FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15. 1954 Spartan Runners Paced by Sophs “Experience is a jewel,” according to Shakespeare, Michigan State cross-country. Coach Karl Schlademan may not have a jewel-studded team this year, but he certainly has some shiny new sophomores. What the Spartans lack in experience seems to be made up for by youth. •Schlademan has lost five of his top stars from last' season four through graduation and one. through ineligibility. However, this is where the sophomores enter the picture. The Spartans have four talented sophomores who have paced recent practice sessions with highly impressive times. Leading ground gainer of the West Virginia Mountaineers is Bobby Moss, 194-pound half back, who has rolled up 12$ yards in 1$ tries for 7.9 yards per carry. IM Cage, Swim Entries Due Entries for intramural swim ming and. basketball are due at the intramural office at Ree Hall before 4:30 p.m. Monday. The en try fee is $1 for each team. The basketball tournament will be played on a round-robin elimi nation basis.. Finalists will play for the league championship. Complete rule sheets may be ob tained at the intramural office. Swimming meets will be held at Glenland pool on nights desig nated by the office. Tournaments will be on an elimination basis with competition carried on in dual meets. A team must consist of at least five men; no individual entries will be permitted. A team will be permitted to enter two men in each event except the relay, in which it will enter a four-man team. CBS Will Carry Game On 'Football Roundup' Columbia Broadcasting Sys tem will carry the all-important duel between Penn State and West Virginia Saturday. The f ..me will be one of four fea tured on CBS's weekly ball Roundup'. Vin Scully, of New York, will be announcer. The broadcast skips around the country to give the high lights of major games', and scores are provided out of New York by the major domo. Red Barber. Other games on Saturday's 'live' network will be Purdue- Wisconsin, Michigan Staie-No tre Dame, and the Army-Duke encounter. DON GRAHAM'S (Hies Service Station Have your oil, changed Get a LUBRICATION i for 50c 1 mile north of State College Route 322 Three sophomores —Sel w y n Jones, Terry Block, and Gay Dens low—toured the four-mile Michi gan State course in under 22 min utes. Jones covored the distance in 21:12, with Block finishing just two seconds behind. Dehslow’s time was 21:19. • Bob Skane, another sophomore, was fourth in the time trial with a clocking of 22:29. Rounding out the finishers were Del Parker, 23:22; John Procter, 24:04; and Dick Stutsman, 24:48. Good Times These times were posted in the Spartans’ initial time trial a little more than a week ago. Most of the times are good enough to place in the top five in many cross-country meets. Lyle Garbe, Dick Jarrett, Ron Barr, and Dick Barley are the four Spartans who graduated. John Cook, this season’s captain, is scholastically ineligible. The’se five runners were the top harriers for Michigan State last season. Penn- State Coach Chick Wer ner will also be counting heavily on sophomores in Saturday’s meet. Dick Mohler, Paul Roberts, and Don .Woodrow are three of the most promising sophomores on the Nittany hill-and-dale outfit this year. Sophs Improve Mohler finished 20th in the-op ening meet against Navy and Vil lanova and 12th in last week’s meet at Cornell. Roberts came in 25th and 11th and Woodrow moved up from 23rd to eighth. Doug Moorhead, Jim Pastorius, Ted Garett, John Chillrud, and Gene McKelvey form a veteran nucleus around which the Nit tany squad has been built this season. Moorhead finished first in the triangular meet with Navy and Villanova and second in the Cornell encounter. Saturday’s meet will be the first home battle for the Lions this sea son. \ . WRA Results BADMINTON League 5 Co-op forfeited to Thompson 3 and 4; McAllister Hall beat Woman’s Building. League 6 Kappa Kappa Gam ma beat Gamma Phi Beta; Leon ides beat Kappa Alpha Thi. League 7 Phi Sigma Sigma beat Little Lions; Kappa Delta forfeited to Theta Phi Alpha; Lit tle Lions beat Theta Phi Alpha; Alpha Epsilon Phi beat Phi. Sig ma Sigma. Penn State’s 1905 football team, captained by E. G. Yeckley, of Lorain, 0., will reassemble for its 50th reunion in 1955. Eat Good Food at REASONABLE PRICES Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner NIGHT- SNACKS Beefburger Cheeseburger ~... Homemade Chili Hof Dogs ........ 20c or 2 for 35c We Make Most Any Kind of Sandwiches to Take Out Open Sunday through Thursday until midnight Friday and Saturday until 2 A.M. Campus Restaurant 142 E. College Ave. (Opposite Old Main) ■WE PAH.Y STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Mayo Smith Named New Philly Manager PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 14 (£>)— The Philadelphia Phillies dipped into the minor leagues—and for the fourth time to the New York Yankee organization—today and tapped lean, greying Mayo,Smith to lead the National League ball club in 1955. The 39-year-old, mild-manner ed Smith was introduced to a gasping group of newspapermen, radio and televisipn reporters at a specially summoned news con ference. When he walked into the room with General Manager Roy Harney, Smith was a complete stranger to the' 50 waiting there. R. Mack Has Not Sold Stock in Athletics ■ PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 14 <£=)— Roy Mack, executive vice presi dent of the Philadelphia Athletics, said today he had not yet sold his stock and still has hopes of keep ing the American League fran chise in this city. Mack’s sin-prising state4n en t added a new puff of smoke to haze encompassing the team and its future. It came as almost ev eryone had settled back in the belief the A’s were due to move to Kansas City.- Pirates .Recall Saffell PITTSBURGH, Oct. 14 (IP) The Pittsburgh Pirates today paid an undisclosed amount in pur chasing outfielder Tom, Saffell from Hollywood of the Pacific Coast League on a conditional basis. In return the Pirates gave Hol lywood Gail Henley who batted .224 wtih the Pirates’ New Or leans club of the Southern Assn, the past season. BasiHo to Meet Groniic SYRACUSE, N.Y., Oct. 14 (IP)— Patient Carmen Basilio, who has waited a year for another crack at welterweight champion Ki d Gavilan without getting a nibble, takes on hard-slugging Allie Gro nik of Detroit here tomorrow night. Pitt and Penn are the only 1954 opponents which own an advan tage over Penn State in all-time football competition. Sports Briefs The Scorebook CIGARETTES, BEER, AND TRACK RECORDS Hats off to Christopher John Chataway, athlete extraordinary. Other sports stars may abide by rigid training programs, but not Chataway. He has been very aptly referred to as the “good-natured beer drinker.” Chataway is also a cigarette smoker. Don’t get the wrong impression—Chataway does train. However, his philosophy is something like this —first comes the fun, then the run. Shades of Babe Ruth! Chataway is one of the finest distance runners_ in the world, but his training program takes a back, seat to his social life. During the winter he smokes about a pack of cigarettes a day. When in training he cuts down to around half a pack daily. Chataway is proud of the fact that he works for a living. Three guesses where he works. To be exact, he is a junior executive for the Guiness brewery in London. All this and track records too! On May 6, Chataway gained his first bit of international fame for his fine job of pacing Dr. Roger Bannister to the world's first sub four-minute mile. Two months later at Turku, Finland, Chata way paved the way for John Landy’s record 3:58 mile. In the British Empire and Com monwealth Games in mid-August at London, Chataway sped to a new Empire Games record for the three-mile run. He finished with a spurt to hit .the tape at 13:35.2. Until he .turned on his powerful kick, Chataway' had been running at a “leisurely lag.” But Chataway's finest per formance came Wednesday at London. With 40,000 Britons cheering him on,-Chaiaway sped to what was probably the most sensational victory since Ban nister edged Landy in the Mile of the Century. His torturous win over Russia's Vladimir Kuc resulted in a new world's mark for the 5000-meier race. Chataway, fighting the fire in his lungs, came from behind in the stretch to nip Kuc. After run ning second in four record-break ing races this year, Chataway finally did his own bit of record busting. A training schedule such as that used by Chataway cer tainly is not endorsed by coach es. Imagine what he would do if he followed the prescribed methods of training. Bui as long By HERM WEISKOPF Assistant Sports Editor as Chataway keeps running ihaiaway . Britons aren't likely to complain. West Virginia will come to town with a “loaded” team this week end. An Associated Press news re lease last night said that profes sor J. S. V. Allen, head of the physics department at Bethany College, W. Va., pointed out that radioactive dust from a Russian hydrogen bomb has been sifting down on the West Virginia hills. Allen's reading was taken near Wheeling, home of West Virginia University. But Nittany fans will have no excuse if the Mountaineers up-t set the Lions, for Allen said that the much talked about dust is also landing in Penn sylvania. If things keep up at this rate something will have to be done. Horses are now subjected to saliva tests. Maybe football players will have to undergo geiger counter examinations someday. Traberf Wins Title MEXICO CITY, Oct. 14 (JP)— Tony Trabert, second seeded play er from Cincinnati, today won the men’s singles championship of the Pan-American tennis tournament with a. 2-6, 6-2, 6-2, 6-2 victory over 22-year-old Mexican cham pion, Mario Llamas. PAGE SEVEN