23, 1954 FRIDAY. OCTOBER Lion H Might Any coach w face the day whe is such a day for ner as the unde , Michigan State •I his squad plays a "do-or-die" game. Today Penn State cross country coach Chick Wer , eated Lions meet the mighty Spartans of t East Lansing. This meet is' be the number on. "If we win, :nee to do well meets. If we nces of a top good," Werner State stacks up to one team in the nat we have a good ch in the east-seaso don't win, out ch finish are not too said. or will send East Lansing • victory. Dick number one The Lion men eight harriers to to try to take th • Engelbrink is th: man on the tea has carded two fi• in the three meets. 1 Engelbrink I.ts and a third !revious Lion Herm Weber is .econd man on the Lion squad. The speedy junior has finished second in all of Penn State's meets. Rounding out the top five bar riers are Steve Moorhead, Denny Johnson and Chick King. "These three men must ,block out thi Michigan State runners or wi won't have a chance," Werne commented Completing the team are Mike Miller, Jack Williams and George Machlin. The Spartans will field six re turning lettermen from their 1958 NCAA and IC4A championship team. Top man for MSU is Forddy Kennedy. He was last year's in dividual collegiate champ and, according to this year's statistics, his ability has not decreased. In five dual meets. Kennedy has recorded four firsts and one third. He holds the Penn State 5-mile course record. Also returning to the Spartan sauad is Bob Lake. Lake was Big Ten mile champion last year. In the Lion-Michigan State track meet, Lake dueled Ed Moran and pushed him to a 4:02.1 mile. Other Spartan lettermen are Jerry Yocng, Bill Reynolds. Ed Grayson and Clayton Ward Young has finished in the top five in all MSU meets. Grayson, Ward and Reynolds have all card- Favors Navy Dame Illini„ Note By WILL GRIMSLEY AP Sports Writer NEW YORK (/P) Ever so' often we take a few snips of the elixir of football foolhardi ness and sail off into the wild blue yonder on, a cloud. Brace yourself, we've got that feeling again—especially after a banner week in which we picked 37 of 47 for a .78; average. Don't demand : saliva test on these: [, Northwestern George ho are ay when every is it. Notre Dame 2 14: The Irish andl bound to have a s thing clicks. Thi: Arkansas 13, Miss may be 10, ahead to the LS could be costly. Navy 19, Penn ,! men crack a th e streak and end t beaten record. ssissippi 7: Ole king a week game, and 'that 4: The Midship •ee-game losing e Quakers' un- 20, Pittsburgh st champs are Fitt still nursing wounds. r: 14, Florida 0: 0. 18 straight. nd it hard-sled fields. Texas Christie 18: The Southw coming strong, • its West Virgini. Louisiana Slat The Tigers win but continue to f ding on foreign 12: Rice halted Teak a year ago 1 , emory is long. nia 19, Stanford lontinue to look e Pacific Coast. Texas 23, Rice the Longhorns' s but the latter's Southern Califo 7: The Trojans 6 like the class of t EAST Ar y 20, Colorado State 7; Yale 21, Colgate 7; Princeton 14, Cornell 8; Harvard 20, Dartmouth 7. MIDWEST Purdue 13, lowa 12; Michigan State 20, Indiana 6; Illinois 14, Penn State 7. rriers Will Meet Spartans Today o has ever guided a successful team must important to the Lions because Michigan The Terps are coached by Doyle Royal who is starting his 14th year at Maryland. Royal has the distinction of never hav ing lost a conference game while he has been head coach. ' Maryland has posted five: straight wins thus far this sea-I :son. Win number five came over, perennially tough John Hopkins' :University, 3-2. The Booters from! College Park, Md., have netted! :for an average of 62 per game., 31 goals in their first five games, This compares to nine goals for' DENNY JOHNSON the Nittanies in four games, an l ... one of top five average of 2.2. ed above tenth place finishes. Maryland has lost only two The Spartans have three out-, starters from last year's team. standing sophomore prospects.: Leading the Terps will be Car- They are Jim Howard, Tonyj holl Hess, outside left, who net- Smith and Bob Bond. i ted one of the four Maryland Last year's Penn State-Michi-' goals against the Lions last year. gan State meet was termed byl The eight other starters fiorn Werneras the greatest cross coun—last year's game who will see try meet he has ever seen. The:plenty of action tomorrow are Spartans carved out a 23-32 vic-'Fred Lehman, goalie Bob Voss tory. In this. Ed Moran and Ken-lwinkel, fb; Rich Romine, hb; Er nedy dueled for the first four l nesto Ribeiro, ir; Bill Pflugrad, or; miles with Kennedy outlasting the'Cliff Krufg, cf; John Fulton, hb; Lion star.. iAlgirdas Bacanskas, hb. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Lion Booters Meet Terps Tomorrow Maryland's undefeated soc cer team come to University Park tomorrow to face the Nit tany Lions on Beaver Field at 1:30 p.m. Maryland downed the Lions last year, 4-1, and went on to cap ture the Atlantic Coast Conference championship for the sixth straight year. The Terps posted a 9-0-1 record last season. A score less tie with Navy was the only blemish on an otherwise perfect slate N.Y. Plans Stadium For 3rd Major Loop NEW YORK (k')—The still-forming Continental Baseball League cleared a major hurdle yesterday. The city's Board of Estimate unanimously approved a $170,000 appropriation for an engineering firm to prepare preliminary plans for construction of a $15,000,000 sportsi- staduim at Flushing Meadows • Park R igney Rehired The park is in Queens, a bor ough of New York City. !w r - William Shea, Continental 1 , I o Manage SF founder who was in Readin ' Pa., said he was delighted and SAN FRANCISCO ('Pt Bill encouraged by the board's ac- !Rigney yesterday was re-hired as Pion. manager of the San Francisco re- 'Giants with a one-year contract "This was a necessary pcanine: for an estimated $40,000. iequisite to our completing the President Horace Stoneham told continental league," he said." - W e ! a news conference the terms are can now look forward to th e,the same as in Rigney's 2-year 'selection of the three remaining contract that expned at the end cities to complete our comple-!of the 1959 season. The Giants !ment in the Continental League.!finished third in the National The five founding cities are League after leading much of the New York, Toronto, Houston,'year. Denver and Minneapolis-St. Paul. The terms were not disclosed Only Wednesday Branch Rick- !but a relaible source placed Rig ey, the president of the Conti- !rev's stipend in the $40,000 neigh netal, said the last three wouldlborhood, about half the salary be chosen from among Mont- 'paid his star outfielder, Willie real, Buffalo, Atlanta and Dal- iMays. las-Fort Worth. 1 Stoneham said he hadn't talked The engineering company will aboutthe manager's job with !draw plans and specifications foriaayone except Rigney, but inti la 55,000-seat all-sports stadium'mated his pilot would be on the whose capacity could be increased spotto produce a champion next ;later to 80,000. 'season. `."• .... " ii O r a s a co 'l' * Q Js ca •-t• e Q. - • 0 6* 6' Ait` * o'/5 /- 0 a " 5. 05 it*,,, , : f.5. (9 9y: ( 2 ) : 2 8 0 7 , to ,s6l(* a 6 5 41 0. 8 6 3173 110 0066 Pa 7S THINK OF GROCERIES THIS WOULD BUY F But wouldn't you hate to see that much of your money being spent unnecessarily by someone else? Sad to relate, that's just about what will hap ', pen if the lobbyists for federal "public power" have their way. They are after some $10,000,000,000 of tax money to put the federal government farther into the electric business. This would cost each American family about $2OO, on the average. And this on top of $lOO per family already spent for so-called "public power"! This "public power" spending is quite 'unnec essary. For independent electric light and power companies like yours are ready and able to supply all the low-price electricity people will need— without depending on your family's taxes. Unnecessary "public power" spending goes on simply because most people don't know about it. So spread the word among your friends and neigh bors. As soon as enough people know, you can be sure it will be halted. WEST PENN POWER a taxpaying, business managed company iorking to help your community grow - •"= ..' . ,:i.,,r,t , ,,4, ' - , ,c,,, C. !..,. ~ - I ••,••• • '''',- Ot;.•::' • • _ .. ... 0 .. • . _ . .. • ... '',/,'•,.i, ~,, ~„ t 4 e i f,;' o ‘ t ( ' a _ 4 4 li f ; 6 C :I ~.74 . * :: : 9 .° • , i ' ' .:, 9 4 e :. a t) . i 1 " 4 6 0 11 * ..s- 4 . b . 0, . .9 8 0 * PAGE SEVEN r • *-4 4 4? SO , ----..
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers