PAGE SIX Rival Scoring Aces Cliff Hagan ,4ittany ,oefense Opposes trentucky's High Scorers (Continued from page one) Kentucky, on the other hand, _d the country in offense, aver -ring 83.2 points per contest. Lions Depend on Arnelle Rupp has three players who ave scored over 400 points in is starting lineup. Besides Hagan Jnd Ramsey, Captain Bobby Wat on has also established a repu •ation as a heavy scorer. Hagan cads the team with 650 points :or an average of 21.7 per game. lamsey, junior guard, has tossed n 484. Watson, a set shot artist, as scored 409. The,Lions will depend on their :ecord holder, Jesse Arnelle, to :tarry the brunt of the scoring 'cad. The Lion center has scored 118 points over the year for an lverage of 18.7 per contest. Hagan, Ramsey Wildcat Stars Gross will probably go along ;Rh the same starting lineup which carried the Lions through .he latter part of the 'season. Co captain Hardy Williams, Heim 3ledzik, Arnelle, Joe Piorkowski, and Jack Sherry will form the "tarting team, but Co-captain Tiny McMahan, Ron Weidenhammer, and Ed Haag will see plenty of action. Chet Makarewicz and Jim Blocker also stand in reserve. Kentucky will probably start with Hagan, Ramsey, . Watson, Shelby Linville, and Lucian Whit aker or Lou Tsioropoulous. Probable Starting . Lineups State Joe Piorkowslci f. Shelby Linville Herm Sledzik f. Frank Ramsey Jesse Arnelle c. Cliff Hagan Hardy Williams g. Bobby Watson Jack Sherry g. Lucian Whitaker Penn State reserves: Tiny McMahan, Ron Weidenhammer. Ed Haag, Jim Blocker, and Chet Makarewicz. Kentucky reserves: Lou Tscioropoulous, Gene Noff, Ronnie Clark, Jim Flynn, Gayle Rose, Bill Evans, and Willie Rouse. Seeks 30th Straight NEW YORK, March 20—R)— Undefeated Gil Turner, a leading welterweight contender after on ly 23 months of pro boxing, aims for his 30th straight victory to morrow night when he faces lanky Don Williams of Worces ter, Mass., at Madison Square Garden. Jesse Arnelle AOPi's Break owling Tie Alpha Omicron Pi broke their tie with Alpha Xi Delta in bowl ing league 4 last night by defeat ing the latter team, 537-529. Bar bara Charles of Alpha Xi Delta was high scorer of the evening with 150 points. Three volleyball teams remained league leaders. In League 4, Al pha Epsilon Phi downed AChio,, 33-29. Theta Phi Alpha downed Phi , Sigma Sigma to retain the leadership of League 5. In other bowling games, Delta Gamma downed Atherton East, 551-512. and Simmons defeated the Co-op, 586-492. In other volleyball games, Chi Omega edged Thompson B, 14-13, and Sigma Delta Tau forfeited to Delta Zeta. AChiO won by a forfeit from Tri Delt. Mac won over Gamma Phi Beta, 43-22. Al pha Gamma Delta beat Phi Mu, 64-10. Kappa Kappa Gamma lost to Leonides, 40-18. Collegiates Share Lead GULFPORT, Miss., March 20 (VP) —T w o Louisiana amateurs, Dick Collord of New Orleans and Bert Weaver of Louisiana State University. posted identical 34-33 —67 s to share the early lead in the $6OOO Gulf Coast Invitational Golf tournament here. Kentucky They were the two low scorers among the first 47 golfers to fin ish the first round of play today. About 140 pros and amateurs are entered in the tourney. 53 Champions Penn State, once the front-run ner_in the Intercollegiate Boxing Association of America, still clings to. one distinction. In the 29 years of the IBA's tournament competition, t,h e Nittany Lions have accumulated 53 individual titles. Syracuse, the runner-up, is credited with 52 individual win ners. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE Cer.lLLEgig. PENNSYLVANIA Army Among 5 Teams Favored in NCAA Gym - Rossini Classy in, Mat Debut Independent Mario Rossini, 155. showed real class in pinning Clyde Aston in 3:19 in one of two independent wrestling matches in the IM tourney last night. Rossini pinned Aston with a standing cradle, a not-too-com mon hold in IM wrestling. Ros sini, who was ahead in • points. was in control all the way. Rossini's fall was one of 11 scored in 14 matches. The matches also marked the first time that the mats were placed on the main 1.1 floor for preliminary bout . Pins In Less Than Min e . • In the other independent atch, Amos (Moose) Rogers pinned Bob Miller in 1:49. . Three pins were also registered in less than a minute last night. Ron Miller, 135, Phi Delta 'Theta, pinned Jack Sher, Pi Lambda Phi, in 0:58; John Dillon. 155, Phi Kappa, felled Dave Douglass, Sigma Chi, in 0:59; Tom Lewis, SAE 165 pounder, nailed John Knox, ACS, in 0:26. In the 128 class, Andy Harvey, Delta Chi, pinned Charles Teach er, Alpha Epsilon Pi, and John Russ, Phi Sigma Kappa, pinned Gerald Loughran, ACS. In the 135 division, Bill Hoffer, Chi Phi, scored a 5-2 win over Harry Frey, ACS. Tom - Smith, DU, pinned Tom Godfrey, SPE, in 2:55. Ziff Wins Decision In the other bout in this class, Paul Eckert, Phi Kappa, lost a referee's decision to Bill' Alich, ACR. The regulation match ended, 0-0. 4 At 145 Sid Ziff. Phi Sigma Delta, tripped Jerome Gibson, Al pha Sigma Phi, 5-2. , The other 155 match saw Gene Whitehouse. Theta Chi. pin Bill Frazer, ATO, in 1:54. Two pins were also scored in the unlimited class. Terhune Dick el, Sigma Nu, felled Andy Zer ban, TKE, and Jim Stanley, LCA, pinned George Kluchonic, Phi Kappa. Forfeit wins were scored by Rod Snyder, Ph i Delta Theta; Tom Pyle, KDR; Al Pancerev, Phi Psi; George Cummings, PiKA; Ed Thomas. Phi• Kappa Tau; Don Fields, Phi Kappa Sigma; and Bill Deppe, ACS. Hoover Tops Betts For Handball Title 'Ed Hoover won the final round of the 1952 IM fraternity hand ball singles tourney at Rec Hall last night by sweeping two mat ches from fellow Phi Delta Thetan Art Betts. Hoover topped football team mate Betts handily in the first match, 21-11. He then copped the second 21-20, to capture the title. Shattqrs Marks Jesse Arnelle, freshman giant of New Rochelle, N.Y., is the first player to top 400 points yin 57 years of Penn State basketball. His 448 points, an average of 18.7 Points per game; shattered every scoring mark in the Nittany Lion record book. Shake . fhe Habit! Want to stop the s m o,k iri g habit? Read the new book .. . .How To Slop Smoking by Herbert Bream Read the book .t hr o ugh. You'll enjoy it. :If you don't shake the habit of smoking, you'll get your, money back and no questions asked. . You won't lose a thing—ex cept smoking! Buy the book, How to Stop Smoking, today! ONLY $1.50 Keeler's The annual NCAA gymnastic tournament open% today with Illinois, Michigan State, Army, Southern California and ,defending team champion Florida State installed as pre-tourney favorites. Two -preliminary rounds , are on tap before the finals start to morrow. Preliminaries are scheduled for 2 p.m,' and 8 p.m. while the finals will get underway at the same time. The ten' best scores in each event will qualify' for the finals. Penn State will bank whatever title hopes it has on Jan Cron stedt, winner of the EIGA tour ney in the all-around competiti6n and the horizontal bar event. Calisthenics Optional The all-around competition will feature six events whereas the EIGA tourney lists only four events. In addition to the side horse, parallel bars, horizontal bar, and flying rings, the all around will include the long horse jump and calisthenics. In the -long horse jump, the contestant dives over• a sidehorse with no handles. Calisthenics is an optional exercise with no spe cific exercise required. Cronstedt, however, could sur prise in the all-around as the Lion gymnast raised a lot of eye brows with his Eastern triumph. Big' Ten' Talists Golf Candidates A meeting- for all candidates interested in trying out for the golf team will be held at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Caddy house, according to an an nouncement by Bob Ruther ford, golf coach: Coleman, Klaus Fail in Olympic Tryout Tests Penn State's hopes for having two representatives on the Olym pic soccer team ended on a dismal note last weekend when inside right Ron Coleman and center halfback Kurt Klaus were elimin ated from further competition. Official word was received yes terday by Coach Bill Jeffrey from Tom Dent, Dartmouth soccer coach and head of the collegiate squad. Coleman and Klaus were two of eight Pennsylvania college soccermen who participated in the trials in Astoria, L. 1., against two selected club teams. Only three Keystone men, how ever, survived the tryouts—all from Temple. Temple had Eddie Tatoian, inside left; Jack Dunn, inside right; and Len Oliver ? cen ter halfback, picked from its team. Three other collegiate sta r s were also selected for the final tryouts, scheduled for St. Louis, April 5-6. Included In that threesome is Eric Baer, all-American goalie from Maryland. State beat Mary land, 1-0, at College Park earlier in the year. But for some brilliant goal tending by Baer, the' score might have been higher. The others picked were forward Larry Surr o c k, University of Baltimore, and fullback Jackson Hall, Dartmouth. As to the game itself, the col legiate team, including Klaus and Coleman, upset a selected Penn sylvania, New Jersey and Mary land club team, 3-1. John Oliver, brother of Temple's Len Oliver, opened the scoring for the losers after 15 minutes. Goals by Howard Burnett, Amhurst, and another by Tony Puglisi, West Chester, gave the Collegians a 2-1 halftime lead. Burnett's final tally in the second half set the final score at 3-1. FRIDAY; MARCH 21, 1952 By TOM SAYLOR The blonde-haired Finns' tough est competition is expected to come from Bob Sullivan. Illinois; Captain Bob Feldmeier, Michigan State; and Carmen Regna and Don Holder, Florida State. .Florida State is also defending titlist in this event as Bill Roetzheim won it last year. Roetzheim has since graduated. Sullivan edged Feldmeier in the Big Ten championships two weeks ago in Bloomington, Ind: F eldmeier, however, tore his shoulder muscles on the last day of practice but still finished a con mendable second. Even though beaten by the Spartans in a dual meet, Illinois walked off with the Big Ten title, 93 1 / 2 -84%. Cadets Eastern Hope Cronstedt will also be a strong contender in the horizontal bar event against an unknown field. Army will be the strong point in bringing the crown to the East. The Cadets, along with being eastern kings, walked off with three EIGA individual titles. Jack Kleberg won the flying rings, Bob Wheeler th 6 sidehorse, and John Ballantyne and John Claybrook tied for first in the rope-climb. Claybrook and Ballantyne scur ried the distance in 3.6 seconds. Meet Bullets First Gettysburg will be Penn State's opening golf opponent, at .Gettys burg, April 30. Cornell, Pitt, Buck nell, Navy and Colgate round out the dual meet schedule, with Bucknell and Navy the only home matches. The Lion golfers also will compete in the Eastern cham pionships at Annapolis. Md., May 10-12.
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