TIYMDAY, 'JIANITARY 21, 1947 Five Penn Cigers Win 11-45 Oier Carnegie Tech Pchn State's basket ball team gained their fourth conlsecuitive victory and incidentally, a little more = respect from Pittsburgh basketball circles, as they trounc ed Carnegie Tech Saturday night, 71-415. In a banner weekend for Nit tany sports teams, the cagers compiled the highest number of 113 . 0111 th for an :awhy game in recent history as they Pulled ahead after , the first fiVe minute s of play and led 33-20 at halftime. Johnny Rusinko paced the at tack with il6 points, followed by Milt Simon 'with .lt3, as Coach* Lowther cleared the bench and the Ni'ttany Lions notched their sixth win out of ten start s for the 'season. The summaries: PENN STATE FG F Simon, f 6 1 Biery, f 3 3 Hornstein, c ... 3 2 Lawther 0 4 Rusinko, g .... 6 4 Russell 2 0 Dietterick 4 2 Bozinski 0 3 Parkhill 1 0 Kuip. 0 2 Total CARNEGIE TECH FG ' F Kate,las, f ' 5 2 Chetlin, f • 4 1 House, c 0. 0 Klein, g 2 , 0 Meyer, g • 2 .2 Matsey .3 1 Riehl 2 1 Kohn - 0 1 Luther 0 1 Total . ... _. _ _. i . Y*os,Mactabe .EiteiiMP-Wtdit Scoring. their sixth consecutive victories, the Yahoos .aud Macca bees swept into the •playoffs of the intramural basketball league, as. the Yahoos trounced Nittany CO-oU 4441 and the Maecabees outfought the Stags 27-22. Playo'ffs for the independent and fraternity cups begin tonight with six contests scheduled on the• Roc Hall courts. At 9 o'clock. Phi Sigma Delta will encounter Theta Chi;' Beta Sigma Rhd will meet the winner of last night's Sigma Nu-Beta . Theta Pi fray; Phi Delta Theta "A" vs. the Phi Kappa Psi- Phi Kappa-Sigma victor. • At 9:40 o'clock, Phi Epsilon Pi vs. Sigma Pi; Yahoos vs. Berks' Independents; Dorm 11 vs. Mac cabees, In Friday's• games, Phi Kappa Sigma 'defeated Pi Kappa Alpha 2342 to enter the final round o'f League No. 3 playoffs. Alpha Chi Rho fell before Phi Sigma Delta 20-7 to give Phi Sig the Loop No. s.crown, and Sigma Nu, paced by Wolfkiel, defeated Phi Kappa Tau 29-17. An intramural scoring record was established. in the Hoopsters' 4042. win over ' the Penn, State, Club as Chuck Howard poured 27 points - through.. the . hoop: This eclipsed th e previous 20-point high of Pi Lambda Phi's Eiffross. Results df other games in the final night of regularly scheduled (Continued on page four) ATTENTION • ALL VETERANS .Until Feb. 249, 1947, you can get one year of your favorite maga zllre at rates. Life Magazine $4.25 Time Magazine $4.50 Fortune Magazine ---$7.75 All orders. must include your I)o;wrner rank and serial number. the Xamak Subscription Agency - 1130 Applegate Ave. .• Elizabeth 2, N. J. zro ALL .STUDENTS • YOU..:CAN • SAVE:UP:TO •7 90% FOR YOUR FAVORITE MAGAZINE! ' l ' THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STME COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA State Teams Score Wins Over :k ;: -~ JACK 4 FIGHE, Nittany Lion boxer who outpointed We'stern Maryland's John Sgariglio in a close match. The two mittmen were evenly matched, gong into the final round when Tighe gained two points on a knock down which gave him the round and the decision. Boxers Win first frorn - W.Maryland Sweeping the" first six bouts, the Nittsny Lion boxing team. de feated Western Maryland 6-2 for its first victory of the season at Bee Hall Saturday.., Lion Red Cramer and JOhn ISheehe were awarded technical knockouts in their 125 and 145- pound bouts. Cramer's victory tame in the third. round of his bout With Howard Shannon. The referee, Bill Gadsby; stopped the ISheehe-Eocies 'fight in the second round after the Lion bOxer dreW blood. Carlo Ortenzi, MBA champion, needed only one minute and 33 seconds. to score a •TKO over , Lion ;Will Greene. • Lion captain Tack Tighe eked out a• close victory over John Sgariglio after he scored a knock down in the third round of 'the 11165-pound (bout. Tighe was be hind in points up until the knock down which gave him an .auto- Ltt're the man most likely 10 succeed hi'VnlOnlB.ol . •'Shirts a nd tie Matmen Score 14-12 Victory Over Princeton Penn State's grapplers opened their season successfully last Sat urday, eking out a close 1442 de cision over Princeton University. Each team won four matches. with Don 'l\4lcKteeby's :flail over Tigers' Fred Allen providing the edge in points. In the 1 155-pound class. Grant Dixon, intercollegiate champ last had an easy time with Russ Ran dall winning 12-4. Pat Harridgton, 16-pounds, had to go into an overtime period to defeat Bruce Hall of Princeton 7-3. . The summaries: 121 lbs.—Tom O'Dell (Prince ton) decisioned George Schantz (PS) 12-2. 128 lbs.—Al McNulty (Prince ton) decisioned Bob Shadley (PS) 8-2. 136 lbs.—Pat Harrington (PS) de cisioned Bruce Hall (Princeton) in an overtime period, 7-3. 145 lbs.—Ernie Closser (PS) de cisioned Dave Wilmer (Princeton) 12-4. 155 lbs. Grant Dixon (PS) de cisioned Dave Wilmer (Princeton) 12 ; 4. 165 lbs.—Don McKleeby (PS) threw Fred Allen (Princeton. 175 lbs.—Mat Atkinson (Prince ton) decisioned Witßaca , Cbkm ber (PS) 3-1. Heavyweight -- Dave Baker ( Princeton) decisioned George Purnell (PS) 13-2. Puckmen -Lose -Colgate's top-notch team de feated C o a-ch O'iHora's handi capped hockeymen 14-0 at Ham ilton, N. Y., Saturday. Although he 'Red Ilaiders' passing and of fensive was very good, the lop sided score wus due to the lack Of practice, said °Mora. The Colgate six scored .11 times in the first period, but were held down to none in the second and three in the last. Colgate remains undefeated :in five games. Imastic two points and the round, .10-8. The point score was . 29-28, Glenn Hawthorne swept all three r o un d s while defeating Flether Ward in the 130-pound bout in what was the Lions' clean_ (Continued on page four) Girls cut in on man! Why? Look at that Van Heusen Shirt! Fainous Van Heusen collar styling sends your Eye-Q zooming. Figure-fit tailoring emphasizes the athlete in you. Style, comfort, plus magic sewmanship and Sanforized, laboratory-tested fabrics to give you many semesters of economical wear. Graduate to Van Heusen today! Phillips-Jones Corp., New York 1, N. Y., makers of Van Heusen Shirts, Ties, Pajamas, Collars, Sport Shirts. N ittany Swimmers Sink Carnegie Tech In Opening Match Resuming competition for the first time since 1943, Penn State's swimmers handed Carnegie Tech a 47-28 defeat at Pittsburgh Sat urday. Coach Lenny Diehl. in his first season as Lion swimming coach, saw his natators win seven of the nine events. The summaries: Medley relay—Carnegie Tech (Burk, Luckey, \Tenzer/ 2:211.1. 220-yard free style Knoll, Penn State; Spangler. Tech: Winton, Penn State. 2:36.5. _ . . )50-yard 'Plee style Christy - , Penn State; Venzer, Tech; (Hirsh field, Penn State. 26.5. Fancy diving Young, Penn State; Kutsenkow, Penn State: Patterson, Tech. 100-yard firee style Christy, Penn State; Venzer, Tech; 'Hirsh field. Penn State, 59.8. 1150-yard back str oke—Wochl ing, Penn State: Burke, Tech, Schroeder, Tech. 1.46.4. 200-yard breast stroke—Luck ey, Tech; Bell, 'Penn State; Fer guson, Tech. 2:38. 440-yard free style Knoll, Penn State; Spangler, Tech; West ner, Penn State. 5:51. 440-yard free style relay—Penn The Spirit of Service T ECEPHONE LINEMEN bravinc , blizzards to keep lines up and calls moving . . . telephone girls refusing to leave their switchboards even while floods mount and fires rage ... former telephone employees coming back to work of their own accord to help out in a crisis . All this is a familiar story to the public. To telepho r ne people, it's tradition. It's the spirit of service that makes telephone people think first and act first in the interests of the public. It's a devotion to duty that no thing and no one can possibly destroy. •It's loyalty to a cause that is greater than those who teach it, those who learn it, those who feel it, and those who stand by it. For telephone people, from fledglings to old timers, know what telephone service is and what it means and what it must continue to be. They know that a single telephone call can be the dif ference between life and death, joy and sorrow, success and failure, victory and defeat. They know that nothing must stop telephone calls Iroin going through. Nothing! You count on telephone people. You always have. You always can. They know their obligation. They live it. It's a part of their very fibre. It's second nature to them. It's the thing that keeps telephone service going against any obstacles. It's the thing that seems to produce miracles of service when miracles are needed. It's the thing that assures telephone service for the people of Pennsylvania . . . come what may. The Bell Telephone Company ri [ll 'of Pennsylvania .i t PAGE TECREE Weekend Bladesmen Triumph Over Lehigh, 181/2-81/2 Taking 18 and tying one of the 27 matches, the Lion fencers in their season's opener outpointed the Lehigh bladesmen in RecTll,9ll Saturday, 18 1 / 2 -8 1 / 2 . Two Nittany- swordsmen went undefeated in the three-hour-long meet as veteran captain Bob Swope won three epee bouts, and . first-year fencer Bob Thompson also took three matches with the lighter foil, Dave Ozarow and Larry Tessier were the only Nittany hladesmen entered in two classes, and they scored 8 1 / 2 points for the team. Tessier made a clean sweep of his sabre bouts, while winning one and tying another in the epee division. Ozarow won four out of six with the foil and epee. The summaries: Foil— Perin State 6. Lehigh 3 Thompson (PS) defeated Jones 5-4 L Poland 5-3. and, McGrath 5-4; Ozarow (PS) defected Mc- Grath 5-3, and Poland 5-2; Wald (PS) defeated McGrath 5-0; Jones (L) defeated Ozarow 5-2 and Wald 5-4; Poland (L) defeated Wald 5-4. ,F.pee—Penn State 6 1 / 2 , Lehigh 2 1 / 2 Swope (PS) defeated Wachtel 2-1, Williams 2-0, end McGrath 2-i: Ozarow (PSI defeated Wach- (Continued on page four) State (Mussieman, Kutsenkow, Pech, Tenzer ). 1'1.5.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers