PAGE FOUR Leads Lions in Rushing, Scoring Urbanik: Workhorse at FB By JOHN LOTT Collegian Sports Editor After the 1963 football season, Penn State fullback Tom Urbanik was faced with a decision— whether to return for another collegiate campaign or to turn pro after his junior year. Urbanik was picked in the college draft by the Washington Redskins of the NFL and the Buf falo Bills of the AFL. Both teams offered him a sizable bonus and contract to pass up his final year of collegiate eligibility. The rugged fullback's decision—to stick with State for 1964—has turned out favorably both for Urbanik and Nittany Lion football followers. Through seven games, he leads the team in rushing yardage (317), number of carries (79) and scoring (five touchdowns for 30 points). Financial Risk "It was sort of a risk," Urbanik said last night, recalling his decision to play another year of col lege ball. "If I came back, had a bad year and ended up fourth string, I'd probably lose money when it came to bargaining with the pros. "But my college career wasn't real outstand ing up to that point so I wanted to come back and give it another try. I'm glad I did." After two seasons of injuries and disappoint ment, the soft-spoken Urbanik is currently en joying his biggest campaign, one which will put him in the driver's seat when it comes to talking salary with the pros. Ran Over Maryland His best game yet came Saturday when State overran Maryland to a 17-9 tune in Beaver Sta dium. Urbanik carried the pigskin 29 times for 109 yards and both Lion touchdowns. In one stretch he carried nine straight times (the last four plays of the first TD drive and all five of the second). Urbanik's showing was the biggest workhorse display since Fran Rogel gained 116 yards in 31 trips in a 1946 loss to Pitt. The only other Lion ever to carry that many times was Elwood Petchel, who made 29 carries in the 1944 Pitt game. Wasn't Looking for Record "I might have carried a couple more times," Urbanik said, "but I lost one run on a penalty and there were a couple other times when the de fensive team was running the ball. But I wasn't thinking about any record. I was getting pretty tired out there!" Although he's as pleased as anyone with his Buckeyes Drop to No. 2 Notre Dame Moves to Top Spot I SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) for 460 points. That was :11, Top Ten teams with first 'Notre Dame campus rang yes- points ahead of Ohio State, sec-place votes in parentheses and terday with jubilant shouts: and with 11 first-place ballots points: "We're No. 1, we're No. 1." ,and 424 points. Ohio Sate bare-! 1. Notre Dame (29) 460 Word spread quickly that the IY shaded lowa 21.19 last Satur-I 2. Ohio State (11) 424 amazing Fighting Irish, unbeat-,daY. 385 en in six games, surged into' The next four teams in last ' 3. Alabama (7) the top position in the weekly week's poll maintained their' I 4. Arkansas (1) 310 Associated Press poll of sports rankings. Alabama, Arkansas, , 5. . Nebraska 259 writers and sportscasters. 'Nebraska and Texas. 6. 1 Texas 175 7. Georgia Tech 174 I Students swarmed in front of Oregon, No. 7 last week, 8. Louisiana State 116 Rockne Hall, athletic office dropped from the Top Ten after 9. Florida 90 ;headquarters, and noisily chant- a 10-8 loss to Stanford. I 10. Purdue 85 ed, "No. 1 all the way." I Georgia Tech moved from,-----_ - --- Coach Ara Parseghian's Irish, eighth to seventh, while Louisi after crushing Navy 40-0 Satur- ana State inched from ninth to day, moved into the No. 1 spot eighth, and Florida from 10th to by a narrow margin over Ohio ninth. State, leader the previous two Purdue, unbeaten Big Ten weeks. ,rival of Ohio State for the con-, Notre Dame got 29 of 48 first- ference title and Rose Bowl bid, place votes in the latest AP poll took over the No. 10 spot. COLLEG FOR SALE INEXPENSIVE Transportation 1954 Chevy. Mechanically sound. 5100.00. Call Lee AD 7-2161. '59 CHEVY, stick six, two door. Good shape 5675. Call Al 8 , 8839 or 7-2303. 15 FOOT Aluminum Canoe 8125; and 22 Ruger and Holster M. Call Dick 466,913. WEST HALLS Dorm Contract. Call Bob 5-5867. I will undersell anyone by 310. ENGLISH BICYCLE (girl's) for sale Good condition. Sl3. Phone .5.2649. FOR SALE: West Halls dorm contract Call Jack 5-2748. Winter term or sooner TRANSFER Fraternity Brother in dorm wants to move Into house. A town inde pendent man is required to take his place in Pollock A. Phone 5.4471. USED PORTABLE Sewing Machine. 10 year guarantee. Just $35. Phone 238-8367. RENT A TV at T.S.C., short time or long time. Television Service Center, 232 South Allen Street. ZIG ZAG Portable Sewing Machine, corn plete: 385. Phone Moyers 238-8361. K&E SLIDE-RULE, new; Heath Kit DX4O AM•CW Transmitter, "Sixer" 6•meter transceiver, Saturn Mobile Halo, Vibrator Supply 350 V. CHEAP. 237-7088. '6O APINE, white with black Interior. Fully equipped, three tops, radio, seat belts, snow tires. Very good condition. Call 238-3486. DORM CONTRACT. Town independent men only. Phone 54471, David. '55 CHEVROLET. One owner; 2-door, standard shift, radio, heater, Naugahlde Interior, new tires, 62,000 miles. $3OO. 238-2627. NEED A Cocktail Bar? At United Rent. Ails "We rent most everything." Next to the bus depot. 238-3037. RECONDITIONED TELEVISIONS at budget prices. Guaranteed service. See T.S.C., the Television Service Center, 232 South Allen Street. 1957 FORD Convertible. Automatic, V-8, power steering, radio & heater, good top. Must sell. Best offer over $375. Call 238-2526. WORK WANTED COED TO WORK for room and board Winter term. Room with private bath Call 237.4378 for Interview. Sponsored by ' NOVEMBER 1748 Alpha Phi Omega and Gamma Sigma Sigma * * * TOM URBANIK * * * rushing success this season, Urbanik feels his big gest improvement has come in the blocking depart ment. Lion head coach Rip Engle agrees. "His blocking has improved greatly," Engle said yesterday. "He has always been a hard run ner but this year he has worked extra hard on blocking. "He has been a real source of satisfaction to us," Engle continued. "He has always had an in jury problem but he seems to have shaken that now. He's a hard worker and always gives you everything out there." From Stan's Home Town Urbanik hails from Donora, Pa., where excel lence in athletics is the rule rather than the excep tion. Donora has produced such notables as former St. Louis Cardinal star Stan Musial; Arnold Galif fa, ex-Army All-America and New York Giants standout; and Dan Tyler, a Washington and Jef ferson great who achieved All-Pro status with ANCLASSIFIEDS !alimunivinimininiuminimunininininininiminimini: TIFFANY BALLPOINT PEN and coed's Econ 4 Notebook. Return to HUB desk or call Bud 865-2233. LOST: WHITE GOLD Ladles Omega Watch between Osmond and Schwab Sat. Reward. Ginny 5-3225. LIGHT RAINCOAT Sat. A.M., Corner Room. Believe switched. Cashier has yours. NOTICE WATCH FOR THE BIRDS ON BLACK FRIDAY. SEE "CRIME AND PUNISHMENT," film based on Dostoevsky's novel, Sunday, Nov. 8, 121 Sparks, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. FREE. Presented by West Halls Cultural and Religious Affairs Committee. SEWING MACHINE parts and accessories for U.S. and foreign sewing machines. For repairs call 2384367. APPLICATIONS for "Penn State Woman" editor available at HUB desk. Phone wait AD 8-2526. FOR RENT STUDENT TO SHARE Apartment, win ter term; ground floor new home. 37.00 week, includes utilities and laundry. Car desirable. Call Bob 2304697. SINGLE ROOM in private home, with Private bath, free parking. AD 8-9689. ROOMMATE WANTED for spacious 4-room, 2-man furnished apartment; one block from campus. Call Jack 237-7229. HELP WANTED STUDENTS FOR part-time employment at apartment project, Previous summer construction experience desired. Work adjusted to meet your class schedule. Work will involve rdugh or basic carpen try. Call Fred Miller 238-6245. COED TO WORK for room and board; winter term. Room with private bath. Call 237-4378 for interview. ATTENTION ATTENTION STUDENT TEACHERS! Learn what to expect during student teaching. Come to the PSEA meeting ' Nov. 4, 7:00 p.m., 214 Eioucke. Instructions: • Register'at the HUB November 4 thru 6. is Have a release form completed by your parents if you are under 21. No one under 18 can donate blood. • Bring the release form with you at the time of donation Nov. 17 or 18. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY 'PARK, PtNNSYLVANIA Pi Gamma Alpha Meeting Thurs.—Nov. 5 7:30 P.M.-111 Temporary Color Film: "Renaissance in Italy" MALE ROOMMATE wanted for spa clous, centrally located apartment start ing winter term. Call AD 7-7767 after 1 p.m. WANTED: MALE Roommate immediately. 214 W. Fairmount. Cable T.V. Phone Walt AD 8.2526. 1= COED WANTED to wash and iron men's shirts. Call 54354 ask for C. Anthony Springer. WANTED: THREE TICKETS to Pitts burgh football game. Desperate! Call Steve 865-9069. WANTED: ONE good seat for Pitt game Call Bob 5.7196. APPLICATIONS FOR the positions of SHOW DIRECTOR and MUSICAL DI RECTOR for Its 1965 spring musical pro duction to be presented April 2 and 3 are now being accepted by the State College Community Theatre. Both posi tions carry moderate stipends. Resumes must be received at Box 397, State Col lege, by Nov. 14. WILL TYPE THESIS, Term Papers, etc. Experienced! Electric typewriter; fast, accurate, reasonable. Call 237-2376 be tween 6-9 p.m. MALE STUDENT to share six room private house with four other students. Call 238-8898. TYPING WANTED. Fast, accurate and economical. Theses, term papers, reports and letters. Will pick up and deliver. Call 2384569. Penn State Outing Club Tonight the SKI SEASON begins for anyone interested In learning to std. An instructional movie and discussion will be in Room 112 BuckhoUt at 7. Everyone welcome. CABIN AND TRAIL DIVISION Over night at Beaver Darn Sat. nice, Nov. 7. Complete Information and slon up at the HUB desk. CABIN AND TRAIL DIVISION meet ing Wed. Nov. 4 at 7:00 p.m. In 112 Buckhout Lab. Winter plans will be discussed and a movie will be shown. CANOE DIVISION meeting, Thurs. Nov. 5 at 7 p.m. In 111 Boucke. Movies of New River, West Virginia—" Grand Canyon of the Eastll" Come see our wildest river! Bloodmobile Registration Ground Floor of the HUB Nov. 4 - 6 the Los Angeles Rams. After graduation from Donora High, where he participated in football, basketball and track, Ur banikspent a year in a Staunton, Va., prep school. He enrolled at Penn State in 1960 and was red= shirted in 1961. Switched to Halfback Urbanik was switched to halfback in 1962, but he missed much of the season because of a pulled hamstring muscle. Last year, after being named the most improved player in spring drills, he opened the season as the No. 1 fullback. He ran well for five games but saw little action after that as the coaching staff shuffled Ed Stuck rath, Dave ,McNaughton, Bill Huber and Urbanik in and out of the fullback slot. This fall he was slated to make the halfback switch again but stayed at fullback when Dirk Nye was moved to blocking halfback and Stuckrath saw action principally on defense. Urbanik's No. 1 rooter is the former Patricia Mares, his high school sweetheart whom he mar ried in June, 1963. She's a nurse in the Bellefonte Hospital. Patty's not the kind to offer solace to her husband when he's "down," Urbanik was saying last night. Uses 'Needle' "Instead she gives me the needle and pushes me to work harder," he laughed. Even when she's high in the Beaver Stadium seats, Patty finds ways to apply the "needle." Urbanik tells this one on himself. "On Saturday against Maryland my blocking was a little shaggy in the first quarter and she noticed it," he said. "At halftime she saw a cheer leader in the stands and asked her to relay a message to me. The cheerleader came down, told one of our players, then he told me that my wife said to brush up on my blocking." URBANIK BRIEFS: Urbanik, who goes 6-0, 220, has carried the ball 159 times in three seasons and has lost only five yards. He hasn't lost a yard this season . . . That he leads in rushing is even more impressive because he carried only once in the two games after UCLA because of a rib in jury ... He was a Big 33 fullback in 1960 . .. His brother Bill, a 6-3, 235-pound tackle, was named to the pre-season high school All-America by Sport magazine . . . Urbanik's a three-year letterman in track. He specializes in the shot-put . . . An insurance major . . of Slavic background, both his grandparents were born in Czechoslovakia. WANTED = LI nalllllllllllllll PSEA MEETING Wednesday, Nov. 4 7 p.m. Room 214 Boucke Topic: "What To Expect During Student Teaching" &JIMMY SANDWICHES WEDNESDAY NIGHTS PIZZA "THE COUNTDOWNS" BEVERAGES FuTuRA 233 THURSDAY NIGHT Dave Bicking and East Saul Bowdy Beaver Guitarist and Folk-singer CLASSIFIED ADS Accepted Mon. - Fri 9:30 - 11:00 a.m. Can 865-2531 NO CHARGE ADS ACCEPTED COLLEGIAN OFFICE BASEMENT OF SACKETT OFFICE CLOSED ALL DAY SAT. & SUN. I iminimiiimmiimmiiimilmummimmiiiiiimmilE WEST HALLS COUNCIL Presents: Kirk Marilyn DOUGLAS MAXWELL in Stanley J. Krauer's Academy Award-Winning Masterpiece "CHAMPION" The great Ring Lardner drama about the fight game. The picture that made Kirk Douglas famous; a classic in the annals of motion picture history. Saturday, NoVember 7 121 Sparks 7:00 and 9:00 P.M. Admission 25c State Theatre, Stale College, Pa. NOW PLAYING— 1:30, 3:35, 5:4n,7:40, 9:45 Oli1;:7 / 1 ) * / `. ,e' I / C, txv SABOR.KASZNAR INTRAMURAL ROUNDUP FOOTBALL CHAMPIONS 'INDEPENDENTS Team Pork Rollers (4.0) Rats (5-0) DORMS Birch (5-1) Jordan I (6-0) Cambria (5-0) Nitfany 27-28 (4-1) Crawford (5-1) Venango (6-0) GRADUATES Chemistry 14.0) FRATERNITIES Phi Gamma Delta (5-0) Acacia (6.0) Phi Kappa Sigma (6-0) BEAVER STADIUM Fayette 6, Tioga 0 Warren 13,• Northumberland 0 Bedford 6, York 0 Crawford 10, Elk 0 Greene 13, Franklin 0 Carbon 26, Allentown 7 Adams 13, Chester 0 Huntingdon 7, Mercer 0 Monroe 7, Lycoming 0 Scranton 3, Bradford 1 (Ist dns.) Hershey 3, McKean 0 Armstrong 4, Ogontz 3 (Ist dns.) GOLF COURSE DORMS Cottonwood 6, Locust 0 Balsam 9, Sycamore 0 Chestnut 16, Tamarack 0 Watts II 13, Larch 0 Juniper 7, Butternut 0 FRATERNITIES Phi Gamma Delta 7, Delta Chi 0 Sigma Pi 9, Theta Xi 6 Chi Phi 7, Phi Epsilon Pi 0 Phi Delta Theta 18, Alpha Kap. Lambda 0 Women's Hockey Team Wins 4th Penn State's WRA hockey team fought hard to win its fourth game of the season by de feating Lock Haven 5-4 on the Women's Athletic Field yester day. Scoring for Penn State were Karen Krouse, (one goal) and Joan Sibson and Kas Wagen seller two goals each. This was the first time in four games that Penn State has tri umphed over Lock Haven. The coeds' next action will be the Susquehanna Field Hockey As sociation Tournament to be held Saturday at Wilson College. Last night's volleyball results: Delta Delta Delta 2, Atherton 1 Stephens•Hibbs 2, Phi Mu 0 Simmons II 2, Alpha Chi Omega 0 East D 2, Runkle 1 - AUTO - PARTS • ACCESSORIES Western Auto 112 S. FRAZIER ST. 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. IN COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR BOWLING NOV. 2 INDEPENDENT Drifters 8, Navy 0 The Five 6, D. & H. 2 Rogues 4, H. & K. Radio 4 DORMITORY Union 8, Jordan I 0 Lackawanna 8, Ogontz 0 Huntingdon 8, Jefferson 0 Linden 8, Harrisburg 0 Armstrong 8, Jordan II 0 Berks 8, Chestnut 0 Centre 8, Juniper 0 Indiana 6, Cambria 2 Allegheny 6, Greene 2 Nittany 23-24 6, Sycamore 2 Allentown 6, Monroe 2 IM Basketball The intramural basketball tournament will begin tonight in the new South Gym. Sched uled starting tunes are 8:45, 9:30 and 10:15. iuimnuunuauuunnuuunnuiii! NEED SOMETHING "DRESSY?" Dress up with Carriage House fashions! For cocktails or lounging or loafing or dancing . . . you'll be dressed in style when you select from the lovely groupings at: The 6rrictge ,I.oust Women's Fashions 109 S. PUGH ST. iiiimminoillllllllllllllllll llummi For Good Results Collegian Classifieds C 7r/fiAl /1//31 TOMORROW ... 1 Day Only! aui4t364tei .16 Presents > , 1 = Travel 4 is* ON THE STAGE t •s Ics I Of, 1'&740,-& awe. ', O d . ON THE SCREEN *.sokie i' - iWe • PRICES: Adults $1.50; Children 75c • LAST TIMES TODAY CATHAUM at 2:00 - 4:30 - 7:00 - 9:30 TO BE HELD OVER at the '9 From Cathaum Feature TOMORROW at 7:00 - 9:05 P.M. AN lAN FLEMING TYPE STORY ... WITH JAMES BOND THRILLS ! "IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR TWO HOURS OF SHEER ENTERTAINMENT, PUT THIS HIGH ON YOUR LIST!" —Cue Magazine "BRILLIANT SUSPENSE! FASCINATES!" ROBERT MORLEY AKIM TAMI lattAlai Ern ° JIILES DS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1964 NEW :COLLEGE"DINEr ~IsolyntoVun Between the Movies : 1 , ,;-L4- -, 91;,W4YS OPEN • , ,• PART TIME JOBS College men Weekends and one week day evening. Eighteen hours work weekly leading into full time summer employment. Inter nationally known con cern with branches in all principle cities. Call 238-4411. $55 per week "the right cue for entertainment" The Room 114 E. College Ave. Hours: 9 A.M. -1 A.M. 0 0 0 40 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 00 • op p i I lugAV ( w hen the jewels amin tatra ROFFgraial,Tri';‘ , Eme7llErß IN COLOR '9416 UNITED ARTISTS