February 14, 1933 Between the Lions with The Sports Editor -The complaint of members of the track team against the decision of the Senate Committee on Athletics' fl \vhich forbade them to make their an nual entrance in the West Virginia even after they had surmount ed financial obstacles by offering tol make the trip in private cars, seems to us a fair and justified one. trend with the times, a fine spirit of co-operation has been mani fest among all Lion athletes where the question of effecting economics is concerned. If budgets must >be pared and* if even the most traditional en-j counters must be sacrificed insofar ‘Hs’Athletic association funds are con cerned, it seems only fair to allow our athletes to make their own provisions to; enter- meets, when they b ave ;-,f<jnough spirit to want to carry on €ycn against odds. The argument that such a move could not be condoned because of the “College’s responsibility to thc.par . ents” hardly applies more to this easel *- ihan if the trip were made in cars paid for by the Athletic association. At any rate, the offers to sign papers the College from any finan _aial responsibility in case of accidents I should have allayed worries from f. that source. liven more important than the ef fects the ruling had last week-end or on.the team’s chances in the Intercol .Jcgiates is the question of Whether it Hseto be regarded as a precedent in cases. Mr. Fleming’s intim-- ation that such will not be the case to say the least. + + + Quite the biggest thrill of the week end just past was the superb come back Charlie Speidel’s grapplers made against a favored Michigan- team that considered the match somewhat of a “set-up,” 'we understand. The en thusiasm the large and spirited crowd iSfelplayed is, we believe, just another ss prob£ of"our 'contentiori that. student interest / in‘;wiriter_ sports is becoming more evenly'divided. ' . ' r ' Official assurance that the College will expend every effort to make Pehn State again the site of the annual P. I. A. A. state championship basket ball game comes, as welcome nows to the hundreds who annually await this , schoolboy.cage classic. While this is only the first step in the trail that may bring the game here again/there js- just cause for optimism, for-the comments invoked by the staging of ilie game here last year wore highly favorable. ; , / -' i • ‘ Memories of that bitter 13-to-12 football -classic last fall should come - iip once 'more when Temple’s power ful* ,quii)tet;fakcs ‘tlV-f loo? at Recrcaf jtipn.’hail'to the Lions tomorrow, •jjight. • We’ve decided to be discreetly the result, 1 but we will jfrophesy' not only the severest test . thjxt' undefeated home floor record of Lion .winter sports teams has witness ed to date but' also, the best basketball, to’be seen this'year in,this hyar neck • of-the woods. 1 + + + This and That Joe Rubin, who went to school with three of Temple’s varsity five, doesn't want to be pessimistic, but' ... —S. H. B. “You Can Get It At Metzgers” Text Books—Both New and Used See Our WANT LIST of Text Books - We Pay CASH Cigarettes - 2 for 25c Furnished Apartment For Rent LION QUINTET TO Nittany Passers Will Seek Fifth Consecutive Victory Owls- Boast Lineup of Giants —Red Rosan Scoring Threat n y W. M. STEGMEIER Ml Seeking their fifth consecu tive win, Lion courtmen will at tempt to knotk the Owls of Temple from their high perch in the basketball world in Recrea tion hall at 7:30 o’clock tomor row night. As far as Recreation hall games are concerned the Cherry and White five will probably be the strongest competition the Lions will have to contend with during the remainder of the season. Temple has a big club, a fast club, and a good club. The en tire first string quintet boasts men towering at least six feet. Won 10 Games Out of thirteen games played so far this season, tomorrow’s opponents have garnered no less than ten vic tories. The three defeats were con tests played on foreign courts., Pitts burgh dropped them, 43-to-26, and New York University edged them out, 33-to-31. The Red* Devils had an off ■night when the Plaid of Carnegie se cured a 38-to-34 victory from them several weeks ago. Bucknell is scheduled to meet the Temple five at Lewisburg tonight. In the last game played between Owl and Lion courtmen, State had an easy time amassing a 53-to-27 score. Headed by Reds Rosan and Len Gudd, the Templars boast a squad list that sounds like a world beater. Ro san, a forward, is a steady performer who never seems to get ruffled, and, in addition, has Norry McFarlane’s habit of accounting for approximately fifteen to twenty points a game. Gudd, is the only four-letterman in Temple’s history. As a forward and center, Len has been a mainstay in basketball for the last two years. In cidents, he also plays end during the grid season, and helps out the Owl track and baseball teams in the spring. . 3' Played in High School , Three of Temple’s starting lineup, Rosan, Brown, and Frieburg, guards, were team-mates at Southern high Jp_T?hilade.lpliia v ' Arid r this in-eanV”mor<y. tbart : ;ihe‘Vfact that they didn’t need to be introduced: Temple has one of the smoothest working clubs the school has .ever known. This is, simply because, .the majority of their squad plays the same type of .basketball, always has, and probably always will. - • According; to Temple news l-eloases, A 1 Liebensperger, a six-foot five-inch lad, is sure to get the tap. At that size, we’re almost inclined to agree with them.- ' The usual combination of McFor lane, McMinn, Henning, Conn, and Thomas will start for State. The Lafayette ~ fracas last week was enough to convince even the most skeptical of Coach Leslie’s squad that basketball teams need plenty of prac tice. ' The Lions had had almost a r week layoff because of the mid-semes ter period;- however, intensive drill .was' resumed Thursday. Opponents’ Scores BASKETBALL r • •. Penn—33; Cornell—2l • Duquesne—33; West Virginia—3o Ohio State—4l; Army—2s . •Western Reserve—4o; Carnegie—33 BOXING Army—4»/ 2 ; C. C. N. Y.— 2/ 2 New Hampshire—3; Yale—3 WRESTLING Navy—22; Michigan—6 Lehigh—24; Syracuse—G GYMNASIUM < Army—42; Temple—l 2 Baseball Aspirants Begin Indoor Drill Although the opening of baseball season is still two months distant, Coach Joe Bedenk will begin indoor practice for candidates for the var iety nine this week. As in former years, the candi dates will work out in the first floor corridors of Recreation hall, limit ing their activities to throwing and general “limbering-up” exercises. 1936 CAGERS WIN FIRST MAJOR TILT Yearlings Down Dickinson Seminary By 42-to-26 Score—Andrews Stars ’for Freshmen Holding a sixteen-point margin gained in the first half, freshman courtmen defeated Dickinson Semin ary passers, 42-to-26, in ' Recreation hall Saturday afternoon. Coach Smith’s quintet was decided ly off form during the opening period and the score at half time was 21-to-o in favor of the Lion cubs. In the lat ter period of play the Williamsport five found the basket and matched the first-year men goal for goal until the end of the cojitest, the score for the second half being a 21-21 deadlock. [Playing both a defensive and offen sive role, Andrews, yearling guard, garnered ten points from the field and two from the free-throw line while holding his opponent scoreless. Close ly trailing the defense man for fresh man scoring honors, Scott.-and Knapp each contributed ten points, /labbits andßadis/ies Rabies andßouquefs Carrots and Cabbages // > ® all from an EMPTY UB! ILLUSION Right before your very eyes the man'of magic 'draws. rabbitsj yegerables, from'an rm/i/ytub! What an astonishing fellow he'iiii i EXPLANATION: The assorted rabbits, babies,-,carrots, bons and other magical “props’! are not-createdrby magic. The tub'has a false bottom that is conveniently displaced, and numberless wonderful things spring.fo life in the magician's nimble lingers. They do.liter ally “spring" because they are made to compress into the bottom of the tub, taking.their natural shape at the magician lifts them out. THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN EET TEMPLE HERE TOMORROW NIGHT GRAPPLERS DEFEAT MICHIGAN MATMEN Sweep Last 6 Bouts To Down Westerners, 22-to-8, in Hard-Fought Meet By riTlf. ROSENZWEHi *3* It was legs versus arms when the Wolverine-of the West grappled the Nittany Lion of thtf East. • But the powerful cross-rides, scissors and grapevines of the Michigan onslaught could not .. hold the. well-trained, squirming Lions, and Coach Charlie Speidel’s matmen breezed-to-another victory by the large margin of 22-to-8 | here Friday night.' j Michigan's Landrum and Oakley j easily subdued the first two Lions zo j step on the mats; TheYWolvorine 118- • pounder bewildered the inexperienced but powerful Dißito with a clever use of legs, while' Bob- Ellstrom, battling in poor condition, was by the veteran Oakley with a;body hold and arm lock in 3:5.5. , * Rosenberg Scores Rosenberg started things- off for the Blue and White, displaying his oid reliable form. Catching. Bob Helliwell. Michigan’s pride, in a bear-like grasp, Rosy , held the , straining Wolverine 135-pounder through a. series of at tempted somersaults and switch-backs to test truly the strength of a Lion, running up an advantage of five-min-, utes and ten seconds. Weakened by a. two-weeks' seige.of tho “flu" the Wolverine captain,-Blair Thomas, nevertheless, gave a. fine dis play of gameness, barely'keeping from being thrown by the calm and aggres sive Bill Cramer.. -In'the;lss-pound [class,.Johnstorf, a sophomore,,battling with the’ cockiness of a tested veter j-an, put on-a-spectacular nip-and-tuck I exhibition-with the Wolverine,-Mosiev, finally winning after *am‘ extra period Soutct: “Tricks and Illusions?' by Will Gclisioni E. P, Dutton & Co.' COLLEGE WILL SEEK TITLE COURT BATTLE Committee Explains Track Meet Ruling Tho College’s responsibility to the parents.was cited by the Senate Committee on Athletics as the rea son for prohibiting the Lion track men from traveling by private au tomobiles to Morgantown, W. Ya., to take their annual part in the West Virginia games Saturday. This decision will not necessarily set a precedent for other sports, Neil M. Fleming, graduate manag er of athletics, has intimated. Bad weather conditions, which will not usually prevail during the season of spring sports, was one -of the main causes affecting the ruling, he said.. . . by a. time advantage'of exactly one minute. / • v Ed Wilson, Michigan’s 165-pounder, came touted as the master of the art of scissoring, but he had little chance to show his stuff as Captain Mike Lor enzo, in his usual “smooth" style, quickly took him - in hand, winning with a 5:53 time advantage. Falls were recorded by the Nittany matmen in both the 175-pound and unlimited classes, Lou Krcizman throwing Bauss with a chancery and body hold, and “King” Cole flashing a definite form of class in pinning Spo den, Michigan’s power of strength. THOMAS SOLD TO ST. PAUL Myles. Thomas, former Lion hurlor now in professional baseball, will pitch with the St. Paul club of the Western association this year! Thomas -pitched with Hollywood of the Pacific Coast league last year, following five seasons in'the‘majors! Tricks are legitimate on the stage but not in business.jHere’s one that has been used in cigarette advertising...the illusion that blending is everything in a cigarette. explanation : Blending is important...but it makes a lot of difference what is blended, 'trior tobaccos canbeblendedto cover tir humble origin. But your taste soon its the trick. proper use of blending is to bring High School Basketball Finals, Track Meet Invited Here Definite assurance that the; College will encourage, the hold ing of interscholastic athletic tournaments here at the College came last week from Neil M. Fleming, graduate manager of athletics. . . | Accoi’ding to Mr. Fleming, an in i vitation offering the use of Recrca ! tion hall for the State high school basketball finals has already been sent ! to officials of the Pennsylvania Inter j scholastic • Athletic association. An effort is also being mndc-to bring the annual 'scholastic track meet to New Beaver field, he saitl. After .the title court contest in Rec reation hall last year, officials intim ated that' the final game would con tinue to be held here. Although the financial returns were not as much as expected, the figures were a good deal larger than they would have been in any other location, Mr. Fleming said. I If the game 3s held here, the scho -1 lastic officials should try to sched l ule the contest so that it will not con i flict.with either the National or East • ern Intercollegiate boxing tournament • which will be held March 17 and 18, the graduate manager safd. Satur day, May 4, is being kept open in case . the P. 1. A. A. decides to hold the track tourney here. Last year was the first time the playoff jn the school basketball tour nament was held here since 1928. Be fore-that year, it was customary to j hold, the-final elimination here as ani annual- affair. . j jfooESD out the full “round” flavor of mild, high grade tobaccos. It’s the costliness of the tobaccos, as well as the blending, that counts. fU&jP' It is a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. Hundreds of thousands of dollars have been spent by others in the attempt to "‘scover just how Camels are blended, blend is important, tut all the while Camel spends millions re for choice tobaccos... to insure your >yment. ight up a Camel. Relax, while the deli ; blue smoke floats about you. Enjoy the full the pleasure that comes from Her tobaccos. .eep Camels always handy...in the air t, welded Humidor Pack. - NO TRICKS JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS !N;A. MATCHLESS.,BLEND Page Three NITTANY MITMEN DEFEAT TARHEELS Boxers Gain 5'A -to-2 J/ 2 Victory Over North Carolina in First Dual Meet Jly CHARLES A. MYEUS Ml Three Lion boxers, at least, pave notice Saturday nijjht in the 5Va-to 2drubbing of the University of North Carolina that they will have plenty of ammunition ready when it comes to deciding: champions. Captain Johnny McAndrews, John ny Napoleon, and Tom Slusser all turned in dear cut decisions over Southern boxers who came North with fine records. Napoleon Wins Johnny Napoleon, with left jabs and right uppercuts to.the stomach, clear ly outpointed the undefeated Captain Levinson'in the first two rounds to gain the referee’s decision in the 125- pound bout. Johnny • Miller, in the bantamweight class, landed rights and lefts on Ivey, of the Tarheels, to give the Lions their first point. A hand injury kept Quarles, highly touted Tarheel lightweight out of the lineup, but Raymer was clever enough to overcomo the aggressiveness of “Red” Palasin. Captain Johnny Mc- Andrews showed that he will be ns dangerous in the 145-pound class as he was in i:>s, when he beat Lumpkin. “Mutt” Kessler, in his intercollegi ate debut, managed to eke out a draw with Giddens. experienced Tarheel 155-pounder. Tom Slusser evened an old score by gaining the decision over Brown, who almost knocked him out last year, in the 165-pound bout. Nobel displayed a good style in gain ing the nod over Parsons, Tarheel 175- pound entry. Landis, heavy-hitting North Caroiina knockout artist, could only gam a decision over Dick Wool . bert in the heavyweight scrap.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers