TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 14. 1961 Kochman, Mounties Hold Nittanies Scoreless in Second Half (Continued from page one) ho plunged over from ihe ona to cap a 90-yard drive at the start of the second stanza. West Virginia lost the ball on the next series of downs when Dieter Garrett couldn’t get a punt off after a low snap from center. Jay Huffman forced Garrett out of bounds on the West Virginia 29 and five plays later State had an other score. This time Buddy Torris went through a gaping hole from the eight. Jonas kicked the second of his three conversion attempts and the Lions led, 2Q-9. At this point State had already racked up more total yardage than Army did in the entire game when the Cadets lost to the Moun taineers, 7-3, three Saturdays ago. The Lions recorded over 220 yards on the ground and through the air in the first 20 minutes, but the West Virginia defenses tightened considerably in the sec ond half. West Virginia held Stale score less the rest of the game and at the same lime launched numer ous scoring threats. Only one materialized, however, that coming early in the. fourth quarter after a 30-yard punt re turn by Moss. It put the ball on the State 40. Led by fullback Steve Berzansky, who replaced first stringer Glenn Holton after he aggravated a knee injury in the first half, the Moun taineers went the 40 yards in 12 plays. The sophomore fullback Penn State-W.Ya. P.S. W.Va. Total Ist downs 14 17 Ist downs rushing 10 15 Ist downs passing 3 1 Ist downs penalties 1 1 Yards rushing 200 222 Passes attempted 9 9 Passes completed 4 1 Yards gained passing . .108 10 Passes inter by 2 1 Number of punts Punting average Yards punts returned . .10 43 Number of kickoffs 4 2 Yards kickoffs returned" 30 89 Number of fumbles 2 3 Opponent fumbles recov . 1 0 Number of penalties ....8 5 Yards lost penalties ... .78 25 PASS RECEIVING PENN STATE No. Yds. .1 66 .1 18 ..1 15 .1 9 WEST VIRGINIA No. Kochman Anderson Powell Schwab Kosanovich PUNTING Liske (PS) Garrett (WVa) . Pranksters Kill Baylor Mascot AUSTIN, Tex. (/P) Eight University of Texas pranksters confessed yesterday they clubbed Baylor University’s mascot bear Ginger to death during a kidnap plot. The Baylor Chamber of Com merce promised to press charges against those who took the 9- month-old female cub from its cage on the Baylor campus at Waco, 100 miles north of Austin, Thursday night. Yesterday an attorney, act ing as spokesman for the eight, told Dean of Student Life Arno Nowotny about the bear's kid naping and death. Nowotny listened behind closed doors, then referred the matter to the special group that handles university discipline. The dean said he would not reveal the names of the eight involved. Here's the dean’s account: The eight decided Thursday to bulled over from four yards out for the TD. Berzansky picked up 24 yards on the drive and 96 during the game to lead the West -Virginia ball carriers. Torris, subbing for the injured pave Hayes, had his second good day in a row. The junior fullback picked up 108 yards in 21 carries, to lead all ground gainers. Last week at Maryland Torris gained 83 yards in 14 carries. Bernie Sabol, who backed up Torris, had 22 yards on five fries and drew praise from both Mouniaineer players and coach es for his defensive play. West Virginia’s sophomore quar terback, Fred (Colt .45) Colvard fired once too often from the hip. A referee caught him kneeing in the third period and ejected him from the game. At least one Penn State player was unimpressed with the highly-rated QB. “When he gets some of that cockiness knocked out of him he might turn into a good football player,” he said. Mountaineer coach Gene Corum said that this year's Penn State eleven is just as good as last year’s Liberty Bowl winners—with one exception. “You don’t have a Dick Hoak to come in there and give Hall a rest,” he said. “A second quarterback who can move the team makes a big difference in college football, and Hoak could move the team.” Torris ... Kochman Powell .. Sabol ... Gursky .. Hall WEST VIRGINIA No. ....20 .5 3 37 33.3 Berzansky .. Moss Colvard .... Woodeshick Holdinsky Holton Kosanovich WEST VIRGINIA Att. Comp. Ini. Yds. TD Colvard ...5 1 0 10 0 Evans 3 0 1 0 0 Burnison . .1 0 1 0 0 PASS INTERCEPTIONS PENN STATE No. Avg. ..5 37.0 ..3 33.3 Powell Gursky kidnap one of Baylor's two cub mascots—an almost annual plot by one or another of the South west. Conference schools. Football spirit was high on both campuses as Baylor chal lenged Texas' No. 1 national football ranking. The students broke the lock to the Baylor bear pit and enticed Ginger outside and put a chain on her. They avoided her more troublesome twin, Pepper. The kidnap plot was perfect un til one of the collegians and Gin ger tried to climb a fence to gether. Both became tangled in the chain. Ginger became angry and the boys panicky. "They hit Ginger over the head with a wrench to calm her down. The blow killed her," Nowotny said. Ginger’s body was buried near Waco. The next day the students consulted the attorney. Pepper appeared at Saturday’s game, growling and seemingly more upset than usual. The Bay lor Bears lost 33-7. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA Statistics RUSHING PENN STATE No. 2l lO PASSING PENN STATE Alt. Comp. Int Yds. TD . 9 4 1 108 1 No. Yds. . .1 2 . .1 0 Torris Get TD' ROGER IS LOOSE Kochman gets set to grab a first quarter Galen Hall pass and scamper for State's first touchdown en route to a 20-8 victory over West Virginia Saturday before 30.000 homecoming fans at Yds. .108 35 28 22 Texas Still Leads AP Poll By The Associated Press The unbeaten Texas Long horns maintained their com manding lead in the weekly Associated Press college foot ball poll yesterday while Pur due and Syracuse moved into the top ten. Yds. 9G 38 34 29 15 14 The Longhorns, 33-7 victors oyer Baylor Saturday for their eighth straight triumph, were named the leading team by 41 of the 47 sports writers and sports-j casters on the committee. Alabama, which clobbered Richmond 66-0, remained in sec ond place, followed by Ohio State, Louisiana Stale and Min nesota. There were no changes among ithe first five, but there was some wholesale shifting in the next five, except for Colorado, which held onto the No. 8 spot, Mississippi, 54-0 winner over Smart 2-button stand-up collar, yoke back, Sherpa lining, Best of all, wash & wear. Available in natural and black, Stop in. Try one on. Free Parking At Rear of Store While You Shop • 229 S. Allen St. • AD 8*1241 Chattanooga, advanced one place to sixth. Purdue’s 7-6 conquest of Michigan State resulted in two changes, the Boilermakers mov ing into seventh' place and the Spartans dropping from sixth to ninth. Syracuse defeated Colgate 51-8 for its third in a row and climbed from the also-rans to 10th position. Georgia Tech, which lost to Tennessee 10-6, and Missouri, beaten by Oklahoma 7-0, drop ped out of the first ten. .? j Ohio State, LSU and Minnesota scored victories over the weekend. The Buckeyes beat Indiana 16-7, LSU defeated North Carolina 30-0 and Minnesota, tied with Ohio State for the Big Ten lead, up ended lowa 16-9. Colorado’s hopes for its first unbeaten season since 1937 ended as it lost to Utah 21-12. Texas collected 463 points on a basis of 10 for a first-place vote, 9 for second, etc. Alabama had 401 points, Ohio State 365, LSU Wac Sez .„ . There’s no other way to really appreciate the new Sherpa Jacket. This jacket is a try-on must! —Collpgian Photo by John Hchur« Morgantown. Leaping vainly to stop the play which covered 66 yards is Mountaineer half back Jim Moss. Also attempting to get the ball is State's Jim Schwab (88). while Joe Blasenstein (62) looks on. 365 and Minnesota 307. Alabama had three votes for first place, Ohio Stale two and LSU one". Texas and Alabama are the only unbeaten-untied teams among the leaders. The Crim son Tide is also 8-0. Ohio Stale, lied by TCU in its opener, has won its last six. The top teams with season rec ords and first place votes in pa rentheses, and total points: 1. Texas (41) 8-0 463 2. Alabama (3) 8-0 401 3. Ohio Slate (2) 6-0-1 365 4. Louisiana State (1) 7-1 336 5. Minnesota 6-1 307 6. Mississippi 7-1 234 7. Purdue 5-2 101 j 8. Colorado 6-1 61 I 9. Michigan Stale 5-2 60 i 10. Syracuse 6-2 47 [ Others receiving votes: Mis* i souri, Georgia Tech, Maryland, lArkansas, UCLA, Kansas, Rut jgers, Utah State, Duke, Wyoming, Utah. Michigan, lowa, Noire Dame and Arizona. TRY IT ON! HABERDASHERY IHS^X *ln the Center cf Pennsylvania* PAGE NIN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers