TUESDAY : MARCH 2. 1954 Lagers, ..Boxers Score Wi Floormen Top Rutgers For Twelfth By DICK .McDOWELL Scoring heavily in the sec ond and third periods,. the Penn State basketball team coasted to its 12th victory of the season Saturday night, bowling over Rutgers, 76-59. • The win leaves only two games remaining on the sche dule before the Lions meet Toledo Tuesday in the opening round of the NCAA playoffs at Fort Wayne, Ind. Georgetown and Temple will be at Rec Hall 'this week to wrap up the regular sea son. The easy win over the Scarlet brought the Lions' log up to 12-5 as they romped to their 32d straight win at Rec Hall, and boosted their team average to 70.5 —three points better than the rec ord total ,set last year. Sherry Leads Scorers Captain Jack Sherry took over the scoring spotlight Saturday with a 23 point performance and Jesse Arnelle. tallied 17 as the taller Nittanies completely out classed the Scarlet. The Lions started slowly but finally moved ahead 7-5 midway in the first period and never were threatened after they boosted the mark to-15-11 at the buzzer. However, the pace' quickened in the second frame. Led by Sher ry, the Nittanies poured in 28 points and opened the gap stead ily until they led 43-30 at the half. The Lion captain accounted. for 12 of them in that stanza. Score 20 in Third The scoring attack . continued in the third period, this time to the tune of 20 points as Arnelle be gan to hit with his sweeping hook shot and Sherry continued scor ing with his driving' lav-ups and fading jump shot. Rutgers had narrowed the gap to 44-34 early in that p9riod but Arnelle dropped in six straight points and Sherry added five more to catapult the Lion lead to 55-34. They led 63-44 at the three-quar ter mark. Both coaches substituted freely in the fourth period and the Lions 'were outscored 13-15, but it didn't make any difference by this time. Meet Noyes Thursday The Lions are idle until Thurs day when Georgetown moves into Rec Hall. They battle Temple Sat urday in the regular season finale and then embark for Fort Wayne where they face the Mudhens. Georgetown and Temple are both new on the Penn State sched ule this season. The Hoyas have been having one of their poorest seasons this year and should pre sent no problem for the Lions: The 'Owls, however, although un impressive for the most .part, may prove dangerous. They upset La- Salle last month. Of course the big one for the Lions will be the NCAA battle with Toledo. The Mudhens, Mid- American Conference champions, have a 13-9 seasonal record. PENN STATE RUTGERS • fg f tp Porter .8 13-5 19 Sundstrom 1 8-11 10 Dacity 0 0-2 0 Driscoll 3 0-0 6 Eppel 0 0-0 0 Ilidastrolia 5 1-3 11 Tighe 0 0-6 0 Stires 0 0-0 0 Olson 0 0-0 0 !Gordon 2 6-8 10 Haberman 0 3-3 3 fg f• tp 2 1-2 5 Blocker 2 0-0 4 1 0-0 2 Arnelle . 6 7-10 17 6 11-12 23 Weid'ham'r 2 0-0 4 1 0-0 2 Christ'nsen 0 2-2 2 4 2-4 10 Rohland Edwards 0 1.11 0 0-0 0 1 0-0 2 2 Ov . 0 4 Brewer 26 24-31 76 Score by periods— Penn State - 15 28 20 12-76 11 19 14 15-59 Rutgers LET'S GO VETERANS Spring's here Let's Get Together for Social Entertainment All Vets Invited to Short Meeting Thursday, March 4 1:00 P.M. • 124 Sparks —Photos by Schroeder JACK SHERRY, Lion forward; lays one up in the second quarter of the Rutgers game. The defender in his eagerness to block the shot climbs onto Jack's back with a resultant foul. Sherry was high scorer for the night with 23 points. Penn State won, 76-59. - - arriers In IC4A Chick Werner's harriers finished in a fourth place tie with Penn Saturday in the 33rd running of the IC4A indoor track cham pionship at Madison Square Garden, N.Y. A photo finish in the 100-yard run, which awarded Yale runner Mike Stanley second place over Penn's Paul Raudenbush, gave the Elis their first title since 1933. Had the Quaker star copped sec ond place B o o n University would have won the title—that's how close the meet was. Five teams finished under a four point blanket. Yale nipped Boston University, 19-18 1 / 2 , and Manhattan, which lad reigned supreme for three straight years, was third with 17 points._The Lions and Penn each garnerd 15 points: The Lions picked up one second place, two thirds, two fourths, and one tie for fourth. Points were awarded on the basis of five for first, four for second, and so on through fifth place. Art Pollard upset defending champ Bob Keegan of Seton Hall in the 60-yard dash, but the vic tory went to Penn's national king Johnny Haines. The "Coatesville Comet" nearly took the crown, but Haines finished about a foot, in front with a clocking of 0:06.3. The Nittany mile relay squad defeated Manhattan in what had been thought to be a two-team battle between these two teams in that event. However, Princeton took first place in the other heat with a faster time than that re corded by the Lions and Colgate and Harvard also posted better times than the Lions in the other heat. As a result, the Lions fin ished fourth, It took a last lap spurt by Lion 011ie Sax to defeat the Jaspers. Sa - x took the baton ten yards be hind Manhattan's Vern Dixon and ran his quarter in slightly more than 48 seconds. Football stars Charley "Block buster" Blockson and Rosey Grier gained points for the Lions in the shotput.. Blockson placed third with a heave of 51' 3 1 / 2 " and Grier copped fou r t h with a toss of 50' 103/4". Red Hollen improved his fourth place finish of last year by taking third in the two-mile with a 9:24.8 clocking. Ed Shea of Northwestern was first with a time of 9:24.5. Defending - champ Dan Lorch met some of the toughest compe tition of his collegiate career and finished in a three-way tie for fourth with a leap of 13'. Boston Totals 19.21-38 59 ME DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Tie for Fourth Championships By HERIvI WEISKOPF U's Bruce Hescock was first with a 14' 2" vault. Dick Matz barely, missed quali fying in the 600-yard run and the freshman mile relay quartet suf fered the same fate. Doug Moor head did not place in the two-mile run. get Your 2ate now! IFC PANHEL BALL FRIDAY, APRIL 2 REC HALL Semi - Formal ' ‘ .... 7 s .77 he geot 2 1 ance of the gear Boxers Defeat Virginia, 5 1 / 2 -2 1 / 2 , for First Victory Getting off to a fast start by winning three of the first four matches, Penn State's boxing squad upended Virginia, 5 1 / 2 -2 1 k Satur day night. The victory was the Lions first this season, and their sepond in 12 tries including last year's 1-6 card. Before 3000 fight fans at Virginia University's Memorial gym nasium, Penn State wrapped up the fight as early as the fourth bout. The Lions had one point before the first contenders entered the ring by virtue of a forfeit in the light-heavyweight class. Some of the ring experience which had seriously been lacking for previous bouts came to light as two sophomores—Bob McMath and Larry Stokes—pounded out victories in the lightweight divis ions Perennial foe at the 125-pound weight, Virginia's Bill Banerdt drew with Harry Papacharalam.- bous in the evening's first bout. Then" the Lions moved in with a three-match winning barrage— something which the lightweights hay,e n4t. •been able to accomplish all season. ,McMath "looked very good" according to Coach 'Eddie Sulkowski, when the 132-pounder came back after trailing in the first round to win his first match. Don Martin, 139-pounder, also copped his first victory against Bob Rush, 29-28. Martin won the first round, but then the ring wise Rush took the second round by the same score, 10-9. Martin won the last round„lo-8 usirig his southpaw style of right jabs and good left hooks. Continuing his mastery over 147-pound foes, Stokes won the evening's only TKO decision over boxing'. newcomer Bill Young at 1:56 of the first round. Don DeMe.7 . , 156-pounder, faced Pete POtter, rUnnerup in both the By ROY WILLIAMS Easterns and the Nationals last year. Potter, like DeMay's pre vious foes this season, had too much experience and finesse for the. sophomore, taking the match, 30-25. Frank Breidor lost the first two rounds with Sonny Nichols, but then took the third round 10-8 in a comeback try. Nichols landed several rights on 165-pound sopho more in the first two stanzas to edge Breidor 29-27. Adam Kois won his third sea son match the easy way with a forfeit in the 178-pound class. Bill Roberts, who gave Kois such a battle in their last dual meet at Virginia, dropped col legiate boxing after suffering a concussion in an auto -accident recently. Penn State's fifth victory carne, in the heavyweight division. Joe Goleman won his first bout in three tries over Bill Creech, 30-27. The improving sophomore south paw won every round in defeating Creech who boasted a 2-1 record. The results: 125-lbs. —Papacharalamborts (PS) and Banerdt drew, 30-30. 132-lbs.—Malath (PS) decisioned 29-28. 139-lbs.—Martin (PS) decisioned Whitely 29-27. , 147-lbs.—Stokes 1 :56 first round. 156-lbs. Potter (V) defeated DeMay, 165-lbs.—Nichols (V) decisioncd Breidos, 29-27. 178-lbs.—Kois won by forfeit. livwt.—Coleman decisioned Creech, 30-27. THE DISC JOCKEYS' CHOICE FOR AMERICA'S No.l BAND SILLIOARD MAGAZINE 1953 POLL RALPF FLANAGAN s; • .......... AND HIS PRIDE OF R.C.A. VICTOR 9tol $4 per couple PAGE SEVENt defeated Young.