PAGE TWELVE M • • 6. kri) W"." " Enter ys IM boxing exploded into the first of its final four days of the 1952 tourney yesterday at Rec Hall as 16 out of a scheduled 18 bouts were fought in the all-fraternity pairings. Yesterday's fights wrapped up the bulk of the fraternity quarterfinals, setting the stage for tomorrow's semifinals, with the finals scheduled for Thursday night. Delta Upsilon, leaders in team points since the opening day, won and lost. Dean Har bold, last season's 128-Ib. king, ran into Jim Lewis, Sigma Chi, in the 135-lb. class and Collegiate Chatter Spectators at the fourth an nual Spartan Basketball Classic to be held at Michigan' State may be looking at the national championship team for 1953. Three teams in the tourney— Notre Dame, Kansas State, and UCLA—are rated very highly in early season polls, and any one could conceivably win the nation al title. Host Michigan State is the only team unrated among the nation's best in the classic, but Pete Newell's Spartans are known to be troublesome. Coach Jack Gardner's K-Stat ers are currently rated third in the country behind Illinois and LaSalle, while UCLA is sixth and Notre Dame 11th. These squads are possibly the highest rated aggregations ever to ap pear in a tournament, with the exception of the NCAA and Na tional Invitation Tournaments. All four teams have gotten off to winning starts. Kansas State dumped • Drake in its opener, while Notre Dame has beaten Creighton and highly regarded In diana. UCLA has stopped Oregon State twice. Michigan State has defeated Marquette in its lone start. Many different types of of fense will be on display in the tourney. UCLA is a "race horse" team using the "run and shoot" offense. Kansas State features the balanced attack, with plenty of set plays, some fast break stuff when the occasion arises, and emphasis on pivot play. K- State boasts one of the nation's top scorers, Dick Knostman. Notre Dame is a fast team with speedy men Joe Bertrand, Norb Lewinski and John Stephans lead ing the attack. Michigan State is mainly a ball control team, but occasionally resorts to the fast break. Tied in with the classic is a two-day clinic for high school and college basketball coaches and players. The instructors, the four head coaches in the tourney, are Johnny Wooden of UCLA, Johnny Jordan of Notre Dame, Newell and Gardner. The schedule calls for Kansas State to meet Notre Dame and Michigan State to play UCLA Fri day night, with K-State meeting Michigan State and Notre Dame playing UCLA Saturday. Members of the press and ra dio delegations covering the games will pick the outstand ing player of the tourney for special recognition. N• -,- •N SALE! T4r The Daily Collegian offers to you for only $2.00 a semester's subscription for those on your Christmas gift Hsi. It will be on sale in the Collegian of fice h Caine& Nall. Stop in and have a GIFT CERTIFICATE sent to that friend and solve your Christizas gilt problem. dropped the decision, while DU Arch Kinder, lightheavy, picked up his third forfeit win in suc cession to move into the semi finals. Kinder has yet to fight. Carroll Wins by Forfeit The defending champs, who have missed bringing home the crown only once since 1947, still head the lot with team points col lected in 14 bouts, with three men left. Beta Theta Pi, with two men still in contention, advanced its twosome yesterday to cut down the DU lead by one. The Betas trail by four. Phi Sigma Kappa remained in a tie with third place Sigma Nu when its only entrant of the day, heavyweight Harry Carroll, was presented a forfeit win from Ros ey Grier, Alpha Phi Alpha. The Phi Sigs with nine team points have two men left. Sigma Nu's defending 135-1 b: champ, Stan Engle took a unani mous decision from Tom Orr, Sigma Phi Epsilon to keep the Sigma Nu's in the third place tie. Lightheavy Jesse Moore was ous ted by Don McCormick, Tau Kap pa Epsilon; to reduce the Sigma Nu's still in the tourney to two. Shopa Wins The lone 121-lb. fight of the lengthy card found Bob Wylie, Pi Kappa Phi, eliminating Beta Bill Camp. Wylie kept on top all the way for the unanimous verdict, thus reducing the total number of Betas to two. Kappa Sigma's Pete Shopa tacked up his second straight stop ping in the lightheavy class, this one hung on John Whitesell, Al pha Gamma Rho. Time was :17 of round two. Whitey Messerman, Delta Chi, gathered in a split decision over Bill Ziegler, Phi Kappa Psi, in one of four quarterfinal matches in the 135-lb. division. Bruce Wagner, Beta Theta Pi, and Carl Evankovich, Phi Kappa Sigma, along with Sig Chi's Lewis, were the other 135 pounders to advance. SPE Contender Loses Wagner outclassed George Resh, Lambda Chi Alpha in their go, while Evankovich ousted Chuck Myers, Delta Sigma Phi. Joe Gratson, Phi Kappa Psi, scored early and freely in his fight with Don Balthaser, Sigma Phi Epsilon to get the unanimous nod in the heavyweight division. Beta Dick Cameron outslugged Johnny Johnson, Acacia, in their lightheavy bout to pick up the unanimous decision. In the 155-lb. class, Bill Mat thews, Alpha Phi Alpha, and Tom Lozaw, Delta Sigma Phi, banged out decisions. Matthews beat Bob Myers, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, while Lozaw cut the remaining number of Delta Sigs by one-third ) tittrgiatt Battg THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Basketball Thompson McMaster over Coop— 40-12 Women's Atherton East won by a forfeit over the lonians. Thompson Rojahns over Aye-Sees -36-25 The Lionides over the Little Lions —25-14. Ping-Pong Little Lions over the Coops by forfeit. Coach Holman Says Suspend Charges False NEW YORK M---Describing the fight to lift his suspension as City College of New York basketball coach as a "battle of life or death," Nat Holman said flatly yesterday the charges which led to the sus pension are false. •"I've never done a dishonest thing in the game in all the years I have been connected with it," the veteran coach told the Metropoli tan Basketball Writers Association at their weekly luncheon. "I have always fought hard and to the best of my ability and there is no,, one anywhere who can point to a single demeaning thing ever done -by Nat Holman." Holman, Asst. Coach Harry Sand, and Prof. Frank S. Lloyd, chair man of the faculty athletic com mittee, were suspended Nov. 17 by the New York Board of Higher Education on charges of unbe coming conduct. The charges were brought by a committee which had been investigating the 1951 "fix" scandals in which several. CCNY players were involved. when he decisioned Bob Gallo way. Other fraternity winners are: Bill Freed, Theta Kappa Phi, over Dick Davidson, Phi Gamma Delta, unanimous decision; Tom Hand, Lambda Chi Alpha, over Glenn Wiggins, Alpha Gamma Rho, un animous decision; Bob Thomas, Kappa Delta Rho, over Bob Cham berlain, Alpha Gamma Rho, split decision; Bud Thompson, Delta Theta Sigma, over Russ Teague, Kappa Sigma, :32, round two. WHA Results Sports Thru The Lion's Eye By JAKE HIGHTON Collegian SpOrts Editor Nittany football Coach Rip Engle has a sure-fire ulcer preventa tive during the season—don't read the newspapers. After the head line which appeared in a Pittsburgh paper yesterday, State's basket ball Coach Elmer Gross will soon be reaching for Dr. Engle's pleasant pellet prescription. The headline and the accompanying story which undoubtedly made Gross shudder and groan said to the effect that Penn State loomed as the best cage team in the district—which takes in the• wide territory of Duquesne, West Virginia, and Pitt. Why, that • kind of story is as dangerous as were those about Pitt's. gridders going to the Orange Bowl. Although looking fairly good in taking their two season openers over the weekend, State hardly qualified for the top team in any district. Physically the majority of the NCAA playoff Nittany team is back, but as yet isn't the same team. Whether or not it will•prove to be the same remains in the future. At any rate, it is much too early for any team to be in NCAA playoff form. As Gross points out, many of the answers to the present team lie in the road games. You can't begin to get any real conclusions•. on a basketball team until it has faced the cold, hard, five to 10 point disadvantages of away games. These conclusions are forth coming over the holidays when the Lions engage in the All-College tournament in Oklahoma City Dec. 29-31. This tournament harks Gross back to last year, even though State played miles and miles away from Oklahoma in the Steel Bowl at Pittsburgh in 1951. Gross recalls State's Steel Bowl championship last year because he feels it was then that the Lions fouhd "some thing" and began a season which Gross still sees as only half real. For it was during that Steel Bowl tourney that State caught fire. They romped Pitt by 20 points and springboarded to a 15-game winning streak and one of State's all-time best court teams. • Even though the newspaper is wrong in calling State so good so early, discount some of the infectious pessimism of Coach Gross and look at the cage situation this way: State is unbeaten so far— which is beating par every time. WASH & JEFF POST MORTEMS: State's win ,over the Prexie was the first in three seasons . . . A full-court press, infrequently. used by State in the past, seemed to be the biggest factor in victory . Captain Herm Sledzik is not only the most improved, man on the squad but at present he is the only one—aside from new-found reserve strength Jim Brewer playing at near peak potentiality. BIG TIME? Up at Hamilton, New York, there . is a college known as Colgate with a male student enrollment less than` 2000. This , school, despite ifs comparatively low number of students, has a 12-game freshman basketball schedule. Down in State Col lege, Penna., there is a college with a male enrollment of approxi mately 8000. This school has an eight-game frosh cage schedule. Although eight is not too far removed from 12, junior varsity and intramural opponents are considerably removed from playing Cor nell, Army, Syracuse, and Niagara as the Colgate fresh do. BIG LITTLE MEN: Pacing the frosh cagers' bright victory over the jayvees Saturday were two sweet little players who end on end couldn't outreach the former Oklahoma A&M seven-foot giant, Bob Kurland. Frosh Coach John Egli's dandies are two of the tricky, shifty type who take some of the truth out of the adage that basket ball is a big man's game. Brunner Named Committee Chairman Dr. Henry S. Brunner, profes sor of agricultural education, was elected chairman of a national committee for research in agri cultural education recently at the annual American Vocational As sociation convention at Boston. His job will be to coordinate work of regional groups. At the convention Brunner reported on developments in regional research in the field in North Atlantic TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1952 When Jesse Arnelle snared four passes in the season's closing game against Pitt, he set a new Penn State record of 33 receptions in one season. The old mark of 31 receptions was se t in 1941 by halfback Lenny Krouse. His Eyes Will Glow . his heart warm if he receives a Van Heusen or Marlboro sport shirt. Casual cottons and corduroys . . . plaids, checks, in virile, bold colors . . . sizes 13-18 . . . 3.95-8.95. SHOP EARLY: SHOP EARLY! Bur's MEN'S SHOP Opposite Old Main