niESCAY. WNEMI3EP 30. 19r44 on Younker Post-Season Grid Bids Accepted by 3 Lions Three Nittany gridders Don Bailey, Gene Danser, and Ron Younker have ac cepted bids to play in post-season football contests. Bailey will play in the East-West Shrine game, Danser in the Blue-Gray battle, and Younker in the North-South Shrine game. During the past season it was Bailey who handled the reins over the Penn State grid fortunes. At the start ; of the campaign the battle for the quarterback position was mainly between Bailey and Bobby Hoffman. However, Bailey's sensational play in the opening game with Illinois put him, in the starting berth for the remainder of the year. Although Bailey was not able to match all-time Penn State pass ing performances set last year by Tony Rados ; he displayed excel lent ball-handling ability. Danser was one of Coach Rip Engle'S top defensive stars. His fine play helped give the Lions one, of the strongest lines in the country. Danser will• be playing at tackle. Younker, standout right half back with plenty of fight, gained 365 yards in 44 carries for an av erage of 8.1 yards per try. The fleet back equaled a Penn State record when he raced 80 yards from scrimmage for a touchdown against Virginia. He• also had scoring runs of .23, 35, and 46 yards. Altogether, Younker scored seven times. Featured With Swedes . . „J. 4 = ; • -,44,,,,,0t5:,4".1:it • ••••• • ••• „.•Zi) 2•••:Lf.',••!..;;• '••-•:-• • • t 4 it•• •• •••• • 4'>!•;:••,•.`• 4, 4; ,4 • wx._ gYI -Ley Jlll the . United States early in 1955. The Swedish team will appear at Recreation Hall on Jan. 15. %.,. 1 7 2 4,74 4 <.k?' • . • .. • • Swedish Gym Show Ticket Sale to Start Tickets for the appearance of Sweden's top men and wo men gymnasts Jan. 15 at Rec Hall will go on sale Monday at the Rec Hall ticket office. Prices are $1 for unreserved bleacher seats and $2 for balcony reserved seats. The colorful event will mark the second time in history a Swedish gym aggregation has visited the Penn State cam pus. Last year the gala attraction attracted the largest crowd ever to pack Rec Hall. DAILY COLLEGIAtiL STATE COLLEGE. FIENNSYLVAMA Don Bailey They'll Play More Football By HERM WEISKOPF Numerous state and national dignitaries will join Swedish authorities at the event. The Rec Hall performance will be one of 32 appearances in 19 states and 'Ontario for the visiting countries' top men and women gymnasts, numbering 20 in all. Gene Wettstone, Penn State coach who brought the men's team to the United States a year ago and who again is masterminding the 1955 tour, said the Swedes will arrive in New York by air Jan. 4 and make their first ap pearance in Paterson. N.J., Jan. 7. This year's attraction differs from last year's in that it will not be on a competitive basis. The Swedish male standouts who com prised last year's touring team de feated the Nittany Lions, NCAA champs • for the second straight year, 49 1 / 2 -46 1 / 2 . The other major difference, which undoubtedly overshadows the fact that January's event will not be competitive, is the appear ance of the Swedish female stand outs. MBES ~!, ,,,,,, - ,. •...., -.: •:.,::, . ;, ' ;...5:.:,:',.'.:, t . ;;;?'(.;'&;,,.',,,,,;•.'"z;.e:,.,'.:FF:,!L; ~.!'''' a - ' 4 "' ' - ~ ''.P.1re6.".,;:'...'‘'..,-W ...•,'-,:.:',, - .....;;<. - ,:r. q;...-:...--,,...',..n . .W . ;;5i. , .i..E..1 : WY?:.iPr:::. '`. l. -'5......i-V'ff.'..,.. W:'.•:','' ' ,:1: fiV.. 7 :W:i . 4 . .... - Ki4 . ;;s . * li, .•:br 4k..;.,. E ., ;...% .-. ..';;;:,...-,4',... .p;tiY,,,,*;'.:4'.',:',',.;'Y: :.-5::',:•,.;...-.,.,-;:,-.:. ~..,;,..--',i, g..:...:...,:p;;;:.,.;.:-;,.,.:',-.:...-:'2:., ~..::...4x.i :ii4 4,i'ir„Vif, : -.?.•.;,,,riY..tn'T. : . i ici;2'; '.... ) ':;i'...,_ - NEM ..,...„ , .....,......, E=M . `::~, The troupe will board a plane for the return trip March 6. Complete Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service - • High Quality 2-Day Service REED'S' Laundry and Cleaners Established in 1912 109 S. Pugh St. Phone AD 8-8981 Gene Denser Boxing Opener for Tonight IM Set The 1954 intramural boxing program, one of the rnost popular from a contestant's as well as from a spectator's angle, ,gets underway tonight at Rec Hall. Fifteen bouts are slated for tonight's 'card with the opening scrap scheduled for 5 p.m.. Phi Kappa Sigma will be seeking to . capture its second mitt championship in a row. The Phi Kaps edged last year's runner up, Phi Sigma Kappa, by the narrow margin of fifteen points, 105-90. The champs held a slim five point lead going into last year's finals, but managed •to walk away with the Moore Was Penn State's' 'lron Man' Penn State's all-America rec ord maker, Lenny Moore, today added one more .distinction to his ever-expanding football list. The Reading Rambler, who set new records for ground gaining and total offense while matching the all-time high of 13 touch downs in one season, played 373 of a possible 540 minutes in 1954. His nearest competitors, giant tackle Rosey Grier, of Linden, N.J., and quarterback Don Bailey, of Pittsburgh, each played 356 minutes. Fourth in line was end Jesse Arnelle, of New Rochelle, N.Y., with 350 minutes. Others who qualified for letters on the basis of time played were Frank Reich, Steelton, 338 min utes; Otto Kneidinger, Bellwood, 332; Earl •Shumaker, Beaver Falls, 303; co-captain Jim Garrity, Mon aca, 229; Ron Younker, Windber, 287; Jack Sherry, Drexel Hill, 204. Sam Valentine, Sykesville, 195; Danny DeFalco, New Castle, 189; Chuck Sower s; Monongahela, 186; co-captain Do n Balthaser, 181; Billy Kane, Munhall, 179; Bill (Continued on page eight) Buckeyes Cop AP Poll; . Lions Finish Twentieth By HUGH FULLERTON JR. NEW YORK, Nov. 2 4 4 (R)—Rose Bowl bound Ohio State today was named as the 1954 national col legiate football champion an d winner of the O'Donnell Memor ial Trophy. In the final Associated Press Ranking poll of the season, the nation's sports writers and broad casters, casting a record-breaking ballot, named Ohio's Buckeyes by a slim margin over UCLA's Bruns. These two unbeaten teams had made it a race all through the closing 'weeks of the season, with Ohio State slipping ahead two weeks ago and holding on to the finish. Oklahoma, the only other major team to finish the season unbeat en and untied, finished a strong title when versatile Nick . Mc- Chesney banged his way to the 135 pound championship and run ning mate, Don Martin, also copped honors in the 145 pound class. Only two fraternity champions are returning from last year's lineup of kings. McChesney, who will be out to add the 145 divi sion to his shelf of 125 and 135 pound crowns, and Steve Haky, Sigma Nu, current 165 pound boss who will be competing in the 175 pound class. Intramural boxing champions are required to move up one weight for competition the following season. The bouts are scheduled to start at 5 p.m. each day, with partici pants weighing in by 4:30 p.m. Those who are detained in class must be weighed-in not later than 5:25 p.m. Weight classes range from 121 pounds to 175 pounds, with an unlimited group above that. This year's schedule includes 184 mat ches and extends. to the night of Dec. 16, when eight new cham pions will be crowned. Last year's heavyweight cham pion, Rosy Grier, Alpha Phi Al pha, will not be eligible for com petition as there is no additional weight class beyond the unlimited division. IM directors, Gene Bischoff and Dutch Sykes, have urged boxers to report promptly to the scales for weigh-ins. third, the position it had held since midseason. The top ranking earned Ohio State its first leg on the Rev. J. Hugh O'Donnell, C. S. C. Memorl ial Trophy, the championship em= blem presented by Notre Dame af ter it had retired the Williams Trophy in 1947 by winning it three times. No team has won the current trophy more than twice. Behind the unbeaten big three in the final ranking came Notre Danie, Navy, Mississippi, Army, Maryland, Wisconsin and Arkan sas, in order, to complete the first ten. The second ten: Miami, Fla.; West Virginia, Au burn, Duke, Michigan, Virginia Tech, Southern California, Bay lor, Rice and Penn State. PAGE Snltfri