FRIDAY. MARCH 10. 1961 Lions Defend Mat Title At Eastern Tournament By JIM KARL _ [l7-11 loss at Navy. Dan Johnston Penn State has dominated was so weakened by tonsillitis i.M-Dotlina for m vonrc that he couldn’t wrestle and Milt eastern wrestling lor 10 years,j ßrubaker, his substitute, lost a but Charlie Speidel isn’t so 5-0 decision. sure the Lions will remain in' There was no doubt about the the driver’s seat for long “We’ve been on top for the last ten years,” Speidel said yesterday before departing for the Eastern tourney at Bethlehem, Pa. "We won the liile in '5l, '52, '53, '57 and 'GO. Four other times we finished second. But this year I'm wondering if we can even come in eighth." The Lion mentor will have a better idea after today’s prelim inary rounds are completed. State’s defending champs will| face 15 EIWA foes, including win-; hungry Lehigh, in the 57th annual mat championships. The tourney will continue with quarter-final rounds to night. The semi-finals and finals will be completed tomorrow. Although State managed only a 6-4 record this season, things aren’t as bleak as Speidel pre dicts. One of State’s losses was to Michigan, ranked among the topj five mat powerhouses in the na tion. Although the other three de-j feats were to EIWA foes, State; could have won two of those with; a break or two. Phil Myer was sidelined | with a skin rash in the Lions' i 16-15 loss io Syracuse. Speidel detests alibis after a meet is over, but he admitted that My er's presence in the lineup would probably have meant a victory. j The same holds true for the ; Yowarsky Joins Vikings iMoran Foregoes Duel ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (TP); Penn State grad student Ed —The Minnesota Vikings of the;Moran will forego another mile National Football League w ith Hungary’s Istvanßo day completed their coaching; . . , staff with the signing of Walt; zsavo^y i a t the Chicago Daily Yowarsky as another assistant to!News Meet tonight. Instead he Head Coach Norm Van Brocklin. will compete in the 1000 and then Yowarsky, 33, lives in Cleveland i s Y , ' 2 , tc ' 2 . ' o! J lori ' o "' and has served the past two sea-i 222^21 222 2e Milwaukee Journal sons as assistant coach and chief-Meet. Rozsavolgyi is not entered scout for the New York Giants of j 221 the mile tomorrow night. the NFL. He played tackle for thoj University of Kentucky, being; graduated in 1951 Positions with Potential ENGINEERS • CHEMISTS • PHYSICISTS Ceramic * Chemical • Civil Electrical ® Industrial • Mechanical Metallurgical National Carbon Company, America’s leading manu facturer of carbon and graphite products, offers positions to qualified B.S. and M.S. graduates in the fields listed above. Ourqrroducts include graphite anodes, electrodes, motor and generator brushes, arc carbons, special graphite shapes used in nuclear, missile, and a wide variety of industrial applications. We serve such key industries as aircraft, alumi num, automotive, chemical, mining, motion pictures, nuclear, steel, transportation, and the electrical manufacturers. Positions are available at 12 plants and labora tories located in Ohio, New York, West Virginia and Tennessee and also in our Marketing organisation which covers the 48 states from nine key cities. Interesting, rewarding careers in research, process and product development, production and methods engineering, product and process control, machine development, plant engineering, marketing, technical sales and technical service. A National Carbon representative will be on campus. MARCH (5 NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY Division of Union Carbide Corporation | Jerry Seckler Phil Myer Lehigh debacle though. State lost 24-8 to the Engineers, who are ranked second in the nation to Oklahoma State. Lehigh is everybody's favor ite lo win the team title, with Pitt the consensus for second place. Penn Stale, Navy, Army and Rutgers could give the Pan thers a battle. Rutgers hopes rest with three lightweights, Bob Hogan (123), Dick Jamish (130) and Mike Leta (137), last year’s champ at J3o.| Army has a good 147-pounder inj Joe Natvig and thred tough! heavyweights A 1 Rushatz (177), Ray Nickla (191) and Dale Kuhns' (Hwt.). Navy pins its hopes on its un defeated heavyweight, John Grif fith, Captain Dick Royston (177) and Mike Harman (137). Penn Slate has defending champion Johnston Obe r I y plus solid contenders in John ston (137), Ron Piter (147), Jer- CLASSIFIEDS—RESULTS 50c BUYS 17 WORDS THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA ry Seckler (157), and Phil My er (177). If Pitt’s “Mighty Mites” are in top form, the Panthers could give Lehigh a battle. The “Mighty Mites” include Dick Martin (123),, undefeated this year; Larry Lau-j chle (130), runner-up to Leta last ! year; Daryl Kelvington (137), sec ond at 137 last year, and John Zolikoff, the 147-pound EIWA champion. The Panthers also have a top middleweight in sophomore Jimj Harrison. Pitt handed Lehigh its! only loss of the season, a IG-14i squeaker three weeks ago. Lehigh’s only weak spots are at 123 and heavyweight. Don Baillie| is a capable 130-pounder and Curt; Alexander (137), Bob Gunst (147),' Kirk Pendleton (157), Thadi Turner (167), and Dave Angell (191) are all undefeated.- Jim Detrixhe’s onlyv loss at 177 was toj Rushatz. i COME TO THE WEST HALLS JAM SESSION SATURDAY 2:00 - 4:00 PM. Featuring the "NITTANY 5" At WARING LOUNGE do girls rush to your head Very likely-if you’ve taken it into your head to use ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic! Downright heady stuff, this - mad e specially for men who use water with their hair tonic. ‘Vaseline’ Hair 'Tonic is 100% pure light grooming oil - replaces oil that water removes. ‘Vaseline’ Hair Tonic won’t evaporate, stays clear and clean on your hair. And just a little does a lot! it’s clear J' # it’s clean ... it’s VASELINE HAIR ATO, Acacia Notch Victories To Enter IM Swim Semis Alpha Tau Omega and Aca-| cia earned the right to face: each other in tonight’s IM| swimming semi-finals with' ivictories at Glennland Pool .Hast night. I ATO won four of five events to swamp Beta Sigma Rho, 33-8. j But Acacia had to come from; behind to beat Tau Kappa Epsi-j lon, 23-18, in a see-saw battle; that wasn’t.decided until the final! event. i. Guy Jackson got Acacia off , to a fast start, winning the free- j style in 36 flat. Cliff Wise look ! second for TKE, but George | Jackson, Guy's twin, notched I third as Acacia opened up a 6-3 lead. Bob Dimock knotted the score Homecoming Game at nine with a win in the breast- California will be Penn State’s stroke in 43 flat, and Jack Bor- Homecoming opponent next sca gerding pushed TKE into a 15-12|son. The teams will clash Oct. 28 jead with a winning 38-second ef-'at Beaver Stadium. fort in the breaststroke. Acacia tied the score again at 18 on the strength of Hal Zook’s diving. Zook edged TKE’s Chuck Gaston, 15.7-15.5, to leave it up to (he relay tea' is. The Jacksons. Zook and Lar ry Wolfe combined lo win the relay in 1:02.2 and clinch the win for Acacia. ATO just breezed through its encounter with Beta Sig after Steve Sussman won the freestyle to give Beta Sig a short-lived 5-4 advantage. John Gasser won the back stroke, Dick McCoy took the breaststroke and Gordie Schmidt scored 26.2 points to cop" diving honors for ATO. In the only independent action scheduled, Niltany 36 forfeited to Navy. S -"' X.,, TONIC tymvHi- u • «wnc»ti 1-0. PAGE NINE