PAGE SIX Phi Kappa Intramural By ED CARPENTER The names of Guy Tirabassi and Gip Bonar will remain in the .annals of Phi Kappa Sig ma; as the players who spear headed the 1955 and 1958 foot ball teams, respectively, to the IM football championships. Now/ it'* time for these two players to move oyer and make room for the; members of the 1962 IM team. For these are the boys who last night defeated Delta Upsilon, 4-2 bn first downs, to lake the IM fraternity crown. DU rolled to thelfirst of its two first downs on the opening play of the game. After downing Phi Kappa Sig's opening 'kickoff on his owns 19, DU quarterback Ed Giegucz ‘passed to Dick Frick for the first down. DU could only ad vance to its 35, and on fourth down punted to the Phi Kappa Sig'il. PHI KAP MANAGED to move the' ball across midfield for its iinitral first down and moved to within'field goal kicking distance. On fourth down Phi Kap's Dick Ix-icev tried to split the uprights from DUs,39. The allempt fell short and DU’s Dave Flrnqhbaugh picked off the ball and returned it to his own 16. On the first play. Phi Kap Don Jameson intercepted a pass on DU's 21. Two days later Skull House's quarterback. Jim Terry, pitched a lateral to Bill Chapas. Chapas then threw a 15-yard Soccermen Need Win and Tie To Avoid Worst Season's Mark By IRA MILLER Penn Stale's hooters need a least a- victory and a tie in their two remaining games to avoid the dubious distinction of equalling the worst Lion aoceer record in historv. , .Beaten six times in seven games, the Lions are rapidly closing in’ on the mark established by the 19. r i!l team. That squad compiled’ a 2-7 record. The Lions will tie that mark by winning one «f their last twq gamer; If they win both they : will equal the marks of the. 1960 and 1961 teams. 3-6. A. victory and a tic‘will leave them at 2-G-I. <• STATE'S two leinaming games are against Gettysburg and Pitt. In both- 'cases, it'll tie the season finale for the Lion opponents. and Ed Hinojosa 'permanently Gettysburg went into vester da\‘s game with-Muhlenberg with Do You Know When They'll SCORE? Win PITT GAME Guess what lime the first touchdown will be scored in Saturday'* Penn Stale-Holy Cross game and win yourself a free, all-expense paid trip to the Penn State-Pilt game at Pitt Stadium on Nov. 24. There's nothing to buy and -you can enter at any Stale College store displaying a football player on the' door. Enter as often as you like right up to game time Saturday. Try your luck and see -if you can guess when they'll score. Enter today at any store with- a football player on the door. Enter Today at These Stores Blair Shop Contemporary , - Kalin'i Bostonian Ltd. Trends Keeler' Centre County Film Crabtree* Lerine Lab Danks It Co. McLani Centre Hardware Epolfs Moyer' Charles Shop Jack Harper'* ’ Store Children's Shop ’ Hut's Mens Shop <3. C. M. Clearfield's Kalin's Dress Shop Penn-Whi PHI KAPPA SIGMA'S football team poses after its win orer Delta Upsilon last night. Front row (1 to r); Dick Lacey. Jim "Bo" Terry. Bob peace, Don Jameson, Larry Gaertner, Gene Daily. Bob Kerr -and Jack .Marshall. Back row (1 to r): Tony Ryan. Jim BroadhursL George Baker. Jae 'English.- Joe Dari, Bill Chapas and Denny Boal. aerial to Terry, who had raced downfield following the lateral. With a nifty bit of running. Terry eluded three DU players and made it, to| paydirt. However, an unnecessary roughness penalty nullified the six-pointer. Before the half had ended Phi Kappa Sig managed to add one more first-down on a pass from I a 4-7 mark and four straight I losses. Pitt is 7-0-2 with just the Lions in the path of an undefeat ed season.! The Bullets will be here Sat urday to close out the home por tion of the Nittany schedule, and if eomparitive scores mean any thing. the. Lions jshould come up with their'second'triumph, j The teams have played three . common foes—Temple, Buckncll, and Navy. Gettysburg lost to Temple. 3-0. while the Owls beat State. 3-2 in overtime. Bucknell ripped Gettysburg. 7-1. while the Linns whitewashed the Bisons, 3-0. Navy rolled over Gettysburg, 9-1, and shut out:the Lions, 3-0. j IK THE LION'S last outing, a 13-1 loss tio Army, the Nittanies . weie plagued by the same diffi culty that! has been hurting them i all.season — a: woeful lack of i offensive firepower. The Lions only; five shots, in the di rection of Cadet goalie Ken 1 Eklund a FREE Trip to the *THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA Sig, Rats Win; Football Titles T-erry to Larry Gaertner, giving Phi Kap a 2-1 lead on first downs at the end of the halt The opening minutes of the second half found both teams ex changing first downs. Phr Kap added their third and winning first down on an 11-yard pass from Terry to Jameson, moving the ball from the 19 to the 30- yard line. DU ADDED THEIR second and final first down on a pass from Giegucz to Denny German. The final first down was added by Terry on a one-yard end run. The run followed a 36-yard DU punt'to the Phi Kappa Sig 39. In addition to last night’s vic tory, Phi Kappa Sig can boast of an unefefeated, unscored-on season. In the ‘ independent final, the Rats, who earlier defeated Lacka? wanna. 9-0, in a special playoff, shut out the Bad Guys, 7-0. The lone' score came when the Rats’ Roy Brubaker intercepted a Bad Guys pass on- the latter’s two-yard line and merely walked over for the ’i’D. The PAT was added by Mike Sheeny. The touchdown was the first score against the Bad Guys and led to their only loss of the sea son. THE YARDSTICK PKS DU '6 First D»vni Passing-. 2 1 First Downs Rushing .... 6 4 Yds. (luined Rushing,:, • IP . . . Yd*. IrfOFt Rushing. 17 2S Passes Attempted 22 12 parses Completed 3 108 Yds. (Jained passing 19 l 7 Parses Had Interrupted 3 2 . _ ~ _ 6 Fpomlti* 5 * Y*l». FennJiw*d Crusaders Beware— Lions Healthy Again By JOHN MORRIS Sports Editor Penn State's once-beaten football team is healthy for the second straight week and that spells nothing but trouble for its opponent Saturday, Holy Cross. Lion coach Rip Engle said that his team was completely healthy for the first time against West Virginia. Then the Nittanies went out' and manhandled the Moun ties, 34 r 0. Now the Lions’ medical corps reports that the Nittanies are healthy again. Let the Crusaders beware. , “We had our full squad togeth er for a whole week for the first time last week," Engle explained. “It made a big difference.” TOWERING LION tackle Chuck Sieminski, named to the ECAC weekly All-East team for his performance against .West Virginia, agreed with his . coach. “You can move better and hit harder when you get rid of all these little injuries,” Sieminski said. Engle, in turn, praised the 0-5, 250-pound Sieminski, calling his performances against Maryland and West Virginia “the best foot ball he’s ever played.”. That’s high praise for a line man of Sieminski’s caliber, who is bidding for national honors and should be a cinch to make everybody’s All-East team. RUMORS OF possible bowl bids have been circulating.around the campus, but the Lions haven’t received any official bids. '-The Nittanies, boasting a 7-1 record with two games to play, are under consideration by the Orange Bowl. Cotton Bowl, Lib erty Bowl, Gator Bowl and Goth am Bowl. But Engle is much too con cerned about the Nittanies* next two games to be thinking. about plans for New Years. “We’ve still got to play the Fitton Field Bow! this week snd the Oakland Bowl next week,” Engle said yesterday. THE NITTANIES have been •working on their pass defense this week in anticipation of an New Linebacker Coach Dan Radakovich is the newest addition to the Lions’ coaching staff. He moves up to the varsity after five years as assistant fresh man coach. He will work with linebackers. Nothing to Buy Enter as Often As You Like 3 Big Prizes All Intlude: ©Game Ticket , i ©Transportation ©Hotel Room Downtown Stores Open Monday - Friday 'til 9 p.m. Tins Month THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 15.1962 aerial bombardment by Crusader quarterback Pat McCarthy. The pass defenders were excel lent against Maryland and West Virginia, but McCarthy is more of a: running threat than either the Terps’ Dick Shiner or the- Mounties’ Jerry Yost. Shiner was hindered by a snowstorm and Yost complained of the slippery footing last week. "It was just too slippery fear our kind of offense,” Yost ex plained after the game. “We like to sprint out, stop and then throw, but. it was too slippery and I just couldn’t-stop.” Nobody said so, but who would want to stop running anyway when he has Sieminski, Dave Robinson. Terry. Monaghan, Dick Anderson and Hatch Rosdabl breathing down his neck? I, K.I.S. Sportswear Available At ImlmA J MEN'S STORE 1 STATE COLLEGE •1 ' f