PAGE TEN ,Lion Harriers ;McKee Minos Down Manhattan Win Swim Meet; In Come-Back Move Into Semis The McKee Minos won their By VINCE CAROCCI second IM swimming meet of the The Penn State cross-country team proved it had the:year and moved into the Indie ability to rebound after a resounding defeat by walloping a iserni-finals last night at the strong Manhattan squad, 20-35, Saturday on the University Glennland P oo t l. The's one catch though—he Minosa r er still golf course.l waiting to get their fins damp- The Lions' three outstanding sophomores —Ed Moran.!ened! ' Fred Kerr, and Clem Schoenebeck—were joined by Captaini They have annexed both their Don Woodrow in leading th Also important, but not as much ;e ngagementse by way of the for- Lion charges to victory, all four . ; i . eit, but it hasn't dampened their finishing in a tie for first place;as rebuffing the demoralization enthusiasm any—as a matter of, in the strongest harrier team ef- beliefs held after the Spartan; fact, they're hoping to go all the fort to date. ishoutout, was that the win guar-iwaY, even if they don't have to! The four finished in 27:13.5 a f- l anteed the Nittanies a winning enter the-water. it'd' having registered identical season after going winless in 1955.1 IM director, Clarence (Dutch) times at each mile mark over; The Lions now sport a 3-1 record, Sykes had a slightly different the five-mile course. The mileiwith only Pittsburgh remaining ,opinion though, for fewer games breakdown read: first mile-5:02, on the regular schedule. ;have been forfeited in IM sports second mile-10:18. third mile— jaspers Sporf Good Record !this year than ever before and 15:58, fourth mile-21:21, and fifth ;Dutch wants to keep the slate mile--21:73.5.Defeating the Manhattan team,clean. Tie for Smith ,can be considered a feather in; In other action, the Trays hand- Phil Rios and Ed McAllisteriCoach Chick Werner's hat be-led Pollock 4 another gift by for- ; Nvere the first Manhattan harriers? cause the Jaspers came here with ,feit, 1-0. Del t a Sigma Phil to cross the finish line in 27:43.5, a record of strong team balance / splashed to a 26-15 triumph over Hood for a sixth place tie. Ed' to back them up. !Beta Sigma Rho, in the only frat- McLaughlin, Manhattan, followed, In three previous meets, the;ernity encounter. in 28:00 with teammate GeraldiJaspers had won the first seven! Bob Grove paced the winners ; Malloy in the eighth spot in 28:90:Places against Dartmouth, the in the 60 yard free style with; John Gorrnally finished ninth first 11 places against Seton Hall,:a wide-margin first, while team in 28:22 to complete the Jasper iand 10 of the fir s t 13 places mate Ron Kolb took a third place. runners listed in the first 10. Bob, against Providence. The Provi-• 1 ?! eta Sig's Tom Brandeis came Thompson, Lion sophomore, coin; i dence meet was the first that a!ir: second. pleted the Lion scoring with a iManhattan runner had not fin-I George Hunter raked in five' 10th place in 28:25. fished in first place—Providence Points by winning the 60-yard Sophomore Jay Kirby was 15th ti von the first two places. ;backstroke for Delta Sig, but the -with senior Ron Lewis grabbing! With all meets but the Pitts -:vanquished captured second and the 16th tiosition. burgh race out of the way, only i third place points with Iry Kline Big Win for Lions the IC4-A and the intercollegiateiand Dick Friedman taking hon . The meet was a big one for the' runs remain for the harrierc Lions to win. By winning, the'llowever, both are run on an op-. ors. I Bill Kiser made it a clean harriers proved that they wert-ltional basis—a team may or may sweep on firsts for the winners on the rebound road after the 15 notenter and Werr.!r has not!'" he powered to a first with 40 whitewash at the hands of un- 'reached a decision on the matter a strong butterfly stroke in the defeated Michigan Slate. _ yet :6o-yard breaststroke. Teammate 'George Hoffman followed up with a third place and Mikey Peri meter of Beta Sigma Rho was the! runner-up. Grove, Kolb, Kiser and Hunter• proved the top combination in the 120-yard freestyle relay. Diving was the only .event the losers could cop, with Tom Bran deis picking up 16.4 points. Ron Passmore of Delta Sig was second with 14.1 and Jack Rusnak fol lowed him, also of the winning team with 11 markers. Red Spirits Boosted By Giant Hoopster MELBOURNE. Nov. 5 from the Hungarians. Poles and contingent of Ru—zian alhlttes ex-citizens of other Iron Curtain who prefei tea to Vodka settled counties, who held a protest meet down :n Hc)dclb••rg Olcinp.c VII- mg yesterday. But none showed at todav, ta:Ked confidently of. the airport, or if they did made ttreir chances in the forthroming'no outbursts. games. but froze like stone at the ; The situation was not entirely mention of politics. ,eased. however. The mystery ship The center of attraction among Gruzia, with a large delegation of the 63 Soviet team members and, both Russians and Hungarians officials who flew in from Ran- aboard, is due to dock Thursday. goon was a 7-foot-one Latvian The first planeload of Hungarian woodchopper named Jan Krum- athletes is now said to be heading inst . ', who plays renter on th e for Melbourne from Prague, where basketball team. they were temporarily held up. Towering above even the tall- 1 est of his teammates, Kruminsh p• submitted to a lunch time inter- Pitt-Gophers view through a Boy Scout in terpreter and predicted Russia • ' IP . - would beat the United States for uitter on 'Cltp` I the basketball title, "We have a fine team and the. MINNEAPOLIS. Nov. 5 tiPi—Aj Americans will not have the ad- mild controversy brewed up atl vantage of height which they had./°ng range today over who got' at Helsinki." Jan said. "Russia ctipped. Minnesota or Pittsburgh.] o and America will be in the finals on the pulse-stopping kickoff run again. but this time we will win.",back by Pitt's Joe Walton in the Russia brought 12 basketball final moments of Saturday's players, of whom nine are so tall,game they require special beds. The; Coach Murray Warmath of Min average height is 6-feet-4. •nesota said the films showed ; c Another standout in the Soviet;ieariy Minnesota's Bob Blakley vanguard was Vladimir Kuts, a' was blocked from behind by a, grim -faced little man who holds; Pittsburgh player in Panther ter the world record in the 10,000- ritory. meter run. i Field Judge Stan Machock, who . .. At the Olympic Village the . called the play, said there was no. Russians mixed in with all oth- : question that it was clipping. er nations, unlike their debut i But a Pittsburgh sports writer, , four years ago at Helsinki , when who also viewed films of the they and other. Iron Curtain game. said he saw no clipping countries camped in a separate on the play. Coach John Micho-I village eight miles from the losen of Pitt also said the Pitt others. , movies show no clipping. __ Olympic official. breathed eas- The play came iminediately ier when the first Russian plane- after Dick Borstad's 23-yard field load arrived without incident. goal which gave Minnesota a 9-6 Demonstrations were expected victory. DONAHEY RADIO-TV Record Players Sales and Service OPEN EVENINGS 1:00 - 10:00 P.M. 119 S. Pugh St. (rear) Phone ADams 7-7112 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA PRIME STEAKS LA GALLERIA STEAMED CLAMS Hours Mon.-Thurs. 5-11 p.m. 233 E. Beaver Fri. and Sat. 5-12 Sun. 12 Noon-8 p.m. AD 8■6765 Coeds Picked As All-Stars Penn State center halfback Carolyn Briggs and left fullback Maxine Hampton were named to the Central Pennsylvania field hockey first team Saturday: Try outs were held at Wilson College at Chambersburg where six teams competed for honors. Goalie Sally Jervis was named to the second team, and center fullback Barb McKnight was giv en honorable mention. The varsity team won one game and tied two others during the tryout competition. It beat Wil son, 3-0, tied Lock Haven, 1-1, and battled Gettysburg to a score less tie. The second team lost to Eliza bethtown, 3-1, and played a score less tie with the Wilson College second team. Those selected for the Central Pennsylvania team will tryout for the Mid East team on Friday and Saturday at Mechanicsburg. In field hockey competition in the F'r•nn State intramural league last week-, Thompson 'boosted its r , torci to 3-0 by handing Kappa' I ?pa Gamma its first loss, Barb McKnight and Sue Corbin; scored the Thompson goals. Lynn: Stollmeyer knoeked- in the lone , KKG score. Coach Rip Engle rates his cur rent Penn State football team the spunkiest he has ever coached. SYRACUSE COACHES PROVEN WRONG! One minute and 49 seconds remained on the scoreboard clock in Syracuse's Archbold Stadium and Lion Coach Rip Engle in a last ditch attempt to salvage a win inserted quarterback Milt Plum into the lineup. Up in the press box, watching the proceedings as an Orange spotter, was assistant coach Roy Simmons. When Simmons noticed Plum walking on the field he immediately began to shout into the ief Id phones: "He's not supposed to be in there. Get the attention of the referee. He's not supposed to be in there." Head coach Ben Schwartzwalder followed the instructions and complained to the referee, causing the Lions to get penalized 15 yards (it appeared to this writer as if it were a 16-yard penalty) and losing any chance of getting the ball. Engle protested violently hut his pleas were unheeded. Many writers in the press box though Engle had pulled a "Woody Hayes" because he was too excited, and one metropolitan paper accused Engle of blundering badly. But yesterday when the films were shown it was evident that the Syracuse coaches and the officials were a fault and Engle was deserving of an apology for being accused unmercifully of being dishonest." The usually mild mannered Engle said yesterday "I'm not going to be the brunt of somebody else's mistakes. The movies prove I was right." Engle added: "Instead of calling us and verifying Plum's eligibility they called us liars and cheats. I was willing to bet $lOOO that I was right and I'm still willing to wager that amount:' Syracuse was apparently on guard against any illegal substitutes that the Lions would use :since West Virginia Coach Art Lewis and Army Coach Earl Blaik both complained about the Lions' illegal substituting during games. But Engle said that the films prove that Plum wasn't inserted illegally during the West Virginia game. At the Army game Engle said he asked for a "dead" bench, but was refused, consequently causing a mix up of players on the side lines. "A couple of our boys were illegally substituted in that game," Engle said, "but it was not premeditated. It was just an honest mis take and I am sorry it happened." Engle appeared bitter over the fact that the integrity of him self, his assistants, and team was questioned after the game. "I would make no comment were it not that my integrity and the integrity of my team have been questioned," Engle said. "I want to say unqualifiedly that anyone who suggests the illegal substi tution is a strategy we employ to gain an advantage is speaking withotit regard for the truth . . Since Engle has proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that he is right it should be unexcusable for the Syracuse coaching staff not to write a public letter of apology. STILL HOPE FOR COTTON lost to Syracuse I still think that we have a club which would fare better against southwestern oppo sition than Syracuse. The Lions have a more versatile team. They boast a powerful de fense, a smooth running offense, a fire passing attack, and one of the best pass defenses in the coun try. On the other hand. Syracuse has one thing—a ground attack, which was not that much more potent than the Lions'. If the Lions win their last three games I don't think the Cotton Bowl commiitees should overlook them for I think in the long run we will prove the bet ter team. (Remember the 1953 Cotton Bowl?) TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 6. 1456 Scanning SPORTS By FRAN FANUCCI, Sports Editor BOWL BID! Although the Lions 1 have the greatest bargain in sweaters in town: All nationally ad vertised name brand sweaters with the labels cut out, se I can sell sweaters at such a low, low price. This was a manufacturer's close-out, thus offering you a TREMENDOUS SAV ING. These sweaters are fashioned of all wool. cashmere blends, orlon. wool and nylon blends. wool and orlon blends. cashmere and wool, and combed lamb's wool. I have long sleeved pull in all the ivy colors nationally advertised at $lO now selling for f 7.99. Olympic crew mach ski sweaters fashioned of IGO% orlon originally $lO now $0.99. I have sleeveless coat sweaters orig inally selling for $6.95 now cut to a. low of only $4.93. Here's the perfect vest to wear under an ivy League Jacket- These vests are of a wool and nylon blend with a. plaid front and knit back. Christmas shopping early? Well. here's the perfect gift for Dad. I have long sleeved coat sweaters fashioned from 1005, lamb's woof. They were originally $14.95 now selling for only -$13.19. Another fine group of long sleeve pullovers selling at only $5.99 were scheduled to arrive before this •rtiele goes to press. Why not come in today and select a new sweater to supplement your win ter wardrobe; Danks & Co. Men's Shop Entrance on W. Beaver Ave mac Sez • • . Sweaters! Sweaters! Sweaters!