WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 7. 1962 Strong Offense Paces Lions To 24th Winning Log in Row The Penn State football team’s 23-7 victory pi er Maryland Saluulay in Beaver Stadium clinched the 24 1 h consecutive winning season for the Lions and the 13th stinight under the tutelage of Rip Engle. The Nittartles now own a 8-l‘record with three games to play. The last time the Lions lost-more than they won,'was in.. 1938. when their record, was-3-4-1... -i-..-... -.. The Lions have bpf n rolling Offensively to record their six wins thus far this season. They'have scored at least three touchdowns in each of their victories. The only lime they were held to less than three touchdowns they didn't get any at all and lost to Army, 9-6. On the plus side of the ledger the Lions have wins over Navy (41-7),oAir Force (20-6), Rice (18-7), Syracuse (20-19), California (23-21) apd Maryland (23-7). " THE NITTANIES hold an edge over their opposition in just about every statistical department. They lead in first downs (121-91), total yardage (2,179:1.80.1),nhd touchdowns (21-11). All-American.-lialfback_candidat« „Rogcr.._Kochman paces the Lions in most of the ground-gaining departments. Kochman lends the rushers with 88 carries for 437 yards, a 5.1 average gain per carry. He also tops the Lions in kickoff returns, punt returns and individual scoring. He has scored seven touchdowns, three on passes and four on thc'ground. .Fullback Dave Hayes, who didn’t break into the starting lineup until the Lions’ third game, is second in both rushing and scoring. Hayes has picked up 209 yards on 57 carries, a 3.7' average. He has yet to be thrown for a loss this season. Hayes has tallied 30 points on five touchdowns. Quarterback Pete Liske gained 80 yards in 15 carries against Maryland, exactly equalling his total in the Lions' first six games. The. junior signal-caller now has gained 160 yards to rank third among the Lion rushers. LISKE ALSO is the Lions' top passing threat with 63 completions in 113 attempts, a completion percentage of 55.8. He has thrown fof 666 yards and six touchdowns. The Lion quarterback has had only, two passes intercepted dll igason. Sophomore Ron Coates trails Liske in the passing statistics with 13 completions.in 29 attempts for 203 yards. He-has had three aerials intercepted. ' The Lions' leading pass receiver is little Junior Ppwell, the for gotten man of the team. Powell, who has 22 receptions for 208 yards, has been relegated to defensive duty with only brief offensive-ap pearances since the Syracuse game. He 'has' caught only one pass vjn the Lions'.last two games. -. ALL-AMERICAN end candidate Dave. Robinson is the Lions’ Northwestern, Southern California Head AP Grid Poll; Rose Bowl Clash Possible _ , By The Associated Press ' ' If the Rose Bowl football game were to be played this week, it could boast of being',an unofficial match for the national championship between the No. 1 and'No. 2_ ranking college teams Northwestern and Southern California, driving toward sible clash in Pasadena, are pace-setters in the weekly poll of Ihq Associated Press. Each has won six .straight games, Northwestern, which squeezed past Indiana '26-21 Satur day on a late passing drive by Tom Myers, retained top place in the standings with 24 of the 49 first place votes of the special panel of sports writers and broadcasters and a total of 442 points. On the basis of ten points for a first place vote, nine for second, etc., Southern California,' which hurdled a formidable obstacle in Washington 14-0, took over the No. 2 rung with 409 points. The Trojans’were picked as the nation's best of six of the voters: Alabama and Mississippi, boomed for a meeting in the Sugar Bowl, followed in the No. 4 and No. 4 positions, respectively, after receiving nine first place votes each. Alabama made Mississippi State its seventh victim of the season 20-0 while Mississippi finally: managed to beat Louisiana State, an old rival, 15-7. I Completing the top ten, which underwent a brisk shakeup, were: Taxas, No. 5; Arkansas, No.. 6; Missouri, No. 7; Wisconsin, No. 8; Louisiana State, No. 9, and Minnesota. No. 10. Lions in Running for Cotton Bid; Robinson All-East End Selection The Cotton Bowl announced to day that Penn-State is one of 12 1 teams from whom the visiting: team in the Jan. 1 classic willj be chosen. : Felix MeKnight. chairman of Army, as it did last week, got the selection committee, said to-! five first place votes with the re day that after this weekend the maining three going to State, list will be down to four or five, The voting had Dartmouth and teams. ; Pittsburgh tied for third with There are too many important! then Holy; games coming up in the next three;*-™ 53 ' ' illanova, Boston College weeks .howeyer, to make any defi- 1 * n “ Rutgers, nite commitments, MeKnight said.! 9 ave Robinson, All-America „ . , . , . . ..... . -end nominee for the Lions, was Schools contacted,on auiuuun to. a j n name< j t 0 (^ e weekly All-, § 8 football, team of theECAC, State, Georgia Tech Mississippi Robinson was cited for recovering Oregon. Auburn. Army, Miami., fumbles in the win over West \ lrgima, Maryland an “ Maryland Saturday. Paul Martha; Duke - of Pitt was named to the back- Penn State, meanwhile, kept a field. TONIOHT— ALARD QUARTET 8:30 p.m. Schwab By JOHN MORRIS Sports Editor firm grlp~on sccond place in the Lambert Tropty voting this week but failed to gain on first place Army as the top major college football team in the East. PRINTING letterpress • Offset Commercial Printing 353 E. College AO 8-3025 THESE THSEE LIONS left halfback Rpger Kochman (left), right halfback A 1 Guriky (confer.) and fullback Dave Hayes Join quarterback Pete Liske in Penn State's first unit backfiold. Thay give tha Nilianiei a powerful running attack. second leading pass receiver with 14 catches for 143 yards, Kochman and Gursky, who replaced Powell at right halfback in the Nittanics’'starting lineup, are tied for third in the pass re ceiving parade with 11 catches apiece. Kochman has 198 yards on his 11 catches whila Gursky has gained 102. ’f .The Lions have one of the nation’s -leading punters in Chuck Raisig. Raisig has averaged 42.9 yards for 26 kicks so far this fall. Raisig, the second leading punter in the country before the Mary land game, averaged 44.4 yards on five kicks against the Terps. Coates gives the Lions another capable kicker on field goals and extra points. IJe has hit on four of five extra point attempts and four of six field goal tries. The Nittanies Saturday’s game Without serious injury to any players. They should be in their top physical shape of the year for this week’s contest with West Virginia. Northwestern, No. 1," and Texas, No.'s, were the only teams to hold their positions from a week ago. Alabama dropper} a notch; Mississippi moved up from sixth place; Arkansas, 17-7 winner over Texas A&M, jumped two rungs; Southern Cal gained one, and, Louisiana State fell from fourth to ninth. Missouri, Wisconsin and Minnesota are newcomers to the list, rooting out Michigan Stfttc, Washington and Auburn, all of whom were beaten. NQrthwestern’s newly-gained station is in-jeopardy-this week! in the .with Wisconsin, which thumped Michigan 34-12 for Its fifth victory six starts. Southern Cal plays'Stanford, Alabama meets' Miami, Fla., Mississippi takes on Chattanooga and Texas faces Baylor. - Other games involving the top ten send Arkansas against Rice, Missouri against Colorado, LSU. against Texas Christian and Min! nesota against lowa. Hadnofs Basketball Fine OAKLAND. Calif. (AP) Jiml Hadnot, a., Democrat, cam- Hadnot; running for the Assembly! paigned against a wealthy GOP in Rhode Island, was fined $100; assemblyman, Frederick Lippit. yesterday by the Oakland pro ‘‘We wish Jim all the.luck in the basketball team management for election," Oaks GenerahM ana S er failure to show up here. ! Joe Anzivino said. "But we’ve got’ The 6-foot, 10-inch rookie on campaign of our own to win and Oakland team in the American'he figures in it." Basketball League, is a week' "But if Hadnot wins the election overdue because of politics. i the fine is off," Anzivino declared. No Senior pictures will be taken the afternoon \! of Nov. 8 and all day Nov. 9. —Thank you The Penn Stale Photo Shop Don't be a meat-head! Get Vitalis with V-7. It JH keejp# your hair neat nil day without grease. Naturally. V-7* is the greaseless grooming discovery. ftrVrM Vitalis® with V-7 fights embarrassing dandrvff, prevents dryness, Keqpsj our hair neat ail day without grease. Icy it 1 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA ★ ★ ★ Hinges on RI Elections Bssaci#?' STATISTICAL LEADERS Rushing Ydn. Ru«Hn Yds. Ku»h Kivhnuin 86 4'i7 f».l >jay«« f»7 209 3.7 M«k* 38 Ifi<) 4.2 Powell 35 ‘ 14.1 4.1 Torrid -40 Jl6 2.9 Gursky 26 M 3.1 Stuckrath 47 4.7; ‘Hermhey - ____l7 37 2.2 Urbanik* M ' 34 2.6 Caum R p 2.4 KfimteiNmilh Passing 'v. .All. Comp. Int. Yd«, Liaka 113 fiJ 2 C<mtea 2» U 3 203 Caum ... Potter ....... Receiving No, Yird. TD. 22 20N 1] u ns o U IHH 3 -J- 11 102 2 7 6K 0 ...5 ' 60 0 2 35 X) Towel! .. Koblnaon Kochman (luraky Herahey Anderaon Malewlct New College Diner DpwMown: Between the. Movies- . BIKE REPAIRS PARTS ACCESSORIES Western Auto New Bikes—l yr . Guarantee 112 S. FRAZIER ST, AD 7-7992 ME, EE, AE, ENGINEERS —sr* — * .. \ ■' • V»‘ rt* r-™— — If the thought has crossed your mind that there's too much of a good thing going around for engineering students lately, we don’t blame, you. We‘are making no exaggerated promises. In fact, we are looking to you and to other engineering students for promise to bring to us. .There’s a switch! History’s second most significant Noah de . fines promise as, “Grpund for hope, expecta . tion, or assurance, often specific, ol eventual success.” Si nee we are dedicated to the propo ' sition of complete success in all our endeavors, —and the less “eventual,” the better—we are lMtmV?or~inen of promise. 3 Hami Iton Standsrdm<* 1a f\t>vru *<y Former Soccer Coach to At Presentation of Lion One of the most successfi coaches in the history of Pen •State athletics will behonore. this Saturday when the fir: 'Bill Jeffrey Award is presen ed (« State’s “outstanding sore player.” The Lions play Am here Saturda'- looming. lA The aware, is the brainchild a committee headed- by Dii Packer. Packer was the Li< hooters' captain in <955, and/i All-American in 1954 and 19.' The Nittanles won the nation championship both years. Jeffrey coached soccer at Sta for 27 years (1927-52)' and duru his tenure the Lions product eleven undefeated seasons —citfl in succession. His overall recoi was 154 wins, 24 losses! and ; ties. Under Jeffrey, .the Nittany booWrs were' unbeaten ..in ,1028, 1031, 1933-40 and 1949. During i the eight-year 1933-1940 stretch, [they plnycd-60-games-and wore tier? only five times. JEFFREY CONSIDERS his 1055 team to be his best. That year the Lions not only won all seven games, but they were .also un-_ scored on. State’s closest call that season was a 1-0 overtime, win over Lafayette. The Lions had 36 All-Amen-j cans during Jeffrey’s regime.: Only in 1942, ’44, ’5l, and ’52 did' State not produce an All-Ameri-; can. 1944 was the only year that! the Nittanies a win-, ning season under Jeffrey, com piling a 3-4 log. Of'- Jeffrey’s All-Americans, twelvfe made it moty than once.' Joe Bielicki, captain of the 1935 squad, was a: three-time selection (1933-35) as was Bill McEwan, captain in McEwan played from 1934 through 1936. 9 4.5 Among the men who were two-, time All-Americans under Jeffrey are Dick Marshall. (’27-’2B), Bill Lutz C2B-’29), A 1 Daykin (’3l-’32), Bill Sutliff C34-’35), Bob Schuler ('37-38), Walt Hoterman, brother 1 v 1 l . 0 Fed up with a profusion of promises? By IRA MILLER ★ ★ * BILL JEFFREY Conch. 1927-52 ★ ★ ★ •of the porsent coach- t l 39*’4o)r .Woody King t'4o-‘4l), John Ham- Jilton (’45-'46), Dean Hartman (’46- ! '47) and Harry Little C49-'5O). ANOTHER BROTHER of the ■present State coach, Ralph - Hos "terman, was' an All-American in , 1948. ; The oldest of four Hosterman (brothers who played for Jeffrey, . Woody, played on the 1935 and , 1936 squads. Stale’s present coach, Ken, played in 1949 and had the mis fortune. ,of being the only player on any l of Jeffrey's squads to break, a limb, suffering a broken leg against ljlenn. “We. had a lot of good teams," l Jeffrey said earlier this week- in .'recalling some of his squad’s heroics, "We were the cream of jlhe crop for a. good many years. !J3esidcs. the 1935 team, I would !’also‘consider the dfcams in 1928, i 1933, 1934 and 1940 to be right up there." Jeffrey's teams in 1949 and 1950 i • played in the first two Soccer What's up at Hamilton .Standard? In brief, a diversification program that included design and development of propuNion controls,''life support systems, other environmental control systems, electron'beam, automatic stabiliza* tion systems, propellers, and ground support equipment. A - Hamilton Standard college personnel representative will be on campus soon. He'll be glad to answer your questions, «lnd to take your application for a position'if you decide you like what you’ve learned about us. Be Honored MVP Award Bowl games. The 1949 team tied San Francisco, 2-2, while the 1950 squad topped Purdue, 3-1. During the thirties and fourties, when State's hooters were the top team around; ‘Collegiate Soccer action was confined mainly to the East, and Jeffrey recruited most of his players from areas close to State College and; frequently got many of Ills players directly from' State College High. "1 got most of m{. 1 ' boys from Centre County," Jeffrey' said. "In fact. State College High sent us more players than, any other school. But in the last' few years, they have dropped soccer and so have all the 1 other schools in the* county. "IN THE PAST decade, the gamb has grown everywhere but in Centre County. .The growth of the colegiate’ game has been fan tastic. When wa were the top team m the East, we were auto matically national chhmpions, But the teams in the West and in the Big Ten have taken up the sport recently too. "With the growth everywhere else and the decline around this nrea,—it -hr naturally-reflected in State’s record because there arc no soccer-playing high schools around from which to draw ; players," he concluded. As a result of this de-emphasis of soccer in Centre Bounty, State is now suffering through its fourth straight losing season. Whereas Jeffrey used to cull many All-Americans from this area the Hosterman brothers, for ex ample there is not one local boy on this year’s squad, which has won one of six games. Five losses was unheard of in. Jeffrey’s time he had only five teams that lost more than one game I ; State’s hooters won the cham pionship trophy so often that they retired it and It’s now on display in one of the Rec Hall trophy cases. Two of Jeffrey’s teams made overseas trips for exhibitions, The .1933 squad went to Scotland during the summer of .1934, The 1950 team went to Iran during the spring of 1951 at the request iof the State Departrqent, Y d s' PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers