PAGE SIX College Cage By WILL GBINISLEY 1 wide syndicate, and charged , identified as Henry Gunter, a Associated Press Sports Writer ; them with bribery and con- center from New York, and Ar- NEW YORK (il 3 ) Three spiracy in an attempt to rig , thus' Hicks. a forward from Chi ! cago. Each is 21 years old , college basketball players have college games. i Andreoli said the players were ' The men were listed as Aaron' . questioned but not' held, and add be e n accused of accepting Wagman, 28, also known as All "Both are cooperating in our 'and Al Williams; Jo-l ed: bribes of $l,OOO and $1,500 in a Wagnerg . , and probe." They were reported stay new outbreak of game-fixineYork. Both have been involved lhotel. 'in previous fix cases one involvl • which police say may dwarf , • ' • Arraigned in General Sessions irlg football and the other boxing,lCourt, Wagman was held in $50,- the gambling scandals of 1951..! the district attorney said. IWO bail and -Hacken in $25,000. Before the present investigation A University of Connecticutßoth face from one to 10 years is completed, an informant said,,' player, not identified, received imprisonment and a tine up to - '$1:)00 to shave points in a game $lO.OOO, or both, if convicted. a total of 15 to 25 colleges, includH aga i ns t Colgate at Hamilton, N.Y. The district attorney's office ing at least three from New York March 1, Asst. Dist. Atty. Peter' said Hacken has a record of 10 City, probably will be drawn into!D. Andreoli said. Two Seton HalL gambling arrests and that Wag thel giant web. ,players collected $lOOO each for man is the same man convicted The office Of Dist. Atty. Frank their part in a game against Day-; , of trying to bribe a University S. Hogan announced yesterday ton at, 9 } re d s Madison Square Garden of Florida football player last Feb. he id. the arrest of two men, described I September. as representatives of a nation- The Seton Hall players were . Details of the alleged game-fix- Speidel Reserves Opinion Erber Goes On NCAA Mat Outcome 2nd Straight IM Mat Win By JIM KARL Charlie Speidel isn't a man of brash statements. Penn State's three eastern champions soon will be facing the top mat competition in the nation, and Speidel is reserving his opinions on the outcome until he has a chance to look ovir the opposition. Dan Johnston, Ron Pifer, Johnston Oberly and Speidel will leave State College Mon day night for Pittsburgh, where they will catch a plane to Cor vallis, Ore., for the NCAA mat championships which begin Thursday. "Nobody knows what will hap pen," Speidel said when asked how his grapplers should do in the tourney. "There's only one thing certain when you step on the mat you won't be facing a fish. No school is going to send a wrestler that far to lose." Speidel said that there are too many possibilities for him to pre dict how Johnston, Pifer and Oberly will fare in the tourna- ment. "Once you step on the mat you're your own field general," he said. You're the offense and the defense there's no sub- stitutes. in the 135-pound class. Riding "I don't know how we're going time made the difference. to do. 1 hope we do well." summaries If the State trioperforms in CHARLIE SPEIDEL l2B—Criley (AZ ) pinned fieq, (nal, , 1 :36. Link (SigNu) dec. Lttng ( ACSigi, the nationals as it did in the East-! * * lii-2. inp:wiler dee. Retallic, 54. erns, Speidel won' t have any) Oberly is a two-year vet and i 135-lleirer (LC Al dec. Greenleaf anti. complaints. 1 Pifer finished fourth last year I f.-41. Grasser I AT()) pinned Lindgren )IP,KPNi). :34. Hardin))) ( A CSig) pinned Johnston, seeded fourth, and as a sophomore. !ma. tSigl'il. 3:00. Fey (Prat) Pinned Pifer, seeded third, won con- Some of Johnston's toughest slim,. (Acacia), 1:511. yincingly in the finals. Oberly, oppositionl may come from grail-;;Acacia, i. P 0 t ,( 1,) , i ri : i g n an Ni d e u s er a b r esr ' - I top-seeded after winning the !piers he has already met in dual Cling 1 l'K AI. 13-I). (iinssinirn (PGD) dee. cro...rt last year, didn't get "meets this year. ;Cooper I ATO), 6-0. Stitt I DTSig ) pinned :13ughv (AGRI, 'l , O. much of a chance to wrestle in Rutger's Mike Leta, Pitt's Daryl i 150—Lightner 4CA 1 pinned Leighton the title round. iKelvington and Lehigh's Curtimml, 3: 30 . Saba I Sigchil Pinned 31111 11 is opponent, Chuck Moore, Alexander will be out to even theli,s.iant,:i.lo,43(ll;incrwrrlej,,,npigunied.2trisehrnan, was outweighed by close to 70,-score with the Lion gi'appler in; 1 f4F.— Drian 11'K1'hi 1 dec. Meier (Sig pounds and kept a safe distance, the nationals.Ohi I, 4-2 Brownhack i DTDI pinned Ludo from the "Big 0," losing 2-0. [N i. l ,, ll• f i I d i ft (...'A 1 ,. . ,, e 4 r :20 6w / e t n iern iii ( T Dalle)ZW l Johnston tied Leta and Alex- 'Viten asked if he thought the ander and beat Kelvinctton ! I !MTh ) pinned Vaganka (SPE), 1:05. 11.111 ,;faits grapplers u7ouldlCK i I pinned Gay ISP El, 13 e i twice this year, the second time 1 167—Weaver ( T seeded in the nationals. Speidel IA :27. Peace I ITSig I pinned Pollock ( LCA I, ! 1-0 for the eastern title. • (3 :30. Weaver (DU) der. Casten iTKE I. 11 'Plied. "We mat' 'ie considered.": -2. Kinnan (Chi Phi i pinned Keck (LTD), This will be . Johnston's first , Pifer may face some competi- L!" 0:45. Ition from eastern foes also. Le-r - _l76—Bartlett ITKEI ,lee, 'Bella ortinchn, appearance in the NCAA's. thigh's Bob Gunst and Pitts John,6-0. Graham t DTSig I pinned Katz ( ALP), IZolikoff are both tournament en- i 3 :or,. Dempler . dec. Gearhart,. (1 , 0. Spring Football Practice Itries. 11w1.—Slemensh) (SigNu) pinned Gape tola (lITPD, 1:50. Kreitner (TKE) dec. All those interested in springi Oberly has no real challengers G "r h ' ek _i sPi) ....: 2-°- football 'practice must draw,in Ile East. His toughest oppon-1 Penn State's record for most equipment at the varsity footbalFerns should be Dale Lewis of,basketball points scored in one' locker room from Mon cl a yOklahoma. Ted Ellis of Oklahoma season 'belongs to Jesse Arnelle. through Thursday between 1:30 State and Rory Weber of North-:He netted 731 in 28 games in the and 4:30 in the afternoon. 'western. 11954-55 campaign. - - - -- . 1 $1:50 Per Couple * * * TICKETS Available at the door for Club Hubano Tonight HUB Ballroom Gala Entertainment Music by "The Twisters" THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Ey DENNY MOLLURA Pete Erber, Sigma Chi's runner-up in the 142-pound class last year, scored his sec- and straight victory, 13-6, over Bob Degling of Pi Kappa Al pha in the feature match of last night's IM wrestling. Erber had Defiling on his back se Jeral times but was unable to apply the clincher. John Gasser of Alpha Tau Omega scored the fastest fall of the night when he pinned Phi Kappa Psi's Al Lindgren in 34 seconds in a 135-pound Delta Tau Sigma's Bill Stitt , flattened Bill Buzby, Alpha Gam ;ma Rho, at 1:00 in their 142- , pound match. In independent action, 150- pounder Join Stevens pinned Bob Sable at 1:25 while Dave Crossley pinned Lewis Fischman at 3:10 in the same weight class. Hank Heiser of Lambda CM Alpha edged out Dick Greenleaf of Delia 'Upsilon, S-4, Scandal Erupts 8:30 - 12:00 ing attempts were not disclosed. Hogan's office merely said Wag man's action occurred 'Feb. 28 in connection with the Connecticut- Colgate game and Hacken's con tact was made Feb. 9 in connec tion with the Dayton-Seton Hall game. Colgate beat Connecticut 83-71. Dayton beat Seton Hall at the Garden 112-77. Basketball followers recalled that both games aroused sus picions at the time. Dayton originally was listed as a six-point favorite but later the game was knocked off the bet ting boards. This was a sign the bookmakers refused to take any more bets. The Connecticut-Colgate 'game twice was taken off the hoards after Colgate had been estab DU, Phi Gam in Cage Finals The stage is set for Mon day night's IM fraternity basket ball final between Delta Upsilon and Phi Gamma Delta. Both ad vanced to the finals by winning ,last night. Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Nu staged a thrilling battle that wasn't decided until the last 10 seconds when Skip Finkelston sank a foul shot to give Phi Gam Havlicek's Basket Gives Ohio State 56-55 Win LOUISVILLE, Ky. (JP) John Havlicek rescued Ohio State in the closing seconds last night to edge underdog Louis ville 56-55 in the semifinals of the Mideast Regional NCAA Basketball Tournament. Ohio State was in trouble most of the way and with the score tied at one minute to go it looked like Havlicek might be the goat. Trying to fake his guard, Le was called for steps, giving Louisville possession. But 13 seconds later, Louisville's John Turner threw a bad pass and Havlicek recovered it and hit the clinching basket with 16 seconds to go. COLLEGE MEN Part-Time Employment 15 Hours Per Week Sales work for internationally known firm with offices in every major city throughout the world. Local calls to establish customers. Car furnished. Rapid advancement offered on competitive basis. Careers in management Available to qualified students upon graduation. Must have at least average grades. Working schedule will be arranged to suit class and study schedule whenevsr possible. CALL MR. RICHARDSON MD A.M. to 2 P.M. ADams 8.2051 SALARY $47 PER WEEK Phi Sigma Kappa RUSHING SMOKER Corner S. Allen & Fairmount SUNDAY, MARCH 19th 2:30 P.M. All Interested Freshmen and Upperclassmen Invited SATURDAY. MARCH 18. 1961 fished first as a nine-point favor ite, dropped to five points, then climbed to 11. In the widespread basketball scandals of 1951, which affected 33 players from seven schools and involved some of The na tion's college basketball giants, the gambling was based on the point spread. This is a listing of game favor ites with points published by a Midwestern concern. Payoffs are based on whether teams are suc cessful in beating the spread, In 1951, such powerhouses as l efty Cciliege of New York, then !holder of the national champion (ship; Kentucky and Bradley were implicated. Several players, as well as gamblers, drew jail sen tences and many were barred from the game. ,the verdict, 38-37. Sigma Nu had la chance to tie the game with two seconds remaining but missed the crucial foul shot. Delta Upsilon had an easy time defeating Delta Tau Delta, 44-23. The Untouchables scored an leasy 33-19 win over the Comets l and will meet Nittany 22 Monday night for the Independent Cham pionship. Nittany 22 defeated a scrappy Dauphin House team. 31-25. footballer Dick Hoak led the Untouchables with 12 markers. Nittany 2.2 was led by Al Driver !with 16 points. oCei Pizza & Sub Shop 15" Subs 21 ingredients Pizza 10" - 12" - 14" Oven Hot Delivery To Your Door AD 841596 400 W. BUM' Me.