The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 18, 1958, Image 6
PAGE SIX Jacks, Star (Continued from page one) must be to Greene's credit that most of his aerials hit the bulls (ye only to he dropped by the intended receivers. Just to show how impeccable the Lion defense was, Holy Cross managed to reach Penn Slate territory only once during the game. That was in the third period, following the Lion's third score. The Crusaders drove from their own 30 , yard line to the Lion 3S before the march bogged down. Meanwhile, the kill-craved Li ons ian all over the Crusader de fense. The pound-gaining forces, which had tanked fourth in the nation before the game, rushed rot 9 74 ears and the Richie Lucas- Al Jacks air arms hit on eight of 14 aerials for 112 yards. Sophomore Dick Hoak, who seems to be getting better each game, was the leading ground gainer with 54 yards on eight carries. But it was the performance of Jacks which really gratified the 18.000 partisan fans who sat in on the affair. Not that Jack s' demonstration was that out standing. Hut the fact is, he be gan to icsemble the Al Jacks of last year-- the one who was picked by the Los Angeles Rams in the pi o grid lottery last win ter. In eight previous games this war. Jaeks had completed only 9 per cent of his 46 pass at tempts—far below the 51 per cent completion average that rated him among the best in the na tion last fall. But against Holy Cross, Jacks completed four of six _aerials for 57 yards, including a 2-yard pitch to sophomore Don Jonas for the Lions' only conversion of the af. ONLY DAYS UNTIL PITT ternoon He also rushed for 15 yards and recorded his first tOucbdovvm of the season with a 1-yard sneak in the third period Jacks quarterbacked the team on two touchdown drives—one for 59 yards in the second quarter and the other for 68 yards in the third. Jacks, however, did not over shadow regular quarterback Nichie Lucas—he only equalled him. Lucas was in on two other Nittany scores, passed for S 4 yards on three completions in five attempts and ran thrice for IS yards. One of his passes was a 38-yard fling to halfback Jim Kerr in the early moments of the second half. Kerr completely fooled two Cru sader defenders on the play, snag ging the pass at least five yards behind the Holy Cross pair. But it was Lucas' dazzling fak ing which really stood out. lie had the Holy Cross defense so baffled that, time and time again. they tackled the faker as the real Lion ball carrier ripped through for sizable gains However, Jacks. Hoak. Lucas :Ind Kerr weren't the only Penn State stars. As Holy Cross Coach Dr. Eddie Anderson quipped after t: • 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111Iii =The Candy Cane "Between the Movies" :-. E Complete your Thanksgiv ing dinner with an assort- = = ment of hand-made candy E . -. = and mints. = = Try ivory chocolate. it's extra good! ="" Hoak, Kerr, Pae 32-0 Victory —Collegian photo by George French WALKIN THE CHALK—Sophomore back Don Jonas (17) fails to stay inside the chalk line after taking a pass from Lion quarter back Al Jacks in the second quarter. Crusader John Allen (16) just got a hand on .Tonas to push him out of bounds. 'the game—when asked to single j third score. But again the try fors out the Penn state stars: "If 1 the extra points failed—this time ion a run by Kerr. Jacks' and did that, I'd have to name the whole team." (his pass to Jonas raised the score There was the running of 'to 26-0 one play before the end' I Andy Moconyi, Pat Botula, , of the third period. Dave Kasperian, Don Jonas and The last Lion touchdown was Dick Pee: the line play of the most spectacular—a 58-yard Chuck Ruslavage, Bill Popp, punt return by Jonas. A clip- Steve Garban, Maury Schleich- ping penalty was called on the er, Andy Stynchula, Bill Weh- Lions at the 7, but the officials mer and a couple of sopho- ruled that it occurred after more ends Henry Opperman Jonas' TD. A pass from Bob and Dave Alexander; and the Scrabis to Jonas faired for the footwork of Pae on punts and PAT. Opperman on kickoffs. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS As for the scoring, Kerr tal-' Penn State Rushing lied the first six points on a 1- Player . Times Net Carried Ydi. ,yard dive in the initial period af- Hank s 34 ter a 37-yard march. Jonas' PAT Moconyi 13 50 was wide to the left. Moconyi's L e g ia - 3 7 33 30 plunge in the second quarter gave Kaaimi ian 9 26 the Lions a 12-0 lead, but Hoak's J°^" . 4 15 pass to Schleicher for the extrai ; lC a n c otie 3 a 1 9 points was out of the end zone. Lucas 3 12 s 11 I . The Lucas-to-Kerr 38-yard aer- f i;a n ue.s 5 21 iial brought the Nittanies their Funair 3 ti ....++++++++.44.44.......+++ ~ 1: Canon BRYAN GREEN 1 I Being and Believing You have heard Canon Green speak on Christianity for the past week. Now read his fundamentals of the Christian faith in his second book, Being and Be lieving, $2.50. These pages set out quite simply and definitely facts which Christians ought to believe. He takes four topics: The Apostles' Creed, The Lord's Prayer, The Serinon on the Mount, and The Ten Command ments. Phrase by phrase they are analyzed and con structive insights are given. His first book, The Practice of Evangelism. $3.75, dcals with conversion and how it happens, mass meet ings, and answers questions like, ''Do conversations last?'' The Pennsylvania Book Shop • 129 West Beaver Avenue, State College 4. Daily 9 to 9 Sat. 9 to 5:30 p.m. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA * * Army Beats Booters In Last Minutes, 3-2 Army's Johnny Forrester scored a goal with three minutes remaining in the last quarter to give Army a hard-earned victory over the Penn State soccer team Saturday morning at Beaver Field, 3-2. The game was played in a steady rain which made the field muddy and slippery, but the bad weather didn't dampen the spirits of either squad as they gave some 200 loyal fans a game, they will long remember. The game was a thriller from start to finish with Ar• • play' its usual "der-or die" game an d Penn State coun tering with its smooth - working type game. Army drew first blood on a "die" play when Lee Farmele scored at 10:15 of the first per iod. Farmelo took a long pass which got past Lion fullback Julius Besoushko and beat the onrushing Larry Feg ley who was guarding the Lion cage. Just as Farmelo kicked the ball he and Fegley collided and Farmelo hit the ground hard and broke his collarbone. Army continued to put pressure on the Lion defense for the rest of the quarter but couldn't man age a score. In the third period the Nit tanies came to life as they bom barded the Army 'goal with shots. At 9:30, Billy Fiedler scored his first goal of the after noon to tie the score. Not to be outdone the Cadets came right back on a goal by Bev Powell at 13:20 to go ahead. 2-1. It was all Penn State the rest of the quarter but the Army defense proved it was as strong Collegian Credit Staff TONIGHT 7 p.m. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 18. 1958 By SANDY PADWE as reported by stopping the Lion offensive. In the fourth quarter Fiedler tied the game again at the 8-min ute mark. The goal was Fiedler's 12th of the season. Both teams battled for the lead until 16 min utes were gone when Penn State had a chance to break the dead lock with a penalty kick. How ever, Fiedler missed the penalty kick anti the Lion hope's of win ning were washed away. Just three minutes later Forrester scored his tie-breaking goal and the Cadets went on to win. As was expected Army played a rough game. When asked about the rough brand of ball that the Cadets play, Army Coach Joe Palone said: "We play a rough aggressive game at the Point because I feel that my boys are going to be officers in the U.S. Army someday and they have to learn to be tough." Army now has a 3-1-4 record while the Nittanies have a 4-4 record. The Lions close out their season this Saturday when they play Pitt. IM Boxing Deadline Intramural boxing entries must be submitted by 4:30 p.m. today at the IM office in Recreation Hall. Five more entries are needed in each weight class of the inde pendent division to make the tournament feasible, according to Director Dutch, Sykes. Meeting 208 Willard