PAGE fOjJff Pitt's Darling Wins Two; Dulaney Wins Tumbling The winners, playihg an ag gressive floor game, jumped into a strong fj.rst half lead, 17-8. mainly orpthe shooting of Jack' Sutyak. who finished the period with 11 points. . The Lion cubs threatened to cut that lead as their floor whiz, Mark DuMars. hit on two eonsoc- ■ utive jumr) shots to put the score at 22-18, Pitt. At. this . point, however; the Panthers hit on two straight at-' tempts to regain an eight point lead, 26-18.-Immediately after the second Pitt goal. Lion frosh coach Don Swegan had a technical foul’ called on him for objecting too long and too loud —at least in the referee's mind —ov e r the rough Panther play under the (Continued from page one) '. across the bar at a bad angle and !,o £u Cls V the bars since the Army meet ;fell: The- judges still gave him f iV* V cl Y lth tnr Pan " when -he pulled a-170 i !a 206, an indication of how highly !ther ?j Mark Falenski scoring on 1 The Lions were still lucky on they thought of his routine. a imd-conn desperation one-hand the parallels irr that John Ham,! Darling followed Werner with f t^^. s „;^'^t hr( Du ( wr ? s I . ! Vu ie o] I no mond pulled only a 183. Hammond a “nice" routine that included 1 , t 0 ? ne ,the Pitt club tKe 29-20 was evidently ,pained, from: an difficult dislocate Giants. The nclvant age. arm injury received in thetumb- "judges gave him a 259 total. That; • P,TT penk state ling event. Another fortunatei fiave Cunningham something to;, or ,; ha , FTp _ M T .Tf break for Wettstone's charges.sboot for. But he missed: with his; smith i l o l came as Co-Captaih -Jim • Mum,ij Woß * 'fornuori- the .-bar- in' the -past i Sutyi*' ~ 2 m r.n,« , 2.1 5 hill fell off the apparatus to a : lour meets. He finished three' J S'J?.V' ,scr 4 ® s season low of 159. : flints behind Darlingto give the Mackey 4 2 unnw I “ 9 Tumbling gave the crowd a Panther ace his first win of the Smier 1 n 2 Mint/ ini good indication of how close day over the Lions. n*!!'iL* n ' n . n . ®P,“jp , K 0 2 the meet would be—for a half i. .The 9-7 high bar victory pul n] , ,!! ,? Tnll'i'*" 1? 4 2 3 J at least The Jungle Cals have ; the JungleCals within two of I J Halhini#». Score; 29-20 ; really come up with one of the ! 'the Lions at the intermission, best tricksters in the East on hut the rope climbers pulled the mats — junior Don Neeld. their "hat,, trick." finishing On his first run, the Panther J-2-3. _ Mullen's 103.5 tied his looked like he was going to walk best time of his career, Sopho a\yay with top • honors, even more Vince Nauhauser took though Graeme Cowan had a 254 second with a :03.9 and Don and Dave Dulaney had recorded; Liltlewood completed the sweep a high -261 previously with a :04.1, ‘ ° 1 , But Nehld couldn't follow up Then came the p-par win paced! his sibling,first exercise, and ran 1 ;byCaptain Foht and with the ; off the mat on his second run !meet already Won by the Lions,! Still, judge Frank Wells gave himi al ' e >’es turned to the’ final and! the single winning score Of the expected main event eof the pro event, an 89. But the other two Ream —the duel between Pitt’s! • fudges scored Neeld below Cowan Eastern and National flying ringi for a, combined total of 256 and champion, Darling, and the Lions’ second place. The 89 was; enough;undefeated sophomore flyer, Wer to edge Cowan for the runner-upj ne i'. It never materialized, spot by-two points. After the first What started out to be the event, the Lions held a slim two-' keenest ring competition of point margin, 9-7. . maiiy-a-yehr, ended when Wer- On the side horse. It was all . tier completed his oif-day with- Lee Cunningham. Although the J the worst ring routine he has sophomore star was not up to 1 exhibited. Jack Donahue cinch his usual form, ha was far and «d a third with a 244 and Eddie away the top narformer on the Sidweil hit for his best score of horse with a 259. Mulvihill was the year, a 258. But Werner s?®°**? irr. With, wasn't up to it and Darling was Cunninghams first and a ’’gift" - simply superlative. Of fourth and fifth, the Lions His near flawless fly, con •v*Bt by another 9-7. eluded with a beautifully tucked e P things started to get a double-sommersault flyaw.ay. tn B l^ r “ th ? cl0 «r st Pilt was i ear ned him the highest score of 'ed off J-uh'^ ll^ 6 ' ™. er , r } er start-!the meet, a 284, deserving of a beautifully excit-j championship performance.'. "Bui ,1 8 rou,me - but about 'he Lions took the event, 9-7, and powered -himself the . meet 58-38. * \ —D»Hy : Coll«f itn pholo by Bob Thompson SIDE HORSE AQE Lee Cunningham displays the beautiful high "scissors": that had the fans “qwwing" and “ahhing” yesterday afternoon. The Lions closed oiit their FJGL League.. competition with Pitt id Recreation Hall with a. 58-38 win over the Panthers. Look At This Sale! SpauUH fig iiiullvroydoH Golf Clubs , Field and Stream ; leather BOOfS selling at... 25“ Off Quality Hand Bali Gloves • . . att utth tony WaltZ Spoiling Goods rHF OAIIY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Pitt Frosh Again Crush Lion Cubs PITTSBURGH. March 1 - The Pitt freshman cagers easily dupli cated their first romp over the Penn State cubs with a 55-39 ver dict here at the Pitt Field House. In command all the way. the Panther frosh scored their 12th decision of the year against, only 3 losses. The Panthers .Jumped to an early 29-20 halftime advantage and thoroughly outclassed the Nit tany juniors the rest of hte wav Ahead 53-36 with two. 2'24 left, the Panthers went into a semi jfreeze and the Lions, could tally ; only three points the rest of : the way. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Successor to.THE FREE LANCE. eat. 188* Published Tuesday through Saturday mom for* foclosirt during the Unl.tr* tty year by the staff of The Dally Colleriau of l Tho Ptnnsylsohii StaU Ujileerilty Entered to second-class matter July 6, 1934. ot tbs State Collere. Pa.i Post Office under the ect of Merch I. 1871. ED DUBBS, Editor STEVE .HIGGINS, Business Manager STAFF THIB ISSUE: Vince Carocd, Matt Matthews, Loy O Pi-nto, Ben Brontteini Car mella LaSpada, Don Casdato, Bill Jaffe Warren Yost. Boh Thohipson, Ron Miller. Joe l’atton. MiffTs9BftlUojߣ& - * LIPSTICKS A % PRICE SALE ■ Reg. 1.00 | \ NOW 50 « For a limited time only, these popular lipsticks in eight best-selling colors at this remarkable sovjng. Handsome golden swivel case, shades just right for Incoming Spring fashions. *plu» tail GRIGGS PHARMACY Opposite 014 Miin lit K. ('oIWo Av«, %UU Collet* * world4amow» 2 for 1.00 As a MATT-er-a-WCT fight for the glory of Old State” and really get very linwS glory in black and while on these pages. Guys who are Unfortunate" enough to complete in events with-the Easts best teammates- meet after meet. We’re thinking of athletes Tike little Lou Savadov e ; As one . t the judges said yesterday afternoon, “That little leadrnan on tt-* parallel bars, what's his name? .Savadove, yes, that’s' it. Weir h* s the most improved man on vofir team." But whal has Lou been placing? On the high bar he was tilth against Army, with a 219, fourth against Syracuse with a 228, and fourth against Navy with a 239. In yesterday’s meet he pulled a clean 231 and still wound up fourth. But he's In there trying, meet after meet. Two of his continual competitors are teammates Jay Werner and Lee Cunningham who have,- some of the best scores in ihe East (excepi yesterday). Vince Neuluiuser another. example of a good •Competitor nhp has the. misfortune to climb alongside a real champion. I’hil M-. :<... On roost any other team in the East, Neuhauser would be the top man ;oh the rope. At Stale, he's the second best. But Ihe sophomore still has two.years of eligibility and should make a good example of Coach Gene Wettstone’s eye for Wettstone diseovered'“the. Marlboro Kid" ih 'a pliys ed ciass. Neu hauser,said. iWetts.tOne.asked him. out for the team when hr o.nlv did a :04.6 .in the climb. (Pitt’s second best time in yesterday’s rihr.b yeas a :04.7. Their be-t. :0-1.5.1 Another example of .We ttst one's :roving eye/ is Dave Palmer, Palmer was also discovered .in a plivs ed class. But the sophomore doesn't believe in starting out easy, His specially is the side 'hone which. ex-Lion ace jack Biestorfeldt so aptly describes as a "terrible beast ,at its .best.” ' ' . Palmer has only worked the horse for three, months and although he has never hit. Captain Bob Foht is not discouraged; "Dave will come through for us. just wait until he hits for ihe first lime, just once/'-Foht should know; he never worked the parallel bars until he came to State, yet in his sophomore year he finished fifth in the nation. Then, there : are' the., ever-reliable,,fivers—'junior Jack Donahue and: senior Eddie Sidwell, Sidwell has never finished below: a third this year—and he’s, never been first although, he came: close-, yester day in one way and far away 1 in another. 1 mean he has finished behind Werner-in. every meet this year and When he got his first chance of the year to beat Werner, it just happened to be the day that one ,of his opponents was the top collegiate ripgnian in the nation—Tom Darling. ■ . ■ u ... Donahue, while being stronger end smoother then Sidwell, hat been prone to 100 many mistakes—like the one against Syra cuse when he missed a rung on a cul-eaich. He was left hanging in mid-air, on one ring. But yeslerday he exhibited hit best cut calch of. the year. It was smoolhly-execuled and reeked with confidence... SUNDAY, MARCH 7 u*.. By MATT MATHEWS Assistant Sports Editor IMPORTED RAINCOATS Superfine raincoats ■ :!!pred of long staple cotton pop- lin, with English stand-up v,’-; .. • collar, comfortable raglan shoulders,/ slash pockets, and long center vent. An authentic Import in tire popular oyster shade. Com- pletely water-repellent. Sizes 36 to 46 Vi '“' * jM.95 •with plaid !ii:inO - • • $16.95 ST ATE COLLEGE