SATURDAY. NOVEMBER Nittany Harriers WalSpp Panthers By GEORGE ' _The Nittany Lion and freshmen cress squads 'crushed Pitt y l on the University gel. Taking the first fli tions, the Lion varsity the Panthers, 18-41, ove, mile course. Led by the'record-bre formances of Denny J 2 Herm Weber, the Vitt: men rolled over the ; 18-42. . Junior Ed Moran i for Penn State in th evert! in 26:31.7, 2.9 slower than his thre: with Captain Fred : Clem Schoenebeck th ago against Cornell. Kerr placed second with Schoenebeck and Dick Engelbrink tying in 27:07. Ron Rush, John Cht George Walters swept three places for Coac son's five-mari Panthe Sophomore Rush b ;I 28:13, with Captain Chl sophomore Walters ty . 1 in 28:13. The Lions swept the next four places. with Al Jones. Chick King. Joe Thompson and Sam White finishing ahead of Ron Goldstein and Vince Wai ner of Pitt. Senior Al Jones, in his final home meet in a Penn State uni form, placed eighth in 28:33, fol lowed five seconds later by King. Lion runners Jack Williams ands Bill Bickham followed the Pan-I thers. Another Nittany runner,' George Jones developed stomach pains midway through the meet and did not finish. In the freshman meet Denny Johnson slashed 17.6 seconds off the old course and Penn State freshman record of 15:56.6 set by Moran. Kerr. Schoen.l. beck and Bob Thompson in I I 1955. 'Johnson crossed the line in 15:39, followed by the Liene•Herm Weber, who also broke the record with a 15:52 clocking. Ken Hunter clinched the meet for Penn State by taking third in.16:16 ever the three-mile course. Pitt's Matt Crofton was the . first Panther to cross the line. placing fourth in 16:24. State College's Bill Schoen beck took fifth for the Lions,- followed by Pills Pal Murphy. Other finishers for the Nittany freshmen - were Ron Genovese, seventh; Dick Anderson, eighth; Al Johnstone. 10th; Jerry - Wel: ter, 11th; Ron Landon, 12th; Er nie Stevens, 15th; Dick Grenier, 16th, and. Mike Connelly. 17th. Army Sellout Army and Navy now own the distinction_of being the only two football rivals to sell out Penn State's Beaver Field in advance of the season. Navy turned. the trick in 1955, followed by Army this year. Beaver Field seats 30,000. 9 Games Seven decisive vict two close encounters fe opening night of intra ketball action at Recre. Thursday night. The McKee Royals Kee One, 21-17; and th' sneaked by the Wolye! two close and highly tilts. In the two h . s = scoring games, of the . night, [the Burns trounced Penn Haven 46-18 and the - Red Raiders routed Linden Five, 42-19' as' Sun Wagner of the Raiders. scored. 2fi points to become high scojer of the night. Other games which featured more_scoring and larger margins of victory saw McKee Two beat McKee 3-4, 29-15; the Watts Devils swamp the Vikings.: 36-10. and Watts One defeat the Jordan Jaguars; 36-12. The- Fourteen Lions whipped Pollock 6; 25-16 and - Studnik best- 2. 1957 varsity ountry steraav 1 course. !ur posi- Ihumbled the five- ing per nson and ny fresh itt frosh, i• ok first varsity seconds -way tie err and l ee weeks in 25:56, opliomore for third :istoff and the next ICarl 01- • squad. , k fifth in - istoff and for sixth ED MORAN (left) is shown crossing the finish line in first place, place, followed by Captain Fred Kerr (r), in the Lions' 18-41 varsity cross-country victory over Pitt yesterday. Ferrari For Alpha Sig Dick Ferrari fired three touch down passes last night to give Alpha Sigma Phi a 21-7 victory over Sigma Phi Epsilon in the first round of fraternity intra mural football eliminations. The first came in the opening minutes of the game, when,. after Alpha Sig received the kickoff on their own 25 yard line, Kerrari used seven pass plays, - hitting Harry Brown, Dick Henkel and Jim "Snorts" Norton for comple- Princeton Coach Dies of Cancer . PRINCETON, N.J., Nov. 1 UP)— Charles W. Caldwell Jr., Prince ton's football coach since 1945 and before that one of the university's finest all-around athletes, died to day in Princeton Hospital. He was 56. A university spokesman said the cause of death was cancer. Cald well was given a leave of absence from his coaching duties Sept_ 23, less than a week before the start of the football season. He was taken to the hospital last Monday and placed in an oxygen tent. He had been confined to his home, though he made a brief visit to P. - 'almer Stadium to talk to the earn just before the first game. Open Cage Play ed Pollock 12, 26-16, in other ac tion. tries and tured the ural bas tion Hall, Other notable individual scor ing efforts, besides the 26 point outburst of Wagner, were handed in by Bob Vdavcak of the Bums, as he scored 14 points. Gil Blew had 11 counters, Marvin Hill 13 tallies, Bob Rebic 11 markers and Bob Jancar had 10 points. 1 g,ed Mc-. Convicts 12-9, in contested RADIO - Sandell and Supptio .Car Radios - •Portable Radios 1 1 . *Phonographs . .sceneries #4.1 A - State College TV _ 232 S. Alton St. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA * * * Passes 3 TD's Victory tions, and connected with a twelve l yard aerial to Ralph Brower in! the end zone. Brower added the; point after touchdown. Halfway through the second half, Brower shook his defense again and Ferrari hit him in the clear with a pass from near mid field. Brower ran the last few yards unmolested. for the touch kdown and kicked tlke extra point. With about two minutes left in the game, Ferrari again let fly with a long one that riehoeheted off two SPE men before falling into the arms of Harry Brown of Alpha Sig who dashed over for the final tally. Brower booted his third conversion. SPE failed to get-possession of the ball until after the first Alpha Sig touchdown. They threatened several times, but did not score until late in• the game on a Jack Michel to Buck Cardoni pass. Harry Davidson kicked the PAT. The Johnston Champions Two wrestlers bearing the same name, but not related, won Na tional Collegiate titles at Penn State. Howard Johnston. a State College native, was the first Lion champion in 1935. Clearfield's Johnny Johnston was the 1957 titalist. Complete Photo Service 6 hr. developing and printing Day Color Service ANSCOCHROME EKTACHROME •Photostats •Laminating •Thesis prints •Commercial photos •Lantern slides Centre Co. Film Lob 122 W. Beaver Ave. Freshmen Gridders Test Plebes Today By MATT MATHEWS ;his outstanding job of signal-call- Coach Earl Bruce's fresh-julg against Pitt. • At the right halfback spot. man football charges conclude, Bruce will have Jimaly Kerr. their two-game season this! the owner of both 7D's against afternoon at Annapolis. 11.1 d. the Panthers. Rounding . out the starting backfield will be Red against what Bruce considers! « u p_th efr iadur Worrell. to be the- best Navy Plebe' At the end posts, Bruce will go team in the Academy's his-.with Henry Opperman and Stu tory. Barber. The 6'2" 215-pound Bar- Bruce backed up his statement- bet is very hard . to move on de with facts. The junior Middies de“ tense and does a good job at --! slowing-up" offensive ends. He tented Pitt quite handily, 25-12, while grinding out 487 yards on also does the punting. At tackles will be the inter the ground. The Lion frosh de-, feated the same Panthers two changeable four "J's"—Jake Shaf.. fer, Jack Lawhead, Jim Rule and Saturdays ago by a 13-6 margin. Jim Zaino. Zaino has been switch- For the clincher. Bruce men- ed from fullback and has taken tioned the Plebes' win over the 'a liking to the position. "When' Villanova frosh—S9-0! iyou pay against a guy on the When ' questioned about the; line, you know when you really short season, Bruce said his ath-:get the better of it," the massive letes get enough experience in tackle said. two games since he uses twos Replacing Dallas at guard will units. "Besides," he said. "the be Dick CenedeUa. Bill Popp wilt, plan his paid off handsomely for, hold down the other post and Bud us in that our academic losses Vogelsong will be at center. have been cut in half." The team's academic losses may be low, but their physical casual-, 1 2 Fraternities Win ties will be at least three. The vita number one guard, Bob Dallas, inn Bowling Tilts end Dave Alexander and full-; back Denny Schaeffer are deft- lea g u e Don Thrsda Fraternity night, \ Sigma Tau Gam nitely out of action for the game. lun• ma defeated Sigma Phi Epsilon, But Bruce is elated that he 3-1; Phi Sigma Kappa lost to has Lou Luce, who missed the , Beta Sigma Rho, 4-0: Beaver Pitt game because of illness. ;House upset Phi Kappa Tau. 3-1; back in action.. Lion fans will :Beta Theta Pi beat Tau Phi Delta, simply have to wait until next • 4-0; Delta Sigma Phi defeated year to get a good look at the !Beta Theta Pi, 3-1; and Phi Sigma fleet-footeil. halfback. Navy gels !Delta beat Phi Gamma Delta 4-0. the opportunity today. 1 In C league. 'Triangle won over Besides being the fastest runner; Alpha Chi Sigma. 4-0. Acacia beat on the team, Luce is also the best! Phi Kappa Alpha. 3-1, Alpha Phi pass receiver. His favorite pat-; Delta defeated Phi Kappa Sigma. tern is to "just let me. aim at one: 4-0; Lambda Chi Alpha beat Sig of those defenders and I'll outrun!ma Alpha Mu, 3-1; Pi Kappa Ptd 'ern." he explained in his south-' lost to Alpha Chi Rho, 4-0; and of-the-border drawl. Chi Phi beat Theta Kappa Phi. For a pitching partner. Luce' 3-1. will have Dick Hoak, who threw: the 54-yard winning TD in the: Penn State won more games Pitt win, and Don Jonas. Bruce; than it lost each year for the last expects to start Hoak because of 18 football seasons. LOVE IN THE LAUNDRY Last month we got the follow ing letter: Dear Van Heusen, you - rats: Thanks mucho for breaking up the hottest romance since Scarlet and Rhett. Me and Laundry Mark x42BFy might be honey mooning in Palm Beach today if it wasn't for your so-called snsttrt ideas. Go shoot yourselres in your ulcers. Respectfully yours, Dorothea James. We tracked down the story behind it and found that Miss JOMES worked a steam-iron at the Acme Laundry in Eastpox, N. J. Last year, while ironing a shirt belonging to Laundry Mark x42BFy, she had noticed a small Piece of paper pro truding from the slot on the collar. Curious, she pulled it out and read: "Whoever you are, I love the way you press my shirts. I think I may love you too. Interested?" She blushed, but daringly wrote her answer -L. "Interested, aorta," and slipped it in the collar-slot. Ten days later came another shirt from x42BFy and, sure enough, another note: "If you can cook like you Discover the neatness of sewn-in stays in the VAN EUSEN Collarites. See thein NOW. Eids. law #llup Your exclusive Van Heusendealer in State College PAGE SEVEN can write I may be smitten beyond recall. Fascinated?" This time she almost swooned, and wrote back, "Wow, am 1r Anyhow, note followed hot note and Miss Jomes began thinking of turning in her steam iron for a marriage man ual. Until one day tragedy struck. x43Fy's shirts arrived as usual, but when Miss Jomes turned to the slot she found it sewn-up. Frantic, she tried to rip it open. No luck. She could feel something thin in aide, but she couldn't get to it. And that's how it's been ever since! You see, x42BFy had switch ed to alotless Van Hensen Coßarite shirts—with sewn-in stays! You should, too! These micro-thin stays can't get lost, keep your collar flat, and launder with your shirt! Spec ify Coßarite next time. - And don't feel bad about Miss Jomes. She took her un happiness out in hard work and was promoted t6:4ssistant manager_ We expect a thank you note from her any day.