PAGE SIX Reconstituted Orangemen To Challenge Nittanies By JOHN MORRIS Sports Editor For the first two games of the 1962 football season, Syra cuse coach Ben Schwartzwal der sat baCk and watched his tough Qrangemeri hold their opponents to just 16 points. He was also a flabbergasted witness as the Orange scored a grand total of five points, a sta tistic that was just bound to cause some commotion in the coaching quarters on Piety HilL "If someone had- told me that neither Oklahoma nor Army ...would score 10 points on us,' Schwartzwalder declared glumly, 4"I would have felt pretty good.' The Orange did manage to hold both the Sooners and Cadets in single figures, but they still lost both games, 7-3 to Oklahoma and 9-2 to Army. TO REMEDY' this situation the veteran Syracuse mentor com -pletely. revamped; his starting backfield, asked 'his defensive stalwarts not to lose hope and sent his fired-up'Orangemen out • to - meet tough little Boston Col lege, Apparently Schwartz welder came up with the winning com bination. The defense smothered .very Boston College attempt to move the ball and the offense scored its first two touchdowns of the year as the Orange won 12-0. The win was a big one for Syracuse, but it was no ;more than preparation for' tomorrow's annual battle with arch-rival Penn State. The State-Syracuse series • is one of the closest and most heated rivalries of the post-war eta. The Bryant Wins With Odd Formula TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) "Our theory .is that you've got to keep from losing the ball game before you try to win it." This is the unusual: , seemingly ambiguous credo of Paul (Bear) Bryant, coach of the defehsive- Minded Alabama football team which hopes to regain its No. 1 national rating tomorrow with a victory over Tennessee, an old and bitter rival, in Knoxville. The Crimson Tide carries into the game one a the country's best records for holding the opposition in check: In the list 18 games n 6 foe has the shave lotion men - recommend to other men!' . - THE DAILY COLLEGIAN: UNIVERSITY PARK. t+" .1- ~ t ~.0..,....; 3 ..", ,, 5t0t 4• . .4 . 1.,.., '-' ~..., -1 '; A " ,113 - '-'" ; '''' - •'- - t, ,, ,. - ;-, t , •••,• - ''A' - ' lt ;'-ii . " o -v-gre.Y.Z 7 ..: ,, t'ij -44,', ._ . - ; "..' • - • i , •,.. - ...„,-;s - ;.•,.„ . ....,74 -4.„ . ~• -••;',~ • !,., ~.. , : • ~:•- • •....!-„7.1•4 , : ::. ..i •;;;,..,. t.., irp.=-7 - 0.4t,-,..il '; l i - ", ;-'•' •-• r 3: - '.,:r: - J. ,) ;,:!,i.r;t - 4 I. f - t l9-, ;• ; " i";fl l *:i . ..i. 14'4 ' s , ' 4 r 5.1 . ~ .4 •.. r - 1,•1111111N , -0- '.7.•': - ,:-. • , ~- ', ',..r.:'1,11..;>-1;, ?,;‘: • ' •Vi:T3-7,46,'"e,,1,',_,: ,',.:*-..!•:- ,''.f.`...01:i,',4, Lions hold a slim 18-16-5 advan tage going into tomorrow's game. Schwartzwalder will go with the same lineup tomorrow that he used against BC. Sophomore 'Walley Mahle made his varsity debut at quarterback last week after veterans Bob Lelli and Walt Sofsian had flopped in the first two games. MAHLE GAINED over 100 yards" rushing 7 ,on Syracuse's op- scored more than a single touch down, on Bryant's hard-Socking operatives from Tuscaloosa. , Bryant, an iron disciplinarian, drills his players in fundamentals and hammers away on the theme: 'Don't make a m i stake don't give your opponent a break." His teams hang on, wait for the ene my to err and then pounce. ' The Volunteers apparently are unaffected by the odds favoring Alabama by two touchdowns. Bry ant. in eight years at Kentucky and four at Alabama, never has beaten Tennessee on its home field. L 25 end 2.00 plus tax. S H U LTC - 0 N JOHN MACKEY . . . top Spracuse flanker tion series and performed capably in the backfield. "He is a good runner and an adequate passer," reports State scout Frank Patrick. "He didn't throw much against Boston - Col lege, but then he didn't have to." Schivartzwaldei - aiso moved - big, Jim Nance from fullback to left' halfback, shitting Bi ll Schoon over to the deep running -back slot. Both men - performed well against BC. Don King, a 185-pound senior. took over the righty-halfback post after being limited. to defensive duty in the, first two. games.' • Syracuse h*srtwo excellent ends in John It and Wa 1 t Sweeney. Mackey set• a Syracuse pass receiving . record last season With 321 yards on just 15 receptions. Both, he and Sweeney are out standing on defense. The tackles will be team OP thin Leon ChOlakis (240) and John Paglio (240). Dave Meggyesy (215) and Henry Buettner (230) will be the starting guards and Gene Stancin (200) will start at center. Harriers Entertain, Spartans Tomorrow By JOE GRATA. Who would think that less than one foot and one second could spell the margin of defeat in a cross-country meet cover ing four miles? But last year at East Lansing, Mich., Penn State lost its only dual meet in five battles when Michigan State edged the Lions, 27-28, by eight inches. The Spartans further harassed the Nittanies by capturing the. IC4A thrpne from the defending Lion champions . three weeks later. at -Van Cortland Park in the Bronx section of New York City. IN THE REGULAR meet with Michigan State, Nittany, runner Lionel Bas Sett was running in ninth place and picking up steam 150 yards from the finish line. Bassett streaked past one Spar tan and pulled even with MSU's Don Castle. The two were run ning on an even par all the way home but Castle lunged forward to break the; tape by an esti mated eight inches and preserve the Spartans' victory. But tomorrow Bassett and all the State distance runners will be out to seek revenge on :the University golf coarse. The.meet is shaping up as one of the finest cross-country! battles . scheduled I I at Mount Nittany in years. I I Another significant "holdover" from last year is the fact that State finished as runner-up to Michigan' State when the Spar tans copped the IC4A helm. MSU finished with 82 points, followed by Penn State with 90, Villanova, Manhattaii and Army. Jerry Young, last year's cap- Hornung May M4s 49er.Cl ash GREEN BAY, Wis. (W) Paul Hornung, Green Bay Packer half back who, though always a prime target, ha's demonstrated • a high degree of durability in capturing three • straight National Football League scoring titles, finally has been knocked out of the lineup by injuries. . Sidelined at last by a severely twisted knee—the result of a Jar ring tackle by Cliff Livingstone of the Minnesota, Vikings— Hor nung yesterday was declared officially out of Sunday's game in Milwaukee against San Francisco. The defending NFL champs will lay their perfect record of Bilitlillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll OXFORD STRIPS Chances are that you will find the right Oxford cloth striped shirt here. Our seise: tion is vast. And it includes r wide variety of striping, both in . button-down and tab , (snap, of courser cbgar, styles. See they today.. . , i miumpmmitminminnninfinmnmittmnmminE FRIDAY. CCTOBBI 19..1962 tain for Michigan State, broke the tape first in the dual meet with the Lions with a time of 20:32:4 over the four-mile route at East Lansing. Young has since graduated, however. - NEVERTHEI rqS. State coach John Lucas' contingent will still have to put up with six other MU runners who .either scored or blocked other Lion harriers froni finishing in higher positions. Leading the Michigan State at tach, will- be co-captains_ and two year monogram winners Castle and Roger Hurn-b-a-rger. Bolstering .the' Spartan? attack . will be lettermen Ron Bierby, Al-+ yin Duncan, Bob Fulcher, Rich Gyde and Pat „Stevens. In two meets this season, •the Spartans have yet to have a runner finish first; One assembly was a triangular meet with Ohio State and Ohio University; the othet, a dual meet with a powerful Wisconsin squad that , handed Michigan State its only loss in five meets in the 1961 season. five; straight victories on the line with the realization that they can not count on Hornung. "If I use him at all it will be linty for kicking," said head coach Vince Lombardi. In selecting asornung replace ment, Lombardi can pick froin Tom Moore, Elijah Pitts, Lew Carpenter, or rookie Earl Gros: Sieminski on Radio Ron Eakin will interview Penn State tackle Chuck Sieminski.,on his sports show this evening. The program will be broadcast over WDFM and WMAJ at 7:45. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 c priced from $5.00 , . • , STORE /,iTATE COLLEGE
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