rAGE TWO Ca e, at Teams Battle Colgate Red Raiders Puckmen Busy With. Hershey Bears On New Ice Rink Davis Squad Fistmen Leave Campus in Comeback For West Point Meet Coach Art Davis' hockey squad By Seaman Rem Robinson cxpects to have a tough job Another boxing- season gets christening its new hockey rink punched into the sporting lime .l.omorrow afternoon, for the Lion. light tomorrow afternoon, when .opponents from Hershey have Coach Leo Houck's squad of near never been beaten by a Penn all Navry-Marine battlers crawl irate team. through the ropes at West Point Earlier in the season. the Her- to slug it out with Army's once itiey Junior Bears came from be- beaten team. :hind in the last period to nail another 7-4 win in • the record As has been the case in foot . uooks, against the Nittany team, ball, track, soccer, wrestling, and put hockey captain, Art Glad- hockey, the Nittany Lion mitt stone, feels that the 1944 puck- master is counting on the V-12 titers, mostly V-12 trainees, are in unit to produce men to fill the 'good shape, and should give the first string. Only civilians on the team are in the first two weight visiting skaters a closer struggle omorrow. divisions, where wiry Joe Cu i. trone and Frank Serago will fight ' Colgate was originally sched- at 121 and 135 respectively. Wed to open Penn State's home Firmly cemented in the 135- :hockey career on January 29, but ' iathletic officials moved another pound notch for tomorrows fray, practice game with the Bears i: Seaman Billy Cochran, product ' .into the ice program for the win- of Pittsburgh amateur bpxing t,ir. circles. Cochran's skill and ek • Coach Davis will start the same perience may prompt Houck to move the Navy fighter into the :squad against the Bears as has ueen scrimmaging as the varsity 145-pound class, thus opening the :;:or the past month. Roger Nel- lighter weight to several other ;son and Tubby Crawford are promising candidates. :dated to bolt down the forward Until after tomorrow's bout, line attack of the Lions, while however, Houck will keep Coch (.!artadian-born Gene O'Donnell ran ,at 135, and send Pvt. Stan and Pvt. Jack Foley will start on Miller of the Marine Corps into :i - ne defense positions. Pvt. Paul the 145-pound. notch. From the Ameel will cover the nets at the football team comes Pvt. Chuck goal, while Gladstone will start as Klausing, who may get the 155- - player-captain, at center. pound nod over Hal Howard, an- The second team is roune.ing other Marine trainee. Houck an -; ; -ito shape at fast pace, and Davis ticipates weekly lineup changes ~n tends to make frequent substi- due to the flexible Military enroll •tutions in order to determine the ment, so . may wait until this af best scoring and defensive corn- ternoon to decide which mittman lAnations available for the squad. he will use in this class. Paul Ranier, Jack Cummings, Ro- Claude Horton, sailor from the i:er Plail, Ew Williams, and University of Pennsylvania intra- Jacque Hutchins should all see mural circles, seems like the log ,•:cion in tomorrow's opener, ac- ical holder of the 165-pound bid, ,ording to Davis • Ilutchins, a Navy trainee, was both he and Manny Herman a ::ofmerly a gun turret captain race ,for either the 165 or 175- with the Pacific Fleet before en- pound slot. Hermann together •; ; ering the V-12 program in July. with Mike Sweeney, will fill the 'mast week, Hutchins scored gaps at 175 and at heavyweight, 4igainst the Air Corps in' a prat- depending upon the way the game. Moran-Horton complex is solVed. etween The Lions With the nation-wide controver stirred up by Penn State's 15- ).2 conquest of Doc Carlson's 'Pitt quintet before 300 yawning spec -caters in the Smoky City last - ,,,Hekenci, the pros and cons of the 'lJawther-type of basketball are di tee more being argued. The Pitt team, unable to pene -c.rate the tight sliding zone defense t the Nittany • Lions, refused to :ittack, waited for the Lions to come to them. On the defensive, •:j•t! Blue and White team could do little but wait for an offense which didn't come until the clos fy I, minutes of the game, when the ..y time Washington, from the serial by Adelia Rogers Sr. John. but Pvt. Jack Moran is giving Panthers made a fruitless rally to bring the final count to a disap pointing 15-12. The pros says that this is good basketball, that it is. playing to win at any cost. Though there was little scoring, the game was a tight one in which the breaks Only One Veteran could decide. The cons say that this is not the Returns From Title conception of modern basketball. They say that the speed, integrat- w inning Gym Squad ed passwork and flashy shooting are absent. Victory, they say, With only one veteran as a should not be sacrificed to the nucleus ' around which to build pure fun of playing the game as the 1944 gymnastic team, Gene well as it can, be played. Wettstone faces his sixth season as coach.. • . Lest year his team .captured the Eastern Intercollegiate title and Went on to . become National A. A: U., champions. After , losing the entire championship ,sqUad with. the exception of veteran Harold Frey, •Wettstone- must re•- build his team literally •. from scratch. Army, Navy . Strong Looking at the -schedule, Wett stone expects the strongest •oppo sition from Army and -Navy. Both schools have seasoned •teains and can not be affected by, the losS of, members to the draft. The Annap olis squad' opens the Lion sched ule on February .12 in Rea Ha11..1 Harold' Frey', "second in' Eastern Intercoljegiates and,third •in Na tional tumbling; loomS • as the star performer, according to (Continued on' page six) THE COLLEGIAN Note to Athletes Restricted use. of newsprint means that the space alloted to the sporting page is limited. If your sport is not covered each week, be patient, for we haven't forgotten you. With at least five major college sports in full blast last week, we are forced to eliminate entire stories in some editions. THE SPORTS STAFF Mermen Seek Army Victory It looks like the Nittany mermen are in for another tough afternoon as they meet West Point in the Cadet pool tomorrow but a couple of the Galbraithmen may come through with their first season wins. Leigh Woehling, who took a fast second spot behind Midshipman Bob Cowell as the latter set a new Academy record at Annapolis last weekend, will probably be , the chOice to capture the 150-yard backstroke event. Johnny Milan, the other Penn State second place winner against the Midshipmen, will be shooting for a first against Army's Mangan in the 200-yard breaststroke. The Nittany butterfly specialist did about 2.46 for the distance against Navy and may be able to cut that down a couple of seconds to win. over Army. Only - recently able to• show this wares On the board, Doc Ridings should improve his 54-point show ing and snatch the fancy dive against the Cadets. Paced by Bill Glynn, who cap tured both the 100 and 220 free style events when Army beat the Princeton ,swimming team last week, the Grey and Gold should star in the freestyle races. Pete Fries will be a likely starter for the State team in the medley relay and 50-yard freestyle event: Bob Zusman, winner of two third places in the Navy pool, will swim again in the 220 and 440 dis tance events, but will have espe cially tough competition from Glynn in the 220 race. Valentino, frosh diver who has been working out with Doc Rid ings on the Nittany board during the week, has showed steady im provement and probably will make the trip. Lions Back Home After Wins ; Untried Wrestlers In Debut Whether Wrestling Coach Paul Boasting victories in five out of Campbell has succeeded in making their last six gameS, Coach La . w: something out of his limited mate- ther's Nittany five faces perhaps rial will be settled tomorrow after- its toughest opposition of the seas.: noon in Rec Hall when the Nittany son when it meets Colgate on the Lion granolers meet Colgate in the Rec Hall floor tomorrow night, first test of the 1944 season. then travels to West Point for a Campbell, aided by Chief Spe- tussle with the Cadets on Wednes cialists Gedeon and Sherman, day. shaped his starting lineup with Colgate, first team to take a win plenty of difficulty after combing from NYU in Madison Square an inexperienced squad for first Garden early in the season, will string possibilities. Not one letter- floor an experienced Red Raider man will wear the Penn State col- squad against the Lions tomorrow, ors when the Lions face the Red but the Army tiff later in the week Raiders. will challenge the best in the Blue Bob Lowrie has had everything and White club. in the 121-pound bracket under West Point, a late starter this control since practice began and season, is being called the best will lead off against the opposi- team in the East by sports writers, tion. Lowrie was Kryder Mattern's by dint of Cadet triumphs over stand-in last season for State. Swarthmore, Colgate, and power- Ray Shibley and Bob Shadley ful St. Johns. have been making a dead heat of ' Dooley Plays Basketball the race for the 128-pound slot al- . Bill Dooley, halfback' on the though Shibley rated the starting Raider football squad, will prolo nod after trials this week. , - ably start at guard position for the V-12 trainees have taken over up-state team against the Nittany Lions. Bob Quiri, Jack Friel, and the 136 and 145-pound divisions. Pat Harrington, who in earlier Larry .Lawrence are available• to practice sessions was bidding for team up with Dooley on the back the 145-pound assignment, dropped line. down to assume the 136-pound Ed Brett, Holmes Cathrall, or duties. Lynn Mcilvaine used his Bob Dewey will probably split the Clearfield High School experience assignments at forward for , the to help him clinch the 145-pound V=l2-bolstered Colgate court,teani, spot Charley Dipner ,won .the 155- Kibben,•or Art Pollock will get the pound berth in trial S.. this week call at center. '• , and Apprentice Searnan John Jim Barron and Ed Czekaj will Shaw will be the.l6s-pound repre- probably be 'Lawther'S choices for sentative. This classification has forward spots as the Lions attempt betn the most hotly contested with to halt the Colgate quick• offensive Chuck Hall and Ben Ulrich press- thrusts. Big Mac McNary will ing Shaw to the limit. jump at .center and Capt.. Joe Cur l The 175 pound and heavyweight ran will probably be flanked by starters are V-12 trainees Dick Lit- Bud Long at the guard position tle and Red Moore. Monty Moskowitz and Walt Funk • Marine Pvt. Bill McKee has an- will be the number one :replace nounced that servicemen will be ments. admitted at a twenty-five cent ad- With Dale Hall, 5-11 Kansan mission price while the civilian forward, notching 'ten field goals rate will be fifty cents. Athletic . and a foul try for 21 points, Army books will, of course, admit regu- knocked over St. John'S liedmen, lar students. 49-36, for its third season win... Valentines. • • Now On Display . Feb. 14 is St. Valentines Day U. S. Camera 1944 . New Stock just in—Don't miss this issue of "photographic hits by this war Year.": • • Leather Writing Cases . Genuine Leather...Wellmade--large • • Sizes for' servicemen and. women: . :- I . . . . • Rental. Library • . New Books added as they are. PubhShed. Moderate' rates. No fee to join. • . , . . . . Buy : What You Need—Need What Tau, Buy Buy Bonds • . . • Heeler s • • eathaum Theater Bldg.- FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1944 while Dick. BundeV.george-