TUESDAY. OCTOBER 18. 1955 Dirty 30, AEPi, Susie Sigma Pi, Post Wins Eight Intramural football teams, playing under adverse condi tions of cold weather and drizzling rain which kept the scoring rather close, saw action last night on the Beaver Field practice turf as IM football resumed play. Dorm 44 lost a clOse, 1-0, decision to Dirty Thirty in the lowest scoring game of the night. In other contests, Sigma Pi stopped Theta Chi, 7-6• Alpha Epsilon Pi whitewashed. Alpha Tau Omega, 9-0; and Susie beat the Radler% 6-0, Dirty Thirty took •advantaige of a 15-yard unnecessary roughness penalty to eke out a 1-0 win over Dorm 44. With the ball on their own 35-yard marker, .Dirty Thir ty's Graham Wentz flippeda pass to Fred Altman stanon the forty yard line. Butch Brasher, coming up hard in an effort to stop Altman from admiring the pigskin any further, bulled into the. Dirty Thirty receiver. knock ing him .for a loop. The officials ruled a roughness penalty # giv ing Dirty Thirty a first down— which later turned out to -be the margin of • victory. The two teams hadpreviously battled to a shust . !radios punts and intercepted passes as though they war* in a pawn shop. Mist. at the adieu took plum between the thirty-yard lines. Sigma Pi had to come from be hind in the second halt to defeat a spirited Theta Chi nine. Theta Chi, who had previously stopped Delta Theta Sigma, 11-3, went in to the lead. in the early moments of the game. Receiving the kickoff on their. own 2s. •tho sea lens Theta Chi failed to more the ball. On a fourth down punt. a Sigma Pi .. halfback dropped the ball on the 33-yard lino. Bill Pram.. Theta Chi and. was on the alert. scooped it up, and sped the rest• of the way for the touchdown. Th. extra point. which wa s lair to provide the margin of victory. was missed. Sigma Pi . fought back the sec ond. half. With just six minutes 'gone, Walt Krauser intercepted a Theta Chi pass on the losers' 35. Four plays later, Ed Redfield fired an aerial to Krauser, standing in the end zone. Krauser then added to his glory by converting the winning - PAT. Theta Chi tried desperately to avoid their first defeat but could not- penetrate the •tight Sigma Pi defense. Paced •by the passing of Jack Shounberger, Alpha Epsilon . Pi ran their winning streak to two in scoring a 9-0 'win over Alpha Tau Omega. Shounberger continually plagued the AT O secondary with his bullet-like passes; one of them resulting in a six-point er for the men from AF:Pi. With one minute left in the halt', Iry Green intercepted an A MIRED ANGEL Boy, was that ever a weekend! The funniest thing I saw was a guy running down the street shouting, "I'm blind, I'm blind." Actually, he was a little under the weather; his hair had gotten mussed and fell over his eyes. He was evidently a frosh because he didn't have the hibit yet the Smith habit. HOWARD T. SMITH BARBER SHOP 210 S. ALLEN ST. Acme from the Post Office (Next to Hartman Electric) By LOUIE PRATO ATO aerial on the ASPi 30-yard line. On the next play, a pass in volving Shounberger, Herb Aboff, Dave Triedenberg and Don Hoff man advanced the oval to their own 25-yard stripe. From here it was all Shounberg- . er, as the former freshman full back from Delaware University, completed a pass to Green on the five who, in turn, flipped the ball to Friendenberg, who made a div ing catch in the end zone for the tally. Larry Boni converted. ASPi garnered two more points late in the second frame. A -hard charging line. led by Stan Stir man. forced the 'APO center to make a bad pass. The ball • went out of the end zone for an auto matic safety. In the final fracas of tho *wa ning. Susie managed to squats* by a biggie Raider iqus4 Harry' Maim scored tiro foss TD of the Isar an a IS-yard end run. Ths play bad boon Olt up on two pass plays: Mann to Phil Sddonirssi. and Mann >o •Jorry Carlson. mods Irons mere virgin Scottish wool. O.S. inquiries may los directed to Suite 801, 110 East 42nd Street, New York 17, New York . .. for your convenience HARRIS TWEED and JOCKEY UNDERWEAR at MEN'S STORE . . . STATE COLLEGE THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA spun, hand-wove* and finished is the Outer Hebrides . . . that's ALTATio - o: ON THE LINE Navy's quarterbacking job that was so expertly handled by con fident George Welsh Saturday will long be a topic of discussion in the Nittany Valley. , He was remarkable. His receiv ers were remarkable - say Penn State wasn't up to par on pass defense. That is.partially true. But Navy was, and did, just about everything in the book, and con tinually got setup to make inter ceptions almost impossible. Lenny Moore's task against a pass to Ron Beagle down the mid dle in the first quarter was typical of Navy's air to air prowess. Bea gle faked beautifully;' he turned at the proper instant. Moore could not go in front, or th . ball would have sailed over his head and into Beagle's hands. Beagle was too big -for Moore to • jump up and knock it outaof his hands—Par ticularly from the back without picking up an interference penal ty for climbing all over him. Welsh was magnificent, . . . and' All-American material along with his buddy, Beagle, who, with his diving catches, blocks, and faking , is a sure repeater. As for Moore, whc was held to 37 yards in 13 tries . for a two year low, he still picked up the plaudits of the press row as a great back. Coach Eddie Ederlatz . . . see ing Moore run practically 15 yards laterally, shaking five would-be taw/ with a tradition, """ • t Outer Haase • Plie Mom abed. Trd) There is no other cloth quite like HARRIS TWEED. Exclusive in its imagination and character, no two pieces are exactly alike. You will currently find at your local college store some of the most beautiful design's in all the history of HARRIS TWEED—in distinctive weights, weaves and textures that are a pleasure to wear. illustruted is she Benton model. one of the many styles you ens choose in Harris Tweed this season. work .. cloth sad 'obeli WIN row Rog: O.S. PO. ON: The Harris Tweed mark Is owned and administered by The Maras Tweed Ar sot n WI.. London,. England tacklers, and picking up only one yard, turned and said—as if he didn't care who heard it as long as it was carried down his own bench—"he is terrific . . . he's really a great runner." Back to - Welsh. He rolled up 285 yards on passes in three quarters of play. That eclipsed his ow n school's record for one passer in a single game, and exceeded any similar r ark set on Beaver Field. •We checked some records on this one through helpful Bill Ackerman of the Sports Publicity department. Here's what we came up with• no opposing team had averaged more than 185 yards per! game in . the air for the past five years against Penn State. That' figure was posted in 1953. As far as individual perform ances are concerned, in 1952 Pour-. due's pint sized quarterback Dale ,Samuels, who resembled Welsh :physically, hit on 13 of 28 for 125 !yards. The late Harry Agganis, Boston University's all-round star, in 1951 connected on 10 of the 12 passes that BU completed in 16 times, for 262 yards. I On the Penn State side of the ledger, quarterback Tony Rados, a .three-year man for the Lions, turned in outstanding perform ances that included (1) 247 yards in 1953 against W. es t Virginia when he completed 16 of 27 pass se, (2) and in 1952 when he flipped for 192 yards against Purdue on. Y : V • .. : ... :111 :1 WY I A II NI : makes date with Jockey brand underwear "Whether I'm on a Fall picnic, or a Spring test of the college golf course, I like to feel comfortable," says Roamer A. Kinsey. "That's why I've been going steady with Jockey briefs for years." Roamer has already found out what every young man should know about underwear—there's nothing like the comfort, and casual, at-ease appearance that cornea from wearing Jockey briefs! Better drop into your dealer's soon .. buy a supply of Jockey briefs and T-shirts ... and feel as good as you look! „.„I,A it's in style to be comfortable . in Jockey** •Ma. 4 underwear mode only by By ROY WILLIAMS Collegian Sports Editor passes. This time he set a Penn State record with 17 completion in 30 tries. In the second instance, how ever, he had three passes inter cepted. In the second trick against the Mountaineers he lost one to the opposition. Welsh bettered both of these marks plus those of Samuels and Agganis, and still had none of his aerials hauled in by the opposi tion. But the number of passes com pared to the attempts don't al ways tel' the story In Welsh's case they do. He averaged 19 yards per pass, and this included screen passes which are designed to pick up quick yardage but often do not. Camera Can't Take Heat Maps, flashlights, screwdrivers —they can take the heat and dust that builds up in the glove com partment of your car. Yt,ur cam era and film can't. So, when traveling to that favorite fighing. spot, it's a good idea .to store your camera , and extra film somewhere else. You'll be glad you did. The Cotton Bowl in Dallas costs $400,000' to build in 1930. It s'nce has been enlarged from 45,019 seats to 75,504. Improvements cost two million dollars. Inc.. Kenosha, Wisconsin PAGE SEVEN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers