WFBIE§P4Y, rAI'WAAit 18, 19q0' Between , 07 4 (;;71 , 7s:co \ //ft The Lions With Elliot Krano Sports Editor Weighty Problem Only 16 ounces kept Pete Bo lonis, Cornell's outstanding 128- pound grappler, from competing officially in Saturday's bout. The Big Red wrestler fought all morning to push his weight down to the required poundage, and when he stepped on to the scales at 2 p.m. Saturday, he still had one more pound to lose. Charlie Speidel, Nittany coach, offered to allow the visiting ath lete to weigh in later in the day— or even up until the opening bout, but Bolonis had sweated off every possible pound that he could lose and declined Speidel's offer. Incidentally, Pete will wres tle in the 136-pound spot next week. Lost Is Found At last, the true facts of. the . case of the missing table tennis , learn have come to light. A let ter from a Thomas G. Sea bourne, a Temple student con nected with the , Department , of Physical and Health Educa tion, stated that some men from the SWarthmore Center repre sented the Collage, and "die to, extenuating 'circumstances they had to default a few matches.',' Seabourne, who conducted the intercollegiate`contest two weeks ' ago, went on to say, in the tra-' ditional 'Old College Fight' style, "class will tell on the basketball court and maybe Temple will avenge our football defeat by Penn State with a twin basket ball win." We'd hate to have this matter turn into an intercollegiate brawl with Penn State students _tearing up Broad Street .with pneumatic hammers and Temple students painting owls on the lion shrine. Incidentally, Upsala College won the intercollegiate table tennis championship and Nate Sussman, of Temple, won the national singles. Another Triplett An,•athlete was visiting State College last weekend who looked so much like Wally Triplett that he could have been his brother. In fact, it was the famous wing back's brother, Perry, who is now attending the 'Harrisburg Center as a Penn State freshman. From anywhere further than 10 feet away, the younger edi tion Of the former Lion defen sive ace looks exactly- like his older brother. His build, ac tions and even his walk is reminiscent of his brother. Perry is playing lacrosse for the Center to -keep I in condition, and when next fall rolls around, Coach Bedenk will put the La- Mott gridder to the final test to see if he can duplicate his bro ther's actions on the football field. THE DAILY P*T- , F,V;1 1 : PTA , FcrE4FRP: PFTMYT-YATITA les Eye Tonight's Rec Hall Contest . , American University's Eagles will be looking for revenge against Penn State in the second game of a Rec Hall basketball double-header tortightd The Lions upset the Eagles, 57-49, in the other meeting of the two schools this year. Starting for the Eagles will be, left to right: Bob Lan on, captain, Leroy Ishman, high scorer with a. 14.2 average, Ronnie Garshag, 6-foot-6 center. Sherwood Webster and Art Morales. 'Lion Five Faces Eagles In Twin-Bill Windup Penn State basketball fans will get double their money's worth tonight in Rec Hall when both varsity and JV Lion teams see action in the first court doubleheader since , the 1947-'4B season. In the varsity tilt State will engage Ameiican U. for the second time this season while the Nittany Cubs open their abbreviated schedule matched with Altoona Center's defending junior college monarchs at 7 o'clock. In American U. Coach Elmer Gross will be facing what is potentially one of • the greatest teams of individual stars on his schedule. In an earlier game in Washington, D.C., the Lions came through with a 57 to 49 . win. WERE HITTING Loking back, Assistant COach John Egli, who will mentor the JV's tonight, recalled that, "The only reason we beat them 'on their own court before was that all of our boys happened to be hitting. Tonight? If the boys are hitting . we'll do • 0.k., if not, it could be another Carnegie Tech story." In recording Saturday's win over ' Washington and Jefferson, Gross started Hardy Williams in place of rugged Jay McMahan in a surprise move. There is a pos sibility that the Nittany coach will again call upon the Phila delphia-born dribbler tonight in a starting role. Although he is sacrificing height, Gross realizes that the Lions have been throwing away too many scoring opportunities on their down court drives. As it was, Williams' floor ,play drew high praise froM Egli. In their firs' ten games this year AmericanjU. won five while losing five. The Eagles can list among their victims the Quantico Marines, Brooklyn Poly, Roa noke, Ohio Wesleyan and Hamp den-Sydney. In those 10 games, 6-foot 4- inch Leroy `lsh'' Ishman, one of 'five Bradford, Pa., cagers /on Coach Staff Cassell's squad, has been the guiding light with a 14.2 average. Another individual id who has been burning up Southern courts is Bob Lamon, a member of last year's. Mason-. Dixon Conference All-Tourna ment team. Lamon's accurate set shots acouzited fOr 17 points in the last Lion-Eagle contest. LOVE PAYS • Not once ... not twice but 10 times oven.. With every Valentine package—a. free chance. %The prize=l.o times the original purchase price -In cash. • - TAKE A CHANCE ON LOVE! IJrandy caner rho L 1 I t I C LILA' .-....-.- NOW! \ At Year • Warner Theatre e t 2l la = l JOHN RUSSELL DOROTHY HART "UNDERTOW" Held Over! Patricia Neal • Ronald Reagan . Richard Todd "HASTY HEART" 474 Itlly GINGER ROGERS FRED ASTAIRE "The BARKLEY'S of BROAIWAY" Schott Named Veep Of NCAA District Carl. P.. Schott, dean of the Schnol of Physical Education and Athletics,. was elected vice presi dent of the Second District of the National Collegiate Athletic Association at the association's two-day meeting in New York last week. TONIGHT at THE HOUSE OF COOK CANDLELIGHT DINNER Meet Your Friends at Cook's 230 East College Ave. pilmaae:NcaowNg! II • • . . g NOW—the world's most. g comprehensive library of great books g q ) ad, 950 each 41 . c EVERYMAN'S i) ( 01. 0 . LIBRARY. ( . , ,11 STANDARD EDITION •:I clothbound 41 OVER 500 TITLES IN PRINT covering the fields of English Literature, II Philosophy, History, etc.—from Aristotle to 11 Zola. Each volume has a helpful and illu minating ( lntroduction by such authorities as ' D. 4 1 T. S. Eliot, Howard Mumford Jones, Chris- \i) topper Morley, G. K. Chesterton, George ). Saintsbury and G. D. H. Cole. ( Get your classroom copies, ,your outside reading books, .and build your personal li brary from this world famous collection. Ask 1: 1 your bookstore for complete list of titles. Vif A E. P. DUTTON . & CO. INC. 300 Fourth Ave:, New York 10, N. ,Y. • `;;'<V,.".W`i"'...A:t;%"%.\:V`i;;:;PcW`it:N:V`:l<:::;l2 PAGE THREE 25 IM Battles Go On Record Th e intramural basketball tournament saw 25 games go into the record book Friday and Mon day nights. Monday nights Dorm 43 smash Dorm 24, 28-9; Dorm 22 edge Dorm 3, 24-22, and Dorm 41 for feit to Dorm 11 in independent League A. In League 11, Dorm 6 turned back Dorm 21, 15-13; Dorm 2 top-. ped Dorm 4, 18-16, and Dorm 7 defeated Dorm 42, 16-10. Dorm 26 spanked Dorm 5, 23- 12; Dorm 35 edged Dorm 14, 10-9, and Dorm 1 forfeited to Dorm 32 in League C. On Friday night, Beta Sigma Rho downed Phi Delta Theta, 17- 13; Pi Lamda Phi squeezed by Phi Sigma Kappa, 15-13, and Phi Kappa spilled Acacia, 19_14, in fraternity League C. In League B, Sigma Phi Sigma whipped Theta Kappa Phi, 19-7; Alpha Phi Alpha tamed Sigma Phi Alpha, 17-4, and Phi Gam ma Delta topped Tau Phi Delta, 28-9. In League A, Sigma Pi turned back Delta Chi, 21-14; Alpha Chi Sigma smacked Kappa Sigma, 17-3, and Lambda Chi Alpha de feated Zeta Beta Tau, 26-12. Also on Friday night, in inde pendent League H, the Ramblers sunk Ritz A. C., 30-13; The Lod gers walloped X.M.S.T.C., 35-13, and the Tigers squeeked by the Musketeers, 26-25. Altoona edged the Choppers, 24-22; the Jayvees took Matilda Chi, 14-13, and Section 10 topped Beaver House, 26-17, in League I. In League J, the Shrimps smashed Jordan Hall, 33-8; Nit tany Co-op downed the Bullets, 14-6, and the Whiz Kids walloped the Barons, 39-8.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers