The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 16, 1961, Image 7

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    THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 16. 1961
Longhorn Upset Forecast
By WILL GRIMSLEY
Associated Press Sports Writer
NEW YORK (/P)—Texas and
Alabama, the nation’s No. 1
and. No. 2 football teams, this
week are sitting on the same
keg of dynamite which blew
Michigan State and Mississippi off
the pinnacle Nov. 4. The upset
odds are longer, but their fate
could be the same.
Attempting to improve on last
week’s .746 average, 41-14, we bra
zenly submit:
Texas Christian 18, Texas 10:
The Horned Frogs have stored up
a year’s venom for this chance to
dump an old antagonist.
Lion Booters Lose
Heinze for Season
Penn State’s hopes for a winning soccer season suffered
a jolt Tuesday when starting halfback Dieter Heinze dis
located his shoulder in practice.
Heinze will miss tomorrow’s important game against
Army and also the final game of the season against Pitt
Tuesday. The steady Lion sopho
more suffered the injury when he
tripped over teammate Jim
Gottschling’s leg
The injur
came at a b;
time for
Lions, who nr
win tomorrow
they expect
break the
mark. State
a 3-4 mark so
this year. A wi
against Arm
may be hard
come by.
The Cadets are
only 4-4, but they
have to be in contention for the
hard-luck team of the year.
Army’s four losses have all been
by one goal. One of these was
in overtime and another in
double-overtime. All four have
been against eastern power
houses.
The Cadets have beaten the
Coast Guard Academy, 3-0,
New York State Maritime Col
lege, 7-0, Yale, 2-0, and Rider,
3-1, while dropping decisions to
Maryland, 4-3 in double over
time, Brockport, 2-1, MIT, 3-2
and West Chester, 1-0 in over
time.
In their loss to Maryland, a
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Georgia Tech 10, Alabama 7:
Alabama beat. Tennessee 34-3,
Tennessee whipped Tech iO-6, so
this result is a natural.
Army 21, Oklahoma 7i The
Black Knights find inspiration in
Yankee Stadium.
Noire Dame 23, Syracuse 20:
The Irish found new talent and
new momentum in the Pitt game.
Purdue 14, Minnesota 8: The
Gophers have made us look fool
ish three straight weeks, but they
must be getting weary.
UCLA 20, Washington 7: If the
Uclans are looking over the Hus
kies’ heads to USC, there’ll be
hades to bear.
Duke 25, North Carolina 14:
Walt Rappold’s versatility and
great halfback speed give thei
team which easily defeated State
5-3, a deflected shot that glanced
off an Army defender and into
the nets with 42 seconds remain
ing was the margin of defeat.
One week later against Brock
port Army again lost when a de
flected shot rolled into the nets.
The Cadets’ strong point this
season has been their defense,
which has limited the opposition
to an average of less than 1.5
goals a game. Anchoring the
Army armor is captain and goalie
Art Brown.
Brown is regarded as one of
the - best goalies in the East.
Last year he allowed only nine
scores. Center halfback Doug
Morgan is the mainstay of the
Cadet halfback corps and has
been a standout aU year.
Dieter Heitue
Offensively, junior Dynon Can
don has supplied most of the
punch, but the Cadets miss Bev
Powell, last year’s scoring ace.
Powell clicked for 15 goals in
1960 and.single-handedly whipped
State by scoring all three Cadet
markers in a 3-1 victory.
Colin Kelly and Dan Banovic
are Army's two other top scorers.
Like State, Army must win if
it hopes to have a winning sea
son.
finest
$7.77
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA
HATS OFF
TO THE
AVAILABLE!
WHERE?
* Ur
»*
Devils the edge.
Mississippi 20, Tennessee 7:' The
Rebels are still trying to live down
their loss to LSU.
Rice 17, Texas A&M 13: The
Owls’ record looks like a beserk
cardiograph. The needle is “up”
this week.
The others, all Saturday:
Navy 25, Virginia 7; Rutgers
22, Colgate 12; Ohio State 24, Ore
gon 7; Michigan State 19, North
western 6; Michigan 10, lowa 7;
Missouri 33, Kansas State 0; Colo
rado 15, Nebraska 14.
Maryland 13, Wake Forest 6;
Louisiana State 30, Mississippi
State 7; Bayior 25, Air Force 7;
Arkansas 19, SMU 0; Arizona 26,
Texas Western 6; Utah State 27,
Utah 14; Kansas 10, California 7.
Maris Nips Mantle
For MVP Award
BOSTON (/P) Outfielder Rog
er Maris, who made history last
season by slugging 61 home runs
to break Babe Ruth’s record, was
named the American League’s
most valuable player for 1961 yes
terday, edging New York Yankee
teammate Mickey Mantle for the
second straight year.
Maris polled 202 points to Man
tle’s 198 in voting by 20 members
of the Baseball Writers Associa
tion of America.
Last year, Maris nosed out the
switch-hitting Mantle by three
points in the second closest race
in the award’s 30-year history.
Third place this year went to
Jim Gentile, Baltimore’s big first
baseman, who received 157 points.
Norm Cash, Detroit Tiger first
baseman, was fourth with 151
points. Yankee hurler Whitey
Ford, who won the C-y Young
pitching award last week, was
fifth with 109 points and ace New
York reliefer Luis Arroyo was
sixth with 95 points.
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Harriers Will Face
Rough IC4A Foes
By DAVE LEONARD
Michigan State, Army, Cor
nell, and Manhattan are the
teams given the best chance
to dethrone Penn Slate at the
IC4A cross country champion
ships in New York City Mon
day.
The Lion harriers met three of
the four above-mentioned teams
in dual meets this year, coming
out victorious in
two of those
meetings.
Coach Chick
Werner's squad
defeated Cornell
22-33, but the
Big Red have
come a long way
since that Octo
ber meeting.
Last week the
Ithaca harriers
copped the Hep
tagonal Cham- U«wie Dcardorff
pionships in New York, scoring 53
points to second place Army’s 59.
Army had a golden oppor
tunity to win the meet when it
placed tour runners in the top
15, but the Cadets' fifth man
finished 33rd.
Although the Lions defeated
Manhattan, 23-32 in the last dual
meet of the season, Werner teas
quick to point out the Jaspers’
strong point. “Manhattan has five
runners who consistently finish
within thirty or forty seconds of
each other,” Werner said. “This is
an essential for championship
races."
Michigan. Slate, the top chal
lenger for the title, is the only
team to record a win over State
in the past two years. The Spar
tans squeaked out a 27-28 victory
at East Lansing this year.
The Lions feel they can even
the score against MSU Monday.
"I know that we have a bet
ter team than they do and we're
looking forward to running
against them in the IC4As."
Gerry Norman said. Norman
was feeling the effects of a leg
injury in the Michigan State
meet, but he is fully recovered
now.
“We’ll be out to get Michigan
State,” said Howie Deardor ff.
iDeardorff has come on fast in the
[latter half of the season lo a
point where Werner gives the
I little Lion a chance for the indi
vidual title.
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STATE COLLEGE
PAGE SEVEN