The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 18, 1958, Image 7

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    SATURDAY. OCTOBER 13.] IssB
Title Hopes in Balance
ters Host Colgate
As i
The Red Raiders of C
University will be looki
their first win against
State’s soccer team whe
invade Beaver Field fo:
beginning at 1:30 toda;
Colgate has yet to b
Lions m a series that dat
to 1941. Last year the Lion;
ed the Red Raiders m
game at Hamilton, N.Y.,
With ten letlermen ret
Colgate coach Mark F
hopes lo give Jhe Lions
battle. Penn State coach
Hosierman has a lot of :
for Randall and hi? boys
year they gave us a real
and this year they sho
tougher. I expect a real
ing afternoon."
Leading the Red Raid
today’s game will be Capt
Biddulph. Biddulph is a t
letterman who plays rig
back. He is rated by Ra
one of the top defensive
he has coached.
The Colgate scoring at ack de
pends mainly on center (forward
-Bob Morvillo and his two insides
—Vic Cino and John James. All
three are potential scoring threats
and will be watched closely by
Hosterman’s defensive crew.
Herby Hertner will probably be
one of the most active defense
men on the field. The Lion right
half will be responsible for watch
ing Morvillo and James but Hos
terman has plenty of confidence
in him. ‘‘He has improved quite
Delta Sig, Theta
Hi-Fliers Remain
By BILL BARBER
Delta Sigma Phi, Theta Chi,
Delta Upsilon and the Hi-Fliers
remained in that charmed circle
of undefeated teams by downing
their various opponents last night
in intramural football action.
In fraternity play, Theta Chi
downed Alpha Tau Omega in
overtime, breaking a 6-6 tie, Del
ta Upsilon crushed Tau Phi Del
ta 27-7, Phi Epsilon Pi defeated
Lambda Chi Alpha 7-0, ‘ Delta
Sigma Phi edged out Phi Kappa
Psi 3-0, and Delta Tau Delta
squeaked by Phi Kappa Psi in
overtime.
Independent play showed the
Hi-Fliers beating the McKee Ma
jors 14-6, the Eagles eaking a 2-1
victory in first downs over the
Thompson Five, the Goopers
downing the Stump Jumpers
19-6, and the McKee Mustangs
defeating Thompson P. R. 13-0.
Delta Upsilon extended their
winning string to three by down
ing Tau Phi Delta 27-V. Sy Du
binski opened the action on the
kick-off bv heaving a long aerial
to Jack Chotta for the touch
down. His attempt for the extra
point was no good.
After a'series of long pass plays
which moved the ball up the en
tire length of the field,, Dubinski
hit Chotta with a 20 yard oass
that was good for a scce. Dubin
ski then split the crossbars with
his extra point kick to bring the
score to 13-0.
Late in the first half
chucked a 50 vard sho
arms of Jim Anderson
it for the tally. Chotta
verted for the extra pc
In the second half aft
of pass plays, Dubii
again found the ra
Chotta who dashed inti
zone. Chotta completed
attempt.
On the fancy runnir
Hrobak, Tau Phi Dfl
their only score. Hrobal
kiek-off late in the sc
and straddling the side]
ed the DU defensemen
dodginff -and streaked f
line. Charles Whitem
the extra point.
By stopping the Mel
14-6, the Hi-Fliers ran
torv streak to four wh
Tony Hutskow oj
scoring for the McKee
tossing a 10 yard sho:
Jackson who then ran
60 yards through the
Colgate] ★ * *
ing forj /,]
; Penn !
n they'
■ a tilt
at the
;s back
1 dump-,'
tough
4-0. ;
arning
andall
a real
Kenny
respect
"Last
1 scare,
lid be
1 excit-
es into
iin Carl
vo year
it half
ldall as
players
Herby Hertner
. . » tough day ahead
a bit this year and his defensive
play is better,” said the Lion
coach.
The N lit any Lions will enter
today's game without the serv
ices of their leading scorer Bill
Fiedler who was operated on
yesterday morning at Centre
County Hospital for the remov
al of a chest growth. Fiedler is
reported resting comfortably
and is expected out sometime
next week.
Gary Miller will replace Fied-
fense to paydirt. The conversion
attempt was no good.
On a pass from Tom Stefers,
Joe Andrey made a spectacular
diving catch for the Fliers to tie
the score at 6-6. Andrey then
kicked home the extra point to
break the deadlock.
In the last few minutes of the
Pigskin Coin Flips ...
Out On a Limb
Picking games that they claim are “snaps”, our fearless fore
casters have again climbed onto the limb over the nation’s football
stadiums.
Genial George French, the top man on the pile, is said to be
resting on his laurels this week. He only went out on the limb
farther than the rest in one tilt—the Minnesota-Illinois game.
“Unlucky” Lou Prato, who has been goofing on his picks all
year, has finally found his mistake. He put the wrong teams down.
“This week,” he yelled as he raced for the nearest ride to Boston,
“tilings'll really be different.”
Prato Mathews French Coaches
(.526) (.569) (.669) (.545)
Fla. Si.-V.P/L Fla. Slate V.P.I. Fla. State V.P.I.
Fla.-V'bilt Fla. Fla. Fla. Vandy
Cal.-U.S.C. U.S.C. U.S.C. Cal. Cal.
Nrlhwstn-Mich. Mich. Nrthwsln. Nrlhwsln. Mich.
Minn.-111. 111. 111. Minn. Minn.
Butler-Valparaiso Val. Butler Butler Val.
Penn-Brown Penn Penn Penn Penn
Pitt-W. Va. Pitt Pitt Pitt Pitt
Tenvi.-Ala. Tenn. Tenn. Tenn. Tenn.
T.C.U.-Tex. A&M T.C.U. T.C.U. T.C.TL T.C.U.
S.MJJ.-Rice S.M.U. S.M.U. S.M.U. sSUL
N.C.-Maryland N. Car. • N. Car. N. Car, N. Car,
Wake For.-Vil'nova Wake For. Wake For, Wake For, Wake For.
Mich. Sl.-Purdue Mich. St, Mich. St. Mich. St. Mich. St.
Wisc.-lowa Wise. Wise, Wise, Wise.
Dubinsky
: into the
who ran
then con
int.
3r a series
iski once
ige with
i the end
the PAT
iff of Bob
ilta made
k took the
>cond half
line, evad
by fancy
>r the goal
sn kicked
One Good Turn
Deserves Another
Re-Elect f STATE
JO HAYS '23 SENATOR
Longtime Champion of Education
THIS IS A PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
ee Majors
their vic
ts.
iened the
Majors by
: to Steve
i the ball
Fliers de-
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
ler at inside right. This is the
third position the versatile Miller
has played this year. Miller’s left
halfback slot will be filled by!
sophomore Gene Raiford.
The rest of the Lion lineup re
mains the same as the last two
weeks.
Today's game is an important
one for Hoslerman and the
Lions, because they can get back
in contention for the national
title with a convincing win.
According to Hosterman the
Lions have a fair chance for na
tional honors if they can get past
Colgate, Maryland, and Navy.
The reason for the rebirth of the
title hopes come as the result
of some games played last week.
The national title is decided
by the Saylor System this is
the system that rates a team
by who it beats and by how
they played.
Although West Chester beat
the Lions they haven’t played
well in their last two games. In
a key game Maryland tied Navy.
The Terrapins and Navy are very
good this year according to offi
cial soccer reports. Thus if the
Lions can beat them they still
have a chance for the title. But
first they must’ get past Colgate.
STARTING LINEUPS
PENN STATE COLGATE
Pete Wadsworth OR
Gary Miller
Fran Manley
Mike Stollmeyer
Loren Kline
Herby Hertner
Bill Rierson
Gene Raiford
Paul Bauer
Wayne Rodger*
Jerry Bruce
Chi, DU,
Undefeated
game, Ken Pollenz snagged an
aerial pitch from Stefers in the
endzone for a Flier tally. Andrey
made the extra point attempt
good for added insurance.
A tie-breaking field goal by
Walt Barnes decided the game
for Delta Sigma Phi in their 3-0
victory over Phi Kappa Psi.
Only 6 Harriers to Run
Against Pittsburgh Today
each meet
Varsity cross-country Coach Chick Werner will send only
six entries against Pitt this afternoon on the 4.3-mile Schen
ley Park course in Pittsburgh. The Lions entered the maxi
mum of 12 runners against Navy, nenls by Ihe time lhe season
m the opener two weeks ago andj is over," he said,
eight last’ week against Cornell j “King is beginning to show the
Explaining his reason for so ! Power he had in track last spring
few entries, Werner said, i(4.13 in the mile and 1:53 in the
"We’re optimistic about win- half-mile) and this new sopho
ning the Pitt meet and believe more Noll has bccn a really plea
thal we will not need a full sanl surprise,” Werner said en
squad against the Panthers, dhusiaatically. “On Wednesday,
Pitt has a pretty good squad, l we had a tough hill workout at
but they are certainly not in a |CentreHillCountry Club. Noll ran
class with a couple of our other well thiough the entire workout,
opponents—Michigan Slate and i and on tlle ftnal of l,le four big
Manhattan." -hill loops, Noll led the pack.”
It is probab'e that Werner will
enter a full squad of 12 against
Michigan State next Saturday on
,the University golf course The
Spartan harriers were NCAA
champs two years ago and run
ners-up last fall.
Running for the Lion harriers
today will be Capt. Fred Kerr,
Ed Moran, Dick Engelbrink,
Chick King, Herm Weber and
Ernie Noll.
Werner was particularly pleased:
with the running of Moran, En
gelbrink, King and Noll.
“If Moran is as tough next Sat
urday as he has been in practice
this week, For d d y Kennedy
(Michigan State’s top runner)
will have to hold a big lead over
Moran going into the stretch
drive to beat Ed—and that is
likely to be nearly impossible.
Moran has really looked terrific
all week,” Werner said.
Bob Brenner
1R Vic Cino
CF Bob Morvillo
1L John James
OL Bob Lucas
RH Carl Bidduiph
CH Mac Neil Edwards
LH Jim Taylor
RF Paul Jaffe
LF MacDonald Roehm
G Ai Scull
SofJ exciusivefy in Stale dot (eg* at'
‘isrltar'a Hints
By GEORGE FRENCH
Penn State's cross-country entries are growing smaller
"And Eagle (Engelbrink) has
also been running very well in
practice this week. He is get
ting steadily stronger all ihe
time and will probably cause a
lot of irouble for our oppo-
V *
* \
The first Shirt Satellite is fi
nally a reality! Just yesterday,
during their lunch hour, Van
Heusen scientists launched a
Van Heusen Century Shirt
into the stratosphere. It’s now
circlingtheearth 180,000 miles
up, in an orbit so large that a
grown man couldn't walk it,
even in a whole day! Travel
ing at the legal 35 miles per
hour, it is expected that the
Van Heusen Century Shirt
Satellite will remain up there
in the blue beyond for at least
1200 years. And, with luck,
maybe 1201.
“But," you will ask, “what
value will the Shirt Satellite
have for science?" Just this,
friend! It will further prove
the immutable law that the
soft collar on Van Heusen
Century Shirt 3 won’t wrinkle
. . . ever! You see, the slick
Van Heusen physicists have
attached an electronic
Wrinkle-ricter to the collar of
the Van Heusen Century
PAGE SEVEN
This is Noll's first year on
fhe campus. Last fall he at
tended the University's fores
try school at Mont Alto. In his
! first co 11 e giaie cross-country
meet, he finished 12th, and then
placed ninth last week against
Cornell.
This afternoon’s meet with the
Panthers will be the 26th in the
series dating back to 1924. The
Lions hold a 21-4 bulge over Pitt,
! winning the first 11 meets. The
Panthers’ only victories over the
Nittany harriers came in 1936
(25-30), 1940 (24-31), 1954 (24-33)
and 1955 (21-40). Those Pitt
squads were led by such Olympic
greats as John Woodruff and Ar
nie Sowell.
"S“ Club Will Meet
The Varsity “S” club will meet
at 10 p.m. Sunday at Phi Kappa
Psi.
Kasperian Leads Scorers
Ex-GI Dave Kasperian was
Penn State’s top football scorer
in 1957, with seven touchdowns
or 42 points.
L. f
Shirt. This clover device will
constantly send back elec-”
tronic reports on the condition
of the collar, so, for 1200 years,
we earthlings will have abso
lute proof that the soft collar
on Van Heusen Shirts won’t
wrinkle ... ever. Should you
ever have any doubts, just
drop in to the Van Heusen
office, and listen to the reports
coming back from the Shirt
Satellite.
One more thing—the Van
Heusen Century Shirt Satel
lite will drop back to the earth
in the spring of 3157 (possibly
3158) and you’re all invited to
the return party! If, in the
meantime, you want to see
the Van Heusen Century
Shirt, you can at your campus
haberdashery. He has them
in 5 collar styles, in white,
stripes and colors. $4 & $5.
At better stores everywhere
or write: Phillips-Van Heusen
Corporation, 417 Fifth Ave,,
New York 16, N. Y.