The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 02, 1956, Image 7

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    FRIDAY. MARCH 2, 1956
Weekend
Hold Key
Weekend gymnastic activity at Annapolis, Md., and Rec
reation Hall will determine the final outcome of the race
for the Eastern Intercollegiate Gymnastic Title.
The Nittany Lions host an upset-minded Pittsburgh team
while undefeated Army, currently on top of the pack, visits
once-beaten Navy.
The Lions must defeat the Panthers and rest their hopes
on an Navy upset in order to win the crown for the fourth
consecutive year.
A Navy win would throw the
three clubs—Penn State, Army
and Navy—into a three-way tie
for the championship. An Army
win automatically gives the Ca
dets the championship.
If team records were any indi
cation of the outcome of the meet,
the Lions should win rather eas
ily.
However, as is the case in most
heated rivalries, records go out
the window when 'Pittsburgh and
Penn State get together.
Last season, an undefeated Nit
tany team managed to gain a
shaky 54-42 victory over the
Panthers who finished with a 1-5
record.
Pitt knows that the Lions must
win to remain in title contention
and will shoot its big guns in
hopes of upsetting the Nittanies.
Sophomore Tom Darling tops
the Panther scorers in seven
meets with six first places.
Darling won the flying rings
against Army, Navy, Lock Haven,
and West Chester. His first at
Army was the only Panther first
of the meet.
He also won the high bar
against West Chester and Tem
ple.
Another sophomore, John Ham
mond, follows Darling in the
scoring column with first places
in tumbling against Navy, West
Chester, and Lock Haven.
Hammond also took the paral
lel bars against Lock Haven and
the flying rings against Temple.
Jim Mulvihill won the high bar
against Lock Haven and West
Virginia and the parallel bars
against Temple.
Joe Lamartine, who was the
team's second highest scorer last
season, has two firsts in the side
horse against West Chester and
the Mountaineers to his credit.
WRA Action
(Continued from page six)
Frances Rosenfield made 11.
Pi Beta Phi beat Tri Sig 37-28
after clinging to a slim 15-13
halftime lead. Peg Boyd, Nancy
Thompson, and Joyce, Gardner
netted nine, eight, and seven
points. Judy Feldmiller and Shir
ley Rosser each made five points
for the losers.
Zeta Tau Alpha gained a 2-0
forfeit win over Thompson 4.
3 Teams Take Bowling Tilts
Delta Zeta rapped up the high
est total in the second round of
the bowling league by beating
Thompson I, 584-506. Mary Gow
er and Terry Flynn rolled 134
and 132 to pace the DZ's.
Audrey Jersun equalled Gow
er's total for the frQsh team. Ra
chel Waters was second with 127.
Leonides stomped Alpha Chi
Omega, 450-390, with Gail Lund
gren getting the highest average
of 112 for the winners. Suzanne
Loux's 92 score was the best for
the AChiO's.
Atherton Stops Thompson II
High scores were scarce when
Atherton Southeast and North
east beat Thompson 11, 424-394.
Bev Dunbar rolled 110 and Helen
Cunnings an even 100 to pace
the winners. Kathryn Petrosky
was the losers' best with 96.
Sigma Delta Tau and Theta
Phi Alpha won forfeits over Mac
Hall and Thompson Hi.
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Gym Clashes
o Title Hopes
IM Bowling
(Continued from page six)
pa, 3-1. Beaver House won on a
slim 27-pin margin, 2333-2306.
Phi Kap picked up its lone point
in the first game of the match
with 828 points. Beaver House
now stands in second place v. ith
an 11-5 slate.
Theta Delta Chi registered the
only shutout of the night in win
ning 4-0 over Phi Mu Delta. The
ta Delt scored a high game of
868 points for a 2431-2109 point
advantage. Theta Delt holds third
place with a 10-6 mark.
The other B League match end
ed in a forfeit with Delta
over
Sigma getting the nod over Sig
ma Alpha Epsilon. 4-0. The for
feit gives Delta Theta Sigma a
5-11 record.
11-eu Bidding High
Gilbert Leu, Penn State fresh
man gymnast, will make his first
bid for national honors in the
AAU championships and Olympic
tryouts here, April 27-28. Leu is an
exchange student from Zurich,
Switzerland.
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THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA
8 Fraternity,
4 Indies Win
In IM Handball
While eight more fraternity
men advanced to the second
round of intramural handball
play Wednesday. four indepen
dent handballers won their first
round games in the independent
section.
Phi Sigma Delta's Elliot Fox
took two games from Vince Car
occi, Pi Kappa Phi. 21-1. 21-2.
Phi Kappa Tau's Sam McKibben
dropped a pair to Phi Gamma
Delta's Don Ferguson 21-10, 21-4:
and Chuck Berkley of Kappa Sig
ma defeated Sigma Phi Alpha's
Jim Byrne. 21-6, 21-1. Phi Delta
Theta's Dick Eldredge beat Rus
sell Mandeville, Sigma Alpha Ep
silon, 21-1, 21-1.
In the independent division.
Don Hillhouse defeated Don
Parker 21-7. 21.5: John Camp
bell dropped two to Bill Beater
21-6. 21-17: and Don Hartnett
beat Art Carroll, 21-12. 21-17.
Ron Siders forfeited to George
Podrasa in the fourth Indio
contest.
Phi Kappa's Don Zugates had
to come from behind to defeat
Delta Upsilon's Bruce Johnson,
21-16, 17-21, 21-10. Theta Xi's
Jim Macklan defeated Garry Cro
thers, Kappa Delta Rho, 21-18.
21-17: and Beta Sigma Rho's
Sheldon Amsel took two from
Ralph Brower, Alpha Sigma Phi.
21-10, 21-15.
But the final match of the
night was the most exciting.
Phi Epsilon Pi's Mike Shapiro
won the hardest fought contest
I of the young tourney from Sig
ma Nu's Tom Law, 21-19. 16-21,
and the final and deciding
game, 20-21.
3 IM Cage Quintets
Cop League Crowns
Kappa Delta Rho, the Trojans, and the Tribe captured intra
mural basketball league crowns Wednesday to qualify for playoffs
next week.
KDR, defending fraternity kingpin, turned in a spectacular per
formance trouncing Alpha Chi Rho, 63-23. George Simpson, with 25,
was followed by Billy Kane in the scoring with 20. KDR finished
with a 7-0 slate
The Trojans, league H, and the
Tribe, circuit J, finished with 8-0
cards.
Bill McDade and Dave Wat
kins. each with 12, led the 34-27
Trojan win over the Yum Yums.
Eight men dented the scoring col
umn for the Tribe in its 34-21
victory over the Grooveology
Five.
Theta Kap. SPE Tied for Lead
Four other quintets remained
in the running for league crowns.
Theta Kappa Phi and Sigma Phi
Epsilon each registered wins
Wednesday to deadlock for
League F lead.
Theta Kap stopped Sigma Nu,
34-25, with Bobby Oleski's 14
points leading the way. Its coun
terpart SPE -- edged by Trian
gle, 16-10.
In Indie League G, Dorm 9
and the Playboys stayed in the
running for the loop title scor
ing relatively easy wins. Dorm
9 topped Stalag 10, 31-14, while
the Playboys dropped the A.R.'s.
31-20. The victors are in a three-
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way tie with Canadian Club
Tau Kappa Epsilon. with only
one defeat, finished in the run
nerup spot to KDR in loop A
trimming Zeta Beta Tau, 24-10.
Mike Znachko led the victors
with 10 points.
Three other fraternity League
A games were played. Phi Kappa
Psi rallied from a 14-point half
time deficit to knock off Delta
Sigma Lambda. 28-27.
Faris Scores 33
With Jack Fads ripping the
cords for 33 points, Alpha Phi
Delta romped to a 49-36 win over
Lambda Chi Alpha. In the other
game, Delta Upsilon, paced by
Dean Mullin's 16 markers, topped
Sigma Pi, 28-18.
In other games Wednesday
Sigma Chi squeezed by Delta
Tau Delta, 24-21; Phi Epsilon Pi
rallied to defeat Tau Phi Delta,
23-18; Dorm 42 lost to the Rocks.
21-17: the Gems beat Dorm 39,
23-14; the Nematodes edged Pol
lock 12, 18-17; the Chiggers cop
ped a forfeit win from the Titans.
PAGE SEVEN