Tuesday; February. 28, .1933 Between the Lions b with ' . The Sports Editor ..i Student Board’s decision to take -action against those who violate Penh ‘State’s code of sportsmanship by boo ing at athletic contests seems thor oughly justified utter' the outbreaks .that occurred ‘Saturday night despite ?the piea voiced . by "Bez” Friday against such a practice. Even the sad spectacle losing a home boxing meet for the first time in three years presents no ' excuse for an obvious “sour grapes” attitude towards the .victors. If we can’t continue to win Mike champions, we most certainly 'should make every effort to continue losing like gentlemen. . .J - ♦ T- ,+ :: That'great rally the basketball .team Staged to nose.out Carnegie Tech was just what the crowd needed ,to send happy after the cheerless rang encounter and- the ragged con ijpit-_the~gameTirnPbeen up to those; ffchal few minutes.. What threatened ,to,become a disappointing ending to a fine home cage season was- turned ’..’if into a thrilling victory when the team flashed some of its old-time form to come from behind and nose out the Plaid. + + +. While we are thoroughly in favor of having freshman teams meet ex tension school squads in pre-season practice games, the woeful lack of competition in giving such a game a placo on the regular card was all too ' evident in Saturday’s game, • listed • as. a replacement when the Carnegie.! ycftrlings could not come here. How ever, with all due.respect for the fine ‘spirit the extension athletes displayed In the face of disheartening handi - caps, we’re afraid that carding .such teams for regular games as a policy means aggravating the lack of com-j petition already' apparent - under ••shortened schedules. • —S. H. B. Wrfon, } < ! ' ENERGY FOOD! YOU GET yourmoney’s worth when you order Shredded Wheat. It’s all of Nature's great energizing food;;. whole wheat. Nothing added, nothing taken away. Just golden brown, bis cuits of whole wheat, ready-cooked, ready to eat, delicious and easy to digest. A treat you’ll never tire of; a well-bal anced meal, with milk or cream and fresh, or preserved fruit. And.a sustaining-meal that will help«you, SAVE MONEY! At aU campus eating places. • . When you see Niagara Tails on the package,you KN OW, you have Shredded Wheat. QSSfiP SHREDDED WHEAT ALL THE WHEAT . . . ALL THE BRAN < ' THE NATURAL ENERGY FOOD MADE BY NATIONAL biscuit COMPANY Uneeda Baker* Passers No LIONS STAGE LATE RALLY TO TRIUMPH McMinn, McFarlane Lead Uphill Fight in Last Home Game For Nittany Five By W. M. STKfiMEIKK Ml Recreation hall rocked Saturday night with the screams of over seven thousand tensely nervous fans who witnessed the Lions complete the most successful home season enjoyed hy a Blue and White cage club in years. The heroic State team staged a late rally that snatched victory from under tho very noses of the touring Tar tans of Tech. When the final gun sounded, the Nittany passers found themselves on the long end of a 30-to -27 score. , With, but Tour minutes to go, the Leslie-coached men trailed Carnegie, 22-to-26. Three clean-cut foul shots by Doe Conn and .Norrie McFarlane mado the score 25-to-26. ’ But the Skibos still led. It was then that McMinn and Norrie turned the win ning tide definitely toward the Blue and White by cutting the .cords for two-pointers. The contest ended with Henning and Silverman augmenting the close score with foul shots. McMinn, Conn Make' Exit In downing the Tartans, the Lion five established a Recreation hall rec ord of seven wins in eight home games, a feat which-was accomplished by a few State cage units in the days when the Armory floor was in use, but not since basketball activities were moved •to Recitation hall. Both the Car negie and the Nittany tossers were just a bit off their usual form, but the rough and tumble playing which en sued only added to the excitement of the evening. For Ed McMinn and aeting-Captain Conn, it was a final chance to exhibit •their-cage prowess before a Recrea tion.hall audience. And.their exit was a brilliant one; Ed was high scorer with ten points and Doc had seven to his' credit. . True to-form, McFarlane ran up a total of nine points- while Henning, secured the remaining four of State’s thirty. Opponents 9 Scores BASKETBALL * Army—s 7; Bucknell—l4 Temple—3s; Carnegie Tech—2s e Out Carnegie Tech, 30-27; Wrestlers Down Cornell,’ls-9 | Last. Minute Work | Sl T ™ T - DEFEAT HOUCKMEN 0 0 10 i 2 :t <\' a 5 « ? Lion Mitmen Lose. First Home Cl 0 • -- Contest in 3 Tears by aVi-ia-Z/i Score . McFnrtnnc, f. Thomas, f. Henning, c. McMinn. g. Conn. g. Witlum, c .. 10 HI 17 CARNEGIE TEfH-27 K.IfJ VIC. I'IT |*t« :i 1 l 7 J J J J By CHARLES A. MYERS Ml i i 2 :t A'lons: standing record—one which o o o « boasted that the Lion boxers had not 0.0 n « been defeated in their home ring since o ” j ii a Navy victory three years ago—fell -- -7 Saturday night when the Orangemen Score at lluff" timV—l'onn state. !i; Carl of Syracuse hung five Lion'skins on neirie Tech. ii. their belts to win, 5V6-tO-2 l /6. Referee —Witwor. Umpire— IlayholT. Syracuse’s superiority in the heavier Jujjnow, f. Smith, f. b'tentx. v. KvjritU;*, u. Ittar. k. Sivwil, ir. Kwult. <• Cnrlson. r. Silverman, u. GYM TEAM LOSES TO TEMPLE, 38-16 round of the IGS-pound.setto and then took a right jolt 'to the jaw after Lions Gain 2 First', Second Places j forty-one seconds of the second canto which laid‘him cold on the canvas. . In his first intercollegiate fight, Harry Balthaser felt prey- to the right and left hooks of the experienced' Against More Experienced Owls in Initial Meet Although they found their Owl op- Syracuse 175-pound- Veteran, Balash, ponents a bit too experienced for am Reteree Grayber- stopped .the them, Nittany. Lion gymnasts made °no minute and thirty-seven an encouraging showing in their first £® c p n< k the second,round. Mahlon, meet of the season Saturday, captur- Heist ; outweighed nearly forty-five ing two first places and as many sec- oun^ s oe Vavra,-lasted haif ond places to trail the Philadelphians, first round of the unlimited bout. 38-to-IG. Napoleon Wins- Captain .Marty Hesch accounted for 'Lion sti-ength in most of the.lower half of the Lion points, finishing brackets, however, was evident. Bur ahead of Statz and Michelek of Tern- ket, aggressivd Syracuse bantam pie in the side horse event, and plac- weight, saw his undefeated record laid ing second in the parallel bar test, away with the moth balls when he which was won by Brod of Temple, took on Johnny Napoleon,; who was Pete Lektrick-climbed the twenty- fighting in the 115-pound class.. ; , foot rope in five and four-fifths sec onds to give the Nittany representa tives a first place in thdt event, and Don Masters contributed three points with a second in tumbling. Temple made a clean sweep of the Ferrero took the first, round and tied three places in the horizontal bar*and the last to. draw with. Robbins, flying ring event, Brod, Captain Captain Johnny McAndrews pev- Webb, and Braverman placing in that sistently rocked Button’s. Tiead' with order in the horizontal bar competi- straight lefts to win the welterweight tion, and Webb, Statz, and Michelek fight by a decisive margin. Alex finishing one, two, three on the flying Turnbull, boxing in Kessler’s - usual rings. Braverman won the tumbling place at 155-pounds, proved-that’he-is to give the Owls first places in four a welcome addition to .the Lion ring of the six events. team by putting up a,whale of a fight i) icon G^ester/te/ds SaMsfy a ift •‘-w". 1 ■ TT THENsmokerskeepbuyirigthe t V same cigarette day after day... ’ it’s a pretty good sign that they’re getting what they want... mildness, better taste —a smoke that’s always the same. ; So we’re going right on making Chesterfields just as we always have . . . selecting -choice, ripe tobaccos . . . ageing them . . . blending' and cross-blending them... making them into cigarettes in- the most scientific ways that are known. As long as we do these things we know that smokers will continue to say,“They Satisfy”. For that’s what people are saying about Chesterfields. , If you smoke, why not find out about them? A package or two will tell you the whole story. C liestffHeld THE PENN STATE. COLLEGIAN. SYRACUSE BOXERS weights gave her the meet without a shadow of doubt. With the score tied at 2 , ( 6~t0-2V& f “Mutt” Kessler fought- Negroni fairly evenly in the first. Mike Zeleznock, 125-pounder,' ■went three close rounds-with national collegiate champion A 1 ■ Wertheimer, but the Orangeman’s' superior v boxing gave him. a clear-cut decision. Paul SPRING GRID PRACTICE TO START TOMORROW Candidates Will Begin Outdoor Training Next Week Ily fJEOIMiK A. SCOTT Ml The opening gun in the 1933 Nit tany Lion football campaign will sound tomorrow afternoon when var jsily candidates meet in Varsity hall I at 4:30 o’clock to answer Coach Bob [Higgins’ announcement that spring football practice will start imme diately. j Tomorrow night’s meeting, as well tas similar sessions on Thursday and ! Friday'afternoon, will be devoted to !?. discussion of new plays and forma tions which Higgins plans .to introduce with, the 1933 season. Weather per mitting, outdoor drill will.begin Mon day, afternoon and will continue for a six weeks’ period, the Lion mentor has announced. • N • • . Expect Big Turnout I “I’m expecting between one hundred jand one hundred and twenty-five men lout for spring, practice this year l ,’’ Higgins declared. “The training per iod will be devoted to a complete study of, fundamentals as well as practice games, so that we’ll' be ready to stave right off-on the more advanced work next fall.” “Spring practice has proved es pecially.valuable hero in the past .in developing future varsity players from men who had little experience in the gamo. before entering college. Prac tice this spring will include several in ter-squad games, : t.o give newcomers to the squad some playing experience be-i fore the regular season opens.” I ; “Spike” Leslie, who served as Hig-j gins' assistant'last-fall, NelsWalko! and’"Doc” Davis, freshman coaches,! and Marty McAndrews will assist Hig-1 gins--in -the spring-workouts, with! Charlie'Spefdel serving. ‘as trainer. -I against. Ross, who moved up a weight when -Captain-Joe Moran failed to make .'the'trip*' j € know it. . ;? If Calls Candidates ' ■ ,y Coach tytGGtMS ’36 CAGERS DOWN EXTENSION SCHOOL Coach Lochs Uses I-l First-Year .Men ' Ir. r».Mo-10 Victory Over Wilkes-Barre Five Completely outclassing: their oppon ents, freshman courtmon laid down a barrage of baskets to overwhelm the Wilkes-Barre Extension School passers, 5-1-to-10, in Recreation hall Saturday afternoon. Fourteen first-year cagers saw ser vice during the tilt with numerous cub substitutions featuring the con test _ after the. first quarter, which ended 11-to-0 in favor of the. 11)36 The yearling eagcrs led, halftime when the first re-entered the game, and courtmen. 21-to-7, at string five changed the totals to 37 and 8 respec- j When the Nittanymen met the Red tivcly by the close of the third quar- i grapplers last year “King" Cole lost ter. i the-heavyweight match to allow the Substitutes finished the tilt, adding j Bears to tie the Blue and White. This fifteen points to the third quarter to- \ year with the same result imminent, tal while holding the extension five to; he persevered with-a large time ad tv single field goal. .'vantage over Cornell’s Cobb. Page Three LORENZO DEFEATED IN EXTRA PERIODS Rosenberg, Johnston, Kreizman, Cramer, Cole Register Lion Victories »>• it. it. kosknzwkh; mi I Tested to the limit by a strong Cor j nell Bear, the. Nlttany Lion further I asserted his claim to wrestling su periority by overcoming the Red j grappling team by a 15-to-9 score at | Ithaca Fri