TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1047 Four Varsity Teams Score Over Led by midfielder nog nesior, oouch jnick 'imeis iNiuany la crosse squad oownea Syracuse, u-o, on new iaeaver JB'ieia Saturday alternoon. Tne win was the second of the current season for the Lions and the second win in two years over tne orange, wnose coacn, Jrtoy Sim mons, tutored Lion niemor Tniei m lacrosse m IU3T. JNestor outguessed tne visitors' aeiense miuway through the first period to marn up goal No. 1 for tne Lions. A goal by btiliwel of byracuse and two by Lions Mc- Uieary and Kerwin produced a 3-1 btate advantage at the end of the first period. This lead was never seriously threatened throughout the game. Penn btate prayed the game witnout tne services or 10m bmitn, onir bumvan, Larry rish er and jonn Finley. captain oeorge Locotos, injured in tne Loyoia game two weens ago, saw duty at me midfield post lor the first time Saturday afternoon. Thiel’s stickmen will travel to Sampson, N. Y., tomorrow to en gage Sampson College and will return to New Beaver Field Sat urday when they meet Drexel Tech. Now 17 Sports Penn Siate, now back on a peacetime basis, maintains sched ules in 17 intercollegiate sports. Match Your Mood! THE LIPSTICK’S THE THIHG! / REVLON, $1 plus tax DOROTHY GRAY COTY j CHEN YU MAX FACTOR CARA NOME BONNIE BELL LUCIEN LELONG •\ REA and DERICK’S * These famous rackets are cold welded of choice northern ash with special throat rein forcements of tough fiber to give this “shock zone” extra j strength! Both are made by m SPALDING. At your dealer’s. S*#**?fJ* ice (toilers Down Colgate in Huai Dual mm Ixl/aCll dJvO golf oviaad set back toe visiting Col gate linemen, b J /2-2Vs, tor tneir second straignt victory, on the college course, Saturday after noon. Saturday’s match was the rast home match for the Rutherford men and marked the end of dual competition for this season. The squad will compete in the EIGA matches at Ithaca, N. Y., next week. Victories wer e scored against the Raiders toy number-one nian Jack Harper 'and partner Jerry Smith, wh 0 took their matches 6 and 4, and 3 and 2, respectively. They won the best ball, 4 and-3. OWER W «-Phr LMriutta BOTH MADB BY SPALDING THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Trackmen Romp lo Win; bed! friiijijejS 0Z72-455/2 i-ypiCai oi tne ease wnn wmcn Penn btate s track and held team swept to an 82&-48£ victory over the Pitt Panthers Saturday was the arm-in-arm finish by milers Stone, Karver and Ashenfelter. Ignoring Pitt’s Ed Sudzina, who was some 10 yards behind the third Lion runner, Jerry . Karver slowed up enough at the finish to allow his two mates to break the tape witn him. Even then the time was a respectable 4:21.0. The Wernermen, expected to score most heavily in the distance events, also copped every pri mary in the field events. Panther wins were restricted to four firsts in the dashes and hurdles. " In the two-mile, Curt Stone re peated Jerry Karver’s perform ance in the mile when, far in front of the nearest Panther, he slowed up to sharp first, place points with Ashenfelter. Time for the dead heat was 9:41.6. Taking first place in the javelin, Tubby Lang became the second Lion in Perm State track' history to. throw 200 feet. Nick Vukmanik holds the Lion record with a toss of 224 feet. Lang’s throw was 203 feet. .Among the many encouraging sights at Pitt Stadium, was Fred Lennox’s 1:56 half-mile, which was one-tenth of a second off the pace set by Jerry, Karver who took the event. Lennox, said Chick Werner, was fooled by a Pitt decoy into oyer-extending himself early in the race. Lennox followed the Pitt runner while the rest of the pach stayed behind, but still had enough • to finish second after Pitt s pacer had burned himself out. Charley Krug topped the Lion scorers with eight and one-half points. This represented a first in the shot-put, a tie for first in the high-jump, and a third in the discus. Sorensen Makes— (Continued from page one) Which the Lions entered a com petitor in the free calisthenics event. The tentative Olympic squad, of which Sorensen is now a mem ber, will work out this summer and .probably compete with sev eral European teams in pre-Olym pic meets this and next year. This NAAU meet was one of the greatest in the history of the or ganization, with a record number of contestants entered in the competition. ... to paper and the writer’s touch, is the unique point of Shaeffer’s Stratowriter . . . not a metal copy of the ancient sharpened quill, pot a tempera mental nib that bends, balks, scratches dry, runs blots if not delicately adjusted to the paper’s sur face. . . . The Stratowriter’s- point is the rounded end of a thread-fine cylinder of i 4 karat gold, and so hard it is impervious to pressure, the corrosion of ink, the wear of years and millions of words.... A true point, like that of a pencil, it writes as it moves in any direction, suits every hand and style of hand writing, spares effort, lessens fatigue. . . . Pressed to paper, this jewel ball-point opens a tiny drop valve, releases ink which is drawn down through a capillary channel as slowly or quickly as the writer writes ... ' A fine writing instrument, precision made, the simple structure of the Stratowriter gives it great strength, exceptional durability, longer and more satisfying service . . . and exclusive functions such as ruling, drawing, making carbon copies, writing on rough surfaces . . . ; . For only $l5 this sleek, gold-plated, ball-pointed pen can be purchased now only at... * LENNOX PLACES REALLY SMOOTH KEELER’S Weekend Lions Thump Piii Nine In Two Weexend Games doe oeuenKs mon baseoauurs were watching the skies, yester day as they prepared to meet the invasion of the Bucknell Bisons tomorrow after defeating the Pitt Panthers, 7-1 and 7-2, over the weekend. Ken x ount and Bob Gehrett re ceived credit for the .Lions’ third and fourth victories of the sea son at Pittsburgn. ft was Ciehrett's first win this year white Xount now has three triumphs under his belt. The Lions, in the opener, forgot about their sloppy fielding record and handled the 27 put-outs flaw lessly for the first errorless game of the season. In the second, how ever, they committed three mis cues. NEAR SHUTOUT Pour hits, nine walks, four Pitt errors and beautiful sacrificing gave the Lions a total of seven runs in the first game. Yount’s shutout effort was stopped in the seventh when the Panthers bunched a double, walk, and single for their one run. The second . game saw Ken Yount take over first base and lead the Lion hitting with two singles. Johnny Potsklan broke into the lineup with a long double. The Lions crossed home plate five times in the seventh inning after adding one marker in the first and sixth innings. Pitt scored one each in the fifth and ninth stanzas. Tennis The Blue and White tennis team will meet a highly-rated Cornell aggregation on the varsity courts at 2:30 o'clock today. Rain forced cancellation of Saturday's scheduled match with Pittsburgh. Intiamuiols DELTS WIN Glenn Hanna and Ralph Scholl led Delta Tau Delta to a 2-0 vic tory over Sigma Alpha Epsilon as the intramural soccer tournament moved into its third day of com petition on the practice field Thursday. Phi Kappa Sigma eked out a 1-0. triumph over Phi Gamma Delta, thanks to John Moorshead’s pay dirt kick early in the con test, and Theta Chi downed Phi Epsilon Pi by a 2-1 count. Floyd Lang and Walt Lang booted goals for the victors while Bert Schoaf tallied Phi Ep’s lone marker. PAGE The Browse it you have been wondering wnat to give mou ier ior moth er s Bay, you can easuy souve uie prooiem by coming to THE CULLEUE BOOK ST OKE AND RECORD SHOP. A good book, an album of records she’d ap preciate, a fine box of station ery, an unusual gift, and the card she'll love to receive can all be bought conveniently from one store. Let’s go over a few book sug gestions; DULCIMER STREET, oy Norman Collins, is an ex cellent book for those of you wiho have mothers who do not like tihe contemporary trend in rough, tough, or nasty fiction It’s a well written book with an interesting plot—reminds you a bit of Dickens. THE BIG SKY, by A. B. Guthrie, Jr., is one of the best historical novels we have had in years. It is much more than just an adven ture story. It is a novel which gives you the understanding into the motives which made , our pioneers pioneers—the mo tive for wanting to find the Big | Sky. CURIOUS RELATIONS, by William d’Arfey, would i make an excellent gift for those of you whose mothers appreci ate something on the humorous i side. We might call it A LIFE i WITH FATHER for mother.. Then for a contemporary, novel we suggest the new ‘ Taylor Caldwell book, THERE WAS A TIME. Your mothers will need no introduction to this. We all know that mother loves music,' so an album oft good records would be appre ciated. MORTON GOULD has recorded an album called REN DEZVOUS which includes Be yond the Blue Horizon, What is This Thing Called Love, Night and Day, Stardust, and Tea for Two to mention a few. Another album she would appreciate is AMERICAN SONGS by Helen Traubel. This album includes Home, Sweet Home, I Love You Truly and other genuinely American, songs. And if mother likes more classical music, there are hundreds of albums for your selection. Stationery always makes a good gilt—after all we all love to receive a letter from our best girl. It would be easy for you to solve the problem—if we have not done so already—-by giving her a box of our lovely Kellogg paper or a small box blank signature notes with a picture she will like. Remember THE COLLEGE BOOK STORE is Your Store where you can browse around to your heart’s content. You are always welcome, and a visit even if it is to talk over the new books and records with us —will be appreciated. IgMßi f; gi,—si,i ;-.'.r4 fifi iViiSJS** liliiSi ssgU^lV’ri THE COLLEGE BOOK STORE and RECORD SHOP 129 W, Beaver Ave OPEN EVENINGS _«C2K