TUESDAY, MARCH 3. 1 No Ups As Pitt By LOU PRATO Sports Editor The law of averages caught up with Penn St letic teams— p ar t ieu 1 wrestlers—at the Pitt Pi• Saturday night. After suffering 12 stra y feats by Nittany sport including a 55-38 gymn. back earlier in the stopped its downhill plun Rex Peery's wrestler's Lion matmen 15-9. The Panthers' mat vie ended a two-year reign f Charlie Speidel's club w pinned two successive 14 losses on the Jungle Ca But the Lion grappler i up for the occasion this Panthers clinched the the end of the 167-poi and the Lions had only bout up until then. That victory was rec riled by junior Sam Minor hen he snapped the nine-match ribeaten streak of Pitt's Copt in Bob] Bubb, 5-4, at 147. It was the most exciting match' of the evening as the lead changed h nds four times and was tied thrice before] Minor emerged with the win. Both men stayed on their feet throughout a scoreless first per-, iod, but Bubb grabbed a 1-0 lead midway through the second frame. when he almost pinned Minor, with a half-nelson and crotch. Minor escaped later in the period for a 1-1 tie as the match entered Pifer Pins As Cubs Win, 20-9 The frosh grapplers turned on the power Saturday as they wal loped the Lock Haven State Teachers JV's, 20-9, to close out their season with a 2-1 record. Ron Pifer, two-time state wres tling champion, continued his domination of the 157-p ou n d weight class as he pinned Lyle Dornico of Lock Haven in 1:40 of the first round. However, it was gridder Al Maillo who wrestled in the heavy weight class for the Cubs who pro vided the several hundred fans with their biggest thrill. Maillo, outweighed and inexperienced, turned in a commendable per formance as he handled his heav ier opponent with speed and skill, and in a wild second stanza, al most pinned his enormous adver sary. He was finally tied in the last few seconds, 15-15. The Halmstad's: 123—Selo'. (PS) and Liodesso (LH) drew. 0-9. l3o—Rarity (PS) dee. Ter* 41.11).. /1-0, 137—Batley (LH) nee. Cassel (P 1). 4.2. 147—Barone (PS) dec. Cole alb. 11-2. 157—Pifer (PS) pinned Dante, (LE). 1:40. 147—Stegner (PS) dee. Stanley (LH). 0-4. 117—Myer (PS) end Reber (LH) drew, 1-1. 11)e).-111aillo (PS) end E1w 04 .1 (LH) drew, CartIiRFSGESACKFIARPNRGUTKRESGEJACKHARPERGUYKRESGEJACKHARPER CC 714 0.1 0:1 C, KI 03 1:11 Hers available in the slip-on version and two-eyelet tie Plump cordove bather hand burnished to a deep4aned ivory glow. h patterns that definitely lead in individuality. r c•D ‘--Bostonlan STATic, Around. pie corner from Jack Harper 4 ZUTHRESGSJACILKASTZSGIUMMIGLIACMIARPERGUTIERENIEJACKHARPEA t Th finally to ath rly the House ght de- uads-- !stie set ay—Pitt e when eat the ory also ir Coach rich had 11 upset s. • weren't lime. The eet by d clash !work one the final stanza Minor, who is probably the Lions' most underrated man, took the offensive position but was reversed after 50 seconds. However, he came back with a reversal about a half-minute later to tie things up again. Bubb went ahead 4-3 on an escape with 35 seconds left but the determined Miner quickly grabbed the Pan ther ace for a takedown—and the 5-4 win. State won the last two matches when George Gray edged Tony Werner, McCoy Dispute Decision in IC4A Meet (Continued from page one) the State team to lose 10 vital away. His 9:13.3• clocking was yards which were too much to be his best time for the two-mile. picked up in one leg. Sprinter Bob Brown scored four points for the NittaMes by plac ing second in the 60-yard dash. Brown left the blocks slowly but caught up and grabbed the lead only to be out-lunged at the wire by Villanova's Ed Collyrnore, last year's champ. Fred Kerr came in third in thel finals of the one-mile run to gar ner three team points for State. • John Fareira tied for fifth place in the high jump and Ron Beard and Dale Peters both cleared 13' in the pole vault to place in a 9-way tie for fifth. Another incident hindered Penn State's two-mile relay team which finished third. Just as Moran I started with the baton on the an chor leg, Manhattan's retiring I third leg runner crossed Moran 's I lane. Moran ran into him and sent • him sprawling but the jolt caused Pricei !rem $15.95 to $18.93 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA is Time Around en Stop * * * Neil Turner .. . loses decision Lions, 15-9 Vuocolo, 3-2, at 177 and John ston Oberly squeezed by Bob Gu- , zik by the identical score at heavyweight. Pitt's Sherm Moyer turned iH the most surprising win of the evening when he decisioned an ineffective Guy Guccione 3-2 at 137. Moyer entered at match a decided underdog against Guc cione, but his aggressiveness paid off with a win. There were two other surprises recorded by the determined Pan thers. They were at 130 where unbeaten Larry Lauchle halted the 5-match win streak of Dan Johnston, 8-3, and at 167 where former NCAA champ Tom Al berts whipped Hank Barone, 10-2. Johnston and Barone had been the Lions' most dependable per formers all season—but Lauchle and Alberts proved more depend able. It wasn't the loss that really surprised Penn State followers, for both matches were listed as toss-ups in pre-meet analysis. But it was the ease with which thel Pitt men won that caught Lion' fans off guard. Lauchle included three take downs, an escape and riding time] (1:11) among his points and Al berts scored two takedowns, hn, escape and riding time (1:11) among his points and Alberts scored two takedowns, a three point near fall, and predicament, escape and time (4:50). In other results, a fighting Don Wilson lost a 5-2 decision to Pitt's 123-pound NCAA champ Paul Powell, 5-2, and Neil Turner dropped an 8-0 decision to Alex Skirpan. Summaries: Two-Mile Relay-1. Manhattan (John Corry, John Horton. Doh McKay. Eye Cool tney? ; 2. Yale; 3. Penn State; St. j Johns; 6. Syracuse. Time-1:46.4. • I,ooo•yard run-1. Ed Moran, Penn State; 2. Frank Finnerty, Alfred; 3. F. 4 ter, Manhattan; 4. Norm Williams, (eorite town ; 5. James Rowers, Holy Cross. Time -2:00.6 (meet record: , old record., 2:10.9, by Tom Courtney, Fordham, 111541. ' Two-mile run—l. Richard Engelbrink. Penn State; 2. Richard Greene, Army; 3. Richard Donohue, Holy Cross; 4. Robert Vinton, Georgetown; 6. Dave Cotton, Notrel Dame. ' Mile ran-1. Pete Close, St. Johns; 2. Ron Gregory, Notre Dame; 3. Fred Kerr.. (Continued on page eight) ' 1 3GEJACKHARPERGUYKRFSGEJACKHAI 4 r ; ,1 O COURSE .... A 0.. g x 5 took l . ~,,,,.„. • iteceigh tn tn c) .4 a... :-.:•.,., 5..),,,•• ; *".., ). !co. 14 ; .*;" ....•( 1 * . ~,,,- Ve.l :, 4 5 .;, ,- ~• ; '. k .• ,' /. s' ' '. 't t:' A ..., 1i 4, • lzod's imported French lisle wash e! able sport shirt flattering fit . al 5 in ten virile rotors. always fresh loOking"lro-shape" Jibbed :of. vs g tar and c uffs. lengthened v'stay-in' shirt tail Sizes S-M-141..-XXL $8.55 '4 Also, In ihort sleeve woo! jersey a , • Oland washable) at 511.50 and long w 1.4 c.) sleeved wool jersey, 4t 312.95 - 6' JACK HARPER Custom Shop fsiriden 04 Around the corner from Bostonian Limited W. College • State College .§1 SGEJACKHARPEHGUYKRESOEJACKIIA Crewe To IM With Torn Creese leading the way by posting a double win, Beaver House logged its third win in a row in intramural swimming competition by eking past Sigma Chi, 21-20. Creese put Beaver House out in front by chalking up a 34.0 win in the freestyle event. But Sigma Chi came storming back as Tom Barnes hit with a :42.7 timing in the backstroke. Beaver House then proceeded to sweep the breaststroke as Creese and Bob Talbot splashed in with first and second respectively. Although Jim Short's 20.1 ef fort for Sigma Chi in the diving assured him a first, it wasn't enough as Mel Sweeney and Ted Lopushinsky pulled down second and third places to put the Beavers in the lead for good. Sigma Chi copped the freestyle relay in 1:11.2 with Don Bru baker, Norbert Connons, Bob Mc- Cannon, and Jim Short doing the swimming. However, this final effort was not enough to' overcome the six point lead held by Beaver House as the Beavers won with only one point to spare. ' Delta Tait Delta wracked up its second win in the swimming ex travaganza by swamping Theta Chi, 34-11. Pulver was the shining star for Delta 'Tau Delta as he posted wins in the 60-yard freestylo with a :33.2 cloning and the 68-yard breaststroke with a :43.3. George Campbell and Cal Richard:era pulled down first and second places respectively in the backstroke in the time of :45.1. Charles Abbey logged a 13.8 win in the diving division while Dellie Creiser, John Behne, George Bowman. and Dick Whit taker clicked off a 1:09.5 to reg ister the win the in 120-yard freestyle relay. Led by the double victory of Carl Tongberg. Alpha Tau Omega whipped Phi Gamma Delta, 24-17. to claim its second win in IM swimming. The backstroke event proved to follow The same pattern as Jim McCoy with a :44.6 clock ing, grabbed the first for Alpha Tau Omega but was closely contended by Joe Good and Lou Curry. Tonberg logged the win in the breaststroke event and followed this achievement with a 12.6 to take diving honors. Sloat nicked up second place in diving for Al ntr, Tau • Omega by logging an 11.2. Tait 0 ::, ... - sz, I, ~. , .„......../ k 4 N. • 4 , ", /,/ WE'LL OFFER YOU FAR -REACHING EXECUTIVE OPPORTUNITIES in all phases of food merchandising - , and retailing. Leads Beavers Swimming Win Are you a dreamer with his fegt on the ground? Do you think "top echelon"? Do you win and hold friends easily? If you do and you qualify for our manage ment training program . . . . Our representative will visit your campus MARCH 3, 4 & 5 Make an appointment at your placement office now for an interview with him. Ask to see our blue book: "A Career for College Men" The third largest food distributor Located in 21 status throughout the rnidwrit and sank) PAGE SEVEN Frosh Team Overwhelms Ogontz Five By BILL BARB‘E.B The frosh cagers found easy pickings Saturday night on the Rec Hall court as they romped to a 96-58 win over Ogontz Center to post their fourth win against one loss. Marlin Biesecker copped high scoring honors for the Lion Cubs as he swished the nets for 26 counters. Charley Fink, one of the several little men on the team, was second high on the Lion squad as he pulled down 15 tallies. ' The strong defensive game played by the Nittanies was too much for the Ogontz basketball ers as they were forced to shoot from the outside and unable to use their height advantage. However, it was Fink who was the standout of the game as his expert ballhandling and playmak ing proved to be the source of many a Lion score. PENN STATE OGONTZ, CENTER kiMEI fliesecker 6 S-10 20 Goldberg t 1- S 6 Bradshaw t t• I ft faindeaster I 0- % 4 7 1- 1 14 Aarvis Moran 4 4- 4 11 Antrim'try R 4. 6 20 Patterson 5 0- 0 10 Kaolin% 1 6- 2 • Phillips 2 0. 0 4 Mitchell 1 0- 1 Shamey 6 0- 010 }Carmel I 0- 1 6 Shea A 2- 7 II Flower 2 0. 2 4 Wettatone 1 0. 2 2 Markonits 1 0- 0 Totals 37 22.231: 06 Totals 23 12.21 63 Circulation Staff, Old Members and Candidates for CIRCA Meeting, Wed., Mar. 4 7 2 P il 21 l EXECUTIVE WANTED (NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY) yoael ) FG F TP 2 2- r) $ U 4-0 0