TUESDAY. MARCH 15, Big 10 H Illinois 0 Perennial gym ] in 1958 and runner-u And once again as prime contenders llfh straight Big Ter Led by bespectacled ley, who scored nearly points, the Illini edged and Michigan State for ors in this year’s Big Hadley, a muscula more, won ihe all-aro 533.75 points and the : cise with 92.5. He adi of thirds on the high parallel bars, and ft ihe side horse and stil account for 52 of his i points. Besides Hadley, the meet wasi dotted with other outstanding! performers who’ll be seeking m-! dividual laurels this weekend in the NCAA gym tourney at Rec Hall. lowa’s Larry Snyder was the only other double winner in the Big Ten get-together. Runner-up in last year’s nationals on the trampoline, Snyder won his spe cialty with a 93 and added the tumbling crown with the same score. Sian Tarshis of Michigan State •won the high bar for the second straight year. The defending national champion in this event, Tarshis scored 93 to beat Min nesota's Duane Hoecherl who I posted a 91.5. 1 Hoecherl won the p-bars with 94 and finished second in the all- 1 around. In last year’s nationals! Hoecherl was seventh in the all-1 around, fifth on the p-bars, sixth on the high bar, and ninth on the still rings. lowa’s Bill Buck, runner-up on both the side horse and parallel bars in last year’s NCAA tourney, won the Big Ten side horse title with 95 5 and finished with a 93 j on the p-bars. ’ Illinois Captain Pat Bird won the still rings with 95.5 while 1 Minnesota’s Bob Schwartzkopf took second with 93.5. Biid also posted an 87.5 for sixth on the! p-bars. I Besides Bird and Hadley, Illi- IM Results IM HANDBALL Calebotto. Phi Delta Theta beat Bullock, DTD. 21-3, 21-4 Robinson. AZ beat McKay, Pi Kappa Phi,! 21-1. 21-5 Hammond. DU beat Farris, Beta Theta Pi. 21-S, 13-23. 21-18 Bush, Triangle beat Washko, Delta Sigma Phi. 21-3, 21-17 Foster, TKE beat Steinman, xZBT, 21-12, 21-# Landau. Beta Sigma Rho beat Packard, ATO. 21-16 17-21. 21-18 Barber, Beta Theta Pi beat Griffith, Sigma Nu. 21-°. 21-4 WANT TO WOW THE GIRLS? DON'T ASK US HOW (we're not sexpeits) WE JUST CUT HAIR •• • • HOWARD SMITH BARBER SHOP 210 S. Allen St. _ ILfi \hl*%**bl+f\v»%*r*v* New Coc,ch Wrestling, Handball fIC iWlfflifl# riIIS&SPC® ¥V 001 OS 1 moil Doug Frey, a member o( Perm All entries for IM wrestling and ■ WBBBIBW IvQilIZ «SjF State’s 1933 National Intercol-. handball doubles are due by 4:38 b_ __ **y I « legiate championship wrestling toc * a >' m the IM office in Rec HalL tstandino Team 1 r,reaiens -s, ™ D^rts «w«UlavBßBl|| B VBAISI g, , , iote. In 1954, Frey ranked fifth! I 16*1 ISC' nationally in the 137-pound class. 1 By LARRY ROTH ksUilliy tower Illinois was NCAA co-champion All Rip Engle needs is a lit _ I to Penn State last year. jtle cooperation from the wea have established themselves .therman and his Penn State al honors by capturing their;f team can start spring * * * (drills right on schedule Sat "dav. the Illini for natioi title. ! Ray Rad half their Minnesota team hon- Ten meet, r sopho und with ree exer ed a pair bar end urths on 1 rings to earn'a 115 LARRY SNYDER nois Coach Charlie Pond hac a few others who are capable of ’ scoring points in the nationals. 1 John Salter and Henry Klaus- 1 i man placed sixth and seventh in ithe all-around, respectively. Sal- 1 [ter also tied for fourth on the high bar and placed seventh on 1 the side horse with 92, and A 1 Barasch placed seventh in tumb ling and the trampoline. 1 % j' -"*, MOHAWK, a n*w observation pfane'on which production began In 195&—Grumman's first Army otr* plane—ls designed to operate from small unimproved fields and will be used for purposes of tactical ob servation. Featuring a 59-knot stall speed and rela tively the some short take-off and landing ($TOl) capabilities as the Army's present fight-weight single engine airplanes, the Mohawk will be able to virtually "live" with the Army in the field. EARLY WARNING. An early warning air plane serves as an "electronic fence" for the Navy Designed to operate from aircraft carriers for at sea, the plane patrols the extremes of defense perimeters to detect impending attocks by enemy air and sea forces. Carrying detection gear in a huge saucer-like radome atop its fuselage, the early-warning plane identifies approaching "strikes" ana relays data to task force Combat Information Centers for the imme diate dispatch of defensive fighters or missile units. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA . lowa gym threat t ★★ ★ i Sxainine the.'Mix” The Defense Department policy of relying on a “WEAPONS MIX” as the best war deterrent is reflected at Grumman. The company has always abided by this concept by putting its corporate effort into many diversified projects, both military and commercial. It is precisely this “COMPANY MIX” that is creating a wealth of engineering opportunities. Our representative will interview Engineering Degree Candidates majoring in aeronautical, mechanical, electrical or civil engineering, math or physics on pr jj 5 'We're all ready,” the Ripper id yesterday in his Rec Halt : ice, “'but the weather is the big ictor. Right now we’re not sure we’ll start this weekend or not. n going to hold off on a deci on until the end of the week hen we see What it's like out le. "If we don'l start this week end, we'll probably begin the following Saturday." Under NCAA rules a team is lowed 20 days for spring prae :e and Engle usually holds piac •e every other day depending the weather. Spring drills are scheduled to id April 30 with the annual lue-White game. GRID NOTES—Engle's role as president of the football coaches' | association is keeping him plen ty busy these days . . . Right \ now his main project is the I (Continued on page twelve) SIGN UP AT HUB GoiSu * CO**" MARCH 14-18 AT GRUMMAN AIRCRAFT " '*** ~ * .~\s ANTI-SUBMARINE WARFARE The award to Grum man by the U. S. Navy of a contract for a new anti-submarine air* plane, the S2F-3, is the result of an intensified effort on the part of our Anti-Submarine Warfare development team (ASW). The 32F-3 was designed to combat what may well be considered ft} be the free world's greatest menace ... the submarine! Contact your Placement Bureau* this date is not convenient, send your resume to the attention of Mr. H. E. Anderson, Dept. GR-SOO. AIRCRAFT ENGINEERING CORPORATION RUMMAN Betbpoge, Long Island, New York tf® We Don't Want ■ . To Scare Y0u.... but if you want your official Penn State Class ring in time for Easter you'd better hurry ... a $5 deposit 1 does the trick. I ORDER TODAY ... and relax, 1 knowing you will have the finest 1 ring that the world's finest crafts § men can produce . . . I The BALFOUR RING laßHnaßKPHrai l. o. r 3dlm 1 c®. h the "A Store* (Send This Ad Home .ds a Written Suggestion) MISSILE & SPACE TECHNOLOGY The Navy Department selected the Bendix Aviation-Grymman Aircraft proposal as the win ning destgn, in a sixteen-com fiany competition, for its new ong-range air-to-air guided missile. The Eagle. The Eagle will equip the Navy with a new generation of air-to-air missile capabilities. Top design engineers and re search scientists are studying a wide range of problems con nected with space and its ex- f iteration to meet the chal enges which stand somewhere between the present and the realization of c true space age. TIRED ? ? ? Lei Collegian Classifieds WORK FOR YOU COMMERCIAL AVIATION—THE GULFSTREAM Grumman'* new prop-iet busi ness transport. The Gulfstream marks the return of Grumman to commercial aviation. This 350-mile-an hour pressurized aircraft, now in full-scale production, has been ordered by many of the notion's leading corporations. HYDROFOIL SEACRAFT a contract to design a high-speed hydrofoil-equipped vessel suit able for operation on the open seas has been awarded Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation by the Maritime Administration. The feasibility of employing hydrofoils to increase ocean transportation speed and comfort has been recently established by a Grumman Study. The study's results showed that hydrofoil craft were well-suited to a wide range of high-seas opera tions. PAGE ELEVEN