FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1942 Golfers Shooting For Fifth Win .. Top team in the EIGA, the Nit tany golfers will meet George town at Princeton this afternoon in one of their toughest matches of the season. The Lion golfers are undefeated this season, hav ing four straight wins to their credit.' - Coach Rutherford has with him on this trip to the,, stronghold of seme of the best 1 golf teams in the country the sarhe six-man outfit that has beeii clicking so handily this year, plus Ed Fairchild and Joe Brucher. Neither of these men have played in a match this sea son. “Georgetown is one of our toughest opponents,” Rutherford said. He added that some of the Hoyas men have been shooting 69’s and 82’s in their matches. If Benn State wins its matches this weekend, there will be nothing in the way of an undefeated season.. Captain Chuck Seebold, v Bob Wallace, Dick Stephens, Jim Kra mer, Bill Swan, and Dent Holden will start in the matches this af ternoon. •Tomorrow morning the Lion linksmen meet Princeton, and in the ..afternoon they take on the Penn team. ’ These ■ are the last scheduled matches of the season, with the only other meets to be played those of the play-offs for the EIGA championships in Connecti cut. JofinnyGfenn Elected Track Captain; Karver feed Honorary Head Johnny Glenn, rangy high jumper, was pamed captain of next year’s track team in elec tions held- at the track banquet in the State College Hotel last night. Jerry Karver was named honorary freshman captain, an honor con ferred at the end of each fresh man season. Glenn will replace this year’s captain, Joe Bakura, star pole vaulter and javelin heaver, holder of the. College record in the pole vault at 13 feet 5 inches. Karver, who broke the College two-mile record in the meet with Tdmple Wednesday with a time of 9:46.1, was elected honorary cap tain of the frosh cross-country team last Fall. He is one of the few men, if not the only Penn State'man, to have been thus hon ored; with two captaincies in one year. BASEBALL SCORES National League Pittsburgh 2, New York 1 (Ist) New York 6, Pittsburgh 2 '2nco Other games postponed, rain American League All games postponed, rain plllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllll'llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll^ == 104 W. Beaver Ave For Your Patronage During The Last Four Years. We Have Appreciated It. MILLER’S MARKET Beta Theta Pi Captures IM Fraternity Golf Title SEEKS TITLE—HaI Zimmerman, intercollegiate gymnastic title holder, and five other Lion gym nasts, will leave today for the National AAU Gym meet in Cleveland. Six Lion Gymnasts Seek MU Titles , Led by Intercollegiate champion Hal Zimmerman, six members of the Lion’s champion Eastern Inter collegiate Gymnastic squad will leave today with Coach Gene Wettstone for the National AAU gym meet Which will be held, to morrow at Western Reserve Col lege, Cleveland," Ohio. Accompanying Zimmerman who will attempt to add the national amateur tumbling and parallel b'ar titles to his list' of wins, will be Sol Small, entered in the parallel bar and ring competition; Captain Charley Senft and Bill Gother man, in the rope climb; Eddie An derson, in tumbling; and Sid Rud man, who will compete on the rings. ’ Wettstone pointed out that Senft and Gotherman have an excellent chance of copping the _rope climb title, because Army and Navy climbers, the only men to defeat them this year, are not entered in the meet. Zimmerman placed fourth in last year’s competition behind Szypula, Temple ace, who defeat ed the Lion star in the Nationals, Logan, Michigan tumbler, and At 'kins, Illinois star. Hal defeated the latter two in dual meet compe tition this year. Illinois, last year’s AAU team champs, will be on hand to de fend their title. Election of the varsity gym nastics captain was postponed until the Summer semester, ac cording to Wettstone. GOOD LUCK SENIORS THANKS- (Everything Good To Eat) * * * Dial 775 = THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Phi Sigma Kappas Lose In Four (lose Matches Beta Theta Pi'won the frater nity intramural golf champion ship by defeating Phi Sigma Kap pa, SV&-V&, on the College course yesterday, but the score does not indicate the closeness of the match. Every individual match was not decided until the entire eighteen holes were completed. The best ball of the second foursome was the only point gar h'ered by the Betas that was de cided before the last hole. Rain and a strong wind slowed up the match considerably. Bus Boyle of Beta Theta Pi edged John King, Phi Sigma Kap pa, by a 1-up count and John Brown, also of Beta Theta Pi, nosed Ben Franklin of the losers by the same 1-up score in the initial foursome. The best ball was captured by the Betas, 1-up. Russ Jacobson, Beta, and Bob Roy, Phi Sigma Kaeppa, were. all even after eighteen holes of play. In the final individual match, Bob Cleland, Beta freshman, nipped Dick Spurck of the Phi Sigs by the same 1-up tally. Best ball went to the Betas, 4 and 3. Beta Theta Pi entered the final found by virtue of a win ov.er Delta Chi and the losing Phi Sig ma kappas eliminated Phi Gam ma Delta yesterday. Ewell, Carter Set For Last Dual Battle When Lion, Panther Clash When the Nittany Lion and the Pitt Panther line up against each other on the Pitt Stadium cinders tomorrow, there will be a dual meet and a duel. Barney Ewell will be racing for the last time in his college running career his mortal enemy of the track, Pitt’s flashing Bill Carter. For two years these speed mer chants have met in this combat several times per year, but this year it promises more <and greater thrills because it is Barney’s last chance to show his stuff against this, the stifl'est competition he has had to face. Especially anxious to win this time because Carter beat him in the Penn Relay century on April 24, one of the two times he has been able to turn the trick on the flashy Lion, Barney will enter this meet with superman ambi tion. Other Lion runners who will attempt to upset the Blue and Gold applecart are Don Dolbin, Barney Plesser, Marty Schiff, Gene Neville, Max Peters, Mac Smith, Norm Gordon, Ed Miller, Herm Goffberg, Curt Stone, Alex Bourgerie, and Bob Hazel. Stone, Gordon, Goffberg, Bour gerie, and Miller will tangle with Panther distancemen Bill Curtis, Bud Davis, and Marcus Allias, while Plesser and Neville will be pitted against Stickel, Carter’s speed partner, in the hurdles. Peters and Mac Smith will stack up against Bob Smith, ace Pitt 440-yard dash man, and Pere tic, both of whom collaborated with Carter a.jnd Stickel in the 880-yard relay event at the Penn Relays last week to score Pitt’s lone championship. While the cinder-burners are contesting at the Stadium oval, the field men lead by Captain Joe Be.kura and captain-elect Johnny Glenn will be endeavoring to score essential points in order to gain revenge for last year’s de feat. Pittsburgh will be especially handicapped in the field events since Dusty Rhodes and Red Tessup, pole vaulters, and Jim Elliot, 200 foot javelin thrower. Penn State Rated Underdogs In Fray Against Orangemen Penn Slate will definitely be the underdogs when the Lion baseball team meets the Orange men from Syracuse on New Bea ver Field in the only home var sity contest in State College to morrow. Freshman lacrosse is the only other team which has a match scheduled here. When the first batsman stands at the plate at. 2:30 p. m. tomor row, he will be facing an ace Sy racuse hurler. The opposition has a whole staff full of compe tent pitchers, one of whom struck out ten Penn State men in the last Orange-Lion encounter away two weeks ago ' when the Blue and White bowed, 10-1. Coach Joe Bedenk has his choice of several pitchers to start on the mound, but it is likely" that Eddie Tuleya will get the nod. Johnny Stover, who hurled last Saturday when the Nittany nine snapped a four-game losing streak, is another possibility. Warren Pyer, who gets used for fireman chores, will probably see action if the starting twirler gets in trouble. Saturday may be the last game for some of the seniors on the squad, although every one is eli gible to continue the regularly scheduled season which ends with Pittsburgh here May 30. After that, will be informal, and members of Leo Houck’s frosh nine can step up and' get exper ience with some of the returning varsity players. Corner Kick Wins Soccer Crown For Phys Ellers Scoring a corner kick in the ex tra period, a team composed of Physical Education Majors defeat ed Irvin Hall for the independent intramural soccer championship on the golf course field, yesterday afternoon. Playing for the victorious team were Clair Hess, manager; Dan Valenti, Len Catanoso, Jerry Wis er, Aldo Cenci, and Jim Wright. C. Eugene Cassel ’44 served as student manager for both the fra ternity and independent tourna ments. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS AND BONDS Mr* and Mrs. NORTH + + + SCHWAB AUDITORIUM + + + MAY 8, 9 8:30 P. M. 50c Plus Tax PAGE THREE Between The Lions With DON DAVIS Sports Editor Bullpen Bull Before the first game of the present diamond campaign we look occasion to ask Joe Bedenk just what he had in the way of pitchers. And his quick retort was that we were assuming too much as he actually had only one real pitcher, namely, Ed Tuleya. Well, after, watching several games since that time' it occurred to us that maybe the team has more than one pitcher. In fact, two sophomores, Warren Pyer. and John Stover have at times shown suspicious signs of being real moundsmeh. So we again approached the ruddy baseball mentor > with a query as to his pitching staff. And although he 'has not been too sur prised at Pyer’s ability as a relief 'hurler, he has been pleased and pleasantly so with the develop ment of Johnny Stover. In fact, Bedenk plans to start Stover to morrow ' against Syracuse, a hard hitting team which pounded the Lions to a 10-1 pulp in their first meeting this Spring. As for Tuleya, he has not car ried the brunt of the mound duties as consistently as expected. This being caused partly by a pulled muscle in his leg. At one point in Bedenk's search for pitchers he tried Sparky Brown on the hill. One reason for this attempted shift being that Brown's poor hilling was acceptable only from a pitch er. , Considering the number of soph omores on the squad, their record has not been bad. And with the experience they’ve had, in the past weeks, Syracuse should find con siderably more resistance when they tangle with the Lions tomor row. „ ~ Attention! _ Summer Semester Students For students wht are not fraternity-minded but de sire the comforts of home like appointments. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Stiizer -AT PE NN STATE (L stomal !■ 123 W. NITTANV AVENUE ALL ROOMS WITH RUNNING WATER Comfortable! Moderate Rates Homelike!
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers