Each
town gets a new hint that Ray is
considering a comeback.
Leahy Coaches ND
Via TV, Telephone
SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. 28 (IP)
Coach Frank Leahy today contin
ued his hospital bed coaching of
unbeaten Notre Dame via tele
vision and telephone.
The Irish mentor, recuperating
from a stomach attack Saturday,
again watched his team work out
on a closed TV circuit brought to
his room in St. Joseph Hospital.
Preparing for its fifth game of
the season against Navy here. Sat
urday, Notre Dame worked on
offense and defense in dummy
scrimmage against the freshmen.
Leahy, who collapsed at half
time of his team's -27-14 victory
over Georgia Tech, is expected to
leave the hospital tomorrow.
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RED SKELTON
IN
"HALF A HERO"
with JEAN HAGEN
~~_
C, e
norm's
"STAND AT
APACHE RIVER"
with STEPHEN McNALLY
"RED SHOES"
with
MOIRA SHEARER
intramural
Dope Sheet
The Intramural fraternity ten-'
nis singles tourney shows two
flight winners seated in the quar
ter-finals of championship play.
John Cleary, Phi Kappa Tau,
decisioned John Gruber, Tau Kap
pa Epsilon, 6-3, 6-0, to win the
flight one final and Bill Wallis,
Sigma Pi, topped Al Freedman,
Sigma Alpha Mu, 6-1, 6-1 to head
flight eight.
In rising to flight champion
ships, Cleary yielded only three
games in his four matches and
Wallis convincingly halted three
opponents.
Delta Upsilon, Alpha Tau Ome
ga, and Pi Kappa Alpha copped
Intramural swimming wins Tues
day as the second evening of the
the ideal cloth
HAL:E.'...IS TWEED
made from pure, virgin Scottish Wool .
-.=.
HARRIS
(OM
•
•
• •
•
air •
lichen, roots, bracken, heather, gorse and other
native sources were the ingredients of the dyes in the
early days and these natural hues still inspire today's
Harris Tweed colorings. The unique character of the cloth
coupled with its rugged wearability make it ideal for
campus and casual wear.
See your local college store for an education in handsome
coats, suits, sport or storm jackets in Harris Tweed,
and accept only the genuine!
Look for this certi fi cation mark on cloth and label! IP .11 •
• - •
The Harris Tweed Association Ltd., London,
.England, administers the Harris Tweed mark.
Inquiries may be addressed to Suite 801, 110 E. 42nd Street, New York 17
HARRIS TWEED
Suits _Sport Jackets and Suits
May be purchased at
/
STATE, COLLEGE
West Virginia
--
(Continued from page six)
comparison will be and can be
made when both take the field.
The largest press contingent at
Beaver. Field this season will be
on hand to cover the State-West
Virginia battle.
Moore, who was State's leading
ground gainer in the TCU battle,
has been alternating with Dick
I (Pony Back) Jones at halfback.
program got underway. •
While winning firsts in all five
events, Delta Upsilon defeated Phi
Kappa Tau, 29-12. In the same
manner, Alpha Tau Omega took
the measure of Tau Kappa Ep
silon, 30-7. Pi Kappa Alpha con
ceded one first place in stopping
Phi Delta Theta, 29-12.
Pacing their teams to victory,
Maurey, Delta Upsilon, Coble, Al
pha Tau Omega, and BrUmbach,
Pi Kappa Alpha; each won two
events.-
Look for This Label
HARRIS
MEN'S SHOP
TWEED
s'dertifiation Mark Opposite Old Main
Reg. U.S. Pat. Office
for campus wear
woven.
Harris Tweed is
hand-woven by the
,r-weavers in colors that
of the country. Seaweed,
PAGE SE
Ettr's
in the
Outer Hebrides
HARRIS TWEED
Rep. U.S. Pat. CC