TUESDAY; o£T©sEg 5. H? 5,4 Booters Win, 14-1, Set Record 1939 Mark Erased; Lions Net 7 4th-Quarter Goafs Penn State’s soccer team kicked the dust off the record hooks Saturday to pen in a rie;w scoring, mark, humbling Bucknell, 14-1, in the season opener. The Lions’ scoring spree—topped off by seven goals in the fourth quarter—crossed out a 15-year-old record set against Carnegie Tech when the Lions’ racked the Titans, 13-1. A quick look at the sheet reg istering the number of shots at tempted by each, squad almost explains how well the Lions dom inated the play. Penn' State practically turned the game into a travesty in at tempting 74 goals compared' to Bucknell’s nine, Actually a Bucknell player en abled the Lions to set their scor ing record. Late in.. the fourth quarter, with the score at 12-1. Vic Rosner—Bucknell halfback— accidentally tallied for Penn State when he tried to block a pass from Joe Mijares in front of the net. Outstanding Line Play The other 13 goals were scored by _ Penn State’s veteran line which played havoc with the Bi sons’ defense. Captain Jack Pine zich led the Lions with four goals, and Dick Packer, a junior sensa tion at- the. center forward slot, netted three. Tom Nute, sophomore newcom er to the Lions’ roster, and Dick Matacia each scored two goals; Mert Springer and Joe Mijares also scored. The Lions managed to hold Bucknell scoreless until the fourth quarter. Aaron Clark, . a substitute lineman, finally stop ped Penn State’s bid to shutout Bucknell for the fourth straight year with a goal at 8:32. Clark rifled the ball past the unguarded Lion net when goalie George Geczy moved out in a -futile at tempt to stop the play. First Lion Score Packet: started the parade of Lion scores midway in the first period with a ten-yard boot at 13:31. Pinezich scored two min utes later on a penalty kick. Nearly nine minutes elapsed be fore Pinezich chalked up his sec ond goal in a spectacular play. The classy lineman attempted a goal, but-it was partially blocked by the Orange and Black goalie; Pinezich, however, carried by the momentum, of his initial kick plastered the ball into the Buck nell goal, "then slipped, and slith ered under the net just missing serious injury. _ With two minutes left in the first half, Packer passed to Nute who scored his first varsity goal to give the Lions a 4-0 lead. : " While the Lion halfbacks con tinually snagged Bucknell’s pass ing attempts in their effort to opeh an offensive attack, 'the Lions pierced the Bison’s defense in the third quarter for 18 shots. Springer, Matacia, and Pinezich scored on three of those attempts to boost Penn State’s lead to 7-0. The final stanza was a tragic nightmare for Bueknell Coach Henry Peters, who suffered his fourth loss by a Penn State team. THE VICTORY DINER . . . is aSwafs ©£©a mu SHI Som Cwpp«sei&, owner AD 7-3646 &A49rertensi. (J*u>st past tfie Boro Lvrye) By ROY WILLIAMS Lions Drop To Twelfth .NEW YORK, Oct. 4 homa profited by idleness over the " weekend, missing a plague 'of upsets, and recaptured first place today in The ' Associated Press College football poll. Beat en Notre Dame tumbled from first to eighth. Purdue, 27-14 conquerer of the fighting Irish in one of the sea son’s biggest surprises, rose from 19th to fifth place. Ohio State at tenth became the only other new comer to the top ten on the strength of its 21-13 triumph over California. Dropping out were Maryland, last year's national champion, which fell from sixth to 13th. after bowing to UCLA 12-7, and Penn State, which dropped two notches-from tenth for no ap parent reason. Penn State beat Syracuse 13-0 for its second vic tory. Following Oklahoma in the first bracket were: UCLA, No. 2; Wis consin, No. 3; lowa, No. 4; Pur due, No. 5; Duke, No. 6; Missis sippi, No. 7; Notre Dame, No. 8; Southern California, No. 9; Ohio State, No. 10. The second ten in order: Rice, Pehn State, Maryland, Florida, Texas, 1 West ; Virginia, Stanford, Minnesota, and Navy and Virginia tied. The entire . forward wall scored for Penn State. Pinezich tallied" for the fourth time- at 4:15. Four minutes later Bucknell scored its only goal to change the score to 8-1. Packer scored his second and third goals on a five-yard head shot and ten yard boot. Matacia and Nute then collect ed their second scores to push the Lions lead to 12-1. Mijares, a scrappy linesman who played a brilliant all-around game, added the final point to Per>n State’s ledger with 46 seconds left in the final period after Bucknell’s line man scored a goal for the Lions. Penn State Bucknell Scoring-: State—Pinezich 4, Packer 3, Matacia 2, Nate 2, Springer, Mijares, (Bucknell score one for Penn State). Bucknell—Clark. IF you can get your car into' Jack Wimmsr’s Sunoco for Lube-Oil change and Anli freeze before the "big freeze," we will knock 10% off the entire ticket, except gasoline. This way we can do a much more careful Job than the night it freezes, and customers are waiting in line. And at the same time we will tighten water hoses to make sure you don't lose that precious stuff JACK WfMMSrS SUNOCO 502 East College Avewue THE DAILY COLLEGIAN; STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA" .Ist 2nd 3rd 4th Final 2 2 3 7 14 0 0 0 1 1 From This Angle. By dick mcdowell Collegian Sports Editor SYRACUSE POST MORTEMS The 32nd football game in the long Penn State-Syracuse rivalry may-not have been as colorful as many in the past, but it had its moments. Football, whether played in the southwest or the east still evolves ground the fundamentals. They still win football games. Penn" State’s tackling, blocking, and defensive line play was a beautiful thing to see Saturday. The Nittanies won the game—a more important win than it actually appears—on the strength of these fundamentals. The Orange could make only 67 yards on the ground-and 24 through the air ways, while the Nittanies ground out 188 and two touchdowns. Ron Younker's 50-yard punt return in the third period pro duced some of the finesttdowrii field blocking we've seen in any football game. Jim Garriiy, Chuck Sowers, EarL Shumaker, and Don Bailey all took a crack at Syracuse defenders while Younkers sped down the right side line. Rip Engle appeared happier Saturday than he did following, the Illinois game. - “It was a big one to win,” he said, “and we’re certainly happy about it.” “The boys made a lot of mistakes,” he added, “but they weren’t fundamental mistakes. They were mechanical errors and you can’t do anything about them. Maybe we have the fumbles and missed passes out of our system now.” Engle’s biggest worry about this one seemed to concern his team’s mental condition. The- win against Illinois was a big one and Engle knew how tough the Orange could be at bleak Archbold Stadium, scene of so many Penn State Waterloos. But the win apparently erased all fears. ( * * * * As in the Illinois game, several breaks Saturday could have given the Lions two or three more, touchdowns. Don Bailey, who is fast proving himself a more than adequate replacement for Tony Rados, had some bad luck in his passing. He saw two of his passes dropped that were labeled touchdown. j And the. Nittanies were well on their way to another score in the third quarter when Lenny Moore fumbled on the 13 yard line. the ideal cloth that stands out in any compmvy HARRIS TWEED sale from pare virgin ScotUsii west ’ tpoa, heed-woven and finished in the OtsJer Hebrides Discerning men cn campus always choose HARRIS TWEED—the ideal cloth for outdoor and Informal wear! They prefer the colorful, ruggediy-mascidme patterns, the superb way it drapes and tailors. They know through years of rough wear, it will never lose its shape. The crofter-weaver creates this tweed in his own home and no two pieces are exactly alike. See the new weaves and designs in HARRIS TWEED at your local college store. r i • ii HARRIS TWEED Reg. V. S. Pm. Off. Look for (hi* c< Mark o* doth Tin Karris The Karris U 4. be directed to Stfßt sei, 111 l £; 42« i St, New York 17 Suit on 13 Teams Continued in Court CHICAGO, Oct. 4 (/P) —Trial erf a 12 million dollar anti-trust suit against 13 major league baseball clubs has been continued in U.S. District court until Jan. 3, attor neys said today. The case first was filed Feb. 21, -1952, by the now bankrupt Liber ty Broadcasting System of Dallas, and after a series of continuances was reset for trial Oct. 13, 1954. The suit names all major league teams except the Brooklyn Dodg ers, Cincinnati Redlegs and Chi cago White Sox. • Ohio State will oppose Penn State in football in 1956 for the first time since 1912. TOMMV Dopy ?/j -•' *i FEATURING JiMMyl D©«iy at the Junior Prom Nov-ember 5 9 p.m. - T a.m. Bee Hc*si Semi-F&rmai $5.00 Per Goepfe Get Your Date Now ! PAGE SEVEN
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