PAGE SIX Pitt-Lion Tie Eastern Mat By JOHNNY BLACK Pitt's stunning tie with the Penn State matmen Saturday greatly changed the outlook for the Eastern tournament scheduled March 11-12 at Princeton, N.J. The Pantheis reeved warning that they v I I be just as much a phIAI , I m be teekotted with in the EIWA a , . State. But the stoty is not an old one tip , els ate as much a part of the Pitt-Penn State mat nval ry as duty sneakets ate of a cord. The Lions had ripped through all competition placed before them, particularly eastern op ponents, and were deigned heir to the team crown won last year by Lehigh. Now they must be considered co-leadeis in the eastern loop HANK BARONE with the volatile Panthers. . impressive farewell The meet closed Pitt's dual-! * * * meet season and the Panthers' ha k e a week to rest before th e and left little standing in their castmds The Lions have another wake. All the Lions could sal. meet with Rutgers remaining on vage was a draw at 137. their schedule before concenti at- For the aesthetically inclined Mg on the tournament. fan who can forget his partisan- Six grapplers in the Nittany ship for one team and enjoy lineup entered Saluiday's meet matches strictly on the merits of spoiling undefeated records. That the competition displayed, the number was cut in half. fast four bouts Saturday were The Lion lightweight crew pi obably the best seen on the included two of these unbeaten Her Hall mats this year. wrestlers and had been one of , Tony Scordo and Dick Martin, the bulwarks during the earlier a couple of sophomores who Nittany conquests. But the Pitt promise as great a future as any lightweights proved tougher in the East, hooked up in the Nittany Trackman Have Rich Heritage Penn State's 1960 track team, which defends its IC4A indoor track title at Madison Square Garden Saturday, has a long heritage of championship performances behind it. During the past quarter of a century Lion Mentor Chick Werner, one of America's foremost track coaches, has directed his athletes to 57 IC4A,_ . individual titles, • hands down to keep from fall- The former Illinois hurdler ing." and high jumper has coached When the officials measured the Blue and White to a multi- the leap from the foul line to hide of victories, and has pro- the place where Ewell's hand hit duced champions in every popu- the sand. the tape read 24' 6 1 r, lar IC4A event except the mile 'good enough for first place. If relay. Ewell's hand had not touched.; h Perhaps one of the greatest he would have set a world's feats performed by a Penn State record that would still be stand athlete occurred mg today. when Bar n e v , Although Werner has the repu- Ewell scored a s tation of tieing a great coach of "trip I e ti iple- • ' -•*' !! x ao . ' distance runners, he has also pro . ' • • - • - , ;duced his share of champions in pro d iple," winning IC4A titles in } , o , ;the field evnts. the broad jump, Ewell in the broad jump, Jim 220 and 100 three -. . Herb in the high jump. Dan I kiie%' cconsecutive: , Lorch and Joe Baruka in the years from 1940 , i. . ...du d ! pole vault, Nick Vukmanic and to 1942. 'r"' i Ted Roderer in the javelin, t. '''''• In 1942 Penn i Rosy Grier in the shot put and State's chances i Grier and John Tullar in the ' „ • for a champion- 1 discus were all products of Wer sh i p depended E nicAh d„ k - 1 ner's coaching. on Ewell in the broad jump. I Other great names in Werner's, , list of champions are Art Pol-; "Ewell had only one jump re- lard in the 100 and 220, Gerald; mauling and needed a second , Karver in the mile, Jim Gehrdes . place finish to give us the chain- and Rod Perry in the hurdles,. pionship," Werner said. "Right ihjim Norton in the 440 and Oliver front of Ewell I told a fella to Sax in the 600. Put a' piece of paper a distance Four of Werner's greatest dis-, of 24 feet from the foul line. tance runners; Curt Stone, lior-; Ewell knew that he had to jump ace Ashenfelter, Bob Hollen, and; that far to win. Dick Engeibrink have all won "Well, the fella put the paper victories in the IC4A 2-mile run.' out 27 feet instead. Ewell's heel - In 1959 Ed Moran captured tiled landed in front of the piece of 1000 title in the indoor cham paper, but his legs were so far pionships and won the 880 and l out in -front of the rest of his the mile in_ outdoor competition. Local Ad Staff Meeting TONIGHT at 7 9 Carnegie Compulsory * * * By JIM KARL body that he had to put his THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Changes Outlook best opening match of the year. 11 was an exciting fast-mov ing bout and foretold what was to happen throughout the meet. Martin held the lead till Scordo escaped and scored a takedown and stalling point in the third period to go ahead, 8-7. Martin reversed in the waning sec onds to notch the victory. Art Ravitz wrestled slowly and deliberately to hold Pitt's un beaten captain, Larry Lauchle, to a takedown and 2 1 / 2 minutes time advantage in a 3-1 contest at 130 Daryl Kelvington. the Panthers' smooth-working sophomore from Washington, Pa., made yeoman's use of a beautiful whizzer to stop several takedown attempts by Guy Guccione Kelvington was no more successful than Guccione in accomplishing a takedown and the match ended 1-1. Senior Hank Barone bowed out with a good showing in his final bout before the home fans. I He and Lenny Vuocolo hooked lup in a tight duel and Vuocolo 'had a 1-0 edge after two periods 'But the Lions' ex-Marine scored a reversal, takedown and time ,advantage in the last period for 'a 5-2 win. The two backcourt whizzes have hooked up in some tremendous duels over the last * * two years and the question as to who is better still iemains to be settled. In their first meeting at Rec Hall last year, DuMars complete ly outplayed the Owl star. He scored 21 points while holding Kennedy to eight with a master ful defensive job. Kennedy, a senior. narrowly took the second round in Harris burg earlier this season, outscor ing DuMars 21-20 to pace the Owls' 60-50 win in the first round of the Keystone Classic. Because of their past showings, a large crowd is expected in the Penn Palestra Friday to watch the final battle between the two Eastern stars. DuMars has been one of the leading scorers in the country all year long and has a 21.9 average in 20 ball games. Kennedy is just a shade ahead of DuMars with a 22.3 mark in 24 outings. Both came through with great performances Saturday night. Kennedy scored 30 points to lead Temple to a 68-63 upset win over St. Johns which boosted the Owls (16-8) into contention for one of the three remaining NIT berths. DuMars, on the other hand, netted 23 points before fouling out as the Lions (10-10) lost to Pitt. 64-63. IM LING DU:Vials' shooting (10 for 16) League A :and plPymaking was so sensa- Bucks Hinise D e x i l a I itional that he had everyone in Vet., 3 Date•un Seholam 1 Flip=ticks 4, Tillie Hunched 0 'the Pitt Field House singing his Spare I. Runkle Ramblers llpraises after the game. idenn Road 2. s"i"nce'*2 ' "I'd say that DuMars is the best I.ea g ue B Et tins 3. MeElnutri 1 !little man I've seen this year." rune tih‘en 4. Jantloi, 0 said' veteran basketball writer NROTC-1A 3, King Pine 1 Lithe 4, HMI , 0 'George Kiseda of the Pittsburgh tots 3, NROTC-111 1 ISun-Telegraph. "Off tonight's per- Sttilit.4 Hi live 1 formance I'd have to say he's a IM BASKETBALL Rip Cot& 25, Bed Realms Ii !little better than Kennedy." Di.telftnks 26, Falcons 25 Kiseda also saw Kennedy at his MaNteri 52, Eight Ball, 15 ',best when he scored 29 points in Nittany Nittany :4'-22 Nittane 40-15, N'ittam 17-10 Temple's 82-74 win over Pitt in Phi Gamma Delta 45, Triangle 25 jJan nary_ Surma Nu 44, Sigma Pa 15 But Kiseda wasn't alone when PI Kappa Alpha 34, Alpha Gamma Rho : 11 it came to handing, out plaudits. Phi Sigma Kappa 31. Beta Sigma Rho 23 Kentucky scout Humzey Yes- IN HANDBALL sin, who was ceiling the line on Eltrlk,-3 TKE, beat Meter. Sigma Chi, 21-3. the Panthers for Adolph Rupp 2 Dithaeinto. PhiKSig, beat Isreal, Delta and his Kentucky Wildcats, Chi, 21.2. 21-1 PiKPM. beat Fesieroff, Sigma Nu. 21-3, 1521, 21-6 Homier, Theta Delta Chi beat Case, Deltal Hits Double . For the second week in a row Ron Pifer, Lion 157-pound grap pler, spent the greater part of his match wrapped around his op ponent in one pinning combina tion or another. Pifer included a 3-point near fall among his 10 points but could not hold his man down for the count. , IM Results Si,. 21-211. 91-17 r ~ Hammond, DU. beat Ttaehtinau, Phi Ep ' "'' 21-11. 21-r, .ticiures in Awards ilonhekn, Phi Mu Delta, beat America,' ' OMPINI PM Phi, 23-14, 21-14 ' NEW YORK (.411 Wilt Cham- Matiam, A Chi tiho, beat Goldberg, SAM, berlain scored another "first" in 1-11. 21-5 Ki 2 eN,ky, Phi Sigma Delta, beat Jones, Tri ithe National Basketball Associa ting-ie. 21-19. 2141 ition yesterday when he was named both the league's No. 1 Schoolboy Ace 'rookie and most valuable player Richie Lucas, Penn State's All-IbY the New York basketball American quarterback, starred in! yvriters. football, basketball and baseball' Never before has a player won at Glassport High School. He set ! the two awards in a single year. several school scoring records in i TIRED ? ? ? basketball and was a hard-hitting Let Collegian Classifieds shortstop on the diamond. WORK FOR YOU PENN STATE ENGINEER OPEN HOUSE TOMORROW . .. 7:00 P.M. 214-215 HUB --- All Students Welcome --- Refreshments will be served and Slides will be shown We are looking for students to fill the following staffs • Features •illustrations •Photography •Publicity •Advertising DuMars, Kennedy Will Battle Again That long awaited rubber-match between Penn State's Mark DuMars and Temple All-American Bill Kennedy comes off Friday night when the Lions and Owls dash in Phila delphia. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2. 1960 By SANDY PADWE BILL KENNEDY . . . Tempt(' All-American * * * thought DuMars rated the edge over Kennedy. ''l've seen both boys play this :year," he drawled, "but I think DuMars is a better shooter and passer than Kennedy. "Ah don't want to get tangled up in any Nawthern arguments," he said with a toothy grin, "but I sure would like to see them on the same team, wow." Basketball Scores NBA Det!rot 10S, Cincinnati 106 Syracuse 124, New York 121 College Niagara 92. Colgate Fa Allegheny 72, Hiram 64 Domie,ne 71. Torelham 62 LaSalle K 2, Scranton 72 • Sanwa 65. Oklahoma S 2 \Sillrama 5S Union 04 Nlaiquette 67, Ratter Ohio 61 St. lionmentuee 110, St. Vincents 56 lona 66„ Siena fil Oetty6Lurg 93, F & M 67 THE NICEST THING NEXT TO YOUR SKULL IS HOWARD SMITH (the barber) •• • • 210 South Allen St. The Biggest Cut Up In Centre County