PAGE SIX Lion Cagers DuMars, Hancock Keep Lions in Game St. Louis Plans Trade For Slugger By SANDY PADWE ! ANNAPOLIS, Md A tremendous second half comeback by the N'ittany Lion cagcis was wasted yesterday when Navy's Jay Metider and Hank Egan scored 11 clutch points between them to give the Middies a 68-58 oveitime win before 1500 here m the Naval Academy Field House. Trailing by 16 points shortly after the start of the second half, the Nittany laons stoimed back behind Mark DuMar's shoot ing and Tom Hancock's lebonnd mj: to ko ahead 52-5! with 1.35 it niaminf> A foul by Melzler seconds later knotted the count at 52- all. Penn State then lost pos session of the be!! on a walking violation and Navy froze the ball for the last shot. But Jim Bowers' last second attempt misted and the game went into overtime. A Mipeih Na\y /one which held the Lions to no field goals for 11 minutes of the second half proved to be the difference. In despeiation the Lions put a full eouit press on the Middies and it w oiked immediately. Behind 46-31 with it 26 to go in tile game, DnMiiis hit ;i jump ti foi the Nittamcs fn.st field goal of the half. Bob Edwards followed with two fouls to make it 40-35. Right aftei. Ron Doyle and _ , , , Bower convened free throws to| Bob fcdwards give Navy a 13-point cushion, j ■• • luts > or But then the Lions really to Wlthln two but , he n the Mid cauqht fire. Edwards hit a field , . goal and Wally Colender fol- dlc<! £ ot lowed suit. Seconds later Du- Egan hit a push shot, Metzler Mars stole the ball from Frank made two consecutive hooks and Dejano and drove in for a layup | N was ahcad 62 - 5 6 Egan’s! which pulled the Lions wilhin ! , „ f ruTPArn ir r>. a KCVen bucket iced it for the Middies! CHICAGO f/Pj A new organ nick' Johnson's bucket five ancl Delano added a set for goodi]? atlon known as the National Nmvv .oiiii' breathing space but nieasurc. Just before the buzzerjL° xni g Club was announced Tues ” I, n C « sounded Hancock tallied for the 1 by Arthur Wntz, president of! light baek\nh a 1 tliiee- point Lions The game ended. 68-58. Stadtum-Corp. , plav to put the Lions only four' DuMars was high man for PennL . , , S , Ul ? Pan j s recent tack. nO-4« State with 16 while Edwards and,k du,s °' v 1 ed International Boxing Colendei hit on a beautiful Colendar each had 18 Incidental- v '7 ( pl r? f T° le . jump shot at 513 and the Lions lv, Edwaids injured his knee in 1 u f [ n \ * ltll ,*ffictrs of the, iiui' onlv two behind a tussle with Blown under 9 i r< iy,P , W 1 , be announce( l Navv's .loin, Mascali then eon- boaids Feb 2 °' Wirtz sa,d -tTlt4Bi,|.!t 4B i, |.! Kl l P uf. 1 Sweeil u,d d c(d : r J ° hnS ?, n " «‘ h 16 ,ed Na ' h V TUCSON. Anz. - Ait Wall lead to knLwith" ‘ nnd A" P SC ° rer thlS favol ' ed f^ lloW Hancock's hook put the Lions ' (to tun the Slj.ooo Tucson Open ahead with 1 83 left, 58-51. BOX SCORE tournament starting Thurs- Met/lei \ toul thin sent the I’tNN stvit, navy ! da y- but he doesn t see it that game into overtime I ‘t \ ir , r „ ml ,. H; 0 P t| Way ' Mascali opened the scoring i.i.<u<is •< TitM.t.Ur -i 2hi Sherm Fogg Isiues First Call in the overtime with a layup Hnmoik s l n Kean 2 i 6 ! . ... to give the Middies the lead. ‘ .] 1 | < i* For Tenm* Candidates Melzler, who only had four Muu tr o 1 1 n<.u««r r 4n| All persons interested in try poinls until then, followed to ivinno 21 5< j n g o ut for the varsity tennis make it 56-52. _ team should see Coach Sherm Hanrork p,nal pulled the Lion 4? Touii 22 it r,** Tomi 25 us t>B Fogg in 114 Rec Hall. Delta Sig, LCA Cinch Swim Openers Picking up four 'firsts' in five events. Delta Sigma Phi ovei whelmod Acacia, 33-7, to clinch its opening meet in fiaternity in tiamuial swimming, posting the largest point spread of the eve- Delta Sigma Phi cleaned up first and second places in the 60- yard freestyle as Ron Kolb grab bed first with a 36.9 timing fol lowed closely by Francis Varvou tis Varvoutis then took first in the 60-yard bieast stroke by docking a 49 2. In the 120-yard lelay Delta Sig chalked up an other fust with the 1:15 1 effort ot Jim Eastman, Ron Kolb, Bill Dobbs, and Bob Beatty. Walt Gladikowski cinched a first in diving with a 98 tally. Acacia’s lone first came in the 60-yard backstioke as Thad Mer riinan splashed to a 48 5 timing. In downing Phi Epsilon Pi, 32-8, Lambda Chi Alpha posted the best record of the night bv taking five fusts out of five. Jack Schweitzer and Ed Knoepfle snapped first and second places respectively in Freshmen Rushing Party Lambdi Chi Alpha Movies - Refreshments 8 p.m., Friday ,351 E. Fairmount Avo. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA (he 50-yaid freestyle event. Ron Lanrion and Ted Schilling equal led this effort in the backstroke event with Landon taking first with a 53,2 timing. Don Smith copped a first in the breaststroke event by splashing a 55 6 timing. In the i2O-yard re lay the team of Ed Knoepfle, Bob Ferris, Terry Young, and Jack Schweitzer splashed to a first with a 1:11.8. Bob Ferris domi nated the diving competition by logging the high score of the night with an 18.2 tally. In eking out a 22-18 win over Sigma Nu. Phi Kappa Psi turned JAI RHAKPKKJAI KIIARPKRJ ACKH ARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJ ACKHAR FOR YOUR VALENTINE - HIM or HER JACK HARPER SHIRTS Visit our second floor., .step up to on Atherton suit 2 Custom Shop for Men §1 < " sc! g Around the corner from Bostonian Ltd. ► JACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKHARFERJACKHAK 1 Lose Off the Wire— ' ST. LOUIS i/P) The St. Louis (Cardinals dangled two of then better pitchers—Vinegar Bend Mi zell and Sad Sam Jones—as trad ing bait Wednesday for a slug ger. Bing Devine, the Cards’ gen eral manager, said the Redbirds would give up a front-line pitcher foi a long-ball hitter because it might make the “difference” for the Caids who finished in a fifth place tie in the National League last season. NEW YORK l/P) Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick was quoted Tuesday as having said there could be no solution of the major league-minor league squab ble over radio-television broad casts of games "until we put our house, in older so that we can stand public investigation.” KANSAS CITY (A>) Hank Bauer, New York Yankee out fielder, said Tuesday if it were not for the Yankees six other clubs in the American League would go broke. ! ; Bauer was commenting on a I magazine article which quotes Paul Richards, manager of the (Baltimore Orioles, as saying the 1 American League will collapse if someone doesn't stop the Yan kees. in some of the best times of the night. Bob Mac Donnell turned in a 36 6 timing in the 60-yard free style event to post a first for Phi Psi. Joe Marchund grabbed a first in the backstroke event with a 48.4 timing while Bob Passmore clinched the 60-vard breaststroke event with a 48.4. Sigma Nu posted its firsts in the 120-vard relay and diving. Kelvin Crowe, Bob Welsh, Dave Hagley, and Bob Federoff posted a 1:09.5 in the relay to tally the low mark of the evening. Crowe then came through with a first in the diving event on 15.8 effort. The quickest route to your valen tine's heart is by way of a Jack Harper shirt. Matching shirts for him and her in tartans or solid oxfords, **see our blazer buttons with the ■ authentic Penn State seal in Overtime Syracuse, Pitt Await Nittanies 2 Future Mat Foes Win Over Weekend The two remaining EIWA foes on Penn State’s wrestling schedule—Syracuse and Pitt—came through with impressive victories over the weekend. Syracuse, who will host the Nittanies Feb. 21, edged Army, 17-15, and Pitt, the Lion’s opponent a week later, ran its win streak to seven with con jquests over Mankato State. 18-6, and Michigan State, 15-11. j Three other State opponents saw action over the weekend, but only one emerged with a win. That was once-beaten Le high which stopped league foe Navy, 21-5. Colgate, whom the Lions swamped in the season's opener, fell to Rutgers, 17-9. In other EIWA matches, power ful Yale stopped Brown, 15-9, to gain the Ivy League lead; Prince ton and Penn tied, 14-14; non league member Bucknell walloped Temple, 29-2 and loop pacesetter Cornell edged State, 15-13. Individually-wise, four defend ing eastern champions continued their winning ways. Cornell’s AM Dave Auble (123) ApPBHB ' and Dave Dun -8 ‘IB 0 P (heavy l weight) beat 7. i jg&F their Lion foes, s* °f course, while » ,W* Lehigh’s Dick I -I, Santoro 147- 1 'm pound king, and a , Rutgers’ Chuck fk i Crosby 167• » % * pound champ, al so won. POWELL Pitt’s Paul Powell, last year's 123-pound national champion, was also victorious. But the Panthers’ 1957 167-pourid NCAA titlist, Tom Alberts, lost a 1-0 decision to Michigan State’s Jim Ferguson— the third place 167-pound NCAA finisher last year. In another highlighting bout. Syracuse’s sophomore heavy weight Art Baker, former two-i time Pennsylvania state champ,! ■ pinned Army's All-American foot-! i bailer Bob Novogratz. That fall !gave the Orange its victory. i f^TSw^r v »Sweetlearti C'D Hurry! Today is the last k'. you can send a chocolate- F- filled heart with a doll on top and be sure it arrives by fc. Sat. Remember yours —we ■P mail everywhere. 9:30-9:30 Dail> £ The Candy Cane {y-Between the Mo\ies THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1959 Sports Dope ... ST. MORITZ, Switzerland (JP) — West German and American sleds set the pace Wednesday in the first official training runs for the world four-man bobsled cham pionship this weekend. ST. LOUIS — The rematch between Don Jordan, the welter weight champion, and dethroned Virgil Akins was reset Wednes day for April 3 at Kiel Auditor ium in St. Louis. SAN FRANCISCO (JP) The State Supreme Court Wednesday refused to reconsider its Jan. 13 decision approving the Los Ange les Dodgers’ deal with the city for the Chavez Ravine Dodger stadium. 12:30-? Son.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers