TUESDAY. OCTOBER 12. 1*54 ’Lion Booters Maryland Tomorrow Pemi State’s soccer team will leave late this afternoon for College Park, Md., it will meet'the ITniversity of Maryland’s Undefeated hooters tomorrow, afternoon. Coach Ken Hosterman has chosen a 16-man traveling squad for the Lions’ first of three road matches on this season’s card. ' Maryland has a two-match win skein intact with wins posted Loyola, 2-0, and Duke, 2-1. The Lions will be out to snap the Terp’s streak and cop their second win after dropping Bucknell, I*4-1, in their season opener. Terp Coach Doyle Royal, how ever, will/ have a slight edge on the lions in manpower with 14 lettermen returning from his 1953 Atlantic Coast Championship team which chalked up eight wins in ten starts. Penn State was bolstered by ten lettermen in its crushing defeat of Bucknell, Four Seniors In selecting his tentative start j jng team to meet Penn State to morrow, Doyle has sprinkled his lineup with four seniors, four juniors, and three sophomores. " Doyle’s four senior choices have been on the squad four years. Of these eleven men, seven of them—the four seniors, two jun iors, and one sophomore—made up the bulk of the same team Which the Lions dumped last fall, 4-3. Penn State got off to an early 2-0 lead in the first quarter, but the Terps rallied to knot the score at the half; in the third period the Terps took the lead, Future Foes W.Va., TCU Score Weekend Victories For'the third straight week only two. of Penn State’s future football opponents were able to score victories. And for-the second wdek in .succession it was the Lions’ two immediate foes that won. West Virginia, which visits Beaver Field Saturday, just did get past a stubborn, upset-minded George Washington team, 13-7 Texas Christian, which will be met Oct. 23 in Ft. Worth, sur prised the “wizards of odds” with a 20-7 verdict over Southern Cali fornia,, dropping the Trojans from the select ten Trailing-7-6 going into the final period, the Mountaineers changed tactics in time to pull out a vic tory. Up to this time, Quarter back Freddie Wyant had used 'a wide Split-T and passes. Chang ing. to straight line bucks, the Mountaineers marched 45 yards in nine plays with Bobby Moss scoring the winning tally. The. Horned Frogs of Texas Christian, sparked by the running of quarterback Ronnie Clinkscale and a superb pass defense, stop ped the Trojans in a Friday night game played at Los Angeles. Once more Pitt’s Panthers took it on the chin, this time by a 33-0 count to the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame. Sherrill Sipes, Ralph Guglielmi, Dean Studer, Paul Hornung, and Jim Munro all scored for the Irish as freshman coach Terry Brennan won his sec ond game. It took a fourth-period touch down by Tailback Royce Flippin to enable Princeton to defeat ENGINEERING SENIORS... North American , Aviation Los Angeles will interview here OCTOBER 20 By roy Williams 3-2. Only two last period goals by junior Dick Packer gave the Lions their eventual margin of victory. John Hopkins University and Penn State were the only teams to" defeat, the Terps last fall. Reynold At Goal Doyle is expected to field a ver satile and experienced squad against the Lions. Maryland’s de fensive work shutout Loyola and allowed Duke only one score. The Terps goalie, Carroll Rey nold stopped 21 scoring attempts by the Bluedevils. Reynold, who allowed the Lions to score four times on him last season, s has been slated by Doyle to open at the net position. Hosterman’s defensive strategy will have to cope with Maryland’s hotshot lineman from the Philip pines. In Maryland’s last two wins, Jose Hagedorn has paced the. Terps’ scoring attack. Hage dorn, a four-year booter playing at inside right, has scored three of Maryland’s four tallies in two games. Penn, 13-7. It was the Quakers more than anyone who insured the loss as they fumbled seven times, recovering only one of their own bobbles. Miami had to come from behind three times in order to defeat Holy Cross, 26-20, and Colgate, on the strength of two last period touchdowns by sophomore Ed Whitehair, topped Rutgers, 26-14. Higgins Replaces Boudreau On Red Sox BOSTON, Oct. 11 (/P)_Frarik (Pinky) Higgins, the. quiet Texan who asked to start his managerial career at the bottom, today reach ed the top with his appointment as field boss of the Boston Red Sox. General Manager Joe Cronin made the announcement at a press conference following long dis tance telephone conversations with Higgins and his predecessor Lou Boudreau. Boudreau’s two year contract had another year to run and Cron in said the Red Sox “will meet the obligation” insofar as the sec ond year is concerned. THE DATCY COCCKSTAW. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Visit Lion. Freshmen Shade Navy, 7-6 Penn State’s freshman foot ball team took advantage of a Navy fumble midway through the fourth quarter Saturday at Annapolis, Md., and quickly scored to top the Midshipmen, 7-6. The game was the yearlings’ first of the season. With the score favoring - the Middies, 6-0, A 1 “Jumbo” Jacks, an All-Pittsburgh high school se lection 1 last fall, fired an eight yard spot pass to six-foot end Paul North, who brought the pigskin in for the tying touchdown. Emil Caprara, Turtle Creek, placed-kicked the seventh and winning, point. . The Nittany Lions liad the bet ter of the game after Navy scored in the. second period. Coach Earl Bruce’s squad had 12 first downs compared to the Midshipmen’s SX Registers IM Upset; 3 Others Win A fired-up Sigma Chi football team pulled, the upset of the young intramural season last night by tripping Acacia, last year’s champion, 6-0 in the opening round. The scoring -play was set up, when Acacia attempted in run two -yards instead of punting on its own 34-yard line on fourth down. Bob Vanner raced 18 yards to the Acacia 16-yard line with 10 minutes to play. Southpaw Mike Hawk then tossed a bullet pass to 6-4 Frank Ross in the end zone for the lone tally. In the other contests which Were all independent games, the Jesters defeated the Hamilton Foum, 6-0; the McKee Barfers waltzed away with a 13-0 deci sion from the Watts Warriors; and Irvin- Hall defeated the Flying Linos, 14-9. The honor of being the night’s outstanding athlete easily went to Ray Coots of the Jesters. ' iamilton's Charlie Muse tossed a looping pass that was intercept ed by Coots on the 24-yard line. The speedy end broke away down the sideline and scored easily. Throughout the game he was spearing anything that came his way and intercepted four passes. Big Bob MacKenzie and tiny Freddie Abel led the McKee Bar ters to an easy win over Watts. Abel, Fred Bohner, and Jerry Witt combined late in the first half to score oi) a pretty passing exhibition. The second touchdown came when Abel intercepted a Larry Metzger pass on Watt’s 40- line and ran the rest of the way to pay dirt with seven 1 minutes to play. you can get your car into Jack Wimmer's Sunoco for Lube-Oil change and Anti freeze before the "big freeze," we will knock 10 °/o off the entire ticket, except gasoline. This way we can do a much more careful job than the night if 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 WIMMER'S SUNOCO 502 East College Avenue 'ten; State completed six passes to Navy’s four. Line play monopolized the low scoring game. State ends showing strong potential against Navy in clude North, Les Walter, Jack Farls, and Romeo Panozzo. Benny Malesky, 190-pounder from Mount Pleasant, won praise for his out standing work at center. The Plebes Split-T system found the State line difficult to crack. Bruce was high in his praise for the Blue. and White linemen. On the other hand, hu said the team wqs “a little ragged” in its run ning game. On Oct. 23 the Lions will meet the second of three opponents— the Pittsburgh freshmen on the latter’s gridiron. Last fall the Lions lost to Pittsburgh, 19-9; State hasn’t topped the Panthers since 1949 ; . The final game for the yearlings will be Nov. 5 with Bullis Aca demy at Beavet Field. TANGLEWOOD ACRES , (Shangri-La of Centre County) 4 Vs suites from Belfefonfe @n road fe 'faeksonviSfe Tangle wood Acres, Jacksonville Hoad - Centre County Dinners Served Nightly STEMS * SPASSiETTS LOBSTER SSSftfffP ALSO s PIZZA SALADS SARDWiOHES Private Parties May Be Arranged by Reservations Call Elgin 5-9924 Dancing Perstiiffed i@ gff®@rs Mt&mS Selected Beverages a campus tradition through 8 generations HARRIS TWEED made from pore virgin Scottish wool spun, hand-woven and finished in the Outer Hebrides look for this certification nark on cloth and label! HARRIS TWEED Reg. V. S. Pm. Off. This is the cloth that wins highest honors on the campus—HAßßlS TWEED! Masterpieces of native genius and rugged inspiration, these superb tweeds are unequalled in character, unbelievable in wear! In dividual too, because the crofter weavers produce no two pieces ex actly alike. It is no wonder that they are treasured by the modern man about-campus as they were by his forefathers. See the new weaves and designs in HARRIS TWEED at your local store. Hie Harris Tweed mart: is owned and administered tqr The Harris Tweed Association ltd., London, England, U.S. inquiries may be directed Ur SUITE BUI.IIO L 42fld St, Km IMb IS! The lineup: ENDS—North, Farls, McClellan, Pa*- ozzo, Seitzinger, Walters. TACKLES — Casarin, Chasar, Dunlap, Smith, Urban. GUARDS—Debski, Fowler. CENTERS—MaIesky. BACKS—Caprara, Coale, Jacks,, Markie wicz, Paolone, Ricesabol, Warholic, WH* liams. Outing Club Members Hike Near Beaver Dam Approximately 50 students and members of the Penn State Out ing Club hiked for two hours Sunday afternoon in the Beaver Dam area. The students were divided into three groups and taken to points three miles, four miles, and five miles from Beaver Dam and from there they hiked to the dam., This hike was the first in a series of fall hikes planned by the club. The second one will be Sun day. . .itifij K ' I l % V- PAGE SEVm
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