TOMMY, MARCH 11, 1.951 Swimmers Place In ECSA Championships Some raw courage and brilliant diving , by Bob Kenyon was parlayed with George Hamilton's great back-stroking to earn for Lion swimmers a fourth place in their season closing Eastern Collegiate Swimming association champion ships Saturday in New York. Kenyon, to Coach Bill Gutteron, is champ despite the fact that his third place medal in the • one-meter dive is two places frOm the title. , Fo r the sophomore diver,, in bed all week draining poison from his leg and without work outs, proved himself a game com petitor by not only diving his best of the season but giving the champion and runnerup the scare of their diving lives, Three Meter Dive Then, tired legs and all, Ken yon showed still more mettle by taking, sixth against a stellar field in th e three meter dive even though he had not practiced off the high board all season. On the heartbreaking side is the distance by which backstrok er Hamilton missed becoming ESCA champion. In fact, the fin ish of the 200-yard backstroke wa s practically a simultaneous touch with Hamilton the loser by the narrowest of ,margins. Hamilton was idling of off the pace set by the eventual Ford ham winner, waiting for Seton Hall's crack swimmer Benza to make his move. This move never came and the Nittany ace began to sprint too late. Hamilton's electrifying last - ditch 50-yard sprint brought the ' crowd to its feet but Hamilton, finishing fresh as dew, had too much too. late. Relay Team Places I Four of the Nittanies 14 points w er e picked up by Bob Long. Dick Wilgon, Gene Kolber, and Cas Borowy in the 400-yard relay with a fourth place finish. Bor owy hardened to - losses in photo finishes, barely missed anchoring the team to second. All Lions reached the finals but Borowy's hard luck beat him out twice by the length of a hand `for fifth in the 50 and 100-yard dashes. Kolber easily got into the 220 finals but he too came out on the wrong end of a four-man blanket finish for second place. , The jud ges, called him sixth. Rutgers and Seton Hall tied for team honors with Pitt and Finn State following in order. rTIE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Fourth Wrestlers-- (Continued from page six) Again the battle seesawed as Lemyre caught Thomas in a near fall. Thomas reversed, and Lemyre followed suit as the second period ended. Lemyre came out for two points in the middle of the third period, but Thomas reversed again and chalked up two nearfalls in the last half-minute and pulled in a point for time advantage. That, night, Yale's George Graveson took Thomas with an easy 9-4 decision and won the coaches trophy. Thomas, after his gruelling battle with Lemyre, didn't have too much for his match with Graveson. Besides Barr's loss, probably the most upsetting bout of the whole tournament, as far .as Penn State fans were concerned, was Bill Santel's loss to Princeton's Tony Orser in the second round of the 157-pound battles. Seeded First Santel, seeded first in his divi sion, pinned Penn's Mac Besse in the first round, and then seemed to lose steam that night, as Orser ran to a 12-5 victory. Rutger's Emil Perona eventually took Orser, 5-2, for the title. - Team Standings • Penn State 28 Navy Lehigh 20 Columbia Cornell, 16 Harvard 5 Army •• 14 Temple 3 Princeton 12 F'&l4 l 2 Yale 10 Virginia 1 Syracuse 9 Brown 1 Rutgers 8 Penn Brigham Young Beats St. Louis In Tourney NEW YORK, March 12 (R)— Roland Minso n, a crew-cut jumping jack With an unerring eye, spark e_d third-seeded Brigham Young to a convinc ing 75-58 victory over St. Louis tonight that' sent the Skyline Six champions into the semi finals of the National Invita tion Basketball tournament. For Best Results Use Collegian Classifieds Lion Duelists Nip Owls. In Season's Final Meet, 14-13 Bouncing back with renewed vigor after their 24-3 setback on Friday night by the undefeated Philadelphia Fencing club, the Penn State fencing squad finally broke into the winning column on Saturday afternoon as it eked out a 14-13 triumph over Temple in the season's final, duel at Phila delphia. After trailing the Owls 13-10, the, Nittanies made a brilliant stretch drive by taking their last four duels, thus enabling them to register their first victory, after dropping six straight. By winning his three epee bouts, Pete Raidy broke thg dead lock and gave the Meyermen their victory. Displaying excellent for m, Raidy defeated Shu Land, 3-1; Sia Zarrow, 3-o,.and Jerry Fertel, 3-0. Lou Gomo won one, while losing two. His scores were 3-0, 1-3, 1-3. Bob Whitman did the same, win ning 3-1, and 'losing 1-3, 1-3. The Lions, however, captured the event, 5-4. With Ed Kalanik and Tom Tay lor pacing the attack, the State men were also able to cop the foil competition, 5-4. Kalanik won 5-2, 5-1, and lost 5-4. Taylor out dueled his opponents 5-3, 5-4, while falling' before the blade, 1-5. State didn't fare as Well in the sabers as the Owls took command 5-4. Captain Ed Merek sparked the exchange of saber blows as he won 5-4,'5-3, and lost 5-3. Charley Richer, who substituted for Jerry Clauser. demonstrated fine sword skill as he won two out of three bouts. His counts were 5-4, 5-4, and 3-5. Bob Searles dropped all three of his matches. Clothes for the College Man Jack Fitzpatrick Sigma CM Light Blue Timely Suit Van Heuien "Spreads" Itep Ties $ 2.50 White Sleeveless Sweater $ 4.50 Hallcraft Cuff Links and Tie Slide $ 3.00 John Omer Beaver House Scottie Tweed Timely Suit .. Brown Gabardine Slacks Neat Pattern Ties Van Heusen Handkerchiefs .. Silk Holeproof Hose Hur's Men's Shop E. College Ave. Valentino Finishes Fourth Fails To Retain EIGA Title Rudy Valentino finished fourth hi tumbling in the Eastern Tn. ercollegiate Gymnastics championships Saturday at Annapolis, lvicL, using to three men he had defeated in dual meet, competition earlier this season Valentino's unsuceessful attempt to retain the title he won last year was the final disappointment of a gloomy day for Coach Gene Wettstone's charges. Tom 'Campbell, earned the high est position for the Lions, getting a third place tie on the horizontal bar. Army, winner of he league through, its dual meet season record, was completely pushed out of the picture as Syracuse captured four titles awl Navy took the other three. Benner Fourth Dave Benner got a fourth place medal in the side-horse event which was won by Gene Babbitt of Syracuse. Dave Schultz tied for fifth place in the rope-climb. Joe Min otti of Syracuse turned in a time of 3.5 seconds to get the winning medal in that event. Dave Douglass, parallel-bars, and Owen Wilkenson, tumbling, both finished sixth for the Nit- 1 tanies. Valentino's 248-point evalu ation for his tumbling routine was by far the lowest of the season. Fritz Graf, Navy earned a 264 for the first place honors. Lewis Double. Winner Hal Lewis, Navy, was the only double winner of the meet, taking the Eastern titles in the flying rings and the horizontal-bar events. The all-around .championships, a seventh event added to the pro gram for the final tourney, was won by Joel Babba, Syracuse. The event is competed by adding the performers points on four differ ent pieces of apparatus. Minotti scored 1039. A coat, a tie, a pair of socks; each item is important to the well dressed man. Here are the choices of the six men voted this week to be the best dressed in their fraternities. They know what it takes to be in style. They've proven it to their fraternity brothers, now let them prove it to you. Come to HUR'S today. See their choices displayed in the store win dows. One look and you'll know why these men are the best dressed, and why HUR's is the store with "Clothes for the College Man." .$69.50 $ 3.95 Brown Town and Campus Sport Coat $25.00 Tan Lackawanna Trousers $14.95 Keystone Brown Leather Belt $ 1.50 Wide Rep Ties $ 2.50 Imported Argyle Hoses 2.95 Men You Know Norm Mot 'kg Alpha Zeta Imported Houndstooth Cost .... $55.00 Blue Timely Plateau Slacks .... $22.50 Van Gab Sport Shirts $ 5.95 Grey Resistol Pork Pie Hat .... $ 7.50 Neat Pattern Bow Ties $ 1.00 Delta Upsilon Gray Flannel Don Richard Suit $55.00 Van Heusen Oxford Shirts $ 4.50 Gray Herringbone Sport Coat .. $25.00 Imported English Argyle Hose .. $ 2.95 Blue and White Ribbon Belt .... $ 2.50 Peak Lapel Don Richard Suit .. $55.00 Gray Bantam Cashmere Sweater $14.95 Van Heusen Button Down Shirts $ 4.50 TPA Ostrich Belt $ 6.50 Nuweave Nylon Hose $ 1.00 . $60.00 • $14.95 • $ 1.50 .. 50c .. 75c Bob Gates Sigma. Pi Boxers— (Continued from page siai semi-final bout with Syracuset Tom Coulter could have gone either way. Coulter kept away for three rounds, and compara tively little action resulted. Both. men landed, several good blows to the head. Barr had previously decisioned him in a dual meet bout. Newcomer Bob Potter came close to being the "cinderella boy" of the tournament when he gave Syracuse's George Kartalian a good lesson in left jabbing through two rounds which were all Pot-. ter's. Like Santangelo, Potter tired very fast in the third and was forced to take a nine count while he regained his strength He finished the bout, but lost a close decision. Marino Cut The opening bout of the tourney ; was a tough one for the Nittany men. The Lions' 125-lb. Sam Mar ino, who could have conceivably taken the title, was thwarted in his first attempt when a cut on his left eyelid reopened in the second round of his bout with Virginia's Len Coiner. Captain Pat Heims dropped his semi-final bout with KO artist Bill "Mad dog" Miller, from Syra cuse, when Miller delivered his now famous solar plekis punch in the second round. Miller holds TKO's over many of his dual meet opponents via this "Sunday punch." George Jefferies - Bill D'Zurko Sigma Phi Alpha Opposite Old Main PAGE SVMf
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