FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 3, 1961 lion Vtiddies K By SANDY PADWE * * * “They’ll probably do the same S* 4b Jwl thing this year,” DuMars said yesterday. “And they have the AL HUGHES men to do a good job." . . . trouble for DuMars DuMars was referring to ★ ★ ★ Navy's slick backcourf combo „„ of Dave Tremaine and Allen w I Hughes. These two bottled Du- ( M^ zlel an . d Bioun. Mars up last year with their de- i M^ llv <? = c a '' e ' agm S 13 - 1 . r and fensive maneuvers and the little M.ga 9.5. Soph Ron Terwilhger, Magician has plenty of cause f. Beshman \\ mz last ,\eat, is hit for worry. Un * at a 9 2 P ace - Hughes and Tremaine are the However, Hughes, the Middie onlv veterans left from the 1959- captain, seems to have lost his 60 Navv squad which made it to scoring touch and is averaging ! the NCAA playoffs. j iust 3.9 points per game this Such strongmen as All-Amer- j year, lean Jay Metzler and sham- | The slumping Middies, who shooting Jim Bower have grad- were beaten at Annapolis by Rut-j uated along with rugged re- gers, 74-73. Wednesday, are bat bounder Dick Brown and coach th'ig a three-game losing streak Ben Carnevale has been bat- ;but that means nothing to Lion lling inexperience this year. coach John Egli who knows how The weak point seems to be up tough the Midshipmen have been front where Metz! or and Brown on the Lions m the past few years, did such an outstanding job. ! Both in 1959 and 1960 the Mid- Bill Kirvan and : Mike Miga. dies ruined State's slim chances who had no varsity experience,f°r post-season tournament berths, prior to this season, have been with key wins at Annapolis, helping Tremaine (14.8) with the: After nearly three weeks of scoring, but they haven’t been ablej rest, the Lions hope their shoot- Tigers Pick Oppermann, Popp Oklahoma, Kansas and Penn'Kansas; quarterback Hal Spoonerj State dominate Missouri’s 1960 of Navy; fullback Ronnie Hart-: all-opponent football team. line of Oklahoma and halfbacks. Twenty-three members of Dan|Bert Coan of Kansas and Mike! Devine’s'Orange Bowl champions'McClellan of Oklahoma. j voted in the poll. i Tackle Stew Barber, guard Penn Staters selected were endlDave Robinson and halfback Jim Henry Oppermann and guard BilljKerr represent Penn State on the. Popp. They were joined on the\second team, first team by end Jerry Hille-j Robinson's selection was some-: brand of Colorado; tackles Billy ithing of an oddity. White and Harold Beaty of Okla-J He received four write-in votes, homa State; and Joe Romig, a|The four Tiger linemen who vot- Colorado guard. ied for him said the 6-3 sophomore Others named to the first teamldelivered the hardest knocks they were center Fred liageman of received all year. ! Ma.tHVIIHDVra»SaUHAn!)M!I«tMVHH3rra»SatIHA:iaMa.IMVHM3Vr3OSiIHHA:I:» ; I $ DAYS $ | ! Starting TODAY at 9:00 AJA. I W ' 1 1 gi I All discontinued style, at SPECIAL CROUP | S Men's Shoes Men's Shoes g B v D „* . Now $5.00 5 | A Price $1095 # $1995 | ts - " !h ■ .——J c. > L P!i v __ H « £i | Penn State Lealher Gift , ltems fj § Jackets Tennis Shoes | I Vi Price A Price |! Lion Cagers Face Middies Tomorrow many other bargains, too numerous to mention | 3 rV_v h Around the corner jrom Jack Harper m\ KRESGEJACKHARPERGUYKRESCEJACKHARI’ERGUYKRESGEJACKHARPER |i Guy Kresge THE DAILY COLLEGIAN-STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA eyes are sharp again. They had a miserable night at Army, hit ting on but 21 of 67 shots (31 per cent). Meanwhile, the Cad ets, _ who now have won nine straight, connected on 21 of 40 shots. The Lions enter the second half of the campaign with the same starting lineup of DuMars and John Mitchell in the backcourt, Gene Harris at center, and Jake Trueblood and Earl Hoffman at forward. After tomorrow’s game, the Lions return to Rec Hall to meet Bucknell Tuesday and Pitt Sat urday. Thirteen Game Statistics (7-6) G Fr K Pts. .14 so 02 222 -14 7S 41 ls 7 _l4 51 45 147 .14 G 4 IK 14*; _l4 44 0 05 _ll 10 6 20 .313 5 -4 10 2 4 1 0 2 1 10 12 DuM.mis Haiti* .. Trui-blood Mitchell Hoffman Phillips Stauh Wit mer Wilson Basketball Scores NBA Lob Angeles 111* St. Louis 115 College Connecticut 73 Manhattan 71 Columbia 51 Fonihum 47 J{»rv;ml (ij Arnh«’t>t M Allegheny 51 KPI hi Providence 11.* Creiirhlon 70 Wiiko I'ore.-t 93 South Carolina 73 North Carolina 04 Maryland s*> Mii’liigun as Western Ontario 53 Cettyshun: us Btu-kni’ll 67 Notro Lame 6i St. Johns 63 Buffalo State 73 l/oumyne 00 St. Bonaventure 75 Bindley M Witohita IU4 North To\«s State 03 Davidson 72 Wofford 65 Scranton (V.< Wilkes fifc Harriers Elect Norman, Moorhead Co’Captains , Gerry Norman and Steve Moor head are the newly-elected co captains of Penn State’s cross country team for next year. Both starred on the Nittanv Lions' un beaten 1960 team which won the IC4A championship. Norman, a sophomore from Bris tol, England, won the IC4A indi vidual title ar, a freshman. Moor head is a junior from Northeast, Pa. ! Both Pullovers and Cardi gans. All sizes and styles. Regularly priced from $3.95 to $19.95. An assorted group of fine Men’s Coats. Camel hairs, Tweeds and Revcrsibles. Regularly priced from $35.00 to" $79.50 SPORT COATS Including Corduroy Sport Coats and an assortment of others. Regularly priced from $19.95 to $43.00 DOLLAR DAY SPECIALS THREE DAYS ONLY FRIDAY - SATURDAY - MONDAY One Large Group of SWEATERS One Group of TOPCOATS One Group of MANY OTHER ITEMS GREATLY REDUCED January Hits Golf Jackpot With $50,000 Hole-ln-One PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (ff>) A 1 Mengert of Phoenix, Ariz., took over the second round lead in the rich Palm Springs Golf Classic yesterday. But the most spectacular shot of the hazy afternoon was a hole-in-one that may mean $50,000 to Don January: * , 31-year-old former because I had just hardy missed star from Spokane, an eagle on the hole before. Mengert, amateur Wash., added a 05 to his first "l didn't know the ball was round of 08 for a 30-hole, score in the cup until my partner of 133,' saw it and pointed to it for me." It was good for a one-stroke January said he has no deal to lead in this 90-hole, $50,000 das- split the money and he intends to sic over Ait Wall Jr. and Bob save it all, "except for what Un- Rosburg. Wall shot his second-dc Sam takes,” for his wife and straight 67 and Rosburg, a cn- two kiddies, leader in the first round with a 'Pied at 135 were Fred Hawkins, 05, had a 69 yesterday. with a 68; Jay Hebert, 69; Dave January, a 31-year-old pro Marr, 70, and big George Bayer from Dallas, got his first hole- with a spectacular 03, lowest itt-one in 34 years of play when round of the tournament so far. he sank an eight-iron shot on 1 Kelt Venturi, Flic Monti, the 148-yard 15th hole at the Charles Sifford.and Don Whitt Indian Wells Country Club. were tied at 130. January, the son of a former \Vith the help of the ace, Jan professional golfer, began playinc uary aha got a 05 yesterday but the game as soon as he could his opening round of 70 left hum swing a stick in liis former home eight strokes hack oi Mengert town, Lampasas. Tex. He stands with a 141. to collect the. full $50,000 jackpot Avg. 17.1 14 t 11.3 1 i:i 2.4 1.0 o.n n.r, 1.5 unless some other professional £ o |avtfO SiqnS Contract also scores an ace in the next three days. In this case the monev DETROIT l/P) Rocky Cola will be split. vito. 1059 American League home "I was just trying to shoot a run champion, has signed good round,” the 0-foot Texan his 1901 contract with the Detroit said, “In fad. I was a little sore Tigers. J.U'KIIAIUMUUACKU.UM’F.IU.U'KIIAIirKIUAC KIIAUIMIIU AC Kll AUPKIU ACKIIAB II TODAY RUMMAGE SALE Custom Shop for Men r, ■* Cathaum Theatre Building > Around the corner from Bostonian, Ltd. ” S M MviiM.)vfHH<iaviiM.)vr!iHdavHM.n'ni3«iHVHß.)vrHa.tHviiH.)vraa.t«VHM;*vr NOW PRICE All Sales Cash and Final I^^S^^OFME STATE COLLEGE Jack Harper pk4k Both short Zipper Jackets and longer Car Coats. Regularly priced from $12.95 to $49.50 SPORT SHIRTS Regular collar and button down styles. Solids, plaids and checks. Regularly priced from $4.95 to $13.95 An assortment of fine Men’s Suits, Corduroy Tweeds. Regularly pi iced' fro in $29.95 to $O9 50 PAGE THIRTEEN One Group of JACKETS One Group of One Group of SUITS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers