PAGF TEN Mat, Gym Teams Score Wins * * The Lion gymnastic team 206 points, followed by Bob Grif-, tempt, plaved a second fiddle to noj* ith and Levv DeProspero. P , • Li l t> Another Lion sweep was in or one. Saturday night at Rec- der in the side horse when Walt ! reation Hall, anyway, when itj H eiler. 238, Jack Biesterfield, 224, followed the wrestlers’ shut-;and Gil Leu, 217, copped the first out over Ohio State with a' three places. The Mountaineers’ out o\ ex umo state \wtn a, Dick G luck was'fourth with team romp of its own. West Virginia!mate Dick Sturgill fifth. was the outmanned victim, 60-36, j Leu displayed one "of the best in the Lions’ season opener. j Lion performances of the eve- The Lions, under the able lute-i be captured a first . * im the horizontal bar with a 270 -i lage of Gene V, ettstone 1956 j loJa j—highest individual I United States Olympic coach—j total of the meet. Gluck, giving ! i entered the meet minus their; the top West Virginia perform- ; three top performers: Armando, ar l ce °f the meet, was second i .Vega, Captain Dion Weissend and' with 249. Phil Mullen. i Lou Savadove and John Coller Vega took a semester's leave 6 ave the Lions a third and fourth to compete in the Olympic on the bar with 236 and 212 scores. Games; Weissend and Mullen Patrick took fifth with 197, despite were both suffering with an a break in his routine. At this academic malady deficient t point the score read: Penn State grades. However, all three will j 34. West Virginia—l 4. be in action when the Lions ! Dick Rehm made Mullen’s ab , test Temple tomorrow night at 'sence in the rope climb hardly —niii» roiirzian Photo br D»»« R*'«r ; Rec Hall. jnoticeable when he scored fourth BRUCE GILMORE toys with Ohio Stale's Hugh Crouse seconds , The gymnasts took a 10-6 lead Li . on first with a :4.0 time. Rehm before he pinned the 177-pounder with a half-nelson and body in tumbling, the first event, in :3.8 in his second at vress. The Lions won the match. 36-0. open the gates to the flood waters 1 tempt, but it was cancelled when _ _ . „ _ _ in the form of Penn State points, be failed to touch the bar at the E* fl I Adie Stevens and Dave Du- 1 to P of the rope. In fact, all three rI VP lulls jljllrK '5O-11 ileany combined to give the Lions l Llons missed on their second at -1 ■’ w ■ * w w V a one-two in the event with a l .. „ - « ». .tricky assortment of twists and SSI®-' Victory Over Ohio State « v j vvwa :check of the totals showed Ste- & By LOU PRATO ; vens the victor, 260-258. ® Four wins and one loss! I Bob Patrick topped the very, ' «*. That’s what the Lion matmen have to show for —- Virginia entries with A || 00, selves as spring semester classes begin. !■ * . . ** "S igr The record was at 2-0 before the fall semester finals'; QCrOSSe ASpirdmS || M \/AMIA began but since then the Nittany grapplers have defeated To M©Bt Thutsdoy &L if. Jf, SYLVAN IA Maryland and Ohio State while losing to arch-rival Lehigh The first meeting of the varsity I| will be Ofl for the first time in 8 years. | ~: }3, cross , e team will be held 7 p.m.; H 8 .■ ■ The latest victory came Satur- j DeFelic'* ni ?kt 114 Recreation Til IS CSITtpUS - ——— - o. day night at Recreation Hall when the Lions humiliated a game Ohio State team, 36-0, in the final home appearance of the season. iod. ~ *** the meeting and emphasizes that; Fire falls were recorded ! nilmnr#» and th*»n nrn. candidates will have an equal HI against the Buckeyes — l w o j ceeded t 0 put the finishing to £ ch J°PPortunity to make the squadJgf CYTI "V7l ]\|| A more than were scored against on the evening’s action. Several weak spots on the team OIIJ ▼ ■Mill IzV them in last year's 34-0 rout. ; The Lions had a more difficult must be IlUed and sophomores.fa SYLVANiA BLCCTRIC products inc. m ST,. 1 " d “ posi ” B j George Smith got the starting Bruce Gilmore and Sam Mar-, nod the 123-pound class and Me—the Lion upper weight menjhe came through with his second —broke into the win column for win of the year in posting a 6-3 the first time this season against j decision over Tony Toston. I-*** am. .nuiUmKd lh ' J,r “ nl ”*”" i LS S h. SsS hL SRold S, •_ * !to dispose of Ray Haney—a form-' Gilmore drew a thunderous' er AAU champion—in the 130- ovation from the 3500 fans Satur- pound bout, 3-2 f i°hnH d v°n S re«i Johnston moved up to 137 to S C nf the rid ffe meet Jack N° rrie and the heavier fost*-SL£ftaST to eC Ed d H^met high, and Dick Dean, Maryland, blt „ during the break. out a 7-0 \ ictor>. Markle tried his best to throw- Ted Talaber into a pinning com-,^ d se " ! %’ P r to be the bination but the Buckeye °* a JOUgh-aJiid ■weight was too stubborn. Marklejjymble 14 match \ lie n had to be satisfied with a 11-2 ft.r ? • • for his first loss of the year, 6-5. Against Lehigh's Pete David- . Adams used a half-nelson and •on. Markle cLe out on the ftr “m to throw Nick Bionai , at short end of a 2-1 count. In the f .° the final period Grav Maryland match, Markle lasted ? n eC J S ’° ; ! ?f d £ y 14 ‘ 6 only 31 seconds of the first m a %wld and wool > affair, period before the Terps' All- Gray's decision gave the Lions America football tackle Mika 8 1 7 ' 3 lead *1 the time and de- Sandusky threw him with a re- spile the losses of Gilmore and verse nelson. Markle, it was too late for the Nodland started the almost per- visitors from the south, feet evening off in the right fash- Lehigh threw a blanket on the ion Saturday night when he,Lion hopes of an unbeaten season showed 123-pound Chuck Branzjwhen they took a 16-13 victory the lights at 2:45 of the first per- law-ay from Rec Hall Jan. 12. iod with a cradle. j The Lions jumped off to a 11-0 Johnston tried desperately for lead on a fall by Nodland and the pin against Don Wilson—a’decisions by Johnston and Pepe., former Pennsylvania state highjßut the tide changed in the 147- school champion—but he could'pound match whei Lehigh’s Dick! only score an 3-4 decision. i Santoro fought to a 2-2 draw with I Ohio State's Bill Floyd lasted ; Adams, only 1:30 of the second period of] After that It was all Lehigh, the 137-pound match before John Joe Gratto decisioned George! Pepe nailed him with a bar arm Gray. 6-4; Hamer beat Gilmore; 1 and press. Les Walters—making his- first; Co-captain Dave Adams fol- varsity appearance—was thrown lowed the example of Nodland by George Gustafson at 0:24 of] and Pepe when he put George jthe third period w-ith a half-nel- Postlewaite aw-ay in 1:23 of fhe!son and crouch: and Markle w-as: first period with a half-nelson'decisioned by Davidson, and body press. _ Earlier Nodland had nailed Sophomore Bill Labone, making (Torn Deppe with five seconds to, his first varsitv start at 157 : ’g0 in his match with a arm-lockj opened up on Buckeye captain,and head-scissors; Johnston had: Bob DeFelice like a hungry tiger. ;decisioned Leon Harbold, 6-4; and He scored a quick takedown be- ( Pepe had stopped the undefeated-' lore the bout was halted because .string of Dave Bates, 6-0. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA •f * * an injury to DeFelice. ,- ~ 0 - „ ' , -r- §< George Gray look up where ”• S Ernle Baer an ‘ % Adams left off when he floored i llO ncec * *°^ a -' ' Mark Roberts with a guillon- I Coach Baer encourages all men *8 line at 2:36 of lhe second per- interested in lacrosse to report for Nittanies Rout West Virginia, 60-36 WHY PAY This fine drafting set, made up to University specifications, has everything you'll need to do near, impressive work in class and at home. All first quality made by a famous manufacturer of fine, high-quality precision instruments. Your complete satisfaction is guaranteed or your money back. Instruments separately for only $9.95. THOUSANDS SOLD TO STUDENTS AND.DRAFTSMEN Here Is Whaf You Gel In This Complete Outfit... 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FEBRUARY 5. 1957 Gluck, -without a doubt the best Mountaineer performer, was second in :4.1. Jack Hidin ger. Penn Stale, was third with Dave Tork, West Virginia, fourth. Leu added another first to his credit when he won easily on the parallel bars—he was the meet’s only double winner. Leu’s 252 total was followed by Mountain eers’ Jim Welsh with 205 and Bruno Stanislawski with 194. Junior Ed Sidwell completed, the Lion first-place sweep with | a 234 score on the flying rings. Sidwell easily out-maneuvered all ring entries with a variety of turns and stands. Griffin look second with 212 followed by Patrick with 185. Heiler was fourth with 152 and Jim Follmer fifth with 55. Foll mer missed an attempted catch, bringing an abrupt halt to his routine. Wettstone should get a better idea of his team strength against a tougher Temple squad. With Vega, Weissend and Mullen back, however, he is definitely thinking in terms of regaining the Eastern title lost to Army last year. mm am am *r,^| i