The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 03, 1957, Image 3

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    SUNDAY. MARCH
Fros
Cag
PITTSBURGH,
Lee Cunningha
I March l—
-1 and Jay
oach Gene
' , man gym
, d and final
against Pitt,
. afternoon atl
Werner carried
Wettstone's fres
nasts to their seco
win of the season
49 1 ,4 to 44 1 here thi!
the Field House
Cunningham and
five of the six event
Werner won
for 34 of the
49 1 / 2 winning points
As in their only
the season with the
lither meet of
Navy Plebes,
rst in tomb
=nd the hori
took the last
1 : lel bars and
finished sec
' wham in the
255.
Cunningham took f'
ling, the sidehorse,
zontal bar. Werner
two events—the pa
the flying rings—ail,
and behind Cunni
tumbling event, 256
Frank Donatelli
for the Lions by hi
in the winning tim &
20-foot rope.
ade it a clean
ting the disk
of 6.3 on the
e first col
a Pitt fresh
vach Warren
1-n top-notch
The meet was
legiate showing of
man team and C
Neieger's cubs put
exhibition.
The top man for the Panthers
was Captain Don . asmar with
three second places, He finished
second in all three of his events—
sidehorse, parallel bars, and hori
zontal bars.
Depth—a thing the varsity has
plenty of—was the principal prob
lem for the Lion frosh.
Wettstone enterc - d a full corn
plement of three men in only
one event, tumbling. In the
other five he had to rely on the
winning of Cunningham and
Werner.
Pitt had similar difficulties as
it entered only two men in two'
of the events. Had they entered
three competitors on the side
horse and flying rings they would
have picked up two more points
and lost by three points.
This lack of depth made the
Cunningham - Werner - Donatelli
first places all the more impor
tant.
None of the first place showings
by the Lions was close except for
the tumbling event. Cain Mc-
Creary came through with an im
portant fifth place in the tumbling
to give the Lions a break-a-way
lead of 11-5.
Cunningham breezed to an
easy win on' the sidehorse. His
221 was 14 points above Pitt's
Don Kasmar. Bob Smith broke
that in his routine but earned
two points on a fourth place
finish.
Cunningham made it three in a
row with an all-conquering 239 onl
the high bar.l<asmar. was second
again with a 205. Smith at 200,
was third.
Donatelli was winner number,
four on the rope with a 6-3 clock
ing. Eric Foust added an impor
tant point to the Lions scorecard
with a fifth.
Werner closed out the afternoon
with first on the parallel bars
and rings and gave warning to
Armando Vega of the competition
ahead next year.
The Philadelphia flash hit for
a 268 on the bars, closely rival
_ ing Vega's best scores.
Donatelli was fifth with a 183
on the parallel bati and placed
fourth on the rings !behind Wer
ner's winning 262.
Eight Fraternity
Record Wins in
By 808 GULLO
Eight fraternity quint e t s
grabbed intramural basket
ball victories Friday night at
Recreation Hall.
Alpha Sigma Phi, scoring
the highest total of the night,
humiliated Pi Kappa Alpha, 60-22,1
after holding a halftime lead of '
34-6. For the winners it was Lewis
Lynch as high man with 19, fol
lowed by teammates Dick Ferrari,
12, Mike Rohrbach, 10, and Ralph
Brower, 9. John Myers led PiKA.
scoring with 14.
Theta Delta Chi downed Alpha
Phi Delta, 32-18. Jerry Olexa was
top scorer with 15 points, followed
by teammate John Ferrari with
12. For the losers Jack Feola
scored 11.
Phi Epsilon Pi enlarged on a
Gymnasts Win;
rs Dumped, 52.-36
??•
Matmen
(Continued from page one)
at 147; Adams put the Lions in
to an 11.5 lead by handing Bubb
his loss at 157. Johnson then
beat Gilmore at 167 with a 6-1
win. But now it was Walters'
turn. He handled• Richardson
with relative ease despite some
questionable call s by the
referee.
The heavyweight match was
anti-climatic as Schirf walloped
Markle 8-1.
Speidel, commenting after the
match, said he figured Peery
would throw Bienkowski at 147
against Adams, but when he
shifted Poust to 147 it was the
turning point.
Peery said: "We just lost. We
wrestled the way we know how
and got beat."
Trackmen
(Continued from page two)
4) Skerritt, Yale; ii . ) Gavaghan, St. Tosephs
Time: 1:12.1
Pole Vault: 1) Bragg, Villanova-15';
21 Zimmerman, Penn-14' 3) Hoyle,
Marquette-13' 8" 4) Fuehrer and Norris.
PSU; John Cray. Penn; Morris, New
Hampshire; (tie) 13' 4"._
High Jump: 1) Reavis, Villanova; Stead,
Villanova. 91: j "; 3) Tate, Mary
land 6' 41:.": 4) Gardner, St. Johns 6' 2";
5) Perry. PSU; Doyle. Manhattan; Shipley,
Manhattan': Pete. Manhattan: Gaugin. Pitt;
Wozelmuth. Maryland; Mcßlain, Army;
(tie) 6' 1 1 /.:'
60 yd. Dash: 1) Slate. Duke; Snydor,
Villanova; 3) Baratta. Adelphi; 4).Davis,
LaSalle: 5) Carper, Pitt. Time: :0.62
Mile Run: I) Grimm. Maryland: 2) Mor
an. PSU: 3) Kopil, Villanova: 4) Close,
St. John's; 5) Osborne, Syracuse. Time:
4 :10.1
Frosh Relay: 1) PSU (Irambright. O'Con
ner. Sharpe. Engelbrinkl: 2) Fordham:
3) Georgetown; 4) St. John's. Time: 7:32.8
so-Td. High Ilurd)es: 1) Knight, Man
hattan: 2) Perry. PSU: 2) Winston. PSU:
4) Holup, Villanova ; 5) Maiers, Rhode Is
land. Time: :07.2
Mile Relay: 11 Villanova; 2) Manhattan
3) Syracuse; 4) Army; 5) Pitt. Time
3 :20.6
Shot Put: 11 Ilanturn. 'Manhattan—
V:t"; 2) Allman. Cornell—SO' 10 , 4";
3) Cooke, Maryland-50' 10"; 4) Casarella,
Boston U.-50' 6'/.".
Broad Jump: 1) Herman, NYU-23'
2) -Davis, LaSalle-23' 4%": 3) Ring. Cor
nell-23' 2"; 4 t Tayton, Princeton-23'1";
halftime lead of 12-9 to defeat
Lambda Chi Alpha, 32-18. LCA's
Ron Fields Jed scorers, bagging 14
of the 18 point total. For- Phi Ep,
Dick Lippe scored ten, and Alan
Robbins, six.
Beaver House set back Omega
Psi Phi, 31-18, with a second halt
surge of 21 points. Fred Waelchli:
of Beaver House paced the scoring.l
Alpha Zeta, holding Delta Theta'
Sigma to only two points in the;
first half, came away with a 26-10;
victory. Alpha Zeta's Gary Miller;
scored ten points; Fred Schuetz!
led the losers with eight.
Phi Kappa Tau routed Sigma!
Tau Gamma, 46-15, John Newlin;
and Floyd Grimm accounted foil
22 points. Sigma Tau Gamma's;
Mark Roller scored nine.
Alpha Tau Omega took a 45-29
verdict from Delta Upsilon. DLT's
Bill Mullin took scoring honors
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
. __ _ _P_~
Sid Nodland
Remains unbeaten
Cage Teams
IM Contests
The Lion's den witnessed its
worst 40 minutes of the year,
as Penn State's Frosh cagers
were clawed mercilessly by
Pitt's Panther cubs, 52-36, last
night at Recreation Hall.
Pitt got off to an 11-7 lead in,
the opening minutes. Then the
Lions, sparked by Bob Amern and
Larry DiGiacinto, fought back to
take a 14-11 edge after 11 min
utes, only to have the Pantheri
go ahead to stay.
Center Bill Guttendorf, who
paced the well-balanced Pitt at
tack with 16 points, and forward
Duke Moravich showed the way
with seven points between them,
as the Panthers roared to a 22-18
bulge after 18 minutes. Only a
set shot and a jump by Walt
Lloyd answered that flurry, and
the fired-up Pitt quintet pulled
away to a 26-18 halftime advan
tage.
Panthers Forge Ahead
Lloyd's twin brother, Dick,
opened the second stanza with a
set, but Pitt piled up eight coun
ters without a Lion reply to grab
a 34-20 margin.
At this point, Guttendorf seared
the hoops for 11 of his markers
to put the contest on ice. With
two and a half minutes remain
ing, the - Panther five had their
largest
. lead of the night, a com
manding '52-32 bulge, and both
clubs began cleaning off their
benches.
Larry DiGiacinto was the lone
bright spot in a dismal Lion
showing. The fleet forward's pair
of drive shots gave Penn State
its only lead and his set shot, fol
lowed by two successful free
throws, pushed the Lion cubs to
within eight points of Pitt mid
way in the second period, the
closest they were to come in that
'frame.
Top Lion Effort
This eight-point output repre
sented DiGiacinto's sum total and
the top Lion effort of the game.
Center Paul Sweetland was next
with seven, Walt Lloyd had six,
and Wally Colender, in his poor-,
est showing of the season, could!
manage only five.
Arner, along with Larry Freed
man, helped keep Penn State in
the ballgame during the initial
period. The pair turned in the
Lions' strongest performance on
the backboards in a fierce battle
with. Guttendorf, Moravich and
John Mills, Pitt's trio of 6-5
giants.
Gymnasts Own .8 Titles
Penn State, topped only by the
service schools, own eight out
right titles in the Eastern Inter
collegiate Gymnastics League
Navy owns nine and one co
championship. Army is runner-up
with seven and three co-cham
pionships.
5) Beringer. Yale-2.2.' 9%".
2 Mile Relay: 1) Georgetown; 2.1 Manhat
tan: 3) Fordham; 4) Pitt: 5) Syracuse.
Time: 7:48.i.
1000-yd. Run: 11 Delaney; -Villanova: 21
Matzo. NYU: 31 Soprano. Manhattan: 4)
O'Donnell. St. Josephs; 6) Stevens, St.
Johns. Time: 2:14.
2 Mile Run: 1) Delaney, Villanova: 2)
Steiglitz, Connecticut• 3) Breckenridge.
Villanova: 4) Reider, Harvard) 5) Timon,
Pitt. Time: 9:06.6
with 18, and Alpha Tau Omega's
Dorrell scored 17.
In the only other game of the
evening. Theta Kappa Phi edged
Sigma Pi, 20-18. Ron Faris was
high scorer with nine points:
Service and Sales
* Radios
*Car Radios - •
•
*Phonographs .
*TV Sets
State College College TV
232 S. Allen St.
'Think We'll Ge
AENE:
fi' l l fr°V66
FAST
DEPENDABLE
SERVICE, send your clothing to . • .
PENN STATE
LAUNDRY & CLEANERS
.
320 W. Beaver Ave. State College. Pa.
Phone AD 7-7629
Agencies also located in Watts Hall & Pollock Circle
Interviews for:
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINING PROGRAM
SALES TRAINING PROGRAM
HOME OFFICE ADMINISTRATIVE OPENINGS
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FRANK CARLUCCI •
March 7 and 8, 1957 -
T i onneetieutMatual
zazz , rX.Sußxxcz coarpeuxr -, muo-Faßp
Anything?'
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PAGE THREE
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