The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, July 08, 1942, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1942
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Between
The Lions
With DON DAVIS
Sports Editor
iiiiiiiiimminiiiimmiummiiimmillomilimmonini
An Adroit Shift
It seems to be the thing to do
these days to write about the
forthcoming Victory Weekend.
And finally an angle has turned
up that fits into the sports page.
Namely the adroit switching of
three varsity' meets with Cornell
University so that they will take
place August 1 during the "Big
Weekend."
• ' Thanks to the ready coopera
tion of Graduate Manager Neil
Fleming, the change was made..so
that 'a baseball, game with Cornell
may be included in the Saturday
afternoon Field Day program.
Tennis and golf matches will also
be held during the afternoon.
Absent. Minded B
Sidelights on Saturday's four
team special event track meet at
Cornell . . . It seems that when
the boys lined up, for the start of
the sprint medley relay, the Syra
cuse and Cornell entrants had
overlooked a very important de
tail. They had neglected to get
their batons. Thanks to the aid
of Penn State's Marty Schiff, who
stood up after the starter had giv
en the boys their marks, attention
Was called to the oversight.. The
batanless runners got up sheep
ithly and procured their necessary
Wooden sticks. Incidentally, Cliff
SI. Clair turned in the best run of
the relay by coming from 40 yards
behind" to win.
' A surprise entrant in the 600-
yard run, .Burnham from Dart-
Mouth, gave the crowd a thrill by.
turning in a win over Colgate's
IC4-A champ, Diebolt; and . Cor
nell's Art Smith. Burnham is tile
boy who recently defeated Les
Mac Mitchell at the 'Metropolitan
AAU meet with a 4:09 . mile.
. The relative standings of the
teams, as figured out by an in
formal team point system, found
Penn State ahead with 21 points,
followed by Colgate with 19 and
Cornell With 14.
FrOM - The
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tOpposite Campus
IM Finals Near
In League Windup
The Fraternity Intramural
iMushball League moved into its
final stages last night when. Alpha
Sigma Phi emerged the victor
over Delta Chi in a bitter' pitch
ers' duel, 2-1, and Theta Chi out
slugged the Sigma Phi Alpha nine
•
by a top heavy ,1.4-9 score.
Play in the Independent League
was featured by7a 6-3 victory for
the Canal Street, Firehouse boys
over Fairmount — Hall. This• win
enabled:, the Firehouse to further
extend their leave read over the
second place Maths who only held
their own in conquering Jordan
Hall, 11-2. .
Nicklas .of Alpha Sigma Phi
gets the brass ring for the day's
outstanding performance for hurl
ing an airtight 2 hitter, handcuff
ing the,. Delta Cliffs. Fanucci and
'Kleckner of Matils and Adams of
Jordan Hall led the hitters when
they pounded out; the only round
trippers• of the evening.
Theta Chi succeeded in giving
Folviell, Sigma Phi Alpha hurler,
a _thorough going-over when they
touched him for 18 hits. The
SPAs collected 13 hits from Theta
Chi's Goss. The Delta Chi-Alpha
Sigma Phi fray showed tight
pitching on both sides since both
teams could garner only a total of
seven hits. .
Standings failed to change in
the Independent. League in the
two contests played there. It was
a' case of superior •hitting in both.
tilts. 'Matils' explosive eight in
the sixth inning put the cap on
their 9-5 win over Jordan Hall.
The league leading Canal Street
Firehouse was pushed through 4
extra innings before they rallied
to force 3 runs across the plate in
the eleventh inning.
With the conclusion of the pres
ent fraternity schedules; r new
leagues will be formed among the
ranking members of each league.
Plans, 'leagues and schedules for
play'will be announced later this
week in The Daily Collegian, ac
cording to Bob Redmount '44, IM
manager. • - -
Games scheduled:
• Wednesday
7 p. m.
- Delta Siena *Phi Phi Kappa
Psi
- Alpha Sigma Phi vs. Beta Sigma
Rho
Engineers Plan
Employment Book
The School of Engineering is
making plans to issue its annual
employment booklet which will
be distributed during ,the "recruit=
iiig season" to seniors and em
ployers alike, the committee in
charge announced today.
The employment :booklet will
contain the name, picture, • curri
culum, college activities, occupa
tional experience and personal
details of .each senior who helps
share the expense ..of printing it.
Material will ,be grouped by de
partments within the school and
sent, as in the past, to many em
ployers.
Those who participate will re
ceive two complete: departmental
booklets, 25 pages on which their
personal data is printed, 25 addi
tional individual pages which will
be kept on file in their depart
ment or sent to industries, free
circulation of the booklet and
pages, the original photograph and
halftone.
To defray the cost of printing,
a fee of $6 must be, paid by each
participating student by Tuesday ;
July 14, the committee announced.
Students may place their reser
vations with the following sen
iors: Charlds Handschuh, archi
tecture; George B..Schroyer, civil
engineering; Robert L. !Markle,
electrical engineering; Lawrence
B. Hawes, industrial engineering;
and Don 'W. Dickinson, Mechani
caLengineering. •
BUY DEFENSE STAMPS
TEE DAILY COLLEGIAN
3 Varsity Games Added
To V-Weekend Program
Cornell Baseball, Golf,
Tennis Teams To Play
Varsity baseball, golf, and ten
nis games with Cornell have been
added to Penn State's ever-grow
ing Victory Weekend program,
Neil M. Fleming, graduate man
ager of athletics, announced yes
terday.
Six of the seven contests on the
Penn State-Cornell Summer sports
card have been re-scheduled to
make possible the change, accord
ing to Fleming.
The three games were formerly
scheduled to be played at Ithaca,
N. Y. To balance the shift of the
battle scene to' State College, the
three contests originally schedul
ed to be played here July 18 have
been changed to Cornell's home
grounds.
The varsity baseball game with
Cornell, now scheduled for 2 p. m.
August 1, will open V-Weekend's
Saturday afternoon field day.
Starting time of the tennis and
golf matches has not yet been set,
according to Fleming. Time for
their opening will be fitted into
the holiday schedule.
Still another addition to the
Saturday afternoon .program was
announced last night by Bernard
A. Plesser '43, program chairman
for the V-Weekend • field day.
Plesser stated that the State Col
lege Drum
. and Bugle Corps, na
tional champions since 1940, had
agreed to present a drill-concert
performance as part of the cele
bration.
• A varsity lacrosse game with
Colgate, the annual frosh-soph
tug of war, with customs at stake,
and presentation of V-Weekend
proceeds, will round out the Sat-7
urday afternoon program.
Band Concert
(Continued from Page One)
"Savonic Rhapsody No. 2," by
Friedman.
The third section of the pro
gram is Texidor's "March Am
perils.' Roco" and "Park Avenue
Fantasy," by Signorelli. ' Conclud
ing part of the evening's perform
ance will be made up of a special
band arrangement • of "Rhapsody
in Blue," by George Gershwin
and John Philip Sousa's "Semper
Fidelis.'-'
. The closing
. number will be
Doctor Howard's special low-key
arrangement of the "Star Spang
led Banner."
Pierre cHenrotte, a member of
the Summer sessions visiting fa
culty, and Hummel Fishburn, act
ing head of the department of
music, will „assist with the direc
tion of the concert
Summer Session Plans
Rec Hall Fun Night
• (Continued from Page , One)
tional events are under the direc
tion of Earl Edwards, Rec Hall.
Edwards said he expects the horse
shoe pits to be busy Friday. He
emphasized the • . advisability of
wearing comfortable clothes for
the event.
.
Competition in
.archery will get
underway on Holmes Field at 2
p. m. Saturday with a preliminary
and final Columbia round tourna
ment. Although the College has
archery equipment, those who
have their own sets are asked to
use them in the tourney.'
s . Two bicycle trips are carded
for the week, one to start at 7
o'clock tonight from 1112 Miles
street. Another will start from
the same place at 7 a. m. Sunday,
when bicyclers will ride to the
College Lodge, eat breakfast, and
return. Those expecting to par
ticipate should sign at Student Un
ion before noon Saturday, or con
tact Miss Marie Haidt, White Hall,
or Earl Edwards, Rec Hall.
IM Mushball
Standings
INDEPENDENT LEAGUE
W. L. Pct.
Canal St. Firehouse 7 1 .875
Matils 6 2 .750
Jordan Hall 5 3 .625
Electric Diner .... 4, 3 .571
Irvin Hall 4 3 .571
Watts Hall 3 4 .428
Miller Club 1 6 .147
Penn State Club ... 0 7 .000
FRATERNITY LEAGUE
SECTION I
W.
Tau Kappa Epsilon 4
Alpha Phi. Delta ... 3
Pi Lambda Phi : ... 2
Gamma Sigma Phi . .1
Kappa Delta Rho .. 0
SECTION 2
Phi Sigma Kappa . 5
Beta Theta Pi .... 4
Alpha Chi Sigma .. 2
Beaver House 2
Sigma Alpha Epsilon 1
Alpha Chi Rho .... 0
SECTION 3
W.
Delta Upsilon 3
Alpha Sigma Phi .. 3
Delta Chi 3
Beta Sigma Rho ... 2
Phi Kappa Sigma .. 1
SECTION 4
Phi Delta Theta
Phi Kappa Psi .
Delta Sigma Phi
Sigma Nu
Theta Chi
SigMa Phi Alpha
GET YOUR COLLEGIAN
SUBSCRIPTION NOW
You trust its quality
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OR THE COCA•COLA COMPANY BY
Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Altoona
In State College Call 3919
Linksmen Prepare
For Cenfre Hills
When the Lion golfers meet the
Centre Hills Country Club team
this Saturday, another mass meet
will be featured, if present plans
mature. The matches will be pat
terned after those held on the Col
lege links June 27 when the Lions
defeated Centre Hills 6-3.
Playoffs are under way this
week to determine the starting
lineup, which will probably in-.
elude Co-captains Dick Stephens
and Bill "Ducky" 'Swan, Bill
Smiley, Jim McCormick, Ed Fair
child, and Charlie McClay.
Coach Rutherford has no set
lineup, but lets the players fight
it out between matches for the
starting positions in the next
Matches in a series of round rob
bins in which the whole squad
takes part.
•
Texas Professor Will
L. Pct.
0 1.000
1 .750
2 .500
3 .250
4 .000
Talk On Housing
"Housing Problems in the Pres
ent Emergency" is the subject of
a talk by Miss Mary Mason, as
sistant professor of home econ
omics, Texas State College for
Women, in 110 Home Economics
at 4 o'clock this afternoon.
A ,conference on instruction
will be conducted in 10 Sparks at
3:15 p. m. today on the topic,
"What Should the Activity Con
cept of Learning Mean to Class
room Teachers?"
Films in schools were discussed
at a session in 121 Sparks last
night.
Wrestlers Called
L. Pct.
0 1.000
1 .800
2 .500
2 .500
4 .200
5 .000
L. Pct.
1 .750
2 .600
3 .500
3 .400
3 250
L. Pct.
0 1.000
2 .600
2 .600
3 .400
4 .333
5 .166
Candidates for freshman and.
varsity wrestling are to report to
Rec Hall on Tuesday and Thurs
days at 4 p. m. Practice has al
ready begun in preparation for
the coming season, according to
Charlie Ridenour,, varsity wrest
ler.
tinily exciting about ice
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that brings a happy after
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quality of the real thing
...Coca-Cola.
PAGE TfiREZ