TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1951 Little Agai 2nd Team Honors To Buss, Coleman Harry Little, captain of the 1950 Lion soccer team, has been accorded All-American honors fop the second straight year; marking him as one of State’s all-time greats. Little was feted in New York city last weekend along with Clarence Buss and Ron Coleman, of the Nittanies, who are second team selections. The awards marked the time that. th. Penn State’ wards . were lected in t same year. The Dover, senior retail the inside ri, position that held on the 1! team while B\ and Coleman were picked as Hurry Little right wing and inside left, re spectively. Buss, of Watsontown, Pa., will graduate in June but Coleman is a junior from St. Louis. Coach Bill Jeffrey, who made the trip to New York , with the players, called Little “easily one of the best insidemen I ever coached.” He was not an aggress ive player, but he used a delib erate style of play that made him effective.” The timely scoring and clever (Continued on page four) Soph Ties 'Star' High-Jump Record Penn State’s high-jumping Jim Herb tied Tom DeLuglio, Brown university, in setting a new Wash ington Star indoor track record of 6-feet 7-inches Saturday night in the nation’s capital. The Lion sophomore, in his first meet, thus established the highest official indoor competi tive jump ever made by a Penn Stater. The old record was 6-feet 5-inches. Vic Fritts tied Jack Moody of N. Carolina for third with a 6- feet 4-inch leap. The Blue and White finished second to the great Seton Hall team in the mile relay. The win ning time was 3:28.1. Bill Lock hart, John Lauer, Guy Kay, and John McCall were pitted against a Seton Hall aggregation that contained several national cham pions. and an Olympic finalist, Bill Carter. Georgetown won the two-mile relay in 7:48.8. They were fol lowed by Seton Hall, Illinois, and Penn State’s combine of Don and Bill Ashenfelter, Bob Parsons, and Bob Freebaim, Ex-Penn Stater Horace Ashen felter finished 60-yards ahead of Browning Ross in the two-mile run. Penn State’s Dudley Foster finished fifth. Another ex-Nittahy Lion, Jim Gehrdes, won the 70-yard high hurdles for the .third successive year. He ran them in 8.6 seconds. Bob Young finished last. I PLASTIC I ( RAINCOATS | = r only : f *l*s | | • Large | | •Medium 1 •Small 1 I PENNSHIRE [ I CLOTHES | = 112 S. Frazier St. = |NEXT DOOR TO CITY HALLE MIHtMMtMMIIMUIHIMIIIMIIMMHIIHMi THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA n Pi NittanyWrestlers Top Virginia, 28-8 Penn State’s matmen made it two in a row this weekend, scor ing five falls and a decision to take a 28-8 verdict from the Cav aliers of Virginia. Johnny Reese, wrestling with a rubber cast on his arm and hand to protect -a broken thumb, was pinned by George Morse in 2:21 of the first period in the 123- pound match. Dean Harbold lost an 8-6 decision to Bill Morse in 130, and the Cavaliers led, 8-0. - Don Maurey broke the ice for the Lions, pinning his opponent in 1:30 of the first period. Don Frey made it two pins in a row by getting a fall in 1:50 of the first over Jack McElroy. Saniel Pins Opponent Bill Santel went' a little longer than his mates, but the end re sult was the same a pin. San tel downed Carr Doorman in 32 seconds of the third period. Joe Lemyre, not to be outdone, con tributed his five points by pin ning Joe Wood in 2:21 of the first period. Mike Rubino, who yesterday reported for his pr e - induction physical, broke the streak with a 10-2 decision over Meb Turner in the 177-pound bout, but Cap tain Homer Barr ended the match by pinning John Clarkson in 1:50 of the first period. For Barr, the “People’s Choice,” it was his 18th triumph dual meet in three seasons without a loss. The match was probably one of the fastest of the season. From the time the referee’s whistle first blew until Barr decked his man, the clock ticked off only 55 minutes. Lion Ski Team Defeats Colgate For First Win Penn State’s skiing team made its 1951 debut at Hamilton, N.Y. a successful one Saturday when they topped Colgate 287.2 to 269.6. State captured the cross country trek, 100-81.5, when Cap tain Bud Bankert, John' Kirch, and Dave Bischoff finished first, second, and third. Bankert’s winning time was 42:07. The Lion skiers also scored another first when Eggie Cronau took the honors in the downhill run in 73.4. Paul Friese finished fourth and Chuck Suitch sixth in this event. The best the Lions could do in the slalom was third place as Eggie Cronau came in in 84.2 followed by Paul Friese, 95.1, and Chuck Suitch in sixth place. Col gate grabbed the first two places in the slalom to take the event by a 93:2-84.6 score. NOW! At Your Warner Theatre aunt Laraine Day Robert Ryan "WOMAN ON PIER 13" State HELD OVER! "DESTINATION MOON" Color by Technicolor Litany International Film Club Presentation "WALLS OF MALAPAGA" eked As Soccer All-American Flails Way To New Record GENE KOLBER cut his way through the waters of Glenland pool Friday night to smash his own 440 pool record against Rut gers with a time of 5:20.5. Colgate Defeats Swimmers, 51-24; 2 Pool Marks Broken If it’s any consolation' to Lion swimmers, their twin setbacks over the weekend were suffered at the hands of two of the best swimming teams in the East. Saturday Colgate nearly dup] of the night before by slapping a 51-24 defeat on Gutteron’s men while breaking two more Glenn land pool records Colgate’s 300-yard medlay team of Ralph Coxhead, Bob Reiners, and Dick Hall erased with a 3:04.9 the Syracuse record of 3:09.4 set in 1943. All-American backstroker Cox head, so named by college swim coaches, lived up to his clippings by chopping 10 seconds from the 200-yard backstroke record set just the night previous by State’s George Hamilton. Coxhead’s new standard is 2:15.2. Lion mermen could garner only one individual first place. Diver Bob Kenyon surprisingly upset the Red Raider’s Adirondack ★ ★ ★ licated Rutger’s smashing triumph AAU champ Wilson Staub. Ken yon averaged nearly '2O points per dive of a 3-judge total and won mainly on the strength of smoothly executed somersault dives. The only other Penn State win, Saturday, was chalked up by Dick Wilson, A 1 Lucidi, Bob Long and Cas Borowy in the 400- yard relay. —Collegian photo br Sullendei ★ ★ ★ PENN STATE CLASS RING Order NOW BALFOUR'S inAt SSe c PAGE THREE Boxers Impress Coach In Opener Boxing coach Eddie Sulkowski Was quick to say yesterday that in losing to Minnesota, 5%-2%, Friday night, his ringmen looked good even in defeat Captain Pat Heims and Frank Gross won clear cut decisions over their opponents at 155 and 135 lbs., respectively, and Lou Kos zarek, 165, had to be content with a draw. Sulkowski was impressed with bantam weight Sam Marino’s showing against a much more ex perienced Gopher, Neil Ofsthun. The Lion’s Austin Marts was TKO’d in the first round by vet eran Dave Mackey. Gross decisioned sophomore Bob York in the 135 lb. class. Johnny Albarano lost a very close decision to' Joe Mackey in the 145 lb. contest. John Morgan, 175 lb. intra mural champ this year, was TKO’d in the first round by vet eran Bill McMoore. McMoore won seven and lost one last year. His only loss was a one point decision to Olympian Chuck Spieser from Michigan State. Outweighed by 60 lbs., Chuck Wilson was TKO’d s.ejosauuijvi Aq puno-i pjtqt aqi in 240 lb. Ron Raveling. SHUTTERBBGS CMAER{W~AND' HE'S "BECOKAE INTERESTS iKi PHOTOGRAPHY/' Has Junior broken your equipment or do you just need equipment to get started? Why not get started with one of these fine used bar gains. Argo Flex .. Voightlander DeJar Meter $lO Kodak, 8 m.m $35 Kodak, 2x2 Projector $l5 Goertz Dagor, wide angle lens for Bxlo $99.05 CENTRE COUNTY FILM LAB. 122 W. Beaver Avenue STATE COLLEGE ..$35 ..$25