PAGE TWO /Baseball, Track Teams Off To Slow Start As Season Nears Sweeney Trades Gloves !For Bat; Wardrop Returns Marine Private Mike Sweeney is keeping the boxing team-baseball team combination intact this sea son, according to Lion mentor Joe i3edenk. Undefeated Sweeney, Nit tany ringman at 175 pounds this winter, is a good bet for the re ceiving end of the baseball bat -I:ery this spring. Last season, Oggie Martella came up to the baseball team from the 175-pound fistic post to garner a starting nod as Lion catcher. Martella is now a boxing champ at Camp Lee, where he is stationed with the Army. . Other spots on the Nittany dia mond varsity are undecided since the Bedenkmen have completed but three days' outdoors this month. Many Marine and Navy trainees have 'been dotting the sessions, however, and several var i3ity men have returned from the .1943 squad. Wardrop Back Big Mike Wardrop, Bedenk's only standby on the mound last ummer, is back with his battery companion, Ed Holler, in the catcher's notch. Joe Golembeski, freshman hurler several years ago, has also reported to early season workouts. In the outfield another letter winner, Dale Bower, is finding competition from V-12 trainees 14all, Bruhn, Urion, and Barnes for fly-chasing chores on the open ing day at Annapolis next month. Johnny Sylvester is the remain- Lion Athletes Overcome Lack Of Sight, Paralysis It takes more than a physical handicap to keep Penn State men out of athletic competition these days. Lack of sight was not enough to keep Chuck Hall out of wrestling: and two boys who were partially crippled by infantile paralysis loom as coming stars in varsity athletics. Steve Green, a freshman from Philadelphia, already has made a niche for himself by winning the Side horse event in the Eastern intercollegiate gymnastics cham pionships. His coach, Gene Wett stone, thinks he will be a contend er for the parallel bars and rope climb titles a year hence. • Vic Danilov, Farrell, also over- Come the handicap of a partially crippled leg well enough to' make the varsity basketball squad as a freshman Danilov, who is active in many campus organizations, played on the Farrell High School team that finished second to Low er Merion in last year's State championships. Chuck Hall, blind wrestler from East Springfield in Erie County, Pa., gave a good account of him self during the past season al though defeated in all but one Start. He was thrown only twice in five engagements. Jacob Walker, a one-armed youth from Montgomery County, Pa., last fall persisted until Foot ball Coach Bob Higgins permitted him to scrimmage with the varsity squad. The Nittany coach has Since commended the boy highly for his spunk and courage. EMPHASIS ON DEFENSE Over a five-year period, Penn State basketball teams have limi ted the opposition to an average Hof 29-points-a-game. HAS WINNING WAYS Since John Lawther took com mand of Penn State basketball in 1936, the Lions have won two out of every three games played. Dutch Hermann, former Penn State basketball coach, still re mains on the campus as a pro -IVssor , of Americqn 14stiorm. H I i . 1 I All-American Lombana Heads Home After Nine Years Of Study, Soccer Jose Lombana, Penn State all- America soccer player, is home ward-bound after nine years of study and travel. He's a native of South America. Lombana, who. won all-Ameri ca recognition two years in a row, attended school in France and Belgium before he entered Penn State four years ago. A mining engineer, he has been offered a position with an oil refining company in his home country. Lombana was voted Penn State's most valuable soccer play er in 1943, entitling him to pos session of the Captain Edward, S. Mandel Trophy offered last year for the first time. ing holdover from Bedenk's sum mer team, and expects to pair off with Marine 'Trainee Al Richards for duty at first base. Richards was a halfback on the football squad in the fall. Pvt. Whitey Kurowski, brother of the famed Whitey Kurowski of the St. Louis Cardinals, is a likely choice for, the second base nod, said Bedenk. Other possibilities listed last night by Bedenk as battery start ers include Seaman 'John Cwik and Pvt. Pat Pantano as catchers, and Marine Wee Willie Proctor on the throwing end of the combina tion. Malils Score Victory Over Penn State Club Mathis scored an eight-point vic tory over the Penn State Club in the IMA Bowling Tournament's final match of the season played Weclwnesday evening. Penn Haven placed third. The winners chalked .up 52 points and lost four during the eight-game tournament. First-half honors went to Doug las Geier and Walter O'Toole Aptulsky, while Joseph Paperelli placed high in the second half. The following members of Matils were presented golden bowling. balls: Capt. Bernard .Strozeski, Joseph Paperelli, Walter O'Toole Aptul sky, Michael . RusinkO, Eugene Davis, and Douglas Geier. Cass Sisler, ex-Grid Star, Shifts Allegiance to Navy Cass Sisler, a nephew of base ball's famed George Sisler and Penn State's most effective ball carrier during the 1943 football season, has shifted his allegiance from the Marine Corps to the Navy. His decision prompted his trans fer from the V-12 program at Penn State to the Navy's pre-Midship men School .at Asbury Park, N. J. Sisler, a native of Barberton, 0., formerly attended Western Re-. serve. DOUGHBOYS LIKE SPORT Penn State's Leo Houck. thinks servicemen's 'participation in ring tourneys insures the. post-war icrYlgt tbrrig, THE - % COLLEGIAN. :'°`! l lRir Harvey Gets Largest Turnout In Two Years Nittany Track Coach George Harvey has been gazing gloomily through Rec Hall's windows for the past week in search• of the spring sun. Indoor practice has. •begun for his 42 track team candidates, but Harvey would like to see his boys dig into the cinders as soon as pos sible. It will give him an idea of what sort of material has answer ed his call. They're out in num ber•—the greatest in .the last two years—awaiting the initial trials April E.. Veteran Robert Jones was point ed out by Harvey as a mainstay this year by dint of performances last year.• Another familiar form will he John Dibeler, who placed second in the 600 when he partici pated in the IC4A last year. • Dash and Distance Men Also returning to the Nittany line-up will be Richard McCown, dash man in the 100, 220 and 440. Two-miler Cecil Deutschle and Phil Jones will don their Penn State outfits as veterans.. Jones was a member of last year's cross country team and will compete in the one- and two-mile events. Marines Edward Buch and Dan iel Orlich, both formerly of North western, will handle the shot-put and discus, according to pre-season guesses. James Wood will probably hur dle for the -Harveymen. Wood came in second at the state cham pionships in high school. Paul Smith, another civilian, will try-to place as a relay man. Three years ago Smith was a freshman at State and was recently released from the Army. Smith will also make a bid for the relays. First meet slated for the Nit tany trackmen will probably be the Penn Relays April 19. Pitt, Cornell, Colgate and the IC4A comprise the rest of the schedule. One more meet might be named, but nothing definite has been an nounced regarding it. Abel Gilbert, Leigh Woehling Place in Nationals in Yale Pool Abel Gilbert took fourth places in the' 220 and 440 while placing sixth in the 1500-meter swim and Leigh Woehling gained a sixth position in the 150-yard backstroke at the NCAA swimming champion ships held over the weekend at Yale. Gilbert represented Penn State in the distance swim as he won hard earned spots in' the distance events. Woehling lost his first heat to Alan Ford • who won the event as well as his specialties of 50 and 100 yards.- - Gilbert, originally from Ecuador where his family still lives, came out for the Nittany tank team late in the season and was good enough for. Coach :Bob • Galbraith to send to the .National competition. Woehling,. .a backstroker from Norristown,. lost only to' Midship man Bob Cowell of the Naval Academy in dual competition this season. Cowell, by the way, did his swimming for the Lions last year before transferring to Navy. PREDICTS PRO BOOM Joe Bedenk, Penn . State, grid aide and former All-American, looks for an amazing growth in professional football after the war. TEACHING ~THE PROFS George. liarvey,;4lt.tration , coach . -andrfishing. , ..expert; is con -o.uctini-a speciasclass igig for Penn•: State -professors, Two Former Gridiron Stars Win Recognition In Theatres Of War Two former grid stars ar: numbered among the scores o Penn State students and alumn who have earned wartime cita tions since the outbreak of the present war. Penn State's total present representation in the armed services' is estimated 8,500 men and women. Of the two ex-gridders only re cently cited, Lieut. David K. Sloan is listed as missing. Sloan finish ed his education at the United States Naval Academy, where he also played football, received the Silver - Star' Medal for "conspic- uous gallantry and intrepidity as assistant approach officer of a United States submarine in ac tion against the Jap forces in five Pacific patrols." • Sloan, who cruised more than 100,000 miles on• Pacific •patrols in the first 15 months of combat, served as gunnery and torpedo officer with a crew which sank 19 enemy vessels, and was on the submarine which rescued from Corregidor the parties of Presi dent Manuel Quezon, of the Phil ippines, and Francis B. Sayre, high United States icommasioner in the islands. • The Distinguished Flying Cross awarded to Col. Harry "Light horse Harry" Wilson, former Penn State and West Point grid hero, was for "extraordinary achieve ment while participating in aerial flights on combat operational mis sions between September 11 and October 1, 1943." Wilson is com mander of the 13th Army Air. Forces medium bomber group op erating in ,the South Pacific. He himself has flown 34 . combat missions. Lower Merlon Captures Gym PIRA Lower Merion, a perennial con tender in basketball but an entry in gymnastics title competition for only the second time, won the hard way in this year's PIAA gym Championships held in Rec Hall. Restricited to one individual title, the Main Liners managed nevertheless to pile up enough points with seconds, thirds, fourths and fifths to become the first school other than Pottsville or' Warren to win the mythical team championship in the nine DON'T DELAY- GIVE TODAY! American Red Cross Space Conftibuted by Mini Big Turnout Helps Thiel Rebuild Club Stickman Face Tough Card With 3 Lettermen With a bumper crop of 65 aspir ants out for the 1944 lacrosse squad, Coach Nick Thiel faces once again the problem of building a winning club from untried ath letes. In past years, Thiel has pro-; duced teams that have held their own against the beSt combinations in the East. Last season, the Blue and-White placed Don Gotwals on the All-American list along with the experienced players turned out by Johns HopkinS, Maryland, Navy and Army—schools which comb high school ranks for lacrosse stars. Mainstays on the Lion stick team this year are Dale Hamilton, Pete Johnson and Mike All- three are returning lettermen from last year, Johnson, -hindered by a recurring asthma ailment, will probably see action in the nets where he will not be exerted'. Hamilton and Millikin will prob ably start the season at two of.the midfield posts. Art Lorenz, Don Bretherick and Bill Batkin have showri up well in the preliminary scrimmages to date, according to• the Lion men tor, and may earn varsity assign ments. Thiel hopes to be able to get in some regular outside workouts if Ole Sol will' give him the chance before launching into one of the toughest schedules he has ever tackled. years of this state-wide competi- The Ardmore squad, unbeaten in 12 consecutive dual meets and coached by Art Dtinnm, Temple's 1929 gym captain, deposed Potts ville in winning its • first title. Five of the eight previous tourna- . ments had been won by Potts ville, with the other three going to Warren. •1 • FRIDAY, MARCH 31; 1944 IM=IMSIIIII