State Five Tests Hoyas In 2nd Capital Tussle No rest for the weary! Penn State’s doughty band of basketeers climb back into their still-damp togs tonight to duel Georgetown University in an 8:30-scheduled contest in Washington, D. C. Tonight's cage tilt marks the second time in two nights that the' Lions will appear on the capital courts. Last night’s fray against American U. was not completed in time to make today’s Daily Col legian deadline. Big name teams mean little to the Blue and Gray clad warriors, who annually play some of the top teams in the nation. Coach Elmer Ripley appears to have built another typically powerful Hoya club. AVERAGED 52 POINTS The Catholic college is ex pected by many to outstrip its ]947-"8 record when it won 13 and lost 15. The Hoyas have added more height and experience to go along with their already strong scoring punch, which averaged 52 points per game last year, and are generally conceded to be a stronger combination. Georgetown’s record last year, although unimpressive on the surface, revealed competition against such nationally known schools as Notre Dame. St. Louis, Western Kentucky and N.Y.U. The two collegiate rivals split a pair of contests last year. Penn State copped a close 42-40 verdict on the National Armory boards, with the Blue and Gray taking another tight 49-43 affair. LOSE TO N.Y.U. Ripley’s proteges are not ex pected to pull any punches in to night’s fracas. The Hoyas are try ing to regain the victory band wagon after dropping a 70-59 contest to New York University in Madison Square Gardens last Saturday. Georgetown’s 16 - man roster lists nine returning lettermen. Outside of two exceptionally tall men, substitute Dan Spukis, 6 foot 7 inches, and John Mazzi otta. 6 foot 5 inches, the Hoyas’ Qsj, cti r i STrri-Q s m &eCOG#TtO/VS ’VjCgfl Gift wrappings that will add to the spirit of giving. a bright, cheerful greeting mm f Ilmlw.xVelXfailb that will always be re • Ribbon • Wrappings S k IW • Cards • Stickers fc 24 Hour service on Person 4UbKm alized Xmas Cards. •* gT’lP*’- To highlight your Christmas I k® with the proper spirit, dee- orate your tree with these ialltil* "listening trimmings. | Ornamental Balls—Tinsel— Sl | Angel-hair Wreaths MALLTH, CHMaTHAI HMI How . &, METZGERS height is average for basketball teams. Captain Ray ‘Chief’ Corely and his ‘basket buddy,’ Tommy ‘Flash’ O’Keefe, will lead the Georgetown forces. The two pro lific scoring wizards, in addition to directing the team from the guard spots, pack the hosts’ heavy artillery and will have to be stopped if the Nittanymen hope to come out on top. PROS EYE O'KEEFE O’Keefe set last year’s scoring pace with a 270-point total, fol lowed by Corely, his roommate, who amassed 156 tallies. A junior, O’Keefe is already being eyed by the pros, and in collegiate circles around the nation’s capital he is believed to have a promising career ahead of him. Corely, a well-set-up 6-footer, is labeled by Ripley as one of the finest poten tial stars to come to the Hilltop. The center slot will be covered by 6-foot-2-inch George Benigni. who also plays end on the Hoyas’ football team. Likely to see action in starting forward roles are ‘lrish’ Joe Culhanc and Dick Favey. Culhane is regarded by Rochester sportswriters as one of the best collegiate performers ever to come out of that section. Benigni and Falvey are consid ered the Hilltoppers’ outstanding backboard men. Italo ‘Fireball’ Ablondi and Frank Alagia will replace the first-stringers. First Wrestling Match Penn State’s first intercollegiate wrestling match was with Cornell at Ithaca in 1909. Special on Tree Lights An 8-light set, com- Arc plete with G.E. bulbs '■» NOMA—lndoor and ■195 Outdoor Lights . . I GENE WETTSTONE Gymnasts Will Rebuild Ibis Year Wettsfone It looks like this year will mark the end of the glory trail for Gym Mentor Gene Wcltstonc and his charges. The Lion gymnasts, undefeated for the past three years of col legiate competition and unprece dented winner of three intercol legiate crowns last year, have been hard hit by losses through graduation and the claims of the armed forces. The current season is expected to be ‘‘one of rebuild ing,” to quote Wettstone. Ten of last year’s top aggrega tion which annexed the Eastern Intercollegiate, NCAA and NAAU titles have departed from the campus. SORENSEN Gaps left by the departure of last years Captain Ray Sorensen, NCAA parallel bars and all around champion; Steve Greene, Eastern Intercollegiate, NCAA, and NAAU side horse titleholder, and Joe Linn, last season’s num ber one rope climber, will be hard to fill. “I don’t expect to come close to winning all our meets this lear, and I certainly don’t think we’ll repeat our NAALT triumph of last spring,” Wett stone declared. But all is not gloom and des pair on the gym nastic front ei ther. Five return- _ in g veterans, BQNSALL lour of them lettermen, will be back to bolster Wettstone’s 1949 aggregation and provide the nuc leus of this year’s squad. Core of the gymnastic contin gent will be Bill Bonsall, who placed second in the NAAU all around championship competition, Bill Meade, last year’s ace tum- Continucd on page five NOW AT YOUR WARNER THE P fret** 155-Pounders Capture Crowd At IM Boxing Curtin TKO's Trioni, Dumps Sigma Nu Hope Sigma Nu boxing stock took a sharp decline under the glaring lights of varsity ring, Recreation hall last night. Hopes of that house for a 155- pound champion in poker-faced Lou Trion; plunked to the floor as Bill Curtin, Phi Delta Theta spoiler, throwing caution to the winds and standing toe-to-toe with Trioni, bombarded his rival into oblivion in the second round of their scheduled three round duel. One other technical knockout and a first-round KO mixed with four exciting decision wins, shook another large crowd out of its early lethargy and made a ring in gsuccess of the IM department’s boxing card. Last semi-final bouts go on to night at Rec hall with half a doz en fights scheduled to start at 5 p.m. CURTIN TAKES OVER Feeling each other out with searching left jabs, through half the first round, then breaking out into a give and take slgging battld", Trioni and Curtin weathere dthe first stanza in good order. But in the second, Curtin took com mand after Trioni set the stage with a stunning flurry of blows. A right-hook by Curtin, thrown m retaliation, put the Sigma Nu chips in the ring and Curtin col lected as he pummeled Trioni in to a corner and put him on the wagon with a succession of righls and lefts. Trioni couldn’t answer the bell for the third frame. 155-POUND ACTION The 155-pounders showed most of the action last night. John Long, Sigma Chi, looped a rip ping right in the first round of his scrap with Henry Van Halle wyn, Delta Chi, that withered Van Hallewyn where he stood. The blow echoed off the Delta Chi’s ear to stop the bout early. Independents Robert Briselli, and Maloney in the same class erased their opponents in two well-matched bouts. Briselli stopped Hopkins in the first round of their fight, while Maloney, op ening Dave Warrington’s nose in the second round, slugged to a decision win. DRAZENOVICH WINS Heavyweight Joe Drazenovich. Delta Upsilon, braved a third round storm by Dalton Rumberg er, Alpha Zeta, to move into the finals. With his corner yelling On him, Joe”, the stocky Nittany guard charged into Rumberger’s swinging fists to twice floor his tfdler rival, and cop the decision. Charley Vitabile, Theta Xi, out lasted Clyde Wilson, Alpha Gam ma Rho, in a 175-pound bout, and slipping under Wilson's longer Continued on page five YOU'LL FIND QUICK, CLEAN, COURTEOUS SERVICE AT MARSHALL'S Automatic Laundry 454 E. COLLEGE AVE REAR 15. 194 U between rpl. The Jggjjb Lio»< By Tom Morgan SPORTS EDITOR On Redwoods Expressions like “tall men con trol the boards” and “basketball games are won under the boards” have boosted a theory that five human skyscrapers are standard equipment if one is to produce a better - than - average basketball team. One of the first questions often asked by coaches and fans about a prospective bas ketball player is: "How tall is he?" If pint-sized, he some times is not afforded much chance of making the first five, for what can a small shrub do among redwoods? But occasionally one of these “shrubs” asserts himself by run ning rings around his taller brethren on the hardwood. By demonstrating that he is better coordinated, trickier, faster, a su perior dribbler, a better ball handler, more exacting in starts, stops and change of direction, he helps disorove the premise that basketball is only for giants. Simon, Weiss, Toed Out to prove there's a place for the little fellow on Coach John Lawther's '4B-'49 cage team are a few Stalemen whose respective heights reach less than 5 feet 10. Competing for starting assignments with "red woods" who sport up to a 10- inch height advantage are Milt Simon, Ken Weiss and Joe Tocci. A first-stringer last year after playing no varsity basketball in high school, Simon is 5 feet 9, weighs 158 pounds and comes from Erie. The two newcomers, both smaller than Simon, are Tocci, of Ridgewood,. N. Y., who started against Pitt in the season opener, stands 5-7 and weighs 155, and Weiss, of Allentown, who is 5-8 and weighs 150. Unfortunately, current Nit tany students who double as fans of the court game will be unable to see these midgets in action till the January 8 home game with Colgate. That is, unless they're around these parts come Saturday when the Lawthermen open the home slate during Christmas vaca tion. More From Spartans Although he didn't mention it specifically, that long touch down run called back in the Michigan Slale-Penn State football game has prompted Spartan Coach Clarence "Big gie" Munn to suggest a rule change. Munn would have officials Continued on page five