SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 213. 1957 Lions, Rec Hall In perhaps the Hall, fans will see la Lions decide the 1957 Army Coach To Wettstone,.l9s6 Olympi that the winner of ton East for 1957. The undefeated Cadets 3-0 Eastern Intercollegia nastics League record t. the men of the Nittany Of the two mutual opp. Army beat Syracuse. while the Lions polished Orangemen. 67-29 The smashed Temple, 67-2' Weltstone and Company ! same by a larger score! 25 1 / 2 . In their other League the men from up the Hu. out a 50-46 victory over Lions' next opponent. The Lions returned to give the Cadets a simil fidence of winning the sinking Navy:a traditions final League foe. Army holds perhaps the best dual meet record of any Univer sity team in the nation. During Maloney's 27-year. reign, the Ca dets have won 9 Eastern Cham pionships in comparison jo Wett stone's 7 in 18 years. Army's 1956 team handed Penn State its only defeat of that sea son, 58-38, to win the Eastern title. Penn State's depth is banked on for the win tonight, although Club Skiers Score Win In the first intercollegiate ski ing competition held in Pennsyl vania in several years, the Penn l State Outing Club team defeated Lehigh, 10-2, last Saturday at. Ligonier, Pa. The meet was not, however, a regularly scheduled contest. Both schools were entered in the State Ski Championship at Ligonier and arranged a . private agreement' - to compete against each other. The University entry scored the win on the basis of 5-1 victories in both the downhill and slalom races. Dave Boucher and Bruce Kun kel scored the five Lion points ini the downhill event with times of :55 and 1:07. Boucher's time was good for second in the state race, Kunkel's an 18th. In the slalom competition, Bou cher again led the Club squad with an 11th place in the cham pionships in 1:08.8. Bill Wild was the next Penn Stater to finish, crossing in 1:26 for a 23rd place. Karin DeJuhasz, an Outing Club entry, topped the women's field in both the downhill and slalom I I Atsl jack's n 4,, !" a with his new •., Ever since Jack bought his new SI CAPRI phonograph at the local college store—he's become the bit BMOC ever. You can join him be the biggest ever, too, for you can buy a Capri phonograph for little as $19.95. This month's special buy is the Capri 550. It's a portable 4-speed hi-fi phonograpl. with WEBCOR automatic changer, Features are twin speakers, a quality amplifier and a smartly styled cabinet in attractive Two-Tone Forest Green.iSpeciaU , priced at your local dealei SONIC INDUSTRIES, I, Cadets Vie for EIGL Crown Tonight Gym Finale Rated Tossup , est and most evenly matched dual meet ever staged at Recreation' t year's Eastern Gymnastic Champs from Army and the runner-up hampionships starting at 8 p.m. tonight. Maloney, 1952 Olympic gym coach, and Penn State Coach Gene, c gym coach, put their thoughts on the same track and conclude , ght's game would "definitely" determ Wettstone fears that the one deciding event of the night may be the rope climb. • In this event, the Cadets have their undefeated star, Paul Dean. Dean has been clocked in :03.5 and :03.4 at West Point. He and Bob Deegan both outclimbed Eastern Champ Phil Mullen last year in the dual meet. Mullen is still below his 1956 form of :03.5. have a - Gym match ale. nents, 62-34, off the Cadets , but 1• id the 701/2- Wettstone's other potential ath-1 letes under four seconds include improving John Hidinger and the number two man, Dick Rehm. Army boasts a second defend ing Eastern champ in Bill Thom son on the horizontal bar. But Wettstone has three potential win ners in Dion Weissend, Qil Len and Armando Vega. Weissend swung a 281 against Syracuse Saturday while Leu and Vega are consistent at 260. John Sewall and Pete Calyer will also I compete for Army. The top double threat man on the team of West Point special ists is Gar O'Ouinn. O'Ouinn was a runner-up in the East ern's on the side horse and par allel bars. Bill Clements, Leo Sheehan and O'Quinn rate a tossup against Walt Heiler, Jack Beisterfeldt and Leu on the contest, .o eked itt, the • favor ar con itle by 1 Army races. Miss DeJuhas2 skied the downhill course in :43.5 and the slalom course in 1:05. The Club is hopeful of schedul ing a tri-college race with Penn State, Lehigh and Swarthmore later this month. 3 Shutouts Feature IM Bowling Action Three shutouts were recorded in the fraternity "C" bowling cir cuit, with Pi Kappa Alpha down ing Chi Phi, Sigma Phi Alpha shutting out Zeta Beta Tau, and Alpha Gamnia Rho waving the whitewash brush at Delta Sigma Phi. Other "C" scores: Acacia and Lambda Chi Alpha split four d& cisions; Beta Theta Pi copped a 3-1 - win over Theta Kappa Phi: and Phi Kappa Sigma defeated Sigma Nu by forfeit. "D" results: Pi Kappa Phi beat Alpha Rho Chi, Phi Kappa Tau topped Sigma Tau Gamma, Sigma Phi Epsilon beat Beta Sigma Rho, and Beaver House downed Phi Sigma Kappa, all by 3-1 scores. SONIC cy=L. C. 19 Wilbur Street. Lynbrook. ft Y. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA ne the team champion in the side horse. Leu is inconsistent in this event. ranging from 218 to 260 scores this year. The Lions' number one 'triple: threat man, Armando Vega, is ex pected to take his specialty, the, parallel bars. Leu and Bob Foht complete the Lions' entrants in their perennially strongest event. Tumbling is Army's weakest event. Mel Morrell's top score is a 250, with Jim Mac Gill and Joe Phillips filling the remaining spots. Dave Dulaney and Adie Stevens will fight it out for the top spot in the vicinity of 255-265. Weissend will be the third com petitor. On the flying rings Vega will face sough competition in Army's' trio of T. 0. Hanford, Bill Clark and Bill Giallourakis. Lions' Ed Sidwell and Jack Donahue will fill out the field. Vega recorded a sizzling 288 against Temple when he executed the highest I flyaway ever seen in Rec. Hall. A Campus-to-Career Case History Ken Boekeloo (center foreground) at the scene of a cable installation project in Detroit. Ten years along in his telephone career After graduation in 1947 from Kalamazoo College with a B.A. in Physics and Mathematics, Ken Boekeloo joined Michigan Bell Tele phone Company as a trainee. Today, ten years later, Ken is a Division Plant Superintendent in Detroit. Eight district supervisors report to him, and they supervise some 1700 people. Ken is responsi ble for the installation and mainte nance of plant facilities valued at $135,000,000 including more than 500,000 telephones. A big jump in ten years? Here's Ken Boekeloo is one of many young men who are finding rewarding careers in Bell Telephone Companies, Bell Telephone Laboratories, West ern Electric and Sandia Corporation. Your place meat officer can give you more information about all Bell System Companies. Starr Leads Theta Chi Capers To Win Over Beaver House A 15-point performance by Jim Starr led Theta Chi to a 37-7 romp over Beaver House in the, highlight of Thursday's infra-' mural basketball action. In other fraternity cage tilts,' Beta Theta Pi eked out a 19-17' victory over the Phi Delta Theta t quintet. Bob Parker paced the Beta Theta Pi triumph with eight,' points, while Lion grid star Mi Plum topped the losing Phi Delis; with five counters. Another close contest saw the' Delta Tau Delta cagers record a; 22-19 decision over Pi Kappa Phil Paul Pritchard paced the winning Delts with nine markers, and, Vince Carocci and John Rapchak' tallied six apiece for Pi Kappa Phi. Paul Johnston, who scored 13 points, led Tau Kappa Epsilon to a 25-17 win over Sigma Alpha Mu_ Joshua Lederberg was SAM's top point-producer. notching nine tallies. Phi Sigma Kappa registered a ! 22-17 victory over Kappa Alpha iPsi. Walt Stevenson sparked the t w inningw quintet with eight mark ers, while John Robinson, with Wye, topped the losers' scoring what Ken Boekeloo says 'about it: "The way the telephone business is growing, you can advance just as fast, and just as far, as you're able. ... And all along the way, from the student period through each assign ment, the training and experience you get really prepare you for ad vancement. "If you like to make contributions and take responsibility, and if you value the opportunities a growing• business can offer, then the tele phone company's the place to look for a career." PAGE SEVEN column. In an Independent tilt, Schmoo's Boys chalked up the closest deci sion of the night, defeating the Aces, 26-25. Washko led the win- ners' offensive attack with seven points, although the Aces' Wolff took individual honors for the game, with 12 counters. Mazuv's 14 markers led the Nittany Supporters to 24-20 tri umph over the Treys. Zbailey was the losers' top pointmaker with 10. Dorm 13 downed Pollock 4, 19-17. Service and Sales 'Radios *Car Radios .• •Phonographs •TV Sets TEA - - - - - State College TV 232 S. Allen St. -~ +~N ~r •ELL TELEIPHOPSZ SYSTEM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers