Friday, January 27, 1933 Between the Lions with The Sports Editor . Tomorrow night's court engagement for Mr. Leslie’s Lions is probably the most colorful tilt that will be seen ,on the home floor this season. There is something about service teams, whether they ’be' up’to standard or not, that stirs the imagination, and _ we imagine the 1933 Cadet quintet, -' .retarded as it has been by the influ ’’ cnza epidemic up at West Point, will no except)qp. About the campus and wherever talk inevitabkly revokes back, to the fortunes of this year’s court Lions, ~,( w e notice a feeling of confidence in the team that has been lacking for ‘ ! 'years. Certainly, if anything can in -1 ' still optimism, it is the powerful of fense drive which the Lions have dis- played in every game to date except '"the ill-fated venture into Pehn’s Pal- • Whether Army’s defense is capable of bottling this up ,is ques jflionable. At any rate, it should be } real battle, and we expect to see the biggest crowd of the season on . rhand to witness it.- ,l ' The proposal of Mr. Harvey Har- Penn’s colorful head football coach, that college football teams be .divided into “amateur” and “profes sional” leagues is a highly interest ing and a fits in per fectly with our pet theory that col legiate elevens will be bound, in the future, to play teams in their own v:f elass, athletically and academically. That subsidization exists in inter im collegiate athletics today, no one who is not afraid to face the.facts, can ~dcny. That it will continue to exist at some institutions is, we have be come convinced, almost as certain. Huge stadia anti cosfly athletic plants cannot be paid off in a day. As long as a financial burden remains, the college will have to attract to its fold the best athletes possible, discounting the glory side of- the question en tirely. Therefore, is it not logical and sen sible that the colleges who subsidize, should declare openly on which side of the fence they stand without dan ger of being subjected to calumny? And if they could then get together and play each other solely, wouldn’t it help the whole muddled question of intercollegiate athletics? We think it would. In fact, we haven’t the slight est doubt about the matter, v+ + + This and That You might be interested''to know tfihat Ernie Paul is now coaching the hockey team at Syracuse • . . . And A 1 Lewis, back in town for a few days, assures us he Is not coaching, the box "ing team'at W: .& J. . . . . A banner headline. on the Record sports page Wednesday had some of the boys puzzled .... “Yale Beats Penn, 35- #; Character Triumphs,” it read, re ferring on the one side, to the Eli’s victory over the Red and Blue court- jnen and on the other to the winner of a horse race .... “Did’ya sec where Yale heat Penn?” asked one of the brothers Then, pointing to the other end of the headline, he add ed, “And look at the Philadelphia papers, always alibing for a Penn —S. H. B. !,-- ■ - ■ |?j ; ; SEE STEIN FOR '%• Sales—FOßD—Service | . ,1000 W, College Avenue Phone 060 , New Location ROOMS FOR SECOND SEMESTER AT THE COLONIAL 115 West Nittany Avenue Offers hotel comfort at moderate weekly rates of §2.50 to §3.00. Few. choice rooms available, all have running hot and cold water. Plenty of heat and hot water. Homelike, newly furnished. See the Colonial if you arc thinking of a change—you’ll like it! “Finest Club Residence in State College” NITTANY COURTME LION QUINTET TO CLASH WITH UNTRIED CADET BASKETEERS AT 7:30 O’CLOCK Unchanged Blue and White Lineup of Henning, Conn, McMinn, McFarlane, Thomas, Announced by Leslie By Wm. M. STEfiMEIER '34 Final exams aren’t the only things bothering the Lion court men this week. What seems to be worrying them a lot more is what sort of “dark horse” the West Pointers will'produce to do battle with them in Recreation hall at 7:30 o’clock tomorrow night. No one, from Coach Spike Leslie down to the meekest of the second assistant managers, knows just what to .expect of the Cadets. But everyone, from the" 1 meekest second assistant man ager up to Coach Spike Leslie can be sure of one thing—the old Army "game Although the Academy five was scheduled for no less than six contests before the State College trip, an in fluenza epidemic at the Point neces sitated the cancellation of five of these games.' And even though it’s a well known • fact that the cancelled games never molded any team into championship calibre, three full weeks of uninterrupted practice drill is something for the Lio'ns to reckon with. Epler Leads Cadets Tomorrow’s opponents hove had only one meagre chance to show how deadly they are this year. Early, in the season they managed to squeeze in a game with Johns Hopkins, the Pointers winning, 28-to-22, by means of a last-minute rally. The count had been tied at the halftime. 'Wednes day night, the Cadets were scheduled to meet Swarthmore but that game tod was called'off. Bruce, Epler, a lanky cadet who measures three inches over the six foot mark, captains the dribblers from the center position. Hillis, the only other regular carried over from last season, will pair off with Meier at the guard posts. Two men who’ gained considerable experience as reserves on the 1932 squad, Neely and Kenerick, will probably start for the Pointers as forwards. Lion Lineup Unchanged A number of football men adorn the Army court squad as reserves, notably Captain-elect Jablonsky, who de lighted grid fans this past season with his dazzling play at the guard berth. Two other grid stars who may break into the game tomorrow are Stancoek, fullback, and Lawlor, an, end on-the 1932 football outfit. Twenty-one years ago, Dutch Her mann led the last Nittany five that registered a victory over the military floormen. Last year, when the series of Penn State-Army games was re sumed, the Cadets took honors by a 46-to-37 score. Now, once again, the Lions begin to look leather hungry. No changes'will be made in State’s lineup. ’ This means that Conn, Mc- Minn, Henning, McFarlanc, and Thomas will doff their sweat suits just before the starting whistle. May Use Reserves The definite .selection of Henning for the center post is a logical move. Although Wittum gets around a lot faster and seems to be a bit more capable on the defensive, “Legs” should get the tap-off for the Lions on at least a fifty-fifty basis. - However, .Spike will probably make frequent replacements . throughout game'no mattei* .which way the tide of battle may be i*unning. The re serves have been pushing the first stringers 'rather hard in scrimmages lately,-which gives Spike a fairly com fortable feeling. In practice Tuesday, a combination of Wittum, Stocker, Heyison, Blylcr, and Fletcher shamed the first club by chalking down a winning score of 32-to-20. Injuries, for a change, have ceased to haunt Leslie’s team. The entire squad, with the exception of Jack Fletcher who turned his ankle in scrimmage, is in perfect condition. Opponents 9 Scores BASKETBALL Yale—33; Penn—23 Pitt—i 7; W. & J.—27 Geneva—32; Carncgjc Tech—3l Lion Wrestling Teams Victorious In S 3 Percent of Collegiate Meets ny n. h. no: Eighty-three percent victorious—| such is the enviable achievement of| Penn State wrestling teams in the 'past. Since the inception of the grap pling art in the field of the Nitcany Lion’s athletic endeavors, the Blue and White banners have fallen less than once a year, on the average—a record probably unparalleled by any univer-' sity in the East. From the 130 dual meets enteredj into by Nittany teams since 1910, when intercollegiate competition was first begun by Lion matmen, the grap plers have emerged victorious 10S times, and have been tied but twice, a study of the athletic records show. Victory, it seems, has always been the inalienable right of Penn State grapplers, and only four teams in the country can boast of ever having twisted. the Nittany Lion’s tail. Navy, with eleven victories against eight defeats and one draw, and lowa State, winner thrice and loser once, have the edge in their series with the Blue and White. . Cornell and Lehigh are the only other teams ever to administer de feat to the State contingents. The; Ithacans have won. five and lost six teen contests up to this year, while Lehigh, can boast of but 'one victory as against fifteen suffered at the hands of the Lion wrestlers. Entering the intercollegiates for the first time in 1918, the Lions proceeded at once to establish their supremacy in Eastern wrestling circles and’ coached by H. C. Yarger, took first place. The Nittanymen retained their championship in the East "during the ADVERTISE THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN N WIL L FortrialGame Rumor Revealed as Untrue Contrary to rumors that tomor row night's'basketball game with Army will be formal, the game will be informaland will be held at 7:30 o'clock, a half hour later than the games have started so far this sea son, officials of the Athletic associ ation have announced. Officials-pointed to the use of formal attire at meets with service teams in the past as the basis for tho runiors. It is customary for athletic officials of West Point to attend athletic contests in formal dress uniform., ISENZWEK '34 | next three years,-and in 1921 were considered the national title-holders. During the eight years following 1918 Penn State was crowned the intercol legiate championship team six times. Since the advent of, Charlie Speidel as coach only two . teams have been conquerors of the Nittany grapplers. j 1 During the six years under Charlie's I tutelage, the Lion matmen lost a total of seven meets to Navy and Cornell, and tied once with' the Ithacans. Thirty victories have been run up by the wrestlers during .this period. With a team superior to last year’s both in strength and experience, the Lion grapplers may well be expected to make a strong bid this year for the resumption of its former champion ship position in the .Eastern intercol legiate circle. Only two regulars are missing from the last year’s team, which only lost one meet and tied one, while a promising group of sopho mores are pushing the veterans for the varsity berths. MONT ALTO BOXERS TRAIN About twenty members of the Mont Alto’ Forestry school, under the su pervision of William C. Sechrist, in structor in forestry, are training daily for a boxing team at-the school, ac cording to Prof. John E. Ferguson, head of the Forestry school. CO-ED RIFLE TEAM TO SHOOT Tho ‘wonten’s rifle team will com peto with the University of Tennessee in a telegraphic match at the Armory this afternoon. TO BOOST DULL BUSINESS Modern Business Has Not Yet Dis covered a Satisfactory Substitute For Good Newspaper Advertising. ADVERTISE WITH THE Penn State Collegian Nittany Printing Bldg. CE ARMY HERE TOMORROW Ca rtmell Sco res Proposed Adoption of Metric System Believes Measurement Plan Will Cause Difficulties Ily JAMES M. SHEEN* *3l Coach Nate Cartmell pointed out salient defects and scored the propos ed adoption of the metric system for track and field by th c Intercollegiate Amateur Athletic association of Am erica in an interview yesterday. By thc proposed system all IC-4A meets will be conducted ynder the me tric system, with dashes, hurdling races, distance runs and weight events measured in meters instead of by the present system of measurement in feet and yards. Thc arrangement now used in all Eureopean countries and in the Olympic games- was adopted by the Amateur Athletic Union last fall, and it was generally considered that tho system would be used by the IC-4A. “The American sporting public is educated to the present system of I track contest measurement in feet and yards and because it knows very little of the European system the people would probably lose a great amount ol* interest in track,” the Nittany mentor stated. He believed that much bewilderment would be expressed over the proposed plan, and that it would lake a long period for American peo ple to get acquainted with such a sys tem of measurement. .Another difficulty to be encountered would be that all of the present Am erican records in feet and yards would have to be changed, Cartmell stated. “The present arrangement, complicat ed as it is because of the several claimants to every track record, would become much more complicated if if the proposed plan for measuring; distances in track contests by meters Is jpassed,” he added. * objection advanced by the Lion track coach is that if the pro posed plan is passed by the IC-iA, then all of the colleges in that organ ization will have to change the length of their tracks, and in many schools which have indoor tracks for dashes this lengthening would cause a great amount of expense. “With many colleges already drop ping a large amount 'of their spring snorts, because of burdening costs, it seems unwise to adopt thc metric sys- Decries Change | C/7/Z 7A4EL. L . tern and cause added expenses because of the necessary 'changes in the size of tracks that, the new system will carry with it,” Coach Cartmell stressed. “Although the Olympic games' use distance in meters, the average American college does not point toward tho international con tests,” he emphasized. Several athletic clubs, members of tho Amateur Athletic Union, have stated that winter track contests spon sored by them will revert to the Am erican system of track measurements. Included among these is the New York Athletic club which lias already dis carded thc metric system in favor of the-former plan for its annual winter races next month. FIRST ROUND COMPLETED IN I. M. BASKETBALL TOURNEY ’ Intramural basketball has coni-j pletcd its second round of play, ac , cording to Charles R. Gies *34, who is in charge of the tournament. Winners include Delta Sigma Phi, . Delta Tau Delta, Beta Sigma Rho, Delta Theta Sigma, Sigma Chi, Sigma Tau Phi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Delta •Chi, and Phi Sigma Kappa. Others advancing to the third round are Phi Kappa, Alpha Chi Rho, Phi Kappa Tau, Frear Hall, Phi Delta Theta, Unit No. 3, Theta Nu Epsilon,, Alpha Sigma Phi, Phi Lambda Theta, | and Unit No. 6. PHONE 292-W Pago Three BOXERS SPAR AS MEETS APPROACH Houck Stresses Active Fighting Among Mitmen—Ralston Returns to Ring By CHARLES M. MYERS Ml "Spare the rod and spoil the child’’ is an old maxim in the boxing game as well as in any other, so Leo is sparing no sparring aibong his mit men as the opening meet approaches. Ralston, after recovering from a temporary lay-oil* in the infirmary, was hack again this week trading punches in the ring with other ban tamweights. He looked good against Daley, a freshman, and Watkins, a 135-poundcr. Johnny Napoleon and -Mike Zelez noek, featherweights, have gone at it hammer and tongs for the last couple of nights. Mike is a brute for punish ment and takes plenty from Napoleon, but he’s always back for more. Ferrero, I’alasin Fighl Ferrero and Palasin arc another pair that like a good scrap, even if it is only in a sparring bout. Palasin charges in, gets a couple bounced off his nose, and manages to land a few himself. Captain Johnny McAndmvs, with out much competition in his new 1-15- pound berth, keeps himself warmed up by sparring with his brother Fran cis, freshman intramural and inter class champion, and others above his weight. Kessler, 155-pounder, has been boxing with Johnny, as well as with Dick Woolbbert, sophomore heavyweight. In the upper weights especially, there have been quite a few unmatch ed sparring bouts, probably because of the lack of enough men in each class. Consequently, Woolbert, Nebcl, and Slusser arc often lighting men under their weight, j Marty McAndrews, intercollegiate 175-pound champion and captain in 3930, has been punching with Nobel and Woolbert. Nebcl usually gives the ringside watchers quite a slug fest, and Woolbert has a left jab which is developing into a powerful ramrod at his opponent’s chin. Marty was continually pulling his old trick of backing into the ropes and swinging out again at bis opponent or the rebound. His success with it in college several years ago indicates | that some of the present boxers might master it with good results.