The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, January 09, 1964, Image 5

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    THURSDAY, JANUARY'S), 1964
Wan : Lagers . Play Peru- at Rec sHall
Terps' Krouse Still
First Victory Over
Assi;tant Sports Editor
Maryland's Sull y Krouse
gets his last shot at beating
Charlie Speidel this weekend
and you can be sure he'll be
pulling out all the stops.
The volatile and outspoken
Krouse has been Maryland's
wrestling coach since it be
came a major sport there 16
years ago, and in that time the
Terps have dominated the At
lantic Coast Conference like
they own it—but they have
never beaten Penn State and
Speidel.
And this Saturday at Col
lege Park marks Krouse's last
chance to beat the' crafty Lion
coach because this is Speidel's
final season. In 13 previous
meetings, State has won 12
and one ended in a tie.
48-0 in ACC
While Maryland has been
having its troubles with State,
the Terps have been piling up
an almost unbelievable mark
in the ACC. They have won
every conference tournament
and sport a 48-0 record against
conference competition. And
last year the y had ACC
champs in nine of the 10
weight classes.
But still Krouse, 94-42-3
overall, seeks his first win
Over State. Last year he al
most exploded when a last
period pin by Ed Pohland in
the final bout snatched victory
International Films Committee
presents
the Winter Schedule of Films
The 400 Blows (1959) Truffeut
JANUARY Id
Devi (1961)
JANUARY 23
Salyajit Ray
The Girl with Golden Eyes (1961)
JANUARY 3$
Earth (1930)
Dovzhenko
General Line (1929)
FISIRUARY 4
I an a Camera (1955)
FEBRUARY 13
Arsenic and Old Lace (1944)
FEBRUARY 30
Treasure of Sierra Madre (1948)
FEBRUARY 37
Nights of Cabiria (1957)
MARCH 4
Eroica (1957) Munk
MARCH 11
The Wave (1935) Paul Strand
The Forgotten Village (1944) Kline
'with John Steinbeek
Thursday 7:00 p.m. & 9:00 p.m.
ADMISSION SOc
HUB Auditorium
JBiotters
MARTY STRAYER
from Maryland's grasp.
In the - locker room following
that setback, Krouse said that
State wasn't the best team
Maryland had faced (the
Terps were unbeaten, until
then) and called the Lions
"lucky" to win. The Terps
went on to complete a 6-2 year
but the loss to State still stuck
in their throats.
Once more this season Mary
land will face the Lions with
a perfect record and possibly
with enough material to fin
ally pin that elusive defeat on
Albicocco
Russian
Russian
Eisenstain
English
Cornelius
Huston
Seeking
Speidel
In the Terps' two previous
outings this season, they flat
tened North Carolina State,
32-0, and tripped Virginia,
21-10. They also placed third,
behind Navy and Syracuse, in
the Coast Guard Invitational
Tournament last month.
Only one man in the Mary
land lineup that will face State
has tasted defeat this season
—167-pounder Nelson Aurand.
All' the rest will go into the
meet undefeated.
Bob Kopnisky, a junior
from Shaler High School in
Pittsburgh who wrestles at
157, is the Terps' top perform
er. He's 2-0 this year, was 7-1
last year and so far this sea
son was runner-up in' the
Wilkes tournament (for the,
second straight year) and!
champion in the Coast Guard
tourney.
Aurand, Wikander Second
Maryland took two other
high places besies Kopinsk to y's
'first in the Coast Guard ur-
Iney. Aurand and heavyweight
[Gary Wikander were both
[runners-up.
I Wikander and 177-pounder
'Marshall Dauberman will be
[the only seniors in the Terp,
[lineup. The rest of it shows
Tom Schleicher at 123; Gary;
Langer at 130; John Hender
son at 137; Frank lepfer at,
1147; Kopnisky at 157 and Au
rand at 167. Not one of the
Tern starters is a native of.
Maryland; all except Wikand..;
er and Langer are from Penn
sylvania.
The State lineup will, of ne
cessity, show at least two
;changes with Lee Wolfe and
;Joe Eremus the likely candi
dates to replace Tom Balent,
and Dick 'Dewalt.
Strayer Only Unbeaten
I With 80', of the season still
'ahead of them, the Lions have
just one unbeaten wrestler
left, 167-pounder Marty Stray
`er. Strayer shows a 1-0-1 mark
to date with a tie against
,Michigan and win over Le-,
[high.
• • •
French
French
, Navy appears to have taken
;command of a strong Eastern
Intercollegiate Wrestling As-
Isociation race, at least for
now.
Poland
) The Middies beat Hofstra
and Cornell in their first two
!outings and won't be really
nested again until they battle
Syracuse Feb. 1.
The Orangemen, defending
Eastern champs, are 1-1, with
the loss to Lehigh and will
help Pitt open its season Sat
lurday.
Mexico
Mexico
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA
Royal, Edwards Named
Top Collegiate Coaches
NEW YORK (R')—Likable young Darrell Royal of
Texas and the man who almost hired him, Bill Edwards
of Wittenberg, shared the honors yesterday as the 1963
college football Coaches of the Year. •
Royal, whose Texas Longhorns swept through an
all-winning season and were named the national cham
pionship team, gained the maj
or college coaching award
while Edwards won the small
college award for the second
straight year.
The two were selected at the
annual convention of the
American Football Coaches
Association
Their selections highlighted
yesterday's session of the Na
tional Collegiate Athletic As
sociation convention, which
also produced these develop
ments:
•The NCAA amended its
constitution to broaden its pur
pose and scope, an amendment
which Executive Director Wal
ter Byers candidly admitted
was aimed at the Amateur
Athletic Union._
•The general convention re
jected a proposal to drop its
ban against summer basketball
programs, but approved an
amendment which would ex
cept the Superior League of
Puerto Rico from the restric
tion.
&The convention also ap
proved measures calling for re
gional football championships
on the small college level, al
small college national swim- 1
ming championship, and set;
up the m achinery for a nation-,
al collegiate 3- Idoor track and i
field championships.
and SELLI
NEW
USED
TEXTBOOKS
CARVER CLINTON
"You know," the veteran
Edwards recalled after the an
nouncement of the Coach of
the Year awards, "I almost
hired Darrell onc e. Now,
wouldn't that have been some
thing?
"It was when I was at Van
derbilt and he was just getting
out of college at Oklahoma. I
wanted to hire him as my
backfield coach, even talked
with him about it, but I had
a previous committment and
just couldn't get out of it."
Royal also recalled the in
cident and observed, "At that
time I never thought we'd
both be standing up here with
plaques in our hands."
Royal, 39. gained the distinc
tion for leading the Longhorns
to the No. 1 rating in the coun
try, capping it with a victory
over second-ranked Navy in
the Cotton Bowl.
"This thing has been blown
all out of proportion insofar
as to what I have done," Royal
observed.
"I just hope people will re
member those things when we
have a dip—and we're going
to have one—l just-hope they
remember I'm still me. I'm not
going to change."
and
Visitors Have Outstanding Ballplayer
In Ricardo Duarte; Winless on Tour
The Peru Olympic basketball team will appear at Rec Hall tonight in an exhi
bition contest against Penn State and it will have in the lineup one of the better
foreign basketball players in the world today.
He is Ricardo Duarte, one of three brothers that will see plenty of action to
night. Duarte is a 6-7 forward who possesses a deadly outside shot and is big and
strong enough to score inside.
Most observers who have
seen him play say that he
could start for any U.S. col
legiate team and be a big star.
He is averaging over 31 points
a game against all competition
and scored 27 against Pitt
Tuesday night in a losing
cause.
During a tour of the United
States in 1961, Duarte aver
aged close to 30 points a game.
3 Duartes to Start
He will have two other
brothers in the lineup to lend
him support.
His older brother Enrique
(6-3) will play the other for-
Game time tonight at Rec
Hall is 7:30 p.m. An admis
sion charge of 50 cents
applies to all, including stu
dents. Receipts will be split
between the U.S. and Peru
vian Olympic funds.
ward while a younger brother
Raul (6-8) will jump center.
Rounding out the starting
lineup for the Peruvians will
be Oscar Sevilla, a 6-2 guard
and Antonio Sangio.
This will be the third game
the Peru squad will play dur
ing a 12-game tour of the Unit
ed States. The - team lost to
Oglethorpe, 89-66 Monday eve
ning and fell before Pitt, 91-69.
In the game against the
Panthers, the Peruvians held a
54-48 lead with a little over
11 minutes remaining. How
ever Pitt went into a full court ,
press and proceeded to score
26 straight points to put the;
game on ice.
McGregor Coach
Coaching the Peru team is
Jim McGregor, a veteran when
it comes to handling foreign
teams. Before taking over the
reigns in Peru, McGregor, a
former college coach at Whit
worth College, coached the na
tional teams of Italy, Greece,
Turkey, Austria and Sweden.
In two years he has brought
the Peru team from fifth to
second in South America and
has coached the team to an
Olympic berth next October in
Japan. Only Brazil continues to
hold the upper hand over the
Peruvians.
Others on the squad are Juan
Cardenas, Thomas Sangio, Paco
Guzman, Francisco Saldarriaga,
Oscar Benalcazar, Manuel Vigo,
Jorge Vargas, Manuel Valerio
By JAMES BUKATA, Sports Editor
and Simon Paredes
Meanwhile, Lion coach John
Egli said he will use the game
to prepare the team for its
important encounter with Pitt
Saturday night and to give
some of the reserves experi
ence.
"We're not going out there
to lose the game," Egli said.
"The boys need the work too
because we haven't played
since Dec. 30."
The Lions will start Ron
Avillion and Ray Saunders at
the forwards, Carver Clinton
at center and Bobby Donato
and Bob Weiss at the guards.
In addition Egli said that
Tom Malinchak, Terry Hoover,
Jim Reed, Jerry Roseboro,
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PAGE FIVE
Chuck Marin and Don Stepa
nausky will see plenty of ac
tion.
"I think we're going to have
a real tough game on our
hands," Egli said. "They are
big and rough and remember
some of these ballplayers have
played together for a number
of years."
The game will mark the
only chance Lions fans will
have to see the squad until
late January when it hosts Le
high.
FOR BEST RESULTS
USE COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS
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