RAGE SIX Temple Beats Cagers, 79-68 Lions Close Season Tonight at Rutgers PHILADELPHIA, March 4—There's no doubt about it, "Pickles" Kennedy is une of the greatest. Playing his final game before the home fans, he poured in 28 points to lead NIT-bound Temple to a 79-68 win over Penn State at the Palestra. , The crowd of 2911 gave the 5-11 playmaker a standing ovation for toot e than a minute * * * m lien he left the game Kennedy wa , , bt ilhant, especial -11 in the first half when he scored 18 point, and brought the Owls out of an Pal Iv slump IA hich found them behind 7-0 in the opening mmotes. Still behind 11.6, at 16:10. Temple roared back and out scored Penn State 15.2 in the next six minutes for a 21.13 lead which put them in front for good. The OIA Is took a 38-30 lead to the dre , ,cmg room at halftime, but Stare came back to make It in tere‘ting The Don't narrowed Temple's lead to 48-44 on a Jump shot by Mark DuMais with 13 41 Wally Colender and Gene Har m kept it close for the next few minutes, until Russ Gordon got hot and scored six straight to sew things up for Temple. ' PAUL SWEETLAND DuMkr,,s was held to 11 points, . . his lowest output of the year. . leads Nittany scorers No made only sof 2.1 shots. * * * Paul Sweetlancrwas high man that the Owls earned it on the for Penn State with 16 points and.basis of improvement They've won seven of their last eight in-, Jake Trueblood and Gem. Harris weie right behind with 13. chiding a 68-63 upset over an-! other NIT team, St. John's. I Temple shot 54 8 per cent and PENN SEAMS. Mt) 'EMMY (79) Penn State 40.6 per cent. Ft r To Ft F TV Penn State now is 10.11 and '5....1 0 1. 1 1 1 I.o , 6inen 0 0- 1 Oi Temple has a 17-8 record. Tho T s r " r t" 3 4 - 7 " I.'"' 60- 0 0 ii 1 t v ,51. 1 , 11 ,, nd 7 5 1; - - 2 1;1 ( li ,, e .r nr , : i ly 1: , 1 4. - 'iS i Lions close out their season to• ! morrow against Rutgers in New IColender 60-0 10 DeNery 60- 212' Brunswick, N.J. 11nrrun 6 1- 413 Pl a. oct, 6 1. 2 1 i Temple's NIT invitation came l ei,li e ws (11 2-0 ( 2 1 ( 4 ) ( I) ,:riV, l rl i v e 4 1 : 1 4 1: . 0 ' 1 2 as a sui pi ise today but the con- Wll,on 0 0- 0 0 sensus of opinion of the Phila.: Rk "" l (4 0- ° ° delphia basketball writers was' T 4,1614 Is 12-10 C‘z Totkl4 34 11-111-i; Track Records Expected To Fall In IC4A Meet NEW YORK, March 4—Records are expected to tumble by the wayside here in Madison Square Garden tonight when a host of stars fi em all the eastern track powerhouses compete in the East's biggest track extravaganza of the indoor season ---the IC4A's. Squads from Notre Dame, Maryland and Mar quette are also entered in the 39th annual board carnival. John Thom,c, will headline a bct of entries including PentilDick Engelbrink, and Steve Moor- State'c Bobby Brown and Dick; head, Engel k. Frank Budd, and Brown will face some stiff corn- Paul Drayton from Villanova. Kye:petition in the 60-yard dash. Dray- Courtney and Joe Marchiony finm,ton and Budd of Villanova, Jonas Manhattan and Jim Stack and Spiegel of Maryland. Mel Barn- Tommy Carroll from Yale. ; well of Pitt and Ed Sprague of Penn State won the champion- 'Army are the other top sprinters ship last year after an 11-day entered. dispute. A reversal of a third I Engelbrink will run against place judge's decision Ps hours Stack. Evans, and Alfred's after the completion of the meet ; Frank Finnerty in the 1000. In caused enough of a point change t i the 2-mile the Lion captain will in team standings to give Man - face Dartmouth's Tom Laris, batten the title over the Lions. Brown's Bobby Lowe and Carl- Before the reversed decision Olar Holmen of Delaware. State had been declared the vie-1 Penn State's 2-mile relay team tots over Manhattan. 21-20 17 / 3 6 .10f Don Davies, Dick Hambright, Eleven days after the meet the George Jones and Mike Miller is IC4A Executive Committee in - ( expected to hook up in a great validated the decision and gave 41uel with Manhattan. the crown back to the Lions. i The Jasper quartet ran a fast This year's contest should be',7 : .45 clocking to defeat State by a wide-open affair with Pennla split second last week in the Stale ranked slightly behind co - (Knights of Columbus Meet here fa% °rites Manhattan and Yale, Other teams that figure to be in the running are Villanova, Navy, Army, Notre Dame and Maryland. Yale's principal scoring threats are two juniors, Tommy Carroll in the 1000 and Jim Stack in the 600. These Bulldog runners have posted faster times in their events than any of the other entries. Pe rrenial track powerhouse' Alanh•ittan will be led by Court ney in the 600, Art Evans In the. 1000 and Marchiony in the shot put. Penn State will count heavily on its Big Three Bob Brown,' By SANDY PADWE Sports Editor By JIM KARL LaX Manager Needed Any sophomore or junior inter ! ested in applying for a manager on the lacrosse team should contact Coach Earnie Baer in 211 Rec Hall as soon as possible. SAVE UP TO 50% DANCE PROGRAMS Personalized matches, napkins Commercial Printing 352 E. CONE* Ave. AD 9.6791 t'HE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Big 10 Bans Post-Season Competition 1 COLUMBUS, Ohio (IP)—The; Big Ten voted yesterday to end post-season competition in, all sports, climaxing a chain' reaction that stemmed from rejecting resumption of a Rose' Bowl football contract. In the biggest athletic upheaval I in the conference's history, ex-, plosions were fired in this order; 1. By a vote of 5-3, continuation' of a Rose Bowl contract netting some $300,000 annually was killed. Wisconsin. Ohio State, Northwest ern, Illinois and Minnesota were against it, and a majority vote was needed for approval. 2. Voted 6-4 to not permit a school to go to the Pasadena ; New Year's Day classic on an individual basis. Indiana's vote was the decisive one. 3. Athletic directors made a startling motion that all athletics be ended with the regular confer- ence championship campaign. Faculty representatives cast a ma jox ity vote of approval. Items 2 and 3 still are to be voted on, on an institutional level,! within the next 60 days After this, ipiocess of placing basic pOlicy, !matters under the so called White! ;Resolution, faculty representa- 1 will be instructed by their ( respective schools how to vote of-' 'facially on the matters at the Big ;Ten May meeting in East Lansing,' }Mich. If the post-season ban is adopted it would mean that Big Ten teams in all sports would be ineligible for NCAA championship meets as well as AAIJ meets. The only ex ception would be made m regard to Olympic trials. , IM Results IM Bowling LEAGUE C Phi Delta Theta -4, Phi Epsilon Pi 0 Beta Sigma Rho 3, Pi Lambda Phi I Mhißho 4, Phi Kappa Sig 0 1 Phi Sigma Kappa 3, Triangle 1 Pi Kappa Alpha 8, Alpha Kappa Lambda i 1 Sigma Pi 2, Chi Phi 2 c., League D , 1gn2.1 Tau Gamma 3. SAE 1 A EP, 3, Sigma Phi Emolon 1 Phi Sigma Delta 3, KIM 1 Acacia .1. Phi llama,* Delta 1 Sigma Nu 4, TEN P Theta Delta Chi 4, Theta Xi 0 IM Basketball Ilk , tawaie 2.7,, Carolcrin 24 Lehigh 22, Lackawanna 20 We , trnoreland 27, Schmlkill 29 Montgomeiv 35, Jordan 1 33 ' Allegheny 211, Bucks 10 Erie 30, Blair 25 Pi 'Lambda Phi 35, Alpha Kaplan r--nrnh : (la 10 Alpha Phi Delta 30, Theta Chi 26 Delta Sigma Phi 32, Sigma Chi 19 i IM Handball Robin, MIT, beat Johnson, Theta Chi, I 21-15, 21-10 Ogden, Phi Mu Delta, beat Lam, nit Kappa Sig. 21-4, 21-19 'Henry, Phi llaninia Delta, beat Nitzterg, SAM. 21-11. 21-9 Rohl, DU, heat Ford. DTD, 21-1, 21-0 WI, Acacia, beat. Gros•g, Phi Epsilon Pi, 21-a, 21-7 Weintraub, 'Beta Sigma Rho, beat Hess, Beta Theta Pi, 21.12, 21-6 Salizroni, Theta Delta Chi, beat Freedman, Phi Sigma Delta, 21-3, 21-15 Bather, Beta Theta Pi, bent Silverman, AP;Pi, 21-0, 21.0 For a really good dinner in an old-fashioned atmosphere. Duf fy's in Boalsburg is the place to go. You will see why Duffy's is a Penn State tradition after you've finished one of those de licious steaks. Your favorite beverages are served. Duffy's In Boalsburg, 4 miles east of State College on Route 322 (turn right at the Texaco Station) RUSTIC Matmen Wrap Up Season At Rutgers The Blue and White wrestlers have a chance to wrap up their best season in seven years tonight when they meet the Rutgers grapplers in their final dual meet of the 1959-60 season. There will be two lineup changes for the Lions who go after their ninth win in 10 meets. * * * Coach Charlie Speidel's matmen have not lost a meet this year but were held to a 14-14 tie by Pitt in their home finale last Saturday. Goi die Danks, hard-working senior, will take over the 130- pound slot for the Lions. It will be the last meet in the Blue and White tights for the two-year letterman, who has a 2-2 record this winter, Ron Pifer, highly regarded Lion sophomore will be missing from his familiar 157-pound slot because of a mishap in prac tice this week. Pifer banged into a wall but was not ser iously hurt. Speidel plans to insert sopho more John Barone into Pifer's spot tonight. Barone earned his numeral with the Lion frosh last year and is a brother of the Nit tallies' undefeated 177-pounder, Hank. The rest of State's lineup will remain intact. Tony Scordo (64-2) will go at 123, Guy Guccione {5.1-2) at 137, Captain Sam Minor (6-2-1) i at 147, Jerry Seckler (8-0-I) at 167, Hank Barone (7-0.2) at 177, Phil Myer (3.1-1) at 191 and Johnston Oberly (8-0-1) at heavyweight. The feature match of the night should come at either 137 or 147,, depending upon where Rutgers' /mentor Dick Voliva uses his seri por ace Tom Grifa. Grifa, who has a career dual meet record of 24-1-1, is unde feated this winter and has wrest led at both 137 and 147. Grifa's list of victims includes Stan Abel. Oklahoma's 130-pound NCAA titleholder. Grifa was held to a ;2-2 draw last week by Lehigh's !Curt Alexander. The other unsettled area in Rutgers' lineup is the upper , weights. Eight different grapplers have seen action in the tour upper weights for the Scarlet this year. Three are 167-pounders, four are 177-pounders and one is a heavy weight. All eight have been ;jumbled through the various classes from 167 to unlimited at ;some time during the year. John Narcisco. is the top man :of the eight and should start at First Call for ... BOOK EXCHANGE CANDIDATES i • ALL 2nd and 3rd semester students with 2.3 All•U or above are eligible 0 . Attend Meeting at 6:30 this MONDAY in 216, 217, 218 HUB SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1960 GORDIE BANKS . . . veteran, back at 130 * * * 177 or above, Other than Narcisco the most likely starters are Carl Skuba, 167, Don Cory, 177, Jim Sierk, 191, and Jim Horner, heavy. Lehigh trimmed the Scarlet. 21-12, to hand them their fourth loss of the season. They have won seven. The Scarlet lost two of their first three meets-16-14 to Yale and 29-6 to Oklahoma—then cap tured six straight before Army stopped their string. Rutgers owns victories over Columbia, 26-3. Temple, 29-3, Penn, 22-9, and NYU, 43-0. The Lions have stopped Army, Colgate, Michigan, Lehigh, Cor nell, Maryland, Navy and Syra cuse. V-Ball Entry Deadline Deadline for the entries in IM volleyball is 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. All entries must be turned in to the lM office in Rec Hall. Olympic Coach Gene Wettstone, Penn State gymnastics coach, was coach of the U.S. men's gymnastics team at the 1998 and 1956 Olympic Games.