PAGE EIGHT Stickmen Beat Colgate; Hess Scores 3 Goals Injured Eill Hess scored 3 goals in the Lions’ 9-4 victory) at Colgate Saturday afternoon, but Coach Earnie Baer at-) Iributed to victory the “great” second half play by his mid field trios. | After playing to a 4-4 stalemate in the first half, goalie Jim Houck and the defense Blanked the Big Red while the jittackmen poured in five goals in the third period Bui according lo Baer, il was Ihe midfielders that made Ihe win possible: "The defense ■ played its usual fine game, but Saturday the midfielders spelled She difference between victory and defeat. “They really came to life in the *econd half and we scored those five winning goals. Our clearing (bringing the ball upfield to the offense from the defense) teas' ■excellent. I think we cleared the ball nearly everytime. “You have to really credit. (Glenn) Fiscus, (‘Horse’) Chest- 1 nut, Jeff Bostock, (Fred) Dona hoe, (Johnny) Steinmuller. (Mike) Beattie and (Johnny) Behne for their great midfield work. Also Houck played an excellent game in the goal.” Hess played what Baer termed "an unusual game." The All-American candidate and high scorer for the team with 24 goals played with a cast on foi« right "control" hand. Hess broke his right thumb in the Adelphi game two Saturdays Ago* and missed last Thursday's Maryland encounter. But he saw his share of the ac tion against Colgate and came Out the high scorer in the game with three goals. Hess has been the high scorer in all seven Lion games this year since the one he missed, Maryland, was a shutout. Southpaw Behne, who started the game at Hess’ attack position was the second highest scorer of the game along with reliable Captain Lou Girard. Both had two goals. Midfielders Fiscus and Chestnut had the other tallies. : Teammate Beattie was high on the play of sophomore Behne who has been out of action for the past three games with a badly sprained ankle. "Behne wa ■ tremendous," Beattie praised. "You might say he and Hess were the two most outstanding players on lbs field. You wouldn't hare known ha had a bad ankle iha way he played Saturday. “He started at the attack in place of Hess and scored a quick goal, (18 seconds of the first period.) Then Hess came in and Hear ye! Hear ye! The Carnival Is Save yourself ihe trouble of waiting in line. Be able to enjoy yourself ~ * Buy Your Tickets Early ... On Sale at the HUB Desk from B*s All Day Today. 'played about 58 minutes of the game. Johnny (Behne) was shift ed back to his midfield position and played a great game there for the rest of the day. "The game was won in the third period," Beattie said. "The attack really broke their (Col gate's) back. They scored five goals in that period. Three real fast ones in about a minute and a half." Behne. Hess and Girard com bined forces for the third period scoring. Behne scored at 1:45. Hess at 1:55 and 8:40 and Girard at 3:50 and 11:25. For the first time since 1952. Penn State will play a ten game football schedule in 1958. I ■> wl with all the fun and excitement that only a carnival can bring. Hurry Hurry Hurry jJ Come see the shows ... join in on the fun and the excitement of carnival. Tonight Is the night, the golf course is the place ... for the Carnival of ’s7—Best Yet! Gel Your Tickets tor Carnival in Advance. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA BILL HESS was the high scorer with 3 goals in the Lion's 9-4 win over Colgate. The All- American candidate played 58 minutes of the game with a cast on his broken right thumb. HASPEL CORDS This is the Suit that has become a summer tra dition with well-dressed men everywhere. It is styled in Haspel's Famous Fleet Model (naturally) to give you a slimmer, more flattering appear ance. There are six shades to choose from. Sizes 36 to 46. Shorts, regulars, longs and extra-longs. Priced from 28.75 to 39.75 N A 1 L v 1 \\ MEN'S STORE STATE COLLEGE Hear ye! In Town Frosh Lose Lax Opener Coach Joe McHugh’s inexperi enced frosh stickmen lost their opening game to the Colgate yearlings Saturday, -12-10. “We have a scrappy group, but they know how to score,” said varsity coach Eamie Baer. ‘‘Mc- Hugh is doing a good job and although they play only three games, they’ll be ready when they start varsity ball next year.” Bob Swanson, who hails from Garden City, L. 1., received glow ing praise from the coaches for his work in the high-scoring loss. Two other stickmen who picked up their experience in high TSr On Campus THE THUNDERING MARCH Today, as everyone knows, is the forty-sixth anni versary of the founding- of Gransmire College for Women which, as everyone knows, was the first Progressive Education college in the United States. Well do I recollect the tizzy in the academic world when Gransmire first opened its portals! What a buzz there was, what a brouhaha in faculty common rooms, what a rattling of teacups, when Dr. Agnes Thudd Siga foos, first president of Gransmire, lifted her shaggy head and announced defiantly, “This here is no stuffy, old fashioned college. This here, by gum, is Progressive Education. We will teach the student, not the course. There will be no marks, no exams, no requirements. We will break the iron mold of orthodoxy, hey." Well sir, forward-looking maidens all over the country cast off their fetters and came rushing to New Hampshire to enroll at Gransmire. Here they found freedom. They broadened their vistas. They lengthened their horizons. They unstopped their bottled personalities. They roamed the campus in togas, leading ocelots on leashes. And, of course, they smoked Philip Morris. (I say “of course.” Why do I say “of course”? I say “of course” because it is a matter of course that anyone in search of freedom should naturally turn to Philip Morris, for Philip Morris is a natural smoke, with no filter to get in the way of its true tobacco taste.) But all was not Philip Morris and ocelots. There was work and study too - not in the ordinary sense, for there were no formal classes. Instead there was a broad approach to enlarging each girl’s potentials. Take, for example, the course called B.M.S. (Basic Motor Skills). B.M.S. was divided into L.D. (Lying Down), S.U. (Standing Up) and W. (Walking). Once the student had mastered L.D. and S.U., she was taught to W. but not just to W. any old way! No, sir! She was taught to W. with poise, dignity, bearing! To incul cate a sense of balance in the girl, she began her exercises by walking with a suitcase in each hand. (One girl, Mary Ellen Dorgenicht, got so good at it that today she is bell captain at the Dinkler-Plaza Hotel in Atlanta, Georgia.) When the girls had walking under their belts, they were allowed to dance. Again no formality was imposed. They were simply told to fling themselves about in any way their impulses dictated, and believe you me, it was quite an impressive sight to see them go bounding into the woods with their togas flying. (Several later joined the U. S. Forestry Service.) There was also a lot of finger painting and gourd rattling and sculpture with coat hangers and all like that, and soon the fresh wind of Progressivism came whistling out of Gransmire to blow the ancient dust of pedantry off curricula everywhere, and today, thanks to the pio neers at Gransmire, we are all free, every man-jack of u>. If you are ever in New Hampshire, be sure to visit the Gransmire campus. It is now a tannery. And be ture to light a Philip Morrlt tt ken you chit Grammire, pr anywhere the jor that matter, became Philip Morru ti fc&Mya a naturally perfect companion and bringg you IUI column weft Keek and U ignitabie at cither end. TUESDAY. APRIL 30. 195> school, Kevin Crowe of Lower Merion and Jim Kane of Tow sanci, also played outstanding parts in the coaches’ eyes. “There’s another Bullock com ing up, too,” .said Baer. “This one’s named Dick. He’s a brother of Bob who played defense for us last year and earned a berth on the North team in the North- South game last year.” Penn State and Pitt return to their once-traditional Thanks giving Day date for their 1958 football game. OF PROGRESS lUu Shalman, 1951