WEDNESDAY. MARCH 12, 1958 Meet the Referees Varsity Wrestlers Important To IM Tourney's Success Bv BEN BRONSTEIN Four varsity Lion wrestlers anc j two freshman counter parts have the job that will, according to Assistant Intra mural Dnector “Dutch” Sykes ‘•make or break” the success of the IM wrestling tourney. ‘ln past years we have been biessefl with good referees ex tracted from the mat team,” Svkc= said m emphasizing their importance, "and hope we are again this year.” If wrestling ability has any direct effect on refereeing tal ents, Sykes need not worry with the likes of Captain Johnny Johnslon. and teammates Dan Johnston. Guy Guccione, Sam Minor, plus frosh grapplers Jerry Seckler and Neil Turner doing lhe job. Probably the most important | i confident. They don't believe Tr%nc (~*rinar* Leads j beat them, even though we Kmney lops *\ m Rov/Vl win C nr Znmnr! Vanr (..«* «*■«* «<» « fc.'SJ SSn && | {"j | JPf (J | If] J ] | nighest series ever bowled at the.week in the Southern Conrerence I Wi v VVS,I intramural competition when he! tournament, which the Mountain- Co-Caplain Ron Rainey was the leading individual scorer;r ol,cd a 605 earlier this semester, : " prs '•’•on'for the fourth straigh* on the Penn State basketball team this year, according to theijf^. ,he Fo ' v l,’’L tcan l. to . a 3-1 ! T,?‘ , , , * i , . rT - • r-„ * n S UT -i !victor}- over the Capitalists in In- ■ V.est Virginia took too honors final s.a.iatics released by the University s Sports Publicity dependent League A action 'in the poll, receiv-ing 89 first place Department. It is the second consecutive year that Raineyj Klukosky’s high single of 223'votes and a total of 1100 points has won the honor. land high series of 551 enabled the!from the 167 snorts writers and Troubled by an early-season slump, the Lion ace started Fo T ' vls , to r , eta * l } tbe ‘ r I°°P lea< L .broadcasters who partiemated in 5 .. K . in defense*- of his crown i In two 4-0 shutouts, the Huck-itne balloting. Cincinnati was run w n,"J st"on-lv to endTthe . , sters beat McKee 1 the Vets nerun with 37 first place votes ;w th Mints to 19 Jack*: Hornptt defeated RAR. The remaining|and 1214 ooints. ;;; r 3 15 "| 4 P narneTT ! matches ended in 3-1 scores as| Points are awarded on the ‘ 14 , ,®‘ Arlurmro U D M !I McKee II downed the Wacs, the 1 basis of 10 for a first place vote. liomcahv enough, his average nCBVCinC6 Hi rS-uGIII Ten-Pins edged Nittany 34. and! n * na f° r second and on down this reason was three-tenths-of a Defending fraternity handball ”'" Hornet beat the! the line. Comoletinq the too poiri. higner man his winning to- slngJes king A 1 j ackSj Beta Theta Bruins. ; ten were Kansas State, which tai year, at- pi _ and last r * s runner _ u D The Zeros blanked Jordan II.! dronued from first to a distant though ne scoied Harnett, Tau Kappa Epsilon the Peanuts defeated Navy anaj third after two loses last week; 3., points. How- moved one step closer to the fin- WDFM whitewashed the Aces in 1 San Francisco. Temole, Mary ever tins was m als by downin P g their opponents League B play. - ; land. Kansas, Notre Dame, Ken s for a in Mon dav night’s matches The Darkhorses and the 20 plus l tucky and Duke. id 1 average. Jacks da f eated p hil Barth ' Thp . 3 club scored respective 3-1 wins All but Kansas and Duke auali- In winning me ta x - 2 i_g “>l-5 and Harnett ovcr the Brats and the AUB’s.Red for the NCAA tournament— crown. Rainey scored the ’ ~t •- McKee 3-4 and the Gutterballersi'vb’ch ooened sectionally Tuesday aiso look two in dividual s i n gle gurr.e honors His 34-point effort against C o 1 gate was the high s:ngle-game .scor ing feat and his 14 baskets against goals made in one game. Getysbuig were the most field Junior Bob Edwards, also for the second consecutive year, fin ished second to Rainey in the in dividual scoring race. Although leading the Lion scorers for al most one-half the season, he tap ered off to finish with a 244 total and a 12.3 average. Last year he finished with a 354 mark and a 14.1 average. Sophomore Wally Colender Eave a sound account of himself in his first varsity season by fin ishing third in scoring with 2ft points and a 11.2 average. Considered to be the most im proved player of the year among ihe cagers, Colender teamed with Kainev in the last half of the sea son to become the Lions’ chief one-two scoring punch. His first lew days of varsity play were JP en ; th e reserve role getting the feel of the situation. Co-Captain Steve Baidy. with , po ,‘^ s ' and junior Ted Ku msta. i p pointSj round Qut the scoiing leaders. The Way to a Girl’s Heart *i ,h °ug h we have known for L*” - that lhe way to a man’s one if , brou 9h his stomach, no oiriv t S dlscovere d ihe way io a heln ttf arl i. Yel ' ood i°°d does 1 ¥ ? though. Take her to Duf fjL*. Tavern this weekend and find out f or yourself! Duffv'c 1 for 9ei dinner at fys before ihe IFC dance. Duffy’s L B ° a ' sbur 9. d wiles east of ( J e Col| ege on Route 322 n r| ght at the Texaco Sta.) THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA decisions for these men working.ute of riding time. in their new jobs will be when. In the tourney’s early stages a match ends in a tie. Since this|the referees will not give nenal 'i >. is an elimination tourney, there ties for illegal holds since the B? WILL GRIMSLEY !| a PPl?rs are not entirely familiar! The West Virginia Mou'ntain tip v, th T' l v. S^' t to !'r lth legal procedures. Instead eers are the nation's No. 1 college | nressnVnarkAd 11 i'« That fi, a iL h^- wlll “"mediately break the : basketball team in the final Asso pressure-packed task, to say the .hold. As the competition proceeds; ciated Press poll. And they think, ' TntprrniTptriatA ? j toward the finals of the tourna- thev can prove it in the big cham- Intercollegiate wrestling rules ment, penalties will be given .nionshio tournament 'i are used for this competition ex- however. c*>,.pwri>nip ununamim. j ! cept in two instances. j John nv an tkjt ' To help the "out of shape" I referring veteran, said refer™ ; Manhatlan Colle^e lai * wrestlers, the usual three three- ' ing is "very good experience for ' defeated West Virginia, the minute periods are cut to three ■ the future with regard to wres- ' number one team in the coun • .. . ! a ?d coaching." ! try, 89-84. in the first round of job of deciding a winner, one: to ‘refere^mvolvefthe ** NCAA basketball tourna point for riding time is added to.oft-times -over-enthusiastic fans.' ment ’ " t P al s P. oint totals. When a wrestler has his opponent' whether that time is one second}in a position that appears to be a “ We are a 'l very pleased over or three minutes. .fall to the fans, they pound their' the honor,” Coach Fred Schaus In collegiate rules no ridingihands on the mat—a si“n which 'said Tuesday. "We are not worry time is given until one minutej should signal the end of'the bout ‘ing about the added pressure this is registered. One extra point is; As Johnny points out, “It isn’t puts on us. then added for ever} extia min- .fair to wrestler or to the referees.’’. "These bnvs are r.ot cocky but scoreu ie most impressive vic tory seen in this year’s competi tion by trampling Dave Johnson, Theta Chi, 21-1, 21-0. ‘Alpha Zeta’s Sam Minor took second place scoring honors for the night by turning in a 21-0, 21-2 victory over Dal Kirk, Theta Xi. Other wins were recorded by Bill Schwab, Phi Delta Theta; [Buck Welsh, Beta Theta Pi; Wil lson Reitz, Sigma Chi. Jack Me- re you ready, willing ffj T\\ and able to consider mrj jv, e s into regional eliminations Friday. In the early years at Penn sinc ? AP basketball pol! State, football coaching was done Y aS sa^. e< J_ in * Slx by older team members or grad- teams wruch won top ranking for uates who returned for short seaf * on s Derformance went on to tours. capture the tournament title. fought to a 2-2 tie. Kenna, Delta Upsilon, Joe Lynch. Pi Kappa Phi; Frank Korbini, Kappa Delta Rho, and Dick Lippe, Phi Epsilon Pi. * Mounties j Ist in AP Cage Poll i Penn State was one of the few 'schools to support intercollegiate boxing, fielding outstanding teams from 1919 through 1954. EARTHMEN OUT-OF-THSS-WORLD ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES Hamilton Standard is emerging as one of the most dynamic, prolific, respected and pioneering organizations in the concep tion and creation of missile, rocket and general equipment for ultra advanced aircraft. If this appeals to you as much as it apparently does to other engineering graduates... circle your calendar with the date, time and place below: HAMILTON STANDARD will be here: MARCH 13 see your placement officer lor time and place HAMSLTON STANDARD Division of United Aircraft Corporation /Bradley Field Rood, Wlndto* locks, Connecticut PAGE SEVEN JIM THE RECESSION KILLER SLASHES PRICES Fancy Drass Belts $.33 sizes 23 to 42 Bow Ties $.29 Sweat Socks 5.59 Athletic Supporters $.45 3 for SI T Shirts 250 p3ir summer dress pants Universal Club wash and wear dacron dacron aceiate $4.98 Corduroy Ivy League Trouser* all colors and sizes values to S9.3ij . . . now S 4 Jackets 52 up Long Sleeve Bullon Down WWm s P° rt mm Shiris Values up to now 51.99 Haines T f||f - j ] Shirts S-79 I \ Haines Boxer Shorls 5.79 '^lUu Polished Cotton Ivy-League Trousers Dan Hirer— all sizes Dessert Bools—White Bucks Saddles Sizes 6-12 Officers' Brown Oxfords Sizes 6-12 P. F. Hood Baskelball Sneakers .... $4.99 Tennis Sneakers Laminated Tennis Rackets Practice Golf Balls .. 9 for $1 JIM'S ARMY and NAVY SOUTH ALLEN ST. .. 51.99 up
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers