PAGE TEN Terps Ist Loss, 18-12 Maryland Coach “Sully” Krouse, his Southern pride obviously hurt by Penn State’s 18-12 win over his previously undefeated grapplers in Rec Hall Saturday night, vowed in a post meet tirade that next year would be a different story. I The veteran coach’s eyes flamed as he stormed up . the locker-lined corridors denouncing the officiating and the “rough” tactics of Lion heavyweight Johnston Oberly. Krouse’s Terrapins, the kingpins of the Atlantic Coast Conference for the past seven years, were seeking their first victory over a Penn State team in the 11-meet series. The closest they ever came was a 14-14 tie in 1958. Krouse, with his best team in 14 years at Maryland, figured this was the year his team could upend Stale. And they almost did. The score doesn’t indicate how close Krause's crew (3-1) came to surprising the Lions. It took three pins in the last four bouts— by Ron Pifor, (157), Phil Myer (177) and Oberly (Hwt.) —to give State its fourth win against two defeats. Amid intermittent periods of incoherent mutterings, Krouse pointed out that his line-up against State showed three sopho mores, three juniors, and only two seniors. "And next year you won't manhandle us at heavyweight,” he almost shouted. "For years you've slaughtered us at heavy weight, but just wait till neii year." he said. Krouse’s ire was stirred Satur day by two specific incidents. The first was caused by a foam rubber strip that Pifer wore around his neck to prevent recurrence of an old injury. Krouse thought that the strip would prevent his wrestler from getting a good grip on Pifer’s neck, but referee Leland Merrill disagreed. The other incident occurred when Oberly picked up 177-pound Bill Rishell and slammed him to the mat just previous to pinning him at 5:01. Krouse charged onto the mat again, arguing -with Merrill a full minute while the referee tried to keep the match going. He claimed that Oberly threw Rishell from a standing posi tion, making the move illegal. Merrill said that the Lion heavy weight had one knee on the mat. Coming into the heavyweight battle Maryland was down by a lone point, 13-12. Before the meet Krouse was undecided on wheth er he should use Rodger Shoals, a 240-pound heavyweight from Norwalk. Conn., who had been out for the team only two weeks. He finally decided to use Art Marinelli at 177 and Rishell, his regular 177-pounder, against Ob erly. The strategy didn’t work. Myer pinned Marinelli and Oberly, out weighing Rishell by 75 pounds, played with him like a polar bear toying with a penguin. In the opening match, Denny Slattery lost his first varsity bout, 3-2, to Ron Maunder after five consecutive wins. A first period .1 ACKHARI‘KK.I ACKIIAKPER.IACKH ARI’ERJACKHARPERJ AC JACKHARPERJACKHARPERJACKIIARPERJACKHARPEBJAC § A JACK HARPER GIFT CERTIFICATE g *l' *** *** 4* *** *s* *»* •***t*'*|* i JACK HARPER t % GIFT I % CERTIFICATE X *}• 4- •i-*3*‘J**»**S**l»*f - 4**J* Also spring shirts and shorts for girls *Feb. 14th By JIM KARL - *■ —• ' —CoMcgl&n Photo by Rick Bow*r COME-FROM-BEHIND-PlN— With Penn State down by four points, Phil Myer struggles to pin Maryland’s Art Marinelli in a 177-pound battle in Rec Hall Saturday night. Myer scored a fall at 3:32 to give State a 13-12 lead. Johnston Oberly added five more points with a fall in the heavyweight division and the Lions won, 18-12. * ★ ★ takedown and a last period escape by Maunder offset two escapes by the Williamsport sophomore. Tony Scordo used two take downs, a predicament point and a near fall to down Fred Setner, 8-4, at 130. Scordo’s record is now 4-2. Bob Smith surprised Dan Johnston at 137 with four points in the final period to win, 8-5. Johnston is now 3-1-2. At 147 Pat Varre, formerly of Bald Eagle High School, used three lightning fast takedowns to down Neil Turner, 8-4. Pifer ran up 11 points against 107-pound ACC champ Ron Kerin before pinning him as the buzzer sounded to end the second period. Bill Offenbacher’s second period Wrestling Fullback Dave Hayes, No. 2 fullback on Penn State’s 1960 football team, will be a regular on the Nittany Lions’ wrestling team. He’ll have to trim down from 207 pounds to the 191-pound class. _____ FOR YOUR VALENTINE No need to remember sizes and colors —let him, or her, select from new spring sport shirts, sweaters, neck wear, and dress shirts by giving our Valentine Gift Certificate in ITT the amount you choose. jig# Hsfp& Custom Shop for Men (Open Monday Nights Until 9) Around the corner from Bostonian Ltd. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA A ♦ ' r *>■ ’ , »} 'reversal plus a point for riding time gave him a 3-1 victory over John Barone at 167. Myer threw Marinelli at 3:32 of the second period after a scoreless first stanza to win his fourth match of the year. 123—Maunder iM) dec. Slattery (PS), 3-2. ISO—Scordo (PS! dec. Setner (Ml, 8-4. 137 —Smith <M) dec. Johnston (PS), 8-5. 147 —Vnrrc, iM) dec. Turner (PS), 8-4. 157—Pifer (PS) pinned Kerin tM), 6:00. 167—Offenbacher (M) dec. Barone (PS), 3-1. 177 —Myer (PS) pinned Marinelli (M), 3132. Hwt, —Oberly (PS) pinned Rishell (N), 5:01. All-Americans Penn State has had 10 football players who were, named to at least one All-American first team. The first was W. T. (Mother) Dunn, a center, selected in 1906. The most recent was quarterback Richie Lucas in 1959. COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS BUY. SELL. TRADE, TELL ★ ★ ★ Summaries Budd Edges Brown In Millrose Games ‘ Frank Budd is fast becoming a thorn in the side of Lion sprint star Bobby Brown. Friday night Budd and Villanova teammate Paul Drayton turned on the steam to edge Brown in the Millrose Games’ 60-yard dash final at Madison Square Garden. Budd’s time was 6.2. Brown and Budd have been in tense rivals ever since the Wildcat star took away Brown’s indoor IC4A sprint crown last year. In that race Budd. then a sophomore, won in the same time of 6.2 with Brown second and Drayton third. Brown re deemed himself in the outdoor championships by copping both the 100 and 200-yard dashes. j Dick Campbell took third place i honors in the high jump with ani effort of 6-6, equaling his Penn! State record-breaking leap out-j doors last year. ' j Hank Wadsworth of Florida! needed fewer jumps to hit the same height and took -second place. Boston University’s John Thomas won the event with a leap of 7 feet. Campbell agreed with reports in the New York Times that Thomas looks off form. “He defL mtely doesn’t look as good as he did at this time last year," Camp bell said. ' “But maybe the added compe tition will be an incentive for him to work harder,” he said. The added competition is Valeri Bru me], the-18-year-old Soviet stu dent who topped 7-4 in Leningrad last month. Brumel along with two other Russian Olympic stars will make a tour of this country starting in a few weeks. Penn State’s two mile relay team finished fourth in their heat behind Fordham, Brown and St Johns. Manhattan won the event in 7:32.8, a new indoor world record. Penn State grad student Ed Moran passed up the Wanamaker Mile to run the 880 and finished fourth. Stanford’s Jerry Siebert won the event, followed by Tom Carroll (Yale), Lee Martin (Mor gan State) and .Moran. Hungarian bred Istvan Rozsa volgvi, a sub-four minute miler, won the Wanamaker Mile in 4:06. —Jim Karl Lacrosse Candidates Candidates for the varsity and freshman lacrosse teams should report to Coach Earnie Baer in 114 Rec Hall for an organizational meeting at 8 tonight. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 6, 1961 Maxwell Takes {Palm Springs Golf Crown I PALM SPRINGS, Calif. C/P) :Billy Maxwell, a tenacious little man on any golf course, ended a long victory drought yesterday | when he captured the $50,000 ! Palm Springs Classic, j The 31-year-old Texan knocked ;out a 1-under-par 71 for a total score of 345 in this SO-hole desert marathon to haul down $5,300 top money and score his first triumnh isinee the Memphis Open in 1958. | Maxwell, who won the U.S. [Amateur championship in 1951 land at least one major PGA open [a year from 1955 through 1958, resisted all. pressures this sunny I afternoon as some of his more feared rivals flew apart in all di rections. ; When the excitement died idown, young Doug Sanders, for ■merly of Miami, but now play ling out of Ojai, Calif., was in sec ;ond place. | And in third place, with a pat jtented Palmer finish, was Arnold Palmer, who came from practical ly nowhere with a 69 for an over all score of 348. It earned last year's all-round champion $2,200. But the tournament’s biggest winner, after four days of ten sion and worry, was still Don January of Dallas. He shot a 'hole-in-one last Thursday and collected the full $50,000 bonus offered for such a feat after no one else managed to duplicate his ace. January said he is splitting the cheek with no one except Uncle Sam’s income tax people. Leading the pack at the start of the round were Maxwell, Ken Venturi and former U-S. Open champion Billy Casper Jr. Bob Rosburg was one stroke behind and Palmer was tied for sev enth. A 1 Mengert of Phoenix, Ariz., who had lead the tournament through the second and third rounds, had a 75 for 352.
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