Slippery Rock University - Saxigena Yearbook (Slippery Rock, PA)

 - Class of 1934

Page 30 of 142

 

Slippery Rock University - Saxigena Yearbook (Slippery Rock, PA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 30 of 142
Page 30 of 142



Slippery Rock University - Saxigena Yearbook (Slippery Rock, PA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 29
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Page 30 text:

ROCKETS Alphabetically speaking we line the Rocket gridsters up ready for the kick-ofT:JACK AIRD . . . Wilmerding . . . five foot eight . . . 158 pounds . . . abackfielder who can play the role ofa heady quarter- back, a smashing full-back, a blocking right half, and a swift, tricky left half. FRANK Cfljiej AFRICA . . . Pitcairn . . . five foot eight . . . 160 pounds . . . a scrappy half-back whose superior speed kept him very much in the running at all times . . . senior. ROBERT CHMQ DINSMORE . . . New Castle . . . junior . . . guard . . . six foot two . . . 230 pounds . . . although Bob is scarcely afuard of watch charm proportions, since he weighs some 230 poun s, he nevertheless moves over the turf fast enough to be termed as one. EUGENE Cfoel DUGAN . . . Pittsburgh . . . center . . . five foot nine . . . 165 pounds . . . junior . . . hard tackler . . . a well- developed ability to diagnose plays . . . an ability to break them up once he had gauged them. EUGENE CPemwt.rD FORKER . . . Grove City . . . senior . . . half-back . . . five foot six and a half . . . 164 pounds . . . a lad who thoroughly enjoys the rough contacts ofa man's game . . . acting captain in many contests. ORVILLE CBudj FREED . . . Mt. Pleasant . . . junior . . . five foot seven . . . 159 pounds . . . half-back . . . his speed and skill entitled him to play a leading role in the Slippery Rock attack. JOSEPH CfoeD GIBSON . . . Slippery Rock . . . Kiski Prep . . . freshman . . . end . . . five foot eleven . . . 161 pounds . . . a former teammate of

Page 29 text:

honors. .Battling to a first half scoreless deadlock, each team waited for a break and a chance to convert it into a score. Good head work was needed to ward off danger. That break never came, however, the miffy Green found one weak spot, and this spelled defeat for the jackets and sent the mirthfulll Rockets and supporting student body down the old ash road to the main campus to the tune of Who s afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? Yes, a 6-O victory, with Slippery Rock still undefeated. H The next Saturday the call was issued to the proud papas and mamas to drop in and see the Wander-boys. At the end of the first quarter we find the varsity lads leaving the field, having spotted the reserves with twenty odd points against a hard fighting, resolute Alfred Holbrook College eleven. The reserves battled the remainder of the game with the determined Ohioans to climax a perfect Parents' Day with 3 35-7 victory, 1 The undefeated Rockets lingered long and worked hard on College Bluff for the next few days, tiying to work out combinations that would stop that well known combination Strimer and Snyder 0 Thiel College, which was scheduled for the following week. Coach Stoefer's Stars were stopped, and in the meanwhile the locals succeeded in pushing over two scores to gain a 12-0 win. ' Rocket fire and lightning stuck the gridiron defenders of Rorabaugh Field at Glenville, West Virgin1a,the following Saturday to break a Pioneer winning streak that had floated over that stadium for Clght years. It was not an easy victory for the Green, for with the backing of the huge Spencer Hlgh School Band and a roaring Homecoming Day crowd the Pioneers took the lead and held a 2119 13 advantage at halftime. Aroused to a fighting fury unusual even to their far famed fighting SPIUY, Kerr Thompson's Slippery Rock players came back holding Coach Rorhbaugh's men scoreless and scoring three times to assure a 27--21 climax. ' Every school has its traditions whether they be social, scholastic, athletic, or spiritual. Grove City has for some time been the traditional rival of the Rockets. Without a breathing game fron the crucial Glenville encounter and with three varsity men garbed in street clothes because of in- luries, the Rockets were forced to wait one more year until they may have the glory of defeating an Amos coached eleven. The final score ended in an habitual tie at six all. However, local people console themselves by saying, We got our touchdown first. What could bring greater satisfaction F0 any Slippery Rock man than to be the hero of the great traditional game with the Crimson Grovers? Can you conceive of playing the autumn pastime on a gridiron covered with snow that actually reached the knee? Coach Thompson's Rockets passed and ran their wav to a 12-O victory over the Powerful Edinboro grid machine on this type of a gridiron at the rival teachers' institution. Slippery Rock remains as one of the few Eastern elevens to yet suffer a set-back. ' Less glorious perhaps, but none the less appreciated, was the final game with Clarion-a 14-0 triumph for the Rock-men. It was an astonishing accomplishment, witnessed by a capacity antag- OIIISEIC group of spectators, who saw a desperate Gold and Blue team crushed completely. Slippery Rock remains one of the undefeated elevens of the country. The fighting men of Slippery Rock, tau ht to fight scientifically and effectively by Coach ThOmpson, have completed another year of fgootball exploits which bring new laurels and new glory. to the feet of the towering Eagle, whose beautiful image, posed at the top of the Old Gvm building of the campus, is a constant source of inspiration to all men of Slippery Rock.



Page 31 text:

St:anford's Bones Hamilton . . . greatest asset, of course, was his speed. OTTO QTinyD GIGONE . . . Titusville . . . tackle . . . six foot . . . 210 pounds . . . Phi Sigma Pi . . . has the ability to mask his emotions, to cover up with apparent placidity the surging of his great competitive spirit. MICHAEL CMikeD KOMORA . . . New Kensington . . . Kiski Prep . . . GeorgetownU .... senior . . . tackle . fivefooteleven . . . 175 pounds . . . afriendly, serious man . . . perhaps the most dependable man on the squad. RUSSEL CRu.rfD KIMBER- LAND . . . Akron . . . Burgettstown High product . . . senior . . . five foot nine . . . 165 pounds . . . a fighting, determined, dogged tackler and blocker. FRED ELMER CTugD LEWIS . . . Turtle Creek . . . manager . . . senior . . . five foot seven . . . 150 pounds . . . varsity basketball . . . gymnast and tumbler of repute. MILES CMeD MILLIRON . . . Kittanning . . . senior . . . quarterback . . .five foot eleven . . . 155 pounds . . . a quiet unassuming clever signal barker . . . generous allotment of good football sense. DOMINIC Ulaorfyj MORELL . . . Rochester . . . senior . . . trained by Army's coach Hawk . . . guard . . . live foot six . . . 168 pounds . . . great skill as apunter . . . many times behind his own goal line he coolly booted long spirals to put his team out of danger. FRANK CHankD NOCERA . . . New Castle . . . junior . . . center . . . five foot eight . . . 165 pounds . a great struggle against handicaps that in the end proved to be overwhelming . . . Phi Sigma Pi. FRED CFreddyD ORTMAN . . . Ford City . . . junior . . . fullback . . . came IHEO his own with his bruising rushes through the line and his brilliant pass catching. MICHAEL CMikeD PERKOSKY . . . Turtle Creek . . . junior . . . guard . . . live foot ei ht . . . 168 pounds . . . one ofthe smartest, f1ghtingest, best all-around guards that ever cgug his cleats into the sod of the college bluff. HOWARD C.S'mittyD SMITH . . . Glassport . . . senior . . . end . . . live foot eight . . . 150 pounds . . . academic rating high . . . personal popularity IS shown by the fact that he has been president of his class for the last two years. GEORGE Cliedj STONIS . . . New Kensington . . . junior . . . tackle . . . six foot four . . . ZOO pounds . . . Phi Sigma Pi . . . three letter man . . . honor student . . . chosen on every all-opponent team that was selected. MILAN CTutj TATALA . . . McKees Rocks . . . junior . . . quarterback . . . live foot seven . . . 160 ounds . . . asafield general he absolutely made the best possible use of the greatest array of weapons any team could have. LOUIS Csf01Z6 Facej WEITZEL . . . Taylor Allderdice . . . junior . . . five foot eleven . . . 175 pounds . Phi Sigma Pi . . . KENNETH Clffmj WESTLAKE Slippery Rock . . . senior . . . five foot eleven . . . 180 pounds. THEODORE CTedD ZIEMENSKI . . . Ford City . . . junior . . . end . . . six foot . . . 175 pounds.

Suggestions in the Slippery Rock University - Saxigena Yearbook (Slippery Rock, PA) collection:

Slippery Rock University - Saxigena Yearbook (Slippery Rock, PA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Slippery Rock University - Saxigena Yearbook (Slippery Rock, PA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Slippery Rock University - Saxigena Yearbook (Slippery Rock, PA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Slippery Rock University - Saxigena Yearbook (Slippery Rock, PA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Slippery Rock University - Saxigena Yearbook (Slippery Rock, PA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Slippery Rock University - Saxigena Yearbook (Slippery Rock, PA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937


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