FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 16. 1962 Egli For Hunts Starting Spot Sophomore Avillion By JIM BUKATA ' (This is the seventh in a series of articles on the 1962-63 Penn State basketball team. Next is Tom Malinchak.y Sophomore Ron Avillion has basketball coach John Egli wondering what to. do with him. ! Avillion is a S-5, 183-pound sophomore from Luzerne where he was an all-county choice for two years. He came to State as a forward, but due to the academic ineligi bility of six members of the /resh man squad, was made a center last year. : (This; year, in the three short weeks ’ since basketball . practice began, Avillion has seen action not only at forward and center, but also in the backcourt. I Egli tried Avillion in the back court with the hopes that he would become the fourth' ade quate guard on the squad, joining Jphn Mitchell, Bob Donato and Bob Weiss. j HOWEVER, Avillion’s try to learn the backcourt position did not prove successful. | His outside shooting left much to be desired and he just couldn’t handle the ball. ; I Egli then switched him., back to forward, hoping that he would develop as a good comer man. This rpove may prove to be one of the smartest Egli has made. I Not only has Avillion looked good at forward, but his pel-forms' ance has made Egli move, Terry Hoover into the pivot, i A lack of bulk hurts Avillion under the boards, but he makes Up for. this with a great sense of timing. : “He seems to know just when to leave his feet to tip a shot," IfTHS R, I ¥ A . . Ah, few gentlemen nowadays know how to . value the ineffectual qualities in a woman." r nuWWa r 4 • AS a matter of fact, the editor of this rag. a / ,r \ Pen Pal League member from way back, immediately on seeing the , advance copy, wrote Miu Afflerbach. We're not sure what else they may be corre sponding about, but the one fact that can, 'apparently, be released to our readers is tha t the nom-pilling Eagle Os fords, Tabsnaps® and/or Sloppy Bulges and ail, can almost certainly be found at Hut's Traditional Shop • 342 East College Ave. Hut's Men's Shop i 114-East College Ave. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA RON AVILLION aid. “He has the knack to above everyone at just the ime." Egli sa be up i right t land his assistant. Snowyj in. both feel that Avillion i Egli Simps< EAGLE SHIRTMAKERS PROUDLY ANNOUNCES OH, given tithe a short-necked man with a heavy beard could pill any oxford cloth, they’re that soft. But until just recently even Little Lord Fauntleroy. could have pilled a DACRON/cotton oxford cloth shirt with one curl tied behind him. Which is why we didn’t put out any of them. ★ Sure you know what pilled j means; it’s when the fabric gets roughed up into little pills. ★ Well, Du Pont has a brand new type Dacron that resists pilling. It came out about a year ago, but we waited until Greenwood Mills, the weavers who make our cotton oxfords produced a DACRON/cotton oxford they were proud of; a really luxuriant lofted oxford. And that brings us up to now. We are making Eagle Shirts Of this new material in both a and a button-down collar. At ajx>ut $8.50. 1 ★ Tabsnaps, you may recall, are Eagle tab collars that need no collar buttons. Our button-down collars also have a property highly prized by the toney cognoscenti**: a sort of sloppy bulge. We used to call this “flare” until we noticed - ; , everybody else was too. Besides, it really isn't a flare, it’s a sloppy bulge, but itj’s ours and-we like it. ★ So if you want a drip-dry oxford shirt that won’t pill perhaps you’d better drop a note to Miss Afflerbach (she says forget the footnote) and ask her where in your town you can find Eagle Shirts. This is because many fine stores prefer to put their own labels in our shirts; very flattering, but tough on Eagle eyed shoppers. Write her care of Eagle Shirtmakers, Quakertown, Pa. •Du Pont's trademark for its polyester fiber. **That wouldn't be a bad name for an Italian fashion consultant. Say, do yon suppose we could get Miss Afflerbach to change her name to toni Cognoscenti and benefited greatly irom a year of freshman ball. •'lt's a big change from high school to college bali." Egli said. "And that year of. freshman ball helps a player gefsodjusted to the change. He also receives game competition." = Avillion was the mainstay of the freshman squad which posted a 4-4 mark last year. J ALTHOUGH HE averaged only 10 9 points per game, he was the teams leading rebounder and near the top in assists. One of Avillion’s big problems so far this winter :is "getting his eye back." . . | A lack of summer practice onj the courts accounts for this andi it seems like only a time before Avillion will lie j making the'nets dance regularly.! If Avillion should continue to hold down hLs forward spot, Egli could very well start three sopho mores against Maryland. He said before practice started that Weiss, Hoover and Avillion must be con sidered for starting berths. With the likes of Avillion and the other promising sophomores moving up to the varsity, the next three years for Penn State-basket ball fans might be rosy. A DACRON/COTTON OXFORD THAT WILL NOT PILL! Penn Slate Barbell Club Reactivated; Lift Contest Scheduled for Sunday By KEN DENLINGER Assistant Sports Editor Sunday afternoon the strongest, man at Penn State will be discovered The distirvetion_wilV be decided in an “all-comers’* weight lifting match staged by the'JPenn State Barbell Club starting at 2 p m. in Recreation Hail Under the direction of -Norm Gordon, faculty advisor, the club has . a three-fold purpose which includes weight training, . body building and weight lifting. “There has been a great in terest shown in the club ' thus far,” Gordon says, -'and we en courage anyone with any ability at all to come out and see what they !can do.” GORDON SAYS that at the moment he hasn't found anyone ready to challenge Paul Ander son in a man'-to-mnn lift, but there are quite a few men who have not only an interest but also some ability for the sport. Provided there is enough in terest and enough talent can be found. Gordon said that in a few years a Penrr State weightlifting team may be formed and an inter collegiate schedule would be adopted. “At the moment our goal is to encourage men to develop an ap preciation fiv- weight training," f T 9" i <>*&t ''"t. St-- ■p • IM2 EAGLE SHIaTMAKtSIS. QUAKER IC/WN. PENNSYLVANIA Cordon said. “Whether it is ta build, a better looking body or to overcome weakness or some'phys ical handicap, we hope to do our part in raising the national stand ard of physical fitness "If it is possible we would liko to form a team and compete m collegiate competition," Gordon continued, "but these are long range plans.” As for Sunday's meet. Cordon says .that there will be'the three Olympic, events the military press, the snatch and the clean and jerk in the afternoon, fol lowed by a series of power lifts starting at 7 p.m. in the evening. These power, lifts will. consist of the bench press, a.dead .'lift and 90-degree squats. The match is open for students (graduate included), faculty and anyone else connected with tho University It's an opportunity to find out how your muscles stack up against others m the University. And. it’s free. ■ '} .* PAGE NINE