FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1965 . • a V r K eystone *op 0 0 • r Future By-JOHN LOTT Collegian, Sports Editor Picture, if you-will, the following scene: It's a Saturday night late in Ma . :eh and Penn State's basketball team trots cnto . the Rec Hall floor for its biggest game of the sea son. Spectators virtually nang from the rafters to catch a glimpse of the upcoming action. The reason for the big attraction: the Lions are battling St. Joseph's of Philadelphia for the championship of the Keystone Basketball Conference. Sound far-fetched? Maybe so, but the idea of a Pennsylvania intercollegiate ba , :'::tball conference boasts a number of appealing characteristics, especially for an indepencient university such as Penn State. - - . Currently there are two• basic complaints concerning Penn State's basketball schedule: (1) the Lions play an overabundance of games away from home; and (2) the quality of teams they face ranges from the perennially-power ful Duke, North Carolina State and West Vir ginia outfits to relative pushovers such as Carnegie Tech, Gettysburg and Bucknell. • About• Face Sometimes Admittedly, there have been years when the latter group has stepped out of its soft touch role (Gettysburg had an outstanding crew three years ago when a pair of hotshots named Ron Warner and Bob Parker were in the lineup). And other seasons have seen the usually-tough teams falter somewhat (West Virginia is only 8-7 this year so far). The "Keystone Conference" might well in clude Philadelphia's "Big Five" (Temple, Villa nova, LaSalle, St. Joseph's and Penn), plus Penn State, Pitt and Duquesne. There would, of course, still be a number of non-conference contests on the schedule, but the intra-state games would be the main attractions. Already in MAC This setup' would obviously be of more benefit to the Pitts and Penn States than to the Big Five teams. St. Joseph's, LaSalle and Temple are members of the Middle Atlantic Conference's University division and that, Cuthane Goes All-Around Lineup 'Problems' Facing Gymnasts for Pitt Contest ' Although this should not be construed as overcOn part, Penn State's gymnast three problems in prepari Weber Tops In Bowling Tourney PHILADELPHIA (IP) Dick Weber, two-time former. champion from St. Louis, won: five of his first six games in the second day of finals at; the $lOO,OOO All-Star Bowlingi Tournament yesterday to take command of the American . Division. Weber got off to a brilliant start, sweeping his seventh round duel with former titlist; Bill Welu of St. Louis with a! big 228-255-183 series. He shot 247-238-485 in th e eighth round to win two more games from Bill Hoppe of Lincoln, Neb., who had 216- 232-448. Weber split his ninth round match with his old teammate and doubles partner, Ray Bluth of St. Louis, with a 424 series. Weber's 12-6 won-lost rec ord and his total pinfall of 3,999 gave him a gross total of 4,599. Under the bonus sys tem a bowler receives 50 pins extra for every game he wins. Tommy Tuttle of King, N.C., runner-up in the 1964 All- Star, was in second place with a 4,404 total. Jerry McClary of Denver, who led the di vision Wednesday nigh t, dropped to third place with 4,395. Ted Hoffman Jr., of Plym outh Meeting, Pa., dominated the National Division at mid day' with an 11-7 record and a total pinfall of 3,864. His gross total is 4,414. Hoffman made his big move in the eighth round when he pounded out a 247-256-503 series to take two straight from Carmen Salvino of Chi cago. Don Daugherty of Clear water, Fla., the leader Wednes day night, dropped to second place with a 4,364 total. Daugherty's worst slip came in the eighth round when Harry Smith of Boston beat him twice with a 211-216-427 series. ' Jean Winsch, the blonde' mother of two from South. Bend, Ind., who won the quali fying trophy, led the women's American Division after the seventh round with a 9-5 rec ord and a 2,765 pinfall. Mrs. Winsch split her sixth round skirmish with Jean Havlish of St. Paul, Minn., but knocked Mary Louise Young out of first place when she beat the Houston blonde two straight with a 201-215-116 series. FOR BEST RESULTS USE _COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS PHI KAPPA PI PI KAPPA ALPHA A PHI PSI PiKA JAMMY I 1 Time: 8:30: 1:00 Place: Phi Kappa Psi Music: The Pika "Screamers" Attire: Sweatshirts and Jeans All Freshmen Rushees Welcome coupled with the traditional intra-city games, has them in an excellent scheduling situation. They don't have to go far to meet good teams. State, on the other hand, offers a slim list of "big" games on the home slate. This year, for example, the Lions play nine home games. Pitt, Syracuse and West Virginia are the only major attractions on that list. An intra-state league would, in all prob ability, have the fans flocking to Rec Hall. A jump or drop in the conference standings could hinge on every game. Each contest would result in more tangible effects besides a win or a loss on the record books. State coach John Egli said he believes such a setup would prove beneficial to all in- STAN RATNER 'Cs coach Gene Wettstone ye g for tomorrow's meet with and none of them had anything! to do with Pitt itself. First of all, Wettstone wants' to give as many of his younger, inexperienced gym na st s as; !muchm dual meet competition asl possible. But he also has to; make sure that his regulars, whom he will be relying on t heavily later in the season and' in the Nationals, don't becomei stale. But then again, he does have to rest some of his start . ers who have been seeing a great deal of action lately, inj particular Ed Isabelle. Despite all these "problems," the Lions are 4-0 and leading the EIGL. The nearest contend er is Syracuse, currently 2-0. No other EIGL teams are still unbeaten. Culhane in All-Around One thing is certain: .Jim Cul hane, who worked the all around against Navy Wednes day, will again be the all around performer. This marks the first time this year one: Lion has performed the all around twice, let alone in two successive meets. Culhane, who had seen rela tively little action until meet ing the Middies, turned in good performances on three events and mediocre performances on I the other three. Wettstone. was pleased with !his high bar, parallel bar and I long horse routines, but thinks, the Rochester, N.Y., senior' could improve in the floor; exercise, still rings and side! horse. Wettsttone will also start the same three men in the trampo line: Tony Watson, co-captain Pete Saponaro and Gene Sco field. Particular emphasis will be placed on the performances of the former two, who will be attempting new and more dif-,' ficult routines against the' Panthers. Difficult Tramp Routines Watson's opening sequence' will be his most difficult part, ) where he will be attempting three back twists' and a somer sault. Saponaro will be doing a 2 1 / 2 back somersault to a double Cody. In layman's par lance that means he will be fol- 1 lowing the somersaults with a landing on his stomach to an other two back somersaults. In the free exercise, Sapon aro and Steve Cohen, one oU the four Lion regulars who missed the Navy meet, will join Culhane to form the starting threesome. Dennis Paoletti will join Cohen and Culhane in the side horse. n the rings, John Martin, Bill Jenkins and Culhane will be starting. As for the other events, Wettstone has, as yet, not decided. • -AUTO PARTS _e ACCESSORIES Western Auto 112 S. FRAZIER ST. ERNEST B. McCOY . . . lots of problems idence or bragging on his sterday said he was having the University of Pittsburgh, Princeton's Bradley Out For Exams NEW YORK (~ P I Bill Bradley the scorer yields to Bill Bradley the scholar this week and it may cost him a chance to move up in the ma jor college basketball scoring ranks. The talented Olympian playing his last season for; Princeton before going to Ox-1 ford on a Rhodes scholarship,, poured in 81 points against; Columbia and Cornell last week. Bradley advanced to third place in the individual rankings released yesterday by the NCAA Service Bureau but he lost ground to Rick Barry of Miami of Florida in the race for the top. Barry, the season-long lead er, has 526 points in 14 games and an average of 37.6 a game. Wayne Estes of Utah State held second with a 32.7 aver 'age and Bradley took third with 31.7. The records include games of Jan. 16. Bradley, busy with midyear examinations, won't play again until Jan. 30 against Pennsyl vania. Meanwhile, Barry has I two chances to improve his, record. Brigham Young became the first team this season to hold the scoring lead two weeks I straight, but only by the bare margin of 95.4 points per game! to Duke's 94.3. New Mexico continued to hold the team de-! fense lead, allowing only 48.6 1 points a game. NEW COLLEGE•DLNER DoWntoWq Between the Mov!es • s:'ALWAYS • Come Alive in 65 Go Eußop- ct :. At 2:30 to 4:00 in the HUB Main Lounge, Sunday, Jan. 24, all well•traveled, interested—or just plain curious students are invited to attend a tea in honor of the students who were in the study abroad program last spring. Why is Europe so intriguing? Find out from the people who have been there . . . refreshments served sponsored by HUB Hospitality Committee THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA volved "We used to play Penn and Temple and some of those others," he said, sincerely hope that some day Penn State is a member of a good conference. In a Keystone Con ference, I know that in basketball and even wrestling you wouldn't look forward to play ing anyone else. "Most of those good teams put more em phasis on conference games than when they play 'outsiders,'" Egli cc i,inuad. "Why, in these leagues, you even have teams battling it out for fifth place." Fan interest would be a major factor. Cur rently, about the only thing inc..epenthmis like Penn State and Syracuse can work toward is a post-season tournament berth. This often means that end-of-the-season games carry more gravity than mid-campaign contests. This is often true in a league, too, but when a team is gunning for that top spot, the pressure is on from start to finish. At-Large Bids An advantage not to be overlooked from the independent's point of view is this: the NCAA awards five post-season "at-large" bids to this district. In a conference, only the win ner would get a tournament berth. "I'd like to see something like this (con ference system), and eventually I think it will come about," Ernest B. McCoy, Dean of the College of Health and Physical Education was saying yesterday. But there are several problems to over come first. If intra-state league rivalry should draw the expected attendance, where would all the extra spectators sit `in Rec Hall? Even in its remodeled state, State's arena is already too small. Because students don't have to pay admis sion to sports events, and because students compose the majority of the audience, all Penn State winter sports operate "in the red." Foot ball receipts support the rest of the athletic program. And when big name schools bring teams to your gym, you have to make it worth their while financially. That's why State can't Tomorrow's Sports Sked Gymnastics vs Pitt Basketball vs Pitt Fencing vs Cornell Wrestling vs VPI Egli Cautions Cagers Against Pitt Letdown Penn St at e basketball coach John Egli is hoping his Nittany Lions can pre vent lightning from striking for the fourth time tomor row night. The Lions battle the Pitt Panthers tomorrow atii p.m., and the word from Pitt coach Bob Timmons is that his outfit doesn't stand much of a chance. Timmons said he believed his team can't stay with State in the run ning and shooting depart ments, so he plans to have the Panthers hold the ball. Egli was saying last night that regardless of Tirnmon's pessimistic attitude. he's worried about tomorrow's game. One reason is this: three of the last four of State's losses have come after dramatic upset vic tories. It started last season when 2:30 p.m. 8:00 p.m. (A) (A) the Lions dropped West Vir ginia, 86-76, in Rec Hall, only to fall victim to Army, 46-37, in their next outing. That was State's final loss en route to a 16-7 season. During State's elongated road trip in December of this season, the Temple game was the big one the Lions were pointing for. So what happened? They ripped the Owls, 73-63, at the Pa lestra, only to lose to a tough NYU outfit the next night. Then, after winning the_ Detroite Motor City Classic, the Nittanies traveled to Duke and absorbed the soundest whipping of the season to the tune of 121-88. So Egli is cautioning his outfit against a letdown against Pitt, mainly because the players are coming off another "big" victory. That (Continued on page six) •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1111111 JOHN EGLI . . . likes idea afford to bring Dukes and Kansas States into Rec Hall. Dollars, as McCoy was saying yes terday, are mighty hard to come by. As long as students don't pay admission, and as long as State doesn't have a large field house which would allow increased attendance from the general public, the situation here will remain static. McCoy is adament about maintaining that first policy. He said he won't make students pay their way to see their own team play, as is the case in some Big Ten universities. Students First "We only put 200 tickets on sale to the public for home basketball," he said. "After they're gone, we close up shop. The students come first." Ragan Tied for Est In Crosby Classic PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) 71, Ragan was six under regula - Dave Ragan deftly swung an tion figures. elderly, 'pawnshop putter yes- That left them one stroke terday to deadlock with veteran ahead of Texan Don January, Doug Ford for the first round who toured Cypress in a five lead in the $84,500 Bing Crosby under 67. Skee Ri of Jamison, Golf Tournament as each fired a Pa., fashioned a 68 at Monterey. sub-par 66. Among the late finishers were Playing the rugged Cypress Jack Nicklaus, who celebrated Point course, Ragan carded his 25th birthday with a 72 and seven birdies with putts ranging Arnold Palmer, who shot a 73. up to 35 feet. The 29-year-old I Like most of the big name golf from Orlando, Fla., used al ers, both played Cypress Point wooden shaft club he was given where galleries of 10,000 last week by a friend whokvatched. U.S. Open champion bought it in a pawnshop a quar-I Ken Venturi soared to an 81 ter century ago. there. Since he hasn't won a tourney since 1962 nor any money this year, Ragan figured the old put ter might change his fortunes. Ford scored four straight birdies, from the second through fifth holes of the Mon terey Peninsula Country Club's shore course, and added his fi nal birdie on the 14th with a 12- foot ee. Pebble Beach, the third course played, proved tougher than the others yesterday. Each of the three courses is played once by each golfer dur ing the first three days of com petition with finals Sunday at Pebble Beach. Since Cypress plays to a par 72 and Monterey Peninsula to a 11:03:11031:111:111113113 So she spent $2.50 last term at the WEST HALLS RECORD HOP So what! Give her another quarter and send her out again Fri. night Waring Lounge 8 • 12:30 25c donation But there' is a possible remedy to• the second problem, that of a bigger arena. A giant .field house' is on the campus blueprints already. It's slated to be built near the Ice Pavilion-Nittany dorm area. Completion date . for the proposed 12,000-seat building is 1970. But once again, accumulating the neces sary dollars is the big problem. One way to lighten, the University's big baskZ;ball dollars ,deficit is to play on the road, where the visiting school is guaranteed a cer tain lump sum before it leaves campus. This is one reason the Lions played nine of their first 10 games away from home this season. There is another valid reason, one on which both McCoy and Egli agree. "Personally, I think we're very fdrtunate," Egli said. "We have a term• break about the time the season opens. Why play ball games at home when the students aren't here? We used to play some games here in December and they wouldn't even bother to put the bleachers on the floor. It was like playing in a funeral. parlor. Why not play on the road where you can make some money?" McCoy added that every little bit' picked up in away basketball guarantees helps lessen the share football must contribute to this de ficit. And football pays for nearly everything already. McCoy cited an example of the bowling alleys in the basement of the original Rec Hall building. These lanes, he said, were built with $lOO,OOO •in television money from a bowl game. The same receipts payed for the four lanes in White Hall. Tennis courts, such as the ones built in the East Halls area last year, also are financed with athletic department, i.e., football, funds. The day may come when Penn State bas ketball team is a full-fledged conference mem ber, intra-state or otherwise. But it won't hap pen until a larger arena is a reality instead of a blueprint. And when it does, there's one thing you can bet on. Students won't have to pay their way in to the games. HERLOCHER'S RESTAURANT SHRIMP ITALIAN TONIGHT Your Favorite Beverage Everything Helps For Good Results • Use Collegian Classifieds PAGE FIVE