TUESDAY. NOVEMBE 800 Finish 3 Tie F By LOU PRATO of .coaching soccer at Penn State, Ken , er lost more than two games in one -coach kept his record intact last week closed out the 1956 campaign with vic- Pittsburgh. n whipped ay in Phila the season with a 3-0 win over the Panthe s. In four years Hostei - man has ne season. The Nittan as the Lion booter tories over Temple an The Lion soccerml Temple 5-1, last Tues• delphia and finished at Pittsburgh Saturda The wins gave H! coaching record at P:1 31-4-L He had Lthbea championship teams 1955 and in his first helm of the Lion 1 team posted a 5-2 ree l , This year, the State eight, lost two, and ti:; lost to Penn, 3-2, a 2-1, and .deadlocked ter, 0-0. The Lion scoring trio of Tom my Rule, Mike Stollmeyer. and Per Torgeson led the Lion of fensive in both of last week's contests. The three Lions tallied a goal in each game to finish in a three-way tie ifor season scoring honors with' 13. Dutch Walz and Jim Hedberg scored the other Lion goals in the Temple game. _ _ Two. lucky breaks helped the , Lions to their win over Temple. Late in the first period with the, score 0-0, Nute attempted a shot at the Owl goal. His shot was short of the goal but was deflected into the net by a Temple player. "History (almost) repeated it self" in the next quarter when with eight minutes gone, one of Dutch Wales kicks was deflected into the goal by another Temple man for the second Lion score. The two goals didn't - make a difference in the final outcome but they probably did their share in breaking Temple's mor ale. For after substitute Greaves scored for the Owls at 13:00 of the second stanza. Temple could not muster any type of scoring attack. The third period went scoreless but in the fourth quarter Torge son, Stollmeyer, and Hedberg erupted for single goals to give the Lions their seventh win with room to spare. Statistics favored the Lions in the Temple game. The Nittany soccermen outshot the Owls 32-17 and had a 10-2 edged in corner kicks. At Pittsburgh, it was again a story of too much Lion strength. Although they only registered three tallies, the Nittanies han dled the Panthers like ' they owned them. The shot statistics stood at 35-8 in favor of the Lions. In the first half alone, the Steel City men could get only two shots at the Nittany goal. Stollmeyer scored first with a 5- yard goal at 8:40 'of the first period. Eleven _minutes and ten seconds later, Torgeson made the score 2-0. The Lions did not score again until Nute banged one into the net with six minutes remain ing in the game. Hosterman lauded the whole team for its play last week but he gave special mention to cap tain- Steve Flamporis.. Flamporis didn't break into the scoring col umn but he was always there when a key pass or defensive stop was needed. 3 Grid Newcomers Three newcomers will bolster Penn State's 1957 football sched ule. The three are Vanderbilt, William & Mary, and Marquette. The game with Vanderbilt will be the first. WHERE AM I? WHAT AM I DOING HERE? Do you sometimes wonder why you believe what you do in matters religious. Many Catholics have that problem. To help them and their non-Catholic friends who wonder the same, a book was re cently published giving all the facts behind Catholic teaching. For information—without obligation—on how to obtain this 484 page volume, as easy to read as a novel, write to: J. ZACHARY GRANT Glenclyffe College, Garrison, N.Y. A postcard .pith name and address is sufficient. o message is necessary. 27. 1956 ters Top Owls, Panthers ith 8-2-1 Mark', r Scoring Lead osterman a nn State of Len national in 1954 and year at the .00ters, his •ooters won d one. They d to Navy, West Ches- Steve Flamporis All-Around Standout John Lawrence Cets Sixth Shutout Prato Finishes First in Final Southern California's football team, although out of the Rose Bowl picture, has made life rosey for The Daily Collegian's Lucky Lou Prato (lucky by name and deed). Thanks to the Trojans' 10-7 vic tory over UCLA Saturday, Lucky Lou rules supreme as the 1956 winner of the 'Out On A Limb' weekly football poll. Lucky's 8-7 mark broke a tie with Vicious Vince Carocci to give him a final over-all mark Of 91 right and 59 wrong for a .607 percentage. It will be recalled that Lucky and Vince agreed on all but the UCLA-Southern Cal and Oregon- Oregon State frays. , A Turkey- Day 14-14 stand-off between the Oregon schools left the issue squarely up to the nationally televised coast game in which the Trojans gave Lou his title. Fearless Fran Fanucci, who picked identical with Lucky's choices, finished in a tie for sec ond with Vicious Vince at 90 and 60 (.600). The coaches finished a "respectable" last with an 86-64 mark (.57p. 5 Lion Cagers Return Five holdovers, led by war vet eran Bob Leisher, of Chambers burg, are expected to get the call for Penn State's opening basket ball test against Carnegie Tech Dec. 1. The others are Bob Ram say, Munhall; Steve Baidy, Wil liamsport; Jim Jordy, Pittsburgh; land Ron Rainey, Johnstown. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Oklahoma Gains is? Place in Poll ; Pitt Ranked 12th By The Associated Press Oklahoma's slick Sooners have moved within sight of their second straight national football• championship after, receiving another vote of con fidence from writers and broad casters. With the final balloting only a week away, Oklahoma held a 95- point bulge over runnerup Ten nessee in the latest tabulations. The Sooners, tied with Wash ington 1908-14 for the all-time rec ord of consecutive victories at 39, convinced 81 of the 159 partici pating sports writers and announ cers they deserved first spot. As a result, Oklahoma ran up .1 . 4411 points to unbeaten, untied Tennessee's 1,353 on the basis of 10 points for a first place ballot, nine for a second etc. The volun teers drew 49 firsts. Both play another game before the final poll,—Oklahoma against the Oklahoma Aggies and Tennes-, see against Vanderbilt. lowa. which has completed its best season since 1922 with the Big Ten title and a Rose Bowl trip, held third place for a repeat of last week's 1-2-3 finish. The Hawkeyes drew 12 firsts and 1,144 points. Georgia Tech moved up from fifth to fourth in a switch with unbeaten, once-tied Texas A&M. Tech.amassed 1,028 points to 902 for the Aggies. _ The remainder of the top 10 in order was Miami, Michigan, Syra cuse, Michigan State and Minne sota. By belting Ohio State 19-0, Michigan advanced to seventh from ninth. Michigan State moved up to ninth from 10th and a 38-17 triumph over Kansas State while a 13-13 tie with Wisconsin drop ped Minnesota from seventh to 10th. The second ten: Oregon State. Pitt, Navy, Texas Christian, - Baylor, George Wash ington, Southern California, Flor ida, Colorado and Ohio .State. Packers Pick Hornung As Pro Bonus Choice PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 26 (.:P)— The Green Bay Packers selected Notre Dame quarterback Paul Hornung as their National Foot ball League bonus choice today after head coach Lisle Blackbourn drew the lucky slip from the hat at the pro football draft meeting. Cadets to Visit Lions An' Army football team will play on Beaver Field for the first time in 1957 when the Cadets help Penn State open its home season on Oct. 5. Look for Christmas GM Ideas . . . Go Western OP' Hats Belts Blue Jeans \ Wallets A Fine Selection ' of Lee Riders Workman aril Western Supply 310 W. BEAVER —Daily Collegian photo by Jive Patina BRUCE GILMORE is about to be brought down by two Pittsburgh defensivemen. Doug Mechling (standing) and Dick McMillen (on ground) fry to lend assistance, but to no avail. TKE, '3Bers Win IM Swim Crowns Tau Kappa Epsilon and the Nittany '3Bers are the 1956 Intramural swimming champions. . Once again it was Al Rossi who operated the spring in the TKE victory gun with. three big wins in a 26-15 triumph aver Delta Sigma Phi. The Nittany victory over the Trays, 24-16, was largely a team effort,' with four blue ribbons spread among separate competitors Time and again, Rossi led his TKE team to first place after first place in the tourney. It was they same story last night—he cap-! Lured the backstroke, breast stroke and diving events. Teammate Karl Snyder gar nered the free style race to give TICE another big lift in their title quest. Delta Sig could only take one; first place—the relay—but ac- I counted for three second places. ; Ron Kolb. Bill Kiser, George; Hunter and Bob Grove comprised' the relay team, while Kiser, Hunt-1 er and Grove had the runner-up: spots in the breaststroke, back--; stroke and freestyle. Snyder was right behind Rossi in the diving event, and Paul Johnston, third in the free-style,' Al Ely, third in the backstroke,; and Hal Beyers, third in the breaststroke, contributed valu able points. Althr rh the d .e point-s pr ea doesn't indicate it, the independ-' ent scrap was much closer. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA CALIFORNIA RESEARCH CORPORATION AND OTHER SUBSIDIARIES Representatives will be on the campus NOVEMBER 29, 30 • to interview CHEMISTS, .ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS, MECHANICAL ENGINEERS for career employment in California and other areas It was neck and neck until the relay and then Al Schroff. Joe Nicklo, Bob Passmore and Alex Mac Lean spurted ahead for the '3Bers and it put them in a never-to-be-relinquished lead. Hal Collier rapped it up with a triumph off the boards. Bob Phelan annexed the only win for the Trey team, taking the backstroke. Schroff fought to a first in the free-style race for the winners, and Passmore grabbed the breaststroke victory. Bill Len hardt finished off the number two spot in the free-style and Nicklo, of the '3Bers, was third. Buck Welch gave the '3Bers runner-up points in the back stroke and Pete Glick took third. Paul Myers took the only other place in the breaststroke. Yale Takes 3 Ivy Posts NEW YORK, Nov. 26 (tP) Dennis McGill, Al Ward and Paul Lopata—three decisive reasons why Yale won the first official championship—are on the As sociated Press All-Ivy League football team announced today. ?AGE NINE