THURSDAY. NOVEMBE _ •. . . Winless' oilltoppersßated AP Honors Lucas i The guy the Associated Press wasn't only Reckless Richie's pass- A Threat by Lion Coaches; called "Reckless Richie Lucas , a' ing that won him the nation-wide s more substitute for Al recognition. -1 IJacks" wound up second in the t AP votingfor the "Top Back of , ' His wide-open signal calling To be quite fra k about it, Marquette's winless football , the Week" . was particularly effective. He al record in its first se 'en games this season and in its last 17 In his first starting assignment' s° picked up a net of 43 yards straight games altog ther, bears no weight in the Penn State, of the year, "Reckless RichieTh !sparsedthe Nit- 7- irtinninc , . including a beautiful Ig planning for the Lio -Hilitopper test Saturday at Milwaukee, , tang Lions to —' - ' yard run on fourth down. Wis. ;th e i r prestige- , , When praised for his efforts The Lion squad ' going about its pregame preparations,raising 27-6 vie- -. in the game. the modest sopho for this encounter just it would 'tory over West -, more said. "The team really He a. i n - it it were playing an ndefeated is that Marquette is predominant -N ir g i makes me look good. Give the squad rather than a winless team. 137 a sophomore team. He said; completed Bof 14 1,. , 411 1 1110 16 e credit to the backs, their ink- The reason for this is quite only one senior and two juniors!passes for 101 -% - ' ing was really great. And the simplex the Lion coat ing staff are on the starting team the 1 yards and a pass - le , blocking by the line was about feels that the Hillto pers are rest are inexperienced sophs. Icompletior. aver* : - 4 . '7 - - the best an year." laying a beartrap for ome op- . The third bugaboo that Toretti l !g l e it. of 54 per . . • :.:2 1. .i . „- • , . The athlete that beat him out ponent and the cos hes are for the top honor was also a for inenantli,e'ornedo_ was the excessive; His yards-per- klt..._ taking all precautoinary - mea-.mer second-stringer, Navy full ! Marquette fumbles. sures to see that the Lions are nu mb e r l pass average is - - -- - -- , back Ray Wellborn. Wellborn not caught in it. These fumbles have stalled the 79 Al J ac k s has Lucas ' figured in all four touchdowns in Hilltopper attack and made it ap- - Assistant Coach Sever "Tor" , a a.B average per pass. But it the 20-6 upset of Notre Dame, pear punchless—this is not the; Toretti, who scouted Marquette _ for the Lions, holds the Hilltop- case, he said. pens in high regard—despite their Individually, he made note of, losing streak. "Marquette is a the two Marquette quarterbacks,' “I Ernie Safran—who he said was well-drilled team," he warned. was impressed with this team's the better all-round player—and spirit because it's pretty difficult Tom Sunderbruch, and fullback: to lose 17 straight games and still Frank Mestnik in the backfield.' be enthusiastic." Along the line, which, inci- Toretti pointed to three factors dentally, is larger than Penn contributing to the the Marquette qtxte.'s. Toretti singled out cen- , losses... The first•is a common foot- ter and team captain Dick ball plague injuries. "Injuries Campbell as the corner stone of have prohibited them from hiv- the forward wall. He empha- ing their top backs in the lineup sized this by mentioning that 1 as they had hoped to have," he Campbell has been touted by . said. many professional scouts as a He then singled out Jim Web- possible number one draft ster, brother of Alex Webster choice. of the New York professional Toretti's feelings on the ball, Giants, as a good example of ,game run like this: "I look for a! this. Webster, who Toretti de- real rugged ball game . . . itl scribed as a "good Tack with might be difficult (for the Lions) speed." has been hampered all - if they *are successful in the early season by injuries and has car- stage mu the game . .. I feel we, ried the ball only twice on of- can win, but as you know, any; fense. given team on any given Satur-' The second 'reason Toretti gave day can turn in an upset " Indies Pace Cage, Swimming Action SWIMMING Jordan Two beat the Bruins, 26-15 and the Hamilton Fins de feated McKee Two 31-19 last night in intramural swimming at Glen land pool. Jim Thompson paced the Jor dan victory with wins in_ the breaststroke and diving. He rack ed up 16.2 points in the diving and swam the 60-yard breast stroke in 52.3. Chow Crease did the 60-yard free style in :34.3. Herb Babakir annexed the 60- yard backstroke distance in :45.0. The relay was won by Jordan on a forfeit. - Preston Ektrtell was the key to the Hamilton win. He did the backstroke in :50.8, scored 14.21 points in diving and swam on the l relay team which eclipsed the 120-1 yard course in 1:13.1. Bill Riseley I did the breaststroke in :57.5 and Larry Guss swam the free style in :37.9. The Corn Grinders beat the Carps on a forfeit in the other scheduled meet of the night. BASKETBALL Nine independent teams won their first intramural basketball games at Recreation Hall Tuesday night. In League A tilts the Panthers beat Dorm 21, 19-13, and Nittany 25 defeated Nittany 34, 23-18. League B action saw Nittany 22 edge the Fortinsky Lions, 19-16; Nittany 39 beat the Shieks, 28-22; the Sharpshooters sink Nittany 44, '..q.A,C/tia --- LAUNDRY . CLEANLINESS IS NEXT TO GODLINESS You'll wear the cleanest clothes in town if you let us wash them. Our physical plant is the largest in Cen tre County. Our staff gives your laundry the attention that you yourself would if you had time to wash it. Drop around to see us. Ask Mr. Marshall to show you why more and more people are. bringing their wash to MARSHALL'S (rear) 454 E. College 7. 1957 28-21; and the Ye/low Jackets de feat Wally's Boys, 32-24. In League C, the Fierce Frosh won over Nittany 31, 22-19, and the Freed Angels defeated Nittany 24, 88-18. I Alpha Tau Omega, third rank-, ing team in Fraternity League A, swept all three scoring honors in Tuesday night's Intramural bowl-, ing action. The ATO team tallyl was 857. Mel Royer bowled two single games with scores (200 and, 207) higher than his nearest corn petitors. His 588 took high series: laurels. In other games, Phi Delta Theta beat Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 4-0;' Phi Mu Delta defeated Alpha Ep-! silon Pi. 4-0; Theta Xi won over, Delta Upsilon, 4-0; Alpha Tau: Omega beat Theta Delta Chi, 3-1;' Kappa Delta Rho defeated Kapp.* I Sigma, 4-0; and Alpha Zeta beat: ISigma Nu, 3-1. Set the. step in an Arrow pin -tab collar. Leaders of campus fashion go for this new idea in cellars: the good looks of the tab shape combined with the ease of the eyelet-and-bar Listening. Yours in white, stripes, solids or checks. In broadcloth or new pique fabric, regular or French cuffs. Shirt from $4.50. Wool rim c tie $2.50. Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. ARROW---- THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA BOWLING first in fashion SMITS G. TIES TIME WAITING-TIME WASTED Faculty—Grad. Students—Townspeople •You won't waste time waiting your tarn far a haircut at Leonard". Appointment Barber Strap. •The servite you receive at Lessisani's is the most personal and friendly say= whet*. You choose your barker. you ehaaidi a tins* that mitts you. sail you choose what you want to talk about—lf yea want to talk. • Just call AD 84040 between 8 a.m. and S psis. da i ly or Saturdays between 8 a.m. and noon. Or you may slop by the shop at 119 E. Beaver Ave. i f d i eoriard i "Central Pennsylvania's Most Modern Barber Shop." 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers