FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1949 Evans Rzturns; Boxers Tr! to Squeeze Orange Fortified by the return of Dave Evans, aggressive 125-pound ring artist who performed for Leo Houck during the '43 mitt cam paign, the boxing Lions are tapering off their training pace in preparation for their toughest assignment to date, the slugging duel against the Orangemen at Syracuse tomorrow. Evans, a Lion regular during hometown of last season's cap tain, Jackie Tighe. A slight in jury kept Evans out of the ring for the first two mitt encounters but the blond battler is ready now to seek his first victory when he squares off against Jim Huba of Syracuse. Six of the battlers who par ticipated in the 5 1 / 2 -2 1 / 2 trounc ing of Army last weekend will be on hand for the sound of the opening gong in the State Fair Coliseum at Syracuse. NEW STARTERS Evans replaces Fred Smith at 125 pounds while Lou Guthrie, left - jabbing 135-pounder who won his inaugural bout against Western Maryland, replaces 011ie Wallace at 135 pounds. In his toughest test to date, the Lions' EIBA defending titlist, Chuck Drazenovich, meets Syr acuse's outstanding sophomore heavy, Marty Crandell. Crandell first gained national recognition when he scored a KO against former national champ Art Saey at Miami. His victory over West Point's Bill Kellum gives him a slight edge over the Brownsville Bombardier. Coach Simmons, of the Or ange, believes Crandell can easily become the next NCAA champ because of his terrific co ordination. Like Drazenovich, he is .a solid puncher with either hand and can readily absorb a punch. EIBA PREVIEW In the contest, which might easily be a preview of the EIBA finals this year, Drazenovich lays an undefeated skein of eight straight fights on the line. Lion ringleader John Benglian should have little trouble mak ing it three .straight for the year when he squares off against Charles Pechette, a clever ring artist. TOUGH TASK Paul Smith draws the tough est assignment of the evening when he meets Syracuse's EIBA champ, Ji m Rollier. Rollier's crowd-pleasing style. and aggres sive type of attack make him a slight favorite over the much improved Smith. Power-punching Julie Levine steps into the ring against Jack Bolger, of the Lions, in the light heavy division, while Lou Guth rie encounters Al Sauerwine at 135 pounds. Offensive-m i n d e d Jim Ma loney should annex his third triumph of the current campaign when he clashes with Chuck Riggolioso. Fight results to date make the Nittany slugger a top heavy favorite. Riggolioso dropped a decision to Army's Ken Herring, a battler whom THE DAILY CO the war, hails from Scranton, the Maloney decisloned last Satur day. At 145 pounds the Lions' Jack Sheehe meets Tim Cur le y. Curley is an excellent fighter whose right glove earned him a runner-up spot in last year's Eastern tour ne y at Virginia. Sheehe has improved greatly since the beginning of the sea son and a victory in this weight class might mean a team win for the Lions. The Nittany Realm Erie's reputation as an incubator for swimmers of the A-1 variety is being upheld well these days in the Vale of Mount Nit tany in the form of Bill Schildmacher, the Lions' swimming captain. It was through the efforts of Lenny Diehl, erstwhile Blue and White swimming mentor, that Bill came to Penn State last year. Schildmacher was one of the mainstays of last season's mediocre tank unit. In this season's opener against Cornell, he set a new record for varsity swimmers in the 100-yard freestyle when he clipped six tenths of a second off the old record as he took first place with a 55.8 time. Much of the success of a winning athlete can be attributed to the guidance of his tutor. "Any swimming records that I have broken here at State or any that I break in the future I attribute to the guiding hand of Coach Bill Gut teron," says Bill. "Gutteron is one of the finest coaches I have ever worked with; he has cut 4 seconds off my time in the 100 since last year. Under his wing Penn State is on the way up in swimming in the East." WATER BABY Bill, who has always lived in Erie, was a water baby from the day he was old enough to keep his . head above the aqua in the bathtub. With the best . . facilities available because his father was the ' owner of a sports store, Bill received his first en couragement for aquatic success from Ed Thomas, • • - former baskteball coach at Erie Academy. .4 Under the tutelage of Bill Hollinger, NAAU 40-yard freestyle champ, Schildmacher learned the fundamentals of the American crawl. But it is water polo that plays an early part of Erie's annual water sport program and it was there that Bill found a second home in the pool. He was a forward on two high school water polo teams which copped the city cham pionship for Academy High. Although a top-flight performer now in the 50- and 100-yard freestyle, he wasn't always the first across the finish line. Often during his high school races he was the "bridesmaid" finishing second behind Jim Duke, Michigan State's ace-in-the-hole in swim circles. After graduation Bill traveled 15 miles to the south and enrolled at Edinboro State Teachers College where he was the Red Raiders' star swimming performer before entering the Navy for a four-year stretch. The Navy soon spied Bill's ability to handle himself in the water so he was asigned to naval underwater demolition training in Florida. "One day while our team (18 men) was swimming to a beach," Bill relates, "I missed the pickup boat on the way back. The ruling was that if you missed the pickup run to swim out to the five-mile buoy to be picked up later. "I'm sure happy that Bill came here," says Nittany Coach Bill Gutteron. "He's a great captain and sportsman." 4-4Afei&(wptiq‘cal 55555 MANE ® *This special compound gives lustre keeps hair in place without stiffness, • 0 ..\\*s By GeOrge Vadasz SECOND BEST gives your hair that "just-combed" look—all day long! lEW FORMULA WITH VIRATOL* 'orks wonders in the ooks of your hair. t looks natural...it 'eels natural... t stays in placel 'ry a bottle. LEO HOUCK Mermen Annex Second, Top Dickinson, 47-28 With three of their star performers setting new pool records, Penn State's swimming team overwhelmed an outclassed Dickinson College team, 47-28, Wednesday at Carlisle. For the second time this year Captain Bill Schildmacher broke an existing record in his special time it was in his own pool and a eign grounds and was joined by a teammate, Cass Borowy. The pair finished in a dead heat in 56.9 seconds, slow time for Schildmacher who recorded a 55.5 time while breaking the Penn State record. FOLMSBEE Cal Folmsbee was the other record-setting Nittany contestant as he rolled up an impressive 92.43 score to sweep the fancy diving event. This victory ran Cal's winning streak to four straight for the current season and left his dual meet record still unblemished. His partner, Rudy Valentino, took third-place honors. Dickinson led at the start with victories in the 300-yard medley relay and the 220-yard free-style. The Lions quickly countered by Two things every college man, should knovi ■ - - 1, This is a father. Thinks crib note is payment due on baby's bed. Sleeps liule—from after the bawl until son rises. Should be graduated tal-cum laude. He looks smooth as a you-know-what in a "Manhattan" shim. . This is a "Manhattan" Burt. Also r howling success. Popular button-down collar. Always fits right—looks neat. Size-Fixt (fabric residual shrinkage 1% or less). In white and solid-colored oxfords. CAMPUS FAVORITE THE MANHATTAN SKIRT COMIPAIMY .:::k. ..;M: %),:: .4- • -,A:".-:, Products are Exclusive with 4 1 f 4 14 4 4 1 4 1 lei 039 HATTER y, the 100-yard sprint. The first one; Wednesday he did it on for- gaining firsts in the 50-yard free style, the diving and the 100-yard free-style. Borowy emerged from the meet a double winner by sprinting the record-breaking 100 and taking first place laurels in the 50. After piling up a lead in these three events, the Gutteronmen were never headed. The closest and most interest• Continued on page six NOW! FREE CLOTHING REPAIRS! We sew on or tighten buttons, mend small pocket holes, tack trouser cuffs, and re pair broken belt loops FREE OF CHARGE when you bring your cleaning or elllek prersing to Hall's Dry Cleaning Shop. Store entrance on Allen St. underneath the Corner Room. Open every day from 8 —G. Bring clothing in today for free re pairs! Small charge for major repairs. ...... .... i.. n.i::v.iA;:lNh: ~J ~~. Copt. 1949, Th. Monbalky, Siki4l Co Manhaiian HAISErIDASMER PAGE FIVIC TAI LOA