WEDNESDAY. MARQa 9. 195 S Lehigh 137 Pouncter Seven Gdin In IM Handball Independent handballers re turned to action Monday- night in the intramural singles tourna ment at Rec Hall. George Schimmel trounced Franklin Trenge 21-8, 21-2, in the first match of tire night; George Obradovich humbled Joe McHugh, 21-6, 21-7; John Burgan stopped Jim Simpson, 21-6, 21-11; Dick Pettit nudged Larry Berk, 21-10. 21-14; Dan Mullen easily defeated Doit Vinkovich, 21-6, 21-3; Jim Greeley defeated Joe -Muenzihay, 21-5, 21-4; and Gerry Werner tOok two' out of .three matches from Everett Weidner, 21-4, 16-21, 21-18. ’ Fraternity action Monday night saw four contestants advance into the third round of play. Sam Mc- Kibben, Phi Kappa Tau, slipped past Jim Park, Delta Chi, 21-16, 6-21, 21-9; Howie Levine, Phi Sig ma Delta, rallied to win the last two matches after losing the first one to John Dirst, Sigma Pi, 17- 21, 21-7, 21-11. Steve Meisel, Alpha Epsilon Pi, gained a hard fought victory over Bob Vanher, Sigiha Chi, 21-13, 17-21, ,21-15; and in the last match of the evening. A 1 Schneider, Phi Epsilon pi, eliminated Dick Hart man, Alpha Rho Chi, 21-2, 21-10. Track Te6m— (Continued irorn page six) equaled the world mark of 6.0 sec. for the 50-yard highs in trip ping the “King of the Kangaroos.” Morin, Dave Leathern, Bob Mate, and Pollard combined to tumble two records in the mile relay in the quadrangular battle. This foursome covered the dis tance in 3:19.6—tw0-tenths of a second better than the field house and Penn State marks. Another indoor season has come to a close for the Lions, but the “old gray record book ain’t -what she used to be.” WANTED: MEN WITH BEARDS Student Union Desk Dmulllmi Sat. March 12 Wo Registration 12:00 Noon Fee Trophies to Winner* 16 Teams Expected for MatTouraey (This account is the first of a series of three that wilt give a breakdown of some of the top wrestlers in each weight for the EIWA tourney set to begin Friday at Aec Hall. Today the review covers the 123, 130, and 137-pound weights.) Slxteeh eight-man teams—a total of 128 wrestlers plus at least one alternate for each weight—are expected to begin invading State College Thursday in preparation for the 51st Eastern intercollegiate Wrestling Association tourney. The preliminary session at Rec Hall will open the -Friday afternoon two-day festivities. Wrestlers from Brown, Yale, Penn, Pitt, Navy, Columb: Syracuse, Army, Temple, Franklin and Marshall, Lehigh, compete. The 129 pound elan will sport such outstanding lightweights as Sid Nodland, undefeated Pena State sophomore; Tom Depp a> Lehigh’s lightweight with a 3*2 card; Ernie Bod a* Cornell's probable eater who drew with Nodland in the Lions' season openert. Bill Hullngp of Pitt with a 6-2-1 record who tied Nodlandi Don Clark, Syra cuse} and Amt's Fox McCar thy. In dual meet action this past season, Lehigh’s Deppe pinned McCarthy, while Bpda edged Clark 16-14. The scramble for v the Easts’ top lightweight will also include Gene De’Allessandro of Rutgers and Franklin and. Mar shall’s Gerry Yoder* D’Allessandro carded a 6-0 rec ord including a 9-5 win over Dep pe of Lehigh. Yoder e&rped a 6-2 record working the lightweigAt slot Columbia also may have a contending on try with John Buchanan at 123 pounds. Bu chanan defeated Boda 8-6. Tem ple's Art McAU also may hie a basis of his 8-0 card. AP San By The Associated Press The University of San Francisco, acclaimed the nation’s No. 1 college team, in the final regular season Associated Press poll, faced tough sledding today as the Dons attempted to prove their rating in the NCAA basketball championship tournament. . The Dons took over the top spot in the weekly poll Feb. 7 after Kentucky’s second loss to Georgia Tech, and the Californ ians have remained No. 1 ever since. Kentucky, which held the top ranking from the third week in December until derailed by Geor gia Tech, was close behind San Francisco as ballots from 171 of the nation’s sports writers and sportscasters were tallied. A year ago Kentucky ruled NO. 1 at the regular season’s close. LaSalle Third San Francisco received 67 first place votes, and on the basis of 10 points for first, nine for second, and so forth, the Dohs. rolled up 1424 points. Kentucky, the (South eastern Conference champion, polled 58 firsts and 1?58 points. Right behind with 1043 points is LaSalle, the* defending NCAA tournament champion. No other team received as many as 1000 points, There Was one major upheaval in the top 10 this Week. mWa, Register at Old Mom fHf CQiIEGIA- STATE COUK%. Cage Poll Pates Francisco First Pwui, Navy, Princeton. Brown. Yalo, and Harvard, however, have had trouble with the light weight division. All these squads, except Penn—which won four of seven bouts—have had losing seasons at 123 pounds. The race for the 130 pound classic also will show such men as Bob Homan, captain of the I/ions; Parker Mangus of Lehigh with a 5-2 record; Dean Oliver of Rutgers who owns a 4-0 rec ord; and Ed Peery who swept his 1954-55 opposition clean with a victory slate of 9-0. Harvard, Yale, and Syracuse have rotated three men in and out of the 130 division. Losing seasons have been posted by Ar my’s Stan Cass, Paul Fiedler of Navy, Mundy Peale of Princeton, and Harold Powell of Columbia. Cornell has called on the services of four men in 11 matches at 130 pounds. Temple has forfeited 130 bounds six times. Franklin and Marshall's Dick Samuels broke even at the same weight with a 3-3 record. In dual meet action Homan .went the distance with Mangus No. 62 a week ago, into the No. 5 spot After capturing the Big Ten Conference title. Oregon Stale Moves Up Oregon State, Pacific Coast Conference champions, took over No. 10 after being No. 14 last week. * North Carolina State, barred from the NCAA tournament, is No. 4. Others in the first 10 are Duquesne (6), Utah (7), Marquette <8), and Dayton (0). Second ten: Minnesota, Alaba ma, UCLA, George Washington, Colorado, Tulsa, Vanderbilt, • Illi nois, West Virginia, and St. Louis. knows what's best! She always takes her car where it will receive the best care. So get wise! Bring your car WIMMER'S SUNOCO $O2 E. College Ave. la, Rutgers, Cornell, Harvard, ’rinceton, and Penn State will ie drop tho rugged Lehigh met* men. 8-4; Peery, however, de feated Homan one week later, 5-3. Peery registered an 8-1 win over Mangus. - Larry Fomicola will be Penn Staters No. 1 entry at 137 pounds. Pitt’s Nick Swentosky carded a 5*6 record including a 5-1 loss to Fomicola. Temple’s Simmqns was undefeated in seven matches; Smith of Brown scored a 6-1 rec ord while Navy’s Fred Thomas had 5-1-1 slate. Princeton, Yale, Harvard, Franklin and Marshall, and Penn have had losing seasons at 137 pounds although Penn’s Len Shea earned a 3-1 record. Chuck Gratto of Cornell edged Shea, 14-13. Syracuse. Rutgers, and Lehigh will have the option of shuffling two men in or out of the 137 pound diivsion. Dave Bates or Captain Ken Faust may get the nod for the Eastern work for Le high. Either Syracuse’s Bill Tor res (0-2) or Tom King (2-3) may enter at 137 pounds. Rutgers has had a 2-3 record with Den Oliver and Paul Bedeel at 137 pounds. Daye Kinne of Columbia has a 4-2 record. Turpin Knocks Out Spanish Champion LONDON, March 8 (iT)—For mer world middleweight cham pion handy Turpin of Great Brit ain tonight knocked out Spanish heavyweight champion Jose Gon zales in 2 minutes, 20 seconds of the seventh round of their sched uled 10-rSund bout. Turpin, at 171%, took another step on his comeback cainpaign. It Was his first appearance in a London ring in 12 months. The fight, before 18,000 in Earls Court, found Turpin ahead all the way. The best ball for vour has the exclusive DURA-THIN COVER Here's amazing new durability in a high-compression ball. The cover provides this great new Spalding DOT® with real scuff resistance ... keeps the DOT uniform and true, even on rugged high-iron shots. The new dot has a greater compactness for truer, more uniform flight. It’s actually an economical bait for yom to play. And, with all this new durability, new dots still offer the long, long cany every hard-hitter wants. At school, or on your home course, make your neat round a better one with this greatest of all golf h«»m, Spalding dura-thin dots. Spalding Bill Simmons Set for Easterns Pasquel Dies in Plane Crash MEXICO CITY, March 8 (M Jorge Pasquel, multi-millionaire Mexican sportsman whose 1948 raids on the big leagues led to • court battle over' baseball’s re serve clause, was killed last night when his private plane crashed in the San Luis Potosi Mountains. Five others, including the pilot, co-pilot, two mechanics and Pas quel’s personal barber, also died in the crash about 225 miles nothwest of Mexico City. The Viking plane took off from Pasquel’s ranch shortly before 9 p.m. Monday. Radio contact with the craft was lost soon after wards. Rescue parties reached the wreckage today. As president of the Mexican league he moved north of the border with pockets bulging and lured some of the major leagued biggest stars into the “outlaw" Circuit. ame PAGE SEVEN