VEMBER 11, 1959 WEDNESDAY, N Syra Favo use. Players Orange Bowl , N.Y. My—Syracuse players and fans, glow ange's No. 1 ranking in the weekly Associated 'rued yesterday they could have an Orange the asking. SYRACUSE ing over the 0 Press poll, Bowl berth for voted for it but university officials postponed after Saturday's i „, The player a decision anti game with Cog Lew Andreas, is director, said meeting the uni, Board would cuss a bowl gan' day night. Syracuse athiet after a two-hour Tersity's Athletic et again to dis e, probably Sun- university of fi t with represen- Orange, Cotton wis. Andreas said cials had talke tatives of the and Liberty bo. In Miami, CI Kussrow of they selection commit 121=WIIIS Orange Bowl ee said last night 1 nternational re- I that Syracuse sled in playing IBowl in Phila .:. United Press ported last nig was not inter = in the Liberty delphia, Dec. 1 will confer committee Wednesday in he light of inde cisian at Syrac se Kussrow said, "There are Geor gia, Georgia Tech, Tennessee and several others, that we can't name ;low which have to be con sidered as an opponent for the Big Eight representative in the Orange Bowl game." Earlier Kussrow said the bid would be extended if Syracur, would indicate quickly it was wanted. If Syracuse were to play in the Orange Bowl New Year's Day, its opponent would be either Colorado, lowa State or Kansas of the Big Eight Conference. Syr acuse defeated Kansas 35-21, in its season opener this year. Jasper Coach Adds Fuel To Feud with Werner By DICK GOLDBERG More fuel was added to the fire which has been smoulder ing between Penn State track and cross country coach Chick Werner and Manhattan's men tor, George Eastment this weekend. It all started in the Indoor IC4A championship meet when a Man hattan runner, Henry White, fin ished fourth in the 60-yard high hurdles. Third place judge Dave Levy, who picked Mike Herman of NYU for the third slot, said that he thought White finished ahead of Herman. Eastment, in violation of the rules, spoke io Levy and the of ficial changed his card, giving White third. This gave the Jas pers an extra point, enabling them to beat the Lions by 19/36 of a point. Werner lodged an official pro test and the Liens were declared the victors. All this proved em- TTENTION SENIORS Seniors i ENGINEERING and ARCHITECTURE are sche Wed to have their portraits taken for the 1 60 is Vie at the . . PENN STATE PHOTO SHOP 214 E. College Ave. from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. No appointments are necessary. Please follow this schedule. Those with last names: A—G Nov. 9.12 11—P Nov. 12.16 Q—Z Nov. 16.19 BEN SCHWAETZWALDEB . . . Syracuse coach IM Boxing Entries Open For Indies, Fraternities Entries for intramural boxing are now open. All boxers who wish to enter must present them selves at the intramural office by 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, November 17. An entry fee of 25 cents per man will be charged. There will be separate tournaments for frater nity and independent students. The weight classes this year will be 128, 135, 142, 150, 158, 167, 176 and unlimited. harassing to the Manhattan coach Last week, the Nittany mentor asked Eastment to change the date cf the Lion-Jasper cross country meet from Saturday to Friday to enable the harriers to see the Syracuse football game. Eastment for some unknown rea son, refused. It turned out that Friday was a beautiful day for running a cross country meet. "However, it rained all Friday night and Sat ! urday morning, making conditions !next to impossible for running," Werner said. Due to the bad conditions, Chick King, veteran harrier, sprained his ankle and was forced to stop early in the meet. The Lions lost 27-30 and Wer ner feels that the difference was not having King. The Penn State mentor also believes that this meet, because of the weather, was not a true test of the runners. In any case, the harriers will afford the Jaspers stiff competi tion in the IC4A championships in he held next Monday in New York. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Lions Rank 10th in AP Grid Poll Associated Press Sports Writer All-conquering Sy racus e,, the East's first major threat, for a national college cham pionship since th e Davis- Blanchard era at Army, yes terday held the coveted No. 1 position in the Associated Press' weekly football poll. By shading previously unbeaten. Penn State 20-18 for their seventh victory of the year, the powerful Orangemen replaced Louisiana .State s defending champions as the top team of the country. This ended LSD's 14-week reign in the front spot. Dumped 14-13 by Tennessee, LSU drop ped to third place behind Syra cuse and Texas. The nation's sports writers and', sportscasters gave Syracuse only a 12-point margin over unbeaten Texas, which jumped from fourth., to second place by virtue of its' 13-12 triumph over Baylor. The Orange attracted 111 first place' votes to 85 for Texas but thel Longhorns picked up enough sec-1 and and third place votes to make{ it close. Northwestern, in the runner up spot a week ago, dropped to sixth, one notch above its con queror, Wisconsin. Southern California, one of the four major unbeaten and untied teams placed fourth barely beat ing out once-beaten Mississippi. Auburn was eighth. Tennessee jumped into ninth spot, displacing Clemson in the top 10 despite the Tigers' 6-0 victory over Duke. Penn State, which didn't disgrace itself in its loss to Syracuse, was tenth. , The top 10 with points based on 110 for a first place vote, 9 for I second etc. First place votes and won-lost records in parentheses: Points Syracuse 111 (7-0) 2.325 Texas 85 (8-0) 2,313 Louisiana State 13 (7-1) 1,848 Southern Cal. 14 (7-0) L 576 Mississippi 14 (7-1) 1,488 Northwestern 2 (6-1) 1.311 Wisconsin 19 (6-1) 1,243 Auburn 9 (6-1) 808 Tennessee 4 (5-1-1) 674 Penn State (7-1) 608 Stynchula, Kockman To Speak on WDFM Andy Stynchula and Roger Kochman, the defensive and offensive stars in Saturday's game with Syracuse will dis- cuss the battle in an interview by Carmella LaSpada and Charlie Swift on WDFM's "Meet the Varsity" program ai 9:45 tonight. The show will also be carried on AM station WMAS. By JOE REICHLER Delaware Wins Title On Defensive Play Ask anyone at Delaware House what the most important factor is in winning football games and their answer might surprise you—defense. The defensive minded Delaware club has not scored a touchdown this season, yet on the strength of last evening's victory over Jordan, 2-0, Dela ware squeaked by with its fourth win of the year and with it the independent League G champion ship. in other games last evening ' weird plays and unusual cir cumstances dominated action as Linden, Alpha Sigma Phi. Phi Mu Delta and Allegheny battled their way to victories and their respective league champion ships. All teams last evening went in— to their contests with identical, 3-1, records. In order to win their, championships the teams went all out for victory, pulling out all the stops. The most unusual plays occured when Allegheny and Phi Mu Delta recovered their own kickoffs in their opponents end zones for quick touchdowns over Erie and Phi Sigma Delta. The rules slate that a ball must be touched down by the offensive team in the end zone. This was not done. Jordan House completely out played the "punchless wonders" from Delaware but went down to defeat as a snap from the center on a punt went awry, and sailed through the end zone for a safety and the event ual 2-0 win for Delaware. Jor dan. who had previously beat en Delaware, led in first downs, 4-1. Dick Hinkel found his receivers, rangy and easy to spot, passing for three touchdowns to give Al pha Sigma Phi a resounding 27-6 victory over Pi Kappa Phi. An interesting sidelight of this game came on the final touchdown as drop kicking specialist Art Nagle See RUSSIA for yourself in 1960 American conducted Student/Teacher Economy tours by Maupintour the best routes at lowest costs. From $495, all•inclusive, summer departures. MI RUSSIA BY MOTORCOACH. Beginning Helsinki or Warsaw. See country byways, rural towns plus Moscow, Leningrad. 17 days. U DIAMOND GRAND TOUR. Russia, Crimea, Ukraine. Czechoslovakia. Poland, Germany, Passion Play, Bayreuth Festival, Berlin. Scandinavia. Benelux. Austria. Switzerland. COLLEGIATE CIRCLE TOUR. Cruise Black Sea, see the Caucasus. Ukraine, Crimea, Russia, White Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Scandinavia, Benelux, Berlin, England, Luxembourg, France. EASTERN EUROPE ADVENTURE. New route. Bulgaria, Roumania, new hiway through Southern Russia, Ukraine, Crimea, Moscow, White Rus sia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Krakow, Dresden, Berlin, Germany, Austria. Maupintour See your local Travel Agent or write 400 Madison Avenue New York 17. New York ••—,.••• • . • • . By DEAN BILLICK missed his first extra point. in 14 attempts. Pht Mu Delta reversed an earlier loss to Phi Sigma Delta with the aid of a recovered kick off in the Phi Sig.'s end zone and a Ron Blend to Bob Luff 40-yard scoring pass to notch a 13-0 win. After a scoreless first half Linden House led by the quar terbacking of Mike Pennington edged by Hemlock for a 3-0 first down victory. The closest resemblance to a score came when Pennington attempted a 35-yard field goal which fell short of its mark. Perhaps the quickest and easiest touchdown in IM history occured when Allegheny kicked off to Erie who allowed the ball to roll dead in the end zone Toni Mol nar of Allegheny calmly picked the ball up and in so doing scored the winning touchdown. Although Erie outplayed and outclassed Allegheny this one lapse in its failure to down the ball in the end zone cost it the league F championship. Erie had three passes intercepted in the end zone and led in first downs, 7-1. For CLASSIFIEDS Call UN 5.2531 Your Local Agent is UNIVERSITY TRAVEL BUREAU STATE COLLEGE HOTEL Above Corner th ßoom ADB e -6779 PAGE SEVEN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers