The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 05, 1941, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
Tigers Break Lion Grappler s Two-Meet Streak, 14-1£
Weight Lifting Finalists
To Receive Place Medals;
Taylor Raises 595 Pounds
Medals will be awarded by the
Strength and Health Club to all
winners of their respective
weight classes in the weight lift
ing finals.
In the 118-pound class, Joe
Sawicke lifted 285 pounds, Hen
ry Wenger, a 13!#-pounder, came
through with a 355 weight total.
Milt Griffith in the 148-pound
class, hoisted 490 pounds.
In the heavier weight classes,
John Maclntire, a 165-pounder,
raised 590 pounds. Bert Taylor,
a 181-pounder, lifted the highest
total of the afternoon 595
pounds. Jay Hammond, unlim
ited .reached 530 pounds.
John Gray and Lynn Adams
acted as judges of the contest
with Carl Morris holding down
the referee and scorekeeper po
sitions.
CLASSIFIED SECTION
FOR RENT—Double room, single
beds. New home, 211 Adams ave
nue. Back of Campus. A. L.
Harkins, phone 2174,
WANTED—Roommate for large
double room. Cal' lat 404, Bur
rowes St. Dial 3179.
FOR RENT—Warm single room
for man student. New home in
College Heights. Telephone 2862.
3tpd3,4,5,-D
I LOVE YOU, MARY. You are my
alentine. May I take you to
the Drydock, Saturday, Febru
ary 8? - 3tch 456 D
LOST —Reading Hospital School
of Nursing ring. $5.00 reward
for finder. Phone 2067,. ask for
Dietrich. 3t-pd-26-4i6
FOR SALE —A pair of boy’s ice
skates. Size 8. Good condi
tion- Call Selma, Room 62, Ath
erton Hall.
FOR RENT —Two double rooms.
Single beds. Shower. 403, Al
len St. Mrs. Geo. C. Meyer.
Phone 4215. 3t-ch-2-6-41L
FOR RENT—Large single room
in private home. 701 W. Fos
ter Ave. Phone 3205. 3tch 456 D
SUITE OF ROOMS for married
couple or two men students,
attractive residential district. No
cooking Phone 2133.
3t-pd.-2-6-41C
WANTED —Students commuting
from Bellefonte, Lewistown
and Philipsburg to post placards
for campus dance.
WANTED Coeds to deliver
Collegians in Grange Dorm.
It 5 comp D
SINGLE ROOM for rent, with
private bath. 219 E. Irvin.
3t ch 2-7-41 L
WANTED Part time house-
keeper in faculty family of
three. Graduate student’s wife
acceptable. Call. 2570 between
six and eight'o’clock.
CHEERLEADER wants room
mate for warm, large room,
twin beds, showers across hall.
124 S. Barnard. Call 4040'.
Itpd 2535 V
FOR . SALE—Pair No. 7 Dart
mouth skis. Used once. Call
Perry', 4143 in the evening. Best
offer , buys. Itpd 2541 C
HALF of very desirable first
floor room. Male student. 120
E. Foster avenue. All newly fur
nished. Phone 2159.
3tpd 2-7-41 L
WANTED—Roommate for stu-
dent in large approved, double,
front comer room. Single beds.
Plenty of light. 300 South Bur
rowes street; Call 3280.
Itpd. 5 D
3tpd2-5-41V
3tpd2-5-41E
Frank Gleason and Joe Scalzo
both won last night as the mat
men lost to' Princeton, 14-12.
Gleason, 136, decisioned Gene
Taylor and Scalzo, 155, won over
Bob Linzsey.
Archers Express Hopes
Of Forming College Team
The possibility of an archery
team for Penn State took on a
new aspect yesterday when Rich
ard R. Vogel and Melvin Wainer,
transfer students from Franklin
and Marshall College announced
they are seeking archery fans to
form a team.
2t 56 comp D
Vogel, captain of the Franklin
and Marshall team last semester
and junior State champion in
1935, expressed his desire of
starting a team at Penn State to
enter a league with the Univer
sity of Pennsylvania, Lebanon
Valley, Franklin and Marshall,
Lehigh, and Shippensburg State
Teachers College.
Wainer, who was No. 2 man on
the F&M team, is also interested
in the undertaking and pointed
out that at least two more arch
ers are needed to complete the
team of four.
2 pd 46 D
Rifle Team Will Battle
Marines And Detroit
Having blasted Washington
State University by a 1901 to
1873 count, the undefeated Lion
varsity riflers skirmish with the
U. S. Marine Corps of Philadel
phia and Detroit University in
a twin postal match Saturday.
With Gil Gault ’4l and Ben
Stahl ’42, pacing the riflemen
with consitsently high scores,
All-American Bob McCoy is ex
pected to boost the five-man
team score with his return, to
condition.
A Winning Pair
FRANK GLEASON
JOE SCALZO
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN
Kern's Defeat
Decides Match
PRINCETON, N. J., Feb. 4
An undefeated Nittany Lion bow-
ed to an underrated but vicious
Tiger onslaught when Bart Rob
bins, Princeton heavyweight
grappler, pinned Jack Kerns to
snatch the Tigers from near de
feat and nose out the Lion mat
men, 14-12, here tonight.
Spotting Kerns 50 pounds, Rob
bins scored the only fall of the
match in 4:02 minutes. John
Blake defeated Joe Valla, Lion
175-pounder, to overcome a Nit
tany' Lion 12-6 advantage and
set the stage for the deciding
heavyweight bout.
Both teams swapped decisions
when 121-pound Clair Hess Oyer
powered the Tiger’s Van Brewer
and . Frank Gleason, Lion cap
tain, rode Gene Taylor, Princeton
136-pounder, to an easy victory.
Tiger Captain Bob Eberle,
twice Intercollegiate 128-pound
champion, exerted superior
grappling to win over Charlie
Ridenour, while Glenn Alex
ander was the victim of a close
' fought 145-pound tilt with Bob
Feldmeier.
In two successive bouts, Nit
tany Lion hopes were boosted by
Joe Scalzo’s brilliant win over
Bob Linzsey, Tiger 145-pounder,
-and Chuck Rohrer’s conquering
of 165-pound Dick Bowen by a
wide margin.
It was the first defeat in three
starts for the favored Lions while
the Tigers racked up their second
straight triumph.
The summaries:
121-pound class: Clair Hess,
Penn State, - decisioned Van
Brewer, 11-2.
128-pound class: Bob Eberle,
Princeton,' decisioned Charles
Ridenour, 8-3.
13.6-pound class: Frank Glea
son, Penn State; decisioned Gene
Taylor, 12-6.
145-pound class: Bob Feld
meier, Princeton, decisioned
Glenn Alexander, 9-6.
155-pound class: Joe Scalzo,
Penn State, decisioned Bob Linz=
sey, 8-4.
165-pound class: Charles Roh
1-eiyPenn State, decisioned Dick
Bowen, 11-4.
175-pound class: John Blake,
Princeton, decisioned Joe Valla,
7-4.
Unlimited class: Bart Robbins,
Princeton, threw Jack Kerns,
bar and chancery, in 4:05 min
utes.
Portfolio Brings
Artist Here
An artist who has had more
than 25 exhibitions in Europe,
Peter Fingsten, now of Philadel
phia, will-appear on campus this
weekend under .the sponsorship
of Portfolio, student literary
magazine.
He will speak on modern sculp
ture and art demonstrating in
clay in Room 207 Main Engineer
ing at 2:30 p.m. Saturday. The
Poetry Society will meet with
him in the basement of the Col
lege Book Store at 11 a.m. Sun
day. Both meetings are open.
His works are particularly
famous for their simplicity of ex
pression and full exploitation of
•their medium. Fingsten’s father,
a painter and wood cut artist, is
in a concentration camp for anti-
Nazi drawings.
Soviet Photos On Exhibit
The works *of leading Soviet
photographers with subjects
ranging from still life and animal
life to scenes of everyday activ
ities in the .Soviet Union will.be
on exhibit at the Library until
February 16..
Help reduce fog in Rec Hall—
don’t smoke.
Hockey Game Features Carnival
Penn State’s ice hockey_Lions r 42, announced yesterday that
will meet the Temple Ice-Owls there will be six medals award
in the Winter Carnival rink fea- e( j j n the intra-rriural ski compe
ture Saturday afternoon, Man
ager Richard. W. May ’4l an- tlon - There wfil be medals
nounced late . yesterday. The each for downhm sialom and
hockey tilt will follow a figure cross country. Beers also wam
skating exhibition by the Figure ed > "Before waxmg your skis be
Skating Club to begin at 2 p. m. sur + e to tak( ?J 3l6 T ? hyS^;
Temple, a member of the nation at the No
Eastern Pennsylvania Hockey student is ehgible for competi-
League, previously met defeat tion unless he has medical ap
before the hard playing Nittany P roval .
sextet, 6-1, in a contest played in Fraternities and living groups
Johnstown early this season, interested in ice sculpture were
This will mark the first home tilt again urged to enter the compe
since the game with Hershey, tition. Several fraternities have
when the rink was opened last already begun plans and have
winter. - started super-structures, the
Ski Manager Henry A. Beers committee announced.
REDUCED PRICES
ON SERIES TICKETS
■
THE sale of Artists’ Course series tickets for the last
three numbers continues at the A.A. Windows in
Old Main. 'Series tickets originally priced at $5.50 are
now repriced at $3.90, $4.50 tickets are $3.40. The re
maining numbers are:
Feb. 11—JASCHA HEIFETZ, violinist ' .
March 17— CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA
April 17— ANNA KASKAS, contralto
If series seats remain, tickets for individual num
bers will be sold tomorrow, at $2.25 each for Heifetz
and the Cleveland Orchestra and $1.25 for. Anna
Kaskas/
THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE
ARTISTS* COURSE
FOR WINTER 6AIETY
Formal Suits and Dresses Should Be
Made. Ready Now, For The Social
Season Is Getting Into Full Swing.
Depend On Balfurd To Clean Them
Properly, Qpickly.
Rug and Garment Gleaners , Tailors
UNDER THE CORNER STATE COLLEGE
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1941- -