,7•4lskariti,r, Boaz Cobb On Deans. List Through a mistiike in depart mental, records, 'the name of J Stanley, Cobb, Jr, mechanical engineering; was omitted from the deatVe list in a recent issue of the Collegian. '.. The , Broadway Success ‘"The World We Live lit" Coming, Friday, Sa'order 3 t• N t _ , • I r • • MADE-TO-MEASURE t'• EXHIBIT Showing all' the" neW smart *oleos and' today's, styles for Business, Sports, Town, Coon :tffrand Formal wear :Wedneiday Thursday 'March 13th March- 14th I MR. SAM MAIMS. Men's. fashion stylist and cue tam fitter, will be here during bis'event Let him show you 'the secret of looking better with the RIGHT kind of cloth ifig VON'S "'MEWS SHOP j 122 S. Alien Street _ 1' ' -.' AWE WEEK . . quid,. you win be going home for your' Easter vacation Now is ithe time to. start thinking about your CLASS RING A class ring' Is something' you wilt always value It, may be mounted with, fraternity crests if desired' , . So remember that when you go home this vacation, first thing on I th'@ list-is to talk'with. your mother and dad about of daring your ',lcrlAss RING as, soon as you come back. ~ ~,, I. GrA E LF R OU lie R eti :/ e BR A A ss N ' C R H IN O G FFICE AT THE LOCATED IN SAUERS-109, S. ALLEN ST Ilb . , ~ , ' j6ep ,yoyr., floors,-and furniinre okind - like new. 'Buy your wax [arid brushes,atclhe—l - , FRATERNITIES- College Itardiare Co. CORNER OF COLLEGE , fttiFRAZIER, , . • ' -A •A .', : . , . , _ - ' = - It'S,THE SECOND ANNUAL „ . .. , , -, . ~ : 1 , • . ~ , ~ . • , . f , A . % A A A . • / A - 1 A A • A A . ; '• - A I ' i ' , , 1 ' , , Lt, ' - - - - , , , THE CAMPUS - OWLS • , , I i t ' ' ' ', , ' . . , , „ FRIDAY, MARCH 15 ,• , , , ..._,,... '- 2 . Wchickilloo Moed , .a, Semi Formal , ' ' Rea Hid . , Sic lOi Tax and Checking ' Dancing 9 fill I , ~.• I ncluding , „ ~...‘ , . . . , ~,i... ' ' ' teiYourteve-PoJencyoklhel(lSSO-METER . in 175=Pound Crown s Engineers Cop EIWA Mdem Matmen , Finish. In 3-Way Deadlock With Penn, Cornell; Frank Gleason Is Dethroned By Levering Of Penn Scalzothips Elbow In Dropping Semi-Final; Bout As RohreplsStoppediln 2nd Round; Alexander, Hess, King ; Valle Lose In Preliminapy Matches By 808 LANE Lehigh won the Eastern Intercollegiate wrestling - crown at Syra cuse on Friday and Saturday, but the spirited Engineers failed to pre vent the Manny Lions from grabbing a slice of glory, Captain Hortz saw to that After seven Lion teammates had been eliminated, the blond State leader entered the finals against Lehigh's Dick Brenneman, PlAAkirg, and garnered the only Nittany Lion championship when he handed ;Brenneman a decisive lacing in the 175-pound clash, During the first three minutes of the light-heavy title bout, neither grappler was able to seem e the ad vantage. t In the'second•three-rninute per iod Bort? chose the ,defensiveand escaped , to a neutral position im mediately The Engineer dived for ltrnie's leg, and returned to the ad vantage with one minute remain ing in the second' period Id the thud three-minute ses sion, Bortz took control from the referee's position and dominated throughout the entire. stanza Bortz was riding his opponent at the bell Referee Thrush and Judges' Vol ute ands Cole decided that Bortr 'did not merit the decision at this point and called for two two-mirf- Me overtime periods Any doubt that may have existed at the - end of the regular session was removed in the extra-period', as Born , pasted Brenneman all over the-mat to take the decision and the gold medal that goes to an Jn tercollegiate champion 13 ti.s tern Intercollegiate king, Frank Gleason was dethroned from his 136-pound pedestal in a sur- 1 prising loss to Pennsylvania's semd , ational Bill Levering Levering Continued On Page 4 The Broadway, ,Success "The World ,, We Live In" Fri. and Sat. Evenings / IOO ID I Igthe' L e `to4l, "*s.;•;,to Syracuse Chosen As' Site 01 , 1944 ELBA. Tournament Syracuse was selected as the site of the 1941 Eastern Intercol= legiate Boxing Association tour nament-at. an, Association meet ing Saturday morning. Charles Havens. athletic direc tor at Western Maryland. , was elected president of the Assam- tion to succeed Neil M. Fleming, graduate manager of athletics. Other officers chosen were L. P. Andrews. Syracuse, vice-pres ident, and Louis Hibbs, Army. secretary-treasurer. Membership in the Association was granted to the University of Virginia. Ice Hockey Team Faces Lafayette Lions Blank Tartans At Johnstown Saturday By ED McLORIE Whether Penn State's ice hockey team is saving the best for last will be determined when the • Lions meet Lafayette in their final sched uled, league encounter in Hershey tonight after blanking Carnegie Tech, 4-0, in Johnstown Saturday If the State puckmen win to night, they will gain the right to enter the playoff for the league trophy with the first place Penn outfit and the second place Her shey Junior Bears Saturday's game - saw the Lions at their best -with Center, Johnny DuffOrd and Goalie Larry Light body starring. Dufford t a llie d twice for the State team, while Lightbody again was outstanding on the defensive Johnny also was credited with an assist The summary Penn State-4 - Carnegie-0 C—Dufford . Ament LW—Gates . . Block RW—Margerum Sctulawske Sivacheck . Wilson Feller LD—Wolbert RD—bowler G—Lightbody Penn State . 1' _1 2-4 Carnegie . 0 0 0-0 Scoring— , First period:—Dufford, assisted by Gates - Second period—Gates, assisted by,Dufford , Third period—Dufford, unassist ed, Margerum, unassisted Spares—Penn State, DeLong, Er win, Herrick, Matula, Bowman, Bachman, Bittner,. JOhnson, Gar rett; Carnegie Tech, Burleigh, Buchanan, Ely, Herre, Church, Tross, G Wilson. Because of the war, no Rhodes scholarships will be granted in 1940 - Eugene H. Lederer REAL ESTATE 114 E. Beaver Ave. Dial 40611 State Canner ST'AI".I"S,-C0LLZC.4..4.11 Between The Lions With SOB WILSON Sportibrial Like locking, the barn after the horse has gone, this piece will probably only be words wasted. But I for one leer that something should be said about the animosity which exists athletically between Penn State and Syracuse Univer sity. The whole, otten mess started nearly a decade ago—back in 1931 and 1932 when Al Lewis, Jimmy's big brother, was knocking 'em cold Or the glory pf. Old' State j College' boxing was stilt its, infancy as far as Penn State and Syracuse were concerned, and the fans who followed it were tacitly adults who held the sport little beb. ter than aglorifiedamateur boxing show. • Knock-ern-down, drag -em - out melees were the vogue then, and if there wasn't at least a pint of blood spilled during the progress of eight bouts the match was con sidered a miserable failure It's a pretty picture I'm painting, but you should hear Al Lewis talk about it To get back to the' story, when Penn State first started to box at Syracuse, 90 per cent.o£ the crowd' who patronized the matches were sanguinary Syracuse townspeople with Robespierre complexes. Few students ever attended the bouts. From the athletic angle, Penn State and Syracuse have been very evenly matched in almost every sport as long as the two schools have met Nearly every event between them has been hard fought and bitterly-drawn Boxing was no different And when a Penn State boxer happened' to win a close decision at. Syra cuse- back in the days when the sanguinary 90 per cent ruled ' the roost, booing and hissing , nearly always resulted. The Penn State men brought these stories back to the campus with them and when Syracuse teams came to State , thereafter, the I student body would invariably greet them and send them home with an assortment of , raspberries that would shame and outclass any county fair or grange exhibit the Nittany Valley has ever seen That all began , back in 1931 and it has grown steadily worse ever since, especially in boxing. Typical of the demonstrations that have followed , almost every State-Syracuse meet was the one that followed the Scally-Woycies jes bout in flee Hall Saturday night No one will deny that Scally fought a beautiful fight against the Syracuse champ, but who will deny that the demonstration would not have occurred had Scally lost to an Army 'man, or a Yale man, or a Cornell mans I said in,the beginning that com ing now, this article would prob ably be a waste'ot effort. Breaking down the wall of hatred that the iwo schools have built 4between each other is like trying to light a candle in monsoon. - , One thinV , ls certain; however H animosity continues to rear ifs ugly head between Penn State and Syracuse, at Is my giaess that the athletic ties connecting the two schools will be severed once and for all And if boxing' , was found , basic ally to blame for e the, increasing, ill-will between the- two. institu. lions, think what a, death blow could be dealt college boxing in general. .., ' ~. Approximately 100 teams from ,11 states are entering the debate tourney , sponsored by St. Paull College of St. Thomas and College of St. Catherine Thirty-one graduates of the de partiment, of metallurgy of the ,class of '39, are now employed in ;industry. II BUM CHAMPIONS 'CAPTAIN MIKE COOPER JIM LEWIS Referee Proposes Meet Forlastern Mit Title An eastern boxing champion ship meet between the winners of the east's two intercollegiate tournaments was proposed Sun day`bY Joe McGuigan, Philadel phia, referee, who handled the weekend Intercollegiates - here and'who will referee the Eastern Inteicollegiate Boxing Confer ence,tournament at Bucknell on Thursday and Friday. McGuigan proposed that the eight, winners of each tourna ment; meet annually in some large city where they could in crease, the interest in and the popularity of the college boxing as well as determine the east's undisputed champions. Schools which belong to the ElBCogroup are Bucknell. Mich iganiState, Rutgers, Temple and West, Virginia. Cooper, Mike Bests Lavendusky Goodman. Trophy Boxei Fiddled* With Past The man who hasn't played a fiddle for 10 years-had' the hap piest moment of his life on Sat urday night His shrill voice rang out in Rec Hall and told the crowd co The captain of Pen _ State's boxing team had Just won the Eastern Intercollegiate 127 pound boxing championship, his points had clinched the team victory for Penn State, he had Just received the Frank Goodman Trophy awarded annually to Penn State's most outstanding boxer, and , he had Just accepted - the Baltimore Sun Boxing Trophy, which his team had permanently relegated to , the Rec Hall trophy case "He had one thing'more He had. decisively beaten a tall, friendly cadet from Army named Walter Lavendusky. Lavendusky hadn't been beaten before this year. In three years he and Mike Cooper (the hero of this story) had fought five times before, twice in the finals of the MBA tourney Lavendusky won every time But in_this last meeting Cooper had finally figured Lavendusky He led with his left, rushed in to punch, and tied the cadet up or darted away before he could re turn the fire. He had won In the last round the cadet had tried evetything he knew to no avail Cooper used to play the violin He says Jokingly he can also play the piano and the sax Once, the Joke goes, he had an audition with Russ Morgan's orchestra before it hit the big time. What a Joke that a little guy like that should be a boxer. What a.Jolce that he should. be the only guy this year to beat Lavendusky + + + Lewis Hatt To- Win To Keep, Up With , Clan Al was on one side Lib was on the other. Sis was back home in Washington, Pa Al had been national 145 pound boxing champion at Penn State in 1932 and was twice eastern champion Lib had been an All- American football player at Car negie Tech. Sis was better than any of them She was the boss of the family What can you do in a family like that 9 Jim Lewis knew the answer He had to be a champion, too So he stepped out into the ring and a couple of minutes later he was back in the locker room with the EISA tournament's biggest upset under his belt He had dethroned the defending 165 pound champ ion in the first bout But Jim still wasn't a champ /on He took care of that next night, Saturday. In an anti-cli ' max he pushed through to the championship over a not-too strong contender whom he had beaten in a dual meet earlier this Tear He has a season record of six wictories, one defeat (in a dual meet from the man he later de throned), and two draws. He also has a year of boxing ahead of him. Perhaps Brothers Al and Lib and even Sis may have to look to their laurels. Taggart Chosen To Head Women's Tennis Club Josephine J Taggart '4l was elected president of the Tennis Club Wednesday night, Janet M. Hartz '42,_vice-president, and Ruth t elvis Glory In Titles Souse Here For Weekend, Counts O Comeback After Win , At Scranton Billy Sow°, Penn State 155- pound Intercollegiate box in g champion in 1937, thinks he can come back in the professional ring, is sure he will eventually get a shot at the world's middle weight title, but won't say how he will make out when he gets the shot. Last Wednesday Soose stif fened Enzo Zenon'. Italian mid dleweight champion, in the fourth round of a bout at Scran ton. It we, his first light since he lost a decision to Georgie Ab rams in Pittsburgh lasi month and thus temporarily scuttled his title hopes Here for the Intercollegiates last weekend. Soose said he has a tentative fight in , Atlanta, Ga., the end of this month. .0% , • .b,. rage J. r...z.5.e IThe Spectacular "The World We Live In" March 15, 16, Admission 50a NOTICE TO EXECUTIVES Now, through a new service lust ann ceound, exc ttuves and ollter9 with salaried positions can get cash loans —nu spe cial terms— and with , tnonthlv repayments arranged to suit their own convenience All transactions at e handled. in the utmost privacy and p confidence Since making Mans up to $3OO is our full lime business we consider IL .1 privilege to serve vou ~ our own We Invite you to get full information without r obligation Come in or tele phone Personal Finance Co Firq National 'Bank Bldr Tvrone P 401
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers