PAGE SIX Coaches Promise Of Action in Big (Continued from page one) leaders nationally in total of fense. He led the Nittany Lions in rushing with 325 yards in 99 cai - ries for an avetage of 3.3 yauls per carry. As a passer Lucas com pleted 58 of 117 for 913 yards and C TDs Staiting with Lucas in Penn State’s backfield will be captain Pat Botula at fullback, and Dick Pae and Dick Hoak at halfbacks Pae is a newcomer to the starting lineup, having been promoted for his fine showing in a losing cause at Pittsburgh. On the line Penn State has John Bozick and Bob Mitmger at ends, Andy Stynchula and Char ley Janerette at tackles, Bud Kohlhaas and Bill Popp at guards and Jav Huffman at centei Slvnchula, Janerette and Kohl haas warn pro diaft choicer Stvn chula (227) and Kohlhaas (222) weie diafted, along with Lucas, by the Washington Redskins. Jan orette. a Philadelphia bov. was oho 1 tn by the Los Angeles Rams Penn State’s second unit which plays almost as much as the first. Is led by sophomoie quarterback Galen Hall. In his backfield are Sam Sobczak at fullback, and Jimmy Kerr and Roper Kochman Bt halfbacks Kochman is the sensational sophomore who ran a kickoff back 100 yards against Syracuse. He missed the Holy Cioss game be- enu.se of a knee injury, but he’s, ROGER KOCHMAN healthy and ready for ’Bama. j ~ . healthy again Norm Neff and Henry Opper- , , ~ , . , , , man are Ihe second unit ends 1«0 in 98. Reports from Alabama against a Southwest all star team and Slu Barber and Tom Mul- iln d the Southland say that “if Dec. 26. The game will be tele raney are the tackles you BiVe ’lll Marlin a foot, he’ll vised nationally by CBS. The guard slots will be filled turn Philadelphia Stadium into * * * by Frank Korbini, Wayne Ber- the Indianapolis Speedway. Besides the Copper Bowl, field and Sam St'ellatella. Dick Either Hank O’Steen or Tom- Richie Lucas, State’s All-Ameri- Wllson is the center. my White will be the starting can quarterback, will play in the Pat Trammel, second in total Alabama fullback. Optimist Bowl in Tuscon, Ariz offense in the Southeastern Con- The Stingy ’Bama line is head- a| td the Hula Bowl in Honolulu, ference. will direct the 'Bama at- od by Bill Rice and Tommy Charley Janerette will join Lucas tack. Trammel picked up 525 Brooker at ends, Gary Phillips in the Optimist Bowl, yards on the ground this year and and Billy Neighbors at tackles, . * . * * is one of the best i unning quarter-Bill Hannah and Don Cochran at Lion captain Pat Botula and backs in the nation. The amazing guards and Jim Blevins at cen- °nd Norm Neff will play for the sophomore also had 293 yards ter. North team in the North-South passing. * * • game in Miami, Christmas Day. Marlin Dyess, one of the small- Following the game, Rip Engle Teammates Bud Kohlhaas and est but one of the fastest backs and three of his Lion gridders Andy Stynchula will play in the anywhere will be at the halfbackwill take off for the Copper Bowl Blue-Gray game in Birmingham, slot while Billy Richardson will in Phoenix, Anz. Engle will coach'Ala. Don Cochran, Marlin Dyess, be at the other Richie Lucas, Charley Janerette iar *d Jim Blevins, all of Alabama, Dyess only stands 5-6 and and Frank Koibini along with 21i | w dl play there too weighs 149 pounds He does the other National All-Stais in a game Colgate, Tourney Await Improving Lion Cagers A busy holiday schedule in cluding the first annual Key stone Classic in Harrisburg, awaits John Egli and his Lion Cagers. The Lions, with n 1-3 record, play Colgate Saturday night at Ree Hall and then play in the Harrisburg tournament Dec. 28-29. Colgate brings a 1-2 record in to the Saturday night tilt. That doesn't include the Lehigh game In Bethlehem tonight. The Red Raiders, coached by Howard Hartman, have beaten Sienna for their only win and have lost to Cornell and Colum bia in their other two outings. The Raiders have a veterani club headed by captain Art Bran- 1 don who averaged 11 points a' game last year. Also back is Ken Norum. an other 11-point man a year ago. . The Lions beat the Red Raiders twice last winter but Egli has warned his team not to take the game lightly. j The Lions broke into the win 1 SENIORS in LA, Ml, and PHYS ED This Friday, December 18, IS THE LAST DAY to have your picture taken at the PENN STATE PHOTO SHOP for the 1960 yearbook THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA >' 'w**^^»*; - jjfy column against Syracuse after losing three straight to North Carolina State, Purdue and West Virginia. Mark DuMars leads the Lions in scoring through the first four games with 109 points for a 27.2 average. He scored 31 against West Vir ginia and had 33 in the Syracuse game Tuesday night. ! A big duel is anticipated when! DuMars and Temple’s Pickles Kennedy hook up in the Keystone Classic. Dec 28-29. in Harris-; burg's Farm Show Arena Last vear DuMars held Ken nedy, an All-American, to just eight points as the Lions wal loped the Owls, 70-36. Kennedy has been waiting to get even and he’ll have his opportunity whenj ,the Owls and Lions clash in the 1 first round Dec. 28. Duquesne and Penn are the other two teams in the tourney. Games start at 7:30 p m. For CLASSIFIEDS Call UN 5-2531 Plenty Tilt W '«* ,* r~ Wind and Light Rain Predicted for Liberty Winlery weather is expected for tomorrow's Liberty Bowl game in Philadelphia. Cloudy skies will combine with rather strong and gusty winds and chilly temperatures to cause rather unpleasant weather. There is a slight possibility that some light rain or snow will fall during the early periods of the game, but pres ent indications show no pre cipitation during late after noon. Winds should be blowing out of the west or northwest at 12 to 20 miles an hour and tem peratures will be in the middle or upper 30's. Have a WORLD of FUN! Orient ItrousJ 43 ' 65^™ Monjf tours include (o//«9« credit Alio low.cost trips to Monin *169 op. Sooth Amorico $699 op, Howom Study Toot SS9I op and 27tH Tui *•— *» *•*■ *'■" f*» Itmil Agon, B *• ■KtoMltc Mn« “ ■■ Ntw Talk 31. WORLD TRAVEL cp.snn Bowl Facts Pluce—Philadelphia Stadium (102,000) Time—l •«& p m., Dec 1<» Trams Alabama (7-1-2 > \». Penn State tB-2i National Ranking—Alabama, 10th (AD, 13th <UPI); P«rm State, 12th (AP), 10th (UPII Coaches—Alabama, Paul (Bear) Bryant, 2nd year; Penn State, Rip Knji!#, 10th year Conference—Alabama, Southeastern ; Penn State, Independent . Penn State Record 1 19— . t 21- —VMI 0 58 —Colgate -20 17— Army 11 21 —Bouton XJ. 12 20 -Illinois 9 28--West Virginia 10 18 — Syracuse _ 20 40—Holy Cross - 0 7 Pittsburgh 22 Alabama Record 3—Georgia 17 3—Houston 0 ! 7—Vanderbilt 7 ■ 11—Chattanooga 0 ! 7—Tennessee -- 7 10— Mississippi State 0 19— Tulane - _ 7 o—Georgia Tech 7 14—Memphis State 7 10—Auburn . . 0 Team Statistics Hashing PENN STATE ALABAMA Carries Yds. Carries Yds. Lucas 99 325 TrartimfeU 156 525 Keir 67 320 O'Stecn 71 228 Hoak 68 237 White 46 169 Botula 64 209 Richardson 34 139 Sobc7ak 49 190 Dyess 28 121 Pae 38 181 Wesley 25 121 Kochman 15 167 Skelton 37 78 Hail 31 132 Stapp 16 66 Caye 27 129 Johnson 9 49 Nittanies Have Appeared In Rose, Cotton Bowls By JOHNNY BLACK , When the Nittany Lion grid- Jders take the field against | Alabama i n Philadelphia’s first Liberty Bowl game to ! morrow, it will be only their third appearance in a post season bowl. But the Lions are not novices at inaugurating bowl games. - ! It was Hugo Bezdek’s iron-man ‘crew that helped inaugurate the granddaddy of all bowls—the Rose jßowl back on Jan. 1, 1923. j Pasadena's famous Tourna ment of Roses started its annual football game in 1902 but the ' 1923 battle between Penn Stale 1 and Southern California was the first game played in the present Rose Bowl—a huge con crete oval, seating 101,000. Names like “Dutch” Bedenk (All-American guard in 1922, la ter a Penn State football coach and now baseball coach), Mike Palm, “Tinv” McMahon, and Har ry Wilson dotted the Lions’ small 22-man lineup that made the long trek westward back in the “Roar ing 20’s.” Bezdek’s Nittany Mountain boys had been the terrors of the East from 1919 till 1922. They had a i3l-game winning streak going in cluding five high-scoring wins in '1922 (54-0, 28-7, 20-0, 32-6, 33-0) before Navy knocked them off midway through the season. The Lions lost two more games that fell to Penn and Pitt but still rated Once Again 70 DAYS THE FAMOUS , * STUDENT/TEACHER 7 COUNTRIES EUROPEAN TOUR taAC nn Summer 1960 $945.00 ALL-INCLUSIVE TOUR PRICE INCLUDES: Transatlantic fare; 3 meals daily everywhere; All transporta tion in Europe by deluxe air conditioned motor coach; Special receptions throughout tour; Generous free lime for indepen dent activities; Experienced European four leaders. YOU'LL ENJOY THESE UNIQUE EVENTS: • Live several days in the home of a French family. •Talk with leading government personalities • Attend cultural events that characterize Europe • Enjoy informal socials, dances and receptions with students from all over the world • Visit renowned studios, industries and art centers • Thriil to variety of special evening entertainments and • See Oh mpic Games and Edinburg Festival (Optional) Tour without transatlantic transportation gy- available at special reduced rate £ T,ME PAYMENT ARRANGED Wrife or call Dept. WX Travel & Cultural Exchange, Inc. 550 Filth Ave., New York 36. N.Y., Circle 5-0594 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1959 PENN S f ATE ALABAMA All. Crop. Yd. Alt. I'mp. Yd. 117 68 913Tr»mmell 49 21 298 t« 18 220FkcKan 20 13 19# 2 1 HlStapp I I II Pars Keeaiving PENN STATE ALABAMA He. Yd. Td. No. Yd. Td. Ho»k 14 187 0 Dyes* 10 149 1 Naff 12 167 2 Brookar 7 108 1 Opparmiin 11 212 0 Ball « 100 2 Karr 9 122 1 Richardson 3 42 1 Roald* 6 168 2 Honsonet 2 29 0 Punting Penn State No. Lutaa - P«* ___ Mitingrr Schaeffer Alabama No, Yds. At*. . 33 1223 87.0 O’Steen White Skelton St&pp l7 622 86.5 l3 408 31.4 lO 381 38.1 Ten Game Statistics Penn State Pit rt Doun* Total Yard* Gained 324 8 Yards Pei Gama 2048 Rushing Yards 208.4 Rushing Yards Per Game 1164 Passing Yaids 116.4 Passing Yards Per Game 161 Passe* Attempted 77 Fasten Completed 47.8 Per Cent Completed 8 Passes Had Intercepted 44-33.6 Punt* 8 Fumbles Lost 87 Touchdowns the trip to Pasadena for the first official Rose Bowl. The lads from the central Penn sylvania hills threw a scare into the mighty Trojans when quarter back Palm booted a lb-yard field goal in the first quarter to give Penn State a 3-0 lead. But the brilliant line play of Leo Calland and the "ball packing" of Bullet Baker and little Harold GBlloway earned a 14-3 victory for Coach Elmer Henderson's Trojans, j Penn State’s other bowl appear ance came in the 1948 Cotton Bowl jin Dallas, Tex., when the unde (feated "Champions of the East” battled the now legendary Doak (Continued on page seven) From France A New Taste Sensation French Fries! You Can Enjoy Them at Your Dorm by Calling Morrell's AD 8-8381 Delivery 9 to midnight MORRELL'S Next to Alpha Fire Co. At*. 24.0 86.1 80.1 81.0 Yds. 680 482 211 .Alabama 120 3799 179 ft 1342 134.3 4&7 4E.7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers