THURSDAY. MARCH 6. Lions F 3 of 6 ft vored to Win dividual Events (This is the second of a series of articles reviewing the East ern Intercollegiate Gymnastics Championships to be held Friday and Saturday in Recreation Hall. Today we review the six stan dard collegiate events.}] Lion Lee Cunningham and Cadet Gar O’Quinn stand the best chance of being double-winners in the Eastern Individual Championships that start tomorrow with O’Quinn out to de fend his side horse title and Cunningham out to take it away. Cunningham is also rated one of the top contenders on the hori zontal bar while O’Quinn could take his second win on the paral lels, if he wins the side horse. Two other Lions affe favored to take individual lilies—jun ior Dave Dulaney in tumbling and senior Phil Mullen in the rope climb. The flying rings are the private air lanes of Pitt's champion flyer Tom Darling but the parallel bars and the high bar will probably provide the most wide-open compe tition of the meet. Although defeated by O’Quinn (267) in dual meet competition at West Point, Lion Captain Bob Foht (259) and sophomore Jay Werner are top contenders for the crown along with Cadet Bob Shurtz (262), Middie Ken McNutt (258), Syracuse’s Lowell Meier and Pitt’s Don Shima. Foht lost the event f at Army when he failed to hold a one-arm handstand. He hasn’t lost any points -on that particular move' since that meet—he simply doesn’t 1 use it anymore. As for O'Quinn's winning rou tine at Army; it was simplicity at its best, but with terrific form. McNutt must have a very difficult routine in that he broke twice during a fast exercise full of flaws and two breaks yet the judges gave hi ma 248 for sec ond place against the Lions. The dog fight on the high bar looms among Cunningham, team mate Werner, Cadet Bob De- - 1 gen and Dar- t ' ham is given the . ISgH nod in a poll of the . Eastern coaches, but the - Vj-'l Lion sophomore ' * J displayed miser able form (for; V ,«r. him) last week. - - Werner is cap able of, and has hit for, scores in Dci»nrr the 260’s on the high bar. Degen’s winning routine, another exam ple of Army simplicity, earned him a 250. Darling won the high bar against the Lion sophomores, but both were below their par. On the side horse, Cunningham A MAN’S SHAMPOO... in Shower-Safe Plastic! Old Spice Shampoo conditions your scalp as it cleans your hair. Removes dandruff widJont removing natural oils. Gives you rich, Baa-sized lather that leaves your hair pore manageable, better-looking with a healthy sheen! So modi better for your hair than drying soaps...so much easier to use than shampoos in glass bottles. Try it! @Mspice SHAMPOO by SHULTON THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA Ken McNutt . . . Navy’s p-bar threat , , half plav over Theta Delta Chi. and O Quinn stand far above the.4.o. thus compiling a 16-0 record field. The defending champion; to far outdistance the competition is given the nod by the EIGL;i n the race for the flag, coaches to revenge a dual-meet': Alpha Tau Omega's Jack Nei loss to Cunningham on the horse.!fert, one of the most consistent Middie Fern Sheppard and anjhigh scoring bowlers in IM com unknovvn outsider from Spring-! petition, led his team to i. 3-1 field, Bob Peterson, are possi-jwin over Alpha Zeta by again bilities should the two aces fail rolling the high single game and to come through. the high series for the night of 222 Tumblers Dulaney and Grae- 580 respectively, me Cowan have defeated every- ! remaining competition Sig thing the East has to offer, in- ;ma Nu defeated Phi Delta Theta eluding last year's champ. Low- and Kappa Delta Rho downed ell Meier of Syracuse. So has i Delta Upsilon by 3-1 scores. The ropeman Phil Mullen. The Lion j speedster did a :03.5 last week !» ™—— — to lie his previous record. His 1 lop competition should come j from Cadet Degen who had a i :03.7 clocking at the Point. j On the rings, Werner is again; the top challenger for Darling’s; crown. Others who are reaching! for the air include Middie Guy; Houston and Cadet Bill Gial-! lourakis. j Reserve seat tickets for both Friday evening's preliminaries* and Saturday afternoon’s finals, cost $l. General admission will; be 50 cents. Student activity cards are not acceptable for admission 11 IM ROUND-UP BASKETBALL Watts I defeated the McKee Royals. 23-20, to win the Ir.de- Dendent League E title and the Masters and Cardinals each won to become deadlocked in League F Tuesday in intramural basket ball at Recreation Hall. The Cardinals walloped Hamilton B. 55-9; and the Masters topped the Hamilton Hillbillies. 37-18. Watts I led at halftime, 12-11. If they had succumbed to defeat, they would have thrown their race into a three way tie, with McKee II and the Royals. In other games, the Terrapins edged the McElwain Men. 25-22: the Bullets won over Hamilton A. 34-8; and McKee 3-4 defeated Mc- Kee I 35-31. The Vikings beat Jordan n. land the Watts Devils defeated (the Jordan Jaguars. 2-0. by for feit. Both teams forfeited in the jFreed Angels-Nittany 28 game. i George Corson. Cardinals, was ,the leading individual scorer of j the evening, with 18 points. Den nis Straiter. Bullets, was runner 'up with 17 points. Bill Benton, i Cardinals, was third, scoring 15 points. BOWLING Theta Xi took a strarigle-hold| on first place in the Intramural Fraternity Bowling League A Tuesday night in scoring its fourth straight shutout of second RADIO Strvicm and Suppfim* •Car Radios •Portable Radios • Phonographs •Batteries Z/filial State College TV 232 S. Allen St. ®Mspice |»| MIS team should report at 1:00 p. Saturday to golf coach Joe Boj Phi Mu Delta-Sigma Alpha Epsi- : I"he meeting will be held in 1 lon match ended in a 2-2 dead- 'golf shop below Recreation 11 lode. ■ — HANDBALL Six fraternity men slammed out decisive victories in Tuesday, night’s fraternity handball compe tition.' i Bob Neff of Alpha Gamma Rho turned in the top performance of the night by trampling Joe Washko of Delta Sigma Phi, 2i-6.' 21-0. | Other winners in fraternity 1 competition were Jerry Neil, Phi; Sigma Delta; Gene Flick, Tau Kappa Epsilon; A 1 Lipner. Phi Epsilon Pi; Reid Roberts, Pi Kap-; pa Phi, and Frank Magalski, Phi Mu Delta. In independent league play wins were turned in by Ron Mc- Comsey over Dale Schissler, Dick Carroll over Dave Byham. Bob Foster over Lou Keitz and Dick DeSara over Dave Schwartz. FRATERNITY NEWSPAPERS Letterpress • Offset Commercial Printing 331 E. COLi rCE AD UTM NOW! Lowest air fares ever to all Europe — 'UWC; Pan Am now introduces new Clipper* Thrift Service. 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FRAZIER PhoneAD 8-8381 Open Evenings hm aawni c/«cn<t «»>ii 4 For information or rtiwvalltM, call your Trawl Agont or Pan American —53 offleM In tfi« United States and Canada. PAGE SEVI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers