PAGF SO( Lion Cagers Meet Hot Rod and Co. College basketball's clown prince, Hot Rod Hundley, leads West Virginia University into Rec Hall tonight for the second game of a home-and-home series against John Egli's fast moving Penn State quintet. The Lions will be looking for their 14th victory of the season, and second against the West Virginia passers when the game gets underway at 8 p.m. Hot Rod, so dubbed because of his clowning antics on the basket ball floor, leads the West Virginia scoring, but the sophomore ace collected only 11 points when the Lions went into overtime to win the first contest, 77-68 at Morgan town. Tonight's contest should mark another big milestone in the scor ing career of the Lions' great cen ter, Jesse Arnelle. The big pivot man needs only 11 points to break the Penn State seasonal scoring record which he now holds at 506. He has 496 this season. Ar nelle has been scoring at a 27.4 point per-game pace this season and should have little trouble eclipsing the old mark tonight. The Lions, on the rebound after a momentary slump two weeks ago, go into the contest with a 13-5 record while coach Fred Schaus' Mountaineers carry an 11-8 slate. No Lineup Changes Egli is expected to start with the combination that has gath ered four straight wins for him since his quartet suffered a dou ble loss against Pitt and Carnegie Tech at mica-season. Earl Fields and Jim Blocker will be at the forwards, and Ron Weidenham mer and Bob Hoffman get the nod at the guard positions, with Arnelle in the center slot. Schaus, the former Fort Wayne Piston and New York Knicker bocker star, who took over the West Virginia varsity reigns this season, is expected to counter with sophomore Hundley (8-4) and a quartet of fine veteran per formers. Willie Bergines (6-6), and Pete White (8-5) will be at the forwards .Paul Whitting (6-7) will be at the center, and Frank Spadafore (5-8) will man the oth er guard position. The game marks the 46th in the series between the two schools. The Lions have won 26 and West Virginia, 20. Fans tonight may also get a chance to see a former Penn State freshman standout, Jim Brennan, in action. He played for the Lion earlin:s two seasons a:o but Baseball Meeting Varsity pitching and catching candidates will meet at 5 p.m. today at 241 Rec Hall, accord ing to head baseball coach Joe Bedenk. ‘ c , .. g) v tx WILBUR JUST WOKE UP TO THE FACT THAT HES IN CLASS! KEEP ALERT FOR A BETTER POINT AVERAGE! Don't let that "drowsy feel ing" cramp your style in class . . . or when you're "hitting the books". Take a NoDoz Awakener! In a few minutes, you'll be your normal best... wide awake . . . alert! Your doctor will tell you—NoDoz Awakeners are safe as coffee. Keep a pack handy! 15 TABLETS, 35e fir,.. K f,Mf R S "Ndßeta" pack 35 tablets Is handy tin •9c transferred to West Virginia after his freshman year here. He owns a fine set shot and rates as one of Schaus' best sophomore prospects. 150 Colleges Join Bidding For 'Wilt Stilt' PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 8 (R')— Wilt the Stilt, America's most prominent high school basketball player, definitely is going to col lege. The big question is, which. one? In case you've been sheltered from basketball news, Wilt the Stilt is Wilton Chamberlain, a seven foot lad who scores on a basketball court at a point a min ute clip. The 18-year-old giant plays for Overbrook High School in Philadelphia. A.), last count, Chamberlain said, he has received close to 150 bids to attend higher institutions of learning and, of course, to play a little basketball. Wilt says he hasn't' made up his mind where he'll go and won't until May or June. As a high school basketballer, the Stilt has scored 1912 points. He has seven games to play and if he continues at his 40-plus per game average can eclipse the three-year local scoring record set by LaSalle's great All-America, Tom Gola. The 'atter netted 2222 points over three seasons at La- Salle High. Wilt's one game high is 74, scored earlier this season. Pennsylvania's newly-appointed State Secretary of Agriculture, Dr. William L. Henning, is a long time Penn State sports follower. PERSON Aro 1111 \ • max kaminski February 16 7:30-9:30 p.m. Schwab $l.OO per person Tickets on sale Ai !33" 4 1nt Union tieuefit of Can:pus Cheat THF neve COLLEGIAN traTE COLLEGE DeroNNIVANIA Dons Hit Top In AP Rating By The Associeted Press The San Francisco Dons, who want to prove they're the best college basketball team in the na tion, already have done a pretty good job of convinci..g the sports writers and broadcP.sters. That was seen today when San Francisco was voted the No. 1 team by a big margin in the ninth weekly Associated Press ranking poll. The Dons were named first by 68 of 126 voters ana polled a total of 1107 points. Kentucky, the leader ever since the second week of this season's poll. dropped to second place with only 19 first place votes and 867 points. San Francisco, a ball control team with the nation's best de fensive record this season, made the top without the benefit of any advance ballyhoo The Dons were not listed in the pre-season poll, when LaSalle was picked as the team most likely to succeed. Behind Kentucky in the rank ings came' LaSalle, Duquesne, Utah, George Washington, North Carolina State, UCLA, Marquette, and Illinois. Th e Illini barely squeezed into the first ten ahead of Maryland. The second ten: Maryland, Min nesota, Alabama, Missouri, lowa, Dayton, Cincinnati, Oregon State, Villanova, and Vanderbilt. Bob Hicks, who produced an un beaten team in his first year as Juniata College coach, is a former Penn State football star. L I 4 1 \ t I 3 Future Mat Foes Show Good Records While the Nittany wrestlers compiled a 2-1 record during the past five weeks and now are on the brink of tangling with Sytacuse. Saturday, three of the Lions' four future mat foes have been sweep ing Eastern competition with impressive wins. After coach Charlie Speidel takes his eight-man squad to Syra cuse, he'll return to Rec Hall to host Army and Lehigh and then close the season at Pitt—three op ponents who require speculative attention from the snappy Lion mentor. Syracuse holds a 2-1 record with a 22-8 win over Temple and a 16-14 win over Army, plus a loss to Cortlandt State Teachers College, N.Y., in the opening meet, 18-18. Army's Recorct Weaker Army, the first of two teams to visit the Lions when they re turn from Syracuse, doesn't have the record that the Lions boast, but had had more matches to its credit—a factor which could aid it as far as experience through competition is concerned. The Cadets presently own a 2-3 record but will meet Yale before they visit Rec Hall. Army has de feated Columbia, 15-11, and Vir ginia Military Institute, 23-13. Lost to Orange , Arhong Army's three kisses the most important as far as the Lions are concerned was its most recent setback by Syracuse at Army Sat urday, 16-14. Army's opening loss was to Springfield, 20-13. Two matches later Cornell turned the trick again with a 19-15 win (Penn State trimmed Cornell 17-10 in the season's opener). The Lehigh Engineers, set to visit• the Lions for the final home match after the Army encounter, have swept four straight matches to jump to the top in the "pos sible" column in bidding for the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association title. Lehigh has stopped Cornell, 18-6, Franklin and Marshall, 26-6, Pitt, 14-12, and Yale, 20-5. Le high's most impressive win, nat urally, is the two-point victory JACK HARPER CAMPUS TOMORROW 1 / 2 SLACKS including McGregor's famous Dazzler Slack. PORK PIE HATS SKATING JACKETS and SHIRTS 6-FOOTER SCARVES Swell for skating. Regularly 4.95 SPECIAL! KHAKI SLACKS $10052 . 00 a Leg 03 9 .44 • :4A4 cltv HATTCR IHAMEROA3PIea THIRD ANNUAL FEBRUARY 10 at 9:00 a.m. PRICE Values to 18.95. Regularly 6.95 - 7.50 Famous McGregor WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 9, 1953 over Pitt. The Panthers, along with Navy, are both considered good bets for the EIWA title with Lehigh and Penn State falling in line in that order. Lehigh Surprises Lehigh, not considered in the hot-stove league as being the po tential Rowerliouse that it may be this winter, hasn't been the only team to dump the Panthers. Michigan did it two matches later, 17-9. Since then the Panthers have swept three straight wins to pull their record to 5-2 with two meets set before they host the Lions in the two teams' season finale. After opening by defeating Michigan State, 24-5, the Panthers were set back by Lehigh. Pitt then dropped Lock Haven State Teachers College 20-5, on the lat ter's mats. Michigan handed Pitt its next and last loss thus far. Pitt then tumbled Purdue, 31-2, Illinois, 18-8, and Cornell, 23-3. Although Cornell and Lehigh are on both the Lion and Pitt schedules, the most direct atten tion is being focused on the Pan thers' meet tonight when they travel to New York to meet Syra cuse, the Lions' Saturday oppo nent. Baker to Fight James BALTIMORE, Feb. 8 (R)—Bob Baker, Pittsburgh giant tanked No. 4 in the heavyweight division, puts his rating on the line tomor row night when he faces Willie James of Roxbury, Mass., in a 10-rounder. The Baltimore Colisetim fight will be televised (CBS) starting at 10 p.m. (EST). DAY 1 / 2 a Pair