I Friday, January 11, n 3.4. Freddie Lion Athlete Will Fill Weak Spot in Team Former Blue and White TaCkle Changes His Mind About Army. By HARRY lIENDERSON The Lion Boxing team's chances for a more successful season loomed a bit brighted today when Johnny Houck, manager of the mitmen, announced that Freddie O'Neil was returning to school and, would be eligible for.inter collegiate ring 'competition. Fred:a second-string tackle on the Lion 'football team during the fall of 1933 and a junior, failed to return here last ,fall because he had hopes of getting into West Point. However things somehow didn't work out and Freddie changed his mind about entering the military institution. Consequently he is returning here next seinster. Freddie was a hard-working mem ber of the Lion ring team while he was here and showed considerable promise. ffe never fought any inter collegiate battles because he was unable to win over last year's ring Captain .Tommie Slusser in the prac tice sessions of the boxers. O'Neil's return is considered a definite step towards strengthening a Iveak spot in the line-up. His long reach often gave him the advantage over many opponents and he is ex pected by Lion fans to begin showing his reach and a lot of his punch be fore the Lion ring season closes. Harnai' Have Daughter Steve llamas, outstanding con tender for the world's heavyweight boxing' championship, announced the birth of a daughter, Kathryn Ann llamas, on December 5. Hillside Ice; :& Coal Co. Clear Sparkling Ice SCORED TO INSURE FULL WEIGHT • Dealers in the Highest Grades of * COAL Phone 136-3 SALE FRIDAYS TAR,TS The HUB, State College, • Pa■ SALE FRIDAY, STARTS JANUARY IIthJANUAY 1 AT 9A M FORCED TO S ' EL. . AT 9 R A M th $2O 000 Stock of Fine Merchandise at a Sacri fice! O'Neil Ek-Lion Will Join Boxers on Return Here Harlow Viewed as State's Most Famous Athletic Son; Harvard Publications Scoff Former Lion Expected To Restore One-Time Grid Prowess to Fading Crimson. By FRED W. WRIGHT, Sports Editor With the appointment of Harvard's new head football coach now definite ly a matter of record, Dick Harlow has beyond doubt become Penn State's most illustrious athletic son. Although Harlow's merited advance ment has aroused a flurry of comment from all of those persons connected with the sport, there is little doubtt, that' he will in one or two seasons accomplish just exactly, that for' which Harvard athletic authorities hired him—restore to the Crimson some of its one-time football prowess and meanwhile be' exemplary. as a gentleman in the style that affiliation which Harvard requires. , Also, it would be nice if more persons' , pur chased ducats to -Soldiers Field, Publications Flay Appointment . liarvard's two most important un dergraduate publications have been the chief factors in the skepticism and agitat/on following the appoint ment of trig ex-Lion coach. '”Where is Western Maryland?" the LaMpoon asks, while the Crimson charges that their new head coach has always been conneeted with colleges of somewhat shady character in the matter of re cruiting players. There isn't very much doubt, that the..charges of the Harvard under graduate publications are, in a. good many instances, true but they can never be officially ,substantiated. Giv ing Penn State due credit for drop ping the athletic scholarship hand out system-in 1927—far in advance of other colleges who gained all the credit—it is impossible to deny that coaches did and still. do proselyte. Harlow, either as head coach here in 1915, 1916, and 1917, or at Col- gate, Western Maryland, or V. P. 1., had a job to preserve, too. It seems pretty far-fetched to take any other stand on the question, es pecially when Bill Shepherd, the na tion's highest-scoring back, matricu lated at Western Maryland under Sir Richard the Lion Hearted when his home was only forty-two miles from State College. It may have been an exception, but most persons within that radius generally come here. There isn't very much doubt that Penn State attempted a little recruit ing when Shepherd was graduated from high school, although, of course, there aren't any records available to prove it. In this case, it is logical to assume that personality did the trick. Harlow has long been esteemed by his contemporaries on a basis of per sonal qualifications as well as his football acumen. Certainly a coach must have some very potent quali ties to bring an obscure Methodist college into the national football lime light, where only the greats like Har vard, Yale, Princeton, Columbia, Penn, Pitt, Army, and Navy are giv en welcome,- Is Noted Ornithologist Singularly enough, a Pend State graduate is chosen as head coach when 'Harvard decides to scrap their GO-year-old policy of having only bearers of its degree in charge of things athletic. But there is a catch to that, too. Harlow is not the or dinary coach who goes in for football an a grand scale and forgets the aca demic background and requirements of the profession: He is football's most noted ornithologist and ornithol ogy's most noted football exponent. Before the next year is out Harlow will probably have a degree from Harvard; they could award him an honorary degree right now without creating much commotion, in view of his ornithological studies which have taken him above the Arctic circle. It is only reasonable to predict that, given two years to exercise his per sonality and to study the best mode of play to use against Hariard's op ponents, Harlow will have old grads from 'O9 and the typical Harvard undergraduate pseudo-sophisticate bashing in hats on Saturday afteik noons. And when that state of af fairs is reached there will• be few people indeed who will give second thought, about the charges floating around now. Harvard, State Policies Compared Bill Corum, writing In the Evening Journal in New York, springs to the aid of this College with "I stand will , ing to wager ... that, let . 9s say, Penn State, can show a record quite as lily white as Harvard's. Particu larly over the last five years." Back to Harlow: His successful coaching is in a great measure due to his willingness to change set systems and suit or modify them to the type of player he •Itas to work with. In addition, Harlow trekked to New York for every home game the Giants played and says he learned a lot. In this neck of the woods, there 'has been no little comment about the rather strained relations which ex isted between Harlow and Penn State d•hen the former went to Colgate. To Harlow's everlasting credit, he did not reply to the Harvard ueder graduate attacks made upon him. Harlow once squabbled with the gentlemen of Harvard after his team had been out-scorebooked, 13-0, on October 31, 1915, but it did little good, and he has apparently become older• and wiser since then. Apparently, his wiseness is going to be kept by Har vard for a long time to come, since Harvard authorities gave every in dication that they were planning to do away with year-to-year contracts. And now it's rumored about that J. Neil (Skip) Stahley, also an ex., Lion and at present coaching at the University of Delaware, will accom pany Sir Richard as an assistant coach. Stahley has denied the rumor, but he seems to know quite a lot about the situation in Harvard. THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Famous Athletic Son "DICK" HARLOW 'l2 Fencers Will Engage 5 Schools This Year Crossing swords with five schools this year, the Lion fencing team is whipping into shape for one of the most difficult seasons it has yet faced. The sworqsmen will clash blades at borne with Syracuse on February 23 and Cornell on March 2. Away meets are scheduled with Johns Hop kins on March 15 and Penn the next day in a two-day trip. A match with Rutgers is still pending. Headed by Captain Johnny Kreeger and Charlie Lipeczky, last year's cap tain,.the varsity (oilmen will swing into action with the support of a small but powerful 'squad. :Walt Storrs, last season letterman, and two sophomores, Ed Bowen and Bill Goo kin, who led last year in the fresh man tournament, will supply plenty of strength for the foil division. Although Lipeczky starred at saber last year, it is doubtful that he will enter the saber competition this year. Under his tutelage, Dick Allen and Dick Lewis are working steadily on the heavy blades. In epee combat, Kreeger, Lipeczky, and Storrs will probably lead the attack, with Carl Brodhun in reserve. ' Penn and Johns Hopkins, both tra ditionally well-drilled teams, offer the toughest oppositiori of the season. Last year, the Lions lost to a swift Penn team by a single point, and de feated Rutgers by a good margin, ending the season with a recognized place in intercollegiate competition. She-Lions Delta Gamma's victory over Alpha. Omicron Pi . was- . the • outstanding event of the basketball playing at Roe hall Monday night., The game was closer than the 35-t0.21 score would indicate. .Kappa Alpha Theta retained a lead on the white team by' defeating a strong Downtown Girls group 40-to-13. Theta Phi Alpha, sur prisingly enough, won from Gamma Phi Beta with a 30-to-23 score. How ever, with Peg Abraham scoring 32 points, Delta Gamma overwhelmed Theta Phi Alpha on Tuesday. Three of the seven scheduled games were forfeited. The Thetas, , with an imposing ag gregation that includes Libby Shaf fer, Bets Walter, Peg Campbell, and Harriett Brakeman, stand at. the head of the blue team. They probably ivill retain their lead unless Chi Omega comes forward with an unexpected strength to defeat them. This is rather doubtful•. Delta Gamma, with four Phys Ed majors, namely Peg Abraham, Ruth Lonberger, Dot Hennicke, and Maria Weber, won the lead on the white team with their defeat of Alpha Omi cron Pi. The group has an undefeat ed record, and they are the most seri ous contenders for the intramural ehampionship Scheduled games are: Monday, Roe hall, 7:15 Chi Omega vs. Downtown Girls Alpha Chi Omega vs. Itappa Alpha Theta Theta Phi Alpha vs. Alpha Omicron Pi Delta Gamma vs. Phi Mu Downtown Dorms vs.-Kappa Kappa Gamma Gamma Phi Beta vs:Grange Tuesday, Armory, 9:15 Phi Mu vs. Woman's. Building Wednesday, ArinorY, '7:15 Alpha CM Omega vs, Downtown Girls Kappa Kappa Gamma vs. Mae • Delta Gamma vs.Gazahia Phi Beta Fencing instructions, at 3 and 4 o'clock every afternoon in the Home Cagemen Outfight Owls, Lose, 3335, In Extra Session Lions Stage Comeback From Penn Defeat; Lead Throughout. The widely-heralded dribblers from the Owl school who journeyed up here Wednesday night fora "breather" in their schedule lost quite a number of their fine feathers before their finally managed to eke out a 35-to-33 deci sion in an extra-period onslaught with the Lion courtmen. The Temple team won the game, but that fact is quite incidental. What is significant is that the Nittany Lion could stage such a fierce comeback from the drubbing it took from the Penn quintet, which team was sup posed to be decidely inferior to the Owl team. It took the Temple courtm2n about thirty-five seconds to learn that in stead of meeting a set-up, they had bumped into an enraged Lion's lair. At the opening whistle Stocker and Co. whirled into action, met the Owls at their own game, and held a scant but , hard-earned lead for practically all of the fray. In the last minute of 1 the regular period Messikomer, Tem ple guard, scooped up a fumble and dribbsd twenty yards to score, making it 31-to-30. Fifteen seconds later Frank Smith got loose and seemed all set to score the winning goal when the sleek .Rosan leaped his sturdy frame. Smith was awarded two free shots for being fouled and make one of them, tying the game. In the extra period the Owls grabbed an early lead and by finesse, managed to hold the two-point lead until the end. Juniata Here Tomorrow Though the Lions lost the Temple game, their sudden display of feroci ousness gave rebirth to confidence and enthusiasm among the followers of the sport. A much more optimistic gathering will assemble when the Lions meet Juanita in Recreation hall tomorrow night at 7:30 o'clock. The Juanita courtmen are coming here ,after an engagement with Elizabeth tonight. The only other team which they will have met is Wit. tenberg, who defeated them by a three-point margin before the Christ mas holiday. Since that game, the line-up has been re-vamped and is re ported to be much more_efficient.., The probable starting line-up for the Huntingdon team will be: Jae Daher and Frank Kepler, forwards; Merle Garner at the tip-off post; and Mel Wenger and Captain Babe Mat lack at the guard positions. The Lion line-up will remain the same except that Bar Riley may start in Hunter's place. .They Won By a Nose I Fl rd. TI Penn State F. Stocker (C.) ___ 5 0 F. Fletcher r•. J. smith u 3 C. Hunter 0 1 2 C. Riley 0 2 4 G, Korniek 5 0 5 G. P. Smith 3 2 7 Total . 33 Temple F. Rosan 3 2 7 F. Fox 1 3 7 F. Brown ( 2 1 4 F. Dubin 0 2 4 F. Greenberg 0 0 0 C. Jcuenger 2 1 4 G. Messikomer 0 2 4 G. Fricberg (C.) __ 0 1 22 C. Casper 1 1 Total 35 Officials: Wallace and Bolster, of Pittsburgh. (V.O.P. Pinch-Flitting For C.M.S.) Ec building, are progressing quietly. Manager Eddie Oglevee says. that the novices at the sport are progressing rapidly. There is no varsity team or fanfare of publicity for this activity, but in terest' and enthusiasm for it is grow ing steadily. The student instruc tors in the sport arc Earle Keyser, Seva Kozitzky, John Kreeger and Walter ,Storrs. DRINK SILVER TOP THE TAP ROOM i South Allen Street _ l Int&class Wrestlers To Determine Team Prowess, Individual Champions in Tourney Tomorrow; Seniors Expected To Take Meet By N ANCE The gravy of the College's beef twisters will be determined tomorrow afternoon when the wrestling repre sentatives of the four different classes clash in Recreation hall at 2:30 o'- clock in the annual interclass grap plang During the preliminaries, two meets will be going on simultaneously on different mats. The freshmen will meet the juniors and the sophomores will meet the seniors. The sixteen men, two in each weight division, will tussle immediately afterward for the individual championships. The team winning the greatest number of points, probably the senior congrega tion, will capture the tournament. The eliminations for the positions on the various class teams have been going on all week, but only the senior team is definitely decided. The sen iors will be represented by Dißito, Ross, Horvath, Civitts, Cruiser, John ston, Zimmerman, and Yoder. Three juniors who are fairly certain of po sitions on their team are Wolfson, Light, and Waite. The satellities of the freshman class are Economes, 165 pounds, and Slumlord, heavyweight. Intramural Pugilists A large part of the first round of the intramural boxing jamboree was staged Wednesday night. The time for the final rounds has not been de cided definitely as yet. The brawny belters who came out on top Wed nesday are: 125 Pound Class Joe Corriols 37, independent. William Bowers '3S, Alpha Chi Sig ma. David Minnick '36, independent 35 Pound Class Eugene Wolf, Alpha Chi Rho. FINE PORTRAITS Deserve Fine Frames ' Metals and silver in gold—reasonably priced The P EN N QTATE HOTO vJA - 10 P 212 East College Avenue State College vsSCOVE 'I ' PERzz Distributed by W. R. HICKEY State College Page Three l'kCK 112 D Paul Hagerty 'fiS, independent. Richard Stenmiler '36, Alpha Chi Sigma. Gregg Thompson '3S, independent 115 Pound Class Sheldon Tones '36, Sigma Pi. Harry Miller '35, Pi Kappa Phi .Saverio Donato '3B, independent Bob Griffith '3B, independent. 155 Pound Class Leroy Sunday '37, Phi Delta Theta Peter Oleny '3B, Pi Kappa l'hi. 165 Pound Class Dick Maurer '304 Phi Delta Theta Albert ochroch '37, Sigma Tau Phi Coach Calls Aspirants For 1935 Indoor Track Track Coach Charles "Chick" Wer ner has issued a call for varsity and freshman indoor track candidates in preparation for the most extensive indoor track season ever scheduled for a Penn State team. Several runners have been work ing out for over a month and addi tional candidates may report at the varsity locker room in Recreation hall any afternoon at 1:00 o'clock, Coach Werner said. On February 9, Penn State will take part in the West Virginia Invi tation meet at, Morgantown, W. Va., and on February 24, the Catholic Uni versity Invitation meet at Washing ton, D. C. A team will be sent to the Intercollegiates which will be held this year on March 4. An indoor dual meet with Cornell is pending. Phone 1517