TUESDAY. OCTOBER 16. 1956 Unbeaten Booters Stil By LOU PRATO ionents of the Penn State soccer team could do well and heed some advice jccer coach Joe Weber. Future opj from Syracuse s “Take a li the second peril ttle lesson from these guys,” the Syracuse mentor told his reserves during >d of Penn State’s 10-0 rout over the Orange hooters Saturday morning . “At least learn something.” mark may have been one of those “off the collar” statements that are al the heat of an >ut it does re md play of the i Saturday, terman’s boot l on the New Syracuse man ill in Lion ter times on Beaver Fielc Weber’s n ways made durini athletic contest, fleet on the all-ro Nittany soccermer Coach Ken Ho: ers were so hari York School that aged to get the bi ritory only a few ■ The win kept defeated streak i games and left the 2-0-1. They have j upon. :he Lion's un atact after 21 ir 1956 mark at et to be scored Statistically, th classed the Orang 4-1 ratio. Hoste tried 61 shots at goal and had fivi In sharp compari cuse unit attemp shots and two cor e Lions out : by an almost man’s eleven the Syracuse : corner kicks. ;on, the Syra ed only eight ner kicks. Hosierman C. iars Bench Hosterman cleared his bench early to prevent a complete walk away. His reserves, plus captain Steve Flamporis, who played the full 88 minutes, saw action through all of the third period and half of the fourth. Per Torgeson Mike Stoll meyer lived up to their roles of Lion scoring threats by leading the 10-point attack. Torgeson, a doubtful'-starter before the game because of a leg injury, sunk four goals while his counterpart put in three. ■ Only - one ,of Torgeson’s goals was made with his injured right foot. That was in the fourth per iod when he breezed the ball past the Syracuse goalie from 15 yards in front of the goal. How ever, the score was costly to the flashy sophomore for it aggra vated his bruise and forced him to leave the scene. Walz Scores Twice ' Dutch Walz and Dave Haase scored the other Lion goals. Walz had one in each of the first and fourth periods. Haase scored his in the second. Penn State started out fast, slowed down briefly in the first period, and then picked up enough momentum to coast to the victory. Torgeson opened the scoring after only a minute and twenty seconds had gone by in the initial stanza. But the Lions bogged down at this point, and although they kept the ball in Syracuse territory for the next ten minutes, it took a goal by Walz at the 13:50 mark to get them moving again. Stollmeyer and Torgeson added Deadline Nears For IM Sports Intramural competitors in bas ketball and swimming must regis ter their organization by 4:30 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 18 at the Intra mural office, 202 Recreation Hall. Independent and fraternity teams .will play a 'round-robin tournament in basketball and a single-elimination tourney in swimming which will be held in Glennland Pool. Entrance fees are $1- . . Swimming will-begin Wednes day, Oct. 24 with each meet con sisting of five.events: 60-yard free style, 60-yard backstroke, 60-yard -breast stroke, 120-yard relay (4 . men), and diving (1 front dive, rl back dive, and 1 optional). Basketball teams will play a minimum of eight games over the season which begins for indies Oct. 25 and continues through the spring semester into March. . Fraternity basketball will start weeks after the indies open. Intercollegiate basketball rules are used with few modifications by the IM- department. Complete rules can be obtained in the IM office' on. payment of entrance fees. Unscored-On —Daily Collegian Phot* by Dave Bavar PER TORGESON. playing despite a bruised instep to his right foot, steals the ball away from a Syracuse man at Saturday's soccer game. The sophomore scoring threat led the Lions to a 10-0 win oyer the Orange with four goals. two more goals before the period, ended to give the Lions a 4-0 lead entering the second stanza. Syracuse began to move the ball into Lion territory in the early moments of the second per iod but they could not keep up the pressure. Stollmeyer scored his second point at 13:00 and fif ty-five seconds later Torgeson boosted the scoring margin to 6-0. Haase tallied his goal 24 seconds before the half ended and the Lions went to the dressing rooms with a 7-0 lead. Subs Can’t Score Hosterman substituted a whole new team in the third quarter —with the exception of Flam poris but the Lion reserves could not score. They had plenty of opportunities, taking 13 shots at the Syracuse goal, but the Syr acuse goalie Jim Barker came through to keep the Lions score less during the period. With the Lion first team back William & Mary, Vanderbilt and in action for part of the fourth Marquette will be newcomers to stanza, Penn State counted three Penn State’s 1957 football sched more goals. Stollmeyer scored at ule. ICE SKATES 15% Off to Students WE TRADE OLD SKATES Have yours laid aside now while all sizes are available WESTERN AUTO W. College Ave. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA 14:32, Torgeson at 19:35, and Walz completed the scoring after 20 minutes and 44 seconds had elapsed in the period. Frosh Soccermen Win Opener, 2-0 Frosh soccerites Bill Feidler, center forward; Garry Miller, cen ter halfback; and Ralph Bocker. goalie, combined their talents to blank the Frostburg Maryland State Teachers varsity in the op ening game last Saturday, 2-0. Weak on experience and unco ordinated in the first half, the freshmen held their hosts score less and then drove the two win ning scores into the nets in the second half when their attack “be gan to jell.” according to coach Dave Bishoff. Council to Post Election Lists Lists for seif-nomination to the Engineering and Architecture Stu dent Council-are being posted for freshmen today. Freshmen enrolled in the Col lege of Engineering and Architec ture may become a candidate by self-nomination. The election will I be held Oct. 30. The lists, which will be removed on Oct. 23, are situated on the Main Engineering bulletin board, and in the basement of Hetzel Union Building. Lists are also posted on the individual depart ment bulletin boards. Freshman representatives will be elected from electrical engi neering, mechanical engineering. STUDYING CAN BE BEAUTIFUL Is studying bugging you? Do you have trouble re membering names, dates, facts, figures, and the location of the library? Dear friends, it need not be so. All you have to do is master the simple art of mnemonics. Mnemonics, as we all know, was invented by the great Greek philosopher Mnemon in 526 B.C. Mnemonics, in cidentally, was only one of the many inventions of this fertile Athenian. He is perhaps best known for his in vention of the staircase, which, as you may imagine, was of inestimable value to mankind. Before the staircase, people who wished to go from floor to floor had to leap from springboards. This meant, of course, that aged and infirm persons were forced to live out their lives, willy nilly, on the ground floor, and many of them grew cross as bears. Especially Demosthenes, who was elected con sul of Athens three times but never served because ha was unable to get up to the office of the commissioner of oaths on the third floor to be sworn in. But after Mnemon’s staircase was invented, Demos thenes got up to the third floor easy as pie and took the oath-to Athens’ sorrow, as it turned out. Demosthenes, his temper shortened by years of confinement to the ground floor, soon embroiled his countrymen in a series of senseless and costly wars with the Persians, the Visigoths, and the Ogallala Sioux. He was voted out of office in 517 8.C., and Mnemon, who had made his accession pos sible, was pelted to death with fruit salad in the Duomo. But I digress. We were discussing mnemonics, which are nothing more than aids to memory catchwords or jingles that help you to remember names, dates, and places. For example, any student of American history surely knows the little jingle: Columbus sailed the ocean blue In fourteen hundred ninety two. You see how simple a mnemonic is? There is no rea son why you can’t make up your own. Say, for instance, that you are proceeding with American history. The Pilgrims landed on Plymouth Rock In sixteen hundred twenty, doe. (This jingle is especially useful to medical students.) The next important event is the Boston Tea Party. Let us compose a rough-and-ready couplet about that: Samuel Adams flung the tea Into -the briny Zuyder Zee. You can see how simple and useful they are —not only for history, but also for current events. For instance, In nineteen hundred fifty six It’s the cigarette that'clicks! What, you ask, is the cigarette that clicks? Why,- Philip Morris, of corris! And why shouldn’t it click? Could any cigarette be more pleasing to the palate? No! Could any cigarette be more tempting to the taste buds? No! A thundering, thumping, resounding no! Get some today, hey. You’ll see. Li mi won't need mnemonics to remember the wonderful natu ral flavor of Philip Morris Cigarettes, whose makers are do. lighte <f fo bring you thia cotumn mry wrffc. History Instructors ITo Attend Meeting Four faculty members will at tend the forthcoming Pennsylvan ia Historical Association meetings to be held Oct. 26 and 27 at York. Dr. Warren W. Hassler Jr., in structor in history, and Dr. Har old E. Dickson, professor of his tory of art and architecture, will deliver papers on historical topics at the meetings. Dr. Philip S. Klein, professor of American history, is president of the association and Dr. Robert K. Murray, associate professor of his tory, is secretary. industrial engineering, aeronau tical engineering, civil engineer ing, architecture, and architecture engineering curriculums. On Campus WaxShokan (Author of "Barefoot fioy Cheek” etc.}' PAGE SEVEN ©Max Shutraaa, 1954
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers