The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, February 19, 1959, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
Lions at Syracuse Saturday for Ist Triple Header
Winter sports are doing
things in triplicate this
weekend as the "Big Three"
travel to Syracuse. The Sat
urday triple-header will be
the first of two straight
such events. On the following
weekend, the wrestlers, gym
nasts and cagers will again
move out i'.t mass—this time
for Pittsburgh.
(In case you’re looking at the
Cagers Open Road Trip
Against Colgate Friday
Faced with the heaviest pail of
its schedule, the Penn State bas
ketball team travels to Hamilton,
N.Y., Friday night for a rematch
with the Red Raiders of Colgate.
The Colgate game maiks the
first of five games which will be
played in 10 days by Coach
John Egli's boys. Saturday night
the Nittanies play Syracuse on
the latter's floor.
Following lho Syracuse game
the Nittanies come home for a
Tuesday night lilt with Lehigh
at Rec Hall. They play host to
Carnegie Tech next Friday night
and travel to Pitt the next day.
The Lions dose out the season
a week later against Bucknell at
Lewisburg.
The Nittanies will take an 8-6
log into the weekend series. Ear
lier (his year they beat Colgate
(78-54) and Syracuse (81-72) at
Rec Hall.
‘‘Both teams are always tough
on their home floors and we’ll be
In for a rough time, even though
Colleges
Direct
3 Coast
Propose
Aid to Athletes
EUGENE, Ore UP) Northern
division schools, left with a dying
Pacific Coast Conference on their
hands when other colleges with
drew, turned Wednesday toward
a program of outright financial
aid to athletes.
The University of Oregon’s ath
letic director, Leo Hams, said the
program has been approved in
principle by the university, but
details still were to be worked
out.
Oregon State and Washington
State also were expected to do
away with labor programs.
The old requirement of so many
hours of work in exchange for
board, room, tuition and books
will be dropped.
Winter Sports Schedule, we
remind you that through a mu
tual agreement the sites of the
Panther-Lion basketball games
were interchanged. The reason
given that the Pitt fans wanted
to hold a “Don Hennon Night”
on Feb. 28.)
But the immediate opponent
for the trio of sports is Syra
cuse.
The only team that lost its
last outing with an Orange
unit is the wrestlers. Coach
Charlie Speidel's matmen won
Tom Hancock
. . . leading rebounder
we beat both teams,” cautioned
Egli.
1 Mark BuMars still holds the
TKE Scores S
Tie ACR
With Lou Troutman’s nine derbirds, led by Bob Mugford’s
counter effort leading the way,' \5-point scoring effort, handed
Tau Kappa Epsilon hit for its I’VJhf he j r £f, feat
f . ...... . ~ . ;in eight starts, giving the Thun
jsixth straight victory in Frater- derbirds undisputed first place in
! nitv League D Intramural “A” fc
iketball by edging Beta Theta Pi.j In othei .' independent games,
1 , . _ , the 22 Tigers whomped Nittany
This win places the Tekes 0n,26, 31-14, and the Tribe eked past
an even par with Alpha Chi Rho,'the Chuckles, 26-25
i which also boasts a 6-0 record.
1 Paul Beehee swished the nets
| for 21 counters as Delta Upsilon
; romped to a 40-14 victory over
iSigma Tau Gamma in League “E”.
j In other fraternity games, Phi
!Delta Theta downed Zeta Beta
,Tau, 32-26: Phi Epsilon Pi stop
ped Omega Psi Phi, 29-17; and
I Sigma Pi whipped Phi Kappa
!Tau,«67-20.
In independent play, the Thun-
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA
only Iwo bouts and drew a third
■with the Big Orange last year
in Recreation Hall. They lost,
21-8.
Gene Wettstone’s gymnasts
fared better with the Piety
men as they won, 67%-28%.
The Lions won all six events
with four of these winners re
maining on this year’s unit—
Jay Werner on high bar and
rings, Dave Dulaney in tumb
ling and Lee Cunningham on
the side horse.
In contrast to the Lions who
lost few important competitors
scoring lead as the Lions go into
the final part of the campaign.
Unofficial statistics show him
with 233 points in 14 games, for
an average of 16.5 points per
game.
Backcourt running mate Wally
Colender is in second place with
220 points, for a 15.7 average. Bob
Edwards is next with a 12 7 aver
age and Ted Kubista, who is side
lined for the season with a hair
line ankle fracture, has 124 points
in 10 games for a 12.4 average.
DuMars is the team leader in
assists, while Tom Hancock has
pulled down 138 rebounds to
lead in that department.
BASKETBALL BANTER—Syr
acuse has won only one game since
its meeting with the Lions Feb. 7,
. . . They beat Colgate, 97-79 Sat
urday night... Look for Bueknell
to play in one of the post-season
tourneys . . . Navy lost a tough one
to Duke at Durham on Saturday,
64-63 . . . Edwards’ knee is still
giving him a little trouble but
he probably will start against Col
gate.
xth Victory
in League 'D'
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ENGINEER! NGOPPQRTUNITIES
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for Seniors and
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APPLIED MATHEMATICS <
ENGINEERING MECHANICS % - .
ENGINEERING PHYSICS |k ;Xh
j AND *’ <' •
\ AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, IkX '
\ \ MECHANICAL, I
\ METALLURGICAL,
\ and NUCLEAR
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INTERVIEWS
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,'W.
•via graduation (as a mallet of
fact. they gained one in Ar
mando Vega) the Orange G
men lost 1957 Eastern tumb
ling champion Lowell Meier
and all-around performer Walt
Dodge. Meier and Dodge per
sonally accounted for over half
of Syracuse's points.
Without them, the grange
men have lost all four their
meets to date and are not ex
pected to give Wettstone's crew
a tough time
ThtT basketball team has had
the most recent —and satisfy-
Causes Many Surprises —
Doc's Juggling Act
Seen Every Week
One of these days the United
Union will have to
bestow some kind of award
upon Penn State’s talented
wrestling Coach Charlie Spei
del.
The crafty Lion tutor surely de
serves some recognition for that
juggling act he performs on the
Nittany matmen’s starting lineup
every week.
Speidel has been working his
juggling routine for a good many
years now—switching his men up
and down the —p— —
' But this sea- jagfe
json, Spcidel’s act JSjl
jseems to be more |
jmore surprising j
|ln six meets, A
Speidel has used &
13 different men
in the eight 'Mm
starting spots. speidel
And seven of those men have
wrestled in at least two different
weight divisions.
Take last week’s meet with
Maryland: out of the eight start
ers, only five had seen action in
the previous week’s engagement
iWith Cornell. And one of those
men, junior Hank Barone, drop
ped all the way down from the
177-pound class against Cornell
to the 157-pound division for
Maryland. Just for the record, Ba
* V-f v'
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j&s&'iS"’" l * ,-V &
THURSDAY, MARCH 5
FRIDAY, MARCH 6
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 19. 1959
ing encounter with a Syra
cuse squad. Earlier this month
they defeated the Orange in
Rec Hall by an 81-72 count
Bui She cagers had two things
geing for them that night. They
had a horns court advantage
and- they played their "best
game" of the year.
On their way to Syracuse,
Coaeh John Egli and company
will stop off at Colgate for a
warmup tomorrow night. They
also whipped the Red Raiders
in their Rec Hall meeting,
78-54.
rone also had wrestled at 167
(against Lehigh).
The “newcomers" to the line
up for Maryland, included Don
Wilson, 123. Guy Guccione. 137,
and Joe Haines. 177. But all of
them had started in at least
one previous meet—and Wilson
had been considered a regular.
Barone’s entry at 157 and Guc
cione's insertion at 137 for un
beaten Dan Johnston in the Mary
land affair have been the biggest
[surprises that Speidel has pulled.
Barone had tied two of the East’s
top wrestlers at 177 in his last
two outings, but Speidel pushed
him down to 157 for the Terps.
He came through brilliantly, by
pinning his man, breaking State’s
52-match pin drought.
The replacement of Guccione
for Johnston was even more sur
prising. For Johnston, who was
unbeaten with a 5-0 mark, had
been the Lions' most consistent
(and bes + ) wrestler. But in pre
meet drills last week, Guccione
eliminated Johnston and earned
the starling berth.
With the aforementioned fi
gures and examples in hand, it is
safe to assume that Speidel will
be performing ,his juggling act
once again this weekend when the
Lions meet Syracuse.
For Expert Tailoring
See C. W. HARDY, Tailor
222 W. Beaver Avenue
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