18ER 5. 1957 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA PAGI . . , ® Sweep Nalry . ' Turley, Buhl to Pitch Today I MILWAUKEE, Oct. 5 +,,n---Rob dium, the ennient MI FRENCH iTurlev and Bob Buhl. a pair of Braves return to their I --, --; - _....,_;:,-;.-;..i.... ,:- ........„...., - ......, . - ;by three Penn S-tate men—State :bullei-throwing righthar.ders, will 'Horne of the Be,"rav d. ' --.-,- i i,.., - -.' ; 1 . - 0„,T:,,.. - - ...:',-*,4, iCollege's Bill Sehoenebeck. Dick.do the honors today when the next three. ••:"'-'.. , s ' .. - y-• 1' ..-- 1 --- - -.- A .-r : -. ''' . - %Anderson and Ron Landon. ''. • ,0 i i.'...4e• • -,...- 'World Series switches to th is Nfilwauket's second g: '..--;. -- - - .-7. :., ''...::: .-Iti.- - -%'4* • Other Penn State finishers'baseball-daffy city after a one torn sliced the Series ..'• . --• -',.• . • ..,r.,Z••-7-: - P - • ..C'' were: Ron Genovese. 11th: Gerry;day travel break. ,half. The Yankees. who -- - '"-- ' -. - 4.. - F•••• 4 •-.,- :Gaiters, 14th; Skip Johnston,i All even at one game each after'to 5 favorites after the .... - .. - 16th; and Ernie Stevens and Alikeiholding the proud New York Yan-;now were only 7t05 to • :le. , - • . .r.,• Connelly, 17th. 'kees to a split in their own sta-"best-of-7 set. -,. , 1.-.101. • 7 -- -----;. 'TI.-- - - , • • up • • .-'.2 . -, -,% - --(.. - ' - I ' s 11 1 . , • A. , % a ~., _ _ .--,—,....,' „ „--- ~_. 1 t o . , _ . * '... „At . .1!n1 4 uh, "1 4 . OM AWY WAY )VU CAI .. t . , .. ....,.. 4k ~. _ .if you're Ghana to recaiU • a dears.) in *inch-kat NINA!! lINCet , 114k“.1 • I 1 I • 4 6 ma. ok ~. •i M.. - . . rid , dull or agricultural attginturring ... or on an undirgradeer In • . PP1114114.. &Delano for arantrurr wort Our representative will Ira • r A I? 4 MIIEISPIhr: t""Ptto October El. 1957 Sign up today fa .. . ma isterviorw with so ovipi•motiort-minil. . , 111 illeirAgn:iiiiirtirit iPt TrIPIP!Iii ... company, ~1'r..:';"..: Iri s., y p i .it : -.A :tea * \ s / 04:f: 4 %. ,1110 , 1 P% # 41• 0 0._ ......,.... , , . • e t ‘I ..ftsr • 1 1 . • 1 ir .: r e ‘ • f , t ‘. P • SATURDAY. OCTO Harr By GEORGE ANNAPOLIS, Ma., Oct. 4-- The Nittany Lions' varsity and freshman cross-country teams' opened- the season with dupH licate 22-33 victories over Na vy here yesterday afternoon.; Captain Fred Kerr came from third place in the last half-mile to win the varsity four-mile test in 20:28. Ed Moran held on to take sec ond in 20:31, while Navy's ,Brad Smith faded to finish third, four seconds behind Moran. Dick Englebrink, with 20:42, and Clem Schoenebeck with 20:55, took .fourth and fifth to clinch the victory for the Lions. Tom Monaghan, Bob Kunkle, Leslie - Palmer and Frank Young swept the next four places for the Midshipmen. Other varsity finishers were George Jones, 10th; Joe Thomp son, 11th; Al -J one s. 12; Sam White, 17; and Jack Williams, 19th. Varsity Coach Chick Werner said he was pleased with the squad's competitive spirit, but said its pacing was poor. The lime for the first mile was a slow 5:25. "Considering that we have only had three weeks of practice, we should be a lot better as the sea- Pigskin Coin Flips . . . Out On a Limb No helicopters, no black briefcases, nd mountain hideaways this week. In fact, no pride on the part of our guessers after last week's hideous results. With little exception. our writers and Coach Joe Paterno are pretty well agreed on the outcome of today's games. Lucky Lou Prato picks Miami over Baylor all by his lonesome. Lou even thinks Dartmouth will beat Penn. , Joe the coach sees Stanford getting Rice in its hair, while the intrepid Magnificent Matt Mathews sees the Mountaineers badger ing Wisconsin. Carocci Prato Mathews Coaches .533 .533 .467 .533 Ark.-TCU TCU TCU TCU fair - 7 Baylor-Miami Baylor Miami Baylor Baylor Duke-Md. Duke Duke Duke Duke It.C.S.-Clem. N.C.S. N.C.S. N.C.S. N.C.S. la.-Wash. St. la. la. la. la. Navy-N.C. Navy Navy Navy Navy Ore.St.-Ntstn.- Ore. St. Ore. St. Ore. St. Ore. St. Ore.-UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA UCLA Piii-USC Pitt Pitt ' USC USC Stan.-Rice . - •Stan. Stan. Stan. - Rice W.Va.-Wisc. Wisc. Wisc. - • W.Va. Wisc. Colo.-Kan. Colo. Colo. Colo. Colo. Corn.-Harv. - Cornell Cornell Cornell Cornell Dart.-Penn Penn Dart. Penn Penn Minn.-Purdue Minn. Minn. • Minn. Minn. Army Tilt (Continued from page one) against Nebraska with 24 passes— probably a Cadet single-game high for the past two years. With an experienced quarter back 'in Bourland and a big line—the biggest in five years at the Academy—, Army has the _ potential to keep the de fense honest with a varied of fense. Bourland completed six of 10 passes against Nebraska, one a touchdown toss to Graf. Last week the Cadets totaled 424 yards in offense, proof enough of their power. Turning to his own squad, En gle said: "The kids have been working real hard and are going to gice_a fine account of them selves... our spirit is good." The game is rated by the odds men a near tossup, Army having the edge in point spread—any where from 1-,7. • The probable starting lineup: PENN STATE AR!IY EMU= Eel McMillen LHB RRU FB Ksziu_ j.iail Moconyi tics titles in 1953 and 1954. Soccer, gymnastics and wrest ling are among the so-called min or sports which enjoy unusual success at Penn State:" Fred Kerr ..."Wins a first place son progresses," Werner said. In the freshman meet, Greens burg's Bill Kiggins finished .a strong first for Navy in 14:04 over the 17 mile course. Denny Johnson, with 14:13, Ken Hunter, 14:18. and Herm Weber, 14:24. took the next three places for the Lion fresh. Navy's Jim Curran took fifth place in 14:40 but was followed Scorer Vets Return Penn State scoring in 1957 will be spearheaded by Per Torgerson I and Mike Stollmeyer, who list year helped the Lion soccer team to an 8-2-1 record. Ken Roster man's booters make their home 'debut against Maryland Satur day. • 4, 4 44. 4 6to Mr. Motorist You've probably noticed herds of cute little "d ea r darting across College Ave. They're migrating to NIT TANY-DELL—the best feed ing grounds in the county. There, They enoy the tastiest snacks ever prepared. Whistle or toot ... but please don't hit the little "dears". - tiffany Dell Across from the New Dorms Wihnoth IBourisui CONVAIR POMONA in Southern Cali fornia is the first fully-integrated mis sile plant in the U.S. Here the Navy's remelt supersonic missile is designed and built. You, as a graduate engineer, can build an outstanding career in elec tronics and missiles systems at cosrvAnt POMONA. You will work with the most modern electronic equipment known. You will work with the kind of friendly. informedengineer-scientist groups that are pacing the advance into outer space. And you will live where the climate and opportunities for spacious country living are unsurpassed in America. AIMED DECREES can be earned while a full-time employee of CONVAIR PONIONA. Salaries and benefits compare with the highest in private industry anywhere in the country. F •, ••1 •:. . - . WEST' PENN POWER COMPANY PROFESSIONAL ENVIRONMENT coicy.trit posioNA is housed in the newest kind of air conditioned plant. Resiarch and Development facilities are manned by top-level people. CONVAIR PO - MONA POMONA , CALWORN IA COMVAIR IS A 311 VISION OF GENERAL DYNAMICS CORPORATION CAIIN HILL OtEENSBUItG, PA. We'd like to explain the engineering career advantag to YOU in becoming a CONVAIR MISSILES MAN PERSONAL INTERVIEWS OCTOBER 9 Please contact your Placement Offices, for an appointment with representatives front • CONVAIR POMONA CALIFORNIA LIVINR close to mountains, desert. seashore. Modern homes with swimming pools are within easy price rAnge. Year= round outdoor sports and recreation.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers