PAGE SIX Lions Enter NCAA Mat T ourney T oday By JOHNNY BLACK The Nations 1 Collegiate, Athletic Association wrestling 1 tournament, which will signal| the end of the mat season for] Penn State, opens today at 2 ji.m. in the spacious University' of Mai,viand field house. Tin 1 first round piehminanes v.ill be nm off thus afternoon and tlie second session will start at 7‘30 tnmi'ht The top grapplers, entered from colleges across the country, will have to fight through six grueling rounds in the three day tourney before the cham pions are determined Saturday night. Penn State and Pitt, co-winners of the KlYv’A tournament at Pnncelon two weeks ago, carry tlie hopes of the East into the com petition dial has traditionally been dominated bv Southwest schools. Oklahoma State and Oklahoma, fil'd and second place winners for the last two years, are favored to retain then monopoly on the learn tioplnes in the 30th annual festival The OSU Cowboys wrapped up their 31st undefeated season in 40 years' competition by post ing a 14-0 record this winter. Two of the dual meet wins were 14-11 decisions over the Okla homa Sooners. but the Sooners reversed the tables by taking the Big 8 tourney championship by a 10-point margin over the Cow boys. Oklahoma State holds a wide _Jend in team titles, having cap tured the NCAA crown 21 times. Penn State’s only national ciown came in 1953 here at Rec Hall when Hudson Samson won the 191-pound title to lead the host team to victory. Nitfany coach Charlie Speidel doesn't expect his club to be a threat for the learn title this year in spite of their undefeat ed dual-meet record and first place lie in the easterns. The Lions’ balance which was the most important factor in their successful season carries little ef fect m the national competition where the point totals are slanted heavily toward the the top indi vidual place winners. The Nitlanics, however, are still rated along with lowa State Mi chigan and Pitt to round out the top five behind the Southwest powers. F’our individual champions will be back to defend their titles at Maryland. Dave Auble, Cornell's unbeat en 3-time Eastern 123-pound champ, Stan Abel, twice winner Walk in First inning Ru ; ns Perfect Game ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (/P) A fir.st-inning base on balls cost two rookie right-handers a perfect game yesterday as the New York Yankees topped the Philadelphia Phillies, 4-0. Johnny James and Bill Bethel collaborated on the no-lntter. James walked the third batter, Johtmv Callison, the Phils' lone base ninner. For appointment, please contact ★A★★ ★ ★ ! of the Big 8 title and holder of to Ellis in the semi-finals last a 17-1 record this year at 130, year. and two lowa State title-hold- i Seniors Guy Guccione, 137, and ers, Larry Hayes. 137, and Ron Sam Minor, 147, and Hank Bar- Gray, 147, will fight again for 'one, 167, are the other highly rat the trophies they won last year, led contenders for the Lions. Art Baker, Syracuse’s 191-1 Guccione took a third-place rib pound titlist and Ted Ellis. Okla- bon in the Easterns this year and homa State heavyweight, will re- 1 lost only once in the dual meet linquish their crowns without de-'campaign. fense. Minor, the Nittanies' captain. Baker, who underwent kneej got la the consolation semi-fi surgery this winter, has passed up; nals in the NCAA's last year and wrestling for football, and Ellis is* look second at the Easterns' this academically ineligible. 1 year. The absence of Ellis elevated j Barone had an 8-0-2 record in State's Johnston Oberly to one ithe 177-pound class this winter of the prime contender spots for and has dropped to the lighter the unlimited title. Oberly lost 'weight for the national tournev. Meeting Coiled to Pfan iPirates Bomb Cards, 6-4 New Pro Cage Circuit {Stuart Clouts 2-Run HR ; CHICAGO (/P) Preliminaryj FORT MYERS, Fla. (/P)—The 'discussions on possible formation!Pittsburgh Pirates bombed three ,of a new professional basketball's*.. Louis Cardinal pitchers for 14 league will be held here today.[hits and a 6-4 victory yesterday. Owner Abe Saperstein of the| Highlighting the Pirate hitting Harlem Globetrotters called thejattaek was Dick Stuart’s two-run meeting “just to expound views homer in the first inning after Bob and see if its feasible to get to- skinner had cracked a double gether ... , 'into right-center field. Besides the independent Globe-j trotters, Saperstein owns a parti jof the Philadelphia Warriors ofl i the lone current pro cage circuit, i j the National Basketball Assn Cities to be represented at thel meeting, or which have expressed! interest in a new pro circuit in-j elude Washington, D.C, Ne\w York, Buffalo, Cleveland. Los An-; geles, Portland, San Francisco,. 1 Baltimore, Toledo, Honolulu, Kan sas City and Chicago. Invites Ph.D. Degree Candidates in electrical engineering, mathematics, physios, mechanical engineering, statistics ami physical chemistry Messrs. G. C. Anthony, G. K. Brock and G. E. Simajtis Representatives of IBM Research and Development Laboratories on march 38, 39 & SO THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA ★ ★ ★ Guy Guccione IBM. to meet ★ ★ ★ IM Results IM BOWLING League A Alpha Rho Chi 3. Alpha Chi Sis 1 ATO 3. Alpha Phi Delta I DTD 3. Delta Phi 1 rhi Mu Delta 4. Sigma Chi 0 Delta Theta Sir 3, Tau Phi Delta 1 .Beta Theta Pi 3. Lambda Chi Alpha 1 —Grandstand Views Last year they were saying that Penn State basketball was a lost art. That’s wrong. Penn State’s athletic administra tion is the lost art. From Old Main to Rec Hal tors may be, they've created a ! State basketball the laughing; ’stock of the country. How? It's simple. Football pays the bills, therefore football is king and everyone knows how demanding a hungry king can be. Because football is king, it gets most of the money allotted for intei collegiate athletics around here. As a result the other sports are suffering, despite a "helping hand,” and basketball seems to be suffering the most. Penn Stale's aid program is divided into three different parts, the athletic budget given by the University, the Levi Lamb Fund (alumni donations) and the work program sponsored by the Department of Physical Education and Athletics. In many cases an athlete’s help comes from a combination of the After football gets its take, track comes next followed by basketball, wrestling, baseball and gymnastics. The other sports re ceive financial help too. Football, of course, gets the highest percentage and track is nearly 70 per cent lower. You can , figure out what the rest get. This is a serious problem that will lake a few years and some big football crowds to straighten out. but by then It might be too late. The argument from the higher echelons is that there just isn’t enough money to suit everyone. But we argue that the percentage can be divided differently without hurting football too much. The extra money would benefit any team, especially the bask etball squad. Track, gymnastics and wres tling have been pulling in the trophies regularly with their fi nancial help, but in the basketball field, Penn State’s aid is almost worthless. It all boils down to the fact that the track, wrestling and gym teams win because their help is sufficient in their individual fields But basketball recruiting it as tough as football and the competition for top-flight boys 1 is just as demanding. \ John Egli doesn’t have much to | offer and the big name stars go .where they get the best deal. jWe’re not calling for an overem phasis, we’re only suggesting that more help be given to basketball iso Egli will have a fighting chance Ito land some of the better boys. Penn State can hold its head high because it has never been in volved in any “dirty recruiting” like the cases at Southern Cal,j Auburn and UCLA in football, and University Creamery Sales Room =Z)«iVm Producti Ice Cream Creamery Buffer Pasteurized Milk Cheddar Cheese Chocefafe Milk Cottage Cheese Buttermilk Trapplst Cheese THURSDAY. MARCH 24. 1960 Let's Help The Basketball Team 11 or wherever the administra situation that has. made Penn North Carolina State in basket bail. There is no need for that, but a better proportioned financial set-up would go a long way to ward improving things. If this can’t be done there are other measures that could be taken. One would be to swallow some pride and move into the Middle Atlantic Cage Conference. That way those "sure losses" that dot the Penn Slate schedule . would be avoided and the team would be playing competition of its own calibre. A look at this year’s .record proves this point. The Lions were 6-2 against Middle Atlantic foes and 5-9 against other competition, including such powers as West Virginia, Navy, North Carolina State and Purdue. Since football crowds pav a lot of expenses, there’s a drastic way that basketball could pay for it self too. State could always play its “big” home games against West Virginia, Pitt and Syracuse at the Farm Show Arena in Harris burg or the Jaffa Mosque in Al toona. Or maybe they could even play in doubleheaders with Pitt and Duquesne in Pitts burgh. Sure the students would scream, but most of them never go to a game anyway. When they do go it’s only to boo or because wrestling or gymnastics is on the other half of the program. That's pretty severe, but it’s the truth, and the Penn State players and coaches deserve a better fate. Maybe heln is coming and may be it’s not, but it’s a downright shame to sit in different press rows and hear the remarks. Typical is one made bv George [Kiscda, basketball writer for the Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. Kiseda, who has seen them all, watched Mark DuMars come off the floor after fouling out against Pitt. Shaking his head in disbelief, he said, “If DuMars played at a school where they didn’t consider basketball a bush-league sport, he’d be an All-American.” Graham to Get Post As Athletic Director NEW LONDON. Conn. UP) Cmdr. Otto Graham will become director of athletics at Coast Guard Academy at the close of the academic year in June. Graham, the former Cleveland Browns football star, will succeed Capt. John H. Forney. Graham will continue in the post of head jfootball coach, which he assumed lin February 1959. By Sandy Padw* Collegian Sports Editor