TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1949 Between The Lions , 4). By Torn Morgan SPORTS EDITOR Cousins Colone At least two guys named Joe Colone are top-drawer operatives in sports. One is the towering six foot-seven basketball center who signed recently with the Lancas ter Rockets of the Eastern Pro League. The other is a sought after Nittany Lion fullback who is currently toying with pros and cons of playing pro football after graduation. _ Many fans are apt to confuse the two stars, as we were when we read last week that "Joe Colons has signed with Lan caster to p 1 a y basketball." Grounds for mistaking one for rother can be found in the fact that the Joe Colones: (a) both hail from Berwick. (b) Played three years of foot ball and basketball together for Berwick High. (c) Are cousins. As Colone, the Lion fullback, explains, "Sometimes people ask my cousin Joe, 'How are you doing as fullback at Penn State?' " Asked how people distinguished between the two cousins when they played for Berwick, Penn State's Colone replied: "Because my cousin out weighed me by 15 pounds and was a few inches taller than I, they called me 'Little Joe. On Diamonds Two baseball notes reached us simultaneously yesterday, one from Michigan State telling the woeful tale of John Kobs, Spar tan coach, who has lost 14 baseball players to the pro ranks in the last two years, and the other con cerning Penn State's baseball skipper, Joe Bedenk. Seems that during a college coaches' conclave, they were discussing ways of gaining pro tection from the raids of organ ised baseball. Bedenk spoke: 'l'm not so much concerned about that--I want some protec tion from our own engineering faculty." With the Mini Jackie Tighe. who was the idol of many boxing fans for the last two seasons. is currently pleading the case for collegiate boxing at the 17. of Illinois. On the staff of the Illinois Chi cago Undergraduate Division at Navy Pier, Tighe wants the Illini to compete in the sport, and re cently said so in the student news paper there. Incidentally, he has also broken his hand playing basketball, an ironic mishap, after an almost indestructible ring career at Penn State. JV Matmen Rout Big Red JV, 24-8 Continuing Penn State's dom ination over Cornell's wrestlers, Coach Charlie Ridenour's jayvee matmen swept to a 24-8 triumph over the Big Red juniors on Sat urday. The meet, held on the Cornell mats, was the lid-lifter for the Lion Cubs. George Schautz, Larry Shall cross, and Bob Markle led the jayvees to their smashing win by scoring falls, while Jack Dreibel bis, Dick Edinger, and Wally Chambers took decision wins for the Nittany junior varsity. Mickey Silverman, at 145- pounds, and 165-pound Aubrey Mcilvaine suffered the only Lion Cub defeats. Silverman was edged 5-3, by Bob Stedge in a questionable decision, while Mc- Ilvaine was pinned in 5:39 by Charles Taft. THEY'VE MOVED THE PARADISE The beat that keeps the Paradise Cafe alive will be set this Wednesday night at Schwab Auditorium. N.S.A. has lifted the lid on the Paradise piano and scooped out Shoe less Lou and the other Tru-Blu's to bring to Penn Staters —the best in THE TRUE JAZZ. This collection of Dixie characters will do everything you don't expect, but it all adds up to good music and good laughs. Guys, take your women to the Tru-Blu Jazz Concert, January 19 at 7:30. The admission is only 50c ... the entertainment, limitless! THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Grapplers Trounce Powerful Cornell Maurey, Barr, Hetrick, Score Second Wins Sweep Six Wins In Eight Bouts Three falls alternated with three decisions gave the Lion varsity wrestling team a 24-6 win over a previously unbeaten Cornell team in a Saturday meet at Ithaca, N. Y. An expected fight-to-the-fin ish turned into a complete rout as the powerful Lions complete ly dominated six o,f the eight weight classes. Second Wins The Blue and White's "pinning pair," Jim Maurey and Homer Barr won .their second straight matches via the fall route. Vet eran Bob Hetrick also won his second victory of the season, and rst by a pin. Barr looked impressive in scor ing a fall win over Dick Clark, Big Red heavyweight and BIWA third place winner in 1948. 145-pounder Maurey indicated the improvement that a year's —petition c a n when he tailed Cornell's 'ck Adams a front 'adle in 4:24. deci led Adams, , in last year's meet which Lions won, The Big Red's lIETRICK John Reavis was subdued in. 8:10 by Hetrick in the 165-pound clash. Hetrick used a reverse body press to flatten his Bear foe. Surprise The most surprising success of the meet belonged to Al Fasnacht, Nitt any 136-pounder, who showed plenty of improvement in outmaneuvering Captain Joe Cal-' by of Cornell by a 4-0 margin. Other State winners were John Reese, 121-pound grappler, and Grant Dixon, Reese out-classed Earl Wilde, 7-1, while Dixon clamped a 10-2 defeat on Bob i Hoagland, 155-pounder of the Big Red. The summaries of Saturday's meet: 121-pounds Reese (PS) decisioned Wilde, '7-1. 128-pounds Bolanis (C) declaimed Walker, 5-2. 136-pounds -- Fasnacht (PS) deadened Copt. Cathy, 4-0. 145-pounds Maurey (PS) pinned Ad amai n 4:24 with front cradle. 155-pounds Dixon (PS) deeisioned Hoagland, 10-2. 165-pounds Hetrick (PS) pinned Reavis in 8:10 with reverse body press. 175-pounds Reeve (C) decisioned Cor man, 4-0. Heavyweight—Darr (PS) pinned Clark in 2:66 with reverse half nelson and bob , press. Ex-Lion Coach Nate Cartmell, former Lion track coach, is assistant to Coach George Eastment at Manhattan. aue -6.o t e! ,4 1 1b - z fr . A Whole Week's Wash Clean—in An Hour! MARSHALL'S AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY 454 E. College Ave.—Rear Open Tonile 'III 10 Lion Cagers Notch 2nd Win; Smother Skibo Five, 65-40 GEHRDES Gehrdes Clips Hurdle Mark Hurdler Jim Gehrdes provided the bright spot in Penn State's track endeavors at Washington Saturday as he clipped three tenths of a second off the Capital City Armory record in winning the 70-yard high hurdle race in 8.5 seconds. The Altoona timber topper, racing against Ed Dugger and Bill Mitchell, two of the nation's best, won his first heat in 8.6, outsprinting Lester Scott of Mor gan State and then nipped Georgetown's Mitchell at the tape with the record-breaking time. The mile relay team, composed of Wil Lancaster, Bill Lockhart, Ike Evans and Paul Koch finished fourth in 3:31.9 as Texas A. & M. ran away with the event in 3:26.1. The Nittany two mile squad, with John Bates, Bob Auman, Bob Freebairn and Mitch Wil liams passing the baton, ran third in 8:13.7 as Villanova copped the event in 8:01. Alumni failed to make the grade in Saturday's Washington meet as both Curt Stone, in the two-mile and Jerry. Karver, in the mile, could not outrace their opponents. Penn State's Newest and Smoothest Orchestra THE Collegian 3 New to Penn State, the "Collegians" have estab lished a fine record of satisfied listening. Featur ing HAL CATHEMAN as the vocalist, this nine piece orchestra can give your dance the melody touch you desire. THE Collgiani Call Bill Rogers, 311 ,, i as 2130. for information A listless Carnegie Tech court aggregation stepped out of its class Saturday night in Rec Hall before a throng of 3,000 Lion rooters with the inevitable re sult, an artistic 65-40 defeat by Penn State. After a hectic first period which saw the score change hands eight times and tie on three occasions, the State forces jumped into an early second period lead and from there it was just a matter of keeping tabs on the mounting Nittany score. Despite a gallant first-half stand, the host Lions proved too big, fast and rugged for the smaller Tartan outfit. Two unsung heroes, Joe Tocci and Carl Nordblom, performed yeomen duty for the Centre County collegians, deserving a majority of the credit for State's second court win. SIMON Milt Simon had his biggest night of the season, carrying off scoring honors by looping in 14 points. Simon was followed by the swarthy Theodore who ac counted for 13 tallies. Sharp shooting Ken Weiss picked up where he left off last week against Colgate by tallying 11 counters. After Nordblom's two foul shots gave the Lions a 13-12 first quarter bulge, the State College crew was never headed. An eight-point splurge by Weiss was the main reason for State's 29-22 half-time edge. Simon, mostly on short passes from Tocci, scored ten of his 14 markers in the free-scoring third period. Sweetheart Dance White Hall Semi-formal Girl-ask-boy-affair 808 CLEMENS' ORCHESTRA SPECIAL • . For Seniors Only! One Bxlo La Vie Portrait Unmounted . . . Only $ 1 . 50 Special for Week of 17th Come in and see on display the individual portraits of the Class of 1949 at the Penn State Photo Shop College Avenue IM Cage Activity Intramural cage activity calls a two-week halt to pro ceedings after action on the Rec hall hardwood Thursday night, to allow concentration on exams and registration. Play resumes February 8 with nine games. : Calt''' lcle asslt 0 1 ' veS 11.14'- ~~! February 12 $1.50 Couple PAGE THREE 9P. M.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers