PAGE SIX 6 '''it . oxiers - See NCAA Action (Continued from page one) After Papacharalambous opens the evening's action, Bob McMath (1-4-0) will meet Joe Rodriquez, San Jose State, in the third bout. Rodriquez won 8, lost 1, and drew 2 during the regular campaign. In the 147-pound class, Jack Stokes (6-2-1), Penn State's stylish Eastern champ, meets undefeated Connie Stamps, Hampton Institute. In the 11th bout of the 14-match card, Captain Adam Kois battles rugged Tom Stern, San Jose State. Kois, two-time Eastern champ at 178-pounds, and National runnerup last year, carries a 6-2-1 record. Stern, National champion last year, holds an impressive 10-1-0 record. Also included in preliminary action will be second-round elimina tions in the 139-pound class because of an influx of entries at that weight. The winner of the Fornicola-Titus match will meet Vic Har ris (5-1-1) of San Jose State. Penn State's other two entries are Frank Breidor, 165-pounder, and Joe Goleman, heavyweight. Breidor received a bye for the after noon bouts, but will fight Friday night. Goleman, along with three other heavyweights, received a bye into the semi-final action Friday. Goleman will meet Bob Hinds. The Wisconsin heavy stopped Goleman earlier in the season early in the first round. Because there were only four entries in the 119-pound class, the four men move into Friday night's semi-final action. These 24 bouts today will produce 18 semi-final matches Friday night, followed by 9 title fights Saturday night. Other bouts to watch in the afternoon will be Gil Inaba. 7 Lettermen To Bolster Golf Team Unbeaten in nine matches last year, Penn State's golf team will swing into its eight-match sched ule in less than two weeks. Coach Bob Rutherford and his seven man squad appear to be strong enough to give their opposition similar trouble as in the 1953 campaign. Rutherford has a wealth of ma terial to work with this season. Last year's captain, Hud Samson, is the only man who will not re turn to the Linksmen's lineup. Seven veterans will bolster the Nittany squad in addition to three other men who tried out for the team in 1953. Five two-year lettermen and two one-year letterman will prob ably hold the major spotlight in Rutherford's eyes as he begins his fifth year as Lion golf coach. Among the standout men re turning are seniors Captain Rod Eaken, Joe Webb, Gordon Stroup, Lou Riggs, and John Carney. Eaken, Stroup, and Webb are two-year letter winners. Warren Gittlen and George Kreidler, both juniors, are also two-year letter men. . Carney and Riggs earned their emblems last year. Competition however will be heavy for a berth on the seven-man squad with Bill Durniak and Jim Mayes, both jun iors, and senior Dick Wahl at tempting to break into the start ing team. Last year the Lions dumped Pittsburgh, Navy, Cornell, Gettys burgh, Georgetown, Lehigh. Col gate, Bucknell, and Temple, in that order. In the Eastern Inter collegiate Golf Association tour ney at Princeton, Penn State placed second. In their first five matches last year, the Lions netted a total of 30 points compared to the compe titions' seven. Pittsburgh and Cornell could only salvage one point each; Gettysburg was shut out; and Navy and Georgetown narrowed the Lions' victory edge in each instance, but still lost the matches. In the game's five matches, Ea ken won medalist honors twice, Riggs was two under par at Cor nell to win the same honor, while Gittlen was medalist against Pitts burgh. This Weekend at Center Stage— PICK UP STICKS PLAYERS' MUSICAL REVUE Tickets at Student Union Goleman to Meet Hinds HOST PEN . _ STATE TEAM will enter eight boxers in the National Collegiate boxing cham pionships today through Saturday at Recreation Hall. The Lion entries are (1. to r.) Harry Papa charalambous, 125 pounds; Bob McMath, 132; Masters Tourney Opens AUGUSTA, Ga., April 7 (A')— The biggest field in the history of the Masters Golf Tournament will start the 20th anniversary tournament tomorrow, facing one of the toughest tasks ever to con front a picked group of star golf ers. That task is to stop Ben Hogan, the tense Texas scrapper who won everything in sight last year. including his second Masters. When this tournament was in augurated in 1934 over the new Augusta National Course, B o b Jones still was the dominant fig ure in golf. His rivals figured the way to win was to beat Bobby— and they occasionally did. Jones never won the Masters tourna ment, which has become recog- THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE courc;F DEMMSYWAMA Penn State Entries 125 Pounds Harry Papachar alambous nized as a sort of memorial to hi 3 feats. Now Hogan is the boss man and others think of him the way they thought of Jones—beat Ben and you can win. Even before it starts, the 1954 Masters has simmered down to a contest between Hogan and the other 78 entrants. So far no one has suggested that anything but superlative golf can beat the lit tle man who won the Masters, the U.S. Open and the British Open last year and who is trying to be come the first player to win this tournament twice ,in succession. The obi is a colored sash corn-' monly worn by Japanese women tied at the back of the neck. 132 Pounds Bob McMath 139 Pounds Larry Fornicola 147 Pounds Jack Stokes 156 Pounds Joe Humphreys 165 Pounds Frank Breidor 178 Pounds Adam"Kois Heavyweight Joe Goleman Larry Fornicola, 139; Jack Stokes, 147; Joe Humphreys, 156; Frank Breidor, 165; Adam Kois, 178; and Joe Goleman, heavyweight. Kois and Stokes are Eastern champions. Penn State will not be represented in the 119-pound class. pounder from Washington -State, against Tony Hansell, Army. Inaba, a junior, has won the Pacific Coast title twice and was NCAA runner up last year. In two seasons, the Cougar has 14 victories and three defeats. Hansell won the Eastern 132-pound crown this year. Another of Washington State's three entries, 125-pound Eddie Olson (6-3-0), meets John Hernandez of San Jose State. Olson is known as a hard hitting lightweight, although not so fast as other NCAA entries. Three other Eastern boxers slated for action this afternoon are Vince Palumbo, 132-pounds, and Bob Theofield, 147-pounds, from Maryland. Syracuse's 165-pound Vince Rigolosi will carry a 7-1-0 record against Nelson Alvarez, Hampton Institute, (3-1-1), in the final afternoon bout. The tourney's lone defending champ, Ray Zale of Wisconsin, meets Don Quarles, North Carolina A&T, in one of the evening's two 178-pound clashes. In addition to Penn State's entries in the evening, two other East ern champs enter preliminary action. Virginia's Pete Potter (6-0-1), runnerup last year in the 156-pound division and Eastern champ this year, meets Gary Bowden, Louisiana State, (2-3-0). Virginia's second champion entry will be Estol Nichols. He will box Lewis Neal, Idaho State. Nichols has a 4-2-1 record, while Neal owns a 3-4-1 card. THURSDAY. APRIL 8. 1954 3 Other. Matches Row on Links Costs Three Pros Fines AUGUSTA, Ga., April 7(A')— On the eve of the Masters Golf Tournament the PGA today slap ped fines on three of its mem bers and put one of them on pro bation as the result of a row at the Greensb"ro, N.C., tournament last weekend. Marty Fur, - ,;o1 of Lemont, 111., drew the stiffest penalty from the association's t o urn am ent committee, a $250 fine and six months probation. Doug Ford of Yonkers, N.Y., himself a member of this committee, and Bill Nary of Tucson, Ariz., were fined $5O each. The incident started in an argu ment between Nary and Ford af ter the former had accused Ford of stepping on a bush while mak ing a shot in the play at Greens boro. Nary refused to sign Ford's card but Raynor, after talking with spectators and a gallery mar shal, ruled Ford innocent of any rule violation and Ford went on to beat Furgol in a playoff for first place. Furgol got into the dispute, ap -rxtrently because he stood to bene fit th most if Ford were penal '