PAG® FOUR Between the Lions At 6:30 a.m. on April 18, the Penn State tennis team rolled out of bed and, following breakfast, piled into two cars and began the 212-mile trek to Washington, D. C. Arriving at noon, the squad located Its Georgetown University objective, lunched and, after a very short rest, took to the courts and dropped an 8-1 decision in its opening meet of the season. This event brought up the old criticism of “Why is the College so saving that a Blue and White sport team must leave town and, fol lowing a lengthy trip, participate that same afternoon in an athletic contest?” Subsequent investigation has not proved the accused stinginess of those guarding the purse strings, but in lieu, an explanation with which few members of this institution are familiar. The Regulations for Undergraduate Students, as drawn up by the Senate Committee on Rules, specify allowances of classroom absences for each sport team. No squad, except baseball, is granted more than 36 hours absence with official leave in one semester. Sports carrying over into two terms receive an allowance of not more than seventy hours, which parallels the maximum allotment to other stu dent organizations such as Glee Club and Debate. LIMITATIONS ON ABSENCE In arranging trips, the athletic directors must apportion each journey so as not tq surpass the stated limit. Baseball and basketball, along with indoor and outdoor track (considered as one sport), draw down the highest amount—6o hours; football, boxing, and wrestling earn 45 hours, and lacrosse, soccer, tennis and all other sports rate 36 hours. Specifying a morning as including four hours, and an afternoon as three, planning stratagem has to be arranged for each sports’ season to keep within bounds. All of this is to explain why the tennis team had tired and un steady legs when it faced the Hoyas at Washington; the Senate rules, and not a tight finance administration being the reason for it all. Penn State’s regulations in this respect are considered quite lib eral when compared to other colleges. But those avid basketball fans who annually follow crack Western quintets on a two-week Eastern swing will be very much astounded by the term liberal, for if our policy is considered liberal, Utah, Oklahoma, Oregon and others are philanthropic, To a now thriving and potentially larger student enrollment, the athletic facilities available to all Staters are pitifully inadequate. Sixteen tennis courts (four of which are for-the varsity) serve the 7000 or so students of the College. In comparison, I might cite Cornell with its 75 quadrangles, or Ohio State with its clump of 60, supple mented by a half dozen or more varsity courts. The golf scene is equally as scanty. Genial Dean Schott of the Physical Education School has compiled these statistics: in order for eatery student to tour the course once, it would require approximately six weeks! We would like a second eighteen, ala Ohio State, Dartmouth and others, but at an average cost of $5OOO per hole and the premium on State College real estate being what it is, all we can do is complain. Intramural facilities are also woefully defective; however, with all of the deficiencies, Messrs. Bischoff and Sykes in the IM office have performed commendably. FIELD HOUSE A field house, the dream of our alumni, would provide much needed additional shower and locker room facilities plus an, immense, enclosed dirt expanse which all sports teams could use when Jupiter Pluvius is at odds with us, or when it’s January in June. West Point’s gargantuan enclosure supplies an indoor, full-size fiootball field; this can be converted for inside drills in tennis, base ball, lacrosse, soccer and other sports. Some day Penn State will have 75 tennis courts; 2 or 3 golf courses; varsity, jayvee, freshman and intramural football fields; several baseball diamonds, and a field house. However, in reference to the field house, the sports page joins the edit page .. . for first, we too would prefer to see a Student Union. ‘Hope Climb Se “It was sensational. He went up so last he surprised ' everyone,” said Lion coach Gene Wettstone about the record-breaking 3.4 second rope climb made by Gar vin Smith in the NAAU’s at Dal las, Tex. last weekend. Smith’s arms functioned inde pendently of his legs, tire Lion coach remarked, and “this threw out the theories of all coaches in the East in stressing the help ob tained from a kick.” ■Hie new champion, who hails from Vendee, California, is no extraordinary athlete, weighing only 140 pounds and possessing but ordinary shoulders and arm muscles, according to the Lion coach. Penn State’s standout, captain Bay Sorensen, won the free calis thenics event and placed fifth in the all-around competition to make the tentative Olympic gym nastic squad. Hie Lion performer was the only collegiate gymnast to place By TED RUBIN INADEQUATE FACILITIES sationul,’ Says Wettstone in the first eight spots and be named to the tentative squad. ; Cumiskey of the Swiss Gymnas tic Society of New Jersey, took first place in all-around competi tion, but was hard pressed at the end of the first day by Sorensen. However, the stellar Lion gym nast broke on the parallel bars, high bar and ring events to.place fifth in final scoring. The pre-Olympic team, of which Sorensen is now a member, will compete against a Czecho slovakian squad in New York this June 13. Final selections for the Olympic anittMiiiniiH I SMARTEST ... FOR THE SWEATER SEASON 1 Brentwood | Manchester | Welgrome | $3-25 IB DAILY AND UP HUB'S MEN'S SHOP OPPOSITE OLD MAIN n rIAN r STATE COUJBGK, PENNSYLVANIA InWedriescLay'sGcinne Lacrossemen Swamp Sampson College, 8-2; Clash With Drexel On New Beaver Field * * Swamp Sampson 8-2 Heavy rain and mud failed to bog down Coach Nick Thiel’s Lion lacrossemen’s attack as they drowned Sampson College 8-2 at Sampson, N. Y., Wednesday afternoon. This was the stickmen's third win of the season against the same number of defeats. The Ni 11 an y stick-wielders pounded the New Yorkers’ net for three goals in the first five minutes of play as Ernie Baer shot the ball past the Sampson goalie at 21 seconds of the open ing quarter to start the scoring. Midfielder Baer was high scor er for the Lions, collecting three goals for Penn State and as-sisting in two of the other tal lies made by his teamates. Jack Nehoda, playing in place of regular goalie “Wild Bill” Hol lenbach, took care of the net dut ies throughout the game, and kept the Sampson stickmen from scor ing more than two goals by his fast-thinking and ball-saves on the mud-soaked field. After the first period the game slowed up because of the down pour of rain and most of the ac tion centered around midfield, with both teams battling to keep possession of the ball. The line up: Posilon Penn Slate Sampson Goal Nehoda..,.. Wilson Defense. Kissell Greco Defense. Tenhula;... Stempel Defense. Johnson.... Grygo Midfield Nestor Hirtz Center.. Locotos Harrington Midfield, Baer... Peck Attack.. Lorenz Delahunt Attack.. Thomas Easton Attack.. Kerwin Score by quarters: lO 1 o—2 Penn State— .3 12 2—B Time of quarters: 12 minutes. Scoring: Sampson Delahunt (10.48); Easton (31.35). Penn State Baer (0.16, 5.22, 29.05) Locotus (1.21, 27.26); Thomas (4.45, 37.30); lannetta (44.05). team will not be made until after the NAAU’s next year, said Coach Wettstone. Steve Greene, Lion side horse specialist, placed- second after breaking during his act. Greene also took third place in the flying rings event. Postponement Intramural softball games scheduled for Sunday, May 11, have been, postponed until Sun day,. May 18, it was announced by the intramural office yester day. COACH NICK THIEL Courfmen Host to Colgate Netters Still seeking its first win, the Blue and White tennis team will encounter Colgate on the varsity courts at 1:30 o’clock tomorrow; By comparative scores, the Red Raiders will rule as favorites sinc A they deluged Georgetown Univer sity. 9-0, while the Nittany Lions lost to the Hoyas . by an, 8-1 count. i Another comparison shows both Colgate and State the victims of a strong Davidson,, sextet, 7-2. and 9-0 respectively. Against, the invaders, Coach’ Sherman Fogg will field his regu lar line-up with' Captain Wait Stenger meeting the Red Raider number one player and Bob Tutt le, Dick Greenawalt, Dick Clark son, Herb Beokhard and Frank Pessolano completing the bill. , Either Ray Fink, Dave Miller, or Dan Moses may break into the. line-up either in the number six slot or in doubles competition. ■ • „ REALLY SMOOTH ... to paper and the writers’ touch, is the unique point of Shaeffer’s Stratowriter . . . not a metal copy of the ancient sharpened quill, not 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 14 karat gold, and so hard it is impervious to pressure, the corrosion of ink, the wear of years and millions of words.. . . 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New Bea ver Field at 3:30 o'clock tomor row. ' Out of action in the Sampson tussle because of academic bur dens, Hollenbach and Fffiman • will be the only two' off the''Six, Lion regulars able to rejdin the squad for tomorrow's game:' Tam Smith. Cliff Sullivan, Jack .Find ley, and Hairy Fisher are 'still’ sidelined with injuries; . ... ' COACH OUTSTANDING ' Despite its clouded record •of five losses and one tie, the Drexel ten boasts a great former sticto man in .Coach Marshall Austin.' A graduate of Drexel, mentor Austin earned a berth on the. All- Scholastic lacrosse- team while a student at St. Paul’s Prep in Bal timore. Later, in 1942, while a student at. Drexel, Austin was named to the collegiate All-Am erican team.' Hoping for a repeat perform ance of their last encounter with the Drexel aggregation in 1942, in. which theNittany stick-wield :ers garnered a 6-2 victory, Nick Thiel’s stalwarts will be gunning for ' their, fourth victory in seven starts. WESLEY FOUNDATION SUNDAY SERVICES 9:3p.A.M. • Rev.Franklm W. • Montgomery 10:30 JLM.— ' Rev. Bruce E. Gideon' Special Mother's Day Service 6:30 P.M.— ' 'Wesley Foundation' Meeting. Speaker to be announced.