PAGE TEN Mounties Rate Tougher Than --Collegian Photo by Marty Scherr DOWN YOU GO—Henry Opperman (89), Richie Lucas (33) and Jay Huffman (legs in the air), a defew,tve 1.1 io that teamed up quite often Saturday, stop West Virginia's Danny Williams on fourth down to end a Mountie drive on the Penn State 40 early in the second quarter. By JOHN BLACK I added some specifics to Peter- ;halfback role from fleet-footed Assistant Sports Editor I son's remark. "Lucas better !Roger Kochman. ! West Virginia owns the stay loose. That Syracuse line ! The speedy sophomore, the really keys off and charges rather dubious distinction of! fast for big men. And they got ; Lions' first re a 1 breakaway being the only team that has ! the hatdest running backs I've 'threat in two years, romped , played against." through the Mountie defense Sat met both of the East's two top-: Williams, the current chief l urday, reeling off more yardage ranking undefeated grid pow-'Mountie signal-caller, who as an, than any other two men on the , understudy to Dick Longfellow field. c, , ers, Syracuse and Penn State. ; last year, played against an array Kochman is an exciting run .of southern clubs that included' In fact the Mounties met them ner whose quickness afoot gives - mighty Oklahoma. said, ' On successive weekends, and byithen him ability to slip through the the haggard, but relieved looks," This Syracuse team is the best, arms of would-be tacklers be en their faces after Saturday's) Ive ever seen." ' fore they can get a firm grip debacle, they're mighty glad to! Art "PaPPY" Lewis. the affiable, and bring•him down. be finished with the ordeal. Theyi and rotound West Virginia men i Galen Hall, the sophomore guar lost to the Orangemen, 44-0, and tor, called Penn State a " we " - Iterback who has filled in so ably to the Lions, 28-10. :balanced" team. He refused tco 1 for Lucas on even call, had his But this made them a natu- I compare the Lions and Orang e- best day, directing the Reddie unit , men but quipped, '.'l'd sure like toi which , ral for giving comparisons on provided most of the of the,see the game. ' I two teams that fight for the lensive thrust for the Nittanies. Lambert Trophy Saturday on Peterson summed things up by Beaver Field, and their corn- saying, "Now understand, yo'all ments were not especially heart- !got a good team, make no mistake ening for Lion fans. !about it, but yo'all better get on In the inimitable voids of your horse and hustle." Mountie halfback Ray Peterson,! But the Penn State hierarchy "Yo'all boys had better tighten , —and possibily the players as yowl chin straps for when those; well—already had one eye on Sy-ra-ruse giants come chargin'; the Syracuse fray. through, there ain't nothin' can The "Ying-yangs" res t e d stop 'cm." throughout much of the game Peterson labeled the Orange de-,while the "Reddies" took over Tense tougher than the Lions'.,' with the noise of seasoned veter " They rush the hell out of your ians and displayed the same brand passer. They had poor Danny of play that has elicited raves for (Danny Williams, WVU quarter-!them before. back) throwing passes from the! Pat Botula, Frank Korbini, and pone position all day." ,Dick Pae did not play at all. And At this point, Dave Rider, a t Pae, even if he is ready to go by two-year letterman at halfback, .this weekend, may have a tough sauntered out of the shower and job winning back his No. 2 left- ••• 0000000000000000000000000 ••••••••••••••••••••• BOWL FOR ~U~. 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State Remains in AP Grid Poll Penn 7th Associated Pres Unbeaten Louisiana State another booming vote of confic previously undefeated Mississi LSU had to go all out to s straight on an 89-yard punt re-I turn by Billy Cannon and then stopping Mississippi on its 1 withi a great goal line stand. Although a losing team often 'drops right out of the picture, that was not the case for Mis sissippi. Even in defeat they dropped only iwo rungs to fifth place with strong support. Northwestern clung to second; place with its shiny 6-0 record now including a 30-13 triumph' over Indiana. Texas advanced a peg to third on its 21-0 victory! over Southern Methodist. Powerful, Syracuse routed Pitts burgh 35-0 and took over fourth place, moving up one step. The sturdy Orange line held Pitt to minus yardage on the ground in another fine demonstration of its strength. Southern California held sixth and Penn State remained in seventh place as they re mained unbeaten and untied. Southern California had a little trouble in beating California Saturday 14- but Penn State made liberal use of its reserves in rnlling over West Virginia 28-10. The only new team among the top 10 was Clemson, which took over the No. 10 position while thumping Rice 19-0. Georgia Tech fell all the way from ninth to 19th in a 10-7 loss to Duke. All of the seven major unbeat en, untied powers are in the first 20 teams. Six are in the first 10 and North Texas State is ranked No. 20. 1. Louisiana St. 132 (7-0) 1.859 2. Northwestern 30 6-0) 1,596 3. Texas 6 (7-0) 1.442 4. Syracuse 14 (6-0) 1,374 5. Mississippi 1 (6-1) 1,123 6. Southern Calif. 4 (6-0) 378 7. Penn State 8 (7-0) 810 8. Auburn 3 (5-1) 677 9. Wisconsin 2 (5-1) 446 10. Clemson 2 (5-1) 224 1111111111111MMININI rt'"' fr- CHRISTMAs DELIVERY for a limited number of fortunate Penn Staters, we can stilt deliver to you one of the finest class rings in America YOUR PENN STATE CLASS RING by Balfour We suggest you call Santa today for wampum. L. G. C D 3 4 0 lir Co. in the "A Store" TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1959 By Jack Hand Sports Writer topped The Associated Press ence after its 7-3 victory over IPPI. nag that one, winning its 19th Chill Winds Hamper IM Grid Play By DEAN BILLICK Old .man winter settled down upon the IM grid scene last night and the "old mans" howling winds and bone chil ling temperatures brought . obvious effects upon the players. ' Low scoring and forfeits dom mated play as Kappa Delta Rho, Alpha Chi Rho, Sigma Chi, Studs, Hamilton Bandits, Burke, Labache Club, College Co-op, and Stump Jurripers were victorious. Ed Kikla was the whole show for Kappa Delta Rho as he ran and passed KDR to their third win of the season, a 22-0 white wash of Kappa Sima. Kikla pass ed for 3 touchdowns using Chick Heistand and Chuck Baldock as his receivers. The other KDR score came on a safety. Alpha Chi Rho evened their slate at, 2-2, when Bill Machole recovered a Sigma Phi Epsilon fumble in the SPE end zone. The only other resemblance of a score came when Bill Funk intercepted a SPE pass and raced 55 yards to paydirt but a penalty nullified the play. Sigma Chi won its first game, beating Alpha Epsilon Pi in over time. Both teams went into the overtime scoreless and deadlocked in first downs, 2-2. Led by the passing of Frank Slapikas and the receiving of Bob Perry the Stump Jumpers con tinued unbeaten by downing G.D.1., 21-0. In winning their (Continued on page eleven)