PAGE SIX , . • . • McMillen Injures - Ribs;Lion Win , 1 ; To Miss W&M Contest Moves Army Guard Hicl.ie :\lo,l.llen was the only serious injury loss Itn o 'Top 10'1 „ , incurred by the Penn State football team during its 27-13, loss to Army last Saturday at Beaver Field. ! Army moved from 12th to 10th y fi,lalillen injured his ribs in the first quarter of the Cadeti in the weekl Associated Press ; •nationwide college football poll contest and was forced to watch the rest of the game froml a fter beating the Nittany Lions.l the sidelines—most of it in street clothes. 127-13, at Beaver Field Saturday! The extent of McMillen's in- -afternoon. fury is still a question mark. I Oklaborr:‘ and Michigan State But. it is fairly certain that he :remained 1-2 in the nation, butl will definitely miss the William ItLere was a bit of shifting around! and Mary game Saturday at !involving other teams in the topi Beaver Field. Reports are that 10. 1 there is a strong liklihood that Navy dropped from sixth place; he will be out for at least two weeks—if not more. With McMillen on the injured list, Coach Rip Engle said that he would move Willard (Bull) Smith up to a starting role. Smith, until this time. saw most of his action with Engle's alternate unit. lie replaced McMillen in the Army game. With Smith moving to the first team, the job for the number two right guard post is no for grabs between sophomore Frank Korbini and junior Ray Pottios. Except for the usual bumps and bruises, the rest of the squad is in good physical shape. Engle said. Fullbacks Maurice Schlei cher and Ben Williams are over their injuriesand should be in good condition for the Indians. Williams. in fact, played a bit against the Cadets. Looking ahead to the William and Mary game. Engle refused to take the Indians lightly. '''William and Mary has a good football team." he :aid. "They scored a surprise win over VPI last week and Navy had Them by only one touchdown at half lime." (Navy eventually went on to win. 33-7). Engle also added that the In diana possess "as good a back as' there in halfback Charlie Sid-1 Sidwell's potential may be Swim Entry Deadline Set for Wednesday Entries for the Intramural swimming tournament are due by 4:30 p.m. next Wednesday in the IM office. A meet will consist of the fol-i sowing five events: 60-yard free, style. 60-yard back stroke. 60- yard breast stroke (butterfly per mitted;, 120-yard relay, and div ing (front dive, hack dive, and; optional). A team mad• enter two men each event, hut only one relay; team. An individual may compete! in only two events, excluding div- cyow ' mit to get a better shove I PRE-ELECTRIC SHAVE LOTION all the way out of the- top 20 as a resulfof its 13-7 loss to North Carolina while Pitt moved back into the lineup as the 20th team. Two of the top 10 teams will ;c lashc this week—Michigan State ;meets Michigan at Ann Arbor and !Army lays its newly found rank ling on the line against Notre ?Dame at Philadelphia. The flu bug bit several of the big teams, notably the Sooners of Oklahoma and lowa, yet both of ;these teams held their positions with wins over lowa State and Washington State respectively. i" The top 10: 1 Oklahoma, Michigan State, iTexas A&M, Minnesota. Duke, Michigan. Oregon State. lowa. Auburn and Army. t 4 The second 10: illustrated by the fact that he has Arkansas, Notre Dame. North already been drafted by the; Carolina State. Mississippi. Rice. Wisconsin. Georgia Tech. North Cleveland Brow ns—and he still! . , C a rolina . Tennessee end Pitt. has a year of college elig i bil i ty' left. Sidwell is considered by; many experts to be one of the ,WRA Tennis Program best combination passing-running The WRA Tennis Club will halfbacks in the country. ; begin season activities with an Coach Milt Drewer, who re-' open ladder tournament. In placed the exiled Jack Freeman' structions for beginners in ten last spring, has the biggest squad, l rus are being held weekly at numerically and physically, Wil-! White Building. Liam and Mary has seen in the! All girls who are interested past six years. The Indians are' in either the ladder tournament expected to stress the "belly"! or the instructions should tn series out of a split-T formation; fact Lida Quinn. extension as its main offensive weapon. ' 1 , 11, for further information. Rich McMillen . . . on injured list COLLEIGAN PROMOTION STAFF: Please have ALL Fraternity Contracts and All Homecoming Ads Completed As Soon As Possible The Contracts Are Ready—Pick Them Up in the Office! f 411401 "S• e 4 ,8 • 0,6* use THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA "R E - ELECTRIC SHAVE LOTION Quicker ... closer ... smoother . . . no matter what machine you use. 1.00 Coos ton SHULTON New York • Toronto Buhl Opposes Turley In Clincher Attempt By JACK HAND NEW YORK, Oct. 9 IQ)—Mic key Mantle and Red Schoendienst probably will be out or action to day when the World Series re sumes at Yankee Stadium. Mil .waukee's Bob Buhl will try for the clincher agiinst the New York Yankees' Bob Turley. The Braves hold a 3-2 edge. Mantle. crippled Yankee center fielder who hurt his shoulder in Saturday's game, appeared at the stadium for diathermy treatment after X-rays proved negative. It iwas reported he couldn't raise his :Ha: arm. Barring an unexpected change, he won't ibe able to swing a bat or make a throw. Schoendiensi, who pulled a groin muscle in yesterday's thriller at Milwaukee, still was hobbled. Normally it takes sev eral days for such an injury to heal. Neither Manager Casey Stengel of the Yankees nor Fred Haney of the Braves would say positive ly the two men won't play. If Mantle can't make it, rookie Tony Kubek probably will be in ,center field again. Schoendienst's Army Bumps Call it ironic if you want; but Army, en route to a 27-13 victory over the Lions last Saturday, ac cidentally retaliated against the only Penn State football player ever to score the winning Lion touchdown against the Cadets in the history of the series between the two schools. The victim of the 'retaliation was 70-ish Earl Hewitt who, in the series opener in 1899, ran an Army punt back 65 yards for the only touchdown of the game to give the Lions their lone win of the seven-game series. The play went like this: He witt, who has yet to miss a Cadet- Lion encounter, was standing near „t0e,....- s ...'' .:2 --- '•-" .” _.....-•....‹.., . . :, lici i- • ' _. .. .., . . - ~. . •-._...-,, ••• ~.. . - N._, - • --_, :".=,-, ' ".. • f 0" • " ENTER 1-iiiiiP - , , - .. ';,•,;....:- . . VAN HEUSEN'S .'.:..?' MAMMOTH "IF I WERE A WRINKLE ..." CONTEST Any college student may enter! come of these wrinkles. Some - Many prizes! No rules! _say they are on the brows of Easy pickings for smart guys! elderly professors. Others say This is it! The contest you've they have migrated - to the long awaited ... the chance to ocean where they cause waves. beat Van Heusen out of some Where do you think the ban of their glorious goods! hind wrinkles have gone? As you may know, Val l i Where would you go if you -- Heusen is the creator -of the were a banished wrinkle? For world's most fabulous shirt. the best answer to this quei- _ Namely, the Van Heusen lion Van Heusen will award Century Shirt with the revolu- a grand prize of a complete tionary soft collar that won't wardrobe of Van Heusen wrinkle .. . erer! This collar Century Shirts in 5 collar - banishes wrinkles mercilessly. styles. To the 1000 next best No matter how horribly you answers there will be consols- -- torture it, it simply will not Lion prizes of a box of genuine ~ wrinkle. Ever! • wrinkkla Now, out of all this grows, Enter today. Mail your . ' our contest. We know ... and answer to Van Heusen's mam the buye'rs of Van Heusen- moth "If I were a wrinkle" Century Shirts know ... that contesttoPhillips-Van Heusen the wrinkles have disappeared. Corp., 41? sth Ave., N. Y., But the question. hat plagues N.Y. Don't forget to send us us all is: Where? What has be- your shirt size with your entry. We, too, don't know where, when, or how the wrinkles have gone, but we are willing to help you find a good answer. Stop in! See the4abulous Van Heusen "Century" at . . . likes n rtt,o *flop WEDNESDAY. !OCTOBER 9. 1957 replacement at second base would be Felix Mantilla, the Puerto Ri can who did such a fine job filling in yesterday. This will be the second time Buhl and Turley, a pair of fast ball pitchers, have been the op posing pitchers. They started the Saturday game at Milwau kee, won by the Yanks 12-3. Buhl failed to survive the firs! and Turley was taken out in the second inning. Turley, 27, didn't have much better luck than Buhl. The right hander gave up three singles and walked four in 1% innings. The Braves received a jolt when Warern Spahn, winner of Sun day's 10-inning thriller, came down with a touch of the flu and a sort throat. Spahn will be the pitcher Thursday if the Yanks tie it today. Lew Burdette, a two time winner, will back him up. The odds favor Milwaukee by 2 to 1 for the Series. The Yanks are 7 to 5 favorites to win today's game which will be played under good weather conditions. 'Star Hewitt the Penn State sidelines when quarterback Al Jacks tossed a pass to fullback Babe Caprara in that vicinity, Army guard Stan Slater, cover ing the play, made a vicious lunge for the ball and succeeded in breaking up the pass. However, his momentum carried him out of bounds and into the startled He witt, who ended up on the ground. But the oldster, who has a rep utation for liking "that body con tact," simply picked himself up and brushed himself off. He then continued to watch the game from the same vantage point. Not even an all-America candidate like Sla ter could keep him down.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers