The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 23, 1954, Image 7

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    ii/EDAY. MARCH 23. 1954
Lion Matmen Keep Up
With Wrestling's Best
By SAM PROCOPIO
The really great wrestling powers in the country—Oklahoma, Oklahoma A&IVI,
Penn State—invariably stay at the top of the pack year in and year out.
This weekend at Norman, Okla., where approximately 50 colleges and universities
will compete for national team and individual honors, the prestige of the afore
mentioned schools will remain as high as ever.
However, one will be able to enhance to the list of probable •title contenders two
faces—Michigan and Purdue. r
Although some experts failed to
I list Pitt among the top five, it
would almost be a crime not to
consider the Panthers. They are
1954 Eastern Intercollegiate cham
pions! They have beaten Penn
State! They do have two-time
defending 115-pound champion,
Hugh Peery!
If there is a reason to eliminate
Coach Rex Peery's EIWA cham
pions, it is because the University
of Pittsburgh does not have the
required depth. Where the Pan
thers are strong some of the other
colleges are stronger.
If Pitt has any chance to sur
vive 'as NCAA titlists, Peery's
matmen will have to elude—be 7
fore the semi-finals—such wrest
lers as Dick Lemyre and Jerry
Maurey of Penn State, Jim Ma
honey and Werner Seel of Le
high, Joe Gattuso and Pete Blair
of Navy in the East.
In the Midwest the Panthers
will have to get by Norvard
Nalan, Andy Kau I, and Dick
O'Shaughnessy of Michigan, Bob
Hoke and Vito Perrone of Mich
igan State. In the South there are
Robert an d Ernest Fischer of
Maryland, and in the West Gene
Nicks and Ned Blass of Okla
homa A&M, and Tommy Evans
of Oklahoma.
Penn State, NCAA defending
champs, is conceded 'a better than
even chance of copping honors
again, although the Lions were
dethroned in the 1954 EIWA tour
ney. Four of Penn State's six en
tries for this year's tourney were
members of last year's winners.
When the Nittany Lions won the
NCAA crown last year at Reel
Hall, it marked the first time in
the sport's history that an East
ern team won the tournament.
Although Oklahoma A&M will
probably be named as tournament
favorite, there are Michigan and
Purdue to consider' too.
The University of Michigan
Cabers--
(Continued from page six)
and Jim Blocker iced the game.
In all, the Lions had a shooting
percentage of better than 40 per
cent, almost clouble their Friday
night figure. They scored 27 field
goals, ten better than the Trojans
but fell short on free throw points,
27-16.
Arnelle with 25, Weidenhammer
with 12, and Haag with nine
points, led the Lion scoring. How
ever, excellent floor play by Jim
Brewer and Sherry was a decid
ing factor in the game.
Arnelle, incidentally, shattered
another Penn State scoring record
when he bettered his own season
scoring mark set in 1952. His 25
points brought his total scoring for
the year to 507, topping the old
record of 492. In five tournament
games, the big center tossed in
102 points.
To all appearances the Lions
were a completely different team
against the Trojans than the team
that bowed to La Salle the night
before. The now-famous "Gross
zone" worked smoothly and kept
Trojan shots outside. At the same
time their offensive attack, par
ticularly in the first half, worked
smoothly and shots fell from all
angles.
The win brought the season
mark to 18-6—second only to the
1952 record of 20-4.
Box Score:
PENN STATE
' fg f tp
Sherry,f 2 3-3 7
Rohland,f 1 1-2 3
S. CAL
fg f tp
Psaltis,f 4 34 11
Carr,f 1 2-2 4
IThompson,l 0 2-2 2
PauSig,f 2 1-3 5
Irvia,c 5 2-3 12
Ludecke,c 0 1-3 1
Hammer,g 2 4-7 S
Dunne,g, 0 0-0 0
Welsb,g 3 12-14 18
Arnelle,c 10 5-6 25
MITIII
Weial'h'rx 4 4-4 121
Brewer,g 4 0-0 8
Fields,g 2 0-0 4
Blocker,f 0 2-3 2
Edwards,g 0 0-0 0
27 16-20 70
Totals 17 27-34 61
20 24 18 8-70
_l3 13 21 14-61
Penn State
S. California
Major League . Citrus Dope
FORT PIERCE, Fla.. March 22
(JP)—A team of mixed Brooklyn
Dodger regulars and rookies push
ed over a run in the ninth inning
to beat the Pittsburgh Pirates to
day 3-2.
Jim Baxes, breaking into the
Brooklyn lineup for the first time,
opened the winning rally with a
single to center and stole second
base. Sandy Amoros then hit the
winning blow, a single to right.
Clem Labine started for the
Brooks and gave the Bucs their
two runs on six hits - in the first
five innings, Ben Wade gave up
one hit in three innings and Glenn
Mickens hurled a perfect ninth.
Cal Hogue, Pirate starter, shut
out the Brooks until the fourth
when singles by Duke Snider,
Gil Hodges and Rube Walker pro
duced a run. Don Zimmer's single
and a double by Amoros tied the
score in the fifth with Don Dang
leis hurling for the Pirates.
WEST PALM BEA C H, Fla.,
March 22 (IP)—The New York
Yankees knocked out lefthander
Alex Kellner in the fifth inning
and went on to drub the Phila
delphia Athletics 12-6 today.
Kellner was stunned by ten
hits and saved further trouble
only because centerfielder Vi c
Power made two great catches of
line drives.
Lefthander Ed Lop at hurled
Flatter Her
With an I.F.C.
CORSAGE
from
Bill McMullen
Florist _•
122 E. College Ave.
Phone 4994
five innings for the winners and
permitted, only one earned run.
Whitey Ford failed to last one
inning due to wildness. He walk
ed five and hit a batter. He was
replaced by Allie Reynolds who
didn't allow a hit to the finish.
Rookies Bob Cery and Bill
Skowron ledt the New Yorkers'
16-hit attack with four apiece, •
At Phoenix, Ariz. (W)—New
York (N) vs. Mexican All Stars,
cancelled, rain.
At Yuma, Ariz. (In—Cleve
land vs. Baltimore, cancelled,
wet grounds.
BRADENTON, Fla., March 22
M—Dick Gernert blasted home
runs his first and last times at bat
today to give the Boston Red Sbx
a 4-3 victory over the Milwaukee
Braves in a Grapefruit League
game.
Gernert's opening homer off
Ray Crone in the second inning
started the Red Sox out with a
1-0 lead and his eighth inning
blast off Gene Conley broke a 3-3
tie for the decision.
SPRING IS HERE I 1 !
And now is the time
to get your . . .
PENN STATE TEE SHIRT
Small, Medium, Large
Only 89c
in the TUB
$5 in sales; $l.OO in Merchandise Free
PENN STATE BOOK EXCHANGE
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE coLLEQ.a. PENNSYLVANIA
with an excellent dual meet rec
ord failed to live up to its press
clippings in defending its Big Ten
title. It lost to Purdue. However,
only four points separated the
two teams.
Michigan is a. more improved
team. It has two grapplers, Nalan,
130-pound defending champ, and
Kaul,' who could easily reign as
individual champs. And too, the
Wolverines have beaten. Pitts
burgh!
Woman's Bldg. over Little Lions
Thompson 1&2 over Mac Hall '
Alpha K. Alpha over Phi Mu
Tri Vi over Pi Beta Phi
Alpha Gamma Delta over Delta
Gamma
Chi Omega over Beta Sigma 0
BOWLING
Kappa Alpha Theta over Leonides
Phi Sigma Sig. over Kappa Delta
Delta Zeta over Theta Phi Alpha
ROTC Team
Place's Third
Penn State's Army ROTC Rifle
Team placed third Saturday in
the National Intercollegiate Small
Bore Sectional Tournament at
Buffalo, N.Y.
Donald .Greth won the high in
dividual award with a score of
282 out of a possible 300. John
Thalimer was fifth in individual
rankings with 279.
University of Akron won the
team competition for the second
consecutive year, with a total of
1379 points. Pitt was second with
1376 points and Penn State third
with 1372 points.
•LAKELAND, Fla., Match 22 (A")
—The Cincinnati Redlegs rough
ed up righthander. Dick Donovan
for three hits and three runs in
the second inning today and de
'feated the Detroit Tigers, 4-3.
Redleg shortstop Roy McMil
lan suffered a severe cut on his
right instep while covering second
base. Twenty-two stitches were
needed but doctors said McMillan
would be back in uniform in four
or five days.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March
22 (fP)—Stan Musial's three-run
fourth-inning home run on the
second pitch thrown b y relief
pitcher Duke lylarkell enabled
the St. Louis Cardinals to coast
to a 9-3 victory over the Phila
delphia Phillies today.
Musial, who drove in four more
runs with a single and triple,
slugged his third homer of the
spring exhibition schedule when
the score was tied 3-3.
Ali three, of the Philadelphia
runs came 'in the first inning
against'' Harvey Haddix, but they
were unearned.
WRA Results
BADMINTON •
Kraabel Crowned
Sophomore Queen
Elizabeth Kraabel was crowned sophomore class queen at the
annual class Spring Prom Saturday night,. in Recreation Hall.
Hugh Cline, sophomore class president, presented Miss Kraabel
with a floral crown and an inscribed loving cup at ceremonies dur
ing intermission. She was sponsored by Kappa Alpha Theta sorority
of which she is a member.
A fourth semester home eco
nomics student from Washington,
D.C., Miss Kraabel is active in
campus activities including the
Daily Collegian advertising staff,
Elizabeth Kraabel
Soph Class Queen
Froth circulation staff, Thespian
publicity, Home Ec Club, He-Man
contest committee, and the Greek
Week sing committee. Last year
she was selected by Alpha Lambda
Delta, freshman scholastic honor
ary society.
She was described by a class
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CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
THURS. & FRI., MARCH 25 & 26
If your degree or major Make appointment to sem
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officer as being 5 feet 8 inches tall,
having blond hair and blue eyes,
and being "trim." She is pinned.
Other finalists and their spon
sors were Sandra Booth, Theta
Phi Alpha; Lorraine Chaban, Kap
pa Delta; Sara McKnight, Cwens;
and Susan Schrenzel, Phi Epsilon
Pi. Finalists were selected from
50 entries.
Judges who made the final se
lection were George L. Donovan,
director of the Student Union; Ray
T. Fortunato, general director of
Thespians; Robert M. Koser, assis
tant registrar; Moylan Mills, di
rector of "Bloomer Girl"; and
Frank F. Morris, assistant comp
troller.
No. 1 Grid Sleuth
A new addition to the Penn
State coaching staff, J. T. White
last year was rated the Univer
sity of Michigan's No. 1 football
scout.
Why Not Laugh
This Weekend?
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Get tickets now for this Fri
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you'll want to stay!
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