FAGE FOUR " Student spirit burst forth yesterday with perhaps the biggest spontaneous roar ever seen on this campus. When the clock at Ohio Stadium ran out, students from all comers of the campus Jet loose with a collective whoop that must have shook the windows m Bellefonte. . , , , , , , ill By GREG HUNTINGDON , stein. Townspeople hurried Billy Kane at the one-foot line. If any one has ever had any serious doubts about a lack. fnnllmll fane and' home with their packages from I Gilmore plowed over two plays of school spirit at Penn State the wild demonstration which- s ! the afternoon shopping routine later and Plum got the oval be conlinued far after dark vesterday must have certainlv erased spectators alike were unin- to pick up ihe second half of tween the uprights. 1 linen dnnhlc united and indifferent ac loud the ball game. j noouy Hates, as well as his those doubts. spued and inaiiierent as loud Indi{fer | nt ?tudents trying to counteipart._Rip Engle, must have It was like a Luge wave which, once underway, seem- speakers, radio and television iogly wouldn't slop. The once-imposable upset which just iannouncers blared the first couldn't be—was! The powerful giants from the Midwest 'period results: Penn State, 0, Ohio were conquered. The Niltany Lions had done it. The Mall Stale 0. Only the occasional rauc becaroe a mass of congestion, wild-shriekinq students and ou . a ? r °aned, simply for the , gaily colored convertibles. and The very spontaneity of the whole tiling seems to be'the rest at the football nation went proof positive of the fact that Penn State students can get :b f ck . to business at hand, henned nn jplaywg golf, working in the yard hepped up. _ or wa j c i, ln g a football game. Looking out at the mass hysteria centering around the So what—nobobdy but the corner of the Mall and Pollock road it was difficult to even dyed-in-the-wool Penn Staler conceive of anyone ever accusing Penn Staters of being ma^r*^ -apathetic about anything—-Je3st of all a win oil the gridiron, tiro® before Ibe Buckeyes would It is true there have been no demonstrations after other cut loose, they thought. SV T mem °T BUI WC h / VB ne , Ver beaten halftime* lire me Number live team m the country for as long as we speakers at Franklin Field. Pitt have been around either. Stadium, the Yale Bowl and And so as we write this editorial the flush of victory still! uS* avlmge r fan Tvniauis strong over the entire student body. They are con-jprobably snapped to attention gregating at every available spot and are rocking the campus ar,d the immediate result must with, “The Niltany Lion and Short Yell State.’’ have been the'first display of ex- The entire football team is a hero. When they arrive | CI pledges engaged “h morning they will be accorded a hero's welcome. To 1 in afternoon work sessions laid say they deserve it would be the world's greatest under- j down their rakes and shovels to ‘Statement ■ gather around the nearest radio 1 and catch the WMAJ report of the contest by Mickey Berg- Grid Scores He** are yesterday's final j Cbeyney Teachers 7 football scores, courtesy of ra- Gettysburg 34. Muhlenburg 7 •die station WKAJ: Shippensburg Teachers 20. tPJSCT I Bloomsburg Teachers 3 Swarlhmore 48. Orsinus 23 ?ENS STATE 7. OHIO STATE G viIEST Amherst 27, Coast Guard 14 n Brandeis 20. Springfield 20 ®f* r 0 1! Lafayette 13. Bucknell 7 *1? ? U ° c . . „ Columbia 26. Harvard 20 0 Dartmouth 7. Holy Cross 7 ,Oklah; oma 34. Kansas 12 Wavy 17, Cinrionili 7 t * 6 6 i»to3S. w,sr 20 tofeLita. M 70 | Indiana 19. Nebraska 14 BS, RuSers 0 14 Syracuse 7. Army 0 ■ c ° kl *J om ? A&M 0 ■Worcester Tech 26. Wesleyan 7 m ~ > _ Yale 25. Cornell 7 v°' V? I P , a „ C,f i ' Marquette 6 Connecticut 13. Maine 7 ; Pittsburgh 27. Duke 14 Rhode Island 34. Massachusetts 13,SOUTH & SOUTHWEST East Stroudsburg Teachers 42, (Florida Stale 14. Wake Forest 14 Mansfield Teachers 12 (Georgia Tech 28. Auburn 7 Juniata 44. Dickinson 13 |VPI 46. Richmor-i 14 Drexell 44. P.M.C. 21 i North Carolina 34. Maryland 6 Indiana Teachers 31* Clarion .Tennessee 24. Alabama 0 Teachers 0 Texas A&M 7, TCU 6 West Chester Teachers 26. .Florida 21. Vanderbilt 7 California Teachers 7 !West Virginia 20. W&M 13 F&M 20. Albright 6 -Virginia 24. Lehiqh 12 Lock Haven Teachers 34. Mississippi State 19. Ark. Stale S Toretti Calls It Right ; Knew Lions Had It Line coach Sever J. Toretti Colled it light. "There aie only a few of you here lonight." he told 600 students s<t Thursday's “Beat-the-Buck * ves” pep rally in front of Rec flail, “but you will be proud you weiie here when you join the s thousands who will be here Sun day morning.” Crowd Doubtful Among the hopeful, but doubt ful. crowd at the rally. Toretti ■was probably the only person !r«c Ad Council Posts wlm flaUy predicted-and em-i Self nomination blanks for ! tor he cal Jed the greatest iness Administration student he has , know "- Council will be available unt.l i Friday in 106 Sparks. would be a contest between a i school where ‘football means! riir t\ iif u rni irni it everyth mg.” and one where "it is! IHc DAILY LULLtuIAN • *“ rt ' !s-~—r w the fhke usce. The members of the team arej t««<u. Thr.uk Sat.rd,. # *thc IUOSt courageous bunch of inrlDfivc iluriisf th* I'nirmitT kids I haw ever seen.” be said. II* r « r ••»»*»*{ o( ri " •*?*!» < «.Mrr>*» »f Overcome with emotion, Toretti I •then* turned and slipped qui et 1v 1 M Mite J ol- s. •through the door into Rec Had mi p "*‘ ortir ~ to the cheers of the crowd be 1 * knew would be multiplied by this' morning. ' Luncheon Club to Meet Dr. John S. Boyle, associate STAFF THIS ISSUE: Mike Moyle, professor of plant pathology, will Ed Dubbs. Vince Carocci. Dave address the Faculty Luncheon Bavar, Greg Huntingdon. Bob; Club at noon tomorrow in the'Frankiin, Carole Gibson. George: Hetzel Union Building. (French, Denny Malick, Mike Max- His subject will be "Life in,well. Joe Patton. Ad Staff:'Dave! Guatemala." i Richards. ' Editorial Lion Gridders— (Covtinved from page three) They just ovei w helmed every body. especially the Buckeye players. Mod of the credit has to be given to Engle and his staff. Working against tremendous odds they never lost faith in the team, which Engle calls “the spunkiest I have ever coached." How far the Lions will jump] lin the national rating remains to :be seen, but seeing it from a partial angle one can only see 'them in the top 15. Next wc-ek; (they meet highlv-rated West Vir- > jginia and the following week Svr-' acuse. I MH>» M o>lr. Aclinj; Ftiitor (Wtr Richard*. fUiMnevn Manacrr THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Fans Jolted by Buckeye Upset, Question Cotton Bowl Chances —The Editor ...but HAMILTON ttAMAM ! will be her#* OCT. 25 5m yovr PJoce*7»«r>J Offiemr for I!m« ond plot* If you cannot attend an interview, please sena your resume to —... a— . trying pick up lost sleep in their dorm been wild. So was everyone else rooms were jai-red back to reality listening in. People were on their by excited roommates. : feet in the heat of the excitement. The nation was waiting now : The clock erased precious to see if this upstart Penn State seconds. ' team was really the potential ! Ohio State took the kick-off i power they had been in the first and went all the way on four ; half. The Public Address an- plays. The moment of decision | nouncers brought the answer: had arrived as the two teams lined" : Third period scores—Penn Stale up for the kick with a minute to 0; Ohio Stale 0. jpiav. A penalty—the kick spurted j The fans were sciearning with to the right—no good! Bergstein that one. On campus, every ear'was screaming into the micro was ghied to the radio. When'phone. would the vaunted Buckeyes let; He counted the final seconds, loose? i Hals flew into the air, a low Mickey Bergstein was slowly; roar gained momentum in State ; unraveling the puzzle. The clock j College. On the field players was moving with seven minutes; and fans hopped into the air, remaining. Ohio State was knock-' hardly believing the scoreboard, ing at the Nittany Lion’s door. ; board. In the midst of the gigantic In the midwest and Southwest ; Columbus Stadium, one of the mouths dropped open and tongues football capitals of America. 82.- curled for the ensuing roar as the | 500 breathless spectators watch- j final came over the loud-speaker: j ed Bruce Gilmore intercept 1 Penn State 7; Ohio State 6. I Frank EUwood’s bullet pass in j On campus, students could the Penn State end zone and 1 hardly contain themselves. Cars . race downfleld to his own 25 to sped down the mall, spoutan brealc up Ohio's scoring threat. ' eous pep rallies arose, the whole j The first downs rolled by and town was engulfed by pande- ■ . the clock showed 3:30 with monium. But one thought bloi- State on the Buckeye 15. Plum , led out the rest—Does this mean ' rolled back and connected with ' the Cotton Bowl? 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