~ A GE FOUR Wald Wins Third Place In Epee Championships Although Penn State finished far down in the team standings, Rolf Wald, the Lions' fine epee entry, gained individual prestige in the Fencing Intercollegiates Friday and Saturday as he placed third in that event. The meet, held in the CCNY gym in New York, saw NYU cop the team title for the eighth time in the last 12 years. Arthur Meyer's Penn Staate squad garnered 43 points, good for 12th place. Wald captured nine out of 12 matches in his pool to tie John Hughes of Princeton for first position and thereby entered the finals. He proceeded to win three out of his five jousts in the finals to insure third spot in the epee. For the entire tourney, Wald had a record of 12 wins and five losses. The Lions were fourth in the epee, eighth in the sabre and last in the foil. In the epee, Art Ward split even in his 12 bouts and Bill Fairchok won five out of 12. Along with Wald, these men put State off to a flying start with 20 points. Competition in the foil proved toe strong for the Meyermcn. They managed to pick up only eight points in this event as Larry McCarty and Ralph Meier each checked in with 3-9 records, while ) John Kochalka had a 2-10 mark. State came back with 15 points in the sabre as Dick Dyer won s van and lost five, Paul Younkin split his twelve matches and John Richards copped two con tests while losing 10. Navy we n the epee crown for the third year in succession and the meet champion, NYU, snared the sabre title bcsides tieing CCNY for the Little Iron Man Trophy in the foil. Final team standings: NYU 80, THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Navy 72, CCNY 67, Army 65, Rutgers 59, Princeton 54, Colum bia 46, Harvard 46, MIT 46, Yale 45, Cornell 44, Penn State 43 and Pennsylvania 33. Grid Aides To Be Named Two new assistants will be added to the Penn State football coaching staff prior to the 1949 season, Coach Joe Bedenk an nounced today. Bedenk. who was annointed to the top job when Bob Hin:ains resigned ten days ago, said the additions had nreviously been authorized but that Higgins had delayed the anpointments. He indicated that no selections had been made yet, but said that both men would come from alumni ranks. Bedenk explained that his for mer assistant. Jim O'Hora, would move up to the line coaching job and nne of the new assistants would be assigned to duty under O'Hora. The other new man will he :assigned to duty under Al Mi chaels, the backfield coach, while Bedenk already has announced the selection of End Coach Earle Edwards as his first assistant. Simon Joins 'Stars' On 3 New Cage 'All' Teams It may take big boys like Ken tucky's Groza and Jones, or Yale's Lavelli, to win national All- American basketball honors, but in his own back yard Lion Cap tain Milt Simon is recognized as a top-flight cage star. The scrappy Nittany guard add ed national stature by being nam ed to three more "all" teams over the weekend. Jack Henry, Pittsburgh Sun- Telegraph sports writer, named Simon to his second Warn "All West Penn" squad. 'Huddle' maga 7 zinc, Pittsburgh district sports or gan, selected the set-shot artist for honorable mention on its Pitts burgh district All-American. Finally, Washington and Jef ferson's cagers gave Simon a third-team slot on their "all-oppo nent" selections. Previously the Associated Press had awarded "Little Milt," as he is known to Lion cage fans, hon orable mnetion on the AP All- State lineup. Joe Tocci, Simons running mate at the other guard post, was also given honorable mention in Hud dle's listing of Pittsburgh district hoop standouts. Pistolmen Triumph Over Vilic:n ova Penn State's NROTC Pistol team defeated that of Villanova College, in results just tabulated from the telegraphic matches of March 12. Midshipmen Jerry Barrho, Raymond George, Thomas Grifferty, John Kemper, John Mc- Call, Philip Monaghan and Wil liam Nagony make up the team that this year seeks its fourth straight championship of the Fourth Naval District. In this season's firing, other vic tims of the championship team in clude Colorado, Notre Dame, Kan sas, South Carolina, Alabama Polytech, Miami, Oklahoma, Mar quette, North Carolina while losses have been incurred at the hands of Holy Cross, Renssalaer, and Illinois Institute of Tech nology. IN 00 0 1001iCS. For Your Dancing Pleasure at IFC - PANHEL BALL APRIL 1 9 - 1 IN REC HALL Admission $4.00 Per Couple Semi-formal Drazenovich One of 4 EIBA Returnee Kings Lion Heavyweight Seeks Third Title Penn State's heavyweight champion, Charles (Chuck) Dra zenovich, will be one of four 1949 title-winners who next year will have the opportunity to win a third straight title in the Inter collegiate Boxing Association. Only seven men have won this distinction in 26 years of tourna ment competition and only Jimmy Miragliotta, of the Univer sity of Virginia, turned the trick in the last decade. Miragliotta won his first 135-pound title in 1944, went to war, and repeated in 1947 and 1948. REPEATERS Drazenovich, also a 60-minute football player at Penn State, was one of four repeaters in the 1949 championships and none of the four is a senior. The others, all of whom will compete again next year, are 130-pound Allen Hol lingsworth and 135-pound Grover Masterson, both of Virginia, and Jim Rollier, of Syracuse Univer sity. Until Miragliotta completed his cycle in 1948, only six men had turned the trick in 25 years. The first three-t:me winner, 160- pound Allie Wolff, of Penn State, ran up a string of 28 straight victories in the years from 1927 through 1929, Penn State's only triple champion, 115-pound Russ Criswell, annexed his titles in 1934, 1935, and 1936. SYRACUSE Syracuse boasts three of the seven, starting with Albert Wert heimer, who was unbeaten in 31 bouts as he won 125-pound honors in 1931, 1932 and 1933. The other Orange triple winners were 175- pound Americo Woyciesjes, beaten only twice as he dominated his division in 1939, 1940 and 1941; and heavyweight Salvatore Mira bito, undefeated in 26 bouts as he won first honors in 1941, 1942 and 1943. The other three-time winner, and Villanova College's only in ter-collegiate boxing champion, was Tony Sala, former football great and brother of Lee Sala, who currently is aspiring to championship recognition in pro fessional ranks. Tony won his titles at 175 pounds in 1935, 1936 and 1937. WARNER BROTHERS S , , TAT E Coming Soo{l . • • ijrn T P I lOF - NAT/ORAL "rO Air tw UVIS AND LOVES Of 01$ IN *TAM dßOWitetlikeflC • • IPAISV? Feat wing GAR M OO E. • , dm Now Amwkan Stu, ,91r/ DaringlY DtaPlaied •' • r. , • • ' ' Ns. . • . Thursday Special! Burger & Shake 35c VIC'S MILKY WAY 145 S. ALLEN ST. TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1949 etween Thes, -.<41 Pi • ..1 1 I I By Tom Morgan SPORTS EDITOR Coaches' Handball Twenty years ago tomorrow Rec Hall was dedicated at Penn State, and at least one institution has paralleled the Rec's two-decade history. That's the coaches' per ennial handball tournament. At various hours during most days, a Rec Hall loiterer can hear the sharp bounce of a rubber ball ricocheting off four walls in the "handball .rooms." .Inspection through small barred windows, which impart a dungeon-like air to the "rooms" to one side of the gym floor, often reveals four ca vorting Penn State coaches. We ventured into Rec Hall yes terday to discover some facts a bout this inter-coach competition. Who decides who will be paired with whom each year? Are there any squabbles about "being stuck this year with this stumblebum"? Who usually wins? Our Results We discovered five salient points: 1) We were nuts for un dertaking such a task in the first place. 2) There have been many tournaments started and few fin ished. 3) It takes the coaches weeks to choose partners each year, and then nobody is satis fied. 4) Trying to find out who has been judged winner leaves one be fuddled in a cross-current of claims and counter-claims from the coaches. 5) The whole affair is loaded with intra-staff dynamite that will probably explode under us the next time we tread the Rec Hall hallways. Aside from that, we learned from an anonymous observer that the coaching clan decided this year to jettison all previous pairing methods and have the ten so called "expert" players rate them selves and a second flight of lesser lights of the handball realm. This seemed to work, although the resulting bickering over who were to be the "experts" consum ed a full month before this year's tourney began. • On the Block We have it on full-proof au thority that Jim O'Hora, football line coach and one of the big handball "wheels," drew Gym Coach Gene Wellston° as a part ner, then promptly placed him on the trading block. It is rumored that O'Hora was willing to throw a couple of paral lel bars into the deal, but nothing resulted. Wettstone declares 'taint so. According to an unimpeachable source, when Boxing Coach Leo "Fred" Houck drew Nick Thiel, lacrosse coach, as his partner, he tried to trade Thiel off with a pair of lacrosse sticks thrown in "to equalize the bargain." Thiel de. vies everything. Who the casual observer con siders the winner of this handball war depends largely on which coach he asks. Much of the infra-staff hand ball dispute and intrigue centers around Coach Houck, described as a "demon on the handball court." Aftet the games are played. Continued on page live