PAGE SIX G-Men By JOHN MORRIS Assistant Sports Editor What a difference a year makes! Last year Penn State's gymnastics team paid a visit to the United States Naval 'Anaderny .--and the fired-up Middies skinned the Lions, 58 1 / 2 =37 1 / 2 . Saturday it was the Nittanies' turn to be an ungra6ous host and Gene Wettstone's defending national champions --responded with a crushing 62 1 /2-33% vic tory. The " win boosted State's - record to 3-0 and set the stage for the battle the Lions face at West Point thii week against uncle ; feated, but once-tied, :Army. ARMY-AND SYRACUSE appear to be the Lions' main challengers fox-the Eastern ; title. But from the way the Lions have lAen steam-rolling so far, it will take a minor miracle to slow them dcwn. Actually, Navy wasi.'t expected to be a serious threat to the Nittanies, but: expected State to win by such a lop aided score. Captain Greg Weiss led the romp with three first places—scoring 280 on the side horse, 288 on theparallel bars and 280 on the horizontal bar. The grim -faced senior's wins on the side horse and p-bars were his third of the year in both events, but it was the first Swordmen Surprise Johns Hopkins, 15-12 Utilizing a pressing, rushing strategy to good advantage, Penn State made an impressive return to fencing Saturday by defeating Johns Hopkins, 15-12 at Baltimore, Md. Larry Chamberlain, number three .sabre man, and Art Fuller, the Lions' best in foil competition, paced State's tri umph by winning three bouts apiece. Captain Bob Oliver, who scored the decisive 14th point, Earl LaKier, Joe Bubinak and Dave Lewis all wop two of their three bouts. "We knew that if we didn't blast them, we' couldn't beat them." coach Dick Klima said. "I was confident that this method of putting constant pressure , on them was the most effective we could have used. Everything worked' out just as we planned it," ,he said. Chamberlain, low Man on a well-balanced sabre team, dis posed o,f Bob Carroll, Tom Koeh ler and Dan Davidson by scores of 5-2, 5-2, and 5-4 ,respectively. Fuller beat Dick Bockman, ,Hugh Loebner and Smith Vaughn, 5-2. 5-], and..s-3/respectively, THE IJONS' SABRE t e am lived up to expectations by winning six of nine bopts from their Blue Jay counterparts while State's foil squad. supposedly the Nittanies' weak spot, turned in a stunning 5,4 victory. Johns Hopkins won the epee competition, also by a 5-4 score. Each of the Lions' three squads scared 2-1 triumphs in the 'final round of competition to clinch the ' LARRY CHAMBERLAIN victory. ,t * >a . JOHNS HOPKINS took an early , Oles' Blue Jay team. Ahern de -lead in the meet, going ahead 5-4;feated Oliver, 5.2. Lewis, 5.1. and after the first sound of fencing. Steve Serene.% 5-4. Charles Twy- The Lions started US climb backirnan t Johns Hopkins captain and -and after the. second round Statenumber two epee man,lwon just had evened the count at .9-9. That4)tie of his three - bouts for the set"the stage for the decisive thircilloceis. . . round which the Nittenies domi-; The setback was the fourthi Dated. 6-3 .;straight for the Blue Jays after State's winners in that finalian opening I'7-10 triutriph over round were LaKier and Chamber-I, e hi g h . . lain in sabre. Fuller and Bubinakipenn Slate 15. Johns Hopkins 12, -in foil, and Lewis and Oliver. ill' i SAME . 1 epee. Oliver put the match on ice. • Pena SIAO. 11. 34hos /14‘401144 3 . 1 by beating Tom McNamara, 5-3,' , f,:r a `D.:! 'st' ..- . 1 11t 3: 41 'Z'Z 1 ` T c :,.. r .. 3- V . 1 %7 and Bubinak added the 15th pointi Later IPS) 44+44 Davi4.oß; 5-3 . : i...t 4 by topping Backman. 5-3. le Carroll. 3-S: defeated Koehler. 1.3. _ the:l etbaaaferlain irs) titfaated Carroll, _S-2• • Bubinak , a - late - comer to efeatd Kaeltlec, 54; defeated nsTi.a..ii: foil team whom Klima pulleds.4. out of a physical education class! FOIL 1 • i • wheli his iwn t ` 3 foil nl " le-: Cltat e ra lul ek S ta t ta ti t r i'S . j l " letat " to ill li k a i ter " hl. 14: came ineligible, proved • to be a.smt to Elorkanan. s 4; loot to Loadener. 4-S: pleasant surprise. He routed! Elinor (es) defeated etookolaa. 5-33 . 1 t-, Vaughn, Hopkins' number one";:t in i : el i I , X. r r 4 S- 1 1 0 ;yr e e i" di Va . 111 1T : a i:.:' man 'in foil, by a 5-0 count andlo a t e 4 Va ug h lt ,..'s.d : e.4.al e d oftam en : 44. 1 then beat Backman. the number] , PEE . • • - • two' man. However , he; lost .his s Pratt sa i l s lobna Bodkin, i , , Leak (PS) defeated Idetimetara. 5-3; just bout to Loebner, ,5;-4. .Buoi - ,t.t I. Ahern. 34: defeated Talesman. 1-2. rtak's Shalltd. of Veneta. was the , Oliver (PS) loot to Ahern. :44, do-1 dall . lone whitewashing, - 'foaled Toryiaaa. 1.-41 defeated MeNoloara.' threeTUM AllE ", _ ' winnt .. i. ofhis ll4 6e rs) hid ti T. 44: lest 'lrn -I Yuma. epee pouts, • paced uscAlls - nclisasara. 44; hot le Ahem 44. By IRA MILLER THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVBiSITY PARK. PE 0 oil time he had been able to beat' teammate Tom Seward on the horizontal bar. Navy coach Chet Phillip; had praise for the , whole Penn State team ("as good as anything Penn State has ever had"), but Weiss was his main topic of 4•onversation. - HE IS TIMMENDOUS7 IFthillips said. "He should go undefeated in all three of his events for the rest of the year; He is by far the class-of the EIGL." Weise- brilliant triple overshadowed outstanding performances byiSeward and junior Gene Harlacher. Seward won the. free exercise for the third straight week and finished second to Weiss on the p-bars and horizental bar. His 278 on the p-bars and 270 on the horizontal bar would probably have been high enough to win any meet that didn't a Greg Weiss. Harlacher's performance was without a doubt his best all-around showing of the year, but the best he could do-was a second place on the side horse. _ • The lanky junior had higher scores In the free exercise (254) and parallel bars (250), but his 246 on the side horse was sec ond to Weiss' 280. THE LIONS JUMPED off, to a 10-6 lead in the free exercise as Seward won the event with a 276. Middie Art Day - edged (Continued on:, page seven) ,Defaico Named Coach RICHMOND, Va., (A?) The University , of Richmond an nounced yesterday that former Penn State tackle Dante Defalco has accepted an appointment as line coach of the Spiders' football team. A native of New Castle; Pa., Delalco, 28, is leaving a similar post at 'the College of William and Mary to accept the new assign ment • Institute of Aero SpOce Went. Presents the film "THE AVON TURBOJET ENGINE" In additicon'a technical paper will be given by an aero=space engineering student. 124 Sackett • - .7:00 p.m. Tuesday, February 6 E}=l ver Navy Czeiiai Honored Ed , Czekaj, business . manager , i for athletics at Penn State, : Ibeen elected vice president . of the natio4Eassociation of collegeath letie bifsiness mitnagers. HUB Etallro'om limited nosier efi tickets GREG Vt'ESS . three first places Per MP TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1962