PAGE TEN . . . . .. . . 1,,, I, • '.l ~ , ... ~ #:, • • ~, :af,., ' • .I.t 7 .> '- -, ' I , ' I v .... „ ' "-41, 4 " ' ' 3 1.,4 . , 1 i ~-. .... .. 4 `.. ers yt • _,.. By DEAN BILLICK Sports Editor Gettysburg coach Bob Hul ton had better be prepared to night for a vastly different Penn State basketball team than he has been accustomed to playing the last few years. Navy coach Ben Carnevale wasn't and his Middies became State's 12th shell-shocked victim, 79-67, Saturday at Annapolis, Md. "I think we really shocked them," a happy Lion coach John Egli said after the win. "We've taken enough shocks down here, though, so I don't have any pity for them. We beat them good and on their own floor." PROBABLY WH AT shocked the Middies most, was not that State beat them so badly, but the way the Lions did it. Fast break ing time after time and ball hawking like a Nittany team hasn't done for quite a few years, State literally ran Navy into the floor. And all this against a mili tary school that is known for its conditioning program. True, the Lions hit on 54.5 per cent of their shots, but that per centage was built skyward on fast Lion Fencers Cop Third Straight; Come From Behind To Nip Orange By JOHN LOTT Before the Penn State fenc ing squad opened its 1963 cam paign, the epee team was sup posed to be the weak link of the outfit. But that's all changed now. State's epeeists stole the show Saturday at Syracuse, taking six of nine bouts to pace the Lions to a 14-13 victory, their third without a loss this season. "If the epee team hadn't come through, we would• have been down the drain," State coach Dick Klima said after the meet. THE LIONS held leads of 6-3 and 10-8 after the first and sec ond rounds, respectively, but with two bouts to go, Syracuse gained a 13-12 advantage. Then epeeists John Hansell and Dave Lewis came through to take the final pair of bouts, giving State the triumph. The victory assured the Nit tanies of a winning season, with SO THAT 'ON VALENTINE'S DAY YOU WOW THE ONE YOU'RE WOOING! breaks and easy lay-ups coming after stolen passes. Up until this year, State has keen known as a slow-down, ball `control team, But if Gettysburg has any ideas of a victory for the only one meet remaining on the schedule. The Lions travel to Cor nell March 9 for their final con test. LEWIS AND HANSELL each swept all three of their bouts for the Lions, while sabremen Chuck Dooley and Jerry Evans each copped a pair. Poole CPSt defeated Unlit), : lost to Hollander, 6-3 ; lost to Dauenhaner. Dooley (PS) defeated Conte, 6-2: de feated Noble, 6-0; lost fo Hollander, 5-1. Evans PS) defeated Da tietianer, 5-1 defeated Dako, 6-4: lost to Hollander, 6-2 FOIL Syracutte 6 Penn State 3 Cooper (PSI defeated Cohen, 6-4 lost to Schuman, 5-3; lost to hionostory, 6-3. 13:thinak 1 PS: siert:sae:l Cohen. 5-4 ; !oat to Schuman, 6-2 ; lost to Monolstory, 6-I. Plotz (PS) defeated Monotory, 5-2 lost to Cohen, 6-1; lost to Schuman, 6-4 EPEE Penn State 6 Syracuse 3 Davis (PSI lost. to Wandanuteker, 6-4; lost to Harrington, 11-0 ; lost to Stone, 5-4. Httnaell (PSI defeated Harrington, 5-2; defeated Stone, 6-4; defeated Wanda tnacker, 5-1. Lewis (PS) defeated Stone, S-4; de feated Wandanteker, 5-2; defeated Har rington. 6-4. 4 L.at.wilgAol.. ever Avenue rner Street PHONE AD 7-7661 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA * * * RON AVILLION * * * SABRE Penn State 5 SYractwe 4 home folks tonight, they had bet ter rewrite their scouting reports from past years. The Bullets are 11-5 this year and have good size. But it will take a major upset to stop the State express. The Lions, who have slowly nursed along post season tournament hopes, find themselves needing two victories this week. State travels to Army Saturday. • DOUBLE WINS this week would give the Nittanies a 14-3 record and put them right in the thick of the "stew" for the tour ney pairings. The NCAA is permitted to begin giving out tourney bids at 10 p.m. next Monday and a 14-3 chart would be hard to overlook. The commit tee, however, may wait until the Lions play West Virginia next Wednesday at Rec Hall. A victory then would all but insure a bid. BUT ONE game at a time and Saturday it was Navy's turn to finfl out why co-captain Earl Hoff man is one of the leading scorers in the country. The senior forward blasted for 17 points in the first half and then watched as team mate Bob Weiss took up the slack in the sec on d half with 17 markers. Hoffman fini s h e d with 25 Gym Summaries (Continued from page nine) l'enn State :19 Army 47 EXI , 3IICISE-1. Seward (PS), 94: 2. DuFour (A), 93.6; B. Jacobson ( PSI. 88; 4. Cu(bane (I'S), 87; 6. Ono (A), 85.6. SIDE HpRsE--I. Porter (PS), 93.6; 2. Thomas (Al. 87: 3. Johnson (A), 86.5; 4. Ono (Al, 85.6; 6. Harlacher (PS), 76. HIGH BAR-1. Jacobson (PSI. 93.0: 2. Best (A). 91.5: 3. Seward (PSI, 87; 4. Slulsl y IA), 86.5; 6. Culhane (PSI, 83. LONG HORSE-1. Mitchell IA), 92.25; 2. Ischinver IA), 90.76: 3. Dt;Four 90.5: 4. Sforza (PSI, 89.75; 5. Skponaro (PSI, 89.25. PARALLEL BARS-1. • Seward (PS), 96.5: 2. Jacobson (PS), 95; 3. Ono (A), 91; 4. Slutzky (A), 90.6; 6. liftklerson (A), 88.5. STILL RINGS-1. Willainis (PS), 5.1; 2. ()ray (A). 83.0: 3. Slutzky (A), 88.6; 4. Jenkins (PS), 87.6; 5. Kirkpatrick IA), 87. FRESHMAN GYM SUMMARIES Penn State 58 FREE EXERCISE—I. Pontuek (A), 86; 2. Keller (PS), 84; 3. Newhouse (A), 81.5; 4. Curtis (PS), 75.5; 6. Paoletti (PS), 63.5. SIDE lIOIISE-1. Isabelle (PS), 78.5 2. Lingle (Al, 71: 3. Paoletti IPS), 57.5 4. Chatfield (A), 62.6: 6. Williams (PS) 90.6. 111GH BAR-1. Keller IPS), 83: 2. Isa belle IPS), 77.5: 3. Oilman (PS). 74.5: 4. Rantala (A), 72; 5. flretwer IA), 66. LONG IfORSE---1. Collins IPS), 88.75 2. Lester IA), 86.5; 3. Williams IPS), 84 4. Lingle IA), 81.6; 5. Steel (A), 81.25 PARALLEL BARS-1. Tie between Bnyuk I PS) and Pontuek (Al. 77.5; 3. Rantalit ( Al, 77; 4. ()limn (PS), 71; 5. Newhouse (A). 60. STILL RINGS—I. Isabelle (PS), 84.5; 2. Keller IPS), 84: R. Rang!lft (Al e 74.5: 4. Williams IPS), 62.5: 5. Reilly (A). 55.5. 1.25 and 2.00 plus tax . . S H U LTON (94 &ice:- the shave lotion men recommend to other men! points and shot a phenominal 64.7 per cent from the field. The outpoint jumped this season aver age to 21.1 and his shooting per centage to 49.1. He ranks amonk the leaders in the country in both (lose Match, Rout Provide Action In Independent Swimming Contests A close 23-17 match between Nittany 23-24 and Larch, and a not-so-close 34-6 contest be,. tween Cedar and Nittany 27- 28, provided the only action in the Independent swim meets at Glennland Pool last night. Nittany 23-24 and Cedar emerged the victors. The other scheduled meet was won by Nit tany 31-32 over Linden by forfeit. IN THE CLOSE MATCH, Nit tany 23-24's 120-yard relay team of Dave Bartram, Dick Rigg, War ren Marshall and Charlie Lomax won the final event to top the meet. Marshall also won the free style, followed by teammate Bob Eishenbraun. Rigg took the breaststroke for the winners only other first place. Larch's two first places were scored by Gerhard Friedrich in the backstroke and Greg Young in the diving competition. Young was followed closely in diving by Army 38 * * * Cltti T. riN.J%,/ • ..ri * * * By DENNIS KNECHT TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1963 departments. Weiss finished with 18 • points, but it was his stealing of passes and near-perfect shooting in the second half that was_ the differ ence in the-game. Navy lead at one time, 18-10, but the Nittanies closed the gap and the score was knotted at 31 by the half. Then Weiss went to work and three consecutive times he batted down Navy shots and sped the length of the floor for easy lay-ups. In fact the sophomore flash hit 8-9 in the half and the team shot 73 per cent. State's biggest lead was at 73-53, bur the Middies cut that margin when Egli cleared his bench. It was the first win over Navy since 1956. In the frosh game, State suf fered its first loss, 91-61. NAVY PENN STATE Fg F Ttl Fg F Ttl R.Terwilliger 8 6 21 Donato 6 1 11. Ross 3 1 7 Hoffman 11 3 25 Konohl 2 3 7 Malinchak 1 0 2 Kettlehart 2 0 4 Weiss 8 2 18 Vaughan 1 0. 2 Avillion' 7 0 14 Davenport - 2 5 - 9 Hoover - 2 1 5 Kretching 1 I 3 Ludwig 0 0 0 Campbell 1 - 0 '2 Mitchell 1 0 2 Mack *2 0 4 Jones 1 0 2 Staubach 0 1 1 Mahoney 0 0 0 B.Terwillisser S 1 7 25 17 67 Totals '36 7 79 Halftime Score Penn State ____ Nittan y's Lomax. Bob Beggs scored a second place in the back stroke for - Larch. Cedar's rout of Nittany 27-28 was marked by, five first and three second place finishes. DICK GREENE won the free style, Skip Westhaffer captured the backstroke, Bill Bowes placed first in the breaststroke and Tony Watson scored 16.4 points to take first place in the diving corn petition. The winners in the swimming events were followed to the finish line by teammates Pete Craig, Gary Himes and Watson, respec tively. Greene, Craig, Bowes and Westhaffer raced to victory in the relay in 1:03.8. Bob Gray scored the only second place for the Nittany 27-28 squad with an 8.6 in diving. BASKETBALL Indiana 89, Minnesota 77 Maryland 51, South Carolina 44 Delaware 105, Ursinus 66 Susquehanna 60, •Albright 28 Westminster 76, St. Francis 63 Drove City 75, St. Vincent 60
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