PAGE SIX Army's 'Chinese Will Try to Stop Ry SANDY PADWE WEST POINT, N.Y., Jan. 13 —Army figures it has the de fense to stop Mark DuMars and Penn State here tomor row. ' ■ i It’s called the "Chinese de fense” and it was good enough to stop Ilubie White and Villa nova, 64-49, in one of the season’s biggest upsets Wednesday. "It's really a half zone, half man-for-man.” Cadel Coach George Hunter said today after sending his charges through a light drill for tomorrow night’s game which begins at 7:30 in the Army fieldhouse. “What we did was put two men on White,” Hunter said. He ex plained that the rest of the team played a zone defense. "Our defense was real good against them. I don’t know exact ly how many White had, but I know we stopped him pretty •well.” White, an All-American, was held to 15 points by Army. "It ryas a great win for us. In fact, it was the greatest win ; I ever had," he said. Lee Anderson, a 6-6 center, was mainly responsible for Army’s up-. get which boosted the Cadet rec ord to 7-4. “He scored 25. points and did a wonderful all-around 1 job,” Hunter said. With Anderson at center and a Speidel May Have Surprise for Cornell Lion Coach Charlie Speidel may have a few tricks up his sleeve when his grapplers meet Cornell’s Ivy League champs at Ithaca, N.Y., today. Speidel, anxious for his crew to end their two-meet losing streak, hinted at some lineup shifts against the Big Red. Speidel wasn't giving away j~ “ ~ 7. any trade secrets, but both Neal the Blue and White, Johnston has Turner and Jerry Seckler were two wins and two diaws so fai among the party that departed this year, for Ithaca yesterday morning. I Speidel moves Pifer to 167, _ , . , „ . . he will probably use Turner at Seckler and Turner have been H 7 and Scdder at 157 The Lion battling each other all yeai foi co-captain wrestled at that weight starting berths at 147. Turner lost mos t of last year and even went, to Army s A 1 McLlhofe by a point U p on occas i on m the season opener. Seckler! The switch won ’t be ne w to downed M ost Virginia s Howard pjf er either. He wrestled 167 all Lester and lost to Bob Gunst of { as t y Gar anc j m oved up 20 pounds Lehigh last week. lover his weight to 177 against Although Speidel wouldn’t com-j Lehigh. He has a 2-2 record this ment on his strategy for the meet,| year, being stopped on a fall by he may shift Bon Pifer to 167 to Pendleton last week. " : meet Cornell's A 1 Marion and use’ Phil Myer will handle the chores either Seckler or Turner at 157. j at 177. Myer also has a 2-2 log this: Marion was the Eastern champ ! season. I Bl 157 lasl year bul has been ! John Tio.ian, 0-2-1, will prob wreslling 167 Ihis year. ably wrestle 191 for State with Lehigh Coach Gerry Leeman Johnston Oberly, 3-0-1, at heavy made n similar move against Yale weight Thursday and it paid off as the Engineers won their fifth straight of the season, 28-3 Lecman moved Doug Baillie, Gunsl and Kirk Pendleton up a weight and had Thad Tur ner, the EIWA 167-pound champ, wrestle heavyweight. All four wrestlers won. Sophomore Denny Slattery will wrestle 123 for the Lions. The former Williamsport prap pler has won all four of his matches this year, amassing 27 points to his opponent's 8. He has one pin to his credit. Tony Seordo is Spcidel’s choice at 130. Seordo started the season with two pins but lost decisions in his last two outings. Dan Johnston will go at 137 for SENIORS Order Your NAMECARDS FOR CItADPATION AT Commercial Printing 352 K. Coll.*. AD 8-6794 factory authorized VOLKSWAGEN Sales Parts Service $1624.00 WYNO SALES CO. 1960 E. 3rd St.. Williamsport LEE SAGER . , . top Cadet rebounder * 4 ¥ pair of 6-5 forwards in Lee Sager: and Buzzy Rolfe, Army definitely will have a height advantage over the Nittanies. Sager, the Cadets’ lop rebound er last year, is averaging nearly 14 points a game and has been By jiM KARL Lions Open Against Navy Penn State will open its 1961, 1962, and 1964 football seasons against Navy. All three games will be played at Penn State. The Lions will open at Oregon in ’63. iiliiiiillliiii = Clinton Avenue & N. Atherton Street AD 8-2792 = EE "FREE PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE" • General Repairs is our Specially • =Ej iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiilllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllia THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Defense' DuMars doing an excellent job under the boards. Outside, the Cadets have two capable performers in 5-10 Slu Sherard and 6-1 Ron Hannon. Sherard was Army’s top scorer as a sophomore last year with a 19.1 average and he’s just a shade be low that this season. Penn State, a 76-58 victor at Gettysburg Thursday night, will be looking for win number eight against five losses. If Siate plays the same brand of ball it did againsl Gettysburg, the Lions will be hard to stop. “That was our best game of the year to date. Our defense was real good and so was the shooting,” Lion Coach John Egli said during the long bus ride from Gettysburg to West Point. “You know something, they have the potential to do better and they’ll have to use it against Army.” Egli plans to start his usual lineup of DuMars and John Mitchell in the back court, Gene Harris at center and Jake True blood and Earl Hoffman at for ward. Harris has been the Lions’ top threat of late. In his last four Igames the lanky junior from Pitts burgh has pulled in 55 rebounds and has scored 84 points. DuMars, State’s All-American guard candidate, still leads the [Lion scoring parade with 212 : points. Thomas Out to Set New Jump Record BOSTON (ff) John Thomas, unruffled by his Olympic setback, will be out to crack his own meet and indoor high jump records tonight at the 35th Knights of Columbus Games at Boston Gar den. The 19-year-old Boston Univer sity junior wears the “most like ly” label in this opener of the major winter meets on banked; boards. Penn State grad student Ed Moran is entered in the mile run along with Olympian Pete Close and Deacon Jones. Mo ran beat both Close and Jones at the All-Eastern Games in Baltimore last week by run ning a 4:08.8 mile. His mark was only .5 off the world rec ord for a flat track. Thomas has a meet mark of 7-!i and an indoor record of 7-2!4 at which to shoot. The only othei; defending champions are Yale’s Tom Carroll and Jim Stack in the 1000- and 600-yard runs and Paul Winder in the dash. Thomas, whose only defeat in three years cost him the gold medal at Rome, is off to the fast est start of his career. ! Carroll, winner in 2:09.2 a year lago. meets Ernie Cunliffe, Stan ford graduate student who holds |the outdoor mark of 2:07.3. iMatehed against them will be Er |ges Leps, third a year ago; Jim jDupree of Southern Illinois, Cary ;Weisiger of the Marines and Ford !ham sophomore Frank Tomeo. ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!! New EDISON Sewing Machine Valued at $189.00 Drawing January 23 KYLE’S SUNOCO SERVICE FREE 100 Gallons BLUE-SUNOCO 200 X Gasoline Drawing Each Week 8 Lucky Winners Owls Get Bad News ; Weiss Will Compete By BRUCE HENDERSON Although Lion gym coach Gene Wettstone is disappoint ed that Greg Weiss wasn’t selected for the team that will face the Soviets tonight, he ihas one consolation —his star! will compete in the Temple! meet at 2 this afternoon. ! Wettstone said the possibility that Weiss may perform against the Soviets as an alternate will ! not keep him from going all out [against Temple. Olympic Coach Tom Mat [named Weiss as SBBHP r ' an alternate in BHi|r case Jack Beck- WB& ner failed to HMf make plane con- w&S nections fromP California. W Beckner, who f ; was awarded a position on the team without trying out, ar rived in State College last night. Barring an unforeseen incident, Weiss will not see action against the Soviets tonight. The assurance of Weiss compet ing against Temple will doubt Olympic Shotput Champ Turns to Prizefighting LOS ANGELES UP) Olympic shotput champion Bill Nieder said yesterday he’s turning profession al as a prizefighter. The 235-pound giant from Kan sas, who holds the world shotput record, said: “I’ve always wanted to be a fighter. I like body contact sports. I was a football player my fresh man year at Kansas.” HERFF-JONES CO. f offers you the SGA approved Official Penn State Class Ring ■dk at NEW Price Savings Weight Base Fed. Tax Stale Tax Total 12 dwi $31.00 3.18 1.24 $35.34 14 dwi* $33.00 3.30 1.32 $37.32 16 dwa* $35.00 3.50 1.40 $39.30 PRICE INCLUDES: ★ Stone selling of your choice, either buff lop or faceted ★Pearmaseal backing behind stone setting* ★ Iok. Gold in either Yellow Gold er Green Gold Your choice of finish initials and degree engraved inside band Orders taken every Monday evening and All day Saturday at Mark Butler Jewelry THE. Beaver opposite Post Office SATURDAY. JANUARY 14. 1961 lessly come as bad news for th® Owls. “Without Weiss, Tempi® would beat us,” Wettstone said. Temple his five strong men plus several specialists who all scored heavily in their opener against Southern Connecticut State College last Saturday. Captain Lou Datilio, Temple’s tumbling specialist, will lead the Owl’s today. He and Dave Peril stein should hook up in a duel with State’s flashy sophomore, Tommy Seward, for tumbling honors. ; The Lions will go with the same ilineup that toppled Springfield College last Saturday, 57-39. ex cept that Charlie Hilbish will re place Bruce Fosnocht in the rope climb. Challenging Weiss and Sew ard for all-around honors will be lanky Bob Smith. Ben Scot kins, Bob Mueller. Sheldon Mitt man and Rogers Weiner. All five may be called on to perform in three events. Temple showed its overall bal ance in last week’s 69-20 rout of jSouthern Connecticut. Five gym nasts captured first Datilio in tumbling, Scotkins on the side horse, Smith on the high bar, IMueller on the parallel bars, and iWeiner on the flying rings. ! Penn State holds a 14-8 edge over Temple in the series. The Russian men’s and wom en’s gymnastics teams have been [invited to view the meet. Dobbs to Coach Calgary CALGARY, Alberta MP) Bob by Dobbs, head football coach at Tulsa University, signed yester day as coach of the Calgary Stampeders of Canada’s Western Interprovincial Football Union. He succeeds Steven Owen, who recently moved on to Saskatche wan Roughriders.