PACT' SIX EIGA Title at Stake In Lion-Cadet Meet The IN ittany gymnasts will be going for everything in the book at 2 p.m. tomorrow in Rec Hall when they meet the ever-dangerous Ca de t s of Army in the final Eastern dual meet of the 1953 season. A victory .over the defending champions from West Point will earn Coach Gene Wettstone’s swashbuckling crew: (1 the 1953 EIGA crown; (2 its ninth consecu tive dual meet win without loss over two seasons; (3 a .perfect season, (its first since 1948 and; (4 a welcome break in Army’s five-year domination over the Nittany gymnasts. The last Eastern gym title to make its w r ay into Ree Hall came in 1948. Bordo '4B Olympian Besides being the top Eastern dual meet of the campaign, to morrow’s meeting carries the added lustre of the presence of three of the best judges in the game. The trio, all former Olym pians, are Frank Cumiskiey, of Union City, N.J.; Frank Haubold, also Union City, N.J.; and Louis Bordo, Philadelphia. Bordo, a ’43 grad of the Col lege, was a member of the 1948 Olympic gym team. Three first-line Lion gymnasts will be closing out their intercol legiate careers tomorrow. They are Captain Bob Kenyon, Jim Hazen, and Dave Shultz. Kenyon will work the tumbling, Hazen, the flying rings, and Shultz, the rope climb. Army Ropemen Tops Kenyon will be performing in one of the Cadets strongest events —tumbling, led by Captain George Haas. Haas took third in the Eastern tumbling last season. The Army ropemen will pre sent the biggest major problem for the Lions and for Shultz. Shultz’s best time is a 3.B—re corded last week against Temple. The week before that .Shultz clocked a 3.9—which also set an individual record for him. “Shultz is still improving,” says Wettstone, “Army will be the big test,” John Ballantyne, the number one Army man on the rope, has a 3.6 timing to his credit—that com ing in the Eastern championships last season at Syracuse. The oth er two Cadet ropemen, Funk houser and Renner, both are ca pable of 4.0 down. The Lions wrapped up their last practice session of the week yesterday with a light workout. Today will be a complete offday. WRA Results VOLLEYBALL Gamma Phi Beta over Sigma Del ta Tau Tri-Delts over Thompson Theta Phi Alpha over Little Lions McAllister over Phi Mu Phi Sigma Sigma over Chi Omega Alpha Chi Omega over Alpha Ep silon Phi Kappa Kappa Gamma over Alpha Gamma Delta Delta Zeta over McElwain-Sim mons BOWLING Co-op. over Aye Sees Alpha Xi Delta over Delta Gamma Zeta Tau Alpha over Women’s Bldg. , - jpe in trial run in preparation for tomor rows all-or-nothing" meet with Army at Rec Hall. Shultz and Baffa have the unenviable job of trying to crack the toughest rope climb trio in intercollegiate competition. Shultz will work number one. Match time is 2 p.m. Lous, Crusaders Capture IM League Championships Championships in three independent and two fraternity basket ball leagues were put on the line Wednesday night at Rec Hall. The Lous, in league I of the independent circuit, and the Crusaders, league J, took over undisputed first places in those leagues. All games were playoffs, the results of dead heats for the top spots The Lous showed up in top form as they trampled Dotm 38, 40-27. Le Maimon contributed most to the winning 'cause with seven from the boards and three from the free throw line for 17 mark ers in all. The Crusaders came home with their shields, the 29’ers won theirs to an 18-13 tune. This win put the Crusaders into the playoffs which will start tonight. Tau Kappa Epsilon outlasted Kappa Sigma, 24-23, in a contest that went to the ■ wire. Neither team had an advantage at the half, the score at that time stand ing at a knotty 13-13. Alpha Tau Omega had little NEW STOCK JUST IN! 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Lions to In Final The Nittany Lions will face the on-and-off Temple Owls in Philadelphia tomorrow in the final basketball game of the season. Both , teams will be after their 16th win of the year, with the Lions having eight losses and the Templars drop ping their tenth Wednesday night to LaSalle, 65-45 The Owls lost a previous game | ★ ★ ★ to the NIT champions 57-42 margin. Included in their string of wins have been upset victories over DePaul University, which gave LaSalle its only two defeats in 26 games, and Manhattan. Uni versity, which is seeded fourth in the National Invitation Tourna ment Lose to Hoyas In. games with four Penn State foes, the Templars managed a .500 percentage. They lost a tight con test to the Midshipmen from Navy by seven points, 59-52, and then were walloped by the George town' Hoyas, 72-45. The Owls trailed by only three points at half-time. Kane Tallest Man, 6-5 Swinging north, the Owls did something no Lion squad has yet accomplished—beat both Colgate 1 and Syracuse on their home courts. The closest the Lions came was this year when they lost to Colgate, 60-62, and then beat Syracuse, 78-74. (Both teams were defeated by the Lions.at Rec Hall). The Owls beat Colgate, 75-62. and Syracuse, 74-66. For the Lions it was the other way around. They managed to squeeze by the powerful Hoyas, 73-70, but then walked into their biggest loss of the season when the Midshipmen captured a 77-53 victory. This was the largest point spread—24—that the Lions have suffered since Kentucky beat 'them by 26 points in the NCAA tourney last year. A probable starting lineup for the Owls will be Harry Silcox, who scored 26 points against De- Paul; Albert Didriksen; Conrad Miller; John Kane, tallest man on the squad at 6-5; and Samuel Syl vester. Since most of the seniors grad uated last year, Coach Harry Lit wack has had to rely on all soph omores and juniors for his start ing five. This is his first, year as basketball coach for _the Owls. Last season the Templars lost 15 out of 24 in spite of the pres ence of the great scorer Bill Mlk vy. FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1953 Play Owls Gage Tilt By TED SOENS Phillips Closes Career As Gross' Leading Reserve .When Elmer Gross’ cagers make their appearance on the Palestra hardwoods in Philadelphia tomor row, two Lion . seniors—Herm Sledzik and Dick Phillips—will plav their last collegiate game. The. Sledzjk story is a well known one. A regular for two years, - captain this season, and currently second man in the scor ing department, Sledzik has a well-established basketball name at Pehn State. But for Phillips, known as Stu by everybody, its been a different tale. Stu has been playing ball for Gross for two seasons but has never received a starting role. Two years of hard work have paid their reward though, because the 6-1 senior has played a lot of ball for the Lions this year, even though it has been as a( reserve. The lanky forward is a hard working, steady- ball player and has been one of Gross’ front-line reserves all season. Stu played his high school ball for Stevens Trade in. Lancaster and was captain of the squad in his senior year. The 22-year-old senior says he loves to play the game but claims there is one outside- interest that '' supercedes the sport. That’s his wife -Lee and their 10-month-old daughter, Sharon. The twq young ladies claim quite a bit of his ' attention. ON THE CUFF: Stu’s the Only married man on the squad ... He , was married almost tiJiro .years ’ ago . . . he’s a member of Sigina - Phi Alpha. Two-Platoon Outlook Penn State’s Rip Engle, dis pleased at first, now looks at the . two-platoon ban more philosophi cally. “Saturday, afternoons will be a lot easier,” the Lion football coach predicts. “There’ll •be loss < traffic direction, more coaching.”