FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1949 Chosen To Top All-Foe Team ... DICK KELSEY Lehigh Mat Star Matmen Select All-Opponents Seven Eastern champions brace the 1949 all-opponent team selected by Penn State's varsity wrestlers. The heavyweight post lacks the only EIWA titlist. , Homer Barr, the Blue and White's heavy, captured 'that title at the EIWA tournament, but his runner-up, Lehigh's Gus LaSasso, was named to the squad. Both Bart Downes, Navy's 145- pound champion, and Jack Ad ams, Cornell, 'were chosen for the number one spot in that class. Downes grappled at 155 pounds when the States met Navy in a dual meet, but proved too valu able to be left off the honor team. SYRACUSE, LEHIGH Syracuse, Eastern team title bearer, and Lehigh—the only teams that rocked the Speidel men this year, ran away with the balloting with three men apiece on the first squad. Ken Hunte, Pas Perri and George Gebhardt of Syracuse and Dick Kelsey and LaSasso of Le high were unanimous choices, while Syracusians Jim Fogarty and Joe Settanni, and Lehigh's jim Jackson were named to the second crew. Completing the number one squad is the third Lehigh muscle man, Mike Filipos, and Prince ton's 128-pound Davie Poor. Filipos was the majority at 121 but Fogarty kept the balloting close. These were the only mat men named at the weight. DAVIE POOR • Princetonian Poor won out in the fight for honors at 128 pounds, but Eastern runnerup Ralph Raabe, Army, and Pete Bolanis, Cornell; tied for the second team berth. Raabe lost to Poor in the Between Lions— Continued from page four of Pennsylvania would engage each year in a three-way battle. He sums it all up as "a natural." According to Gilbert's plan, in Year A, Penn would entertain Penn State on Franklin Field in Philly, while Penn State would play host to Pitt and Pitt would do likewise with Penn in its Pittsburgh stadium. Then in year B, Penn would travel to State College, Penn State would travel to Pitt and Pitt would travel to Penn. Year C would re peat Year A's arrangement, and so forth. It seems that Penn puts a deep cleat wound in any such sugges tions on football scheduling, for reasons we'll mention later. An Amazing Offer by HOLIDAY Pipe Mixture pipe that eyes) , sasollser wants—DANA, the modern pipe, with brightly polished alurnii nuns shank and aloe i • erred briar bowl.: Oily 504 with inside wrappers from 12 pocket tins 01 11111.111 AT PIPE 11111TUAIE SM. 12 1122 W raNels 081 yaw DANA PIPI Ski MUM ba1..041111611114 ,1 10 11 • Otto, Limited to Uni...•11491300 • Juno 30. 1141 s',/ • '' , lt /1• • •II MIKE FILIPOS Top Lehigh Wrestler By Ed Watson EIWA finals, but Bolanis, who wrestled at 128 pounds during regular season, dropped to 121 for the tournament and placed third in that class. Army's Abe Allan gained the second team at 145 pounds behind the Downes-Adams duo. "Murderer's Row," Syracuse'3 Hunte, Perri and Gebhardt, had no trouble outclassing the field at 155, 165 and 175 pounds. Picked as second choices were Russ Ran_ dall, Princeton; Bob Wisherd, Navy, and Jim Jackson, Lehigh. Howie Houston, Harvard, who lost a 6-0 decision to Barr in the sem:-finals of the EIWA tourney, gained a position on the second team. Although, Harvard and Penn State did not duel on the mats, Houston's ability earned him the second team rank. The 1949 All-opponent team: FIRST TEAM 121-Filipos, Lehigh 128-Poor, Princeton 136-Kelsey, Lehigh 145-Downes, Navy -Adams, Cornell 155-Hunte, Syracuse 165-Perri, Syracuse 175-Gebhardt, Syracuse Unl.-LaSasso. Lehigh SECOND TEAM 121-Fogarty, Syracuse 128-Bolanis, Cornell -Raabe, Army 136--Settanni, Syracuse 145-Allan, Army 155-Randall, Princeton 165-Wisherd, Navy 175-Jackson, Lehigh Unl.-Houston, Harvard THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA All candidates for the var sity tennis team are urged to attend a preliminary organiza tion meeting in Room 12, Irvin Hall, at 5 p.m. today, an nounced Sherm Fogg, tennis mentor. Sigma Nu's Retain Lead In IM Scoring Sigma Nu continues to lead fraternity race for all-year point award honors in intramural ath letics. Finishing as runner-up in the fast-stepping cage tournament recently completed, the Sigma Nu's garnered 110 points, boost ing their total for the four sports concluded to 410 markers. Second-place Phi Epsilon Pi dropped far behind, grabbing only 25 points for court work to bring its total to 300, while Phi Delta Theta clung to third posi tion with 235 by adding 45 mark ers for basketball. Pi Kappa Alpha's booming surge to the fraternity cage championship and top-flight 160 points shoved that house up from I the ranks of also-rans to fourth I spot in all-fraternity compilation. The PiKa's jumped from 25th spot to the coveted first-five com pany by boosting their total point age to 220, just 15 points behind the third running Phi. Delts. The big-ten standings through the first four sports touch football, swimming, boxing and basketball are: 1. Sigma Nu, 410 2. Phi Epsilon Pi, 300 3. Phi Delta Theta, 235 The intramural office will make make another compilation after handball singles and wrestling are completed. IM Office Now Accepts Entries Entries for handball doubles and badminton singles will now be accepted by the intramural office, announced Eugene Bisch off, IM director, yesterday. All entries must be filed before next Thursday at 5 p.m. Each organization is permitted to enter one handball team and two badminton players. Entry fee for handball is 50 cents per team; for badminton, 25 cents per player. Tennis Call 4. Pi Kappa Alpha, 220 5. Pi Kappa Phi, 175 6. Phi Sigma Kappa, 160 7. Phi Gamma Delta, 145 8. Alpha Gamma Rho, 135 9. Alpha Tau Omega, 135 10. -- Delta Upsilon, 135 14 Falls Give Fans Flashy IM Mat Show Fourteen exhausted grapplers rasped their last breaths then let their shoulders sag to the canvas on the Rec Hall mats last night as the IM wrestlers put on the biggest pinning festival of the rapidly ending tournament. Only one bout went the entire six minutes, Jim Worley, Sigma Nu 165-pounder, tacking a 13-4 licking to Lou Epstein, Phi Epsilon Pi. But the intramuralers evened that event when Bill Laderer, Tau Kappa Epsilon, and Paul Hallman, Sigma Pi, exchanged falls in a 128-pound struggle. Hallman cinched that match by downing Laderer in 1:32 of the third stanza after his own shoul ders had felt the mat in 1:50 of the second frame. Russ Wilson, Delta Theta Sigma, pulled the upset of the night as he tied up last season's runnerup in the 135-pound class, George Kurtz, Lambda Chi Al pha, in 5:40. Kurtz was riding a two-match winning streak when Wilson won his third bout of the season, all by falls. TROYAN Cy Troyan, sturdy 145-pound independent, fought it out until 1:10 of the third period before he pinned Steve Heyser; Don Keck, Phi Sigma Kappa, downed Fred Schutzman, Phi Epsilon Pi, in 1:19; John Hull, Beta Theta Pi, uncled Wil (Red) Roth, Zeta Beta Tau, in 1:43 of the third round after a bruising fight in the 155- pound class. Other falls saw Ed Van Sickel, Phi Kappa Psi, slam down Israel Dinner, Phi Sigma Delta, in 1:56; 175-pound Barker, independent, lay the holds on Mike Callahan, ANWAYMAYAWANWAWANWWWWwWWI in: ....} ?' . 4 : wi. 0.1. ir ARROW'S SPREAD COLLAR STYLES Phil, Bill and Jack—like many college men—like the extra touch of real style in Arrow's spread collor models with plain or French cuffs. If you prefer oxford—ask for Arrow "SUSSEX." If you like broadcloth—ask for Arrow "PAR." ARROW $:: SHIRTS and TIES 7e. ..: 5 UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS IirnsIWWWIWANYWINIANWAVANVANYANN Exclusive With ARROW PRODUCTS 1 THE YOUNG MEN'S SHOP By Bob Kotzbauer in 41 seconds of the third; Chuck Eeatty, Kappa Sigma, pin Bill Mathers, Delta Tau Delta, in 1:26. in a battle of the heavy weights, and 121-pound Sheldon Leisawitz, Phi Epsilon Pi, drop Jeff Naylor, Kappa Delta Rho, in 3:46. Dan Pearson, Delta Upsilon, watched his two-match streak go down the drain as Big Mike Ru bino, Alpha Phi Delta, applied the holds in 2:50; Cal DiValerio, Phi Sigma Kappa, won by fall over Jim Yerkes, Sigma Pi, in 3:25; Bud Pierce, Phi Delta Theta, pinned Bob Harkless, Al pha Tau Omega, in 3:41; Jack McCall, Alpha Tau Omega, slammed George Himes, Sigma Chi, in 1:59; and Vince Cava naugh, Delta Upsilon, overturned Bill Aiken. Phi Delta Theta, in 3:32. Jim Worley's heavy 13-4 win over Lou Epstein piled up as Worley scored with three re verses, a takedown, two near falls, and time advantage over his tricky, but outclassed oppo nent. With Jack Weidenman, 135- pound Sigma Nu, and Halford, Continued on page six with FRENCH CUFFS STATE COLLEGE 127 S. Allen St. rAcTr, FTVT RUBINO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers