PAGE SIX Sprained Ankle Shelves Ca Grid Injuries Continue To Plague Lion Back By SANDY PADWE Luck and Eddie Caye just can't get together. Every time the classy half back seems to be going places, the injury jinx pops up to ruin things. It happened in 1958 and '59, and yesterday CaYe limped off the practice field with a sprained ankle suffered \vhen he tripped over a blocking dummy during a drill. .lust three days before, the Penn State senior capped a two rear comeback by leading the Lions to a 20,0 win over Boston University in tic season's opener in Beavcr Stadium. lie carried the ball 14 times for 77 ‘..ard ! : and was impassable on dr fr ti Team niiysician Alfred H. Griess said yesterday that Cdye would be out. of action for the next few days and maybe as long as a week. On the surface the injury doe - sn't seem too bad especially `,Vith an open date this weekend, but Caye doesn't enjoy sitting on the sidelines even for a short time. A Pittsburgher (Oliver High). he has been haunted by injuries Ihroughout most of his stay on Mt. Ninany. After a sensational debut as a sophomore in 1957. Caye found himself running with the first unit (luring prc-season practice in the tall of 1951 t. That's when lady luck started playing havoc with his promising foci hall career. "A week before the opener, I hurt my knee in a pre-season scrimmage," Caye said. "At the time I was in a backfield with Al Jacks, Dave Kasperian, and Pat Botula." The Lion medical corps decided the best thing for Caye's knee n•ould be an operation so they sent him to Geisinger - Memorial Hospital in Danville and he •drop ped ant of school for the fall semester. Last fall he injured his other knee , in the VIVII game and played irregularly after that. "I was really discouraged last vear," Eddie related yesterday as he received treatment for his in jured ankle in the Jack Hulme training room. With Caye out of the lineup, others moved up in his place Bucs Dump Phils To Increase Lead PHILADELPHIA The pennant-bound Pittsburgh Pi rates last night took another gie.rt step toward their first flag in 33 years by defeating Phila delphia 7-1 behind the seven -111 pifchina of Bob Friend who won No. 17 in the opener of a twi-night doubleheader. The Pirates also won the sec ond game, 3-2. Friend, who has lost 11 this year, struck out six to run his season's total to 178. His victory reduced the Pi nieck number to six and gave the Bucs a six-game lead ever the second-place St. Louis Cardinals. Rookie third base r,arl Jim Woods ruined Ffiend's shutout in the eighth with his first major' league homer. Jones Wins for Giants CHICAGO Sam Jones. long-anticipated signing of Jerry winning his lith game. :-:tattered West .of West Virginia, captain five hits Tuesday to give theSanof the winning U.S. Olympic Francisco . Giants a sweet) of a team, was announced yesterday three-game series against the Chi-:hy the Los Angeles Lakers of the cago Cubs via a 5-2 payoff. 'National Basketball Association. The Giants wrapped tip their West and Mark DuMars of Penn conquest with a three-run fourth. State hooked up in some tremen- 1 After Willie Kirkland singled for dous scoring duels over the past e the first run. third baseman Jim- two years my Davenport tripled for the next! two Itacrosse Practice IM Entries Due Friday ( All freshmen and upperelaßs 'men interested in Lacrosse have All entries for IM football and been asked to report to the Nit tennis singles must be turned in'tony locker room (opposite the by 4:30 p.m. Friday at the intra-:ice rink) between 4 and 6 p.m. mural office in Recreation Hall. IThuisday, Sept. 22. * * * 0.. ''' • • • ' -*Or' S~Y~. and things got worse as far as What's more important he, Eddie's status was concerned. showed the old form that made' "I admit that I felt like quitting , ihim State's third top ground gain- 1 but then I realized my attitude er in 1957. wasn't the best," he said, as trickles of water oozed from the; Running in Roger Kochman's place, Caye' picked up most of " ice pack around his swollen ankle. his yardage on end runs end "You know something. I really; line plunges. learned a great lesson last sea-I "That game gave me a lot of son. When I didn't play in the confidence." he said. Then he Liberty Bowl I figured I was looked down at the ice pack and t finished but then I said to my - :the bandages on both knees, self I don't want to leave here' "But I was in there because like that. 'Roger was hurt. That's why I "That's why I wanted to make . have to get back as soon as pos good this fall. I wanted to proveible. I don't want anyone tak that I could do it." Caye said. ing my place again." One game doesn't make a sea son but Caye made quite an im pression SaturdtQ: Snort, Shorts New Pittsburgh Stadium May Be Ready by '64 PITTSBURGH 0 3 ) An offi cial of Allegheny County said yesterday the spring of 1964 or 1965 is still the target date for completing a proposed new muni cipal stadium in Pittsburgh . Dr. William D. McClelland, chairman of the County's com missioners, said the cost and size of the stadium make it a sensi tive subject. "The only general agreement thus far among city and county officials is that we need a new stadium," McClelland said. West Signs With Lakers LOS ANGELES The THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Eddie Caye Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL The best tobacco makes the best smok * * * * * * X-Country Coach Returns From Olympic Spectacle Lion track coach Chick Werner took the reins of the cross country squad from assistant coach Norm Gordon yesterday after returning from a 26-day tour that included stops at Paris, Lucerne, Toronto, Naples, Pompeii, Capri, and of course, Rome. Werner, along with five other prominent U.S. track and field coaches, and an ensemble of, • sports writers and fans left this; Werner were Don Canham. Michi gan; Dave Rankin, Purdue; Jessie country Aug. 20 to witness the: Olympic games. Mortensen, U.S.C.; 011ie Jackson, The Lion mentor, one o tle .A ihne iristian; eo o nson, top coaches in U.S. track circles. Illinois•. and Jim Kelly, Minne served as assist- sota. who coached the U.S. team ant coach at the ,at Melbourne in 1956. 1952 games in Most of the people on the Helsinki. Fi n- four returned home Sept. 15. land. But this i but Werner, Rankin and Can time he relaxed ham decided they needed a and viewed the week in Switzerland to recu games strictly as perate from the month of hectic a spectator, events. i Accompanying After relaxing for a week in his party were the cool surroundings of that the parents of :little mountain country they em- Earl Young (U.S. 400-meter entry) Chick Werner d b a a s ilked from Paris at 3 p.m. Sun and Cris Von Saltza, the winner '" At 5 p.m. Sunday they were f two swimming gold medals. Young finished out of the top circling New York (a five hour time difference brought traveling three in the 400-meter final but time to a total of seven hours). the 16-year-old Von Saltza set This was the fifth Olympiad an Olympic record in winning that Werner has attended. The the 400-meter freetsyle (4:50.6), others were at Los Angeles, Am- Other coaches on the tour with sterdam. Helsinki and London. Levine of Stole College will be closed Thursday and Friday in observance of religious holidays We will close Today at 5:30 instead of 9 as appeared in yesterday's Collegian Levine Bros. Men's Shop S. J. lloriolds Tobacco Company. ►llnston-Bslem, N WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 21. 1960 By JIM KARL Bros. 147 S. Allen St. =in 1 ;•••• • ~. h `,•<, ''''''''qc, * ~../ ?.f.,,i, '', Arr f,t•A....?;• i';, •,....P...E.:•% , 403. .3 . ; \ • j:::%.-4.,,,..<:.0. fk. 4:4'i.c::..,*5 ‘35.0;rii::;.:c!,..". '.: . .* ‹ ..,:. , ....‘i ...,?.4 , K. ,, .... ,e....E.:........., , .45c,:.:... .....r.fr WRANIM s. Y ......a =:h;.