SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 12. IRM Harriers to Run In IC4-A's Frosh Rated Top .Contenders For Yearing Championship The Penn State cross-country team completed a sour sea son on a bitter note last Saturday. The loss to Manhattan in its final dual meet of the season left Chick Werner's harrier squad with a winless Centennial record. • As a result, only two varsity hill and dalers Captain Doug Moorhead and Don Woodrow—will run for the bacon Monday in the mammoth Intercollegiate Association of Ama teur Athletics meet in New York City. 10 Bowlnig Teams Win IM Games Intramural fraternity bowling came within two games of an all winning night on Thursday at Recreation Hall. Eight of the 10 matches played in leagues C and D resulted in shutout victories. In league C, Sigma CM held on to its first-place' lead over Al pha Chi Sigma as is stopped Pi Kappa Phi, 4-0. In the other whitewashes Lambda , Chi Alpha beat Alpha Sigma Phi; Kappa Sigma defeated Phi Kappa Sig ma; and Alpha Chi Sigma blast ed Delta Upsilon. Only Theta Chi failed to come through with a shutout as it beat Theta Xi, 3-1. Beta Theta Pi maintained its lead in league D over idle Sigma Alpha Mu with a 4-0 win over Alpha Tau Omega. Tau Kappa Epsilon beat Phi Delta T het a; Theta Kappa Phi defeated Sigma Nu; and Sigma Phi Alpha stop ped Phi Sigma Kappa in the oth er shutouts for the. D loop. In the other game Kappa Delta Rho beat Triangle 3-1. Bill Gardiner, of Sigma Chi, rolled the highest single in league C, knocking down 214 pins. His 564 three-game title also brought him top honors in the high game triple. Kappa Sigma was the teiml leader in loop C with a high single of 816 and a three-game total of 2267. Garry Crother,s, of KDR, bowl ed the best individual single in the D circuit with 211, but he could not keep up the pace in three games as Bob Koehler, of Phi Sigma Kappa, came through with the high triple; 519. Despite KDR's failure to join its league D counterparts in a shutout, it received some consola tion by winning the high team single 812, and triple, 2222. 8 Indies Post IM Wins (Continued from page six) Five, 26-18. Larry Fiessner scored eight points for the winners while Bill Davies dumped in six for the losers. The Musketeers walloped, Dorm 26, 32-18,• behind a nine point ef fort by Pat Parmelee. Clayton Carter scored seven points for the losers. The Twenty-niners trounced Dorm 25, 40-17. Mike Vignola, with 10 points, and Don Gray and Tom Hancock, with nine points each, sparked the winners' at tack. The Grooveology Five, playing sterling defensive ball, outscored a hard-fighting Dorm 48 squad, 17-8.-Bob Taft was Ifigh man for the winners with eight points. The Filthy Five won a forfeit victory over Dorm 31. The Tribe, spearheaded by Bob By RON GATEHOUSE It will mark the first time dur ing Werner's reign in the Vale that the Blue and White hasn't been represented team-wise in the annual eastern cross-country fes tival. The minimum entry in or der to be eligible for the team trophy is five, thus eliminating the Lions from team competition. But, on the strength of fresh man Coach Norm • Gordon's yearling runners, Penn State will be duly represented Mon day. The freslunn team,, ranked by both Gordon and Werner among the best they've witnessed, will enter the meet seven strong. And on the basis of their performance the past season, the Lion frosh have to be rated among the top contenders for the yearling cham pionship. Gordon has selected the front runners of his first-year team— a squad which has yet to taste defeat—to carry the Lion hopes into the frosh battle. The list includes Ed Morin. Fred Kerr. Bob Thompson. Clam Schoen*. beck, Chailie King, Sam Sharbii. and Bill Kithy. In the Lions' two shutout wins over the Navy and Cornell fresh man teams the past season, four runners—Moran, Kerr, Thompson, and Schoenebeck crossed the finish line side-by-side and tied for top honors. Commenting on the frosh's chances for title honors Mon day. Gordon and Werner were quick to point out that the IC4-A run will be only the third taste of collegiate competition for the freshmen, and they will be facing several teams strong er than the two who fell by the wayside against them during the regular season. Among the freshman powers expected to challenge the Lion frosh are Harvard, Pitt, Manhat tan, St. Josephs. of Philadelphia, St. Johns of New York, and Syra cuse- Moorhead and Woodrow will be running against a field of some 230 varsity harriers, rep resenting the 78 colleges and universities which comprise the IC4-A—the largest league of its kind in the world. Devlin and Dave Monk, beat the Susies, 34-21. George Mauler scored 10 points in the losing cause. The Knicks edged the Baby Sans, 27-24, in the final game of the evening. Jim Megahan , was the high scorer for the winners with nine .points, while Elwood Austin hit for 12 points for the losers. Fraternity hoopsters w ill get their first taste of IM action Mon day 'night when nine fraternity squads hit the hardwoods. Inde pendent cagers will return to ac tion Wednesday night when four indie teams Will play along with five fraternity entries. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Bob Thompson, Fred Kerr, Ed Moran, Clem Schoenebeck, and Charlie King. Two other yearling runners not pictured above, Sam Sherba and Bill Kirby, will also enter the meet. Natators, Alpha Sig, TKE, Swim Victors Last night's Intramural swimming matches at the Glennland Pool proved to be a runaway for the winning teams. Tau Kappa Epsilon and Alpha Sigma Phi split 68 points between them in their victories while ,the Natators went into the independent semi-finals with its 27-14 conquest, of Watts Hall. TKE beat Alpha Gamma Rho, 34-7 and Alpha Sig stopped Kappa Sigma, 34-5, in the fra. ternity; matches. - The Natators set an unofficial rm. record in the 120-yard relay in its victory over the Watts Hall Swimmers. The new record-57.6 —clipped two and three-tenths seconds off the old relay mark. Record Not Official But the Natators efforts were in vain. The record can not be counted as official since Watts did not enter a team in the relay event. Mike Stollmeyer, John Funk hauser, Bob Schiffener, and Jim Helper were the unlucky swim mers who will not see their rec ord go down into the books. AGR could put together only one second and two first places in* its loss to TKE. Meanwhile, TKE was racking up point after point, in copping its second win. Rossi Top Poinimaker Al Rossi was the big point maker for the TKE, swimmers.'He actually beat the men from AGR single-handed by , winning first places in the 60-yard back stroke, 160-yard breast stroke, and the I diving contest. But all of TKE's entrants did its share. Carl Snyder placed first in the 60-yard free style, second in diving, and was a member of the 120-yard .relay team; Pa u 1 Johnson was second in the back stroke, and was on the relay squad; Hal Byers, second in the breast stroke; and Walt Cron and Henry Keltz on the relay team. Rohrbach Stars Mike Rohrbach led Alpha Sig to its decisive win over Kappa Sig. He walked off with top hon ors in the free style and diving, and was on the winning relay team. His teammates backed him up with first places in every event. Cliff Gleason won the back stroke; Tim Bynes, the breast stroke; and AI Balkey, Mike Bun ney, and Gleason teamed with Rhorbach for the 120-yard relay. '..:GAD.!'-THIS WIND IS OSSING MY HAIRif- ILL NOT BE A CREDIT THE. - -E,WHEN Out On a Limb Sports Editor Roy Williams and Assistant Sports Editor Ron Gatehouse are out today to break their two-way deadlock for first place in the Daily Collegian's weekly grid poll. Gatehouse has been on the up-climb the past two weeks, jumping from last place into the tie for first. Williams, on the other hand, has hit a slump which he can't seem to shake. In the past two weeks, he saw his four game lead dwindle to a bare tie for the top spot in the standings. Fran Fanucci and the Nittany Lion coaches—represented this week by head coach "Rip" Engle—are right on the tails of the two leaders, just one game off the pace. Fanucci, who has been shuffling back and forth between the second, third, and fourth positions throughout the poll, tied the coaches for second with a 7-8 slate last week. The coaches are putting their fate in the hands of their boss in an effort to regain the lead which they held for the first two weeks of the picks. Both Williams and Gatehouse are playing it on the safe side today, differing in only one pick—the Florida-Tennessee battle Fanucci "went out on the limb" in today's poll to place himself on top of the pack. Ala-Geo Tech Ark-SMU Auburn-Geo Colgate-Syracuse Colorado-Neb Florida-Tenn 111-Wis lowa-Ohio St Mich St-Minn Ore-Stanford Pitt-West Va Prince-Yale Rice-Texas A&M TCU-Texas UCLA-Wash • • , • ,• 4 ! .4 k Y * * * Williams (.628) Geo Tech Auburn Syracuse Colorado Florida Ohio St Mich St Stanford West Va. Prince Texas A &bi UCLA Panther-W.Va. Tilt to Feature Big Line Play PITTSBURGH, Nov. 11 (EP)— Two of the biggest and best lines in college football appeared today to hold the key to success as un beaten West Virginia and a good Pitt team went through fin al preparations for their game today before a sellout crowd of some 60,000. Aiming for victory, West Vir ginia sought both a Sugar Bowl bid and revenge for the 13-10 up set last year that is the only Mountaineer loss since the middle of the 1953 season. Coach Art Lewis' charges still have to face Syracuse and North Carolina State, but the bowl scouts will be on hand for the Pitt, game. Pitt's 5-3 season log is far less impressive than the Mountain eers' 7-0, and the Panthers own nothing remotely like West Vir ginia's offensive averages of 436 yards and 34 points per game. But Pitt has faced what most fans rate as tougher competition, and has a 35-11-1 edge in the long ser ies with West Virginia beginning in 1895. And Pitt owns a forward wall that is bigger and more seasoned than any yet faced by the Moun taineers, which leaves a possibly decisive edge in the game riding on the line play. Fanucci (.619) Gatehouse (.628) Geo Tech Geo Tech Auburn Auburn Syracuse Syracuse Colorado Colorado Florida Ohio St Mich St Mich St Stanford Stanford West Va. Prince Texas ABeNl Texas A&M UCLA UCLA PAGE SEVEN n an effort Coaches (.619) Geo Tech Auburn Syracuse Colorado Ohio St Mich St Stanford West Va. - - Yale Texas A&M UCLA
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