OAximuAi, JANUARY 6, 1951 Nittaiw Tfanfis Open Rec Hall Twin Bill Card Wredlers Host Lehigh Al 7 p.m. The Penn State wrestling team will open its 1951 Rec hall, mat season 'tonight by taking on the EngLrieefs of Lehigh in the open ing half of a twin bill. . ■ The ■ match will begin at 7 o’clock. Tonight’s "mat contest, the first of jthe season for Coach Charlie SpeideP's..grapplers, can be terni ed'-as a'“cirucial test” in the Nit tariieS’ictUgst for the eastern title. Split Last Year Last., year, . Lehigh edged the Lions,- 29-28, in the Eastern Inter collegiate .Wrestling Association’s finals held;at Princeton. The Blue ancf - Wlute'came up with a 17-13 victory-over the Engineers dur ing : regular season. Lehigh' Has already won one decision* a'l9-11 fracas with Cor nell. \ : j;',:' . Probable starting lineups: Pehn State Luhiiih Watkins' - 123 (c).l'ilipos Drelbelhis' 130 Puereliach Maurer 137 Carlisle Prey;- .v San tel 147 (c) J i Mahoney 157 E. Mahoney IC7 Murphy Harr, (c) . Coach Billy Sheridan will prob ably stick with the same lineup that beat t the Big Red. Co-cap tain' Mike* Filipos, who won by a pin, will go in the 123-pound class; George Feurebach, with one decision, starts at 130; Bill Carlisle a prep school national champion who was pinned in the Cornell meet, at 137; co-captain John Mahoney who lost a de cision, at 147;-Ed Mahoney, with a decision to his credit, at 157; Pete Murphy, also with a decis ion, at 167; Tom Dimmig, who lost a decision, at 177, and Don Berndt, with a pin, in the heavy weight class.' “Judge” Watkins will probably get the nod at 123, although an other newcomer, Harry .Smith, might replace him at the last minute. Veteran Jack Dreibelbis will be at 130; letterwinner Don Maurey, who owns a 7-1 dual meet record, at 137; sophomore Don Frey at 147; holdover Bill Slabonik at 157; returnee Bill Santel at 167; EIWA runnerup Mike Rubino, with a 7-1 record last season, at 177, and two-time EIWA champ ion Homer Barr, captain of this year’s mat squad, at heavyweight. Barr will be after his 16th straight win in dual competition. He has no losses. The Engineers may rate as slight favorites in the njeet to night by virtue of the veterans present in the lineup, which in cludes an EIWA champion and two runners-up for titles. Feurebach was 130-pound champ last year, Filipos lost out in the 121 race in the finals, though he won the title the year before as a sophomore. John Ma honey and Lion captain ' Jim Maurey battled to a 0-0 tie in the EIWA finals, and Maurey was awarded the title on the referee’s decision. Is Your Entertainment Limited? . . How many people have limited their enjoyment of living by unreasonable prejudices? The people who won’t taste some foods because they know they won’t like it, “longhairs” who refuse to let themselves enjoy modern dance music, and “hep-cats” who won’t take time to appreciate a symphony. We have in our audiences many who. will come only to see comedies, and some who scorn “mere entertainment.” PLAY ER’S next production is no comedy. But, it is a tragedy which comes to us with twenty-five hundred years of recommenda tions. • THE ANTIGONE OF SOPHOCLES at Schwab January 77, 72, 73 Tickets will be on sale Monday, January 9, at the Student Union desk in Old Mam. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Fencers Engage Engineers Today Coach Arthur. Meyer’s fencing team draws open the curtain on its 1951 winter sport schedule this afternoon when it plays host to Lehigh. The match will start at 2 p.m. Last year in a closely con tested ' match the Engineers nipped the Lion fencers, 14-13. Captained by Ed Merek with additional lettermen Pete Raidy, Gene Goldbloom, Bob Searles, and Wayne Culver, the team shapes up as fit competition for any op ponent. Coach Meyers will select his lineup from the following blade men. Wielding the sabers will be skipper Merek, Jerry Clauser, Searles, Charles Ricker, and Bob Williams. The foil event should see Goldbloom, Die k Manback, Acer Kalanik, and Joe Kusick in action. In the epee division are veterans Culver, Raidy, and Co mo. Trackmen Enter PhiSSy inej. Meet Penn State, led by IC4A high jumping champ Vic Fritts, has ent red the seventh annual Phil adelphia Inquirer Track and Field meet in Convention- hall scheduled for Fri., Jan. 19. Coach Chick Werner will also field Ron Coder in the Howard S. Jensen Memorial pole vault,- and Guy Kay in the 50-yard high] hurdles. The mile-relay team! sparked by Kay and Bill Lock-] hart, and the two-mile relay team led by Bill and Don Ashenfelter, Bob Parsons, and Bob Freebairn will also compete. Jim Finn and Robert Young, both ineligible for varsity com petition,' will run as independ ents. Frosh Wrestlers Open Coach Charlie Ridenour’s fresh man wrestlers will open their season against the Lehigh fresh men at 2 o’clock this afternoon on the Rec hall mats. Ridenour plans to start the fol lowing line-up: 123 lbs.—Doug Cassel; 130 lbs.—Dick Lemyre; 137 lbs.—Pete Huey; 147 lbs.— Jerry Maurey; 157 ' lbs. Bill Krebs; 167 lbs:—Budd Whitebill; 177 lbs.—Dick Phelan, and heavy weight, Joe Pascarella. after the game drive out to .. . WINK'S SKY-VIEW Barbecues Sea Foods Steaks and Chops Chicken in the Basket on Route 322 Nightcap Matches Mon-Colgate s's Penn State’s basketball team will go after its fifth win of the season tonight, entertaining the tough Colgate quintet in the sec ond half of the Rec hall twin bill. The game will begin immedi ately after the wrestling match between Penn State and Lehigh. Coach Elmer Gross’ cagers, losers in three out of their last four contests, will be out to keep their record from dropping be iOW the .500 mark. In their first eight games, the Lions have won four and lost the same number. The Nittanies hold wins over Ithaca, American university, Rhode Island State, and Ohio State. Syracuse, Washington & Jefferson, Michigan State, and Lawrence Tech hold victories over the State cagers. On the other hand, Colgate comes to Rec hall with seven wins and three losses. The Red Raiders have downed Toronto, St. Lawrence, Rider, Duke, Navy, NYU, and RPI, while losing oniy to Princeton, Cornell, and North Carolina State. Tonight’s meeting reverses the situation before last year’s con test between the two schools. In the Christmas Dixie Classic Col- (Continued on page jour) Pgr Sliliiiiiy l [ Monday & Tuesday J Presented in cooperation with Romance Languages Dept. ; ] C&UJBEM r {Loeura D* Amor] f “Spectacular! Miss Bautista portrays the title role with great charm ... the first lady of the Spanish theatre.” —Brooklyn Eagle “Miss Bautista gives a booming performance!” —Daily Mirror NOW! i At Your I Warner Theatre 1 dathcuim | GARY COOPER | RUTH ROMAN "DALLAS” 1 I CLIFTON WEBB | JOAN BENNETT 1 "FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE" \VJittany. 1 VIRGINIA GREY 1 PHILIP REED pNKNOWN ISLAND" IM Fives Post 2nd Victories In intramural basketball con tests postponed from Nov. 27, Sig ma Nu, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Beta Sigma Rho, and Sigma Phi Ep silon all won their second straight league games Thursday night.* With Sam Lemon tossing in 8 points, Sigma Nu walloped Aca cia, 28-5, in the feature game in league C. Other loop C battles saw Tau Kappa Epsilon drub Phi Gamma Delta, 23-7; Sigma Alpha Mu edged Delta Chi, 12- 11, and in another low-scorer. Phi Kappa Sigma eked- out an 11-10 win over Triangle. Beta Sigma Rho triumphed 22- 6 over Theta Kappa Phi in league D; Zeta Beta Tau topped Alpha Phi Delta, 13-6; Alpha Sigma! (Continued on page fouri One-year Course l< tr NO PROHIBITION AT NICK'S BAR!! At Center Stage ... Don't Miss 1t... j « Now In Its 3rd Big Week ... "The Time of Your Life" Tickets at Student Union—Sat. $1.25 Boxers Step-Up Training Program With less than a week remain ing before their opening meet with Minnesota next Friday night in Minneapolis, the Nittany Lion boxers are well along the r-v' toward tiprtop condition. Coach Eddie Sulkowski’s sqm although hard hit by graduation which took away veteran Chuck Drazenovich, Paul Smith Johnny Bolger and John Han’;- plus last year’s most consiste -130 pounder, Harry Paracharalar bous appears to be particular; strong in the middle weight clo ses. Only three Rec hall meets a.. scheduled, the first being three wee k s away with Catholic U. Army and Wisconsin complete th" home schedule. • Prepare to step into a responsible executive position in the retailing field: buying, advertising, fashion, personnel. Specialized training, ex clusively for college graduates, covers merchandising, personnel manage ment, textiles, store organization, sales promotion, and all phases of store activity. Realistic approach under store-trained faculty. Classes are com bined with paid store work. Students are usually placed before graduation. Co-educational. Master’s degree. Limited enrollment. Write Admissions Office for Bulletin C. RESEARCH BUREAU FOR RET AH 7RMMMG UNIVERSITY Of PITTSBURGH . PlttsbmeN H; R*. l-AUi xhkilE