THURSDAY. MARCH 15. 1956 4 Indie Fives ILifters to End Seoson Bid for IM Title r£aSHSt;Jss' With Shippensburg Meet 'A Loop was thrown into a two- 1 The Penn State Barbell Club to popularize the weight-lifting Only four quintets remain in' ,way tie for the first time in sec-'closes out its season Saturday s P° rt here at the Umverstty. contention for the 1956 Indepen- One bv squeezing bv the Cou- omt half competition. 'when it iomnevs to Shinoensbure' Those who are interested m on dent IM cage crown at a lfi-H Joe Frank and Dick! The Alpha Gamma Rho keglers wntn J > bhippensburg leri „.. the wintest shou ld Mgn u „ of quarter-final games played' Jacobs split ten points to lead' defeated Phi Kappa Tau, 3-1, to lor a four-wav meet involving May is from 130 to 5 p m at Uu - Tuesday night at Recreation Hall.'the winners to their tenth straight move ' nto a first P !ace tie with Shippensburg Legion, Harrisburg reatton Hall, or on May t*J from Semi-final rounds in both the'victory. ! phi , Tau ; AGR taHied 2239 points, YMCA, and West Chester State'" to 9p m. Entry fee for the -.on- Independent and Fraternity l , }to the losers' 2iiB. Both teams .Teachers College. ites? will be $i 00. bracket were run off last night ~ .7~ n °w °wn 20-4 slates. | lifters won their last en- The club announced that indi but results of those games did not 1 TenniS Managers „°‘ her action saw Sigma Phi' m against the Teachers vulaa!; \,, who take schedui. 1 reach the Collegian press time. I Anyone interested in becom- . R P sll ° n . u° W Si, A 1 E ? sl ? n n - Pl ’ last Saturdav, and hope to make 'Wetght-lifting * n Physical Educa- The All Stars —who are the . . 3-1; Alpha Phi Delta beat Tau 1f ‘ .tion on Monday would be able carlv favorites m the Indie tom - “ aSS,Slani ““t 9 "* “ >Phi DeJU 3-1; and Alpha Zetaj 11 ££ d 1?3 £>und '» in the tourney dur ney—romped to their eighth win ennis ma * s ‘9" «P al «»* Ath- .beat Ph, Gamma Delta 3-1. i T RaSfnell! 148 Sound Chuck *»S <* a « hours, of the year with an easy, 34-11, l *tic Association in Recreation j DeJo Sigma Phi and Delta Tau Giv j er 165 pound Bob Smith 198 Bod - v measurements and victory over the previously unde-, Hall this week, -,ck ded th ° ir match ln a “ “ pound Ed Claycomb, and heavy,, amoun ' s of > ,fts m the bench feated 8.M.0.C.’5. Seven of the i ,n .deadlock. weights ClaudeWallii'k and Frank pres *’ dcad , ilft ’ curl ’ *»““*?■ 4,1,11 victors entered their name in the . * all candidates . - Stanoms against their triple op bat > ? f prosses ' v ‘" he ,v -scoring column with Larry Gersh- bas heen scheduled for 5 p.m. TenrtlS Candidates position ,corded a L*^ ,e oA I T c entrante. man s 10-points and Art Pollard’s’ Friday on the first floor of Rec- There will be a meeting of var- The club officials also an-'? !Cn , on ,.^ a - V cn tran»s will eight, leading the way. j reation Hall. sity and freshman tennis candi- nounced that they will sponsor It was the first loss in eight, !dates at 5 p.m. today in 241 Ree-!a physical improvement contesLt „um, pr * encounters for the B.M.O.C.’s—! 1 reation Hall. 'in the near future in an effort! ae< J a ! ea lno "i" ntr who were handicapped by the loss of ace scorer Dan Radacovich from the lineup. The Gnarps earned the right to meet the All Stars in the semi final round by taking a 23-17 decision from the Trojans. Dean McCartney was the scoring leader for the winners with seven points, but the Trojan's Dave Watkins was the game’s high scorer with 13 points. The win was the seventh in eight games for the Gnarps. For the Trojans, however, the defeat marked their first loss in nine games. In the other side of the bracket Jordan One eaked out a 24-20 vic tory over the Canadian Club. Jor dan One led by eight points at halftime and had to stave off a second half rally of the Canadian Club to gain the win. Tom Wagner, with 10, and Bill Schwab, with nine, paced the Jordan One attack. However, Stearer of the losers led all scor ers with 12 markers. The other semi-final berth was filled by the Tribe. The Tribe earned the right to meet Jordan 9 Teams Win in IM V-Ball Independent volleyball opened its season Tuesday night with nine teams winning matches. Three games are played in each match with the winner of two games being claimed the victors of the match. Only one match failed to fin ish. The Kemo Sabes and Dorm 39 were tied with a win each as time ran out before the third game could get underway. The Kemo Sabes had won the first game, 15-6, and dropped the sec ond, 10-15. Only one encounter" went the full three games. The Dirty Thir ty defeated their arch rival—the Twenty-niners—ls-11, 10-15, and 15-10. In other battles the Canadian Club topped the Baby Sans, 15-8, 17-15; the Buzzards defeated Dorm 21, 15-7, 15-4; Dorm 14 beat Dorm 13. 15-13, 15-10; the Cagers stopped Dorm 25, 15-9, 17-15; the Cadillacs edged Dorm 31, 15-6, 16-14; Dorm 22 beat Colassal Six, 15-3, 15-6; and the Pinochles de feated Dorm 40, 15-3, 15-12. Farrell Wins, 80-34 PITTSBURGH. March 14 (/P>— Farrell’s WPIAL championship basketball team advanced to the western regional Class A PIAA semi-finals tonight with an easy 80-34 victory over Somerset. J. T. W Former Center Coaches Ends By TOM WERNER | Here are sung the praises of [one of the heretofore unsung, Jj. T. White, end coach on the iLion’s grid squad and All jAmerica center on the 1948 Michigan Rose Bowl team. Starting his playing career at Ohio State in 1941, J. T. played varsity end on that team in 1942. In that year Paul White, J. T.’s brother, was playing halfback for the Michigan eleven. The two teams, Ohio State and Michigan, met for the Big Ten champion ship with Ohio State coming out on top, 21-7. Joins Brother A few months later, 1946, J. T, joined his brother with the Wol verines to beat his former Alma Mater for the conference cham pionship. Thus, he has never been on the losing side in the Buckeye- Wolverine series. The World War between those games took some time out of White’s career, but in 1946 he re sumed Big Ten play with Michi gan on a squad that included five former captains. Play that year was a bit ragged. However, they were good enough to scare the Featuring IFC-PANHEL BALL THE DAILY COLLEGiAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Sr- Army, of Davis-Blanchard fame, 20-13. With the Michigan team J. T. was switched from his end posi tion to center where the Wolver ines were light in talent. A for- LES ELGART “the trumpet player's trumpet player" FRIDAY, J. T. White Assistant Grid Coach Semi-Formal Dancing from 9 to 1 Fellows: Here is a little ditty In which I’d like to say, Extra money from Will sorely save the day. MARCH 23 at the tunate turn of events By 1947 the Michigan eleven was ready to roll. | In its first four games Michigan racked up a total of 222 points ;to its opponent’s 34. White was [commended for his defensive I play, being called an expert in [diagnosing the opposition’s plays. The "Wolverines were National champs that year with a line that averaged 185 pounds. J. T. came in at 6-3, 185 pounds. 60-Minute Man The team was an outstanding all around combination that steamrollered its opposition for 324 points in the. regular season while allowing only 53 points to be scored upon them. Center White was the only man playing a GO minute game, attesting to his diversified talents in that era of unlimited substitution. j Look magazine thus had good .reason to pick J. T. as one of the country's best centers. Michigan proved its righl to the National title in the Rose Bowl in January 1948, when Southern California was completely out classed, 49-0. The next year J. T. stayed as coach on another Rose Bowl team ;that beat California 14-7. 1 He came to Penn State in 1954. $5.00 per Couple •. Tickets Available “NO FLOWERS” <<*•* :■ if' Makeit aQala p(' | “Home • d Going; b A/Ueek”- I More Fun*^ In tiic company of friends home* ward bound you can make it a "party" all the way. There's room to roam. time to visit, and nothing to worry about More Comfort! Restful coaches. Hi ~ ir luggage space. M -‘ ” refreshments vISp'JW. and swell meals en route. No ~—~-r rough driving on crowded highways. No waiting for skies to clear. Vessir, the train it top* in tnnsponation! | What Savings! j Give yourself a j "Scotch treat' bf reaming up with j two or more friend* j bound for your home town. On :rips of 100 mile* JC more, you'll P*ch .ave IS 1 * on round rip coach tickets using GROUP ECONOMY FARES 1* And here* mother bargain! Round up 25 or more to travel long-distance together on the same homeward train. 1 hen eturn singly or together, and you :ach save of regular round tip fare. iiutpt far U<al (rape! kritura Set* >V4* Yaihin&pn and prints tait if Lancaster, Pa. See your travel or ticket agent . JOW! Atk about tbete big money { -.aving plant! EASTERN RAILROADS PAGE SEVEN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers