FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, Syracus 5-Year A hard-workin nucleus of Syracuse Penn State at 10 a.n Syracuse will be man-coached soccer with the Orangemen In addition, Syracus shooting for its second 30-year-old series. Last season, the L whelmed Syracuse, unleashed a powerfu attack which saw ths fantastic total of 86 .!] holding the Orangeme Reports from Syra cate that Orange m• + Cataldi will send a • dominated squad a • Nittanies Saturday. dude five or six "mo enced men" in the ling ance his attack. The Orange offens- will be built around letterma Ted Kop pel. Koppel is the Syracuse cen ter forward and was one of the leading scorers last year. Be scored the lone tally against the Lions a year ago. Flanking Koppel will be sophs Charlie Vajanasootorn C(IL), San dy Gradinger or Stan McAdams (IR), Paul Posnick (OL), and Dave Dolins (OR). At fullback Cataldi has letter man John Stailman ,and sophs Jim McKinkley and 'Doug Ma loney. Stallman is sure of starting but the other spot is a toss-up. Halfback seems to be the most experienced position on the Syracuse squad. The three starters, Klaus Kumme, Jerry Stahl and Dave Kenyon all played on last year's eleven. Stan Corwin who started half the games for Syracuse last fall appears to be a good bet to cover the Syracuse nets. His replace ment will be Manuel Pardon who is just recovering from a badly sprained ankle. In preparation for Syracuse. the Lions have been working hard on ball control and pass ing two things that could have been better in last week's Haney Credits Yank Hurlers MILWAUKEE (M—Manager Fred Haney refused to alibi the Braves' World Series collapse Thursday saying, "Instead of moaning, let's talk about how good their pitchers were." Contrary to what might be ex pected under the circumstances, the Braves, from Haney on down, did not appear to be downhearted over losing their world champion shin to the Yankees. The clubhouse was relaxed. There even was some horseplay in the showers and wisecracks by individual players. "Let's not talk about our bat ting slump," he said. "Let's talk about their pitching. Bob Turley pitched great ball. So did Whitey Ford, only he was unlucky. Frosh Grid-- (Continued from page six) Without a fullback in the 200- pound class, Lion Coach Bruce will depend more on speed anc'. a rugged line to outplay the Moult ties in tomorrow's opener. Mike Daniels, a, 6 ft. 160- pound speedster fr o m Du quesne, and Roger Kochman. the Wilkinsburg back who was second in the 100 and 200 dash es in the PIAA's, appear to , be the starting halves; who may supply the frosh with the neces sary speed. Bruce sizes up his enough 'at the end slots, although I wl have Lynn ("Slugg' one of the guard slo inside balance. But his leg in practice E be able to play." "We'll probably e on our backfield sti dieted the Lion men I mean quantity, • None of these boy tested yet." Hopes to Stop osterman 'Jinx' IBy SANDY PADWE bunch of sophomores will forth the University's soccer team which meets . tomorrow at Beaver Field. looking for its initial win over a Roster crew. The Lions have won every game ince 1952. * * * will be win in the .1 1 ons over 2-1. They offensive m take a hots while . 1 to six. use indi tor Pete ophomore ainst the e will in e experi up to bal- Pete Wadsworth . switched to right wing loss to West Chester, according to Hosterman. Hosterman is hoping that Pete Wadsworth and Loren Kline who exchanged wing positions will remedy this situation. "Both boys are fairly good passers and should be a big help Saturday," said Hosterman. SHORT SHOTS—Lion soccermen Tony Mattei and Julius Besoushko played together at the Ogontz center last season ... Bill Fiedler has a long way to go if he wants to break the Penn State scoring record of 25 goals . . . the Lion junior now has four. line as "big and tackle puld like to p Drake at s to give us Drake hurt nd may not epend a lot ength," pre or. "By that not quality have been THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Phi Kappa Edges PiKA, 7-3; Sigma Chi, ATO Also Win In fraternity league competition last night Sigma Chi defeated Triangle, 6-0; Phi Kappa edged Pi Kappa Alpha. 7-3; and Alpha Tau Omega rolled over Sigma Alpha Mu, 15-0. In other games McKee Majors walloped Thompson Five, 19-0; The Eagles squeaked past Thomp son P.R., 8-7; the Hi-Flyers thumped the McKee Mustangs. 18-0; Nittany 23 beat Nittany 30, 20-7; and The Coopers shutout The Navy, 16-0, A double forfeit resulted when Nittany 21 and the Rockets both failed to show up. Sam Rodgers snagged a 20-yard aerial from Guy Guccione for the only score of the Sigma Chi-Tri angle game. It looked as though an 8-yard field goal by Steve Troese would be the margin -of victory for Pi Kappa Alpha, but with two min utes to go in the game, Kloess of Phi Kappa made a leaping catch of a Kunda pass for the winning touchdown. T e r c h i c k tacked on the PAT. Mel Royer led Alpha Tau Ome ga to its 15 to' 0 rout of Sigma Alpha Mu by throwing a 30-yard pass to Kim Packard. Mike Patrick proved an able field general as he guided the McKee Majors to their 19-7 vic tory over Thompson Five. Pat rick hit Joe Dankoff, Don Signor, and John Verkoski with perfect strikes resulting in TD's. The roaring charges of the Majors Halfback to Full Penn State's first two fullbacks —Pat Botula and Andy Moconyi —were halfbacks in 1957 when each gained 155 yards and posted 3.2 and 3.1 rushing averages. Bo tula was a fullback at Pitts burgh's South Hills High before entering Penn State. Moconyi played halfback at Bethlehem. Best Climate for Growth? General Telephone Territory The Great Migration is under way—out of crowd metropolitan centers, into the areas General Telepho serves. In suburban and rural America, populations are swi ing at five times the big city rate. Industry is expand': at three times the national rate.! And that's where Gen Tel is installing new phones the rate of over 15,000 each month. That's where we're meeting the future with invel ments which—in new construction alone—will run $l2 million in 1958. Result: we are the nation's second largest telepho system. America is G. t the move. And Gen Tel is moving-with —moving up! is) :*\ GENERAL TELEPHONE Wi t f - ' l ' ' \li f.' America's Second forward wall were also instru mental in the viclory. A 35-yard pass from Bill En hart to Joe Kerenick and a safety. enabled the Eagles to eke out an 3-7 victory over a game Thompson P.R. aggregate. Tom Stefero lofted three TD passes, two to scatback Torn Ford and one to Joe Ondrey as the Hi-Flyers crushed the McKee Mustngs, 18 to 0. One of Ford's receptions was a superb effort in the coffin corner. Mike Raiser hit Les Salomon with two 8-yard strikes for touch- Bit',ACOTA GOLF JACKET Made in England Combed water repel lent cotton poplin with colorful plaid lining. It has the original Bara cuta button-up collar, action-f re e, ventilated yoke back, knitted cuffs and waistband. '~i 0) 'V MEN'S STOR STATE COLLEG downs and caught a 20 yard pitch from Bill Jenkins as he figured in all three touchdowns scored by Nittany 23 in their 20-7 victory over Nittany 30. Watson Brown made a spectacular catch of_ a 40 yard aerial thrown by John Elish for Nittany 30's only score. Navy-vet Walt Shank htt Joe Cocco with a 20-yard strike and kicked a 16-yard field goal to lead Goopers to a 16-0 shutout over Navy. Charles Parry inter cepted a Navy aerial and sped GO yards down the sideline for the other score of the game, $20.95 PAGE SEVEN
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