The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, January 08, 1952, Image 6

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    PAGI;; SIX
Lions
Gagers Top
Red Raiders,
Eye Orange
By DAVE COLTON
Penn State's cage forces kept
in tune for Thursday's important
battle with top-ranking Syracuse
with a convincing 68-51 triumph
over Colgate in Rec Hall Satur
day night.
Jesse Arnelle, freshman center,
continued at the head of the
Lion scoring column as he gar
nered eight field goals and five
fouls for 21 points. The six-five
frosh gridder and another new
comer, Ed Haag, we r e instru
mental in breaking the Red Raid
ers' three year . Rec Hall jinx.
Haag, a sophomore from Craf ton,
scored 12 points and played a
good floor game.
The victory was the Lions fifth
of the year against a single loss.
Colgate now has a 4.7 seasonal
record.
Dodd Handicapped
. A big factor in the Nittanies'
impressive win was a full court
press defense which the Blue and
White used after the opening
moments of the game. Colgate
was hampered by these defensive
tactics and was repeatedly unable
to work the ball past the ten
second line.
The Red Raiders' top scorer,
Bill Dodd, got four personal fouls
on him early in the game and
only scored eight points—one of
his worst nights of the season.
Dodd had been averaging about
17/points per game.
Lions Start Slowly
State no w has an offensive
average" of 60.3 points per game,
and has allowed 47.3 points per
game.
~ The Lions started slowly in the
first quarter, and the visitors had
the lead on two occasions. Guard
Joe Piorkowski scored his four
points of the game in the opening
fray, helping Gross' dribblers cap
ture their 10-8 first quarter lead.
Arnelle and Berm Sledzik paced
the Nittanies throughout the sec
ond quarter. Arnelle bucketed his
first ten tallies of the evening and
Sledzik, who finished as State's
third leading, scorer with 11
points, chipped in with six.
After eight minutes of the sec
ond quarter ha d elapsed, the
Lions had a decisive 30-17 mar
gin. The Raiders were able to
lower the halftime lead to 32-23.
Gross Uses Reserves
Arnelle practically iced the con
flict with three quick two-pointers
at the start of the second half.
Another basket by Sledzik gave
State a 40.23 edg e. The New
Rochelle freshman spearheaded
the third quarter assault with
nine tallies. The Lions led 47-30
at the three-quarter mark.
Colgate rallied with 21 points
in the last ten minutes of action
to match State's output. Gross
used reserves much of this quar
ter and the Raiders scored the
last nine points of the game.
Sophomore Haag paced the home
team with 6 markers in this
frame.
Gross used 12 players in the
game. Dick Phillips, a holdover
from last season, saw his first
action of the year: Co-captain
Tiny McMahan marked his re
turn to action after illness by
scoring six points.
The Lineups •
. .
Colgate Fg I" T
lUtz;l' 1 0 2
tWarren,t 2 0 A
Dodd,c ' 3 2 8
Antinelli,g 2 4 8
Osborne,g 4 2 10
Patterson 1 6 S
Joyce 1 3 6
Roberts 0 0 0
Popovich 1 2 4
Lalla 0 1 1
Antoine 0 1 1
Penn State Fa F T
Sledzik,f 4 3 11
Piorkowski,f 2 0 4
Arnelle,c 8 5 21
Williams,g 1 3 5
Weid'ham'r,g 1 2 4
Haag 5• 2 12
McMahan 2 2 6
Sherry 1 0 2
Blocker 1 0 2
Makarewicz 0 1 ' 1
Phillips 0 0 0
Hill 0 0 01
Totals 16 21 51
8 16 7 21-51
0 22 15 21-68
25 18 68
Totals
Colgate
Penn State
Eastern League Owners
Will Meet in N.Y.
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa., Tan. 7
—(A)—Eastern League club own
ers will meet in New York on Feb.
2 to adopt the 1952 season sched
ule, President Thomas H. Richard
son said today.
Clubs in the league this year
will be Reading, transferred from
Wilk e s-B arr e, Williamsport,
Scranton, Elm i r a, Binghamton,
Schnectady, Albany, and Hart
ford.
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN: STATE C"-rf LEGE: PIENNStti:FANTA:
Mai Etta iii: W I'OH:H-51--te'-'o*
Beats Eastern Champ
Don Frey
Scores 21 Points
Jesse Arnelle
Arnelle, Frey
Named Week's
,Top Athletes
Jesse Arnelle, Penn State's high
scoring center, and Don Frey, run
nerup in the Eastern and national
wrestling tournaments last year,
were named Athletes of the Week
yesterday by the Collegian sports
staff.
, •Arnelle paced the Nittany Lion
attack against Colgate Saturday
night with 21 points while play
ing a fine board game.
The lanky center, who also
played, for Rip Engle's football
team, raised his point total to 82
for an average of 13.7 per game.
Arnelle has hit on 29 of 74 shots
from the floor and has converted
24 of 43 fouls.
Frey was named co-athlete by
virtue of his 4-3 'triumph over
George Feuerbach, Lehigh's 130-
pound Eastern champion last
year. Lehigh Coach Billy Sheri
dan moved Feuerbach up to 147
from 137 in the hope of stopping
Frey. Frey's victory was one of
six registered by the Lion grap
plers as' State mauled the Engi
neers, 20-5.
Walt Dropo to Wed
Airline Stewardess
SAN FANCISCO, Jan. 7—(R)—
Mrs. Grace G. Wise, field repre
sentative here for the American
National Red Cross, announced
today the engagement of her
daughter, Miss E. Terrill Wise, to
Walter Dropo, first baseman for
the Boston Red Sox of the Am
erican League.
' They will be married after the
end of the baseball seas i n next
fall.
Miss Wise is an American Air
-1 es stewardess; based in Bos
ton.
Wrestlers
Throttle
Lehigh, 20.5
By JAKE 1-IIGHTON
After Tenn State wrestlers
dumped Lehigh 20-5 Saturday
night in Bethlehem, no one: could
exactly sing praises to the Lions.
Yet, none could deny that such
a clear-cut, season-opening vic
tory over a team habitually a
wrestling powerhouse stamped the
Lions as the team to beat in the
East.
Thirty-five hundred Grace Hall
fans had little to cheer about as
Lehigh could only snatch one vic
tory and a draw from the Lions.
Newcomers Win
But the good Nittany represen
tation of fans couldn't get over
excited either. Th e first-meet
wrestling was somewhat dull and
the Lions' offensive action was
often nonexistant in-positions of
advantage.
Noteworthy in the triumph were
the four wins and a draw earned
by five out of six Nittanies wres
tling their first varsity matches.
Bob Homan, Dick Lemyre, Hud
Samson and Lynn Illingworth all
began college careers auspiciously
with decision wins.
Fornicola Draws
With such surprising support
from newcomers, the only two
veterans in Charlie Speidel's line
up, Don Frey and Joe Lemyre,
came through as expected with
decisions to make the team result
so lop-sided.
Of the other two first-match
Lions, Larry Fornicola gained - a
draw and Doug Frey lost a deci
sion by one point, keeping State
from sweeping every bout.
Most of the drama of the entire
meet was packed into , the :147
pound match. With Lehigh's reg
ular 147 man, Bill Carlisle. out
with A bad shoulder, Captain
George Feuerbach was surprising
ly moved up to that weight, which
he made at the weigh-in with
street clothes on.
Time . Advantage
State's Don Frey, now unbeaten
in nine dual meets,, gained a 4-3
decision thanks to riding time,
but the smaller Feuerbach put up
a courageous losing struggle.
Frey succeeded on his fourth
attempt at la shoe-string takedown
midway in the first period. The
Lehigh captain escaped to start
the second period and Don did
likewise in the third. A momen
tary lapse by Frey and Feuerbach
tied the match at 3-3 with a take
down but the State matman's
time in the second period gave
him the nod.
At 167 pounds, State's Joe
Lemyre started slowly but rallied
in the third period to decision
Jack Platt, 5-1.
Heavies Win
Joe's brother, Dick Lemyre, had
a rough scrap with Lehigh's 'Jim
Mahoney for two periods but 'in
the third the, Lion soph poured it
on. , for a 6-1 verdict.
State's two top-weighted grap
plers came up with convincing
decisions. Hud Sam Son won over
Bill Jackson, 9-1 at 177 pounds,
and Lynn Illingworth took a 9-4
heavyweight decision from Joe
Comly.
Samson reversed trickily from
a third period near pin and
promptly held Jackson in a near
fall predicament for 30 seconds
with a half-nelson and crotch
hold before the bridging Jackson
got away.
Illingworth scored three take
(Continued on page seven)
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Return of Ashentelter
Will Help Thinclads
With the return' of Bill Ashenfelter later this week, `the Penn
State track team will be - considerably bolstered as it readies itself
for Saturday night's competition at Washington in the annual Eve
ning Star games.
Ashenfelter, the Middle Atlantic AAU cross-country champion,
will be returning from a competitive tour of South America with
former Penn Stater' Curt Stone.
Coach Werner's charges, hav
ing ironed out some of the kinks
acquired during the long Christ
mas respite, went through a rug
4red workout Sunday afternoon
on the Rec Hall track in prepara
tion for their final time .trials
tomorrow, at which time both the
mile and two mile relay teams
will be selected.
Leading the mile relay hope
fuls is sophomore 011ie Sax, hold
er of the New Jersey scholastic
record for the quarter mile. In
Sunday's trial he,returned a time
of 51.5 seconds for the distance.
Veteran John Lauer and soph
Bill Kilmer have been steadily
improving in each successivp trial
and should be rounding into shape
by tomorrow. Skip Slocum, Bill
Polito, and Tom Younkins are
the other leading contenders for
a spot on the quartet.
In the two-mile affair, Bill Ash
enfelter will probably lead 'the
relayers. Bob Roessler, Jack Hor
ner, Dave Pierson, and Bob Leh
man are keenly competing for the
other starting berths.
In addition to the two. relay
teams, hurdlers Ed Snodgrass and
Lew Wadlington will compete:
Pole-vaulter Dan Lorch and last
year's high jump winner in the
games, Jim Herb, will round out
the 12 man' squad.
Track Mentor
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Chick Werner
Campy Changes Mind!
BROOKLYN, Jan. 7—(W)—Roy
Campanella, Brooklyn's'outstand
ing catcher, changed his mind to
day and decided not to undergo
an operation for the removal of
bone chips in his left elbow.
When Lee Scott, of the Dodgers'
publicity staff, arrived at Campy's
home this morning to escort• him
to the hospital, the stocky catcher
said he had changed his mind.
Ex-College Star
Fran Rok el, fullback of the'
Pittsburgh Steelers, is a former
Penn State football stand-out.
The Collegian Proofreader
Couldn't Believe
- His Eyes!
,
2 Sport Shirti; regularly priced at $7.95 each, for only
$5.00 . . . He couldn't believe it . . • and so changed
the apparent error. inlast Saturday's paper to $15.00
. .. but $5.00 was right . . . so
t for those who missed
this opportunity, we're .repeating the bargain .
SPO S I RTS •
LIGHTWEIGHT WOOL & RAYON
Reg. Price $7.95
Santa's- $ It 00
special Tor
TODAY FOR TWO HOURS ONLY
from 10 to 12 a.m.
. .
Bur
`MEN'S SHOP
Opposite 01d Main
TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1952
By FRED SINGER
Bliy Your -
CLASS RING
with your - Christmas Money
NOW
at Balfour's ("A" Store)