The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, March 09, 1965, Image 7

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    TUESDAY, MARCH 9,
.1965
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12- ~ t ~,- -t— , r‘zo c •-ok '), '1"41 .-' By ED CARPENTER . high bar
-.' "*4‘ ,• -os= ='"` ''''• ',. ~, t.,49 0 -', . A , -. "We'll get the Lion's •
share." .. The pert
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gyTmhtiaats'stsexclillyarhr.atstPewnneeSkteantde:ss two ai 1
t,„. 4 ' 141 ,„-: : i..i 41 ,'' . ,ll"ii., . 'P' . ;' , . 44 '. - 4- t • , ,t k : IIAI -7. -e . * : -. 7' .,-;•,: 4, . To - -4 ) -4 ,) ',. < , '= Eastern Intercollegiate Gymnas
of
,'A 3 * l "-„A-'1 '4" ' ' '• T t; ' ) 1 . ' 3. ...4.,; :, .! . . ' 4. p i `',io
4 , 44
tics League championships as they
_ lades
oie
meet, and
• ".,'",'.' - '-:4 , 4• -' '''-' ' "''''' ' }' , l `, ''- $., 1 ;:, , * ` , s - , ,..,t, walked off with three individual
: • -
, t , , ,‘ '''' • , I..a''' 1 ,*4 ".7 i , 444 '', : .er ! at Sanibel
s er's• - .• ...*l-` io• 4, 1 ,•••t„.--,,,, a... i trophies and 15-medals while prov
„fa ..- •
f ' 4
;.'
''
"... ' 1, .. ' .....,... '•. ' . '..
.. "' Z - ing they were the men to beat in "One of
endurance
.1 +4' / k ti +•`yi I ~
~ ,
~,
many events.
ct , /* ~, t. ' If ' „i••”" 4 ' An ways
"He The top Nittany performer in
' 1 4 % 4t,',4' .4., ~.,% ~ • 1 ,-,-'' , .4,
said. He
) 7*, -, - y - ~ t *,.: , i:4,
~3 -,. , , •
routine th,
i n o a n m
s e o n p t
' •`' ', -- A " 4/ --,... 4%
f • the fig
I,• , . -I'''" t S h t e eve t C w o o h d en aY ; Th t e ou L r homore
' 1 1%4 ,
' showed why he is considered w by as
many as potentially one of the
I t at V , :. ‘k A
, ' 1 41 6 4 1 „
\
'..i ',
CA ...
...4 best gymnasts to compete for
. i' 4 t• ' 44 '''' 4: . 1 :4 ''
' '
it Gene Wettstone.
• The Philadelphia-bred star cap- h°el,,Cstoihllenret
material,"
self was 1
and 1960
4, ',"' :,‘; " '-‘ ' ~„,. 43, , w •
~,, •,-iitt:'- 1 ' , ,"' •, ',0,,,, tured the first-place trophy in the
.., ~ ~, •• - 4 -4 ) 'IV - ;I":4'''' ll. \''''•' should lea,
' 4 ., ,•t '• Meat 4 4.4.,,,ei i ~. ~...,.., ~, 4 all-around competition and be
came the first State sophomore to because tl
• .4,,,L.. • 4 , ' • „ It t" . - '" , ,n 'i, . ' ~.
pull the trick since Greg Weiss now work:
' i * - ~,,Ve i* = ""'4• , % f ~, ,• beauty of
t , • \-fi k . Pfit vt',4==;'N.;i ',, -,,, 1. „ '-' ~...; ,:. 4; = did it in 1961.
1' '' 'N - i.-.., -•
,C.,,,‘,„!"-:',,,i.:' '•
: 4'(, ' ',',‘ ,•• kni`i N ~' ~,, `,l, • - Cohen came away with a first Connectici
~,,• ~ .... dit,, - ••• ,<^ % v - = , .4,,,,,t, ;. • ~..., •
=,='•• ", '.' , „,„ .;• 44 „1,„• , ,,,, ~4.,,,444..v.,.., A ,
' ~• . :... . 5.... •v % ; ~ M. , • ~, (9.55 in the free ex), two seconds remedied
. ,
1965 EIGL TEAM CHAMPS: Penn State's
gymnastics team poses with the team
trophy which was presented at last week
end's EIGL tournament at Temple 'Uni
yersity. They are, left to right, first row,
Scotty Whitelaw, assistant commissioner
Of the Eastern Collegiate Athletic. Con
ference, co-captains Mike Jacobson and
Bradley's Late
Proves Key to
(Continued from page six)
the key "tripping" play involving
Weiss and Rodenbach.
Reed, who hit on 7 of 15 floor
attempts, wound up as State's
high man with 16 points. Weiss,
Clinton, and Avillion had 13, 12
and 11, respectively. One key
factor, according to Egli, was
the performance of Princeton's
Hummer. Six-foot-Nine Robinson
Brown started the game at cen
ter, but Hummer went in with
Mac Call States Plans
For Davis Cup Team
NEW YORK (AP) The new U.S. Davis Cup captain,
George Mac Call, said yesterday he planned to assemble a four
man squad in mid-May to begin all-out campaign for the inter
national tennis trophy.
"This is not an experimental year. As far as we're concerned,
we're out to win," added the 96-year-old Los Angeles insurance
executive who recently was named to succeed Vic Seixas. "We
plan to spare nothing in our bid to get back the Davis .Cup."
Mac Call, a handsome, personable former Air Force navi
gator, listed as the preliminary Davis Cup squad: Dennis Ral
ston of Bakersfield, Calif., America's No. 1 player; 6-foot-6 Frank
Froehling of Coral Gables, Fla.; Ron Holmberg, 27-year-old
comeback from Dallas, and the Dallas schoolboy, Cliff Richey, 18.
"This doesn't mean these boys are being favored or are
the nucleus of our plans," Mac Call added hastily. "It's just
that they are available to start a European swing with the
French championships in May.
"I'll work with them right through Wimbledon."
Other players figuring in MacCall's, plans are Chuck McKin
ley, former Wimbledon champion who recently has taken a fi
nancial job in New York; Ham Richardson of Dallas, a Cup
veteran; and Arthur Ashe, Clark Grabner, Marty Riessen, Gene
Sdott and Charlie Pasarell, all of whom are in school.
Mac Call made an appearance at a special luncheon meeting
called by Martin Tressel, the new president of the USLTA.
Playing in the American Zone, the United States must first
play Canada, somewhere on the Pacific Coast probably, then
meet Mexico in Mexico City before qualifying for the Inter-
Zone final in Europe and the Challenge Round in Australia. The
Challenge Round is scheduled after Christmas in Sydney,
Australia.
O'Dell Claims Lack of Hustle
Hurt Giants in Quest for Flag
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(AP) Southpaw Billy O'Dell,
a key figure on San Francisco's
1962 championship club, said
yesterday the Giants had the
best team in the National
League last year but didn't win
the pennant because the players
did not put out for manager
Alvin Dark.
O'Dell was quick to point out
that he did not mean all the
players.
"There were guys who broke
their backs- for Dark," he said,
"but there were other guys who
did not hustle. They gave him
only 60 per cent effort. It was
pitiful. I think Dark might still
be the manager if • the players
had given him 100 Per cent."
Neither Dark nor O'Dell is
with the Giants any longer.
Dark was fired on the last day
of the season and later signed
on as a Chicago Cub coach. Her-
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'
116 W. COLLEGE AVE. 2384528 ,
%
—Collegian Photo by Ed Carpenter
Pete Saponaro and coach Gene Wettstone.
Second row, Ed Isabelle, Tony Watson
(behind Jacobson), John Martin and Pete
McCormick. Third row, Gary Williams,
Dennis Paoletti and Doug Collins. Fourth
row, Bill Jenkins, Jim Culhane, Steve
Cohen, Gene Scofield.
7:25 left in the first half and
played the rest of the game. He
lead Princeton's rebounders with
13 and scored nine points.
"I'd say the rebounding of
Hummer hurt us more than the
all-around play of Bradley,"
Egli said. "I also think Bradley
will be the first to tell you the
rest of the Princeton club is
underrated because of Bradley.'
Van Breda, Kolff said he was
man Franks, (a coach under
Dark, was named Giant manag
er. O'Dell was traded to the Mil
waukee Braves for catcher Ed
Bailey four months later. The
veteran pitcher, plagued by a
sore arm during the first half of
the season, finished with an 8-7
record.
"The Giants may have a new
manager," said O'Dell, "but the
players are the same. I hope,
for Herman's sake ,they change
their attitude. But I wonder.
"I could name names, but
that would serve rio 'purpose.
Besides, the guys know who
they are.
"It's really a shame the way
they treated Dark. I thought he
was a fine manager. He pura
lot ,of effort into managing. He
never did anything without
giving it a lot of thought. I al
ways respected him. But he
didn't have a chance."
Splurge
Victory
glad State, like his Tiger s,
played a sub-par game.
"I think both teams playedi
poorly," he said. "It was an even,
game. And if they both had
played well, it still would have
been an even game."
Egli agreed that State didn'L
put on one of its-better shows.
"I think we made all the nec
essary moves," he said.. "We'
just couldn't execute them
right."
Princeton jumped off to a 2-0
lead at the tap when Haarlow
scored on a layup. But Weiss
countered with a jump shot and
Reed scored State's only foul
shot of the half to make it 4-2.
The Lions got their biggest lead
of the half when goals by Reed
and Ray Saunders offset another
Haarlow layup to make it 8-4.
It was seesaw after that. Both
teams made repeated ball
handling mistakes and neither
could get an appreciable lead
until the Tigers reeled off five
straight points to grab a 22-181
margin with 6:23 left in the half.
But the Lions rebounded, and
Weiss' jumper with :13 left put
them within threat at intermis
sion, 31.28.
NITTANY NOTES: Bradley,
beseiged by reporters after the
game, said he was impressed
with State's defense "They had
a good zone and moved real
well," he said . . . Princeton out
rebounded State, 48-45 . . . Clin
ton, usually a secon d-half
phenom, couldn't find the range
against the Tigers. He was 5 for
21 from the floor . . . A behind
the-back pass by Avillion on a
fast brake was intercepted by
Rodenbach and cost the Lions a
l basket late in the game . . Van
Brenda Kolff said he told his
players to look for State's
behind-the-back antics. "Weiss
and Clinton will do it, too," he
said . . . The State entourage is
scheduled to be on campus
sometime between 1 and 1:30
p.m. today.
,„. ~
~
-. Box Score 3,
..
PRINCETON (60)
FG FT RB A'sts PF Pts
Bradley —7-22 8. 9 9 6 2 12
Haarlow ..5-13 1- 2 9' 1 2 11
Brown __lt- 4 0. 0 5 1 1 0
Rodenbach 5-11 2- 3 5 1 3 12
Walters ...3- 7 0- 0 2 3 2 6
Hummer 4- 5 1- 3 13' 1 1 9
Team Rbds 5
Totals .. 24.62 12-17 48 13 11 60
==l
FG FT RB A'sts PF Pts
Avillion ..5-11 1- 2 8 0 4 11
Sanuders .3- 5 0- 0 6 0 2 6
Clinton ...5-21 2- 5 16 2 4 12
Weiss ....5-16 3- 4 5 8 2 13
Reed .... 7-15 2- 3 6 0 2 16
Mickey . . 1 0. 0 3 0 1 0
Team Rbds 1
Totals .. 25.69 8-14 45 10 15 58
Halftime: Princeton 31, Penn State 28
Officials: Lon Elsenstein and Steve Honzo
For Good Results
Use
Collegian Classifieds
. .
The UniverSity Bookstore, tnc.
THE .DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA
(9.425 in the parallel bars and a
9.40 tie in the still rings with
Springfield's Ron Peek), a third
(9.425 high bar score) and a 9.10
fifth (side horse).
Co-captain Mike Jacobson was
runnerup as far as total medals
won was concerned, taking a sec
ond in the all-around competition
in addition to his second in the
free ex (9.525) and first in both
'.. .:'• ,:::.;'H , :::','. '. ''' v''''''..l.7,;>::.:Y.iCT,'.;
Swordsmen Win 3rd
By Routing Rutgers
The Penn State fencing team ended the 1965 season on a
glorious note, Saturday, by trouncing the Crimson Key of
Rutgers, 19-8. The victory enabled the Lions to finish the reg
ular season with a respectable 3-3 record.
The match started as most of State's matches have this
year—with the sabre team winning its first round by taking
two out of the three bouts. The meet continued to look like a
typical Lion dual meet with the foil and epee teams both losing
two of three as the Nittany swordsmen trailed at the end of
the first round, 5-4.
Then, all of a sudden, State could do no wrong. They com
pletely dominated the action in the second round. Rutgers
could do nothing against the relentless Lion attack as State
won eight of nine bouts to pull out to a commanding 12-6 lead
lat the end of the second round.
State clinched its third victory when senior sabreman
Chuck 'Dooley won his third bout of the match early in the
third round to give the Lions their 14th win.
With victory assured, the Nittany swordsmen continued
to make shambles of the Rutgers team, which enterd the match
as a slight favorite. State won seven of , the final nine bouts as
they came away with a lopsided 19-8 verdict.
Commenting on State's fencing team, judge John F. Austin
said, "The two teams are just about even in ability, but the
Penn State team performed harder, and the extra effort can
be seen in the score."
Coach Dick Klima called the victory a "team effort." "We
didn't start off ..too well," Klima explained, "because we were
over cautious. In the second round we became more aggressive
and pulled away from them."
It was indeed a team effort for the Lions. Everyone on the
team performed well as can be seen by the final statistics.
Every fencer won at least one bout. Chuck Dooley, Bo Franko,
and Ron Bell were outstanding, each winning three bouts.
Unlike the two previous matches when only the sabre
team could win, all three weapon teams performed very well.
Sabre won seven out of nine bouts while foil and epee each
won six.
Speaking about the importance of the Lion victory, Klima
said, "It gives the guys confidence that they will do well in
the Easterns. Our fellows know that they have a fighting
chance of doing well."
The fencing team leaves Thursday for the Eastern Inter
collegiate Fencing championships which will be held Friday
and Saturday in New York City.
During the regular season, Chuck Dooley paced thr , team
by winning 15 bouts while losing only three. Bo Franko 1 the
foil team with 11 wins while team captain, Fred Davis iced
the epeeist by garnering ten victories.
- BICYCLE
PARTS
REPAIRS • ACCESSORIES
Western Auto
112 S. FRAZIER ST.
Herlocher's
Restaurant
LASAGNA,
Tonight
206 E. Colige Ave.
Cohen's strengths is his
plus the fact he's al
inging in there," Stout
broke on his side horse
tis afternoon (Saturday)
first time this year, yet
- gained his composure."
is definitely Olympic
said Grossfeld, who him
a member of the 1956
U.S. Olympic team. "He
ern more control, though,
he speed in which he
:s takes away from the
his routine."
:cording to the Southern
.tut' coach, should be
with experience, which
prompted his comment on Jacob
son.
"Mike really has class," Gross
feld said, "and his experience
gives him this quality."
All was not Mike Jacobson and
Sieve Cohen, however, as four oth
er Lion gymnasts won at least one
medal.
Junior Ed Isabel
third in the Lions'
By JIM ROSSI
'The Thrill Of It All'
Starring DORIS DAY and JAMES GARNER
March 13th and 14th
in HUB Assembly Hall
Saturday 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Sunday 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Donation 25c at HUB desk
CHICKEN?
Afraid to wait until next term.to
find out if anyone bought your
books? Take the easy way out;
let Keeier's give you CASH, not
chickenfeed, for your books. We
are buyiri g - books next week,
March 15-20:
optitiore - I_s H.Mcidtithh.
(9:525) and parallel bars
formances of State's hip
rounders drew the aceo
both Robert Stout, one
judges assigned to the
Able Grossfeld, coach
rn Connecticut.
e, who finished
1-2-3 sweep in
Gymnastics Tickets To Go on Sale—lf .
Should Penn State's gymnastics team Rec Hall, Saturday night, March 27.
win this Saturday's NCAA quarterfinal • Seven thousand general admission
meet at Charlottsville, Va. against the tickets would go on sale at $1 each at
Southern League winner, the semi-final
8 a.m., Monday, March 15, at the Rec Hall
round between the Lions and either Michi
gan Nor Southern Illinois will be held in ticket office.
ARE YOU A
the a.ll 7 arounds, contributed a sec
ond.:prace finish in , the • high bar
with "'a 9.450 ayer,"age and a fifth
place medal -in the free ex (9.325).
Senior Jiin Culhane, who had
one of his best Saturday after
noons .of the season, wound up.
the two-day competition with
thirds in both the long horse 'vault
(he was tied in this event by
Massachusetts' Alan Cohen with a
9.525) and parallel bars (9.375)
and a fourth in the high bar with
a 9.275 score.
Side-horseman Dennis- Paoletti
had a third-place finish in his
specialty (9.125), while co-captain
Pete Saponaro was runnerup in
the long horbe vault..
Saponaro and Syracuse's Sid
Oglesby were involved in one of
the big rivalries of the tournament.
They both Shared,the Eastern long
horse championship, and both
would have liked nothing better
than to take the measure of his
arch opponent,
By the end of the preliminary
competition, the Syracuse perform
er was in second place, while
Saponaro ' was lodged in fifth, .35
behind Springfield's Rick Black,
who was leading with a 9.75.
The final results were different
as the Nittany senior finished sec
ond behind Black while Oglesby
,
wommins"llll6
found hithself in the position:4-
catqd.':hy -
,OapOnaro: - The "thing' that
,made' tiol difference Was a, ,pike
handspring from the near end that
the judges thought Saponaro exe
cuted to near-perfection.: The re
sult-9.9,.9.9, 9.8 and 9.7 for a 9.85
and a two-day average of 9.625
for second place,
"It's a shame Pete had to finish
second after a vault like that,"
said- Temple star Jim petrincY. aft
er the final- scores were tabulated.
The Lion G-men finished with
the largest number of medals as
, most-people expected, but they
didn't dominate the action the way
some had thought they might.
"State looked good todayrjudge
Louis Bordo said after the meet,
"but remember there were, other
teams out there."
In particular, there was Spring
field.
Coach . Frank Walcott's contin-
gent, which finished second only
to the Lions in League comrie
, tition (6-1), left the tournament
with 12 medals, the second highest
team total,
Heading the list of medal win
ners was Bob Cargill, who took
second in the trampoline (9.025),
fourth in. the parallel bars (9.225)
and sixth in the high bar (9.150).
To Campus Cleaners for all
your cleaning needs. From
the most fragile to the tough
est garment you own . you
can rely on the Sparkling
Cleaners.
campus cleaners:
110 fast Beaver Ave.
We're trying to kin two birds in one ad
today . . . (1) We're having that delicious
rib steak again this evening. Stop down
and give it a try. You get the steak,
french fries, lettuce and tomato, and a
tossed salad . . . all for $1.50. Tomorrow
you can wrap yourself around a sump
tous Chinese meal at "The Lodge". Treat
yourself to the best Chinese food in town.
Try Won Ton soup, Sweet 'n Sour Spare
ribs, Fried Rice, Chop Suey, Chow Mein
. . and a wonderful host of other foods.
113 Heister Street ® State College
PAGE SEVEN