The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 07, 1958, Image 11
TUESDAY, OCTOBER Long P Big Fac In IM By BIL. Sixty yard yr the order of t, of the high flir and the scortm mural football In the fraten silon Pi down( 6-0; Kappa D( Sigma Nu, 12-' Epsilon beat A Independent the Sabre Jets Thompson Thr, the Thompson Thompson V, games were: Dorm 43, 0; M( M c Kee Majot 0; Hi-Fliers, Eagles, 0. The passin c o m bination Mike Carey. a; Chuck Ba I do( proved to be tl major reason f( the KDR victor: Early in the fir: half Carey hi Baldock with forty-yard aerial shot for the first Baldock tally. Then late in the second half, Carey grabbed the ball deep, in his own territory from the' kickoff and winged a. seventy' yard pass right into Baldock's arms for the touchdown. The KDR's also proved to have a hard charging line and. spearheaded by Dick Bur goone, they pushed Sigma Nu back for losses up to forty yards. The losers were net without startling plays themselves as Jack Solomon intercepted a KDR pass at the fifty and straddled the sideline for fifty yards for the score. Chick Rolling made the conversion. Two independent games proved to be scoring feasts as Thompson P. R. rolled up the impressive score of 26-0 over Thompson V. and the Sabre Jets zoomed past the Thompson Three - 19-0. The Thompson P.R.'s formed a winning combination in Jim Johnson and Steve Solmes as the pair accounted for all but one of the P.R. scores. Early in the first half Solmes recovered a fumble in the end zone for the first marker. A pass from Kickla to Jerry Parkinson accounted for the sec ond score, with Dick Kuntz split ting the crossbars for the extra point. For the Sabre Jets, John Black proved to be the sparkler as his cluarterbacking paved the way for a Jets victory over the Thomp son Three, 19-0. Black grabbed a pass from Dan Lipperini and clashed into the end zone for the first score and then kicked the extra point. Black also figured in the next two tallys as lie passed to Lipperini and Julian Weiss. , 1953 t SS —Collegian Photo by John Reange FOUR-IN-ONE—Dick Engelbrink (3), Herm Weber (5), Capt. Fred Kerr (1) and Ed Moran (2) cross the finish line in a four-way tie for first place in Saturday's dual meet with Navy on the University golf course. Navy's Bob Kunkle (arrow) trails far in the distance. Harriers Crush As 4 Lions Tie By GEORGE FRENCH The Nittany Lion Harriers opened the 1958 cross-country season like bulls in a china shop as they shattered Navy, 16-46, on the University golf course Saturday. Capt. Fred Kerr, Ed Moran, Dick Engelbrink and Herm Weber broke the tape shoulder to-shoulder in 26:54.6 over the 5-mile course. Naval first classman Bob Kunkle trailed well behind the Nittany foursome in 27:09 for fifth place—lwo places higher than he finished last fall. The Nittany hill-and-dalera swept the next two positions, Junior Chick King took sixth in 27:40, 20 seconds ahead of sophomore teammate Denny Johnson. Navy Captain Dick Winter grabbed eighth place in 28:06. Winter was sick last fall and did not run against the Lions. Penn State's George Jones Freshman Harriers Beat Plebes, 22-33 Steve Moorhead, Mike Miller and Fred Larson swept the first three places as the Lion freshman harriers dumped the Nevy Plebes, 22-33, Friday at Annapolis, Md. Moorhead—b rot h e r of 1955 cross-country Captain Doug Moor head—was clocked in 14:07, just three seconds slower than the 2.7- mile course record set last fall against the Lions by the' plebes' Bill Kiggins. Miller was timed in 14:20 and Larson in 14:25. Other top freshman finishers were Dave LaHoff (6th), Larr Millhouse (10th), Herb Carver (14th) and George Machlan (16th). THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STAII COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA took the ninth position in 28:16, ono place higher than he fin ished last fall. The Middies' Chico Chavez showed the biggest_ improve ment in position over the course of a year as he moved from 20th to 10th. His time was 28.32. Two seconds behind Cavez was Frank Young another Middle first classman. Then came the Lions' power that did not figure in the scor ing. Although Ernie Noll fin ished ahead of the fifth mid shipman—Brad Smith—he was the eighth Lion to cross the finish line and only the tint seven men on a team can raise their opponents score. Noll—a sophomore who came out for cross-country for the first time this fall—was clocked in 28:49. Smith--another first class man running against the Nit tany barriers for the last time— dropped from third last fall to 13th this year. His time was 28:49. Just a step behind Smith was Penn State junior Sam White. At this point, the Lions had swept six of the first seven positions and nine of the first 14 places. The fifteenth place was tak en by Naval first classman Les lie Palmer in 28:54, 14 seconds That's what we want—fora job that offers no limit on earnings and the opportunity to be in bush ness for yourself. A few minutes with the head of our campus unit will tell you a lot that you may not have realized about the life insurance business. And if you're interested in actual sales training, you can get started now—while you're still at college! CAMPUS OFFICE 227 W. Beaver Ave. AD B-9421 PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company Navy, 16-46, for Ist Place of Philadelphia * * * ahead of third Glassman Bill Kiggins—the winner of the Navy Plebe—Penn State fresh man meet last fall. Navy annexed the 17th posi tion in 29:44 by Ken McLeod, with the Nittanies' Jack Wil liams just a step behind. First elassman Tom Monghan —sixth for the Midshipmen last fall—dropped to the 19th posi tion in 31:00. Penn State's Dick Doyle fin ished 20th in 31:04, followed by teammate John Norton in 34:14. Varsity Coach Chick Werner was generally pleased with his team's showing and pointed out that their performance was about as good as could be ex pected in the unusually warm weather. Werner was particu larly pleased with the perform ances of sophomores Weber, Johnson and Noll. A6t , .1-41.4 wt ! Ai4.Xim....r Siehtea . 5.A...;„=„, / , I Yes, we've done it! The In stant Sport Shirt is a reality. With the new Van Heusen Vantage Sport Shirts, all you do is add water . . and presto ... a fresh, handsome sport shirt springs to life be fore your very eyes. And a sport shirt that's all cotton! Is it a miracle? Is it a powder? Is it a pill? A grind? Read on. You see, the new Van Heusen Vantage Sport Shirts work this way. First, you buy one (this is terribly impor tant), then you ,wear it for a while. Then you remove it from your pampered body, drop it into the sink, and ADD WATER. 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